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Mayor’s status unknown as city OKs $207M budget
Gov. Sam Brownback said Kansas law requires districts to spend twothirds of their funding in the classroom, but only a handful of districts meet that target.
Brownback urges schools to move money into classrooms By Roxana Hegeman Associated Press
Nick Krug/Journal-World Photo
LAWRENCE VICE MAYOR LESLIE SODEN reaches over to grab the gavel to conduct Tuesday’s Lawrence City Commission meeting after it was apparent that Mayor Jeremy Farmer would not be attending. Farmer resigned from his position as executive director of Just Food on Monday, when it was revealed that the local food bank owed about $50,000 in back payroll taxes. Farmer’s status with the commission was unclear Tuesday.
Absence follows Just Food resignation By Peter Hancock Twitter: @LJWpqhancock
Four of the five Lawrence city commissioners gave final approval Tuesday to a $207 million city budget for 2016, but there remained a cloud of uncertainty about the status of Mayor Jeremy Farmer, who was absent from the meeting without explanation. Farmer’s absence came one day after he resigned “by mutual agreement” with the board of directors from his regular job as executive director of Just Food after the nonprofit local food pantry learned that about $50,000 in federal pay-
roll taxes had not been remitted to the IRS. Farmer did not return phone messages from the Journal-World on Tuesday to answer questions about Farmer whether he intends to remain on the commission. Interim City Manager Diane Stoddard said she had not spoken directly with Farmer, but she was informed that he would likely be absent from Tuesday’s meeting. That left Commissioner Leslie
Soden, who serves as vice mayor, to chair Tuesday’s meeting. “I was prepared in case he arrived and decided to resign,” Soden said after the meeting. “I had a speech ready in case he did that because I try to be prepared.” Earlier in the day, however, Soden told the Journal-World that she would understand why he might resign his seat. “Serving as the mayor is a large responsibility, so I certainly understand if Jeremy needs to step down to have adequate time to handle his personal obligations,” she said. Please see CITY, page 6A
DOUGLAS COUNTY COMMISSION
Large turnout expected for meat shop case Secretary of state opposes local chef’s business plan
By Karen Dillon Twitter: @karensdillon
A permit for a specialty meat shop — one that’s opposed by Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach — is expected to be the big draw at the Douglas County Commission meeting today. Brian Strecker, a wellknown Lawrence chef who ran the kitchen at Pachamamas for 13 years, would like to build a 640-squarefoot building for a business called The Burning Barrel on 30 acres to process al-
ready slaughtered and disemboweled hogs and beef in northern Douglas County. The shop would be located at 292 North 2100 Road, about four miles west of Lecompton, and would use locally raised animals to make hams, sausages and other cuts of meat. The business would provide employment for up to four people. Strecker told the commission he would not process more than four hogs a week.
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that the business might expand in the future. Kobach, who owns 160 acres and a one-bedroom home nearby, is one of the leading opponents of the business. Kobach is not a resident of the area. He has said “the hog processing plant” would ruin the bucolic beauty of the Please see COUNTY, page 4A l Commission slated
to approve budget. Page 3A
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Former FSHS swimmer killed in K-10 accident By Conrad Swanson and Caitlin Doornbos Twitter: @conrad_swanson; @CaitlinDoornbos
A 19-year-old Lawrence man who was known as a talented swimmer at Free State High School was killed in a car accident Tuesday afternoon on Kansas Highway 10. Hunter Cade Robinson was driving westbound on K-10 around 1:15 p.m. when he stopped his van along the south shoulder, just west of Kansas Highway 7, said Technical Trooper Tiffany Bush of the Kansas Highway Patrol. Robinson left the van and stepped to the front of the vehicle before entering the highway’s right lane of traffic for an un- Robinson known reason, Bush said. There, he was hit by a westbound 1999 Chevy Malibu. Robinson was pronounced dead at the scene, Bush said. The driver of the Malibu, Cristal M. Howey, 42, of Gardener, was not injured in the crash, according to the KHP’s online crash logs. Howey’s passenger, Donnie Ray Brown Jr., 30, of Kansas City, Kan., was taken to Overland Park Regional Medical Center for a possible injury. Please see ACCIDENT, page 2A
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The shop has raised the ire of some Lecompton residents and neighbors. They fear that obnoxious odors comparable to a hogprocessing plant or Kobach rendering plant would permeate the area and that truck traffic would crowd the highway. They also raised concerns
Wichita — Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback urged school districts on Tuesday to move more money into the classroom and hold down the administrative costs of running their schools. The Republican governor’s comments came after he addressed educators at a training session in Wichita and lauded the Kansas Reading Roadmap initiative, a program that aims to improve reading levels in grades K-3. Districts across the state are grappling with cuts under SCHOOLS a new funding formula purported to give schools more choice in spending. Brownback signed a bill in April that dropped the state’s old funding system and substituted it with block grants. Supporters said those would provide more stable funding for schools, but many school districts have reported their funding was
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Bond concerns Citing funding problems, Moody’s Investors Service has scored KPERS bonds lower than the state’s overall rating. Page 3A
Vol.157/No.224 36 pages
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Wednesday, August 12, 2015
LAWRENCE • STATE
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DEATHS Journal-World obituary policy: For information about running obituaries, call 832-7151. Obituaries run as submitted by funeral homes or the families of the deceased.
Darrel J. BruBaker Graveside services for Darrel J. Brubaker, 82, Lawrence, KS will be held at 11:00 a.m. Thursday, August 13, 2015 at Oak Hill Cemetery. Darrel passed away Monday, August 10, 2015 at his home after battling Glioblastoma (brain cancer). Darrel was born September 30, 1932 in Pawnee, OK the son of Orvil and Hazel (Lizer) Brubaker. His bride was Mary Della Cartmill, marrying her on September 16, 1952 in Tatum, New Mexico. He served his country in the United States Army during the Korean Conflict and was stationed in Ft. Hood, TX. Darrel started out on the drilling rigs in New Mexico. With hard work and a number of moves across the country, he completed his career as the Vice President of Crude Oil Operations with Koch Oil Company, retiring in 1989. Darrel was a member of the Liberty Church of Christ in Liberty, MO, and most recently attended Southside Church of Christ. Darrel was a member of the American Quarter Horse Association, and participated with the Sheriff Posse, a service organization in Breckenridge, TX. In addition to Mary,
other survivors include sister, Carole Brown of Tulsa, OK. Daughters Brenda Flynn and Anjanette Wilhelm, sons-in-law Daniel Flynn and Doug Wilhelm, all of Lawrence. Granddaughters Emily Baumiller and husband, Craig of Piedmont, SD. Mary Sousa and husband, Nelson of Bashor, KS. Nathan & Olivia Wilhelm of Lawrence, KS. Four great grandchildren, Ryan and Grant Baumiller, Mark and Allison J. Sousa. Five nieces and seven nephews including Brad Avants, Thibodaux, LA who lived with the family and became like a son. Darrel was preceded in death by sisters, Zoe Burge and Patty Bradford. The family will greet friends from 10:00 a.m. at Warren-McElwain Mortuary in Lawrence until graveside at 11:00 a.m. M e m o r i a l contributions may be made in his name to the VNA Hospice of Douglas County and may be sent in care of the mortuary. Online condolences may be sent to www. warrenmcelwain.com. Please sign this guestbook at Obituaries. LJWorld.com.
John “Jack” Bernhard alden John ‘Jack’ Alden of Olathe, KS passed away on August 4, 2015 at the age of 64. Jack was born to parents Mary Elaine Johnson and Bernhard Warkentin Alden on November 11, 1950 in Kansas City, KS. He grew up on Lake Quivera in Shawnee where he enjoyed swimming, sailing and was part of the diving team at Shawnee Mission North High School where he graduated in 1968. He married his love, Jean Ann ‘Jeannie’ Dempsey in 1971 and became a father to son, Scott in 1976 and daughter, Briea in 1980. After receiving a BS in Journalism from KU in 1972 his career began at WREN Radio in Topeka as a political reporter where he covered multiple National Conventions. He and his family moved to Lawrence when he was named News Director at KLWN-AM/KLZR-FM in 1976. He worked on and off-air at the station in news and sales until 1987 when he left to pursue a full-time career in sales. During his time in Lawrence, he refereed junior high and high school football and basketball games throughout Northeast Kansas for over 20
years. He also loved serving as an occasional PA Announcer for his beloved Jayhawks at Allen Fieldhouse and Memorial Stadium. In Olathe, he enjoyed getting back to his journalistic roots by being involved in the Media Arts Ministry at Westside Family Church. He dearly loved the water, classic rock, Kansas sports, a good political debate, his church community and spending time with his grandchildren. He is survived by his sister Judy Alden Camp; wife Jeannie Alden; son Scott Alden; daughter Briea Alden Berry; grandchildren Sean Alden, Alyssa Alden, Brooke Berry and Reid Berry. Memorial Services will be held at 11:00am on Saturday, August 15, 2015 at Westside Family Church, 8500 Woodsonia Dr, Lenexa, KS 66227. Memorial Donations can be made to Westside Family Church’s Global Missions program. Checks can be made out to One Life with ‘in memory of Jack Alden’ in the memo and sent to: One Life P.O. Box 860078 Shawnee, KS 66286. Please sign this guestbook at Obituaries. LJWorld.com.
NormaN o. PederseN A private graveside service for Norman O. Pedersen, 101, Lawrence will be held at a later date in Stayton, Oregon. For more info. go to warrenmcelwain.com.
ViVian norma Johnson Funeral services for Vivian Norma Johnson, 96 of Lawrence, KS will be 11 am, Saturday, August 15, 2015, at Rumsey-Yost Funeral Home and burial will follow at Washington Creek Cemetery, Douglas County. Mrs. Johnson died Sunday August 9, 2015, at Pioneer Ridge Assisted Living. She was born December 12, 1918, in rural Douglas County, the daughter of Robert Lee and Eva Martha (Flory) Markley. Her childhood was spent in Colorado, western Kansas, California, as well as Douglas County, attending eight different schools and graduating from Liberty Memorial High School in Lawrence in 1937. She was baptized into the Lone Star Church of the Brethren in 1947. Vivian volunteered as a cooking leader for the Lone Star 4-H club and taught Sunday school. She worked in Lawrence at Hallmark Cards, Woolworths, and B.F Goodrich for many years. Vivian also worked at M and M Office Supply for 24 years before finally retiring. Vivian and her husband Frank were members of 5 Lawrence Square Dance Clubs and square danced for 30 years serving as President and many other duties in the clubs. Besides her love of square dancing she enjoyed biking, hiking, traveling and writing poetry. She was a member of the International 1918 Birthday Club from 1969 to 2004 and also a member of the Lawrence “No Name Club” and a square dance Friends Club for many years. She married Frank
Johnson in June of 1938. He preceded her in death in July of 1991. She is also preceded in death by a brother, Merle Lee in 1925 and sister, Yvonne Markley in 1993 and sister, Lila McMillen in 2011. Survivors include two sons, Jim Johnson (wife Etha) of Lone Star and Robert Johnson (wife Fran) of Lawrence and one daughter, Cheryl Durrant (husband Jerry) of California and one sister, Flora Ott of Lawrence, 11 grandchildren and 18 great-grandchildren and many nieces, nephews and cousins. Vivian’s family would like to thank Pioneer Ridge Assisted Living for the loving care and attention they gave to her over the last two years. They were greatly appreciated for everything they did. Friends may call from 8 am to 8 pm, Friday, at the funeral home where the family will receive them from 6:30-7:30. M e m o r i a l contributions may be made to the Lone Star Church of the Brethren or Visiting Nurses sent in care of Rumsey-Yost Funeral Home. Online condolences may be sent to RumseyYost.com Please sign this guestbook at Obituaries. LJWorld.com.
L awrence J ournal -W orld
Police look into BB gun incidents
By Caitlin Doornbos
Twitter: @CaitlinDoornbos
Lawrence police were investigating a series of related incidents Tuesday involving BB guns, police spokesman Sgt. Trent McKinley said. The first incident was reported around 9:30 p.m. Monday when a man in the 1000 block of Rhode Island told police that two people had shot at him from a vehicle, McKinley said. The man reported that as he was standing in the street talking to a friend, a vehicle passed and someone yelled at him. McKinley said the vehicle continued forward before making a U-turn in the intersection of 10th and Rhode Island streets. The car then allegedly started back toward the man, who said he then saw backseat passengers on both sides of the vehicle “lean out of the car with what he believed to be handguns.” The man said he heard the weapons being fired “several times,” but concluded they “must have been some other type of weapon” due to the sound they made, McKinley said. The man was not injured. Around 10:15 p.m., a different man reported that someone shot at his vehicle near the intersection of Bob Billings Parkway and Iowa Street. As the driver was in the left lane, another vehicle pulled up beside him and he said he “heard the sound of multiple objects striking the passenger side of his vehicle,” McKinley said. Responding officers latorothy oper er found “numerous dents and areas of paint damage Services for Dorothy J. Roper, 92, Lawrence, are consistent with having pending at Rumsey-Yost. She died Mon., Aug. 10, 2015, been struck with BBs or pellets,” McKinley said. at Lawrence Memorial Hospital. rumsey-yost.com At 6:23 a.m. the next day, police were called to the revor llen oung area of West 25th Court and Ousdahl Road for a report 21, Tonganoxie, died Friday 8/7/15. Funeral 10 of a man “seen holding a am Saturday 8/15/15 at Quisenberry Funeral Home. gun and a female saying, Visitation 5-8 pm Friday. www.quisenberryfh.com ‘Don’t shoot me,’” McKinley said. Officers spoke with several people near the intersection, one of whom alI could count on legedly had a BB pistol. (Robinson) to do Police concluded that whatever I asked him the people there were CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A McKinley said, to. He really contrib- friends, and some of them were It was not immediate- uted to the success shooting at cups and othly clear why Robinson of the team. ... We er items with the BB gun. stopped his van along were really fortunate Officers noticed that a vethe highway, Bush said. hicle at the scene appeared There were no apparent to have him for the similar to the vehicle demechanical issues with four years.” scriptions at the Rhode Isthe vehicle. land Street and Iowa Street “There wasn’t anyincidents, so the group thing disabling or anymembers were questioned, thing like that,” Bush — Annette McDonald, head coach McKinley said. Following said. “The van was listed of Free State High School’s swim the investigation there, Levi and dive teams as functional.” Aaron Law, 20, of Olathe, Robinson, a Free State was booked into the DougHigh School alumnus, las County Jail around 9:45 was a record-holding a.m. Tuesday on suspicion swimmer for the school, of aggravated assault in said Annette McDonald, uted to the success of the connection with the Rhode head coach of the school’s team,” she said. “And I Island Street incident. swim and dive teams. think everybody enjoyed “He had a school re- his camaraderie on the cord as a part of the 200 team. We were really forfreestyle relay,” McDon- tunate to have him for the ald said. “He was very four years.” talented, just naturally Following the accident talented, and he was the Kansas Department such a great part of the of Transportation closed team.” all westbound K-10 lanes Robinson was depend- in the area and reduced able and fun to be around, the eastbound traffic to McDonald said. one lane for more than “I could count on him two hours. The accident to do whatever I asked remains under investigahim to. He really contrib- tion, Bush said.
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Moody’s raises concerns about Kansas pension bonds By Peter Hancock Twitter: @LJWpqhancock
Topeka — Moody’s Investors Service said Tuesday that Kansas’ plan to issue $1 billion in pension obligation bonds will do little to solve financial problems of the Kansas Public Employees Retirement System, and that it could create additional budget problems for the state in years to come. The Wall Street rating company gave the proposed bonds an Aa3 rating, one notch below the state’s overall rating, saying that Kansas “will do little to solve the challenges surrounding its poorly funded state-administered pension plans.� “Even if the state’s pension bonds work as designed, contributions must rise in order to address growing unfunded liabilities,� Moody’s said.
Kansas lawmakers authorized issuing the bonds this year, on the condition that the overall cost of the issuance, including interest rates and other fees, would not exceed 5 percent. Rebecca Floyd, general counsel for the Kansas Development Finance Authority, which manages the state’s bond issues, said the state plans to proceed with the bond sale today and that officials remain “cautiously optimistic� that the final price will come in below the 5 percent cap. “We should know by early afternoon (today),� she said. “We are in a pre-pricing period right now. Investment banks are gauging interest and taking pre-orders for the bonds. That’s been going reasonably well.� KPERS manages a $16 billion investment fund that is the source of re-
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Even if the state’s pension bonds work as designed, contributions must rise in order to address growing unfunded liabilities.� — Moody’s Investors Service statement tirement benefits for roughly 289,000 active and retired employees of the state, public schools and local governments in Kansas, including the city of Lawrence, Douglas County and the Lawrence school district. Officials estimate that fund is about $9 billion short of what it needs to meet its long-term obligation to pay out those benefits, an amount referred to as its “unfunded actuarial liability.� As part of a major overhaul enacted in 2012, the state changed the benefit plan for new employees coming into the system, providing them with a
smaller retirement benefit and requiring those employees to contribute more. That reform also gave current employees the option of contributing more in exchange for a slightly enhanced benefit plan. In addition, the state is supposed to gradually ratchet up the amount it contributes each year until the fund comes into actuarial balance. The idea behind the bond issue is that by injecting $1 billion of cash into the fund, the bonds will immediately reduce the system’s long-term unfunded liability. And by investing that money
along with the fund’s other assets, the interest earned on the money will shorten the length of time it takes for the pension fund to get back in balance. However, anticipating that the bond sale would happen, lawmakers also reduced the amount of money the state would otherwise contribute into the pension plan for the next two years, a move that Moody’s criticized as trading a “soft� liability, its underfunded pension, for a “hard� liability of bonded indebtedness. “Debt represents an inflexible fixed cost that cannot be renegotiated or modified without defaulting,� Moody’s said. “By contrast, an unfunded pension liability can sometimes be modified through benefit reforms or funded over a longer timeline without defaulting.� Floyd said state officials
money would have been used to buy an ambulance and hire and equip seven Douglas County’s pro- full-time employees to be posed $79 million budget, housed in Eudora’s Public which would hold prop- Safety Building. l Commissioners aperty tax rates consistent proved $333,729 in with 2015, will go funding for the hirbefore county coming of six correcmissioners for aptional officers for proval tonight. the Douglas County Commissioners Sheriff’s Office. reached a tental Commissioners tive agreement on COUNTY rejected a request the budget in July COMMISSION for $450,000 from after three days the Lawrence Huof discussion. The proposed budget for mane Society to renovate 2016 would maintain the and expand the facility. A county’s mill levy at 41.01 $15,000 increase in annual funding from $28,000 to mills. If approved, the bud- $43,000 was approved, get will take effect Jan. 1, however. That money will 2016, County Administra- be used to help the Humane Society house more tor Craig Weinaug said. During the budget dis- stray animals. County commissioncussion, county commissioners offered the Law- ers meet at 6 p.m. today rence Community Shelter at the Douglas County $50,000 in emergency Courthouse, 1100 Massafunding from the 2015 bud- chusetts St. The meeting get — the offer was con- is open to the public. Also on this week’s tingent upon a matching contribution from the city agenda: l Authorize the county — but they declined to increase their annual allot- administrator to execute documents apment by $100,000 for the loan proved this March in the 2016 budget. The proposed budget amount of $143,294.50 for for 2016 holds the shel- renovations to be made ter’s funding constant at within the Dwayne Peaslee Technical Training $115,000, Weinaug said. Commissioners left the Center, 2920 Haskell Ave. l Consider approval of door open to providing the shelter with financial assis- the Fiscal Year 2015 Budtance in 2016, but wanted get Adjust Report, Fiscal to see the organization’s Year 2016 Revised Grant budget balanced with the Budget and Fiscal Year current level of funding 2016 Revised Behavioral before any additional help Health Grant Budget. l Consider a condiwas offered, Weinaug said. Other budget requests tional use permit for a value-added agricultural discussed in July: l Commissioners de- business, The Burning nied the City of Eudo- Barrel, a specialty meat ra’s request for $827,780 processing shop, located for Lawrence-Douglas approximately 30 acres at County Fire Medical. The 292 North 2100 Road. By Conrad Swanson
Twitter: @Conrad_Swanson
Mike Yoder/Journal-World Photo
JORDYNN MILLER REACHES FOR A PINK BACKPACK FULL OF SCHOOL SUPPLIES for her kindergarten class Tuesday at the Back to School Distribution at the East Lawrence Recreation Center. The program is organized by the Ballard Center, Penn House, ECKAN and the Salvation Army, and will distribute school supplies to about 1,100 children. Most of the supplies are donated by local businesses and organizations. The distribution continues until Friday afternoon for those who previously applied.
Library, LMH giving library cards to newborns Twitter: @HlavacekJoanna
Soon, every baby born at Lawrence Memorial Hospital will come home with a library card application from the Lawrence Public Library. The paperwork, which also includes a schedule of the library’s kid-friendly activities such as Books & Babies and storytime, will be distributed via the bag of parenting literature new moms and dads already receive from the
hospital, said Kathleen O’Leary Morgan, director of development and strategic partnerships at the Lawrence Public Library. “The goal is to make every child a reader from the start,� said Morgan, who said the library was inspired by similar partnerships across the country. “It’s incredibly important to read to your child from a young age. This is a way to encourage parents to read to their children, to get them excited about books and the library.� She hopes the program will
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streamline the process for new parents, who can fill out the application at home and return it to the library (along with a valid photo ID and proof of address) to receive the library card. The new initiative is part of the library’s Dr. Bob Reader program. Named after the late Kansas University Athletics Director Bob Frederick, the program provides a free book to any child receiving his or her first library card. For more information, call the Lawrence Public Library at 8433833.
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County budget plan with no mill levy hike up for vote today
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have never suggested that the bond issue by itself will solve the long-term funding problems in KPERS. “It is one measure in bridging that gap,� she said. “Ultimately it will help to fund the unfunded actuarial liability in a little bit shorter time period than without the issuance of the bonds.� Gov. Sam Brownback’s budget director Shawn Sullivan issued a statement through the governor’s press office saying the financial problems at KPERS pre-date the Brownback administration. “It is unfortunate that previous administrations chose to underfund KPERS,� Sullivan said. “Governor Brownback and the Legislature have invested hundreds of millions more into the pension system as compared
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LAWRENCE • STATE
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I want to see teacher salaries go up, I want to see us getting more reading proficiency — and we can do that, but it is going to require, I think, some push.”
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cut and are anticipating further budget cuts. Brownback said each By Mackenzie Clark school district has to deal Read more responses and add with its own local budget. your thoughts at LJWorld.com “I think we really have to look at our back-office What’s your favorite operations a lot more — what it is costing us to children’s book? run the things associated Asked at the with a school and doing Lawrence Public Library that a lot more efficiently and holding our adminSee story, 3A istrative costs down so we can get that money into the classroom where everybody wants it,” Brownback said. Kansas did that in the state government by consolidating things like technical support and human resource functions, he said. “I want to see teacher Rozay Nazaire, student, Oskaloosa “‘Arthur’ (series by Marc Brown).”
— Gov. Sam Brownback salaries go up, I want to see us getting more reading proficiency — and we can do that, but it is going to require, I think, some push,” the governor said. Brownback said Kansas law requires districts to spend two-thirds of their funding in the classroom, but only a handful of districts actually meet that target. However, the head of the state’s largest teachers union said later in a phone interview that teachers need “a whole school” — including support staff such as a librarian, a school nurse, a
counselor, a principal and custodians — to be successful in the classroom. Some schools are pushing classroom sizes of 40 students because of inadequate block grant funding from the state, and some elementary classrooms are approaching 30 students, said Mark Farr, president of the Kansas National Education Association. He added that research shows that elementary classrooms need to be closer to 15-18 students to be successful. “If the governor really wants to help our schools, he would fund
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County CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A
Ashlinn Danford, student mortician, Kansas City, Kan. “‘The Giving Tree.’ I can still read it to this day and bawl my eyes out.”
L awrence J ournal -W orld
area and is a “dramatic alteration to the county’s comprehensive plan.” The Douglas County Planning Commission voted 6 to 2 on July 22 to send the conditional use permit to the Douglas County Commission for final approval. Planning Commissioner Eric Struckhoff, who voted for the permit, said the concerns of residents are always important but that in this case they were “overblown.” “Unfortunately, it looks like these concerns are being blown out of proportion,” Struckhoff said. “Comments about this being a hog-processing plant is overblown. One commenter described this as a dramatic alteration to the county’s com-
Comments about this being a hog-processing plant is overblown... This is exactly what our comprehensive plan envisions when it contemplates the concept of value-added agriculture in our county.” — Eric Struckhoff, Douglas County Planning Commission member prehensive plan. That is not true. This is exactly what our comprehensive plan envisions when it contemplates the concept of value-added agriculture in our county.” The smoking process will be indoors, and the meats will be cooked at low temperatures, Strecker told the Planning Commission. The permit prohibits any odors from crossing property boundaries, and the commission at the end of the meeting restricted truck traffic to and from the property even further, allowing only two truck trips per
week instead of two a day. It also prohibits retail sales of the meat. Planning Commissioner Rob Sands, who voted against the permit, said he was concerned there was no data to show that there would not be odors. And he said residents remain concerned that the business will expand even though the permit prohibits that from happening. “Everybody there voiced concern about additional truck traffic,” he said. The Burning Barrel would be comparable to a similar meat-process-
our schools,” Farr said. With “very constrained budget dollars,” local school districts have to make choices and all parts of a budget play a role in educating children, said Mark Tallman, associate executive director for advocacy for the Kansas Association of School Boards. The KASB released a report in May showing the number of teachers and other classroom personnel has increased 16 percent in the past 17 years, while the number of central office administrators and clerical staff has gone down 16 percent. Student proficiency in reading and math has gone up, along with graduation rates. “There is a lot of evidence to suggest the ways we are using our resources are highly effective, and I don’t think there is a
lot to gain from shuffling money around,” Tallman said. Brownback got a friendlier reception when he spoke to educators at the session on the grade school reading program, which uses some money from the Temporary Assistance to Needy Families program. TANF funds typically are used to provide cash assistance to impoverished families. The governor praised the initiative’s early successes in improving reading proficiency, calling it a way to help people’s lives and reduce poverty in the long run through education. “If a child can read at fourth grade reading (level) when they are in the fourth grade, the likelihood of them being in poverty goes down substantially,” Brownback said.
ing store in Lawrence: Hank Charcuterie, which is located at 1900 Massachusetts St., said Vaughn Good, owner of Hank Charcuterie. Good, who sells meat both retail and commercially, said he had never had any complaints about odors even though he has an outdoor smoker. The Lawrence Police Department said that since the business opened last year, it had not received any complaints. Douglas County commissioners Jim Flory and
Nancy Thellman declined to comment for this story, saying they would wait for the meeting at 6 p.m. today, at 1100 Massachusetts St., to discuss the matter. Thellman said she expected a large turnout. “A lot of correspondence has been pouring in,” she said. “I suspect we will have a full house and lots of comment from both the applicant, his supporters and folks who are in opposition.”
Make an
— Reporter Karen Dillon can be reached at kdillon@ljworld.com or at 382-7162.
informed decision
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BRIEFLY Hearings planned on Westar rates
procedural issues during a Wednesday meeting at its Topeka offices. It plans Topeka — Kansas utility to open hearings on the regulators plan hearings agreement Aug. 17 and has later this month on a proset aside up to five days. posed agreement to allow Westar initially sought a the state’s largest electric $152 million rate increase company to raise its annual and said the revenues rates by $78 million. largely would cover the The agreement incosts of upgrading power volves Westar Energy, a plants. state consumer advocacy The company says that agency and other parties in under the agreement, most Westar’s rate case before households would see their the Kansas Corporation monthly bills rise from $5 Commission. to $7. Westar has nearly The KCC plans to handle 700,000 Kansas customers.
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to the pre-recession state contribution levels. With the issuance of the pension obligation bonds, the KPERS actuaries project that the state will be meeting the ‘actuarial required contribution rate’ by State Fiscal Year 2020. Without the bonds, the state will meet this threshold by State Fiscal Year 2021. In either scenario, this will be the first time in 20 years where the state would fully fund the annual contribution rate.”
• Covers whitening services and supplies. • Pays 100% for preventive services: oral exams, cleaning, polishing, X-rays. • Pays 80% for primary services: fillings, extractions, periodontics, etc. • Extensive provider network.
Bob Shmalberg Scotch Fabric Care Services
LaVerne Epp
Bioscience & Technology Business Center
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Steve Glass
LRM Industries, Inc.
Join us as we recognize the 2015 honorees for the Lawrence Business Hall of Fame at a tribute dinner highlighting their excellence and dedication to our community. bcbsks.com
— Peter Hancock can be reached at (785) 354-4222 or phancock@ljworld.com.
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Opinion
Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com l Wednesday, August 12, 2015
EDITORIALS
Voter purge Setting an arbitrary time limit isn’t an acceptable way to reduce the number of voter registrations being held “in suspense” by the Kansas secretary of state.
I
t’s understandable that Secretary of State Kris Kobach would like to get rid of the list of about 31,000 wouldbe voters whose registrations are being held “in suspense” by his office, but the procedure and timing of his proposal to reduce that list aren’t acceptable. Most of the registrations on the list are being held up because the registrants have failed to produce documents that prove they are U.S. citizens. Currently those people are allowed to provide that proof and complete their registrations up until the day before an election. Kobach now wants to give those would-be voters just 90 days after filing their registration to provide that proof and complete the registration process. After that, their registrations would be tossed out and they would have to start the process over again. Four members of the Kansas Legislature’s Joint Committee on Administrative Rules and Regulations expressed their opposition this week to the policy change, but that committee can only comment on the change, not keep it from taking effect. Kobach’s office has scheduled a hearing on the change for Sept. 2 in Topeka. After that, regardless of what feedback the office receives, Kobach has the power to proceed with the change. A representative of his office told the legislative committee that the 90-day limit is longer than what is enforced in two other states with similar proofof-citizenship laws and would relieve county election officials of the burden of continued efforts to reach people, who he asserted didn’t want to complete their registrations. Setting an arbitrary time limit to produce citizenship proof is a poor way to determine whether someone wants to — or even is trying to — complete his or her registration. As Rep. Jim Ward, D-Wichita, pointed out, it may take longer than 90 days for some people to obtain an out-of-state birth certificate or other proof of citizenship. Even looking at how many contacts an election office has had with a wouldbe voter or how many letters have been returned as undeliverable would be a more valid indicator than a simple 90day limit. Ward said he might accept a 90-day limit “if there was some criteria other than, ‘it’s convenient for us and we think this is fair.’” Another key issue is the fact that the constitutionality of the Kansas proof-ofcitizenship still is being disputed. Restrictive voting laws are under scrutiny in several other states, and an advisory committee of the U.S. Civil Rights Commission plans to begin hearings in January to look into whether Kansas voter laws are suppressing voter turnout. Until questions about the validity of the law are resolved, no registrations should be tossed out for failure to adhere to that law. The 31,000 voter registrations being held in limbo certainly raise questions about a voter registration system that was sold to state legislators with the promise it would include a seamless system for verifying citizenship. Setting an arbitrary time limit to remove people from that list would reduce the list but not address basic defects in that system that are keeping qualified Kansas voters from exercising their constitutional right to cast a ballot. LAWRENCE
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Book celebrates inner barbarian Washington — Escapism has a special lure this summer, if you’re saturated with Islamic State atrocities, the Iran nuclear deal and Donald Trump’s presidential campaign. As relief from such weighty matters, I can recommend a magnificently escapist book about surfing called “Barbarian Days.” Subtitled “A Surfing Life,” the book is a memoir by New Yorker writer William Finnegan about his pursuit of big, beautiful waves since he was 10. Finnegan is a fine reporter and writer, as New Yorker readers have long known, but he is also a serious surfer who for a half-century has challenged himself to ride the mightiest waves he can. Finnegan describes waves as living things, shaped by winds, currents, sand bars, reefs, storms and swells. Reading the ocean when astride his board, he’s at once a meteorologist, hydraulic engineer, cartographer and artist. Here’s how he describes the palette of colors in the breaking waves at Hawaii’s Makaha Point: some “cobalt at the top,” others “a warmer shade of navy blue in the shadowed part of the maw,” a distant set of “long, long roping gray walls.” Finnegan doesn’t brag about his exploits; he tells you how afraid he was sometimes, and about the swells that he decided were too big to ride. He recounts a few times he walked away from
David Ignatius
davidignatius@washpost.com
“
Finnegan is a fine reporter and writer, as New Yorker readers have long known, but he is also a serious surfer who for a half-century has challenged himself to ride the mightiest waves he can.” unridden surf with a sense of shame. But he’s deliberately underselling himself: The book includes pictures of him riding monster waves three times his height in Portugal and the South Seas. “Being out in big surf is dreamlike,” he writes. “Terror and ecstasy ebb and flow around the edges of things, each threatening to overwhelm the dreamer. An unearthly beauty saturates an enormous arena of moving water, latent violence, too-real explosions, and sky. ... I always feel a ferocious ambivalence: I want to be nowhere else; I want to be anywhere else.” What makes this a perfect summer book is the way it
draws us into the author’s private passion, and invites us to indulge our own eccentricities and obsessions. Realizing that Finnegan is a world-class surfer is like discovering that columnist Tom Friedman is a scratch golfer, or that Energy Secretary Ernie Moniz plays defensive back in a senior soccer league, or that billionaire Warren Buffett is a killer bridge player. Within even the most extraordinary lives, there are other lives. “Barbarian Days” is also a reminder of just how crazy people were in the 1960s and ’70s, when the ordered world was coming apart and New Age guru Ken Kesey’s slogan “Further” summed up a rebellious young person’s aspirations. For Finnegan, the passion was chasing waves, from a boyhood in Los Angeles to an adolescence in Hawaii, and then to a global Wanderjahr that took him in his 20s to Fiji, Australia, South Africa and Portugal, and then back to America. Having done my share of crazy things back then (riding a freight train with hobos out West sticks in my mind), I relished Finnegan’s description of his efforts to shed his privileged self — only to find that it was impossible to escape. “Being rich white Americans in dirt poor places ... well, it would simply never be OK. In an inescapable way, we sucked, and we knew it, and humility was called for.” He describes some of his
early journalism as a kind of reparations. Some of the most gripping passages in the book, expanding on an unforgettable piece in the New Yorker two decades ago, describe riding the huge, frigid waves of San Francisco’s Ocean Beach. “From the water’s edge, looking out across a stepladder of six or seven walls of cold, growling, onrushing whitewater, the idea of paddling out actually carried with it a whiff of lunacy. The project looked impossible, like trying to swim up a waterfall.” At times like these, Finnegan seems in the spell of a personal compulsion. Journalism may be his vocation, but surfing is deeper. It affords Finnegan the chance to get lost in something beautiful and powerful. Finnegan likens this experience in several passages to sex and religion, but his point is that for its devotees, surfing is transcendence. A final value of this escapist book is that it celebrates the inner barbarian that’s in most of us. This pursuit of adventure is a special American virtue, a quality that for many foreigners defines what’s lovable about our otherwise vain, violent and often arrogant culture. We are sometimes at our best (or certainly, our most American) when we are restless, risk-taking, wave-riding obsessives. — David Ignatius is a columnist for Washington Post Writers Group.
PUBLIC FORUM
Education funds
Hemenway made KU better Bob Hemenway was my boss. He was also my friend. He touched my life and made it better as he did for thousands of people during his career. He was a man of principle who did not hesitate to take a position he believed in, even if it meant that he might suffer for it. Bob was not a remote chancellor. When I was a dean, he would often attend meetings simply to let the deans and other administrators know that he was involved in their issues and cared about what they thought. Often, if there was something on his mind, he would give one of the deans a call and chat about it. He always made it clear that he valued the opinions of others, even though the decisions were his to make. For many years after I stepped down as dean, I would drive over to the chancellor’s residence at 6 a.m. on Friday mornings to meet Bob. I would inevitably find him sipping a cup of coffee and reading this newspaper. Sometimes he was happy with what he read. Sometimes, not so much. But every Friday we would walk around campus for an hour. That hour was for free and uninhibited discussion. Most of the time Bob would talk about what was on his mind and ask my opinion. Occasionally, I would bring up a subject that I felt he needed to think about. He was always receptive. Sometimes we talked about Kansas University. Sometimes we talked about politics. Sometimes we talked about books. And sometimes we just talked about whatever we were thinking. I cherish those quiet moments I had with Bob. I learned then that he was a remarkably thoughtful and compassionate man and that he cared deeply about the university, his family and
“
Mike Hoeflich
Bob’s was a life welllived. He enriched KU and Lawrence and Kansas with his insight, his caring and his enormous energy.”
friends and about this country and humanity. Bob’s was a life well-lived. He enriched KU and Lawrence and Kansas with his insight, his caring and his enormous energy. He made KU and this state a better place than it was when he first arrived. But Bob Hemenway’s life cannot be adequately measured simply by his administrative achievements, by the progress made at the university during his tenure. To do so would be to drastically underestimate his accomplishments and his impact as a man and as a teacher. Bob Hemenway’s greatest achievement was in the many lives he improved and enriched through his commitment, his compassion and his determination to make the world a better place. With his passing, the world is diminished. So many of us will miss him. But his legacy will live on. — Mike Hoeflich, a distinguished professor in the Kansas University School of Law, writes a regular column for the Journal-World.
To the editor: We do not have enough money to help pay for public education when education is one of the major factors in helping all people become self-sufficient, self-reliant, productive people. All people becoming self-sufficient will cut state expenses on social programs where so much state money is used. Government officials feel there is a need for new facilities and housing for criminals costing millions of dollars in taxpayer money, which could be used in more positive, productive ways. But we provide people with avenues for more violence, such as allowing everyone to carry a gun, which will create more crime and the use of more taxpayer money to pay for more police to solve the crimes and house the criminals when that money could be going for education. The Declaration of Independence says: “We hold these truths to be selfevident that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of happiness.” The National Rifle Association may feel everyone has a right to carry a gun, but how can we pursue having these rights if we live in constant fear of being shot? John N. Gutschenritter, Eudora
Letters Policy
The Journal-World welcomes letters to the Public Forum. Letters should be 250 words or less, be of public interest and avoid name-calling and libelous language. The Journal-World reserves the right to edit letters, as long as viewpoints are not altered. By submitting letters, you grant the Journal-World a nonexclusive license to publish, copy and distribute your work, while acknowledging that you are the author of the work. Letters must bear the name, address and telephone number of the writer. Letters may be submitted by mail to Box 888, Lawrence, KS, 66044 or by email to: letters@ljworld.com.
OLD HOME TOWN
100
From the Lawrence Daily Journal-World for Aug. 12, 1915: “A. D. Puckett, who lives nine miles south of town, years killed the biggest rattlesnake ago this morning that has been IN 1915 seen in Douglas county in many years, he thinks. The reptile was fifty-seven and one-half inches long and seven and one-half inches in circumference. It had twelve rattles, and a button. He will probably bring the reptile to town this afternoon.... Rattle snakes are not very common in Douglas county during the last few years and it is unusual to kill one.” — Compiled by Sarah St. John
Read more Old Home Town at LJWorld. com/news/lawrence/history/old_home_ town.
6A
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WEATHER
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Wednesday, August 12, 2015
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TODAY
THURSDAY
FRIDAY
SUNDAY
SATURDAY
Sunny and pleasant
Pleasant with plenty of sun
Pleasant with abundant sunshine
Plenty of sunshine
Partly sunny
High 86° Low 61° POP: 5%
High 88° Low 63° POP: 5%
High 88° Low 63° POP: 5%
High 89° Low 65° POP: 5%
High 91° Low 68° POP: 10%
Wind NNE 2-4 mph
Wind S 3-6 mph
Wind SSE 4-8 mph
Wind SSE 4-8 mph
Wind S 4-8 mph
POP: Probability of Precipitation
Kearney 85/62
McCook 85/62 Oberlin 85/64
Clarinda 84/62
Lincoln 88/64
Grand Island 87/63
Beatrice 85/62
St. Joseph 84/62 Chillicothe 85/61
Sabetha 85/64
Concordia 84/63
Centerville 82/59
Kansas City Marshall Manhattan 86/65 85/62 Goodland Salina 87/63 Oakley Kansas City Topeka 84/61 88/65 83/65 86/63 Lawrence 84/64 Sedalia 86/61 Emporia Great Bend 84/62 86/62 84/65 Nevada Dodge City Chanute 85/62 84/64 Hutchinson 86/63 Garden City 87/64 83/63 Springfield Wichita Pratt Liberal Coffeyville Joplin 83/62 82/65 85/66 85/66 85/62 86/62 Hays Russell 84/64 85/64
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
LAWRENCE ALMANAC
Through 8 p.m. Tuesday.
Temperature High/low 85°/64° Normal high/low today 89°/67° Record high today 109° in 1936 Record low today 47° in 2004
Precipitation in inches 24 hours through 8 p.m. yest. 0.00 Month to date 1.79 Normal month to date 1.40 Year to date 28.79 Normal year to date 25.89
REGIONAL CITIES
Today Thu. Today Thu. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Independence 86 63 s 88 64 s Atchison 86 62 s 88 65 s Fort Riley 87 62 s 89 66 s Belton 85 63 s 86 66 s Olathe 84 62 s 85 66 s Burlington 86 63 s 88 65 s Osage Beach 84 62 s 86 64 s Coffeyville 86 62 s 88 64 s Osage City 88 63 s 89 64 s Concordia 84 63 s 86 66 s Ottawa 88 63 s 89 64 s Dodge City 84 64 t 89 65 s Wichita 85 66 pc 87 68 s Holton 88 64 s 89 66 s Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
NATIONAL FORECAST
SUN & MOON Today 6:31 a.m. 8:20 p.m. 4:44 a.m. 6:58 p.m.
New
First
Thu. 6:32 a.m. 8:19 p.m. 5:40 a.m. 7:37 p.m.
Full
Last
Aug 14 Aug 22 Aug 29
Sep 5
LAKE LEVELS
As of 7 a.m. Tuesday Lake
Clinton Perry Pomona
Level (ft)
Discharge (cfs)
877.57 893.15 974.61
21 25 15
Shown are today’s noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for today.
Fronts Cold
INTERNATIONAL CITIES
Today Cities Hi Lo W Acapulco 89 77 t Amsterdam 72 59 pc Athens 92 76 s Baghdad 109 85 s Bangkok 92 79 t Beijing 96 72 s Berlin 85 61 t Brussels 80 63 pc Buenos Aires 55 50 r Cairo 98 77 s Calgary 88 58 s Dublin 66 50 pc Geneva 87 64 t Hong Kong 91 82 pc Jerusalem 86 67 s Kabul 92 62 s London 72 63 pc Madrid 96 68 pc Mexico City 74 51 t Montreal 72 57 sh Moscow 79 59 s New Delhi 89 80 t Oslo 64 51 pc Paris 91 68 pc Rio de Janeiro 79 65 s Rome 88 69 s Seoul 89 72 s Singapore 87 78 t Stockholm 72 53 pc Sydney 65 47 pc Tokyo 90 78 pc Toronto 73 54 c Vancouver 79 62 s Vienna 97 73 pc Warsaw 94 67 pc Winnipeg 91 66 t
Hi 90 81 93 111 94 94 85 87 53 97 92 65 88 90 87 92 77 88 72 74 84 91 65 88 80 90 87 87 70 64 86 80 76 96 85 89
Thu. Lo W 79 t 64 pc 76 s 84 s 80 t 73 pc 68 s 67 t 44 r 76 s 57 pc 51 pc 62 t 82 t 68 s 65 s 62 t 62 pc 54 t 57 pc 55 pc 80 t 51 s 61 t 66 s 68 s 70 s 78 t 52 s 46 s 79 t 64 s 62 s 70 s 64 t 59 s
Warm Stationary Showers T-storms
WEATHER HISTORY
7:30
Flurries
Snow
Ice
WEATHER TRIVIA™
Q:
The temperature reached 90 degrees for the 19th consecutive day in Washington, D.C., on Aug. 12, 1980.
WEDNESDAY Prime Time WOW DTV DISH 7 PM
Rain
-10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s National Summary: Drenching storms will affect the Gulf and southern Atlantic coasts and will dot the Rockies today. Spotty thundershowers with small hail will riddle the Northeast. The Central states will be mostly dry and sunny. Today Thu. Today Thu. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W 87 66 s 86 67 s Albuquerque 91 64 s 93 67 pc Memphis Miami 93 78 t 91 77 t Anchorage 70 53 sh 71 55 s Milwaukee 78 65 s 88 70 s Atlanta 88 68 s 87 70 s Minneapolis 86 70 s 91 71 pc Austin 104 76 pc 100 72 s Nashville 86 62 s 84 62 s Baltimore 83 61 pc 82 60 s New Orleans 93 79 t 94 78 s Birmingham 89 65 s 88 69 s New York 83 66 t 82 68 s Boise 100 70 s 102 68 s 87 67 s 89 69 s Boston 81 65 t 78 65 pc Omaha Orlando 92 75 t 89 73 t Buffalo 71 55 c 76 66 s Philadelphia 85 66 pc 83 66 s Cheyenne 86 60 pc 87 59 t Phoenix 108 89 pc 112 88 pc Chicago 79 64 s 87 69 s Pittsburgh 75 55 pc 79 64 s Cincinnati 79 57 s 82 62 s Portland, ME 79 59 t 77 57 pc Cleveland 74 56 pc 81 65 s Portland, OR 90 64 pc 86 64 c Dallas 96 76 pc 96 73 s Reno 90 58 s 91 57 s Denver 90 63 t 94 64 t Richmond 85 66 s 83 65 s Des Moines 84 66 s 88 68 s Sacramento 89 58 s 88 58 s Detroit 76 59 s 84 68 s St. Louis 86 66 s 87 69 s El Paso 96 73 s 97 74 s Salt Lake City 87 68 t 91 72 pc Fairbanks 59 49 c 63 50 c San Diego 79 69 pc 81 69 pc Honolulu 91 78 pc 89 78 c Houston 101 77 pc 97 75 pc San Francisco 74 59 pc 72 59 pc Seattle 88 62 s 83 61 c Indianapolis 78 59 s 82 65 s Spokane 98 68 s 97 63 pc Kansas City 84 64 s 86 67 s 102 76 pc 105 79 t Las Vegas 96 79 t 101 81 pc Tucson Tulsa 88 66 s 90 68 s Little Rock 89 66 s 88 67 s 86 69 pc 85 68 s Los Angeles 86 67 pc 92 70 pc Wash., DC National extremes yesterday for the 48 contiguous states High: Death Valley, CA 113° Low: Bodie State Park, CA 29° Can lightning strike from a clear sky? Rarely, but this has been observed.
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015
Precipitation
MOVIES
8 PM
8:30
9 PM
9:30
A:
Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset
KIDS
Æ
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62 The Walking Dead
The Walking Dead
News
4
4
4 MasterChef (N)
Home Free (N)
FOX 4 at 9 PM (N)
5
5
5 Big Brother (N)
7
19
19 NOVA (DVS)
9
9 Middle
9
America’s/Talent
D KTWU 11 A Q 12 B ` 13
Gold
Extant (N) h
Gold
Big Brother (N)
Inside
Criminal Minds
How We Got to Now
Holly
Dish Nat. Rules
Rules
News
News
Seinfeld
News
NCIS: Los Angeles
TMZ (N)
Corden
Motown 25 (My Music Presents)
Robinson Robinson Comic Standing
KSNT
Tonight Show
Mod Fam blackish Celeb.-Swap
News
Jimmy Kimmel Live Nightline
Nature “Animal Odd Couples” Middle
My Wild Affair
Mod Fam blackish Celeb.-Swap Extant (N) h
Criminal Minds
Meyers
World
Business Charlie Rose (N)
News
Jimmy Kimmel Live Nightline
News
C I 14 KMCI 15 L KCWE 17
41 38
Robinson Robinson Comic Standing News 41 America’s/Talent 38 King/Hill King/Hill Minute Minute Commun Commun Mother
29
29 Top Model
ION KPXE 18
50
NCIS: Los Angeles
Corden
Tonight Show
Meyers
Mother
Fam Guy South Pk
A Wicked Offer (N)
News
Two Men Mod Fam Mod Fam Office
Ghost Whisperer
Ghost Whisperer
Ghost Whisperer
Ghost Whisperer
Office
Garden
6 News
Pets
The
Movie
6 News
Not Late Tower Cam
Mother
Mother
Mother
Mother
Rules
Ghost Whisperer
Cable Channels WOW!6 6 WGN-A CITY
Varsity
307 239 Funny Home Videos Mother
THIS TV 19 25
USD497 26
›››› The Song of Bernadette (1943) Jennifer Jones, Charles Bickford.
Rules
Parks
›› Tender Is the Night
City Bulletin Board, Commission Meetings
City Bulletin Board
School Board Information
School Board Information
ESPN 33 206 140 aMLB Baseball Pittsburgh Pirates at St. Louis Cardinals. (Live)
SportsCenter (N)
SportsCenter (N)
ESPN2 34 209 144 aLittle League
NFL Live
Baseball Tonight
FSM
36 672
World Armwrestling Rookie
Rookie
aMLB Baseball Detroit Tigers at Kansas City Royals. (Live)
NBCSN 38 603 151 Poker FNC
Poker
CNBC 40 355 208 Shark Tank
Royals
Big 12
Bull Riding
Poker
Poker
Hannity (N)
The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File
Shark Tank
Make Me a
Shark Tank
Shark Tank
Rachel Maddow
The Last Word
All In With Chris
Rachel Maddow
39 360 205 The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File (N)
MSNBC 41 356 209 All In With Chris
Poker
CNN
44 202 200 Anderson Cooper
Anthony Bourd.
CNN Tonight
Anderson Cooper
Anthony Bourd.
TNT
45 245 138 Castle
Castle
Castle
Major Crimes
CSI: NY
USA
46 242 105 Law & Order: SVU
Suits “Mea Culpa”
Mr. Robot (N)
Mod Fam Mod Fam Suits “Mea Culpa”
A&E
47 265 118 Duck D.
Duck D.
Duck D.
Wahl
Donnie
Lachey’s Duck D.
Duck D.
Duck D.
Duck D.
TRUTV 48 246 204 Carbon
Carbon
Carbon
Carbon
Carbon
Fame
Hack
Carbon
Carbon
Office
Conan
Hack
AMC
50 254 130 ››› 300 (2007, Action) Gerard Butler.
TBS
51 247 139 Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Conan (N)
BRAVO 52 237 129 Flipping Out HIST
I have talked to Jeremy (Farmer), and I do not know the answer to (whether he plans to stay on the commission).”
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A
— City Commissioner Mike Amyx
Commissioner Mike Amyx was the only commissioner to say he had spoken directly with Farmer since the news of his resignation from Just Food, but he said he did not know whether Farmer plans to stay on the commission. “I have talked to Jeremy, and I do not know the answer to that,” Amyx said. City Attorney Toni Wheeler said the process for resignation would be for the commissioner resigning to inform the governing body in writing. The remaining commissioners would then vote in a public meeting on whether to accept the resignation. Near the end of Tuesday’s meeting, commissioners met for about 30 minutes in a closed-door executive session with Wheeler to discuss legal issues that were subject to attorney-client privilege. But commissioners did not say whether those issues were related to Farmer’s status as mayor or to some other legal matter. Under Lawrence’s form of government, the mayor chairs commission meetings and is authorized to sign documents that require a mayor’s signature, but otherwise has no day-to-day administrative duties. City codes provide that vacancies are filled by appointment and require a majority vote of the remaining commissioners. In the event of a tie vote, the city attorney would cast the deciding vote. Those codes also specify that if the mayor is absent or otherwise unable to fulfill the duties of the job, the vice mayor serves as “acting mayor” and is authorized to perform all of the duties of the mayor.
City budget Tuesday’s commission meeting itself was relatively brief, with final passage of the 2016 budget the only significant item on the agenda. Normally, the second and final reading of an ordinance would be placed on the consent agenda and would be voted on without discussion. But Commissioner Stuart Boley acknowledged there had been some controversy over a last-minute change that he spearheaded a week earlier, after the public hearing on the budget had closed, which involved shifting $100,000 from a reserve fund and allocating it for a Lawrence Housing Authority transitional housing program. “Before the public hearing on Aug. 4, I mentioned that I had something to add and was asked by the commission and staff to hold the item until later in the evening,” Boley said in a prepared statement. “I believe that the process we followed on Aug. 4 was appropriate. However, due to concerns that were expressed since our last meeting, I requested that the second reading of the ordinance be a regular agenda item, and I welcome all citizens’ comments on our 2016 budget.” Boley had urged the $100,000 transfer as part of an effort to reduce the homeless population at the Lawrence Community Shelter, which received emergency funding last month from both the city and county to keep it financially solvent and prevent immediate cutbacks in staff and services. Boley and Amyx both stated that the money would not be disbursed
to the Housing Authority until a specific plan was in place specifying how the money will be used and how many people will be served through the program. Commissioner Matthew Herbert said he and Amyx had spoken after last week’s meeting and agreed there should be some limitation on the amount of funding per bedroom in the project. “I’m a little bit leery of the notion of using that $100,000 for the benefit of only three families or four families,” Herbert said. Also during the meeting, while commissioners were in executive session, East Lawrence resident K.T. Walsh handed out a written statement, signed by six other neighborhood residents, demanding that images and descriptions of themselves, their property and their artwork be removed from all material being used to promote the East Ninth Project, arguing that they do not want to be portrayed as supporters of the project. In other business, the commission: l Deferred action on three proposed zoning changes related to a commercial and residential development around 6300 W. Bob Billings Parkway. l Conducted a public hearing and approved the vacation of the east 15 feet of the 30-foot drainage easement at 109 Fall Ridge Lane, as requested by property owner Jason Todd Construction LLC. l And adopted a resolution setting a public hearing for Sept. 22 to consider ordering the house at 912 Chalk Hill Court to be repaired or demolished.
DATEBOOK ters of Douglas County volunteer information, Red Dog’s Dog Days noon, United Way Buildworkout, 6 a.m., Lawing, 2518 Ridge Court. rence High School, 1901 Lawrence Public Louisiana St. Library Book Van, 1-2 1 Million Cups prep.m., Babcock Place, sentation, 9-10 a.m., 1700 Massachusetts St. Cider Gallery, 810 PennClinton Parkway sylvania St. Nursery Farmers Lawrence Public Market, 4:30-6:30 p.m., Library Book Van, 9-10 Clinton Parkway Nursery, a.m., Brandon Woods, 4900 Clinton Parkway. 1501 Inverness Drive. Steak/Salmon Night, Lawrence Public 5-7:30 p.m., Eagles Library Book Van, 10:30Lodge, 1803 W. Sixth St. 11:30 a.m., Arbor Court, Douglas County Com1510 St. Andrews Drive. mission meeting, 6 p.m., “Welcome to MediDouglas County Courtcare” Info Session, house, 1100 Massachunoon, Lawrence Senior setts St. Center, 745 Vermont St. Red Dog’s Dog Days Big Brothers Big Sisworkout, 6 p.m., Law-
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54 269 120 American Pickers
SYFY 55 244 122 ››‡ The Crazies
››› 300 (2007, Action) Gerard Butler.
Flipping Out (N)
Million Dollar
American Pickers
The Woodsmen (N) An Inside Look
Happens Flipping Out
›› Straw Dogs (2011, Drama) James Marsden.
Million
American Pickers
›››‡ Se7en (1995) Brad Pitt.
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
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››‡ Oblivion (2013) Tom Cruise, Morgan Freeman.
››‡ Oblivion (2013) Tom Cruise. South Pk South Pk South Pk South Pk Key Why? Daily Nightly At Mid. Key Stewarts-Ham. Stewarts-Ham. Stewarts-Ham. E! News (N) I Am Cait Reba Reba Cheerleaders Dog and Beth Cops Cops Cops Cops Going RV Going RV Going RV Going RV Going RV Going RV Going RV Going RV Going RV Going RV Movie TBA Nellyville Wendy Williams Dating Naked Dating Naked (N) Twinning (N) Candidly Dating Naked Twinning Thrill Fa. Thrill Fa. Food Paradise (N) Food Paradise ManManFood Paradise Leah Re Leah Re Leah Re Leah Re I Am I Am Leah Re Leah Re I Am I Am Little Women: LA Little Women: LA Terra Terra Terra Terra Little Women: LA Betrayed (2014) Amanda Schull. The Preacher’s Mistress (2013) Betrayed (2014) Cutthroat Kitchen Cutthroat Kitchen Carnival Beach Burgers Diners Cutthroat Kitchen Property Brothers Buying and Selling Hunters Hunt Intl Property Brothers Buying and Selling Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Gaffigan Impastor Friends Friends Friends Kirby Mighty Lab Rats Gamer’s Kirby Lab Rats Doctor Who Kirby Mighty Best Fr. Best Fr. ››‡ Monte Carlo (2011) Selena Gomez. I Didn’t K.C. Even Stevens King/Hill King/Hill Burgers Cleve American American Fam Guy Fam Guy Chicken Aqua Fast N’ Loud Airplane Repo (N) Land Rush (N) Airplane Repo Land Rush Kevin Kevin Job or No Job (N) Pretty Little Liars The 700 Club Princess Bride Rocky Mountain Rocky Mountain Southern Justice Rocky Mountain Southern Justice The Waltons Middle Middle Middle Middle Golden Golden Golden Golden Last Frontier Alaskan Bush Ice Lake Rebels Last Frontier Alaskan Bush Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond Gaffigan Impastor The Exes King King King Trinity Turning Prince By Faith Praise the Lord (N) (Live) Graham Duplantis EWTN Live (N) News Rosary Religious Vaticano Catholic Women Daily Mass - Olam Taste Taste Taste Taste Cooking Cooking Taste Taste Taste Taste America at War Islam Soldier Phones War Islam Soldier Girls Football Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. Capitol Hill 48 Hours on ID (N) Blood Relatives (N) Swamp Murders (N) 48 Hours on ID Blood Relatives Almost, Away Almost, Away Manhunt: Kill Almost, Away Almost, Away 20/20 on OWN 20/20 on OWN (N) Dateline on OWN 20/20 on OWN 20/20 on OWN Earth Earth Secret Earth Secret Earth Secret Earth Secret Earth ››› Home From the Hill (1960) Robert Mitchum. ›› Thunder Road (1958) Yakuza ››‡ Godzilla (2014)
True Detective Hard Knocks Real Time, Bill Legend-Herc Strike Back ›› The Purge: Anarchy Strike Back Hannibal ››‡ Last Vegas (2013) Ray Donovan South Park: Bigger Dice ››› Twister (1996) Helen Hunt. ›› Ghost Rider (2007) Nicolas Cage. ›‡ End of Days ›››‡ Foxcatcher ››› 22 Jump Street (2014) Jonah Hill. Power “Time’s Up” ››‡ Bamboozled
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Source Bloomberg USA TODAY
Trump still leading in Iowa Billionaire, Bush take hits; Rubio, Fiorina get boost from debate Susan Page
This is an edition of USA TODAY provided for your local newspaper. An expanded version of USA TODAY is available at newsstands or by subscription, and at usatoday.com.
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USA SNAPSHOTS©
Drivers’ lapse People most often leave coffee and shopping bags atop their car, but
6%
misplace something key there: their car keys.
Source Hankook Tire Gauge Index survey of 1,031 adults TERRY BYRNE AND JANET LOEHRKE, USA TODAY
GEORGE KRAYCHYK, NBC UNIVERSAL
USA TODAY
Businessman Donald Trump continues to lead the Republican field in Iowa, a new Suffolk University Poll finds, but his performance in last week’s opening debate has dented his standing and cost him ground in the state that will hold the first presidential contest next year. Also hit: former Florida governor Jeb Bush, who sank to seventh place from third in the RealClearPolitics average of Iowa polls over the past month. He now narrowly trails former CEO Carly Fiorina in the key early state. Florida Sen. Marco Rubio scores the biggest boost, rising from eighth to third. The survey of 500 Iowans likely to participate in the Republican caucuses, taken by landline and cellphone from Friday through Monday, is one of the first quantitative measures of the impact of Thursday night’s debate in Cleveland, hosted by Fox News and Facebook. It comes as the repercussions of the encoun-
ter, which drew 24 million viewers nationwide, are still being IOWA GOP sorted out in a contest where support is scattered. If the Republican caucuses were One in five remains undecided held today, who would be your in the new Iowa poll. Among first choice to win the GOP those with a preference, Trump nomination for president? leads the field at 17%, followed by Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker at Donald Trump 17% 12% and Rubio at 10%. The survey’s margin of error is Scott Walker 12% +/-4.4 percentage points. The Suffolk survey has warning Marco Rubio 10% signs for Trump. By 2-1, 55%Ben Carson 9% 23%, those surveyed say watching Trump in the debate made them 7% Ted Cruz feel less comfortable with him as Carly Fiorina 7% a candidate for president. A 54% 5% majority also reject Trump’s Jeb Bush complaints that he was treated 3% John Kasich unfairly by the Fox News anchors Mike Huckabee 2% who served as moderators. And a third of Iowa RepubliRand Paul 2% cans say Trump — enmeshed in a Chris Christie 2% post-debate contretemps over his comments about Fox News anUndecided 20% chor Megyn Kelly — “doesn’t Source Suffolk University Poll of 500 show appropriate respect for likely Republican caucus-goers in Iowa, women.” A larger number, 46%, taken Friday through Monday. Margin side with the real-estate mogul of error ±4.4 percentage points. KARL GELLES, USA TODAY and reality-TV star, saying criticism of his comments about women “are just examples of political correctness.” Among those who watched the afternoon debate, more than eight in 10 say Fiorina impressed them the most.
Dow down 212 points, oil hits a 6-year low Adam Shell and Chris Woodyard USA TODAY
Stocks tumbled and oil hit a six-year low Tuesday after China unexpectedly reduced the value of its currency in an effort to provide a boost to its lagging economy by making its goods more affordable to foreign buyers. The move worried Wall Street because it suggests the world’s second-biggest economy might be in worse shape than believed. Over the weekend, China reported that its exports fell more than 8% in July. While a weaker yuan makes Chinese exporters’ products more affordable abroad, it makes U.S. goods exported to China more expensive. That could crimp sales and profits of U.S. companies such as Apple, Yum Brands and Qualcomm that do business in China. In short, a weaker yuan makes U.S. products less competitive in China. The Dow Jones industrial average fell more than 260 points before trimming its losses to close down 212 points, or 1.2%, at 17,403. The weakness on Wall Street followed Monday’s 242point Dow rally, which snapped a seven-session losing streak. “China’s currency decision (is) drilling the Dow,” Alex Eppstein, analyst at Schaeffer’s Investment Research, warned clients. However, the stock sell-off was minor compared with what happened to oil. The price of benchmark U.S. crude tumbled 4.2% to $43.08 a barrel — the lowest since March 2009 — on concerns about global demand. China “has been the sputtering engine that has caused the commodity sell-off this spring and summer,” says Tom Kloza, global head of energy analysis for the Oil Price Information Service. Adding to oil’s woes Tuesday: news that OPEC’s production increased in July. Wall Street is hotly debating whether the currency move by China, seen as a sign that the government is concerned about weak growth, will give the U.S. Federal Reserve pause when it comes to raising interest rates. A weaker yuan translates into a stronger dollar, which could drag down U.S. growth. If the Fed goes through with its first rate hike since 2006, perhaps as early as next month, it will cause the dollar to strengthen more, creating a further drag on U.S. exporters and domestic growth. Though the devaluation rattled markets, some experts say there’s no reason to overreact. Paul Hickey, co-founder of Bespoke Investment Group, views the move by China as “incremental” given the rapid rise of the U.S. dollar over the last year. What’s more, he says, “1% of U.S. economic growth is exported to China,” which makes it a “tiny sliver” of total U.S. economic activity.
Suspected Russian missile parts found at MH17 crash site Kim Hjelmgaard USA TODAY
Investigators said Tuesday that suspected Russian missile parts were found near where Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 crashed in eastern Ukraine last year. “The parts are of particular interest to the criminal investigation as they can possibly provide more information about who was involved in the crash of MH17,” the Joint Investigation Team said
in a statement with the Dutch Safety Board. The development marks the first time investigators confirmed potential physical evidence related to the July 17, 2014, crash that killed all 298 people on board. Investigators nevertheless stopped short of linking the crash of MH17 to the new find, which the team and board said contains components possibly from a Russian-made Buk surface-to-air missile system. “At present the conclusion can-
not be drawn that there is a causal connection between the discovered parts and the crash of Flight MH17,” the team wrote. The investigation team is made up of representatives of the Netherlands, Ukraine, Malaysia, Australia, the United Kingdom, United States and Russia. MH17 crashed on territory in Ukraine held by Russian-backed rebels while it was en route from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. The rebels and Ukrainian government forces blamed
BULENT KILIC, AFP/GETTY IMAGES
A piece of wreckage from Malaysia Airlines Flight MH17, taken July 20, 2014, lies in a field in the Donetsk region in Ukraine. each other for shooting down the plane, with the latter accusing the rebels of using a Buk missile system supplied by Moscow. Both sides deny responsibility, and Russia also disputes the alle-
gations from Kiev. A full report on the criminal investigation into the crash is due by the end of the year. The Dutch Safety Board also plans to release a report, likely in October.
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L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 12, 2015
VOICES
As Cuban mystique fades, a flag rises Alan Gomez @alangomez USA TODAY
HAVANA Just eight months ago, traveling to Cuba was still a mystery to most Americans. Before embarking on my reporting trips down here, my family — Cuban Americans who fled Fidel Castro’s revolution more than 50 years ago — would panic and worry about my getting harassed, arrested or worse. My friends would plead for Cuban rum and cigars as if they were forbidden treasures. I can’t count the times people told me they could fit in my suitcase. But ever since President Obama and Cuban President Raúl Castro announced Dec. 17 that the two countries would re-establish diplomatic relations after a 50-year freeze, the rush to the island has been overwhelming. Senators and representatives from both parties have come down to meet with Cuban government officials. Business people from agricultural states in the Midwest, tech hubs in California and travel companies from New York to Miami have flooded the island. Conan O’Brien danced the salsa (or at least tried to) down the streets of Old Havana. Paris Hilton posed with giant cigars in Havana nightclubs and atop the hotel operated by her greatgrandfather, now known as the Habana Libre. Even the ultimate
JACK GRUBER, USA TODAY
Workers paint and clean El Monte de las Banderas — or “the mountain of flags” — monument directly in front of the U.S. Embassy in Havana. American invention of reality TV has invaded: The Discovery Channel is running a series called Cuban Chrome, which focuses on islanders struggling to maintain the classic American cars that have become synonymous with Havana’s streets. In the days leading up to my trip, rather than fret about my well-being, my family asked about my travel schedule the same way they have asked about a work trip to Washington. “Want me to pick you up at the airport?” had replaced “Make sure you’re not being followed!” One friend mentioned that he already had plenty of Havana Club
By the end of this week at a spot that for so long was the site of anti-American protests, where 148 black flags once blocked a view of the U.S. building, a giant American flag will wave.
rum, so no need to bring him more. When I went to a drugstore to print passport pictures, the clerk ended up telling me about his buddy who was already in Cuba taking in the sights. By the time I landed in Havana late Monday, the novelty of the trip was completely gone. As I stood in the baggage claim area waiting to get my suitcase, there was a line of CNN crewmembers picking up their camera gear, followed by a line of an NBC crew picking up theirs. While I used to look forward to disconnecting from email during my stay in Cuba, now I’m constantly checking it to confirm appointments with
people making their way down. It's true you still need to jump through some hoops to travel to Cuba. Americans need to certify that they are traveling under one of 12 categories approved by the U.S. government, including trips for humanitarian, educational and business purposes. Many end up using travel agencies that arrange trips that comply with the regulations set forth by the U.S. Treasury Department. Travel to Cuba strictly as a tourist is still forbidden by the U.S. embargo, but many still do so by flying through third countries, such as Mexico or Canada. By the end of this week, I’ll watch Secretary of State John Kerry preside over a ceremony to raise the U.S. flag at a spot that for so long was the site of antiAmerican protests. Where 148 black flags once blocked a view of the U.S. building, a giant American flag will wave. None of this is to say that the new approach to Cuba will work. Many Americans still shudder at the idea of working with the Cuban government, the same one that imprisoned more than 100 protesters over the past week and still controls the most basic aspects of its people’s lives. We still can’t use American credit and debit cards, you still can’t hop on a travel website and book your flight to Havana, and the economic embargo against the island still stands. Still, times have clearly changed. Who wants a cigar? Gomez is a Miami-based correspondent for USA TODAY
Coalition says Iraqis close to taking Ramadi Jim Michaels USA TODAY
Iraq forces have surrounded the city of Ramadi and are preparing for a final assault in what will be the first significant test of American-trained forces against the Islamic State, according a senior official with the U.S.-led coalition that is supporting the mission. Iraqi forces plan to tighten a cordon around the city to cut escape routes before launching a final operation to clear militants out of the city, according to the senior official, who closely monitors the fighting. He asked not to be named because he is not authorized to speak publicly about the operation. The official said that airstrikes by the coalition and Iraqi ground operations have severely weakened Islamic State forces inside the city. That may allow Iraqi forces to avoid a prolonged street battle with major casualties that military planners have feared. Coalition officials declined to say when a final assault may take place. Temperatures in Ramadi and surrounding Anbar province can climb to 120 degrees in the summer and the logistics of providing enough water and other supplies to sustain a major offensive are complex. WASHINGTON
EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY
An Iraqi inspects a car damaged Sunday in an apparent airstrike by the Iraqi army on Fallujah, Iraq. “It’s a slow, methodical, deliberate advance on the city,” said Navy Cmdr. Elissa Smith, a Pentagon spokeswoman. The Iraqis have assembled a force of about 10,000 troops, including about 3,000 trained by American advisers. The offensive force includes about 500 U.S.trained tribal fighters, the Pentagon said. It is not clear how many militants the Iraqis will face in the city. Estimates by the coalition have ranged from several hundred to 2,000. Despite being outnumbered, the militants’ defensive posture
provides an advantage: They can fire from bunkers and other concealed locations, and it will be difficult for the coalition to bombard the militants, who can hide in an urban setting. The Sunni city once had 400,000 residents, but most civilians fled when it fell to the Islamic State in May. Iraq’s government launched an offensive to take the city a month ago. The official said military pressure seems to be causing a split between local Islamic State fighters and non-Iraqi leaders, some of whom are fleeing the city. In June, President Obama authorized an additional 450 U.S. ad-
visers for Iraq, mainly to assist in retaking Ramadi and the surrounding Anbar Province. The total number of U.S. troops there is about 3,200. The U.S. troops are banned from accompanying Iraqi forces into combat but have been training and advising Iraqi forces from large bases. Ismael Alsodani, a retired Iraqi brigadier general who served as a military attache in Washington, said the Ramadi offensive is progressing, but has been delayed by a number of factors, including a slow response by the coalition to Iraqi requests for airstrikes.
IN BRIEF NTSB: TRUCKER FATIGUED, SPEEDING IN MORGAN CRASH
The crash that injured comedian Tracy Morgan was caused by a fatigued truck driver speeding along the New Jersey Turnpike without his automatic-braking system engaged, federal investigators ruled Tuesday. The National Transportation Safety Board found that the WalMart truck that struck the limo carrying Morgan was traveling 65 mph before the collision near Cranbury, N.J., in a construction zone where the speed limit was 45 mph in the early hours of June 7, 2014. In addition, driver Kevin Roper, 35, had commuted overnight 800 miles from Georgia before picking up his load in Smyrna, Del., and pushed ahead despite having 57 more hours to deliver the load, the board found. — Bart Jansen NO BOND FOR PAIR ACCUSED OF TRYING TO JOIN ISIL
In a federal court hearing Tuesday for a Mississippi couple accused of trying to join the Islamic State, evidence was pre-
The Pentagon has said it acts cautiously to avoid civilian casualties, but the strikes have been effective. More than 115 coalition airstrikes have targeted militants in Ramadi during the past month, hammering at bunkers and obstacles that militants have built to slow the Iraqi offensive, coalition figures show. Most ground forces used in the Ramadi offensive are Iraqi army and tribal fighters. Washington convinced Baghdad not to use Shiite militias out of concerns that they would alienate the city’s largely Sunni population, Alsodani said. But that decision could put the Iraqis at a military disadvantage, Alsodani said, since it deprives them of a significant number of troops. “It’s premature to say that the operations have achieved the aims,” he said. Some analysts said coalition predictions have proven overly optimistic in the past. “Since 2003, U.S. officials have been predicting enormous successes in Mosul or Tikrit, for example, only to be humbled by reality,” said Ali Khedery, a former special assistant to five U.S. ambassadors in Iraq, referring to other operations in Iraq. “In each case there has been a major setback due to Washington’s fundamental inability to understand or act on the nuances on the ground.” Corrections & Clarifications
material support to the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, a designated foreign terrorist organization. U.S. Magistrate Judge S. Allan Alexander denied bond in day two of the couple’s initial appearance. — Therese Apel, The Clarion-Ledger
BENT BUT NOT BROKEN
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WHITE HOUSE AIDE ARRESTED FOR ASSAULT
BENJAMIN YEH, AFP/GETTY IMAGES
A woman poses Tuesday next to a pair of mailboxes in Taipei, Taiwan, that were reportedly battered by the winds of Typhoon Soudelor over the weekend. The mailboxes have become an unlikely attraction, drawing thousands of snap-happy visitors. sented suggesting the woman, a daughter of a Vicksburg, Miss., police officer, was the alleged mastermind behind the plan to leave the United States. Jaelyn Delshaun Young, 20, and Muhammad Oda Dakhlalla, 22, of Starkville, Miss., were ar-
rested at Golden Triangle Airport in Columbus on Saturday. Investigators said they were bound for Atlanta, but eventually for Syria, where they hoped to join Islamic State. They were charged with conspiring and attempting to provide
A senior White House aide has been charged with assault in a Washington suburb after reportedly threatening and shooting at her boyfriend, a U.S. Capitol Police officer. Barvetta Singletary, 37, is a special assistant to the president who handles President Obama’s relations with the House of Representatives. Police in Prince George’s County, Md., say Singletary and the unnamed officer had a domestic dispute Friday morning in the suburb of Upper Marlboro when she grabbed his duty weapon out of a bag and fired one round into the floor. No one was injured, police said. — Gregory Korte
PRESIDENT AND PUBLISHER
John Zidich
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Kevin Gentzel
7950 Jones Branch Dr., McLean, Va. 22108, 703-854-3400 Published by Gannett The local edition of USA TODAY is published daily in partnership with Gannett Newspapers Advertising: All advertising published in USA TODAY is subject to the current rate card; copies available from the advertising department. USA TODAY may in its sole discretion edit, classify, reject or cancel at any time any advertising submitted. National, Regional: 703-854-3400 Reprint permission, copies of articles, glossy reprints: www.GannettReprints.com or call 212-221-9595 USA TODAY is a member of The Associated Press and subscribes to other news services. USA TODAY, its logo and associated graphics are registered trademarks. All rights reserved.
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USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 12, 2015
NATION/WORLD
West’s mines toxic traps
Last week’s spill that turned river orange reveals dirty secret Trevor Hughes USA TODAY
DOZENS ARRESTED IN FERGUSON PROTESTS
MICHAEL B. THOMAS, AFP/GETTY IMAGES
A woman is detained by police during a protest Monday in Ferguson, Mo. Tuesday was quiet in the wake of Monday’s arrests.
Streets are calm after Monday’s state of emergency taints Brown remembrances Yamiche Alcindor USA TODAY
FERGUSON, MO.
Quiet returned to the streets of this St. Louis County city on Tuesday, hours after more than 20 people were arrested during demonstrations marking the first anniversary of the fatal shooting of Michael Brown. After hundreds of protesters began marching into a street Monday night, police using loudspeakers told them to move out of traffic. When they didn’t comply, officers advanced and took several people into custody. At least one officer also fired pepper spray into the crowd. More arrests followed before protests and the police presence began to diminish at 1 a.m. Tuesday. In St. Louis on Monday, police arrested 57 people during protests outside the Thomas F. Eagleton Courthouse. The demonstrations were part of events dubbed #MoralMonday. Brown, who was black, was 18 years old when he was fatally shot by a white police officer following a confrontation on a Ferguson street Aug. 9, 2014. Brown’s death set off a wave of sometimes violent protests, although a grand jury and a Justice Department probe both found that former officer Darren Wilson used justifiable force in the shooting. During Monday night’s protest, there were no shots fired and no burglaries, looting or property damage, county police spokesman Shawn McGuire said in a statement. No smoke or tear gas was used, and no injuries to police or civilians were reported. St. Louis County Executive Steve Stenger declared a state of emergency earlier Monday after Ferguson protests turned violent Sunday night. “In light of last night’s violence and unrest in the city of Ferguson, and the potential for harm to persons and property, I am exercising my authority as county executive to issue a state of emergency effective immediately,” Stenger said in a statement. “The recent acts of violence will not be tolerated in a community that has worked so tirelessly over
the last year to rebuild and become stronger.” St. Louis County Police Chief Jon Belmar immediately took control of policing in Ferguson. In St. Louis, the protesters arrested outside the courthouse were being processed and released “as quickly as can administratively be accomplished by the United States Marshal Service,” U.S. Attorney Richard Callahan said. Terri Dougherty, a U.S. attor-
“If there’s a silver lining, it’s that people are starting to say, ‘wait a minute.’ ” Roger Flynn, adjunct professor at University of Colorado Law School SCOTT OLSON, GETTY IMAGES
Demonstrators mark the one-year anniversary of the fatal shooting of Michael Brown. The 18-year-old’s death sparked sometimes violent protests last year.
Protesters arrested outside the federal courthouse face charges of unreasonably obstructing the usual use of an entrance and each will be fined $125. ney spokesperson, told USA TODAY that protesters arrested outside the courthouse face charges of unreasonably obstructing the usual use of an entrance and each will be fined $125. Author and activist Cornel West, along with several prominent protesters including DeRay McKesson, 30, and Johnetta Elzie, 26, were arrested. At least three people were shot and four arrested in Ferguson as peaceful Sunday protests became violent overnight into Monday. Belmar said that after a shootout involving at least six people, a suspect ran away but then shot at police who were chasing him. Four detectives shot at the suspect, identified as Tyrone Harris Jr., 18, hitting him several times, according to police. The suspect’s father, Tyrone Harris, told USA TODAY his son was a close friend of Michael Brown. Harris was hospitalized in critical condition. Prosecutors announced 10 charges against him, including four counts of first-degree assault on a police officer. The four officers have been placed on administrative leave.
SILVERTON, COLO. The mining spill that temporarily turned the Animas River bright orange exposed a dirty secret of the West: Tens of thousands of old mines may be leaching toxic waste into the nation’s waterways. Concrete Creek, the stream running through Silverton that bore the brunt of the Gold King Mine blowout, was so acidic even before last week’s spill that fish couldn’t live in it. An EPA assessment this spring called the water “highly toxic to fish.” “This is not just an isolated problem. There are mines like this all over the West,” said Roger Flynn, an adjunct professor at the University of Colorado Law School in Boulder. “If there’s a silver lining, it’s that people are starting to say, ‘wait a minute …’ ”
SCOTT OLSON, GETTY IMAGES
‘Oath Keepers’ take guns to demonstrations Yamiche Alcindor and John Bacon USA TODAY
FERGUSON, MO. An armed group of “Oath Keepers” joined the mix of protesters and police on city streets this week, and neither police nor protesters provided a warm welcome. Oath Keepers describes itself as a “non-partisan association of current and formerly serving military, police and first responders.” The Southern Poverty Law Center describes the group as “fiercely anti-government, militaristic.” Missouri allows people with permits for concealed weapons to carry them openly. St. Louis County Police Chief Jon Belmar called the group’s presence “unnecessary
and inflammatory.” Some protesters took issue with Oath Keepers joining the protest. “You’re going to bring some uncommissioned citizens, white citizens, into a black community like this? It’s disrespectful,” Talal Ahmad, 30, told Reuters news service. “If there were black and brown people ... who showed up in the streets openly carrying assault rifles in paramilitary garb, would they still be received the same way?” Patricia Bynes, Democratic committeewoman of Ferguson Township, told MSNBC. Oath Keepers was founded in 2009 by Stewart Rhodes, an Army veteran and former aide to ex-congressman Ron Paul. The group did not immediately respond to a request from USA TODAY for comment.
Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper, a former geologist, speaking Tuesday, called on state and federal governments to aggressively tackle the “legacy of pollution” left by mining. Hickenlooper on Monday declared the Animas spill a disaster area, freeing up $500,000 in emergency state funding. That’s welcome news to Flynn, who directs the Western Mining Action Project, an environmental advocacy group that uses the court system to force miners to clean up their sites, and the federal government to enforce the Clean Water Act. Many mines across the West were dug in the 1800s or early 1900s, a time when the nation’s leaders encouraged rapid western settlement through mining and logging. In many cases, mining companies simply abandoned “played out” mines, leaving them to leach contaminants in the water. Many Colorado rocks contain naturally occurring sulfur, which can react with rainwater to make sulfuric acid, which then leaches even more chemicals out of the rock. To meet modern environmental regulations, many mines now must build on-site water treatment plants that can cost $1 million a year to operate, Flynn said. Flynn said EPA officials have appropriately apologized for causing the Gold King spill, but have not addressed what he sees as the real problem: The mine’s owner allowed millions of gallons of highly contaminated water to accumulate inside. EPA officials say they were testing for contamination when they accidentally unleashed the spill that polluted the water for hundreds of miles downstream.
Federal report: 7 million fewer uninsured this year Laura Ungar USA TODAY
The number of Americans without health insurance dropped from 36 million last year to 29 million in the first quarter of this year, according to the latest in a string of reports showing uninsured rates are on the decline. The newest report, to be released Wednesday by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s National Center for Health Statistics, contains early estimates from the National Health Interview Survey based on
data for 26,121 people from across the nation. The estimate of 29 million, which represents 9.2% of Americans, reflects the porAFP/GETTY IMAGES tion of responObama dents who reported being uninsured at the time of the interview. “Our report doesn’t address any reasons” behind the drop in the uninsured, lead author Robin Cohen says. “We’re a policy-neutral research organization.”
“Certainly, the biggest thing that’s going on is the ACA.” Rachel Garfield, a senior researcher at the Kaiser Family Foundation
Research published last month in the Journal of the American Medical Association analyzed 2012-15 results of the GallupHealthways Well-Being Index and found a 7.9 percentage point drop in the number of people who reported being uninsured since the Affordable Care Act took effect. And a report released
in March by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services said the number of adults without insurance fell 16.5 million from five years ago. “Certainly, the biggest thing that’s going on is the ACA,” says Rachel Garfield, a senior researcher and expert on the uninsured at the Kaiser Family Foundation. “The reason we know that is that groups being targeted by the ACA are seeing the sharpest declines.” Wednesday’s report details insurance gains for various groups in the first quarter of this year: uAmong adults 18-64, 18.1% had public coverage, 70.4% had
private coverage and 13% were uninsured. The uninsured rate was down from 16.3% in 2014. uAmong children, 4.6% were uninsured — less than half the 1997 rate of 13.9% — and 40.4% had public coverage. Just over 56% were covered by private plans, up slightly from 2013, reversing a 14-year trend. uSince 2013, poor and nearpoor children and working-age adults saw the biggest drops in their uninsured rates. And working-age adults who live in states that expanded Medicaid under the ACA were less likely to be uninsured than residents of non-expansion states.
NEWS MONEY SPORTS 32 charged in $100M trading scheme LIFE AUTOS TRAVEL 4B
L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 12, 2015
Traders allegedly gave hackers ‘shopping list’ of insider info to steal Kevin McCoy USA TODAY
Federal authorities Tuesday unsealed charges against 32 international traders and computer hackers who allegedly reaped more than $100 million in illegal profits by gaining access to pending corporate announcements and trading on the news before it was made public. In a scheme that married Wall Street insider trading with global hacking, newly unsealed federal court indictments alleged mem-
bers of the group broke into the online networks of Marketwired, PR Newswire Association and Business Wire, services that receive, store and issue news releases about companies’ pending earnings results, merger plans and other corporate news. Trader conspirators in some cases allegedly directed the hackers to what information they wanted, providing “shopping lists” of companies expected to issue news releases about potential market-moving news. Once inside the computer networks, the hackers allegedly stole more than 150,000 press releases about not-yet-public announcements by Caterpillar, Panera Bread and dozens of others. The hackers, in turn, allegedly
Hackers nabbed more than 150,000 press releases about not-yet-public announcements, the indictment alleges.
made and posted video tutorials that instructed their trader coconspirators and others how to gain access to the stolen press releases that were posted on private, overseas computer servers. Alleged conspirators were charged in criminal indictments handed up in federal courts in
Newark and New York’s Brooklyn. The Securities and Exchange Commission filed parallel civil charges in Newark federal court. “The hackers were relentless, and they were patient,” often keeping secret access to the news wires for years, said New Jersey U.S. Attorney Paul Fishman. SEC Chair Mary Jo White called the case “unprecedented,” based on the scope of the hacking, the number of traders involved, the securities unlawfully traded and the profit volume. “We’ve seen an evolution in cybercrime,” said Craig Newman, a cybersecurity specialist at the Patterson Belknap Webb & Tyler LLP law firm in New York City. “Now, the line has been crossed into insider trading, and the al-
leged use of non-public, material information to game the financial markets.” The hackers charged in the New Jersey criminal case are Ivan Turchynov, 27, and Oleksandr Ieremenko, 24, residents of Ukraine. The traders include Arkadiy Dubovoy, 51, and his son, Igor Dubovoy, 28, both of the Alpharetta, Ga., area, and a second relative, Pavel Dubovoy, 32, who lives in Ukraine. The Brooklyn indictment charged Vitaly Korchevsky, 50, of Glen Mills, Pa., Vladislav Khalupsky, 45, of Brooklyn and Ukraine, Leonid Momotok, 47, of Suwanee, Ga., and Alexander Garkusha, 47, of Cummings and Alpharetta, Ga. The SEC’s court complaint charged 32 individuals in all.
MONEYLINE
APPLE POISED FOR PAIN IN CHINA
BUFFETT REBUFFS TALK OF MONDELEZ BUYOUT Warren Buffett tossed cold water on the idea that snack-food giant Mondelez could soon be united with Kraft Foods. In a CNBC interview, the 84-year-old head of Berkshire Hathaway said there’s still too much work to be done on the newly USA TODAY formed Kraft Buffett Heinz Co. to consider a large acquisition like Mondelez, which is valued at $75 billion. “At Kraft Heinz, we have our work cut out for us for the next couple of years,” said Buffett. JAGUAR CHOOSES SLOVAKIA FOR ITS NEW PLANT Jaguar Land Rover has passed over possible plant locations in the U.S. and Mexico and instead announced Tuesday that it has signed a letter of intent to build a new factory in Slovakia. The choice of the city of Nitra in the eastern European nation comes as the brand continues to grow. It says it now employs 36,000 worldwide, up by 20,000 in the past past five years. “With its established premium automotive industry, Slovakia is an attractive potential development opportunity for us,” says Ralf Speth, CEO of Jaguar Land Rover, in a statement. The factory is expected to open in 2018. FRONTIER AIRLINES DITCHES TOLL-FREE PHONE HELP Frontier Airlines is the latest to do away with its toll-free 800 number. The carrier told The Denver Post that discontinuing the tollfree number will save it $160,000 a month — or close to $2 million a year. Spokesman Jim Faulkner says it will help keep its fares low.
DOW JONES INDUSTRIAL AVG. 17,600
9:30 a.m.
17,615
17,550 17,500
-212.33 4:00 p.m.
17,450
17,403
17,400 17,350 TUESDAY MARKETS INDEX
Nasdaq composite S&P 500 T- note, 10-year yield Oil, light sweet crude Euro (dollars per euro) Yen per dollar
CLOSE
CHG
5036.79 2084.07 2.14% 43.08$ $1.1035 125.15
y 65.01 y 20.11 y 0.09 y 1.88 x 0.0015 x 0.54
SOURCES USA TODAY RESEARCH, MARKETWATCH.COM
USA SNAPSHOTS©
Not fast & furious
11%
think elderly drivers are more dangerous than drunken drivers
Source Caring.com survey of 1,000 adults JAE YANG AND PAUL TRAP, USA TODAY
SALES EXPOSURE IN CHINA
But sales ding may be offset by lower production costs Kaja Whitehouse @kajawhitehouse USA TODAY
U
.S. companies that rely heavily on sales to China, including Apple and fastfood chain Yum Brands, could soon feel the pain of China’s move to weaken its currency. China’s central bank Tuesday devalued the nation’s tightly controlled currency, known as the renminbi (RMB) or the yuan, in response to the country’s economic slowdown. The People’s Bank of China called the 1.9% cut a one-time adjustment. But the surprise move pushed stocks down amid concerns that it will hurt U.S. companies, like Apple, that have been increasingly peddling products to the world’s most populous nation. Under CEO Tim Cook, China has become Apple’s largest revenue source after its Americas region, which includes the U.S. In the latest financial quarter ended in June, the iPhone maker said China made up $13.2 billion of its overall $49.6 billion in revenues. That was up 112% from the same quarter in 2014, when China made up just $6.2 billion of Apple’s overall revenue. Yum Brands also has broad exposure to China due to the popularity there of its KFC fast-food chain. About 52% of Yum Brands’ revenue comes from China, according to Goldman Sachs. Baby formula maker Mead Johnson Nutrition derives 31% of its revenue from China, while electric car maker Tesla has been making moves to sell in China after the nation broke a record for car sales in 2013. Wynn Resorts, which runs casinos and hotels, has a massive 83% of its sales exposed to China, Goldman said. Plenty of chipmakers and other tech firms derive a large percent of revenues from China, Goldman Sachs says, including: uChipmaker Qualcomm,
Companies in the S&P 500 overall get about 2% of their revenue from China. Here are 15 companies with the highest level of exposure: Total revenue % revenue Company (ticker) (in billions) from China Skyworks Solutions (SWKS) $2 83% Wynn Resorts (WYNN) $5 70% QUALCOMM (QCOM) $26 61% Broadcom (BRCM) $8 55% Micron (MU) $16 55% NVIDIA (NVDA) $5 54% YUM! Brands (YUM) $13 52% Avago Technologies (AVGO) $4 49% Applied Materials (AMAT) $9 48% Texas Instruments (TXN) $13 44% SanDisk (SNDK) $7 44% Microchip Technology (MCHP) $2 42% Lam Research (LRCX) $5 36% Intel (INTC) $56 36% Mead Johnson Nutrition (MJN) $4 31% SOURCES: COMPANY FILINGS; COMPILED BY GOLDMAN SACHS GLOBAL INVESTMENT RESEARCH
Weaker yuan could stall Fed rate plans Adam Shell USA TODAY
A surprise intervention Tuesday in currency markets by China’s central bank could complicate the U.S. Federal Reserve’s rate-hike plans. Indeed, China’s move to slash the value of its currency by 2% vs. the dollar — its biggest dip since 1994 — could muddle the Federal Reserve’s timetable for interest rate increases. The reason: A weaker yuan could put more upward pressure on an already strong U.S. dollar, which could crimp U.S. economic growth and profits of U.S. companies that do business in China. China’s decision is a bid to boost its flagging economy by making Chinese exports more competitive around the globe. The Fed, which has been preparing Wall Street for its first interest rate increase in nearly a decade amid an improving U.S. economy and labor market, might have to reassess its thinking. The Fed has kept borrowing costs near 0% since late 2008 but now views that rate as too low as the economy is no longer in crisis mode. If the Fed does push forward with rate increases, perhaps as early as next month, it could exacerbate problems by pushing up the value of the dollar further, hurting U.S. competitiveness and creating another headwind for the U.S. economy.
PHILIPPE LOPEZ, AFP/GETTY IMAGES
A pedestrian passes a sign touting the Chinese yuan in Hong Kong on Tuesday.
Wall Street is split on whether the Fed will postpone rate hikes. Some investment strategists say it would behoove the Fed to take a wait-and-see attitude until it has a clearer picture of how turbulence in the currency markets will affect U.S. growth. “China’s move highlights the fragility of the global economy, and the Fed is always inclined toward a ‘safety first’ attitude — so in the absence of any compelling reason to hike rates, this will be just one more reason not to,” says Donald Luskin, chief investment officer at TrendMacro. Other Wall Street pros say the Fed’s rate-hike timetable won’t change. “China (will have) no effect” on Fed policy, argues David Kotok, chief investment officer at Cumberland Advisors. “The Fed wants to get away from zero percent. Zero interest rate policy, or ZIRP, is a great distortion, and the Fed knows it has to stop.”
AFP/GETTY IMAGES
which has 61% of its revenue exposed to China. uChipmaker Nvidia gets 54% of its revenue from China. uChipmaker Intel Corp., with 36% of its revenue from China. For some companies, the negative impact on sales may be offset by lower production costs, said Adolfo Laurenti, chief international economist for Mesirow Financial in Chicago. Apple, for example, assembles many products in China and therefore could benefit from the cheaper yuan.
“Chinese consumers ... have an appetite for American brands. So the adjustment in price won’t deter them that much.” Adolfo Laurenti, Mesirow Financial
Laurenti says he thinks companies with strong enough brands — like Apple — may not be dinged as badly as less popular products because wealthy Chinese consumers may be willing to shell out more for those brands. “Chinese consumers in particular have an appetite for American brands, especially marquee products. So the adjustment in price won’t deter them that much,” Laurenti said. The bigger concern is what the devaluation move suggests about China’s larger economy, said Francisco Torralba, senior economist with Morningstar Investment Management. “My main concern is the depreciation of the RMB is interpreted by markets as a signal that Chinese economy is weakening more than we think,” he said. If that happens, sales to China will be hurt by more than just currency costs, he said. Contributing: Adam Shell
5B
USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 12, 2015
AMERICA’S MARKETS What to watch Adam Shell @adamshell USA TODAY
The Dow Jones industrial average is faring worse than the broader Standard & Poor’s 500stock index in the current stock market funk, prompting one Wall Street strategist to dub the recent blue-chip swoon a “DOWntrend.” What has Paul Hickey at Bespoke Investment Group concerned is the fact the blue-chip Dow’s short-term trend indicator (dubbed the 50-day moving average) has crossed below its longerterm trend line, or 200-day moving average. This is the first time this dreaded “cross” has occurred in 906 trading days, which dates to Dec. 30, 2011. The knee-jerk reaction from Wall Street is to view this chart pattern as a bad sign. “This nega-
Facts about America’s investors who use SigFig tracking services:
tive cross is seen by chart watchers and trend followers as a sign of negative momentum,” Hickey said in a report. History backs up that negative spin. After the two dozen other times the market’s average price over the past 50 days dipped below its average 200-day price, the Dow rose 0.3% the next day and 0.7% a week later, Bespoke data show. But the Dow has been higher a month and three months later less than 50% of the time, underperforming all monthly periods by nearly a full percentage point and lagging the threemonth average by 0.3%. The good news: The Dow was up 13% three months after its longest streak without suffering the “crossing” chart pattern, a 1,015-day stretch in 1998. “That was a volatile period, but it was also a great buying opportunity in the near term,” Hickey noted.
-212.33
DOW JONES
Median men and women on SigFig have the same level of exposure to domestic equities.
-20.11
INDUSTRIAL AVERAGE
CHANGE: -1.2% YTD: -420.23 YTD % CHG: -2.4%
CLOSE: 17,402.84 PREV. CLOSE: 17,615.17 RANGE: 17,352.63-17,593.59
NASDAQ
COMP
-65.01
COMPOSITE
CHANGE: -1.3% YTD: +300.74 YTD % CHG: +6.4%
CLOSE: 5,036.79 PREV. CLOSE: 5,101.80 RANGE: 5,013.45-5,089.33
-11.54
CLOSE: 2,084.07 PREV. CLOSE: 2,104.18 RANGE: 2,076.49-2,102.66
RUSSELL 2000 INDEX
CHANGE: -.9% YTD: +6.44 YTD % CHG: +.5%
CLOSE: 1,211.14 PREV. CLOSE: 1,222.68 RANGE: 1,205.87-1,218.67
S&P 500’S BIGGEST GAINERS/LOSERS GAINERS
Company (ticker symbol)
Price
YTD % Chg % Chg
Marathon Petroleum (MPC) 55.86 +2.60 Rating increased at Zacks and liked by Credit Suisse.
+4.9 +23.8
Google C (GOOG) 660.78 +27.05 Rises after creating holding company called Alphabet.
+4.3 +25.5
Google A (GOOGL) Rises along with its sibling shares.
+4.1
+30.1
+.95
+2.5
-27.9 -20.4
690.30 +27.16
Range Resources (RRC) 38.55 Wins another day as it benefits from lower prices.
LOSERS
$ Chg
42.70
+1.02
+2.4
Valero Energy (VLO) Shares reach 2015 high on lower prices.
70.43
+1.43
+2.1 +42.3
PulteGroup (PHM) Shares climb as demand exceeds supply.
20.55
+.43
+2.1
-4.2
Tesoro (TSO) Refiner to benefit on lower prices.
109.43
+2.07
+1.9
+47.2
General Growth Properties (GGP) Hits month’s high as earnings increased.
28.04
+.51
+1.9
-.3
Aimco (AIV) 39.93 Continues strong August as strong market expected.
+.71
+1.8
+7.5
Price
$ Chg
YTD % Chg % Chg
-12.3 -56.3
Symantec (SYMC) Dips as tires to sell Veritas to Carlyle Group.
21.34
-1.57
-6.9
-16.8
CF Industries (CF) Falls after agreed to buy OCI asset for $8 billion.
57.27
-3.68
-6.0
+5.1
Alcoa (AA) Metals are hammered by China’s devaluation.
9.48
-.60
-6.0
-40.0
Harman (HAR) 111.96 -6.29 Erases August’s gain after mixed upgrades/downgrades.
-5.3
+4.9
Apple (AAPL) Weaker yuan to hurt sales.
Yum Brands (YUM) Big China exposure affects negatively. Chesapeake Energy (CHK) Shares fall on lower oil prices. Wynn Resorts (WYNN) Hurt by weak yuan, nears 2015 low.
AGGRESSIVE 100%-plus turnover
5-day avg.: 6-month avg.: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold:
5-day avg.: 6-month avg.: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold:
-2.01 -4.61 AAPL AAPL AAPL
113.49
-6.23
-5.2
+2.8
17.88
-.94
-5.0
-48.9
83.54
-4.28
-4.9
+14.7
8.21
-.42
-4.9
-58.0
99.53
-4.47
-4.3
-33.1
POWERED BY SIGFIG
American Airlines
The air carrier’s traffic in July rose 4.8% vs. July 2014, as passengers flew 21.8 billion miles. That was faster than the 2.2% increase in seats, so the average flight was 87.3% full, vs. 85.1% a year earlier.
Price: $42.70 Chg: $1.02 % chg: 2.4% Day's high/low: $43.42/$41.65
$690.30
$42.70
$50
$30
July 14
4-WEEK TREND
ICU Medical
The medical device maker report- $120 ed second-quarter earnings that Price: $119.50 topped analysts’ expectations. ICU Chg: $18.43 said that after adjusting for one% chg: 18.2% Day's high/low: time items it earned 97 cents a $80 July 14 $123.33/$115.16 share, 28 cents above expectations. Fund, ranked by size Vanguard 500Adml Vanguard TotStIAdm Vanguard TotStIdx Vanguard InstIdxI Vanguard InstPlus Fidelity Contra American Funds GrthAmA m American Funds IncAmerA m American Funds CapIncBuA m Vanguard TotIntl
Ticker SPY UWTI NUGT EEM VXX GDX XLF EWJ QQQ IWM
Chg. -1.82 -0.49 -0.49 -1.80 -1.81 -0.68 -0.32 -0.17 -0.34 -0.24
Close 208.67 1.18 3.96 36.10 16.22 14.52 25.21 12.90 110.14 120.22
4wk 1 +0.5% +0.1% +0.1% +0.5% +0.5% +1.9% +1.6% -0.6% unch. -1.0%
YTD 1 +2.5% +2.6% +2.5% +2.5% +2.5% +7.8% +6.6% -0.3% +1.1% +3.7%
Chg. -1.90 -0.12 +0.21 -0.81 +0.65 +0.23 -0.23 -0.23 -1.43 -1.04
% Chg %YTD -0.9% +1.5% -9.2% -75.9% +5.6% -64.5% -2.2% -8.1% +4.2% -48.5% +1.6% -21.0% -0.9% +1.9% -1.8% +14.8% -1.3% +6.7% -0.9% +0.5%
INTEREST RATES
MORTGAGE RATES
Type Prime lending Federal funds 3 mo. T-bill 5 yr. T-note 10 yr. T-note
Type 30 yr. fixed 15 yr. fixed 1 yr. ARM 5/1 ARM
Close 6 mo ago 3.25% 3.25% 0.14% 0.12% 0.10% 0.01% 1.53% 1.51% 2.14% 1.99%
Close 6 mo ago 3.83% 3.88% 3.00% 3.01% 2.66% 2.82% 3.16% 3.50%
SOURCE: BANKRATE.COM
Commodities Close Prev. Cattle (lb.) 1.50 1.50 Corn (bushel) 3.77 3.90 Gold (troy oz.) 1,107.60 1,104.20 Hogs, lean (lb.) .77 .77 Natural Gas (Btu.) 2.84 2.84 Oil, heating (gal.) 1.56 1.59 Oil, lt. swt. crude (bar.) 43.08 44.96 Silver (troy oz.) 15.28 15.29 Soybeans (bushel) 10.14 10.45 Wheat (bushel) 5.07 5.26
Chg. unch. -0.13 +3.40 unch. unch. -0.03 -1.88 -0.01 -0.31 -0.19
% Chg. unch. -3.5% +0.3% unch. unch. -1.8% -4.2% -0.1% -2.9% -3.5%
% YTD -9.4% -5.2% -6.4% -5.5% -1.6% -15.4% -19.1% -1.8% -0.5% -14.0%
FOREIGN CURRENCIES Currency per dollar British pound Canadian dollar Chinese yuan Euro Japanese yen Mexican peso
Close .6425 1.3124 6.3256 .9062 125.15 16.3094
Prev. .6410 1.3001 6.2142 .9075 124.61 16.1278
6 mo. ago .6559 1.2654 6.2453 .8851 120.29 15.0990
Yr. ago .5958 1.0928 6.1589 .7472 102.18 13.1927
FOREIGN MARKETS Country Frankfurt Hong Kong Japan (Nikkei) London Mexico City
Close 11,293.65 24,498.21 20,720.75 6,664.54 44,379.79
Prev. Change 11,604.78 -311.13 24,521.12 -22.91 20,808.69 -87.94 6,736.22 -71.68 45,320.69 -940.90
%Chg. YTD % -2.7% +15.2% -0.1% +3.8% -0.4% +18.7% -1.1% +1.5% -2.1% +2.9%
SOURCES: MORNINGSTAR, DOW JONES INDEXES, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
IN-DEPTH MARKETS COVERAGE USATODAY.COM/MONEY
Special for USA TODAY
ATHENS Greece and its creditors agreed “in principle” Tuesday on terms for a new multibillion-euro bailout, and Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras called for parliament to vote on it Thursday. The agreement will help Athens avert bankruptcy and keep it in the eurozone economic bloc. It came after marathon overnight talks between Greece and lenders in Athens, the Finance Ministry said, according to Greece’s Anadolu news agency.
“With this deal the Greek economy can return to normality, restarted by an influx of investments while reaffirming its relationship with other European member states,” said Kostas Vergopoulos, economics professor at the University of Paris VIII. “The stability of the Greek economy is a prerequisite for the European and world economy balance.” Greece and its international creditors — the International Monetary Fund, eurozone governments and European Commission — must approve the deal by Aug. 18 to give Greece access to fresh capital in time to make a
Aug. 11
$119.50
Aug. 11
INVESTING ASK MATT
NAV 192.69 52.45 52.43 190.82 190.83 104.62 45.48 21.18 59.23 15.91
1 – CAPITAL GAINS AND DIVIDENDS REINVESTED
ETF, ranked by volume SPDR S&P500 ETF Tr CS VelSh 3xLongCrude Dir Dly Gold Bull3x iShs Emerg Mkts Barc iPath Vix ST Mkt Vect Gold Miners SPDR Financial iShare Japan PowerShs QQQ Trust iShares Rus 2000
Aug. 11
4-WEEK TREND
Blaming currency is sometimes just an excuse Q: Do currency woes really hurt U.S. companies? Matt Krantz
mkrantz@usatoday.com USA TODAY
A: The strong dollar was a top scapegoat for U.S. companies during earnings season. Investors, though, need to be savvy to understand when currency is just an excuse, or a legitimate worry. The strong dollar has created a headwind for U.S. investors, as companies lose money translating weaker local currencies back into strong U.S. dollars. Standard & Poor’s 500 companies have reported more than $240 billion in cumulative foreign exchange losses over the past few quarters, says Credit Suisse in a note to clients. That’s the biggest foreign exchange hit in the past 15 years. To help divert attention from the hit of currency, many companies report “constant currency” statistics. This measure shows how the company’s revenue and profit would have fared had the value of the dollar remains steady. Constant currency is a useful tool for investors, but don’t make the mistake of assuming that’s all that matters. Relying on constant currency can mask some competitive problems a U.S. company is having against competitors, says Credit Suisse. Revenue can decline due to the fact that a company is having difficulty holding the line on prices, but companies can hide that in large part by blaming the currency.
Greece’s parliament asked to vote on new bailout deal Tsipras called for an emergency session of parliament, requesting an end to its summer recess to allow the two-day procedure to ratify the agreement. Greece wants to have the deal approved before a meeting Friday of eurozone finance ministers. Greek Finance Minister Euclid Tsakalotos said his country wants to secure a three-year, 85 billion euro ($93 billion) agreement. The bailout deal faces opposition from many in Tsipras’ own ruling party. The vote is expected to pass easily, but Tsipras may be forced to call elections to secure a sturdy majority government.
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Greece seeks a three-year, $93 billion agreement with its creditors.
$3.4 billion payment to the European Central Bank by Aug. 20. Greece says it needs around $22 billion quickly to repay loans and revive its beleaguered banking sector. The new bailout package would come on top of $265 billion the country received in two prior bailouts since 2010. Olia Vikou, 29, a shop assistant said the new bailout will only mean more demands on Greeks like her who work long hours for meager pay. “This deal confirms that we’re moving from a bad situation to an even worse one,” she said.
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SNEAK PEEK MY BIG FAT GREEK WEDDING 2
HOW WAS YOUR DAY? GOOD DAY DRAKE The Drake mixtape ‘If You’re Reading This, It’s Too Late’ has become 2015’s first release to sell more than 1 million copies, reports ‘BillWIREIMAGE board.’ The album has sold 1.007 million copies, according to Nielsen Music.
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BAD DAY MEGHAN TRAINOR The singer has canceled the rest of her North American tour because of a vocal cord hemorrhage. Trainor wrote on Instagram Tuesday that she also has bronchitis and will need surgery. “I am devastated, scared, and so sorry,” she wrote, noting that she has been coughing a lot, which “pushed it over the edge.” Trainor, who canceled shows last month because of her damaged vocal cords, was expected to play shows on her MTrain Tour through September. “I am determined to do what it takes to get better and come back around stronger than ever,” she wrote. STYLE STAR Emily Ratajkowski sizzled while showing hardly any skin at a photocall for her new film, ‘We Are Your Friends,’ Tuesday in London. The actress and model worked a pair of black suede thighhigh ‘Odille’ boots by Brian Atwood with a fitted white turtleneck minidress. DAVE J HOGAN, GETTY IMAGES
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George Hamilton is 76. Casey Affleck is 40. Cara Delevingne is 23. Compiled by Cindy Clark
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The whole crazy Portokalos clan returns to pick up the story of Ian and Toula (John Corbett and Nia Vardalos, far left).
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Portokalos family gathers for another big reception Sequel is a belated thank-you note to fans, Vardalos says Bryan Alexander @Bryalexand USA TODAY
My Big Fat Greek Wedding started its amazing theater run April 19, 2002. Star and screenwriter Nia Vardalos figures that fans of the romantic comedy started asking for a sequel right around April 21, 2002. “I’d be at Starbucks reaching for the creamer, and people would be like, ‘How about the sequel?’ ” says Vardalos, who concedes it has been a big fat wait. “It has turned to sullen dismay from people. I just felt so bad. I’m a middle child from Canada and an obscenely nice people-pleaser.” Consider the just-wrapped My Big Fat Greek Wedding 2, headed for release March 25, a belated thank you to fans 15 years after production started on the original. The first Greek Wedding was an unlikely success story, going from Vardalos’ screenplay to a onewoman play to championed by married producers Rita Wilson and Tom Hanks. Vardalos earned an Academy Award nomination for screenwriting for the film, which featured non-Greek Ian (John Corbett) marrying into a
GEORGE KRAYCHYK, NBC UNIVERSAL
supremely quirky and close clan of Chicago Greek-Americans. It has grossed nearly $370 million worldwide For the sequel, Vardalos has reunited with her screen husband, along with the entire Greek Wedding family — from proud father Gus Portokalos (Michael Constantine) and cousin Angelo (Joey Fatone) to unfiltered Aunt Voula (Andrea Martin). John Stamos joins the cast in a pivotal cameo appearance. Corbett and Vardalos had strange déjà vu moments standing inside the rebuilt Dancing Zorba’s family restaurant on the Toronto set and outside the same
Aunt Voula (Andrea Martin) is her usual outspoken self, much to Toula’s (Vardalos) amusement/dismay.
“I’d be at Starbucks reaching for the creamer, and people would be like, ‘How about the sequel?’ ” Nia Vardalos
Portokalos house the entire cast visited together after the first script rehearsal. “We’re standing there and John (Corbett) goes, ‘Weren’t we just here six months ago?’ ” Vardalos says. “It was lovely having the whole cast back together. We hugged each other daily and ate a lot. When the candy cart came around, we are scraping off candy. It wasn’t like a normal set where people had to fit into Gucci jeans.” Toula and Ian had settled into life with a daughter at the end of the first Greek Wedding. Vardalos says the new chapter picks up as the couple deals with “angst and anger” from their now teenage daughter — along with their own relationship “lull.” “We have spent all of our time on our daughter and we’ve forgotten to look at each other,” Vardalos says. “It’s pretty typical.” Vardalos is tight-lipped about many plot details, but she promises a “a big fat Greek wedding” and aims to show “the family is back and we’re taking over the street again, as usual.” Corbett says he was nervous when he received the script in the mail. “I thought I’m just going to brace myself and know it’s probably not going to be as good. But I gotta tell you, I finished it with my jaw on the floor. In my opinion, Nia made it funnier than the first one, more touching and better on a lot of levels.”
TELEVISION
Stephen Colbert is ready to take his bow New ‘Late Show’ host is looking forward to being himself for a change
Gary Levin USA TODAY
BEVERLY HILLS Stephen Colbert is preparing his new late-night perch. David Letterman’s Late Show replacement says the network made no demands in mapping his new show, due Sept 8: “CBS has really given me free rein. ... They’ve asked nothing of me (other) than fill an hour of airtime Monday through Friday,” he said at the Television Critics Association gathering. He doesn’t mind. “I love the grind of a daily show. I love the audience,” he says. And he likes guests “who just have something to say, so I can play with them.” George Clooney will be his first, and Kendrick Lamar will be his first musical guest. (New Orleans jazz musician Jon Batiste is his bandleader.) He says he was ready to move on from Comedy Central, feeling after nine years he was ready to show his true self. “One of the reasons I most
character (and) can’t stop laughing, that’s the real Stephen Colbert.” But “I don’t think anyone who watched my old show didn’t know who I was, because that guy was a tool.” He’ll feature a mix of guests, improvised comedy and other elements he’s not ready to reveal. “I won’t know what it’s like until I’m on the board; all I can feel is the swell behind me, and I’m paddling as fast as I can.” He just hopes a certain presiFREDERICK M. BROWN, GETTY IMAGES dential candidate hangs on until Sept. 9: “I want to do jokes on “I don’t think anyone Colbert says Donald Trump so badly, and I looking who watched my old he’s have no venue, so right now I’m forward to show didn’t know just dry-Trumping.” the Late But last week’s heartfelt thanks Show prewho I was, because that guy was a tool.” miere Sept. 9. to Jon Stewart “might be my favorite thing I ever did on the The “I want to do Daily Show: making Jon squirm. I jokes on felt like a rodeo clown, just to want to drop the character was I Donald watch him crumble under somedid everything I could with him Trump so one thanking him. Because he other than having an honest con- badly, and I versation with guests. I had to put have no venue, really would never let us thank him, he was famous (for that).” everything I did” through a filter so right now So he did, moving Stewart to of what “Colbert” would think, I’m just and “now I can just talk to them.” dry-Trumping.” tears: “I will remember that for the If anyone wonders who that is, rest of my life, that look on his face: he says, “the guy who breaks ‘Don’t do it, you’re killing me.’ ”
VENTURA, THREE HOME RUNS PACE ROYALS’ 6-1 WIN. 4C
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Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com/sports l Wednesday, August 12, 2015
KANSAS FOOTBALL
Tom Keegan tkeegan@ljworld.com
Got your back
Changing coaches, Glatczak’s revolving teammates roster step up
The massive overhaul of personnel on the Kansas University football team that has taken place this offseason highlights the danger in universities making coaching changes so frequently. An athlete who fits what one coaching staff is trying to accomplish might be a poor fit for the next staff. Plus, athletes who want to play for the staff that recruited them don’t necessarily want to play for the next. The biggest loss revealed last week was guard Junior Visinia, an anticipated starter. One reason we included him as one of the 25 keys to the season was that it was no easy call that he would fit the quick-strike offense of Rob Likens, which puts a premium on mobile offensive linemen. In keeping with that goal, strength and conditioning coach Je’Ney Jackson makes conditioning a priority, which means he believes in making players do a lot of running, as did current Kansas State strength coach Chris Dawson when Jackson worked for him at KU. That approach meant that for mountain men such as Visinia and right tackle Larry Mazyck to survive the summer they were going to have to run more than they ever had. Coming off a tough spring and a challenge from the staff to turn on the light switch and turn it on now, Mazyck responded. Potential was the word always used with Mazyck. Now he can respond to the word “tough,” as well. Kudos to Mazyck for a strong summer. Visinia will find a school for which he considers himself a better fit. As for the newcomers whose names came out Wednesday, kudos to the staff for being organized and determined enough to bring in so many new bodies, some of whom could help immediately, provided they earn it with strong fall camps. Still, it pays to keep in mind that the best predictor for future performance is past performance as a college football player. That was driven home during the Charlie Weis era. Transfers with history of injury or injury-diminished performance (linebacker Anthony McDonald and tight end Mike Ragone of Notre Dame) brought more of the same. Five-star quarterbacks (Dayne Crist and Jake Heaps) who were given chances to start but were benched at previous schools, followed the same pattern at Kansas. Players who stood out and then transferred (Nick Harwell and Nigel King) remained productive at KU. A look at a few of the more interesting names to join the program recently: Joshua Stanford, wide receiver: Virginia Tech transfer has size (6-foot-1, 200 pounds), speed and a killer play on YouTube in which he breaks three tackles en route to a 32-yard touchdown.
By Matt Tait mtait@ljworld.com
In the hours and days that followed last April’s freak accident during the Kansas University spring football game that left starting quarterback Michael Cummings with a serious knee injury and pushed senior safety Michael Glatczak into the public eye for the wrong reasons, several Jayhawks stepped forward to show they had Glatczak’s back. Defensive coordinator Clint Bowen was not one of them. “I never said a word to him,” Bowen said Tuesday on Day 5 of preseason camp. “It’s football. The young man was playing football and things happen. I didn’t see any point in making a deal about it. Young man didn’t do it on purpose. It was part of the game. It was terrible for Cummings. Glatczak probably felt bad about it, but (he) didn’t need to.” Need to or not, the walkon from Centralia High by way of Butler Community College felt awful about the innocent hit that likely ended Cummings’ season. Still does, in fact. “It was a tough day,” he said Tuesday. “I just kept thinking about it.” Through the help of several of his teammates — most notably Ben Goodman, Fish Smithson and Cummings himself — Glatczak eventually was able to move forward without feeling guilty. He surely still remembers what led up to the fluke collision where he hit a scrambling Cummings low and watched the quarterback limp off the field with help. But he can’t recall many specifics of the play and he’s just fine with that. “I try not to (remember it),” he said. “I was just trying to make a play.” Cummings understood that immediately and went out of his way to communicate to
Richard Gwin/Journal-World Photo
Please see GLATCZAK, page 3C KANSAS UNIVERSITY SAFETY MICHAEL GLATCZAK talks to teammates between drills Tuesday.
N.Y. guard rounding into top prospect By Gary Bedore gbedore@ljworld.com
College basketball notebook. ... Rawle Alkins, who has Kansas University on his list of 11 schools, is emerging as one of the top prospects in the high school recruiting Class of 2016. The 6-foot-4 senior guard from Christ the King High in Brooklyn, New York, who is ranked No. 15 by Rivals. com, averaged 21.8 points off 54 percent shooting with 5.6 rebounds and 5.4 assists a game at the recent Adidas Nations global tournament. He had 26 points off 6-of-8 three-point shooting in the title game and was named tourney MVP. Alkins, who is in the proPlease see KEEGAN, page 3C cess of choosing a prep
school for his final year of high school, is considering KU, Kentucky, North Carolina, Indiana, St. John’s, Arizona, Louisville, Texas, N.C. State, Maryland and UNLV. He will visit Kentucky for Big Blue Madness on Oct. 16. “There are a ton of great guards in the class of 2016, but Alkins’ name deserves to be in the discussion as the group’s best prospect,” writes Ricky O’Donnell of SBnation.com. “As a strong and powerful guard, he has experience playing both on and off the ball and the size to handle either backcourt spot. He’s a force getting to the rim, has improved his jump shot significantly in the past year and has impressed as a defender with his lateral quickness.” Writes Eric Bossi of Ri-
vals.com: “A powerful wing, Alkins is a ready-made scorer for the college level who is nearly impossible to match as a high schooler because of his power and strength. At No. 15, he might be a few spots too low and he’s put together a pretty strong argument to get moved up some in 2016’s overall hierarchy.” The New York Post says St. John’s coach Chris Mullin is attempting to “sell Alkins on being ‘The King of New York.’’’ Alkins has been compared to fellow New York native/NBA player Lance Stephenson. “People say he was the best to come out of New York but I don’t want to be
CHRIST THE KING GUARD RAWLE ALKINS has
Please see HOOPS, page 3C Kansas University among his list of 11 schools.
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Foster’s atheism significant to NFL
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I saw the headline a few days ago, and my first response was: “Is that really even a headline?” The confession is a shocking one only because it’s so close to the mainstream and so far removed from anything we normally associate with confession material. It’s an ESPN The Magazine article on Houston’s Arian Foster, who has been more than occasionally controversial during an unexpectedly successful career (he was undrafted out of Tennessee), and his confession is this: “I don’t believe in God.” Now while it’s only a small percentage of people who consider themselves atheist in this country, more than 20 percent say they don’t have an affiliation with any church or religion. It shouldn’t really register as shocking for someone to declare that modern science and the books written by Stephen Hawking and so many others tell us more about our true origins and who we are than what they read years ago in Sunday school (or in Foster’s case, the Koran, since he was raised in a free-thinking Muslim family). But giving it more thought, I realized this was, indeed, a significant confession, given that Foster’s home is an NFL locker room — not exactly the province of against-the-grain thinking. In addition, football, probably due to its violent nature, is more closely associated with pregame prayer than other team sports. Although athletes of all sorts might choose to give glory to God in their postgame remarks, it’s a safe guess that the percentage is higher in football than all others. Like many, I have long questioned how these players see something as irrelevant as football outcomes as part of “God’s plan,” but I don’t question the sincerity of these players. I have felt for years that some are instructed to go this route. When NFL players find themselves in trouble, their feelings about God are almost inevitably part of their confession. That’s not to say there isn’t media backlash against those who wear their religion on their sleeves. Tim Tebow’s devout nature has been the subject of ridicule at times (especially kneeling down i.e. “Tebowing” after touchdowns). But that hasn’t kept a truly substandard quarterback from getting a fourth chance this season in Philadelphia. As for Foster, he’s not only part of the NFL but a Houston Texan. While these sorts of things should be no one’s business, there will be some in that stretch of the Bible Belt who will see this “confession” as either a deficiency on Foster’s part or explanation for his recalcitrant behavior. And yet in Tim Keown’s thorough and engaging profile, Foster makes it clear he doesn’t challenge others’ religious beliefs as he did when he was younger. He’s no longer challenging teammates on the Science vs. Religion front. Others’ beliefs simply have no place in his life. While the numbers tell us there are plenty of NFL players just like Foster who skip chapel services or laugh at those who thank God for every touchdown or victory, I don’t anticipate a rush to the podium to support Foster. Disbelief doesn’t generate much passion. When he returns from injury, Foster, the free spirit, will mostly go it alone.
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JETS HEAD COACH TODD BOWLES SPEAKS TO THE MEDIA AFTER A JETS PRACTICE Thursday in Florham Park, N.J. Quarterback Geno Smith will be sidelined at least 6-10 weeks with a broken jaw after being punched by teammate Ikemefuna Enemkpali in the locker room Tuesday morning. Smith, entering his third season, required surgery to repair the injuries.
Teammate breaks Jets QB Smith’s jaw Florham Park, N.J. — Geno Smith’s hopes for a breakout season with the New York Jets took a major blow — to the jaw. The quarterback will be sidelined at least 6-10 weeks with a broken jaw after being punched by teammate Ikemefuna Enemkpali in the locker room Tuesday morning. Smith, entering his third season, required surgery to repair the injuries. Coach Todd Bowles made the stunning announcement in an impromptu news conference before training camp practice was scheduled to start. Enemkpali (EN-um-PAL-ee), an outside linebacker in his second season, was immediately released by the Jets. Bowles said Smith and Enemkpali got into an “altercation” in the Jets’ locker room Tuesday morning. “It had nothing to do with football,” Bowles said. “It was something very childish, and he got cold-cocked, sucker-punched — whatever you want to call it — in the jaw.” Bowles wouldn’t go into detail about the nature of the altercation, except to say: “It was something very childish, that sixth-graders could have talked about. It had no reason for happening.” Smith, who was having a good training camp, will be sidelined for the rest of the summer and likely for the first few games of the season. The season opener at home against Cleveland on Sept. 13 is five weeks away. “Depending on how surgery goes, we’ll see where we go from there,” Bowles said. Smith took to Instagram and posted a picture of himself sitting in a car — mouth closed and looking stern — and a simple message: “ILL BE BACK.” Bowles said the Jets could add another quarterback, but it appears veteran Ryan Fitzpatrick will assume the starting job. Bryce Petty, a fourth-round pick this year out of Baylor, and undrafted free agent Jake Heaps out of Miami are the Jets’ other remaining quarterbacks. It was a jaw-dropping announcement by Bowles, who earlier in camp had to deal with the news that star defensive lineman Sheldon Richardson was suspended four games by the NFL for violating the league’s substance abuse policy and then was arrested after a high-speed road race in Missouri 12 days later. Richardson could face additional discipline by the league for violation of the personal conduct policy once the legal process plays out.
Redskins coach Jay Gruden said Tuesday, “You tell them ‘one series’ and it’s three-andout — that’s not enough for us.” Griffin expressed no preference about playing time in exhibition games. But a disappointing 2014 season, truncated by a dislocated left ankle and a late-season benching, has left his long-term future with the organization tenuous, at best. NBA
Wolves’ Saunders has cancer Minneapolis — Minnesota Timberwolves president and coach Flip Saunders said he’s being treated for Hodgkins lymphoma, and his doctors consider it “very treatable and curable.” Saunders was diagnosed with a cancer of the immune system two months ago and has been undergoing chemotherapy. He plans to remain as the Timberwolves head coach and top executive while being treated. “I am taking it step by step and day by day to understand how to best manage this process,” Saunders said Tuesday in a statement. The 60-year-old Saunders returned to the Timberwolves as team president in 2013. Last year, he replaced the retired Rick Adelman on the Wolves bench and the team finished 16-66. Even while undergoing treatment, Saunders remained active with the team, overseeing draft workouts, selecting Karl-Anthony Towns at No. 1 overall and trading for Tyus Jones on draft night in June. He signed players including Euroleague MVP Nemanja Bjelica and veteran point guard Andre Miller to supplement a roster teeming with young talent. He didn’t attend the team’s trip to the Las Vegas Summer League, but has remained engaged and at the team’s new practice facility throughout the summer. Doctors have encouraged him to keep up with his daily business. COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Guard transfers to Miami
Coral Gables, Fla. — Guard Rashad Muhammad will join the Miami Hurricanes’ basketball team as a transfer from San Jose State, where he led the team in the scoring each of the past two seasons. A 6-foot-6 guard, Muhammad is the younger brother of Minnesota Timberwolves forward Judge urges Brady settlement Shabazz Muhammad. He’ll sit out the 2015-16 season and have two years of eligibility. New York — A judge is urging the NFL, the Rashad Muhammad averaged 13.2 points players’ union and Tom Brady to have lastas a freshman and 13.9 last season. He set the minute settlement talks before a Wednesday Mountain West Conference freshman record hearing in the legal dispute over the superstar for 3-pointers made in a season with 75. quarterback’s suspension for using underinMuhammad is the 10th transfer to join the flated footballs. Judge Richard Berman on Tuesday ordered Hurricanes since Jim Larranaga became the sides to have “further good faith settlement coach in 2011. efforts” prior to the first meeting since the OLYMPICS sides took the scandal known as “Deflategate” to federal court. USOC to focus on L.A.’s bid Berman directed NFL Commissioner Roger The U.S. Olympic Committee’s board of Goodell and the New England Patriots quardirectors will convene today for a meeting that terback to join lawyers in his robing room to is expected to focus on Los Angeles’ desire to discuss negotiations prior to a public hearing. bid for the 2024 Summer Games. The league has asked Berman to find that it USOC leaders are scheduled to address the acted legally when it suspended Brady for four media afterward, but did not anticipate making games after finding underinflated footballs any final decisions at the Denver International when New England topped the Indianapolis Airport meeting. Colts 45-7 in the AFC championship game in Earlier this week, Mayor Eric Garcetti told January. The union has countersued to block The Los Angeles Times’ editorial board that the the suspension. city is pushing to be the American candidate could stage the Games for a projected $4.1 RG3 ready for heavy workload and billion. Los Angeles expects to generate a $150 milRichmond, Va. — Unlike last summer, when lion surplus by way of broadcast and sponsorRobert Griffin III played sparingly in three ship revenues, but will guarantee to cover any preseason contests and attempted only 20 cost overruns, Garcetti said. passes, the Washington Redskins quarterback The Olympics have a history of such overis expected to face a heavier workload this runs. Russian officials recently spent a reported time around. $51 billion to stage the 2014 Sochi Winter He was named the starter back in February Games, using the 17-day competition as a and the Redskins have not wavered from that reason to build significant infrastructure in the stance. It helps that Griffin is healthy heading into Thursday’s preseason opener at the Browns. region.
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LATEST LINE NFL Favorite.............. Points (O/U)........... Underdog Preseason Week One Thursday, August 13th. BALTIMORE........................3 (38)................... New Orleans DETROIT............................31⁄2 (36)..........................NY Jets NEW ENGLAND................31⁄2 (38).....................Green Bay CLEVELAND...................21⁄2 (37.5).................Washington CHICAGO............................. 1 (37).................................Miami SAN DIEGO.......................31⁄2 (38)..............................Dallas Friday, August 14th. ATLANTA..........................21⁄2 (37)....................Tennessee BUFFALO..........................3 (35.5)..........................Carolina CINCINNATI........................3 (37).........................NY Giants JACKSONVILLE........ Pick’em (36.5).............. Pittsburgh OAKLAND....................Pick’em (36).................... St. Louis SEATTLE.............................5 (37).............................. Denver Saturday, August 15th. MINNESOTA.....................31⁄2 (36)...................Tampa Bay HOUSTON...........................3 (36)................ San Francisco ARIZONA.................. 3 (36).............Kansas City Sunday, August 16th. PHILADELPHIA..................4 (42)....................Indianapolis MLB Favorite.................... Odds................. Underdog National League ARIZONA............................... 7-8......................Philadelphia SAN DIEGO.......................51⁄2-61⁄2..................... Cincinnati NY METS............................... 8-9............................ Colorado CHICAGO CUBS...............71⁄2-81⁄2.................... Milwaukee ST. LOUIS...........................Even-6...................... Pittsburgh LA DODGERS.......................9-10......................Washington American League SEATTLE...........................51⁄2-61⁄2......................Baltimore TORONTO........................91⁄2-101⁄2........................ Oakland CLEVELAND......................... 6-7.......................NY Yankees LA Angels.........................Even-6..............CHI WHITE SOX KANSAS CITY..........71⁄2-81⁄2.................. Detroit MINNESOTA......................Even-6................................Texas Interleague SAN FRANCISCO................. 6-7..............................Houston Boston...............................Even-6................................MIAMI TAMPA BAY.....................81⁄2-91⁄2...........................Atlanta Home Team in CAPS (c) TRIBUNE CONTENT AGENCY, LLC
E-MAIL US Tom Keegan, Andrew Hartsock, Sports Editor Managing Sports Editor tkeegan@ljworld.com ahartsock@ljworld.com Gary Bedore, Matt Tait, KU men’s basketball KU football gbedore@ljworld.com mtait@ljworld.com Benton Smith, Bobby Nightengale, KUSports.com High schools basmith@ljworld.com bnightengale@ljworld. com
TODAY IN SPORTS
2012 — Rory McIlroy breaks the PGA Championship record for margin of victory set by Jack Nicklaus in 1980. McIlroy sinks one last birdie from 25 feet on the 18th hole to give him an eight-shot victory. McIlroy plays bogey-free golf over the final 23 holes of a demanding Ocean Course at Kiawah Island, S.C.
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L awrence J ournal -W orld
Beaty, Bowen share a bond By Benton Smith basmith@ljworld.com
David Beaty and Clint Bowen haven’t just run up and down the same practice fields in their intermittent years of service for Kansas University’s football program. The two coaches have darted back and forth on the same Florida beaches on family vacations together. Beaty says Bowen wears him out in all the “kids Olympics” that go on during those summer excursions, and the firstyear KU head coach calls his assistant head coach and defensive coordinator “dad of the year” to Bowen’s boys, Banks and Baylor. The head Jayhawk says his daughters, Alexa and Averie, love Bowen. So when Beaty claims he would’ve been at KU this season, even if he hadn’t been hired as head coach, the statement carries some weight. “Clint and I are as close of friends as I’ve got,” Beaty said Tuesday, when asked about their relationship and whether he would have left his position as receivers coach and recruiting coordinator at Texas A&M to work on Bowen’s staff had his football and vacation buddy taken over at KU after serving eight games as interim head coach in 2014. “If he would’ve got the job, I would’ve came if he offered me the job. I’m assuming he would’ve offered me the job to come with him,” Beaty said, grinning. “But he’s one of my best friends and I trust him with everything.” Last season, Beaty would call up Bowen and pick his brain about packages the Aggies used. The receivers coach wanted to know what his defensive-minded pal would do against certain passing looks. Eventually, their
Hoops CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C
the next Lance Stephenson,” Alkins tells rumbleinthgarden.com. “I want to be the new Rawle Alkins.” Alkins has said he will narrow his list in coming days. “I am looking for a school with a great atmosphere,” Alkins tells rumbleinthegarden.com. “Basketball isn’t year round so it is important to see what you are doing in the off season. Fan support is also really important. They build your brand for you.” l
Nick Krug/Journal-World Photo
DEFENSIVE COORDINATOR CLINT BOWEN, LEFT, laughs with newly-hired Kansas University head football coach David Beaty before Beaty is introduced to an Allen Fieldhouse crowd on Dec. 5, 2014. conversations had more career and life ramifications, as the two found themselves in the running to become Charlie Weis’s replacement at Kansas. Bowen said the two were friends even before Beaty first worked at KU, for Mark Mangino in 2008. So their relationship didn’t take a hit late last year, and they continued their regular conversations amid athletic director Sheahon Zenger’s search. “I was glad it was either going to be me or him,” Bowen said Tuesday. “When it came out to be him, it really didn’t matter who, because the bottom line is we needed someone in our program who would operate this program in a way that builds the Jayhawk nation, builds a support for our program, our players and allows people to be a part of it. Be a part of what we all have known is special. You know, he’s worked his tail off this year, trav-
Herard sets KU inhome: Schnider Herard, a 6-10 senior center from Prestonwood Christian Academy in Plano, Texas, who is ranked No. 41 in the Class of 2016, tells Jayhawkslant.com he will host an in-home visit with KU coach Bill Self on Sept. 9. He has a list of KU, Texas, Indiana, Arizona, Cal, Mississippi State, SMU, Texas Tech, Alabama and Purdue. l Killeya-Jones has KU on list: Sacha KilleyaJones, a 6-10 senior forward from Virginia Episcopal School in Lynchburg, Virginia, who reopened his recruitment after decommitting from Virginia, tells scout.com he’s received offers from
Miller swims at U.S. Nationals
Kansas University, Kentucky, North Carolina, Notre Dame, Virginia Tech, Wake Forest, N.C. State, UConn, Florida and others. The Chapel Hill, North Carolina native is ranked No. 51 in the recruiting Class of 2016. “Killeya-Jones is one of the most versatile bigs in the entire class of 2016,” writes Drew Goodman of streakingthelawn.com. “Without getting anybody too excited, KilleyaJones’ athleticism is off the charts, and the talented forward can score from both inside and out. If Killeya-Jones is not banging down in the low post, the talented junior can also shoot the ball well from all over the floor.”
Glatczak CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C
anyone who would listen that he believed Glatczak never saw him. “Mike reached out to me and told me everything was gonna be all right and he didn’t hold any grudges,” Glatczak said. “It helped. He could’ve been bad, but he took it the right way and it helped me out a lot. It made the days go by better.” If there’s any silver lining in this story it’s that Glatczak, who played for his father, Larry, at Centralia High, had a good enough spring and is off to a hot enough start in preseason camp to put himself in position to make some of those plays that Cummings won’t be able to this fall. “He’s a great kid,” Bowen said of Glatczak. “We all know where his heart is and what he’s trying to do to help this team. And
Keegan CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C
He has two seasons of remaining eligibility because of a medicalredshirt season, his first. In three years at Virginia Tech, most of his productive play came in three consecutive halves on the road in ACC play during his sophomore season: the second half of a loss at Boston College and both halves in a victory vs. Miami the next week. In those three halves, Stanford combined for 13-278, one TD, and a non-scoring catch of 69 yards. During the rest of his career, he totaled 32 catches for 435 yards and no touchdowns. Given that the only others eligible to play this season to have any receptions in a Div. I game while lined up at wide receiver are Tre’ Parmalee and Quincy Perdue, Stanford will
Roberts ready to roll With the departures of Ben Heeney and Jake Love, KU lost 180 tackles at the linebacker position from last year’s team. And replaced those with a guy who made 31 for his previous team. While the math might not line up favorably for the Jayhawks, the addition of South Carolina transfer Marcquis Roberts (pronounced Mar-Kweese), a 6-foot1, 220-pound junior who joined the team this summer, could go a long way toward helping Kansas ease into life after Hee-
get every chance to earn his way onto the field. In those three halves, he amassed more reception yardage than Parmalee (174) and Perdue (82) combined for in four combined seasons. As a junior, Stanford took a four-game leave of absence to address off-field issues, returned, didn’t play much, and left the program days before last Christmas. Marcquis Roberts, linebacker: Started nine games two seasons ago and five a year ago for South Carolina after missing first two seasons with injuries. If the injuries haven’t worn down his body, he definitely has the talent to help at linebacker. Roberts wears No. 5, the same digit safety Isaiah Johnson wore before he took advantage of the same graduate-transfer rule to go to South Carolina from Kansas. College football’s first trade? Perdue, wide receiver: Caught just two passes,
one for a 75-yard touchdown, for AlabamaBirmingham as a freshman. At 6-foot-3 and 210 pounds, he stands out among KU receivers. His speed looked plenty good enough on YouTube when he raced behind the Mississippi State defense for the touchdown, but something kept him from getting much time and he finished the season with two catches. Deondre Ford, quarterback: The 6-2, 200-pound junior out of Dodge City Community College, threw 18 touchdown passes and 22 interceptions for Dodge City as a sophomore. He also rushed for 173 yards and four touchdowns, but described himself in an interview with JCFootball.com as a, “pocket passer that runs when he has to. I prefer throwing from the pocket though.” Whether throwing from the pocket or on the run, 22 interceptions in one juco season is not a good number.
Chiefs count on continuity St. Joseph, Mo. (ap) — The Kansas City Chiefs churned through four coaches in eight years before Andy Reid arrived, and far more offensive and defensive coordinators. Each of them had varying schemes and ideas, and the result was a hodge-podge of failure. Alex Smith went through a similar experience in San Francisco, where the constant changes on the coaching staff nearly ran the former No. 1 draft pick right out of the league. Reid and Smith are entering Year 3 together,
though. Their assistant coaches have remained largely unchanged. And in a league in which turnover — coaches and players — is part of life, the Chiefs are hoping that unique period of continuity will yield success. “I think that’s important. Continuity is a big thing,” said Reid, whose 14 seasons spent in Philadelphia are a prime example. “We all kind of know as a coaching staff where we’re going, what direction we’re going in, and I think that’s important. That’s a good thing.” Historically, the Chiefs
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aren’t a franchise that goes through coaching staffs. Hank Stram was in charge for the first 15 years, leading the Chiefs to their only Super Bowl title in 1969. Marty Schottenheimer spent a decade in the coach’s office, leading Kansas City to seven playoff appearances. Dick Vermeil spent five years in charge. Chiefs chairman Clark Hunt said that he wanted the franchise to be a model of consistency. So when Reid was let go by the Eagles, Hunt made an aggressive play for him. usbank.com/wealth-management
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ney and Love. Although an official 2015 depth chart has not been released, it’s clear that Roberts is playing his way into the good graces of the coaching staff day by day. Head coach David Beaty, on multiple occasions, has called Roberts a “natural” player. And Tuesday Bowen ditched his usually reserved demeanor in favor of a compliment. “‘Quis has played a lot of football and it shows,” Bowen said. “He’s an athletic young man, physical, a very good instinctual player. He’s been a really pleasant surprise.” Bowen said he knew Roberts could help the team somehow but refers to his new linebacker as a surprise because he now has seen him play live right in front of him. “‘Quis has obviously been well coached throughout his time (at South Carolina),” Bowen said. “He’s a legitimate BCS player.”
he’s gonna help this team. You talk about probably the biggest surprise of spring and camp, it’s Michael Glatczak. That’s the guy that can play that people will find out about.” Added Smithson: “He’s more than a walk-on. He’s good. If you watch him you’ll realize he’s got talent and he’s gonna be out there this fall with us making plays.”
Carpet gone to the dogs?
J-W Staff Reports
Kansas University swimmer Chelsie Miller concluded a busy weekend and summer with swims in the 400-meter individual medley and 200-meter butterfly at USA Swimming’s National Championship meet. Miller began the weekend by climbing 10 spots from her seeded position and finished second in her heat in 2:17.34, then returned to the pool for the 400-meter individual medley Saturday and 200-meter butterfly on Sunday. She will be a senior at KU this year.
eling all over the state and the nation, spreading the word. That’s good. That’s inviting. It’ll help our program.” According to Beaty, they both saw the opening — one way or the other — as a chance for KU to have a coach “who really loves” the university. “That’s what both of us were looking for.” Kansas has won just 12 games and lost 48 since 2009, when both Bowen and Beaty worked for Mangino in his final season. The program has been in a constant rebuilding process since, so Bowen is glad Beaty can bring the kind of passion necessary to implement an effective overhaul. “It’s gonna take a lot of energy and a lot of work to get this thing going,” Bowen said, “and the process has gotten started. We’re already on our way doing that. And he brings that every day, and we have a coaching staff that brings it every day.”
Wednesday, August 12, 2015
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Wednesday, August 12, 2015
SPORTS
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Baseball
SCOREBOARD
MAJOR LEAGUE ROUNDUP
American League
Cain, K.C. cream Detroit Padres 11, Reds 6 San Diego — Colin Rea pitched well into the sixth inning in his major league debut and Jedd Gyorko homered and drove in four runs as the Padres beat the Reds.
The Associated Press
American League Royals 6, Tigers 1 Kansas City, Mo. — Lorenzo Cain went 4 for 4 with a home run and Yordano Ventura pitched six scoreless innings as Kansas City defeated Detroit Tuesday night. Cain, who raised his average to .316, led off the sixth with his 12th homer, a mammoth shot to left field. Mike Moustakas snapped an 0-for-18 drought with a homer to right with Kendrys Morales aboard in the same inning. Ventura (7-7), who is 3-1 since the All-Star break, limited the Tigers to two hits but walked a career-high six. He struck out eight, matching his season high. Eric Hosmer hit a tworun homer in the first, giving him 21 RBIs in the opening inning. Anibal Sanchez (10-10) yielded all three homers, bringing his season total to 28 — tied for most in the American League. Sanchez yielded only 13 homers combined in the past two seasons. Moustakas also stroked a run-scoring single in the eighth for his third threeRBI game of the year. The Tigers snapped a season-worst 17-inning scoreless drought with a run in the seventh against reliever Franklin Morales. Pinch-hitter Rajai Davis’ sacrifice fly scored Jefry Marte, who led off with a double. Detroit AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Gose cf 2 0 0 0 1 2 .255 a-R.Davis ph-cf 1 0 0 1 0 0 .250 J.Iglesias ss 3 0 0 0 1 0 .303 Kinsler 2b 3 0 0 0 1 1 .299 V.Martinez dh 3 0 0 0 1 1 .241 J.Martinez rf 2 0 0 0 2 1 .288 Ty.Collins lf 3 0 1 0 1 2 .257 J.McCann c 4 0 0 0 0 0 .281 J.Marte 1b 4 1 2 0 0 2 .289 Romine 3b 4 0 1 0 0 2 .267 Totals 29 1 4 1 7 11 Kansas City AB R H BI BB SO Avg. A.Escobar ss 4 0 0 0 0 0 .275 Zobrist 2b 4 0 0 0 0 0 .273 L.Cain cf 4 2 4 1 0 0 .316 Hosmer 1b 4 2 1 2 0 1 .317 K.Morales dh 3 1 0 0 1 1 .290 Moustakas 3b 4 1 2 3 0 0 .275 S.Perez c 3 0 1 0 0 1 .251 Butera c 0 0 0 0 1 0 .186 Orlando rf 4 0 1 0 0 2 .238 J.Dyson lf 3 0 0 0 0 3 .245 Totals 33 6 9 6 2 8 Detroit 000 000 100—1 4 1 Kansas City 200 003 01x—6 9 1 a-hit a sacrifice fly for Gose in the 7th. E-Ty.Collins (1), Zobrist (4). LOB-Detroit 9, Kansas City 5. 2B-J.Marte 2 (4), L.Cain (27), Orlando (6). HR-Hosmer (12), off An.Sanchez; L.Cain (12), off An.Sanchez; Moustakas (11), off An.Sanchez. RBIs-R.Davis (17), L.Cain (51), Hosmer 2 (64), Moustakas 3 (43). SB-Hosmer (5). SF-R.Davis. Runners left in scoring position-Detroit 4 (Romine 2, J.McCann, V.Martinez); Kansas City 3 (Hosmer, Zobrist, Orlando). RISP-Detroit 1 for 8; Kansas City 1 for 7. Runners moved up-Kinsler, A.Escobar. Detroit IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Sanchez L, 10-10 51⁄3 7 5 5 1 4 104 4.95 2⁄3 0 0 0 0 2 10 7.45 N.Feliz Alburquerque 1 0 0 0 0 1 12 2.98 Gorzelanny 1 2 1 0 1 1 26 6.39 Kansas City IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Ventura W, 7-7 6 2 0 0 6 8 104 4.97 1⁄3 2 1 1 1 0 9 2.58 F.Morales Hochevar S, 1-2 22⁄3 0 0 0 0 3 26 3.41 Inherited runners-scored-Hochevar 2-0. Umpires-Home, D.J. Reyburn; First, Clint Fagan; Second, Kerwin Danley; Third, Joe West. T-3:01. A-34,068 (37,903).
Indians 5, Yankees 4, 16 innings Cleveland — Michael Brantley’s RBI single with one out in the 16th inning lifted Cleveland to a victory over New York. New York Cleveland ab r h bi ab r h bi Ellsury cf 7 0 0 0 JRmrz 2b 8 1 3 1 Gardnr lf 6 0 0 0 Lindor ss 8 2 3 0 ARdrgz dh 6 0 1 0 Brantly lf 6 1 3 1 Teixeir 1b 6 0 0 0 CSantn dh 5 0 1 2 BMcCn c 3 0 0 0 YGoms c 7 0 2 1 CYoung pr-rf 2 0 0 0 Almont cf 6 0 1 0 Beltran rf 4 2 2 1 CJhnsn 1b 4 1 3 0 JMrphy c 2 0 0 0 Walters pr-rf 3 0 0 0 Gregrs ss 6 1 3 0 Chsnhll rf 3 0 1 0 Drew 2b 6 1 1 1 Aviles ph 0 0 0 0 B.Ryan 3b 3 0 0 0 Sands 1b 3 0 0 0 Headly ph-3b 3 0 1 2 Urshela 3b 7 0 0 0 Totals 54 4 8 4 Totals 60 5 17 5 New York 000 001 010 200 000 0—4 Cleveland 110 000 000 200 000 1—5 DP-New York 1, Cleveland 1. LOB-New York 5, Cleveland 15. 2B-Gregorius (14), Brantley 2 (35). HR-Beltran (10), Drew (14). SB-Almonte (1). CS-Gardner (4). S-Aviles. SF-C.Santana. IP H R ER BB SO New York Severino 6 7 2 2 1 2 Shreve 1 0 0 0 0 2 Betances 1 1 0 0 0 1 Ju.Wilson 1 1 0 0 0 0 A.Miller BS,1-25 1 3 2 2 0 2 Warren 1 0 0 0 0 0 Mitchell 3 2 0 0 2 5 Pinder L,0-2 11⁄3 3 1 1 0 2 Cleveland Carrasco 8 4 2 2 0 8 Allen 1 0 0 0 1 1 2⁄3 B.Shaw 3 2 2 1 0 1⁄3 Crockett 0 0 0 0 1 McAllister 1 0 0 0 1 2 Manship 1 1 0 0 0 1 R.Webb 3 0 0 0 0 2 A.Adams W,2-0 1 0 0 0 0 1 T-5:04. A-23,618 (36,856).
Blue Jays 4, Athletics 2 Toronto — Jose Bautista hit a solo home run, and Toronto won its ninth straight game.
(AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)
DETROIT TIGERS’ JAMES McCann (34) is tagged out at home by Kansas City Royals catcher Salvador Perez (13) as he tried to score on a double by Jefry Marte during the fourth inning of a baseball game Tuesday in Kansas City, Mo. Oakland Toronto ab r h bi ab r h bi Burns cf 4 0 2 1 Tlwtzk ss 4 0 0 0 Crisp lf 3 0 0 0 Dnldsn 3b 4 0 0 0 Reddck rf 4 1 0 0 Bautist rf 4 1 1 1 Valenci dh 4 0 1 1 Colaell dh 4 1 3 0 Vogt c 4 0 1 0 Pnngtn pr-dh 0 0 0 0 Lawrie 3b 4 0 0 0 RuMrtn c 4 1 0 0 I.Davis 1b 4 0 0 0 Smoak 1b 4 1 1 1 Semien ss 2 1 1 0 Pillar cf 3 0 1 0 Sogard 2b 2 0 1 0 Goins 2b 2 0 0 1 Revere lf 3 0 0 0 Totals 31 2 6 2 Totals 32 4 6 3 Oakland 100 000 010—2 010 00x—4 Toronto 030 E-Sogard (5), Semien (30). DP-Toronto 1. LOBOakland 5, Toronto 5. 2B-Valencia (16), Vogt (16), Colabello 2 (15), Smoak (9). HR-Bautista (27). S-Sogard. IP H R ER BB SO Oakland Graveman L,6-8 42⁄3 5 4 2 1 4 Scribner 11⁄3 0 0 0 0 2 A.Leon 2 1 0 0 0 3 Toronto Hutchison W,11-2 7 4 2 2 2 6 Aa.Sanchez H,5 1 1 0 0 0 1 Osuna S,11-12 1 1 0 0 0 2 T-2:35. A-39,381 (49,282).
White Sox 3, Angels 0 Chicago — Carlos Rodon threw seven scoreless innings and the Chicago White Sox beat the Los Angeles Angels. Los Angeles Chicago ab r h bi ab r h bi Victorn lf 3 0 1 0 Eaton cf 4 0 1 0 Calhon rf 3 0 1 0 Saladin 3b 4 1 1 0 Trout cf 4 0 0 0 Abreu 1b 2 1 0 0 Pujols 1b 4 0 0 0 MeCarr dh 3 0 1 2 Aybar ss 4 0 0 0 AvGarc rf 3 0 0 0 Cron dh 4 0 2 0 AlRmrz ss 3 0 0 0 Giavtll 2b 4 0 1 0 CSnchz 2b 3 0 0 0 Iannett c 3 0 0 0 Flowrs c 3 0 0 0 Fthrstn 3b 3 0 0 0 TrThm lf 2 1 1 1 Totals 32 0 5 0 Totals 27 3 4 3 Los Angeles 000 000 000—0 Chicago 000 210 00x—3 E-Al.Ramirez (11). DP-Chicago 1. LOBLos Angeles 7, Chicago 3. 2B-Giavotella (20), Me.Cabrera (27). HR-Tr.Thompson (1). SB-Saladino (4). CS-Av.Garcia (7). IP H R ER BB SO Los Angeles Santiago L,7-6 51⁄3 4 3 3 1 4 Cor.Rasmus 22⁄3 0 0 0 1 3 Chicago Rodon W,5-4 7 4 0 0 1 11 1⁄3 Duke H,20 1 0 0 1 1 2⁄3 Petricka H,12 0 0 0 0 0 Dav.Robertson S,23-28 1 0 0 0 0 1 T-2:38. A-17,137 (40,615).
IP Pittsburgh Locke L,6-7 5 Caminero 1 Bastardo 1 J.Hughes 1 St. Louis C.Martinez W,12-4 8 Rosenthal S,34-36 1 T-2:40. A-41,273 (45,399).
L awrence J ournal -W orld
H
R ER BB SO
7 1 0 2
4 0 0 0
4 0 0 0
3 0 0 1
3 1 0 0
9 0
3 0
3 0
0 0
8 3
Cubs 6, Brewers 3 Chicago — Anthony Rizzo and Jorge Soler, and Chicago won for the 11th time in 12 games, beating Milwaukee. Milwaukee Chicago ab r h bi ab r h bi SPetrsn rf 4 0 1 0 Fowler cf 2 1 0 1 KDavis lf 3 1 0 0 Schwrr lf 4 1 0 0 Lind 1b 4 2 2 2 Coghln 2b 3 1 1 0 Lucroy c 4 0 0 0 SCastro 2b 1 0 0 0 Gennett 2b 3 0 0 0 Rizzo 1b 3 0 2 2 HPerez ph 1 0 0 0 Bryant 3b 4 1 1 0 EHerrr 3b 4 0 1 1 Soler rf 3 1 1 2 Segura ss 4 0 1 0 MMntr c 4 1 1 0 LSchfr cf 4 0 1 0 Haren p 2 0 0 0 Jngmn p 1 0 1 0 T.Wood p 0 0 0 0 JRogrs ph 1 0 0 0 Denorfi ph 1 0 0 0 Braun ph 1 0 0 0 ARussll ss 3 0 1 0 Totals 34 3 7 3 Totals 30 6 7 5 Milwaukee 000 102 000—3 200 00x—6 Chicago 031 E-E.Herrera (6), Lucroy (8), L.Schafer (1). DP-Milwaukee 2. LOB-Milwaukee 5, Chicago 11. 2B-Lind (23), E.Herrera (5), Rizzo (29), Bryant (18). HR-Lind (17). SB-Coghlan (11), Bryant (12). SF-Fowler. IP H R ER BB SO Milwaukee Jungmann L,6-4 22⁄3 5 4 2 3 3 Thornburg 11⁄3 1 2 2 3 2 Lohse 2 1 0 0 1 2 Cotts 11⁄3 0 0 0 0 1 2⁄3 Knebel 0 0 0 0 0 Chicago Haren W,8-7 51⁄3 5 3 3 1 6 T.Wood H,3 1 1 0 0 0 1 2⁄3 Grimm H,10 0 0 0 0 1 Strop H,20 1 0 0 0 0 2 J.Russell S,1-3 1 1 0 0 0 0 T-3:10. A-37,109 (40,929).
Cincinnati San Diego ab r h bi ab r h bi Phillips 2b 4 0 2 0 Solarte 3b 4 3 2 0 Schmkr lf 3 0 0 1 BNorrs p 0 0 0 0 Votto 1b 4 1 1 0 Garces p 0 0 0 0 Frazier 3b 4 1 3 2 Alonso 1b 5 2 2 2 Bruce rf 4 0 0 0 Kemp rf 3 2 1 0 DJssJr ss 4 0 0 0 UptnJr cf 1 0 0 0 Brnhrt c 4 2 3 0 Upton lf 4 2 1 1 Lornzn p 0 0 0 0 Gyorko 2b 4 1 2 4 Axelrod p 2 0 0 0 Venale cf-rf 3 0 0 0 Byrd ph 1 0 0 0 Hedges c 4 0 2 1 Badnhp p 0 0 0 0 Amarst ss 4 0 0 0 MParr p 0 0 0 0 Rea p 3 1 1 0 Bourgs ph 1 1 1 2 Despgn p 0 0 0 0 BHmltn cf 4 1 1 1 Wallac ph-3b 1 0 0 0 Totals 35 6 11 6 Totals 36 11 11 8 Cincinnati 000 120 003— 6 San Diego 353 000 00x—11 E-De Jesus Jr. (2), Frazier (13), Wallace (1). DP-San Diego 3. LOB-Cincinnati 5, San Diego 6. 2B-Votto (23), Frazier (31), Barnhart (4), Solarte (24), Alonso (14), Upton (12). HR-Frazier (28), Bourgeois (1), Gyorko (7). SF-Schumaker. IP H R ER BB SO Cincinnati Lorenzen L,3-8 11⁄3 7 7 7 2 1 Axelrod 42⁄3 4 4 1 3 4 Badenhop 1 0 0 0 0 0 M.Parra 1 0 0 0 0 0 San Diego Rea W,1-0 5 7 3 3 1 4 Despaigne 2 1 0 0 0 1 B.Norris 1 0 0 0 0 2 Garces 1 3 3 3 1 0 Rea pitched to 1 batter in the 6th. WP-Lorenzen. T-2:44. A-26,588 (41,164).
Interleague Rays 2, Braves 0 St. Petersburg, Fla. — Erasmo Ramirez pitched efficiently into the eighth inning for his first win in more than a month, Kevin Kiermaier hit a two-run homer in the seventh and Tampa Bay beat Atlanta. Atlanta Tampa Bay ab r h bi ab r h bi Bourn lf 4 0 0 0 Jaso dh 3 0 0 0 Maybin cf 4 0 1 0 Sizemr lf 3 0 0 0 Markks dh 4 0 2 0 Guyer lf 0 0 0 0 Przyns c 4 0 0 0 Longori 3b 4 0 0 0 Swisher 1b 3 0 0 0 Loney 1b 3 0 0 0 JPetrsn 2b 3 0 0 0 Forsyth 2b 3 0 1 0 AdGarc 3b 3 0 2 0 ACarer ss 3 1 2 0 ASmns ss 3 0 1 0 Nava rf 2 0 0 0 EPerez rf 3 0 0 0 Kiermr cf 3 1 1 2 Casali c 2 0 0 0 Totals 31 0 6 0 Totals 26 2 4 2 Atlanta 000 000 000—0 Tampa Bay 000 000 20x—2 DP-Atlanta 2, Tampa Bay 1. LOB-Atlanta 4, Tampa Bay 4. 2B-Markakis (26), A.Cabrera (23). HR-Kiermaier (5). IP H R ER BB SO Atlanta W.Perez L,4-3 8 4 2 2 4 1 Tampa Bay E.Ramirez W,9-4 7 5 0 0 0 4 B.Gomes H,13 11⁄3 0 0 0 0 1 2⁄3 Cedeno S,1-1 1 0 0 0 0 T-2:02. A-15,506 (31,042).
East Division W L Pct GB New York 61 50 .550 — Toronto 62 52 .544 ½ Baltimore 57 54 .514 4 Tampa Bay 57 56 .504 5 Boston 50 63 .442 12 Central Division W L Pct GB Kansas City 68 44 .607 — Minnesota 56 56 .500 12 Detroit 54 59 .478 14½ Chicago 53 58 .477 14½ Cleveland 52 59 .468 15½ West Division W L Pct GB Houston 61 53 .535 — Los Angeles 59 53 .527 1 Texas 55 56 .495 4½ Seattle 52 61 .460 8½ Oakland 51 63 .447 10 Tuesday’s Games Kansas City 6, Detroit 1 Toronto 4, Oakland 2 Tampa Bay 2, Atlanta 0 Miami 5, Boston 4, 10 innings Chicago White Sox 3, L.A. Angels 0 Minnesota 3, Texas 2 Cleveland 5, Yankees 4, 16 innings San Francisco 3, Houston 1 Baltimore at Seattle, (n) Today’s Games Detroit (Da.Norris 2-2) at Kansas City (Volquez 11-6), 7:10 p.m. Baltimore (Gausman 2-3) at Seattle (Iwakuma 3-2), 2:40 p.m. Houston (Feldman 4-5) at San Francisco (Heston 11-6), 2:45 p.m. Boston (E.Rodriguez 6-4) at Miami (Conley 1-0), 3:10 p.m. Oakland (Brooks 1-0) at Toronto (Buehrle 12-5), 6:07 p.m. Atlanta (Wisler 5-2) at Tampa Bay (Odorizzi 6-6), 6:10 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (Sabathia 4-8) at Cleveland (Salazar 9-6), 6:10 p.m. L.A. Angels (Heaney 5-1) at Chicago White Sox (Joh.Danks 6-9), 7:10 p.m. Texas (N.Martinez 7-6) at Minnesota (Pelfrey 5-7), 7:10 p.m. Thursday’s Games L.A. Angels at Kansas City, 7:10 p.m. Oakland at Toronto, 11:37 a.m. Texas at Minnesota, 12:10 p.m. N.Y. Yankees at Cleveland, 6:10 p.m.
National League
East Division W L Pct GB New York 61 52 .540 — Washington 58 54 .518 2½ Atlanta 51 62 .451 10 Miami 45 68 .398 16 Philadelphia 45 69 .395 16½ Central Division W L Pct GB St. Louis 72 40 .643 — Pittsburgh 65 45 .591 6 Chicago 63 48 .568 8½ Cincinnati 49 62 .441 22½ Milwaukee 48 66 .421 25 West Division W L Pct GB Los Angeles 63 50 .558 — San Francisco 60 52 .536 2½ Arizona 56 56 .500 6½ San Diego 54 60 .474 9½ Colorado 47 64 .423 15 Tuesday’s Games Tampa Bay 2, Atlanta 0 Miami 5, Boston 4, 10 innings N.Y. Mets 4, Colorado 0 Chicago Cubs 6, Milwaukee 3 St. Louis 4, Pittsburgh 3 Arizona 13, Philadelphia 1 San Francisco 3, Houston 1 San Diego 11, Cincinnati 6 L.A. Dodgers 5, Washington 0 Today’s Games Cincinnati (R.Iglesias 2-4) at San Diego (Shields 8-4), 2:40 p.m. Philadelphia (Nola 2-1) at Arizona (Ch.Anderson 5-4), 2:40 p.m. Houston (Feldman 4-5) at San Francisco (Heston 11-6), 2:45 p.m. Boston (E.Rodriguez 6-4) at Miami (Conley 1-0), 3:10 p.m. Atlanta (Wisler 5-2) at Tampa Bay (Odorizzi 6-6), 6:10 p.m. Colorado (J.De La Rosa 7-4) at N.Y. Mets (deGrom 10-6), 6:10 p.m. Milwaukee (Garza 6-12) at Chicago Cubs (Hammel 6-5), 7:05 p.m. Pittsburgh (G.Cole 14-5) at St. Louis (Wacha 13-4), 7:15 p.m. Washington (Zimmermann 8-7) at L.A. Dodgers (Kershaw 9-6), 9:10 p.m. Thursday’s Games Colorado at N.Y. Mets, 11:10 a.m. Milwaukee at Cubs, 1:20 p.m. Pittsburgh at St. Louis, 6:15 p.m. Cincinnati at L.A. Dodgers, 9:10 p.m. Washington at San Francisco, 9:15 p.m.
12:50 p.m.-7:35 a.m. — Nick Watney, United States; Ian Poulter, England; Joost Luiten, The Netherlands. 1 p.m.-7:45 a.m. — Luke Donald, England; Graeme McDowell, Northern Ireland; Patrick Reed, United States. 1:10 p.m.-7:55 a.m. — Adam Scott, Australia; Henrik Stenson, Sweden; Brooks Koepka, United States. 1:20 p.m.-8:05 a.m. — Rory McIlroy, Northern Ireland; Jordan Spieth, United States; Zach Johnson, United States. 1:30 p.m.-8:15 a.m. — Jason Dufner, United States; Phil Mickelson, United States; Padraig Harrington, Ireland. 1:40 p.m.-8:25 a.m. — Cameron Tringale, United States; Danny Willett, England; John Senden, Australia. 1:50 p.m.-8:35 a.m. — Jason Bohn, United States; Marcel Siem, Germany; Omar Uresti, United States. 2 p.m.-8:45 a.m. — Richie Ramsay, Scotland; Dan Venezio, United States; Nick Taylor, Canada. Thursday-Friday 10th hole-First hole 6:45 a.m.-Noon — Pat Perez, United States; Brian Gaffney, United States; David Hearn, Canada. 6:55 a.m.-12:10 p.m. — Hideki Matsuyama, Japan; Johan Kok, United States; Brendan Steele, United States. 7:05 a.m.-12:20 p .m. — Matt Dobyns, United States; Colin Montgomerie, Scotland; John Daly, United States. 7:15 a.m.-12:30 p.m. — Victor Dubuisson, France; Matt Kuchar, United States; Charl Schwartzel, South Africa. 7:25 a.m.-12:40 p.m. — Sergio Garcia, Spain; Bill Haas, United States; Louis Oosthuizen, South Africa. 7:35 a.m.-12:50 p.m. — Justin Rose, England; Brandt Snedeker, United States; Geoff Ogilvy, Australia. 7:45 a.m.-1 p.m. — Bubba Watson, United States; Paul Casey, England; Jim Furyk, United States. 7:55 a.m.-1:10 p.m. — Hunter Mahan, United States; Lee Westwood, England; Ernie Els, South Africa. 8:05 a.m.-1:20 p.m. — Jason Day, Australia; Dustin Johnson, United States; Rickie Fowler, United States. 8:15 a.m.-1:30 p.m. — Tiger Woods, United States; Martin Kaymer, Germany; Keegan Bradley, United States. 8:25 a.m.-1:40 p.m. — Gary Woodland, United States; Francesco Molinari, Italy; Marc Warren, Scotland. 8:35 a.m.-1:50 p.m. — Brent Snyder, United States; Tyrrell Hatton, England; Brendon Todd, United States. 8:45 a.m.-2 p.m. — Jeff Olson, United States; Fabian Gomez, Argentina; Martin Laird, Scotland. Noon-6:45 a.m. — George McNeill, United States; Charles Frost, United States; Emiliano Grillo, Argentina. 12:10 p.m.-6:55 a.m. — Chris Wood, England; Brett Jones, United States; Sean O’Hair, United States. 12:20 p.m.-7:05 a.m. — George Coetzee, South Africa; Ben Martin, United States; Soren Kjeldsen, Denmark. 12:30 p.m.-7:15 a.m. — Rich Beem, United States; Shaun Micheel, United States; Y.E. Yang, South Korea. 12:40 p.m.-7:25 a.m. — Rafa CabreraBello, Spain; Steve Bowditch, Australia; Daniel Berger, United States. 12:50 p.m.-7:35 a.m. — Camilo Villegas, Colombia; Kiradech Alphibarnrat, Thailand; Pablo Larrazabal, Spain. 1 p.m.-7:45 a.m. — Cameron Smith, Australia; Shawn Stefani, United States; Hiroshi Iwata, Japan. 1:10 p.m.-7:55 a.m. — Kevin Streelman, United States; Sang-Moon Bae, South Korea; David Lingmerth, Sweden. 1:20 p.m.-8:05 a.m. — Troy Merritt, United States; Alexander Levy, France; Russell Knox, Scotland. 1:30 p.m.-8:15 a.m. — Tim Clark, South Africa; Billy Horschel, United States; Miguel Angel Jimenez, Spain. 1:40 p.m.-8:25 a.m. — Eddie Pepperell, England; Sean Dougherty, United States; Kevin Na, United States. 1:50 p.m.-8:35 a.m. — Marc Leishman, Australia; Ben Polland, United States; Kevin Kisner, United States. 2 p.m.-8:45 a.m. — Scott Piercy, United States; Alan Morin, United States; Andy Sullivan, England.
Marlins 5, Red Sox 4, 10 innings Miami — Dee Gordon tripled to lead off the 10th inning and scored on a Mets 4, Rockies 0 walk-off base hit by JusNew York — Matt Har- tin Bour to lift Miami to MLS vey pitched four-hit ball a come-from-behind win EASTERN CONFERENCE W L T for eight innings, Ruben over Boston. D.C. United 13 7 5 Tejada had a go-ahead Boston New York 10 6 6 Miami ab r h bi ab r h bi Columbus 9 8 7 single in the sixth and Betts cf 5 0 3 2 DGordn 2b 6 1 2 1 Toronto FC 9 9 4 the New York Mets beat B.Holt 2b 4 0 0 0 Prado 3b 4 0 1 0 New England 8 9 7 p 0 0 0 0 Dietrch lf 4 1 1 0 Twins 3, Rangers 2 Colorado for the eighth Breslw Montreal 8 9 4 Bogarts ss 4 1 2 0 Bour 1b 4 0 2 1 PGA ChampionshipTee Orlando City 7 10 7 4 1 1 0 Gillespi cf 4 0 2 0 Minneapolis — Eduardo straight time at Citi Field. Ortiz 1b NYC FC 6 11 6 Machi p 0 0 0 0 Realmt c 5 2 2 0 Times Escobar’s two-out double Colorado Philadelphia 6 13 5 Tazawa p 0 0 0 0 ISuzuki rf 2 1 1 1 New York At Whistling Straits Rutledg 2b 0 0 0 0 Hchvrr ss 4 0 1 1 Chicago 6 12 4 ab r h bi ab r h bi in the ninth inning drove Blckmn cf 4 0 0 0 Lagars cf 5 0 3 2 Sandovl 3b 4 0 0 0 Nicolin p 2 0 0 0 Sheboygan, Wis. WESTERN CONFERENCE Purse: $10 million in the winning run. Swihart c 4 0 0 0 Brrclgh p 0 0 0 0 Reyes ss 4 0 1 0 DnMrp 1b 5 0 2 0 W L T Yardage: 7,501; Par: 72 Texas Minnesota ab r h bi ab r h bi DShlds cf 4 0 2 0 Hicks cf 4 0 0 0 Choo rf 3 0 0 0 Dozier 2b 4 0 0 0 Fielder dh 4 0 2 0 Mauer 1b 3 1 2 1 Beltre 3b 4 0 0 0 Sano dh 3 0 2 1 Morlnd 1b 4 0 0 0 SRonsn pr-dh 0 0 0 0 JHmltn lf 3 1 1 0 Plouffe 3b 4 0 0 0 Andrus ss 4 1 2 2 TrHntr rf 4 0 0 0 Odor 2b 4 0 1 0 ERosar lf 4 0 1 0 Gimenz c 3 0 0 0 KSuzuk c 2 1 0 0 Napoli ph 1 0 0 0 EdEscr ss 3 1 1 1 BWilsn c 0 0 0 0 Totals 34 2 8 2 Totals 31 3 6 3 Texas 020 000 000—2 000 021—3 Minnesota 000 DP-Minnesota 1. LOB-Texas 7, Minnesota 7. 2B-Mauer (21), Sano (10), Edu.Escobar (17). HR-Andrus (5). IP H R ER BB SO Texas Gallardo 52⁄3 2 0 0 3 1 1⁄3 S.Dyson H,2 1 0 0 0 0 Kela H,10 1 0 0 0 0 1 2⁄3 Diekman BS,1-1 2 2 2 1 0 Patton L,1-1 1 1 1 1 1 1 Minnesota Gibson 6 7 2 2 2 7 2⁄3 Fien 0 0 0 0 0 2⁄3 O’Rourke 0 0 0 0 1 2⁄3 Jepsen 0 0 0 0 0 Perkins W,1-3 1 1 0 0 0 1 T-3:19. A-26,663 (39,021).
National League Cardinals 4, Pirates 3 St. Louis — Carlos Martinez was strongest at the end of his eight innings, helping St. Louis edge Pittsburgh in a matchup of the National League’s top two teams. Pittsburgh St. Louis ab r h bi ab r h bi GPolnc rf 4 1 3 0 MCrpnt 3b 3 0 1 0 SMarte lf 4 1 2 0 Wong 2b 4 2 2 0 McCtch cf 4 0 0 0 JhPerlt ss 4 1 1 0 ArRmr 3b 3 0 1 1 Heywrd rf 4 1 2 2 Kang ss 4 0 1 1 Grichk cf 4 0 0 0 NWalkr 2b 4 0 0 0 Rosnthl p 0 0 0 0 PAlvrz 1b 4 1 2 1 Molina c 3 0 0 1 Cervelli c 4 0 0 0 Pisctty lf 4 0 3 1 Locke p 2 0 0 0 Rynlds 1b 4 0 1 0 Caminr p 0 0 0 0 CMrtnz p 3 0 0 0 Ishikaw ph 1 0 0 0 Bourjos ph-cf 0 0 0 0 Totals 34 3 9 3 Totals 33 4 10 4 Pittsburgh 101 100 000—3 St. Louis 100 030 00x—4 E-Ar.Ramirez (9). DP-St. Louis 2. LOB-Pittsburgh 5, St. Louis 11. 2B-S.Marte (21), Kang (18), P.Alvarez (16), Piscotty (7). 3B-G.Polanco (4). HR-P.Alvarez (16). S-Bourjos. SF-Molina.
CGnzlz rf 4 0 0 0 Cespds lf 4 0 0 0 Arenad 3b 4 0 1 0 Uribe 3b 4 0 0 0 Paulsn 1b 3 0 1 0 Cuddyr rf 4 2 2 0 LeMahi 2b 3 0 1 0 OFlhrt p 0 0 0 0 Hundly c 3 0 0 0 WFlors 2b 4 0 2 0 KParkr lf 3 0 1 0 dArnad c 3 1 1 0 Rusin p 2 0 0 0 Tejada ss 2 1 1 1 Betncrt p 0 0 0 0 Harvey p 3 0 0 0 Descals ph 1 0 0 0 Grndrs ph-rf 0 0 0 1 Totals 31 0 5 0 Totals 34 4 11 4 Colorado 000 000 000—0 New York 000 001 03x—4 E-Hundley (4). DP-New York 1. LOB-Colorado 4, New York 10. 2B-Reyes (3), Paulsen (15), Lagares 2 (13), W.Flores (18). SB-LeMahieu (16), Cuddyer (2). IP H R ER BB SO Colorado Rusin L,3-5 6 8 1 1 1 5 Betancourt 1 0 0 0 0 0 2⁄3 Axford 1 3 3 2 0 1⁄3 Logan 2 0 0 1 0 New York Harvey W,11-7 8 4 0 0 0 4 O’Flaherty 1 1 0 0 0 0 T-2:47. A-25,611 (41,922).
D’backs 13, Phillies 1 Phoenix — David Peralta hit a grand slam in an 11-run second inning and tied a career high with five RBIs, leading Arizona to a victory over Philadelphia. Philadelphia Arizona ab r h bi ab r h bi Utley 2b 4 0 2 0 Pollock cf 5 2 3 0 OHerrr cf 4 0 0 0 JaLam 3b 5 0 0 0 Franco 3b 0 0 0 0 Gldsch 1b 1 1 0 0 ABlanc pr-3b 3 1 0 0 OHrndz c 1 0 0 0 Howard 1b 4 0 1 0 DPerlt lf 4 1 2 5 Francr rf 4 0 1 0 Romak pr-lf 1 0 0 0 Ruf lf 4 0 1 0 Tomas rf 2 2 2 0 Galvis ss 3 0 1 0 Inciart rf 3 0 0 0 Rupp c 4 0 2 0 Sltlmch c-1b 4 2 1 1 DBchn p 1 0 0 0 A.Hill 2b 5 2 3 2 Neris p 1 0 0 0 Owings ss 5 2 2 2 Loewen p 1 0 0 0 Hllcksn p 3 1 2 3 Totals 33 1 8 0 Totals 39 13 15 13
Philadelphia
1 0 0 000 000— 1
Arizona 0(11)0 011 00x—13 E-Tomas (8). DP-Philadelphia 1, Arizona 1. LOBPhiladelphia 7, Arizona 7. 2B-Francoeur (13), Ruf (9), Pollock (26), Tomas (18), A.Hill (11), Owings 2 (18). HR-D.Peralta (11), Saltalamacchia (4), A.Hill (5). SB-Pollock (27). S-Galvis. IP H R ER BB SO Philadelphia D.Buchanan L,2-7 12⁄3 11 11 11 2 1 Neris 21⁄3 0 0 0 0 1 Loewen 2 3 2 2 2 4 De Fratus 2 1 0 0 0 0 Arizona Hellickson W,8-8 8 7 1 0 0 6 A.Reed 1 1 0 0 0 1 T-2:43. A-19,836 (48,519).
RCastll rf 4 0 1 1 McGeh ph 1 0 0 1 BrdlyJr lf 4 2 2 0 KFlors p 0 0 0 0 SWrght p 1 0 0 0 Dunn p 0 0 0 0 Cook p 0 0 0 0 Rojas ph 1 0 0 0 De Aza ph 1 0 0 0 ARams p 0 0 0 0 T.Shaw 1b 1 0 0 0 Telis ph 1 0 0 0 Totals 36 4 9 3 Totals 38 5 12 5 Boston 001 012 000 0—4 002 101 1—5 Miami 000 E-Cook (1). DP-Miami 2. LOB-Boston 4, Miami 16. 2B-Betts (26), Prado (15), Realmuto (16). 3B-R. Castillo (1), Bradley Jr. (2), D.Gordon (6). SB-Betts (14). S-S.Wright. SF-I.Suzuki, Hechavarria. IP H R ER BB SO Boston S.Wright 5 5 2 2 5 4 Cook H,1 1 1 0 0 0 1 Layne 0 0 1 1 2 0 Ogando H,9 1 1 0 0 0 1 Machi H,1 1 1 0 0 1 1 Tazawa BS,5-5 1 2 1 1 0 0 1⁄3 Breslow L,0-2 2 1 1 1 1 Miami Nicolino 52⁄3 9 4 4 1 0 1⁄3 Barraclough 0 0 0 0 0 K.Flores 11⁄3 0 0 0 0 1 2⁄3 Dunn 0 0 0 0 1 A.Ramos 1 0 0 0 0 1 B.Morris W,4-3 1 0 0 0 0 0 T-3:30. A-31,951 (37,442).
Giants 3, Astros 1 San Francisco — Madison Bumgarner pitched a five-hitter with 12 strikeouts, Brandon Belt broke up a pitcher’s duel with two solo homers, and San Francisco beat Houston. Houston San Francisco ab r h bi ab r h bi Altuve 2b 4 0 2 0 GBlanc cf 3 0 1 0 CGomz cf 4 0 1 0 MDuffy 3b 4 0 0 0 Correa ss 4 0 0 0 Posey c 3 0 1 0 Gattis lf 4 1 1 0 Pence rf 4 0 0 0 Lowrie 3b 3 0 0 0 Belt 1b 4 2 2 2 Carter 1b 3 0 1 1 BCrwfr ss 4 0 1 0 Conger c 3 0 0 0 Maxwll lf 2 1 1 0 Mrsnck rf 3 0 0 0 Adrianz 2b 4 0 1 0 Kazmir p 2 0 0 0 Bmgrn p 3 0 0 0 MGnzlz ph 1 0 0 0 Totals 31 1 5 1 Totals 31 3 7 2 Houston 000 000 100—1 San Francisco 000 102 00x—3 E-Kazmir 2 (5). LOB-Houston 3, San Francisco 8. 2B-B.Crawford (23). 3B-Gattis (8). HR-Belt 2 (17). SB-C.Gomez (4), G.Blanco (8). CS-Altuve (11). IP H R ER BB SO Houston Kazmir L,6-7 52⁄3 7 3 2 2 3 J.Fields 1 0 0 0 2 2 1⁄3 O.Perez 0 0 0 0 1 Qualls 1 0 0 0 0 1 San Francisco Bumgarner W,13-6 9 5 1 1 0 12 T-2:36. A-42,569 (41,915).
Thursday-Friday First hole-10th hole 6:45 a.m.-Noon — Ryan Helminen, United States; Rory Sabbatini, South Africa; Chesson Hadley, United States. 6:55 a.m.-12:10 p.m. — David Howell, England; Grant Sturgeon, United States; Boo Weekley, United States. 7:05 a.m.-12:20 p .m. — Charles Howell III, United States; Austin Peters, United States; Thomas Bjorn, Denmark. 7:15 a.m.-12:30 p.m. — Byeong Hun An, South Korea; Russell Henley, United States; Robert Streb, United States. 7:25 a.m.-12:40 p.m. — James Morrison, England; Ryan Palmer, United States; Charley Hoffman, United States. 7:35 a.m.-12:50 p.m. — Stephen Gallacher, Scotland; Ryan Moore, United States; Thongchai Jaidee, Thailand. 7:45 a.m.-1 p.m. — Vijay Singh, Fiji; David Toms, United States; Mark Brooks, United States. 7:55 a.m.-1:10 p.m. — James Hahn, United States; Jamie Donaldson, Wales; Harris English, United States. 8:05 a.m.-1:20 p.m. — Ross Fisher, England; J.B. Holmes, United States; Mikko Ilonen, Finland. 8:15 a.m.-1:30 p.m. — Tony Finau, United States; Branden Grace, South Africa; Danny Lee, New Zealand. 8:25 a.m.-1:40 p.m. — Steve Young, United States; Morgan Hoffmann, United States; Anirban Lahiri, India. 8:35 a.m.-1:50 p.m. — Brian Cairns, United States; Matt Every, United States; Matt Jones, Australia. 8:45 a.m.-2 p.m. — Adam Rainaud, United States; Brian Harman, United States; J.J. Henry, United States. 9 a.m.-3 p.m. — Michael Putnam, United States; Marcus Fraser, Australia; Steve Marino, United States. Noon-6:45 a.m. — Bob Sowards, United States; Koumei Oda, Japan; Alex Cejka, Germany. 12:10 p.m.-6:55 a.m. — Ryan Kennedy, United States; Kevin Chappell, United States; Brendon de Jonge, Zimbabwe. 12:20 p.m.-7:05 a.m. — Davis Love III, United States; Darren Clarke, Northern Ireland; Steve Stricker, United States. 12:30 p.m.-7:15 a.m. — Jimmy Walker, United States; Tommy Fleetwood, England; Justin Thomas, United States. 12:40 p.m.-7:25 a.m. — Webb Simpson, United States; Bernd Wiesberger, Austria; Shane Lowry, Ireland.
Pts 44 36 34 31 31 28 28 24 23 22
GF 34 35 38 37 32 29 32 31 29 24
GA 26 25 39 38 36 31 37 36 40 31
Pts GF GA Vancouver 13 8 3 42 34 22 Los Angeles 11 7 7 40 42 30 FC Dallas 11 6 5 38 32 27 Sporting KC 10 4 7 37 33 22 Portland 10 8 6 36 25 28 Seattle 10 12 2 32 26 27 Houston 8 8 7 31 30 28 Real Salt Lake 7 9 8 29 27 37 San Jose 7 10 5 26 23 29 Colorado 5 8 9 24 20 24 NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie. Thursday, Aug. 13 D.C. United at NYC FC, 6 p.m. Friday, Aug. 14 Colorado at San Jose, 10 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 15 Toronto FC at New York, 6 p.m. Houston at New England, 6:30 p.m. Los Angeles at FC Dallas, 8 p.m. Vancouver at Sporting Kansas City, 8 p.m. Portland at Real Salt Lake, 9 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 16 Orlando City at Seattle, 4 p.m. Chicago at Philadelphia, 6 p.m.
WNBA
Tuesday’s Games Indiana 73, Washington 62 New York 84, Chicago 63 Minnesota 83, San Antonio 76 Seattle at Los Angeles, (n) Today’s Games Tulsa at Connecticut, 6 p.m. Seattle at Phoenix, 9 p.m.
NFL Preseason
Thursday New Orleans at Baltimore, 6:30 p.m. New York Jets at Detroit, 6:30 p.m. Green Bay at New England, 6:30 p.m. Washington at Cleveland, 7 p.m. Miami at Chicago, 7 p.m. Dallas at San Diego, 9 p.m. Friday Tennessee at Atlanta, 6 p.m. Carolina at Buffalo, 6 p.m. New York Giants at Cincinnati, 6:30 p.m. Pittsburgh at Jacksonville, 6:30 p.m. St. Louis at Oakland, 9 p.m. Denver at Seattle, 9 p.m. Saturday Tampa Bay at Minnesota, 7 p.m. San Francisco at Houston, 7 p.m. Kansas City at Arizona, 8 p.m. Sunday Indianapolis at Philadelphia, Noon
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The University of Kansas is committed to providing our employees with an enriching and dynamic work environment that encourages innovation, research, creativity and equal opportunity for learning, development and professional growth. KU strives to recruit, develop, retain and reward a dynamic workforce that shares our mission and core strategic values in research, teaching and service. Learn more at http://provost.ku.edu/strategic-plan
Functional Systems Analyst
Development Specialist
Assistant Director
KU Public Safety Office seeking Functional Systems Analyst to facilitate use and support of KU’s security access, cameras and alarm systems.
KU Dole Institute of Politics seeks a Development Specialist to join their team.
KU Financial Aid & Scholarships seeks an Assistant Director.
APPLY AT
APPLY AT
http://employment.ku.edu/staff/4067BR . Application deadline is August 20, 2015.
http://employment.ku.edu/staff/4054BR Application review date is August 14.
Grant Specialist
Administrative Assistant
The University of Kansas seeks a Grant Specialist to serve within the Shared Service Center.
KU Air Force ROTC seeks an Administrative Assistant.
APPLY AT http://employment.ku.edu/staff/4023BR
Lecturer/MAcc Coord. in Accounting School of Business is seeking a Lecturer/MAcc Coord. in Accounting. Master’s Degree req’d.
APPLY AT https://employment.ku.edu/academic/4035BR Review begins 9/3/15.
APPLY AT http://employment.ku.edu/staff/4037BR Application deadline is August 20, 2015.
APPLY AT http://employment.ku.edu/staff/4061BR. Application review begins August 17.
For complete job descriptions & more information, visit:
employment.ku.edu KU is an EO/AAE. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex (including pregnancy), age, national origin, disability, genetic information or protected Veteran status.
MECHANICAL DESIGN ENGINEER Custom Dredge Works Inc. a leader in semi-portable hydraulic dredging equipment manufacture, is seeking a
SENIOR DESIGN ENGINEER
Based in Topeka, Kansas USA, this position will be responsible to perform design tasks related to New Product Development (NPD), Advanced Engineering (AE), Product Care (PC) and Customer Engineering (CE) projects. KEY RESPONSIBILITIES INCLUDE BUT ARE NOT LIMITED TO: • Design and documentation of components and systems • Ensure that designs and documentation meet specified technical customer demands, product safety, legislative requirements and internal demands • Provide support and/or solutions for service, production and supplier issues • Coordinate build and testing of prototype components
JOB REQUIREMENTS: • Undergraduate degree in Mechanical Engineering preferred • Strong aptitude toward mechanical design • Strong understanding of assembly processes and good understanding of manufacturing processes • Strong skills in 3D CAD systems, Autodesk Inventor experience preferred • Theoretical and applied knowledge of pneumatic, hydraulic and electrical systems related to mobile equipment • Good understanding of structural analysis and testing • Good organization skills and highly motivated • Excellent time management skills, demonstrating meeting multiple project deadlines • Good communication and problem solving skills Custom Dredge Works Inc. offers a competitive compensation and benefit package, including 401(k), Medical, Dental and Life Insurance plans, paid vacation, and paid holidays.
Hi!
We’ve Been Searching for YOU! Do you like speaking with clients from around the world? Do you have customer service experience? If so, this could be your perfect opportunity. Our Lawrence, KS based office has multiple part & full time entry level openings available for outstanding people like YOU!
In-Bound Conference Coordinator:
We are seeking energetic, detail-oriented people with a positive attitude and willingness to learn. Previous computer experience is required. Flex schedules available from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. Connex offers a competitive benefits package including paid time off and 401K plan. For immediate consideration, please email your resume, salary requirements, and cover letter to hireme@connexintl.com and reference Lawrence, KS. EEO/M/F/V/D
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Wednesday, August 12, 2015
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PLACE YOUR AD:
L awrence J ournal -W orld
785.832.2222
classifieds@ljworld.com
Direct Support Professionals COF Training Services, Inc., a non-profit organization providing services to individuals with disabilities, is seeking full-time and part-time Direct Support Professionals (DSP’s). A DSP assists individuals with disabilities to lead a self-directed life, contribute to the community, assists with daily living activities if needed, and encourages attitudes and behaviors that enhance community inclusion.
Don’t stand in line for a job…
Get on-line at: www.BerryPlastics.com
Qualifications include: • A good driving record • A valid driver’s license • Pass background checks • Pass drug test (pre-employment & random) • Must be flexible, working evenings, overnight, or weekend shifts. • High school diploma or GED preferred COF offers competitive wages, and excellent benefits for full-time employees, including: medical, dental and life insurance, KPERS, paid holidays and paid time off. Apply at: 1516 N. Davis Ave., Ottawa, KS 66067, or 1415 S. 6th St., Burlington, KS 66839 Inquiries may be submitted by e-mail to: jstar@cofts.org | www.cofts.org
What are you waiting for??? Your career is waiting for you!
COF is a drug free and tobacco free workplace. Equal opportunity employer.
Operators
• Maintain operations of machinery • Package finished product • Ability to lift up to 35 lbs. • Starting pay is $11.00/hour (plus shift differential) • 2nd and 3rd shifts
NOW HIRING DRIVERS!!
KU on Wheels or Lawrence Transit System! Flexible schedules, 80% company paid employee health insurance for full time, career opportunities. $11.50/hr after paid training, must be 21+
Apply online:
Lawrence Transit: http://goo.gl/H9mPO8 KU on Wheels: http://goo.gl/Hg346z Walk-ins welcome:
MV Transportation, Inc. 1260 Timberedge Road Lawrence, KS
Thermoform Process Technicians
• Perform minor repairs • Troubleshoot equipment • Must have mechanical aptitude • Ability to lift up to 35 lbs. • Pay range is $14.00 - $16.00/hour (plus shift differential) We offer excellent benefits after 60 days of employment (medical, dental, vision, life insurance) and a 401K retirement program with a company matching contribution. To apply, go to our website at www.berryplastics.com and click on Careers to view all of our current job openings in Lawrence. We require successful completion of a pre-employment background check and drug test. EOE
EOE
We’re Hiring!
Brandon Woods at Alvamar offers part and full-time positions in an environment focused on resident directed care. We are looking to add a caring, qualified team member. Come see us if you are interested in our RN, Staff Development Coordinator position:
RN, Staff Development Coordinator As part of the Nurse Manager Team, provides, plans, coordinates and manages orientation and in-service education for community Team Members. RN with management or supervisor experience in long term care or geriatric nursing preferred.
Why Work Anyplace Else? We are an upscale retirement community offering opportunities for new experiences and advancement. Brandon Woods at Alvamar Human Resources 1501 Inverness Drive | Lawrence, KS 66047
TProchaska@5ssl.com
Equal Opportunity Employer
Drug Free Workplace
Make BIG Money With
Sales Consultants Wanted Dale Willey Automotive has positions open for Sales Professionals. If you are enthusiastic and a self-motivated, then stop looking. Dale Willey Automotive is the right place for you.
Responsibilities:
Requirements:
We believe our employees are our greatest asset. As such, we treat all employees with respect and appreciation for their contributions to the company. We believe not only in providing ongoing training, but also rewarding outstanding effort and results through bonus and commission programs. Applicants from retail, sales, customer service, real estate, restaurant, and banking industries are strongly encouraged to apply.
Apply in person or Email your Resume. 2840 S Iowa | Lawrence KS 66046 • Email – sales@dalewilleyauto.com Dale Willey Automotive is a drug free environment, as well as an Equal Opportunity Employe
Maverick Transportation, the largest glass carrier in the transportation industry, has an open
Dock Position At our facility in Spring Hill, KS. • Position will work 2nd shift: (2 shifts open, either 2:00 pm - 10 pm or 3:00 pm - 11:00 pm) • Overtime available
Our NEW Lawrence location has a GREAT business opportunity for you to own & operate your own Flat Bed delivery service!
BIG Income Potential with small startup costs. Be home EVERY night with your family! Work for YOURSELF, not someone else!
• Must live within a 50 mile radius of Spring Hill, KS
The Lawrence Humane Society is seeking a dynamic community engagement professional to design, plan, and direct a vibrant volunteer management program and community engagement initiatives. The Volunteer & Community Engagement Coordinator will create sustainable and engaging opportunities and programs to recruit, train and retain volunteers, as well as community outreach programs and events. View the full description at:
www.lawrencehumane.org Interested candidates should submit a letter of interest, resume, and salary requirements to mscheibe@lawrencehumane.org by Sept. 7, 2015.
• Spot trailers in dock doors • Load, secure, & tarp glass loads on flatbed, step deck & double drop trailers • Lifting up to 50lbs & climbing required
• No experience required
Follow Us On Twitter!
renceKS @JobsLawings at the best for the latest open companies in Northeast Kansas!
http://www.menards.com/main/c-19223.htm Or contact us at: (715)-876-4000 dfedewa@menard-inc.com
Volunteer & Community Engagement Coordinator
• Starting pay rate is $18/hr.
• Active Class A CDL License & stable work history
Work with the #1 Home Improvement Center in the Midwest. For more information, visit our website at
Great Benefits:
• Provide Excellent Customer Service • Automotive and/or Sales Experience • Commission play plan plus bonuses • Maintain Product knowledge on all a plus, but not required (we will train plus monthly guarantee new vehicles the right individuals) • Great Benefits -- medical, dental etc.. • Follow-up with clients to ensure • Great Communication and Customer • 401k plan customer satisfaction Service Skills • Paid Vacation • Work with management team to • Outgoing, Enthusiastic and Positive • $2,000 per month while in training achieve sales goals Attitude • Great work schedule & Closed on Sundays and Major Holidays! • Full training program
To apply, contact Maverick’s Recruiting Dept at
844-371-8500
Email recruiting@maverickusa.com or visit us online at www.drivemaverick.com
L awrence J ournal -W orld
Wednesday, August 12, 2015
PLACE YOUR AD: AdministrativeProfessional
Building Maintenance
Baldwin City USD is seeking
Kitchen Manager
BUS DRIVERS for 2015-2016 routes. CDL preferred. Training provided. Starting rate: $12.50 per hour. Hours vary For more info: Call Shawn Ellis at 785-594-7433 EOE
Banking
De Soto School District. Must have experience in food production. Managerial exp. preferred. 7.5 hrs/day, 168-day contract, $12.50 $14.00/hr plus paid benefits. Apply online: http://desoto.school recruiter.net/
785.832.2222 Customer Service
Call Center New Shift Open $10 hr + bonuses 40 hrs/wk, Full time $$ Weekly Pay! $$
Call today! 785-841-9999 DayCom
classifieds@ljworld.com
DriversTransportation
Local Semi Driver Local deliveries Haz-Mat & CDL required.
Taylor Oil Inc. 504 Main Wellsville, KS 785-883-2072
General
Healthcare
EQUIPMENT OPERATORS
FULL-TIME OPTICIAN Seeking full-time optician to assist doctors in growing eye care practice. Strong work ethic, team player, enjoys working with people, detail-oriented and EXCELLENT customer service skills required. Duties include eyewear sales, frame buying and inventory, edging lenses, etc. Experience welcomed, but not a necessity. Competitive base pay with health insurance, retirement, plus incentive bonus. Email resume and cover letter to: drarnold@shawneeevca.com
Operators needed for quarry work in NE Kansas. Top pay for experience or will train with similar experience. Full-time, permanent positions. Apply between 7am & 4pm at Hamm Companies, 609 Perry Place, Perry, KS Equal Opportunity Employer
Healthcare
Legal - Paralegal
DriversTransportation
TELLERS Customer Service Full and part time openings. Seeking qualified persons w/minimum 6 mos. teller experience with a financial institution, quality customer service skills, detail oriented, professional appearance & manner. Scheduling flexibility with weekend hours required. Interested applicants fax resume to Mainstreet Credit Union 913-599-4816, or complete application at 1001 East 23rd St. Lawrence.
Childcare Part Time In-Home Childcare Provider needed for 4 children in Lawrence. Flexibility a must. Call Sara: 913-238-8110
Construction Experienced Concrete Finisher $18 an hr, work mostly Douglas County. Also need laborers.
785-423-7145
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
General
CNA & CMA Classes Day/evening starting W/O 8-24. In Lawrence, Ottawa, & Chanute.
620-431-2820
Interview TIP #1 Learn a few things about the company before you interview.
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Teri x241, or Tracy x262 tshowalter@neosho.edu or trhine@neosho.edu
Decisions Determine Destiny
Full Time & Part Time Night PA or NP Critical Access Hospital coverage needed for the ER and Prompt Care Clinic. Position is very autonomous, exceptional working cond. Kansas license req, start ASAP! Resume or apply to: Human Resources Fax: 913-774-3366 or email mkeirns@fwhuston.com F.W. Huston Medical Cente 408 Delaware Winchester, KS 66097 Ph: 913-774-4340 www.fwhuston.com
Maintenance
ELECTRONICS TECHNICIAN
Custodial Position Part-time, mainly weekends, some weeknights. Approx 30 hrs/mo. Good 2nd job! Must be able to lift 70 lbs on regular basis. Pay rate $9/hr. Send letter listing job experience to Barbara Holland at: barbholland@sunflower.com
Management Citizens’ Utility Ratepayer Board
Attorney Applicants must be a member of the Kansas Bar and have litigation experience. For position details, please view the job posting on the agency website: http://curb.kansas.gov or the State of Kansas website at https://admin.ks.gov EOE
Manufacturing & Assembly
Executive Director Douglas County Senior Services Provides, overall strategic, visionary and operational leadership for an agency serving seniors in Douglas County, KS. Complete job description at: dgcoseniorservices.org Submit cover letter, resume and three references, no later than 8/14/2015, to: jwrightdcsssearch@gmail.com
FT person needed to join expanding company making laboratory equipment. Soldering experience preferred but will train. Send resume to: LLANE@PinnacleT.com
Social Services Self Advocacy Support Self-Advocate Coalition of Kansas seeks direct support worker to help survivors of sexual violence. Exp req w people with developmental disabilities, good driving record, and reliable transportation. Applicants with a bachelor’s degree may be eligible for expanded duties and full time position. 2.5 yr, 25 hr/wk grant funded position. Send resume to:
The Arc of Douglas County 2518 Ridge Court, #238 Lawrence KS 66046 785-749-0121 Need to sell your car?
Call 832-2222 or email classifieds@ljworld.com
PUBLIC NOTICES TO PLACE AN AD: (First published in the Lawrence Daily Journal-World August 12, 2015) The following vehicles will be sold by Moon’s Towing at public auction for tow an storage fees on August 16, 2015 at 1:00pm at 417 Maple St., Lawrence, KS. YEAR/MAKE 03 FORD 97 DODGE 01 FORD
VIN # 1FAFP55U83A172974 4B3AV42Y3VE079578 1FAHP56S51G144193 ________
(First published in the Lawrence Daily JournalWorld August 12, 2015) IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS Bank of America, N.A. Plaintiff, vs. Estate Of Homer Barkley, et al., Defendants. Case No. 14CV229 K.S.A. 60 Mortgage Foreclosure (Title to Real Estate Involved) NOTICE OF SHERIFF’S SALE Under and by virtue of an Order of Sale issued by the Clerk of the District Court in and for the said County of Douglas, State of Kansas, in a certain cause in said Court Numbered 14CV229, wherein the parties above named were respectively plaintiff and defendant, and to me, the undersigned Sheriff of said County, directed, I will offer for sale at public auction and sell to the highest bidder for cash in hand at 10:00 AM, on 09/03/2015, the Jury Assembly Room of the District Court located in the lower level of the Judicial and Law Enforcement Center building, 111 E. 11th St., Lawrence, Kansas the following described real estate located in the County of Douglas, State of Kansas, to wit:
EVERBANK PLAINTIFF -vsCHRISTOPHER SEAL, et. al.; DEFENDANTS No. 14CV93 Div. No. 3 K.S.A. 60 Mortgage Foreclosure NOTICE OF SHERIFF’S SALE Under and by virtue of an Order of Sale issued by the Clerk of the District Court in and for the said County of Douglas, in a certain cause in said Court Numbered 14CV93, wherein the parties above named were respectively plaintiff and defendant, and to me, the undersigned Sheriff of said County, directed, I will offer for sale at public auction and sell to the highest bidder for cash in hand at the South door of the Law Enforcement center in the City of Lawrence in said County, on September 3, 2015, at 10:00 a.m., of said day the following described real estate located in the County of Douglas, State of Kansas, to wit:
785.832.2222 Defendants. Case No. 15CV110 K.S.A. 60 Mortgage Foreclosure (Title to Real Estate Involved) NOTICE OF SHERIFF’S SALE Under and by virtue of an Order of Sale issued by the Clerk of the District Court in and for the said County of Douglas, State of Kansas, in a certain cause in said Court Numbered 15CV110, wherein the parties above named were respectively plaintiff and defendant, and to me, the undersigned Sheriff of said County, directed, I will offer for sale at public auction and sell to the highest bidder for cash in hand at 10:00 AM, on 09/03/2015, the Jury Assembly Room of the District Court located in the lower level of the Judicial and Law Enforcement Center building, 111 E. 11th St., Lawrence, Kansas, the following described real estate located in the County of Douglas, State of Kansas, to wit: LOT 10, BLOCK 6, PARK HILL ADDITION, AN ADDITION TO THE CITY OF LAWRENCE, DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS. SHERIFF OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS Respectfully Submitted, By: Shawn Scharenborg, KS # 24542 Sara Knittel, KS # 23624 Kelli N. Breer, KS # 17851 Kozeny & McCubbin, L.C. (St. Louis Office) 12400 Olive Blvd., Suite 555 St. Louis, MO 63141 Phone: (314) 991-0255 Fax: (314) 567-8006 Email:sscharenborg@km-la w.com Attorney for Plaintiff ________
TRACT TWENTY-TWO (22), IN SOUTHERN PARKWAY ADDITION, A REPLAT OF LOT ONE (1) PARKMAR ESTATES NO. TWO (2) AND LOT TWO (2), PARKMAR ESTATES NO. THREE (3), IN THE CITY OF LAWRENCE, AS SHOWN BY THE RECORDED PLAT THEREOF, IN DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS. Commonly known as 3305 West 26th Street, (First published in the LOT NINE (9), IN BLOCK Lawrence, Kansas 66047 Lawrence Daily JournalTWO (2), IN TOWN AND COUNTRY ADDITION, AN This is an attempt to col- World August 12, 2015) ADDITION TO THE CITY OF lect a debt and any inforIN THE DISTRICT COURT LAWRENCE, IN DOUGLAS mation obtained will be OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, COUNTY, KANSAS. used for that purpose. KANSAS
SHERIFF OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS Respectfully Submitted, By: Shawn Scharenborg, KS # 24542 Sara Knittel, KS # 23624 Kelli N. Breer, KS # 17851 Kozeny & McCubbin, L.C. (St. Louis Office) 12400 Olive Blvd., Suite 555 St. Louis, MO 63141 Phone: (314) 991-0255 Fax: (314) 567-8006 Email:sscharenborg@km-law.com Attorney for Plaintiff ________ (First published in the Lawrence Daily JournalWorld August 12, 2015) IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS
Kenneth M. McGovern SHERIFF OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS SHAPIRO & KREISMAN, LLC Attorneys for Plaintiff 4220 Shawnee Mission Parkway - Suite 418B Fairway, KS 66205 (913)831-3000 Fax No. (913)831-3320 Our File No. 14-007306/jm ________ (First published in the Lawrence Daily JournalWorld August 12, 2015) IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS Bank of America, N.A. Plaintiff, vs. Athena Huffman, William Wayne Huffman , et al.,
DEUTSCHE BANK TRUST COMPANY AMERICAS, AS TRUSTEE FOR RESIDENTIAL ACCREDIT LOANS, INC., MORTGAGE ASSET-BACKED PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATES, SERIES 2006-QS5 PLAINTIFF -vsTERRY HARRAL, et. al.; DEFENDANTS No. 15CV177 Div. No. 5 K.S.A. 60 Mortgage Foreclosure NOTICE OF SHERIFF’S SALE Under and by virtue of an Order of Sale issued by the Clerk of the District Court in and for the said County of Douglas, in a certain
cause in said Court Numbered 15CV177, wherein the parties above named were respectively plaintiff and defendant, and to me, the undersigned Sheriff of said County, directed, I will offer for sale at public auction and sell to the highest bidder for cash in hand at the South door of the Law Enforcement center in the City of Lawrence in said County, on September 3, 2015, at 10:00 a.m., of said day the following described real estate located in the County of Douglas, State of Kansas, to wit:
classifieds@ljworld.com the following described mation obtained will be real estate located in the used for that purpose. County of Douglas, State of Kansas, to wit: Kenneth M. McGovern SHERIFF OF DOUGLAS LOT 12, IN RIVERRIDGE RUN COUNTY, KANSAS ADDITION, AN ADDITION TO SHAPIRO & KREISMAN, LLC THE CITY OF LAWRENCE, IN Attorneys for Plaintiff DOUGLAS COUNTY, KAN- 4220 Shawnee Mission SAS Commonly known as Parkway - Suite 418B 506 Sandpiper, Lawrence, Fairway, KS 66205 Kansas 66049 (913)831-3000 Fax No. (913)831-3320 This is an attempt to col- Our File No. 15-008028/jm _______ lect a debt and any infor(First published in the Lawrence Daily Journal-World August 12, 2015)
LOT ELEVEN (11), BLOCK SIX (6), IN WHISPERING MEADOWS ADDITION, IN THE CITY OF EUDORA, AS SHOWN BY THE RECORDED PLAT THEREOF, IN DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS. Commonly known as 1441 Arrowwood Dr, Eudora, Kansas 66025
Pursuant to Section 79-2303 of Kansas Statutes Annotated, notice is hereby given that the taxes assessed for the year 2014 against the real estate described in the following list, all situated in the county of Douglas and the state of Kansas, are due in full in the listed amount. Notice is further given that the Douglas County Treasurer will sell to Douglas County, and bid off in the name of Douglas County, said real estate on the first Tuesday of September, which is September 1, 2015, for unpaid taxes, interest and legal charges. No bid shall be received from any other person. This is an attempt to col- _______________________ lect a debt and any infor- Paula Gilchrist mation obtained will be Douglas County Treasurer used for that purpose. Lawrence, KS Kenneth M. McGovern SHERIFF OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS SHAPIRO & KREISMAN, LLC Attorneys for Plaintiff 4220 Shawnee Mission Parkway - Suite 418B Fairway, KS 66205 (913)831-3000 Fax No. (913)831-3320 Our File No. 15-008217/JM ________ (First published in the Lawrence Daily JournalWorld July 29, 2015) IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS WELLS FARGO BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, SUCCESSOR BY MERGER TO WELLS FARGO BANK MINNESOTA, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION AS TRUSTEE FOR REPERFORMING LOAN REMIC TRUST CERTIFICATES, SERIES 2002-1 PLAINTIFF -vsPAULA KISSINGER, et. al.; DEFENDANTS No. 2015-CV-000073 Div. No. K.S.A. 60 Mortgage Foreclosure NOTICE OF SHERIFF’S SALE Under and by virtue of an Order of Sale issued by the Clerk of the District Court in and for the said County of Douglas, in a certain cause in said Court Numbered 2015-CV-000073, wherein the parties above named were respectively plaintiff and defendant, and to me, the undersigned Sheriff of said County, directed, I will offer for sale at public auction and sell to the highest bidder for cash in hand at the South door of the Law Enforcement center in the City of Lawrence in said County, on August 20, 2015, at 10:00 a.m., of said day
0230283404007012000, 339 HALDERMAN ST, BLK 21 LTS 4,5 & 6, TRENDEL GREG A 6,207.06 0230283404008001010, 301 ELMORE ST, BLK 20 LTS 26,27 & 28;ALSO LT, CREATIVE CUSTOM HOMES INC 1,635.43 0230283404008006000, 410 EAST WOODSON AVE, BLK 20 W 1/3 LTS 49 THRU 56 &, JANES KEVIN R, JANES BELINDA J 1,242.18 0230283404010007000, 334 CLARK ST, 34-11-18 S 6.25A OF W 36.5A OF, TOMPKINS GAIL L 1,020.95 0230293100000019000, 2124 E 250 RD, 10A 31-11-18 W 1/2 W 1/2 SW 1/, BOOSE DONALD R, BOOSE VICKIE M 1,499.70 0230293100000024010, 273 N 2150 RD, 20A 31-11-18 TR OF LAND IN N H, VOTH JOE, VOTH CRYSTAL 958.15 0230293200000006010, 2110 E 350 RD, 5.24A 32-11-18 BEG AT SW COR S, CLEMENT ETHEL D TRUSTEE, CLEMENT DONALD F TRUSTEE 1,872.61 0230373500000005000, 35-11-17, 40.12A 35-11-17 BEG AT NW COR, GRANDMONTAGNE JOHN T, GRANDMONTAGNE CHRISTINE L 327.27 0230373500000007020, 35-11-17, 7.72A 35-11-17 COM AT NW COR S, SIMMONS GEORGE R, SIMMONS ARLOENE 188.76 0230410100000006000, 2066 E 100 RD, 78A 1-12-17 S 1/2 NW FR 1/4 E, ROBERTS RANCE E, ROBERTS SHARRON K 1,648.77 0230410200000009000, 8 N 2050 RD, 30A 2-12-17 S 30A NW 1/4 (5000, RHOADES BRENDA R 717.94 0230411100000006000, 10 N 1900 RD, 7.9A 11-12-17 BEG 42 RDS E OF, BOWER JAMES B, BOWER DAWNDA L 535.78 0230461300000001050, 13-12-17, 5.54A 13-12-17 THAT PART OF PA, SHERMAN DOUGLAS 583.87 0230461302001001000, 1899 E 175 RD, 3.38A 13-12-17 THAT PART OF FO, GARBER JENNIFER M 3,159.56 0230461302003004000, 13-12-17, .487A 13-12-17 BEG 61 RDS (100, FICKEL HOMER D 39.82 0230461401002002000, 87 HWY 40, 1.5A 14-12-17 BEG AT PT N84DEG, OSHEL ROGER N, OSHEL LINDA M 2,836.00 0230462400000004000, 24-12-17, 68A 24-12-17 S 1/2 NW 1/4,LESS, LONE OAK LLC 392.51 0230462400000006000, 1718 E 150 RD, 95A 24-12-17 E 1/2 SW 1/4 & SE, LONE OAK LLC 8,760.02 0230462400000006010, 24-12-17, 145A 24-12-17 145A IN SE 1/4 A, LONE OAK LLC 1,060.11 0230473600000004000, 1540 E 100 RD, 33.16A 36-12-17 NW 1/4 SW 1/4,, RAKE FRANCES 1,089.94 0230510100000003000, 708 N 2050 RD, 1A 1-12-18 COM AT SW COR NW 1/, TERRY GLENN, TERRY ERIN 301.05 0230510202002001000, 300 SHANNON AVE BLK 1, BLK 36 LTS 12,13,14,15,16,17,1, GOODRICH MICHAEL T 48.93 0230510202002002000, 300 SHANNON AVE BLK 1, BLK 36 LTS 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,1, GOODRICH MICHAEL T 47.01 0230520300000003000, 335 E 7TH ST, 3-12-18 BEG AT NW COR SE 1/4 T, BROUHARD KENNETH E, BROUHARD GERDA R 487.61 0230520300000006060, 707 WHITFIELD ST, WHITFIELD SUB LT 2,LESS S 10 F, BAYLESS EARL L, BAYLESS MARILYN J 1,446.66 0230520300000006130, 3-12-18, WHITFIELD SUB S 10 FT LT 4 MG, COFFELT CYNTHIA 22.12 0230520301001003000, 440 BOONE ST, BLK 36 LTS 46 THRU 56 INCL (L0, KELLEY PATRICE, KELLEY BRIAN 24.99 0230520301005005000, 424 WHITFIELD ST, BLK 40 S 30 FT LT 24 & ALL LTS, SLEDD GREGORY G, SLEDD MARY S 1,717.19 0230520301008015000, 410 E 7TH ST, 3-12-18 BEG AT PT 1469.5 FT E, BROUHARD MICHAEL G, BROUHARD MAXINE
M 277.68 0230520302002001000, 543 N 2100 RD, 43A 3-12-18 N 53A OF E 73A OF, MITCHELL BETTY R, MITCHELL MICHAEL L 1,009.39 0230520900000003020, 9-12-18, 10A 9-12-18 E 42.956A OF N 871, POWELL KEVIN 626.20 0230530500000002000, 355 N 2100 RD, 57.47A 5-12-18 BEG AT NW COR N, COOLEY MARJORIE 720.97 0230530500000010000, 332 N 2050 RD, 10A 5-12-18 S 1/2 S 1/2 SE 1/4, LADUKE DAVID R, LADUKE FREDA N 2,060.20 0230541700000002090, 17-12-18, 10.06A 17-12-18 N 1/2 S 1/2 NW, BECKWITH JOHN V 466.34 0230541800000011000, 1814 E 200 RD, 20.15A 18-12-18 BEG AT PT ON W, KOERNER JOHN J, KOERNER PATRICIA C 908.45 0230552100000001010, 453 HWY 40, 5.336A 21-12-18 BEG AT PT ON C, WRIGHT RICHARD J, WRIGHT TARA L 449.56 0230561300000016020, 13-12-18, 11.66A 13-12-18 TR OF LAND IN, PATTERSON DALE D SR 120.73 0230561300000016030, 787 N 1851 DIAG RD, 20.34A 13-12-18 TR OF LAND IN, PATTERSON DALE D SR 601.33 0230562400000005000, 755 N 1800 RD, 2.9A 24-12-18 BEG AT PT ON W L, COYNE DANNY 2,338.51 0230572600000008000, 624 N 1600 RD, 8.42A 26-12-18 BEG 966.76 FT E, MCPHEETERS JEFFREY S, MCPHEETERS PRISCILLA J 4,823.83 0230573500000010000, 1537 E 642 RD, 5.0541A 35-12-18 BEG AT NW COR, MARTIN DONALD M, MARTIN MARIA S 2,603.81 0230573500000011060, 35-12-18, 2.39A 35-12-18 COM AT NE COR S, MARTIN DONALD M, MARTIN MARIA S 131.32 0230573500000014040, 35-12-18, 22.374A 35-12-18 BEG AT NW COR, PLOTNIKOV ALEXANDR, PLOTNIKOV TATIANA 566.22 0230582800000010000, 424 N 1600 RD, 5A 28-12-18 E 1/2 E 1/2 S 1/2, OSHEL MARVIN G 2,000.58 0230592900000003000, 1673 E 350 RD, 3.22A 29-12-18 PARCEL IN NW 1/, VERMETTE JUDY K HIGGINS 1,196.59 0230593102001003020, 237 N 1600 RD, 1.5A 31-12-18 COM AT NE COR NW, CLUTCHEY RACHEL L 1,697.25 0230630800000009000, 946 N 1950 RD, 39A 8-12-19 SE 1/4 NW 1/4,LESS, BOETTGER WANDA J 1,062.76 0230641900002008000, 844 N 1750 RD, 9.47A 19-12-19 S 10A OF SE 1/4, RAY DONALD L, RAY BOB J 199.59 0230641900003003000, 19-12-19, PINE-NE-WA BLK 1 LT 1,LESS 4A, WINBORN JAMES M III 34.75 0230641900003004000, 835 N 1750 RD, PINE-NE-WA BLK 1 LT 2,LESS .86, WINBORN JAMES M III 2,113.63 0230641900003022000, 866 N 1710 RD, PINE-NE-WA BLK 1 LT 20,LESS .2, STROKER WALTER A, STROKER CHARLOTTE J 58.43 0230642000000001130, 20-12-19, OAK RIDGE ESTATES LT 13, SLOAN EDWARD, SLOAN POLLY 759.77 0230642000000001140, 1761 E 960 RD, OAK RIDGE ESTATES LT 14, SLOAN EDWARD S, SLOAN POLLY 9,482.02 0230642000000001150, 20-12-19, OAK RIDGE ESTATES LT 15, SLOAN EDWARD S, SLOAN POLLY 738.41 0230642000000003000, 939 N 1800 RD, 55.011A 20-12-19 BEG AT NW COR, ROTHWELL WILBUR C 985.38 0230652200002005010, 1760 E 1100 RD, 5A 22-12-19 SW 1/4 SW 1/4 NW 1, WILLIAMS ADAM W, WILLIAMS GINGER 445.82 0230652200010008000, 907 N FIELD STONE DR, STONEGATE III ADD REPLAT OF LO, CUEVAS CARLOS G CO-TRUSTEE, CUEVAS MARIA E COTRUSTEE 1,830.58 0230652204012004000, 3916 HOLLYHOCK CT, STONEGATE IV ADD REPLAT OF STO, MYERS CONST INC 16.09 0230662304003008000, 2517 STOWE DR, DE VEL ADD BLK 3 LT 8, VOGEL ROGER, VOGEL JUDITH 2,626.62 0230662304011009000, 2349 HAVERSHAM DR, DE VEL ADD NO 4 BLK 3 LT 9, DRASKOVICH RICHARD M, DRASKOVICH TERRY L 2,634.28 0230662401001002000, 24-12-19, 45.85A 24-12-19 COM AT SW COR, ALLEN JEFFREY N 637.61 0230662401002003000, 1358 N 1750 RD, 1.29A 24-12-19 BEG AT PT 410 F, ALLEN JEFFREY N 652.08 0230662402002013000, 1755 E 1310 RD, MILLER ACRES LT 2, DYER DANA E 1,608.42 0230662402006001000, 1780 E 1338 RD, WELLS ACRES SUB LT 8, ALLDRITT LINDA J 2,240.48 0230662403403012012, 255 NORTH MICHIGAN ST 13-84, WOODCREEK TOWNHOUSES LT 13A, JOHNSON STEVEN W, JOHNSON MARITZA 23.52 0230662403403012062, 255 NORTH MICHIGAN ST 13-79, WOODCREEK TOWNHOUSES LT 13F, PATTON BRIAN K, PATTON KIMBERLY D 501.19 0230662403403014032, 255 NORTH MICHIGAN ST 15-93, WOODCREEK TOWNHOUSES LT 15C, YU STEVEN P 995.07 0230662403403017032, 255 NORTH MICHIGAN ST 18-109, WOODCREEK TOWNHOUSES LT 18C, LEE RONALD D (NASH) 486.11 0230662403403018012, 255 NORTH MICHIGAN ST 20-119, WOODCREEK TOWNHOUSES LT 20A, LYLES LIJIA L 1,189.55 0230662403403021672, 255 NORTH MICHIGAN ST 12-67, WOODCREEK TOWNHOUSE ADD WOODCR, SULT RITA K 274.40 0230662403403022562, 255 NORTH MICHIGAN ST 11-56, WOODCREEK TOWNHOUSE ADD WOODCR, STEELE MER-
PUBLIC NOTICE CONTINUED ON PAGE 5D
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Wednesday, August 12, 2015
.
L AWRENCE J OURNAL -W ORLD
SPECIAL!
10 LINES & PHOTO 7 DAYS $19.95 28 DAYS $49.95
DOESN’T SELL IN 28 DAYS?
FREE RENEWAL!
PLACE YOUR AD:
785.832.2222
classifieds@ljworld.com
Lawrence Premier Pre-Owned Sales, Collision and Mechanical Repair Car Center
RECREATION
Chevrolet Cars
Boats-Water Craft
2014 Chevrolet Camaro SS 2SS Stk#1215T589A
$33,986 LUND, Fishing boat 2005. 16 ft Deep V, 2004 50 hp Johnson motor, 24 volt Minn Kota 65# Power Drive trolling motor, swing away trailer tongue, new cover to fit, 2 on board chargers, live well with bait holder, rod locker, 2 pro butt seats, Lund sport track with 2 rod holders, new stainless steel prop.. $6500.00 (785)813-6707
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Alek's alek's Auto auto SALE SALE SALE
2012 TOYOTA YARIS 60k...................................$7,750 2010 NISSAN VERSA 60k ..................................$7,900 2010 TOYOTA COROLLA LE, 55k .......................$9,950 2010 TOYOTA COROLLA LE, 56k .......................$9,950 2009 HONDA CIVIC 2D, LX, 73k ........................$8,500 2009 TOYOTA COROLLA LE, 109k .....................$7,500 2009 CHRYSLER TOWN & COUNTRY 51k .... $12,500 2008 MITSUBISHI ECLIPSE GT, V6, 51k ....... $11,500 2008 CHEVY COBALT LT, 105k...........................$6,950 2008 TOYOTA CAMRY LE, HYBRID, 58k......... $10,900 2007 HONDA CIVIC EX, 2D, 75k........................$7,900 2005 HYUNDAI ELANTRA 121k........................$3,900 2005 JEEP LIBERTY V6, 89k..............................$7,250 2004 TOYOTA COBRA GT, 32k..........................$7,500 1987 MERCEDES 560SL 44k........................... $17,500
ALL PRICES NEGOTIABLE!!!!
601 N. 2nd • Lawrence, KS 66044 785-766-4864 • 785-843-9300 • aleksauto.com
USED CAR GIANT
2008 VOLKSWAGEN RABBIT S
2008 FORD ESCAPE XLT
UCG PRICE Stock #114K242
$6,995
2007 MAZDA CX-7 GRAND TOURING
UCG PRICE
2001 TOYOTA PRIUS FIVE
UCG PRICE
Stock #115T815
$10,995
$9,495
Stock #116T066
UCG PRICE
Stock #115L769A
$17,430
785-727-7151 23rd & Alabama, Lawrence www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
RV Dodge Trucks
Ford Cars
Ford Trucks
Honda Cars
Honda SUVs
Honda SUVs
**FOR SALE**
1986 Honda CRX,
2009 Chevrolet Impala LT Stk#115C969
$9,494 2009 Chevy 3500 Express AND 2008 Rockwood Forest trailer! 12 passenger van & Rockwood Forest River 26 ft. camping trailer combo. Both excellent condition. 59K mi on van & little use on trailer. Rear A/C, Power seats, cloth int., van has removeable seats, new tires on both. Trailer stored inside. Must see!! $28,000 (785)423-0037
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
2011 Dodge Ram 2500 Laramie
2009 HONDA CR-V EX-L AWD
Stk#115T945 Stk#115T970
$8,995 $38,979 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Ford Crossovers
TRANSPORTATION
133,550 miles. Runs good! Call 785-691-6425
2005 Ford Expedition Limited
Ford Cars
2012 Ford F-150 SVT Raptor Stk#115T876
888-631-6458
2012 Ford Escape Limited
2011 Chevrolet Impala LT
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4x4, Leather, Moonroof, Loaded, Low Miles, Well Maintained, Immaculate Condition. Stk# F349A
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
Only $18,588
GMC Trucks
$15,995
2015 BMW 6 Series 650i Gran Coupe
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Stk#15T537A
Stk#115C582
$13,495 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Ford SUVs
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
$76,995
2009 Honda Accord LX-P
2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Isuzu SUVs
Stk#1PL1985
Stk#P1861A
2014 Ford Focus SE
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888-631-6458
$32,500
JackEllenaHonda.com
Stk#1PL1958
$8,995
Stk#115C520A
$46,995
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BMW Cars
2014 Honda Pilot EX-L
2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047 JackEllenaHonda.com
$10,752
GMC 2011 Sierra Reg cab long box 4wd, one owner, power equipment, very nice! Stk#345291 only $15,814.00
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
2012 HONDA PILOT EX-L NAVIGATION 4WD Isuzu 2000 Rodeo
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4wd LS, V6, one owner, running boards, alloy wheels, power equipment, Stk#43679A1
Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
Honda Cars
Only $6,486
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Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Buick Cars
1993 Chevy Corvette Convertible. Auto, Red leather interior, Drop top in good condition, CD/ Cassette/ radio, New tires, Dual airbags, AC, cruise- power everything! Only 49K mi! Call or email for more details: 785-423-0037 bstoneback.we@gmail.com
2008 HONDA CIVIC LX
Need an apartment? Place your ad at apartments.lawrence.com or email classifieds@ljworld.com
2008 Dodge Grand Caravan SXT
2012 HONDA ACCORD EX-L
Jeep
Only $24,950 Call Thomas at
888-631-6458 Fuel Efficient, Automatic, Awesome Condition, Well Maintained, Safe and Reliable. Stk# F238B
Stk#PL2016
Chevrolet Trucks
Honda Certified Pre-Owned Vehicle, 7 Year / 100,000 Mile Limited Powertrain Warranty. Stk# F197A
Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
$9,495
2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047 JackEllenaHonda.com
Only $10,711
2010 Ford Fusion SE 2005 Buick LaCrosse CX Stk#1P1896
V6, 59k, family owned, never wrecked, dealer maintained. Nice. $5,495. 913-485-1135
Cadillac Crossovers
$8,993
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
Honda Certified Pre-Owned Vehicle, 7 Year / 100,00 Mile, Limited Powertrain Warranty. Stk# LF287A
Only $17,999
W/T, regular cab, topper, bed liner, cruise control, one owner, GM certified with 2 years of maintenance included. Stk # 12129A
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888-631-6458
JackEllenaHonda.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Honda 2006 Accord EXL
Chevrolet Vans
Stk#116T066
2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047 JackEllenaHonda.com
2008 Chevy Express Stk#1P1896
Need to sell your car? Place your ad at sunflowerclassifieds.com or email classifieds@ljworld.com
LairdNollerLawrence.com
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
2008 Ford Escape XLT
65,000 miles, excellent condition, Stabilitrak, 16 passenger van. New tires & brakes, A/C & Cruise. $11,500 OBO Call (785)423-5837 or (785) 841-8833
$20,495 23rd & Alabama - 2829 Iowa
2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047
Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
$8,993
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
1998 HONDA ACCORD LX
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Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Kia Cars
One owner, leather heated seats, sunroof, alloy wheels, loaded with equipment, Stk#158832 only $8744.00
Automatic, Great Car for First Time Driver, Great Gas Mileage, Wonderful Safety Ratings. Stk# F361A
Ford Trucks Call Thomas at 2006 Ford F150 Extended cab, 4 Wheel drive, automatic, power windows in fair condition. 88,000 miles $ 10,500 OBO Call after 6 PM—785-542-2251
2012 HONDA PILOT EX-L 4WD
Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
Only $5,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
2014 Jeep Cherokee Sport Stk#PL1935
888-631-6458
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
2010 Ford Fusion SE
Only $11,995
2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047
Call Thomas at Chevrolet 2012 Silverado
$9,495
DVD Player, Loaded, Leather, Panoramic Sunroof, AWD Northstar V6, One of a Kind! Stk# F209A
888-631-6458
We Buy all Domestic cars, trucks, and suvs. Call Scott 785-727-7151
JackEllenaHonda.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Only $18,417
2005 CADILLAC SR5 AWD
Call Thomas at
888-631-6458 2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047 JackEllenaHonda.com
CNA & CMA Classes Day/evening starting W/O 8-24 in Lawrence, Ottawa & Chanute.
620-431-2820 Teri x241, or Tracy x262 tshowalter@neosho.edu or trhine@neosho.edu
2005 KIA SPECTRA What a Value! Leather, Sunroof, Power Liftgate, 4WD, Local - One Owner, Priced Below Market! Stk# F341A
Great Mileage, Well Maintained, Awesome Value, Fuel Efficient. Stk# F347B
Only $22,992
Only $5,995
Call Thomas at
Call Thomas at
888-631-6458
888-631-6458
2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047
2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047
JackEllenaHonda.com
JackEllenaHonda.com
L AWRENCE J OURNAL -W ORLD
Wednesday, August 12, 2015
CARS TO PLACE AN AD: Lincoln SUVs
Mercedes-Benz Cars
2005 Lincoln Aviator Luxury
SPECIAL! 10 LINES & PHOTO 7 DAYS $19.95 | 28 DAYS $49.95 Doesn’t sell in 28 days? FREE RENEWAL!
785.832.2222 Nissan Cars
Saturn
2006 NISSAN MAXIMA SL
Stk#115L778
$9,449
2007 Mercedes 6?K &% =2DD CLK350 Base
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
$13,695 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Mazda Crossovers
Toyota Cars
Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
Only $10,995
Subaru Crossovers
888-631-6458
2007 Toyota Stk#1PL1906
$8,995 What an Awesome Car?? Low Miles, Fuel Efficient, Immaculate Condition, Great School Car Stk# F027B
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
Only $9,495
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Call Thomas at
2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047
2008 Volkswagen +233:E ,
$6,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Cars-Domestic Dale Willey Automotive 2840 Iowa Street (785) 843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
SELLING A MOTORCYCLE?
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047
Motorcycle-ATV
JackEllenaHonda.com
Pontiac
Bags windshield & foot 3@2C5D @?6 @H?6C miles. History of mainte?2?46 2?5 42C6 2G2:=23=6 Bike in Tonganoxie. $2800
Stk#114K242
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
888-631-6458
JackEllenaHonda.com
Motorcycle-ATV
2008 Triumph Bonneville America
Only $6,855.00
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Volkswagen Cars
2006 Toyota Camry LE
Low Miles, Local Owner, Great Condition, All the Goodies, Loaded, Well Maintained. Stk# F200A
Call Thomas at
'2K52 1
Toyota Cars
AWD, 4cyl, great gas mileage and room for the whole family! Stk#399782
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
Mercury SUVs
classiďŹ eds@ljworld.com
Saturn 2007 Aura XE
Stk#215T628
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
| 5D
Find A Buyer FAST! Print + Online ~ SPECIAL PRICE ~
Stk#116L103
,F32CF @C6DE6C 1- Touring
$11,988 2008 Mercury Mountaineer Base
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
2007 Toyota Camry
2009 Toyota Camry
2010 Kawasaki 1700 Voyager
Stk#1P1880
Stk#1PL1929
Stk#1PL1975
Stk#114T1075C
$29,989
$7,995
$10,495
$7,995
$6,994
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
FREE ADS for merchandise
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23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
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Pontiac 2009 Vibe Fwd, 4 cyl, great gas mileage, alloy wheels, power equipment, cruise control. Stk#352451 Only $10,855 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
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TO PLACE ANAN AD:AD: 785.832.2222 Review these businesses and more @ Marketplace.Lawrence.com classiďŹ eds@ljworld.com TO PLACE 785.832.2222 Antique/Estate Liquidation
Cleaning New York Housekeeping: Accepting clients for wkly, bi-wkly & seasonal or special occasion cleaning. Ex. Ref. Beth - 785-766-6762.
Concrete Downsizing - Moving? We’ve got a Custom Solution for You! Estate Tag Sales and Cleanup Services Armstrong Family Estate Services, LLC 785-383-0820 www.kansasestatesales.com
Craig Construction Co Family Owned & Operated 20 Yrs
Driveways - stamped • Patios • Sidewalks • Parking Lots • Building Footings & Floors • All Concrete Repairs Free Estimates
Construction
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
Mike - 785-766-6760 mdcraig@sbcglobal.net
Auctioneers
Decks & Fences BILL FAIR AND COMPANY REAL ESTATE AUCTIONS 785-887-6900 www.billfair.com
DECK BUILDER
Carpentry
CTi of Mid America Concrete Restoration & Resurfacing Driveways, Patios, Pool Decks & More CTiofMidAmerica.com 785-893-8110
Over 25 yrs. exp. Licensed & Insured. Decks, deck covers, pergolas, screened porches, & all types of repairs. Call 913-209-4055 for Free estimates or go to prodeckanddesign.com
Place your ad today? The Wood Doctor - Wood rot repair, fences, decks, doors & windows - built, repaired, or replaced & more! Bath/kitchen remodeled. Basement finished. 785-542-3633 • 816-591-6234
Thicker line? Bolder heading? Color background or Logo? Ask how to get these features in your ad TODAY!! Call: 785-832-2222
785-832-2222
Stacked Deck 64<D O !2K63@D ,:5:?8 O 6?46D O 55:E:@?D +6>@56= O 062E96CAC@@7:?8 #?DFC65 O JCD 6IA 785-550-5592
Furniture
Rich Black Top Soil No Chemicals Machine Pulverized Pickup or Delivery 913-962-0798 Fast Service
Foundation Repair FOUNDATION REPAIR Mudjacking, Waterproofing. We specialize in Basement Repair & Pressure Grouting. Level & Straighten Walls & Bracing on wall. BBB. Free Estimates Since 1962 Wagnerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s 785-749-1696 www.foundationrepairks.com
Home Improvements
Lawn, Garden & Nursery
AAA Home Improvements Int/Ext Repairs, Painting, Tree work & more. We do it all! 20 Yrs. Exp. w/ Ins. and local ref. Will beat all est. Call 785-917-9168
Complete Lawn Care ,9CF3 EC:>>:?8 >@H:?8 Mulch & Rock landscape !FEE6C =62?:?8 +6A2:C FREE ESTIMATES. Call 785-393-8034
Full Remodels & Odd Jobs, Interior/Exterior Painting, Installation & Repair of:
Serving KC over 40 years
Dou3le D Furniture Repair Cane, Wicker & Rush seating. Buy. Sell. Credit cards accepted.785-418-9868 or doubledfurniturerepair @gmail.com
Deck Drywall Siding Replacement Gutters Privacy Fencing Doors & Trim Commercial Build-out Build-to-suit services Fully Insured 22 yrs. experience
913-488-7320
785-832-2222
Higgins Handyman 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
!2C286 @@CD O )A6?6CD O ,6CG:46 O #?DE2==2E:@? Call 785-842-5203 www.freestatedoors.com
Advertising that works for you!
Golden Rule Lawncare Mowing & lawn cleanup Snow Removal Family owned & operated Call for Free Est. Insured. Eugene Yoder 785-224-9436
Painting D&R Painting :?E6C:@C 6IE6C:@C O J62CD O A@H6C H2D9:?8 O C6A2:CD :?D:56 @FE O DE2:? 564<D O H2==A2A6C DEC:AA:?8 O 7C66 6DE:>2E6D Call or Text 913-401-9304
Interior/Exterior Painting Remodeling/Tile and Wood Flooring 785-840-5903
Tree/Stump Removal Fredyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Tree Service ;ML<GOF U LJAEE=< U LGHH=< U KLMEH J=EGN9D Licensed & Insured. 20 yrs experience. 913-441-8641 913-244-7718
KansasTreeCare.com Trimming, removal, & stump 8C:?5:?8 3J &2HC6?46 =@42=D 6CE:7:65 3J %2?D2D C3@C:DED Assoc. since 1997 N06 DA64:2=:K6 :? preservation & restorationâ&#x20AC;? Ins. & Lic. visit online 785-843-TREE (8733)
785-312-1917
Guttering Services
JAYHAWK GUTTERING 785-832-2222 classifieds@ljworld.com
Interior/exterior painting, roofing, roof repairs, fence work, deck work, lawn care, siding, windows & doors. For 11+ years serving Douglas County & surrounding areas. Insured.
Painting
Pristine Paint & Interiors Mowing...like Clockwork! "@?6DE 6A6?523=6 Mow~Trim~Sweep Steve 785-393-9152 Lawrence Only
Needing to place an ad?
Garage Doors
STARTING or BUILDING a Business?
Driveways, Parking lots, Pavement Repair, Sidewalks, Garage Floors, Remove& Replacement Specialists Call 785-843-2700 or text 785-393-9924 Sr. & Veteran Discounts Stamped & Reg. Concrete, Patios, Walks, Driveways, Acid Staining & Overlays, Tear-Out & Replacement Jayhawk Concrete Inc. 785-979-5261
Dirt-Manure-Mulch
Retired Carpenter, Deck Repairs, Home Repairs, Interior Wall Repair & House Painting, Doors, Wood Rot, Power wash 785-766-5285
Landscaping
Seamless aluminum guttering. Many colors to choose from. Install, repair, screen, clean-out. Locally owned. Insured. Free estimates.
785-842-0094 jayhawkguttering.com
YARDBIRDS LANDSCAPING Father (retired) & Son Operation W/Experience & Top of the Line Machinery Call 785-766-1280
Family Tradition Interior & Exterior Painting Carpentry/Wood Rot Senior Citizen Discount Ask for Ray 785-330-3459 Interior/Exterior Painting Quality Work Over 30 yrs. exp.
Call Lyndsey 913-422-7002
Professional Tree Care 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
PUBLIC NOTICES 785.832.2222
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PUBLIC NOTICE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3D RILL F 461.95 0230662404001001000, 24-12-19, 16.63A 24-12-19 BEG AT PT ON N, ALLEN JEFFREY N 36.57 0230662404002007000, SUNCHASE DR, ROCK RIDGE ADD BLK 1 TR â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;Aâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; (A, TRIPLE E ENTERPRISES LLC 28.48 0230662404003001000, 24-12-19, 13.87A 24-12-19 BEG AT PT ON S, ALLEN JEFFREY N 640.13 0230662404004001000, 24-12-19, 48.73A 24-12-19 THAT PART OF S, ALLEN JEFFREY N 477.36 0230672501001001000, 25-12-19, 3.8A 25-12-19 COM AT INTERSEC, ALLEN JEFFREY N 24.07 0230672501001028000, 1300 MICHIGAN WAY A-C, WEST LAWRENCE BLK 8 LTS 25 & 2, H & R PROPERTIES LLC 27.29 0230672501002008000, 226 MICHIGAN ST, WEST LAWRENCE BLK 9 LT 62, BALDWIN MICHELLE A 1,440.10 0230672501005001000, 25-12-19, 11.64A 25-12-19 THAT PART OF N, ALLEN JEFFREY N 56.67 0230672502002007000, 1508 PINEWOOD DR, RIVERSIDE ADD BLK 2 LT 7 RS8, TRYON PROPERTIES LC 1,724.25 0230672502003014010, 1522 PIN OAK DR, RIVERSIDE ADD NO 3 PORTION LT, OZAKI DAVID T, OZAKI PATRICIA M 1,684.77
0230672502006012000, 1643 KENWOOD DR, NORTHWOOD ESTATES SUB A REPLAT, RAYTON CLARENCE A, RAYTON KIM A 888.53 0230672502008014010, 1602 W 3RD ST, HOFFMAN SUB A REPLAT OF LT 23, KRAUS DAVID E, KRAUS CELESTE M 1,024.90 0230672502008017000, 1514 W 3RD ST, NORTHWOOD ADD BLK 4 LT 20, CHANEY JEFFREY O 852.37 0230672502008021000, 1414 W 3RD ST, NORTHWOOD ADD BLK 4 LT 16, QUINT T LLC 1,763.72 0230672502009016000, 1514 W 2ND TER, NORTHWOOD ADD BLK 5 LT 19, HERNANDEZ BERNICE L 1,627.02 0230672502011011000, 149 FLORIDA ST, NORTHWOOD ADD NO 2 BLK 2 LT 9, THORNTON TERESA A 1,985.54 0230672503001007000, 1410 W 4TH ST, NORTHWOOD ADD BLK 1 LT 10 LESS, SNELLER LYNN R 914.88 0230672503001011000, 333 MICHIGAN ST, NORTHWOOD ADD BLK 1 LT 7, SIEBEL GREG 1,801.66 0230672503002007000, 322 MINNESOTA ST, REPLAT OF LTS 5 TO 18 INCL BLK, DOUG GARBER CONST INC 1,302.88 0230672503002007010, 324 MINNESOTA, REPLAT OF LTS 5 TO 18 INCL BLK, DOUG GARBER CONST INC 1,280.31 0230672503002010000, 317 FLORIDA ST, REPLAT OF LTS 5 TO 18 INCL BLK, WESLEY JAMES T Jr 1,809.32 0230672503005012000, 305 CALIFORNIA ST, NORTHWOOD HEIGHTS PORTION LT 1, DOUG GARBER CONST INC
1,255.52 0230672503005014000, 317 CALIFORNIA ST, NORTHWOOD HEIGHTS PORTION LT 1, DOUG GARBER CONST INC 1,255.52 0230672503005014010, 319 CALIFORNIA, NORTHWOOD HEIGHTS PORTION LT 1, DOUG GARBER CONST INC 1,238.29 0230672503005017000, 337 CALIFORNIA ST, NORTHWOOD HEIGHTS PORTION LT 1, DOUG GARBER CONST INC 1,203.57 0230672503005017010, 339 CALIFORNIA, NORTHWOOD HEIGHTS PORTION LT 1, DOUG GARBER CONST INC 1,246.51 0230672503007009020, 1919 W 3RD ST, NORTHWOOD HEIGHTS NO 2 SUB PAR, FUHRMAN JOHN D, FUHRMAN GRETA M 1,459.93 0230672503008018000, 422 IOWA ST, WEST LAWRENCE BLK 29 BEG AT PT, BOWEN GEORGE 1,207.75 0230672503008019000, IOWA ST, WEST LAWRENCE BLK 29 W 25 FT O, KREIKEMEIER RUSSELL J, KREIKEMEIER JUSTIN J 728.32 0230672503008020000, 2008 W 5TH ST, GRANDVIEW HEIGHTS SUB IN BLK 2, HERNANDEZ RICHARD S, HERNANDEZ NANCY M 2,802.82 0230672503010023000, 1508 W 5TH ST, WEST LAWRENCE BEG 95 FT E OF S, DELCAMPO FELIPE M 1,383.98
0230672503010024000, 1500 W 5TH ST, WEST LAWRENCE E 100 FT OF S 12, JAMES JANICE M, CALDWELL ELOISE & TRAYLOR PHYLLIS 1,441.73 0230672503011001000, 401 MICHIGAN ST, WEST LAWRENCE BLK 32 N 67 FT L, HOLLADAY ROBERT D, HOLLADAY SHARON A 933.68 0230672503014005000, 530 WISCONSIN ST, COMPTON SUB NO 2 REPLAT LT 1 W, PROSOSKI STEVEN E, PROSOSKI ROBIN A 18,551.51 0230672503016001322, 507 COLORADO ST 8, COLORADO POINTE VILLAS CONDOMI, SAHAFNIA MAHDI 1,085.06 0230672504009012000, 433 MISSOURI ST, WEST LAWRENCE BLK 34 LT 113, WILHELM PHILLIP S, WILHELM ELIZABETH A 940.51 0230672504010014000, 425 MAINE ST, WEST LAWRENCE BLK 35 LT 109, HERNANDEZ RICHARD S, HERNANDEZ DAVID A 631.53 0230672504011007000, 446 MAINE ST, WEST LAWRENCE BLK 36 LT 120, RENNELS BURGESS W Jr, RENNELS OTHO G 1,640.63 0230672504011011000, 425 ALABAMA ST, WEST LAWRENCE BLK 36 LT 107, LAVENDUSKY ROBERT M 24.78 0230672504012009000, 446 ALABAMA ST, WEST LAW-
PUBLIC NOTICE CONTINUED ON PAGE 6D
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Wednesday, August 12, 2015
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L awrence J ournal -W orld
MERCHANDISE PETS TO PLACE AN AD:
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classifieds@ljworld.com FARM & EQUIP AUCTION
TAGGED ESTATE SALE
144+/- ACRES • HOME • CROPLAND HUNTING • EQUIPMENT
KANSAS NATIONAL GUARD ARMORY 200 IOWA ST. LAWRENCE, KS 66044
LEAVENWORTH COUNTY KANSAS
ESTATE OF WAYNE & MARY ELLEN WOODY OF BALDWIN CITY, KS
Goodyear Tire Store & Casey Bros. Sinclair AUCTIONS THIS WEEK!
FRIDAY, AUG. 14TH 9:00-5:00 SATURDAY, AUG 15TH 9:00-3:00
SATURDAY, AUGUST 15th at 10AM 31849 255th Street, Easton, KS 6602 DIRECTIONS: from Easton, KS go 3 miles west on Hwy 192, and 1.5 miles north on 255th Street. (Watch for signs).
Friday, August 14th at 10:00 am (Preview at 8 am) at the Goodyear Tire Store, 13505 S. Murlen in Olathe, KS- lots of equipment and tires & vehicles, see ONLINE for full list! Saturday, August 15th at 10:00 am, Casey Bros Sinclair, 5710 Johnson Drive in Mission, KS- closing after 56 years in business! Parts, equipment, supplies, See List and pics ONLINE.
FARM/HOME: Farm has 144 (+/-) acres with nice 2 bedroom country home, outbuildings, tillable land, CRP, native pasture, pond, Dawson Creek and lots of wildlife. Good county roads, fenced and tiled. FSA: 138.8 Farmland, 87.44 Cropland, 72 bu. corn yield, 70 bu. sorghum yield. Buyer receives sellers (1/3) of 2015 soybean crop. CRP: 42.0 acres in CRP, paying $2,948 per year. FARM EQUIPMENT & PERSONAL PROPERTY: JD 4030 Tractor, 3pt, cab, A/C, quad-range; JD 3020 Tractor, 3pt, synchro-range, Westendorf loader; JD Gator TX, 287 hrs.; JD 336 Baler; trailers; feed cart; 24’ Crust Buster; tillage; mowers; shop tools; antique equip; too much to list. Visit www.AuctionKansasCity.com for complete list and photos.
Also check out the ONLINE AUCTION HAPPENING NOW!
Terms: 10% down day of auction, balance at closing. Possession at closing. Equip: cash or approved check day of auction. Sold “As-Is, Where is” without warranty or guarantee.
LINDSAY AUCTION & REALTY SVC INC.
For information, contact Trisha Brauer, Agent/Auctioneer at (913) 481-8280
913.441.1557 WWW.LINDSAYAUCTIONS.COM
AUCTIONS Auction Calendar Estate Auction Sunday, Aug. 23, 9:30am Douglas Co. Fairgrounds 2110 Harper Lawrence, KS 1981 Jeep 4 x 4, 2002 Honda motorcycle, collectibles & primitives, tools & misc. Big Sale! Seller: Bob Lemon See pics online: kansasauctions.net/elston Elston Auctions 785-594-0505|785-218-7851 FARM & EQUIP AUCTION LEAVENWORTH CO. KANSAS SAT, AUGUST 15th @ 10AM 31849 255th Street, Easton, KS 6602 FARM/HOME FARM EQUIPMENT & PERSONAL PROPERTY Sellers: Eugene & Eileen Kramer
For information, contact Trisha Brauer, Agent/Auctioneer at (913) 481-8280 United Country Kansas City Auction & Realty www.AuctionKansasCity.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
Auction Calendar 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
Auctions Margaret Counts Trust Online Personal Property AUCTION ONLINE BIDDING ENDS: Fri., Aug. 14 at 8 p.m. BID NOW at CatesAuction.com Farm house primitive to mid century modern furniture (including Paul McCobb), primitive & modern utensils, rock, mineral & lapidary items, large candlewick & glassware collection, work benches, store fixtures & so much more! Bidding open now! www.CatesAuction.com Cates Auction Real Estate Co. 877.781.1134 CatesAuction.com
Sellers: Eugene & Eileen Kramer
MERCHANDISE Baby & Children Items BABY Fisher-Price Snugabunny Cradle ‘N Swing. Paid $150. Hardly used. Sells $50 cash 785-843-7205 BABY, toddler jumping exerciser. Almost new. Paid $85 Sells for $40 cash 785-843-7205
Furniture
Lindsay Auction & Realty SVC 913.441.1557 www.lindsayauctions.com
BIGGEST SALES!
785-830-9169
For Sale: La-Z Boy living room chairs, excellent condition $ 95.00 for set Call 785-865-0167
Household Misc.
Youth desk-Vintage tablet Chair, solid wood. Excellent condition. $54. 785-865-4215
FREE ADS for merchandise
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Sports Fan Gear Kevin Harvick Jacket Vintage Racing Jacket, XL. RCR, Mister Good wrench. Chase Authentics. $100 FIRM Message: (785)764-3788
Sports-Fitness Equipment
Marble Slab Marble slab. Cream color. $100, 785-418-0117
Solid Cherry Cabinet, Pennsylvania House traditional style entertainment cabinet. Adjustable shelf and top. Like new. 36x21x78. $350. Call 785-979-8969
Music-Stereo
Couch (full size), floral A PERFECT PLUSH CAT TREE 5 speakers ~ 5 speakers ~ sleeper. 3 seater. Clean, - 2 hammocks, 2 sleeping all for one price $25 ~ no tears, no stains. $40 areas, a tunnel, three play 785-550-4142 (785)764-3788 boards and ladders. Beige PUMP ORGAN Couch-Broyhill couch color. Originally $160, ask- Antique pump organ, walfrom non-smoking home ing $80. nut, nice, works well. $100 785-550-9289 seeks new home. $75 785-418-0117 785-766-0733 Electric Wheelchair Need to sell your car? For Sale: 1133-Jazzi FOR SALE Place your ad at Like BRAND NEW- Large • Antique Dresser -$50 sunflowerclassifieds.com size, $1500. Also for sale, • Hall Rug Runner - $10 or email hydraulic lift for car to • Office Chair - $50 classifieds@ljworld.com carry chair- $100. NICE. • Old Rocker - $30 Call 785-249-4084 • Bench - $10
cabinet with 4 doors, fits Vintage Ceramic Base Antique WALNUT Lamp Height 21” Base Cirup to 32” TV. $60. DRESSER cumference 28” Shade Large, solid walnut. Nice- (785)764-3788 depth 9 1/2” Earth tones $100, 785-418-0117 TWIN bed, used, clean with textured glaze $15. Wooden Hutch 6ft tall X basic bed frame. $35 cash 785-865-4215 42in W X 19in D ~ top doors & 785-843-7205 sides have glass ~ bottom cabinet has shelves $90 Miscellaneous 785-550-4142
Love Auctions? Check out the Sunday / Wednesday editions of Lawrence Journal-World Classifieds section for all the details and the
Health & Beauty
ANTIQUE CABINET Oak Kitchen cabinet with Loft bed w/ mattress beveled mirror and $ 25.00 Call 785-843-5141 frosted glass doors- $100 Old Fashion Butcher Block 785-418-0117 24X24in. Butcher Block w/ Antique Roll-top “S” Desk bottom shelf $100 Needs repair. 785-550-4142 $100, 785-418-0117 RCA DVD Player with remote and papers. Antique Seed Dryer $25.00. 785-764-3788 With 4 seed sizes. $100, 785-418-0117 Solid Cherry entertainment
Goodyear Tire Store AUCTION Friday, Aug. 14 @ 10 am 13505 S. Murlen Olathe, KS Casey Bros Sinclair AUCTION Sat., Aug 15 @ 10am 5710 Johnson Dr. Mission, KS
Furniture
Kansas City Auction and Realty
Music-Stereo Pianos: Beautiful Story & Clark console or Baldwin Spinet, $550. Kimball Spinet, $500. Gulbranson Spinet, $450. And more! Prices include tuning & delivery. Call-785-832-9906
GENESIS HEALTH CLUB DUAL MEMBERSHIP 19 Months for $35.00 per person, per month. No enrollment fee. No processing fee. MEMBERSHIP TRANSFER to be done at Genesis in Topeka or Lawrence. 785-691-7731
CNA & CMA Classes Day/evening starting W/O 8-24. In Lawrence, Ottawa, & Chanute.
620-431-2820 Teri x241, or Tracy x262 tshowalter@neosho.edu or trhine@neosho.edu
Bountiful array of good condition household products: Moved and displayed in the Armory for your convenience and selection. Sofas, one of which is a hide a bed, end and coffee tables, art work, collectibles/Hummel, Beatrix Potter, Boyd bears, kitchenware, clocks, linens, leather chairs, side chairs, large selection of lamps, dining room table w/ 8 chairs, 5 piece tea set of Silver Plate, buffet, wall cabinet, Oriental round rug, luggage, Noritake dishes, steel step ladder, Canon 35mm camera, Gateway computer, 3 piece oak china cabinet, 2 door metal cabinet, Stihl blower, entry table w/ glass top, wicker table, Fisher Paykel washer & dryer, costurme jewelry, Belleek china, unique Christmas decorations, Vera Bradley purses, mens and womens clothing, linens, and much misc. Shown by John I. Hughes Certified Appraiser 785-979-1941
Sports-Fitness Equipment Football shoes - Size 7.5 Worn for one season. Good condition. $40.00. 785-842-8776
PETS Pets
Soccer shoes - Adidas F30 messi with micoach. Size 7. Worn only two or three games, all on turf. Like new. $60.00. 785-842-8776.
TV-Video 48” HDTV with remote/papers $350. 785-764-3788 Color 21” TV FREE. Excellent cond used very little. Call 785-856-0858
AKC Chocolate Labs Big, beautiful, farm raised pups. Shots & Dewormed. 3 Females, 2 Males. $400 785-248-3189
FOR SALE Apex color 21” TV Used very little. excellent cond. Call 785-865-0858 asking $25.00
GARAGE SALES Lawrence-Rural
ENGLISH CREAM GOLDEN RETRIEVER
Estate Sale Garage Sale 1120 E. 1200 Rd Lawrence, KS
Winter Moon Retrievers has several pups left from our late May litters. these are very nice pups with excellent pedigrees and wonderful personalities. they are partially housebroken and very intelligent. Pups come with up to date shots and worming, vet check with letter, microchip, and health warranty. Pups are 2000. and ready for their new forever homes! Billie Altenhofen 316-745-9010 wintermoonretrievers.com billie@wintermoon retrievers.com facebook.com/winter moon retrievers
(2 miles South of 31st & Iowa to N. 1100 Rd, Go West 1 mile to E. 1200 Rd, then North to 4th House, Follow signs) Thursday, Aug 13: 2- 7pm Friday, Aug 14: 9- 6 pm Saturday, Aug 15: 9- 3 pm 1950’s Solid Walnut 4 pc bedrm set (manufactured by Davis Furn. Co), Lane Cedar Chest, Telesenery Aladdin Atlas 600 low vision magnifier for macular degeneration. Furniture; Vintage Chrome Dinette Set, 5 pc. bedroom set, dining room set, tables, lamps, chairs. Kitchen items; pressure cooker, turkey fryer, bakeware, dishes, etc. Linens; sheets, towels, blankets, doilies. Golf balls/ clubs/ carts/ bags. Comic books, Vintage Playboy Magazines, LOTS of Books, Woman’s Schwinn Breeze Bike, Hand tools, Garden Tiller, Lawn Furniture... too much to list!
Care-ServicesSupplies Dog Bark Collar For a large dog by Petsafe. Hardly used. Brand new battery. $55. 785-760-1638.
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PUBLIC NOTICE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 5D RENCE BLK 37 LT 120;&, WILHELM PHILLIP S, WILHELM ELIZABETH A 656.76 0230672504012012000, 439 ILLINOIS ST, WEST LAWRENCE BLK 37 LTS 113 &, WALKER GLEN H, WALKER GLENN H 1,348.96 0230672504013002000, 705 W 4TH ST, WEST LAWRENCE BLK 38 LT 26, HICKS KEITH 804.36 0230672504013006000, 410 ILLINOIS ST, WEST LAWRENCE BLK 38 LT 106, FENDER JAMES D 1,595.98 0230672504013008010, 434 ILLINOIS ST, WEST LAWRENCE BLK 38 LT 112, GARRETT CLARABELLE 1,444.77 0230672504013008030, ILLINOIS ST, WEST LAWRENCE BLK 38 LT 116 (D, JOHNSON COLETTE Y, PATTON SHAWN L 570.32 0230672504015007000, 424 INDIANA ST, WEST LAWRENCE BLK 40 LTS 109,1, RISLEY MARGUERITE V 1,823.75 0230672504015007020, 432 INDIANA ST, WEST LAWRENCE BLK 40 LTS 114 &, RISLEY MARGUERITE V 1,309.59 0230672504015007030, 400 BLK INDIANA ST, WEST LAWRENCE BLK 40 LTS 118 &, RISLEY MARGUERITE V 62.55 0230672504016007000, 526 INDIANA ST, INDIANA STREET LT 134, SNEEGAS PARISH A 887.03 0230672504017008000, 545 INDIANA ST, PINCKNEY STREET LTS 31,33 & E, PROPERTY MANAGEMENT SERVICE LLC 7,501.69 0230672504019004011, 1112 W 6TH ST TOWER, BUILDING ON LEASED LAND -SEE-, CINGULAR WIRELESS 855.12 0230672504026008000, 638 ILLINOIS ST, ILLINOIS STREET LTS 164 & 166, JOHNSON BURKS BOWDEN ADRA E, BURKS ADRA E 1,578.43 0230672601002037000, 2303 WESTCHESTER RD, COUNTRY CLUB NORTH LT 87 RS8, DIAZ ARTHUR M TRUSTEE, DIAZ CARMEN H TRUSTEE 2,240.74 0230672601004005000, 2609 PICKWICK PL, COUNTRY CLUB WEST SUB BLK 2 LT, PELLIGREEN GREGORY G 2,002.31 0230672602002008000, 2913 MOCCASIN DR, REPLAT OF DEERFIELD PARK BLK 2, TOMS TRAVIS 2,049.36 0230672602005013000, 212 GLENVIEW DR, SUMMERTREE A REPLAT OF PART OF, YOUNG ELIZABETH M 1,889.91 0230672602005019020, 323 GLENVIEW DR, SUMMERTREE A REPLAT OF PART OF, LEWIS-BEERS LINDSAY 1,660.44 0230672602006006000, 218 SUMMERTREE LN, DEERFIELD VILLAGE SOUTH NO 5 A, PALLADIUM GROUP LLC 1,570.88 0230672602006007000, 216 SUMMERTREE LN, DEERFIELD VILLAGE SOUTH NO 5 A, COLEMAN JOHN R 1,921.74 0230672602009004000, 3007 CREEKWOOD DR, REPLAT OF LT C-23 OF A REPLAT, BATTEN STEVE, BATTEN SHARON 2,616.03 0230672602015011000, 3100 RANGER DR, REPLAT OF DEERFIELD PARK BLK 7, HUTCHISON HELEN K 2,594.75 0230672602017011000, 3107 LONGHORN DR, REPLAT OF DEERFIELD PARK BLK 5, FITTELL JOHN, FITTELL VALERIE 2,334.95 0230672602019021000, 3306 CREEKWOOD DR, DEERFIELD VILLAGE SOUTH A REPL, ROSAS STEVEN A, ROSAS MARIA F 2,240.74 0230672603001004000, 312 HOMESTEAD DR, PIONEER RIDGE NO 2 BLK 15 LT 5, LANGLEY MARTHA B 2,046.18 0230672603001012000, 414 LAWRENCE AVE, PIONEER
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PUBLIC NOTICE CONTINUED ON PAGE 7D
L awrence J ournal -W orld
Wednesday, August 12, 2015
| 7D
SPECIAL! 10 LINES
2 DAYS $50 7 DAYS $80 28 DAYS $280 + FREE PHOTO!
PLACE YOUR AD:
785.832.2222
C EDARWOOD A PARTMENTS
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“ Where Carefree, Comfortable Living Begins…” 2 Bedroom, 2 Bathroom Townhomes
Now Available!
2411 Cedarwood Ave.
B E A U T I F U L & S PA C I O U S
1 & 2 Bedrooms
start at $450/mo. • Near campus, bus stop • Near stores, restaurants • Laundries on site • Water & trash paid
• Fireplace • Easy access to I-70 • Central Air • Includes paid • Washer/Dryer cable. Hookups • 2 Car Garage with • Pet under 20 lbs. allowed Opener Call 785-842-2575 www.princeton-place.com
CALL TODAY (Mon. – Fri.) 785-843-1116 REAL ESTATE Acreage-Lots
Farms-Acreage
Absolute Real Estate Auction Bank Owned Property 19.7 Acre Building Site 1635 E. 400 Rd. Lawrence, KS Sold Live on Location Saturday Sept. 12, 10 A.M.
Gorgeous wooded tract, large pond, easy access. Just off Stull Rd/45th Street at E. 400. TERMS: $5,000 day of sale, balance in 30 days. Seller guarantees clear title. Selling to the high bidder regardless of price! VIEWING: At will
Apartments Unfurnished
Townhomes
1 & 2 Bedroom Units Available Now!
SEEKING SUBLET Immediately!! 3100 Ousdahl 3BD w/ personal BA, walk in closet, full kitchen, W/D. Near KU, on bus route. 620-205-9372
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
LAUREL GLEN APTS 147.22 Acres 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.
All Electric 1, 2 & 3 BR units. Some with W/D, Water & Trash Paid, Small Pet, Income Restrictions Apply 785-838-9559 EOH
www.sunriseapartments.com $200-$300 off August Rent Specials!!
Duplexes
Need to sell your car? Call 832-2222 or email classifieds@ljworld.com
(785)887-6900
REMODELED!
3 Bedroom - 3 Bath Meadowbrook. Vaulted ceiling, large kitchen w/island, wood & tile, washer/dryer, enclosed patio, garage. On bus route. Pets ok. Available NOW! RENT REDUCED: $1000/month.
4 BEDROOM, 3 BATH
Apartments Unfurnished
RENTALS
Cedarwood Apts
Apartments Furnished
2411 Cedarwood Ave.
DOWNTOWN LOFT Studio Apartments 600 sq. ft., $710/mo. 825 sq. ft., $880/mo. No pets allowed Call Today 785-841-6565 advanco@sunflower.com
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CALL TODAY (Monday - Friday)
785-843-1116
SunflowerClassifieds
NOTICES 785.832.2222
Business Announcements Accent Tamer ACCENT problem? Here’s your solution:
Special Notices Indian Taco Sale! Friday, August 14 11 AM - 6 PM
www.AccentTamer.com
CLEANING & MORE Call or email us! $18 hr./ OR Call for Est. shellysmop@gmail.com or needahand@gmail.com
785-550-1705
Lawrence Indian Methodist Church 950 E. 21st St., Lawrence
CNA/CMA CLASSES! Lawrence, KS MORNING CLASSES
CMA DAY CLASSES
Sept 7 - Sep 30 8.30a-3p, M-Th
Oct 5 -Nov 6 8.30a-2p, M/W/F
Oct 5 - Oct 28 8.30a-3p, M-Th
Dec 1 -Dec 23 8.30a-2p, M/W/F
Nov 2 - Nov 24 8.30a-3p, M-Th
CMA EVENING CLASSES
Nov 30 - Dec 22 8.30a-3p, M-Th
Sep 14 -Oct 23 5p-9p, M/W/F UPDATE REFRESHER
CNA EVENING CLASSES Sept 7-Sep 30 5p-9p, T/Th/F
Aug 14/15, Sept 4/5, Sep 25/26 , Oct 9/10, Nov 6/7, Dec 4/5, Dec 18/19
Nov 2 -Nov 25 5p-9p, T/Th/F CALL NOW- 785.331.2025 trinitycareerinstitute.com
SEARCH AMENITIES
Townhomes 2BR with loft, 2 bath, 1 car garage, fenced yard, FP, 3719 Westland Pl. $790/mo. Avail. Aug. 1. 785-550-3427
785-842-2545 pinetreetownhouses.com
Townhomes
Townhomes
Fox Run Apartments
Available Now! 3 BR w/2 or 2.5 BA
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.
FIRST MONTH FREE! 1 & 2 Bedroom Units Available Now! Cooperative townhomes start at $446-$490/mnth. 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. Membership & Equity fee required. 785-842-2545 (Equal Housing Opportunity) pinetreetownhouses.com
W/D hookups, Fireplace, Major Appliances. Lawn Care & Dbl Car Garage!
DOWNTOWN
LOFT Studio Apartments
600 sq. ft., $710/mo. 825 sq. ft., $880/mo. No pets allowed
785-865-2505
grandmanagement.net
Houses
Call Today 785-841-6565 advanco@sunflower.com
3 Bd/1 BA Home:
785-691-9800
785-550-7258
* Near campus, bus stop * Laundries on site * Near stores, restaurants * Water & trash paid
-
Need an apartment?
In excellent condition! Near Free State HS & I70 all modern appliancesmany extras! Lawncare provided. $1195 / mo. Available Now!
Beautiful & Spacious 1 & 2 Bedrooms Start at $450/mo.
Cooperative townhomes start at $446-$490/ mnth. 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. Membership & Equity fee required.
Call now! 785-841-8400
Bill Fair & Co.
Bill Fair & Co. (785)887-6900
FIRST MONTH FREE!
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
Southeast of Lawrence, easy access to K10, large tree shaded yard, no smoking, 1 small dog ok. Avail Aug 15. Renter pays utilities. Call: 785-838-9009 Leave #
Basehor 2, 3, 4, and 5 Bedroom Townhouses and Single Family Homes Available Now Through August 1st! $800-$2200 a month. Call Garber Property Management at 785-842-2475 for more info
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
OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE Call Garber Property Management at 785-842-2475 for more information.
Retail & Commercial Space FOR RENT: Mass Street 839-1/2 Massachusetts Lawrence, KS, 66044, Retail/Commercial space, flexible lease, furnished, 1,250 sq. ft. Lots of natural light! 2 private offices, 1 reception office, kitchenette break room, conference room, storage, recent updates. $1,000.00/mo (785)423-3223.
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PUBLIC NOTICE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 6D HOLIDAY HILLS, NGUYEN NGHIA T, NGUYEN THO N 923.50 0230683404001043000, 3404 W 13TH ST, REPLAT OF LTS 14 THRU 67 HOLID, WILLIAMS THOMAS B, WATT JAMIE L 2,265.06 0230683404004026000, 3800 TIFFANY DR, TIFFANY ADD NO 2 A REPLAT OF T, TIFFANY PHYLLIS G TRUSTEE 408.43 0230683404004028000, 3813 TIFFANY DR, TIFFANY ADD NO 2 A REPLAT OF T, TIFFANY DONALD W, TIFFANY PHYLLIS G 2,755.92 0230692904001005000, 5604 FORT BENTON WAY, OREGON TRAIL ADDITION 2ND PLAT, SALB HOMES LLC 46.70 0230692904002008000, 325 FORT LARAMIE DR, OREGON TRAIL ADDITION 2ND PLAT, SALB HOMES LLC 64.54 0230693000000006000, 1664 E 818 RD, 40A 30-12-19 SE 1/4 NW 1/4 (40, WARREN JUDITH J, WARREN LARRY J 3,605.06 0230693000000011010, 30-12-19, 16.68A 30-12-19 BEG AT SW COR, DOUG GARBER CONST INC 1,240.03 0230693204011004000, 1114 KANZA DR, FOX CHASE SOUTH BLK 8 LT 4, RESSEGUIE TRACY S, RESSEGUIE HOLLIE M 2,323.37 0230693204013014000, 5724 Warren CT, FOX CHASE SOUTH NO 3 BLK 2 LT, SALB HOMES LLC 173.65 0230730500000015000, 2004 E 1600 RD, 2.87A 5-12-20 BEG AT SE COR SE, CORNELIUS LARRY L 1,661.26 0230730800000008000, 1964 E 1500 RD, 114.787A 8-12-20 E 1/2 NW 1/4,, BELIEVER FOUNDATION 4,340.17 0230730800000009000, 8-12-20, 1A 8-12-20 W 1/2 NE 1/4,LESS T, BELIEVER FOUNDATION 114.50 0230741700000004021, 1960 N 7TH ST, BUILDING ON LEASED LAND - SEE, GREAT PLAINES INC-KANSAS 3,407.37 0230741700000007000, 1804 E 1500 RD, MILLER’S SUB LT 1 1.2A DCK (3, STAGG EARL, STAGG SUSAN 8,081.23 0230741800000003030, 1431 N 1900 RD, 6.32A 18-12-20 BEG AT NW COR N, PHILLIPS BEVERLY M 9,846.44 0230741800000009010, 1827 E 1450 RD, 2.6A 18-12-20 COM AT SE COR SW, BHANGU AVTAR S 11,231.53 0230741800000025000, 1845 E 1450 RD, 1.093A 18-12-20 BEG AT PT 150, LUSK JOHN L 7,463.88 0230741901001004000, 1493 HWY 40, .872A 19-12-20 BEG AT PT 455.2, ALBEE PRAVIN L, ALBEE LATA P 5,842.70 0230741902002001000, 19-12-20, NORTH LAWRENCE 19-12-20 BEG AT, MCCLEERY EARL 103.88 0230741903006001000, 19-12-20, 17.1A 19-12-20 LT 2 IN W 1/2 &, ALLEN JEFFREY N 17.52 0230741904001007000, 936 N 3RD ST, 4.009A 19-12-20 ALL THE FOLLOW, PUCKETT-DAVIS CYNTHIA A 1,537.89 0230741904001007010, 936 N 3RD ST, 1.09A 19-12-20 E 287.7 FT OF F, PUCKETT-DAVIS CYNTHIA A 838.83 0230741904001014000, 1462 N 1700 RD, 2.065A 19-12-20 BEG AT PT 302., MOON RAELYNN 886.37 0230741904001016010, 501 NORTH ST, .35A 19-12-20 S 1A OF W 2A OF, LOWTHER NATALYA M 101.89 0230741904001016030, 501 NORTH ST, .15A 19-12-20 S 100 FT OF S 1A, LOWTHER NATALYA M 624.57 0230741904002004010, 1030 N 3RD ST, NOLLER’S ADD LT
1, KELLEN STORE KOMPANY LLC 58.71 0230741904002008000, 1004 N 3RD ST, NORTH LAWRENCE 19-12-20 A TR O, ALBEE PRAVIN L, ALBEE LATA P 11,456.91 0230741904002011000, 952 N 3RD ST, NORTH LAWRENCE SCHOMER ADD LT, OJELEYE LARRY O, OJELEYE LAURA 9,144.56 0230741904002013000, 936 N 3RD ST, NORTH LAWRENCE 19-12-20 W 240., PUCKETT-DAVIS CYNTHIA A 1,453.11 0230742000002006000, 1736 E 1500 RD, RONOAK SUB LT 2 DCK, ROGERS PATRICIA A 1,212.67 0230751600000030000, 1867 E 1700 RD, 10A 16-12-20 BEG AT A PT ON E, MORRIS NORMA S 15.00 0230751600000030010, 16-12-20, 10A 16-12-20 BEG AT A PT ON E, MCCANON MARK L, MCCANON SHELIA M 625.16 0230773500000006000, 1555 E 1850 RD, 4.07A 35-12-20 BEG AT PT 154 F, LAUBER RICKY L 2,271.99 0230792902002001000, 772 NORTH ST, NORTH LAWRENCE ADD NO 8 LT 2, TODD ROXANNA, TODD JOHNNY 2,363.99 0230792902002002150, 752 NORTH ST, BISMARCK GARDENS SUB NO 2 REPL, MOFID VIRGINIA E 2,347.06 0230792902004001060, 746 LAKE ST, SYDNEY ADD LT 6, LCA INC 889.95 0230792902004001080, 741 LAUREN ST, SYDNEY ADD LT 8, SOSMAN JOHN G, SOSMAN STEPHEN B 1,150.70 0230792902004001130, 761 LAUREN ST, SYDNEY ADD LT 13, LCA INC 850.48 0230792902004001150, 769 LAUREN ST, SYDNEY ADD NO 2 REPLAT OF LOT, NGUYEN NGHIA T, NGUYEN THO N 855.72 0230792902004001170, 777 LAUREN ST, SYDNEY ADD NO 2 REPLAT OF LOT, NGUYEN NGHIA T, NGUYEN THO N 854.66 0230792902005003000, 835 LYON ST, NORTH LAWRENCE ADD NO 9 LTS 25, DAVENPORT RHONDA 584.53 0230792902007003000, 801 LINCOLN ST, NORTH LAWRENCE ADD NO 10 LTS 1, DOUG GARBER CONST INC 1,659.96 0230792902008001000, 700 LYON ST BLK 3, NORTH LAWRENCE ADDS NO 6 & 7 E, JACKSON AARON D 272.45 0230792902008002000, 760 LYON ST, NORTH LAWRENCE ADDS NO 6 & 7 E, RAYTON HARRY (SR) 971.77 0230792902010004000, 751 GRANT ST, NORTH LAWRENCE SIMPSON’S CENTR, WOOLSONCROFT TROY 454.67 0230792902010005000, 741 GRANT ST BLK 2A, NORTH LAWRENCE SIMPSON’S CENTR, WOOLSONCROFT TROY 113.31 0230792902010006000, 741 GRANT ST BLK 2A, NORTH LAWRENCE SIMPSON’S CENTR, WOOLSONCROFT TROY 160.01 0230792903002007010, 742 MAPLE ST, MAPLE STREET SOUTH SUB REPLAT, STRODA CONNIE S 1,580.65 0230792903002007020, 700 MAPLE ST, MAPLE STREET SOUTH SUB REPLAT, STRODA CONNIE S 403.07 0230792903002010010, 700 BLK LOCUST ST, NORTH LAWRENCE E 20 FT OF FOLL, AMYX CHARLES, AMYX BILLIE 128.33 0230792903002011000, 719 LOCUST ST, NORTH LAWRENCE E 100 FT OF:BEG, HARMON WILLIAM T, HARMON JUDY G 231.71 0230792903002012000, 719 LOCUST ST, NORTH LAW-
RENCE BEG ON N LINE O, HARMON WILLIAM T, HARMON JUDY G 162.13 0230792903002014000, 719 LOCUST ST, NORTH LAWRENCE BEG 107 FT E &, HARMON WILLIAM T, HARMON JUDY G 1,061.96 0230792903003016000, 709 ELM ST, NORTH LAWRENCE BEG 30 RDS S OF, WILLIAMS REGINA A 1,286.93 0230792903004007040, 831 ELM ST, REPLAT OF LTS 14,15 & 16 NORTH, HURST CHARLES R, HURST RUTH M 1,677.12 0230792903005001010, 878 ELM ST, NORTH LAWRENCE ADD NO 11 LT 21, SHEPARD HAROLD 1,861.20 0230792903005015000, 200 N 8TH ST, NORTH LAWRENCE ADD NO 11 S 1/2, HARDING CLIFFORD L 1,623.50 0230792903006015000, 711 WALNUT ST, NORTH LAWRENCE E 50 FT OF FOLL, ROUNTREE RONDA A, WIMBERLEY-ROUNTREE ROY L 1,296.25 0230792903008003010, 179 N COMFORT CT, HABITAT NEIGHBORHOOD ADD NO 5, WALTERS SERENITY 800.01 0230792903008007000, 808 WALNUT ST, BEEBE ADD A MINOR SUBDIVISION, BOWDEN COMPLETE CONSTRUCTION LLC 402.16 0230792903008007010, 804 WALNUT ST, BEEBE ADD A MINOR SUBDIVISION, BOWDEN COMPLETE CONSTRUCTION LLC 402.16 0230792903009001000, 876 OAK ST, NORTH LAWRENCE SIMPSON’S SUB P, SNOW CHARLES R, SNOW MARGARET 1,733.66 0230792903010002000, 776 ASH ST, NORTH LAWRENCE SIMPSON’S SUB P, JAYCAT INVESTMENTS LLC 442.44 0230792903010004000, 768 ASH ST, NORTH LAWRENCE SIMPSON’S SUB B, PLACE LINDA P 1,323.62 0230793001004009000, 722 N 3RD ST, NORTH LAWRENCE FRAZIER’S SUB O, POWERS JUDY L 956.48 0230793001004016000, 337 FUNSTON AVE, NORTH LAWRENCE FRAZIER’S SUB O, MCCUTCHEON EDWARD M SR, MCCUTCHEON JOANN C 1,104.76 0230793001005001000, 717 N 4TH ST, NORTH LAWRENCE FRAZIER’S SUB O, RETTER KENNETH, KOLTS KAREN S 1,802.44 0230793001007004000, 608 LAKE ST, A REPLAT OF LTS 24 AND 25 ADD, LITTLE CLYDE A II, HULL ANNETTE M 1,713.74 0230793001008003010, 600 LYON ST BLK 1, NORTH LAWRENCE W-S ADD LT 1, CROMWELL JERRY L, CROMWELL JOYCE L 216.22 0230793001008014000, 600 LINCOLN ST BLK 2, NORTH LAWRENCE W-S ADD LT 5, GIBBENS MICHAEL D, GIBBENS NANCY J 358.86 0230793001012015000, 325 LINCOLN ST, NORTH LAWRENCE WALNUT PARK LT, OJELEYE LORETTA 1,358.91 0230793001015010000, 541 PERRY ST, NORTH LAWRENCE ADD NO 6 LT 48, GIBLER ROBERT M II, GIBLER JEFFREY W 998.39 0230793001020005000, 501 MAPLE ST, NORTH LAWRENCE ADD NO 6 LTS 62, BAILEY DANIEL D, BAILEY ROBIN A 3,633.49
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PUBLIC NOTICE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 7D 0230793002001005000, 740 N 2ND ST, NORTH LAWRENCE ADD NO 1 BEG AT, HUNTER GLEN LLC 6,064.04 0230793002001006010, 700 N 2ND ST, NORTH LAWRENCE ADD NO 1 PORTIO, MOFFET MICHAEL C, MOFFET JEFF 173.83 0230793002001006030, 700 N 2ND ST, NORTH LAWRENCE ADD NO 1 TR OF, MOFFET MICHAEL C, MOFFET JEFF 18.90 0230793002001007000, 732 N 2ND ST, NORTH LAWRENCE ADD NO 1 BEG AT, JAVANMARD MOHAMMED 4,558.51 0230793002007004000, 601 N 2ND ST, NORTH LAWRENCE ADD NO 2 LTS 58, PLOTNIKOV ALEXANDER 8,096.93 0230793002008004030, 640 N 2ND ST, NORTH LAWRENCE ADD NO 2 LTS 13, HOLLADAY ROBERT D, HOLLADAY SHARON A 7,131.30 0230793002015009000, 200 MAPLE ST BLK 2, NORTH LAWRENCE ADD NO 2 N 20 F, KRUM JOHN A 33.89 0230793002015010000, 200 MAPLE ST BLK 3, NORTH LAWRENCE ADD NO 2 LT 184, KRUM J J 41.59 0230793003002002000, 415 N 2ND ST, NORTH LAWRENCE S 41 FT OF N 77, EXCHANGE HOLDINGS LLC 7,923.99 0230793003017003000, 608 KENTUCKY ST UNIT 1, KENTUCKY STREET LT 2, YODER BONITA J 4,596.45 0230793003020003000, 644 NEW HAMPSHIRE ST, SUNFLOWER BROADBAND ADD A MINO, KNOLOGY OF KANSAS INC 21,263.00 0230793003020005010, 210 E 7TH ST, RHODE ISLAND STREET LTS 13,15,, KNOLOGY OF KANSAS INC 6,684.18 0230793004003001000, 346 LOCUST ST, NORTH LAWRENCE LOCUST STREET B, DRAKE STEVEN C, DRAKE CAROLYN R 394.74 0230793004003008000, 316 LOCUST ST, NORTH LAWRENCE BLK 3 LOCUST ST, WILLIAMS REGINA A 1,071.15 0230793004003009000, 312 LOCUST ST, NORTH LAWRENCE LOCUST STREET B, HAMMER AMY N 469.10 0230793004004004000, 434 LOCUST ST, NORTH LAWRENCE LOCUST STREET L, DELCAMPO JESUS M, DELCAMPO SEVERINO M 6,639.98 0230793004005005000, 514 LOCUST ST, NORTH LAWRENCE SUB OF S 1/2 BL, COLE QUENTIN 497.81 0230793004005007000, 508 LOCUST ST, NORTH LAWRENCE SUB OF S 1/2 BL, DELCAMPO JESSE M, DELCAMPO SEVERINA M 5,511.56 0230793004006007000, 611 ELM ST, NORTH LAWRENCE SHAFER SUB LT 1, SHAFER HARRY A, SHAFER DEBBIE I 1,787.26 0230793004006007010, 600 ELM ST BLK 1, NORTH LAWRENCE SHAFER SUB LT 2, 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0230793103011011000, 200 W 12TH ST, KENTUCKY STREET E 65 FT OF S 1, BARKING DOG LC 4,505.81 0230793103011015000, 1129 VERMONT ST UNIT 1, KENTUCKY STREET E 1/2 LT 132, MARIE ANTHONY PROPERTIES LLC 1,491.41 0230793103023023000, 1209 TENNESSEE ST, TENNESSEE STREET S 1/2 LT 171, RAINBOW WORKS LLC 6,735.27 0230793103024004000, 1216 LOUISIANA ST, LOUISIANA STREET LT 222, BROWN MYRNA J TRUSTEE 4,001.44 0230793103024006000, 1224 LOUISIANA ST, LOUISIANA STREET LT 226, HOLROYD DAVID W 3,083.91 0230793103027002000, 1300 TENNESSEE ST, TENNESSEE STREET LT 194, PAUL JESS D JR TRUSTEE 2,319.73 0230793103027013000, 310 W 14TH ST, KENTUCKY STREET W 37 FT LT 187, HERNANDEZ RICHARD S, HERNANDEZ DAVID A 777.79 0230793103027020000, 1317 KENTUCKY ST, KENTUCKY STREET LT 173 & N 1/2, LCA INC 3,894.31 0230793103029013000, 16 W 14TH ST UNIT 1, VERMONT STREET E 51 FT LOT 188, STINE DAVID A 1,917.10 0230793103035013000, 1421 KENTUCKY ST, PARKER ADD S 15 FT LT 1 & N 20, GARCIA ROBERT A 1,043.05 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0230793203005006000, 1236 LAURA AVE, FAIRFAX LTS 173,174,175 & 176, GULLEY LLEWELLYN E, GULLEY PHYLLIS M 1,083.21 0230793203007009010, 1200 PRAIRIE AVE, FAIRFAX LT 107 (DIV 1991 U0832, SULLIVAN EUGENIA M 322.66 0230793203007009020, 1246 PRAIRIE AVE, FAIRFAX LT 108 (DIV 1991 U0832, SULLIVAN EUGENIA M 992.06 0230793203010002000, 1503 E 13TH ST, FAIRFAX LT 27 & N 1/2 LT 28 (U, HOOVER JOAN 837.29 0230793203010008010, 1505 OAK HILL AVE, FAIRFAX LTS 3 & 35;ALSO VAC AL, STALKFLEET FREDA C 1,991.61 0230793203011005000, 1310 PROSPECT AVE, FAIRFAX LT 75 & S 10 FT LT 74, MORENO ANTONIO 1,101.40 0230793203011013000, 1303 SUMMIT ST, FAIRFAX LTS 45 & 46 (U08265 &, MORRIS HOWARD L, MORRIS SANDRA D 670.78 0230793203012010000, 1313 PROSPECT AVE, FAIRFAX LTS 82 & 83 (U08303 &, BROUHARD BILLIE 900.90 0230793203015010000, 1344 MAPLE LN, BELMONT ADD BLK 1 LT 26, ROOD JAMES F 1,288.33 0230793203015013000, 1402 MAPLE LN, BELMONT ADD BLK 1 LT 34, GARRISON WILBUR D JR, MCLEES DORENA D 1,061.92 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PUBLIC NOTICE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 8D 2,777.04 0231030603022004000, 2110 TENNESSEE ST, THE FAIR GROUNDS ADD LT 46 (LE, MCFARLAND EVA B 1,613.27 0231030603023007000, 2120 OHIO ST, THE FAIR GROUNDS ADD LT 67 (LE, MERRILL CHERYL A 926.21 0231030603025012010, 2221 OHIO ST, BABCOCK PLACE BLK 3 LT 52, JONES CAROLYN M, SNYDER KENNETH W 1,291.26 0231030603026013000, 2245 TENNESSEE ST, BABCOCK PLACE BLK 2 LT 34, TRYON PROPERTIES LC 1,028.50 0231030603036007000, 2234 RHODE ISLAND ST, HASKELL PLACE BLK 11 W 1/2 LT, KEELER LINDA L 1,791.11 0231030603036008000, 304 E 23RD ST, HASKELL PLACE NO 2 A REPLAT OF, KEELER LINDA L 3,272.15 0231030604003006000, 921 E 21ST ST, EAST VIEW SUB NO 3 BLK 1 LT 5, SCHONBACHLER DANIEL P 1,005.37 0231030604007046000, 312 E 23RD ST, 6-13-20 BEG AT PT 220 FT E OF, THOMAS ROGER A, THOMAS IRENE H 5,541.68 0231030604009001000, 2200 DELAWARE ST, INDIA ADD BLK 1 LT 10,LESS S 1, LDDB LLC 8,772.98 0231030604010015000, 706 E 23RD ST, 6-13-20 BEG 430.8 FT N & 652 F, LAWRENCE 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SIGNAL RIDGE
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2,287.05 0232020303005003000, 500 HIGH ST BLK 1, HIGH STREET N 1/2 LTS 74 & 75, BARRY BERNARD M CO-TRUSTEE, BARRY KRISTA CO-TRUSTEE 710.36 0232020303005004000, 517 HIGH ST, HIGH STREET N 1/2 LT 76, BARRY BERNARD M CO-TRUSTEE, BARRY KRISTA CO-TRUSTEE 374.73 0232020303006005010, 912 6TH ST, INDIANA STREET S 12 FT LTS 86, BIGSBY ROBERT R JR 1,705.87 0232020303006010000, 1004 6TH ST, JERSEY STREET LTS 80,82,84,86, RANDEL ORVILLE K 1,424.83 0232020303006020000, 900 4TH ST BLK 1, JERSEY STREET LTS 62,64 & 66;A, DRENNON JOCELYN 618.14 0232020401008003000, 1000 CHAPEL ST BLK 2, CHAPEL STREET LTS 159 & 161, SHIPPY BRADFORD H, SHIPPY LILA L 54.20 0232020401025002000, 1105 ELM ST, ELM STREET LTS 110 & 112, SHOEMAKER TRAVIS L, SHOEMAKER JAVENIA 1,546.53 0232020401028007000, 619 9TH ST, GROVE STREET LT 71 & E 40 FT L, ANDERTON ETTA J 4,119.81 0232020401029005000, 820 GROVE ST, NINTH STREET LTS 30,31,32 & 33, ROSS RICK A 3,625.91 0232020401029007000, 613 8TH ST, EIGHTH STREET S 8 FT LT 28,ALL, SCHAFER ROGER K, SCHAFER BONNIE L 2,448.41 0232020401034007000, 1016 HIGH ST, HIGH STREET LT 127, SHAFER DEBORAH, SHAFER RALPH T 211.06 0232020401034008000, 1016 HIGH ST, HIGH STREET LT 125, SHAFER DEBORAH, SHAFER RALPH T 1,666.49 0232020402003005000, 1720 HIGH ST, 4-15-20 W 6A OF SW 1/4 SW 1/4, REED RAYMOND M 1,603.76 0232020403001006000, 1200 INDIANA ST BLK 1, HOGANS ADD INDIANA STREET LTS, WEBB KATHY, JEGEN JARED 73.36 0232020403009005010, 1604 COLLEGE ST, WEST BALDWIN LTS 30,31 & 32 (B, SCHROCK ANDREW, SCHROCK TINA 6,904.58 0232020403020001000, 1205 MIAMI ST, PRAIRIE ADD A REPLAT OF WASHBU, STOUT KYLE I 1,865.05 0232020403020015000, 1213 MIAMI ST, PRAIRIE ADD A REPLAT OF WASHBU, COURTNEY KEVIN, COURTNEY AMY 15.32 0232020404001001000, 601 HIGH ST, HIGH STREET LTS 77 & 78;ALSO N, BARRY BERNARD M CO-TRUSTEE, BARRY KRISTA CO-TRUSTEE 4,270.12 0232020404001004000, 821 6TH ST, INDIANA STREET LTS 83,85 & 87,, BARRY BERNARD M CO-TRUSTEE, BARRY KRISTA CO-TRUSTEE 410.77 0232020404003005000, 818 INDIANA ST, INDIANA STREET W 1/2 LT 129 &, TIMBERIDGE CONST INC 671.98 0232020404005001000, 801 10TH ST, HIGH STREET LT 118, WRIGHT SHERYL L 1,814.94 0232020404018013000, 1315 10TH ST, OSAGE ACRES FIRST ADD BLK 2, ROBBINS STEVEN J 2,471.73 0232020404035001000, 1403 9TH ST, NEWTON STREET LTS 126 & 128, GAMMON CHARLES E III, GAMMON KRISTINE M 1,316.53 0232021000000006000, 10-15-20, 38A 10-15-20 E 1/2 NW 1/4 NW 1, SCHILD RAYMOND, SCHILD LINDA 558.98 0232030504003007000, 1835 COLLEGE ST, MARSHALL’S WEST ADD NO 1 LT 3, SCOTT RUTH S TRUSTEE 1,800.93 0232110200000002020, 2-15-19, 23.48A 2-15-19 BEG AT SW COR N, BASINGER RICHARD D JR, BASINGER JUANITA 15.06 0232111100000006020, 153 E 1250 RD, 9.99A 11-15-19 BEG AT PT 65 FT, HIXSON DAVID M Jr 1,782.62 0232120400000001000, 1069 N 300 RD, 18.03A 4-15-19 COM AT NW COR N, KESL BRUCE P 1,517.36 0232120400000007000, 1088 N 200 RD, 10A 4-15-19 SE 1/4 SE 1/4 SE 1, MATHER ROBIN G 2,234.45 0232161400000018000, 1278 N 1 RD, 49.25A 14-15-19 COM AT SW COR, HOBSON ALAN E, HOBSON KENDALL R 22.64 0232221000000009000, 10-15-18, 40A 10-15-18 NE 1/4 SW 1/4 UC, FISHBURN DUDLEY N, COOK-FISHBURN BELINDA L 182.53 0232221000000011010, 134 E 550 RD, 10.95A 10-15-18 BEG AT SW COR, FISHBURN DUDLEY N, COOK-FISHBURN BELINDA L 2,306.28 0232230700000005000, 105 E 300 RD, 39.9A 7-15-18 SE 1/4 SE 1/4, L, HIER FRANCIS W, HIER MOLLY E 1,001.14 0232230800000001020, 8-15-18, 49.84A 8-15-18 COM AT NE COR N, CHANEY JEFFREY 48.35 0232241700000004000, 335 N 100 RD, 9A 17-15-18 BEG AT PT 595 FT W, YOUNG CHARLES H, YOUNG CHERYL L 2,109.82 0232241800000006000, 55 E 300 RD, 80A 18-15-18 S 1/2 NE 1/4 UCA, YOUNG CHARLES H, YOUNG CHERYL L 240.33 0232261300000010000, 42 E 800 RD, 2.5A 13-15-18 BEG AT NE COR N, WILKS JEFF, WILKS AMBER 1,833.49 0232261400000003000, 14-15-18, 75A 14-15-18 W 1/2 SW 1/4,LESS, FISHBURN DUDLEY N, COOK-FISHBURN BELINDA L 925.14 0232020302003004000, 219 HWY 56, AMES STREET THAT PART OF, CITY OF BALDWIN CITY, 712.48 Total taxes due: 2,209,739.38 ________
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Contacting deadbeat dad should be son’s choice Dear Annie: I was divorced in 1972 and was given custody of our 2-year-old son. As much as I didn’t want the divorce, my husband was an alcoholic who refused help. I finally realized it was the only way to protect my son. My ex did not use his visitation rights and never paid child support. I remarried when my son was 4. My new husband wanted to adopt him, but my ex at first refused to relinquish his rights. When my son was 6, my ex called early in the morning (drunk) and said adoption was OK. When our son turned 10, my ex called wanting to see him. I refused, saying it would be too disruptive to his life. When my son was
Annie’s Mailbox
Marcy Sugar and Kathy Mitchell
anniesmailbox@comcast.net
18, I asked whether he wanted to know anything about his biological father, but he declined. I asked him again at 21, saying that people can change and he should be prepared for the day when his bio dad shows up on his doorstep. He didn’t care. Our son is now 45, and my ex recently called wanting to have our son’s contact information. Instead, I
‘Kevin’ a reminder of Jim and Pam A cute non-couple, secret longing and public mortification are the ingredients for “Kevin From Work” (7 p.m., ABC Family). Produced and written by Barbie Adler (”How I Met Your Mother”), this manic single-camera workplace comedy stars Noah Reid (”Backpackers”) as Kevin, a goofy, likable enough 20-something. He toils at a rather joyless food service company and harbors an unrequited crush on Audrey (Paige Spara), with whom he has shared a cubicle wall for several excruciating years. If you said this sounds a little like Jim and Pam (John Krasinski and Jenna Fischer) from “The Office,” you’d be right. And wrong. On that documentary-style series, their flirtation and courtship were a slow burn. The audience got to suffer along with Jim for years. “Kevin” is a much more frantic affair. After receiving notice that he’s been hired for a dream job in Italy, Kevin attends a going away party and gets drunk enough to send Audrey a note, confessing his true feelings. Unfortunately, Kevin does not end up in Italy when Audrey receives his love note. His job falls through and he must face her the next Monday at work. So now they must share humiliation as well as a common office. For a real treat, look for Amy Sedaris as Kevin’s cougar boss, Julia, forever seen in frightfully inappropriate come-hither poses. Julia is probably as close as Sedaris has come to her old role on “Strangers With Candy.” O Not to be confused with “Shark Tank,” the new series “Make Me a Millionaire Inventor” (9 p.m., CNBC) provides a forum for the creative in search of a lucrative franchise. O On “Thrill Factor” (7 and 7:30 p.m., Travel), hosts Kari Byron and Tory Belleci scour the globe for the tallest, fastest and scariest roller coasters, water slides and other stomach-churning attractions. They also explain the physics behind these rides as well the psychological need behind their popularity, a subject they define as “the science of fun.” O “Cutthroat Kitchen” takes a five-episode summer escapade on “Camp Cutthroat” (8 p.m., Food). Host Alton Brown moves the proceedings to the wilderness, challenging contestants to cook and live outdoors. Tonight’s other highlights
O Seven acts move forward
on “America’s Got Talent” (7 p.m., NBC). O Molly fights for her mutant son on “Extant” (8 p.m., CBS). O On two helpings of “Mr. Robinson” (NBC): dog sitting (8 p.m.), a teachers’ night out (8:30 p.m.).
gave our son his biological father’s contact information. He had no interest and tossed it away. He considers my husband to be his father. To appease my ex (and hopefully stop him from trying to track our son down), I told him I would send him general information about our son’s life, along with a few pictures. But now I’m having second thoughts, because I know neither my husband nor our son would approve. I have done nothing so far and am stressed about the situation. I would appreciate your opinion. — Second Thoughts Dear Second: If your ex wanted to track down your son, he could probably do so without any appease-
JACQUELINE BIGAR’S STARS
For Wednesday, Aug. 12: This year you could experience a new beginning in at least one area of your life. Many of you will see greater creativity emerge. Financial gain will result from your hard work. If you are single, you seem to push away your many admirers. Don’t be so critical. If you are attached, the two of you seem more drawn to each other than usual. The stars show the kind of day you’ll have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult Aries (March 21-April 19) +++ You might feel pressured to find a solution to a personal matter. Speak to an adviser whom you trust. Tonight: Take a midweek break. Taurus (April 20-May 20) ++++ Your focus will be on your personal life. A close friend will offer you some solutions. Tonight: Order in. Gemini (May 21-June 20) ++++ Your concerns can easily be handled with a little self-discipline and energy. Grasp the power of your inner strength. Tonight: Out at a favorite spot. Cancer (June 21-July 22) ++++ You might want to establish a stronger budget or tap into your self-discipline. Tonight: Positive vibes flow. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) ++++ Postpone as much as you can. Be ready to say “no” to a request. Tonight: Ask for what you
ment from you, but we understand why you are willing to indulge him with photos and information. Nonetheless, you should not have made such a promise without consulting your son. It is his decision, so talk to him. Explain that you don’t expect him to want a relationship with his biological father, nor does he owe him any information. But it would be a kindness to give the man some peace of mind after all these years. Whatever decision your son makes, please abide by it.
— Send questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or Annie’s Mailbox, P.O. Box 118190 Chicago, IL 60611.
jacquelinebigar.com
want. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) ++++ You might have to deal with someone who has caused you a great deal of pain. Tonight: Take some time off just for you. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ++++ A meeting could prove to be important, as it allows you to test ideas. A friend will help you plan. Tonight: Follow a friend’s suggestion. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) ++++ You might feel overtired and withdrawn later in the day. Take a break around lunch. Tonight: A must appearance. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21 ++++ Deal with a close child or loved one. Remain sensitive. You know what you need to do. Tonight: Relax to a good movie. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ++++ One-on-one relating will cause you to question certain decisions you’ve made. Honor a change of pace. Tonight: Where others are. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) ++++ Emphasize what you can complete in the morning. You will flourish with a change of pace. Tonight: The only answer is “yes.” Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) +++ Tap into your creativity for the morning. By midafternoon, you will re-energize. Tonight: Take a personal night. — The astrological forecast should be read for entertainment only.
UNIVERSAL CROSSWORD Universal Crossword Edited by Timothy E. Parker August 12, 2015
ACROSS 1 Ewe youth 5 “Joy of Cooking” author Rombauer 9 Stay on the same topic too long 14 Caspian Sea feeder 15 Goat-legged deity 16 Some math measurements 17 “Don’t worry” 20 Words with prayers 21 Leaders of the band? 22 Wise guy’s delivery 25 Inquire 26 Cholesterolrich egg parts 28 “Family Guy” creator MacFarlane 32 Jungle creature 37 Eagle haven 38 “I don’t care” 41 Gumption 42 Opposite of horizontal 43 Nautical direction 44 Writer Asimov 46 Hidden means of support? 47 Grassland 53 Notions department?
23 In ___ (working in harmony) 24 A la ___ (pie choice) 27 Cocoon dweller 28 Interstate hauler 29 Clapton of rock 30 Louise of “Gilligan’s Island” 31 Foot part 32 I, in “The King and I” 33 Holiday tune 34 It could be a lot 35 Shoreline indentation 36 Bill that wasn’t redesigned 37 Back of the boat 39 One kind of tide 40 Whale type
58 Lady of Troy 59 What to leave when going all-out? 62 Brownish photograph tint 63 ___ gin fizz 64 Pew area 65 Meeting for lovers 66 Have a disposition 67 Acorn, for one DOWN 1 Circular religious receptacles 2 Appetite stimulus 3 Sprayer in self-defense 4 “That’s all, folks!” voice 5 “Weather permitting” and others 6 Charlotte of “The Facts of Life” 7 Misplay, as a grounder 8 Arctic attire 9 Didn’t pass the bar? 10 Disney’s first name 11 Hard yellow cheese 12 Change in Roma, once 13 Trace the shape of 18 Where many things are “made” 19 “Friends” friend
44 Unwrinkle 45 Like the best advice 46 Make swell 48 Moo ___ pork 49 Aquatic birds 50 Arm bones 51 “Superman” actor Christopher 52 Halted 53 “Meet Me ___ Louis” (film) 54 Person of action 55 To see at a distance 56 “The Adventures of Milo and ___” 57 Christmas season 60 Persona ___ grata 61 “Cheers” star Danson
PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER
8/11
© 2015 Universal Uclick www.upuzzles.com
NO WAY By Mary Jersey
8/12
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.
BURYG ©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.
ROCUS BOCBEW
DAYDEL Answer here: Yesterday’s
Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app
10D
Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.
(Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: GOING BRAVO WEAPON COMEDY Answer: The plant nursery owners’ son was a — GROWING BOY
BECKER ON BRIDGE
Wednesday, August 12, 2015
An edition of the Lawrence Journal-World
INSIDE Grilled pork with blackberries
Page 2
Rick Martin/Special to the Journal-World
Coconut Curry Chicken and Vegetables is one of the dishes taught at the Just Cook! classes at Just Food.
A RECIPE FOR TEAMWORK
T
Locally Sourced
here was a time not long ago when restaurants didn’t collaborate and chefs did not share. Secrets were the intellectual property of the establishment, and helping another eatery meant you loaned out a sleeve of gocups on a busy weekend. It was as if the joy of sharing and appreciation of the collaborative dining experience were achievements yet to be unlocked. How things have changed. Today we see a growing number of restaurants owned by chefs and a thriving family tree of culinary mentors training the next generation. Chefs are setting up shop in real neighborhoods that were long in need of revival. Local farmers and eager restauranteurs are working together to increase purchases of local food and make the transaction economical and convenient. Chefs are teaching low-income residents how to cook at Just Food. Not only are these chefs helping each other but they are also assisting in the community together. Just Food has pondered and delivered many solutions to hunger in our community
rate. Teach a class and you will experience the reward that comes from sharing secrets and giving to your community. Like I discovered myself, you might just find that many of the students could be teaching you. Below is one of the original recipes from the cooking classes. The Just Cook! classes were founded to teach anyone how to cook restaurant-style meals at home for over the last several years. around $2 per portion or Implementing a choice-based less. Contact Just Food for a system, providing locally schedule of classes. grown food and offering cooking classes are just a few examples. The “teach a man Coconut Curry to fish” proverb can’t define Chicken and the effect that cooking, from scratch, at home brings to a Vegetables family in need. Ingredients People want to learn how 8 chicken thighs to cook, and the lesson plan 2 tablespoons olive oil is always more effective 2 carrots, medium dice when taught by someone 6 green onions, cut in 2-inch with a genuine taste and lengths professional passion for 1 red bell pepper, medium the subject. It’s proven that dice when our community com6 leaves kale, stemmed and bines talents, we can solve chopped big issues in our society. 1/2 cup frozen peas Attend a Just Cook! class, 8 small potatoes and you’ll be amazed by the 1 thumb ginger, cut in large diversity of students and pieces their respective tastes in 1 quart chicken stock food. And you’ll see first2 12-ounce cans coconut milk hand that chefs do collabo-
Rick Martin
23rd & Louisiana
Local chefs will be hosting a chefs’ dinner to support Just Food, The Douglas County Food Bank, at 6 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 27, at the Cider Gallery, 810 Pennsylvania St. A six-course meal will be served, with each course prepared by a different chef. Participating chefs include Rick Martin and Mike Humphrey from Limestone Pizza Kitchen Bar, TK Peterson from Merchants Pub
2 tablespoons curry powder 1/2 cup fresh cilantro, chopped 1 lime, cut in wedges
Directions In a large pot, brown the chicken, potatoes, green onion bottoms, herb stems and vegetable scraps in olive oil. Add the ginger and chicken stock and simmer on high until potatoes are tender. While simmering, prepare other vegetables, paying close attention to proper cutting techniques. Remove chicken and potatoes and strain stock (de-bone and chop chicken when cool). In same pot, simmer the coconut milk, curry powder,
W8-12ED 8-18 TUES
50
and Plate; Ken Baker, formerly of Pachamamas; Zach Thompson from 715; and Vaughn Good and Juan Carlos Tovar-Ballagh from Hank Charcuterie. The event will celebrate local food while giving back to the thousands who need food assistance here in Douglas County. Tickets cost $100 and can be purchased at justfoodks.org. Email questions to ekeever@ justfoodks.org.
carrots and strained chicken stock. Reduce by half, then add chicken and potatoes. Simmer for 5 minutes then add remaining vegetables and simmer 1 minute. Serve over rice and garnish with cilantro and lime. Substitute any fresh garden ingredients when available. Serves: 8 — Rick Martin is executive chef and owner of Limestone Pizza. He is a contract trainer for Lawrence Public Schools Food Service and the Kansas Department of Education Child Nutrition and Wellness, as well as a consulting chef for Just Food Kansas. He has been preparing food for the Lawrence community for over 20 years.
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Wednesday, August 12, 2015
CRAVE
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L awrence J ournal -W orld
Meryl Carver-Allmond/Special to the Journal-World
Grilled Pork Tenderloin with Blackberry Sauce
GRILLED PORK WITH BLACKBERRY SAUCE A s we were finishing dinner the other night, I heard a knock at the front door. Grateful to escape the job of scrubbing the baby’s beet-stained face, I quickly slipped out past the dog to find a neighbor standing on my front porch with a bowl of fat, dark blackberries cupped up in an offering. “Thanks for the eggs,” she smiled, as she pressed the bowl into my hands and slipped away. My husband and I keep talking about moving. We’ve been happy in our cozy, starter home, but, with the arrival of child number two, we’re starting to get overly snug. Almost every time we talk about leaving East Lawrence, however, the conversation ends with me trailing off wistfully, “But I’ll miss the neighborhood...” It’s really the best. It’s live and let live enough to accommodate my mild introversion, but something interesting or nice is always happening. One time I had a chicken get loose and it ended in a fish fry. We have the best seats in town for the horse drawn Christmas parade. I keep coming home to a mysteriously freshly
Cooking From Scratch
to serve it is spooned over a grilled pork tenderloin, as described below.
2 tablespoons blackberry sauce concentrate 2/3 cup water
so that you get all of the to finish cooking with carjuice. ryover heat. Discard the berries and Meanwhile, add the butgently boil the remaining ter and flour to a large skilDirections juice and sugar mixture for let and whisk together over While you can get away about 8 minutes more. medium heat until the flour Grilled Pork with just marinating this Add the balsamic vinegar turns caramel colored. and bring to a boil one last Lower the heat and add 2 Tenderloin with pork for a few hours, it’s better if you can let it sit time, stirring frequently to tablespoons of the blackBlackberry overnight. keep the sauce from scorch- berry sauce concentrate For the marinade, mix ing. When the bubbles and 2/3 cup of water, conSauce together the mustard, change from foamy to shiny tinuing to whisk until the lemon juice, thyme and looking — about 5 minutes sauce is thick and bubbly. Ingredients salt. Rub it into the meat — remove the sauce from (If it gets too thick, you can For the blackberry sauce well, pop the whole thing the heat and pour it into a always thin it down with a concentrate into a plastic, zip-top bag lidded container. mowed front lawn. And little extra hot water.) 1/2 cup brown sugar and let it sit in the fridge Kept in the fridge, this the only time we have Slice the pork tender1/2 cup water overnight. sauce concentrate will last loin against the grain and ever been looked upon About 3 cups blackberLikewise, while it’s not for at least a month and it with disfavor was when spoon the blackberry sauce imperative, the blackberry will keep even longer in the generously over the top we re-homed our — loud ries 1/2 cup balsamic vinegar sauce concentrate can also freezer. and smelly, but comjust before serving. be made ahead of time. The next day, cook the pletely endearing — trio Serves 4-6 For the pork tenderloin To make it, pour the 1/2 pork tenderloin on a hot of ducks. 1-2 pound pork tender— Meryl Carver-Allmond cup water and the brown grill — turning frequently It’s not for everyone, lives in Lawrence and writes sugar in a large saucepan to ensure even cooking — to be sure, but — if we do loin about chickens, babies, knitting, 3 tablespoons mustard and heat over medium until until the internal temperamove away — I’m really gardening, food, photography, 3 tablespoons lemon the brown sugar melts. ture is at least 145 degrees. going to miss those sponand whatever else tickles her Add the berries and bring Wrap the tenderloin in taneous interactions and juice fancy on any given day at 2 tablespoons dried the mixture to a gentle boil foil and allow it to rest for neighborly exchanges. mybitofearth.net. thyme for about 10 minutes. 10-15 minutes to allow it For now, though, I’m 1 teaspoon salt Then, using a fine, mesh going to try not to worry 1 tablespoon butter strainer, strain off the berabout the future and 1 tablespoon flour ries, squeezing them well instead enjoy my blackberries. The following sauce “concentrate” is one of my favorite uses for fresh blackberries when they’re in season. The concentrate will keep in the fridge for about a Your Real Sports Barber Shop. anniversaries • births • weddings • engagements month, and even lonCELEBRATION ANNOUNCEMENTS ger in the freezer. It’s Place Your Announcement: REX’S STADIUM BARBER SHOP delicious over chicken or Orders.SunflowerClassifieds.com or call 785.832.7151 EXPIRES 9/30/15 beef, but my favorite way
Meryl Carver-Allmond
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r
TM
great GROCERY VALUES
1
48
Minute or Success Rice
12-14 Oz. Box or 2 Ct. Ready to Serve! Cups
Post Cereal Family Size
16 Oz. Honey-comb, 25 Oz. Raisin Bran,18 Oz. Grape-Nuts Flakes & Honey Bunches of Oats, 15 Oz. Pebbles or 13.5-16 Oz. Great Grains
2
98
WOW
Country Club Milk Gallon
ONLY99
¢
with Card and 2,500 Points
Hawaiian Punch
Selected Varieties Gallon or 10 Ct. Pkg.
1
88
5
Kellogg’s Fruit Snacks
3/$
Sunshine Cheez-It
2/$
Selected Varieties 10 Ct. Box
Best Choice Eggs White or Brown Dozen
ONLY99¢
with Card and 2,000 Points
Dunkin Donuts Ground Coffee Selected Varieties 11-12 Oz. Bag
FREE! with Card and 3,000 Points
Orville Redenbacher’s Popcorn Selected Varieties 3 Ct. Box
3
2/$
Selected Varieties 9-13.7 Oz. Box
5
La Croix Sparkling Water Selected Varieties 12 Pk./12 Oz. Cans
FREE! with Card and 3,000 Points
Belfonte Premium Ice Cream Selected Varieties 56 Oz.
FREE! with Card and 3,000 Points
Niagara Purified Water
24 Pk./.5 Liter Bottles
1
98
Lay’s Potato Chips Selected Varieties 7.75-8 Oz. Bag
1
98
great FROZEN VALUES
PictSweet Vegetables
Selected Varieties 10-12 Oz. Bag
88
¢
Kahiki Egg Rolls
5
2/$
Selected Varieties 12.2 Oz. Box
Banquet Entrées
10
5/$
Selected Varieties 24-28 Oz. Family Size Box
great GROCERY VALUES
Kraft Macaroni & Cheese
Original Blue Box 5 Ct. Pkg.
4
88
5
3/$
Peter Pan Peanut Butter Selected Varieties 13-16.3 Oz. Jar
WOW
Best Choice Sugar Granulated 4 Lb. Bag
3
2/$
1
88
XTRA Detergent
Selected Varieties 50 Use
Wed. thruTues.
1
98
Wish-Bone Salad Dressing
Selected Varieties 16 Oz. Bottle
General Mills Cereal
8-12 thru 8-18
50
1
9-12.25 Oz. Cheerios, 11.5 Oz. Lucky Charms, 12.2 Oz. Cinnamon Toast Crunch, 11.25 Oz. Cookie Crisp, 13 Oz. Reese’s Puffs or 12 Oz. Golden Grahams
98
¢
E A R OFF N EARN 50¢ OFF ! PER GALLON OF GAS* WHEN YOU PURCHASE A TOTAL OF $75.00 OF VALID GROCERIES AT ANY ONE TIME AT CHECKERS USING YOUR XTRA! CARD *LIMIT ONE ( 1 ) 50¢ FUEL DISCOUNT PER XTRA! ACCOUNT
FUEL $AVING$ ARE LIMITED TO 20 GALLONS OF FUEL PER PURCHASE, PER VEHICLE WED 8-12 THRU TUES 8-18, 2015 EXCLUDING TOBACCO, BEER/ALCOHOL, STAMPS & GIFT CARD PURCHASES. SEE STORE MANAGER FOR DETAILS.
Kellogg’s Pop•Tarts
Selected Varieties 12 Ct. Box
5
2/$
Doritos Tortilla Chips
Selected Varieties 10-11.5 Oz. Bag
5
2/$
great DAIRY DEALS
t
Limi 10
Yoplait Yogurt
39
Selected Varieties 4-6 Oz. Cup
¢
Minute Maid Orange Juice
5
2/$
Selected Varieties 59 Oz. Bottle
Selected Varieties 8-13.9 Oz. Can
5
3/$
Pillsbury Sweet or Crescent Rolls
premium QUALITY MEATS Economy Pack Fresh Cut
Boneless Pork Loin Butterfly Chops
2
38 Lb
Economy Pack Fresh Cut
3
Boneless Beef Charcoal Steaks Nathan's Franks
Selected Varieties, 12-14 Oz. Pkg. .............
Farmland Sliced Bacon
Fresh
Red or Black Plums
Lb
398 Oscar Mayer Sliced Bologna 10/$10 Oscar Mayer Sliced Lunch Meat 2/$4 or Cotto Salami, 12 Oz. Pkg...........
2
88
3
2/$
Dole Salad Blends
98
Lb
12 Oz. Pkg. Patties or Links
Farmland Homestyle Sausage
fresh PRODUCE SPECIALS
5-12 Oz. Pkg. Select Variety Field Greens, Baby Spinach, Spring Mix, 50/50 & Romaine
2
88
Economy Pack Fresh Cut
12-16 Oz. Pkg. Hickory Smoked
Pork Cutlets
98
¢ Lb
Smoked Turkey or Honey Ham, 8 Oz. Pkg.
4
2/$
88
¢
14 Oz. Coleslaw Mix or 12 Oz. Bag
Fresh
Dole Large Red Ea Bell Peppers Garden Salad
Fresh Washington
Royal Gala Apples
fresh & ready DELI BAKERY 17 Oz. Tub Big Family Size Deli Fresh
Sabra Hummus
3
99
23RD & LOUISIANA, LAWRENCE, KS
Locally Owned & Operated Since 1987
88
¢
LbLb
1 Lb. Pkg., 45-55 Ct. Individually Quick Frozen Pure & natural
9
98
AquaStar Cooked Shrimp
Fresh
Jumbo Artichokes
Wow!
Thursday ONLY! Bananas
1
98 Ea
19
¢ Lb
10 Ct. Pkg. Selected Varieties
16 Oz. Pkg. Selected Varieties
James Skinner Ring Danish
Lofthouse Frosted Cookies
2/$
2/$
7
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TWENTY FIFTEEN
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Weekly August 2015
Amyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;sÂŽ
Avalon OrganicsÂŽ
Select Burritos
12 89
$
1
$ 99
2 oz.
EDAP $16
.89 - $16
.99
5.5 oz. - 6 oz. EDAP $2.49
Deep Stress Daily Rescue - or Serious Relaxer Muscle Tension
The vitamin C, and white tea in these facial moisturizers encourage daily skin repair and rejuvenation.*
8
$ 79
Trace MineralsÂŽ
Psyllium Husks 180 Caps or 12 oz. Powder
$
each
EDAP 9.59 - 10.39
7
Hyaluronic Acid
$ 49
60 cap
EDAP $10.1
9
9
8 oz.
EDAP $19.59
Jarrow FormulasÂŽ
Kelp Powd er
$ 79
60 cap
EDAP $15.9
$
PS 100 PS is an integral part of brain cells and promotes normal communication between neurons.*
Hyaluronic acid
for joint lubrication, skin hydration and skin repair.*
transResveratro l Plus
8
1899
1349
Natural GrocersÂŽ
13 99
Our modern diets are woefully lacking in important essential this easy-to-take liquid supplement.*
Paperback
$
$
ConcenTrace Trace Mineral Drops
Banana Oatmeal Pancakes, Avocado Reuben, Chick â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;nâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; Pot Pie, and Chocolate Cheesecake... this cookbook is chockfull of recipes that will appeal to vegans and meateaters alike.
$ 79
Alpha Lipoic Aci d
1 oz.
EDAP $10.39
Yerba PrimaÂŽ
8
Offers end August 15, 2015
Wishgarden HerbsÂŽ
Vitamin C Renewal Cream or Vitamin C Rejuvenating Oil-Free Moisturizer
YOUR CHOICE!
3
7 oz.
EDAP $8.65
WestbraeÂŽ Organic Canned Beans
$
SAVE $1
1399
1279
$
60 cap
EDAP $14.99
30 sg
EDAP $16.25
LifewayÂŽ
Select Organic Lowfat Kefirs Delicous, tangy and creamy drinkable probiotics.
Select Org an Lowfat Ke ic firs
3
$ 19
2
$ 19
25 oz. EDAP $2.79
Wild PlanetÂŽ
Wild Albacore Canned Tuna
EDAP $3.7
32 oz.
9
So DeliciousÂŽ
Coconut Milk Beverages A delicious, creamy dairy alternative comprised of over 60% medium chain fatty acids (MCFAs).
Coconut M ilk Beverages
3
$ 29
5 oz. EDAP $4.15
1
$ 79 32 oz.
EDAP $2.49
Organic PrairieÂŽ Grass-Fed Organic Beef Mighty Bars
High BrewÂŽ Cold Brew Coffees
Organic, grass-fed bars with meat, fruit and nuts.
Grass-Fed Organic Beef Migh ty Bars
2
$ 49 EW N ! 1 oz.
EDAP $3.19
ITEM
All items are available while supplies last. Offers end August 15, 2015
1
$ 49
8 oz. EDAP $2.29
*These statements have not been evaluated by the FDA. These products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.
ď&#x20AC;Ľď&#x20AC;§ď&#x20AC;Żď&#x20AC;Şď&#x20AC;Łď&#x20AC;¨ ď&#x20AC;˘ď&#x20AC;Ťď&#x20AC;Ąď&#x20AC;Śď&#x20AC;Ľď&#x20AC;ď&#x20AC;Łď&#x20AC;Ž ď&#x20AC;Łď&#x20AC;Ąď&#x20AC;Źď&#x20AC;Ąď&#x20AC;Ľď&#x20AC;˘ ď&#x20AC;¤ď&#x20AC;°
~ and join us all day for ~ Local, Organic Products & Cooking Demos
Receive Free* ~ Limited-edition ~ 60th Anniversary Reusable Bags ~ Coloring Books ~
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~ Limited-edition ~ 60th Anniversary T-shirts ~ Books & more! ~
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