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The Kansas City Star du lieu suivant : Kansas City, Missouri • A2

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Kansas City, Missouri
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A2
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2A SUNDAY MAY 19 2019Stay Connected KANSASCITY.COM 2019 Vol. 139 No. 244 290-240 (ISSN 0745-1067) The Kansas City Star is published daily. Subscriptions to The Kansas City Star are available either by home delivery or by mail. Home delivery rates include full digital access and delivery.

WEEKLY SUBSCRIPTION PUBLISHED RATES 7-day Wednesday-Sunday Sunday and Wednesday Sunday only Single-copy rates: Daily Sunday Digital only, including e-Edition: $12.99 per or $129.99 per when paid annually. applicable sales tax Subscriptions are available by mail, (7 issues per week) $52.00 per 4-week period plus applicable sales tax for Kansas and Missouri residents; elsewhere in the U.S. and U.S. posses- sions, $56.00 per 4-week period; in foreign countries $116.00 per 4-week period. All subscriptions will include delivery on Thanksgiving Day.

Your sub- scription is subject to the Terms of Service at http://www.kansascity.com/ terms-of-service. Published by The Kansas City Star, a McClatchy Company newspaper, 1601 McGee Kansas City, MO, 64108. Periodical rate postage paid at Kansas City, MO, and additional mailing offices. POSTMASTER: Please send address changes to The Kansas City Star, 1601 McGee Kansas City, MO 64108. Contact The Star Customer Service For delivery, subscription or billing, call toll-free 1-877-962-STAR (7827) or send email to Report an error To notify The Star of an error of fact, please email Obituaries Tony Gray, 817-390-7533, Legals Stefani Beard, 817-390-7224, Classified Keriann Leenerts, 817-390-7843, The Kansas City Star Publisher and President Tony Berg 816-234-4878 Editor and VP Mike Fannin 816-234-4345 Page Colleen McCain Nelson 816-234-4886 Stephanie Boggins 816-234-4069 Operations Jane Howard 816-234-4896 Phil Schroder 816-234-4585 THE KANSAS CITY STAR winning numbers: Missouri Pick 3 Midday: 5-4-8 Evening: 9-0-5 Missouri Pick 4 Midday: 6-9-7-6 Evening: 5-4-6-7 Missouri Show Me Cash: 5-6-20-35-38.

Next jackpot: $226,000 Missouri Lotto: 22-32-38-41- 42-43. Next jackpot: $1.7 mil- lion. Kansas Pick 3 Midday: 7-6-2 Evening: 1-0-0 Kansas 2by2: red 20-22, white 1-24 Super Kansas Cash: 2-9-18-21- 25, super cash ball 9. Next jackpot: $230,000 Lotto America: Drawing was too late for this edition. Sat- jackpot: $19.87 million.

Powerball: Drawing was too late for this edition. jackpot: $270 million. Please confirm numbers with state lottery officials. LOTTERIES Birthdays PBS newscaster Jim Lehrer is 85. TV personality David Hartman is 84.

Actor James Fox is 80. Actress Nancy Kwan is 80. Rock singer-composer Pete Townshend (The Who) is 74. Concert pianist David Helfgott is 72. Rock singer-musician Dusty Hill (ZZ Top) is 70.

College Football Hall of Famer and former NFL player Archie Manning is 70. Singer-actress Grace Jones is 68. Rock musician Phil Rudd is 65. Actor Steven Ford is 63. Actress Toni Lewis is 59.

Rock musician Iain Harvie (Del Amitri) is 57. Actress Polly Walker is 53. Actor Jason Gray-Stanford is 49. Gospel singer Israel Houghton is 48. Rock singer Jenny Berggren (Ace of Base) is 47.

Race car driver Dario Franchitti is 46. TV personality Kim Zolciak Biermann (TV: Housewives of is 41. Actor Drew Fuller is 39. Actor-comedianMichael Che (TV: Night is 36. ASSOCIATED PRESS On this date Multi-talented and fun- loving, Daniel, 12, is a good friend to have.

He is described as someone who mind compromis- ing to reach an agreement. Daniel loves being active and really enjoys riding his bike. He is also in- terested in motorcycles. In his downtime he likes reading, playing video games and making his own music. Daniel is proud of work- ing hard in school to im- prove and reach certain goals for himself.

He is a great kid who needs a loving family that will commit to him and help him reach his potential and beyond. A tight-knit family that can provide lots of structure, guidance and support would be ideal. To learn more about Daniel call Adopt Kansas Kids at 877-457-5430 or send an email to adoptkskids.og. His case number is CH-7464. FAMILY WANTED Submitted photo Two decades after open- ing on the Country Club Plaza, sources say Cinemark Palace at the Plaza will be closing.

told us the week of the festival this year that they were, in fact, said Veron- ica Elliott Loncar, exec- utive director of the Kansas City FilmFest International, on Monday. The group has held its festival at Cinemark since 2013. are looking at other theaters in Kansas City so we will be some- where. We are checking out all our Cinemark employees also are telling customers the theater will shut down at the end of the day on May 19. Officials with Cinemark have not returned phone calls or emails.

Officials with the Plaza declined to comment. However, Plaza officials had previously said an upscale movie theater was on their wish list. Nordstrom is taking over the west side of the Plaza, just across the street from Cinemark. It plans to open a new store in 2021. Nordstrom wants to remove several buildings, as well as five Cinemark screens, a mezzanine and a pedestrian walkway over Jefferson Street leading from the main theater complex.

Plans listed a remaining Plaza movie theater with 1,640 seats, down from current 2,600 seats. Texas-based Cinemark swept into Kansas City in the late 1990s, announc- ing plans for 52 screens on the Plaza, in Summit and Merriam. is back yard. think that walk in here if we know what we were the company said at the time. The Merriam location opened at 5500 Antioch Drive.

But Cinemark was in a with another theater company for Summit and lost out. Cinemark Palace at the Plaza, at 526 Nichols Road, was part of a $30 million redevelopment of Seville on the Plaza that included a two-story res- taurant on the east side, now home to Brio Tuscan Grille, and six-story park- ing garage west of Jef- ferson. Cinemark opened on May 7, 1999, as a film oasis hearkening back to the ornate movie havens of bygone according to a Kansas City Star story. The 14 auditoriums had seating capacities ranging from 82 to 377, plus a small 38-seat VIP Room offering extra amenities. It boasted digital sound, stadium seating, lots of legroom, plush high-back- rocker chairs, inlaid stone and brass trim, and an art deco marquee over the street level entrance.

The cutting-edge concept also was spread out over sever- al levels. Elise Carlson worked there for about three years, starting as a server and then manager of the VIP room, then marketing and promotion manager before leaving for film school in Toronto. A film she worked on, was shown at Kansas City FilmFest. used to clean up pop- corn, now watching my movie in this she said Monday. really sad that this theater is going away.

It was in- novative for its time. But I also remember when it was the Seville theater, going there as a Cinemark customers said they like the Plaza central location in the city and its ticket prices. An evening showing of this past week was $7.25 for general admission and $5.25 for children, com- pared to $11.49 per adult and $8.49 for children at AMCWard Parkway 14, which offers more upscale amenities. The Cinemark closing will leave another empty space on that corner of the Plaza; Noodles Co. closed there in November.

Joyce Smith: 816-234-4692, CITYSCAPE Sources: Cinemark Palace at the Plaza to close soon, future theater plans unclear BY JOYCE SMITH JOYCE SMITH Cinemark Palace at the Plaza has been in operation for two decades. Sources say it will close soon, thoughCinemark has not replied to inquiries. Je rs on St Nichols Rd. en sy lv an ia A ve 48th St. Capital Grille Parking garage 47th St.

Nordstrom (Coming 2021) Cinemark Anthropologie Urban BRIO Tuscan Grille THE KANSAS CITY STAR Former President Jim- my Carter changed plans and will not be teaching Sunday school just days after undergoing surgery for a broken hip. he is progress- ing well, he underesti- mated the amount of time he would need to recover from his recent hip Carter spokeswoman Deanna Congileo said in a state- ment Saturday evening. Carter, 94, broke his hip Monday as he was leav- ing to go turkey hunting. Congileo said Carter apologized for any in- convenience to those who traveled to hear his lesson at Maranatha Baptist Church in Plains, Geor- gia. ASSOCIATED PRESS Jimmy Carter will have to skip Sunday school.

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