Lawrence Journal-World 08-14-11

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INSIDE: Your guide to KU, including FACES • PLACES • SPORTS • RESOURCES • AND MORE L A W R E N C E

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SUNDAY • AUGUST 14 • 2011

New DUI law tougher, but loopholes still exist

LONE STAR LAKE

Tonganoxie man, 30, drowns By Aaron Couch acouch@ljworld.com

KANSAS’ NEW DUI LAW PENALTIES

ONLINE: See the video at LJWorld.com

The law has been in effect since July 1: ● First offense: Misdemeanor, 30-day license suspension, ignition interlock for remainder of a year, two days to six months in jail or 100 hours of community service, $1,000 fine. ● Second offense:

Misdemeanor, 45-day license suspension, ignition interlock for one year, $1,250 fine. Must serve at least five days in jail.

● Third offense:

Misdemeanor, 45-day license suspension, ignition interlock for two years, $1,750 fine, 90 days to one year in jail. Will be charged with a felony if offender has had one other DUI in the past 10 years.

● Fourth offense and above:

Felony, 45-day license suspension, ignition interlock for three years, 90 days to one year in jail, $2,500 fine.

Offenders must petition court to be eligible to drive after the 45-day license suspensions for second and above convictions. Any DUIs committed prior to July 1, 2001, do not count toward an offender’s total. Nick Krug/Journal-World Photo Illustration

A 30-year-old Tonganoxie man died while he was swimming about 75 feet offshore at Lone Star Lake in southern Douglas County, said Douglas County Sheriff spokesman Sgt. Steve Lewis. Divers were called to the scene shortly before 11:30 a.m. and the man, identified as James Nicholas Owens, was pulled from the lake about 3:45 p.m., Lewis said. Lewis said Owens was swimming with friends who immediately noticed he did not come up after going under water. The friends then called for help. Brooke Crews was nearby on an inflatable raft when the man went under. She heard teenagers calling for help and yelling for someone to dial 911. She said she didn’t think the teens knew the man but saw they were trying to save him. “I ran my raft over there to them,” Crews said. She saw teens using flotation devices to try to rescue Owens. She said that at one point, Owens grabbed onto one of his would-be rescuer's legs, and in his panic began to drag the teenager down with him. This forced the teen to let go of Owens to prevent being pulled down with him. “They started diving for him until the emergency crews showed up,” Crews said. Rescue crews from the Douglas and Jefferson county sheriffs’ offices, Lawrence-Douglas County Fire Medical and other area agencies used boats and divers to search the water. Douglas County Sheriff Ken McGovern encouraged swimmers to follow safe practices, such as novice swimmers taking lessons and wearing life preservers. He also urged swimmers to be aware of unfamiliar environments. Lone Star Lake, he pointed out, gets deep fast. “It goes from calf-deep all the way to 15 feet in just no time,” McGovern said. This is the second incident at Lone Star Lake this summer. A boy drowned at Lone Star Lake on July 2.

Central database, tougher What a DUI stop, penalties can’t keep all arrest looks like Late-summer vacancies ‘odd’ T drunken drivers off streets

— Reporter Aaron Couch can be reached at 832-7217.

By Shaun Hittle sdhittle@ljworld.com

In 2008, a Wichita mother and daughter were killed by a drunken driver as they walked to school. The driver, Gary Hammitt, 57, was still on the road despite having four convictions for driving under the influence, or DUI. The incident spurred two state-sponsored commissions and led to a new DUI law that went into effect July 1. But Hammitt’s DUI history could be considered paltry compared with some drivers booked into Douglas County Jail last year. A Journal-World investigation identified 18 people booked into Douglas County Jail in 2010 for their fourth or more DUI charge; there are drivers cruising local roads every day despite six and seven DUI arrests. Then there’s 56-year-old Baldwin Cityarea resident Randolph Holder.

Since 1977, Holder has been convicted of DUI at least nine times, most recently in March, though that case is being appealed. Covering a span of 34 years, Holder has been jailed, fined, placed under house arrest and had his license suspended and revoked. But nothing has kept Holder from driving drunk. Holder — who, along with his attorney, declined comment for this report — isn’t alone in the state, said Mary Ann Khoury, director of the DUI Victim Center of Kansas in Wichita. “We’ve seen 18, 19, 20 (DUI convictions),” she said. Holder’s case highlights some of the problems the new DUI law tries to address. But will the new law keep drivers like Holder off the road?

o understand what it’s like getting pulled over for driving under the influence, Douglas County Sheriff’s Deputy Richie Labahn and I simulated the process. Labahn, a patrol deputy, flashes his lights behind me on a side road near the jail. It’s about 6 a.m., and a couple of interested walkers look on at the potential trouble on a quiet street. Labahn approaches my Ford Focus. “License and registration,” says Labahn, who’s all business. “Is this a current address?”

Please see SOBRIETY, page 6A

!"#$"%

!!!"#$!%&#'"(%) See videos of reporter Shaun Hittle going through a DUI stop, installing an ignition interlock device and using an interlock device, all at LJWorld.com

Please see DUI, page 2A

for rentals

By Aaron Couch acouch@ljworld.com

If you take a drive around Lawrence this weekend, you might notice more “For Rent” signs than you’d expect to see in August. Even prime spots for students have rooms for rent. “This will be my first year that I’ve had a vacancy,” said Quinn Miller of Second Wind Management. “It’s been an odd month.” Miller has been managing properties in Lawrence since 2007 and noticed last year the renter pool seemed smaller. Then, he didn’t fill his last spot until July 31. This year, Aug. 1 has come and gone and he has yet to fill five of his 37 spots. Last week in the neighborhood north of Memorial Stadium, where Miller still has a house to fill, there were seven “For Rent” Please see RENTAL, page 6A

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COMING MONDAY City commissioners are expected to approve spending $1 million on planning for the former Farmland Industries property.

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LAWRENCE

| Sunday, August 14, 2011 Year

DUI Repository The new DUI law created a central repository — or electronic database — to help police and prosecutors statewide better access criminal histories of those arrested for driving under the influence. Previously, prosecutors had difficulty finding the necessary information about how many DUIs a person had. In some municipalities, records weren’t forwarded to the appropriate state agency, and prosecutors were forced with the time-consuming task of trying to track down where someone may have had a DUI. Here’s information on the Central Repository, which is being created by the Kansas Bureau of Investigation: ● The central repository will enable prosecutors to electronically obtain full criminal histories from one location. Records will be stored in a database maintained by the KBI. ● All law enforcement agencies will be required to submit DUI offenses to the central repository by July 1, 2012. ● All agencies will be required to submit DUI offenses electronically to the central repository by July 1, 2013. Source: Kansas Bureau of Investigation

Lawrence DUI arrests comparison Lawrence had the highest amount of DUI arrests per 1,000 residents in 2010, according to a survey of 27 cities across the country, known as the Benchmark City Survey. Here is how Lawrence compared: 1. Lawrence — 12.0 arrests per 1,000 residents 2. Overland Park — 10.0 arrests 3. Edmond, Okla. — 9.4 arrests 4. Fort Collins, Colo. — 9.2 arrests 5. Springfield, Mo. — 8.0 arrests 6. Lincoln, Neb. — 7.7 arrests 7. Boise, Idaho — 7.4 arrests 8. Richardson, Texas — 7.3 arrests 9. Olathe — 7.1 arrests 10. Norman, Okla. — 6.1 arrests 14. Boulder, Colo. — 5.1 arrests 16. Broken Arrow, Okla. — 4.5 arrests 17. Plano, Texas — 4.4 arrests 21. Boca Raton, Fla. — 3.6 arrests 27. Coral Springs, Fla. — 0.7 arrest

Douglas County’s top offenders Randolph Holder’s DUI conviction record by year and city or county: ● 1977, Douglas County ● 1978, Douglas County ● 1987, Lawrence ● 1995, Douglas County ● 1997, Shawnee ● October 2000, Osage County ● November 2000, Osage County ● 2002, Franklin County ● 2011, Douglas County In addition, Holder’s driver’s license has been suspended or revoked six times since 2007. The Journal-World contacted Holder at his home, but he declined an interview request. Holder’s current lawyer also declined comment on Holder’s case, citing an open appeal on Holder’s most-recent DUI conviction. Here’s a look at some of the other habitual DUI offenders in Douglas County: 40-year-old Lawrence woman ● DUI arrests: Six since 2002 ● License suspended or revoked: Six times 47-year-old Lawrence man ● DUI arrests: Eight since 2000 ● License suspended or revoked: Nine times 31-year-old Lawrence man ● DUI convictions: Six since 2001 ● License suspended or revoked: 12 times The Journal-World was unable to contact any of the other offenders for comment.

DUIs in Douglas County (Lawrence, Baldwin City, Eudora, Sheriff, KU) Source: Kansas Bureau of Investigation Alcohol-related traffic fatalities in Kansas (bloodalcohol content above .08) Source: National Highway Transportation Safety Administration

DUI CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A

No way to know For starters, Holder’s case highlights the inconsistencies in how the state tracks DUI offenders. A search of Holder’s criminal history through the Kansas Bureau of Investigation shows six DUI convictions. Obtain his driving record from the Kansas Department of Revenue, and only three show up. Holder, however, has nine total convictions, according to Douglas County Assistant District Attorney Greg Benefiel. Benefiel prosecutes most of the county’s DUI cases and has access to Holder’s presentence investigation report, Holder which isn’t open to the public under Kansas open records laws. “One of the issues is the fuzziness of the records,” said Benefiel, explaining that not all Kansas municipalities have consistently submitted such cases to state databases. As part of their investigation, prosecutors must call each municipality where they think someone may have been convicted of a DUI. Benefiel said that if he suspects the accused has been convicted somewhere in Johnson County, for instance, staff would need to check all 18 municipalities in the county. “It’s a very time-consuming process,” he said. But that’s not the end of it. A prosecutor must get the records to prove the case, and also prove that the offender was represented by an attorney. But sometimes those records aren’t kept. So is there any way to know how many DUI convictions a person in Kansas has? Probably not, Benefiel said. Is it possible someone in Kansas has 100 DUIs and is still driving around? Unlikely, but it’s possible, he said. That’s one of the issues the new DUI law addresses, in the form of a central DUI repository, or database, to track the state’s DUI offenders. In essence, law enforcement and prosecutors will need to search only one database to find out how often someone has been convicted or arrested for a DUI, and all municipalities are required to participate. Clean-slate provision But the repository comes with a caveat, one that wipes the slate clean for some offenders. Any DUIs committed prior to July 1, 2001, cannot be included in an offender’s total. In Holder’s case, that would mean that if he is convicted of another DUI — which would be his 10th — it would be counted as only his third offense, which carries fewer penalties. Khoury, of the DUI Victim Center, is fuming about that stipulation, as well as other aspects, that she said don’t make Kansas roads any safer. Kansas roads are among the most dangerous in the country when it comes to alcohol-related fatalities. Several years ago, Kansas ranked well below the national average in alcoholrelated fatalities per million miles driven. In 2010, the state’s rate was 40 percent higher than the national average. In addition, the number of alcohol-related traff ic fatalities in Kansas increased more than 50 percent between 2005 and 2009. The law simply didn’t go far enough to make a significant impact, Khoury said. “We failed victims in what the Legislature put forth from

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Addictions counselor explains ‘substance abuse continuum’ By Shaun Hittle sdhittle@ljworld.com

To get a better sense of the behavior of habitual drunken drivers, the Journal-World interviewed licensed clinical addiction counselor Lisa Carter, who works for DCCCA. Carter explained the “substance abuse continuum,” which outlines varying stages of alcohol addiction, and how individuals in those stages respond to negative consequences, such as being arrested for a DUI. Here’s how Carter explained the five stages: ● No use or abstinence: Individuals who do not drink. ● Nonproblem users: Those who drink occasionally, but who don’t experience any negative effects related to their drinking.

our recommendations. We failed,” she said. Khoury favored a “lifetime look back” for DUIs, so someone like Holder would receive the most severe punishment for his crime — up to a year in jail and lifetime use of an ignition interlock that prevents him from driving if he has been drinking. But if someone committed all of their DUIs before 2001, regardless of how many they had, they’d avoid serious jail time. Restricting the look back to 10 years “was putting us back in the dark ages,” Khoury said.

Ignition interlock Over at one of the local businesses that installs ignition interlock devices — Garber Automotive, 2216 W. Sixth St. — business is booming, said owner Micah Garber. Businesses such as Garber’s are seeing a spike in ignition interlock installations thanks to the new DUI law, which requires even f irst-time offenders to use the devices. How long DUI offenders must use an ignition interlock varies, but in some cases it can be for up to 10 years. Garber explained how the ignition interlocks work. Offenders pay a $45 installation fee, and Garber’s crew installs the devices in about 30 minutes. The device is connected to a vehicle’s ignition, and to start the car someone needs to blow into a hand-held device, which records the Blood Alcohol Content, or BAC. While the legal limit in Kansas is a BAC of .08, the ignition interlock won’t allow the vehicle to start if someone blows over a .04. If someone registers over the limit, they get two retests within the next 15 minutes. Fail those, and the car locks up. Offenders must also pay a $75 monthly fee, and data from the devices is downloaded and sent to probation officers. The device has provisions to prevent ways of skirting the system, said Jamie Krumsick, who coordinates distribution of interlock devices for Kansas Guardian Interlock. “The device is a lot smarter than people give it credit for,” Krumsick said. What if someone else, who’s sober, blows into the device to get it started for a drunken person? They won’t get too far, as the device will ask for occasional rolling retests, beginning after about five minutes. If the device requests a retest, drivers have 300 seconds to blow into the device before locking up. But what if a sober passen-

Commonly referred to as “social drinkers.” ● Misuse: When nonproblem users experience a negative consequence of drinking, they shift into this category. Those consequences can range from relationship problems to legal trouble. In this stage, a negative consequence is sometimes enough to make a person curb problem drinking. ● Abuse: Misusers who continue to experience negative consequences but drink anyway. Carter said that at this stage, friends and family begin noticing the problems, and the drinking can cause problems in nearly every aspect of someone’s life. Some are still able to cut down on their drinking at this stage, and slide back into one of the lesser stages. ● Dependence: In this

ger blows into the device for a drunken driver whenever the retests are requested? Krumsick answers that with a question of his own. “Why is the sober person not driving?” he said. Good point, but Khoury, from the DUI Victim Center, said she’s heard cases of drunken parents making their children blow into the device for them. For someone determined to drive drunk, there are other ways around the interlock. The new law doesn’t require someone to install an ignition interlock. But if they drive then they must legally use one. So you could simply not install one and roll the dice that you won’t be pulled over. Or have one installed, use it when sober, but use a second vehicle — without an interlock — when drinking.

Refusal One of the drawbacks of the new DUI law, said State Sen. Tim Owens, R-Overland Park, is the failure to close a loophole for drivers who refuse to take a Breathalyzer when pulled over. Owens served on the DUI Commission and has spent five years trying to reform Kansas DUI laws. Here’s the choice offenders can make when they’re pulled over for drunken driving: ● Take the Breathalyzer, fail, and then be subjected to jail time, be fined and use of an ignition interlock for a year. ● Refuse the Breathalyzer, which will trigger an automatic one-year license suspension, then be required to use an interlock for one year. While you could still be prosecuted for DUI under the second option, it’s much more difficult to prove without the Breathalyzer. Prosecutors are left with field sobriety tests administered by the on-scene officer, said Owens, who has been a prosecutor, defense attorney and judge in his career. He’s seen cases in which someone refuses a test and evades a conviction for DUI. An offender like Holder could simply refuse next time and have his license suspended, while taking his chances in court on the DUI charge. In the past, that doesn’t seem to have had much of an effect. Since 2009, Holder’s license has been revoked or suspended at least five times. Consequences? More jail time, ignition interlocks, increased fines — no matter what the law requires, those most addicted

TODAY’S OBITUARIES APPEAR ON PAGE 8C.

stage, a person is physically and psychologically dependent on alcohol. At this stage, negative effects of drinking are not enough to persuade someone to stop drinking. Consequences don’t matter. Treatment varies, depending on what stage someone is in, Carter said, and can range from outpatient therapy for misusers to intensive inpatient treatment for those in the dependence stage. The new Kansas DUI law has provisions to increase treatment for offenders, such as standardized substance abuse assessments for all offenders. The new law also designates funding to send offenders to inpatient substance abuse facilities. — Reporter Shaun Hittle can be reached at 832-7173.

to alcohol or drugs don’t fear the consequences, said Lisa Carter, an addictions counselor with DCCCA. That’s one of the lessons she’s learned in more than 15 years in the addictions field. “They start losing things — jobs, homes, relationships,” she said. “Everything crumbles.” It comes down to a choice, and if an addicted person isn’t ready for that, “It’s not going to change,” Carter said. The only foolproof way to keep the most habitual drunken drivers off the road would be incarceration. The new law sets one year as the maximum sentence a judge could give, even if someone has 10 DUIs. Owens, however, said the state’s sentencing guidelines allow for a judge to impose a prison sentence for felony DUI convictions if someone has an additional criminal history. At what point that would happen, and how it would be applied by the legal system, is not clear. The Kansas Department of Corrections, in its 2010 population report, showed that 27 offenders were in Kansas prisons for DUI, while 42 were imprisoned for vehicular manslaughter DUI. Other aspects of the new law will have to play out over time. The 54-page law is complex, and some defense attorneys interviewed for this report admitted to not understanding all of the provisions. “This is so new,” said John Frydman, a Lawrence attorney who handles several DUI cases. “We’re all just feeling our way through this.” Even at its strongest, the law will probably not keep the most habitual drunken drivers off the roads for long. For some, like Hammitt, who had four previous DUIs when he killed the mother and daughter, it takes a death to remove them from the roads. For his crimes, Hammitt was sentenced to 39 years in prison and won’t be eligible for parole until he’s 87. “You have people who aren’t going to get any better,” Owens said. “They’re not going to stop (driving drunk).” — Reporter Shaun Hittle can be reached at 832-7173.

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LOTTERY PICKS SATURDAY’S POWERBALL 9 12 35 50 58 (4) FRIDAY’S MEGA MILLIONS 9 43 51 54 55 (13) SATURDAY’S HOT LOTTO SIZZLER 9 11 13 21 32 (2) SATURDAY’S SUPER KANSAS CASH 13 20 24 27 28 (24) SATURDAY’S KANSAS 2BY2 Red: 6 23; White: 9 14 SATURDAY’S KANSAS PICK 3 1 5 9

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Should the amount of loans a student receives in college be tied to their potential earnings after graduation based on their major? ❐ Yes ❐ No ❐ Not sure Saturday’s poll: What did you do with your 401(k) during this week’s volatile market? I did nothing and let it ride, 58%; I don’t have a 401(k), 32%; I moved my money to more conservative funds, 6%; I moved my money to more aggressive funds, 2%. Go to LJWorld.com to see more responses and cast your vote.

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LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD ● LJWorld.com/local ● Sunday, August 14, 2011 ● 3A

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Funding for heritage projects available

Everything must go

1 | INDIANAPOLIS

Stage collapse kills state fairgoers Authorities say they have confirmed at least four deaths after a stage collapsed during a storm at the Indiana State Fair, where country act Sugarland was set to perform. Indiana State Police said the number of people hurt has risen to about 40, with their injuries ranging from minor to serious. The incident happened Saturday night at the fairgrounds in Indianapolis. Strong winds caused the stage rigging for the outdoor concert to collapse, trapping and injuring concert-goers shortly before 9 p.m. Witnesses say no one was performing at the time. The opening act had finished, and the crowd was waiting for Sugarland to take the stage. The collapse came as thousands of concert-goers were being evacuated from the fairground grandstand to a nearby coliseum.

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Douglas County Commission ready to accept proposals By Christine Metz cmetz@ljworld.com

One of those customers walked over to the women and thanked them for their service. It was a common occurrence throughout the store Saturday, as customers asked employees where they would go, and if they would come back when the store reopened. District Manager Kim Svoboda was in from Topeka to mark the store’s last day. “This is the only time you’d see one of our stores looking like this,” she said, noting the

Think big. And think small. That’s the advice Douglas County Commissioner Nancy Thellman is giving those who are interested in applying for the inaugural round of funding from the Natural and Cultural Heritage Grant Program. Last summer, the county commissioners made the controversial decision to set aside $350,000 in the 2011 budget to spend on projects that would preserve the area’s natural and cultural heritage. Nearly a year later, the county is ready to accept proposals from those who have projects that could use the money. Any Douglas County resident can apply for a grant, which could be used to preserve everything from a century-old farmstead to a historic building in a small downtown. “I don’t want to draw the lines so clearly because I don’t want people to be discouraged from putting in an application,” Thellman said. “If they think they have got a parcel of land or great historic structure or something of real interest that might relate to this, it would be worth filling out an application.” For nearly nine months, a task force met to establish the guidelines for how the County Commission should best spend the money. They recommended that almost $200,000 of the $350,000 be spent on one or two major projects and $105,000 on smaller, targeted projects. Those targeted projects could be for several thousand dollars or up to $105,000. In the first year, the remaining

Please see DILLONS, page 5A

Please see COUNTY, page 5A

2 | PAKISTAN

Gunmen abduct American man Gunmen kidnapped an American development expert after tricking his guards and breaking into his house in Pakistan on Saturday, a brazen raid that alarmed aid workers, diplomats and other foreigners who already tread carefully in this country rife with Islamic militancy and anti-U.S. sentiment. The U.S. Embassy identified the victim as Warren Weinstein. Weinstein is the Pakistan country director for J.E. Austin Associates, a development contractor that has received millions of dollars from the aid arm of the U.S. government, according to a profile on LinkedIn, a networking website. Police declined to speculate on the motive, and no group immediately claimed responsibility. But kidnappings for ransom are common in Pakistan, with foreigners being occasional targets. Criminal gangs are suspected in most abductions, but Islamic militants are believed to also use the tactic to raise money. 3 | LONDON

Top cop slams U.K.’s crime adviser pick Tensions between Britain’s government and police leaders flared Saturday over Prime Minister David Cameron’s recruitment of a veteran American police commander to advise him on how to combat gangs and prevent a repeat of the past week’s riots. The criticism, led by Association of Chief Police Officers leader Sir Hugh Orde, underscored deep tensions between police and Cameron’s coalition government over who was most to blame for the failure to stop the four-day rioting that raged in parts of London and other English cities until Wednesday. Cameron criticized police tactics as too timid and announced he would seek policy guidance from William Bratton, former commander of police forces in Boston, New York and Los Angeles. British police have branded the move misguided and an insult to their professionalism. 4 | LIBYA

Rebels enter key city of Zawiya Libyan rebels fought their way into the strategic city of Zawiya west of Tripoli on Saturday in their most significant advance in months, battling snipers on rooftops and heavy shelling from Moammar Gadhafi’s forces holding the city. Zawiya, 30 miles from the capital, is a key target for rebels waging a new offensive launched from the mountains in the far west of Libya, an attempt to break the deadlock in combat between the two sides that has held for months in the center and east of the country. A credible threat from the rebels in the west could strain Gadhafi’s troops, which have been hammered for months by NATO airstrikes. Defending Zawiya is key for the regime but could require bringing in better trained forces. 5 | BEIRUT

Richard Gwin/Journal-World Photo

MEGAN ALLRED AND HER SON WYATT, ABOVE, BOTH OF LAWRENCE, were among the many shoppers hitting the aisles at Dillons, at 1740 Mass., which was closing on Saturday to make way for a new Dillons store at the same location. BELOW, BAKERS AT DILLONS SINCE 1980, Julie Sutheimer, left, and Karen Strickland worked their last day at Dillons at 1740 Mass. Both bakers have jobs at other Dillons stores.

Longtime employees help close down Dillons By Aaron Couch acouch@ljworld.com

ONLINE: Watch the video at LJWorld.com

For some, Saturday’s closing of the Dillons at 1740 Mass. meant discounted ice cream and TV dinners. For others, it meant saying goodbye to familiar faces. Two 30-year employees of Dillons said they were sorry to go, and hoped they would be able to return to work at the location when it reopens next year. “We started together and we’re closing it down togeth-

Travel agencies embrace Internet to help business By Chris Hong chong@ljworld.com

Syrian tanks, army kill at least 5 Syrian tanks, security agents and pro-regime gunmen fanned out into the streets of several towns to root out protesters demanding the ouster of President Bashar Assad in a sweep Saturday that killed at least five people. The heaviest assault was in the Mediterranean coastal city of Latakia, where a day earlier thousands had turned out in protests. At least 20 tanks and armored personnel carriers rolled into the city’s elRamel neighborhood amid intense gunfire that sent many residents fleeing the area, according to Rami Abdul-Rahman, head of the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

er,” said Julie Sutheimer, who began working in the bakery department in 1980. Her friend Karen Strickland had been working in the bakery since 1979. The pair went to same high school, have children who are close in age, but now will be parting ways. One will be going to a store in Topeka, the other going to the Dillons at Sixth Street and Wakarusa Drive. “We have built great relationships with customers, and it’s hard to say goodbye,” said Sutheimer.

As the Internet continues to turn personal computers into virtual travel-booking kiosks, travel agents are confident they aren’t going away anytime soon. Just ask Walter Houk, president of Travellers Inc., 831 Mass. He has been in the business for more than 52 years and started Travellers in 1994. He has survived many challenges, like stock market fluctuations, the end of airline ticket commissions and the post-9/11 recession.

WALT HOUK, PRESIDENT OF TRAVELLERS INC., 831 Mass., has been in the travel agency business for more than 52 years.

While more Americans book their travel online — 93 million in 2009, according to a U.S. Travel Association survey — Houk said he never considered the Internet a threat. “There’s no question the Internet has an effect,” he said. “We’ve always been dealing with direct sales; now, the Internet made it easier.” It’s the recession that is hurting business the most, Houk said, adding that it’s the toughest problem his business has faced. Houk said people are still traveling, but they are taking

Richard Gwin/Journal-World Photo

more affordable vacations, like weekend getaways, instead of trips that require a travel agent. “If they had money to spend, I think the Internet would be

less of a thing,” Houk said. “Now, if they’re looking for those trips, there’s that myth that if I find Please see TRAVEL, page 5A

ATTENTION HOMEOWNERS

NO COST ENERGY SAVING IMPROVEMENTS

CITY OF LAWRENCE CAN HELP HOMEOWNERS SAVE $$$ ON ENERGY BILLS

The City of Lawrence has money available to pay for weatherizing homes in the city. Improvements are limited to:

• Attic Insulation • Storm Windows • Weatherstripping of Entry Doors Grants for these improvements will be made to eligible homeowners. No repayment for this assistance is required. Grants will be awarded on a first-come first served basis. Eligibility requirements for this assistance are: 1. The home must not have received this service since January 1, 1993 2. The home must be owner occupied with no more than two dwelling units. 3. Home ownership will be verified. 4. Annual gross family income cannot exceed the following guidelines. Family Size Maximum Income Family Size Maximum Income 5 $61,050 1 $39,550 6 $65,550 2 $45,200 7 $70,100 3 $50,850 8 plus $74,600 4 $56,500 Application deadline is August 31, 2011. Application forms are available at the office of Planning and Development Services Department located at 1 Riverfront Plaza, Level one, Suite 110, P.O. Box 708, Lawrence Kansas, 66044. For more information call 832-7700, or visit www.lawrenceks.org./pds

COMPREHENSIVE REHABILITATION LOANS

The Community Development Division of the Planning and Development Services Department of the City of Lawrence has a limited amount of funds available for its comprehensive housing rehabilitation loan program. These loans may require monthly payments. The loan money may be used for foundation repair, wiring, plumbing, painting, roofing, and minor interior repair. This is not a remodeling program. Applications will be accepted through September 1, 2011 Basic eligibility requirements are that the recipient must be an owner-occupant of the property for a minimum of one year prior to application, the property must contain only one or two dwelling units, and the property must be located within in the city limits of lawrence. Mobile homes are not eligible for this program. Gross family income from all sources cannot exceed the following:

Family Size 1 2 3 4

Gross Annual Family Income $39,550 $45,200 $50,850 $56,500

Family Size 5 6 7 8 plus

Gross Annual Family Income $61,050 $65,550 $70,100 $74,600

Applications will be evaluated after September 1, 2011 and a list of potential recipients will be established. Applicants will be notified by mail of their application status after all applications have been evaluated. Additional information and application forms may be obtained from the Development Services office, 1 Riverfront Plaza, Level One, Suite 110, by calling (785) 832-3113 or (785) 832-3114, on the web www.lawrenceks.org/pds/

Planning and Development Services | 785-832-7700 | www.lawrenceks.org/pds


4A

STATE

| Sunday, August 14, 2011

SOUND OFF

Q:

What’s the location of the 67-acre plot in northwest Lawrence that was just annexed?

A:

The property is on the south side of North 1800 Road, near the Farmer’s Turnpike, between the extended alignments of East 900 and East 950 roads. It’s about a half mile east of the Kansas Turnpike’s Lecompton interchange.

Q:

Who would I contact about curbs or lack of curbs on my street?

A:

Contact Lawrence Street Maintenance Department, 832-3031.

SOUND OFF If you have a question, call 832-7297 or send email to soundoff@ljworld.com.

?

ON THE

STREET By Joe Preiner Read more responses and add your thoughts at LJWorld.com

Where do you get your news?

L AWRENCE J OURNAL -WORLD

BRIEFLY Granddaughter of KU chant writer dies The Kansas University family lost a valued member as Carolyn Bailey Berneking, granddaughter of KU icon E.H.S. Bailey, died Thursday. Berneking, a former KU librarian, worked to preserve the university’s history through the years. Her efforts saw Strong Hall entered into the National Register of Historic Sites and Bailey Hall, named for her grandfather, placed on the Kansas Register of Historic Buildings. Bailey was also responsible for creating the university’s Rock Chalk chant. KU Chancellor Bernadette Gray-Little shared kind thoughts on the KU graduate and longtime volunteer. “Carolyn Bailey Berneking was a beloved member of the Jayhawk nation,” Gray-Little said. “On behalf of the entire University of Kansas community, I offer the deepest condolences to her family and loved ones. She will be missed.” Berneking was 96 years old. ● An obituary for Mrs.

Berneking appears on page 8C.

60K lbs of ground beef recalled over E. coli DODGE CITY — A Kansas company is recalling about 60,000 pounds of ground beef because the product may be contaminated with E. coli. The U.S. Department of Agriculture says National Beef Packing Co. of Dodge City has recalled about 60,424 pounds

of ground beef because of E. coli concerns. The recall includes ground beef chubs produced on July 23, 2011, with a freeze date of Aug. 12, and product codes 483, 684, 782, 785, 787. Also recalled are ground beef chubs produced on July 25, 2011l, with a freeze date of Aug 14., bearing product codes 431, 471, 494. The USDA says the problem was discovered during testing at an Ohio facility that bought some of the products. E. coli is a potentially deadly bacteria that can cause bloody diarrhea and other problems.

Nemaha County needs workers SENECA — Unemployment numbers may be rising elsewhere in Kansas, but Nemaha County in the northeast section of the state is having trouble finding workers. The Topeka Capital Journal reports that the a preliminary report from the Kansas Department of Labor indicates Nemaha County’s unemployment rate is 3.9 percent. That compares with the state’s jobless rate of 6.7 percent. Betsy Macke, human resource manager for Koch and Co. Inc., a woodworking facility in Seneca, says that company struggles to find enough workers. Harry Leem, executive director of the Seneca Chamber of Commerce, said a lack of affordable housing is the biggest drawback to attracting workers to the community of about 1,990.

Asked on Massachusetts Street

ON THE RECORD

LJWORLD.COM/BLOTTER

LAW ENFORCEMENT REPORT • A 40-year-old Lawrence man was arrested early Saturday morning after making threats with a weapon. According to Douglas County emergency dispatchers, the caller who reported the incident said the man had threatened her husband with a knife in the 1700 block of West 24th Street. The incident occurred shortly before 2 a.m.

Rosemary Murphy, artist, Baldwin City “I would not be without a newspaper.”

HOSPITAL BIRTHS Brandon and Jessica Robson, Lawrence, a boy, Saturday. Deborah and Timothy Bredehoft, Lawrence, a boy, Saturday. Jeff and Stephanie Fagan, Lawrence, a girl, Saturday.

Officers arrived on scene and took the man into custody. He was booked into the Douglas County Jail on charges of aggravated assault and criminal threat. No injuries were reported during the incident.

The Journal-World does not print accounts of all police reports filed. The newspaper generally reports: • Burglaries, only with a loss of $1,000 or more, unless there are unusual circumstances. To protect victims, we generally don’t identify them by name. • The names and circumstances of people arrested, only after they are charged. • Assaults and batteries, only if major injuries are reported. • Holdups and robberies.

CORRECTIONS

PUMP PATROL LAWRENCE

Gabriel Murphy, actor, Minneapolis “Just The New York Times online.”

LAWRENCE

“I never knew LMH ranked so high nationally for cardiac care, but now I’ll never forget it.”

The JournalWorld found gas prices as low as $3.42 at several stations. If you find a lower price, call 832-7154.

The Journal-World’s policy is to correct all significant errors that are brought to the editors’ attention, usually in this space. If you believe we have made such an error, call (785) 8327154, or email news@ljworld.com.

Julie Heart Attack Survivor Lawrence, KS For Julie, what began as jaw pain soon became a serious heart attack. Within 32 minutes of her arrival, the cardiac team at LMH cleared the blockage in her artery, saving her life and preventing damage to her heart. Ten days later she was back at work and fully enjoying a healthier life. To hear Julie’s story, visit lmh.org/qualitymatters.

Expanded Obituaries Every life has a story.

Quality Matters

www.WarrenMcElwain.com

DO YOGA--IT’S COOL! Tanya Keuchel, customer service representative, Kansas City, Kan. “The Internet.”

Excellence in healthcare is measured in many ways,

Try a FREE Yoga Class: Sunday, August 14th, 4:45 p.m. Wednesday, August 17th, 5:45 p.m.

including “door-to-balloon” times—the amount of time it takes to unblock an artery when a patient is in cardiac arrest. While the national guideline is 90 minutes, the

Enroll in an Intro Class Tuesday 7:30 p.m. Starts 8/16. Sunday 4:45 p.m. Starts 8/21. Wednesday 8:30 a.m. Starts 8/24. Wednesday 5:45 p.m. Starts 8/24.

cardiac care team at Lawrence Memorial Hospital averages just 56.5 minutes. In fact, the American College of Cardiology recently ranked LMH’s Heart Center in the top five percent nationally for heart attack care.*

Also Appropriate for New Students Ageless--Mon 10:15 a.m. Starts 8/15. Ageless--Weds 1:15 p.m. Starts 8/24. Prenatal--Thurs 4:00 p.m. Starts 8/25.

Chris Keuchel, IT tech support, Kansas City, Kan. “MSN, Yahoo, Google and Reddit.”

We proudly exceed state and national averages for virtually all quality measures. That’s why patients in our community choose LMH. Quality care is a priority here. Visit www.lmh.org/qualitymatters to learn more

YOGA CENTER OF LAWRENCE

about our clinical outcomes and why quality matters.

920 Massachusetts St.--Above Milton’s

yogacenter@sunflower.com

* Ranking based on average door-to-balloon time for treatment of patients with ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI).

www.yogacenteroflawrence.org For classes & enrollment form call 785.830.YOGA (9642), e-mail, or see website.

325 Maine

Lawrence , KS

785-505-5000

w w w. l m h . o r g


L AWRENCE J OURNAL -WORLD

Dillons CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A

half-empty shelves growing more disorganized as customers picked through them. Packing up an entire store takes a lot of work, but Svoboda has done it before. Inventory and equipment will be moved to different locations throughout the company. The store’s oven is going to Eldon, Mo. Wichita is getting its rotisserie. Canned goods and other items will go to area stores.

LAWRENCE But frozen foods and other perishable items would not be sent out, thus discount prices. By 9:30 a.m., they were going for half off. “I’m going to stock up so I don’t need anything until the new store opens,” joked Mary Gray, who had been shopping at that location for 30 years. Gray will have to a wait a while to shop at her favorite location again. The company said the new store, first proposed in November, should take from 10 to 12 months to complete. According to its plans, the new store will be 43,000 square feet, 10,000 square

X Sunday, August 14, 2011

| 5A.

feet larger than the current store. That extra space will be used to put in a Starbucks, spacious organic food and deli sections, and a drive-thru pharmacy. “I’m sad, but it’s going to be nice,” said Gray, who has been shopping there since the store opened. “They deserve it.” In the meantime, Dillons has set up a temporary pharmacy at the corner of 19th and Massachusetts streets to continue serving customers until the new store is ready.

Dance CNlowaensroslleinsg for Fall Check out our

OPEN HOUSE • 4-7p.m. & Wednesday, August 10th Monday, August 15th • Noon-8p.m.

— Reporter Aaron Couch can be reached at 832-7217. Follow him at Twitter.com/aaroncouch.

We offer sprung dance floors, observation windows, and large dance classrooms. Our teaching staff offers the best teachers with excellent

County CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A

funds would go toward a countywide inventory of heritage resources and administrative costs to evaluate and monitor the projects. “We would love to see some significant, sizable new projects,” Thellman said. “But people can also think small, (such as) a few thousand dollars for an architectural study or signage for a public path or historical trail.”

Conservation council Following the task force’s recommendations, the County Commission appointed a seven-member Heritage Conservation Council, which mixed advocates for land conservation and historic preservation. The council will review the applications and then pass its recommendations on to the commission. “We are interested in quality projects, ones that preserve heritage. We’re not here to give away money. We

Travel CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A

this on the Internet, a sevenday cruise for $690, I got to take that.” Anne Walters, general manager of Travel Leaders, 4104 W. Sixth St., said her company has embraced the Internet to make their job easier, using it to send clients information about their trips as well as their itinerary. AAA Lawrence has also embraced the Internet. Jim Hanni, spokesman for AAA Kansas, said customers can book their travel online or work one-on-one with an agent at their office, 3514 Clinton Parkway. Travel agencies charge a fee, usually $25 to $30, to book airline travel. Other travel reservations, such as for hotels and cruises, are free because those companies still pay commission.

WORKSHOP A workshop from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Tuesday will help those submitting applications for funding through the Natural Cultural Heritage Grant Program. The workshop, which will review the application process, will be on the second floor of the Douglas County Courthouse, 1100 Mass. More information on the grant process can be found on the county’s website, douglascounty.com. Applications are due Sept. 23, and the Heritage Conservation Council is expected to make a recommendation by late October or early November. are here to support projects that will really make a difference,” said Ken Grotewiel, who is chairman of the Heritage Conservation Council and was the facilitator for the task force. Grotewiel said a strong application would combine elements of natural, cultural and historic importance. Other attractive projects would be those that connect a land, building or historic site to a larger story, especially if that tale links to the county’s Civil War or pre-Civil War history. In particular, Thellman said, the county

Travellers and Travel Leaders also rely on corporate travel. Walters said companies value the convenience of booking all their travel through a single account. Chris Armstrong, president of Travel Leaders, said the volume of reservations his agency makes with businesses sometimes gives them access to better deals than people can find on their own. These relationships also allow his agency to solve unexpected problems, such as flight cancellations and last-minute crises. Armstrong said an agent will not only rebook the travel but also do it without fees. Hanni also said relationships with suppliers has kept AAA competitive. “We work with preferred vendors who jump through hoops because you have a relationship with them,” Hanni said. It’s the ease of having all their needs taken care of that

would be interested in projects that have ties to Freedom’s Frontier National Heritage Area, which encompasses 41 counties that were part of the Kansas-Missouri Border War from 1854 to 1858. The county is also looking for projects that have matching funds and will improve sites that are accessible to the public. Both Grotewiel and Thellman hope this is the first of many rounds of grant cycles. If successful, Grotewiel said, the grant program could spread to the other counties in the Freedom’s Frontier area. Thellman said that one day she hopes the grant program finds a permanent funding source, such as a sales tax. As for the next round of grants, commissioners this week approved setting aside another $350,000 in the 2012 budget for preservation projects. “I think it is a program that will take years to develop and weave together that great story that helps us know who we are,” Thellman said.

jazz, tap, hip hop, lyrical, pointe, tumbling, acrobatics, aerobics, and musical theater. We also have combination classes for ages 2-8.

For schedule & enrollment info visit

http://dancegallery.tripod.com/lawrence | dancegallery@sunflower.com

Celebrating 30 Years in Business

DANCE GALLERY

4940 Legends Dr • 785-838-9100

— Reporter Christine Metz can be reached at 832-6352.

keeps customers coming back, Armstrong said. “More than anything else, the relationships have continued throughout the years,” Walters said. “It’s a bond of trust.” The U.S. Travel Association’s 2010 survey, Travelers’ Use of the Internet, indicated online travel bookers grew by 3 million from 2007 to 2009. Forty-three percent of leisure travelers surveyed said the Internet decreased the likelihood they would call a travel agency; 44 percent said it had no effect. Houk’s confidence in his business has two core beliefs: People choose personalized customer service, and travel is a necessity, not a luxury. “Travel is something that people have to have,” Houk said. “If you woke up every morning and said, ‘This is what it is for the rest of my life,’ that would be a nonexistence.” — Reporter Chris Hong may be reached at 832-6354.

Host families sought for exchange students The STS Foundation is seeking families in Lawrence to host exchange students. The students are from more than 30 countries and will attend local high schools for the entire school year. A foundation representative said they were looking for as many families as possible. Host families need to provide students meals, a separate sleeping area and a nurturing environment. Students have their own spending money, and coordinators from STS will be available in Lawrence throughout the school year. The STS Foundation is a nonprofit operated in Scottsdale, Ariz. Families interested in hosting students should call 1800-522-4678 or email craig@stsfoundation.org.

dance training. We have classes for ages 2 through adult, including ballet,

Local TV LISTINGS now on… Listings for

CABLE, SATELLITE and BROADCAST! SUNDAY Prime Time 7 PM

KNO DTV DISH

MOVIES

7:30

8 PM

8:30

KIDS

9 PM

BEST BETS

9:30

SPORTS

10 PM

10:30

August 14, 2011 11 PM 11:30

Network Channels

M Æ 3 E $ 4 B % 5 D 3 7 C ; 8 A ) 9 D KTWU 11 A Q 12 B ` 13 C I 14 KMCI 15 L KCWE 17 ION KPXE 18

62 4 5 19

62 4 5 19

9

9

41 38 29 50

41 38 29

Cable Channels

MONUMENT SELECTION ON DISPLAY

lawrence.com/listings

KNO6 6 WGN-A 16 THIS TV 19 CITY 25 USD497 26 ESPN 33 ESPN2 34 FSM 36 VS. 38 FNC 39 CNBC 40 MSNBC 41 CNN 44 TNT 45 USA 46 A&E 47 TRUTV 48 AMC 50 TBS 51 BRAVO 52 TVL 53 HIST 54 FX 56 COM 58 E! 59 CMT 60 BET 64 VH1 66 TRV 67 TLC 68 LIFE 69 FOOD 72 HGTV 73 NICK 76 DISNXD 77 DISN 78 TOON 79 DSC 81 FAM 82 NGC 83 HALL 84 ANML 85 TBN 90 EWTN 91 RLTV 93 CSPAN2 95 CSPAN 96 OWN 103 TWC 116 SOAP 123 HBO 401 MAX 411 SHOW 421 ENC 440 STRZ 451

››› Planes, Trains and Automobiles (1987)

News Off Pitch Funniest Moments The Unit h Simpsons Family Guy In the Flow FOX 4 News at 9 PM News News Seinfeld Bones Big Brother (N) Same Name (N) News the Bench The Unit h CSI: Miami h Les Misérables 25th Anniversary Concert at the O2 Silver anniversary of the musical. Australian Pink Floyd Minute to Win It (N) The Marriage Ref (N) The Marriage Ref (N) News The Closer Criminal Minds h News News Two Men Hollywood CMA Music Festival: Country’s Night to Rock (N) h Best of Pledge Best of Pledge Lessons-World Recreating Amer. News Deadliest Catch Paid Prog. CMA Music Festival: Country’s Night to Rock (N) h Big Brother (N) Same Name (N) News Grey’s Anatomy NUMB3RS CSI: Miami h Minute to Win It (N) The Marriage Ref (N) The Marriage Ref (N) News How I Met Ugly Betty Movie King ’70s Show Family Guy Amer. Dad Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Home of the Brave Brothers & Sisters Two Men The Office Smash Cut Smash Cut The Closer h ›› 3000 Miles to Graceland (2001, Action) ››‡ Deep Blue Sea (1999) Thomas Jane. ››› The Pelican Brief

Tower Cam/Weather Demolition Derby Town Top. News Pets 1 on 1 Turnpike 307 239 How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met News/Nine Replay Monk h Monk h Amazing Trans Stargate SG-1 Stargate SG-1 ›› How to Beat the High Cost of Living City Bulletin Board, Commission Meetings City Bulletin Board, Commission Meetings School Board Information School Board Information SportsCtr 206 140 aMLB Baseball Colorado Rockies at St. Louis Cardinals. (Live) h SportsCenter (N) (Live) h World, Poker World, Poker World, Poker hNASCAR Racing 209 144 World, Poker Royals Lve Marshall Faulk Football Football Football Football Baseball Cycling Tour of Utah. 672 Post Show UFC Live 5 603 151 UFC Pre-Fight Show (N) UFC Live 5: Hardy vs. Lytle (N) (Live) h Justice With Jeanine Geraldo at Large (N) Justice With Jeanine 360 205 Huckabee (N) h Huckabee h 60 Minutes on CNBC American Greed 355 208 How I Made My Millions Ford: Rebuilding CNBC Titans h Minh’s Story Sex Slaves: Texas 356 209 Caught on Camera (N) Sex Slaves in America Sex Slaves: UK h Piers Morgan Tonight CNN Newsroom (N) Blair Mountain Piers Morgan Tonight 202 200 Blair Mountain 245 138 The Da Vinci Code Leverage (N) h Leverage (N) h Leverage h Leverage h 242 105 Indiana Jones ›› Fast & Furious (2009) h Vin Diesel. White Collar h ›› Fast & Furious 265 118 Criminal Minds h Criminal Minds h The Glades (N) h The Glades h Criminal Minds h Cops Bait Car Bait Car Vegas Vegas Forensic Forensic Cops Cops 246 204 Cops Breaking Bad (N) The Killing “Super 8” 254 130 ›‡ Bulletproof (1996) Damon Wayans. Breaking Bad h 247 139 ››‡ Yes Man (2008) h Jim Carrey. ››‡ Yes Man (2008) h Jim Carrey. ›› Without a Paddle Housewives/NJ Housewives/NJ Housewives/NJ Housewives/NJ 273 129 Housewives/NJ Divorced Divorced Divorced Divorced Divorced Divorced Divorced Divorced Cleveland 304 106 Divorced Ice Road Truckers (N) Ice Road Truckers 269 120 Ice Road Truckers Modern Marvels h Top Gear (N) h Two Men Two Men 248 136 ››‡ Final Destination (2000) Devon Sawa. ›› Final Destination 3 (2006, Horror) h South Park South Park South Park South Park Tosh.0 Futurama Ugly Amer Amer Pie 249 107 ›‡ Scary Movie 2 Chelsea Kardashian Kardashian 236 114 Kardashian Kardashian Kardashian Kardashian Kardashian Kardashian Fashion Extreme Makeover Extreme Makeover Extreme Makeover Extreme Makeover 327 166 Texas Women h Sunday Best “I Do” Born to Dance Paid Prog. Inspiration 329 124 Sunday Best (N) h Sunday Best h Celebrity Rehab, Drew Behind the Music 335 162 Celebrity Rehab, Drew Celebrity Rehab, Drew Behind the Music (N) Extreme Beaches Extreme Restaurants Roadside Adventures Truck Stp Truck Stp Extreme Restaurants 277 215 280 183 Hoarding: Buried Alive Hoarding: Buried Alive High Stakes Sweepers Hoarding: Buried Alive High Stakes Sweepers Drop Dead Diva (N) Against the Wall (N) Against the Wall 252 108 To Be Announced Drop Dead Diva h Food Network Star (N) Food Truck Race Iron Chef America Food Network Star 231 110 Food Network Holmes Inspection (N) House Hunters Holmes Inspection 229 112 Holmes on Homes Design Star h ’70s Show ’70s Show My Wife My Wife Married Married 299 170 ››› The SpongeBob SquarePants Movie Zeke Zeke I’m in Band I’m in Band Suite Life Suite Life Suite Life Spider Spider 292 174 Zeke Kickin’ It PrankStars Shake It Random Random Wizards Wizards 290 172 Phineas and Ferb: The Movie Looney Delocated Childrens King of Hill Family Guy Family Guy Chicken Metal Venture 296 176 Gumball Monsters in Alaska Monsters in Alaska Area 51 Military base. 278 182 Curiosity (N) h Curiosity h Funniest Home Videos J. Osteen Ed Young 311 180 ›››‡ Aladdin (1992) ››› Casper (1995) h Christina Ricci. Witness: Tornado Witness: Katrina 276 186 Witness: Tornado Witness: Katrina h Honeymoon for One (2011) Nicollette Sheridan. Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls Gold Girls 312 185 Growing the Big One Hillbilly Handfishin’ Hillbilly Handfishin’ (N) Hillbilly Handfishin’ Hillbilly Handfishin’ 282 184 River Monsters Copeland Changing ››› David (1997, Drama) Nathaniel Parker, Jonathan Pryce. 372 260 J. Osteen Praise Chesterton Rosary Roundtable Heritage Bookmark Sunday Mass: Our Lady 370 261 The Great Adventure Cosmetic Surg Romance Romance Sunset Art Living Cosmetic Surg Romance Romance Book TV: After Words Book TV Book TV Book TV: After Words 351 211 Book TV Commons Road to the White House Q&A Commons Wh House 350 210 Q & A Ryan-Tatum Ryan-Tatum Oprah Ryan-Tatum 279 189 Oprah 362 214 Weather Center h Weather Center h General Hospital General Hospital General Hospital 262 253 General Hospital All My Children h True Blood (N) Curb Entourage True Blood h Entourage Curb 501 300 Boardwalk Empire Strike Back Sexual Witchcraft 515 310 HalfBaked ››‡ The A-Team (2010) h Liam Neeson. Weeds The Big C Weeds The Big C ››‡ The Twilight Saga: Eclipse (2010) 545 318 Dexter 535 340 ›››‡ Up (2009) Voices of Ed Asner. ›‡ The Bounty Hunter (2010) Jennifer Aniston. ››› Jackie Brown (1997) Torchwood Lord of the Rings: Fellowship of Ring 527 350 ›› Anger Management (2003) Adam Sandler.

For complete listings, go to www.lawrence.com/listings


6A

LAWRENCE

| Sunday, August 14, 2011

Rental CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A

signs in the 10 square blocks from Sixth and Illinois streets to 11th and Maine streets. No one knows exactly how many rental vacancies Lawrence has because property management companies are reluctant to reveal those exact numbers. But real estate appraiser Tim Keller conducts an annual survey of property owners to try to find out. “My estimates have shown the vacancy rates range from 6 to 10 percent depending on the part of the city,” said Keller, who has not yet released the results to this year’s survey. That fits with the most recent estimates from the U.S. Census Bureau, which pegged Lawrence’s 2009 rental vacancy rate at 6.5 percent, with about 2,400 of the 37,900 rental units vacant. That’s actually lower than the 7.7 percent rate for the entire state that year. Nationally, the rental vacancy rate dropped to 9.2 percent in the spring, the lowest it’s been since 2004. For landlords like Miller, lower student enrollment may be contributing to his unoccupied rooms. The head count on the Kansas University’s Lawrence campus declined by 600 from fall 2008 to fall 2010. KU’s latest enrollment numbers have not been released. For landlords who cater to students, the decline has been felt. “It’s been a lot of wait-andsee,” Miller said.

Development continues There are also more apartment units. Since 2008, 997 apartment units have been built in Lawrence, with 55 built so far this year. Tuckaway Apartments at 546 Frontier Road were completed in the spring, replacing the Boardwalk Apartments that burned down in 2005. Since becoming fully operational in June, about 35 per-

cent of the 96 apartments have been leased. Other projects in the works include a seven-story, 55-bedroom building on the corner of Ninth and New Hampshire streets and a 300-apartment complex on Sixth Street and Queens Road. It might sound odd that there’s so much development in a town where there are more rooms for rent than there are renters. But for investors, it could make sense to build now. “Construction costs will probably never be any cheaper,” Keller said. “Financing is not easy to get, but the interest rates are favorable.” And while there are vacancies, Lawrence’s population did grow by more than 1,000 from 2006 to 2010. That growth may give investors the confidence that building now could pay off later. “While there’s vacancy, there’s also growth the market can stand,” said Ted Haggart, president and CEO of Douglas County Bank. “There is never going to be zero vacancy.” He said developers who build now may be able to sell their holdings down the road for a big payoff. That happened last December, when a New York-based company purchased two of the three Hawks Pointe apartments at 1421 W. Seventh St. for $12.4 million. The apartments had been owned by a Massachusetts-based company since 2004. “Apartments are still a favored property to own nationwide,” Keller said. “That probably accounts for some of that signif icant investment from out of state.” For landlord James Dunn, who still is trying to fill some of his properties, that development perplexes him. He is concerned the Lawrence rental market has become overbuilt. “I do have places that really should have somebody living in them. A lot of them are fixed up with new things,” Dunn said. “I feel like I’m personally creating museums.” — Reporter Aaron Couch can be reached at 832-7217. Follow him at Twitter.com/aaroncouch.

L AWRENCE J OURNAL -WORLD

Sobriety CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A

Labahn runs my information, and my record’s clear. But we pretend Labahn spots something suspicious; maybe the scent of alcohol or slurred speech. When he asks, I tell him I’ve had a “few beers.” I’m asked to step out of the car, and Labahn says he’s watching to make sure I don’t stumble as I exit, or brace myself on the car for balance. Now it’s time for the field sobriety test, which Labahn, a 17-year veteran, estimates he’s done thousands of times. None of the counting backward or the reciting the alphabet for Labahn. He goes straight for the eyes, which apparently tell all. I’m asked to follow Labahn’s pen as he twirls it around, moves it up and down. Labahn’s watching to see how my eyes react to the movement. “I’m checking how (the eyes) roll across,” Labahn says, as I try to follow the pen. In the morning sun, the eye tests are actually a little uncomfortable; Labahn has me stretching my eye muscles about as far as I can. After that, I’m ready to “walk the line.” Ten steps for-

Journal-World Graphic

THIS MAP SHOWS "HOT SPOTS" OF DRIVING UNDER THE INFLUENCE ARRESTS in Lawrence. Locations are approximate and reflect crimes posted on the Lawrence Police Department's website between Jan. 1 and Aug. 1. It does not reflect all DUI arrests during that time period, but rather indicates areas where arrests were most frequent. ward, 10 steps back. Labahn explains that after the field sobriety test, he has a good idea if someone has been drinking, and even how much. Labahn will later record all the indicators that point to alcohol usage that can later be used in court. But the real test, the Breathalyzer, is next. Labahn pulls out a plastic

tube, explains how to blow into it, and I agree to the test. Suspects can decline, but the penalties, in some case, are even stiffer than if they had agreed and failed. If there are enough other indicators of alcohol use, I’d be arrested either way. I blow into it. Labahn waits. If the results come back above the legal limit of .08,

Labahn says he wastes no time handcuffing a suspect. In an actual arrest, he’d have an officer standing behind me in case I resist. Labahn has my arms behind my back before I have time to realize what’s happened. “It’s done real quick,” Labahn says. — Shaun Hittle

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L AWRENCE J OURNAL -WORLD

Agenda highlights • 6:35 p.m. Tuesday • City Hall, Sixth and Massachusetts streets • Knology Channel 25 • Meeting documents online at lawrenceks.org

City to mull police, fire contracts BOTTOM LINE City commissioners will consider approving employment contracts with the city’s police officers and firefighters.

BACKGROUND increases until 2015. The contracts also provide funding for a merit program that would provide either 2.5 percent or 5 percent wage increase for eligible employees based upon their performance evaluations.

OTHER BUSINESS Recognition

• Recognition of Stefan Petrovic. • Receive presentation from the Sons of the Union Veterans of the Civil War.

Consent agenda

• Receive minutes from various boards and commissions: • Approve all claims. • Approve licenses as recommended by the City Clerk’s Office. • Bid and purchase items: a) Approve Change Order No. 1 to Vance Brothers, Inc. in the amount of $340,000 for Project No. PW1103, 2011 Microsurfacing Program. The change order amount does not result in exceeding previously approved budget allocations. b) Approve Change Order No. 1, and Final, to Little Joe’s Asphalt, Inc., in the amount of $15,267.86, for Project No. PW1104, 2011 Overlay Program, Phase 1. The change order amount does not result in exceeding previously approved budget allocations. • Adopt on first reading, Ordinance No. 8654, changing the name of Fireside Drive to Frontier Lane. • Adopt on second and final reading, Ordinance No. 8652, allowing the possession and consumption of alcoholic liquor on Massachusetts Street from North Park Street to South Park Street on Aug. 28 from 11:30 a.m. – 7:30 p.m. for the Kansas State Fiddling and Picking Championship. • Adopt Resolution No. 6930, initiating the use of eminent domain authority for acquisition of property interests for the 23rd Street Bridge utilities relocation project. • Approve Special Event requests, SE-8-16-11; SE-8-17-11; SE-8-18-11; SE-819-11: Special Event Permits requested for location of a light truck and a temporary 42’ tall Verizon mobile cellular communication tower at 1101 Indiana (Berkeley Flats Apartments) for KU home football games Sept. 3, Sept. 10, Oct. 1, Oct. 15, Oct. 22 and Nov. 12. • Authorize City Manager to sign an agreement with the property owners of Burger King/EVAC and Party America to begin driveway reconfiguration at the southwest corner of 23rd and Naismith. • Approve a temporary use of public right-of-way permit for use of various city streets, including the closure of the northbound lane of Massachusetts Street downtown from 8 a.m. – 8:25 a.m. Oct. 2 for the Head for the Cure 5K. • Approve donation of standby medical services and the closure of the city parking lot on the southeast corner of N 2nd St and Locust St for the GaDuGi SafeCenter 5K Boo! Run on Oct. 30, 11 a.m. – 4 p.m. • Approve the following item related to the Sandbar Halfway to St Patrick’s Day fundraiser: a) Approve a Temporary Use of Public Right-of-Way Permit allowing the closure of the 100 block of East Eighth Street from 1 p.m. – midnight on Sept. 17 for the Halfway to St Patrick’s Day fundraiser. b) Adopt on first reading, Ordinance No. 8657, allowing the possession and consumption of alcohol on the 100 block of East 8th Street from 1 p.m. – 12 a.m. on Saturday, September 17, for the Halfway to St Patrick’s Day fundraiser. • Authorize the City Manager to execute a License Agreement permitting Lynn Investments, LLC, d/b/a Bullwinkle’s, to use certain portions of the Tennessee Street and 14th Street Rights of Way for landscaping in accordance with the terms of that Agreement. • Authorize the City Manager to execute License Agreements permitting 1040 Vermont Street to use certain portions of the Vermont Street Right of Way and the Alley Right of Way between Massachusetts Street and Vermont Street in accordance with the terms of those agreements. • Authorize the City Manager to provide written notice to Rural Water District No. 1 of the City’s intent to annex approximately 45.4 acres of land located north and east of the intersection of West 6th Street and the SLT, in accordance with K.S.A. 12539, and to refer the annexation request to the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission for review and a recommendation. • Receive city manager’s report.

Regular agenda

• Consider approving the 20122015 Memorandum of Understanding agreements with the Lawrence Police Officers Association (LPOA) and the International Association of Firefighters (IAFF) Local 1596, and consider authorizing the Mayor and City Clerk to execute the agreements. • Receive update on next steps for Farmland Property and consider adopting on first reading, Ordinance No. 8659, a Home Rule Ordinance of the City of Lawrence, Kansas authorizing the financing of the costs of a master plan and certain infrastructure development for the former Farmland Industries property for Economic

| 7A.

BRIEFLY

LAWRENCE CITY COMMISSION

The contracts would provide a 1 percent wage adjustment in 2012, 1.5 percent in 2013 and 2014 and 1 percent in 2015 for most members of the police and fire unions. Police detectives, however, wouldn’t be eligible for the wage

X Sunday, August 14, 2011

Development purposes, and authorizing the issuance of general obligation bonds of the City to pay the costs thereof; and Ordinance No. 8660, designating Delaware Street from Eighth Street to 11th Street and a street to be named, located north of the northern terminus of O’Connell Road at 23rd Street, north to an intersection with 19th Street, as main trafficways. • Consider adopting the following resolutions/ordinances related to the 2012 Capital Improvement Projects: a) Resolution No. 6934, authorizing the construction of certain main trafficway improvements on 23rd Street (K-10) between Harper Street and Barker Street, including, but not limited to, replacement of a bridge, sidewalks, lighting, and other necessary and appropriate improvements, and all related design, engineering and inspection work and authorizes the issuance of general obligation bonds pursuant to K.S.A. 12-685 et seq. to pay the costs thereof b) Resolution No. 6933, authorizing construction of certain main trafficway improvements on 23rd Street, between Naismith Drive and Ousdahl Road, including, but not limited to street construction, curbing, guttering, paving, acquiring right-of-way and easements, sidewalk construction, stormwater, bicycle facilities, subgrade stabilization, waterlines within the right of way and other necessary and appropriate improvements, and all related design, engineering and inspection work and authorizes the issuance of general obligation bonds pursuant to K.S.A. 12-685 et seq. to pay the costs thereof. c) Resolution No. 6935, authorizing the construction of certain main trafficway improvements consisting of the addition of bus lanes, and the repaving of Sixth Street from Iowa to Monterey Way, curb and gutter, sidewalks, waterline within the right of way, traffic signalization and geometric improvements and all related design, engineering and inspection work and authorizing the issuance of general obligation bonds pursuant to K.S.A. 12-685 et seq. to pay the costs thereof. d) Resolution No. 6936, authorizing the construction of certain main trafficway improvements consisting Reconstruction of Wakarusa Drive from Oread West Drive to Research Park Way, including improvements at the intersections of Wakarusa Drive and Oread West Drive and Wakarusa Drive and Research Park Way, including, but not limited to street construction, curb and gutter, right of way easement acquisition, sidewalks and multiuse paths, stormwater, subgrade stabilization, and other necessary and appropriate improvements, waterline within the right of way, traffic signalization and geometric improvements and all related design, engineering and inspection work and authorizing the issuance of general obligation bonds pursuant to K.S.A. 12-685 et seq. to pay the costs thereof. e) Resolution No. 6937, finding and determining it to be necessary to make certain improvements to certain public buildings, public parks, public parking, and public recreational areas within the City and finding and determining that the costs thereof may be temporarily financed by the issuance of general obligation temporary notes or bonds of the Issuer. f) Resolution No. 6938, establishing the maximum annual bonding amount for improvements authorized pursuant to Charter Ordinance No. 27 as $1,635,000, plus costs of issuance and interest on any temporary financing. g) Ordinance No. 8658, authorizing the issuance of a grant to the Lawrence-Douglas County Bioscience Authority for the purpose of expanding the Bioscience & Technology Business Center, and the financing of the Project at a cost not to exceed $500,000 plus costs of issuance and interest on any temporary financing in whole or in part, from the proceeds of general obligation temporary notes and/or bonds of the city, which are hereby authorized to be issued for such purposes pursuant to the authority of the Home Rule Amendment in an amount of not to exceed $500,000 plus costs of issuance and interest on any temporary financing. h) Resolution No. 6939, authorizing the sale of general obligation notes in the amount of $14,665,000 and general obligation bonds in the amount of $4,275,000 on Sept. 13.

Health care seminar targeting veterans The Department of Veterans Affairs, Eastern Kansas Health Care System invites veterans to a seminar about health care enrollment and eligibility. The seminar will be from 4:30 p.m. to 6 p.m. Thursday at the community-based outpatient clinic, 2200 Harvard Road. Veterans are encouraged to bring their discharge papers to check eligibility for possible enrollment for VA health care. Information will be available about the medical services provided at the Lawrence clinic and the VA Medical Centers in Topeka and Leavenworth. A representative from the Department of Veterans Affairs will be available to answer questions about health care.

Headquarters to host motorcycle poker run Headquarters Counseling Center is sponsoring its fourth annual motorcycle poker run Aug. 21. The event is to raise

awareness of suicide prevention and bereavement support. Motorcyclists are invited to ride an 80-mile route, beginning at Set ’Em Up Jack’s at 1800 E. 23rd St. and ending at Johnny’s Tavern, 401 N. Second St. Food and drink will be available for purchase at stops along the way in Ottawa, Baldwin City and Eudora. Afterward, poker will be played, with a $20 donation asked for each rider and hand. For more information, find the event on Facebook at Life Support Ride 2011.


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NATION

| Sunday, August 14, 2011

2012 Republican race jolted with straw poll, Perry entry By Thomas Beaumont Associated Press Writer

A M E S , I O W A — The 2012 Republican presidential race lurched into a new phase Saturday as Iowans weighed in for the first time on their expanding field of presidential hopefuls, picking Michele Bachmann as their top choice for the GOP nomination. Halfway across the country latecomer Texas Gov. Rick Perry formally entered the race, declaring: “AmeriPerry ca is not broken. Washington, D.C., is broken.” Together, the events were certain to reshuffle the race to face President Barack Obama. Exactly how was anybody’s guess, as the candidates sought an early validation that they have widespread appeal, with those further behind in the pack hoping to gain momentum and avoid increased questions over their campaign viability. A slew of Republicans are seeking the chance to challenge Obama next fall for the leadership of a country facing a recent downgrade in its credit rating, high unemployment and Wall Street tumult. And, from Iowa to South Carolina on Saturday, several of those candidates used their perches before GOP activists in two critical early voting states to castigate the Democratic incumbent and offer themselves as the answer to an ailing America. “We are going to make Barack Obama a one-term president,” Bachmann declared to cheers on the campus of Iowa State University during a daylong political festival. A few hours later, she learned she won the Iowa

Charles Dharapak/AP Photo

REPUBLICAN PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE REP. MICHELE BACHMANN, R-MINN., reacts to a group of supporters as she emerges from her campaign bus after winning the Republican Party's Straw Poll in Ames, Iowa, on Saturday. straw poll and said: “This is the very first step toward taking back the White House!” Bachmann, the tea party favorite with a following among evangelicals who make up the GOP base in Iowa and elsewhere, got more than 28 percent of the 17,000 votes cast in the nonbinding exercise. It provides clues about each candidate’s level of support and campaign organization five months before the Iowa caucuses kick off the Republican primary season. Texas Rep. Ron Paul, who has support among libertarian-leaning voters, came in a close second. Former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty was looking for a strong showing to boost his struggling campaign, but fared a distant third, raising questions about the future of his candidacy. “We have a lot more work to do,” Pawlenty said, suggesting he wasn’t dropping out despite the disappointing finish. “We are just beginning.”

Former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum was fourth, followed by businessman Herman Cain. Perry, who wasn’t on the ballot but was written in by supporters, came in sixth, just ahead of GOP front-runner Mitt Romney, the former Massachusetts governor who didn’t compete in the straw poll. Also on the ballot but barely registering support: former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman and former U.S. House Speaker Newt Gingrich of Georgia. The results are hardly predictive of who will win the state’s winter precinct caucuses but the outcome can shape the race for the months ahead. With the victory, Bachmann is all but certain to get a jolt of momentum just as Perry seeks to infringe on her base of tea party and evangelical support. She also made clear that she has a strong getout-the-vote operation and a wide volunteer base in a state whose caucuses require those elements.

L AWRENCE J OURNAL -WORLD

Obama to talk jobs in rural America By Ken Thomas Associated Press Writer

W A S H I N G T O N — Trading Washington’s hot house for states critical to his re-election prospects, President Barack Obama is headed to the Midwest after a summer of discontent over a protracted debt showdown with Republicans and the downgrade in the nation’s credit rating. Obama’s bus tour, his first as president, begins Monday and will take him to prairie communities in Minnesota and through Iowa and Illinois, with stops in the farmland and rural towns that launched his f irst White House bid. The former Illinois senator is expected to tell audiences that he agrees with their frustrations about a dysfunctional federal government. “What we’ve seen in Washington the last few months has been the worst kind of partisanship, the worst kind of gridlock — and that gridlock has undermined public confidence and impeded our efforts to take the steps we need for our economy,” Obama said Thursday in Michigan. “It’s made things worse instead of better.” Obama won a clean sweep in 2008 of Iowa, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Illinois and Michigan, a region that has supported Democratic presidential candidates since 2000, except for President George W. Bush’s narrow victory in Iowa in 2004. But Obama’s standing in these states, like elsewhere, has grown precarious as the economy has slumped. Republican governors are now in charge in three of those five states and Obama’s approval rating, as measured by Gallup, is hovering around 50 percent in most of the region. “We got a president who got a decrease in the credit rating of our nation, and that’s because our president simply doesn’t understand how to lead and how to grow an economy,” Republican hopeful Mitt Romney said in Thursday’s Iowa debate.

Romney and his GOP rivals blamed Obama for the growth of the federal deficit and the credit Obama downgrade by Standard and Poor’s, the first in the nation’s history. The GOP race intensified with Texas Gov. Rick Perry’s entry Saturday. When Obama arrives at a town hall meeting in Decorah, Iowa, on Monday afternoon, Perry intends to meet with voters in eastern Iowa, about 100 miles away. Nationally, Obama’s approval rating is compara-

ble to President Ronald Reagan’s ratings in August 1983. But recent Gallup polls found that Obama’s approval rating was hovering between 44 percent and 49 percent in 10 states closely watched by his political advisers. Those states include Iowa, Pennsylvania, Virginia and Florida. Obama’s standing with independents, who helped him win in traditionally Republican states such as Indiana and North Carolina, has fallen, too. “The country is in an unbelievably angry mood,” said Democratic pollster Stan Greenberg. Most presidents like to get away from the nations’ capital, and this excursion couldn’t come at a better time.

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OPINION

LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD ● LJWorld.com ● Sunday, August 14, 2011

EDITORIALS

Make it right Kansas legislators need to move quickly to remedy the terrible precedent set by forcing local governments to fund services that are the state’s responsibility.

C

ity and county officials have taken the Kansas Department of Social and Rehabilitation off the hook. Now, local taxpayers can only hope that the Kansas Legislature returns the favor. Although members of the Lawrence City Commission and Douglas County Commission expressed displeasure over the precedent they were creating, they decided this week to commit $450,000 in local tax money for the next two years to maintain an SRS office in Lawrence. That completely covers the amount state SRS would have saved by closing the office. SRS officials earlier had said that closing the office would save the state about $450,000 per year, but had to revise that figure after learning that about half that amount was federal funds that simply would be lost by the state. SRS Secretary Rob Siedlecki told a Kansas Public Radio reporter Thursday that the local funding deal was “a win-win for everybody,” but it doesn’t really feel that way. Blackmail may be too strong a word, but by threatening to close the local SRS office, state officials put local governments in a near-impossible situation. Using local tax dollars to take over a state responsibility sets a terrible precedent, but if local officials stood on principle, there would be significant social and economic costs for the county. There was the human cost to thousands of residents who depend on SRS services as well as the economic loss of 87 employees and the estimated loss of $2.4 million in food stamp assistance that wouldn’t be distributed in Lawrence. Timing also was critical. City and county officials were told that SRS was preparing to move furniture out of the local offices. It appeared that the office closing would be over and done with before state legislators got around to looking into the situation. Once the office was closed, it would be extremely difficult to have it restored. City and county officials made the decision they thought they had to make for the good of the community. Nonetheless, it could be a decision they live to regret. SRS office closings across the state have gotten the attention of some state legislators who say they intended for administrative budget cuts included in the budget to take place at the state level, not at local offices. Sen. Marci Francisco, D-Lawrence, said Tuesday that she hoped legislators will consider the issue in the 2012 session and perhaps order funding to the Lawrence office to be restored. According to the local funding agreement, if that happens, the city and county are no longer obligated to continue their financial support. In his KPR interview, Siedlecki made no reference to revisiting the situation for the next two years. After the local funding agreement runs out, he said, his office will “make good faith efforts to keep the office open” with additional funding from the Legislature. We hope the Legislature won’t wait that long to act. City and county officials stepped into this situation because they believed the closing of the local office would be beyond the point of no return before legislators could take any action. They were backed into a corner and made the best decision they could — but that doesn’t make it OK for local taxpayers to fund this state responsibility. State legislators need to review this situation as quickly as possible and make it right.

LAWRENCE

JOURNAL-WORLD

®

ESTABLISHED 1891

What the Lawrence Journal-World stands for Accurate and fair news reporting. ● No mixing of editorial opinion with reporting of the news. ● Safeguarding the rights of all citizens regardless of race, creed or economic stature. ● Sympathy and understanding for all who are disadvantaged or oppressed. ● Exposure of any dishonesty in public affairs. ● Support of projects that make our community a better place to live. ●

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

Dolph C. Simons Jr., Editor Dennis Anderson, Managing Editor Ann Gardner, Editorial Page Editor Chris Bell, Circulation Manager Caroline Trowbridge, Community Editor Ed Ciambrone, Production Manager Edwin Rothrock, Director of Market Strategies

THE WORLD COMPANY

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

Electronics Division

Suzanne Schlicht, Chief Operating Officer Dan Cox, President, Mediaphormedia Ralph Gage, Director, Special Projects

9A

Berlin Wall built on Kennedy blunders WASHINGTON — Fifty years ago, a metaphor became concrete. Beginning on Aug. 13, 1961, along West Berlin’s 27-mile border, the Iron Curtain became tangible in a wall of precast slabs of concrete. It came down 22 years ago, but the story of how it rose, as told in Frederick Kempe’s book “Berlin 1961,” compels an unflattering assessment of John Kennedy. His serial blunders that year made it the most incompetent first year of any presidency. In a State of the Union address just 10 days after his inauguration, Kennedy seemed exhilarated by hysteria. He said that “in this brief 10-day period” he had been “staggered” by “the harsh enormity” of the “trials” ahead: “Each day the crises multiply. Each day their solution grows more difficult. Each day we draw nearer the hour of maximum danger, as ... hostile forces grow stronger. ... Our analyses over the last 10 days make it clear that ... the tide of events has been running out.” Lunging for an equivalence with Lincoln, Kennedy said that during his term Americans would learn whether a nation such as ours “can endure.” Actually, since Election Day he had learned that the “missile gap” he had accused President Eisenhower of allowing to develop was f ictitious. And the coming months of danger would begin with the staggering stupidity of the Bay of Pigs invasion. It convinced Nikita Khrushchev, the 67-year-old grandson of a serf and son of a coal miner, that

George Will

georgewill@washpost.com

And the coming “months of danger would

begin with the staggering stupidity of the Bay of Pigs invasion. It convinced Nikita Khrushchev, the 67-year-old grandson of a serf and son of a coal miner, that Kennedy, the 43-year-old son of privilege, was too callow to recognize the invasion’s risks and too weak to see it through.” Kennedy, the 43-year-old son of privilege, was too callow to recognize the invasion’s risks and too weak to see it through. Khrushchev knew the steady flow of East German refugees — 2 million in a decade, disproportionately the most educated, productive citizens — to West Berlin was making that drab nation into a mendicant, and revealing socialism’s moral bankruptcy. But candidate Kennedy had said “our position in Europe” depends

on not being “driven from Berlin” and “is worth a nuclear war.” On May 25, six weeks after Yuri Gagarin became the first man to orbit Earth, Kennedy said “extraordinary times” demanded a second State of the Union address. In it he proclaimed “the whole southern half of the globe” a “great battleground,” especially emphasizing a place on few Americans’ minds: Vietnam. Then he flew to Vienna to meet Khrushchev — “Little Boy Blue meets Al Capone,” a U.S. diplomat said. Khrushchev treated Kennedy with brutal disdain. In excruciating pain from his ailing back, and pumped full of perhaps disorienting drugs by his disreputable doctor (who would lose his medical license in 1975), Kennedy said it was the “worst thing in my life. He savaged me.” British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan said, “For the first time in his life, Kennedy met a man who was impervious to his charm.” Kempe writes, “From that point forward Khrushchev would act more aggressively in the conviction that there would be little price to pay.” Kempe says that when Robert Kennedy met with his brother back in Washington, “Tears were running down the president’s cheeks.” As Khrushchev turned up the temperature on Berlin, Kennedy studied the modalities of conducting a nuclear war. On July 25, he gave a nationally televised address, referring 17 times to the U.S. commitment to West Berlin,

although the entire city was under four-power (U.S., Soviet, British, French) rule. On July 30, in a Sunday morning television interview, Sen. William Fulbright said: “I don’t understand why the East Germans don’t close their border because I think they have a right to close it.” He was wrong regarding the four powers’ rights and five days later he apologized for giving “an unfortunate and erroneous impression.” But Kennedy, who did not dispute Fulbright’s mistake, evidently welcomed it. After Aug. 13, an unsympathetic Kennedy, who never asserted the indisputable legal right of free movement of people throughout Berlin, told New York Times columnist James Reston that East Germans had had 15 years to flee to the West. Reston wrote that Kennedy “has talked like Churchill but acted like Chamberlain.” Clearly, there was a causal connection between Kennedy’s horrible 1961 and the Cold War’s most perilous moment — Khrushchev’s 1962 gamble on putting missiles in Cuba. The Cold War ended 27 years later, when the Iron Curtain suddenly became porous, and the Wall crumbled. Tens of millions of East Europeans might have been spared those years of tyranny, and the West might have been spared considerable dangers and costs, if Kennedy had not been complicit in preventing the unraveling of East Germany. — George Will is a columnist for Washington Post Writers Group.

PUBLIC FORUM

Lame, stupid

Tea party’s stock is falling Cheer up. Not everything went down over the last two weeks. Granted, most things did. The stock market tanked, government’s approval numbers fell, America’s credit rating slipped as if on a cosmic banana peel. All of which is predictable any time the world’s largest economy is driven to the rim of ruin while “leaders” bicker like kids in the back seat of the family car on a road trip across Texas. In August. With a busted AC. But in the midst of that bleak litany of decline, there was a bright spot. Indeed, one leading indicator registered a sharp uptick. For the f irst time, it seems, more than half the American electorate now holds a negative view of the tea party movement. If you’re wondering what that is a leading indicator of, the a n swe r i s s i m p l e : co m m o n sense. The noteworthy thing about the CNN/ORC poll, which was conducted Aug. 5-7, is not simply that it found 51 percent of Americans now regard the tea party unfavorably, up from 26 percent when they first started asking this question in January 2010. No, what’s telling is where the dislike is coming from. You see, the spike does not reflect a change of mind from the tea party faithful. Approval numbers have remained relatively stable over the 19-month history of the survey, starting out at 33 percent, peaking to 38 percent twice, falling back to 31 percent this month. Once one drinks the

Leonard Pitts Jr. lpitts@miamiherald.com

more Americans “learnTheabout this

movement, the more they dislike it.”

to write an epitaph for American intelligence. Not that one can afford to be sanguine about the fact that “only” one American in three supports the tea party. Still, there is something reassuring in the realization that we have not completely lost our national mind. Yet. As the world grows larger and more fiendishly complex there is, make no mistake, something seductive about loud voices and simplistic answers. Especially when they demand nothing more of you than your capacity to feel frightened, angry and put upon. Government is the enemy! Taxes are unpatriotic! Re-education camps are being built! Death panels are raiding senior centers! Obama wants to destroy the economy! It is distressing to see that such obvious, asinine fearmongering holds sway with a large number of Americans, amazing to know those fear mongers all but control a major political party, disheartening to realize they would rather wreck the economy than ding their ideological purity. At the same time, it is encouraging to see evidence that some of us — most of us — yet retain the common sense for which Americans are renowned. Maybe there is hope for us after all.

To the editor: How could the J-W assign any other headline than "Unbelievably lame and stupid” to the story regarding the proposed “deal” to reopen the SRS office? Let me define how Chairman Flory and Mayor Cromwell must have discussed their buying into this scam. Lame: Let’s not only let Brownback off the hook for his Legislature-defying decision, let’s abet in his overarching attack on women, the middle class and the working poor and look like heroes for “saving” the SRS office. We can cut other services to these people later and use our hero status in future campaigns as no one will remember the details! Stupid: $450k over two years? No problem. We’ll cut food, health and other programs for the powerless (see above) next year. And if that gets sticky, we’ll take it from those fat-cat, overpaid city/county workers, school teachers and their staff! We don’t need to maintain our infrastructure, educate our children or pay a reasonable (benefit inclusive) wage for that work. There would be plenty of money to fund SRS statewide if Brownback wouldn’t use state money, for example, for his fundamentalist-directed attempt to eliminate our legal right to abortion. For 17 years I’ve been deluding myself that my community doesn’t elect these kind of right-wing idiots. My daughter is one year from kindergarten. Amid this economy, my family is searching for a home where we don’t need to deal with this nonsense, much less worry about whether or not evolution is taught. What’s the matter with Kansas? Mitch Stockton, Lawrence

tea, apparently, the tea stays drunk. No, the fluctuation has come from those who previously knew nothing about the party. Twentyfour percent of Americans said in January of last year that they had never heard of it. Only 5 percent say that now. As that number has fallen, tea party disfavor has risen. To put that more simply: The Letters Policy more Americans learn about this The Journal-World welcomes letters to movement, the more they dislike the Public Forum. Letters should be 250 words or less, be of public interest and it. should avoid name-calling and libelous lanThat is good news for those who guage. The Journal-World reserves the right had taken to muttering that to edit letters, as long as viewpoints are not famous old axiom about the altered. By submitting letters, you grant the birthrate of suckers, a hopeful sign Journal-World a nonexclusive license to pubfor those who had resigned themlish, copy and distribute your work, while — Leonard Pitts Jr., winner of the 2004 acknowledging that you are the author of selves to the fact that they lived in a nation where she who yells the Pulitzer Prize for commentary, is a colum- the work. Letters must bear the name, address and nist for the Miami Herald. He chats with telephone number of the writer. Letters may most simplistic thing in the loudreaders from noon to 1 p.m. CDT each be submitted by mail to Box 888, Lawrence Ks. est voice wins the debate. It is a Wednesday on www.MiamiHerald.com. 66044 or by e-mail to: letters@ljworld.com godsend for those who were ready


WEATHER

|

10A Sunday, August 14, 2011 TODAY

MONDAY

TUESDAY

WEDNESDAY

CALENDAR

THURSDAY

14 TODAY

Abundant sunshine and pleasant

Some sun, a couple of t-storms

Partly sunny, a t-storm possible

Partly sunny, a t-storm possible

Humid with clouds and sun

High 85° Low 64° POP: 5%

High 87° Low 69° POP: 60%

High 88° Low 73° POP: 30%

High 89° Low 68° POP: 30%

High 86° Low 62° POP: 10%

Wind E 4-8 mph

Wind SE 6-12 mph

Wind S 10-20 mph

Wind SW 6-12 mph

Wind NE 6-12 mph

POP: Probability of Precipitation

Kearney 81/65

McCook 87/67 Oberlin 84/67 Goodland 90/64

Beatrice 80/66

Oakley 90/65

Russell Salina 87/68 86/67

Manhattan 86/66 Topeka 83/66 Emporia 84/64

Great Bend 88/68 Dodge City 92/69

Garden City 92/68 Liberal 95/68

Kansas City 82/66 Lawrence Kansas City 84/66 85/64

Chillicothe 81/63 Marshall 82/64 Sedalia 82/63

Nevada 85/64

Chanute 86/64

Hutchinson 87/66 Wichita Pratt 88/69 88/69

Centerville 77/62

St. Joseph 84/65

Sabetha 80/64

Concordia 82/66 Hays 88/67

Clarinda 80/65

Lincoln 82/64

Grand Island 82/64

Coffeyville Joplin 87/66 85/65

Springfield 83/65

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

Temperature High/low Normal high/low today Record high today Record low today

91°/64° 89°/67° 114° in 1936 50° in 2002

Precipitation in inches 24 hours through 7 p.m. yest. Month to date Normal month to date Year to date Normal year to date

0.04 0.10 1.66 19.00 26.15

REGIONAL CITIES

Today Mon. Today Mon. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Atchison 83 65 s 84 69 t Independence 87 66 s 92 72 s Belton 82 66 s 84 69 t Fort Riley 86 66 s 90 72 t Burlington 84 64 s 89 69 pc Olathe 82 66 s 85 69 t Coffeyville 87 66 s 92 72 s Osage Beach 82 62 s 85 66 s Concordia 82 66 s 87 71 t Osage City 84 65 s 87 70 t Dodge City 92 69 s 97 69 pc Ottawa 84 64 s 86 68 t Holton 83 66 s 89 70 t Wichita 88 69 s 90 72 pc Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice. Seattle 69/54

SUN & MOON Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset Last

Today

6:33 a.m. 8:18 p.m. 8:29 p.m. 7:27 a.m. New

First

Mon.

6:34 a.m. 8:16 p.m. 8:55 p.m. 8:26 a.m.

NATIONAL FORECAST Billings 92/61

San Francisco 67/53

Denver 92/62

Full

Minneapolis 78/63

Kansas City 84/66

Chicago 78/63

Los Angeles 78/65

Aug 28

Sep 4

Sep 12

LAKE LEVELS

As of 7 a.m. Saturday Lake

Clinton Perry Pomona

Level (ft)

874.81 895.71 974.14

Discharge (cfs)

23 25 15

El Paso 89/75

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

INTERNATIONAL CITIES

Today Mon. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Acapulco 88 77 t 88 79 t Amsterdam 70 57 sh 68 55 pc Athens 91 73 s 91 76 s Baghdad 109 72 s 108 71 s Bangkok 91 77 t 90 77 t Beijing 81 77 t 86 73 t Berlin 75 64 sh 71 55 r Brussels 69 51 sh 71 50 pc Buenos Aires 59 44 s 59 46 sh Cairo 95 74 s 95 74 s Calgary 78 50 pc 67 50 t Dublin 64 45 pc 61 52 sh Geneva 77 61 t 71 57 sh Hong Kong 90 81 t 91 81 t Jerusalem 80 61 s 80 60 s Kabul 86 63 t 95 56 t London 75 53 pc 70 52 pc Madrid 90 63 s 93 64 s Mexico City 81 59 t 72 52 t Montreal 73 64 r 70 61 sh Moscow 84 65 t 84 63 pc New Delhi 83 79 t 82 75 r Oslo 68 58 r 65 52 r Paris 75 54 sh 74 52 pc Rio de Janeiro 81 68 s 83 72 s Rome 82 65 s 82 61 s Seoul 84 72 sh 86 73 sh Singapore 86 77 t 88 77 t Stockholm 68 59 pc 73 63 sh Sydney 64 48 sh 63 46 sh Tokyo 89 78 sh 86 78 sh Toronto 74 64 t 78 62 pc Vancouver 67 57 sh 69 55 sh Vienna 83 70 sh 79 61 r Warsaw 71 55 sh 80 63 t Winnipeg 86 62 s 85 64 pc

Houston 101/80 Miami 92/79

Fronts Cold

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2011

Atlanta 92/71

Warm Stationary

Precipitation Showers T-storms

Rain

Flurries

Snow

Ice

-10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s National Summary: Areas of rain and thunderstorms will spread into the East today with wet weather from Maine to Florida. High pressure will dry the Midwest out as afternoon storms persist across the Rockies. Much of the West will be dry, but a few showers will wet western Washington. Today Mon. Today Mon. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Albuquerque 88 69 t 91 69 t Memphis 89 69 pc 89 69 s Anchorage 62 52 sh 61 53 sh Miami 92 79 pc 92 79 t Atlanta 92 71 t 89 69 s Milwaukee 76 62 t 78 64 s Austin 100 73 s 101 74 pc Minneapolis 78 63 s 81 66 s Baltimore 81 68 t 82 65 t Nashville 86 66 t 84 66 s Birmingham 94 70 t 90 68 s New Orleans 95 78 pc 95 78 pc Boise 89 61 s 83 53 s New York 78 68 t 76 69 r Boston 80 67 c 74 64 r Omaha 80 66 s 78 67 t Buffalo 76 62 t 74 61 t Orlando 94 76 t 94 76 t Cheyenne 84 58 t 88 56 pc Philadelphia 78 70 t 78 70 t Chicago 78 63 pc 80 61 s Phoenix 104 87 pc 107 87 pc Cincinnati 80 63 t 79 62 s Pittsburgh 75 63 t 78 62 t Cleveland 78 65 t 80 61 pc Portland, ME 80 63 c 69 59 r Dallas 104 79 s 105 79 pc Portland, OR 73 58 pc 72 53 c Denver 92 62 t 94 62 pc Reno 88 56 s 85 56 s Des Moines 79 64 s 79 65 s Richmond 86 69 t 88 68 t Detroit 76 64 t 82 59 pc Sacramento 87 55 s 87 56 s El Paso 89 75 pc 91 73 pc St. Louis 80 62 pc 84 66 s Fairbanks 59 48 c 64 49 sh Salt Lake City 87 66 t 89 58 pc Honolulu 88 75 pc 89 75 pc San Diego 72 66 pc 72 68 pc Houston 101 80 t 101 80 s San Francisco 67 53 pc 70 54 pc Indianapolis 78 62 t 82 63 s Seattle 69 54 pc 68 50 sh Kansas City 84 66 s 84 69 t Spokane 81 54 s 70 47 c Las Vegas 99 86 s 102 84 s Tucson 95 78 pc 97 77 pc Little Rock 92 69 s 89 70 s Tulsa 90 70 s 95 75 s Los Angeles 78 65 pc 85 64 pc Wash., DC 82 70 t 82 69 t National extremes yesterday for the 48 contiguous states High: El Centro, CA 108° Low: West Yellowstone, MT 28°

WEATHER HISTORY Rain on Aug. 14, 1979, left 1,800 Las Vegas residents without electricity and made getting around the flooded city streets dicey.

Q:

WEATHER TRIVIA™ What is the record rainfall from a hurricane striking the U.S.? 39 inches; Yankeetown, Fla., September 1950.

Aug 21

Detroit New York 76/64 78/68 Washington 82/70

A:

LAWRENCE ALMANAC Through 7 p.m. Saturday.

Global Propane fire tied to broken coupling ANDOVER — Investigators determined a fatal explosion and fire at a Butler County propane company occurred after a coupling broke, but they may never know its full cause, Andover Fire Chief Jim Woydziak said. The Wichita Eagle reported the Aug. 2 fire and explosion at Global Propane killed Jeffrey Burnham of Wichita and injured two other workers. The Kansas State Fire Marshal’s Office is leading the investigation into the blast. Shortly before the explosion, Burnham was working around a truck carrying 200 cylinders that are typically used to power forklifts, Woydziak said. The truck was backed into an enclosure that had three walls and a canopy. The enclosure was used to fill the cylinders from a nearby 18,000-gallon tank, he said. As Burnham, 40, was filling one of the cylinders, something caused the coupling to come loose from the cylinder. The hose immediately began flailing around as propane spewed from the end, Woydziak said. The enclosure was probably filled with propane when a spark ignited the gas, he said. “By the time it sparked, it had been spewing long enough that there was probably a very large fireball right there,” he said.

L AWRENCE J OURNAL -WORLD

Wearable work of art After winning first place in an earlier local competition in May at the Lawrence Presbyterian Manor, Ruth Glass, a resident of Prairie Commons Retirement Community in Lawrence, received the honorable mention Governor’s Award in the Art is Ageless competition May 19 in Topeka for her full-length hand-quilted coat. Ruth Glass submitted the photo.

Civil War on the Western Frontier: Guided Tour of Black Jack Battlefield by John Brown, 1-3 p.m., Black Jack Battlefield and Nature Park, 163 E. 2000 Road. Civil War on the Western Frontier: Tour Historic Lecompton, 1-3 p.m., Territorial Capital Museum and Constitution Hall. Concert Series: Summer Sunday Ragtime Party, 2 p.m., Watkins Community Museum of History, 1047 Mass. Civil War on the Western Frontier: “To Catch a Butterfly,” 2:30 p.m., Theatre Lawrence, 1501 N.H. Texas Hold’em Tournament, free entry, weekly prizes, 8 p.m., The Casbah, 803 Mass. Smackdown! trivia, 8 p.m., The Bottleneck, 737 N.H. Speakeasy Sunday: A variety show and jam session hosted by Funk Tank, 10 p.m., the Jazzhaus, 926 1/2 Mass. Karaoke Sunday, 11 p.m., The Bottleneck, 737 N.H.

15 MONDAY Films For Action presents: “What’s Organic About Organic?,” 7 p.m., Liberty Hall, 642 Mass. Lecompton City Council meeting, 7 p.m., Lecompton City Hall, 327 Elmore St. Baldwin City Council meeting, 7:30 p.m., City Hall, 803 S. Eighth St. Civil War on the Western Frontier: Civil War Lookout from the Nest at The Oread, a special screening of 2009’s “Bloody Dawn — The Lawrence Massacre” from Lone Chimney Films will be presented, 7:30 p.m., The Oread, 1200 Oread Ave. Open mic night, 9 p.m., the Bottleneck, 737 N.H. Mudstomp Monday, 9 p.m., The Granada, ,1020 Mass. Dollar Bowling, 9:30 p.m. to 1 a.m., Royal Crest Lanes, 933 Iowa. Karaoke Idol!, 10 p.m., The Jazzhaus, 926 1/2 Mass.

16 TUESDAY Red Dog’s Dog Days fall workout, 6 a.m., Memorial Stadium at Kansas University. Lawrence Farmers’ Market, 4 p.m.-6 p.m., 1020 Vt. Big Brothers Big Sisters of Douglas County, 5:15 p.m., 1525 W. Sixth St., Suite A. Information meeting for prospective volunteers. For more information, call 8437359. Fundamentals of Estate Planning, 5:30–7 p.m., Douglas County Senior Center, 745 Vt. Red Dog’s Dog Days fall workout, 6 p.m., intramural fields on east side of Robinson Gymnasium at Kansas University. Lonnie Ray’s open jam session, 6 p.m. to 10 p.m., Slow Ride Roadhouse, 1350 N. Third St. Lawrence City Commission meeting, 6:35 p.m., City Hall, 6 E. Sixth St. Parent & Children Chinese Class, 7-8 p.m., Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vt. Poker Night, 8 p.m., Applebee’s, 2520 Iowa. Transient, Knifewound, Methhorse, 8 p.m., Replay Lounge, 946 Mass. Teller’s Family Night, 746 Mass., 9 p.m.-midnight Tuesday Night Karaoke, 9

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Sons of the Union Veterans, program on Jeremiah Burger Remington of the New York 89th Infantry Volunteers by speaker Mary Buster, a relative of Remington as well as Florella and Samuel Adair and John Brown, 6:30 p.m., Watkins Community Museum of History, 1047 Mass. Busker Festival Preview Show, 7-11 p.m., Abe & Jake’s Landing, 8 E. Sixth St. Dads’ Night Out, 8 p.m., The Sandbar, 17 E. Eighth St. The Hips, 10 p.m., Replay Lounge, 946 Mass.

ONGOING

Lonnie Ray Ingredient, 947 Mass., has been hosting free live music for awhile, offering up local jazz ensembles and DJs to entertain their dine-in customers as they chow down on a Sweet Leaf salad or Yard Bird sandwich. But today's entertainment stands apart. Lonnie Ray, a blues/jazz guitarist who regularly plays clubs in Kansas City, Mo., such as the Phoenix, will stop by the iBar tonight for a couple of hours of smooth, technically impeccable guitar playing. Ray has been exhaustively active in Lawrence and Kansas City long enough that everyone's had the good fortune of seeing him, whether they realized it or not, but in the off chance you haven't, tonight's a great opportunity to do so in an intimate setting. And because he'll be set up in the iBar, it wouldn't hurt to order a drink either. Ray starts at 6:30 p.m. Admission is free and open to all ages. p.m., Wayne & Larry’s Sports Bar & Grill, 933 Iowa. Tuesday Transmissions, 9 p.m., Bottleneck, 737 N.H. Live jazz at The Casbah, 9 p.m., 803 Mass. It’s Karaoke Time!, 10 p.m., Jackpot Music Hall, 943 Mass. Men, JabberJosh, 10 p.m., Replay Lounge, 946 Mass.

17 WEDNESDAY Civil War on the Western Frontier: “John Brown’s Raid” Lunchpail Lecture by Dr. Jonathan Earle, noon, Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vt. Shanks, The Shivs, 9 p.m., Jackpot Music Hall, 943 Mass.

18 THURSDAY Summer Documentary Film Series — Discussion with filmmaker Kevin Willmott, 3-4 p.m., Dole Institute of Politics, 2350 Petefish Drive. Prairie Acre, Cottin’s Hardware Farmers’ Market, 4-6:30 p.m., behind store at 1832 Mass. Department of Veterans Affairs health care enrollment/eligibility seminar, 4:306 p.m., VA Community Based Outpatient Clinic, 2200 Harvard Road. Conscious Fathering class for new and expectant dads, 5:30 p.m., The Sandbar, 17 E. Eighth St. Civil War on the Western Frontier: “Dark Command” film screening and talk, 6:30 p.m., Lawrence Public Library Auditorium, 707 Vt.

Lawrence Arts Center exhibits: Tanya Hartman — Rhyming Lines, and Ceramics Artist in Residence Akiko Jackson, through Aug. 13, noon-8 p.m. Sunday, 9 a.m.-9 p.m. Monday through Saturday, 940 N.H. Lumberyard Arts Center exhibit: “My Living Room Art (your art doesn’t have to match the couch!),” an eclectic group of paintings, sculptures and other arts and crafts on loan from Baldwin City-area residents, through Aug. 13, 1-4 p.m. Tuesday through Friday and 9 a.m.-noon Saturday, 718 High St., Baldwin City. Watkins Community Museum of History exhibit: “It Happened on Mass Street: 150 Years in Lawrence,” featuring historic photographs and objects illustrating the growth of downtown Lawrence, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday and Saturday, 10 a.m.-8 p.m. Thursday, 1047 Mass. KU Natural History Museum exhibits: Bug Town, third floor; Explore Evolution, fifth floor; Mosasaur Munchies, self-guided tour; Darwin’s Journey, sixth floor. Museum open until 5 p.m. daily, 1345 Jayhawk Blvd. Spencer Museum of Art exhibits: Roots and Journeys, through summer 2011; Nature/Natural, through summer 2011; Glorious to View: The KU Campus Heritage Project, through Sept. 11. Museum open until 4 p.m. daily, 8 p.m. on Thursdays, 1301 Miss. Lawrence Public Library storytimes for August: Fun with Food storytime, 10:30 a.m. Tuesdays and Fridays through Aug. 12; Library storytime, 7 p.m. Thursdays, Aug. 11, 18 and 25; Family storytime, 3:30 p.m. Sundays, 707 Vt. Lawrence Public Library bookmobile schedule (open to the public): 9-10 a.m. Monday, Prairie Commons, 5121 Congressional Circle; 10:30-11:30 a.m. Monday, Babcock Place, 1700 Mass.; 9-10 a.m. Wednesday, Brandon Woods, 1501 Inverness Drive; 10:3011:30 a.m. Wednesday, Presbyterian Manor, 1429 Kasold Drive; 1-2 p.m. Wednesday, Drury Place, 1510 Andrews Drive; 11:15-noon Friday, Vermont Towers, 1101 Vt.; 1:302:30 p.m. Friday, Peterson Acres, 2930 Peterson Road.

More information on these listings can be found at LJWorld.com and Lawrence.com. To submit items for Journal-World, LJWorld.com and Lawrence.com calendars, send an email to datebook@ljworld.com, or post events directly at LJWorld.com/events/submit/.

e r th ou t a h s! Be wit reat at l T e H oo C

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4106 W. 6th, Ste. E (Just West of HyVee)

Ottawa (785) 242-7100

1302 S. Main, Ste. 23 (Across from Ransom Memorial)


GOLF: Nationwide qualifier coming to Alvamar. 3B OUT OF REACH Alcides Escobar and the Royals suffered a 5-4 setback at Chicago on Saturday. Story on page 3B

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B

LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD ● LJWorld.com/sports ● Sunday, August 14, 2011

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Big 12 vows to go on with or without A&M By Matt Tait mtait@ljworld.com

A day that began with rumors of Missouri joining Texas A&M in bolting the Big 12 Conference for the SEC ended with one message: The Big 12 wants to stay together, preferably with A&M on board. In a statement released Saturday night, the Big 12 said it “strongly conveyed to Texas A&M its unanimous desire that it remain a Big 12 member, and acknowledged its value to the Conference.” In addition, the

statement said the league “is prepared to aggressively move forward to explore expansion opportunities” and “recognizes the strength of the Big 12 Conference national brand and the opportunity to capitalize on it.” Later Saturday night, Kansas University Chancellor Bernadette Gray-Little released her own statement, which came after a conference call of Big 12 presidents and chancellors that followed a similar call between the Big 12’s athletic directors and commissioner Dan Beebe. “The University of Kansas is

committed to the Big 12 Conference and its success,” Gray-Little’s statement read. “We fully support the efforts of the conference to remain strong and competitive, including the active pursuit of additional membership in the event of a departure.” Not surprisingly, Gray-Little’s words echoed those uttered by KU athletic director Sheahon Zenger on Friday. “Sheahon Zenger and I have been in regular contact with conference board members, the commissioner and others to ensure KU’s interests are pro-

tected,” Gray-Little continued. “We are going to do what is in the best interest of the university (and) our student-athletes and fans. Maintaining a vibrant Big 12 is in KU’s best interests.” KU’s two most visible leaders have worked closely together on this matter during the past few days. As for the specifics of Saturday’s activity, sources with knowledge of the conference call between the ADs and Beebe told the Journal-World that the tone of the call was pleasant and more about solving the problem

together than picking each other apart. “I think nine (member schools) is an option,” UT AD DeLoss Dodds told Kirk Bohls of the Austin (Texas) AmericanStatesman. “I think nine are solid. I think 10’s a good number. In my mind, we’d try to stay at 10. If we had to, we’d go to 12.” Sources said it was believed by all parties involved that the Big 12 would survive as long as everyone was up front and honest. Because of its recent track Please see BIG 12, page 3B

We are going to do what is in the best interest of the university (and) our studentathletes and fans. ” — Kansas University Chancellor Bernadette Gray-Little

KANSAS FOOTBALL

Separated at birth? Publicity Photo

ACTOR WILL FERRELL, WHO WAS THE LEAD in the 2006 comedy “Talladega Nights,” bears a resemblance to KU offensive lineman Tanner Hawkinson, teammates say.

Jayhawks say tackle looks like Ricky Bobby By Gary Bedore gbedore@ljworld.com

Nick Krug/Journal-World File Photo

KANSAS OFFENSIVE LINEMAN TANNER HAWKINSON, FRONT, and the offensive linemen work on technique during practice in this photo from April 25 at the KU practice fields.

Kansas University junior offensive lineman Tanner Hawkinson resembles somebody who appears regularly on the big screen. That person is ... “Ricky Bobby,” said KU junior safety Lubbock Smith, referring to actor Will Ferrell, who played race car driver Ricky Bobby in the 2006 comedy, “Talladega Nights.” “Hawkinson came in the ’08 (recruiting) class with me. Since I’ve known him, I’ve called him Ricky Bobby. Every time somebody sees him they say, ‘What’s up Ricky Bobby?’ “I tell him all the time: ‘You’ve got to be No. 1,’’’ Smith added, referring to Ricky Bobby’s line: “If you ain’t first, you’re last.” McPherson native Hawkinson, who at 6-foot-6, 293 pounds is a bit larger than the 6-foot-3 Ferrell, takes the ribbing in stride. “I’m used to it by now. I’ve

been hearing that since my freshman year,” Hawkinson said. “It’s kind of a second-nature thing.” Good thing Hawkinson is a Ferrell fan. “I love Will Ferrell. He’s a pretty funny guy,” said Hawkinson, who would love to meet Ferrell. It wouldn’t be a huge stretch, since Ferrell figures to visit Allen Fieldhouse for a basketball game, considering he’s a buddy of KU fan/fellow comedic actor/former Shawnee Mission West hoopster Jason Sudeikis. “I’d maybe pull out some of his lines to see if he could see a resemblance or something,” the bearded Hawkinson added. The easy-going Hawkinson happens to be one of KU’s fiercest competitors on the field. He’s a three-year starter who this year has moved from left to right tackle. “It was a little awkward the first couple of practices just because of footwork,” he said of the switch. “It’s gone really well. Please see HAWKINSON, page 3B

Relative unknowns Steele, Dufner share PGA lead JOHNS CREEK, GA. (AP) — Brendan Steele and Jason Dufner at least can make a name for themselves in the PGA Championship. Until that big trophy is handed out today, however, this major remains very much a mystery. How will they handle the pressure of the final round? Can they safely navigate through the four-hole finish, considered among the most brutal of any course? And just who are these guys, anyway? Rarely has a major championship contained so much inexperience at the top going into the

final round. Steele is believed to be the first rookie since John Daly in the 1991 PGA to play in the final group of a major. Steele, already a winner this year on the PGA Tour and No. 121 in the world, showed remarkable poise Saturday by overcoming a double bogey on the seventh hole. He ran off four birdies over his next seven holes, and not even a safe bogey on the 18th could take away from a 4-under 66 to give him a share of the lead. He is tied with Jason Dufner, who, at 34, is still looking for his first PGA Tour win. Dufner, stoic as ever with a chunk of tobacco jutting out from his bottom lip,

atoned for a pair of three-putt bogeys on the back nine with back-to-back birdies. He only missed one green in the third round and shot 68. They were at 7-under 203, one shot clear of Keegan Bradley, a 25-year-old rookie who also won earlier this year. Bradley, playing in the final group, opened with a double bogey, which might have been expected given his inexperience. He also bounced back with remarkable resiliency, playing bogey-free on the back nine and rallying for a 69. Now comes the hard part. Never mind that only one of the top 10 players in the world is

within four shots — Steve Stricker, who shot 69 and was three behind. Or that Tiger Woods, defending champion Martin Kaymer and British Open champion Darren Clarke all missed the cut. Or that U.S. Open champion Rory McIlroy blew up in a round of 74 and was out of contention. Atlanta Athletic Club is the kind of course that can take shots away without notice. Jim Furyk discovered that by putting three balls into the water on the last four holes for a pair of double bogeys. “Wishy-washy play is not going to get it done,” Steele said

Woodland tied for 30th JOHNS CREEK, GA. — The 18th hole continues to vex Gary Woodland. A day after a triple-bogey 7 on No. 18, Woodland, a Topeka native and former Kansas University golfer, shaved two strokes off that hole but still bogeyed it in a round of 1-overpar 71 that left him tied for 30th after three of four rounds of the PGA Championship on Saturday at the Atlanta Athletic Club. Through three rounds, Woodland is 1-over 211, but 4-over 16 on the 18th. Woodland is eight strokes behind co-leaders Brendan Steele and Jason Dufner heading into today’s final round.


Sports 2

2B | LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD | SUNDAY, AUGUST 14, 2011

COMING MONDAY

TWO-DAY

• Recap of the Royals’ series finale with the White Sox

SPORTS CALENDAR

ROYALS

Cubs ban Zambrano for 30 days A T L A N T A ( AP ) — The Chicago Cubs placed Carlos Zambrano on the disqualified list Saturday and said the right-hander would receive no pay and have no part in team activities for 30 Zambrano days. Zambrano cleaned out his locker and left the

team after giving up five homers and being ejected from Friday night’s 10-4 loss to the Braves. He did not return to the team Saturday. General manager Jim Hendry said Saturday that Zambrano’s actions, including a brush-back pitch to Chipper Jones that led to the ejection, were “intolerable.” “This was the most stringent penalty we could enforce without a release,” Hendry said. Cubs pitcher Ryan Dempster had similarly strong words.

“He’s made his bed. Let him sleep in it,” Dempster said. “It’s not like it’s something new.” Hendry said Major League Baseball and the players’ association would discuss Zambrano’s statements about his baseball future. Cubs manager Mike Quade said Friday night that Zambrano told team personnel he might retire. “There’s not much worse than running out on your teammates in the middle of a ballgame,” Hendry said on a conference call.

TODAY • White Sox, 1:10 p.m. in Chicago MONDAY • Yankees , 7:10 p.m. in Kansas City, Mo.

Hendry said he apologized to Braves general manager Frank Wren for the actions by Zambrano on the same night Atlanta honored former manager Bobby Cox. Zambrano was ejected by plate umpire Tim Timmons in the fifth inning after throwing two inside pitches to Jones, the second going all the way to the backstop. The brush-back pitches followed homers by Freddie Freeman and Dan Uggla.

| SPORTS WRAP |

COMMENTARY

Kiawah Island ready for 2012 PGA

FOOTBALL ANYONE?

By Ron Green Jr. The Charlotte Observer

JOHNS CREEK, GA. — To give golfers, a masochistic group by nature, a sense of what the 2012 PGA Championship will be like this time next year at Kiawah Island’s Ocean Course in South Carolina, resort operators ran a recent promotion inviting players to test themselves against the Pete Dye-designed course as it will be set up for Rory McIlroy, Phil Mickelson and Mother Nature next August. That meant playing the Ocean Course from 7,693 yards, longer than any major championship course has ever played, and being asked to keep it between the dunes, off the beach and away from any gators that may be sunning themselves. Of the 1,000 or so who took the Ocean Course test, only 155 were brave or silly enough to step all the way back. Of those, one player broke 80, shooting 78 with a scratch handicap. The lowest validated net score was 75 from a sixhandicap. It’s dental work without the Novocain. This time next year, we’ll see what McIlroy and his mates can do. For Kiawah Island Resort and the Ocean Course, the PGA Championship is an enormous opportunity. Twenty years ago, the Ryder Cup matches put the Ocean Course on the world golf map and next year’s PGA Championship is a chance to further establish the layout’s statue as a major championship venue, building on the 2007 Senior PGA Championship. When the Ryder Cup was played at the Ocean Course, the place was new, carved onto a sliver of oceanside land dotted with dunes. It was unforgiving to the extreme but that worked for match play. It could have been a stroke-play blood bath. Dye has softened and refined the Ocean Course over the years, making several visits in recent years to get it where he wants it. That means a course that is more forgiving but still with its teeth, especially if the sea breeze blows as it’s supposed to in August. The PGA, though, is about more than just the golf course. In the same way organizers sold the first U.S. Open at Pinehurst as a statewide event, they’ve taken a similar approach in marketing the first men’s major championship in South Carolina. From Greenville to Columbia to Charlotte, the tournament has been sold to both businesses and individuals. It means capitalizing on what works for football games at Clemson and South Carolina — getting fans to drive in for the day. Approximately 75 percent of the tickets have been sold within the state border. The result will be the earliest sellout in the tournament’s 95-year history. Already, 94 percent of the tickets have been sold and when organizers reopen ticket sales after this year’s event ends, they expect the names on the waiting list will gobble up the remaining tickets. Wisely, they have limited spectator attendance to 30,000 daily, substantially lower than the 40,000 or more at some events. The Ocean Course isn’t easy to traverse with its out and back routing winding through dunes. The goal is to make it pleasant for the spectators, down to misting stations to keep them cool. “We want people to be able to see the golf and to enjoy it,” resort president Rodger Warren said. That’s been the goal at Kiawah Island all along.

SPORTS ON TV TODAY MLB Tampa Bay v. Yankees Chc. Cubs v. Atlanta K.C. v. White Sox Colorado v. St. Louis

Time Noon 12:30 p.m. 1 p.m. 7 p.m.

Net TBS WGN FSKC ESPN

Cable 51, 251 16 36, 236 33, 233

Golf PGA Championship PGA Championship Sprint Cup U.S. Women’s Amateur

Time 10 a.m. 1 p.m. Noon 2 p.m.

Net TNT CBS ESPN Golf

Cable 45, 245 5, 13, 205 33, 233 156, 289

Tennis Rogers Cup ATP Masters

Time Noon 2 p.m.

Net ESPN2 ESPN2

Cable 34, 234 34, 234

Auto Racing FIM MotoGP IndyCar series

Time 7 a.m. 2:30 p.m.

Net Speed ABC

Cable 150, 227 9, 12, 209

Soccer U-20 World Cup U-20 World Cup

Time 2:45 p.m. 5:45 p.m.

Net ESPNU ESPNU

Cable 35, 235 35, 235

WPS Soccer West. N.Y. v. Atlanta

Time 5 p.m.

Net GolTV

Cable 149

Premier Soccer West Brom v. Man-U

Time 10 a.m.

Net GolTV

Cable 149

Diving U.S. Championships

Time 2 p.m.

Net NBC

Cable 8, 14, 208

MONDAY

Bob Leverone/AP Photo

FANS SIT IN A LARGELY EMPTY SECTION in the rain before an NFL exhibition game between the Carolina Panthers and the New York Giants on Saturday in Charlotte, N.C.

Eagles DT Patterson returns after seizure BETHLEHEM, PA. — Ten days after suffering a seizure, Eagles defensive lineman Mike Patterson was back on the practice fields at Lehigh, although his participation was limited to conditioning. Coach Andy Reid said the defensive tackle was still being evaluated by doctors and had permission only to work out. But the coach intimated that Patterson could return to action soon. “He’s got to get himself back into shape,” Reid said. “It’ll probably be a week or so as we’re looking at it now.” Patterson declined an interview request but said that he felt good. A day after his seizure, the Eagles said the likely cause was an arteriovenous malformation near Patterson’s brain. Patterson’s agent, J.R. Rickert, said Friday his client was likely to play football again this season.

NFL Burress talks shooting, prison NEW YORK — Plaxico Burress says in an interview for HBO’s “Real Sports” that he “lost count” of how many times he cried in jail and didn’t know who New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg was until after the wide receiver accidentally shot himself in 2008. Burress, now with the Jets after signing a one-year, $3 million deal with them two weeks ago, went to prison for 20 months on a gun charge after the incident. He says during the interview, which airs Tuesday, that he didn’t realize at first that he had shot himself in a leg in a Manhattan club until he saw his white sneakers turning red. The interview includes Burress’ attorney, Benjamin Brafman, and his wife, Tiffany, also an attorney, who predicted her husband would end up having to serve jail time.

NFL Preseason N.Y. Jets v. Houston

Time 7 p.m.

Net ESPN

Cable 33, 233

MLB TBA N.Y. Yankees v. K.C.

Time 6 p.m. 7 p.m.

Net ESPN2 FSKC

Cable 34, 234 36, 236

Premier Soccer Man. City v. Swansea

Time 1:55 p.m.

Net ESPN2

Cable 34, 234

Net Tennis

Cable 157

Women’s Tennis Time Western & South. Open 10 a.m.

LATEST LINE

TENNIS Djokovic, Fish to meet in final

NFL Favorite .........................................Points.....................................Underdog Monday, August 15th. Preseason Week 1 1 HOUSTON .....................................2 ⁄2 (35)........................................NY Jets MLB Favorite ..........................................Odds ......................................Underdog National League CINCINNATI...................................61⁄2-71⁄2 ....................................San Diego San Francisco .............................Even-6 .......................................FLORIDA PHILADELPHIA...............................13-15...................................Washington ATLANTA...........................................6-7.................................Chicago Cubs MILWAUKEE.....................................9-10......................................Pittsburgh ST. LOUIS...........................................7-8..........................................Colorado LA DODGERS...................................9-10..........................................Houston ARIZONA ...........................................6-7 ...........................................NY Mets American League CLEVELAND..................................61⁄2-71⁄2....................................Minnesota LA Angels.....................................51⁄2-612 .....................................TORONTO Detroit ...........................................61⁄2-71⁄2 ..................................BALTIMORE CHI WHITE SOX ...............................7-8 ....................................Kansas City Texas..............................................51⁄2-61⁄2 .....................................OAKLAND Boston...............................................7-8...........................................SEATTLE NY YANKEES ................................51⁄2-61⁄2 ..................................Tampa Bay MMA UFC Live 5 Bradley Center-Milwaukee, WI. D. Hardy +100 C. Lytle -120 B. Henderson +130 J. Miller -150 D. Cerrone +110 C. Oliveira -130 D. Ludwig +270 A. Sadollah -330 J. Hamman +220 CB. Dollaway -260 E. Wineland +220 J. Benavidez -260 E. Herman +140 K. Noke -160 R. Markes +190 K. Vemola -220 A. Caceres +300 J. Hettes -360 TJ. O’Brien +320 C. Miller -380 J. Volkmann +100 D. Castillo -120 J. Reinhardt +280 E. Figueroa -320 Home Team in CAPS (c) 2011 Tribune Media Services, Inc.

MONTREAL — Top-ranked Novak Djokovic advanced to the Rogers Cup final when JoWilfried Tsonga retired from their semifinal match Saturday night because of an apparent right arm injury. Djokovic led 6-4, 3-0 when Tsonga retired. The Australian Open and Wimbledon champion playing his first tournament since taking the top spot in the world ranking, Djokovic improved his match record for the year to 521, including 28-0 on hard courts. Earlier, sixth-seeded Mardy Fish advanced to his third straight ATP Tour final, beating Janko Tipsarevic 6-3, 6-4. He’s trying to become the first American to win the Rogers Cup since Andy Roddick in 2003.

Serena advances to final TORONTO — Serena Williams advanced to the final in the Rogers Cup, beating fourthseeded Victoria Azarenka of Belarus, 6-3, 6-3, on Saturday night. Williams, playing just her fourth tournament since being sidelined for a year by injuries and illness, will face 10th-seeded Samantha Stosur of Australia in the final. Stosur beat Poland’s Agnieszka Radwanska, 6-2, 5-7, 6-2.

GOLF Kang, Jutanugarn advance to final

BARRINGTON, R.I. — Defending champion Danielle Kang and Thailand’s Moriya Jutanugarn advanced to the U.S. Women’s Amateur final Saturday at Rhode Island Country Club. Kang, the 18-year-old Pepperdine star from Westlake Village, Calif., beat University of Alabama player Brooke Pancake, from ChatHarbaugh: QB spot up for grabs tanooga, Tenn., 1-up. SAN FRANCISCO — Surprise! There’s another The 17-year-old Jutanugarn edged LSU’s quarterback competition for the San Francisco Austin Ernst, the NCAA champion from 49ers. Seneca, S.C., 1-up. Rookie Colin Kaepernick will get his shot to Kang is trying to become the first player to challenge incumbent Alex Smith for the Niners’ win two years in a row since Kelli Kuehne in starting job — though Smith has been the 1995-96. strong favorite all along and probably still is. Smith has taken all the reps with the first team MLB when he has been on the practice field, too. While Jim Harbaugh still considers it Indians’ OF Brantley out again Smith’s spot to lose, the first-year coach and CLEVELAND — Indians outfielder Michael former NFL QB said Saturday nobody has Brantley’s right wrist is not getting better. earned the position in training camp thus far. Brantley was not in the starting lineup SatHe hasn’t said when he will name a starter. urday for the fourth straight game, and manIn addition, San Francisco will consider ager Manny Acta said he intends to keep the adding an experienced veteran backup quaroutfielder out until at least Tuesday. terback to the mix. Acta said that if Brantley does not show “That’s a possibility,” Harbaugh said, noting improvement, a trip to the disabled list is posa decision would be based “on the right persible. son available.”

THE QUOTE

“Bankrupt former NFL punter Ray Guy was forced to sell his three Super Bowl rings. What a shame. I don’t mean that the man is broke. I mean that punters get Super Bowl rings.” —Greg Cote, in the Miami Herald

TODAY IN SPORTS

1959 — The formation of the American Football League is announced in Chicago. Play will begin in 1960 with franchises in six cities with the probability of adding two more teams. 1994 — Nick Price wins the PGA Championship in record fashion, finishing at 11-under 269.

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LOCAL

L AWRENCE J OURNAL -WORLD

X Sunday, August 14, 2011

| 3B.

Alvamar hosts qualifier ————

Ex-Jayhawk Thompson to vie for berth By Tom Keegan tkeegan@ljworld.com

Picturesque, power golf swings and sweet putting strokes will stock both Alvamar courses Monday, when competitors will try to go low enough to qualify for the Midwest Classic, a Nationwide event scheduled to tee off Thursday at Nicklaus Golf Course at Lions Gate in Overland Park. Former Kansas University golfer and Lawrence resident Chris Thompson, who has qualified for one Nationwide event this summer, will be in the field of potential qualifiers Monday. He enters the qualifier on fire. Confident that he’s playing the best golf of his career, Thompson qualified for a Nationwide event in Omaha, Neb., and made the cut two weeks ago, but did not qualify for this weekend’s event in Springfield, Mo. Instead, he played in the three-round Northwest Arkansas Open, an Adams Golf Pro Tour Series event. Tied going into Saturday’s final round, he blew away the field, firing a 10under-par 62 to finish 22under, seven strokes better than the second-place finish-

ers and one stroke shy of the Lost Springs Golf and Athletic Club course record. Thompson was 7-underpar over the final seven holes, carding an eagle, five birdies and a par to finish the back side with a 29. “I feel like I’ve had a good year,” Thompson said. “No excuses. I’ve got the qualifier at my college home course, and I love Lions Gate.” Some golfers will choose the longer, more wide-open public side, others the tighter private course, which requires precise positioning off the tee and more strategic decisions than the “upstairs” course. The low seven scores from the public and the low seven from the private qualify. Thompson initially was leaning toward playing the tighter course, but in the end decided to play the public side. “Obviously, I’ve played both courses a lot,” Thompson said. “I’ve played tournaments on the public, but I don’t think I’ve ever played a tournament on the private side. It’s easy to hit drivers when you’re just freewheeling with your friends, but there are some pretty awkward tee balls. I think playing upstairs is a lot safer option.”

The Monday qualif iers move on to play in the $550,000 Midwest Classic and will vie for the $112,500 firstplace prize money, roughly $100,000 more than Thompson’s check for winning in Rogers, Ark. Thompson predicted that a 67 on the public and 68 on the private should be good enough to at least make a playoff for a qualifying spot. Matt Gogel, a former Kansas University golfer and PGA Tour pro, holds the Alvamar public course record of 64. “I think it has a chance to go down,” Alvamar pro David Dunn said. “The country club’s going to play a little harder. I expect the guys who have course knowledge to play well down there.” Former KU golfer Ryan Vermeer, now a teaching pro at Oak Hills Country Club in Omaha, Neb., brings course knowledge and will play the private side. Spencer Wilson of Golf USA in Lawrence and Alvamar assistant pro Tyler Henderson will play the private side. Their Monday morning tee times: Wilson 7:45, Vermeer 10:09, Henderson 10:27. Thompson tees off upstairs at 7:45.

Chisox edge K.C., end skid CHICAGO (AP) — Paul Konerko hit a two-run homer, and Tyler Flowers added his first home run in the majors to lead the Chicago White Sox to a 54 victory over the Kansas City Royals on Saturday night. Konerko went deep in the third, and Flowers added a solo shot in the fifth to help the White Sox snap a sevengame home losing streak. Flowers also had a single and a walk. Juan Pierre had three singles and scored two runs for Chicago. Jesse Crain (7-3) got the win in relief after pitching out of starter Jake Peavy’s jam in the seventh and his own in the eighth. Chris Sale got the last three outs, earning his fourth save. Peavy allowed four runs 2 and nine hits over 6 ⁄ 3 innings. Luke Hochevar (8-9) took the loss, allowing eight hits and five runs in six innings.

Big 12 CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1B

record of wanting to leave the conference, one school that has to be looked at twice is Missouri. Despite rumors of Mizzou being bound for the SEC, several media outlets reported that the Tigers seemed committed to the Big 12. Asked by reporters if MU had entered into talks with the SEC, Missouri AD Mike Alden said: “No. The answer to your question is no. I want to make sure: no.” With the Big 12 in turmoil yet again, administrators at other schools, such as BYU, Louisville and others, were

Hawkinson CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1B

It’s not that big a transition. Same terminology, same technique, just opposite sides.” Hawkinson’s consistency pleases the pre-sports-management major’s coaches and teammates. “He moved over to right tackle and has done a really good job of being stabilized there and doing a good job of run-blocking and pass-protecting,” coach Turner Gill said. “He’s definitely a leader as far as the offensive line.” Noted wide receiver Daymond Patterson: “Tanner is really good. He started here as a tight end, moved to defensive tackle then offensive

He had won four straight decisions and hadn’t lost in eight starts dating to June 21. Billy Butler stroked a tworun single for the Royals, and

Johnny Giavotella added two hits and an RBI. The White Sox have won seven of last their last nine, but they had lost seven straight at U.S. Cellular Field by a combined score of 54-17. The start of the game was delayed by 1 hour, 25 minutes due to thunderstorms that moved through the Chicago area late Saturday afternoon. There was another delay of 42 minutes prior to the start of the eighth. The White Sox took the lead with a two-run seventh. Carlos Quentin drove in the tying run with an RBI double into the left-field corner. Alejandro De Aza forced in the go-ahead run with a bases loaded walk. Both runs came with Royals reliever Aaron Crow on the mound, but both were charged to Hochevar, who issued a single and a walk to start the inning before being pulled.

called upon to answer whether they would be interested in joining the Big 12 should the opportunity present itself. Each gave the same answer: We’re happy with where we are. With a meeting of Texas A&M’s board of regents looming Monday, and Texas lawmakers set to meet Tuesday, one source said the whole thing boils down to one simple truth. “If it’s A&M’s decision, they’d be gone. But nothing’s a done deal.” One of the biggest reasons why is the presence of the Texas legislature, which has a strong interest in keeping Texas, Texas A&M and Texas Tech together. Although some reports have indicated that Monday’s meeting of A&M’s board of

regents could include a vote to accept an invitation from the SEC, no actual offer has been conf irmed, and one Texas lawmaker said any such action would be frowned upon. “It’s my understanding, based upon conversations with A&M officials, that the A&M Board of Regents is meeting to authorize the president to enter into negotiations with the SEC, assuming the SEC extends an offer to A&M to join the conference,” Rep. Dan Branch said. “It is not my understanding that they are meeting to complete or accept an offer to the SEC. To finalize such an action before giving legislators a chance to ask some questions would be inappropriate, highly inappropriate.”

tackle. No matter where he’s been, he’s worked his tail off. “He had a great summer. He is in really good shape right now. He is a guy a lot of people are going to have to look out for. He’s relatively new to the position, but each and every game he’s gotten better.” Hawkinson sees great improvement in the offense entering year two of the Gill regime. “Everyone is so much more comfortable with everybody,” Hawkinson said. “We have a great feel for the coaches, and they have a great feel for us. It’s been over a year now. We’re so much more far ahead than we were last year. We are more comfortable with everything. We’re kind of used to the change.” More than anything,

Hawkinson wants to earn victories his final two years here. The native Kansan’s mother, grandfather, two brothers and a sister attended KU. “My dad went to K-State, but I don’t think he has too much a problem with me being here,” Hawkinson said, laughing. “I grew up a KU Jayhawk fan. My grandpa has had season tickets as long as I can remember. I’ve been coming up to games forever. Having my older siblings go to school here ... it’s great to be part of the Jayhawk family. “I’m definitely proud of the team and university. I want to represent the state of Kansas and University of Kansas well. The only way to do that is win some games. We have some goals. The first is McNeese State,” he added of the Sept. 3 opener in Memorial Stadium.

BOX SCORE Kansas City

Chicago ab r h bi Pierre lf 4 2 3 0 Vizquel 2b 4 1 0 0 Bckhm 2b 0 0 0 0 Konerk dh 4 1 1 2 Quentin rf 4 0 1 1 AlRmrz ss 3 0 1 0 De Aza cf 2 0 0 1 Morel 3b 4 0 0 0 Lillirdg 1b 4 0 1 0 Flowrs c 3 1 2 1 Totals 36 4 11 4 Totals 32 5 9 5 Kansas City 000 040 000 — 4 Chicago 002 010 20x — 5 E—S.Perez (1), Flowers (2). DP—Chicago 2. LOB—Kansas City 6, Chicago 12. 2B—S.Perez (1), Quentin (30). HR—Konerko (27), Flowers (1). SB—Francoeur (19), A.Escobar (18), Pierre (20), Al.Ramirez (6). S—Pierre. IP H R ER BB SO Kansas City Hochevar L,8-9 6 8 5 5 3 4 Crow BS,5-5 1 1 0 0 2 2 Bl.Wood 1 0 0 0 3 0 Chicago Peavy 6 2-3 9 4 4 1 6 Crain W,7-3 1 1-3 2 0 0 0 0 Sale S,4-5 1 0 0 0 0 1 Hochevar pitched to 2 batters in the 7th. Umpires—Home, Chris Guccione; First, Mike Muchlinski; Second, Mike Winters; Third, Mike Everitt. T—2:58 (Rain delay: 0:42). A—24,854 (40,615). AGordn lf MeCarr cf Butler dh Hosmer 1b Francr rf Giavtll 2b S.Perez c Mostks 3b AEscor ss

ab 5 3 4 4 4 4 4 4 4

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h bi 1 0 2 0 1 2 1 0 2 0 2 1 1 0 0 0 1 1


SPORTS

|

4B Sunday, August 14, 2011

L AWRENCE J OURNAL -WORLD

SCOREBOARD

MAJOR-LEAGUE ROUNDUP

Posada, Yanks slam Rays The Associated Press

American League Yankees 9, Rays 2 NEW YORK — Jorge Posada hit a grand slam and drove in six runs in his first game since being benched six days ago. Tampa Bay New York ab r h bi ab r h bi Jnnngs lf 4 1 2 1 Gardnr lf 4 0 2 0 Damon dh 4 1 1 0 Jeter ss 5 0 2 0 Longori 3b 4 0 1 0 Grndrs cf 4 2 2 1 Zobrist 2b 3 0 0 1 Teixeir 1b 5 2 2 1 Brignc ss 1 0 0 0 Cano 2b 4 2 2 0 Ktchm 1b 4 0 0 0 ENunez 2b 0 0 0 0 BUpton cf 3 0 1 0 Swisher rf 2 1 0 0 Fuld cf 1 0 0 0 ErChvz 3b 4 1 1 1 Joyce rf 2 0 0 0 Posada dh 5 1 3 6 SRdrgz ss-2b 3 0 0 0 Martin c 4 0 1 0 Chirins c 3 0 0 0 Totals 32 2 5 2 Totals 37 9 15 9 Tampa Bay 000 002 000 — 2 New York 020 052 00x — 9 E—Jeter (8). DP—Tampa Bay 1, New York 1. LOB—Tampa Bay 4, New York 11. 2B—B.Upton (15), Teixeira (18), Cano (30). 3B—Damon (5). HR—Jennings (4), Granderson (33), Posada (10). IP H R ER BB SO Tampa Bay Hellickson L,10-8 4 1-3 8 4 4 2 4 B.Gomes 2-3 3 3 3 2 0 C.Ramos 2 3 2 2 2 1 J.Cruz 1 1 0 0 0 2 New York P.Hughes W,3-4 6 4 2 2 1 6 Wade 2 1 0 0 0 1 Noesi 1 0 0 0 0 1 HBP—by Hellickson (Gardner). WP—Wade. T—3:01. A—47,804 (50,291).

Indians 3, Twins 1 C L E V E L A N D — Asdrubal Cabrera hit a three-run homer, and Josh Tomlin pitched shutout ball into the seventh inning. Minnesota

Cleveland ab r h bi Choo rf 3 1 0 0 Donald 2b 4 1 2 0 ACarer ss 3 1 2 3 CSantn c 4 0 0 0 Duncan dh 3 0 1 0 Chsnhll dh 1 0 0 0 Fukdm cf 3 0 2 0 LaPort 1b 4 0 2 0 Hannhn 3b 4 0 1 0 Carrer lf 3 0 0 0 Totals 32 1 5 1 Totals 32 3 10 3 Minnesota 000 000 100 — 1 Cleveland 003 000 00x — 3 E—Tolbert (4). DP—Minnesota 1. LOB— Minnesota 5, Cleveland 8. 2B—Morneau (13). 3B—Donald (1). HR—A.Cabrera (20). SB— A.Cabrera (16). CS—Fukudome (3). S— Fukudome. IP H R ER BB SO Minnesota Duensing L,8-11 6 2-3 9 3 3 2 9 Al.Burnett 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Dumatrait 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 Capps 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 Cleveland Tomlin W,12-5 6 1-3 4 1 1 1 2 J.Smith H,9 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 R.Perez H,10 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Sipp H,20 1 0 0 0 0 0 C.Perez S,25-28 1 0 0 0 0 1 PB—Mauer. T—2:34. A—30,619 (43,441). Span cf Tolbert 2b Mauer c Mornea 1b Kubel rf Thome dh Valenci 3b DYong lf Nishiok ss

ab 4 4 4 4 4 3 3 3 3

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h bi 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0

Mariners 5, Red Sox 4 SEATTLE — Felix Hernandez pitched seven innings and survived a shaky sixth to help Seattle hold off Boston. Boston

Seattle ab r h bi ab r h bi Ellsury cf 3 1 2 2 ISuzuki rf 4 1 1 1 Crwfrd lf 4 0 1 0 FGtrrz cf 4 1 2 0 AdGnzl 1b 4 1 2 0 Ackley 2b 4 1 1 0 Pedroia 2b 4 1 1 2 Carp 1b 3 1 1 2 D.Ortiz dh 2 0 1 0 W.Pena dh 4 0 0 0 DMcDn pr-dh0 0 0 0 C.Wells lf 4 1 2 2 Reddck rf 4 0 0 0 J.Bard c 3 0 0 0 Aviles 3b 3 0 2 0 LRdrgz 3b 3 0 0 0 Lowrie ph 1 0 0 0 JaWlsn ss 3 0 2 0 Varitek c 4 0 0 0 Scutaro ss 3 1 1 0 Totals 32 4 10 4 Totals 32 5 9 5 Boston 000 004 000 — 4 Seattle 500 000 00x — 5 E—Carp (4). DP—Boston 1, Seattle 4. LOB— Boston 4, Seattle 4. 2B—Ackley (11), Ja.Wilson (8). 3B—Scutaro (1). HR—Ellsbury (20), Pedroia (16), I.Suzuki (2), C.Wells (6). SB—F.Gutierrez (11). CS—D.McDonald (3). IP H R ER BB SO Boston Beckett L,9-5 5 8 5 5 1 6 Albers 1 2-3 1 0 0 0 3 F.Morales 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 Aceves 2-3 0 0 0 0 2 Seattle F.Hernandez W,11-10 7 9 4 4 2 2 J.Wright H,14 1 1 0 0 1 0 League S,28-32 1 0 0 0 0 2 T—3:03. A—41,326 (47,878).

National League Reds 13, Padres 1 CINCINNATI — Miguel Cairo and Ryan Hanigan each homered twice, and the Reds hit seven in all off starter Tim Stauffer and the Padres bullpen — matching a San Diego record. San Diego

Cincinnati h bi ab r h bi Venale rf 1 0 Sappelt lf-cf5 0 2 0 Bartlett ss 1 0 Janish ss 5 0 0 0 Maybin cf 1 0 Votto 1b 3 2 2 1 Tekotte cf 0 0 Alonso 1b 1 0 0 0 Blanks 1b 2 1 Bruce rf 3 3 2 2 OHudsn 2b 0 0 Cairo 2b 4 2 2 4 Hamrn p 0 0 Stubbs cf 4 2 2 0 Thtchr p 0 0 TrWood p 0 0 0 0 RJhnsn ph 0 0 Frazier 3b 3 2 1 1 Hundly c 1 0 Hanign c 4 2 2 5 Cnghm lf 0 0 HBaily p 3 0 0 0 Bass p 0 0 Arrdnd p 0 0 0 0 AlGnzlz 2b 0 0 FLewis ph-lf 1 0 0 0 Forsyth 3b 0 0 Stauffr p 1 0 Darnell lf 0 0 Totals 7 1 Totals 36 13 13 13 San Diego 000 100 000 — 1 — 13 Cincinnati 315 020 02x DP—San Diego 1. LOB—San Diego 7, Cincinnati 1. 2B—Stubbs (17). HR—Blanks (3), Votto (19), Bruce (25), Cairo 2 (7), Frazier (4), Hanigan 2 (5). SB—Maybin (30). IP H R ER BB SO San Diego Stauffer L,7-9 3 7 9 9 2 1 Bass 2 3 2 2 0 1 Hamren 2 0 0 0 0 4 Thatcher 1 3 2 2 0 1 Cincinnati H.Bailey W,7-5 7 6 1 1 1 7 Arredondo 1 0 0 0 0 2 Tr.Wood 1 1 0 0 0 2 HBP—by Tr.Wood (Ro.Johnson). T—2:50. A—31,374 (42,319). ab 3 4 3 1 4 3 0 0 0 4 2 0 2 4 1 2 33

r 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1

Tigers 6, Orioles 5 BALTIMORE — Miguel Cabrera homered in a five-run sixth inning that featured six conCubs 8, Braves 4 secutive two-out hits. ATLANTA — The latest entry Detroit Baltimore in Dan Uggla’s improbable ab r h bi ab r h bi AJcksn cf 5 0 0 0 Pie lf 4 0 0 0 hitting streak was not enough Dirks lf 5 1 1 0 Hardy ss 4 0 0 0 for Atlanta as Starlin Castro Ordonz rf 4 1 2 0 Markks rf 4 0 0 0 Kelly pr-rf 0 0 0 0 AdJons cf 4 1 1 0 and Darwin Barney each had MiCarr 1b 2 1 1 3 Guerrr dh 4 1 2 2 four hits to lead Chicago. VMrtnz dh 3 1 2 0 Wieters c 4 1 1 0 JhPerlt ss 4 1 1 0 C.Davis 1b 4 1 2 0 Uggla had a first-inning sinAvila c 3 1 1 1 Reimld pr 0 0 0 0 Raburn 2b 4 0 1 2 J.Bell 3b 3 0 0 0 gle and a fourth-inning homer RSantg 2b 0 0 0 0 MrRynl ph 1 0 0 0 off Randy Wells (4-4) to Betemt 3b 4 0 0 0 BDavis 2b 4 1 2 3 Totals 34 6 9 6 Totals 36 5 8 5 extend his hitting streak to 33 Detroit 000 105 000 — 6 games. Baltimore 050 000 000 — 5 E—Raburn (12). DP—Baltimore 1. LOB— Detroit 5, Baltimore 4. 2B—Dirks (9), Ordonez (7), Avila (21). HR—Mi.Cabrera (23), Guerrero (10), B.Davis (1). SF—Mi.Cabrera. R ER BB SO IP H Detroit Scherzer W,12-7 7 7 5 4 0 10 Coke H,6 1 0 0 0 0 2 Valverde S,35-35 1 1 0 0 0 1 Baltimore Guthrie L,5-16 5 2-3 8 6 6 2 1 Jakubauskas 2 1-3 1 0 0 1 1 M.Gonzalez 1 0 0 0 0 1 T—2:48. A—24,114 (45,438).

Blue Jays 11, Angels 2 TORONTO — Adam Lind hit a grand slam for Toronto, and Edwin Encarnacion and Mark Teahen also went deep. Los Angeles Toronto ab r h bi ab r h bi MIzturs 2b 4 0 0 0 YEscor ss 5 3 2 0 Bourjos cf 3 0 0 0 EThms lf 2 2 1 0 TrHntr dh 3 1 1 0 Encrnc 1b 4 2 2 3 Trumo 1b-rf 3 0 0 1 Lind dh 4 1 1 5 V.Wells rf 3 0 0 0 Arencii c 5 0 1 1 Branyn 1b 1 0 0 0 Teahen rf 4 1 1 1 Callasp 3b 4 1 2 1 Lawrie 3b 4 0 2 0 HKndrc lf 4 0 1 0 RDavis cf 4 1 1 0 Mathis c 1 0 0 0 JMcDnl 2b 4 1 2 1 Romine ss 2 0 0 0 Totals 28 2 4 2 Totals 36 11 13 11 Los Angeles 000 010 001 — 2 Toronto 210 053 00x — 11 E—Romine (1). DP—Toronto 1. LOB—Los Angeles 5, Toronto 6. 2B—Callaspo (19), Y.Escobar (20), E.Thames (14), R.Davis (21), Jo.McDonald (7). 3B—Tor.Hunter (2), Lawrie (1). HR—Callaspo (5), Encarnacion (11), Lind (20), Teahen (4). S—Romine, E.Thames. SF—Trumbo, Lind. IP H R ER BB SO Los Angeles Weaver L,14-6 4 2-3 8 8 8 2 3 Cassevah 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 Pineiro 2 3 3 2 1 0 R.Thompson 1 1 0 0 0 1 Toronto R.Romero W,11-9 7 2 1 1 2 3 T.Miller 1 0 0 0 1 1 L.Perez 1 2 1 1 0 2 T—2:39. A—27,185 (49,260).

Rangers 7, Athletics 1 O A K L A N D , C A L I F . — Colby Lewis and four relievers combined on a five-hitter. Texas

ab 5 5 4 4 4 4 4 4 3

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h bi 2 3 1 1 2 0 1 1 1 0 1 1 1 0 1 0 1 0

Oakland

ab r h bi Kinsler 2b JWeeks 2b 4 0 3 0 Andrus ss SSizmr 3b 4 0 0 0 JHmltn lf Matsui dh 3 0 0 0 MiYong 3b Wlngh lf 4 1 1 0 N.Cruz rf DeJess rf 4 0 1 1 Napoli dh Allen 1b 2 0 0 0 Morlnd 1b CJcksn ph-1b2 0 0 0 Torreal c Sweeny cf 3 0 0 0 EnChvz cf Powell c 3 0 0 0 Sogard ss 3 0 0 0 Totals 37 7 11 6 Totals 32 1 5 1 Texas 000 001 132 — 7 Oakland 000 000 100 — 1 E—S.Sizemore (10), Sogard (1), J.Weeks 2 (11). DP—Oakland 1. LOB—Texas 4, Oakland 5. 2B—Kinsler 2 (28), Andrus (17), Napoli (16), J.Weeks (13), Willingham (19), DeJesus (17). 3B—J.Weeks (7). SB—J.Weeks (13). CS— Torrealba (2). IP H R ER BB SO Texas C.Lewis W,11-8 6 1-3 3 1 1 0 8 D.Oliver 0 1 0 0 0 0 Uehara H,16 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 M.Adams 1 1 0 0 0 2 Feliz 1 0 0 0 1 1 Oakland Cahill L,9-11 7 1-3 7 4 3 0 4 Fuentes 0 1 1 1 0 0 De Los Santos 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 Breslow 1 2 2 2 1 1 T—2:52. A—25,160 (35,067).

Chicago

Atlanta ab r h bi ab r h bi SCastro ss 5 1 4 2 Bourn cf 5 0 1 0 Barney 2b 5 1 4 1 Prado lf 5 1 1 0 ArRmr 3b 4 1 1 1 Fremn 1b 5 0 2 0 C.Pena 1b 5 0 1 2 Uggla 2b 3 2 2 1 Byrd cf 5 0 0 0 C.Jones 3b 4 1 3 1 ASorin lf 4 0 1 0 AlGnzlz ss 5 0 1 1 Campn pr-lf 1 1 1 0 D.Ross c 4 0 2 0 Colvin rf 5 2 2 0 Constnz rf 4 0 0 1 Marml p 0 0 0 0 D.Lowe p 2 0 0 0 Soto c 5 1 0 0 Conrad ph 1 0 0 0 R.Wells p 2 0 0 0 CMrtnz p 0 0 0 0 Marshll p 0 0 0 0 Hinske ph 1 0 0 0 DeWitt ph 1 1 0 1 Sherrill p 0 0 0 0 Totals 42 8 14 7 Totals 39 4 12 4 Chicago 100 022 030 — 8 Atlanta 000 101 011 — 4 E—Marshall (1), C.Jones (5), Prado (7). LOB— Chicago 9, Atlanta 11. 2B—C.Pena (16), Colvin (6), C.Jones 2 (25). 3B—Colvin (1). HR—Uggla (27). SB—Bourn (43). S—R.Wells. SF— Ar.Ramirez, C.Jones. IP H R ER BB SO Chicago R.Wells W,4-4 5 8 2 2 0 1 Samardzija H,10 1 0 0 0 0 0 Marshall H,24 1 0 0 0 0 0 R.Ortiz 1-3 2 1 1 0 0 J.Russell 1 2 1 1 1 1 Marmol S,27-34 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Atlanta D.Lowe L,7-11 6 10 5 3 0 6 C.Martinez 1 1-3 2 3 2 0 2 Varvaro 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 Sherrill 1 1 0 0 0 0 HBP—by R.Wells (Uggla). T—3:10. A—49,781 (49,586).

Phillies 11, Nationals 3 P H I L A D E L P H I A — Ryan Howard homered and drove in four runs, and Roy Oswalt pitched seven solid innings to lead Philadelphia. Washington Philadelphia ab r h bi ab r h bi Ankiel cf 4 0 0 0 Rollins ss 4 3 1 1 Espinos 2b 4 0 0 0 Victorn cf 5 2 2 0 Zmrmn 3b 4 1 1 0 Utley 2b 5 1 1 0 Morse 1b 4 1 2 1 Mrtnz 2b 0 0 0 0 Werth rf 3 0 1 0 Howard 1b 4 2 2 4 L.Nix lf 4 1 1 1 Pence rf 3 1 1 1 WRams c 4 0 0 0 Ibanez lf 4 0 0 2 Dsmnd ss 3 0 2 1 Ruiz c 4 1 1 1 Lannan p 1 0 0 0 WValdz 3b 5 1 1 0 Balestr p 1 0 0 0 Oswalt p 1 0 0 1 Cora ph 1 0 0 0 BFrncs ph 1 0 0 0 HRdrgz p 0 0 0 0 Stutes p 0 0 0 0 Matths p 0 0 0 0 JGoms ph 1 0 0 0 Totals 34 3 7 3 Totals 36 11 9 10 Washington 020 001 000 — 3 001 03x — 11 Philadelphia 205 E—Morse (6), Desmond (17), Espinosa (11). LOB—Washington 6, Philadelphia 9. 2B— Morse (28), L.Nix (13). HR—Howard (26). SF— Ibanez. IP H R ER BB SO Washington Lannan L,8-8 3 4 7 1 5 1 Balester 3 1 1 0 0 3 H.Rodriguez 1 2 2 2 1 1 Mattheus 1 2 1 1 1 0 Philadelphia Oswalt W,5-7 7 6 3 3 1 5 Stutes 2 1 0 0 1 1 H.Rodriguez pitched to 2 batters in the 8th. WP—Balester, Mattheus, Oswalt. T—2:41. A—45,570 (43,651).

Giants 3, Marlins 0 M I A M I — Tim Lincecum allowed two hits in seven scoreless innings, and Jeff Keppinger provided a firstinning solo home run to lead San Francisco.

San Francisco Florida ab r h bi ab r h bi C.Ross lf 4 1 1 0 Bonifac ss 4 0 1 0 Kppngr 2b 4 1 2 1 Amezg 2b 4 0 0 0 PSndvl 3b 3 0 0 0 Morrsn lf 3 0 0 0 A.Huff 1b 4 0 1 1 Stanton rf 3 0 0 0 Schrhlt rf 4 1 1 0 Dobbs 3b 4 0 1 0 OCarer ss 4 0 0 0 GSnchz 1b 3 0 0 0 Rownd cf 4 0 1 0 Petersn cf 3 0 1 0 CStwrt c 3 0 0 0 J.Buck c 3 0 0 0 Linccm p 2 0 0 0 Vazquz p 1 0 0 0 Fontent ph 1 0 0 0 Helms ph 1 0 0 0 Totals 33 3 6 2 Totals 29 0 3 0 San Francisco 100 011 000 — 3 Florida 000 000 000 — 0 E—Morrison (5). LOB—San Francisco 4, Florida 8. 2B—A.Huff (21), Schierholtz (22). HR— Keppinger (5). SB—Bonifacio (28). S—Vazquez. IP H R ER BB SO San Francisco Lincecum W,11-9 7 2 0 0 3 10 Affeldt H,12 1 0 0 0 0 1 Br.Wilson S,35-39 1 1 0 0 1 2 Florida Vazquez L,7-10 7 5 3 3 0 10 Cishek 2-3 1 0 0 1 1 M.Dunn 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Ceda 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 HBP—by Lincecum (Stanton). WP—Vazquez 2. T—2:29. A—25,013 (38,560).

Diamondbacks 6, Mets 4 PHOENIX — Ryan Roberts hit a three-run homer to help Arizona come from behind to win for the 33rd time this season. New York

Arizona ab r h bi ab r h bi Pagan cf 5 0 1 0 Blmqst ss 3 1 1 0 Harris 2b 3 0 0 0 RRorts 3b 4 2 2 3 DWrght 3b 4 0 0 0 J.Upton rf 3 1 1 1 Duda 1b 3 0 0 0 Monter c 2 0 0 1 Bay lf 4 1 0 0 CYoung cf 4 0 0 0 RPauln c 4 1 2 0 Gldsch 1b 4 0 0 0 Baxter rf 4 2 2 1 KJhnsn 2b 4 1 1 0 RTejad ss 4 0 2 2 GParra lf 3 1 1 0 Pelfrey p 2 0 1 1 DHdsn p 2 0 1 1 DCrrsc p 0 0 0 0 Putz p 0 0 0 0 Hairstn ph 1 0 0 0 JuTrnr ph 1 0 0 0 Totals 35 4 8 4 Totals 29 6 7 6 New York 020 200 000 — 4 Arizona 200 031 00x — 6 E—R.Paulino (6), R.Roberts (10). DP—Arizona 1. LOB—New York 6, Arizona 4. 2B—R.Paulino (12), R.Tejada (7), R.Roberts (20), K.Johnson (23). 3B—Baxter (1). HR—R.Roberts (16). SB— J.Upton (18). S—D.Hudson. SF—Montero. IP H R ER BB SO New York Pelfrey 4 4 3 2 0 3 D.Carrasco L,1-3 1 1 2 2 1 1 Beato 2 2 1 1 0 3 Parnell 1 0 0 0 0 1 Arizona D.Hudson W,12-8 8 8 4 2 2 4 Putz S,29-33 1 0 0 0 0 1 Pelfrey pitched to 1 batter in the 5th. HBP—by D.Carrasco (Bloomquist), by Pelfrey (J.Upton). PB—Montero. T—2:17. A—33,552 (48,633).

Rockies 6, Cardinals 1 ST. LOUIS — Carlos Gonzalez hit a three-run homer, and 1 Jason Hammel threw 6 ⁄ 3 strong innings to lead Colorado. Colorado

St. Louis ab r h bi ab r h bi EYong lf 4 2 2 0 Furcal ss 3 0 1 0 RBtncr p 0 0 0 0 Jay cf 3 0 1 0 Fowler cf 3 1 0 0 Craig ph 1 0 0 0 CGnzlz rf 5 1 2 4 MBggs p 0 0 0 0 Tlwtzk ss 4 1 0 0 Pujols 1b 3 0 0 0 Helton 1b 3 0 1 2 Hollidy lf 3 1 0 0 Alfonzo c 4 0 1 0 Brkmn rf 4 0 1 0 M.Ellis 2b 4 0 2 0 Freese 3b 4 0 0 1 Nelson 3b 4 0 0 0 YMolin c 3 0 1 0 Hamml p 3 0 1 0 Theriot 2b 3 0 1 0 Roenck p 0 0 0 0 JGarci p 1 0 0 0 MtRynl p 0 0 0 0 CPttrsn ph 1 0 0 0 Belisle p 0 0 0 0 Rzpczy p 0 0 0 0 S.Smith ph-lf 0 1 0 0 Schmkr ph-cf1 0 1 0 Totals 34 6 9 6 Totals 30 1 6 1 Colorado 003 020 001 — 6 St. Louis 000 000 100 — 1 DP—Colorado 3, St. Louis 1. LOB—Colorado 7, St. Louis 5. 2B—C.Gonzalez (19), Helton (24), Theriot (22), Schumaker (15). HR—C.Gonzalez (18). CS—Fowler (9). R ER BB SO IP H Colorado Hammel W,7-11 6 1-3 5 1 1 3 1 Roenicke H,3 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Mat.Reynolds 1-3 1 0 0 0 1 Belisle 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 R.Betancourt 1 0 0 0 0 2 St. Louis J.Garcia L,10-6 5 6 5 5 4 3 Rzepczynski 3 1 0 0 1 1 M.Boggs 1 2 1 1 1 0 WP—Hammel, J.Garcia. T—3:02. A—40,172 (43,975).

Brewers 1, Pirates 0 MILWAUKEE — Marco Estrada pitched five innings in a spot start, combining with four relievers on a three-hitter, and Yuniesky Betancourt homered to carry Milwaukee. Pittsburgh

WTA Rogers Cup

American League East Division

Boston New York Tampa Bay Toronto Baltimore Central Division Detroit Cleveland Chicago Minnesota Kansas City West Division

W 73 72 64 60 45

L 45 46 55 59 72

Pct .619 .610 .538 .504 .385

GB — 1 91⁄2 131⁄2 271⁄2

W 64 60 59 52 50

L 55 57 60 67 70

Pct .538 .513 .496 .437 .417

GB — 3 5 12 1 14 ⁄2

W L Pct GB Texas 68 52 .567 — Los Angeles 65 55 .542 3 Oakland 53 66 .445 141⁄2 Seattle 51 67 .432 16 Today’s Games Minnesota (Slowey 0-0) at Cleveland (D.Huff 11), 12:05 p.m. Tampa Bay (Shields 11-9) at N.Y. Yankees (A.J.Burnett 8-9), 12:05 p.m. L.A. Angels (Haren 12-6) at Toronto (Cecil 4-5), 12:07 p.m. Detroit (Fister 4-12) at Baltimore (Jo-.Reyes 59), 12:35 p.m. Kansas City (Francis 4-12) at Chicago White Sox (Danks 4-9), 1:10 p.m. Texas (M.Harrison 10-8) at Oakland (Harden 32), 3:05 p.m. Boston (Wakefield 6-4) at Seattle (Furbush 24), 3:10 p.m.

National League East Division

Philadelphia Atlanta New York Washington Florida Central Division Milwaukee St. Louis Cincinnati Pittsburgh Chicago Houston West Division

W 78 70 58 57 56

L 41 50 61 62 63

Pct .655 .583 .487 .479 .471

GB — 1 8 ⁄2 20 21 22

W 69 64 59 56 52 38

L 51 56 61 62 68 82

Pct .575 .533 .492 .475 .433 .317

GB — 5 10 12 17 31

W L Pct GB Arizona 67 53 .558 — San Francisco 65 55 .542 2 1 Colorado 56 65 .463 11 ⁄2 Los Angeles 54 64 .458 12 1 San Diego 53 68 .438 14 ⁄2 Today’s Games San Diego (LeBlanc 0-2) at Cincinnati (Willis 02), 12:10 p.m. San Francisco (Vogelsong 9-2) at Florida (Volstad 5-8), 12:10 p.m. Chicago Cubs (Garza 5-9) at Atlanta (Beachy 52), 12:35 p.m. Washington (Wang 1-2) at Philadelphia (Halladay 15-4), 12:35 p.m. Pittsburgh (Morton 9-6) at Milwaukee (Marcum 10-3), 1:10 p.m. Houston (Lyles 1-6) at L.A. Dodgers (Kuroda 714), 3:10 p.m. N.Y. Mets (Capuano 9-10) at Arizona (Marquis 8-6), 3:10 p.m. Colorado (Rogers 6-1) at St. Louis (E.Jackson 1-1), 7:05 p.m.

ATP Rogers Cup

A U.S. Open Series event Saturday At Uniprix Stadium Montreal Purse: $3 million (Masters 1000) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles Semifinals Mardy Fish (6), United States, def. Janko Tipsarevic, Serbia, 6-3, 6-4. Novak Djokovic (1), Serbia, def. Jo-Wilfried Tsonga (13), France, 6-4, 3-0 retired.

A U.S. Open Series event Saturday At Rexall Centre Toronto Purse: $2.05 million (Premier) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles Semifinals Sam Stosur (10), Australia, def. Agnieszka Radwanska (13), Poland, 6-2, 5-7, 6-2. Serena Williams, United States, def. Victoria Azarenka (4), Belarus, 6-3, 6-3.

PGA Championship

Saturday At Atlanta Athletic Club, Highlands Course Johns Creek, Ga. Purse: $8 million Yardage: 7,467; Par: 70 Third Round Brendan Steele 69-68-66—203 Jason Dufner 70-65-68—203 Keegan Bradley 71-64-69—204 Scott Verplank 67-69-69—205 Steve Stricker 63-74-69—206 Anders Hansen 68-69-70—207 D.A. Points 69-67-71—207 David Toms 72-71-65—208 Charl Schwartzel 71-71-66—208 Robert Karlsson 70-71-67—208 Adam Scott 69-69-70—208 John Senden 68-68-72—208 Ben Crane 71-72-66—209 Nick Watney 70-71-68—209 Luke Donald 70-71-68—209 Spencer Levin 71-70-68—209 Brendon de Jonge 68-72-69—209 Lee Westwood 71-68-70—209 Jim Furyk 71-65-73—209 Hunter Mahan 72-72-66—210 Francesco Molinari 72-71-67—210 Alexander Noren 70-72-68—210 Matt Kuchar 71-71-68—210 Bill Haas 68-73-69—210 Phil Mickelson 71-70-69—210 Ryan Palmer 71-70-69—210 Sergio Garcia 72-69-69—210 Scott Piercy 71-68-71—210 Brandt Jobe 68-69-73—210 Brian Davis 69-73-69—211 Bill Lunde 71-71-69—211 Kevin Na 72-69-70—211 Gary Woodland 70-70-71—211 Trevor Immelman 69-71-71—211 Simon Dyson 68-72-71—211 Mark Wilson 69-71-71—211 K.J. Choi 70-73-69—212 Bubba Watson 74-68-70—212 Ian Poulter 74-68-70—212 Johnson Wagner 71-69-72—212 Jerry Kelly 65-73-74—212 Jhonattan Vegas 70-68-74—212 Chris Kirk 72-72-69—213 Bryce Molder 74-69-70—213 Matteo Manassero 68-74-71—213 Robert Allenby 72-70-71—213 Harrison Frazar 72-69-72—213 Charles Howell III 72-68-73—213 Yuta Ikeda 73-68-72—213 K.T. Kim 73-71-70—214 John Rollins 72-72-70—214 Mike Small 73-71-70—214 Miguel Angel Jimenez 69-73-72—214 Johan Edfors 71-70-73—214 Robert Garrigus 70-70-74—214 Kevin Streelman 73-71-71—215 Ricky Barnes 69-75-71—215 Rory Sabbatini 73-69-73—215 Davis Love III 68-71-76—215 Zach Johnson 71-72-73—216 Andres Romero 72-70-74—216 Seung-yul Noh 71-70-75—216 Ross Fisher 71-69-76—216 Rory McIlroy 70-73-74—217 Padraig Harrington 73-69-75—217 Michael Bradley 70-74-74—218 Y.E. Yang 71-73-74—218 Rickie Fowler 74-69-75—218 Peter Hanson 71-71-76—218 Pablo Larrazabal 70-73-76—219 Edoardo Molinari 75-69-76—220 Ryan Moore 75-69-76—220 Sean O’Hair 71-73-77—221 Shaun Micheel 66-78-77—221 Paul Casey 72-72-78—222

Zippo 200 at The Glen

Saturday At Watkins Glen International Watkins Glen, N.Y. Lap length: 2.45 miles (Start position in parentheses) 1. (1) Kurt Busch, Dodge, 85 laps, 142.9 rating, 0 points, $35,150. 2. (6) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 85, 111.8, 0, $31,475. 3. (8) Joey Logano, Toyota, 85, 109, 0, $21,875. 4. (2) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 85, 134.4, 0, $17,425. 5. (3) Carl Edwards, Ford, 85, 121, 0, $18,000. 6. (7) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 85, 107, 0, $13,350. 7. (5) Ron Fellows, Chevrolet, 85, 111.3, 37, $12,600. 8. (17) Aric Almirola, Chevrolet, 85, 92.9, 36, $18,693. 9. (11) Trevor Bayne, Ford, 85, 99.1, 35, $18,893. 10. (4) Elliott Sadler, Chevrolet, 85, 98.1, 34, $21,543.

WNBA

Saturday’s Games Connecticut 82, Washington 75 Indiana 82, New York 71 Atlanta 92, Seattle 63 Today’s Games Chicago at San Antonio, 2 p.m. Tulsa at Minnesota, 6 p.m.

MLS

EASTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA Columbus 10 7 7 37 27 23 Philadelphia 8 5 10 34 29 22 New York 6 6 13 31 39 35 Sporting Kansas City 7 7 9 30 32 30 D.C. 7 6 9 30 33 33 Houston 6 7 10 28 28 28 Toronto FC 4 11 11 23 25 46 New England 4 11 9 21 23 36 Chicago 2 7 14 20 25 32 WESTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA Los Angeles 13 3 9 48 35 20 FC Dallas 12 6 7 43 33 26 Seattle 11 5 9 42 35 27 Colorado 10 6 10 40 37 32 Real Salt Lake 10 6 6 36 30 17 Chivas USA 7 8 9 30 30 26 Portland 7 10 5 26 28 35 San Jose 5 9 10 25 26 32 Vancouver 3 12 9 18 25 40 NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie. Saturday’s Games Seattle FC 0, Chivas USA 0, tie Toronto FC 1, Real Salt Lake 0 New York 2, Chicago 2, tie D.C. United 4, Vancouver 0 Columbus 3, New England 1 Philadelphia 2, FC Dallas 2, tie Colorado 2, San Jose 1 Today’s Game Portland at Houston, 8 p.m. Wednesday’s Games Houston at New England, 6:30 p.m. Portland at Sporting Kansas City, 7:30 p.m.

NFL Preseason

Saturday’s Games Cleveland 27, Green Bay 17 Chicago 10, Buffalo 3 Tennessee 14, Minnesota 3 St. Louis 33, Indianapolis 10 Carolina 20, N.Y. Giants 10 Monday’s Game N.Y. Jets at Houston, 7 p.m. Thursday’s Games New England at Tampa Bay, 6:30 p.m. Philadelphia at Pittsburgh, 7 p.m.

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Milwaukee ab r h bi C.Hart rf 3 0 1 0 Morgan cf 4 0 1 0 Braun lf 3 0 1 0 Fielder 1b 3 0 1 0 McGeh 3b 4 0 1 0 YBtncr ss 3 1 1 1 HrstnJr 2b 4 0 0 0 Lucroy c 4 0 1 0 Estrad p 1 0 1 0 Greink ph 0 0 0 0 Saito p 0 0 0 0 Hwkns p 0 0 0 0 FLopez ph 1 0 0 0 FrRdrg p 0 0 0 0 Axford p 0 0 0 0 Totals 29 0 3 0 Totals 30 1 8 1 Pittsburgh 000 000 000 — 0 Milwaukee 010 000 00x — 1 DP—Pittsburgh 1. LOB—Pittsburgh 4, Milwaukee 10. 2B—Estrada (1). 3B—Paul (4). HR—Y.Betancourt (9). SB—Braun (22). S— Correia, Greinke. IP H R ER BB SO Pittsburgh Correia L,12-11 6 2-3 7 1 1 3 3 Resop 1-3 1 0 0 1 1 D.McCutchen 1 0 0 0 0 1 Milwaukee Estrada W,3-7 5 1 0 0 0 5 Saito H,7 1 0 0 0 0 1 Hawkins H,18 1 0 0 0 0 1 Fr.Rodriguez H,8 1 1 0 0 0 2 Axford S,34-36 1 1 0 0 1 1 T—2:55. A—43,214 (41,900). AMcCt cf Diaz rf GJones 1b Walker 2b Ludwck lf JHrrsn pr DMcCt p Doumit c PAlvrz 3b Cedeno ss Correia p Resop p Paul lf

ab 4 4 3 4 3 0 0 3 3 3 1 0 1

r 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

h bi 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0

Dodgers 6, Astros 1 LOS ANGELES — Clayton Kershaw earned his career-high 14th victory and drove in a run with a safety squeeze. Houston Los Angeles ab r h bi ab r h bi Bourgs cf 4 1 1 0 JCarrll 2b 4 0 1 0 Altuve 2b 4 0 1 0 Blake 3b 3 1 1 1 JMrtnz lf 4 0 1 1 Ethier rf 4 1 1 0 Bogsvc rf 0 0 0 0 Kemp cf 3 1 1 2 Ca.Lee 1b 3 0 0 0 JRiver 1b 4 0 1 1 WLopez p 0 0 0 0 Loney 1b 0 0 0 0 Pareds 3b 4 0 2 0 Barajs c 3 0 0 0 Michals rf-lf 4 0 0 0 GwynJ lf 4 2 3 0 Barmes ss 4 0 1 0 Sellers ss 3 1 1 0 Corprn c 4 0 0 0 Kershw p 2 0 0 1 WRdrg p 1 0 0 0 Oeltjen ph 1 0 0 0 AngSnc ph 1 0 0 0 Elbert p 0 0 0 0 Fulchin p 0 0 0 0 MDwns 1b 0 0 0 0 Totals 33 1 6 1 Totals 31 6 9 5 Houston 000 000 010 — 1 Los Angeles 200 021 10x — 6 E—Ca.Lee (5), Corporan (5), Paredes (1), Barajas (2). DP—Houston 2. LOB—Houston 7, Los Angeles 7. 2B—Altuve (6), J.Martinez (5). 3B—Gwynn Jr. (5). HR—Kemp (27). SB—Paredes (1), Gwynn Jr. 2 (17). S—W.Rodriguez, J.Carroll, Kershaw. SF—Blake. IP H R ER BB SO Houston W.Rodriguez L,8-9 6 6 5 2 2 3 Fulchino 1 3 1 1 1 2 W.Lopez 1 0 0 0 0 1 Los Angeles Kershaw W,14-5 8 6 1 1 1 9 Elbert 1 0 0 0 0 0 PB—Corporan. T—2:44. A—36,111 (56,000).

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PULSE LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD

5B

Sunday, August 14, 2011 ● Lawrence.com

STYLE SCOUT by Caitlin Donnelly

Tracy Fredley Age: 24

Sign: Cancer

Relationship status: In a relationship Hometown: State College, Pa. Time in Lawrence: One week Occupation: Law student What were you doing when scouted? Getting froyo at Orange Leaf. How would you describe your style? Simple and comfortable. I usually wear earth tones. What are your current favorite fashion trends? Sling bags, long summer dresses and colorful sun- CLOTHING DETAILS: Top: Urban Outfitters, August 2011, $20. glasses.

EMINEM HEADLINED the first day of the Kanrocksas Music Festival at the Kansas Speedway.

Ailecia Ruscin/Journal-World Photos

CLEVELAND NATIVE KID CUDI PERFORMED a late afternoon set that caught the attention of fans and non-fans alike.

Jeans: Charlotte Russe, November 2010,

What are your $40. least favorite Shoes: June 2011, gift. fashion Bracelet: St. Croix, 1996, $50. trends? Purse: Salvation Army, June 2011, $4. Super-tight jeans on guys. What would you like to see more of in Lawrence? Vibrant, colorful dresses. What would you like to see less of in Lawrence? Fedoras. Do you have any piercings or tattoos? Yes, one tattoo. I drew it on lined paper in 11th grade during my U.S. history lecture.

LAWRENCE’S FOURTH OF JULY PLAYED an acoustic set.

Do you have any fashion influences? Not really but I've always paid attention to Jennifer Aniston. I like her laid-back style. She can look sexy in a T-shirt and jeans. People say I look like: Julianne Moore Tell us a secret: An old friend did my tattoo for me when I was 16, and I sat on a wooden chair in his bedroom.

Know someone stylin’? Send us a tip! style@lawrence.com

ALEX TURNER OF THE ARCTIC MONKEYS flew through a blistering set that only got hotter as the day continued.

Jeff Immer Age: 33

Sign: Cancer

Hometown: Eudora Time in Lawrence: Off and on my whole life. Mostly on. Occupation: Designer What were you doing when scouted? Heading to The Bourgeois Pig. How would you describe your style? This insanely hot summer has reduced me to practically no style — but typically I like casual wear in the “Mad Men” sense — a shirt with buttons, sunglasses and a clean pair of shoes. What are your current favorite fashion trends? Well-tailored American sportswear and Ray-Bans. What are your least favorite fashion CLOTHING DETAILS: trends? Jeans: Levi’s, November 2010, $58 Men’s watch- Belt: JCPenneys, June 2011, $2.99 es are getting Shirt: Liberty of London for Target, August a little too creative for 2010, $20 my tastes. I'd Shoes: Nordstrom’s, June 2011, $100. like to find a simple white-face/black band watch that isn't the size of a hubcap. What would you like to see more of in Lawrence? LIDS franchise stores.

THE FLAMING LIPS on the Stageasaurus Rex stage.

MULTI-INSTRUMENTALIST STEVEN DROZD sang background forWayne Coyne during “Do You Realize,” the band’s final song of the night. The Flaming Lips put on an audio/video spectacle complete with giant video screens, confetti and dancers dressed as Dorothy Gale.

KANROCKSAS ROCKS

Festival includes Eminem’s first live show since 2009 August 5 and 6, The Kansas Speedway played host to the first Kanrocksas Music Festival, a two-day music and art festival that showcased local and international musicians. About 35,000 people attended the

first day of the show, many drawn by headliner Eminem, whose appearance at Kanrocksas marked his first live show since 2009. In addition to Eminem, the first day featured performances from The Arctic

By Caitlin Donnelly

Do you have any piercings or tattoos? No. I'm boring like that.

After a couple of months of pool parties, Red Dog Days, vacations and backyard barbecues, the youth of Lawrence is heading back to school. For weeks, grocery stores and shoe outlets have advertised back-to-school specials — spiral notebooks, mechanical pencils and two-forone deals have taken over the seasonal aisles all over town. And back-to-school shopping doesn’t stop at new binders and school supplies. Lawrence retailers notice an increase in business from the young and fashion-forward teens and young adults looking to update their school wardrobes with new clothing and accessories of the latest style. For girls and boys alike, com-

Special to the Journal-World

Do you have any fashion influences? My nose and teeth were highly influenced by Tiny Tim. People say I look like: That guy from the Killers. Tell us a secret: I'm not sure I have any…

CONTACT US

Christy Little, Go! editor 832-7254, clittle@ljworld.com

Circle, The Black Keys and headliner Muse. We’ve got photos of the bands and the fans who braved the heat and made the show possible. For even more photos, visit Lawrence.com.

Back-to-school fashion goes back to basics

What would you like to see less of in Lawrence? Heads without LIDS on them.

Trevan McGee, Lawrence.com editor 832-7178, tmcgee@ljworld.com

Monkeys, The Flaming Lips and Kid Cudi, whose set became one of the more talked-about moments of day one. Day two was marked by performances from Grace Potter and the Nocturnals, A Perfect

Caitlin Donnelly/Journal-World Photo

THE CLOTHING RACKS at Wildman Vintage are packed full of vintage items perfect for back to school. The blue blouse is part of the shop’s recently acquired 1960s and 1970s vintage dead stock, unworn vintage clothing purchased from another store.

When in doubt, know that a dark, slim pair of jeans always looks good.” — Bodie Agada, KU student fortable clothing and classic basics are school wardrobe essentials. Well-made denim with a good fit tops most every school-goer’s list. “This fall denim is clean. Distress just isn’t as important as it once was,” says Shauna Swanson, denim guru and manager at Hobbs Inc. “Skinny jeans are still important, as are straight-leg jeans. But this fall we are excited because flare and boot-cut jeans are showing up in full force. And while denim is a staple — always

will be — khaki is huge for fall 2011.” Khakis have been around a long time, but the rise in popularity may be reflective of the times. “I think that people are ready to mix it up a little,” Swanson says, “and khaki is an easy way to do that.” Indeed, many students in Lawrence are branching out to define their back-to-school look. “Urban Outfitters has outlined major fall trends for their shoppers on their website,” says Garrett McGraw, men’s department manager. “If you’re drawn to a particular style, you can easily create an outfit and know it’s hip.” Presented are three major trends for women and two for men, trendy looks form genres Please see FASHION, page 6B


6B

PULSE

| Sunday, August 14, 2011

L AWRENCE J OURNAL -WORLD

ARTS NOTE KU grad’s work in Charlotte St. exhibit The Charlotte Street Foundation will present “The Fascinators: The Inaugural Charlotte Street Biennial of Regional BA/BFA/MA/MFA Candidates.” This biennial is a new effort designed to showcase the work of outstanding artists emerging from colleges and universities within a 200-mile radius of Kansas City and to connect these up-and-coming artists. Six artists were chosen from a pool of nearly 100 applicants, including Jacob Banholzer, who graduated from Kansas University in May with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in sculpture. His

Caitlin Donnelly/Journal-World Photos

JESSIE PLOTKIN, the manager at Envy, 911 Mass., says that feather earrings are the hottest item in their shop right now. “Each week we sell out of the feather hair extensions, and the earrings are also popular. Many girls wear one long feather earring and one stud earring.”

Fashion CONTINUED FROM PAGE 5B

like “Art Student League,” a preppy/academic womenswear look, and “Marine Nationale,” a classic menswear look with a utilitarian, naval twist. To create a more distinct back-to-school style, vintage shopping is popular among Lawrence’s student population. During the summer, shops utilize their brief reprieve from the larger Kansas University student population. “We stuff the store with merchandise over the summer,” says Holly Charlton, Wildman Vintage employee. “We stock up on western shirts, skirts, accessories … everything that’s awesome.” The shop appeals to the college crowd, and when the students return they can expect a huge array of unique merchandise. “This year we’ve done something a bit different, too,” says Wildman Vintage owner Phil Chiles. “We purchased dead stock inventory from a clothing store. We have tons of unworn pieces from the ’60s and ’70s.” Here especially, Chiles is right on trend, as ’70s silhouettes and wide-leg trousers re-emerge as a popular style for fall 2011. Not unlike Wildman Vintage, other local shops are prepared for student shoppers. “We’ve stocked up on backpacks in a variety of styles and colors from The North Face and Patagonia for the upcoming school year,” says Sunflower Outdoor & Bike Shop manager Jen Beck. “In terms of jackets and fall apparel, we should be expecting great outdoor brands such as The North Face, Patagonia, Columbia and Marmot to start trickling into the store as the weather cools down.” Sunflower caters to high school and college students, selling popular backpack brands and lifestyle apparel. And while fall marks a change in the realm of fashion, it also represents a fresh start, clean books, blank slates. And KU student Bodie Agada is ready to hit the books and sport a fresh, new style. “I’m going to pick up transitional pieces in consideration of our extreme

WHAT’S IN STYLE Here’s a quick list of fashion dos for this fall. Remember, your entire wardrobe doesn’t have to come from a brand new outlet. Secondhand or vintage clothing have a personality all their own and are usually cheaper. Women: Military-inspired outerwear (jackets or vests) Midi skirt Bright jeans Denim or leather backpack Oversized silk blouse Boyfriend plaid shirt Long dress or skirt Floral patterns and tribal motifs Smock dress Oxford shoes Graphic T-shirts Bomber jacket Oversized T-shirt

Clean denim (Boot-cut, flare or cigarette) Chambray button-down Men: Naval-inspired outerwear Chinos or khakis Striped T-shirts Patterned sweatshirt Button-up cardigan Moc-toe boots or bucks Classic striped or plaid scarf Western shirt Tribal patterns Sneakers Classic watch or colorful/tech watch MC jacket Canvas or leather weekender bag Woven belt Sporty jacket Double-breasted blazer

— Caitlin Donnelly

MANY MEN wear these Wolverine moc-toe boots with cuffed denim and only tie them halfway up, folding over the tongue and back heel for a worn-in look that’s easy to slip on. weather,” Agada says. “Lightweight sweatshirts, jackets and basic button downs will be key.” He jokingly describes his stepped-up, back-to-

school style as “Ivy League swag.” “When in doubt,” Agada adds, chuckling, “know that a dark, slim pair of jeans always looks good.”

work, which produces fanciful relationships between the ornamental and mundane, is part of the permanent collection at Johnson County Community College and KU’s Murphy Art & Architecture Library. The exhibition opens with a free public reception from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. Sept. 2 at Charlotte Street Foundation’s la Esquina gallery, 1000 W. 25th St., Kansas City, Mo. The exhibit runs through Oct. 15.

Answer : INFUSE URCHIN AMBUSH OUTLET YONDER EASILY The cat blamed his inability to quit smoking on the fact that he was a —

CREATURE OF HABIT


BOOKS A new American heroine LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD

Sunday, August 14, 2011

?

WHAT ARE YOU

READING By Joe Preiner Read more responses and add your thoughts at www.ljworld.com

Teenage girl claims place in American lit once owned by men

Cristi Hansen, hydrologist, Lawrence “’Disgrace’ by J.M. Coetzee. It’s about a professor who gets accused of having an improper relationship with his student and he chooses not to fight it and goes off to live with his daughter.“

By Jim Higgins

Kylie Jackson, Medicare researcher, Lawrence “’Hounded’ by Kevin Hearne. It’s modern fantasy. It’s about the last druid on Earth who’s over 2,000 years old and still protecting Earth. It’s a riproaring adventure.”

Jacqueline Soto, customer service representative, Lawrence “’The Fountainhead’ by Ayn Rand. It’s about architecture and how a man gets rejected by society because he stands by himself; he’s an individual.”

Jacob Conrad, administrative assistant, Lawrence “’The Art of War’ by Sun Tzu. Basically it’s about strategies for businesses, but it was based on Chinese mythology, strategy and tactics.”

as “I imagined it might be.” Then she shared it with her friend Gary Peake, a master shooter. “No way,” he told her, after reading the manuscript. “Some of the shots I had her doing were a bit much,” Campbell said. “I had certain ones in the woods and he pointed out in the woods you get the dappled light and it’s very hard to focus.” Peake “tried all the shots in the book, showed me his targets when he tried to do what Margo did,” she said. Campbell already had a Marlin bolt-action rifle, but after she finished her novel, her husband, Christopher, bought her Margo’s gun from the book: a Marlin Model Golden 39A lever-action rifle. “The lever-action is really the cowboy gun,” she said.

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

MEQUON , W IS . — In a fractured, polarized America, the woman who could bring us together picks black raspberries and tends donkeys in western Michigan. This summer, Bonnie Jo Campbell published her novel “Once Upon a River” (W.W. Norton, $25.95) to wide acclaim and many comparisons to one of the American greats, Mark Twain. With its teenage heroine making her way along a Michigan river with a Marlin lever-action rifle, “Once Upon a River’ could be read enthusiastically by both National Rifle Association and National Organization for Women book clubs. Both groups would find much to like and provocative questions to discuss in her novel. “Without sacrificing any of its originality,” Washington Post book critic Ron Charles wrote, “this story comes bearing the saw marks of classic American literature, the rough-hewn sister of ‘The Leatherstocking Tales,’ ‘The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn’ and ‘Walden.”’ “It’s a little overwhelming when people make big comparisons,” Campbell said during a recent interview, conducted on the day she visited Mequon’s Next Chapter Bookshop for a reading. “There’s no room in this writing life for anything but humility. “We don’t know what the good books are for years and years and years.” But we do know that Campbell is about as distinctive as her crack-shot heroine. Bright enough to attend the University of Chicago, and just a cosine short of her Ph.D. in mathematics, she likes to forage the Kalamazoo countryside for wild food and practices kobudo weapons training. While she had published earlier fiction, Campbell’s literary star rose when “American Salvage,” her collection of stories about rural life from the small Wayne State University Press, was named a surprise National Book Award finalist in 2009. Campbell had parted from her agent before that collection came out, and she had wondered more than once if anyone was ever going to read what she wrote. “Within three days” after the nomination, “I’d gotten emails from 50 agents.” She’d already finished a

draft of “Once Upon a River,” and her new agent moved quickly to get it on a publishing calendar.

Mythologizing a teen girl In “Once Upon a River,” Campbell said she was “trying to mythologize a teenage girl. All that (literary) territory is owned by men, so I thought let’s see what my girl can do.” The two books that served as her whetstones were Twain’s “Adventures of Huckleberry Finn” and Homer’s “Odyssey.” To Campbell, Margo and Odysseus are both trying to get home — Margo in the sense of trying to get to her mother, who left her earlier. As a young girl, Margo’s equivalents of the battles Odysseus fought are the relationships she has along the river, Campbell said. In rereading “Huck Finn,” Campbell said, she was surprised to see how little of the river is in it. “I wanted to write as much of the river into it as I could,” she said. Margo’s, and Campbell’s, river is the real Kalamazoo and a suitably named imaginary tributary, the Stark River. In her New York Times review, novelist Jane Smiley praised Campbell’s “ruthless and precise eye for the details of the physical world.” “The damaged world she lives in remains an ecosystem in which animals and humans, field and stream, purity and pollution, love and hate are tightly interconnected.” Her book is set in the years between 1978 and 1982, when GM plant closings hurt the Michigan economy and had a

ripple effect on small factories and parts makers, like the one in “Once Upon a River.” Margo, 14 when the story begins, lives with her father after her mother has walked out. She is molested by her uncle. When his actions are discovered, he tries to throw the blame on her. “His molesting was not as horrible a crime as the result of what he did. He made her an outcast,” said Campbell, choosing her words carefully. “I think that’s something that often happens to girls in that situation.” The quiet, self-contained Margo has her revenge later, but its consequences include the loss of her father, and rather than go into state custody, she sets out on the river in a rowboat with her rifle and a copy of Annie Oakley’s biography. Through almost compulsive practice, Margo has virtually become one with her rifle: “She reloaded the Marlin with fifteen of the long-rifle cartridges she’d carried from Cal’s gun cupboard and listened for a moment to the river. Holding the rifle steady would have been easier with a sling, but she held her arm up until her body remembered it as a natural position. She hit the next can and each can after that, and she reloaded and knocked all the bottles from their perches. And in that several minutes of intense focusing, she felt peaceful. Margo lowered the gun, pressed the barrel against her face to its heat. “‘Holy (expletive deleted),’ Brian said. ‘A guy has got to respect that.”’ In writing the novel, Campbell put the shooting in

Finding her calling Campbell has been writing since she was 14, but if not for the right teacher, she might never have composed this book. She planned earlier in life to become a middle-school teacher, then a math teacher. She and her husband even spent a year living in Milwaukee’s Riverwest neighborhood, while she took some classes at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. Later, Campbell had already taken half of her preliminary Ph.D. exams in mathematics at Western Michigan University, but “found myself pretty much crying every night,” she said. Her math adviser, Art White, knowing Campbell’s interests, suggested she take a writing class. That class, with novelist Jaimy Gordon, opened Campbell’s eyes and set her on her literary path. “I thought you wrote to tell stories and you just told them how you could tell them most efficiently. I really was a rube,” Campbell said. Gordon taught her to care about every word and to choose the right one, she said. In a delightful coincidence, Gordon won the National Book Award for her novel “Lord of Misrule” in 2010, the year after Campbell was nominated. WMU should sell bottles of the local water to creative writing departments around the country. With her tough rural tales, her country lifestyle, vigorous hobbies and muscular appearance, Campbell is already a distinctive character in her field. She may be well on her way to becoming the Chuck Norris of literary fiction. Campbell laughed at that thought, then acknowledged that she has been known in boisterous moments to “wrestle guys to the ground for the fun of it. “I’m going to become a parody of myself if I’m not careful.” Kidding aside, readers can be grateful that Campbell turned away from math to wrestle with the American literary tradition.

‘Humiliation’ explores appetite for embarrassment By Kelly McMasters Newsday

Julie Holmberg, violin teacher, Lawrence “’Life Together’ by Dietrich Bonhoeffer. It’s about the life of a Christian community and has to do with the Christian life together.”

N E W Y O R K — It’s nearly impossible to avoid humiliation — everyone has felt the sting of shame at some point in their lives, and we bear witness to mortification daily in the press (think Anthony Weiner, Eliot Spitzer, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Lindsay Lohan and “Bachelorette” Ashley Hebert, to name a few). In “Humiliation” (Picador, $14 paper), Wayne Koestenbaum — poet, critic and professor of English at City University of New York — mixes history, philosophy, memoir and wit for a timely and withering assessment of America’s appetite for embarrassment. In a recent telephone call, Koestenbaum discussed the link between torture, two-timing and yoga.

Q. The book tracks everything from quotidian indignities to celebrity sex scandals to major human rights violations. Why does this mix all read as humiliation to you? A. To be humiliated is to be debased. I was really struck by the fact that one nation could get so much pleasure or sanctimonious satisfaction out of covering sexual scandals on one hand, and then on the other hand be caught using sexual torture with Abu Ghraib. I noticed every time I looked at the paper, there was something about sexual humiliation and it seemed to be very much a part of our national identity. These were the big American stories.

Q. Your book is as much about those who have been humiliated as about those watching the act of humiliation. A. There are various spectatorial decisions around the humiliated one. I wanted to talk about the weird sense of complicity, identification, joy and shameful viewing that come with watching someone else’s humiliation. Q. What is the most common type of humiliation? A. When the stink of the liverwurst emerges! We all have a built-in disgust toward the human body. There is not a human being alive who has not felt the stink of their being revealed

at some point of their life. Q. How has the Internet changed humiliation in our society? A. The Internet is the highway of humiliation. The worst kind of humiliation is when an entire community knows about the shame and has marked or expelled you, and that happens instantly on the Internet. The small town now includes millions of people. There is no hiding. Q. You’ve melded cultural critique and lyrical, personal writing here. Why this staccato, confessional style? A.As a poet, this form comes naturally to me. Sometimes, I wish I were a writer who had secrets and who could maintain a certain level of decorum, but I feel I don’t have a choice; if I am going to write the best book I can write, it has to be disclosing.

7B

Poet’s Showcase ‘The Uncivil War’ The iron of my musket is cold and cruel and eager as I take aim at a gray uniform. Was it just yesterday I fired a cannon across that there creek, sending a ball sailing through an officer’s tent? The explosion was a lightning crack reeling me backwards but I pushed up and cheered when I heard the death screams. Eighth Kansas reporting for duty, sir. Well done, lieutenant, carry on. Cottonwoods, battered by artillery, weep for men strewn like straw on a field. I thought by now the horror had numbed me. I don’t want to cry, so I take a swig from my canteen and wonder how momma is doing with the farm. Said she’d have to sell it; can’t do the crops alone. I feel bad about momma, But then I think about them other mommas, the ones whose sons got killed, and for a moment, an eternal moment, I’m there shielding a flickering candle as their sobs cascade over stone monuments. — Tom Mach, Lawrence

Write poetry? Our Poet’s Showcase features work by area poets. Submit your poetry via email with a subject line of Poet’s Showcase to danderson@ljworld.com. Include your hometown and contact information.

BEST-SELLERS Here are the best-sellers for the week ending Aug. 6, compiled from data from independent and chain bookstores, book wholesalers and independent distributors nationwide.

Fiction 1. “Cold Vengeance.” Douglas Preston & Lincoln Child. Grand Central, $26.99. 2. “A Dance with Dragons.” George R.R. Martin. Bantam, $35. 3. “Full Black.” Brad Thor. Atria, $26.99. 4. “Retribution.” Sherrilyn Kenyon. St. Martin’s, $25.99. 5. “Ghost Story.” Jim Butcher. Roc, $27.95. 6. “Portrait of a Spy.” Daniel Silva. Harper, $26.99. 7. “Now You See Her.” James Patterson & Michael Ledwidge. Little, Brown, $27.99. 8. “Happy Birthday.” Danielle Steel. Delacorte, $20. 9. “State of Wonder.” Ann Patchett. Harper, $26.99. 10. “Then Came You.” Jennifer Weiner. Atria, $26.99.

Nonfiction 1. “A Stolen Life.” Jaycee Dugard. Simon & Schuster, $24.99. 2. “The 17 Day Diet.” Dr. Mike Moreno. Free Press, $25. 3. “Unbroken.” Laura Hillenbrand. Random House, $27. 4. “Go the **** to Sleep.” Adam Mansbach, illus. by Ricardo Cortes. Akashic, $14.95. 5. “In the Garden of Beasts.” Erik Larson. Crown, $26. 6. “Nothing to Lose, Every thing to Gain.” Ryan Blair with Don Yaeger. Portfolio, $25.95. 7. “Bossypants.” Tina Fey. LB/Reagan Arthur, $26.99. 8. “The Greater Journey.” David McCullough. Simon & Schuster, $37.50. 9. “Through My Eyes.” Tim Tebow with Nathan Whitaker. Harper, $26.99. 10. “The Dukan Diet.” Dr. Pierre Dukan. Crown, $26.


8B

PULSE

| Sunday, August 14, 2011

L AWRENCE J OURNAL -WORLD

THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD Good to Go By Tony Orbach and Janie Smulyan Edited by Will Shortz Across 1 Airplane amenities 9 “The Dublin Trilogy” dramatist 15 Kind of attraction 20 Windward 21 Fashion frill 22 Add-on meaning “galore” 23 Start-press order for a New York daily? 25 Shaded shelter 26 Sleuth Lupin 27 Suffix with form 28 Dresden’s river 30 St. Pete-to-Savannah dir. 31 Flaps 32 Make out 35 Big name in potatoes 37 Explorer’s writing 39 Flippered animal that runs a maid service? 43 Legal assistants 46 Mart start 47 Sparks 48 Request for candy from a kid at camp? 52 Nutritional abbr. 53 Like the yin side: Abbr. 56 Author Sinclair 57 Start 59 Dewlapped creature 62 When to call, in some ads 64 “Rocky III” co-star 65 Gnarly 67 Ohio university 68 Congratulatory phrase at a “Peanuts” bar mitzvah? 74 “Sounds like ___!” 75 Western Indian 76 High lines 77 Romeo’s predecessor? 78 Keir of “2001: A Space Odyssey” 80 End of a Greek run

82 Ones gathered for a reading, maybe 85 ___ result 86 One of the Bobbsey twins 88 Jaded comment from a constantly updated person? 93 1981 German-language hit film 96 Part of some itineraries? 97 Leisurely time to arrive at the office 98 1970s, to a schmaltzy wedding band? 104 See 106-Across 105 Musée d’Orsay artist 106 Things determined by 104-Across 107 Everybody, to Erich 110 “___ me” (phone comment) 111 Match part 114 Geneviève, for one: Abbr. 115 Denmark’s ___ Islands 118 “Scooby-Doo” girl 120 Amnesiac’s vague recollection of having a hobby? 125 Construct 126 Environment 127 TV character who worked for Steinbrenner 128 Six-pack holder? 129 Certain newspaper advertisement 130 Washed Down 1 Substitute for forgotten words in a song 2 Pour thing? 3 Stops panicking 4 Valued 5 Prefix with -centric 6 “I can’t believe it!” 7 Holiday celebrated with bánh chung cakes 8 Asian title that’s an anagram of an English one 9 Unsettling last words

10 Two-time Oscar nominee Joan 11 Home to about 15% of the world’s population: Abbr. 12 W. Coast air hub 13 Fashion magazine 14 “2, 4, 6, 8 — Who do we appreciate?,” e.g. 15 ___ egg 16 Back 17 College-area local 18 What a chair should cover? 19 Cosmetics brand with the classic slogan “Because I’m worth it” 24 Swiss mix 29 Often-trimmed tree 32 Designed for two 33 Takes in 34 “___ out!” 36 Serpentine shape 37 “Beatles ’65” and others 38 Hanauma Bay locale 40 Antipollution mascot Woodsy ___ 41 AOL’s Web site, e.g. 42 Birth control option, briefly 44 Lacking a surrounding colonnade, as a temple 45 Ljubljana resident 49 Ready to be called 50 French meat 51 Active 53 Casino offering 54 Poetic “plenty” 55 Singer Aimee 58 Muffs 60 What a pajama party often is 61 It’s NW of Georgia 63 Sch. that plays Texas A&M 64 Memory: Prefix 66 Calendario unit 68 When tripled, et cetera 69 Musical number

70 “The Producers” character who sings “When You Got It, Flaunt It” 71 Mucho 72 Actor Rickman 73 K-12 79 “Broken Arrow” co-star Michael 81 Type in 83 Portrayal 84 Zeus’ disguise when fathering Helen of Troy 87 Blood-typing system 89 Modern party planning aids 90 Sports column 91 Go south, as sales 92 Scot’s “wee” 93 In excelsis ___ 94 Japanese “thanks” 95 Frequent, in verse 98 Stand on short feet 99 Straight 100 Eve who wrote “The Vagina Monologues” 101 ___ egg 102 Beat it 103 Best in crash-test ratings 108 Order to a barista 109 “Zigeunerliebe” composer 112 “La Bohème” soprano 113 Key of Brahms’s Symphony No. 4: Abbr. 116 Eleven, to Héloïse 117 Edwardian expletive 119 Ones putting on a show, for short 121 They: Fr. 122 German rejection 123 Cause of some repetitive behavior, in brief 124 A Stooge

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UNITED FEATURE SUNDAY CROSSWORD Across 1 Entertainer Abdul 6 - Khan 11 Ancient calculators 16 “Grand Canyon Suite” composer 21 Strong-arm 22 Whales like Shamu 23 Ponytail sites 24 Make void 25 Prickly pear 26 Go-between 27 Broadside (hyph.) 28 Has status 29 Plausible 31 Just fine (hyph.) 33 Math course 35 “The Greatest” 36 Adventurer, often 37 McNally’s partner 39 Entertainer Della 41 Oval 43 Wall paintings 46 Travel book 48 Actor Howard 49 Time to be in 52 Ugh! 54 Fence crossover 56 Advise against 60 Stockpiled 62 Interstate 64 Elegant wrap 66 Worst possible score 67 Checkbook amt. 68 Ash or maple 70 Huh? 72 Quick drives 74 A real swine 75 Cuba, to Castro 77 Safecracker 79 Piggy-bank feature 81 Spectacles part 83 “Bye Bye Bye” band 85 Massage deeply 87 Uh-huh 89 Earliest 90 Pronounce 92 Vaccines

UNIVERSAL SUDOKU

94 Mumble 96 Costello or Gehrig 97 Gridiron pass 101 Today’s paper 103 Musical symbol 105 Snitch 109 Intimidated 111 Frat letters 113 Bagpiper’s wear 115 Prefix for “trillion” 116 Fictional collie 117 Michener bestseller 119 Bellow 121 Informal refusals 123 Encyclopedia bk. 124 Resort near Venice 126 Sand formations 128 Where Anna taught 130 Tell in advance 132 Twice as tricky 134 Hot coffee hazard 136 Short slant 138 Purple flowers 139 Labor org. 141 Grinding material 143 Import taxes 145 Teased 149 Garden starters 151 Crow’s-nest locale 152 Dwarf buffalo 156 - Palmas 157 Tie-dyed garments 159 Harem head 161 Boat passengers 163 Muscat citizen 165 Pang 167 Inbox filler (hyph.) 169 Storage bins 170 Old Portuguese colony in India 171 “The Sons of - Elder” (Wayne film) 172 Waned 173 Salsa singer Cruz 174 Teen lingo 175 Political position 176 Outlaw pursuers 177 Peevish

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

BSUHMA

©2011 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

SLIYAE SNUEFI LTEUTO CRINHU REONDY

Sign Up for the IAFLOFCI (OFFICIAL) Jumble Facebook fan club

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

Solution, tips and computer program at: http://www.sudoku.com.

82 Mukluk wearer 84 Gem measure 86 Worry 88 Green superhero 91 Wobbled, as a rocket 93 Out of town 95 Bronco “brake” 97 Sprawls out 98 Be of benefit 99 Lingerie buy 100 Luxury car 102 Drags into court 104 Move up and down 106 Denims 107 “Bad, Bad Leroy Brown” singer 108 Quits marching 110 Waltz or polka 112 Lost traction 114 Frugal 118 Stitched edges 120 Cafe au 122 Bond servant 125 Monsieur’s egg 127 Stays abed (2 wds.) 129 Polite address 131 Argue 133 White-water sport 135 Had a nightmare 137 Meat juices 140 Barely visible 142 Fabric meas. 144 Tristan’s love 145 Clumps of dirt 146 Patna porter 147 Honshu volcano 148 Office furniture 150 Wool givers 153 Simon and Young 154 Planet’s course 155 Ore analysis 158 Petty quarrel 160 Lectern 162 Checkbook no. 164 A Bobbsey twin 166 - - premium 168 Exercise targets

See both puzzle SOLUTIONS in Monday’s paper. See JUMBLE answers on page 6B.

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

PRINT YOUR ANSWER IN THE CIRCLES BELOW

Last week’s solution

Down 1 Bit of salt 2 Love in a gondola 3 Kind of berth 4 Starts 5 That’s - - know! 6 Eucalyptus diners 7 Imperativeness 8 Before yr. 1 9 Actress Turner 10 Fur-trading name 11 Hercules out-wrestled him 12 Minds a kid (hyph.) 13 GI address 14 Bronze coin 15 Grenoble’s river 16 Used mouthwash 17 Single-strand molecule 18 Pub sign (2 wds.) 19 Coal and gas 20 Borden cow 30 Suds source 32 Barbecue extra 34 Genre 38 Active sort 40 Touches up 42 Don Juan’s mother 44 Take a break 45 Flat-bottomed boat 47 Marry in haste 49 Log home 50 Amherst sch. 51 Come back to win 53 Derisive snorts 55 Inventor Howe 57 Cheyenne abode 58 Ambler and Sevareid 59 Thesaurus name 61 Forest browser 63 Actress Tyne 65 Register 69 They’re often inflated 71 Be on your -! 73 Lampoon 76 Goose genus 78 Singer Campbell 80 Bath powder


PULSE

L AWRENCE J OURNAL -WORLD

X Sunday, August 14, 2011

Richard Gwin/ Journal-World Photo

RICHARD RENNER is the organizer of the fourth annual Lawrence Busker Fest. A performer in his own right, Renner hopes this year’s festival will be the biggest and most varied yet.

Promoters ready for 4th annual Busker Fest By Michael Auchard Special to the Journal-World

To listen to Linsey Lindberg speak, the most honest entertainment in the world is coming soon to Lawrence in droves. “A lot of times, if you buy a ticket to a movie, you pay for the performance in advance. If you don’t like it, you’ve already spent your money. At a busking show, only afterward do they decide what it was worth,” says performer Lindberg, a Kansas City native. The fourth annual Lawrence Busker Festival returns to downtown Lawrence from Aug. 19 to Aug. 21 with a multitude of street performers, musicians and other surprising entertainers. Lindberg, who performs as strongwoman Mama Lou, a character who “rolls frying pans up like burritos,” says she has always had a penchant for the circus style of entertainment. “I didn’t want to be an obnoxious clown on the street, and being an aerialist didn’t seem like it would work well. I needed to collect tips, and I decided to be scary so no one would steal from me. I’m actually really strong, so I decided to be a strongwoman and thought, ‘Now, nobody will be able to steal my money.” Promoter Richard Renner says the idea for the Lawrence Busker Festival is completely home-grown. To the uninitiated, he describes busking as an eclectic mix of street performances, a wide range of “unique, unusual and useless skills.” “It started with me walking around downtown, taking a look at the street performers we had, and thinking — ‘God, we can do better than this,’” Renner says. “Knowing that downtown is a good venue for street performing, as street performer myself, I could see the potential there, but there weren’t the performers. I thought: ‘Let’s make other performers aware of this.’” Renner hopes this year’s incarnation of the Busker Festival will be the largest yet, and the most varied. “What we’re doing is that we’re actually making the stages bigger,” he says. “Before, we’ve had two big stages and

Special to the Journal-World

VOLER: THIEVES OF FLIGHT, an aerial performance arts group from Kansas City, Mo., will perform its unique aerial ballet during the Lawrence Busker Fest, which is Aug. 19-21. The performance ensemble has performed previously in Lawrence during a Final Friday at the Lawrence Arts Center, 940 N.H. several little ones. We’ve eliminated a lot of the little ones now, and we’ve got three big stages at Eighth, Ninth and Tenth streets. “Over on Tenth Street are the aerial artists that have been in front of the (Lawrence) Arts Center. They have their own rigging, and they’ll do aerial acts from the rigging. That’s kind of a big deal. We’ve got more artists coming from out of town than ever.” Renner says besides the multitude of both scheduled and unscheduled street performances, the highlight of the festi-

val will be a fundraising event at 7 p.m. Thursday at Abe & Jake’s Landing, 8 E. Sixth St., benefiting Big Brothers and Big Sisters of Douglas County. This preview event of the “best buskers we have to offer” will showcase a wide array of talent such as acrobatic juggling, sword swallowing, fire dancing and much more. There will also be showings of the film “Busking the System,” a documentary about street performances in New York City that will be screened Friday at the Lawrence Arts Center, 940 N.H., and Saturday

and Aug. 21 at the Granada 1020 Mass. Renner hopes the festival will appeal to the entire Lawrence community. He says the wealth of entertainment possibilities should draw in a diverse crowd. “It’s a good demographic for kids and moms and dads,” he says. “ But, I will say this: as the night gets going, yeah, then it changes over, a bit, more to the younger crowd. But, we have workshops for kids at the Lawrence Arts Center on Saturday morning to help teach them juggling and miming and hula hooping. Then as things are going later in the night, the fire acts start showing up. You don’t really want the kids doing that.” Among the numerous local and national acts performing at the festival will be Overbrook resident Tommee Sherwood’s band Zydeco Tougeau. Sherwood describes the three-piece band’s sound as “high-energy, accordion-driven dance music.” He says the Lawrence Busker Festival offers a unique opportunity to a street band like his. “We’re looking forward to the enthusiasm of the crowd. It’s the one time of the year when people are coming to listen to us. Usually, we play to people who are on their way somewhere else. We do this quite a bit and we get good crowds, but it’s just different.” Sherwood says the festival is a good showcase for a plethora of art forms that many Lawrence residents don’t see on a regular basis. His band has performed at all four years of the Lawrence Busker Festival. “I think it’s a different

LAWRENCE BUSKER FEST What: A festival of street performers, musicians, strongwomen and fire-breathers all in downtown Lawrence. When: Aug. 19-21 Price: Free, but bring loose cash and change for tips. For a full schedule: Visit www.lawrencebuskerfest.com Preview benefit show: 7 p.m. Thursday at Abe and Jake’s Landing, 8 E Sixth St. Price for the benefit show: $20 for adults, $10 for children 12 and younger. way of presenting the arts,” he says. “There’s a lot of things I see at the festival — some of them are just purely kinda circus acts, but a lot of them are just bringing the arts out into the public. I’m looking forward to that. Just being out there and having a good time.”

THOM SELLECTOMY is a comedian and sword-swallower. He will appear at the fourth annual Lawrence Busker Fest, which takes place Aug. 19-21. Special to the Journal-World

1339 39 Massachusetts

Sale

| 9B.


LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD

HOME&GARDEN

10B

Sunday, August 14, 2011 ● Lawrence.com

Jennifer Smith/Special to the Journal-World

IT'S NEVER too early to start preparing your garden for fall. Plant frost-resistant vegetables such as kale, spinach and radishes. Lay off fertilizer, as many of these plants have low nutrient requirements.

Fall offers second chance for cool-season crops M

id-August is the time in my vegetable garden when both my plants and I are feeling a little tired. The tomatoes, although still producing, have lost some of their vigor to heat and fungal disease. The sweet corn and cucumbers have produced all they are going to produce. The squash was sacrificed long ago to squash bugs and squash vine borers. There is still plenty of time to garden this year, though, and a few days of lower temperatures remind me that fall is on the way. I already have a space set aside for radishes, lettuce and spinach. I also hope to plant kale and carrots to last into the winter months. To prepare for planting, I plan to work the soil only lightly. Tilling at this time of year will only cause more moisture loss from already dry soils. I

Garden Calendar

Jennifer Smith smithjen@ksu.edu

am also holding off on fertilizer since many fall crops have low nutrient requirements. Fertilizer can be applied later if plants need it. I just want to get rid of what remains of the weeds and loosen the soil surface enough to plant easily. Starting seeds in August is sometimes difficult, so I also plan to plant the seeds just a tiny bit deeper than I would in the spring. I will water heavily

before and after planting. Soaker hoses work best to allow water to soak deeply into the soil. Seedlings should also be watered until their root systems develop. Once plants reach a few inches tall, wait until they wilt before applying water again. Deep and infrequent watering builds drought tolerance and encourages deeper root growth. Leafy greens can be harvested as soon as they are large enough to eat. Although some people prefer to pull the plants and trim the roots, I simply cut the leaves and leave the roots in the ground. This method allows for several cuttings of leaf lettuce and spinach in a season. Some gardeners report a different flavor on later cuttings than on the first, but it is a matter of personal preference. Spinach, like kale and car-

rots, can withstand some frosts. All of these vegetables will last longer if mulch is placed around the plants. Carrots can be left in the ground until the soil starts to freeze. What else can be grown in fall? Most of the cool season crops that are grown in the spring will also grow in the fall. Two exceptions are peas and potatoes. Peas prefer cooler soils for germination. Snow peas grow better in the fall than other varieties but still generally with limited success. Potatoes grow well in the fall, but seed sources are a challenge. Few garden centers or supply dealers carry seed potatoes in mid-summer. If you have sprouted potatoes in the pantry, they are probably your best bet for a fall crop. Turnips often grow better in the fall than in the spring and can be left in the ground like carrots. Beets will also with-

stand light frost. First frost usually occurs in mid- to late-October. Tender (warm-season) plants can be covered with baskets, blankets, or buckets for the first frost or two to extend their season. Row covers may be used with hoops (to keep the cover from contacting the plants) to extend the growing season even longer. Just the thought of a fall garden is making me hungry for salad. Side note: There are still spaces available in the Fall 2011 Extension Master Gardener Training class. Contact us for more information! Classes start Aug. 23. —Jennifer Smith is the Horticulture Extension Agent for K-State Research and Extension in Douglas County. Contact her or an Extension Master Gardener with your gardening questions at 843-7058.

KOVEL’S ANTIQUES

Wedding cups in 15th century style making comeback By Terry Kovel

The wedding cup that looks like a woman holding a swiveling cup above her head is showing up at modern wedding celebrations. The cup is used for a toast and as a trial for the bride and groom. According to tradition, the earliest swivel cups were made in about 1450 in Nuremberg, Germany. A wealthy nobleman disapproved of his daughter’s choice of a husband, a goldsmith. The father had the goldsmith sent to a dungeon, but the girl became ill and her father finally agreed to a test for her beloved. If the goldsmith could make a chalice that two people could drink from at the same time without spilling a drop, the pair could wed.

The goldsmith made the the swiveling cup and they were permitted to marry. Today the cups are being made again and a newly married couple must drink from the cup at the same time to assure a happy marriage. The lady-shaped cup is turned upside-down and the husband drinks from the skirt, the wife from the small cup that has now swiveled to be right side up. It is a difficult but possible task, and happiness is, of course, assured. Look for old cups made of silver or glass. Several were offered this year at the Stein Auction Co. for $700 to $2,400. Reproductions can be found online.

Q:

I own a beautiful Kroehler buffet that belonged to my

grandmother. She and my grandfather bought it when they were first married, decades ago. I have never used it, and it’s in great shape. Now I would like to sell it. What should I ask for it?

your own city. What you can get for it depends on its style, age and condition. Assuming your buffet dates from the 1930s or ‘40s, you could try asking $500, but you probably will have to settle for less.

A:

Q: We own an old Hires Root Beer countertop barrel dispenser. It’s wooden and encircled with six metal hoops. It has one large spigot on the side and two metal signs. The large red sign on the front says, “Drink Hires, It Is Pure.” The plain small sign on the back says, “Loaned by The Charles E. Hires Co., Philadelphia, U.S.A., No. 15294.” What can you tell me about it? A: Charles E. Hires (18511937) was a Philadelphia

Peter E. Kroehler bought the Naperville (Ill.) Lounge Co. in 1902 but didn’t name it Kroehler Manufacturing Co. until the early 1910s. By the 1940s, Kroehler was one of the largest furniture manufacturers in the United States. It struggled through the 1970s and closed its Naperville factory in 1978. The brand still exists, but the original company closed. Generally, it’s a good idea to sell a large piece of furniture locally. So advertise it in

pharmacist when he developed his own root beer concoction in the 1870s. Dispensers like yours (with either a copper or ceramic lining), as well as ceramic dispensers with pump tops, were used at soda fountains to pour syrup into a glass or mug. Your dispenser probably dates from the first few decades of the 20th century. We have seen similar dispensers for various brands sell for $400-$500. But the value also depends on the condition of your barrel. Tip: Tufted Victorian pieces covered in dark velvet need to be dusted in each tuft, a time-consuming process. Consider reupholstering without tufts, a style also done in Victorian times.

THIS GLASS TOASTING CUP decorated with colored enamel and gilding is 11 inches high. It sold for $2,300 at a 2011 Stein Auction Co. sale in Schaumburg, Ill. Cowles Syndicate Inc. Photo


Sunday, August 14, 2011

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The KU Transportation Research Institute has an immediate opening for a Post Doctoral Researcher. This position will provide Family Learning assistance to transporta- Trinity tion engineering faculty. Center, Basehor, seeks a part time bus driver. Required qualifications Inquires to: include: a doctorate detflcdirector@gatheringinchrist.org gree in Civil Engineering with an emphasis in Transportation Engineer- Van Go, Inc. seeks 18-21 ing; and a minimum of 2 yr. olds for part time posiyrs experience in the tions in The Arts Train employment areas of traffic safety, transitional multi-modal freight program. Van Go, Inc., an movement and traffic arts based social service control devices. Salary is agency, provides job trainnegotiable and commen- ing programs to high-needs surate with qualifications and under-served youth. Must be 18-21 yrs. old and and experience. not enrolled in school at Application deadline is the time of application. August 23, 2011. For a Call (785) 842-3797 for complete description and qualifications/application. to apply go to Review of applications https://jobs.ku.edu and begins August 12th, 2011 search for position #00207341. EO/AA

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Or Call 785-843-7700 to set-up an interview. Drug-Free Workplace Equal Opportunity Employer

KANSAS BOARD OF REGENTS PROJECT SPECIALIST SYSTEMS ANALYST/PROGRAMMER REPORTING AND RESEARCH SPECIALIST The Board of Regents invites nominations and applications for three positions in the Data, Research and Planning unit: Project Specialist, Systems Analyst/Programmer, and Reporting and Research Specialist. Candidates must have a Bachelor’s degree from an accredited college or university with specialization in information systems technology, mathematics, statistics or related analytical field. Candidates should possess strong data modeling and reporting skills or experience. Salary $40,000 - $55,000. A complete position description and instructions on how to apply for these positions are available on www.kansasregents.org EOE

Required Qualifications: 1. 1. Master’s degree in Computer Science or Electrical Engineering or related field. 2. 2. 1+ years of work experience with Java Programming Language and SQL. 3. 3. 1+ years of work experience with J2EE technologies like JSP and Servlets. 4. 4. At least 1+ years of experience with Java based web or application servers like Tomcat or JBoss or Glassfish or IBM WebSpehere or BEA WebLogic or others. 5. 5. 1+ years of experience in web development/ application development APPLICATION PROCEDURES: Review of applications begins on August 30, 2011. Applications will be accepted on-line only. A complete application will consist of a cover letter, resume or vita and three professional references. Contents of the cover letter should address how the candidate meets the position requirements.

For more information and to apply online go to https://jobs.ku.edu. Position number: 00208188 Contact Ms. Nora McAfee at (785) 864-3537 for questions about application process. EO/AA Employers

Submit Application to: 1216 Biltmore Drive Lawrence, KS 66049 jobs@neuvanthouse.com Fax:785-856-7901 For more information see our website www.neuvanthouse.com Neuvant House of Lawrence is a Tobacco Free Campus. EEO/ADA Compliant

Position available for mechanical assembly, thorough, punctual, computer skills a plus, hr@microtechcomp.com

Tonganoxie Nursing Center currently has positions for RNs, LPNs & CMAs Please send your resumes to:

Health Care

meickhoff@cypresshealth group.com.

HEALTHCARE OPPORTUNITIES

Lansing Correctional Facility: Medical Director FT Days

Discharge Planner FT Days RN FT, PT & PRN All Shifts

Successful candidates will have at least one year experience with In-Design, Quark, Adobe Acrobat, and Photoshop in Mac format with ability to troubleshoot and correct electronic files; strong attention to detail; and can handle multiple projects under demanding deadlines. Previous newspaper prepress experience is preferred. Must be able to lift up to 50 lbs, stand for long periods of time and frequently bend and twist. We offer an excellent benefits package including health, dental, 401k, paid time off and the opportunity to live and work in a desirable Midwestern community. Background check, preemployment drug screen and physical lift assessment required.

Hotel-Restaurant

Correct Care Solutions (CCS) invites you to become a member of the best health care team in town! CCS currently has career opportunities at the following locations:

Certified Medication Aide FT Days/Evenings PRN - All Shifts

The World Company, a forward-thinking media company in Lawrence, Kansas has an opening for a Digital Imaging Specialist. Specialist will be responsible for the nightly production of electronic newspaper pages to be generated for printing of the World Company print products and commercial projects. Shift hours will vary slightly based on workload , but must be available to work from 4 p.m. to 3 a.m. Monday-Friday. Periodic overtime is required.

Field Manager Trainer

LPN FT, PT & PRN All Shifts

Topeka Correctional Facility: Psychiatrist FT - Days

LPNs FT Evenings & Nights PRN - All Shifts RN PRN All Shifts Certified Medication Aide FT Days/Evenings PRN - All Shifts We offer generous compensation, great benefits and flexible hours! For immediate consideration, please apply online at: www.correctcaresolutions. com/jobs or fax to 615-324-5774

EEOE

Medical Associate

Excellent opportunity, strong computer skills required. Billing background a must. $12-$14 an hour depending on experience. Call: 877-389-6538 Part time RN or LPN needed for busy Pediatric office. Must be available to work every Saturday a.m. Experience preferred. Please fax resume attn: Linda to 785-842-7433

FOOD SERVICE • Cook Ekdahl Dining Wed. - Sat. 9 AM - 8 PM $9.14 - $10.24 • Cook Ekdahl Dining Sun. - Wed. 9 AM - 7:30 PM $9.14 - $10.24/hr. • Senior Cook Oliverl Dining Sun. - Wed. 9:30 AM - 8 PM $9.48 - $10.61/hr. • Catering Cook Production Mon. - Fri. Hours Vary Some Weekends $9.14 - $10.24/hr. • Food Service Worker Underground Mon. - Fri. 7:30 AM - 4 PM $8.52 - $9.54/hr.

Find jobs & more on WorldClassNEK.com

To apply submit a cover letter and resume to hrapplications@ljworld.com. EOE

Established 20 yr. company seeking traveling sales rep. Gone Mon. - Fri. Company avg. pays $910/wk. Call 1-800-225-6368 ext. 333. www.brechtpacific.com

Schools-Instruction

CUSTOMER SERVICE SUPERVISOR Lawrence-Journal World is looking for a Customer Service Supervisor to support our customer service team who in turn support our customer’s needs. Responsible for retention efforts to ensure that we are maintaining current subscribers and quality delivery is met; successfully leading, coaching, training and counseling team members; fostering a positive, successful, and professional work environment in which employees are fully engaged; clearly explaining policy and procedures to CSRs so that they can effectively perform their job duties; maintaining effective communications with staff and working with other department managers and peers to ensure smooth operations; maintaining communication with field personnel to determine problems and assist with timely resolutions; overseeing and analyzing customer service issue records; maintaining Newspaper in Education (NIE) documentation for ABC audit purposes; responsible for raising funds for our Newspaper in Education program. Must be available to work between the hours of 7:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m. daily. Ideal candidate must have strong communication and organizational skills; a bachelor’s degree and two years successful management experience working with managing carriers or customer service representatives or equivalent years of experience, high school diploma or GED required; a customer Focus—able to communicate courteously and proactively; an ability to learn customers’ short term and long term needs; ability to promote customer focus in associates; team Leadership—an ability to provide the team with needed resources; an ability to provide meaningful direction and motivation towards a common team goal; ability to model desired behavior, inspire high team performance, and facilitate high team morale; strong organizational skills, followthrough and ability to multi-task and meet deadlines; an ability to use thinking and reasoning to solve a problem; a demonstrated ability to make critical decisions and/or take action to solve a problem while following company procedures; a demonstrated strong leadership skills and the ability to influence others to perform their jobs effectively while being responsible for making decisions; an ability to successfully lead, coach and counsel associates; a proficiency in MS Office; an ability to drive with reliable transportation, a valid driver’s license and a safe driving record; and an ability to lift 50 lbs. We offer an excellent benefits package including health, dental, and vision insurance, 401k, paid time off and more! Background check, preemployment drug screen and physical lift assessment required. To apply submit a cover letter and resume to hrapplications@ljworld.com. EOE

Information Technology with the University of Kansas is seeking a Project Coordinator/Data Center Coordinator responsible for overseeing processes, standards, and the tracking and facilitation of the day to day operations of KU’s primary data centers. The position is charged to be the primary point person to ensure that processes are correct, documented, changed when needed, communicated, and performed as designed within the data center. The Data Center Coordinator serves as the primary liaison between the Network Operations Center and the other units within IT on all issues pertaining to provisioning, de-provisioning, change management within the data center, and data center processes. Although this position oversees the daily tracking of work within data center they do not supervise staff directly. Required Qualifications: 1. Bachelor’s degree in Computer Science or computer related field, or four years of combined professional computer systems operations experience 2. Two years of experience in data center operations or IT disaster recovery design, implementation and execution 3. Two years of experience in technical process development, implementation and maintenance 4. Two years of experience in advanced principles, concepts and practices in IT asset management 5. Two years of experience with formal change management processes and/or tools 6. One year experience in a Project Manager role, preferably in a data center environment 7. One year experience within a mid to large scale data center (100+ servers)

To apply, visit https://jobs. ku.edu and search for position number 00209059. Application deadline is 08/25/11. EO/AA.

EO/AA

4BR duplex - start at $795 CALL TODAY (Mon. - Fri.)

785-843-1116

VILLA 26 APARTMENTS

Girls Gymnastics Coach

Lawrence Public Schools is accepting applications for a Girls Gymnastics Coach for both high schools. Coaching experience is required. The season is August 15 - October 31. Please visit our website at www.usd497.org for more details or call 832-5000. EOE.

Avalon Apartments 901 Avalon

2BR, 900 sq. ft., balcony, Heat & water paid, Easy walk to school or downtown, $630/mo., $300 deposit.

785-841-1155

Country Club Apts.

Nice 2BR, 2 bath with W/D

ONLY $600/mo. (785) 841-4935

www.midwestpm.com

Quiet, great location on KU bus route, no pets, W/D in all units. 785-842-5227 www.villa26lawrence.com

We have Lawrence covered with 7 locations

Houses, Townhomes, Apts. Choose the Lifestyle YOU Deserve! Ask About Our Specials 785-841-5444 www.apartmentslawrence.com

2BR- 2BA w/office. On KU bus route. W/D hookups, DW, new carpet/paint, carport & pool, lawn & snow removal. By Orchard’s golf on W. 15th. 1402 Westbrooke St. Aug. 1. $800/mo. 785-760-2700 2BR, 1.5 bath, CA, DW, washer & dryer, storage. Pets allowed. $500/mo. Avail. Now. 785-766-7589 2BR — 909 Missouri or 1305 Kentucky, in 4-plex. Have CA & DW. No pets. $450/ month. Call 785-841-5797 2BR, 1310 Kentucky. CA, DW, laundry. Close to KU. $595/ month. $200 Deposit. Avail. Now. Call 785-842-7644

3 GREAT Locations Village Square Stonecrest Hanover First Month FREE • Pet Friendly • Lg. closets - lg. kitchens • Huge private balconies • Swimming pool • W/D or hookups in some • 2 & 3Bedrooms • Close to KU Campus

785-842-3040

Applecroft Apts.

village@sunflower.com

1/2 Off August Rent

ASHBURY TOWNHOMES

19th & Iowa, Lawrence

1 and 2 Bedrooms Gas, Water & Trash Paid

785-843-8220

chasecourt@sunflower.com

Near K-10, W/D hookups & fenced courtyard. 2BR & 3BRs Available

MOVE IN SPECIALS

Call NOW 785-842-1322

BRAND NEW

One Month FREE Tuckaway at Frontier 542 Frontier, Lawrence 1BR, 1.5 bath 2BR, 2.5 baths

LECTURERS

School of Social Welfare University of Kansas Part-time lecturer positions available, for teaching and/or field liaison. For more information and online application go to: https://jobs.ku.edu Position No. 00005535 The University of Kansas is especially interested in hiring faculty members who can contribute to four key campus-wide strategic initiatives: (1) Sustaining the Planet, Powering the World; (2) Promoting Well-Being, Finding Cures; (3) Building Communities, Expanding Opportunities; and (4) Harnessing Information, Multiplying Knowledge.

EO/AA Employer

Rent Includes All Utils. Plus Cable, Internet, and Fitness. Garages Available Elevators to all floors Pool

785-856-8900

www.tuckawaymgmt.com

Jacksonville

Bob Billings & Crestline

785-842-4200 2 and 3 Bedroom Apts. & townhomes Available August Close to KU, 3 Bus Stops

Regents Court 19th & Mass

Furnished 3 & 4BR Apts For August 2011 W/D included Ride the Meadowbrook Bus to KU

Ask about our 2-Person Special 785-842-4455

Newer 1 & 2 BRs West Side location Starting at $475 (785) 841-4935 www.midwestpm.com

See Current Availability, Photos & Floor plans on Our Website

Luxury Apts. For Less HOT Summer Specials

951 Arkansas, so close to KU! 2BR w/study or 3rd BR, 2 full bath, CA, DW, laundry, lots of parking, some w/ W/D. Call for prices & specials. No pets. 785-841-5797 www.rentinlawrence.com

www.meadowbrookapartments.net

Google Map Us!

1, 2, & 3 Bedrooms Clubhouse lounge, gym, garages avail., W/D, walk in closets, and 1 pet okay. 3601 Clinton Pkwy., Lawrence

785-842-3280

Science Educator

To apply submit a cover letter and resume to hrapplications@ljworld.com. Background check, preemployment drug screen and physical lift assessment required. EOE

* Water & trash paid.

Move-in Special for 1BRs Only one 2BR Apt. left

(part-time)

Ideal candidates will have a bachelors in journalism or related degree; at least one year of newsroom, print or on-line publication copy editing experience; experience using Adobe Suite, HTML and content management systems; possess sound news judgment; strong design skills, strong attention to detail and organizational skills; and ability to work under pressure in a deadline-driven environment. Must be available to work afternoons between Noon and 6 p.m.

1 & 2BRs start at $400/mo. * Near campus, bus stop * Laundries on site * Near stores, restaurants

A GREAT PLACE TO LIVE

WEB PRODUCER

The Lawrence Journal-World is seeking a part-time Web Producer to work with reporters, editors, photographers and contributors to create and update multimedia content for company websites and social media platforms.

2411 Cedarwood Ave. Beautiful & Spacious

Fort Hays State UniverHIGHPOINTE APTS sity, in Hays, Kansas, is seeking up to 6 addiFall & Deposit Specials! tional adjunct positions 2001 W. 6th. 785-841-8468 to teach English as a www.firstmanagementinc.com Second Language (ESL). Native or near-native flu- 1 & 2BR for avail. now. Next ency in English is re- to KU, Jayhawk Apts. 1130 quired. Proficiency in W. 11th St. No pets. $500 multiple languages, ex- $575/mo. Call 785-556-0713 perience teaching ESL, an ESL endorsement, or 1 & 2BRs, $435 - $550/mo. ESL certificate is pre- NW location close to shopping & bus route. No pets. ferred. Avail. Aug. 1st. 785-865-8699 Send résumé to cweigel@fhsu.edu. Consideration will begin immediately. Classes 785.843.4040 begin August 22. Water, Trash, Sewer, & FHSU is an EA/EOE Basic Cable Included. employer fox_runapartments@ hotmail.com

For more information see: http://www.provost.ku. edu/planning/themes/

PROJECT COORDINATOR/DATA CENTER COORDINATOR Salary: 45-55K

1 & 2 BRs from $390/mo. Call MPM for more details at 785-841-4935

Cedarwood Apts

Full time employees also receive 1 FREE Meal ($7.50) per day

Applications available in the Human Resources Office 3rd Floor, Kansas Union 1301 Jayhawk Boulevard EOE Lawrence, KS

1BRs — 622 Schwarz. CA, laundry, off-street parking, gas & water paid. $435/ mo. No pets. 785-841-5797

Apartments Unfurnished

Ad Astra Apartments

Sales-Marketing

• Salad Prep Production Part Time Mon. - Fri. Some Weekends $7.50 - $8.52/hr.

Full job descriptions available online at: www.union.ku.edu/hr

Apartments Unfurnished

First Management, a lo- 1BR-CA, DW. Parking Lot. cally owned Property Close to downtown & KU. Mgmt Company has an $415/mo. plus utilities. immediate opening for a 785-766-0743; 785-749-3794 Field Manager Trainer. Great location 1/2 block to Some overnight travel. KU at 1034 Mississippi. EnRequires supervisory exergy efficient 1BR (Big BR) perience, strong clerical with private parking. Avail. skills, including excel now. $475/mo. No pets. spreadsheets, 10 key by Call Neil 785-423-2660 touch, & general administrative skills. Must have 1BR, 1/2 block to KU. Reminimum 3 years manag- served parking, ALL UTILS. ing employees. PAID. $500/mo. 785-842-7644 We offer a competitive www.gagemgmt.com salary package with 2BR — 2406 Alabama, bldg. health, dental, and 401K. 10, 2 story, 1.5 bath, CA, Email resumes to: jobs@ DW, W/D hookup, garage, firstmanagementinc.com $570. No pets. 785-841-5797 Or fax to 785-830-9011

Adjunct Positions

ARNP FT Days

DIGITAL IMAGING SPECIALIST

Kansas Dialysis Services has a full or part time opening for a registered nurse at our Ottawa unit. We work 3-4 ten hour days each week and we are open Mon thru Fri. Experience is not required as we will train the right candidate. Great communication and people skills are most important and we welcome new graduates. Dialysis nurses have the opportunity to make a difference in the lives of our patients every day. KDS offers an excellent salary and exceptional benefit package. If interested apply at 1320 S. Ash, Suite 206, Ottawa 6:30am-4:30pm Mon, Wed, Fri. For information call 785-542-5300 or 1-800-689-4694.

Management

The KU Natural History Museum seeks a parttime science educator to provide K-12 science programs. Bachelor’s degree and 1 year science teaching experience required. Review begins 8/29/2011. For complete description and application procedures visit https://jobs.ku.edu Position #00208013 EOAA

Security Mil-Spec Security Group is seeking security officer applicants for Part Time positions. Friday & Saturday evenings are a must. (785) 832-1351

Parkway Terrace

Apts.

2340 Murphy Drive

1 & 2 BRs Nice kitchens, large bedrooms and closets, convinent to all services.

Red Oak Apts. 2408 Alabama

Structural Steel Fabrication Shop Now taking applications for Layout and Fitter/Welders. Apply in person at Shop Office between 8am-12noon or 1pm-3pm. 2520 Scheidt Lane, Bonner Springs, KS. Layout and Fitters/Fitter-Welders Experienced in fabrication of structural & misc. steel. Must be able to read & understand Structural & misc. shop blueprints. EOE /M/F Bonner Springs, KS 913-422-5500

Check Out

Our Luxury 2-3BR Apts. & Town Homes!

Garages - Pool - Fitness Center

Ironwood Court Apts. Park West Gardens Apts. Park West Town Homes

785-840-9467

www.ironwoodmanagement.net

Sunrise Place Sunrise Village

Apartments & Townhomes 2 & 4BRs Available NOW

½ OFF Deposit

All Units: Pool, on KU bus route, DW, & microwave 2BR Apts. - $200 OFF near KU, laundry facilities 837 MICHIGAN 4BR Townhomes-$400 OFF W/D, FREE wireless internet 660 GATEWAY COURT

Call 785-841-8400 www.sunriseapartments.com Great Locations! Great Prices! 1, 2 & 3 Bedrooms

Leasing for Summer & Fall

785-838-3377, 785-841-3339 www.tuckawaymgmt.com

2BR — 1017 Illinois. 2 story, 1 bath, CA, DW. $570/mo. No pets. Call 785-841-5797 www.rentinlawrence.com

3BR — 1131 Tennessee, 1st floor, 1 bath. Avail. Aug. No pets. $680/mo. 785-841-5797 www.rentinlawrence.com 3BR - 2121 Inverness, 2 story, 2.5 bath, CA, DW, W/D hookup, 2 car, 1 pet ok. $940/mo. 785-841-5797

3BR, 1.5 bath, W/D hookup, 3332 W. 8th St. $750/mo. & 2BR — 1313 E. 25th Terrace, $750 deposit. Sunset Ele1 story duplex with DW, mentary. Call 785-842-9033 W/D hookup. No pets. $480 Downtown & Campus per month. 785-841-5797 2 & 3 Bedroom Apts 2BR — 2412 Alabama in 1133 Kentucky St., Lawrence 4-plex. 1 bath, CA, washer 785-749-7744 & dryer. No pets. $470/mo. Call 785-841-5797 3BR, 1028 Ohio. Lovely home 2BR - 3503 W. 7th Court, 2 great for family, near KU/ story, 1 bath, CA, DW, W/D downtown. With Low utils. hookup, garage, 1 pet ok. Has study, appls., parking. $1,350/mo. 785-979-6830 $650/mo. 785-841-5797

2BR — 934 Illinois, In 4-plex, 1st floor, DW. $490/month. No pets. Call 785-841-5797 www.rentinlawrence.com 2BR avail. now, very nice & quiet, DW, W/D, off st. parking. $585/mo. No pets. 785-423-1565, 785-841-4035

1-2BRs, nice apts. 1 block to KU, off street pkg. 2BR fully furn. condo, 2.5 bath, lg. BR suite, WD, lg. $400-500/mo. 913-963-5555, flat screen TV, porch, FP, 913-681-6762. Great loc. garage, pet maybe. $1,350. 1BR — 810 E. 14th, in 4-plex, see online ad. 785-843-2055 W/D hookups, DW, 1 pet ok. $430/mo. 785-841-5797 www.rentinlawrence.com

2BR - LARGE & CLEAN

1BR. Efficiency duplex includes W/D. Wonderful Away-From-It-All Location! $465/mo. Call 785-841-4201

Call 785-838-9559

Income restrictions apply Students welcome Sm. Dog Welcome EOH

$450 - $510/mo. All units - deposits -$300

Call Today 785-841-1155

2BR - 415 W. 17th, laundry on site, wood floors, off-st. Truck Mechanic: KCK, parking, CA. No pets. $500steady work, weekly pay, $550, water pd. 785-841-5797 benefits. 913-957-4526 2BR — 725 W. 25th, In 4plex, CA, W/D hookup, offst. parking. $410-$420/mo. No pets. Call 785-841-5797

Apartments Unfurnished

2 & 3BR units

1 & 2 BRs, water paid, on the bus route

Trade Skills Electricians, Journeymen or Masters Wanted Experience is Preferred Will Train! 913-208-3514/785-242-9700

LAUREL GLEN APTS w/electric only, no gas some with W/D included

at Harvard Square Starting at $595. No pets.

785-843-4798

www.lawrencerentals.com

4BRs - CA, DW, fans, W/D. Big family or housing welcome. $1,375/mo. Call 785-766-0743; 785-749-3794 Apartments, Houses & Duplexes. 785-842-7644 www.GageMgmt.com

Chase Court Apts. 1 & 2 Bedrooms

Campus Location, W/D, Pool, Gym, Small Pet OK 1/2 Off August Rent & Security Deposit Special! 785-843-8220 chasecourt@sunflower.com

Last One Left!!

941 Indiana - 2BR 1 bath $650/mo. 785-841-4935 Studios — 1244 Ohio, all elect., AC, laundry on site, off street parking, $410/mo. No pets. 785-841-5797 Studios — 2400 Alabama, all elect., plenty of parking, AC, laundry. $390, water/cable paid. No pets. 785-841-5797


SUNDAY, AU+US, 1., 2011 0"

Air Conditioning

Air Conditioning Heating/Plumbing

930 E 27th Street, 785-843-1691 http://lawrencemarketplace. com/chaneyinc

Auctioneers BILL FAIR AND COMPANY AT YOUR SERVICE SINCE 1970 800-887-6929

Carpet Cleaning

TOKIC CONSTRUCTION Specializing in Carpet, Tile & Upholstery cleaning. Carpet repairs & stretching, Odor Decontamination, Spot Dying & 24 hr Water extraction. www.doctor-clean.com 785-840-4266

Carpets & Rugs

Buying Junk & Repairable Vehicles. Cash Paid. Free Tow. U-Call, We-Haul! Call 785-633-7556

Cash Paid

Dale and Ron’s Auto Service

Family Owned & Operated for 37 Years Domestic & Foreign Expert Service 630 Connecticut St

785-842-2108

http://lawrencemarketplace. com/dalerons

Call 913-209-4055

WEBSITE SPECIALS IN STOCK! www.FloorTraderLawrence.com Click on “Local Store” tab.

“STEALS & DEALS”

For closeouts to 80%

“NEW ARRIVALS”

For our latest shipments. Carpet, Vinyl Flooring Wood Laminate & Ceramic Tile.

NEW STYLES & SALE ITEMS Jennings’ Floor Trader 3000 Iowa - 785-841-3838 BBB Accredited A+

Catering

- Full Service Caterer Specializing in smoked meats & barbeque

- Corporate Events, Private Parties, Weddings-

For All Your Battery Needs

Child Care Provided

Harris Auto Repair

Childcare for Schwegler schoolagers. 7:30 - 5:30 before-and-after & days out. Reliable, references. Call: 785-841-9643

785-838-4488

lawrencemarketplace.com/ harrisauto

Hite Collision Repair

K’s Tire

Lawrencemarketplace.com/ kstire

Need tires, A/C check or alignment?

Hilltop Child Development Center, 1605 Irving Hill Road Lawrence, Kansas 785-864-4940 hilltop@ku.edu twitter.com/HilltopCDC Serving Lawrence since 1972.

Cleaning

Bird Janitorial & Hawk Wash Window Cleaning. • House Cleaning • Chandeliers • Post Construction • Gutters • Power Washing • Prof Window Cleaning • Sustainable Options Find Coupons & more info: lawrencemarketplace.com/ birdjanitorial Free Est. 785-749-0244

Eco-Friendly Cleaning

Five yrs. exp. References, Bonded & Insured Res., Com., Moveouts 785-840-5467

for Free estimates or go to prodeckanddesign.com Looking for Something Creative? Call Billy Construction Decks, Fences, Etc. Insured. (785) 838-9791 www.billyconstruction.com

Stacked Deck

• Decks • Gazebos • Framing • Siding • Fences • Additions • Remodel • Weatherproofing & Staining Insured, 20 yrs. experience. 785-550-5592

Dirt-Manure-Mulch

Topsoil Clean, Fill Dirt 913-724-1515

Rich Black Top Soil No Chemicals Machine Pulverized Pickup or Delivery

Serving KC over 40 years 913-962-0798 Fast Service

Drafting AUTOCAD Drafting

Westside 66 & Car Wash

Full Service Gas Station 100% Ethanol-Free Gasoline Auto Repair Shop - Automatic Car Washes Starting At Just $3 2815 W 6th St | 785-843-1878 http://lawrencemarketplace. com/westside66

Carpet Cleaning Kansas Carpet Care, Inc.

Your locally owned and operated carpet and upholstery cleaning company since 1993! • 24 Hour Emergency Water Damage Services Available By Appointment Only

785-842-3311

For Promotions & More Info: http://lawrencemarketplace .com/kansas_carpet_care

Breathe Holistic Life Center Yoga is more than getting on the mat. Live Passionately Yoga Nutrition Classes Relaxation Retreats 1407 Massachusetts 785-218-0174 lawrencemarketplace.com/ breathe

Renovations Kitchen/Bath Remodels House Additions & Decks Quality Work Affordable Prices

Haul Free: Salvageable items. Minimum charge: other moving/hauling jobs. Also Maintenance/Cleaning (785) 550-1565 for home/business, mmdownstic@hotmail.com inside/out plumbing / Lawrencemarketplace.com/tic electrical & more. www.a2zenterprises.info 785-841-6254 Retired Carpenter, Deck Repairs, Home repairs: Int. & Ext., Doors, Handrails, Windows, Stairs, Siding, Wood Rot, Power STARVING ARTISTS MOVING 15yr. locally owned and wash 785-766-5285 operated company. Professionally trained . staff. We move everythInstruction and ing from fossils to office and household goods. Tutoring Call for a free estimate. 785-749-5073 http://lawrencemarketplace. Origins Interior com/starvingartist Design

All Your Banking Needs Your Local Lawrence Bank

Flooring Installation Christensen Floor Care LLC. Wood, Tile, Carpet, Concrete, 30 yrs. exp. 785-842-8315 http://lawrencemarketplace. com/christensenfloorcare

Foundation Repair ADVANCED SYSTEMS Basement & foundation repair Your hometown company Over three decades 785-841-0145 mybasementiscracked.com CONCRETE INC Your local foundation repair specialist! Waterproofing, Basement, & Crack Repair

Quality work at a fair price!

1-888-326-2799 Toll Free

Concrete, Block & Limestone Wall Repair, Waterproofing Drainage Solutions Sump Pumps, Driveways. 785-843-2700 Owen 24/7

www.customcadshop.com Over 25 years experience Drafting/Cutout/Constr. Commercial Casework. CNC availability 785-766-1280 eves. Mudjacking, waterproofing. We specialize in Basement Repair & pressure Grouting, Level & Straighten Electrical Walls, & Bracing on Walls. B.B.B. FREE ESTIMATES Since 1962 WAGNER’S 785-749-1696

Foundation Repair

Electric & Industrial Supply Pump & Well Drilling Service

Motors - Pumps Complete Water Systems

Concrete CONCRETE INC. Your local concrete repair specialists Sidewalks, Patios, Driveways

Quality work at a fair price!

1-888-326-2799 Toll Free Decorative & Regular concrete drives, walks, & patios. 42 yrs. exp. Jayhawk Concrete 785-979-5261

Driveways, Parking Lots, Paving Repair, Sidewalks, Garage Floors, Foundation Repair 785-843-2700 Owen 24/7

Garage Doors

602 E 9th St | 785-843-4522

http://lawrencemarket place.com/patchen

For Everything Electrical Committed to Excellence Since 1972 Full Service Electrical Contractor www.quality-electric.net

JAYHAWK GUTTERING

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

785-842-0094

“where simple ideas become inspiring realities”

• Color & Design • Space Planning • Furniture Layouts • Trade Discounts • Project Management 785-766-9281 originsinteriordesign.com

Pet Services

Roofing

Complete Roofing

Tearoffs, Reroofs, Redecks * Storm Damage * Leaks * Roof Inspections

We’re There for You!

I COME TO YOU!

785-749-4391

Dependable & Reliable Pet sitting, feeding, overnights, walks, more References! Insured! 785-550-9289

Lawrencemarketplace.com/ksrroofing

Prompt Superior Service Residential * Commercial Tear Off * Reroofs

Plumbing

Free Estimates

Insurance Work Welcome

785-764-9582

Lawrencemarketplace.com/ mclaughlinroofing

“When You’re Ready, We’re Reddi” •Sales •Service •Installations •Free Estimate on replacements all makes & models Commercial Residential Financing Available

Re-Roofs: All Types Roofing Repairs Siding & Windows FREE Estimates (785) 749-0462 www.meslerroofing.com

24 emergency service Missouri (816) 421-0303 Kansas (913) 328-4437

ROOF REPAIRS

Leaks, Flashing, Masonry. Residential, Commercial References, Insured.

Music Lessons

KW Service 785-691-5949

Piano-Voice Lessons in your home. 17 yrs. exp. Masters degree Call Gwen at 785-830-8305

Salon & Spa

Heating & Cooling Painting A. B. Painting & Repair

Insurance “Your Comfort Is Our Business.” Installation & Service Residential & Commercial (785) 841-2665 http://lawrencemarketplace. com/rivercityhvac

Free Estimates on replacement equipment! Ask us about Energy Star equipment & how to save on your utility bills.

Roger, Kevin or Sarajane

785-843-2244

www.scott-temperature.com www.lawrencemarketplace. com/scotttemperature

Get Lynn on the line! 785-843-LYNN www.lynnelectric.com

http://lawrencemarketplce.com/ lynncommunications

Employment Services

• Garage Doors • Openers • Service • Installation

General Services

Office* Clerical* Accounting Light Industrial* Technical Finance* Legal

Apply at eapp.adecco.com Or Call (785) 842-1515 BETTER WORK BETTER LIFE lawrencemarketplace.com/ adecco

Call to schedule a ride: 843-5576 or 888-824-7277 Monday - Friday 7:30 am - 3:30 pm We ask for $2.00 each way. Even if you don’t have a disability and you live outside the Lawrence City limits, we can help. Funded in part by KDOT Public Transit Program

Staining & Engraving Existing Concrete

Patios, Basements, Garage Floors, Driveways 785-393-1109 www.robinseggconcrete.com

For all your Heating, Air Conditioning and Plumbing needs

Events/ Entertainment

Banquet Room Available for Corporate Parties, Wedding Receptions, Fundraisers Bingo Every Friday Night 1803 W 6th St. (785) 843-9690 http://lawrencemarket place.com/Eagles_Lodge

Four - Star

Painting & Remodelling Bathroom Remodeling Exterior|Interior Painting Flooring Kitchen Remodeling Roofing Siding

Flower Beds, Mulching, Mowing, Weedeating, Pruning & Retaining walls. Noe Singleterry 913-585-1450

Low Maintenance Landscape, Inc.

Inside - Out Painting Service Complete interior & exterior painting Siding replacement

785-766-2785

inside-out-paint@yahoo.com Free Estimates Fully Insured Lawrencemarketplace.com/ inside-out-paint

Int/Ext/Specialty Painting Siding, Wood Rot & Decks

Kate, 785-423-4464

www.kbpaintingllc.com

Serving the Douglas & Franklin county areas www.ah-air.com

785-594-3357

Plan Now For Next Year • Custom Pools, Spas & Water Features • Design & Installation • Pool Maintenance (785) 843-9119

Interior/Exterior Painting

Quality Work Over 20 yrs. exp.

Call Lyndsey 913-422-7002

midwestcustompools.com

Lawn, Garden & Nursery

via 9 community newspaper sites.

Earthtones Landscape & Lawn, LLC.

WorldClassNEK.com

Landscape Installation Monthly Maintenance, Sod, Mulch, Retaining walls Delivery/Disposal up 5 tons For details 785-856-5566

Home Improvements

MAGILL PLUMBING • Water Line Services • Septic Tanks / Laterals 913-721-3917 Free Estimates Licensed Insured.

Professional Painters Home, Interior, Exterior Painting, Lead Paint Removal Serving Northeast Kansas 785-691-6050 http://lawrencemarketplace. com/primecoat

15 yrs exp, Mowing, Yard Clean-up, Tree Trimming, Snow Removal All jobs considered. 785-312-0813 785-893-1509

Full Remodels & Odd Jobs, Interior/Exterior Painting, Installation & Repair of: Decks Drywall Siding Gutters Privacy Fencing Doors Trim

LAWN & LANDSCAPE MAINTENANCE Big/Small Jobs

Dependable Service

Mowing Clean Up Tree Trimming Plant Bed Maint. Shrub Trimming Whatever U Need

Insured 20 yrs. experience

JASON TANKING CONSTRUCTION New Construction Framing, Remodels, Additions, Decks Fully Ins. & Lic. 785.760.4066 http://lawrencemarket place.com/jtconstruction

913-585-1846

Specializing in new homes & Residential interior and exterior repaints Power Washing Deck staining Sheet Rock Repair Quality work and products since 1985

Mea’s BERNINA 2449 B Iowa St. 785-842-1595

Taking Care of M-F 9-6, Th 9-8, Sat 9-4 Lawrence’s Plumbing CLASSES FORMING NOW Needs for over 35 Years Servicing Most Model Sewing (785) 841-2112 Machines, Sergers & Vacs lawrencemarketplace.com www.lawrencemarketplace. /kastl com/measbernina

Recycling Services 12th & Haskell Recycle Center, Inc. No Monthly Fee - Always been FREE! Cash for all Metals We take glass! 1146 Haskell Ave, Lawrence 785-865-3730 http://lawrencemarket place.com/recyclecenter Lonnie’s Recycling Inc. Buyers of aluminum cans, all type metals & junk vehicles. Mon.-Fri. 8-5, Sat. 8-4, 501 Maple, Lawrence. 785-841-4855 lawrencemarketplace.com/ lonnies

Repairs and Services

Bus. 913-269-0284

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Siding Installation New Construction, Repair, Replace, Painting Windows, Doors, Remodeling

FREE Estimates Licensed & Insured (785) 312-0581 www.crconstruct.com

lawrencemarketplace.com/ crconstruct

Travel Services Lawrence First Class Transportation Limos Corporate Cars Drivers available 24/7

785-841-5466

Lawrencemarkeptlace. com/firstclass

• Unsightly black streaks of mold & dirt on your roof? • Mold or Mildew on your house? • Is winter salt intrusion causing your concrete to flake?

Mobile Enviro-Wash LTD 785-842-3030

Supplying all your Painting needs. Serving Lawrence and surrounding areas for over 25 years.

Tree/Stump Removal Arborscapes Tree Service Tree trimming & removal Ks Arborists Assoc. Certified Licensed & Insured. 785-760-3684 www.KansasTreeCare.com

Locally owned & operated.

Free estimates/Insured.

Pet Services

BUDGET TREE SERVICE, LLC. Water, Fire & Smoke Damage Restoration • Odor Removal • Carpet Cleaning • Air Duct Cleaning •

One Company Is All You Need and One Phone Call Is All You Need To Make (785) 842-0351

Roofing

913-593-7386

Trimmed, Shaped, Removed Shrubs, Fenceline Cleaned

No Job Too Small Free Est. Lic. & Ins. 913-268-3120 Chris Tree Service 20yrs. exp. Trees trimmed, cut down, hauled off. Free Est. Ins. & Lic. 913-631-7722, 913-301-3659

Fredy’s Tree Service

Mowing...like Clockwork! Honest & Dependable Mow~Trim~Sweep~Hedges Steve 785-393-9152 Lawrence Only

785-764-2220

“Call for a Free Home Demo” www.MuttsandManners.com

ROCK-SOD-SOIL-MULCH Adorable Animal Designs Full Service Grooming All Breeds & Sizes Including Cats! Flea & Tick Solutions

785-865-0600

Complete Roofing Services Professional Staff Quality Workmanship http://lawrencemarketplace. com/lawrenceroofing

Allcore Roofing & Restoration

Roofs, Guttering, Windows, Siding, & Interior Restoration

Hail & Wind Storm Specialists

NOT Your ordinary bicycle store!

Siding Services

Free Quote

Marty Goodwin 785-979-1379

No Job Too Big or Small

Int. & Ext. Remodeling All Home Repairs Mark Koontz

Sewing Service & Repair

Sewing and Vacuum Center

Riffel Painting Co. Green Grass Lawn Care

Home Repair Services Interior/Exterior Carpentry, Vinyl siding, Plumbing, Light electrical, Roofing, Tearoff/reroof 35 yrs. exp. Free est. 913-636-1881

www.independenceinc.org

albeil@aol.com

785-550-5610

913-488-7320 Temporary or Contract Staffing Evaluation Hire, Direct Hire Professional Search Onsite Services (785) 749-7550 1000 S Iowa, Lawrence KS lawrencemarketplace.com/ express

Eagles Lodge

Custom Decorative Patterns

Fast Quality Service

Accessible and General Public Transportation We provide door-to-door transportation as well as many additional services to residents of Douglas County living with disabilities.

Al 785-331-6994

LawrenceMarketplace.com/ fourstar

1210 Lakeview Court, Innovative Planting Design Construction & Installation www.lawrencemarketplace. com/lml

target NE Kansas 785-841-3088

Visit us at our New location! • Hair styling /Coloring • Soft Curl Perms • Nails & Pedicures • Eye Lashes 785-856-9020 2400 Franklin Rd., Suite E LawrenceMarketplace.co . m/ruffends

Int/ext. Drywall, Tile, Siding, Wood rot, & Decks 30 plus yrs. Refs. Free Est.

785-764-9136

Air Conditioning/ & Heating/Sales & Srvs.

Commercial &Residential 24 hour Service

• Garage Doors • Openers • Service • Installation Call 785-842-5203 or visit us at Lawrencemarketplace.com /freestategaragedoors

Auto-Home- BusinessLife- Health Dennis J. Donnelly Insurance Inc. 913-268-5000 11211 Johnson Dr. insuranceinckc.com

Landscaping

ONLINE ADS

Computer/Internet Computer too slow? Viruses/Malware? Need lessons? Questions? techdavid3@gmail.com or 785-979-0838

Tires, Alignment, Brakes, A/C, Suspension Repair Financing Available 785-841-6050 1828 Mass. St lawrencemarketplace.com/ performancetire

REMODELING & HANDYMAN SERVICES

Financial

jayhawkguttering.com

Dave’s Construction

www.lawrenceautodiag.com

785-842-8665

785-843-2174

www.foundationrepairks.com

Sales and Service Tires for anything Batteries Brakes Oil Changes Fair and Friendly Customer Service is our trademark 2720 Oregon St. 785-843-3222 Find great offers at

Medical-HealthTherapy

Oakley Creek Catering

785-887-6936 http://oakleycreek.com

“If you want it done right, take it to Hite.” Auto Body Repair Windshield & Auto Glass Repair 3401 W 6th St (785) 843-8991 http://lawrencemarket place.com/hite

Home Improvements

• Baths • Kitchens • Rec Rooms • Tile • Windows •Doors •Trim •Wood Rot Since 1974 GARY 785-856-2440 www.winston-brown.com Licensed & Insured

1388 N 1293 Rd, Lawrence

Open 7 Days A Week

Family Owned & Operated

Domestics and Imports Brake repair Engine repair AC repair / service Custom exhaust systems Shock & Struts Transmissions Tire sales / repairs

Steve’s Place

Banquet Hall available for wedding receptions, birthday parties, corporate meetings & seminars. For more info. visit http://lawrencemarket place.com/stevesplace

Over 25 yrs. exp. Licensed & Insured Decks, deck covers, pergolas, screened porches, & all types of repairs

On-Site Cooking Available

Across The Bridge In North Lawrence 903 N 2nd St | 785-842-2922 lawrencemarketplace.com/ battery

Decks & Fences

Guttering Services

Moving-Hauling

from 57c sf!

For Junk or Repairable Vehicles Call John 785-409-4886 Fast Service

Serving JO, WY & LV 913-488-9976

Events/ Entertainment

DECK BUILDER

Automotive Services Bryant Collision Repair Mon-Fri. 8AM-6PM We specialize in Auto Body Repair, Paintless Dent Repair, Glass Repair, & Auto Accessories. 785-843-5803 bryantcollisionrepair@msn.com. lawrencemarketplace.com/ bryant-collision-repair

Concrete

1783 E 1500 Rd, Lawrence

PineLandscapeCenter.com Find us on Facebook Pine Landscape Center 785-843-6949

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785-842-7118

Lawrencemarketplace.com/ adorableanimaldesign

We Work With Your Insurance Inspections are FREE

800-910-4920 http://lawrencemarket place.com/allcore

cutdown• trimmed• topped Licensed & Insured. 14 yrs experience. 913-441-8641 913-244-7718

ENHANCE your listing with MULTIPLE PHOTOS, MAPS, EVEN VIDEO! WorldClassNEK.com

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Save some GREEN! *LEASE BY AUGUST 20, 2011 1BR APTS – ONLY $515/MO. 2BR APTS – ONLY $650/MO.

- secluded and quiet - pets of all sizes welcome

Apartments and Townhomes

peppertree-leasing@maxusprop.com www.peppertreeaptsks.com

(785) 841-7726

has the highest concentration of local job postings in the region, 67,000 readers in print, 140,000 users online.

Apartments Unfurnished

Townhomes

Townhomes

Four Wheel Drive

Studios - 1708 W. 5th, all Townhomes elect, plenty of parking, AC, 2859 Four Wheel Drive laundry. $410. water/cable Amazing 2BR, tranquil intipaid. No pets. 785-841-5797 mate setting, free standing townhome w/ courtDuplexes yard, cathedral ceilings, & skylights, & W/D. only 1 1BR in duplex. Clean & available. Most residents quiet. Has carport. Excel- professionals. Pets okay. lent location: 2020 W. 9th Water & trash paid. $750/mo. 785-842-5227 $435. No pets. 785-371-4343 www.villa26lawrence.com 2BR 4-plex, central location, split-level design, great 2BRs from $550 - $800/mo. closets, CA, W/D hookups. 4BR farmhouse $975/mo. $575/mo. Call 785-841-4201 785-832-8728 / 785-331-5360 www.lawrencepm.com 2BR on cul-de-sac, 1301A Michigan Way. Large yard w/patio, CA, W/D hookup. VILLA 26 APTS. $650/mo. Call 785-691-7400 Fall Leasing for 2 & 3BR townhomes 2BR, 2.5 bath, recently reM ove-in Specials! modeled 2 story w/FP, 1 car, bonus rm. in finished Quiet, great location on KU bsmt., fenced yard. 3724 bus route, no pets, W/D in 785-842-5227 Westland Place. $850/mo. all units. Avail. Now. 785-218-7005 or www.villa26lawrence.com ssims331@ yahoo.com 3BR newer, spacious unit. 2 2BR duplex w/office avail. bath, All appls., FP, 2 car. now on KU bus route. CA, $875/mo. Avail. Now. NW W/D hookup, DW, attached area. No pets. 785-766-9823 garage. $650. 785-843-2934 2 & 3BR Duplexes Avail. Now 1-2 bath, 1 car, patios, all appls, personal W/D. $650-$850/mo. 785-766-1677 www.dutcherproperties.com

3BR, 2 bath, 2 car, NW Nicer, Aug 1st, No Pets $775. 785-423-5828

GPM

PARKWAY 4000

• 2 & 3BRs avail Sept. • 2 Bath, W/D hookups • 2 Car garage w/opener • New kitchen appliances • Maintenance free

Call for Specials!

785-832-0555/785-766-2722

Apartments, Houses & Duplexes. 785-842-7644 www.GageMgmt.com

LUXURIOUS TOWNHOMES * 2 BR, 1,300 sq. ft. * 3 BR, 1,700 sq. ft. * Kitchen Appls., W/D * 2-Car Garage * Small Pets Accepted Showings By Appointment

www.mallardproperties lawrence.com

Call 785-842-1524

Houses

Rooms Room Available $355/mo. Utils paid. Share kitchen/bath. 785-727-9764

Eudora Studios - 3 BRs Only $300 Deposit & FREE Rent

W/D in Units, Pet Friendly!

Greenway Apartments

2 & 3 BR homes available. $785/mo. & up. Some are in downtown Lawrence. Call Jo at 785-550-7777

1516 Greenway, Eudora 785-542-2237

Tonganoxie

See regional listings for open positions in:

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Your Source for Jobs in Northeast Kansas

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Antiques Creamer & Salt & Pepper set: President & Mrs. John F. Kennedy. The pieces are off white with gold trim. The creamer has a picture of John & Jackie. The shakers show each of them separately. The cream pitcher is embossed with MADE IN USA on the bottom. $45 Cash. Ken at 785-542-5024

Commode Chair. Never used. $100. Cash only. Call: 785-764-9359 Toilet risers. $75. Cash 785-764-9359

Never used. only. Call:

Walkers. Two of them. $50 each. Cash only. Call: 785-764-9359.

Wheel Chair. Priced at $100. Cash only. Call: Gas Range Old Tappan gas 785-764-9359. range. $50. 334 S. 68th St. Miscellaneous KC, KS 66111.

2BR, 1 bath with garage & large fenced yard. 1702 E 19th. $750/mo. Heritage Realty 785-841-1412

Bicycles-Mopeds

Dog Kennel. X-Large. Priced at $75. Call: 785-214-9183 EZ-up canopy 10”x10”, Cost is: $25. Please Call: 785-766-3439

Washer. Heavy-Duty G.E. KU Football Season and washer. $50. 334 S. 68th St. single game parking spots KC, KS 66111. available. 1.5 blocks from www.vintagemgmt.com 3BR Townhome on quiet Stadium at private resi785-842-1069 cul-de-sac. Has a garage. Baby & Children's dence. Family friendly. For No pets. $800/month. Call info call 785-550-4268. 2BR brick house + 2BR loft, 785-542-3240, 785-865-8951 Items 2 car, 2211 Ohio. CA, stove, refrig., new W/D, wood Medela pump in style douCEDAR HILLS floors, fenced yard, lawn ble breast pump. $50. Call New Management mower, grill/access. $800/ 785-749-1608 1-3BR apts. in Tonganoxie mo. Pets ok. 989-202-5020 Many improvements! My Little Ponies (6 big, 9 2BR, 1 bath - Secluded, large 816-260-8606, 913-845-0992 little) 15 of them, all in excountry home, natural gas. cellent shape, $10. Call No smoking. 1 sm. dog ok. 785-749-1608 Avail. Aug. 1. 785-838-9009 Office Space

2BR, 1 bath, CA, DW, W/D hookup, 1 car garage. $750 /mo. Refs./security deposit required. Call 785-749-3840 3BR avail. now 1 block west of hospital. 2 full bath, finished basement, lg. deck, fenced yard. $800/month. No pets. 913-486-3156 3BR - Prairie Park district, high ceilings w/fans, 2 full baths, fenced yard, patio, double garage. Really nice! $1,100/mo. 785-841-4201 3BR ranch home, W. side. 1.5 bath, 1 car, nice yard. all appls. No pets. $850/mo. Avail. now. 785-766-9823 3BR, 1 bath, 2641 Maverick Ln. CA, W/D hookup, garage. Remodeled. $795/mo. $400 deposit. 785-842-7644

Office Space Available

at 5040 Bob Billings Pkwy.

785-841-4785

Retail & Commercial Space

Kids Bike. Girls bike pinkgood for 3-6 yr old Boys bike red (2)-good gor 4-6 yrs old. $25. Call: 785-542-9171.

Building Materials

1311 Wakarusa - office space available. 200 sq. ft. Vinyl Clad Window. White - 6,000 sq. ft. For details vinyl clad window, wood call 785-842-7644 interior. From remodel job. $25. Call 785-887-6571.

Clothing

PARKWAY 6000

Available August • 3 Bedroom, 2 bath • 2 car garage w/opener • W/D hookups • Maintenance free Call 785-832-0555 or after 3PM 785-766-2722

Save Money By Moving in Today!

Smokin’ Hot Daily Deals!

Check out the hottest deals in 25 years! Mid-America Piano piano4u.com/updateme

Music-Stereo

Jacket: KU Men’s Leather Jacket: Size L. $40. Please call 785-550-7529

Real Estate Auctions Real Estate Auction

3BR, 1627 W. 20th Terr. CA, DW, 1 bath, wood floors, 1 car, fenced yard. $840/mo. +$415 deposit. 785-842-7644

Collectibles THURSDAY SALE! 10% OFF MAJORITY OF INVENTORY 20% OFF FURNITURE! Past & Present Treasures Antiques Collectibles & Other Items 729 Main in Eudora 10am-6pm

3BR, 813 Crestline Ct. CA, 1 Floor Coverings bath, garage, fenced yard. Avail. Now. $800/mo. 1/2 off 160 Acres (+/-) just NW of Carpet: 12x12 off white carDeposit. Call 785-842-7644 Lawrence - 1909 E. 400, pet. Free. You haul. Lecompton. Beautiful hill- 785-749-4107 top views, native prairie grass, some trees, older improvements. Offered in Furniture GPM 3 tracts and as whole. Antique Church Pew, Fin3 & 4 BR Single Family Auction is Aug. 23rd. Visit: ger oak strips. Moving Homes Avail. Now www.FloryAndAssociates.com must sell 8 ft. Oak Church Lake Pointe Villas 4BR, 2 bath townhome with pew Great for porches. & W. 22nd Court DW & W/D hookup. $825/ 785-393-1992 Some brand new. 2.5 4 mo. + $450 deposit. Avail. bath. Close to Clinton Aug. 1st. Call 785-749-6084 Antique Whitney Piano Lake, K-10, & turnpike. over 100 years old. Moving Pets ok with pet deposit. must sell upright hand Apartments, Houses & Development has a pool. carved designs decorated Duplexes. 785-842-7644 www.garberprop.com piano from Chicago. $99 www.GageMgmt.com 785-841-4785 785-393-1992 Jason Flory - 785-979-2183

Our studio apartment will save you $2,657! Our one bedroom apartment will save you $2,540!

Medical Equipment

Appliances

Kenmore W/D. Almost new Kenmore W/D; 2 years old; $1,300+ new; located in Lawrence; pick up only; Asking $550. Call Lisa or Mark:(614) 271-0415 or champm01@gmail.com

25th Anniversary Sale!

Now thru Sep 3rd ALL PIANOS ON SALE! piano4u.com/updateme

Mid-America Piano 1-800-950-3774

Clarinet. Very good condition, with case. $25. Call: 785-865-5636 Fri.-Sun. only Panasonic Digital Stereo. 5-CD Changer, MP3, Digital Stereo, Remote Control Included. 785-749-3298, $20 Pianos: (3) Spinet pianos w/benches $300 - $425. Price includes tuning & delivery. Call 785-832-9906 Pioneer CD Player. 25 Disc Changer. File Type. Model PDF 506. Works Great! $100 cash. 785 979 2312. Student Violins, Violas, Cellos, Bass - rent to own. No interest. Steve Mason Violin Shop 785-841-0277

Chairs: Four Oak pressed back captain chairs. Very Yamaha Set: FM/AM radio; good condition. $50. Call CD player; cassette player w/2 speakers; remote. Ex913-486-7492. cellent condition. $50. Call Furniture: Table with 6 (785) 843-5655. OWNER WILL FINANCE chairs (expandable) very 4BR, large split-level avail. near Deerfield School. W/D, 2BR, 2 bath, FP, wet bar, & good condition. $100. Call: Sports Fan Gear 785-542-9171 3 bath, new kitchen, 2 car. CH/CA. Move In Ready! Lawrence. 816-830-2152 $1,800/mo. 785-218-0331 Heavy wood dining table, 2 KU Jacket - Kansas Jayleaves, extends to 8’, w/4 hawk starter jacket and chairs. Like new. $100. Call: hood, size boys XL. Asking $25. 785-832-0969 785-691-5851 4BR, 2.5 bath, 2 car, newer. 520 N. Rebecca Lane. I-70 access, Deerfield school. $1,300/mo. 785-423-4228

Mobile Homes

Berkeley Flats Basehor De Soto Lawrence Tonganoxie

Trees: FREE MAPLE TREES 12 inches / 6 feet by Oct. Lawrence 785-749-7797

2BR, 1 bath rural home, CA/ CH, W/D hookup, $650/mo. 1+BR cottage, country like + deposits. No smoking. No pets. Call 816-830-1186 setting, quiet, lots of bookshelves, AC, kitchen appls. 3BR house, $900/mo. 210 N. $550/mo. + utils. + deposit. Village St. Terr. 2 bath, CA, No pets. 785-841- 3301 attached garage, covered patio, shed. 785-865-6316. 1st Class, Pet Friendly smmc@aol.com

Perfect Apartment... Perfect view...

Baldwin Bonner Springs Eudora Shawnee

Lawn, Garden & Nursery

Houses & Apts.

3BR, 2 bath, 2 car, SE Nicer, Aug 1st, No Pets 3BR, 1 bath, 1 car garage, $800/mo. 785.423.5828 newer carpet & paint. NW location. Avail. now. $700/ 3BR, 2 bath, all amenities, mo. No pets. 785-865-8699 garage. 2805 Four Wheel 3BR just remodeled. 1518 W. Drive. $795/mo. Available 26th, dead end st. On bus Aug. 1st. Call 785-766-8888 route. CA, garage, DW, W/D hookup, $645. 816-721-5183 3BR, 2.5 bath, 2 car. Unique tri-level floor plan. 3411 W. 3BR, 2 bath, large pantry, 24th St. Avail. now. August W/D hookup, 2 car garage, FREE! $999/mo. 785-331-7319 quiet NW area. Avail. now. from $950/mo. 785-760-3456 AVAIL. Now & Sept. 3BR, 2 bath, major appls., Apartments, Houses & FP, 2 car. 785-865-2505 Duplexes. 785-842-7644 www.GageMgmt.com AVAIL. Now 2BR, 1Bath in 4-plex, newly remodeled, major appls., Townhomes W/D, $575/mo. 785-865-2505 1, 2, & 3BR townhomes avail. in Cooperative. Units starting at $412 - $485/mo. Water, trash, sewer paid. Now Leasing FIRST MONTH FREE! for August Back patio, CA, hard wood Adam Ave. Townhomes floors, full bsmt., stove, 3BR, 2 bath, 2 car garage, refrig., W/D hookup, gar- 1,700 sq. ft., some with bage disposal, Reserved fenced in back yards. parking. On site manage$895/mo. ment & maintenance. 24 hr. Brighton Circle emergency maintenance. 3BR, 2.5 bath, 1 car garMembership & Equity Fee age, 1,650 sq. ft., $995/mo. Required. 785-842-2545 (Equal Housing Opportunity) Bainbridge Circle 3BR, 1.5 - 2.5 bath, 1 car 1, 2, 3BRs NW-SW-SE garage, 1,200 - 1,540 sq. ft. $375 to $900/mo. No pets. $775 - $875/mo. Available now. Please call Pets okay for more info 785-423-5828 with paid pet deposit 2BR avail. now at 2406 Alawww.garberprop.com bama, 8C. 1.5 bath, kitchen 785-841-4785 appls. $625/mo. Call Heritage Realty 785-841-1412 3BR, avail. now 2824 Uni2BR, 1 bath, 2100 Haskell. versity Dr., Lawrence. 2 CA, DW, W/D hookup, car- Bath, all amenities, 1 car. port. $575/mo. Available $960/mo. 785-550-8599 Now. Call 785-842-7644 3-4BR - Newer Crestline duplexes. 3 bath, all kitchen appls. W/D, 2 car. No pets. $1,095-$1,295. 785-979-2923 2BR, 2 bath, fireplace, CA, W/D hookups, 2 car with opener. Easy access to I-70. Includes paid cable. Pets under 20 lbs. allowed Call 785-842-2575 www.princeton-place.com

Houses

11th & Mississippi Street Directly across from Memorial Stadium

Call for details: (785) 843-2116

www.berkeleyflats.com youtube: berkeleyflats

LAKE POINTE VILLAS Avail. Now & Aug. 1 3 & 4 BR 3 1/2 Bath Homes 1,900 sq. ft. at Lake Pointe Villas (Candy Lane) Wonderful Development near Clinton Lake, K-10, & Kansas Turnpike Pets are Welcome. $995 per month

Garber Property Management 785-841-4785 GarberProperty.com

King oak waterbed frame, heater, liner, mattress cover, 6 drawer underbed dresser. Photo online. $200 OBO. Avail for pickup after 8/13. Call/message 785-843-3659

Sports-Fitness Equipment

13 Foot Coleman Canoe for sale. Moving must sell Coleman canoe 13 feet, green with two seats. Easy load. $99.00 Kitchen Chairs: four, on to rollers. $40. Please call 785-393-1992 785-550-7529 Excercise Bike. ProgramMattress Sets: Factory re- mable excercise bike. Very jects, new in plastic. Save good condition. $25. Call: up to 70%. All sizes. 785-865-5636 Fri.-Sun. only 785-766-6431 Queen size bed. Matress, Futon. Black frame sofa/ box springs, metal frame. bed futon in excellent conGood shape. $100. Call: dition with tan 8” thick, full size mattress. $70 cash 785-760-3109 only. Call 785-843-2957 in Rock maple desk. Excellent Lawrence. quality. Home size. $75 Call: 785-893-4301 Set of Golf Clubs & bag. Women’s right handed. SAVERS $75. Call: 785-214-9183

OUTLET FURNITURE

Everything must Go Going Out OF Business

Sofas, loveseats, BR sets, dinette sets, mattresses.

Last month - Buy NOW! 1414 W 6th St, Lawrence 785-856-4640

Solid Mahogany desk. Circa 1930’s. Excellent! Home size $80. Call: 785-893-4301

Upscale Furniture For Sale

in excellent shape. Dining Room Set, Martinique by Thomasville, cherry finish. Rectangular table 44x72” w/ two leaves, extends to 112” and pads. Four side chairs w/ neutral upholstered seats, two arm chairs. Buffet, 68x18x40” w/ 3 drawers w/ silver inserts and 4 doors. $1995 Home Office Group, Martin, espresso finish. Executive desk, credenza with hutch w/ 2 glass door cabinets, book case, 2 drawer file cabinet. $1695.

Treadmill for sale. Pro-Form E355 Cool Aire Heart Rate Control Treadmill in very good condition. $100. Moving need to sell. Call 785-418-1339 for information. UFC MMA Protective Gear. New. Includes 2 pair MMA leather gloves, one pair instep guards, 2 Everlast leather headgear protection. $100 cash obo. 785 979 2312. Weight Bench w/bar. Lots of weights included. $50. Call: (785) 979-3625 Weight bench with weights & barbell. $25. Call: 785-865-5636 Fri.-Sun. only

TV-Video DVD - CD Player - Sylvania DVD -CD Player video cassette recorder. Asking $10. 785-832-0969 Haier 19” color TV/DVD combo. Remote included. 749-3298. $25

Sony Trinitron 36” TV with stand. $50 you haul (heavy) works great! Call Wingback Chair. Neutral 785-749-1608 color. $65. Call 785842-1760. Leave a message TV & Stand: 27” TV on a Wooden bookcase, 72”x28” wooden swivel base, $20. +five shelves, 1 fixed. $30 Please call 785-550-7529 each; 2 or more $25 each. TV - DVD Combo: 20” Flat Call: 785-766-3439 Screen Combo. Has remote control & on-off timer. Household Misc. Asking $85. 785-832-0969 Call 785-856-0869

Alegro China. Nice. $25 785-893-4301

45+ pieces. TV: Zenith TV (21” x 16” Call: screen) with remote. Excellent Condition! $10. Call (785) 843-5655. Bread Machine: Breadman Ultimate Bread Machine Want To Buy $15. Excellent condition! Call (785) 843-5655. WANT TO BUY, (newer)

China: Everyday, 52 piece used/broken PC or Mac and Desktops, set, blue, $10. Please call Laptops iPhones, iPads, and used 785-550-7529 but working iPods, and Coffee Maker: Krups 12- AT&T/T-Mobile cup coffee maker w/carafe Smartphones. Call or text coffee pot. $10. Excellent 785-304-0724. condition! 785-843-5655 Floor lamp. Brass. New lamp shade. Three way bulb. Good condition. $25.00. 785-842-8776. Loft bed. Twin size dark gray metal bed frame with desk underneath. Great for a dorm or small bedroom. $75 Excellent condition. 785-865-0806 Phone - GE Cordless phone with Caller ID & 10 number speed dial memory. Asking $5. 785-832-0969

ONLINE ADS target NE Kansas

via 9 community newspaper sites. WorldClassNEK.com


Lawrence-Rural

Pets

Cars-Domestic

Cars-Domestic

Cars-Domestic

Cars-Domestic

Cars-Domestic

SUNDAY, AU+US, 1., 2011 1" Cars-Imports Mazda 2002 Millenia S. Beautiful white / gray two tone, with tan leather heated seats. Moonroof, Bose audio, chrome wheels, Goodyear tires, dual power seats, and much more. Two owner, no accident car. See website for photos. Rueschhoff Automobiles rueschhoffautos.com 2441 W. 6th St. 785-856-6100 24/7

Large Family Garage Sale

1879 E. 50th Rd. (Take 6th st to Hwy 40W towards Topeka, Go through big springs and take a left on 50th rd. Across from Big Springs car lot. Big Springs, KS)

Lawrence 07

HUGE GARAGE SALE!

Blue Pitbull Puppies Gottiline/RzrsEdge $500+Call/txt 785-760-3199 or 917-374-3330 www.blackacrebulls.com

Friday: 1:30PM-? Saturday: 8AM-? Sunday: 8AM-?

2709 Wildflower Dr (near sunflower school) August 12-14 Fri (8AM-2PM, 4PM-7PM) Sat-Sun (8AM -6PM) SALE! SALE! SALE! Cheap items 46” LCD TV Panasonic1080 p (almost new), Dining table with 6 chairs, loads of kids shoes, diapers, scooter, car seats, outdoor grill, charcoal and gas, sewing machine, booster seat, new baby clothes, tons of board games and toys, barbies, small cars, stereo, ladder, books, kids clothing (2-5yrs), dresses , tops and skirts for girls, winter clothing for girls, boys and girls bike (3-6 yrs), computer, printers, Christmas decoration, Christmas tree and lights, pots, kitchen stuff, microwaves, king size bed with mattress, women sandals and purses, dresser and side tables (complete set), queen size bed with mattress, piano set, bed sheets, blankets, very nice tops for women (large), DVD players, TV, couch set (green), bathroom stand, flower decorations, framed paintings.... and a lot more... 10

Big Multi-Family Sale 19th & Vermont

Saturday & Sunday 7AM - ? Lot of furniture & tools. 16

3 Family Garage Sale Sat. 8-2

Furniture, sporting goods equipment, baby items, English Bulldog Puppies. 9 clothing, lawn and gar- Wks old. M & F. AKC reg. den equipment, lawn Brown, White, & Brindle. mower, Grand Jeep Cher- Champ pedigree. All shots. okee, Edison phono- $950/ea 785-371-3646 or graph, Craftsman bgarry@live.com edgers, chippers, snow blowers, dirt bikes, Men’s clothing, housewares, & much misc.

We’ve Got What You Want at This Multi-Family Sale Saturday and Sunday August 13 and 14 7AM-4PM 26050 Chieftain Road (Rural Lawrence, 2nd driveway on left past Paradise Saloon.) CASH ONLY

Boats-Water Craft Cabin Cruiser: 1989 Bayliner Cabin Cruiser. Ciera Sunbridge 2455, trailer, lift, dock box. Lake Perry. Serious Buyers only. $10,950 or best offer. Call 785-865-0797, 785-760-1828

Campers

Acura 2003 RSX, 3dr Spt Cpe, FWD auto/tiptronic.lthr, 135k. 24-33MPG. $8,900. View pictures at www.theselectionautos.com 785.856.0280 845 Iowa St. Lawrence, KS 66049

Buick Lucerne CXL 2009 Leather seats, heated front seats, allow wheels and much much more Stk#D8739 Sale Price $20,822

Robert Brogden Olathe Buick - GMC KC’s #1 Low Price Dealer 1500 E. Santa Fe, Olathe, KS 800-536-5346 913-782-1500 www.robertbrogden.com

Chevrolet Impala LT 2010 Stk#D8756 Sale Price $15,780

Robert Brogden Olathe Buick - GMC KC’s #1 Low Price Dealer 1500 E. Santa Fe, Olathe, KS 800-536-5346 913-782-1500 www.robertbrogden.com

Ford 2008 Mustang GT this is one hot ride! Leather heated seats, Shaker sound system, local trade, very nice! Stk#58041A2 only $21,476. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Cadillac 1984 El Dorado Biarritz. 74,000 miles. Very Chevrolet 2010 Malibu’s mpg hwy, nicely clean, stanless top, spoke 32 Like new wheels, leather interior. equip’d. $6000 firm. Call in the throughout with remainder of 5yr/100,000 mile mornings to 785-840-8356. factory warranty. 6 available price as low as $16,495.00 1.9% apr financing available. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 Buick 2008 Enclave CXL www.dalewilleyauto.com AWD, power liftgate, sunroof, navigation, 19” alloy wheels, Bose sound, dvd, On Star, GM certified, first 2yrs maintenance, and much more! Stk# 14586A only $30,995. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Keystone sprinter 5th We have a 2004 Panterra Wheel- 2004- in excellent condition-It is 30 ft, has 2 MS electric scooter, small electronics, antique glas- slide outs, ceiling fan in living room, power jack, sware, jewelry, books, toys, childrens clothes, sleeps 6, also comes with camping gera, and household items. some Among the household dishes, etc. super Buy at items for sale are brass $17,500- call 913-724-3099. candle sticks, lawn chairs, grocery roller bas- RV's ket, decorative woven Monaco 2005 30’ basket, ironing board, 20,000 miles, 2 slides, auto iron, roaster pans, bamjacks, backup camera, boo trays, art work, and oven/ convection microthrow pillows. We also wave, brand new bank have an over the stove system that adds 36 horsemicrowave oven, counter power to the V 10 gas entop microwave oven, gine, always covered when Black and Decker yard not used, sleeps 6-8,very vacuum/blower, baseclean. Selling below book board heater, humidifier value for $42,000. with filters, electric Call 785-615-9026 or juicer, furniture (some 785-615-1478. antiques), assorted power tools, hand tools, Buick 2011 Lacrosse CXL sewing machines (1 ansave huge on one of the tique Singer), new toilet most beautiful sedans in seat, men, womens and the market! Stk#12975 children’s clothing, and only $27,995.00 much more. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Cadillac 2007 STS AWD luxury edition, this is one luxury car that you don’t have to spend a luxurious price on! Stk#131221 only $18,276.00 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

CHEVY 2008 IMPALA FWD LT Leather heated seats, ABS, rear spoiler, alloy wheels, On Star, GM certified, XM radio and affordable only $16,995.00 STK#18910 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Honda 2009 Civic EX cpe, like new, alloy wheels, sunroof, and fun to drive! Stk#19689 only $17,947.00 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Infiniti 2003 G35, two to choose, under 100k, auto/lthr. moon, loaded, Bose, starts @ $12,900. www.theselectionautos.com 785.856.0280 845 Iowa St. Lawrence, KS 66049

2916 Kensington Road.

(Prairie Park)

Pets Gorgeous English Bulldog puppy for sale. AKC Registered, come with shots, health certificate, and health guarantee 8 weeks old $400 marylongley41@yahoo.com 913-649-1815

1997 Mercury Cougar 30th edition. One Owner. 59,000 miles, Top Cat Pkg, Full power. Mon roof, 4.6 Liter Engine, new tires, leather interior, Many Extras. Always been garaged. Excellent Condition. Call 785-594-3204/785-393-0060

GM CERTIFIED is not like any other Dealer backed warranty. Don’t let other dealers tell you any different. DALE WILLEY AUTOMOTIVE IS the only dealer in Lawrence that GM Certifies their cars. COME SEE THE DIFFERENCE! CALL FOR DETAILS. 785-843-5200 ASK FOR ALLEN

Chevrolet 2010 Cobalt Sedan LS 33+ MPG. Extra clean Stk#C8721 Sale Price $12,998

Robert Brogden Olathe Buick - GMC KC’s #1 Low Price Dealer 1500 E. Santa Fe, Olathe, KS 800-536-5346 913-782-1500 www.robertbrogden.com

Advertise your Garage Sale to all of Northeast Kansas!

Your ad will run Wednesday through Saturday in the Lawrence Journal-World and in one issue of the Community papers!

Nissan 2007 Altima, 2.5 auto/tiptronic, 101k, 26-34MPG, air cruise, ABS pw, pl. $11,900. www.theselectionautos.com 785.856.0280 845 Iowa St. Lawrence, KS 66049

Chrysler 2006 300C loaded up with all the extra’s sunroof, leather heated memory seats, Boston premium sound, stk#436431 only $17,686.00 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Chrysler 2010 Sebring Convertible Touring, this is one fun car! Come by for a test drive! Stk#16266 only $18,978 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Chrysler 2007 300 Touring sedan, this is one stylish and sporty sedan! Stk#126944 only $13,450. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com Dale Willey Automotive 2840 Iowa Street (785) 843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

signal.baldwincity.com www.lansingcurrent.com

Toyota 2009 Camry LE 32k, 4cyl. 21-31MPG, 16” alloy, white/gry int. $14,500. View pictures at www.theselectionautos.com 785.856.0280 845 Iowa St. Lawrence, KS 66049

Mazda 2005 Rx8 High Performance. 1.3L Rotary motor, alloy wheels, ravishing two-tone interior w/silver exterior. Don’t miss sports car for only $11, 888 Firm. All American Auto Mart 1200 East Santa Fe Olathe KS 66061 visit our website www.aaamkc.com Call 888-239-5723 Today.

MINI 2008 Cooper Hardtop 2dr Coupe S Stk#D8734 Sale Price $19,990

Robert Brogden Olathe Buick - GMC KC’s #1 Low Price Dealer 1500 E. Santa Fe, Olathe, KS 800-536-5346 913-782-1500 www.robertbrogden.com

Olds 2003 Alero. Great looking silver 4 door automatic with clean gray cloth inside. Two owner, NO accident car in great condition. Alloy wheels, PW, PL, cruise. Would make a super student car! Seew ebsite for photos. Rueschhoff Automobiles rueschhoffautos.com 2441 W. 6th St. 785-856-6100 24/7

Toyota 2006 Camry, SE, 101k, auto, 16” alloys, rear spoiler, JBL, power seat, moon, pw, pl, $11,500. View pictures at www.theselectionautos.com 785.856.0280 845 Iowa St. Lawrence, KS 66049

Volkswagen Passat Sedan 4dr Auto Komfort FWD Sedan 2009 Stk#T6696A Sale Price $20,995 Pontiac 2009 G6 GT sedan, local trade, alloy wheels, spoiler, remote start, ABS w/traction control, On Star, and more! Stk#300271 only $15,486.00 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

www.bonnersprings.com

www.lawrence.com www.basehorinfo.com www.shawneedispatch.com

Saturn 2007 Aura XE leather heated seats, 18” alloy wheels, On Star, great gas mileage and plenty of room for the family! Stk#307641 only $14,476. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Chevy 2007 Malibu LS, one owner, 4cyl, great gas mileage, great finance terms available, only $11,977. stk#18647A Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Reach over 140,000 readers in Print and over 170,000 readers Online for just $39.95!

www.ljworld.com

Mazda 2002 Millenia S. Super looking car in white with tan leather heated seats. Moonroof and chrome wheels. NICE car, two owner, NO accidents. Bose audio, dual power seats, and much more. See website for photos. Rueschhoff Automobiles rueschhoffautos.com 2441 W. 6th St. 785-856-6100 24/7

1-888-239-5723 All American Auto Mart 1200 E Sante Fe Olathe, KS www.aaamkc.com

Antiques-Classic

Large amount of Antique and used Furniture & Collectibles, Scuba Training gear, English saddle and bridle, western saddle, nursing textbooks, clarinet, trumpet, toys, clothing, household goods, and much more!

Pontiac 2005 6.0L engine, 6sp. transmission, deep ocean blue with gray interior. This is a beautiful car, very rare! Don’t miss this one! For only $15,488. All American Auto Mart 1200 East Santa Fe Olathe KS 66061 visit our website www.aaamkc.com Call 888-239-5723 Today.

Pontiac 2009 G8 GT 6.0 V8 with lots of power to spare! You gotta drive this one! Not many left! Stk#11346 only $28,995.00 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Robert Brogden Olathe Buick - GMC KC’s #1 Low Price Dealer 1500 E. Santa Fe, Olathe, KS 800-536-5346 913-782-1500 www.robertbrogden.com

PROTECT YOUR VEHICLE WITH AN EXTENDED SERVICE CONTRACT FROM DALE WILLEY AUTOMOTIVE CALL ALLEN or TONY at 785-843-5200 Rueschhoff Automobiles rueschhoffautos.com 2441 W. 6th St. 785-856-6100 24/7

Saturn 2004 Vue AWD, 3.5L, 6cyl. automatic, Forest green w/gray interior. Winter vehicle at summer price only $18,988. Get Ready now - snow is coming soon! All American Auto Mart 1200 East Santa Fe Olathe KS 66061 visit our website www.aaamkc.com Call 888-239-5723 Today.

WE BUY CARS Top dollar for top late model vehicles. Drive in, see Allen or Jeff and get your big bucks today! 2840 Iowa St. Lawrence. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Cars-Imports Honda 2000 Civic, 4Dr, sedan, Many New parts, Cold AC, 222,000 miles. $2,500/ or best offer. 785-766-6676

Volkswagon 2005 Passat GLX local trade, loaded up with all the nice things you want, stk#10796 only $15,450. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Crossovers

www.tonganoxiemirror.com

www.desotoexplorer.com

www.eudoranews.com Dodge 2006 Charger SXT 3.5 V6, nothing says sporty sedan like this! Only $14,368.00 stk#588621. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Pontiac 2006 G6, red, auto, 6cyl, 98k, CD, PW, PL, air, cruise, alloys, spoiler, 16”alloy, $10500. View pictures at www.theselectionautos.com 785.856.0280 845 Iowa St. Lawrence, KS 66049

DON’T SEE WHAT YOU WANT? Give us a call we can help you find it! DALE WILLEY AUTOMOTIVE, JUST ASK FOR DOUG 785-843-5200

DON’T SEE WHAT YOU WANT? GIVE US A CALL WE CAN HELP YOU FIND IT! DALE WILLEY AUTOMOTIVE, JUST ASK FOR DOUG 785-843-5200 Ford Mustang- Convertible. 1996. Colbalt blue,gray interior, black top, V6, 109k, auto, cruise,air bags, PW, PS, PB, pwr mirrors, intm. wipers,newer paint and top, always garaged, $5000 obo, call 785-856-5510

Call Toll-Free: 866-823-8220 Email: classifieds@ljworld.com

GET YOUR CAR COVERED From the tires to the roof from Bumper to Bumper. 0% FINANCING AVAILABLE on all service contracts. NO CREDIT CHECKS! CALL FOR DETAILS. 785-843-5200 ASK FOR ALLEN

Honda 2004 EX-L 4dr. loaded with power sunroof, alloy wheels, heated mirrors, leather, PW, tilt, steering wheel controls, Perfect condition. All American Auto Mart 1200 East Santa Fe Olathe KS 66061 visit our website www.aaamkc.com Call 888-239-5723 Today.

Acura 2001 MDX Touring, 136k, leather, heat seats, Bose, 6disc/cass, PW, PL, moon, home-link, $10900 View pictures at www.theselectionautos.com 785.856.0280 845 Iowa St. Lawrence, KS 66049

Infiniti 2004 G35 sedan, white exterior w/tan leather interior, very clean, AM/FM/6 disc CD changer, PW, PL, moon roof. Priced to SELL! 785-979-6014

Pontiac G6 Sedan GT 2008 Stk#D8757 Sale Price $14,780

Buick 2008 Enclave CXL, leather, alloy wheels, On Star, Buick Certified with 2 yrs of maintenance included! Stk#471241 only $26,995. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Robert Brogden Olathe Buick - GMC KC’s #1 Low Price Dealer 1500 E. Santa Fe, Olathe, KS 800-536-5346 913-782-1500 www.robertbrogden.com

WE BUY CARS Top dollar for top late model vehicles. Drive in, see Allen or Jeff and get your big bucks today! 2840 Iowa St. Lawrence. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Lexus 2002 GS 430 4.3L, V-8 engine with automatic trans. Beautiful midnight black w/gray interior. sunroof, navigation, custom chrome wheels. Thousand below book at only $13,450. All American Auto Mart 1200 East Santa Fe Olathe KS 66061 visit our website www.aaamkc.com Call 888-239-5723 Today.

ENHANCE your listing with MULTIPLE PHOTOS, MAPS, EVEN VIDEO! WorldClassNEK.com


2" SUNDAY, AU+US, 1., 2011 Crossovers Crossovers

Ford 2010 Escape XLT 4wd, ABS, traction control, alloy wheels, steering wheel controls, cd changer, stk#11153A only $18,844.00 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Nissan 2007 Murano AWD S, alloy wheels, power seat, power pedals, and more. Stk#15039 only $20,995. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Sport Utility-4x4

Honda 2008 CRV LX, local trade, power equip, dependability, only $18,487. stk#368901. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Volvo 2006 XC90 AWD loaded with luxury! Stk#17346 only $21,995. Great finance terms are available Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Chevrolet 1989 K1500 4x4, Awesome work truck, rhino sprayed, won’t rust anymore! $3,998. All American Auto Mart 1200 East Santa Fe Olathe KS 66061 www.aaamkc.com Call 888-239-5723 Today.

Dodge 1999 Durango SLT 4x4 immaculate interior, loaded, window tint, CD player, 5.2L engine, Runs perfect. $4,998. All American Auto Mart 1200 East Santa Fe Olathe KS 66061 visit our website www.aaamkc.com Call 888-239-5723 Today.

Sport Utility-4x4

Truck-Pickups

Truck-Pickups

Robert Brogden Olathe Buick - GMC KC’s #1 Low Price Dealer 1500 E. Santa Fe, Olathe, KS 800-536-5346 913-782-1500 www.robertbrogden.com

Jeep 2005 Liberty Renegade 4wd, A/C, sunroof, navigation, cruise control, power equipment, stk#169371 only $14,632. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

2008 Jeep Wrangler, Hard Doors, Power Windows, Tilt, Cruise, Bright Yellow, Ready for some fun in the sun! $19,995

Ed Bozarth Chevrolet # 1 Buick - GMC The Dealer You Can Trust 3731 S Topeka Ave Topeka, KS 66609 SALES (877) 721-490 SERVICE (877) 626-9358 www.edbozarthoftopeka.com

Dodge 1999 Durango SLT 4x4 immaculate interior, loaded, window tint, CD player, 5.2L engine, Runs perfect. $4,998. All American Auto Mart 1200 East Santa Fe Olathe KS 66061 visit our website www.aaamkc.com Call 888-239-5723 Today.

Robert Brogden Auto Plaza Chevrolet 2006 Trailblazer LS, 4.2L, 6cyl. Stunning blue w/gray interior. Sun roof, tow PKG, tinted windows, CD player, Alloy wheels. 3 to choose from. All American Auto Mart Motorcycle-ATV 1200 East Santa Fe Olathe KS 66061 visit our website Harley Davidson Sportster www.aaamkc.com 2005. Extra Low Mileage! Call 888-239-5723 Today. Only 1015 miles! Extra Clean! Same as NEW! EXCELLENT condition! Pearl White. Always stored inside. Includes windshield & backrest. $8200.00 Call Rodney 785-423-1586 See at 757 Hwy 40 Lawrence, KS

Honda 2005 Pilot EXL 4wd, v6, heated leather seats, sunroof, traction control, alloy wheels room for 7 and it leaves room in your wallet! Stk#17246A2 only Honda Shadow 2006 for $16,444. sale. 750 Trike with Dale Willey 785-843-5200 Motortrike conversion. www.dalewilleyauto.com ONLY 1500 miles on it! Blood Stone Red, has back rest, Show Chrome windshield, chrome luggage rack, chrome wheels. Trike Chevy 2010 HHR LT 4cyl, is in excellent condition get great gas mileage with very minor scratches. and plenty of room. Please no tire kickers.Test Chevy Certified w/2yrs rides will NOT be allowed. of worry free maintePrice: $11,500 CASH Con- nance! Stk#10963 only tact Doug at 785-865-6406 $14,678.00 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 Yamaha 2009 V-Star 250 www.dalewilleyauto.com A very nice V-Twin motorcycle that is great for getting around town. Purchased new in 2009 and Lincoln 2007 MKX AWD has only 2000 miles. Averone owner, loaded with age gas mileage is around an ultra sunroof, leather 65 mpg. It has always been heated and cooled seats, kept in the garage. navigation system and $2,700.00 Call: 785-856-0631 much much more! Stk#12683 only $24,995. Sport Utility-4x4 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Ford 2007 Escape XLS. This is the gas saving 4 cylinder front wheel drive Escape. The most economical to drive. Great condition and has higher miles (141K), but priced at only $7885. 26 MPG hiway. New tires. Take a look. Extended warranty available Rueschhoff Automobiles rueschhoffautos.com 2441 W. 6th St. 785-856-6100 24/7

Protect Your Vehicle with an Extended Service Contract from Dale Willey Automotive. Call Allen or Tony at 785-843-5200

Protect Your Vehicle with an Extended Service Contract from Dale Willey Automotive. Call Allen or Tony at 785-843-5200

Jeep 2004 Wrangler Sport. 4.0L, 6Cyl, 5sp with custom lift kit & 35 inch tires on alloy wheels. Come drive this Jeep today, it’s absolutely amazing. One of a kind, head turner. All American Auto Mart 1200 East Santa Fe Olathe KS 66061 visit our website Hyundai 2003 Santa Fe. www.aaamkc.com NICE all wheel drive, Call 888-239-5723 Today. leather, heated seats, moonroof, alloy wheels with newer tires. ONE owner, Nice burgandy with gray interior. Sale price of only $7995. See website for photos. Rueschhoff Automobiles rueschhoffautos.com 2441 W. 6th St. 785-856-6100 24/7 Infiniti 2002 QX4, 4X4 in awesome condition, beautiful platinum gray. One of the nicest little SUV’s ever made, and has that famous Nissan V6. Come Toyota 2008 Highlander take a look. See website Sport 4wd, power equip, for photos. CD, Alloy wheels, 2nd Rueschhoff Automobiles row bench with a 3rd rueschhoffautos.com row, great dependability, 2441 W. 6th St. only $21,555. stk#15163A 785-856-6100 24/7 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

All American Auto Mart 1200 East Santa Fe Olathe KS 66061 www.aaamkc.com Call 888-239-5723 Today.

GMC 2007 Yukon XL SLT 4wd, loaded up with it all, navigation, sunroof, DVD, and more! You gotta see this one! Stk#54939A1 only $23,486.00 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

We’re open for business!

Now serving the Lawrence area for Sales and Service on Chrysler, Dodge, Ram and Jeep. Authorized warranty service dealer. Services hours: M-F 7:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. • Saturday 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Sales hours: Mon-Tues-Thurs 8:30 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. Wed, Fri & Sat 8:30 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. 2121 W. 29th Terrace • Lawrence, KS 66047 785-856-8889

Ed Bozarth Chevrolet # 1 Buick - GMC The Dealer You Can Trust 3731 S Topeka Ave Topeka, KS 66609 SALES (877) 721-490 SERVICE (877) 626-9358 www.edbozarthoftopeka.com

NISSAN 2008 ARMADA LE 4WD, Sunroof, leather, alloy wheels, Bose Sound, 2nd row, bench, power liftgate, one owner, VERY NICE! STK#100331, ONLY $31,745. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Ford 2006 F250 Crew Cab Lariat Diesel, auto, stunning black w/slightly chrome everywhere. This is a highboy 4x4 with leather, sunroof, tinted windows, & off road package. You will not find another Truck like it! All American Auto Mart 1200 East Santa Fe Olathe KS 66061 visit our website www.aaamkc.com Call 888-239-5723 Today.

Ford 2003 F-350 Crew Dually 7.3 Power Stroke Turbo Diesel 5 speed, alloy wheels, chrome step guards, bed liner, tinted windows $9,988

Jeep 2007 Commander Sport 4wd, sunroof, abs, 3rd row seating, stk#19824A only $18,498. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

JEEP 2008 Grand Cherokee Laredo 4WD, Warranty, Alloy wheels, One owner, Power seat, XM/CD/MP3 Stereo, only $19,741. STK#10746. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Jeep 2008 Grand Cherokee Laredo 4x4, 3.7L, 6cyl., adjustable foot pedals, tire pressure monitoring system, chrome package, Alaskan silver with 2 tone interior. All American Auto Mart 1200 East Santa Fe Olathe KS 66061 visit our website www.aaamkc.com Call 888-239-5723 Today.

Jeep 2008 Grand Cherokee Laredo 4wd 3.7 lt V6, sunroof, ABS, alloy wheels, tow pkg, and more, stk#12496 only $19,874.00 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

What’s GM Certified? 2yrs of free regular maintenance 172 Pt. Inspection 12 Mo./12,000 Mi. Bumper-to-Bumper Warranty 100,000 mi./5-yr. limited Powertrain warranty, no deduct. 24-hr. Roadside Assistance Courtesy transportation. Nationwide coverage backed By General Motors. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Toyota 1998 Tacoma SRS PU 4x4, ext. cab. 5sp, cold AC, tow package. Did I mention 4x4 ext. cab! Hard to find! All American Auto Mart 1200 East Santa Fe Olathe KS 66061 visit our website www.aaamkc.com Call 888-239-5723 Today.

Ford 1996 Chateau E150 7 passenger. CLEAN good looking van,with rear seat / bed. Quad captains chairs and rear heat and AC. Nice famiy or work van for under $5000. See wbsite for photos. Rueschhoff Automobiles rueschhoffautos.com 2441 W. 6th St. 785-856-6100 24/7

GMC 1997 Savana Conversion Van. 5.7L V8 engline. Limited conversion w/ high top. Only $4,888. All American Auto Mart 1200 East Santa Fe Olathe KS 66061 visit our website www.aaamkc.com Call 888-239-5723 Today.

Honda 2003 Odyessy EX, 2 owners, Honda Serviced, 133k, 16” alloy, pwr. sliding dr. rear air, trac. control, cd. $7,900. www.theselectionautos.com 785.856.0280 845 Iowa St. Lawrence, KS 66049

Kia 2006 Sedona, 1 owner, alloy wheels, power everything, rear AC, CD player, $8,998. All American Auto Mart 1200 East Santa Fe Olathe KS 66061 www.aaamkc.com Call 888-239-5723 Today. Pontiac 2006 Montana SV6. 7 passenger family van, very clean, with DVD player. Nice Dark Blue Metallic, clean gray interior. Rear A.C. Nice van, 119K miles, and priced at only $8,995. (KBB value $10,600) Rueschhoff Automobiles rueschhoffautos.com 2441 W. 6th St. 785-856-6100 24/7

Vans-Buses

All American Auto Mart 1200 East Santa Fe Olathe KS 66061 www.aaamkc.com Call 888-239-5723 Today. Dodge 2008 Grand Caravan SXT, alloy wheels, quad seating, power liftgate, heated seats, DVD, and more! Stk#183122 only $18,845. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Truck-Pickups

Ford 2004 Excursion Eddie Bauer Turbo Diesel automatic, quad captain chairs, rear entertainment, tow package, rear a/c, beautiful $19,988

Chevrolet 2007 Trailblazer LS 4wd, tow pkg, alloy wheels, power seat, On Star, Chevy Certified and more! Stk#314651 only $15879.00. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com Buick Enclave FWD 4dr CXL 2008 Stk#D8742 Sale Price $24,918

Hummer 2007 H3 Adventure 3.7L, 5cycl. 4x4, red with black & tan interior. This 1 owner SUV is perfect inside & out with all options. Special price $17,888. All American Auto Mart 1200 East Santa Fe Olathe KS 66061 visit our website www.aaamkc.com Call 888-239-5723 Today.

Vans-Buses

Chevrolet 2006 Silverado LT crew cab, 4WD, alloy wheels, On Star, Chevrolet Certified, everything you have been looking for in a truck! Stk#17352 only $21,476. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Mitsubishi 2006 Raider LS 4wd, one owner, crew cab, tow pkg, alloy wheels, stk#335961 only $13,450.00. Great finance terms are available! Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Honda 2003 Pilot LX AWD, 131k, auto, cloth, rear air, silver/gry int. 3 rows cd, cruise. $10,900. View pictures at www.theselectionautos.com 785.856.0280 845 Iowa St. Lawrence, KS 66049

Chevrolet Tahoe 4WD 4dr 1500 LTZ 2008 Stk#D8750 Sale Price $33,680

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GMC 2002 Yukon XL SLT 4wd, lots of room for the family and your wallet! Only $7,888 this is not a misprint! Hurry this won’t last long! Stk#574791 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

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Nissan 2008 Altima SL leather, heated seats, sunroof, Bose sound, this is one sporty car! Stk#10953 only $18,462.00 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

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Honda 2002 CR-V EX, AWD,149k,auto,moon,cd cass,cruise,15” alloy,26mpg Hwy,$8900 firm View pictures at www.theselectionautos.com 785.856.0280 845 Iowa St. Lawrence, KS 66049

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Ford 2007 Ford F150 XLT Crew cab, alloy wheels, pwr equipment, tow pkg, 5.4 liter V8 stk#16336 only $22,551.00. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

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Robert Brogden Olathe Buick - GMC KC’s #1 Low Price Dealer 1500 E. Santa Fe, Olathe, KS 800-536-5346 913-782-1500 www.robertbrogden.com

Ford 2006 F150 XLT Ext cab, tow pkg, alloy wheels, running boards, tonneau cover, and more! Stk#18017b1 only $12,487. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com Ford 2008 Ranger 4x4 Ext. Cab Tow Pkg. Black over Black & Gray Interior, 114,285 miles, one owner, PW, PDL, Keyless Entry, nice off-road tires. Accepting bids through 9/6/2011. Vehicle will be sold to highest bidder. Call Zak at 785-865-1046 or email at zbolick@douglascountybank.c om for more information or to place a bid.

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Stop offering opinions on relationships

Dear Annie: My sister-inlaw, “Robyn,” is also a dear friend who has been part of my life for 20 years. Robyn is now in her 50s and has two children — one by a married man who dumped her, and the other by a loser who abandoned her. Robyn finally married a stable co-worker, but they divorced after six years. Since then, she has dated a lot, but the relationships never work out, and she always has some kind of crisis. The problem is, she asks for my opinion, but when I am not supportive, she stops talking to me. I’m tired of it. I can’t work up the energy to care anymore, and I no longer want to be involved in her drama. Her current beau is a guy who was convicted of stalking his exgirlfriend and breaking into her home. I told Robyn this relationship is doomed, but she said she was not interested in my unsolicited opinion and I should not contact her again. Robyn often stops speaking to me, and I’ve had enough. I miss our friendship, but don’t want to be her punching bag. If dating these losers makes her happy, that is her choice, but I am hurt that she once again has turned away from me because she knows I am right. When she decides to rekindle our friendship, is it OK if I choose not to speak to her? — See the Forest for the Trees Dear Forest: Sure, but it seems a little spiteful, especial-

Annie’s Mailbox

Marcy Sugar and Kathy Mitchell anniesmailbox@comcast.net

ly if you are hoping to one day be friends again. Instead, scale back enough to be less aggravated. If, after all these years, Robyn does not realize that she makes rotten choices, your criticisms will only make her dig in her heels. In order to change, she would likely need therapy. Stop offering your opinion. If she demands it, tell her she is a big girl now and can make her own decisions. Her mistakes are not yours to fix. Dear Annie: I wholeheartedly disagree with your advice to “Confused,” whose brother’s wife and sister’s husband had an affair. Snubbing their spouses would be no less hurtful for the siblings than if she just stayed away. In fact, it’s better if she stays home. That way, her family can enjoy a pleasant day without the constant reminder of the past that Confused’s uncivil behavior

Foxx goes with the ‘Flow’ Produced by Jamie Foxx, “In the Flow With Affion Crockett” (8 p.m., Fox) kicks off with a seemingly improvised hip-hop number tailored to members of the studio audience. It then dives into its main theme, sketch comedy, with a long and belabored filmed bit featuring Crockett as a beleaguered and forlorn Tiger Woods attempting a comeback at a miniature golf course. It sounds funnier than it is. “Flow” returns in its regular time slot next Sunday at 9:30 p.m. Repeats will air on Saturday nights at midnight, a time that seems more appropriate to this venture. ● As long as man has created science, there have been efforts to make science seem cool and trendy to the nonscientific. The latest arrives on “i.am.FIRST -- Science Is Rock and Roll” (6 p.m., ABC). This one-hour special features highlights from the 20th annual FIRST Robotics Championship, hosted by will.i.am of Black Eyed Peas fame. This yearly contest pits robotbuilding teens from various schools. FIRST stands for “For Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology.” The festival gathers 30,000 students, educators, engineers and business leaders at the Edward Jones Dome in St. Louis to celebrate students’ engineering skills and to enjoy musical performances by The Black Eyed Peas and Willow Smith. There are also special appearances by Justin Bieber, Jack Black, Bono, Miranda Cosgrove, Miley Cyrus, Josh Duhamel, Britney Spears, Snoop Dogg, Justin Timberlake and Steven Tyler.

Tonight’s other highlights ● Scheduled on “60 Minutes” (6 p.m., CBS): overseas tax havens, Albert Pujols, the “Top Gear” phenomenon. ● Musical stars gather at the “CMA Music Festival: Country’s Night to Rock” (7 p.m., ABC). ● High noon at midnight on “True Blood” (8 p.m., HBO). ● Natalia’s kidnapper can’t keep his trap shut on “CSI: Miami” (9 p.m., CBS). ● Jesse vanishes on “Breaking Bad” (9 p.m., AMC). ● Boar necessities on “The Glades” (9 p.m., A&E). ● Larry plays the hero on “Curb Your Enthusiasm” (9 p.m., HBO). ● The gang engages in spin control on “Entourage” (9:30 p.m., HBO). Sunday series “Big Brother” (7 p.m., CBS) ... “Minute to Win It” (7 p.m., NBC) ... Cheech asks Homer to replace Chong on “The Simpsons” (7 p.m., Fox) ... A trip to Paris on “Family Guy” (8:30 p.m., Fox). “Same Name” (8 p.m., CBS) ... Two hours of “The Marriage Ref” (8 p.m., NBC).

would generate. The parents have obviously accepted their children’s decisions to stay in their marriages and have moved past the pain. They attend family events with decorum. Why can’t “Confused”? If she persists in making things difficult for her siblings, she will find herself on the outside looking in. — M. Dear M.: A lot of readers agree with you, and we suspect part of the problem was our use of the word “snubbing.” Many readers interpreted that to indicate nastiness, when it is just the opposite. Social snubbing means behaving with extreme polite-

44 IV units 45 Philippine

11 Not in the pink

!"#$%&S() +&OSS-O&.

8/14

ness, while remaining slightly aloof. It is an acceptable form of reproach when someone has behaved terribly. The siblings (and parents) have many reasons to forgive the spouses, but it is not realistic to expect everyone else to be so generous. And “Confused” cannot learn to accept these mended relationships if she refuses to be present at family events that will allow her to do so. — Please e-mail your questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write to Annie’s Mailbox, P.O. Box 118190 Chicago, IL 60611.

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JACQUELINE BIGAR’S STARS

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some touching up. You will discover that you can regain the same understanding as in the past. Tonight: A must appearance. Cancer (June 21-July 22) ★★★★ A partner explains a lot more than in the past. Think positively. This person keeps trying to keep communication open. Tonight: Listen to a favorite piece of music. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) ★★★★ Defer to others, as you might not have an alternative. Why fight city hall? A discussion occurs later in the day as you attempt to gain a better understanding. Tonight: Chat over dinner. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) ★★★ Bring friends and family together. Whether it is a picnic or a family gettogether makes little difference. Tonight: Are you ready? Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ★★★★ You wake up with mischief in your heart and are likely to act on it as well. If with children, the bonding between you can only grow by letting your inner child out. Tonight: If you're tired, call it an early night. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) ★★★★ Make it OK to lay around at home. You might not be tired or feeling lazy, but you are smart

enough to know when you need some downtime. Tonight: Now that you are energized, what's next? Sagittarius (Nov. 22Dec. 21) ★★★★★ Take a hint from Libra. Make time for a late brunch, and invite a close family member. Feed togetherness! Tonight: Air out your feelings. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ★★★★ You might be in the mood to treat and share with others. Listen to what is happening with a child or loved one. He or she needs to share. Tonight: Hang out. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) ★★★★ Share your good mood. In fact, someone might delight in the fact that your humor and attitude are contagious. Tonight: Treat a loved one. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) ★★★ Take some muchneeded private time. You need less stressful moments to stay chipper. Let your mind wander. Later on, you will feel the difference. Tonight: Another person voices his or her displeasure. — The astrological forecast should be read for entertainment only.

BIRTHDAYS Pulitzer Prize-winning author Russell Baker is 86. Baseball Hall of Fame coach Earl Weaver is 81. Singer Dash Crofts is 73. Rock singer David Crosby is 70. Country singer Connie Smith is 70. Comedianactor Steve Martin is 66.

© 2011, Universal SUNDAY AU+US,Uclick 1., 2011 3" www.upuzzles.com

SMOKING ALTERNATIVES By Carl Cranby

Enhance your listing with

For Sunday, Aug. 14: This year, many doors open if you can stay fluid and let go of upset in awkward moments. Many people come forward this year. If you are single, you attract others like honey attracts bees. If you are attached, the two of you will learn how to balance your different needs. Pisces zeros in on basic issues. The Stars Show the Kind of Day You'll Have: 5Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult Aries (March 21-April 19) ★★★★ Listen to news. If need be, sit down and do some heavy thinking. Clear out a problem at work, which might take an attitude adjustment on your part. Tonight: Take some much-needed personal time. Taurus (April 20-May 20) ★★★★★ It might feel like you are carrying the weight of the world on your shoulders. How you discharge a problem could be very different from in the past. Tonight: Find your friends. Gemini (May 21-June 20) ★★★★ Let someone else have more say so. A mutual agreement might need

8/13

o Fargas is 65. Actor Antonio Actress Susan Saint James is 65. Actor David Schramm is 65. Author Danielle Steel is 64. “Far Side” cartoonist Gary Larson is 61. Actor Carl Lumbly is 60. Actress Jackee Harry is 55. Actress

Marcia Gay Harden is 52. Former basketball player Earvin “Magic” Johnson is 52. Actress Susan Olsen is 50. Actress Halle Berry is 45. Actress Mila Kunis is 28. TV personality Spencer Pratt is 28.

Universal Crossword Edited by Timothy E. Parker August 14, 2011

ACROSS 1 Impossible to achieve 9 Suppress, as a yawn 15 It’s not Lady Luck’s number 16 Marked the hour, in a way 17 Camel alternative? 18 Tea variety 19 They’re tailor-made? 20 Divest 21 Fish eggs 22 Laotians and Koreans, e.g. 25 Atom centers 27 It’s heavensent 28 Many an Air Force flier 29 Murphy of “Shrek” 32 Some drawers in a laundry room? 33 Sty squealer 34 Spanish inn 35 Install, as a carpet 36 Saratoga alternative? 38 Place for powder 39 “More! More!” 41 Newt wannabe 42 Ducky shade? 43 Like old cigarettes 44 IV units 45 Philippine

island 46 Make further corrections to a manuscript 48 Has a hunch 49 Vehicle 51 Signed with a symbol 52 Pinkett Smith in “Jason’s Lyric” 53 Neat ___ (tidy) 55 Lark alternative? 59 Hire new actors for 60 Parsons and Getty 61 Blasts from the past? 62 Region including Turkey DOWN 1 SUV, briefly 2 Where Sharks and Ducks collide 3 Atlantic City roller 4 Dondi and Annie 5 Goddess of wisdom 6 Smiles radiantly 7 Hubble Telescope part 8 Tolkien tree creature 9 Student of Zeno 10 “See ya later!” 11 Not in the pink

12 Capri alternative? 13 Monologist on weeknights 14 Trim a lawn 20 Furrow 22 Strolls leisurely 23 Learned one 24 Winston alternative? 25 Fail to take care of 26 Begley and Koch 28 Kirk, to McCoy 30 Think creatively 31 U.S. gold coins 33 Chart type 34 Agt.’s take 36 Antedate 37 Contingencies 40 “Bravo, bullfighter!”

42 Like a wellarmed fort 44 El ___ (Spanish hero) 45 Accountant’s book 47 Body shop jobs 48 Comet’s leader 49 Irene of “Fame” 50 “I hate to break up ___ ...” 52 San ___, Calif. 54 ___ de chat (ballet jump) 55 One of a D.C. hundred 56 Stevedore’s org. 57 Matter for the courts 58 “Spring ahead” letters

PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER

8/13

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8C

LAWRENCE • WORLD

| Sunday, August 14, 2011

L AWRENCE J OURNAL -WORLD

DEATHS DEBORAH G UY Funeral services for Deborah Guy, Lawrence, are pending and will be announced by Warren-

McElwain Mortuary. She died Saturday, Aug. 13, 2011, at Kansas University Hospital in Kansas City, Kan.

Alice Irene (Iverson) Percival January 23, 1934 – July 30, 2011 Alice Percival was born in Bismarck, North Dakota to George Iverson and Lydia Zherbina Iverson. Her father was from Minnesota, her mother from St. Petersburg, Russia. Alice enjoyed a happy childhood in a close family steeped in reading, music, and languages. In 1951 Alice, her parents, and younger sister moved to Seattle. She graduated from the University of Washington, summa cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa, with a degree in Slavic Languages and Linguistics. She taught at the University of Washington before moving to Cambridge, Massachusetts, where she worked as editor for the pre-eminent linguistics scholar Dr. Roman Jakobson at Harvard and MIT. At a linguistics conference in Bucharest, Romania, in 1967, she met her future husband, Dr. W. Keith Percival. They were married in 1968, first living in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and then Lawrence, Kansas, where Keith held positions of Chair and Professor at the Universities of Wisconsin and Kansas, respectively. Throughout her life Alice was an essential colleague in Keith’s research. Subsequently they moved to Seattle.

Alice enjoyed traveling to many countries with her husband and family. She loved Percival classical music, literature, dance, art, good conversation, nature, and animals (especially cats). Thoughtful, kind, and intensely loyal, Alice took a genuine interest in people. She was a modest, brave, generous and gallant woman who will be greatly missed. Her family and friends will always treasure the memories of the twinkle in her eye, her quick wit, and her compassion for others. Beloved wife of Dr. W. Keith Percival, treasured sister of Helen Carter (George), George Iverson (Phyllis), and Mary June Iverson. Much loved aunt of Jeffrey Carter (Lisa Peterson), Laurie Carter, and Kim Iverson Headlee (Chris). Celebration of life at 2 p.m., Sunday, August 21, at University Congregational Church, 4515 16th Ave NE, Seattle. Memorial gifts may be made to the Olympic Music Festival or a charity of your choice.

Carolyn Bailey Berneking Carolyn Bailey Berneking, age 96, died on August 11 at Lawrence Memorial Hospital. Mrs. Berneking was born in Kansas City, Mo., June 21, 1915. Parents were Dr. & Mrs. William H. Bailey of Oklahoma City; grandparents were Prof. & Mrs. E.H.S. Bailey, Lawrence, Kansas and Mr. and Mrs. Clarence E. Walker of Kansas City, Missouri. Mrs. Berneking graduated from the University of Kansas in 1937 with a degree in music, and later she received a master’s degree in library science from the College of Emporia. She married Christian Louis Berneking III of Trenton Mo. in 1937, who died in 1998. Mrs. Berneking taught public school music in Elmore County, Alabama before moving to Auburn, Alabama where she was a cataloger at the Auburn University Library. She worked as a cataloger at the Elizabeth Public Library, Elizabeth, New Jersey before coming to Watson Library, University of Kansas, as a serials librarian. She became librarian at Central Junior High School in Lawrence and after retirement she volunteered at the Kansas University Archives, Spencer Research Library from 1990 to 2004. During this time, she also worked as a preservation historian. She placed several houses

in Lawrence, buildings on KU’s campus, and a historic landmark site in Douglas Berneking County on the National Historic Register. She was a member of Pi Beta Phi (social sorority), serving as president of the Alumni Club; Daughters of the American Revolution; Twentieth Century; Historic Mount Oread Fund; Lawrence Preservation Alliance; Douglas County Historical Society; Kansas State Historical Society; and the First Presbyterian Church, Lawrence, Kansas. She is survived by two sons and a daughter: William Bailey Berneking, Wayzata, MN; Christian Louis Berneking IV and wife Elizabeth, Evansville, IN; Carolyn Berneking Kelleher, Spicer, MN; nine grandchildren and several great grandchildren. The family suggest memorials to the Dr. William H. Bailey Memorial Award in care of the Kansas University Endowment Association. Private interment will be in Oak Hill Cemetery. A celebration of life service will be held at the First Presbyterian Church in Lawrence on a date and time to be determined.

NAPOLEON ‘CHARLES’ PARKS Funeral services for Napoleon “Charles” Parks, 69, Lawrence, will be at 10 a.m. Aug. 20 at First Presbyterian Church in Lawrence with Pastor Leo Barbee Jr. officiating. Burial will follow in Oak Hill Cemetery in Lawrence. He died Friday, Aug. 12, 2011, at his home in Lawrence. He was born Nov. 9, 1941, in Lawton, Okla., the son of Clemmie Charles and Ruby Wilson Parks. Mr. Parks graduated from Lawton High School and earned a bachelor’s degree in physical education and a master’s in administration from Wichita State University. He taught four years in Wichita before moving to Lawrence, where he worked as an assistant principal at Lawrence High School from 1971 to 1998 and at Free State High School from 1998 until his retirement in 2004. Mr. Parks was a member of the Alpha Phi Alpha social fraternity. He served as a board member for Lawrence Parks and Recreation and the Douglas County Visiting Nurses Association. He was an avid golfer and gardener. He loved cooking,

Parks

playing poker and entertaining family and friends. He married Ella M. Myers on Aug. 8, 1970, in Wichita. She survives

of the home. Other survivors include a daughter, Gale Marie Turner and husband Michael, Lawton, Okla.; two sons, Charles Clifton, Omaha, Neb., and Terrance Victor, Overland Park; a sister, Linda Piper and husband Gordon, St. Louis; a granddaughter, Brittini Turner, Lawton, Okla.; a grandson, Tyson Miles Baldwin-Parks, Overland Park; and various relatives and friends. He was preceded in death by his parents. The family will greet friends from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Friday at Warren-McElwain Mortuary in Lawrence. The family suggests memorials be sent to Grace Hospice, sent in care of the mortuary, 120 W. 13th St., Lawrence, KS 66044. Online condolences may be sent at warrenmcelwain.com.

Deborah Lynn Toms Deborah Lynn “Debbie” Toms, 58, passed into the arms of Jesus on Friday, August 12, 2011 at Lawrence Memorial Hospital. A Mass of Christian Burial will be conducted at 10 a.m. Wednesday, August 17, 2011 at Corpus Christi Catholic Church with a luncheon to follow. Burial will be in the Grantville Cemetery, Grantville, KS. Debbie was born on August 2, 1953 to Don C. Welter (deceased) and Nancy Dean Boswell. Debbie was diagnosed with a brain tumor in April 2011. She handled her illness with faith and dignity and never considered herself sick. She was a living example of understanding God’s plan and pleasing him. Debbie had a special love of life and lived it with unwavering faith. She made several pilgrimages to Italy and was present for the canonization of her patron saint, Padre Pio. She loved the Catholic Church and was active in the RCIA program for nine years. She graduated from Wheaton North High School and Kirkwood Community College with a degree in Nursing. She worked in the Intensive Care Unit for over 20 years and most recently, in the Cath Lab and for Cardiovascular Consultants at Lawrence Memorial Hospital. She was active in “GO RED”, through the American Heart Association. She ran in the “Brew to Brew” run prior to her diagnosis. She completed a half-marathon in 2003 at Walt Disney World in Orlando, Florida. She loved to run and raised thousands of dollars for cancer/heart research. But what she loved most was being a mother. Her greatest gift on earth were her two sons, Jarrod and Travis and her two grandchildren

Rian and Aiden. She loved spending time with family. Every year she, her two sisters, Toms Cindy Ford and Linda Craig, and their mother, would take off on a surprise venture, which resulted in endless hours of laughter. Debbie also loved her home. Her favorite holiday was Halloween and she loved the fall season. Many who knew her have grown stronger in their faith because of her example. She will continue to witness to others as her story is retold. Debbie is a constant reminder to us that His plan is so very easy to understand. Pray, hope and don’t worry. This is what she strived for in her career, devotion to her family and friends, and most importantly, to her savior Jesus Christ, whom we thank for the many gifts and blessings received on her final journey home. A special thank you to all her friends, co-workers, Lawrence Memorial Hospital, Dr. Stein, Dr. Denning, Dr. Klish, Advocare, neighbors, and all the prayer warriors, for your love and devotion to the care of our sister. We could not have done this without you. God Bless you all. The family will receive friends Tuesday, August 16, 2011 from 5PM to 7PM at the church. A Parish rosary will be said at 7PM. Memorial contributions may be made to the American Heart Association and the Oncology Clinic at LMH. They may be sent in care of Warren-McElwain Mortuary in Lawrence. Online condolences may be sent to warrenmcelwain.com.

WFP expands relief work in famine-hit Somalia By Katharine Houreld Associated Press Writer

MOGADISHU, SOMALIA — The World Food Program said Saturday that it is expanding its food distribution efforts in famine-struck Somalia, where the U.N. estimates that only 20 percent of people needing aid are getting it. Some of those from the outlying regions have walked for days to the capital for help, only for it to be too late. In the pediatric ward in one of Somalia’s best-equipped hospitals, a shriveled baby lies motionless on a crowded ward; a doctor said he weighs less than he did at birth. Doctors push a feeding tube down

the nose of a skeletal 3-yearold, his body covered in sores. Mothers lay their babies between the cots on the floor because there are no beds left. Benadir hospital lacks equipment, nutritional supplements and even beds, but it’s a refuge most of the families here have walked for miles to get to, carrying children who got weaker by the hour. Many arrive too late to be saved; both Ali Abukar, the baby, and Ibrahim Abukar Abdi, the 3-year-old, died shortly after The Associated Press spoke to their mothers. That’s why aid agencies urgently need to increase their efforts to reach families beyond the Somali capital, said

Valerie Amos, the U.N.’s top humanitarian official, on Saturday. Wastelands in the battlescarred capital are being transformed into makeshift camps as families move in and set up shelters, hoping for help. The U.N. estimates that 2.8 million Somalis need food aid, and 2.2 million of them live outside the capital in areas controlled by Islamist rebels, who have forbidden many aid agencies to work in their territory, including the U.N.’s World Food Program. But WFP is already getting aid to some areas in southern Somalia that had been inaccessible a month ago, said one official. “We are expanding our activities in Mogadishu and

we are looking to dramatically increase those activities over the coming days and weeks as the security situation in the city permits,” said Stanlake Samkange, the WFP regional director in East and Central Africa. More aid was getting to southern Somalia as well, he said. But it’s hard enough to distribute aid in the capital, controlled by pro-government forces with the help of 9,000 African Union troops. At least 10 people have died this month in shootouts when aid agencies attempted to distribute bags of maize or grain, and competing militias fought over the site. Much of the food ended up being looted.

Joyce Ann Krones Joyce Ann Krones, RT(C) (CVIT), 52, passed away at her home in Lawrence, KS, on August 4th after a two-year battle with cancer. Her family and beloved dog Daisy were at her side. A Memorial mass will be held at 10am at St. John’s Catholic Church in Lawrence, KS., on Saturday, August 20th. Interment will be at a later date. Joyce was born on May 26th, 1959, to Leo G. and Marcella (Sally) M. (Lambert) Krones. She was proceeded in death by her father, her paternal grandparents Joe and Marie (Reilly) Krones as well as her maternal grandparents Russell and Helen (Tholen) Lambert. She is survived by her mother, her son Joshua A. (Sally) Pedraza of Lawrence, KS, and his daughter Eve; her daughter Samantha B. Pedraza of Oklahoma City, OK; her sister Susan (Stan) Kitten of Slaton, TX; her brother John (Kriss) Krones of Lawrence, KS; and sister Brenda (Liam) Riggs of Lawrence, KS. She is also survived by six nieces, one nephew and a large circle of aunts, uncles and cousins. Joyce graduated from Gilman High School and she received an Associate

of Applied Sciences degree from Kankakee Community College. She worked at Krones Texoma Medical Center in Denison, TX, as well as several hospitals in the Kansas City area. Most recently, she worked at Lawrence Memorial Hospital in Lawrence, KS. Joyce was licensed in Kansas with certification in cardiovascular interventional technology. Joyce was an animal lover. She volunteered for Operation Wildlife and the Lawrence Humane Society. She was a member of St. John’s Catholic Church in Lawrence. She also traveled extensively. She enjoyed spending time with her family and her French bulldog Daisy and was an avid reader. The family requests memorials be sent to: LMH Oncology Center, 330 Arkansas, Suite 105, Lawrence, KS 66044. Arrangements by the Redenius Funeral Home in Gilman, IL. Please sign the guest book at redeniusfuneralhomes.com.

WHEEL GENIUS

Road work planned this week Lawrence ● Crack sealing on Iowa Street from 23rd to 31st will cause intermittent lane closures. Completion: Friday. ● Water main rehabilitation on Kentucky, Ninth, 18th, 13th and Tennessee streets. Parking and a travel lane on Kentucky will be closed, as will parking and travel lanes on Tennessee. Single-lane traffic will still run through the areas. ● Phase two of annual street maintenance project on Sixth Street from Massachusetts to Iowa streets. Completion: midAugust. ● Repairs to concrete curbs and street pavement from Sixth to North Park streets and from Vermont to New Hampshire streets. Parking limitations and some single-lane traffic. Completion: mid-August. ● Add a center turn lane on Sixth Street between Folks Road and Monterey Way. Second phase construction will widen Sixth Street on the south side, eastbound lanes. Two lanes of traffic in the westbound lanes and one lane of eastbound traffic will be open. Completion: late August. ● Single-lane traffic both ways on Kasold Drive between Clinton Parkway and 31st Street for rebuilding of road. Access from side streets is right-turn only. Completion: late November. ● Add center turn lane on Kasold Drive from 23rd to 31st streets. Southbound traffic will use the lane already being used, and northbound traff ic will switch to new pavement. Completion: late fall. ● Kansas River levee closed (for construction of Bowersock Mills & Power Co.’s new plant) on the north bank, so users will be detoured to city streets crossing at the controlled intersection of North Second and Locust streets. Completion: late 2012. ● Second phase of overlay and crack-sealing projects could mean temporary single-lane closures. For a map of the overlay projects go to lawrenceks.org/public_w orks/streetmaintenance and click on “2011 Street Maintenance Plan.”

Douglas County ● Kansas River Bridge resurfacing project. Traffic will be reduced to one lane in each direction on U.S. 40/59. Completion: late October. ● North 1000 Road closed between U.S. Highway 59 and East 1200 Road beginning Wednesday as part of reconstruction and widening of North 1000 Road on the west side of a new U.S. 59 interchange. Local access for residents of area available. No marked detour available for other drivers, who must use alternate routes. Completion: early September. U.S. Highway 59 ● Northbound lanes over the Wakarusa River bridge will be reduced to one lane during repair and resurfacing project. Completion: late October. ● North 200 Road closed at U.S. Highway 59 for frontage road construction work. Completion: late 2012. Interstate 70/Kansas Turnpike ● Reconstruction of three miles just east of Lawrence. One-lane traffic each direction between mile markers 208 and 211. Access to the Lawrence Service Area will remain open. Expect delays during rush hour. Completion: November. ● Replacement of 142nd Street bridge in Leavenworth and Wyandotte counties. Both lanes of 142nd Street closed between Kansas and Riverview avenues. Daily lane closures could occur on I-70 and the right shoulder. Completion: late fall. ● Pavement repair and ramp work will close the eastbound right lane of I-70 in Shawnee County from California Avenue to the KTA toll gate. Completion: Wednesday. Interstate 435 ● Pavement repair from 87th Street to Midland Drive and on the Holiday Drive interchange ramps in Johnson County. Lane closures from 7 p.m. through noon Monday through Friday and from 7 p.m. until 1 p.m. on the weekend. Completion: late October.


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