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LEGISLATURE

Fallout from tax cuts will drive 2013 agenda

IN 1964

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Session starts Monday By Scott Rothschild srothschild@ljworld.com

Journal-World Photo courtesy of KU Spencer Research Library

ON CHRISTMAS EVE, Amy Marshall got her pre-adoption birth certificate in the mail. She was a bit surprised to see where it listed her place of birth: a laundromat at 19th and Barker in Lawrence. Baby Amy, as she was dubbed by nurses at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, was front-page news in the Journal-World following her abandonment in November 1964. Her parents were never found.

Baby born in Lawrence laundromat alive and more than well in Alaska

A

dime’s worth of love goes a long way. Not that Amy Marshall has ever known of any shortage of love in her life. She’s the adopted daughter of Ken and Winnie Knowles, and love has surrounded her since she entered their home as an infant who was just a few days old. Amy always knew she was adopted, but she never knew anything of her biological mother. On Christmas Eve, a letter arrived in the mail that was supposed to change that. It didn’t, at least not with a name. It was her pre-adoption birth certificate, and her mother and father’s names simply

Lawhorn’s Lawrence

Barker in Lawrence. It did not take Amy long to put two and two together. She had long sensed she had been abandoned. But now, at least, she knew where. So on Christmas Eve she called the laundromat, which is still in operation but under different ownership, and left a message on its answering machine. “I prefaced it by telling them this will clawhorn@ljworld.com probably be one of were listed as “unthe oddest messages known.” But there was they’ve received in a place on the docuawhile,” Amy says. ment that caught Amy’s Then, she emailed eye. me. She was looking Her place of birth for a newspaper article was listed as a “laundry from November 1964. I mat,” known back then sent her a couple. as the Grover Bungalo There she was on Launderette at 19th and the front page of the

Chad Lawhorn

Journal-World on Nov. 17, 1964. A big picture of a nurse — a Mrs. Gary Edwinson is how we identified the nurse back then — was holding an infant who earlier that day had been found at the laundromat. The baby was being referred to as “Madame X.” By the next day, the newspaper reported the nurses at Lawrence Memorial quickly had tossed aside that name and started calling her Amy. “The baby is in excellent health, and she is a little dandy,” then-Lawrence Police Detective Dick Stanwix announced to the city. Stanwix, who died five Please see BABY, page 8A

TOPEKA — The state of Kansas faces its own “fiscal cliff” as the Legislature starts the 2013 session Monday. Because of tax cuts pushed through last year by Gov. Sam Brownback and conservative legislators, state revenues are shrinking. And the appetite among the growing conservative majority in the Legislature for more budget cuts is growing. Those legislators aren’t simply ready to cut state agency budgets; there are nu- Brownback merous proposals that would have the effect of reducing taxes or limiting spending at the local level. City, county and school officials often complain about how the actions in the Statehouse negatively affect their ability Please see AGENDA, page 6A

See more about the upcoming

Legislative session, including the key issues and area legislators. Page 6A

LHS teacher who was part of Lawrence history remembered By Peter Hancock phancock@ljworld.com

When Debra Green was buried earlier this month in a small cemetery southeast of Lawrence, a big part of the history of Lawrence High School, and all of Douglas County, was buried with her. Debra Ann Harvey Hicks Green, a graduate of Lawrence Green Please see TEACHER, page 2A

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The wedding singer Singer-songwriter and Lawrence native Lisa Donnelly’s career got a boost when she sang the nuptials on a recent “Bachelorette” wedding special. Page 1C

Vol.155/No.13 32 pages


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DEATHS Journal-World obituary policy: For information about running obituaries, call 8327151. Obituaries run as submitted by funeral homes or the families of the deceased.

CLIFFORD JESSE IKENBERRY Clifford Jesse Ikenberry, 79, of Baldwin City, passed away on January 11, 2013. He was born February 13, 1933 in Overbrook, Kansas, the son of Ira Wilson Ikenberry and Sylvia Louise (Mason) Ikenberry. He grew up in Lawrence, Kansas until first grade and at that time moved with his family to Baldwin City, graduating from Baldwin High School with the class of 1952, where he was an All-State football player. Clifford then attended Baker University, for one year, where he was a member of Delta Tau Delta Fraternity and the Baker University football team. On October 1953 He began serving his country in the United States Army. Clifford attained the rank of Specialist 3rd Class and also attaining the National Defense Service Medal and the Army Occupation Medal (Germany). He was honorably discharged in October of 1954. Following his military service Clifford attended and graduated from Coyne Electrical School in Chicago. He then moved back to Baldwin City and opened a Radio and Television Repair Shop which he owned for three years. He then went to work for General motors at the Fairfax plant as an Electronics Inspection Specialist, where he worked for 28 years, retiring in 1993. Clifford was a member of the American Bantam Chicken Association, U.A.W. Local # 31, and former Secretary for the Baldwin City Rotary. On December 18, 1953, Clifford was united in marriage with Dora Ann Boyer at Ives Chapel in Baldwin City, Kansas. Clifford and Dora Ann have shared over 59 years of love and devotion to one another. Dora Ann

survives of their home. He is also survived by seven children, Eric Ikenberry and his wife, Patty, of Dakota Dunes, South Dakota, Janet Ikenberry of Lawrence, Tony Ikenberry and his wife, Shopna, of Baldwin City, Linda Gastelum of Baldwin City, Gregg Ikenberry and his wife, Kim, of Olathe, Nancy Ikenberry of Baldwin City, Scott Ikenberry and his wife, Kim, of Baldwin City; two sisters, Helen Torkelson of Lawrence, Dorothy Powell of Lawrence; two brothers, Kenneth Ikenberry and his wife, Charlotte, of Lawrence, Raymond Ikenberry and his wife, Myrna, of Lawrence; fifteen grandchildren; and six great-grandchildren. Clifford is preceded in death by his parents and an infant brother, Ira Ikenberry, Jr. Funeral services will be Tuesday, January 15, 2013, 10:00 am at Ives Chapel United Methodist Church, Baldwin City. The family will receive friends from 6 to 8 p.m. Monday, January 14, at Lamb-Roberts Funeral Home, Baldwin City. The family suggests memorial contributions be made to Ives Chapel United Methodist Church, c/o Lamb-Roberts Funeral, P.O. Box 64, Baldwin City, Kansas 66006. Condolences may be sent to the family through www.lamb-roberts.com. Please sign this guestbook at Obituaries. LJWorld.com.

WHEEL GENIUS

MARY KATZFEY A Mass of Christian Burial for Mary Margaret “Mirt� Katzfey, 90, Lawrence, KS will be at10 a.m. Tuesday, January 15, 2013 at St. John the Evangelist Catholic Church in Lawrence. Burial will follow at Holy Family Catholic Cemetery in Eudora. She died on Friday evening at Lawrence Memorial Hospital She was born on March 29, 1922 in rural Sarcoxie, Mo, the daughter of William and Una Reeves Kelly. Mary was a former clerk in the Kansas Union for over twenty years. During World War II, she worked at the Sunflower Army Ammunition Plant. She was a member of St. John the Evangelist Catholic Church and The Daughters of Isabella in Lawrence. Mary was married to Leo J. Katzfey on July 21, 1942 in Sarcoxie, MO. He preceded her in death on May 28, 1997. Survivors include twin daughters, Joan Annette (husband, Ronald S. Sr.) Fowler, JoAnn Jeanette Johnston, both of

Lawrence, three sisters, Mildred Trefz, Frances Olmstead, Kathryn Agnes Borland, six grandchildren and nine great grandchildren. The parish rosary will be recited at 7 p.m. Monday, January 14, 2013 at Warren-McElwain Mortuary. The family will greet friends until 8 p.m. The family suggests memorials in her name to the Grace Hospice or to the Medicalodges of Eudora and may be sent in care of the mortuary. Online condolences to www.warrenmcelwain. com Please sign this guestbook at Obituaries. LJWorld.com.

JOANNA BYERS Memorial services for JoAnna Byers, 87, Lawrence, will be held at 10 a.m., Wednesday, January 16, 2013, at WarrenMcElwain Mortuary in Lawrence. Burial will follow at Oak Hill Cemetery in Lawrence. She died on Wednesday, January 9, 2013. JoAnna was born on April 9, 1925 in Red Cloud, NE, the daughter of William and Gertrude (Wolfe) Schenck. She was the Executive Director of the American Red Cross - Douglas County Chapter in Lawrence for over 40 years. Survivors include two sons, Timothy Byers, Ozawkie, KS, Bill Byers, and wife,

Brenda, Gladstone, MO; five grandchildren, Timothy Byers, Tamantha Hockenbury, Benjamin Leuty, Patrick Laffon, Cathlyn Byers; five great grandchildren; and one brother William Schenck, Crown Point, IN. The family will greet friends following the service on Wednesday at the Mortuary. The family suggests memorials in her name to the American Red Cross Douglas County Chapter and may be sent in care of the mortuary. Please sign this guestbook at Obituaries. LJWorld.com.

BEVERLY A. GARCIA

RUTHANNE FINLEY LACEY

Funeral Mass Wednesday 10 a.m. at St. Peter’s Catholic Memorial services for Ruthanne F. Lacey, 87, Lawrence will be at 2:00 p.m., Sat., Jan. 19, 2013 at First Presbyterian Church, Ordway, Colo. Burial following at Valley View Cemetery, Ordway. Full obituary at rumsey-yost.com Church in Lawrence. www.warrenmcelwain.com

Teacher CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A

High School who later taught math there for 31 years, died Dec. 26, 2012. She was 61. “Her life could be a book,� said Jack Hood, a social studies teacher at Lawrence High. “She and her family have been so important to the history of Lawrence, and I think Kansas University athletics back in the day. She influenced so many people as a teacher and a community leader. She bridged gaps between the different communities of Lawrence.� Green was buried Jan. 3 at Vinland Cemetery, alongside at least six generations of her family. The cemetery sits not far from the Harvey family homestead where her greatgrandmother Rebecca Brooks Harvey, a former slave, settled in 1863 after being freed from a plantation in Arkansas during the Civil War. “She got up here with four children that I know of, and she buried some on the way,� said Green’s mother, Dorothy Harvey. “And she was pregnant with a child. But she got here, and she worked with Sheriff Stephen Ogden and started homesteading. She was able to secure quite a bit of this property.� According to family records at the Douglas County Historical Society, Rebecca Brooks Harvey was born a slave in North Carolina. Nobody

knows exactly when or where. Around the age of 5, she was sold as chattel to a man who eventually brought her to Van Buren, Ark., where she grew up. There, she met her future husband, David Harvey, a teamster on the plantation. They were separated when he joined the Union Army, which took him to St. Louis and, eventually, Fort Leavenworth. Rebecca Brooks was freed from slavery during a Union Army raid of Van Buren in December 1862. She and scores of other former slaves were brought to Kansas and arrived in Douglas County on Jan. 26, 1863 — 150 years ago this month — just a few weeks after President Abraham Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation. It wasn’t long before word of her move reached David Harvey at Fort Leavenworth. He quickly came down to Lawrence where, as Dorothy Harvey puts it, they were “legally� married, because marriages between slaves were not recognized at that time. They worked as sharecroppers on the land of then-Sheriff Stephen Ogden, and by 1893 had managed to acquire 100 acres of their own. They raised three sons on the farm, all of whom later attended Kansas University: Frederick Douglas Grant Harvey, who became a doctor; Sherman Alan Harvey, who became a lawyer; and Edward S. Harvey, Debra’s grandfather and a businessman who was also the first black player on the Kansas University football team.

L AWRENCE J OURNAL -W ORLD

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Debra Green was a professional teacher in the highest regard. She had high standards, but if you had a problem, she always had time to talk. Debra touched lives in a positive nature.� — Longtime Lawrence High librarian Martha Oldham High school and civil unrest Debra (Harvey) Green was born in 1951, grew up in Lawrence and attended Lawrence High during the turbulent era of the late 1960s. Racial tensions in America were running high following the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., in 1968, and Lawrence was not immune to those troubles. From 1968 through 1970, students at LHS demonstrated, organized petitions and even engaged in walkouts and sit-ins at the school to protest discriminatory treatment of black students. Records from that time show the students protested what they perceived to be unfair and unequal treatment of black students. There were no black students on the LHS cheering squad, for example, and no school-recognized clubs or organizations for black students. They also protested what they called an “inadequate curriculum,� including the absence of any AfricanAmerican history studies. “And it was true, too,� recalled longtime Lawrence High librarian Martha Oldham, who was just starting her career at the time. “But her father (Dean Harvey,

1922-1999) would not allow her to walk out. He said, ‘You can honor everything that they’re fighting for, and they’re all legitimate reasons, but you can do it another way besides walking out.’ He wanted to impress upon her how important an education was. “That was her father.�

Teaching career After graduating from LHS in 1969, Green attended KU where she earned a bachelor’s degree in education in 1973. A few years later, Green returned to her alma mater as a math teacher. Ray Wilbur, who headed the LHS math department from 1964 to 1995 and knew Green as both a student and colleague, remembered Green as a teacher who often asked to take on the most difficult students and assignments. “And she never shied away from them,� he said. “She would take some of the more difficult classes and did a great job with them. She also took some of the more advanced classes, Algebra II classes. But she did take difficult students, did a great job with them, encouraged them and helped them get through their math requirements.�

Road work planned this week Lawrence City construction projects are now mapped at lawks.us/constructionmap.

The city of Lawrence will be sealing street cracks in the neighborhoods east and west of Monterey Way, north of Sixth Street. Lanes may be closed temporarily during working hours.

Street traffic has shifted from the existing shoofly lanes onto the new 23rd Street bridge near Haskell Avenue. Two westbound lanes and one eastbound lane will be open on the bridge as crews work to remove the existing shoofly lanes and finish road work.

Street concrete will be reworked this week east of Nicklaus Drive, Palmer Court and Drive, and Hogan Court and Drive. Through traffic will generally be maintained, but there may be street closures.

Belle Haven Drive, from West 25th to West 27th streets, will be closed to through traffic, and there will be no parking from 7 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. The utility department will be installing a water main.

Lawsuit against police dismissed TOPEKA — A federal judge has dismissed a lawsuit that a Kansas City, Mo., man filed against the Topeka Police Department and Shawnee County District Attorney’s Office. The Topeka CapitalJournal reports that U.S. Senior District Judge Sam Crow dismissed Donzell A. Jones’s lawsuit in which Jones alleged police and prosecutors violated his rights when he was arrested and charged with drug crimes in 2011. The charges were dismissed in 2012. Crow dismissed Jones’ lawsuit in December and said Jones didn’t comply with the judge’s request to fix several deficiencies in his complaint and submit financial information required to proceed without prepayment of fees.

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Green taught at Lawrence High from 1976 until her retirement in 2007. Along the way, she earned her master’s degree at KU in 1999. And she spent 11 years sponsoring cheerleading squads, the same squads she couldn’t have joined during her time as www.ljworld.com a student. “Debra Green was a professional teacher in Do you agree with a the highest regard,â€? Old- Kansas court’s ruling ham said. “She had high that the Legislature standards, but if you had a problem, she always is not suitably fundhad time to talk. Debra ing schools? touched lives in a positive nature.â€? To honor her memory, ž Yes Lawrence High officials ž No are establishing a mež Not sure morial scholarship fund. The scholarship will be Go to LJWorld.com to awarded to one student per year with financial see more responses need who has experienced and cast your vote. a personal or family crisis, overcome it and decided to make themselves eligible to attend a four-year college, junior college or vocational school. Donations can be made through the Lawrence Schools Foundation, 110 McDonald Drive, Lawrence, KS 66044.

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LAWRENCE&STATE

LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD LJWorld.com/local Sunday, January 13, 2013 3A

‘A powerful, symbolic display of solidarity’

MCLOUTH

School sued over alleged sexual assault By Shaun Hittle sdhittle@ljworld.com

Mike Yoder/Journal-World Photos

PEOPLE WATCH FROM THE SOUTH PARK GAZEBO AS MORE THAN 200 NATIVE AMERICANS AND SUPPORTERS participate in a round dance flash mob Saturday to raise awareness about the Idle No More movement. The movement brings attention to a Canadian bill that activists say infringes on land- and water-related treaties, and changes the approval process for leasing tribal land.

Jefferson County resident Terry Snell says his 6-year-old daughter was sexually assaulted by a teenager at a McLouth school in 2011. Though the 16-year-old boy accused in the case was arrested on several sexual and assault charges, the case was dropped by prosecutors. Police and Jefferson County officials say there isn’t enough evidence in the case, but that hasn’t deterred Snell. “I just keep coming,� said Snell, who’s taken his fight to social media with a YouTube video he created that’s now surpassed 30,000 hits. “I have never given up.� In October, Snell filed a lawsuit against the McLouth school district, alleging that the Please see MCLOUTH, page 4A

Hundreds partake in flash mob for cause

Dec. restaurant inspections find 73 critical violations

Native Americans raise awareness about movement protesting bill By Rebekka Schlichting rschlichting@ljworld.com

An environmental battle in Canada came to downtown Lawrence on Saturday afternoon as hundreds of Native Americans started a flash mob and demonstrated on behalf of the Idle No More movement in South Park. The movement promotes awareness about a Canadian bill that Chief Theresa Spence of the Attawapiskat First Nation and her people are fighting. Spence has been on a hunger strike since Dec. 11, drinking only water and fish

broth, to bring attention to Bill C-45, which activists say infringes on land- and waterrelated treaties, and changes the approval process for leasing tribal land. Since December, Idle No More protests have been happening around the world in countries such as Colombia, Chile and Puerto Rico, according to ABC News. The local flash mob was more than just a quick dance HUNDREDS OF NATIVE AMERICANS AND SUPPORTERS — it had spiritual overtones demonstrated in South Park on Saturday to raise awarethat were symbolized by ness about a Canadian bill, Bill C-45, that Chief Theresa drums, eagle feathers, sage Spence of the Attawapiskat First Nation and her people Please see MOVEMENT, page 4A are fighting.

By Shaun Hittle sdhittle@ljworld.com

In December, the Kansas Department of Agriculture’s food inspectors visited 30 Lawrence restaurants, finding 73 critical violations, which are violations of the food code that could cause a foodborne illness. As part of a continuing Journal-World project, we’re collecting data from all Lawrence restaurant inspections and entering it into a searchable database and online map. To search our complete database, visit LJWorld. com/restaurantinspections. — Reporter Shaun Hittle can be reached at 832-7173. Follow him at Twitter.com/shaunhittle.

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Sunday, January 13, 2013

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ON THE McLouth

STREET By Meagan Thomas Read more responses and add your thoughts at LJWorld.com

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A

school “failed to implement adequate supervision of students� and failed “to report incidents of sexual, physical, or other bullying as required by state law.�

If a restaurant gets a low score for its health inspection, do you still eat there?

The allegation As detailed in the YouTube video and in the lawsuit, Snell’s daughter SumAsked at Dillons, mer, then 6, came home 1740 Massachusetts St. from school Feb. 22, 2011, See the story, page 3A and told her father about an incident involving a 16-yearold student at McLouth Elementary School. According to the lawsuit, the 16-year-old boy, who was able to access the elementary school because the district’s kindergarten through high school facilities are connected, grabbed Summer and pulled her into a school bathroom. The boy fondled Summer and attempted to take the Sara Billhimer, girl’s clothes off. student, Summer broke free and Lawrence reported it to a teacher, “Yes. It’d have to be a pretty low score. If it has but that teacher did not report the incident to 20 violations, I’m probschool officials, according ably not going to go.� to the lawsuit. Snell reported the incident to McLouth police, who interviewed Summer and the 16-year-old boy. The boy was arrested and charged with attempted aggravated indecent liberties with a child, three counts of battery, and criminal restraint. Days later, though, the boy was released and charges dismissed by Alex Grandsoult, then-Jefferson County Atstudent, torney Robert Fox. Lawrence The problem, said cur“Sure, if it’s really good.� rent Jefferson County Attorney Jason Belveal, who also reviewed the case, was that “there simply was not sufficient evidence to proceed with prosecution.� Belveal cites video surveillance in the school, seized by police. Though Belveal said he has not seen the footage, police reviewed the tapes and found no evidence of an assault, he said. Belveal also takes his Kellsey Trimble, conviction about the case sales associate, a step further. Lawrence “I believe that it didn’t “Yes. I’ve probably done it happen,� he said. before.� The response from Belveal and police has never satisfied Snell, however, who points to the video. Snell said police never took his daughter to the alleged crime scene to detail the location of the incident, and Snell said he’s been denied a chance to view any footage. McLouth Police Chief Marcus Koch, who headed the investigation, declined Elaine Bell, to comment about many asteacher, pects of the case, saying he Eudora didn’t want to compromise “No.� the investigation if any new

Q:

SOUND OFF

I see the signs on Iowa Street that construction will begin in 2013. I know a turning lane will be put in, but was curious if a rightturn lane will be put in at 15th and Iowa for people wanting to turn right onto Iowa coming out of the university.

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-"83&/$& t "3&" evidence came to light. A video was reviewed by police, he said, but didn’t offer any further details about what that footage did or didn’t show. Koch said his office conducted a “very complete and very detailed investigation.� McLouth School District Superintendent Steve Splichal, citing the pending civil suit that’s seeking $75,000 in damages, declined to comment in detail about the case. “To be clear, the McLouth school district investigated the claim and fully cooperated in a separate investigation conducted by the McLouth Police Department,� Splichal said in a written statement.

Advocate role Snell said he knows that additional criminal action in the case is not likely. But after the YouTube video aired, he said he’s been thrust into the role of advocate for improved criminal investigations of sex crimes in rural Kansas communities. He’s received hundreds of emails from others in small Kansas communities, expressing concerns that sexual assault cases are being mishandled by small police departments ill-equipped to handle such complex cases. One step Snell said the county attorney should’ve taken in his case was to ask the Kansas Attorney General’s Office for assistance. The Attorney General’s Office has the ability, if requested, to assist police and prosecutors in rural communities in criminal investigations. Snell said he thinks the outcome of the investigation may have been different if additional resources had been brought in earlier in the case. But that’s a charge Belveal disputes. “It wasn’t a lack of resources� that led to dropping the charges, Belveal said, adding that he believes the McLouth police “did a fine job� investigating. Police used a trained sexual assault interviewer to speak with Summer, which is cited by advocates as a best-practice approach in such cases. Snell said he’ll keep fighting for his daughter, who now attends another school. From the incident, Snell said she’s suffered post-traumatic stress disorder and other anxiety-related issues. He keeps up the battle and said he’s proud she stood up and reported the incident. “She did everything she was taught to do,� he said.

WEEKLY COURT WRAP-UP • A bench warrant was issued Tuesday for a 26-yearold man facing charges of aggravated battery against a law enforcement officer. Prosecutors accused John S. Kissell of injuring a Lawrence police officer’s knee during a struggle in August, when he attempted to flee police investigating a stolen truck. Douglas County District Court Judge Peggy Kittel issued the warrant after Kissell failed to appear Tuesday for a preliminary hearing in the case, and ruled his $20,000 bond was forfeited. • Kittel also issued a warrant Tuesday for a 32-yearold Lawrence man charged with aggravated assault and theft stemming from a Dec. 8 incident in which he allegedly threatened another man

ON THE RECORD

with a knife over a pair of headphones. Jacob P. Paine failed to appear Tuesday for a preliminary hearing in the case, and Kittel ruled his $15,000 bond forfeit. • A new jury trial began Wednesday in Douglas County District Court for Christopher Belone, 41, convicted of second-degree murder in the July 2006 beating death of Linda Begay, of Lawrence. The Kansas Supreme Court ordered a new trial in September after finding, based on new case law, that a district court judge erred in allowing into evidence statements Begay made to police she died. Belone had been sentenced to 48 years in prison. The new trial is scheduled to continue Monday.

CORRECTIONS

LJWORLD.COM/BLOTTER

LAW ENFORCEMENT REPORT A quantity of methamphetamine and a gun were seized, and a 26-year-old man was arrested on drug charges Friday morning at a house in the 600 block of East Lake Street in McLouth. Landon Stevenson, of McLouth, was arrested on suspicion of possession and distribution of methamphetamine, and possession of drug paraphernalia after McLouth police, the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office, and an entry team from the Shawnee County Sheriff’s Office executed a search warrant at the house about 8:30 a.m. Friday. McLouth police obtained the search warrant after responding to a burglary at another location the night before, said McLouth Police Chief Marcus Koch. That investigation included the arrest of another McLouth man on a drug possession charge and led officers to the house on East Lake Street. “That’s been a place of interest to the McLouth Police Department for a while,� Koch said. The Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office has not released information about the quantity of drugs or the type of gun seized. Stevenson remains in the Jefferson County Jail. A second man arrested at the house on Friday, Landon McAffee, 45, was booked into the jail on an unrelated Shawnee County warrant and has been released on bond.

A story in Saturday’s edition of the Journal-World about Kansas professors traveling to Paraguay included the incorrect name of Baker University professor Gwyneth Mellinger. In the same story, the

universities represented by professors in a Dec. 15 trip to Paraguay was incorrect. Professors from Washburn, Baker and Emporia State traveled to Paraguay on that date.

Movement

outlet,� Laubsch-Robinson said. “They also need to see that through peaceful actions, like Idle No More, that they really do have a chance to change things.� She said one reason why Native Americans in the U.S. have been so passionate about Idle No More is because similar issues are being debated here, HOSPITAL and there is a lot of Native American anger stemming BIRTHS from issues such as land Marco Ramirez and Jenn and water rights, boarding Benschoter, Lawrence, a boy, Saturday. schools and reservations.

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A

and cedar. Participants circled in front of the park’s gazebo and danced a round dance, or friendship dance, and periodically let out a traditional battle and celebration cry. In the center of the circle, singers hit their hand drums in the rhythm of a heartbeat and belted out round-dance songs in a native tongue. A nearby man prayed while he burned sage and cedar to bless the dancers. Many of the people prayed for Chief Spence as they danced. “This is a powerful, symbolic display of solidarity with our relatives north of the border,� said Dan Wildcat, a professor at Haskell Indian Nations University. “Any time we can inform the larger community about issues that are affecting native people, much like the issue we’ve been struggling with for 20 years on the South Lawrence Trafficway, I think it’s good.� “Justice takes centuries,� said Mike Ford, a Baldwin City resident and flash mob participant. “This is a beginning.� After the flash mob, some of the dancers gathered at Four Winds Native Center, 1423 Haskell Ave., for a potluck dinner and to meet the organizer of the event, Susan Laubsch-Robinson, a Lawrence resident and board member at Four Winds. Laubsch-Robinson was motivated to start the flash mob after attending one in Kansas City, Mo., two weeks ago. She also wanted to support her First Nation Iowa Street to improve family members in Canada. the safety and efficiency “I think the younger genof left turns to and from eration needs to feel like side streets. they have a voice and an

the city’s communications manager, dedicated right-turn lanes will be installed on all four approaches of the 15th and Iowa street intersection during the Iowa reconstruction project. But a SOUND OFF right-turn lane on University Drive will not be If you have a question, call installed. A center turn According to Me- lane will be installed 832-7297 or send email to soundoff@ljworld.com. gan Gilliland, north of 15th Street on

L AWRENCE J OURNAL -W ORLD

— Reporting intern Rebekka Schlichting can be reached at 785-832-7248.

Kourtney Martin and Malcolm Brown, Lawrence, a boy, Saturday.

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Key issues for 2013 Agenda

STATEHOUSE EVENTS THIS WEEK

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A

By Scott Rothschild srothschild@ljworld.com

Top issues to watch during the 2013 legislative session:

School funding Public schools want to restore cuts that have been made to base state aid per pupil, and they just got a big assist from a three-judge panel that ruled on Friday the Legislature has failed its constitutional duty on school finance. The state judges ordered a $440 million increase, but Republican leaders will focus on legislation that would retain third-graders who fail to read at grade level, review and possibly narrow state laws that give teachers collective bargaining rights, and consider allowing the use of tax dollars or credits to send students to private schools. The school funding case will likely be decided by the Kansas Supreme Court after the legislative session. Lawrence public school officials have urged the Legislature to provide “constitutionally suitable funding� for schools and noted that base state aid has been cut to $3,838 per pupil when the law — and now three judges — say it should be at $4,492 per pupil. Tobacco settlement Programs serving approximately 200,000 children statewide are sweating out an arbitration decision between Kansas and tobacco companies that are seeking to reduce payments to states. This fiscal year, Kansas received $56 million as part of its annual share of the settlement with cigarette makers, but officials have said next year it could be as low as $12 million. Recently, Kansas officials announced they would participate in a multistate agreement that would reduce the risk of losing tens of millions of dollars. Mental health funding Meanwhile, the state’s mental health community centers have been cut by nearly $20 million in recent years. Douglas

County officials have said the cuts have put a great strain on services and increased costs for public safety and jail operations. Gov. Sam Brownback has proposed a $10 million shift in mental health funding, but officials are eager to see details.

KanCare The Brownback administration’s remade Medicaid system, called KanCare, will get some attention. Legislators have announced they will review implementation of KanCare, which started Jan. 1, and appoint an oversight panel. Under KanCare, nearly 380,000 Medicaid beneficiaries will be enrolled in one of three private managed care companies. On another front, Brownback hasn’t announced whether he will to opt in to an expansion of Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act. The expansion would provide coverage for an estimated 135,000 people and be paid for by the federal government for three years. Then the federal share would drop to 90 percent by 2020. Immigration battle The annual battle over illegal immigration will feature some nationally known names. Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach has signaled he will help legislators who want to push for tougher illegal immigration restrictions, as he has done nationwide. The Kansas Chamber of Commerce, however, will counter with anti-tax activist Grover Norquist who will warn against restrictions that could hurt businesses. Pension system changes Last year, the Legislature approved changes to the public pension system but stopped short of putting new teachers and government workers in a 401(k)style plan. This year, the Kansas Chamber of Commerce wants the Legislature to go all the way. But employee groups say setting up a 401(k)-style plan will actually worsen the unfunded liability in the Kansas Public Employees Retirement System.

KU Med Center funding Kansas University is lobbying for state funding for improved medical education efforts, including construction of a medical education and training facility at the KU Medical Center’s main campus in Kansas City, Kan. But the school may find itself fighting battles from last year, including allowing concealed carry of guns on campus and efforts to ban abortion training by KU doctors in training. Shifting tax burden Local governments are on high alert to keep an eye on the Legislature. Cities and counties are warning of efforts by the Legislature to shift costs to the local level, impose caps on local taxing and expand the property tax exemption on machinery and equipment. A proposal before the Legislature to expand that exemption would cost Douglas County $3 million in revenue and all local governments in the county $12 million. The city of Lawrence and Douglas County also have voiced opposition to proposals in the Legislature that would place limits on state spending and taxes, such as the so-called Taxpayer Bill of Rights, or TABOR. Judge appointments Conservatives want the governor to have more power in selecting appellate judges. Currently, the governor picks one of three nominees provided by a commission. Proposals will be heard to change the Kansas Constitution to provide for the governor picking judges subject to confirmation of the Senate. The school finance ruling by the three-judge panel is being used by conservatives to ratchet up calls for changing the way judges are selected. Liquor sales The Kansas Chamber of Commerce will weigh in on the side of allowing liquor to be sold in convenience stores and grocery stores. Mom and pop liquor stores will fight the proposal.

to deliver services, just as state legislators complain about Washington. But this year, that complaining has morphed into a outspoken concerns about Topeka among some local leaders. “To say that local governments are worried this year is to put it lightly,� Douglas County Commissioner Nancy Thellman said. As if this wasn’t enough, on Friday a three-judge panel ruled that the Legislature violated the Kansas Constitution by cutting public school funding over the past several years. It ordered a $440 million increase in funding. The state has said it will appeal the decision to the Kansas Supreme Court. While the court is unlikely to rule until after the legislative session, the decision by the threejudge panel will likely dominate public policy debate on school funding and attempts by conservatives to rein in the courts.

The budget equation When legislators gavel in Monday, they will start working on the budget for fiscal year 2014, which starts July 1. The effects of reducing state income tax rates and eliminating state income taxes for nearly 200,000 business owners will be part of the equation. The total amount of revenue the state is expected to collect in the fiscal year is approximately $5.5 billion. Current spending levels are at $6.2 billion. That leaves a $700 million difference — nearly 12 percent of current spending — that has to be bridged through either budget cuts, tax increases or a combination of the two. “No matter what solutions lawmakers choose, the fiscal year 2014 budget presents many challenges that could have a direct effect on health programs and other key services,� said

Monday A “People’s State of the State� rally will be held at noon on the east steps of the Statehouse. The rally is being coordinated by MoveOn of Johnson County. Rally organizers said those speaking at the event include Kathy Cook, Kansas Families for Education; Lisa Ochs, American Federation for Teachers-Kansas; Karen Godfrey, Kansas National Education Association; Rev. Ben Scott, Kansas NAACP; Tom Witt, Kansas Equality Coalition; Elise Higgins, Kansas National Organization for Women; and Sarah Gillooly, Duane Goossen, an analyst with the Kansas Health Institute, who served as the state’s budget director under Republican Gov. Bill Graves and Democratic Govs. Kathleen Sebelius and Mark Parkinson.

The one-cent solution One partial solution that Brownback has indicated support for in the past is keeping in place the 6.3 percent state sales tax. When the state was reeling from the Great Recession, a coalition of moderate Republicans and Democrats in 2010 approved a one-cent increase in the sales tax — raising it from 5.3 percent to the current 6.3 percent — for three years to avoid further cuts to schools, social services and public safety. The sales tax is scheduled to drop to 5.7 cents per dollar on July 1, with a portion of the levy going to help fund the state’s transportation program. Conservative Republicans and the Kansas Chamber of Commerce hammered those who supported the tax increase when it passed, but now the Chamber of Commerce has pivoted, leading the charge to make the temporary increase permanent. The chamber wants more budget cuts, and then the higher sales tax revenue can be used to cut income tax rates further.

srothschild@ljworld.com

Brownback, a Republican. But Wilson said he will work hard to find common ground in the Legislature. Here are the legislators whose districts are in Douglas County or contain a large part of Douglas County, and their contact information:

Sen. Marci Francisco, D-Lawrence, 785-2967365; marci.francisco@ senate.ks.gov

Sen. Anthony Hensley, D-Topeka, 785-2963245; anthony.hensley@ senate.ks.gov

Sen. Tom Holland, D-Baldwin City, 785-2966403; tom.holland@senate.ks.gov

Rep. Barbara Ballard, D-Lawrence, 785-2967697; barbara.ballard@ house.ks.gov

Rep. Paul Davis, D-Lawrence, 785-2967630; paul.davis@house. ks.gov

Rep. Tom Sloan, RLawrence, 785-296-7654; tom.sloan@house.ks.gov

Rep. John Wilson, D-Lawrence, 785-2967652; john.wilson@house. ks.gov.

Wednesday Brownback’s proposed budget will be presented by Budget Director Steve Anderson at 9 a.m. to the House Appropriations Committee and 10:30 a.m. to the Senate Ways and Means Committee. The decision makers Working on these financial problems is an inexperienced House and new ruling group in the Senate. Partially because of court-ordered redistricting, there will be 50 rookies in the 125-member Kansas House. The 40-member Senate has 16 new members, although 14 have served in the House. In the 2012 legislative session, a political war within the Republican Party sent the redistricting process to federal court. A three-judge panel hit the reset button and drew congressional, legislative and State Board of Education district lines. That resulted in a frantic rush for candidates and a huge freshman class. Now there are House members who are starting only their second terms and finding themselves chairing committees. The Senate also is under new leadership that is tightly aligned with Brownback. But to all the new members, most of whom are solidly conservative, Brownback had some advice: “I always believe you shouldn’t overplay your hand. I’ve been saying that for years. You do what is sensible and have a strategy for doing it and try to move that on forward.� — Statehouse reporter Scott Rothschild can be reached at 785-423-0668.

DOUGLAS COUNTY

When a federal panel in June redrew legislative district boundaries, John Wilson found political life. His residence had been in House Democratic Leader Paul Davis’ district, but the new map put him in the 10th House District, which became more Democratic friendly by being contained in Douglas County. Wilson filed to run and won in November to become the newest member of the Douglas County Wilson legislative delegation. He will be sworn into office Monday along with a huge freshman class as the 2013 session starts. “There’s a lot for me to learn just about the personalities and how the leadership does business,� Wilson said. “I’m very much looking forward to doing what I can to create policies and address issues that improve people’s lives,� he said. Politically, Wilson comes into the Legislature surrounded. Republicans hold a 92-33 margin in the House and 32-8 in the Senate. Wilson already has been assigned as the top Democratic member of the House Children and Seniors Committee. Wilson said he disagrees with many of the policies of Gov. Sam

Tuesday Gov. Sam Brownback will outline his initiatives when he delivers his 2013 State of the State address at 6:30 p.m. Democrats will offer response after the speech.

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Wilson newest member of delegation By Scott Rothschild

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Critics say Sandy aid tied to other projects By Andrew Miga Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Conservatives and watchdog groups are mounting a “not-so-fast� campaign against a $50.7 billion Superstorm Sandy aid package that Northeastern governors and lawmakers hope to push through the House this coming week. Their complaint is that lots of the money that lawmakers are considering will actually go toward recovery efforts for past disasters and other projects unrelated to the lateOctober storm. A Senate-passed version from the end of the last Congress included $150 million for what the Commerce Department described as fisheries disasters in Alaska, Mississippi and the Northeast, and $50 million in subsidies for replanting trees on private land damaged by wildfires.

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Sunday, January 13, 2013

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BRIEFLY Domestic violence topic of workshops

Baldwin City woman killed in accident

Willow Domestic A lot of the money goes to government and Michigan would not Violence Center is offering agencies to rebuild rather than helping people qualify, he said. workshops for the public to “That’s not a bad chunk actually afflicted by Sandy.� learn about what domestic

— Stephen Ellis, vice president of Taxpayers for Common Sense, a budget watchdog group The objections have led senior House Republicans to assemble their own $17 billion proposal, that when combined with already approved money for flood insurance claims, is less than half what President Barack Obama sought and the Senate passed in December. That $17 billion package will be brought to the floor by the House Appropriations Committee, and Northeast lawmakers will have a chance to add $33.7 billion more. House Speaker John Boehner intends to let the House vote on both measures. He’s responding both to conservatives who

are opposed to more deficit spending, and to Govs. Andrew Cuomo, D-N.Y., and Chris Christie, R-N.J., who are irate that the House hasn’t acted sooner. Critics are taking the sharpest aim at $12.1 billion in the amendment for Department of Housing and Urban Development emergency block grants. Any state struck by a federally declared major disaster in 2011, 2012 or this year would qualify for the grants, and that’s just about all the states, said Stephen Ellis, vice president of Taxpayers for Common Sense, a budget watchdog group. Only

An 89-year-old Baldwin City woman was killed in a two-vehicle car accident Friday on Interstate of change, particularly if violence is, how it affects 35, near 119th Street in you are trying to get other victims and how to develop Olathe. lawmakers to vote for the a safety plan. Elaine E. Smith was bill,� Ellis said. The workshops are traveling south on InterState and local governscheduled for Jan. 14, 15 and state 35 in a 2003 Chevy ments like block grants 17. Sessions include Domes- Impala when she struck a because they provide tic Violence 101, Domestic 2010 GMC Denali that was more flexibility in how Violence and Poverty, and stopped in traffic, accordthe money is spent. The Safety Planning with Surviing to the Kansas Highway money can go toward a vors of Domestic Violence. Patrol. variety of needs, including For a complete list of sesSmith was transported hospitals, utilities, roads, sions, dates and times, visit to Olathe Medical Center small businesses and rent with fatal injuries. She was http://ljw.bz/ZEMaQz. subsidies. The sessions are free and not wearing a seat belt, The Northeast lawmakopen to the public. Commu- according to the accident ers’ $33.7 billion amendnity members interested in report. ment also includes more The occupants of the attending any of the workthan $135 million to help shops should contact Becca Denali, a 36-year-old the National Oceanic and Burns, director of volunteer Olathe woman and two Atmospheric Adminis6-year-old children, did services, at bburns@wiltration improve weather not report life-threatening lowdvcenter.org or 785forecasting. injuries at the scene. All 331-2034 ext. 104. Burns “A lot of the money has location information for three were wearing seat goes to government agenbelts. all workshops. cies to rebuild rather than helping people actually afflicted by Sandy,� Ellis said.

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Baby CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A

years ago, later would become the police chief. The articles, though, had lots of other details. A baby, likely no more than 3 hours old, was found lying unwrapped on a blanket on the bathroom floor of the Bungalo Launderette. Amniotic fluid was still fresh on the baby when A.T. and Jean House came to the laundromat at 6 a.m. to give the place its daily cleaning. “I had terribly mixed emotions — I was concerned, wanted to cry,� Mrs. House told the Journal-World at the time. “But when I felt the baby, I knew I had to get her warm fast. She was awfully cold.� It was 42 degrees outside that night, the paper reported. “I’ve been thinking about her quite a bit these last couple of days,� Amy says of the woman who gave her a bit of needed warmth. But there was one other detail in the articles: a dime. Police found that a dime had been placed on top of the laundromat’s pay phone. They surmised that it was left there so that whoever found the baby could call for help. “When I read that, that’s when I lost it,� Amy says. “That is when I started bawling. It was devastating — in a good way.� A baby, a dime and a mystery: That was the last Lawrence ever heard of Baby Amy. The parents were never found, and Amy’s case became another sealed adoption file. And a lingering question, to some. Dr. Phillip Godwin was the physician on call at the emergency room that day. Godwin told me he remembers the case well. It was the only abandoned baby case he ever worked. He listened intently as I told him of what became of Baby Amy’s life. “Just a couple of months ago, I was thinking of her,� Godwin said. “I wondered what ever became of that baby. This is good because that has sort of hung over me for a while.�

Special to the Journal-World

AMY MARSHALL, photographed in November in Ireland, was born and abandoned in a Lawrence laundromat in 1964. She now lives in Craig, Alaska, and works as a librarian.

Mike Yoder/Journal-World Photo

AMY MARSHALL was born in this building at 19th and Barker. It’s now the Bungalow Laundromat but was called the Grover Bungalo Launderette in 1964. Brad House laughed when he heard that. Brad, at the time, was the 13-year old son of A.T. and Jean House. Just weeks ago, his younger sister was back for the holidays, and they asked the same question of each other. “My mother would be jumping up and down with joy right now,� Brad said. She should. Life has been good for Baby Amy. She lives in Craig, Alaska, where she works as the head librarian in the small

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town on Prince of Wales Island. Her adopted family took her from Lawrence to their home in Derby. She lived there until she was 7, when her father’s job caused the family to transfer to New York state. She grew up there, ended up getting two degrees — maritime history and nautical archeology — and has traveled the world as an underwater archeologist. “It has been fun,� Amy says of everything that has happened since she first

AMY MARSHALL’S original birth certificate shows her mother and father as “Unknown.� got a little warmth. But still, there was the beginning on a cold bathroom floor. Sure, even before the Christmas Eve letter, Amy had plenty of scenarios that floated around in her head. “My absolute best-case scenario was that she had me in a hospital, and kissed me goodbye,� Amy says.

Find Movie Listings at:

lawrence.com/movies/listings

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— Each Sunday, Lawhorn’s Lawrence focuses on the people, places or past of Lawrence and the surrounding area. If you have a story idea, send it to Chad at clawhorn@ljworld.com.

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There is no way to know, but Amy suspects her mother was a young college student, who — for whatever reason — wanted to hide her pregnancy.

“My dad probably never knew a thing in the world that I exist,� she says. But somebody does — maybe a couple of somebodies. Amy figures that if her mother was a young college student, there had to at least be a girlfriend who knew. Nobody goes through this completely alone. But who knows? This is all coming from Baby Amy’s churning mind, a mind that has been turning for a long time. “Until I became a mom, I didn’t have a clue what she could have been thinking,� Amy says. Yes, Amy and her husband have two children, a 15-year-old son and a 12-year-old daughter. “Her grandkids rock, by the way,� Amy says. Maybe that will particularly please somebody who reads this. If Amy is right, her mother probably would be approaching 70 now — approaching an ending stage, surely with the story of a beginning still on her mind. Would Amy want to meet her? Not a moment’s hesitation: Yes. She remembers how she felt when she read about that dime. “My heart broke,� she says. “It broke on several levels. I’m sorry for that — I was sorry for that girl that it happened to. “I would love to say thank you to her. That’s the gist of it. She had choices. The mother always has choices, and she made a great choice. I hope it got better for her. I really hope she found peace. I wouldn’t want her to go through life thinking something bad happened, because it didn’t.� A little love, indeed, goes a long way.

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OPINION

LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD LJWorld.com Sunday, January 13, 2013

EDITORIALS

Ethics issue Altering the duties of the Kansas Ethics Commission seems like it should be a low priority for lawmakers.

I

f it ain’t broke, let’s not fix it. Especially with other matters that, just possibly, might be more pressing. The chairmen of the Kansas House and Senate election committees both have expressed interest in scrutinizing the Kansas Ethics Commission, which is charged with enforcing campaign finance laws in the state. Scott Schwab, who heads the House Elections Committee, said his committee will debate taking away the commission’s enforcement duties and imposing term limits on its members. One proposal is to have county prosecutors and the attorney general’s office pursue the cases of elected officials who violate ethics and campaign finance laws. Schwab’s interest in the ethics commission appears to have it roots in complaints from fellow Republican legislators who believe the commission is more aggressive in investigating and fining conservative candidates than in pursuing complaints against moderates and liberals. Although the commission has fined and been criticized by both Republicans and Democrats, according to Schwab, the perception of unfairness “taints everything” the commission does. It’s often said that perception is the same as reality, but changing the way a body like the Ethics Commission does business probably should be based on verifiable fact rather than on a perception that it is being unfair. The fact is that Schwab and other Kansas conservatives will have ample opportunity to alter both the perception and the reality of the ethics commission through appointments to that body. The governor appoints two members of the commission, and the Senate president and House speaker each appoint one. All are conservative Republicans. The secretary of state, the attorney general and the chief justice of the Kansas Supreme Court each have one appointment, as do the Democratic leaders in the House and Senate. Assuming those doing the appointing are true to their conservative or liberal leanings, it seems likely the nine-member commission would have a solid majority of conservative members. As the commission’s executive director, Carol Williams, pointed out, it’s easy enough for leaders to replace members they think aren’t doing a satisfactory job. Ideally, the people of Kansas probably would prefer for the commission to be as nonpartisan and autonomous as possible, rather than shifting in the political winds. Williams also is concerned that enforcing campaign finance laws would be a low priority for the attorney general or county prosecutors with large caseloads — and perhaps some political biases of their own. It’s unfortunate that political agendas seem to be driving many issues that lawmakers have been promising to bring to the Legislature this year. In the big scheme of things, it seems that lawmakers have more important issues to debate than the emasculation of the Kansas Ethics Commission. LAWRENCE

JOURNAL-WORLD

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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.

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Exposure of any dishonesty in public affairs.

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

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THE WORLD COMPANY

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

Electronics Division

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Movie confronts interrogation issues “I have neither the time nor the inclination to explain myself to a man who rises and sleeps under the blanket of the very freedom that I provide, and then questions the manner in which I provide it.” — Col. Nathan Jessep to Lt. Daniel Kaffee, “A Few Good Men” (1992) WASHINGTON — “You,” said Jack Nicholson’s Jessep to Tom Cruise’s Kaffee, “have the luxury of not knowing what I know.” Viewers of the movie “Zero Dark Thirty” will, according to some informed persons, lose the luxury of not knowing about hard but morally defensible things done on their behalf. Other informed persons, however, say viewers will be misled because the movie intimates (actually it is ambiguous about this) a crucial role of “enhanced interrogation” in extracting information useful to tracking Osama bin Laden. In “A Few Good Men,” Col. Jessep insists that a harsh — and proscribed — training method (“Code Red”) saves lives: “You f— -in’ people ... you have no idea how to defend a nation.” “Zero Dark Thirty” explores the boundaries of the permissible when defending not a nation but this nation. Viewers will know going in how the movie ends. They will not know how they will feel when seeing an American tell a detainee, “When you lie to me, I hurt you,” and proceed to do so. The movie, which is primarily about CIA operatives, probably will make at least a cameo appearance in the

David Shribman dshribman@post-gazette.com

Viewers of ‘Zero Dark Thirty’ can decide whether or which ‘enhanced interrogation’ measures depicted … constitute, in plain English, torture. And they can ponder whether any or all of them would be wrong even if effective.” confirmation hearings for Barack Obama’s nominee as the next CIA director, John Brennan. His 25 years with the CIA included the years when “enhanced interrogation” was used to squeeze crucial information from suspected terrorists. Sen. Dianne Feinstein, chair of the Intelligence Committee, and two colleagues have denounced the movie as “grossly inaccurate and misleading” for its “suggestion” that torture produced information that led to locating bin Laden. But former CIA Director Michael Hayden, while saying “there is no way to confirm” that information obtained by “enhanced interrogation” was the “decisive” intelligence in locating

bin Laden, insists that such information “helped” lead to bin Laden. Former Attorney General Michael Mukasey goes further: Khalid Sheik Mohammed “broke like a dam” under harsh techniques, including waterboarding, and his “torrent of information” included “the nickname of a trusted courier of bin Laden,” perhaps the one who is central to the movie’s narrative. In 2007, Hayden ended the use of half the “enhanced interrogation” techniques, including waterboarding, because American law, our understanding of the threat and our sources of information had changed. He also says, however, that such interrogations produced half our knowledge of al-Qaida’s structure and activities. “In the end, everybody breaks, bro, — it’s biology,” says the CIA man in the movie, tactically but inaccurately, to the detainee undergoing “enhanced interrogation.” This too familiar term has lost its capacity for making us uneasy. America’s Vietnam failure was foretold when U.S. officials began calling air attacks on North Vietnam “protective reaction strikes,” a semantic obfuscation that revealed moral queasiness. “The great enemy of clear language is insincerity,” wrote George Orwell, who warned about governments resorting to “long words and exhausted idioms, like a cuttlefish spurting out ink.” Viewers of “Zero Dark Thirty” can decide whether

or which “enhanced interrogation” measures depicted — slaps, sleep deprivation, humiliation, waterboarding — constitute, in plain English, torture. And they can ponder whether any or all of them would be wrong even if effective. Mukasey says the phrase “enhanced interrogation techniques” is “so absurdly antiseptic as to imply that it must conceal something unlawful.” Such “harsh techniques” were, he says, used against fewer than one-third of the fewer than 100 “hard-core prisoners” in CIA custody. The government properly cooperated with the making of this movie because the public needs realism about the world we live in. “We live,” says Col. Jessep, “in a world that has walls. ... You want me on that wall, you need me on that wall.” Regarding terrorism, the problem is that we live in a world without walls, without ramparts that can be manned for the purpose of repelling an invasion by a massed enemy. When the CIA woman who drives the pursuit of bin Laden is about to enter, for the first time, the room where “enhanced interrogation” is administered, the CIA man who administers it tells her, “There’s no shame if you want to watch from the monitor.” She, however, knows, and viewers of “Zero Dark Thirty” will understand, it is best to look facts, including choices, in the face. — George Will is a columnist for Washington Post Writers Group.

OLD HOME TOWN

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From the Lawrence Daily Journal-World for Jan. 13, 1913: YEARS “Amid the cheers AGO of hundreds of enIN 1913 thusiastic Democrats, the waving of flags, the booming of cannon and the patriotic strains of ‘The Star Spangled Banner,’ George H. Hodges of Olathe was inaugurated at noon today as the nineteenth governor of Kansas. It was an impressive and dignified ceremony. Added to the importance of the occasion was the fact that Hodges is the first Democrat to take the oath as governor of Kansas since the day that John W. Leedy was inaugurated in January 1897.” — Compiled by Sarah St. John

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

Black apparently more than a color I suddenly find myself concerned about my blackness. It had never occurred to me to worry about it before. Then came the incident last month on ESPN’s “First Take” program that initially got commentator Rob Parker suspended and then, last week, fired outright. It seems Parker, who is African-American, analyzed what he saw as the insufficient blackness of Robert Griffin III, rookie quarterback for the Washington, D.C., football team that is named for a racial slur. Having returned their team to relevance for the first time since the Clinton era, RG3, as he is known, can do no wrong in the eyes of Slurs fans. But Parker, saying that the young man’s fiancee is (gasp!) white and that he himself is rumored to be — cover the children’s eyes — a Republican, found him lacking in the area of authentic blackness. “My question,” he said, “which is just a straight, honest question: Is he a brother, or is he a cornball brother? He’s not really … OK, he’s black, he kind of does the thing, but he’s not really down with the cause. He’s not one of us. He’s kind of black, but he’s not really like the guy you really want to hang out with …” That explosion you hear is the sound of my mind, blown.

Leonard Pitts Jr.

lpitts@miamiherald.com

I have no natural rhythm, no criminal record and can correctly pronounce the word ‘ask.’ I don’t curse nearly as much as I ought to. Oh, and I went and married my baby mama. Obviously, my blackness is on life support.”

I’m left second-guessing my own blackness. I mean, I listen to Bruce Springsteen, for crying out loud! There’s even a Dixie Chicks album on my iPod. Should I download more James Brown and Al Green to save my, ahem, soul? And I read books sometimes, man — even when no one’s making me do it. Some of them are thick as bricks. Some aren’t even about African-American themes. It gets worse. I have no

natural rhythm, no criminal record and can correctly pronounce the word “ask.” I don’t curse nearly as much as I ought to. Oh, and I went and married my baby mama. Obviously, my blackness is on life support. Many of us have been taught that it is demeaning and delimiting when someone presumes to say who you are, how you will behave, what you think, what you like, and how intelligent you are, from the color of your skin. We have been taught that such behavior abridges the other person’s individuality. But apparently, that’s only when white people do it to black people. When black people do it to black people, it’s called assessing your blackness, making sure you aren’t some “cornball brother.” How enlightening to learn that. It is even more enlightening to discover that we have such easy-peasy rubrics to go by. You can’t be black if you are a Republican? That means Colin Powell isn’t black. Neither, if published reports are to be believed, are rappers LL Cool J and 50 Cent. Who’d have thought? And if you can’t be black and have a white significant other … wow. There goes — what? Half? 90 percent? — of all the brothers in the NBA. Poor Frederick Douglass

has a double whammy. He was a Republican and had a white wife. Who’d have thought this former slave, one of the towering heroes of African-American history, wasn’t black enough? It is this kind of bold insight and trenchant analysis ESPN loses in sacking Rob Parker. What is the network thinking? Parker, who also contributes commentary to WDIV television in Detroit, defended himself in an interview with the station that aired just before ESPN dropped the ax. He pronounced himself shocked by the fallout and suggested his comments were taken out of context. “You can’t be afraid to talk about race,” he said. He’s exactly right. In discussing race, we must be fearless. We must also be thoughtful. And informed. And exact. And alive to the ramifications of what we say. Surely, Rob Parker knows this. Of if he didn’t before, he does now. As for being black enough, he is probably a greater expert than he was before. He is, after all, a man out of work. It doesn’t get much blacker than that. — Leonard Pitts Jr. is a columnist for the Miami Herald. He chats with readers from noon to 1 p.m. CST each Wednesday on www.MiamiHerald.com.


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Sunday, January 13, 2013

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

L AWRENCE J OURNAL -W ORLD

BRIEFLY

More than 34,000 people have signed an online petikilled in raid tion calling on the Obama MOGADISHU, SOMALIA — administration to build the A raid to free a French intel- “Star Warsâ€? inspired superligence agent held captive weapon to spur job growth BOTTOM LINE in Somalia for three years and bolster national defense. went horribly wrong, leaving But in a posting Friday on City commissioners will reconsider a rezoning request that would allow retail 17 Islamists and at least one the White House website, development on 146 acres at the northwest corner of Sixth Street and the South French commando dead in Paul Shawcross, an adminLawrence Trafficway. a mud-caked farming town istration adviser on science deep in militant territory. and space, says a Death In the chaotic aftermath Star would cost too much to BACKGROUND of the firefight, the hosbuild — an estimated $850 City commissioners in fortable with the retail zon- Lawrence-Douglas County tage’s fate was unclear Sat- quadrillion — at a time the September balked that the ing if there was not going Planning Commission in urday. The Islamists denied White House is working to proposed retail zoning for to be a recreation center October couldn’t come to French claims that he was reduce the federal budget. the property. The site once on the site. But the prop- an agreement on whether killed and said they had a Besides, Shawcross says, was proposed to house a erty’s ownership group, to recommend retail zon- new prisoner, a wounded the Obama administration 181,000-square-foot rec- which is led by Lawrence ing for the site. Commis- French soldier. “does not support blowing reation center. But plans businessmen Duane and sioners sent the item back The botched rescue in East up planets.â€? for that facility shifted to Steve Schwada, are lobby- to city commissioners ask- Africa came the same day an area near the northeast ing that the retail zoning ing for more time for the French airstrikes in the West Online activist, corner of Sixth Street and is still necessary to serve Planning Commission to African nation of Mali targetprogrammer dies the South Lawrence Traf- the recreation and sports study the issue. Commis- ed resurgent rebel Islamists. ficway. Commissioners park that will be across the sioners will consider that French officials said the two NEW YORK — Computer said they were less com- highway from the site. The request Tuesday. operations were unrelated prodigy Aaron Swartz, who but stepped up domestic helped develop RSS and counter-terror measures to co-founded Reddit, has OTHER BUSINESS protect public places and been found dead weeks transportation networks. additional funds in the amount related to the northwest Consent agenda before he was to go on trial of $5,000 for the 2013 Outdoor quadrant of the intersection • Receive minutes from boards on federal charges that he Downtown Sculpture Exhibition. of Sixth Street and Kansas and commissions. Treasury: $1T coin stole millions of scholarly • Authorize distribution of Highway 10: • Approve claims. the Employee Healthcare Plan articles in an attempt to a. Comprehensive Plan • Bid and purchase items: would not be legal Request for Proposal on or Amendment to Horizon 2020 make them freely available a. Award bid for leasing 70 before Jan. 25. to create CC600 District poliWASHINGTON — Forget to the public. golf vehicles for the Parks and • Receive the 2012 Annual cies and to Chapter 14 Specific Recreation Department to E-Zabout the government Swartz, 26, hanged himPlans, to revise the West of K-10 Go/PNC Equipment Finance, LLC Utility System Development minting a $1 trillion coin to self in his Brooklyn apartPlan and A Nodal Plan for the for $56,714 per year for the next Charges Report. solve its debt-limit crisis. ment, his family in Chicago • Authorize the Mayor to sign Intersection of Sixth Street and four years. a Subordination Agreement for Kansas Highway 10 designating Treasury Department confirmed in a statement b. Authorize the City Manager Craig Nowatzke, 838 Oak. the node of Sixth Street and spokesman Anthony Coley Saturday. He was proto execute Change Order No. • Receive city manager’s K-10 as a CC600. 2 to the construction contract said Saturday that neither his nounced dead Friday evereport. b. Amendment to the city’s with EmCon Inc. for priority department nor the Federal ning at home in the Crown Land Development Code, group I of Project UT0919CS Reserve believe the law can Heights neighborhood, Ellen Articles 1, 2 and 13, to provide General Wastewater Pumping Regular agenda for a CC600 (Community or should be used to produce Borakove, spokeswoman Station Improvements increas• Consider adopting these Commercial) District. such a coin to avoid a coming for New York’s chief mediing the contract amount by ordinances on first reading as c. Rezoning about 146 acres $41,094.75 and contract time by related to the 2012 International battle with Congress over cal examiner, said. in the northwest quadrant of 63 calendar days. Codes: government borrowing. the intersection of Sixth Street c. Authorize the City Manager a. Adopting the International Some of President Barack and Kansas Highway 10 from Emergency declared to enter into an agreement with Building Code, 2012 edition. Obama’s liberal allies have agriculture and neighborhood the KERN group for a marketb. Adopting the International business districts to the pending been promoting the coin because of flu ing campaign to attract and Residential Code, 2012 edition. community commercial district strategy. retain retirees in Lawrence and c. Adopting the National NEW YORK — New York to accommodate a regional recDouglas County for $17,250. Electrical Code, 2011 edition. The government has reation facility. Gov. Andrew Cuomo ded. Authorize the City Manager d. Adopting the International reached its $16.4 trillion • Consider approving the clared a state health emerto execute the Enterprise Plumbing Code, 2012 edition. borrowing limit. By late 2013 Comprehensive Street License Agreement with ESRI e. Adopting the International gency Saturday because of a Maintenance Program. February or early March, for $50,000 for 2013 with Mechanical Code, 2012 edition. flu epidemic • Receive request from Tony Treasury will run out of options to renew up to three f. Adopting the International that has Krsnich for neighborhood infrayears for a total of $150,000. Fuel Gas Code, 2012 edition. ways to cover debts and structure and public improvesickened • Adopt these ordinances on g. Adopting the International could begin defaulting on more than second and final reading: Energy Conservation Code, 2012 ments within the Warehouse government loans. Arts District/East Lawrence a. For Special Use Permit for edition 19,000 peoHistoric District, including the the City of Baldwin and Rural h. Adopting the International ple, giving Cider Building, 810/812 Pa. Water District No. 4 Metering Existing Building Code, 2012 Obama won’t back pharmacists • Receive staff report on proStation, a Minor Utility, located edition. test petition for parking garage the right to at 4100 O’Connell Road. i. Adopting the International building ‘Death Star’ special assessment benefit immunize b. To rezone about 20 acres, Property Maintenance Code, Cuomo district; consider directing staff from County A (Agricultural) WASHINGTON — A “Death infants and 2012 edition. to execute change order for District to GPI (General Public j. Adopting the International Starâ€? won’t be a part of the children in hopes of curbing additional parking spaces and and Institutional Uses) District, Fire Code, 2012 edition. U.S. military’s arsenal any the spread of the potentially proceed with special assesslocated east of Kansas Highway • Reconsider these items time soon. lethal virus. ment benefit district. 10 and north of Sixth Street

City to mull retail zoning for site near Sixth, SLT

adjacent to the Baldwin Creek City Park. c. For Special Use Permit for an Institutional Development Plan for development of General Entertainment and Spectator Sports, Active Recreation, and Outdoor and Participant Sports and Recreation uses on approximately 90 acres in the northeast quadrant of the intersection of Sixth Street and Kansas Highway 10. • Authorize the city manager to sign a letter of interest in teaming with KU in a research grant opportunity to evaluate dual fuel use on heavy-duty vehicles. • Authorize mayor to sign CityState agreement for a Kansas Department of Transportation project along Iowa Street, 29th Street to south city limits. • Approve staff recommendation to fund Lawrence Cultural Arts Commission request for

Hawker Beechcraft plans furloughs WICHITA — Hawker Beechcraft plans to furlough about 240 employees now that negotiations with the government have fallen behind schedule. The Wichita Eagle reports the furloughs will affect hourly workers on T-6 and AT-6 production and will begin later this month. Hawker Beechcraft spokeswoman Nicole Alexander says the furloughs will likely be in one- or two-week increments and total several weeks throughout the year to match production. The company builds T-6 military trainers to sell to the U.S. government as part of the Joint Primary Aircraft Training Systems contract. The company is currently negotiating with the government for the next lot of airplanes, and negotiations are behind schedule. Each lot is negotiated separately and pricing for the next lot of airplanes is a main piece of the negotiations.

Under Cuomo’s executive order, pharmacists for at least the next 30 days will be able to give flu shots to children as young as 6 months, a break from state law that usually limits them to immunizing people 18 years and older. The Democratic governor said the change was crucial given the nationwide flu epidemic. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, at least 28,747 cases of flu have been reported so far this season nationwide, and 20 deaths of children.

Actress Olivia Wilde and actor Jason Sudeikis watch Kansas University play American in Lawrence on Dec. 29.

Jason Sudeikis, Olivia Wilde engaged LOS ANGELES — Olivia Wilde and Jason Sudeikis are getting married. A spokeswoman for Wilde confirmed Saturday that the couple is engaged. Joy Fehily released no other details. This will be the second wedding for both actors. Wilde finalized her divorce from documentarian Tao Ruspoli in 2011 after eight years of marriage. Sudeikis was previously married to “Pitch Perfect� screenwriter Kay Cannon. They divorced in 2010. Wilde, 28, rose to fame on TV’s “House M.D.� Her film credits include “Tron: Legacy� and “Cowboys & Aliens.� Sudeikis, 37, is a star of “Saturday Night Live.� He hosted the MTV Movie Awards in 2011 and appeared in the film “Horrible Bosses� that same year. Sudeikis, a Kansas University basketball fan who graduated from Shawnee Mission West High School, and Wilde have attended several KU basketball games, most recently on Dec. 29.

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NFL PLAYOFFS: Ravens, 49ers advance. 9B DOWN GOES DUKE

C.J. Leslie and North Carolina State came out on top against Josh Hairston and Duke, 84-76. Page 6B

SPORTS

B

LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD O LJWorld.com/sports O Sunday, January 13, 2013

Women brace for BU, Griner

Better half KANSAS 60, TEXAS TECH 46

KU flips switch at break

By Matt Tait mtait@ljworld.com

After the Baylor women’s basketball team capped an undefeated 2011-12 season with a national championship, Kansas University coach Bonnie Henrickson had one piece of advice for Baylor star Brittney Griner. “I was all for her leaving early,” Henrickson said of the national player of the year. BEWARE: HenrickBEARS son’s hope did not come Who: No. 1 true, and Gri- Baylor (12-1, ner elected 3-0) vs. No. to return to 17 Kansas Baylor for (11-3, 2-1) her senior When: 1:30 season. The p.m. today dominant center will Where: Allen play her fi- Fieldhouse nal game in TV: Knology Allen Field- Cable chs. house at 1:30 36, 144, 236 p.m. today, when the top-ranked Bears take on No. 17 Kansas. With the game representing the final shot at the Bears at home, several KU seniors are hoping everything they’ve learned during previous match-ups with the Baylor beast will help them pull off the upset today. “I think every team that gets multiple shots at them does that,” KU senior point guard Angel Goodrich said of piecing together information from previous matchups to try to come up with the perfect game plan. “You just can’t go in there scared. They’re a great team, they have the best player in the nation, and they have great guards around her. They’re really good. But you just have to go in there and play your hardest.” Henrickson said one of the biggest keys to competing with Baylor is for a team to stick to its identity. Sure, the game plan must be tweaked to account for Griner, who leads Baylor with 20.2 points, 7.7 rebounds and 2.6 blocks per game. But scrapping what you do altogether is a recipe for disaster, Henrickson said. “There are some things that we’ve tried and that other people have tried, we all watch each other and go, ‘Well, that kind of worked,’ or, ‘Well, that didn’t work.’ So, with them, it’s really pick-your-poison and finding out what hurt you the most,” Henrickson said. The Jayhawks enter today’s contest at 11-3 and 2-1 in Big 12 play. Kansas split back-to-back road games last week, picking up a tough one-point victory at West Virginia before falling at Oklahoma State, 76-59, in a game the Jayhawks never led. Although Henrickson said she could tell her team was excited about returning home, she was not ready to say the Jayhawks were catching Baylor at an opportune time. “I don’t know that there’s ever a good time to get them, quite honestly,” Henrickson said. And just because Henrickson had hoped never to face Griner again does not mean that she has anything other than positive things to say about the Bears’ 6-foot-8 center. “I have tremendous respect for her,” Henrickson said. “Great young lady. She’s done tremendous things for women’s basketball, and she’s done tremendous things for our league, but the countdown to not ever having to play her again is on. We all have that clock.”

By Gary Bedore gbedore@ljworld.com

Nick Krug/Journal-World Photos

KANSAS FORWARD KEVIN YOUNG SOARS FOR A REVERSE JAM in front of Texas Tech guard Ty Nurse during the second half. Young and the Jayhawks turned up the intensity after a lackluster first half to beat the Red Raiders, 60-46, on Saturday in Lubbock, Texas.

LUBBOCK, TEXAS — Like the rest of his Kansas University basketball teammates, everenergetic Kevin Young had a case of the blahs Saturday afternoon in half-filled, tomblike United Spirit Arena. “We were playing flat in the first half. It seemed like we were just out there,” Young said after KU’s 60-46 victory over Texas Tech. Young, KU’s senior forward, scored just two points off one shot in the first half as the zombie-like Jayhawks (14-1 overall, 2-0 Big 12) led the Red Raiders (8-6, 1-2), 2725, at halftime. He erupted for 12 points off 6-of-8 shooting the second 20 minutes as the Jayhawks rallied for a victory before an announced crowd of 8,534 fans in Tech’s 15,098-seat facility. “Kevin drives me nuts. He drives me nuts,” KU coach Bill Self said. “He can play so well. At 6-foot-8, he can run and jump and not even contest a shot or a layup with a 6-foot guy shooting it with one second left on the shot clock or not even come close to blocking out a guy when his man is the best offensive (rebounder). When he turns the switch, he does a lot of great things. “We’re so much better with Kevin in the game, but if he would just hone his focus in on the thing that we know he’s good at, we’re so much better. That’s what he did in the second half. In the first half, he didn’t play with that energy, and I think that’s one reason we labored.” Did Self flip that switch at halfitme? Self grinned. “I don’t know,” he said. “You’d have to ask him.” Tech outrebounded KU, 16-8, in the first half — during which KU scored just five baskets and dished a mere two assists. “At halftime, we were down on the boards. Coach emphasized they had seven offensive rebounds, and we had only five defensive rebounds. We tried to stop them from attacking the offensive glass,” Young said. Please see KANSAS, page 4B

Baylor, KU incomparable LUBBOCK, TEXAS — Lunatics who trust comparative scores in attempting to forecast outcomes will note that Baylor and Kansas, the Big 12 powers who meet for the first time this season Monday night in Allen Fieldhouse, both played Texas Tech in United Spirit Arena this past week with distinctly different results. Kansas stretched a twopoint halftime lead into a 6046 victory Saturday against the Red Raiders, four days after visiting Baylor scored an 82-48 slaughter. Is it a mistake to read anything into the outcomes? “Most definitely,” Tech interim head coach Chris Walker said. “I wouldn’t even comment who is the better team.” But when Walker talked about his two most recent

Tom Keegan tkeegan@ljworld.com

foes, it sounded as if he likes KU’s chances of staying unbeaten in the Big 12. “First of all, it’s in Lawrence, I believe, and that is something in and of itself,” Walker said. “And Kansas has guys who played in the championship game. They have four seniors and a guy predicted to be a lottery pick, and Baylor has pros on its end, too. So it’s going to be a heck of a game with a lot of future NBA players on the floor.”

A heck of a game Saturday’s was not, at least not for Kansas, which played as ugly a first half as it had in years. So much for the second-half field-goal drought of 9:18 against Iowa State disappearing in the rear-view mirror, as predicted here. The Jayhawks topped themselves for offensive futility Saturday by not scoring a single field goal in the final 11:13 of the first half, during which they made just five buckets from the field. Tech had two more offensive rebounds in the first half than Kansas had defensive boards. Kevin Young, the team’s Energizer bunny, looked to be out of batteries and was KANSAS GUARD TRAVIS RELEFORD (24) repeatedly abused on the boards in the first 20 minutes. GOES UP FOR A BUCKET in traffic as he is defended by Texas Tech guard Ty Please see KEEGAN, page 5B Nurse during the first half.


Sports 2

2B | LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD | SUNDAY, JANUARY 13, 2013

COMING MONDAY s #OMPLETE COVERAGE OF +ANSAS "AYLOR WOMEN S BASKETBALL s ! LOOK AHEAD TO +ANSAS MEN S BASKETBALL MATCH UP WITH "AYLOR

47/ $!9 30/243 #!,%.$!2

+!.3!3 5.)6%23)49

TODAY • Women’s basketball vs. Baylor, 1:30 p.m. MONDAY • Men’s basketball vs. Baylor, 8 p.m.

Chiefs tap Packers’ Dorsey as GM KANSAS CITY, MO. (AP) — The Kansas City Chiefs must have figured if the Green Bay Packers were playing in the NFC playoffs Saturday night, they were making a wise choice for their next general manager. The Chiefs announced during the first half of the Packers’ game against the San Francisco 49ers that they had hired longtime Green Bay personnel man John Dorsey to replace Scott Pioli, who was fired after four tumultuous years and a 2-14 finish this past season. The team announced the hiring on Twitter, but did not make Dorsey, Chiefs chairman Clark Hunt or new coach Andy Reid available to comment. An introductory news conference was scheduled for Monday. Hunt did describe his ideal GM candidate in an interview earlier in the week: “First of all, someone who’s a sharp tal-

ent evaluator,� he said. “I’d like someone who’s been part of a successful program from a talent standpoint. Someone who’s a good communicator, a good manager, and last but really not least, someone who will work well with Andy.� Hunt might as well have been describing Dorsey, a linebacker for the Packers in the 1980s. Dorsey was instrumental in helping build Green Bay into a perennial contender, first as a college scout from 1991-97 and then as director of college scouting from 1997-98 — a period that roughly coincided with Reid’s time as a Packers assistant coach. Dorsey spent one season with the Seattle Seahawks before returning to Green Bay, where he was director of college scouting from 2000-12 and director of football operations this season. During that time, the Packers have won six division titles, a

NHL lockout ended; camps set to open

conference championship and the 2010 Super Bowl. They’ve also made nine playoff appearances in the past 12 seasons. Dorsey helped select quarterback Aaron Rodgers with the 24th overall pick in the 2005 draft and has been a part of several other solid draft choices: linebacker Nick Barnett in 2003, wide receiver Greg Jennings and linebacker A.J. Hawk in 2006, wide receiver Jordy Nelson and tight end Jermichael Finley in 2008, and defensive tackle B.J. Raji in 2010. All that success in the NFL Draft should come in handy. The Chiefs, with the league’s worst record, will have the No. 1 pick for the first time in franchise history. One of their most pressing needs is an upgrade at quarterback, where Matt Cassel and his six-year, $63 million contract were benched last season.

Brady Quinn started half the season and fared little better. Third-string quarterback Ricky Stanzi never saw the field. Reid said recently he’s going to examine the players on the roster, and then consult with the GM — whoever it ended up being — on what other options are available. That may include selecting a quarterback with the first pick in the draft. “You don’t build your team in free agency. That’s not how you go about it,� Reid said. “I’ve experienced that. I’ve seen it firsthand. You can afford to bring a guy in here or there, but you better have that nucleus of guys that you kind of raised up, and then what’s important about that is you better make sure you have the right guy. And that’s the general manager’s responsibility. You have to identify the right guy.�

| SPORTS WRAP |

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MONDAY • Bowling at Maranatha Academy quad, 3:30 p.m.

3%!"529 !#!$%-9 MONDAY • Girls basketball vs. De Soto at Tonganoxie Invitational, 3 p.m.

30/243 /. 46 TODAY College Basketball

Time

Penn St. v. Purdue Michigan v. Ohio St.

11 a.m. BTN 12:30p.m. CBS

Pro Football

Time

Cable

147 5, 13, 205,213 Wichita St. v. Evansville 3:30p.m. MS 37 Nebraska v. Mich. St. 5 p.m. BTN 147 Maryland v. Miami 7 p.m. ESPNU 35, 235 Net

Seattle v. Atlanta noon Fox Houston v. New England 3:30p.m. CBS

Women’s Basketball Time

Net

Okla. St. v. Texas Baylor v. Kansas

11:30a.m. FSN 1:30p.m. FSN FCSA Nebraska v. Penn St. 1 p.m. ESPN2 Rutgers v. Notre Dame 2:30p.m. ESPNU California v. Stanford 3 p.m. ESPN2 Mich. St. v. Illinois 3 p.m. BTN S. Miss. v. Memphis 3:30p.m. FSN Net

Cable 4, 204 5, 13, 205,213 Cable 36, 236 36, 236 144 35, 235 35, 235 34, 234 147 36, 236

Golf

Time

Sony Open

6 p.m. Golf

156,289

Tennis

Time

Cable

Australian Open

5:30p.m. ESPN2 34, 234

——

Net

Cable

MONDAY

Regular season to begin Saturday NEW YORK (AP) — NHL hockey is finally back, and this time it’s official. Nearly one week after a tentative labor deal was agreed to by the league and its players, the sides agreed to a required memorandum of understanding (MOU) on Saturday night that truly makes the lockout a thing of the past. Training camps will open today, and a 48-game regular season will begin next Saturday. The signing of the MOU also paved the way for the NHL to release the long-awaited revised schedule. Twenty-six of the 30 teams will play next Saturday. All games will be intraconference this season. It took another lengthy negotiation to finally end the four-month lockout. The sides worked on the MOU all week, after a tentative deal was reached last Sunday morning — the 113th day of the lockout — and needed all day Saturday to finish it. The announcement that the deal was signed came several hours after the union easily ratified the tentative agreement that was reached after an all-night, 16-hour bargaining session last weekend. The more than 700 union members had a 36-hour window from Thursday night until Saturday morning to vote electronically. The NHL board of governors unanimously approved the deal on Wednesday. The NHL hoped to open camps today, and that prospect seemed in jeopardy Saturday until the document was signed at 9 p.m. CST. The new deal is for 10 years, but either side can opt out of it after eight. The previous agreement was in effect for seven seasons. While this negotiation was long, the sides were able to rescue at least part of the regular season. The NHL also played a 48game campaign following a lockout in the 1994-95 season. The 2004-05 was completely canceled because of a lockout. This one forced the cancellation of 510 regular-season games, the Winter Classic and the All-Star game. No preseason games will be played in the seven days before the regular season gets under way.

Net

College Basketball

Time

Net

Cable

Louisville v. Connecticut 6 p.m. ESPN 33, 233 Baylor v. Kansas 8 p.m. ESPN 33, 233 Baylor v. KU replay 10:30p.m. Knol. 6, 206 Women’s Basketball Time

Net

Cable

Norfolk St. v. Howard 3:30p.m. ESPNU 35, 235 Ohio St. v. Purdue 6:30p.m. BTN 147

Bas Czerwinski/AP File Photo

LANCE ARMSTRONG COMPETES IN THE 2010 TOUR DE FRANCE. Armstrong reportedly will confess to doping during an interview with Oprah Winfrey.

Armstrong could make limited confession AUSTIN, TEXAS — Lance Armstrong said he will answer questions “directly, honestly and candidly� during an interview with Oprah Winfrey this week. He also will apologize and make a limited confession to using performanceenhancing drugs, according to a person with knowledge of the situation. Armstrong has spent more than a decade denying that he doped to win the Tour de France seven times. Without saying whether he would confess or apologize during the taping, Armstrong told the Associated Press in a text message early Saturday, “I told her (Winfrey) to go wherever she wants and I’ll answer the questions directly, honestly and candidly. That’s all I can say.� A confession would be a stunning reversal for Armstrong after years of public statements, interviews and court battles from Austin to Europe in which he denied doping and zealously protected his reputation. Armstrong was stripped of his titles and banned from the sport for life last year after the U.S. Anti-Doping agency issued a detailed report accusing him of leading a sophisticated and brazen drug program on his U.S. Postal Service teams that included steroids, blood boosters and a range of performance-enhancing drugs. Armstrong’s interview with Winfrey is not expected to go into great detail about specific allegations levied in the more than 1,000-page USADA report. But Armstrong will make a general confession and apologize, according to the person, who requested anonymity because there was no authorization to speak publicly. Several outlets had also reported that Armstrong was considering a confession. Armstrong hasn’t responded to the USADA report or being stripped of his Tour de France titles. But shortly afterward, he tweeted a picture of himself on a couch at home with all seven of the yellow leader’s jerseys on display in a room at his home in Austin. He also agreed to be interviewed there, in what the Oprah Winfrey Network announced would be a “no-holds barred� session. That’s scheduled to be taped Monday and broadcast Thursday night. “His reputation is in crisis,� said crisis management expert Mike Paul, president of New York-based, MGP & Associates PR. “Most people don’t trust what comes out of his mouth. He has to be truly repentant and humble.� Armstrong is facing legal challenges on several fronts, including a federal whistle-blower lawsuit brought by former teammate Floyd Landis, who himself was stripped of the 2006 Tour de France title, accusing him of defrauding the U.S. Postal Service.

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

Kelly to stay at Notre Dame SOUTH BEND, IND. — Notre Dame coach Brian Kelly will be back for a fourth season after leading the Fighting Irish to the national title game this past season. Kelly issued a statement Saturday that after interviewing with the Philadelphia Eagles he will remain as coach of the Irish. Kelly said he has had thoughts about coaching in the NFL, but after much reflection and conversations with those closest to him he has decided to stay with the Irish. Kelly led the Irish to a 12-1 record this past season and has an overall record of 28-11 in three seasons with Notre Dame.

PRO FOOTBALL

Peterson, Watt All-Pros NEW YORK — Vikings 2,000-yard man Adrian Peterson and Texans pass-swatting end J.J. Watt are unanimous choices for the Associated Press All-Pro team announced Saturday. Peterson, who came within nine yards of breaking Eric Dickerson’s single-season rushing record, and Watt, who led the NFL with 201⠄2 sacks, were selected by all 50 members of a nationwide panel of media members who cover the league. Peterson is a three-time All-Pro, while Watt makes the team for the first time. Kansas City Chiefs running back Jamaal Charles was tapped a second-team All-Pro. Charles was the only Chiefs player to be named. He rushed for a career high 1,509 yards.

PRO BASKETBALL

Mavericks to keep Nowitzki DALLAS — Mark Cuban says he plans to keep Dirk Nowitzki, even though the Dallas Mavericks have their worst record since a few months after he bought the team in 2000.

GOLF

Henley, Langley tied at Sony HONOLULU — PGA Tour rookies Russell Henley and Scott Langley will play one more round together at the Sony Open, this time with a trophy and a Masters invitation at stake. Henley two-putted from 30 feet for birdie on the last hole for a 3-under 67. That gave him a share of the lead with Langley, who had a 65.

Tennis

Time

Australian Open

8 p.m. ESPN2 34, 234

Net

Net

Cable

Pro Soccer

Time

QPR v. Tottenham

1:55p.m. ESPN2 34, 234

Cable

,!4%34 ,).% NFL PLAYOFFS Favorite ............ Points (O/U) ........... Underdog Divisional Round ATLANTA ....................... 21⠄2 (47)............................ Seattle NEW ENGLAND ............91⠄2 (48)......................... Houston NBA Favorite ............ Points (O/U) ........... Underdog NEW YORK ......................7 (193) .................. New Orleans TORONTO ........................ 2 (191) ....................... Milwaukee a-BROOKLYN ...............OFF (OFF) ......................... Indiana SAN ANTONIO ...............12 (198)...................... Minnesota DENVER ........................51⠄2 (209) ..................... Golden St Oklahoma City ..............5 (199) ...................... PORTLAND LA LAKERS ......................8 (211)........................ Cleveland a-Brooklyn guard D. Williams is questionable. COLLEGE BASKETBALL Favorite ................. Points ................ Underdog SETON HALL ......................41⠄2 ....................... Providence MICHIGAN ST ..................... 18 ............................. Nebraska Massachusetts ................31⠄2 .......................... FORDHAM OHIO ST ................................2............................... Michigan Wichita St ............................3......................... EVANSVILLE NORTHWESTERN ................2........................................ Iowa MIAMI-FLORIDA ................61⠄2 ........................... Maryland PURDUE ................................11 ................................. Penn St OREGON ..............................91⠄2 ......................... Arizona St FAIRFIELD ............................6................................. Niagara MANHATTAN .......................7..................................... Marist Loyola Maryland ............. 11⠄2 ................................... RIDER SIENA ....................................2............................. St. Peter’s IONA ......................................7................................ Canisius Home Team in CAPS (c) 2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc.

4(% 15/4% h&INALLY THE .(, LOCKOUT IS OVER .OW WE CAN GET BACK TO WATCHING FOOTBALL v — Mike Bianchi, in the Orlando Sentinel

4/$!9 ). 30/243 1962 — Wilt Chamberlain scores an NBA regulation-game record 73 points to lead the Philadelphia Warriors to a 135-117 triumph over the Chicago Packers. 1971 — Lenny Wilkens of the Seattle SuperSonics, at 33, becomes the oldest All-Star MVP as he scores 21 points to give the West a 108-107 victory over the East. 1974 — The Miami Dolphins win their second straight Super Bowl in their third straight appearance with a 24-7 victory over the Minnesota Vikings. Larry Csonka, the game’s MVP, gains 145 yards on 33 carries and scores a touchdown.

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4B

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Sunday, January 13, 2013

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KANSAS 60, TEXAS TECH 46

L AWRENCE J OURNAL -W ORLD

KANSAS FORWARD KEVIN YOUNG IS FOULED by Texas Tech forward Jordan Tolbert (32) after grabbing a steal during the first half. At right is Tech forward Dejan Kravic.

McLemore in check By Tom Keegan tkeegan@ljworld.com

NIck Krug/Journal-World Photos

KANSAS GUARD BEN MCLEMORE FINISHES A PUT-BACK DUNK for two of his 10 points over Texas Tech guard Dusty Hannahs during the first half. KU beat the Red Raiders, 60-46, on Saturday in Lubbock, Texas.

Kansas CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1B

“Coach said that stat at halftime, and it was another emphasis we needed to change,” Young said of the made baskets/assists number. Self had a lot of things to say, rather emphatically, at the break. “He was pretty mad,” KU center Jeff Withey said. “I’ve seen way worse. We were still up by two. I felt we played pretty bad, but we knew what we needed to do to correct ourselves and did it.” The Jayhawks’ five first-half hoops in 18 shot attempts were the fewest made baskets in a half since the Jayhawks made six in the first half at Oklahoma State on Feb. 13, 2006 (KU’s half-only records began in the 1988-89 season). As far as assists, KU had just one in the second half at Texas last season. “Well, we tried to wake up,” Self said of the mood at halftime. “I was disappointed in our play, obviously. That’s as miserable as an offensive team can play, I think. “I thought their defense was good, and they kind of punked us on the glass, being physical. We had to decide whether we wanted to be here or not.” Young had six points in a 12-0 run that increased a 29-28 lead to 41-28 with 13:41 left. Included was a

BOX SCORE KANSAS (60)

MIN FG FT REB PF TP m-a m-a o-t Jeff Withey 31 2-3 8-10 1-7 1 12 Elijah Johnson 35 2-6 0-0 0-1 2 5 Ben McLemore 29 2-7 6-8 1-4 2 10 Travis Releford 33 4-5 4-4 0-3 0 12 Kevin Young 24 7-9 0-2 2-4 3 14 Naadir Tharpe 19 2-5 0-0 0-1 2 6 Perry Ellis 13 0-2 1-2 1-2 1 1 Jamari Traylor 10 0-2 0-0 2-3 1 0 Rio Adams 2 0-0 0-0 0-0 1 0 Andrew White III 2 0-1 0-0 0-0 0 0 Justin Wesley 2 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 team 0-1 Totals 19-41 19-26 7-26 13 60 Three-point goals: 3-10 (Tharpe 2-2, Johnson 1-3, White 0-1, McLemore 0-4). Assists: 8 (Johnson 4, McLemore 2, Releford, Tharpe). Turnovers: 9 (Johnson 4, Withey 2, Tharpe 2, McLemore). Blocked shots: 3 (McLemore 2, Withey). Steals: 10 (Releford 3, Young 2, Traylor 2, McLemore, Tharpe, Ellis). TEXAS TECH (46) MIN FG FT REB PF TP m-a m-a o-t Dusty Hannahs 25 1-4 0-0 0-1 2 3 Josh Gray 25 2-7 1-2 0-2 1 6 Dejan Kravic 20 3-8 3-4 4-8 3 9 Jamal Williams 31 3-7 4-5 0-0 1 11 Jordan Tolbert 24 4-8 0-2 3-5 2 8 Jaye Crockett 28 1-8 0-0 0-4 3 3 Ty Nurse 15 0-1 0-0 0-1 2 0 Daylen Robinson 15 1-3 0-0 0-1 1 2 Toddrick Gotcher 9 1-1 0-0 3-3 2 2 Kader Tapsoba 8 1-1 0-0 0-1 2 2 Clark Lammert 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 team 1-2 Totals 17-48 8-13 11-2819 46 Three-point goals: 4-11 (Gray 1-2, Williams 1-2, Hannahs 1-3, Crockett 1-3, Nurse 0-1). Assists: 11 (Gray 4, Williams 2, Crockett 2, Kravic, Nurse, Robinson). Turnovers: 16 (Kravic 3, Williams 3, Gray 2, Tolbert 2, Robinson 2, team 2, Nurse, Crockett). Blocked shots: 2 (Kravic, Tolbert). Steals: 3 (Williams 2, Crockett). Kansas 27 33 — 60 Texas Tech 25 21 — 46 Officials: John Higgins, Terry Oglesby, Greg Rennegarbe. Attendance: 8,534.

bucket following his own miss, a basket following his two missed free throws and a highlightreel dunk on a breakaway. “It helps a lot,” Self said of the team benefiting from Young’s playing with energy as he did in the second half. “He needed to step up. He had plenty of room for improvement

based on the first half. He stepped up and was real aggressive the second half.” Self said one problem has been the way the last two opponents have guarded KU. Young has been unguarded on the perimeter with extra attention being paid to Withey, who scored 12 points off just 2-of-3 shooting. Withey did sink eight free throws in 10 tries. “It will be difficult getting Jeff the ball if they don’t guard Kevin, and they didn’t guard Kevin the first half. The second half he took advantage of that, personally. He goes and scores eight straight points or whatever the second half off being aggressive because they were shading Jeff the whole time,” Self said. Withey said he has noticed double-teaming. “I feel a lot of people are going to start playing us like that,” Withey said. “Iowa State played us like this (in KU’s overtime victory on Wednesday in Allen Fieldhouse). We have to learn from it and get better. “He (Young) had a great game the second half,” Withey added. “The first half he made some bonehead plays; the second half he showed energy. He was starting to get dunks.” Noted Young: “We have a 7-footer down there. He has to touch the ball. He has to get off more than three shots a game. I think the next game (8 p.m. Monday, at home vs. Bay-

LUBBOCK, TEXAS — Texas Tech junior Jamal Williams led his team with 11 points Saturday in a 60-46 loss to Kansas in United Spirit Arena. But it was talk of his defense that put a smile on his face. Williams spent part of the game checking Kansas freshman Ben McLemore, who was coming off a 33-point night against Iowa State. McLemore made two of seven shots, misfired on all four threepointers and scored 10 points. “He’s a great player,” Williams said. “I like the fact that I got a chance to play against him. During film, I knew he was going to have a good game, so I just anticipated him. I tried to be a step ahead of him, tried to think it through each time and read what he was going to do. Some plays he made good plays and we defended him well. … I didn’t let him get comfortable. I kept him out of his comfort zone.” Red Raiders interim head coach Chris Walker, elevated when Billy Gillispie lost his job, discussed the approach against McLemore. “We just wanted to limit his touches,” Walker said. “He’s a great player, taking nothing away from him. He didn’t take as many shots as he normally had taken.” McLemore’s such a great finisher on drives to the hoop that Tech’s ap-

KANSAS GUARD ELIJAH JOHNSON (15) GETS DOWN on defense against Texas Tech guard Josh Gray during the second half. proach was to try to stymie the drives at the beginning. “We just didn’t want to let him have clean looks,” Walker said. “That was our No. 1 goal: not let him have clean looks, and to push him a little higher, really stay on his dribble and force him to drive the ball, because he’s really good with space. I don’t know if it was us or him today, but we did slow him up. I think our guys did a good job on him.” Tech’s approach worked against McLemore, and the strategy Walker employed against KU’s big men worked in the first half and was exploited in the second. The Red Raiders consistently doubleteamed center Jeff Withey and decided if a big man were going to beat them, it was going to be Kevin Young, for whom opportunities were created because of the special attention paid to Withey. Young didn’t make them

pay in the first half and did in the second. Tech also made Withey earn eight of his 12 points at the free-throw line, playing him physically at both ends and challenging him defensively. “That’s the only way you can,” Red Raiders center Dejan Kravic said. “If you don’t play physical against him, he’s blocking every shot And there were times in the second half where I faded away from him and just missed easy shots. But the objective was just to go at him and try getting in the air to try to get him to foul you. That was our objective in the first half. Just take it inside and be aggressive. If you’re not aggressive, he’s blocking it.” Attempts to draw fouls on Withey failed, but he only blocked one shot. The underdogs stayed aggressive but couldn’t keep Kansas from dominating the interior in the second half.

lor) we’ll work on that a lot.” The Jayhawks increased their second-half lead to 46-32 on a three by Naadir Tharpe with 9:31 left. KU built the lead to 18 points (58-40) with 4:21 left. The Jayhawks hit 14 of 23 shots the second half, heating up to 46.3 percent for the game to Tech’s 35.4 percent. KU hit three of 10 threes, Tech four of 11. Freshman Ben McLemore followed his 33-point game against Iowa State with 10 points off 2-of-7 shooting. “It was a tough night for the whole team to get in the flow,” Self said after his team scored a seasonlow 60 points, lowest total since 59 in last year’s NCAA title game against Kentucky. “Ben ... he would tell you that’s probably the roughest night he’s had this year. There were some other guys who had rough nights, too.” Elijah Johnson had five points off 2-of-6 shooting with four assists and four turnovers; Travis Releford had 12 points off 4-of-5 shooting with three rebounds. Tharpe had six points and Jamari Traylor one for the only bench points. “Give Tech credit. They played hard,” Self said. “I think they’ve got good players. If they play with that type of energy all the time and guard, I think they can be a good defensive team. I think you should look at us as being inept offensively, but in large part because Tech KANSAS HEAD COACH BILL SELF APPLAUDS a hustle play by forward Perry Ellis during the second half. was good defensively.”


KANSAS 60, TEXAS TECH 46

L AWRENCE J OURNAL -W ORLD

Sunday, January 13, 2013

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Nick Krug/Journal-World Photos

KANSAS CENTER JEFF WITHEY (5) PRESENTS A BIT OF AN OBSTACLE for Texas Tech guard Josh Gray during the second half. KU beat the Red Raiders, 60-46, on Saturday in Lubbock, Texas.

NOTEBOOK

Jayhawks smother sixth-man Crockett By Gary Bedore gbedore@ljworld.com

LUBBOCK, TEXAS — Billed as one of the best sixth-men in the country, Texas Tech’s Jaye Crockett had a game to forget against Kansas University on Saturday at United Spirit Arena. “We just guarded him,” KU coach Bill Self said of the Jayhawks’ work on 14.8-point-a-game scorer Crockett, who totaled three points off 1-of-8 shooting in 28 minutes in the Jayhawks’ 60-46 victory over the Red Raiders. “He made the three late, I guess his only points,” Self added of Tech’s final basket. “We did a good job on him. Our defense ... you go in anybody’s building, and the other team scores 46, that’s pretty good. Their field-goal percentage was down (35.4 percent, 4-of-11 from three). We turned them over the first half (13 times, 16 total). We did some good things.”

KU committed nine turnovers. “It wasn’t a lot. Nine is an unbelievable number for us,” said Self, whose squad had eight assists to Tech’s 11. “The problem is, there’s no assists. Elijah (Johnson, four assists, four turnovers) never got in the paint and made plays for others. Naadir (Tharpe, two threes, one assist, two turnovers) didn’t get in the paint and make plays for others. “Ben and Travis didn’t drive it much,” he added of Ben McLemore (10 points, 2-for-7 shooting and 6-for8 free throwing) and Travis Releford (12 points, 4-of-5 shooting, 4-for-4 free throwing). “They (Raiders) played it smart. If you only score 19 baskets (in 41 shot attempts), you are not going to get a ton of assists. You can’t get 25 assists if you only score 19 baskets. A lot of our baskets were in transition off steals and stuff. That doesn’t create opportunities.”

O

Weird rule?: Self was quite upset at the start of the second half when the officials awarded Tech the ball to begin play. Most assumed KU would get first possession, considering KU won the opening tip, and there was just one tie-up the first half, giving Tech possession. However, with 8:11 left in the half, a foul was committed after Tech received a tied-up ball, causing the ball to go to KU. Since no time ran off the clock, the arrow didn’t change, so Tech had the arrow to begin the second half. “I’ve never heard of the rule. I’m sure the officials are right,” Self said. “This isn’t me being upset with them ... when the foul occurred, we got the ball. They said it would be double jeopardy for them to lose the possession arrow, and the foul cost them possession, which is total crap because it cost us a possession. The bottom

line is, they went back to the old possession arrow since the foul occurred when the ball wasn’t live, which I’ve never heard of that rule at all. To me it makes zero sense, but that is the rule. “I’m sure they’re right. They said they’ve had it happen other times, but that’s one (rule) that may need to be visited. That penalizes a defense,” Self added. O

No meeting with Billy: Former Tech coach Billy Gillispie, who still lives in Lubbock, did not attend the game. Self, who is a good buddy of Gillispie’s, did not meet with him on this short trip to Texas. “We texted back and forth two or three times, but didn’t talk,” Self said. O

Self on KU’s offense: “We need to correct some things, pay more attention to detail on some things. It’d be nice to get some rhythm back offen-

sively. Rhythmic games means you are usually not stopping them either. Winning ugly is fine with me. If there’s no rhythm to a game, it means we’re probably guarding them pretty well.” O

Next: Baylor, which beat TCU, 51-40, on Saturday in Waco, travels to KU for an 8 p.m. tipoff Monday. BU is 3-0 in the league and 11-4 overall; KU is 14-1, 2-0. “They are a great team. They have been the past few years. It’s going to be a fun game. It’s Big Monday,” KU’s Jeff Withey said. O

Stats, facts: KU, which has won six straight over Texas Tech, leads the alltime series, 23-4. ... KU is 2-0 in Big 12 play for the seventh straight season. ... KU held Texas Tech to a season-low 46 points. ... KU’s five field goals (5-for-18) were the fewest made baskets in a half since the Jayhawks made

six shots in the first half against Oklahoma State on Feb. 13, 2006 ... KU’s two assists in the first half are fewest since recording one in the second half at Texas on Jan. 21, 2012. ... Travis Releford grabbed KU’s first rebound at the 11:42 mark. ... KU started the game 10-for-10 from the free-throw line and finished 19-for-26. O

Individual notes: Ben McLemore’s first bucket came via dunk at the 11:37 mark in the first half. Both he and Withey recorded dunks and are now tied for the team lead with 24. ... With 1:39 remaining, McLemore missed his first free throws in five games. He had made 24 straight prior to the missed pair. ... In his last six games, Releford is 27-for-34 (79.4 percent) shooting. ... Justin Wesley, who missed three weeks because of a broken finger, played his first minutes since the Colorado game on Dec. 8.

Keegan CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1B

KANSAS GUARD BEN MCLEMORE PASSES as he is defended by Texas Tech guards Ty Nurse and Daylen Robinson during the second half.

KU MEN’S SCHEDULE Exhibition Oct. 30 — Emporia State, W 88-54 Nov. 5 — Washburn, W 62-50 Regular season Nov. 9 — Southeast Missouri State in CBE Classic, W 74-55 (1-0) Nov. 13 — Michigan State in Atlanta in Champions Classic, L 64-67 (1-1) Nov. 15 — Chattanooga in CBE Classic, W 69-55 (2-1) Nov. 19 — Washington State in CBE Classic in Kansas City, Mo., W 78-41 (3-1) Nov. 20 — Saint Louis in CBE Classic in Kansas City, Mo., W 73-59 (4-1) Nov. 26 — San Jose State, W 70-57 (5-1)

Nov. 30 — Oregon State in Kansas City, Mo., W 84-78 (6-1) Dec. 8 — Colorado, W 90-54 (7-1) Dec. 15 — Belmont, W 89-60 (8-1) Dec. 18 — Richmond, W 87-59 (9-1) Dec. 22 — at Ohio State, W 74-66 (10-1) Dec. 29 — American, W 89-57 (11-1) Jan. 6 — Temple, W 69-62 (12-1) Jan. 9 — Iowa State, W 97-89, OT (13-1, 1-0) Jan. 12 — at Texas Tech, W 60-46 (14-1, 2-0) Jan. 14 — Baylor, 8 p.m. Jan. 19 — at Texas, 1 p.m.

Jan. 22 — at Kansas State, 7 p.m. Jan. 26 — Oklahoma, 3 p.m. Jan. 28 — at West Virginia, 8 p.m. Feb. 2 — Oklahoma State, 3 p.m. Feb. 6 — at TCU, 8 p.m. Feb. 9 — at Oklahoma, 3 p.m. Feb. 11 — Kansas State, 8 p.m. Feb. 16 — Texas, 8 p.m. Feb. 20 — at Oklahoma State, 8 p.m. Feb. 23 — TCU, 3 p.m. Feb. 25 — at Iowa State, 8 p.m. March 2 — West Virginia, 1 p.m. March 4 — Texas Tech, 6 p.m. March 9 — at Baylor, 5 p.m. March 13-16 — Big 12 tournament in Kansas City, Mo.

KU coach Bill Self’s tongue gave Young new batteries at the half, and the senior forward led the way from there. Freshman sensation Ben McLemore followed a 33-point night in a home victory against Iowa State with a 10-point game. Point guards Elijah Johnson and Naadir Tharpe combined for more turnovers (six) than assists (five). Looking very much like freshmen playing against older players, Jamari Traylor and Perry Ellis combined for one point in 23 minutes. So why believe that a team in such a sluggish state for 20 minutes against a Red Raiders squad picked for ninth in the 10-team Big 12 will gather itself in time to stop a talented Baylor team hitting stride just two days later? For one thing, it happens all the time in college basketball. It happened during halftime Saturday. For another, Kansas will go from playing 20 minutes in a fog to 40 minutes in the Phog. The obvious homecourt advantage cited by Walk-

KANSAS HEAD COACH BILL SELF TURNS HIS HEAD and laughs while in the middle of a disagreement with official John Higgins during the second half. er ranks as the biggest but far from the only reason to like Kansas extending to 31 an Allen Fieldhouse winning streak seriously challenged the past two games. Even when its offense drops into a prolonged funk, the defensive intensity doesn’t fall as far with it. Plus, the veteran Jayhawks won’t let the Bears’ flapping jaws erode their composure. The Red Raiders were tagged with two technical fouls in the loss to Baylor, and both could be traced to Baylor players egging them into retaliating to trash talking. Self won’t have much time to dissect what went wrong in Saturday’s lackluster victory. “I want them to forget about it,” Self said. “There are things we may learn from them and show

them five minutes of edit clips or whatever. But we need to put our focus on Baylor.” As he made his final postgame comment, Self sounded tired. And he sounded tired of talking about a game that for a long stretch looked as if his players were shooting at upside-down peach baskets. “I don’t know how you guys feel, but we look like a tired team,” he said. “So we need to get our batteries recharged. I’m sure we will for Monday night. We’re playing a really talented team.” Consequently, it will take as much passion as talent to win. The former didn’t show up until the second half Saturday, a formula that won’t cut it Monday.


6B

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Sunday, January 13, 2013

Crist gets TD, win as all-star By Matt Tait mtait@ljworld.com

Former Kansas University quarterback Dayne Crist got back on the winning track Friday night at the Casino Del Sol College AllStar Game in Tucson, Ariz., helping lead the West allstars to a 40-7 rout of the East. C r i s t , Crist who started seven games during his one season at KU and was benched midway through the year, was one of two quarterbacks on the West roster and played multiple series. He finished 6-of-12 passing for 62 yards and one touchdown and also was sacked once. His lone TD pass came in the third quarter, when he led an 11-play, 85-yard scoring drive that spanned 5:15 and resulted in a 10yard strike from Crist to former San Jose State running back Ina Liaina. Next up for Crist is a trip to the NFLPA Collegiate Bowl on Jan. 19. He will join fellow Jayhawks Trevor Marrongelli, Duane Zlatnik, Toben Opurum and Josh Williams in playing in the all-star game sponsored by the NFL Players Association.

Veritas boys third at Braymer J-W Staff Reports

Veritas boys 55, Tina-Avalon (Mo.) 38 BRAYMER, MO. — Andrew Currier scored 17 points to lead three Veritas Christian players in double figures, and the Eagles’ boys basketball team defeated Tina-Avalon, 55-38, for third place Saturday in the Braymer Invitational. Chad Stieben scored 14 points, and Thomas Bachert scored 12. Both were named to the all-tournament team. “What I liked about tonight was it was really good to see the guys bounce back and play four good quarters,” Veritas coach Gary Hammer said. “I was happy to see us handle fullcourt pressure better. We shot free throws better and just did a better job of moving the ball on offense.” Tina-Avalon cut a 13-point Veritas lead to five entering the fourth quarter, but Veritas outscored Tina-Avalon, 18-6, in the fourth. Veritas (9-2) will play Tuesday at Topeka Cornerstone. Veritas 10 15 12 18 — 55 Tina-Avalon 7 5 20 6 — 38 Veritas: Chad Stieben 14, Micah Edmondson 3, Andrew Currier 17, Elijah Harvey 3, Caleb Holland 6, Thomas Bachert 12. Tina-Avalon: Luckett 9, Myers 18, Matthews 4, Rucker 2, Ray 4.

Tina-Avalon (Mo.) 52, Veritas girls 37 BRAYMER, MO. — Madison Bennett scored 18 points, but the Veritas Christian girls basketball team lost to Tina-Avalon (Mo.) on Friday night in the third-place game of the Braymer tournament. Bennett was named to the all-tournament first team. Veritas (6-5) will play Tuesday at Topeka Cornerstone. Veritas 7 8 5 17 — 37 Tina-Avalon 12 12 8 19 — 52 Veritas: Hannah Gloss 6 points; Madison Bennett 18 points; Kristen Finger 6 points, 6 rebounds; Alison Dover 7 points, 8 rebounds. Tina-Avalon: Kelsey Garber 22 points; Lacey Rucker 16 points;

SPORTS

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L AWRENCE J OURNAL -W ORLD

TOP 25 COLLEGE BASKETBALL ROUNDUP

N.C. State topples top-ranked Duke NOTRE DAME (14-2) Cooley 7-12 0-2 14, Atkins 6-12 3-4 18, Martin 1-3 1-1 3, Grant 5-18 0-0 11, Connaughton 3-6 0-0 7, Biedscheid 2-4 0-0 5, Sherman 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 24-56 4-7 58. Halftime-Notre Dame 31-29. 3-Point Goals-UConn 4-13 (Napier 3-5, Boatright 1-3, Evans 0-1, Giffey 0-1, Calhoun 0-3), Notre Dame 6-13 (Atkins 3-5, Connaughton 1-1, Biedscheid 1-1, Grant 1-5, Martin 0-1). Fouled Out-Cooley. Rebounds-UConn 34 (Daniels 9), Notre Dame 28 (Cooley 9). Assists-UConn 15 (Boatright 5), Notre Dame 13 (Atkins, Grant 4). Total FoulsUConn 10, Notre Dame 13. A-9,149.

The Associated Press

No. 20 N. Carolina St. 84, No. 1 Duke 76 RALEIGH, N.C. — C.J. Leslie scored 25 points — including six straight during a key second-half run — to help North Carolina State beat Duke on Saturday. DUKE (15-1) Cook 6-16 4-4 17, Mas. Plumlee 7-10 1-3 15, Sulaimon 0-10 4-4 4, Hairston 4-7 0-0 8, Curry 8-16 1-1 22, Thornton 0-1 0-0 0, Murphy 0-0 0-0 0, Jefferson 5-7 0-0 10, Mar. Plumlee 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 30-67 10-12 76. NC STATE (14-2) Purvis 3-6 1-2 7, Howell 7-12 2-2 16, Brown 3-13 5-6 12, Leslie 9-16 7-8 25, Wood 3-3 5-5 14, T. Lewis 0-1 0-0 0, Warren 5-8 0-0 10. Totals 30-59 20-23 84. Halftime-NC State 41-39. 3-Point Goals-Duke 6-20 (Curry 5-10, Cook 1-6, Thornton 0-1, Sulaimon 0-3), NC State 4-8 (Wood 3-3, Brown 1-4, Purvis 0-1). Fouled Out-Cook, Jefferson, Thornton. Rebounds-Duke 35 (Mas. Plumlee 11), NC State 34 (Howell 18). AssistsDuke 10 (Cook 7), NC State 13 (Brown 13). Total Fouls-Duke 20, NC State 13. Technicals-Thornton, Wood. A-19,557.

No. 3 Louisville 64, South Florida 38 LOUISVILLE, KY. — Peyton Siva scored 17 points. SOUTH FLORIDA (9-6) LeDay 1-5 0-2 2, Fitzpatrick 3-11 0-0 7, Brock 1-5 2-4 4, Collins 1-3 3-5 5, Hawkins 2-8 4-4 9, Abdul-Aleem 0-3 0-0 0, Rudd 4-8 1-4 10, Poland 0-2 1-2 1, McCloskey 0-0 0-0 0, Omogbehin 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 12-45 11-21 38. LOUISVILLE (15-1) Blackshear 2-4 0-0 4, Harrell 1-4 0-0 2, Dieng 5-8 2-2 12, Smith 2-13 4-5 8, Siva 7-11 0-0 17, Ware 1-4 2-2 4, Hancock 1-4 2-2 4, Henderson 0-2 0-0 0, Behanan 3-9 1-2 7, Price 0-0 2-2 2, Van Treese 1-1 2-2 4. Totals 23-60 15-17 64. Halftime-Louisville 38-15. 3-Point Goals-South Florida 3-17 (Hawkins 1-2, Rudd 1-3, Fitzpatrick 1-6, Abdul-Aleem 0-2, Poland 0-2, Brock 0-2), Louisville 3-18 (Siva 3-5, Blackshear 0-1, Behanan 0-1, Ware 0-2, Henderson 0-2, Hancock 0-3, Smith 0-4). Fouled Out-LeDay. Rebounds-South Florida 24 (Rudd 8), Louisville 49 (Dieng 16). AssistsSouth Florida 4 (Brock 3), Louisville 6 (Behanan, Hancock, Harrell, Siva, Smith, Ware 1). Total Fouls-South Florida 16, Louisville 17. Technical-Harrell. A-21,903.

No. 4 Arizona 80, Oregon St. 70 CORVALLIS, ORE. — Solomon Hill had 16 points, including five three-pointers. ARIZONA (15-1) Ashley 6-8 0-0 12, Hill 5-10 1-2 16, Tarczewski 1-3 3-3 5, Lyons 6-14 4-6 16, Johnson 4-9 5-7 14, Parrom 2-8 0-0 6, Mayes 1-2 1-3 3, Chol 0-0 0-0 0, Jerrett 3-5 0-0 8. Totals 28-59 14-21 80. OREGON ST. (10-6) Reid 0-4 0-2 0, Collier 5-13 3-7 13, Burton 6-8 3-4 15, Starks 6-17 3-3 18, Nelson 4-11 6-8 15, Barton 0-2 0-0 0, Morris-Walker 1-2 0-0 2, Schaftenaar 2-4 2-2 7. Totals 24-61 17-26 70. Halftime-Arizona 43-35. 3-Point GoalsArizona 10-25 (Hill 5-8, Jerrett 2-4, Parrom 2-5, Johnson 1-3, Mayes 0-1, Lyons 0-4), Oregon St. 5-15 (Starks 3-9, Nelson 1-2, Schaftenaar 1-2, Morris-Walker 0-1, Barton 0-1). Fouled Out-Barton. ReboundsArizona 43 (Ashley 7), Oregon St. 37 (Collier 15). Assists-Arizona 14 (Johnson, Lyons 5), Oregon St. 14 (Burton 4). Total Fouls-Arizona 22, Oregon St. 16. A-7,224.

No. 5 Indiana 88, No. 8 Minnesota 81 INDIANAPOLIS — Indiana held off Minnesota’s late charge.

BRIEFLY KU swimming loses double-dual LOS ANGELES — Bryce Hinde earned two top-three finishes for Kansas University’s swimming team, which lost its double-dual with San Diego State and UCLA on Saturday at UCLA. Hinde placed second in the 100 breaststroke and third in the 200 breast. Brooke Brull (200 back), Morgan Sharp (500 free) and Haley Molden (200 free) also placed second for the Jayhawks. Christy Cash led Kansas divers on Saturday at the Bruin Diving Invitational with an 18th-place finish in the one-meter event. Competition will continue today. KU swimmers will compete against Hawaii on Friday in Honolulu.

LHS wrestling 13th at Newton NEWTON — Lawrence High wrestlers Alan Clothier and Andrew Denning were runners-up in their respective weight classes as the Lions placed 13th at the Newton Tournament of Champions on Saturday. Clothier (170 pounds) and Denning (182) were joined in scoring by Alex Jones (seventh place, 285) and Ryan Bellinger (eighth, 152).

FSHS wrestling last at Basehor BASEHOR — Free State High’s wrestling team took last place out of 36 teams at the Bobcat Classic on Saturday at Basehor-Linwood.

No. 19 Georgetown 67, St. John’s 51 NEW YORK — Georgetown broke out of its scoring funk. Ethan Hyman/AP Photo

NORTH CAROLINA STATE’S C.J. LESLIE CELEBRATES with fans after the Wolfpack’s 84-76 victory over top-ranked Duke on Saturday in Raleigh, N.C. MINNESOTA (15-2) Au. Hollins 4-10 2-3 13, Mbakwe 5-9 3-3 13, Williams 5-9 0-0 11, An. Hollins 8-20 4-6 25, Coleman 4-8 3-3 11, Welch 0-3 0-0 0, Osenieks 0-1 0-0 0, Ahanmisi 2-5 0-0 6, Ingram 1-1 0-0 2, Eliason 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 29-66 12-15 81. INDIANA (15-1) Watford 4-11 5-8 15, Zeller 6-8 6-8 18, Hulls 4-8 7-10 19, Oladipo 8-10 3-4 20, Ferrell 5-8 2-4 13, Sheehey 0-3 0-0 0, Mosquera-Perea 0-0 1-2 1, Abell 0-3 1-2 1, Hollowell 0-2 1-2 1. Totals 27-53 26-40 88. Halftime-Indiana 52-29. 3-Point GoalsMinnesota 11-27 (An. Hollins 5-12, Au. Hollins 3-5, Ahanmisi 2-4, Williams 1-1, Osenieks 0-1, Coleman 0-1, Welch 0-3), Indiana 8-19 (Hulls 4-7, Watford 2-3, Oladipo 1-2, Ferrell 1-3, Hollowell 0-1, Abell 0-1, Sheehey 0-2). Fouled OutColeman, Oladipo, Williams. ReboundsMinnesota 34 (Mbakwe 10), Indiana 36 (Watford 9). Assists-Minnesota 15 (An. Hollins, Au. Hollins, Mbakwe, Welch 3), Indiana 14 (Ferrell 8). Total FoulsMinnesota 25, Indiana 15. A-17,472.

No. 7 Syracuse 72, Villanova 61 SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Trevor Cooney hit a pair of three-pointers to punctuate a late surge. VILLANOVA (11-5) Ochefu 1-6 2-2 4, Bell 2-5 2-2 8, Yarou 3-6 5-6 11, Hilliard 2-9 4-6 8, Arcidiacono 2-8 2-2 7, Chennault 0-2 0-0 0, Pinkston 3-9 6-8 12, Yacoubou 3-7 0-0 8, Sutton 1-2 1-2 3. Totals 17-54 22-28 61. SYRACUSE (16-1) Fair 7-12 7-8 22, Christmas 2-4 0-0 4, Coleman 3-6 0-0 6, Carter-Williams 3-12 4-6 10, Triche 1-8 7-8 10, Grant 4-7 5-6 13, Cooney 2-6 0-0 6, Keita 0-0 1-2 1. Totals 22-55 24-30 72. Halftime-Villanova 29-27. 3-Point Goals-Villanova 5-23 (Bell 2-5, Yacoubou 2-5, Arcidiacono 1-7, Pinkston 0-1, Hilliard 0-5), Syracuse 4-14 (Cooney 2-6, Fair 1-2, Triche 1-4, Carter-Williams 0-2). Fouled Out-Bell. Rebounds-Villanova 40 (Yarou 14), Syracuse 34 (Christmas, Fair, Grant 5). Assists-Villanova 10 (Arcidiacono 4), Syracuse 11 (CarterWilliams 7). Total Fouls-Villanova 22, Syracuse 21. A-27,586.

Mississippi 64, No. 10 Missouri 49 OXFORD, MISS. — Murphy Holloway scored 22 points as Mississippi cruised. MISSOURI (12-3) Oriakhi 2-4 0-0 4, Pressey 5-11 0-0 10, Bell 5-11 1-1 11, Brown 4-13 3-3 13, Ross 1-7 1-2 3, Criswell 3-4 0-0 6, Bull 0-1 0-0 0, Webster-Chan 0-2 0-0 0, Feldmann 0-0 0-0 0, Jankovic 0-1 0-0 0, Rosburg 1-3 0-0 2. Totals 21-57 5-6 49. MISSISSIPPI (13-2) Buckner 0-5 0-0 0, Holloway 8-12 6-10 22, White 2-6 0-0 4, Henderson 4-11 1-2 11, Summers 2-8 8-8 12, Newby 0-0 0-0 0, Millinghaus 3-6 0-0 8, Williams 2-6 0-0 5, Brutus 0-0 0-0 0, Jones 1-2 0-0 2. Totals 22-56 15-20 64.

Halftime-Mississippi 31-22. 3-Point Goals-Missouri 2-18 (Brown 2-7, Bell 0-1, Webster-Chan 0-2, Ross 0-4, Pressey 0-4), Mississippi 5-18 (Millinghaus 2-3, Henderson 2-8, Williams 1-3, Summers 0-1, White 0-3). Fouled Out-Criswell. Rebounds-Missouri 36 (Bell, Brown 7), Mississippi 37 (Buckner 10). AssistsMissouri 9 (Pressey 5), Mississippi 7 (Williams 2). Total Fouls-Missouri 19, Mississippi 14. A-9,173.

No. 11 Florida 74, LSU 52 BATON ROUGE, LA. — Florida used a 31-6 run across the halves to rout LSU. FLORIDA (12-2) Prather 3-5 0-0 6, Murphy 5-13 0-0 12, Young 5-9 4-8 14, Boynton 7-13 2-4 20, Wilbekin 3-10 0-0 7, Graham 0-2 0-0 0, Yeguete 4-6 2-3 10, Frazier II 1-5 2-2 5. Totals 28-63 10-17 74. LSU (9-4) O’Bryant III 1-8 0-0 2, Del Piero 3-7 1-3 7, Carmouche 1-6 0-0 3, Hickey 6-12 0-0 15, Stringer 3-9 0-0 6, Courtney 0-1 1-2 1, Collins 0-0 1-2 1, Coleman 5-13 0-0 11, Hammink 0-1 0-0 0, Morgan 2-8 1-3 6. Totals 21-65 4-10 52. Halftime-Florida 29-20. 3-Point GoalsFlorida 8-23 (Boynton 4-8, Murphy 2-7, Wilbekin 1-3, Frazier II 1-3, Yeguete 0-1, Graham 0-1), LSU 6-24 (Hickey 3-8, Coleman 1-4, Morgan 1-4, Carmouche 1-5, O’Bryant III 0-1, Stringer 0-2). Fouled Out-Murphy. Rebounds-Florida 53 (Yeguete 13), LSU 34 (Carmouche 6). Assists-Florida 13 (Frazier II, Murphy, Wilbekin 3), LSU 11 (Hickey 4). Total Fouls-Florida 15, LSU 17. A-9,964.

Wisconsin 74, No. 12 Illinois 51 MADISON, WIS. — Jared Berggren scored 15 points and grabbed a season-high 12 rebounds for Wisconsin. ILLINOIS (14-4) Egwu 0-3 0-0 0, Griffey 1-6 0-0 2, Richardson 7-11 1-1 16, Paul 1-11 5-10 8, Abrams 4-8 1-2 9, McLaurin 0-1 0-0 0, Bertrand 4-8 4-5 12, LaTulip 0-1 2-2 2, Shaw 1-2 0-0 2, Henry 0-0 0-0 0, Langford 0-0 0-0 0, Djimde 0-0 0-0 0, Berardini 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 18-51 13-20 51. WISCONSIN (12-4) Evans 4-5 2-2 10, Bruesewitz 2-4 2-5 7, Berggren 6-13 2-3 15, Brust 3-8 0-0 8, Jackson 5-8 2-3 14, Smith 1-1 0-0 2, Marshall 2-7 0-0 5, Fahey 0-0 0-0 0, Dekker 5-9 0-0 13, Wise 0-0 0-0 0, Anderson 0-0 0-0 0, Showalter 0-0 0-0 0, Bohannon 0-0 0-0 0, Kaminsky 0-2 0-0 0. Totals 28-57 8-13 74. Halftime-Wisconsin 39-19. 3-Point Goals-Illinois 2-14 (Richardson 1-3, Paul 1-4, LaTulip 0-1, Shaw 0-1, Egwu 0-1, Griffey 0-4), Wisconsin 10-23 (Dekker 3-7, Jackson 2-2, Brust 2-4, Berggren 1-2, Bruesewitz 1-3, Marshall 1-4, Kaminsky 0-1). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-Illinois 24 (Bertrand 7), Wisconsin 43 (Berggren 12). AssistsIllinois 2 (Bertrand, Shaw 1), Wisconsin 11 (Brust, Dekker 3). Total Fouls-Illinois 19, Wisconsin 20. A-17,249.

No. 14 Butler 79, Dayton 73 DAYTON, OHIO — Butler won despite losing top scorer Rotnei Clarke to injury. BUTLER (14-2) Barlow 1-1 4-6 6, Clarke 2-3 0-0 5, Jones 4-8 8-12 16, Marshall 4-6 4-8 12, Smith 4-7 4-7 13, Fromm 3-5 0-0 7, Aldridge 1-1 0-0 2, Dunham 2-6 2-2 8, Em. Kampen 0-0 0-0 0, Woods 2-3 0-0 4, Stigall 2-3 0-0 6. Totals 25-43 22-35 79. DAYTON (10-6) Dillard 5-11 2-2 13, Benson 2-4 2-2 6, Oliver 2-12 3-6 7, Pierre 5-9 3-5 14, Sanford 5-15 2-2 14, Price 3-4 2-2 10, Robinson 0-2 2-2 2, Derenbecker 2-4 0-0 5, Gavrilovic 0-1 0-0 0, Scott 1-1 0-0 2. Totals 25-63 16-21 73. Halftime-Butler 35-27. 3-Point GoalsButler 7-13 (Dunham 2-3, Stigall 2-3, Clarke 1-2, Smith 1-2, Fromm 1-3), Dayton 7-19 (Price 2-3, Sanford 2-6, Pierre 1-1, Dillard 1-3, Derenbecker 1-3, Oliver 0-3). Fouled Out-Benson. Rebounds-Butler 26 (Jones 7), Dayton 40 (Oliver 13). Assists-Butler 19 (Jones, Smith 4), Dayton 10 (Dillard, Pierre 3). Total Fouls-Butler 21, Dayton 27. A-NA.

No. 16 San Diego St. 79, Colorado St. 72, OT SAN DIEGO — Chase Tapley scored 12 of his 19 points in overtime. COLORADO ST. (13-3) Hornung 3-6 0-0 7, G. Smith 3-10 1-2 8, Iverson 5-11 8-12 18, Eikmeier 8-21 3-3 22, Green 1-9 0-2 2, Bejarano 6-14 0-0 13, Octeus 1-3 0-0 2, De Ciman 0-0 0-0 0, Santo 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 27-75 12-19 72. SAN DIEGO ST. (14-2) O’Brien 4-6 1-1 9, Stephens 0-0 2-2 2, Thames 3-11 5-6 14, J. Franklin 6-19 6-8 23, Tapley 7-14 2-2 19, Spencer 0-1 0-0 0, Rahon 3-6 1-2 8, Johnson 0-0 0-0 0, Shepard 1-5 1-4 4. Totals 24-62 18-25 79. Halftime-San Diego St. 41-23. End Of Regulation-Tied 63. 3-Point GoalsColorado St. 6-22 (Eikmeier 3-7, Hornung 1-2, G. Smith 1-4, Bejarano 1-6, Green 0-3), San Diego St. 13-29 (J. Franklin 5-12, Thames 3-5, Tapley 3-7, Shepard 1-2, Rahon 1-3). Fouled Out-Stephens. Rebounds-Colorado St. 54 (Hornung 14), San Diego St. 38 (O’Brien 10). Assists-Colorado St. 9 (Hornung 4), San Diego St. 14 (O’Brien, Tapley 3). Total Fouls-Colorado St. 16, San Diego St. 15. A-12,414.

Conneticut 65, No. 17 Notre Dame 58 SOUTH BEND, IND. — Connecticut ended the game with a 7-0 run. UCONN (12-3) Daniels 3-8 2-4 8, Olander 8-9 0-1 16, Boatright 4-11 5-6 14, Napier 8-13 0-0 19, Calhoun 1-6 0-0 2, Wolf 1-1 0-0 2, Giffey 1-3 0-0 2, Evans 1-2 0-0 2. Totals 27-53 7-11 65.

GEORGETOWN (11-3) Hopkins 0-4 1-2 1, Lubick 5-8 1-3 11, Starks 7-13 1-1 17, Porter Jr. 5-11 9-12 19, Trawick 1-3 2-2 4, Caprio 0-0 0-0 0, Ayegba 1-1 0-1 2, Smith-Rivera 3-11 2-2 8, Bowen 2-4 0-0 5. Totals 24-55 16-23 67. ST. JOHN’S (9-7) Sampson 5-14 2-4 12, Greene IV 0-4 0-0 0, Obekpa 1-1 1-4 3, Harrison 3-12 1-4 7, Garrett 0-7 0-0 0, Branch 7-11 0-0 16, Pointer 4-6 2-4 11, Bourgault 0-0 0-0 0, Balamou 1-4 0-0 2. Totals 21-59 6-16 51. Halftime-Georgetown 36-19. 3-Point Goals-Georgetown 3-8 (Starks 2-3, Bowen 1-1, Smith-Rivera 0-2, Trawick 0-2), St. John’s 3-16 (Branch 2-5, Pointer 1-2, Balamou 0-1, Sampson 0-1, Greene IV 0-2, Harrison 0-5). Fouled Out-Hopkins, Sampson. Rebounds-Georgetown 48 (Porter Jr. 14), St. John’s 33 (Obekpa 10). Assists-Georgetown 15 (Smith-Rivera 4), St. John’s 8 (Pointer 4). Total FoulsGeorgetown 22, St. John’s 23. A-11,057.

No. 21 Cincinnati 68, Rutgers 58 PISCATAWAY, N.J. — Cashmere Wright scored 23 points for Cincinnati. CINCINNATI (14-3) Rubles 2-5 3-6 7, Mbodj 0-2 2-2 2, Wright 6-17 9-10 23, Kilpatrick 3-12 3-6 10, Parker 4-7 2-2 11, Jackson 2-4 2-4 6, Sanders 3-5 2-2 9, Nyarsuk 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 20-53 23-32 68. RUTGERS (11-4) Miller 3-5 0-0 6, Judge 2-7 2-3 6, Seagears 3-8 0-0 8, Mack 4-8 4-4 15, Carter 1-11 4-5 6, Poole 2-4 0-0 4, Kone 0-1 0-0 0, Johnson 3-4 2-2 8, Jack 2-5 1-3 5. Totals 20-53 13-17 58. Halftime-Cincinnati 27-15. 3-Point Goals-Cincinnati 5-22 (Wright 2-8, Sanders 1-2, Parker 1-4, Kilpatrick 1-7, Rubles 0-1), Rutgers 5-17 (Mack 3-5, Seagears 2-4, Miller 0-1, Poole 0-1, Carter 0-6). Fouled Out-Carter, Mack. Rebounds-Cincinnati 41 (Rubles 11), Rutgers 34 (Jack, Miller 7). Assists-Cincinnati 6 (Wright 2), Rutgers 11 (Miller, Poole 3). Total Fouls-Cincinnati 18, Rutgers 25. A-5,560.

No. 25 New Mexico 72, Fresno State 45 ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — Alex Kirk had 19 points and a career-high 14 rebounds. FRESNO ST. (6-9) Upshaw 4-7 1-2 9, Brown 3-4 0-0 6, Olekaibe 2-11 0-0 5, A. Anderson 2-7 2-3 7, Harris 3-11 3-4 11, Giddings 0-1 1-2 1, G. Johnson 0-1 0-0 0, Huddleston 2-6 1-4 6. Totals 16-48 8-15 45. NEW MEXICO (15-2) Bairstow 6-11 4-5 16, Kirk 8-13 3-3 19, Thomas 2-2 0-0 4, Greenwood 2-5 0-0 4, Snell 6-15 3-5 16, Adams 1-2 0-0 2, Fenton 4-8 0-2 9, Banyard 0-2 1-2 1, Alford 0-1 1-2 1. Totals 29-59 12-19 72. Halftime-New Mexico 39-22. 3-Point Goals-Fresno St. 5-20 (Harris 2-4, Huddleston 1-4, A. Anderson 1-4, Olekaibe 1-8), New Mexico 2-12 (Fenton 1-3, Snell 1-6, Alford 0-1, Banyard 0-1, Greenwood 0-1). Fouled Out-Bairstow, Giddings, Upshaw. Rebounds-Fresno St. 25 (Brown 9), New Mexico 43 (Kirk 14). Assists-Fresno St. 10 (A. Anderson, Huddleston 3), New Mexico 12 (Greenwood 6). Total Fouls-Fresno St. 18, New Mexico 14. A-15,337.

BIG 12 ROUNDUP

K-State survives wild end at WVU 2-4, Babb 2-5, Clyburn 2-5, Niang 1-2, Booker 0-1, Ejim 0-1). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-Texas 37 (Holmes 9), Iowa St. 37 (Ejim 10). Assists-Texas 16 (Felix, Holland 4), Iowa St. 18 (Lucious 9). Total Fouls-Texas 17, Iowa St. 10. A-14,376.

The Associated Press

Men No. 18 Kansas State 65, West Virginia 64 MORGANTOWN, W.VA. — Shane Southwell made two free throws with 21 seconds left, then blocked Gary Browne’s layup attempt with a second left to preserve Kansas State’s one-point victory over West Virginia on Saturday. Southwell and Rodney McGruder each had 17 points for the Wildcats (13-2, 2-0 Big 12), who won for the sixth straight time. KANSAS ST. (13-2) Southwell 5-7 5-6 17, Gipson 0-1 3-4 3, Rodriguez 4-8 0-0 9, McGruder 7-16 0-0 17, Spradling 1-5 0-0 2, Irving 1-2 0-0 2, Williams 3-6 0-0 6, Diaz 0-0 0-0 0, Henriquez 4-4 1-2 9, Johnson 0-0 0-2 0. Totals 25-49 9-14 65. WEST VIRGINIA (8-7) Rutledge 1-2 2-3 4, Noreen 1-1 1-2 3, Hinds 6-10 1-6 15, Browne 3-9 0-0 7, Henderson 4-6 2-2 10, Harris 2-3 3-4 8, Kilicli 3-4 0-1 6, Murray 4-11 3-4 11, Miles 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 24-47 12-22 64. Halftime-Kansas St. 36-33. 3-Point Goals-Kansas St. 6-17 (McGruder 3-7, Southwell 2-3, Rodriguez 1-3, Irving 0-1, Spradling 0-3), West Virginia 4-8 (Hinds 2-2, Browne 1-2, Harris 1-2, Henderson 0-1, Murray 0-1). Fouled Out-Henriquez. Rebounds-Kansas St. 28 (Henriquez 7), West Virginia 27 (Browne, Murray 5). Assists-Kansas St. 12 (Spradling 4), West Virginia 13 (Noreen 4). Total Fouls-Kansas St. 22, West Virginia 12. A-10,039.

Oklahoma 77, Oklahoma St. 68 NORMAN, OKLA. — Romero Osby scored 17 points, Amath M’Baye and freshman Buddy Hield added 15 apiece, and Oklahoma beat Oklahoma

Baylor 51, TCU 40 WACO, TEXAS — Cory Jefferson had 15 points, including consecutive baskets to start Baylor’s tiebreaking run, and the Bears beat TCU in the first meeting in more than 10 years between the instate rivals which are now Big 12 foes.

David Smith/AP Photo

KANSAS STATE’S SHANE SOUTHWELL (1) BLOCKS THE SHOT of West Virginia’s Gary Browne, center, at the end of their game Saturday at WVU Coliseum in Morgantown, W.Va. Kansas State defeated West Virginia, 65-64.

TCU (9-7) Abron 3-7 4-6 10, McKinney 1-7 1-2 3, Hill Jr. 5-9 0-1 12, Anderson 3-11 1-4 8, Green 0-5 0-1 0, Crossland 2-5 0-0 4, Smith III 0-0 0-0 0, Butler Lind 1-1 0-0 3, Zurcher 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 15-45 6-14 40. BAYLOR (11-4) Jefferson 6-14 3-3 15, Austin 5-11 0-2 10, Heslip 0-3 0-0 0, Walton 3-6 0-0 7, Jackson 4-12 1-2 11, Rose 0-0 0-0 0, Gathers 2-4 0-0 4, Franklin 0-0 0-0 0, Bello 2-4 0-0 4. Totals 22-54 4-7 51. Halftime-TCU 22-21. 3-Point GoalsTCU 4-9 (Hill Jr. 2-4, Butler Lind 1-1, Anderson 1-3, Green 0-1), Baylor 3-12 (Jackson 2-6, Walton 1-2, Austin 0-1, Bello 0-1, Heslip 0-2). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-TCU 33 (Hill Jr., McKinney 8), Baylor 33 (Austin, Gathers 8). AssistsTCU 7 (Anderson 3), Baylor 11 (Jackson 6). Total Fouls-TCU 12, Baylor 16. Technical-TCU Bench. A-7,753.

State in the Bedlam rivalry Iowa St. 82, Texas 62 AMES, IOWA — Freshman game. Georges Niang scored a Women OKLAHOMA ST. (11-4) season-high 18 points, Will No. 16 Oklahoma 65, Nash 5-9 2-3 12, Murphy 0-2 0-0 0, Clyburn added 16, and Iowa Jurick 3-4 0-0 6, Brown 4-12 9-11 19, Texas Tech 55 Smart 3-10 3-6 10, Gardner 0-2 1-2 1, State rolled past Texas in NORMAN, OKLA. — Forte 3-12 3-3 12, Cobbins 4-5 0-0 8. its Big 12 home opener. Totals 22-56 18-25 68. Aaryn Ellenberg scored 26 OKLAHOMA (11-3) points, including OklahoM’Baye 5-9 4-4 15, Osby 6-12 5-6 17, TEXAS (8-8) Pledger 2-7 5-5 11, Hield 6-11 0-0 15, Felix 2-7 2-2 6, Bond 0-4 0-0 0, Holmes ma’s last 13, as the Sooners Hornbeak 3-3 0-0 8, Grooms 1-5 4-4 6, 6-12 2-2 15, Lewis 6-15 2-2 15, Papapetrou held off Texas Tech. Fitzgerald 0-2 1-2 1, Cousins 0-2 0-0 0, Neal 0-1 0-0 0, Clark 2-6 0-0 4. Totals 25-58 19-21 77. Halftime-Oklahoma 38-29. 3-Point Goals-Oklahoma St. 6-21 (Forte 3-10, Brown 2-7, Smart 1-3, Nash 0-1), Oklahoma 8-13 (Hield 3-5, Hornbeak 2-2, Pledger 2-5, M’Baye 1-1). Rebounds-Oklahoma St. 36 (Jurick 8), Oklahoma 37 (Pledger 9). Assists-Oklahoma St. 11 (Smart 3), Oklahoma 13 (Hield 5). Total FoulsOklahoma St. 18, Oklahoma 21. A-12,695.

4-11 3-5 13, McClellan 0-0 0-0 0, Holland 3-6 0-0 6, Lammert 1-3 0-0 2, Ibeh 0-1 0-0 0, Ridley 2-2 1-2 5. Totals 24-61 10-13 62. IOWA ST. (11-4) Babb 2-7 2-2 8, Ejim 1-7 5-6 7, Lucious 3-5 2-2 10, Clyburn 6-11 2-6 16, Niang 5-7 7-8 18, Booker 0-2 0-0 0, Gibson 4-9 0-0 8, McGee 4-9 3-3 15. Totals 25-57 21-27 82. Halftime-Iowa St. 42-31. 3-Point GoalsTexas 4-18 (Papapetrou 2-7, Holmes 1-4, Lewis 1-5, Lammert 0-1, Holland 0-1), Iowa St. 11-26 (McGee 4-8, Lucious

No. 25 Iowa State 68, TCU 52 AMES, IOWA — Chelsea Poppens scored 24 points and grabbed 15 rebounds to lead Iowa State over TCU.


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Sunday, January 13, 2013

L AWRENCE J OURNAL -W ORLD

NBA EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division New York Brooklyn Boston Philadelphia Toronto

W 23 21 19 16 14

L 13 15 17 22 22

Pct .639 .583 .528 .421 .389

GB — 2 4 8 9

L10 4-6 7-3 6-4 3-7 7-3

Str L-3 W-5 W-5 W-1 W-2

Home Away Conf 13-5 10-8 14-6 13-7 8-8 15-8 12-6 7-11 12-10 10-8 6-14 8-12 10-7 4-15 8-8

L 11 15 23 27 28

Pct .686 .583 .361 .250 .176

GB — 31⁄2 111⁄2 151⁄2 171⁄2

L10 5-5 4-6 1-9 2-8 3-7

Str W-1 L-1 W-1 L-3 W-2

Home Away Conf 16-3 8-8 11-7 12-6 9-9 13-8 7-12 6-11 5-15 5-14 4-13 7-12 5-13 1-15 3-21

L 14 15 17 24 29

Pct .622 .571 .514 .368 .237

GB — 2 4 91⁄2 141⁄2

L10 8-2 5-5 4-6 6-4 4-6

Str W-4 L-1 L-1 L-1 L-1

Home Away Conf 15-3 8-11 13-8 10-10 10-5 16-6 10-9 8-8 15-9 10-10 4-14 11-10 4-12 5-17 7-18

Pct .718 .686 .553 .395 .306

GB — 2 61⁄2 121⁄2 151⁄2

L10 7-3 6-4 6-4 2-8 6-4

Str L-1 L-1 L-3 W-2 W-4

Home Away Conf 15-2 13-9 15-8 14-4 10-7 14-8 14-6 7-11 7-13 9-7 6-16 7-14 6-13 5-12 6-16

Pct .778 .579 .556 .513 .485

GB — 7 8 91⁄2 101⁄2

L10 7-3 7-3 7-3 6-4 4-6

Str W-2 W-4 L-1 W-1 L-2

Home Away Conf 18-3 10-5 16-3 13-2 9-14 15-10 13-4 7-12 12-9 11-4 9-15 12-14 10-5 6-12 9-10

Southeast Division Miami Atlanta Orlando Charlotte Washington

W 24 21 13 9 6

Central Division Indiana Chicago Milwaukee Detroit Cleveland

W 23 20 18 14 9

WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division San Antonio Memphis Houston Dallas New Orleans

W 28 24 21 15 11

L 11 11 17 23 25

Mark J. Terrill/AP Photo

ORLANDO’S ISH SMITH IS HAMMERED BY the Los Angeles Clippers’ Jamal Crawford after making a dunk. The Magic ended a 10-game losing streak with a 104-101 victory over the Clippers on Saturday in Los Angeles.

Northwest Division Oklahoma City Denver Portland Utah Minnesota

W 28 22 20 20 16

L 8 16 16 19 17

Roundup The Associated Press

Magic 104, Clippers 101 LOS ANGELES — J.J. Pacific Division Redick gave Orlando its W L Pct GB L10 Str Home Away Conf first lead on a three-pointL.A. Clippers 28 9 .757 — 7-3 L-1 18-4 10-5 19-5 er with 42 seconds left, Arron Afflalo tied his seaGolden State 23 12 .657 4 6-4 W-1 12-5 11-7 10-10 son high with 30 points, L.A. Lakers 15 21 .417 121⁄2 3-7 L-6 10-9 5-12 9-16 and the Magic beat Los Sacramento 13 24 .351 15 4-6 L-4 10-10 3-14 6-15 Angeles on Saturday to Phoenix 13 26 .333 16 2-8 W-1 10-9 3-17 6-12 snap a 10-game skid. The loss ended the Clippers’ franchise-record 13-game home winning streak and provided them Saturday’s games How former with a scare when All-Star guard Chris Paul went Jayhawks fared Orlando 104, L.A. Clippers 101 down holding his right knee with 54 seconds to Indiana 96, Charlotte 88 Cole Aldrich, Houston go. Paul returned after a Washington 93, Atlanta 83 timeout and hit a 15-footer Did not play Utah 90, Detroit 87 to draw his team within (coach’s decision). Philadelphia 107, Houston 100 one with 33 seconds left. Phoenix 97, Chicago 81 Dallas 104, Memphis 83 Miami 128, Sacramento 99

Darrell Arthur, Memphis Min: 28. Pts: 11. Reb: 9. Ast: 0.

Today’s games

Mario Chalmers, Miami Min: 30. Pts: 34. Reb: 2. Ast: 3.

New Orleans at New York, 11 a.m. Milwaukee at Toronto, noon Indiana at Brooklyn, 5 p.m. Minnesota at San Antonio, 6 p.m. Golden State at Denver, 7 p.m. Oklahoma City at Portland, 8 p.m. Cleveland at L.A. Lakers, 8:30 p.m.

Monday’s games Orlando at Washington, 6 p.m. Charlotte at Boston, 6:30 p.m. Atlanta at Chicago, 7 p.m. L.A. Clippers at Memphis, 7 p.m. Minnesota at Dallas, 7:30 p.m. Oklahoma City at Phoenix, 8 p.m. Miami at Utah, 8 p.m. Cleveland at Sacramento, 9 p.m.

Kirk Hinrich, Chicago Min: 23. Pts: 1. Reb: 1. Ast: 3. Marcus Morris, Houston Min: 21. Pts: 4. Reb: 2. Ast: 0. Markieff Morris, Phoenix Min: 19. Pts: 7. Reb: 3. Ast: 1. Thomas Robinson, Sacramento Min: 24. Pts: 10. Reb: 10. Ast: 2. Josh Selby, Memphis Min: 16. Pts: 10. Reb: 3. Ast: 2.

Calendar Feb. 15-17 — NBA All-Star weekend (Houston). Feb. 21 — Trade deadline. April 20 — Playoffs begin. June 6 — NBA Finals begin (possible switch to June 4). June 20 — Last possible date for NBA Finals (possible switch to June 18). June 27 — NBA Draft.

Leaders THROUGH FRIDAY Scoring Bryant, LAL Anthony, NYK Durant, OKC Harden, HOU James, MIA Westbrook, OKC Wade, MIA Curry, GOL Aldridge, POR Lee, GOL Pierce, BOS Parker, SAN Ellis, MIL Lillard, POR Jennings, MIL Mayo, DAL Holiday, PHL Bosh, MIA Gay, MEM Deng, CHI Rebounds Howard, LAL Randolph, MEM Asik, HOU Hickson, POR Vucevic, ORL Chandler, NYK

G 36 29 36 36 34 36 30 35 34 35 36 37 35 36 35 37 33 33 33 34

FG FT PTS AVG 375 254 1081 30.0 292 186 851 29.3 337 288 1026 28.5 286 309 952 26.4 339 161 885 26.0 274 188 789 21.9 232 143 620 20.7 247 108 708 20.2 277 132 686 20.2 289 116 694 19.8 237 161 707 19.6 284 133 721 19.5 248 136 661 18.9 237 110 667 18.5 237 103 647 18.5 242 115 681 18.4 243 82 605 18.3 227 135 596 18.1 229 101 592 17.9 229 120 608 17.9

G 33 33 37 35 35 36

OFFDEF TOT AVG 122 288 410 12.4 144 251 395 12.0 111 301 412 11.1 139 245 384 11.0 115 266 381 10.9 166 224 390 10.8

Lee, GOL Noah, CHI Cousins, SAC Faried, DEN Assists Rondo, BOS Paul, LAC Vasquez, NOR Holiday, PHL Westbrook, OKC Calderon, TOR Williams, Bro Parker, SAN Nelson, ORL James, MIA FG Percentage Chandler, NYK Jordan, LAC Howard, LAL Ibaka, OKC Lopez, NOR McGee, DEN Bosh, MIA Faried, DEN Hickson, POR James, MIA

35 33 31 38

101 278 122 221 108 208 154 233

379 343 316 387

10.8 10.4 10.2 10.2

G AST AVG 31 345 11.1 36 342 9.5 36 331 9.2 33 289 8.8 36 307 8.5 36 280 7.8 35 267 7.6 37 262 7.1 26 183 7.0 34 234 6.9 FG 169 142 201 217 176 162 227 189 178 339

FGA 250 237 353 383 313 290 409 347 330 629

PCT .676 .599 .569 .567 .562 .559 .555 .545 .539 .539

ORLANDO (104) Jones 0-2 0-0 0, Nicholson 4-8 0-0 8, Vucevic 7-9 4-6 18, Nelson 4-14 1-1 11, Afflalo 10-19 7-8 30, Redick 8-14 1-1 21, McRoberts 2-8 2-2 7, Smith 3-6 0-1 7, Harkless 1-1 0-0 2, O’Quinn 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 39-81 15-19 104. L.A. CLIPPERS (101) Butler 3-7 0-0 8, Griffin 15-22 0-0 30, Jordan 5-6 0-0 10, Paul 4-11 1-1 10, Green 4-7 0-0 10, Barnes 4-10 0-0 10, Bledsoe 1-4 0-0 2, Crawford 4-12 3-3 13, Odom 3-5 0-0 6, Turiaf 0-1 0-0 0, Hill 0-3 2-2 2. Totals 43-88 6-6 101. Orlando 26 23 26 29 — 104 L.A. Clippers 31 26 26 18 — 101 3-Point Goals-Orlando 11-25 (Redick 4-8, Afflalo 3-3, Nelson 2-7, Smith 1-2, McRoberts 1-5), L.A. Clippers 9-22 (Butler 2-4, Green 2-4, Crawford 2-4, Barnes 2-5, Paul 1-3, Griffin 0-1, Odom 0-1). Fouled Out-None. ReboundsOrlando 49 (Vucevic 15), L.A. Clippers 42 (Griffin 8). Assists-Orlando 28 (Nelson 9), L.A. Clippers 32 (Paul 16). Total Fouls-Orlando 12, L.A. Clippers 15. Technicals-Afflalo, Orlando defensive three second, Crawford. A-19,060 (19,060).

Wizards 93, Hawks 83 WASHINGTON — John Wall gave his teammates a lift with 14 points and four assists in his first game of the season, and worst-inNBA Washington has its first winning streak after a victory over Atlanta. Wall’s playing time will be limited as he returns from a knee injury, but he appeared to have his old speed and explosiveness back while playing seven minutes in the first half and 15 in the second half. No. 3 overall pick Bradley Beal, getting to play with Wall for the first time, scored 16 points for the Wizards, who are 6-28 but have strung together two wins in a row following their upset of Oklahoma City on Monday. ATLANTA (83) Korver 2-6 0-0 5, Smith 4-13 2-6 11, Horford 8-16 0-0 16, Teague 6-10 6-7 19, Harris 3-6 1-2 8, Pachulia 2-4 1-2 5, Williams 3-12 0-0 8, Johnson 0-6 6-8 6, Jenkins 2-4 0-0 5, Stevenson 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 30-78 16-25 83. WASHINGTON (93) Webster 6-10 2-6 15, Nene 3-5 2-2 8, Okafor 3-8 4-6 10, Price 6-12 4-4 16, Beal 6-16 3-4 16, Seraphin 4-10 0-0 8, Wall 5-11 4-5 14, Vesely 0-1 0-0 0, Ariza 1-2 0-0 2, Booker 1-1 0-0 2, Temple 1-3 0-0 2. Totals 36-79 19-27 93. Atlanta 17 33 16 17 — 83 Washington 27 24 22 20 — 93 3-Point Goals-Atlanta 7-24 (Williams 2-6, Jenkins 1-1, Teague 1-3, Harris 1-3, Korver 1-4, Smith 1-4, Stevenson 0-1, Johnson 0-2), Washington 2-11 (Webster 1-3, Beal 1-3, Temple 0-1, Price 0-4). Rebounds-Atlanta 51 (Horford 12), Washington 57 (Okafor, Nene 10). Assists-Atlanta 23 (Harris 5), Washington 17 (Wall 4). Total FoulsAtlanta 20, Washington 27. A-15,331 (20,308).

Matt Slocum/AP Photo

HOUSTON’S OMER ASIK, LEFT, goes up for a shot against Philadelphia’s Thaddeus Young. The 76ers defeated the Rockets, 107-100, on Saturday night in Philadelphia. Pacers 96, Bobcats 88 INDIANAPOLIS — George Hill scored 19 points, D.J. Augustin added a seasonhigh 18, and Indiana beat Charlotte for its fourth straight victory. Lance Stephenson had 17 points, and David West scored 14 points to help the Central Division-leading Pacers, playing without leading scorer Paul George (illness), get their sixth victory in seven games. CHARLOTTE (88) Kidd-Gilchrist 2-7 0-0 4, Warrick 5-13 3-5 13, Biyombo 4-4 0-0 8, Walker 5-9 5-5 16, Henderson 6-12 0-0 12, Gordon 9-14 2-3 21, Sessions 2-11 3-3 7, Taylor 1-2 0-0 3, Adrien 0-2 0-0 0, Haywood 2-4 0-0 4. Totals 36-78 13-16 88. INDIANA (96) McGuire 0-3 0-2 0, West 7-15 0-0 14, Hibbert 4-9 1-2 9, Hill 7-17 2-2 19, Stephenson 8-13 0-0 17, Green 3-12 0-0 8, T.Hansbrough 1-3 1-1 3, Johnson 1-3 0-0 3, Mahinmi 2-5 1-1 5, Augustin 5-9 4-4 18. Totals 38-89 9-12 96. Charlotte 24 21 20 23 — 88 Indiana 23 20 26 27 — 96 3-Point Goals-Charlotte 3-7 (Gordon 1-1, Taylor 1-1, Walker 1-2, Henderson 0-1, Warrick 0-1, Sessions 0-1), Indiana 11-28 (Augustin 4-8, Hill 3-7, Green 2-8, Johnson 1-2, Stephenson 1-3). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-Charlotte 44 (KiddGilchrist 8), Indiana 55 (West 12). Assists-Charlotte 20 (Sessions 6), Indiana 24 (West 10). Total FoulsCharlotte 20, Indiana 21. TechnicalsStephenson. A-13,656 (18,165).

Jazz 90, Pistons 87 AUBURN HILLS, MICH. — Al Jefferson scored 10 of his 20 points in the third quarter, and Utah rallied to beat Detroit. Detroit’s Brandon Knight missed a threepointer in the final seconds that would have tied the game after the Pistons trailed by 13. UTAH (90) Carroll 2-5 1-1 5, Millsap 6-13 5-6 17, Jefferson 10-18 0-0 20, Tinsley 0-1 0-0 0, Foye 6-9 2-2 17, Watson 0-3 2-2 2, Favors 3-5 1-4 7, Hayward 2-8 2-3 6, Burks 5-7 0-0 12, Kanter 2-2 0-0 4. Totals 36-71 13-18 90. DETROIT (87) Prince 3-8 2-2 8, Maxiell 2-5 3-4 7, Monroe 6-9 0-0 12, Knight 7-16 0-0 16, Singler 2-2 0-0 4, Stuckey 2-6 3-4 9, Drummond 4-5 1-4 9, Villanueva 1-5 1-3 4, Daye 1-3 2-2 5, Bynum 6-6 1-2 13. Totals 34-65 13-21 87. Utah 13 26 25 26 — 90 Detroit 26 24 11 26 — 87 3-Point Goals-Utah 5-10 (Foye 3-5, Burks 2-2, Hayward 0-1, Tinsley 0-1, Carroll 0-1), Detroit 6-16 (Stuckey 2-4, Knight 2-7, Daye 1-2, Villanueva 1-3). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-Utah 38 (Jefferson 10), Detroit 41 (Monroe 11). Assists-Utah 21 (Watson 6), Detroit 21 (Bynum 4). Total Fouls-Utah 22, Detroit 22. Technicals-Detroit Coach Frank. A-18,441 (22,076).

76ers 107, Rockets 100 PHILADELPHIA — Jrue Holiday scored 30 points, Thaddeus Young had 18 points and 12 rebounds, and Philadelphia snapped a five-game losing streak with a victory over Houston. Jason Richardson scored 16 points for the Sixers, who finally return home for a lengthy stint as they try to play their way back into the Eastern Conference playoff race. The Sixers opened a stretch of 12 homes in the next 13 and hope they can start to offset a miserable 2-6 road trip that stretched over the new year. HOUSTON (100) Parsons 9-18 4-4 23, Morris 2-6 0-2 4, Asik 6-7 4-4 16, Lin 2-13 3-4 7, Harden 10-19 7-8 29, Douglas 1-6 0-0 2, Patterson 1-4 0-0 3, Delfino 6-11 0-0 16, Smith 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 37-84 18-22 100. PHILADELPHIA (107) Turner 6-10 0-0 12, T.Young 8-14 2-4 18, Allen 1-6 1-2 3, Holiday 11-22 7-7 30, Richardson 7-15 0-0 16, Hawes 5-9 0-0 10, Wright 3-6 0-0 8, Wilkins 1-3 5-6 7, Ivey 1-2 0-0 3. Totals 43-87 15-19 107. Houston 25 25 26 24 — 100 Philadelphia 29 29 27 22 — 107 3-Point Goals-Houston 8-32 (Delfino 4-7, Harden 2-9, Patterson 1-2, Parsons 1-7, Morris 0-2, Douglas 0-2, Lin 0-3), Philadelphia 6-18 (Wright 2-5, Richardson 2-7, Ivey 1-1, Holiday 1-3, Hawes 0-1, Turner 0-1). Fouled OutNone. Rebounds-Houston 50 (Asik 10), Philadelphia 49 (T.Young 12). AssistsHouston 21 (Harden 6), Philadelphia 26 (Holiday 9). Total Fouls-Houston 18, Philadelphia 18. Technicals-Hawes. A-17,329 (20,328).

PHOENIX (97) Tucker 1-6 0-0 2, Scola 9-15 4-4 22, Gortat 3-4 2-4 8, Dragic 2-8 2-4 7, Brown 4-6 2-4 11, O’Neal 1-5 2-2 4, Johnson 1-4 0-0 3, Telfair 2-6 7-7 13, Beasley 10-14 0-0 20, Morris 3-5 0-0 7, Zeller 0-0 0-0 0, Marshall 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 36-73 19-25 97. CHICAGO (81) Deng 5-16 2-2 13, Boozer 6-14 3-3 15, Noah 4-13 2-4 10, Hinrich 0-3 1-2 1, Hamilton 6-9 0-0 12, Robinson 2-8 2-2 7, Gibson 1-2 0-0 2, Belinelli 3-12 2-3 8, Mohammed 0-2 0-2 0, Butler 5-7 3-3 13, Cook 0-2 0-0 0, Teague 0-0 0-0 0, Radmanovic 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 32-88 15-21 81. Phoenix 20 29 28 20 — 97 Chicago 21 21 21 18 — 81 3-Point Goals-Phoenix 6-14 (Telfair 2-4, Brown 1-1, Morris 1-1, Johnson 1-2, Dragic 1-4, Tucker 0-2), Chicago 2-11 (Deng 1-2, Robinson 1-4, Cook 0-2, Belinelli 0-3). Fouled Out-Morris. Rebounds-Phoenix 57 (Gortat 10), Chicago 48 (Noah 13). Assists-Phoenix 23 (Dragic 8), Chicago 18 (Robinson 6). Total Fouls-Phoenix 20, Chicago 18. Technicals-Telfair, Boozer, Deng, Robinson, Chicago Coach Thibodeau. A-21,874 (20,917).

Mavericks 104, Grizzlies 83 DALLAS — Shawn Marion scored a season-high 20 points, Dirk Nowitzki added 17, and Dallas won consecutive games for the first time in a month. MEMPHIS (83) Gay 5-11 1-2 12, Randolph 3-7 0-0 6, Gasol 3-8 2-2 8, Conley 2-5 2-2 7, Allen 4-9 1-2 9, Speights 3-7 1-2 7, Bayless 2-4 4-5 9, Arthur 5-13 1-4 11, Ellington 1-9 0-0 2, Haddadi 1-5 0-0 2, Selby 3-6 4-7 10. Totals 32-84 16-26 83. DALLAS (104) Marion 9-13 0-0 20, Nowitzki 5-8 4-7 17, Kaman 7-13 0-0 14, Collison 4-8 1-1 10, Mayo 4-7 1-1 11, Carter 2-6 2-2 8, Beaubois 1-4 0-0 2, Brand 4-6 2-2 10, Crowder 1-3 2-4 5, Da.Jones 1-2 3-4 5, M.James 0-3 0-0 0, B.James 0-3 0-0 0, Wright 1-4 0-0 2. Totals 39-80 15-21 104. Memphis 18 21 23 21— 83 Dallas 25 29 34 16—104 3-Point Goals-Memphis 3-8 (Conley 1-1, Bayless 1-1, Gay 1-2, Arthur 0-1, Ellington 0-3), Dallas 11-17 (Nowitzki 3-3, Mayo 2-2, Marion 2-3, Carter 2-4, Crowder 1-1, Collison 1-1, M.James 0-1, Beaubois 0-2). Rebounds-Memphis 51 (Arthur 9), Dallas 58 (Brand 9). AssistsMemphis 19 (Bayless 5), Dallas 26 (Collison 6). Total Fouls-Memphis 15, Dallas 22. A-19,984 (19,200).

Heat 128, Kings 99 SACRAMENTO, CALIF. — Mario Chalmers had career highs with 10 threepointers and 34 points to lead Miami. LeBron James had 20 points, seven assists, five steals and a pair blocks for the Heat. Chris Bosh had 16 points, Mike Miller 12 and Dwayne Wade 11 for Miami, which shot 56 percent and went 17 for 37 from beyond the arc. Chalmers, a Kansas University prodSuns 97, Bulls 81 uct, tied Brian Shaw’s franCHICAGO — Luis Scola chise record for threes, scored 22 points to help connecting on 10 of 13. Phoenix beat Chicago, snapping a five-game los- MIAMI (128) James 7-10 6-7 20, Haslem 1-3 3-4 5, ing streak. Bosh 6-11 4-4 16, Chalmers 12-16 0-0 Michael Beasley added 34, Wade 3-5 5-6 11, Allen 4-9 1-1 10, 1-3 2-2 4, Miller 4-8 0-0 12, Cole 20 points for Phoenix, Anthony 3-6 0-0 6, Lewis 3-5 0-0 8, Jones 0-2 0-0 0, which had lost 12 straight Varnado 1-1 0-0 2, Harrellson 0-1 0-0 0. 45-80 21-24 128. on the road and got its Totals SACRAMENTO (99) first victory away from Salmons 0-3 0-0 0, Thompson 1-3 0-0 Cousins 4-11 3-3 11, Thomas 13-22 home since beating Cleve- 2, 2-3 34, Garcia 1-4 0-0 3, Evans 2-9 4-6 land on Nov. 27. 8, Thornton 2-8 0-0 5, Johnson 5-8 1-3 11, Fredette 3-7 2-2 9, Hayes 1-1 0-0 2, Carlos Boozer had 15 Robinson 4-8 2-2 10, Honeycutt 2-3 0-0 points and 10 rebounds, 4. Totals 38-87 14-19 99. 28 38 37 25—128 and Joakim Noah added Miami Sacramento 17 27 28 27— 99 10 points and 13 boards for 3-Point Goals-Miami 17-37 (Chalmers Miller 4-8, Lewis 2-4, Allen 1-5, Chicago, which continued 10-13, James 0-1, Harrellson 0-1, Wade 0-1, its inconsistent play at Cole 0-2, Jones 0-2), Sacramento 9-18 6-8, Fredette 1-1, Garcia home with its fourth loss (Thomas 1-4, Thornton 1-4, Honeycutt 0-1). in the last six. The Bulls Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-Miami 41 8), Sacramento 51 (Robinson lost for just the second (Haslem 10). Assists-Miami 35 (James, Wade time in 13 games when 7), Sacramento 23 (Thomas 5). Total 19, Sacramento 19. both Boozer and Noah re- Fouls-Miami Technicals-Sacramento Coach Smart. corded double-doubles. A-14,367 (17,317).


SPORTS

L AWRENCE J OURNAL -W ORLD

Sunday, January 13, 2013

SCOREBOARD

NFL PLAYOFFS

NFL Playoffs

Divisional Playoffs Saturday’s Scores Baltimore 38, Denver 35, 2OT San Francisco 45, Green Bay 31 Today’s Games Seattle at Atlanta, noon (FOX) Houston at New England, 3:30 p.m. (CBS) Conference Championships Sunday, Jan. 20 San Francisco vs. Seattle-Atlanta winner, 2 p.m. (FOX) Baltimore vs. Houston-New England winner, 5:30 p.m. (CBS)

Monday, Jan. 14 Baylor at Kansas, 8 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 16 Texas Tech at Oklahoma, 7 p.m. Kansas State at TCU, 8 p.m. West Virginia at Iowa State, 8 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 19 Kansas at Texas, 1 p.m. Iowa State at TCU, 12:30 p.m. West Virginia at Purdue, 1 p.m. Texas Tech at Oklahoma State, 1 p.m. Hardin-Simmons at Baylor, 2 p.m. Oklahoma at Kansas State, 3 p.m. Monday, Jan. 21 Oklahoma State at Baylor, 4:30 p.m. Texas at Oklahoma, 8:30 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 22 Kansas at Kansas State, 7 p.m.

College Women Joe Mahoney/AP Photo

BALTIMORE WIDE RECEIVER JACOBY JONES (12) CATCHES A TOUCHDOWN PASS as Denver free safety Rahim Moore (26) and Denver defensive back Tony Carter look on in the fourth quarter on Saturday in Denver.

Ravens reel in late TD to force OT, top Denver DENVER (AP) — Welcome to NFL immortality, Joe Flacco. Somewhere up there in the all-time playoff archives near the “Hail Mary” by Staubach and the “Immaculate Reception” by Franco now lives the “Flacco Fling” by the Baltimore Ravens quarterback. One big throw down the sideline, 70 make-orbreak yards on a wing and a prayer — a high, arcing touchdown pass that soared through the icy air, flew over two defenders, landed in the hands of Jacoby Jones, saved the game for Baltimore and kept Ray Lewis’ 17-year career going at least one more week. The record will show Justin Tucker kicked a 47yard field goal 1:42 into the second overtime Saturday to give the Ravens a 38-35 victory over Peyton Manning and the Denver Broncos. But it was so much more. It was a crazy, backand-forth instant classic of an AFC divisional playoff game. The highlight? That would be Flacco’s game-tying touchdown to Jones on third-and-three from the 30 with 31 seconds left in regulation and no timeouts. “At that point,” Flacco said, “you have to start taking shots. You have to get a little lucky.” And while Flacco gets to celebrate that throw, Manning will have a long offseason to think about a really bad one. On Denver’s second possession of overtime, he stopped and threw across his body to the middle of the field and into the arms of Ravens cornerback Corey Graham at Denver’s 45. Baltimore (12-6) ran five plays and gained 16 yards before Tucker sailed his winning kick inside the right upright.

SUMMARY Baltimore 14 7 7 7 0 3 —38 Denver 14 7 7 7 0 0 —35 First Quarter Den-Holliday 90 punt return (Prater kick), 12:14. Bal-T.Smith 59 pass from Flacco (Tucker kick), 10:31. Bal-Graham 39 interception return (Tucker kick), 9:49. Den-Stokley 15 pass from Manning (Prater kick), 4:02. Second Quarter Den-Moreno 14 pass from Manning (Prater kick), 7:26. Bal-T.Smith 32 pass from Flacco (Tucker kick), :36. Third Quarter Den-Holliday 104 kickoff return (Prater kick), 14:47. Bal-Rice 1 run (Tucker kick), :20. Fourth Quarter Den-D.Thomas 17 pass from Manning (Prater kick), 7:11. Bal-J.Jones 70 pass from Flacco (Tucker kick), :31. Second Overtime Bal-FG Tucker 47, 13:18. A-76,732.

Bal Den First downs 21 30 Total Net Yards 479 398 Rushes-yards 39-155 41-125 Passing 324 273 Punt Returns 3-22 3-90 Kickoff Returns 4-64 4-171 Interceptions Ret. 2-39 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 18-34-0 28-43-2 Sacked-Yards Lost 1-7 3-17 Punts 8-48.3 5-48.8 Fumbles-Lost 1-1 2-1 Penalties-Yards 8-58 10-87 Time of Possession 36:36 40:06 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Baltimore, Rice 30-131, Pierce 5-14, Flacco 2-7, Leach 1-3, T.Smith 1-0. Denver, Hillman 22-83, Moreno 10-32, Hester 8-11, Manning 1-(minus 1). PASSING-Baltimore, Flacco 18-34-0331. Denver, Manning 28-43-2-290. RECEIVING-Baltimore, Boldin 6-71, T.Smith 3-98, Pitta 3-55, Dickson 3-29, J.Jones 2-77, Leach 1-1. Denver, Decker 6-84, Dreessen 6-46, Tamme 3-44, D.Thomas 3-37, Stokley 3-27, Hillman 3-20, Moreno 2-21, Hester 1-7, Willis 1-4. MISSED FG-Denver, Prater 52 (SH).

The Manning throw, intended for Brandon Stokley, was one that quarterbacks from junior high to the pros are advised not to make. It’s a throw that unraveled all the good Manning has accomplished during this, his comeback season from neck surgery during which he threw for 37 touchdowns and led the Broncos (13-4) to top seeding in the AFC. “Yeah, bad throw,” Manning said. “Probably the decision wasn’t great either. I thought I had an opening, and I didn’t get enough on it, and I was trying to make a play and certainly a throw I’d like to have back.” Lewis, who led the Ravens with 17 tackles over this nearly 77-minute game in 13-degree weather, kneeled down to the ground and put his helmet on the rock-solid turf when it was over. “I’ve never been a part of a game so crazy in my life,” he said. After he thaws out, the Ravens, 9.5-point underdogs for this one, will get ready for a game at either New England or Houston, who meet Sunday for the other spot in the AFC title game.

This game, the longest since the Browns beat the New York Jets 23-20 in 1987, was an all-timer — up there with San Diego’s 4138 double-overtime victory over Miami when it comes to drama, momentum shifts and the unexpected. But Flacco’s throw might best be bookended next to one made by Dallas quarterback Roger Staubach, who famously brought the term “Hail Mary” to football after his game-winning toss to Drew Pearson beat Minnesota in the 1975 playoffs. Staubach was near midfield when he threw his. Flacco, who finished with 331 yards and three scores, was standing at the 25 for his throw, buying time in the pocket when he saw Jones sprinting down the right sideline into double coverage. Defensive back Tony Carter slowed up and let Jones streak by him. Instead of staying step for step with Jones, safety Rahim Moore tried to leap and knock down the ball. Flacco, who throws the high, deep ball as well as anyone, got it over Moore’s head and into Jones’ hands.

Kaepernick, Niners roll over Packers, 45-31 SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Colin Kaepernick ran for a quarterback-playoffrecord 181 yards and two touchdowns and threw two scoring passes to Michael Crabtree in leading the San Francisco 49ers back to the NFC championship game with a 45-31 victory against the Green Bay Packers on Saturday night. Playoff first-timer Kaepernick outshined reigning NFL MVP Aaron Rodgers, who never got in sync for the Packers (12-6) in finishing 26-of-39 for 257 yards with two touchdowns. Kaepernick ran for scores of 20 and 56 yards on the way to topping the rushing mark of 119 yards held by Michael Vick. Crabtree caught TD passes of 12 and 20 yards in the second quarter and wound up with nine receptions and 119 yards for the Niners (124-1) in the NFC divisional match-up. San Francisco had 579 total yards, 323 on the ground.

SUMMARY

Tony Avelar/AP Photo

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS QUARTERBACK COLIN KAEPERNICK (7) RUNS FOR A 56-YARD TOUCHDOWN during the third quarter of an NFC divisional playoff victory on Saturday in San Francisco.

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Green Bay 14 7 3 7—31 San Francisco 7 17 7 14—45 First Quarter GB-Shields 52 interception return (Crosby kick), 12:48. SF-Kaepernick 20 run (Akers kick), 9:01. GB-Harris 18 run (Crosby kick), :29. Second Quarter SF-Crabtree 12 pass from Kaepernick (Akers kick), 10:59. SF-Crabtree 20 pass from Kaepernick (Akers kick), 5:26. GB-J.Jones 20 pass from Rodgers (Crosby kick), 2:33. SF-FG Akers 36, :00. Third Quarter GB-FG Crosby 31, 8:25. SF-Kaepernick 56 run (Akers kick), 7:07. Fourth Quarter SF-Gore 2 run (Akers kick), 14:57. SF-Dixon 2 run (Akers kick), 3:34. GB-G.Jennings 3 pass from Rodgers (Crosby kick), :57. A-69,732. GB SF First downs 20 29 Total Net Yards 352 579 Rushes-yards 16-104 43-323 Passing 248 256 Punt Returns 2-0 1-0 Kickoff Returns 4-71 1-23 Interceptions Ret. 1-52 1-39 Comp-Att-Int 26-39-1 17-31-1 Sacked-Yards Lost 1-9 1-7 Punts 4-47.0 3-44.3 Fumbles-Lost 3-1 1-0 Penalties-Yards 5-26 8-86 Time of Possession 21:59 38:01 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Green Bay, Harris 11-53, Rodgers 3-28, Cobb 2-23. San Francisco, Kaepernick 16-181, Gore 23-119, James 3-21, Dixon 1-2. PASSING-Green Bay, Rodgers 26-391-257. San Francisco, Kaepernick 17-311-263. RECEIVING-Green Bay, G.Jennings 6-54, Nelson 5-46, Cobb 5-24, J.Jones 4-87, Finley 4-35, Harris 2-11. San Francisco, Crabtree 9-119, Gore 2-48, Moss 2-25, V.Davis 1-44, Walker 1-17, James 1-7, Ginn Jr. 1-3.

College Men

Saturday’s Scores EAST Albany (NY) 76, Maine 63 American U. 72, Colgate 63 Boston U. 83, Binghamton 59 Brown 71, Daniel Webster 34 Bryant 69, CCSU 62 Bucknell 76, Army 55 Charlotte 58, Rhode Island 50 Cincinnati 68, Rutgers 58 Cornell 103, Old Westbury 84 Fairleigh Dickinson 79, St. Francis (Pa.) 69, OT Georgetown 67, St. John’s 51 Harvard 75, Dartmouth 65 Hofstra 70, William & Mary 59 Kansas St. 65, West Virginia 64 LIU Brooklyn 86, Mount St. Mary’s 72 La Salle 71, Richmond 59 Lafayette 64, Navy 47 Lehigh 79, Holy Cross 47 Marquette 74, Pittsburgh 67, OT Miami (Ohio) 58, Buffalo 57 NJIT 83, Chicago St. 78, 3OT Northeastern 70, Towson 59 Princeton 65, Penn 53 Robert Morris 70, Monmouth (NJ) 55 Sacred Heart 80, Quinnipiac 74 Saint Joseph’s 74, Duquesne 66 St. Francis (NY) 71, Wagner 52 Stony Brook 73, Hartford 59 Syracuse 72, Villanova 61 Temple 64, Saint Louis 54 VCU 72, St. Bonaventure 65 Vermont 68, UMBC 53 Yale 104, Oberlin 39 SOUTH Alabama 68, Tennessee 65 Alabama A&M 64, Alabama St. 57 Alcorn St. 72, MVSU 67 Appalachian St. 80, Elon 70 Auburn 74, South Carolina 71 Belmont 90, UT-Martin 53 Bethune-Cookman 72, NC A&T 60 Campbell 62, Presbyterian 46 Charleston Southern 75, Longwood 62 Clemson 59, Virginia 44 Coll. of Charleston 86, Chattanooga 59 Davidson 81, Furman 73 Delaware 86, Georgia St. 83 E. Kentucky 59, Morehead St. 52 ETSU 85, Florida Gulf Coast 75 East Carolina 88, UCF 85, OT FAU 65, W. Kentucky 62 Florida 74, LSU 52 Hampton 51, Howard 49 High Point 70, Gardner-Webb 64 Jacksonville 49, Mercer 47 James Madison 51, Drexel 43 Liberty 64, Coastal Carolina 56 Louisiana-Lafayette 61, Arkansas St. 56 Louisville 64, South Florida 38 Memphis 69, UAB 53 Middle Tennessee 66, LouisianaMonroe 57 Mississippi 64, Missouri 49 Mississippi St. 72, Georgia 61 Morgan St. 76, SC State 60 Murray St. 71, Austin Peay 68 NC Central 85, Florida A&M 62 NC State 84, Duke 76 Norfolk St. 63, Md.-Eastern Shore 58 North Carolina 77, Florida St. 72 North Florida 81, Kennesaw St. 72 SE Louisiana 70, Nicholls St. 65 Sam Houston St. 72, McNeese St. 57 Samford 69, The Citadel 65 Savannah St. 56, Coppin St. 48 Southern Miss. 73, Houston 54 Southern U. 84, Ark.-Pine Bluff 50 Stetson 66, SC-Upstate 64 Tennessee St. 81, SE Missouri 69 Texas A&M 83, Kentucky 71 UNC Asheville 79, Radford 61 UNC Wilmington 82, George Mason 74 VMI 72, Winthrop 54 Virginia Tech 70, Georgia Tech 65, OT W. Carolina 62, UNC Greensboro 59 Wake Forest 75, Boston College 72 Wofford 71, Georgia Southern 53 MIDWEST Akron 68, N. Illinois 53 Bowling Green 46, E. Michigan 44 Butler 79, Dayton 73 Cleveland St. 74, Detroit 62 Drake 82, Illinois St. 77 Green Bay 53, Ill.-Chicago 47 Indiana 88, Minnesota 81 Iowa St. 82, Texas 62 Jacksonville St. 61, E. Illinois 55 Kent St. 61, Ball St. 47 N. Dakota St. 73, Oakland 65 N. Iowa 84, Bradley 53 North Dakota 86, Montana St. 73 Ohio 61, W. Michigan 59 S. Dakota St. 83, IPFW 57 S. Illinois 76, Indiana St. 71 SIU-Edwardsville 58, Tennessee Tech 54 Toledo 76, Cent. Michigan 72, OT UConn 65, Notre Dame 58 UMKC 90, South Dakota 86 Valparaiso 76, Milwaukee 52 W. Illinois 89, Nebraska-Omaha 74 Wisconsin 74, Illinois 51 Xavier 71, George Washington 56 SOUTHWEST Arkansas 56, Vanderbilt 33 Baylor 51, TCU 40 Kansas 60, Texas Tech 46 Louisiana Tech 73, UTSA 71 North Texas 66, South Alabama 56 Northwestern St. 100, Cent. Arkansas 88 Oklahoma 77, Oklahoma St. 68 Prairie View 60, Grambling St. 44 SMU 59, Tulane 53 Stephen F. Austin 61, Oral Roberts 50 Texas A&M-CC 62, Lamar 56 Texas Southern 84, Jackson St. 57 Texas-Arlington 91, Texas St. 74 Texas-Pan American 95, Fisher 49 Tulsa 64, Rice 51 UALR 88, FIU 76 UTEP 74, Marshall 63 FAR WEST Arizona 80, Oregon St. 70 BYU 82, Santa Clara 64 Cal St.-Fullerton 71, UC Riverside 69 California 67, Washington St. 54 Denver 64, Seattle 51 Idaho St. 54, S. Utah 53 Long Beach St. 76, Hawaii 72 Montana 85, N. Colorado 77 New Mexico 72, Fresno St. 45 Pacific 77, Cal Poly 55 Portland 68, Loyola Marymount 64 Sacramento St. 60, E. Washington 53 San Diego St. 79, Colorado St. 72, OT Southern Cal 76, Utah 59 UC Irvine 79, CS Northridge 69 UCLA 78, Colorado 75 Utah Valley 83, Houston Baptist 62 Wyoming 59, Nevada 48

Big 12 Men

Overall League W L W L Baylor 11 4 3 0 Kansas 14 1 2 0 Kansas State 13 2 2 0 Oklahoma 11 3 2 0 Iowa State 11 4 1 1 Texas Tech 8 6 1 2 Oklahoma State 11 4 1 2 West Virginia 8 7 1 2 TCU 9 7 0 3 Texas 8 8 0 3 Saturday’s Games Kansas 60, Texas Tech 46 Kansas State 65, West Virginia 64 Iowa State 82, Texas 62 Oklahoma 77, Oklahoma State 68 Baylor 51, TCU 40

Saturday’s Scores EAST Albany (NY) 71, Maine 39 American U. 54, Colgate 45 Army 68, Bucknell 60 Boston U. 57, Binghamton 52 CCSU 59, Bryant 50 Canisius 62, St. Peter’s 52 Fairfield 61, Niagara 54 Hartford 59, Stony Brook 43 Harvard 88, Dartmouth 66 La Salle 72, Rhode Island 46 Lehigh 67, Holy Cross 65 Louisville 70, Providence 62 Monmouth (NJ) 58, Robert Morris 47 Mount St. Mary’s 66, LIU Brooklyn 41 NJIT 60, Texas-Pan American 55 Princeton 77, Penn 47 Saint Joseph’s 82, Richmond 62 St. Francis (NY) 72, Wagner 66 St. Francis (Pa.) 68, Fairleigh Dickinson 50 St. John’s 72, Seton Hall 46 Syracuse 86, Georgetown 56 UMass 62, George Washington 58 Vermont 63, UMBC 60 Villanova 68, Pittsburgh 52 SOUTH Alabama St. 69, Alabama A&M 67, OT Appalachian St. 77, W. Carolina 46 Arkansas St. 48, Louisiana-Lafayette 39 Belmont 58, UT-Martin 56 Bethune-Cookman 69, NC A&T 64 Campbell 79, High Point 76 Chattanooga 75, Georgia Southern 43 Coppin St. 57, Savannah St. 53 Davidson 58, Wofford 45 E. Kentucky 62, Morehead St. 52 Florida A&M 52, NC Central 35 Florida Gulf Coast 97, ETSU 60 Furman 67, UNC-Greensboro 48 Hampton 52, Howard 50 Houston Baptist 60, New Orleans 45 Liberty 76, Coastal Carolina 48 Longwood 67, Charleston Southern 52 MVSU 65, Alcorn St. 61 McNeese St. 62, Sam Houston St. 58 Md.-Eastern Shore 86, Norfolk St. 80, OT Mercer 72, Jacksonville 68 Middle Tennessee 66, LouisianaMonroe 48 Murray St. 77, Austin Peay 72 N. Kentucky 66, Lipscomb 33 Nicholls St. 71, SE Louisiana 65 North Florida 52, Kennesaw St. 49 Radford 49, Presbyterian 31 SC State 83, Morgan St. 74 Samford 56, Coll. of Charleston 47 Southern U. 67, Ark.-Pine Bluff 44 Stetson 84, SC-Upstate 66 UTSA 51, Louisiana Tech 50 W. Kentucky 86, FAU 68 Winthrop 60, Gardner-Webb 55 MIDWEST Bradley 80, Missouri St. 79 Cleveland St. 77, Detroit 66 Dayton 82, Butler 39 DePaul 91, South Florida 75 E. Illinois 76, Jacksonville St. 53 Green Bay 71, Wright St. 44 Ill.-Chicago 73, Loyola of Chicago 62 Iowa St. 68, TCU 52 N. Dakota St. 60, Oakland 59 S. Dakota St. 66, IPFW 64 Saint Louis 60, VCU 46 Tennessee Tech 66, SIU-Edwardsville 56 UConn 85, Marquette 51 UMKC 60, South Dakota 56 Valparaiso 67, Youngstown St. 59 W. Illinois 71, Nebraska-Omaha 44 West Virginia 66, Kansas St. 52 Wichita St. 60, N. Iowa 57 SOUTHWEST Cent. Arkansas 60, Northwestern St. 44 FIU 55, UALR 53 Lamar 44, Texas A&M-CC 37 North Texas 67, South Alabama 47 Oklahoma 65, Texas Tech 55 Oral Roberts 63, Stephen F. Austin 56 Prairie View 78, Grambling St. 59 Texas Southern 73, Jackson St. 66 Texas St. 63, Texas-Arlington 57 FAR WEST Air Force 81, UNLV 69 BYU 68, Pepperdine 42 CS Northridge 59, UC Irvine 48 Cal Poly 96, Pacific 95, 3OT Cal St.-Fullerton 54, UC Riverside 49 Fresno St. 69, New Mexico 65 Idaho 57, New Mexico St. 51 Montana 56, N. Colorado 42 Montana St. 64, North Dakota 49 Portland St. 60, N. Arizona 59 S. Utah 74, Weber St. 61 Sacramento St. 85, E. Washington 70 San Diego 88, Loyola Marymount 78, OT San Francisco 88, Portland 81 San Jose St. 103, Utah St. 80 UC Santa Barbara 58, UC Davis 43 Utah Valley 71, Chicago St. 38 Wyoming 92, Nevada 41

Big 12 Women

Overall League W L W L Oklahoma 14 2 4 0 Baylor 13 1 3 0 Iowa State 12 2 3 1 Kansas 11 3 2 1 Texas Tech 12 4 2 2 West Virginia 10 5 2 2 Oklahoma State 12 2 1 2 Kansas State 10 6 1 3 Texas 7 7 0 3 TCU 7 8 0 4 Saturday’s Games West Virginia 66, Kansas State 52 Iowa State 68, TCU 52 Oklahoma 65, Texas Tech 55 Today’s Games Baylor at Kansas, 1:30 p.m. Oklahoma State at Texas, 11:30 a.m. Tuesday, Jan. 15 TCU at West Virginia, 6 p.m. Oklahoma at Iowa State, 7 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 16 Baylor at Kansas State, 7 p.m. Texas Tech at Texas, 7 p.m.

Sony Open

Saturday At Waialae Country Club Honolulu Purse: $5.6 million Yardage: 7,044; Par: 70 Third Round Russell Henley Scott Langley Tim Clark Scott Gardiner Charles Howell III Matt Jones Danny Lee Pat Perez Chris Kirk Marc Leishman Dicky Pride Brian Stuard Matt Kuchar Tommy Gainey Jeff Overton Tim Herron Harris English Scott Piercy Shane Bertsch John Senden Ricky Barnes David Mathis Justin Hicks Russ Cochran Erik Compton John Huh

63-63-67—193 62-66-65—193 64-66-66—196 68-64-65—197 66-64-67—197 66-68-64—198 66-66-66—198 68-63-67—198 68-62-68—198 67-68-64—199 68-67-64—199 66-68-65—199 66-63-70—199 66-69-65—200 65-68-67—200 66-66-68—200 69-69-62—200 64-64-72—200 69-67-65—201 69-66-66—201 70-65-66—201 69-66-66—201 69-68-64—201 68-68-66—202 67-68-67—202 71-63-68—202

Alistair Presnell Vijay Singh Stephen Ames Peter Tomasulo Morgan Hoffmann Doug LaBelle II David Hearn Keegan Bradley David Lingmerth Webb Simpson Josh Teater Nicholas Thompson Hideto Tanihara Brad Fritsch Rory Sabbatini Brian Gay John Rollins Kevin Streelman Charlie Wi Chad Campbell Ben Kohles Henrik Norlander Justin Leonard Jeff Maggert Billy Horschel Steve Marino Lee Williams Dean Wilson Brendon de Jonge Bart Bryant Jimmy Walker Sang-Moon Bae Kyle Stanley Y.E. Yang Cameron Percy D.H. Lee Shawn Stefani Carl Pettersson Mark Anderson George McNeill Steven Bowditch Ryan Palmer Derek Ernst Fabian Gomez Jason Kokrak James Hahn Robert Streb John Daly

68-66-68—202 67-67-68—202 65-67-70—202 68-68-67—203 66-70-67—203 71-66-66—203 67-70-66—203 68-69-66—203 69-68-66—203 66-69-68—203 70-68-65—203 69-68-67—204 70-65-69—204 67-70-67—204 69-65-70—204 70-68-66—204 68-66-70—204 71-67-66—204 67-69-69—205 69-68-68—205 67-70-68—205 70-64-71—205 70-68-67—205 71-67-67—205 66-70-70—206 69-67-70—206 69-66-71—206 69-68-69—206 69-68-69—206 68-67-71—206 69-69-68—206 72-66-68—206 73-65-68—206 70-68-68—206 71-67-68—206 68-68-71—207 68-67-72—207 68-69-70—207 73-64-70—207 70-68-69—207 67-69-72—208 67-68-73—208 71-67-70—208 69-69-71—209 69-69-73—211 70-67-75—212 67-71-77—215 70-68-79—217

Volvo Champions

Saturday At Durban Country Club Durban, South Africa Purse: $2.61 million Yardage: 6,732; Par: 72 Third Round Scott Jamieson, Scotland

69-64-68—201 Thongchai Jaidee, Thailand 65-68-73—206 Julien Quesne, France 72-67-67—206 Louis Oosthuizen, South Africa 68-64-74—206 Padraig Harrington, Ireland 70-71-67—208

High School

Bobcat Classic Saturday at Basehor Team scores: Topeka Seaman 177.5, Blue Springs 172, St. James (Mo.) 168.5, Collinsville (Okla.) 154.5, Overland Park Aquinas 153, Junction City 131, Mountain Range (Colo.) 127, Bonner Springs 109, Tonganoxie 103.5, Glenwood (Iowa) 94.5, Platte County (Mo.) 90, Andale 86.5, Fort Scott 78, Pittsburg 74, 15. Baldwin 67.5, Royal Valley 62.5, Olathe North 58.5, Rossville 54.5, Prairie View 52, Goddard 51.5, SM East 51.5, KC Turner 48, ACCHSEffingham 45, Oak Park (Mo.) 42, Paola 38, Columbus 36, Santa Fe Trail 30, Chapman 29, KC Piper 29, BasehorLinwood 26, Lansing 24, Clay Center 21, 33. Eudora 19, Olathe South 19, Blue Valley 17, 36. Free State 14. Baldwin placings 132 — Tucker Clark, second place. 138 — Bryce Shoemaker, second place. 160 — Jason Von Bargen, seventh place. 170 — Mark Harman, eighth place. Newton Tournament of Champions Saturday at Newton Team scoring: Grand Island (Neb.) 243, Arkansas City 178, Newton 152.5, Garden City 152, Colby 128.5, Andover Central 124, Manhattan 123, Derby 106, Emporia 97.5, Wichita Northwest 91.5, Gardner-Edgerton 88.5, Leavenworth 82, Lawrence 74, Blue Valley Southwest 69, Norton 62, Mill Valley 59, Wichita Carroll 58, Fredonia 55.5, Wichita Heights 55, Dodge City 53.5, Maize 45.5, Liberal 44, Salina South 38, McPherson 30.5, Maize South 27, Wichita East 24, Hutchinson 21.5. Lawrence placings 152 — Ryan Bellinger, eighth place. 170 — Alan Clothier, second place. 182 — Andrew Denning, second place. 285 — Alex Jones, seventh place. Junior Varsity Saturday at Shawnee Mission Northwest Lawrence results 126 — Zech Warren, first place. 138 — Sean McCoy, first place. 152 — Jeff Westcoat, first place. 160 — Charles McGraw, first place. 120 — Shawn Wiley, second place. 132 — Cy Burghart, second place. 220 — Malik Davis, second place. 113 — Jhon Jacob, third place. 132 — Darien Coffey, third place. 138 — Don Glockner, third place. 145 — Peter Afful, third place. 182 — Stevin Hayes, third place.

Australian Open

Show Court Schedules Monday At Melbourne Park Melbourne, Australia Play begins at on all courts at 6 p.m. today Rod Laver Arena Olga Puchkova, Russia, vs. Maria Sharapova (2), Russia Chang Kai-chen, Taiwan, vs. Sam Stosur (9), Australia Novak Djokovic (1), Serbia, vs. PaulHenri Mathieu, France Night Session (2 a.m. Monday) Lleyton Hewitt, Australia, vs. Janko Tipsarevic (8), Serbia Ana Ivanovic (13), Serbia, vs. Melinda Czink, Hungary Hisense Arena Venus Williams (25), United States, vs. Galina Voskoboeva, Kazakhstan David Goffin, Belgium, vs. Fernando Verdasco (22), Spain Dominika Cibulkova (15), Slovakia, vs. Ashleigh Barty, Australia Not before midnight Monday: David Ferrer (4), Spain, vs. Olivier Rochus, Belgium Margaret Court Arena Li Na (6), China, vs. Sesil Karatantcheva, Kazakhstan Bojana Bobusic, Australia, vs. Agnieszka Radwanska (4), Poland Mikhail Youzhny (23), Russia, vs. Matthew Ebden, Australia Casey Dellacqua, Australia, vs. Madison Keys, United States Night Session (2 a.m. Monday) Albert Ramos, Spain, vs. Marcos Baghdatis (28), Cyprus Show Court 2 Julia Goerges (18), Germany, vs. Vera Dushevina, Russia Michael Russell, United States, vs. Tomas Berdych (5), Czech Republic Angelique Kerber (5), Germany, vs. Elina Svitolina, Ukraine Juan Monaco (11), Argentina, vs. Andrey Kuznetsov, Russia Show Court 3 Nicolas Almagro (10), Spain, vs. Steve Johnson, United States Johanna Larsson, Sweden, vs. Jelena Jankovic (22), Serbia Anabel Medina Garrigues, Spain, vs. Marion Bartoli (11), France John Millman, Australia, vs. Tatsuma Ito, Japan


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10B

TODAY

WEATHER

.

Sunday, January 13, 2013

MONDAY

TUESDAY

WEDNESDAY

THURSDAY

Mostly sunny

Partly sunny

Sunny much of the time

Sunshine and patchy clouds

Mild with a full day of sunshine

High 29° Low 9° POP: 5%

High 30° Low 13° POP: 10%

High 40° Low 22° POP: 10%

High 48° Low 24° POP: 0%

High 55° Low 28° POP: 5%

Wind NW 7-14 mph

Wind WNW 3-6 mph

Wind SW 6-12 mph

Wind W 7-14 mph

Wind SW 7-14 mph

POP: Probability of Precipitation

McCook 23/4

Kearney 23/8

Oberlin 25/5

Clarinda 25/10

Lincoln 24/8

Grand Island 24/9

Beatrice 26/9

Concordia 26/9

Centerville 26/12

St. Joseph 26/9 Chillicothe 28/10

Sabetha 26/10

Kansas City Marshall Manhattan 28/15 28/11 Salina 29/6 Kansas City Topeka 28/9 28/12 Lawrence 28/13 Sedalia 29/9 Emporia Great Bend 28/12 30/8 28/5 Nevada Dodge City Chanute 30/11 28/9 Hutchinson 30/11 Garden City 30/6 28/8 Springfield Wichita Pratt Liberal Coffeyville Joplin 30/13 30/10 30/12 28/10 31/13 32/12

Goodland 26/4

Hays 28/6

Oakley 28/5

Russell 28/7

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

LAWRENCE ALMANAC

Through 7 p.m. Saturday.

Temperature High/low 52°/25° Normal high/low today 38°/18° Record high today 69° in 1996 Record low today -17° in 1916

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

0.00 0.53 0.38 0.53 0.38

REGIONAL CITIES

Today Mon. Today Mon. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Atchison 26 9 s 30 15 pc Independence 31 11 pc 31 14 pc 28 6 s 31 13 pc Belton 28 12 pc 29 16 pc Fort Riley 29 12 s 29 15 pc Burlington 30 10 s 30 14 pc Olathe Coffeyville 32 12 pc 31 15 pc Osage Beach 30 12 pc 30 12 pc 28 8 s 30 14 pc Concordia 26 9 s 30 17 pc Osage City Ottawa 28 9 s 30 14 pc Dodge City 28 9 s 31 13 c 30 12 s 31 16 pc Holton 26 10 s 31 16 pc Wichita Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.

NATIONAL FORECAST

Jan 18

Full

Last

New

Jan 26

Feb 3

Feb 10

LAKE LEVELS

As of 7 a.m. Saturday Lake

Clinton Perry Pomona

Level (ft)

871.97 886.00 970.36

Discharge (cfs)

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

Fronts Cold

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2013

INTERNATIONAL CITIES Cities Acapulco Amsterdam Athens Baghdad Bangkok Beijing Berlin Brussels Buenos Aires Cairo Calgary Dublin Geneva Hong Kong Jerusalem Kabul London Madrid Mexico City Montreal Moscow New Delhi Oslo Paris Rio de Janeiro Rome Seoul Singapore Stockholm Sydney Tokyo Toronto Vancouver Vienna Warsaw Winnipeg

Today Hi Lo W 90 71 s 33 25 s 58 47 s 57 37 pc 93 75 t 39 26 s 26 17 c 33 21 pc 90 72 pc 67 53 s 17 14 pc 40 37 sh 39 19 c 72 58 s 53 40 s 45 18 s 36 29 c 42 30 pc 77 46 s 43 33 r 13 10 c 73 46 pc 14 -1 s 40 27 sh 88 73 t 57 49 r 39 23 pc 86 77 t 27 20 s 82 64 c 54 44 s 54 21 r 36 28 pc 32 26 c 24 14 sf -6 -14 s

Mon. Hi Lo W 89 68 s 31 27 c 62 52 pc 58 39 s 93 75 sh 37 21 pc 25 21 c 32 24 s 90 72 pc 67 51 s 40 33 sn 42 34 sh 34 17 c 66 59 s 56 42 s 42 21 pc 35 34 sn 43 34 pc 76 46 s 34 27 c 14 9 c 72 45 pc 14 7 pc 35 31 s 86 72 t 55 40 sh 37 21 s 86 75 pc 26 21 sf 77 64 pc 45 37 r 31 19 pc 38 33 pc 31 25 sn 25 19 s -11 -15 c

Precipitation

Warm Stationary Showers T-storms

Rain

Flurries

Snow

Ice

-10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s National Summary: Warmth will continue to surge northward along the East Coast today while rain falls from northern New England through the Gulf Coast. Very cold air will continue to filter into the West. Today Mon. Today Mon. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W 48 28 r 37 29 r Albuquerque 29 15 pc 28 9 sf Memphis Miami 81 68 s 80 68 pc Anchorage 40 34 r 41 28 c Milwaukee 28 14 pc 24 17 pc Atlanta 72 53 pc 58 46 c Minneapolis 14 5 pc 14 7 pc Austin 48 29 r 48 27 c Nashville 62 30 r 42 29 r Baltimore 63 51 c 56 36 r Birmingham 70 43 t 48 40 sh New Orleans 78 51 t 57 46 r 54 51 c 58 37 sh Boise 22 8 pc 27 18 pc New York 24 10 s 29 18 pc Boston 54 47 c 55 30 sh Omaha 82 60 s 81 61 pc Buffalo 58 29 r 33 24 pc Orlando 60 52 c 57 38 r Cheyenne 13 -3 s 17 6 pc Philadelphia 49 29 pc 49 30 pc Chicago 28 15 sf 26 14 pc Phoenix Pittsburgh 65 35 r 38 26 pc Cincinnati 58 26 r 35 23 c Cleveland 52 25 r 29 23 pc Portland, ME 48 40 c 50 25 sh Dallas 44 26 pc 43 26 pc Portland, OR 38 22 pc 40 26 pc 28 10 s 31 17 s Denver 18 0 pc 24 5 pc Reno 72 58 pc 62 38 sh Des Moines 24 11 s 28 17 pc Richmond 47 24 s 48 24 s Detroit 40 24 r 31 20 pc Sacramento St. Louis 32 18 c 29 18 pc El Paso 40 25 pc 41 24 c Fairbanks 22 14 c 30 0 sn Salt Lake City 18 -1 pc 19 0 pc 56 38 pc 57 37 s Honolulu 81 64 s 81 64 sh San Diego San Francisco 50 35 pc 51 35 s Houston 53 40 r 46 36 r 36 24 pc 40 25 pc Indianapolis 42 20 r 30 20 pc Seattle 22 9 pc 25 14 c Kansas City 28 13 s 31 18 pc Spokane Tucson 46 23 pc 43 24 pc Las Vegas 41 27 s 40 27 s Tulsa 36 17 pc 35 18 pc Little Rock 43 27 r 38 27 c Wash., DC 68 52 c 55 34 r Los Angeles 58 38 pc 58 37 s National extremes yesterday for the 48 contiguous states High: Kingsville, TX 86° Low: Alamosa, CO -32°

WEATHER HISTORY Temperatures soared to 70 degrees in central Pennsylvania on Jan. 13, 1932.

WEATHER TRIVIA™

Q:

What is the lowest temperature ever recorded in Death Valley?

15F.

First

Mon. 7:39 a.m. 5:22 p.m. 9:15 a.m. 9:07 p.m.

FRIENDS & NEIGHBORS

A:

Today 7:39 a.m. 5:21 p.m. 8:39 a.m. 7:59 p.m.

AP Photo/Warner Bros.

BRYAN CRANSTON, LEFT, AND BEN AFFLECK STAR IN “ARGO,” a rescue thriller about the 1979 Iranian hostage crisis. Affleck, who directed the movie, was a surprise omission from the Best Director category when Oscar nominations were announced Thursday.

Oscar snubs: Musical chairs in the director’s seat ————

Tarantino, Bigelow, Affleck among surprise omissions By Jake Coyle Associated Press

SUN & MOON Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset

L AWRENCE J OURNAL -W ORLD

NEW YORK — In this year’s Oscar nominations, the director’s seat was the hot seat. In the now heavily analyzed awards season, unequivocal snubs have become less common as the field is more accurately predicted. But on Thursday morning, the motion picture academy provided the genuine article: Bigelow a somewhat shocking and unexpected brush off to one whom it so recently exalted: Kathryn Bigelow. The director of the Osama bin Laden chase film “Zero Dark Thirty” had been widely expected to land her second directing nomination, with a strong chance of repeating her historic 2009 win for “The Hurt Locker” over James Cameron and a little, bluepeople movie called “Avatar.” But alas, Bigelow was not among the names read Thursday morning, leading to inevitable speculation that Bigelow and the film were diminished by the many objections to the movie’s much-debated depiction of torture. Instead, the director nominees were Steven Spielberg for “Lincoln”; David O. Russell for “Silver Linings Playbook”; Ang Lee for “Life of Pi”; Michael Haneke for “Amour”; and Benh Zeitlin for “Beasts of the Southern Wild.” Mouths were agape all over Hollywood. Aghast hordes wielded pitchforks on Twitter around the world. The category could have very possibly (and many expected it to) include Bigelow, Ben Affleck for “Argo,” Quentin Tarantino for “Django Unchained” and Tom Hooper for “Les Miserables” — all of those films best picture nominees. Hooper, Affleck and Bigelow were all nominated by the Directors Guild, presumably the faction of

the academy that knows something about directing. But the Oscar nominations clearly shook up prevailing thoughts about this awards season, which is moving at a slightly different pace this year with nominations coming earlier and before the Golden Globes are handed out tonight. The message Thursday was that “Lincoln,” with a huge 12 nominations, is the clear front-runner and that it’s not “Zero Dark Thirty” or “Argo” as the main competition (when a film’s director isn’t nominated, it rarely wins best picture), but “Silver Linings Playbook” (eight nominations) and “Life of Pi” (11 noms). That made it one of the least predictable Oscar mornings in memory, with considerable boosts for “Silver Linings Playbook,” ‘‘Amour” (five nominations), and “Beasts of the Southern Wild” (four nominations). The eight for Russell’s film included the rare feat of nominations in all four of the acting categories: Bradley Cooper (actor), Jennifer Lawrence (actress), Robert De Niro (supporting actor) and Jacki Weaver (supporting actress). The latter two were not favorites. Haneke’s “Amour,” too, is an oddity in Oscar history: the first foreign language best picture nomination since Ang Lee’s “Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon” in 2001. Its five nominations includes a nod for the 85-year-old Emmanuelle Riva — the oldest actress ever to receive a best actress nomination. Made for less than $2 million, the “Beasts of the Southern Wild” has now completed the arc many predicted, from Sundance darling to Oscar hit. Actually, it did even better than its fans hoped, earning not just best picture, but nominations for director Zeitlin and its young star, Quvenzhane Wallis — the youngest best actress nominee ever. (Again, it was a day for the record books.) Still, Zeitlin could also be considered a snub: He composed the film’s

beautifully lush score. The case of “The Sessions” was just as surprising. In a film about a guy in an iron lung, it’s usually the guy in the iron lung who gets an Oscar nomination. But it wasn’t John Hawkes’ widely hailed performance that earned a nom, but Helen Hunt, who plays a professional sex surrogate helping him lose his virginity. Though the best picture category this year boasts films that have largely fared well at the box office, arguably the year’s most popular film, the Bond flick “Skyfall” (with more than $1 billion in tickets globally) was not among them. It reaped five nominations in cinematography, music and sound categories, but nothing in the above-theline awards. The French foreign language submission, “The Intouchables,” seemed a sure thing, considering it was one of the biggest hits ever in France. But it came up empty-handed, suggesting the choice was wrongheaded when the country could have instead chose the more critically adored “Rust and Bone” or “Holy Motors.” Marion Cotillard’s performance as an amputee in “Rust and Bone” was another unexpected snub for best actress. And then there are countless other quibbles a moviegoer could fairly make. Were Paul Thomas Anderson’s “The Master” (handsomely shot in 70mm) and Wes Anderson’s “Moonrise Kingdom” not two of the best films of the year? Wasn’t Jason Clarke ferocious in “Zero Dark Thirty”? Wasn’t Rachel Weisz dreamy in “The Deep Blue Sea”? How about the wry James Spader in “Lincoln”? Was anyone more fun to watch than John Goodman in “Argo” or Michael Shannon in “Premium Rush” or Javier Bardem in “Skyfall” or James Gandolfini in, well, anything?

‘Zero Dark Thirty’

rises above controversy. Read the review on page 3C.

Snake on a plane: Python clings to wing on Australian flight

PERFORMERS FROM SUE EVANS STUDIO-PIANO AND VOICE are pictured at a holiday recital Dec. 15 at Pioneer Ridge Retirement Community. Emily Mulligan submitted the photo.

Have something you’d like to see in Friends & Neighbors? Email your photos to friends@ljworld.com or mail them to Friends & Neighbors, P.O. Box 888, Lawrence, KS 66044.

SYDNEY — This snake on a plane had a turbulent flight. Stunned Qantas Airways passengers watched out their windows as a large python clung to a plane’s wing during a two-hour flight from Australia’s northeastern city of Cairns to Papua New Guinea. The 10-foot python fought to stay on the wing, pulling itself forward only to be

pushed back by the frigid wind. Passenger Robert Weber videotaped the struggle and told Australia’s Fairfax Media that the wind whipping the snake against the side of the plane left a bloody smear. The python managed to hang on until the plane landed in Port Moresby, but a Qantas spokesman said the creature was dead on arrival.

It was reminiscent of the 2006 movie “Snakes on a Plane.”


Billy Vanilly offers cupcakes with a retro twist in Off the Beaten Plate. PAGE 2C

‘Zero Dark Thirty’ soars and ‘Gangster Squad’ bores in Scene Stealers. READ THE REVIEWS ON PAGE 3C

COMING MONDAY IN GO! Fair trade stores hope to make positive change

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Lawrence Journal-World | Sunday, January 13, 2013

ARTS | ENTERTAINMENT | CULTURE | FOOD

THE WEDDING

SINGER Performing nuptials on ‘Bachelorette’ a boost to Lawrence native’s career

By Sara Shepherd Photos courtesy of Lisa Donnelly

LAWRENCE NATIVE LISA DONNELLY, who’s pursuing singing and songwriting in Los Angeles, performed two songs on the ABC special “The Bachelorette: Ashley and J.P.’s Wedding.” BELOW: Donnelly is pictured with Ashley Hebert and J.P. Rosenbaum of “The Bachelorette” during the couple’s wedding reception. Donnelly sang during the wedding ceremony, which was televised Dec. 16, 2012.

Lisa Donnelly tries to keep on walking path to success

W

hen “Bachelorette” sweethearts Ashley Hebert and J.P. Rosenbaum tied the knot on national TV last month, all eyes were on them. But during key moments of the wedding ceremony, all ears were on someone else. That soulful voice — crooning Elvis Presley’s “Can’t Help Falling in Love” as Hebert walked down the aisle and later an original song titled “Here to Stay” as the newly pronounced couple faced family and friends — belonged to Lawrence native Lisa Donnelly. Donnelly, who’s now pursuing singing and songwriting full-time in Los Angeles, says the exposure is a big boost but not necessarily a catapult for her career. She’s riding the momentum yet continuing to work hard at refining her sound, lining up gigs and recording her next album. “If you’re walking down the path, you just get to take a big step forward for a little bit,” Donnelly says, “and then you keep walking.” “Home,” her album set for release in May, explores “the understanding that

13 TODAY

Classical music: Baroque at the Unitarian Fellowship of Lawrence Lawrence Chamber Orchestra will put on a choral concert of Bach and others, accompanied by violin, cello and harpsichord, starting at 2:30 p.m. at the Unitarian Fellowship, 1263 N. 1100 Road, for $8. Local music: Tyler Gregory, et al, at the Jackpot Saloon Local bluegrass singersongwriter Tyler Gregory is playing with like-minded

If you’re walking down the path, you just get to take a big step forward for a little bit, and then you keep walking.” — Singer-songwriter Lisa Donnelly

home is with you wherever you go,” Donnelly says. For her, that goes for her experiences and her music. Donnelly says her decidedly non-9-to-5 life involves traveling a lot, keeping odd hours and living in a city that can be cutthroat, competitive, industry-driven and even lonely. She describes her new album as the completion of a cycle — a realization that no matter how long you’re away, your roots are still with you. In interviews and blog posts, she frequently lauds visits to more free-spirited locales like San Francisco, Austin and Lawrence as breaths of fresh air that help keep her inspired.

HEAR MORE OF LISA DONNELLY Lisa Donnelly’s single “Here to Stay” — which she wrote for and performed on the TV special, “The Bachelorette: Ashley and J.P.’s Wedding” — is available to download online from iTunes. Donnelly will be in Lawrence next month to perform as part of the Kansas University Theatre Department’s annual Alums Come Home

show “Elegies for Angels, Punks, and Raging Queens.” Performances are at 7:30 p.m. Feb. 28 and March 2 and at 2:30 p.m. March 3 at CraftonPreyer Theatre in Murphy Hall, 1530 Naismith Drive. Tickets are $18, or $10 for students and $17 for senior citizens and KU faculty and staff. To purchase, go online to kutheatre. com or call 864-3982.

Please see SINGER, page 6C

musicians Tom Skora and The Sharrows, starting at 9 p.m. at the Jackpot, 943 Massachusetts St., for $5.

14 MONDAY

Concert: Reel Big Fish at the Granada If you were a ’90s ska kid, you’re likely familiar with the brash, playful Fish with no PH. The ska-punk band, best known for the song “Sell Out,” will be playing at 7:30 p.m. at 1020 Massachusetts St. for $20 in advance or $22 at the door.

15 TUESDAY

Crafts: Quilting tips at Plymouth Congregational Church Was one of your New Year’s resolutions to take up more quilting in 2013? If so, you’re in luck. The Kaw Valley Quilters Guild is having a free meeting with tips on beginning and keeping your space well organized.

It runs from 9:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. at Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St.

16 WEDNESDAY

Hip-hop: Convergence local showcase at the Bottleneck The event bills itself as a who’s who of area MCs, featuring 10 indie artists,

Contributed Photo

Ska-punk band Reel Big Fish will be playing at 7:30 p.m. Monday at the Granada, 1020 Massachusetts St. starting at 10 p.m. at 737 New Hampshire St. Tickets

are $5 for 18 and older fans of fresh MCs.


2

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@lcom facebook.com/ lawrencekansas

KANSAS CITY CONNECTION

Foodies rejoice! Restaurant Week is here

T

here’s more to January than Kansas University basketball. Yes, it’s true. There’s also Kansas City Restaurant Week — 10 glorious, gluttonous days in January when many of the metro’s best restaurants (as well as a few mediocre ones) serve three-course prix-fixe dinners for only $30, and lunches for $15. Now in its fourth year, Kansas City Restaurant Week draws diners out during a typically slow, cold month for the hospitality industry, and also gives back to the community. This year, 10 percent of each meal will be donated to three local charities, including Harvesters, a local food bank. Because of the wide variety of places that participate — more than 120 this year — you can end up spending $30 on a dinner that would normally cost you $30, or you can be smart about it and spend $30 on a dinner that would normally cost at least twice that. The fun begins this Friday and runs through

CONTACT US

Jon Ralston, features editor, 832-7189, @jonralston, jralston@ljworld.com

OFF THE BEATEN PLATE

BY SARA SHEPHERD

ter, whose three-course tasting menu that usually starts at around $60 can be had for $30 per person during Restaurant Week.

EMILY FARRIS feedmeemily@gmail.com

Sunday, Jan. 27. But if you want to dine at any of the places listed below, I recommend making your reservations today. Here are just a few highlights among the more than 120 participating restaurants. Find more information at www.visitkc.com/kcrestaurant-week.

The American Restaurant Sure, the inside of The American Restaurant (200 E. 25th St., Kansas City, Mo., 816-545-8000) at Crown Center looks like the set of “The Golden Girls� if it’d taken place in a casino. But that’s part of the charm. The other part is its executive chef, Debbie Gold, a James Beard Award winner and “Top Chef� Mas-

Chevre Chaud avec Figue (warm goat cheese with a fig compote, served over mixed field greens and tossed in a citrus vinaigrette), Pate Francais 801 Chophouse (chicken liver pate with If you like your steak grilled country bread) rare, your seafood plenor Bouche a la Reine aux tiful and your drinks Escargots (puff pastry strong, try 801 Chophouse stuffed with garlic-butter(11616 Ash St., Leawood, sauteed escargot). 913-322-1801) — especially Starker’s Restaurant if you owe your in-laws While the Starker’s dinner. This is an oldschool dining experience, (201 W. 47th St., Kansas City, Mo., 816-753-3565) complete with white tablecloths. You’ll almost Restaurant Week menu doesn’t feature its $90 feel bad paying only $30 for three courses here. Al- Dry Aged Piedmontese Tomahawk Ribeye most. (Note: The Power Chop, you can get a Pan & Light District location in downtown Kansas City Seared Beef Tenderloin with Peppercorn Sauce is not participating.) with Gruyere Potatoes Le Fou Frog and SautÊed Greens as Le Fou Frog (400 E. your main course. Plus, Fifth St., Kansas City, both the lunch and dinMo., 816-474-6060) in the ner menus offer this River Market is as French Plaza restaurant’s famous as you can get — in KanBookbinder Soup with sas City anyway. And I’m Steamed Fish in Rich not just talking about the Sherry Broth as a starter. food. Someone from the — By day, Kansas City nastaff serenades the dining tive Emily Farris is a cookbook room on most, if not all, publicist. The rest of the time, nights. I just don’t know she can be found eating food or how I’m going to choose writing about it. Find her recent between its Restaurant ramblings at feedmekc.com. Week starters: Salade de

Britney Spears ends yearlong engagement, leaves ‘X Factor’ LOS ANGELES — Britney Spears announced Friday that she has ended her yearlong engagement, capping a week of changes that included her leaving “The X Factor� and promising fans she was returning her focus to music. Within hours of confirming her

departure from the Fox reality series, Spears also announced that her relationship with talent agent Jason Trawick had ended. “Jason and I have decided to call off our engagement,� Spears said in the statement. “I’ll always adore him, and we will remain great friends.�

Spears’ publicist Jeff Raymond said the breakup was a difficult decision made by “two mature adults.� “I love and cherish her and her boys, and we will be close forever,� Trawick said in a joint statement that was first reported by People magazine. Spears

The Retro cupcake from Billy Vanilly, 914 Massachusetts St.

THE RETRO CUPCAKE So what if another company never takes over production of now-defunct Hostess Brands’ iconic chocolate CupCakes, the ones with the mysterious cream filling and white curlicues on top? Meh. Downtown Lawrence has the same thing, only better. The Retro is a moist, dark chocolate cupcake filled with vanilla cream and topped with glossy chocolate ganache — and white squiggles. Unlike its prepackaged, semi-crusty, convenience store counterpart, The Retro’s frosting actually smears if you stick your finger in it. Where to get it: Billy Vanilly, 914 Massachusetts St.

What you’ll pay: $2.50 apiece for a regular-sized cupcake (they call them baby cakes, as opposed to preemies — tiny size — or big kid cakes — overgrown toddler size, more or less). Try it with: Milk. There is no disputing this. Also on the menu: A few cakepops, but mainly cupcakes, lots of cupcakes. I Love Lemon, 24 Carrot, Death by Chocolate and ever-changing specialty flavors of the month are just a few. The store’s namesake Billy Vanilly cupcake is vanilla cake and vanilla buttercream topped with sprinkles and a cherry on top — just like the picture on the logo.

+BOVBSZ t UP Q N + B O V B S Z t U P Q N 'F C S V B S Z t Q N


L AWRENCE J OURNAL -W ORLD

Sunday, January 13, 2013

SCENE STEALERS

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Sculpture exhibit goes more local By Chad Lawhorn clawhorn@ljworld.com

Pieces of sculpture have been creating conversations, smiles and sometimes head-scratching in downtown Lawrence for almost a quarter-century. The Lawrence Cultural Arts Commission is now accepting entries for its 25th Annual Outdoor Downtown Sculpture Exhibition, and a couple of changes are in store for the milestone year of the event. For the first time in perhaps ever, the show will be limited to artists

who have a local connection. Only artists that live within a 15-mile radius of Lawrence will be allowed to submit entries. In the past, the event has attracted artists from across the country. “This year, the committee wanted to do something special by showcasing the talents of local artists,� says Diane Stoddard, an assistant city manager who serves as the staff liaison for the Arts Commission. Also, the city will provide an extra $5,000, enabling the exhibition to increase the honorarium

paid to artists from $750 to $1,200. Porter Arneill, public art administrator for Kansas City, Mo., will serve as the juror of the show and is expected to select eight pieces for display. All work must be freestanding, of sound design and suitable for long-term outdoor public display without external support. The show will open June 15 and run through April 2014. Artists can find entry information on the city’s website, www. ci.lawrence.ks.us. The deadline is 4 p.m. Feb. 22.

AP Photo/Columbia Pictures Industries, Inc.

JESSICA CHASTAIN, CENTER, PLAYS a member of the elite team of spies and military operatives, stationed in a covert base overseas, with Christopher Stanley, left, and Alex Corbet Burcher, right, who secretly devote themselves to finding Osama bin Laden in “Zero Dark Thirty.�

Taut ‘Zero Dark Thirty’ rises above controversy T

he movie about the hunt for Osama bin Laden, “Zero Dark Thirty,� arrived in theaters Friday amidst heavy controversy surrounding its depiction of torture (or “enhanced interrogation techniques�) by U.S. intelligence operatives. It’s a work of historical fiction, but the film states in its opening titles that it was “based on first-hand accounts.� Last month, the Senate Intelligence Committee sent a letter to Sony Pictures asking for a reedit and called the movie “grossly inaccurate and misleading� about exactly what intelligence was gained this way, while at the same time admitting that some intelligence in fact “came from detainees subjected to enhanced techniques.� If the committee is admitting torture, then the entire controversy seems like splitting hairs and doesn’t really matter because the film makes a broader point that absolutely rings true. “Zero Dark Thirty� is a remarkable achievement. Oscar-winning screenwriter Mark Boal and Oscar-winning director Kathryn Bigelow (who both won for “The Hurt Locker�) compress 10 years of U.S. intelligence work into one morally complicated, riveting, two-and-a-half-hour suspense drama. Jessica Chastain plays a young CIA operative who develops a lasersharp obsession with hunting down the world’s most-wanted criminal. She grows thick skin and becomes accustomed to enhanced interrogation techniques as lead after lead fizzles out. Eventually, her intelligence and CIA money track a courier to Abbottabad, Pakistan, and the most famous raid in modern history ensues. Somehow, in the midst of all the dense information and the mounting tension, Chastain is able to develop a three-dimensional character, an independent woman fiercely dedicated to her job who defies expectations.

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ERIC MELIN eric@scene-stealers.com

What makes “Zero Dark Thirty� such a fascinating film is that it plays both as an engaging procedural/thriller and a serious examination of the country’s moral compass. It is already doing what great movies do: Starting conversations. Nothing, not even the raid on the compound, is staged like a typical Hollywood film. “Zero Dark Thirty� won’t leave you feeling like the Americans who celebrated in the streets after learning of bin Laden’s death. It will tie your stomach into knots.

‘Squad’ not exactly a gangster’s paradise Now that most of the serious Oscar contenders are out in theaters, it’s time for January to reveal its true face when it comes to first-run films. The first movie to prove that the first of the year is typically a dumping ground for movies that aren’t aimed at discerning filmgoers is here already. “Gangster Squad� has the look of a classicperiod film noir, even if it is in color. Josh Brolin, Ryan Gosling and Sean Penn are all dressed up in 1940s/’50s-era garb, smoking cigarettes with their fedoras turned down, and a neon-lit Los Angeles is brimming with energy and full of shadows. But this movie, “inspired by a true story,� is about as far from a film noir as you can get, plot- and feel-wise. It’s also dumb. In addition to throwing the nonfiction book by Paul Lieberman out the window completely (a minor offense really), “Gangster Squad�

ups the violence factor in place of developing any kind of mystery or investigative story whatsoever. The movie chronicles an off-the-books group of L.A. cops who violated the law on a regular basis in order to put all-powerful mob boss Mickey Cohen (a hammy Sean Penn, buried under heavy nose makeup) behind bars. Even if I hadn’t read the book, I’d be able to tell that the plot (or the barest thread of it) is complete hokum. It only exists to put the tough-as-nails cops and Cohen’s gangsters in a series of contrived showdowns for more tommy-gun porn. Poor Emma Stone is woefully underused as Cohen’s girlfriend, a character invented for the movie to create a love triangle with Gosling’s character. She looks terrific, as does everybody, but besides having no femme fatale qualities whatsoever, she has no personality either. I was so bored during “Gangster Squad� that I started thinking about the future of classic-era gangster flicks and noirs. It might make an interesting film to use the era but deny the typical noir elements (both plot and visual-oriented) like “Gangster Squad� did. Michael Mann’s “Public Enemies� wasn’t a complete triumph, but viewing the period detail through a modern, digital handheld lens was at least an interesting experiment. “Gangster Squad� is only interesting in that it’s a tremendous waste of a ton of really talented people.

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— Eric is a longtime Lawrence.com/Journal-World entertainment writer. He’s also the editor-in-chief of SceneStealers and on-air film critic for Kansas First News. He’s a member of the Broadcast Film Critics Association, vice president of the Kansas City Film Critics Circle, and drummer for The Dead Girls and Ultimate Fakebook. On the air-guitar circuit, he goes by the name Mean Melin. Eric goes to 11.

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4C

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Sunday, January 13, 2013

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L AWRENCE J OURNAL -W ORLD

BOOKS Weighing civilization ? WHAT ARE YOU

READING By Adam Strunk

Read more responses and add your thoughts at www.ljworld.com

Where has it gotten us, exactly? Author Jared Diamond investigates

By Mary Ann Gwinn The Seattle Times

Nick Spacek, program adviser for KJHK, Lawrence “I’m reading a book called ‘Fakes’ (by David Shields and Matthew Vollmer). It’s a collection of short works in the form of everything from catalog entries to emails to self-help seminars.”

Jenna Muscarella, student, Alton, Ill. “‘The Great Gatsby’ (by F. Scott Fitzgerald). It never bores me.”

Leighton Watts, works at Berry Plastics, Lawrence “‘The Champions: Kansas Basketball at the Pinnacle’ (by Rich Clarkson, Grant Wahl, Mark Dent.) It’s kind of interesting to look at, at the past championships in 1952 and 1988.”

Estrella Frankenfeld, student, Lawrence “ I just finished a book called ‘The Indigo Notebook’ (by Laura Resau ). I liked it. It’s kind of a hippyish book.”

Jared Diamond may be the world’s best-known geography teacher. The UCLA professor bristles with academic credentials — he’s won a MacArthur Foundation “genius” grant and a National Medal of Science, among many other prizes. But Diamond’s reach far exceeds the boundaries of academe. How did someone trained as a physiologist become a literary superstar? Diamond’s breakout book, 1997’s “Guns, Germs and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies,” won the Pulitzer Prize for its analysis of why Europeans and Asians came to dominate the world. “Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed,” from 2005, analyzed the reasons successful civilizations vanish from the earth. In a recent interview, Diamond talked about how he became one of the English-speaking world’s great explainers in arenas most of us don’t have the wherewithal to enter — physiology, anthropology, sociology, history. And he touched on several topics in his new book, “The World Until Yesterday: What Can We Learn From Traditional Societies?” (Viking, $36). Diamond uses his years of experience in studying traditional peoples (especially in New Guinea, where he has worked for many years as a conservationist) to consider a compelling topic: What’s gotten better as man has become more civilized? What’s become worse? He examines human behavior in the areas of peace and war, treatment of the young and old, responses to danger, religion and diet in search of answers to a central question: What can we learn from people who live pretty much as humans did thousands of years ago? Are your three books “Guns, Germs and Steel,” “Collapse” and now “The World Until Yesterday” a trilogy of sorts? No, not a trilogy. Each of the books has been on what I found most fascinating at the time. Here’s a softball question: Why do you think your books have become so popular?

The subjects that fascinate me fascinate other people. Why is it that Europeans ended up dominating the world? What are the risks to our societies? I’ve learned to write so as to explain things to myself. In my childhood I was always having to explain things to my sister (Diamond was 1 1/2 years older than his next oldest sibling). Now I explain things to other people. Part of it is that my books are about things I’m trying to understand myself. Much of the material in the book is not Aude Photo about my immediate specialty. I’ve had to explain it PROFESSOR JARED DIAMOND’S latest book is “The World to myself, then explain it to Until Yesterday: What Can We Learn From Traditional Societies?” other people. Your book looks at traditional vs. modern societies in several arenas. One is justice and how it’s meted out. You use as an example the way two groups of New Guineans negotiated after the death of a child in an auto accident. Both the driver and his company, and the child’s family, were able to resolve their feelings. What is your biggest take-away on this subject? There are two takeaways. In our state justice systems, administered by a state government, we’re gaining some things. But we’re losing the emotional clearance in cases of divorce, disputes between brothers and sisters about inheritance, disputes between business colleagues. The state justice system is not concerned at all about emotional clearance for the parties. That’s something that needs to be worked on. Among my close acquaintances, brothers and sisters (in a dispute) hired a mediator. It really made a difference. I have a school classmate whose sister was killed by robbers. The robbers were arrested and sent to jail, but 50 years later that still gnaws at my friend. That’s something state justice doesn’t do, and restorative justice attempts.

propensity (for violence) has changed, but the reality is that fewer and fewer people are dying in wars than in the past. It may sound obscenely bad to say that, given Auschwitz, given Hiroshima. But when you look at the numbers, even in the worst affected countries, a considerably smaller percentage of people have died in war-related injuries.

In your chapter about childhood, you note that in traditional societies, kids of multiple ages mix more with each other (a la the Little Red Schoolhouse); in our modern systems, kids are grouped according to age. What do you think is lost when kids are sequestered by age? In traditional societies, all sorts of role models are available to children. Every adult in the village is an aunt or uncle. When kids who have misfortunes with their own parents have problems, they can learn from them, even if their parents were screwed up. When I grew up in a suburb of Boston, we ran together on the street and played together in mixed groups. In my own home in a suburb of Los Angeles, there isn’t even a sidewalk. (Kids) can’t walk over to see friends; they You point to several have to see friends by apdifferences between pointment. traditional warfare and modern warfare. Though You talk about “conmany more people are structive paranoia” killed in modern warfare, among traditional people a greater percentage of a — how they learn from given population dies in on-the-ground experitraditional warfare. Has ence to avoid danger. man’s urge to wage war What have you as a perchanged much? son with a foot in both There is hope for op- worlds learned from that timism. It’s not that our trait?

I can say something that all my readers over 60 should think about. What are the real dangers in life? If you ask, people are likely to talk about nuclear power, terrorists, radiation. What you should really worry about is slipping in the shower and slipping on the sidewalk. You cite the Christian doctrine of forgiveness as one reason that Christianity has achieved enduring success. Explain. The doctrine of forgiveness is often misunderstood to mean turn the other cheek. It’s more sophisticated than that ... the best way to resolve the dispute is not to jump to the nuclear option. The best way is to try to seek understanding, is forgive the person and try to reestablish the relationship. Your chapter on diet and noncommunicable diseases in emerging societies was frightening, especially in reference to diabetes. Talk about where you think that is going. The incidence is rising. In particular, it’s rising most rapidly in countries that have been underdeveloped and poor and are becoming rich. For example, the rich Arab countries. The steepest rise is in diabetes — for people in places like Kuwait it’s 15 percent to 20 percent and higher (for Type 2 diabetes). They are wealthy, they can afford rich food and they haven’t learned the public-health lessons we have in the United States. In the U.S., rich people are slimmer than poor people. In India and Saudi Arabia, rich people are fatter.

BESTSELLERS

Here are the best-sellers for the week that ended Jan. 5, compiled from nationwide data.

Fiction 1. “Gone Girl.” Gillian Flynn. Crown ($25). 2. “Empire and Honor.” W. E. B. Griffin. Putnam ($27.95). 3. “The Racketeer.” John Grisham. Doubleday ($28.95). 4. “Threat Vector.” Tom Clancy. Putnam ($28.95). 5. “Cross Roads.” William Paul Young. FaithWords ($24.99). 6. “The Forgotten.” David Baldacci. Grand Central ($27.99). 7. “Shadow Woman.” Linda Howard. Ballantine ($27). 8. “Notorious Nineteen.” Janet Evanovich. Bantam ($28). 9. “The Twelve Tribes of Hattie.” Ayana Mathis. Knopf ($24.95). 10. “The Casual Vacancy.” J.K. Rowling. Little, Brown ($35).

Nonfiction 1. “Shred: The Revolutionary Diet.” Ian K. Smith, M.D. St. Martin’s ($24.99). 2. “Killing Kennedy.” Bill O’Reilly. Henry Holt ($28). 3. “Barefoot Contessa Foolproof.” Ina Garten. Clarkson Potter ($35). 4. “I Declare.” Joel Osteen. FaithWords ($21.99). 5. “Thomas Jefferson.” Jon Meacham. Random House ($35). 6. “The World Until Yesterday.” Jared Diamond. Viking ($36). 7. “No Easy Day.” Mark Owen. Dutton ($26.95). 8. “To Sell Is Human.” Daniel H. Pink. Riverhead ($26.95). 9. “The 8-Hour Diet.” David Zinczenko. Rodale ($26.99). 10. “7 Years Younger.” Good Housekeeping. Filipacchi ($25.95).

BRIEFLY

Rare Stephen King book up for auction

ELLSWORTH, MAINE — A signed copy of a rare Stephen King book is up for auction at a Maine bookstore, with proceeds going to a nearby homeless shelter’s emergency home heating fund. The copy of “The Regulators,” written by horror writer and Maine native King under the pen name Richard Bachman, was donated by a customer of Scottie’s Bookhouse in Hancock. Owner Michael Riggs says there are only 550 copies of the book in a special collector’s box. Auction proceeds will go to the Emmaus Homeless Shelter’s emergency fuel fund in Ellsworth. The book is on display at Scottie’s. Bids are being accepted by email, phone and in person until Jan. 31. The phone number is 207667-6834. Email is scottybooks@yahoo.com.

‘Dancing’ champ writes about his war injuries By Rodney Ho The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

ATLANTA — As a kid, J.R. Martinez was scared of Freddy Krueger, the disfigured menace in Steve Tiffany, the “Nightmare on Elm psychologist, Street” film series. Buffalo, N.Y. After a bomb in war“‘The Beautiful Mystery’ (by Louise Penny). It’s a series town Iraq ripped through of mystery stories with the his Army Humvee and protagonist being the head burned one-third of his of a murder investigation.” body — including part of his face — Martinez felt like he had become the living embodiment of Krueger. He was horrified and, for a brief time, suicidal. Nine years later, the former Dalton, Ga., resident is very much alive. While in the hospital, he began sharing his story with other burn victims

and soon became a fixture on the speaking circuit as an inspirational war survivor. His gift Martinez for gab and zest for life led to a regular role on the sincecanceled TV soap opera “All My Children” and first place last year on ABC’s “Dancing With the Stars.” And now he’s produced a memoir about his life: “Full of Heart: My Story of Survival, Strength and Spirit” (Hyperion, $23.99). “Writing a book has been floating around in my head for a while,” Mar-

tinez says. But he didn’t think it was the right time until he won “Dancing With the Stars,” which broadened his appeal beyond soap fans. “I’m not a writer,” says Martinez, explaining why he worked with a ghost writer, Alexandra Rockey Fleming. Plus, given his full slate of speaking engagements, “It was difficult for me to write all this by myself, given the deadlines I had.” The most difficult part was researching his mother’s tough past, including her bad relationships with men and the suffering she endured after Martinez was injured. “It makes me appreciate her that much more.” He also had to fill in

post-injury memory gaps from when he was in a coma, interviewing doctors and nurses as well as fellow soldiers stationed with him when his Humvee was hit. Martinez, who spent most of his childhood in Arkansas, lived in Dalton only during his senior year at Dalton High School. But he fell in love with the town. And his mother, Maria, still lives there. “It was a great year for me. It felt like home. I still consider it home.” When he got out of the hospital and visited Dalton for the first time since the blast, the war vet was stunned by the hero’s welcome. The city held a big rally. His high school football coach and former team-

mates spoke. He even received a key to the city. “That really choked me up,” he said. While in Dalton for the rally, Martinez recalls not being able to pick up a hamburger because his hands were partly disabled. A friend quietly cut it up for him. “People there showed me so much love and support.” Now living in Los Angeles, he visits Dalton as his schedule permits. But visits to Georgia have become more difficult since the spring, when he and girlfriend Diana Gonzalez-Jones had a baby, Lauryn Annabelle. In the meantime, Martinez is looking for new TV and film roles.


Sunday, January 13, 2013

L AWRENCE J OURNAL -W ORLD

THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD

Puzzle Envy By Dan Feyer and Andrea Carla Michaels Edited by Will Shortz

Across 1 Pop 4 Court statistic 11 Kid’s game with a ball 16 A Bobbsey twin 19 Constellation near Scorpius 20 Start to make a living from something 21 W.W. II marine threat 22 Israeli weapon 23 What some goggles provide 25 10,000,000 ergs 26 U.S.A. neighbor 27 Represent at a costume party 28 ___ minute 29 It may be tightly coiled 30 “Let us part, ___ the season of passion forget us”: Yeats 31 Designer Mizrahi 32 Old lad’s wear 34 Like pulp fiction 36 Onetime enemy 38 Reggae’s ___ Kamoze 39 Exposed 40 Kazakhstan, once: Abbr. 41 Shot blocker 45 Mrs. Mitt Romney 48 Place for runners 50 Far-out experience 54 Greenish creature 55 Diagonal 57 Wastage 60 Bit of negativity? 62 Flubbed 63 Squeeze for dough 65 Wine taster’s destination 68 Beetles, briefly 69 Slick 70 Bad sign for a traveler? 71 Land of Zion? 73 “That’s ___-brainer” 74 1942 Bette Davis film

76 Go downhill, in a way 78 Department-store department 80 Fix one’s eyes 81 Chip away at 83 Hornswoggle 84 Huzzahs 86 Singer/songwriter Laura 88 Make, as one’s way 90 Northern California’s ___ River 91 Breed of cat or dog 93 Baseball “twin killings,” for short 96 Chicago’s county 98 Alternative to a bus 99 Home of the world’s largest naval base 107 “Done, O.K.?!” 109 Head of London 110 Seemingly forever 111 NetZero competitor 112 Ladderlike in arrangement 114 Sports org. of the early 2000s 115 Until now 116 Statehouse resident, informally 117 Solitaire unit 118 “My Big Fat Greek Wedding” writer and star 120 Purpose 121 Quarter back? 122 Pastoral poem 123 Mich. neighbor 124 Stroke 125 Slammin’ Sammy 126 Prop up 127 Miss identification? Down 1 1978 Bob Fosse Broadway revue 2 Melodious 3 Blond bombshell of ’50s TV 4 Lawyers’ cases, maybe 5 Yukon and Tahoe, for short 6 Mumbai title 7 Moonstruck 8 Downsized uprights 9 “Les ___” (Berlioz opera based on the “Aeneid”)

10 Heir, maybe, but not an heiress 11 Immature 12 Cancels 13 One at a sidebar 14 Moolah 15 Unblemished 16 3.14159…, for pi 17 Baku resident 18 Gave the thumbs-down 24 Qualifiers 29 “Just like that!” 32 Ralph in the Baseball Hall of Fame 33 Cameo, for one 35 Remove from a mailing list, informally 37 Where springboks graze 42 One of Mozart’s? 43 Subtitle of “Star Wars Episode IV” 44 Cat’s dogs? 45 ’60s prez 46 Late ’60s and early ’70s, politically 47 Hit 1944 film starring a 12-yearold actress 49 One-named pop singer 51 Wreak havoc on 52 More ridiculous 53 Paragraph symbol [¶] 56 Fifth tone 58 Mouth-watering 59 Vet, at times 61 West Coast beer, familiarly 64 Rembrandt van ___ 66 Here, in Juárez 67 Brynner of “Taras Bulba” 70 Its capital is Yellowknife: Abbr. 72 Smidgen 73 Choices of time 75 Ending with psych76 Sir abroad 77 Gibson of “The Beaver” 79 “Norwegian Wood” strings 82 To say, in Spanish 85 Grows old 87 Kardashian spouse Lamar ___ 89 Well-intentioned activist

UNITED FEATURE SUNDAY CROSSWORD

See both puzzle SOLUTIONS in Monday’s paper. UNIVERSAL SUDOKU

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19

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102 Subj. of the 2008 biography “Traitor to His Class” 103 Some Swedish models 104 Kevin of “Weeds” 105 Cantillate 106 Carol starter 107 Advice to a base runner

88 Green around the — 89 Home to Swiss banks 90 Rounding up 93 Kitchen herb 95 Noshery 97 Improve, as wine 98 “A means to — —” 100 On Soc. Sec. 101 Gauzy-winged insect 106 Express relief 108 Skips a syllable 110 Gazing at 112 Latin hymn word 113 Test, as ore 115 Black & Decker rival 116 Ribs, to Cato 117 Knowing looks 118 Runway hazard 120 Write on glass 122 Big Board letters 123 Dog 124 Carriage 128 Edible root 129 “Burnt — — crisp” 130 — fly (baseball play) 131 Stag attendees 132 WWW addresses 133 Pub pint 135 Pulls a heist 137 Mr. Goldfinger 139 Size above med. 140 Pesky bugs 142 “Shogun” apparel 144 Forest creatures 148 Actress — Prentiss 150 London’s river 153 Groovy 155 Fix a manuscript 156 Pentium producer 157 Flip-chart stands 158 Apple gizmo 159 “M.A.S.H.” actor 160 Lake near Reno 161 Underhanded 162 Listens to 163 Fishing gear

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

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Across 1 Cabinet dept. 5 Reef 10 Place of business 16 Exploded 21 Candle lover 22 Boy Scout rank 23 — collision (hyph.) 24 Violin maker 25 “Gotcha!” (2 wds.) 26 Ringlet 27 Skillful 28 A singing Jackson 29 Witty comeback 31 Hull sealant 33 Pack animal 35 Noncom 36 Limericks and haiku 37 Withered 40 Family mem. 41 Heavy gold chain 42 Michael Jackson album 45 Half a couple 46 Utmost degree 48 NBA coach — Unseld 50 Worked hard 52 Maxims 54 Pier 55 Varnish resins 57 Merry’s opposite 58 Type of surgeon 59 Fawn’s father 60 Sugar serving 62 Beneficiaries 66 Goya’s duchess 67 Padded envelope 69 Suffused 71 Type of mitt 72 Lack of energy 74 4-wheel drive ftr. 76 Finished off (2 wds.) 78 — Ray Hutton 79 Ducks’ haunt 80 Irreverent 83 Pupil, maybe 85 Weighed down

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Solution, tips and computer program at sudoku.com.

Follow Us On Facebook & Twitter

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©2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

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108 Provide a place to stay 113 Scott of “Hawaii Five-0” 115 “How ___!” 118 It’s S. of S. Dak. 119 15%-er: Abbr.

Down 1 Kuwaiti leader 2 Prescribed amount 3 El Paso sch. 4 Stingy 5 Hunting dogs 6 Sheiks’ bevies 7 Curved moldings 8 Pacino and Unser 9 For fear that 10 Midwest airport 11 Kept up the fire 12 Out of the way 13 Goddess’s statue 14 Rolls of stamps 15 Necessitate 16 Mexicali locale 17 Ms. Thurman 18 Spite 19 Treeless plain 20 Of the nobility 30 “Balcony scene” swain 32 Wan 34 Exec. degrees 38 Hole-making tool 39 Kingdom 41 Bull-riding event 42 Trite 43 — Rogers St. Johns 44 Smears 46 Atom middles 47 Walk off with 49 Goes diving 51 Pooh- — 53 Understood 54 Tobacco wad 56 Grass fungus 59 Modem-speed unit 61 Do KP work 63 Columnist Molly — 64 Ms. Zellweger 65 Tangle 67 Everest or K2 68 Scabbard fillers 69 Cut off 70 Unpaid 73 Ancient Greek colony

75 Hull’s bottom 77 Casals or Picasso 81 Ball club VIP 82 Mil. branch 84 Cascades peak 85 Tibet’s capital 86 Zeus’ shield 87 Coffee grounds 91 Vane reading 92 Firms up 93 Curiosity 94 “The — File” 95 Wynter or Carvey 96 Quiche base 99 Winged Victory 102 Greet the dawn 103 Crisp 104 Cowboy Lash — 105 “Oui” and “da” 107 Ax handles 109 “MacGyver” actor 111 Goofball (hyph.) 114 Thou, today 117 Of sound mind 119 Part of G.T.O. 121 Insurance gp. 122 Crash-investigating org. 123 Sitting rooms 124 Jack-in-the- — 125 Princess Leia — 126 Gumshoe 127 Makes glad 130 Appropriate 134 Frome or Hawke 136 Overbearing 137 Not spaced-out 138 Prove innocent 140 Big blow 141 Return env. 143 Move very slowly 145 Like gossip 146 Bona — (genuine) 147 And others (2 wds.) 149 August kid, maybe 151 “Drop — — line” 152 Yellowstone sight 154 Job-ad letters


6C

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Sunday, January 13, 2013

.

L AWRENCE J OURNAL -W ORLD

ARTS NOTES

DATEBOOK

13 TODAY

Lawrence Public Library closed. Lawrence Chamber Orchestra Baroque Ensemble, 2#$0 &'(', U+,-./,.+ F1223456,&, 128$ N3/-6 1100 R3.;' O.U.R.S. (Oldsters United for Responsible Service) dance, 8<= &'(', E.?215 @3;?1, 1A0$ B' S,D-6 S-' Poker tournament, 7 p.m., Johnny’s Tavern, 410 N. Second St. Smackdown! trivia, A &'(', E61 B3--21+1GH, I$I N14 J.(&56,/1 S-' Shoofly, A &'(', KL--1/M5 S(3H163L51 N K.-1/,+?, 21A E' 20-6 S-', EL;3/.'

14 MONDAY

Lawrence Public Library closed. Lawrence Board of Education meeting, I &'(', 5G6332 ;,5-/,G- 61.;< OL./-1/5, 110 PGD3+.2; D/,R1' Eudora City Council meeting, I &'(', EL;3/. K,-S J.22, T E' S1R1+-6 S-' Free Meditative Yoga Class, I#$0<A#$0 &'(', B15-5,;1 Y3?., T=$V R151./G6 W./H B.S

15 TUESDAY

Lawrence Public Library closed. Red Dog’s Dog Days workout, 8 .'(', A221+ F,12;63L51, 1+-1/ 3+ 53L-61.5- 5,;1, Y/11' Big Brothers Big Sisters of Douglas County

volunteer information, V#1V &'(', V$8 F,/15,;1 K3L/-, SL,-1 B' Lonnie Ray’s open jam session, 8<10 &'(', S234 R,;1 R3.;63L51, 1$V0 N' E6,/; S-', +3 G3R1/' Lawrence City Commission meeting, 8#$V &'(', K,-S J.22, 8 E' S,D-6 S-' Gamer Night, A &'(', BL/?1/ S-.+; .- -61 K.5< Z.6, A0$ P.55.G6L51--5 S-', Y/11' Free swing dancing lessons and dance, A<11 &'(', [.+5.5 R33( ,+ -61 [.+5.5 U+,3+, 1$01 \.S6.4H B2R;' Poker Night, A &'(', A&&21Z11M5, 2V20 ]34. S-' Geeks Who Drink pub quiz, A &'(', W63??S D3?, 222A ]34. S-' Slideshow photography group, A &'(', ^.52,?6- ^./;1+5, $1I N' S1G3+; S-' Teller’s Family Night, = &'('<(,;+,?6-, IT8 P.5< 5.G6L51--5 S-' Tuesday Night Karaoke, = &'(', B.S+1 N @.//SM5 S&3/-5 B./ N ^/,22, =$$ ]34. S-' Kaw Valley Quilters Guild “The Studios Where Women Create,” =#$0 &'(', W2S(3L-6 K3+< ?/1?.-,3+.2 K6L/G6, =2V _1/(3+- S-'

16 WEDNESDAY

Lawrence Public Library closed. Big Brothers Big Sisters of Douglas County volunteer information, +33+, V$8 F,/15,;1 K3L/-, SL,-1 B'

Billy Spears and the Beer Bellies, 8 &'(', \36++SM5 E.R1/+, T01 N' S1G3+; S-' The Good Ole Boys, 8#$0 &'(', KL--1/M5, 21A E' 20-6 S-', EL;3/., +3 G3R1/' Douglas County Commission meeting, 8#$V &'(', D3L?2.5 K3L+-S K3L/-63L51, 1100 P.55.< G6L51--5 S-' NAMI-Douglas County meeting, 7 p.m., Lawrence Senior Center, 745 Vermont St. Conroy’s Trivia, I#$0 &'(', K3+/3SM5 WLZ, $11V B' S,D-6 S-' Pride Night, = &'(', B,2;1M5 K6.-1.L, 2T12 ]34. S-'

17 THURSDAY

Lawrence Public Library closed. Red Dog’s Dog Days workout, 8 .'(', A221+ F,12;63L51, 1+-1/ 3+ 53L-61.5- 5,;1, Y/11' Cottin’s Hardware Farmers’ Market, T<8#$0 &'(', ,+5,;1 5-3/1 .- 1A$2 P.55.G6L51--5 S-' The Open Tap, ;,5GL5< 5,3+ 3Y . 5121G-1; /12,?,3+ -3&,G, V#$0<I &'(', J1+< /SM5, 11 E' E,?6-6 S-', Y/11' Headquarters Counseling Center volunteer training, 8<I#1V &'(', J1.;OL./-1/5 K3L+512,+? K1+-1/, 211 E' E,?6-6 S-' Sons of the Union Veterans, 8#$0 &'(', B.-H,+5 K3((L+,-S PL51L( 3Y J,5-3/S, 10TI P.55.G6L< 51--5 S-' Insight Art Talk: Sans Façon, 7 p.m., @.4/1+G1

Singer CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C

Donnelly describes the sound of her debut album, “We Had a Thing,” as popfolk. “Home,” she says, has a pop sensibility but a rootsy vibe and blues-gospel edge — a throwback to the funky soul music that fans of The Lisa Donnelly Project remember seeing at Jazzhaus and other local venues, where she performed often before graduating from Kansas University and moving to Los Angeles in 2002. “She’s always had an amazing voice and the ability to put her personality across, and I think the fruits of our efforts have been really driving and enhancing the soul of what she’s doing,” says Donnelly’s current producer, Ethan Allen. Allen says Donnelly has wide appeal and is worthy of being a singer-songwriter everyone knows. “She’s one of the great voices that we have right

Photo courtesy of Lisa Donnelly

SINGER-SONGWRITER LISA DONNELLY, a Lawrence native, sang Elvis Presley’s “Can’t Help Falling in Love” and her original song “Here to Stay” on “The Bachelorette: Ashley and J.P.’s Wedding.” She’s pictured with her accompanist before the wedding, which was televised Dec. 16, 2012. now, and she’s got some songs that really match and suit her present spirit,” Allen says. Donnelly tweets at Twitter.com/lisadonnelly, updates fans on her latest projects on her website, lisadonnelly.com, and is using PledgeMusic.com — a crowdsourcing web-

site like Kickstarter, but for musicians — to help get the new album off the ground. “Little by little, people find out about you,” she says. “And we live in a world of social media where people and fans are pretty much the way to drive musicians.”

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Storage

Storage

Pawn

Pawn

50 254 130 ›‡ Gone in Sixty Seconds (2000, Action) Nicolas Cage. ›‡ Gone in Sixty Seconds (2000, Action) Nicolas Cage. 51 247 139 Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Wedding Band h

BRAVO 52 237 129 Housewives/Atl. TVL

Lockup: Raw h

››› The Bourne Ultimatum (2007) h Matt Damon. ›› The Game Plan (2007, Comedy) h

USA

AMC

Stossel h

60 Minutes on CNBC Swoosh! Inside Nike

Predator Raw: Unseen Predator Raw: Unseen Lockup: Raw h

A&E

TRUTV 48 246 204 Pawn

NFL

World Poker Tour

Elk Fever Wild Skies ›››‡ The Natural (1984) Robert Redford.

CNBC 40 355 208 ››‡ Walt: The Man Behind the Myth (2001) American Greed MSNBC 41 356 209 Caught on Camera

Shahs of Sunset (N) Vanderpump Rules Bamazon (N) h

Talladega Nights:

Happens Housewives/Atl.

53 304 106 Roseanne Roseanne Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond King 54 269 120 Ax Men “Cage Match” Ax Men (N) h

‘Bachelorette’ party Donnelly’s been singing in weddings since she was a teenager and says her friends joke that theirs were good practice for the high-profile “Bachelorette” nuptials. The Huffington Post described the widely anticipated show — one of only two actual weddings resulting from the “Bachelorette” — as “something so rare and important for the franchise that ABC simply had to turn it into a reality special.” When they got word about the “Bachelorette” opportunity, Donnelly and Allen wrote four love songs in 48 hours for show producers, Hebert and Rosenbaum to choose from. Accompanied by a pianist, Donnelly sang in person during the picture-perfect wedding, which was televised Dec. 16 and included a few shots of Donnelly at the microphone amid footage of the happy couple, their family, friends and former “Bachelor” and “Bachelorette” celebrities. Donnelly’s toe-tapping but sweet “Here to Stay”

has a country feel and a recessional-perfect, upbeat, happy vibe. “I remember the day we met, I knew I would never forget that smile ...” the song begins, before leading into the befitting chorus, “Our love is here to stay, and it was worth the fight.” Donnelly, naturally, was thrilled about the publicity from the TV special. But she also enjoyed writing and performing her song for the couple for the same reasons that have always driven her singing and songwriting. Whether about hopeful moments or heartbreak, performing music based on one’s own experiences lets audiences know they’re not alone. That connection helps keep Donnelly inspired. “There’s a never-ending well to draw from because life is so complex and beautiful,” she says, “and there’s always something to write about.”

7:30

‘Ebullient’ VIM exhibit opens Friday VIM, a new collaborative art exhibit at the Lawrence Arts Center, opens this week with a public reception. The reception is planned from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Friday at the Arts Center, 940 New Hampshire St. There’s also a Final Friday reception from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. Jan. 27 and an Insight Art Talk at 7 p.m. Feb. 7. The exhibit runs through March 2, and select works from it will be featured at the Arts Center’s annual benefit auction April 13. VIM is a first-time collaboration among painters Kent Michael Smith, Lisa Lala and Archie Scott Gobber and ceramist Ben Ahlvers, who is also the Arts Center’s exhibitions director. The center promises a two- and threedimensional exhibit accentuating distinctive qualities in materials, processes and ideas in works that convey “ebullient vitality and vigor.”

Find Movie Listings at: lawrence.com/ movies/listings

— Features reporter Sara Shepherd can be reached at 832-7187. Follow her at Twitter.com/KCSSara.

BEST BETS KNO DTV DISH 7 PM

EMU Theatre will present the world premiere of the play “Let My Mind Flash with Blades” this week at the Lawrence Arts Center. Based on the therapy sessions of Sigmund Freud and poet Hilda Doolittle, “Blades” is a “what-if” exploration of the pair’s relationship, according to the Arts Center. Doolittle befriended Freud in the 1930s and became his patient while suffering severely from writer’s block. Their multifaceted relationship incorporated their shared passion for art and culture, their fondness for each other, and their fear of coming war. The play, with its title pulled from a Doolittle poem, is written and directed by Dan Born and produced by Feloniz LovatoWinston. Performances are planned for 7:30 p.m. Jan. 18, 19, 25 and 26 in the Black Box theater at the Arts Center, 940 New Hampshire St. Tickets are $7. The show is recommended for adult audiences.

SPORTS 8 PM

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9 PM

January 13, 2013 9:30

10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30

Cable Channels cont’d

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8

Library closed. Red Dog’s Dog Days workout, I#$0 .'(', &./H,+? 23- .- N,+-6 .+; _1/(3+- 5-/11-5' Sunflower Kennel Club Dog Agility Trials, A .'('<T &'(', D3L?2.5 K3L+-S F.,/?/3L+;5, 215.+; J./&1/ 5-/11-5' St. John Catholic Church Rummage Sale, 18 FRIDAY A#$0 .'('<12#$0 &'(', Lawrence Public 12T8 [1+-LGHS S-' Library closed. Americana Music Mike Shurtz Trio, `.aa Academy Saturday Jam, (L5,G, 10#1V<11#1V .'(', $ &'(', A(1/,G.+. PL5,G S,?+5 3Y @,Y1, I22 P.55.< AG.;1(S, 1T1= P.55.< G6L51--5 S-' G6L51--5 S-' Ayurveda Yoga Class “The Fox on the Fair& Free Lecture with way,” I#$0 &'(', E61.-/1 Balarama Chandra Das, @.4/1+G1, 1V01 N14 V#$0<A &'(', B1 P3R1; J.(&56,/1 S-' S-L;,3, 2 E' S1R1+-6 S-' Beer Night at the VFW benefit dinner Watkins Museum, I#$0 and karaoke, 8 &'(' ;,+< &'(', B.-H,+5 K3((L+,-S +1/, H./.3H1 .- I &'(', PL51L( 3Y J,5-3/S, 10TI _FB &35-, 1$A A2.Z.(. P.55.G6L51--5 S-', Y/11' S-' Westside Folk: Drew The Heebie Jeebies, Nelson, opener Danny I &'(', DS+.(,-1 S.233+, McGaw, I#$0 &'(', U+,-S I21 P.55.G6L51--5 S-' K6L/G6, N,+-6 S-/11- .+; “The Fox on the FairP.;12,+1 @.+1' way,” I#$0 &'(', E61.-/1 “Let My Mind Flash @.4/1+G1, 1V01 N14 With Blades,” I#$0<11#$0 J.(&56,/1 S-' &'(', @.4/1+G1 A/-5 K1+< “Let My Mind Flash -1/, =T0 N14 J.(&56,/1 With Blades,” I#$0<11#$0 S-' &'(', @.4/1+G1 A/-5 K1+< Benefit Show for -1/, =T0 N14 J.(&56,/1 Megan Dambro, A &'(', S-' F/.+HM5 N3/-6 S-./ E.R1/+, Gypse Jazz Duet, A V0A @3GL5- S-' &'(', B,? 8 .- -61 E2;/,;?1, Lawrence Brewers I01 P.55.G6L51--5 S-' Beer Tasting, A#$0 &'(', Karaoke with DJ John, B.-H,+5 K3((L+,-S = &'(', S234 R,;1 R3.;< PL51L( 3Y J,5-3/S, 10TI 63L51, 1$V0 N' E6,/; S-', P.55.G6L51--5 S-' +3 G3R1/' Video Jerry and DJ John, = &'(', S234 R,;1 19 SATURDAY R3.;63L51, 1$V0 N' E6,/; Lawrence Public S-', +3 G3R1/'

A/-5 K1+-1/, =T0 N14 J.(&56,/1 S-' Junkyard Jazz Band, I &'(', A(1/,G.+ @1?,3+, $T0A B' S,D-6 S-' Poker Night, A &'(', A&&21Z11M5, 2V20 ]34. S-' Team trivia, = &'(', \36++SM5 B15-, I21 B.H.< /L5. D/,R1'

10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30

Network Channels M

EMU to premiere play about Freud

King

Shahs King

Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Ax Men “Cage Match”

SYFY 55 FX 56 COM 58 E! 59 CMT 60 BET 64 VH1 66 TRV 67 TLC 68 LIFE 69 LMN 70 FOOD 72 HGTV 73 NICK 76 DISNXD 77 DISN 78 TOON 79 DSC 81 FAM 82 NGC 83 HALL 84 ANML 85 TBN 90 EWTN 91 RLTV 93 CSPAN2 95 CSPAN 96 ID 101 MILI 102 OWN 103 TWC 116 SOAP 123 TCM 162 HBO MAX SHOW ENC STRZ

401 411 421 440 451

244 248 249 236 327 329 335 277 280 252 253 231 229 299 292 290 296 278 311 276 312 282 372 370

122 136 107 114 166 124 162 215 183 108 109 110 112 170 174 172 176 182 180 186 185 184 260 261

351 350 285 287 279 362 262 256

211 210 192 195 189 214 253 132

Star Trk: Cntct ›› Star Trek: Nemesis (2002) h Patrick Stewart. ››‡ Star Trek: Insurrection (1998) ››‡ Iron Man 2 (2010, Action) h Robert Downey Jr.. ››‡ Iron Man 2 (2010, Action) h Robert Downey Jr.. ››‡ Dumb & Dumber Daniel Tosh: Happy A. Jeselnik: Ca. A. Jeselnik: Ca. The Burn Tosh.0 Ice-Coco Miami Miami Miami Miami Miami After Party Chelsea Kardashian Ink Master “Holy Ink” Ink Master “Buck Off” Ink Master h Ink Master h Ink Master h The BET Awards 2011 Music, entertainment and sports in LA. h Family Fi. Family Fi. Popoff Inspiration Mob Wives “Bad Boys” Making Mr. Right (N) Mob Wives “Bad Boys” Making Mr. Right Mob Wives “Bad Boys” Extreme Pig Outs Extreme Fast Food Burger Burger State Fair Foods Extreme Fast Food Here Comes Honey Here Comes Honey Pete Rose Pete Rose Here Comes Honey Pete Rose Pete Rose Walking the Halls A Mother’s Nightmare (2012) Annabeth Gish. Walking the Halls (2012) h Jamie Luner. ››‡ Devil’s Pond (2003) h Kip Pardue. Her Perfect Spouse (2004) Tracy Nelson. ››‡ Devil’s Pond Sugar Dome “The 80s” Rachael v. Guy Iron Chef America (N) Restaurant Stakeout Rachael v. Guy Island Island Hawaii Life Hawaii Life House Hunters Reno Hunters Hunt Intl Hawaii Life Hawaii Life See Dad ›› Hotel for Dogs (2009) Emma Roberts. The Nanny Friends Friends Friends Friends Buttowski Buttowski Ninja Phineas Slug Terra Suite Life Suite Life Suite Life Tron Motorcity Dog Austin Shake It Jessie Jessie Good Luck Austin Austin Wizards Wizards Looney Dragons Oblongs King of Hill King of Hill Cleveland Family Guy Family Guy Chicken Metal Moonshiners h Moonshiners (N) h Concordia Update Moonshiners h Concordia Update ››› Despicable Me ››› Despicable Me (2010) h, Jason Segel Bunheads h J. Osteen Shook Ate Jaws: Bite Wicked Tuna (N) Mudcats (N) Wicked Tuna h Mudcats h Undercover The Nearlyweds (2013) Danielle Panabaker. Frasier Frasier Frasier Frasier Wild West Alaska (N) Gator Boys (N) h Finding Bigfoot (N) Gator Boys h Finding Bigfoot h J. Osteen Kerry Believer Creflo Doll ››› The Shoes of the Fisherman (1968) Anthony Quinn. The Boy Sunday Night Prime Chesterton Rosary Roundtable God Weep Bookmark Daily Mass: Our Lady Stanley Stanley Fraud Fraud Money Matters Stanley Stanley Fraud Fraud Book TV Book TV: After Words Book TV “David Roll” Book TV Book TV: After Words Q&A P.M. Road to the White House Q&A P.M. Road Fatal Encounters Fatal Encounters (N) On the Case, Zahn Fatal Encounters Fatal Encounters World at War World at War World at War World at War World at War Oprah’s Lifeclass Oprah’s Lifeclass (N) Oprah’s Lifeclass Oprah’s Lifeclass Oprah’s Lifeclass Weather Weather Coast Guard Florida Weather Center Live Weather Weather Coast Guard Florida Days of our Lives Days of our Lives Days of our Lives Days of our Lives General Hospital ›››‡ Anna and the King of Siam (1946) ››› Magnificent Obsession (1935, Drama) Bumping Scarecrow

501 515 545 535 527

300 310 318 340 350

American Reunion ››‡ Wanderlust Twilight-Dawn Titanic: Blood ››‡ John Carter

Girls (N) Enlighten Girls Enlighten Girls Enlighten The Three Stooges ›››› The Silence of the Lambs (1991) Banshee “Pilot” Erotic Karma (2012) Shameless (N) Lies Californ. Shameless h Lies Californ. ››‡ Dante’s Peak (1997) ››› Air Force One (1997) Harrison Ford. ››› The Pirates! Band of Misfits ›› Scary Movie 3 (2003) Underworld

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


Sunday, January 13, 2013

D

PLACE YOUR AD ONLINE AT SUNFLOWERCLASSIFIEDS.COM OR CALL 785.832.2222 or 866.823.8220

Featured Ads KU Department of Special Education seeks a PT Program Assistant. Search key word 67336 at http://employment.ku. edu. Application deadline 1/20/13. EOE M/F/D/V

KU Department of Special Education seeks a PT Temporary Research Assistant. Search key word 303 at http://employment.ku. edu. Application deadline 1/20/13. EOE M/F/D/V

Find Jobs & More SunflowerClassifieds

Childcare Little Learners is hiring a full time TEACHER ASSISTANT. Must be positive, professional, and passionate about the care and education of young children. Six months of experience in a licensed center preferred. $10/hr, health insurance, 401K. Email info@kslittlelearners.com for an application.

Computer-IT KU’s Institute for Educational Research & Public Service seeks a full-time Research Assistant to assist the evaluation of early childhood programs in urban and rural communities in Kansas. Search key word 200566 at http://employment.ku. edu. Application deadline is January 21, 2013. Salary commensurate with experience. EOE M/F/D/V Truck Driver, Lowboy truck driver needed to move heavy equipment. Must have previous exp. benefits include company paid health, vacation, 401K. Call Brad at 785-597-5111 or apply at Hamm Companies, 609 Perry Place. EOE

Announcements Christal K-9 Obedience Classes

Enrolling now! AKC S.T.A.R. Puppy Program for dogs up to 12 mos & beginning obedience classes. CGC testing offered. Ask about the Pre-Enrollment Special!! 785-423-0596 North Lawrence Improvement Association Meeting -Monday, Jan. 14, 7pm. at Peace Mennonite Church, 615 Lincoln. Guest speakers City of Lawrence Park & Rec.. to talk about playground equipment that was installed at John Taylor Park. Also a person form Iwig Dairy to discuss Home Delivery of Dairy products. They want the neighborhood’s help to see if there is a need for this service. Also there will be a little history about the long time family owned dairy. All welcome! Info. 785-842-7232

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Programmer 1 The successful applicant will join CETE’s technology team developing web based assessment applications and will be directly involved in the development, testing and deployment of web based assessment applications using Java and J2EE technologies. Web-based assessment applications will be used for administering large scale assessments in K-12 schools Required Qualifications: 1. Master’s degree in Computer Science or Electrical Engineering or Engineering majors. 2. 3-6 months of work experience with Java or PHP or Perl Programming Language and SQL. 3. 3-6 months of work experience with JavaScript and Ajax. 4. 3-6 months of experience with web or application servers like Apache or Tomcat or others. 5. 3-6 months of experience in web application development Review of applications begins on Feb 11, 2013 and will continue until the position is filled. 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 http://employment.ku.edu Position number:00209150 EO/AA Employers

AdministrativeProfessional

AccountingFinance

KU BOOKSTORE FULL TIME • Customer Service

Pricing Coordinator/ Sales Department • Strong Customer service experience with two years experience using JD Edwards • Accounting background and basic data analysis skills • Solid interpersonal skills to work with sales and internal support groups • Ability to adapt and work well in a fast-paced environment • Must exemplify excellent written and oral communication skills • Highly organized and very detail oriented with ability to multi -task • Experience working with Cognos, MS Office , IBM Lotus Notes Excellent Benefits after 60 days Applications only accepted online at: WWW.BerryPlastics.com (Click on) corporate (Click drop down link to) employment Background check/drug test required EOE

AdministrativeProfessional

Supervisor Mon - Fri 8 AM - 5 PM Some Evenings/ Weekends $28,782 - $34,242

• Lead Textbook Clerk Mon - Fri 8 AM - 5 PM $9.70 - $10.86 Job Description & Online Employment Application available at www.union.ku.edu/hr. Full time employment contingent upon passing a background check prior to beginning work. KU Memorial Unions Human Resources Office 3rd Floor, Kansas Union 1301 Jayhawk Blvd. Lawrence, KS 66045 EOE

CUSTODIAL WORKER Mon - Fri 11 PM - 7:30 AM $10.00 - $11.16 Job Description & Online Application available at www.union.ku.edu/hr. FT employment contingent upon passing a background check prior to beginning work.

KU Honors Program seeks FT Administrative Associate to serve as receptionist, scheduler, and perform general office tasks including assistance with the implementation of program events and special projects. Search key word 00064931 at http://employment.ku. edu. Application deadline 1/20/13. $11.79hr. EOE M/F/D/V Need an apartment? Place your ad at ljworld.com or email classifieds@ljworld.com

KU Memorial Unions Human Resources Office 3rd Floor, Kansas Union 1301 Jayhawk Blvd. Lawrence, KS 66045 EOE

Banking Mainstreet Credit Union , Bonner Sps. Branch has immediate opening for a PT teller. Hours, Wednesdays 9-6; Sats. 8:45-12:30. Qualifications: in. l year teller experience in a financial institution, excellent customer service skills, “we can� attitude, professional appearance. Qualified individuals contact HR Dept., 913-599-1010 or fax resume, 913-599-4816.

KU’s Institute for Educational Research & Public Service seeks a full-time Research Assistant to assist the evaluation of early childhood programs in urban and rural communities in Kansas. Search key word 200566 at http://employment.ku. edu. Application deadline is January 21, 2013. Salary commensurate with experience. EOE M/F/D/V University of Kansas Programmer IIs in Lawrence, Kansas. Contribute code, provide technical support and development expertise to various development projects and applications, using Java or C++ programming. Requires BS in CS, SE or related & 2 yrs. exp. w/Java or C++ programming, incl. 1 yr. exp. w/XML-enabled Application Development, web-based application development, application of object-oriented programming techniques, development & maintenance of a database focused application, RDBMS, & UNIX operating system. Ability w/the following tools: HTML, CSS, JSP/J2EE, Application/web security; XML/XSLT, and SVN, CSS or other version control system. Ability producing technical documentation. Search key word 00206409 at http://employment.ku. edu. Applicant review EOE begins 2/3/13. M/F/D/V

DriversTransportation Drivers Truck

Due to continued growth Ashley Distribution Services is looking for CDL A qualified Drivers to join our Kansas City Regional Over The Road Fleet delivering to KS, OK, MO and TX. Weekly home time, day pay and drop pay, great benefits and the security of driving for the #1 home furnishings company in the world. We require 1 year OTR experience, good work history & clean MVR. For an application please call 1 800-837-2241, 8 AM to 4 PM CST Mon-Fri.

DriversTransportation

Education & Training

General $10 - $12 hr!

14 Full-time Openings! 40 hrs a week Weekly pay. Call John: 785-841-0755 Or come by 1601 W. 23rd Ste. 206, 11-7 Mon-Thur.

Drivers-$2K Sign on Bonus$ Start the NEW YEAR off RIGHT! **No Touch Freight** Weekly pay/Great Hometime Class A CDL. Hogan. Call Sandra 866-275-8840 sphillips@hogan1.com First Student -Now Hiring Part-time School Bus Drivers and Attendants. No experience necessary. Must be at least 21 years of age and pass a background investigation, physical & drug screen. Call 785-841-3594 for details or stop by our office 1548 East 23rd Suite B in Lawrence. EOE

CHEF

KU Department of Special Education seeks a PT Temporary Research Assistant. Search key word 303 at http://employment.ku. edu. Application deadline 1/20/13. EOE M/F/D/V

Fast food restaurant in Lawrence, KS. Prepare, season, and cook various dishes commonly known and familiar to Japanese and Chinese cuisines; instruct and supervise other workers in the preparation and cooking of foods; estimate amounts and order required supplies, such as food and ingredients; and inspect and clean supplies, equipment, and work areas. Must have at least 3 years prior chef experience in a fast-paced restaurant serving Asian cuisine. 40 hrs/wk.

EngineersTechnical

Education & Training

Mechanical Technologist Civil Environmental & Architectural Engineering is seeking a highly qualified mechanical and hydraulic technician, who can operate a variety of academic teaching and research laboratories. Will interact directly with faculty and must be able to establish priorities for projects in addition to operating laboratories. Requires a High School Diploma or G.E.D and three years of experience in troubleshooting, equipment repair and maintenance. For more information and to apply go to http://employment.ku.edu search key word ‘00003867’. Application deadline: 1/23/2013. EOE M/F/D/V

KU Department of Special Education seeks a PT Program Assistant. Search key word 67336 at http://employment.ku. edu. Application deadline 1/20/13. EOE M/F/D/V

Find Jobs & More SunflowerClassifieds

Resume: Royal Peking Restaurant Attn: Xin Liu 701 W 23rd St. Lawrence, KS 66046 Deliver phone books from YP in Lawrence & surrounding areas. Payment issued within 72 hrs. 888-404-5999

Happy New Career!!

Now you have to Work!! Start the NEW YEAR with GREAT PAY $2,000 per month and opportunity to advance with an established local company Full Time only 3 departments

LEADS/LABOR/MANAGER For interview call 785-856-1243

Program Coordinator College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Student Academic Services KU College of Liberal Arts & Sciences seeks FT Coordinator. This position will coordinate the launch of an online degree completion program designed to allow students who have completed the equivalent of an Associate’s degree at a community college to complete a Bachelor’s degree. Responsibilities include: Advisement of students regarding degree completion; tracking current trends in online degree completion programs; providing guidance to administrators regarding future directions in online education; organization of rotating course schedules and assessment of both courses and Program; and working closely with community college partners to assist students transferring to the Program, as well as relevant KU Student Affairs and Enrollment Management units. Search key word 00207242 at http://employment.ku.edu Application deadline 1/25/13. $40K. EOE M/F/D/V

!"ASS%F%ED A!!*UN- E.E!U-%/E The World Company is seeking a high energy, self-motivated, and professional inside sales representative. Account Executive will make outbound sales calls and handle inbound calls to sell commercial and private party advertisements and public notices in our Sunflower Classifieds print and online products that cover northeast Kansas. This position will sell, format, proof and obtain approvals on classified ads; legal notices or public notices for advertisement in any of the World Company publications. This is an inside sales position based in Lawrence working with employment, rental, real estate, automotive and other retail businesses in Lawrence, Kansas City, Topeka and surrounding communities, as well as, handling private party advertisements. The ideal candidate must be goal-oriented and comfortable making outbound calls; have experience selling print and online sales products, marketing and/or advertising; excellent verbal and written communication skills and interpersonal skills; strong attention to detail and organizational skills; at least one year of phone sales and customer service experience preferred; be proficient in MS Office (Word, Excel and PowerPoint); able to work independently with minimal supervision; and able to multi-task on numerous projects and work in a fast paced team environment. If you have a proven track record of sales success and enjoy a fast-paced environment, then we would like to hear from you! We offer a competitive salary and commissions with an excellent benefits package including health, dental and vision insurance, 401k, tuition reimbursement, paid time off and more! Background check and pre-employment drug screen required. To apply submit a cover letter and resume to hrapplications@ljworld.com. EOE

General

General

DETAILER, Part-time de- Warehouse/delivery driver tailer needed 24-35 hrs. per position. Duties include week including Saturdays. customer service, order We will work with your picking, daily delivery with schedule. Must be at least some overnight trips.7-6 18 years old to apply. You M-F and occasional Sat. need a clean driving rec- Paid medical insurance, ord and must pass a drug holidays and vacation. screen. Apply in person at: Must be able to pass drug CROWN TOYOTA, 3430 S. test and DOT physical. EOE Iowa, Lawrence 66046 Apply at Lawrence Battery 903 N 2nd St. Lawrence, Ks

is in need of Newspaper Delivery Route Drivers to deliver the Lawrence Journal-World to homes in Lawrence. We have three routes available. All available Routes are delivered 7 days per week, be fore 6AM. Valid driver’s license, proof of auto insurance, and a phone required. If you’d like to be considered, please email to Carolyn Wilson at cwilson@ljworld.com. and mention your name and phone number.

KU Endowment is accepting applications for the following vacancies: Video Producer Assistant Editor Call Center Coordinator Applications instructions and position descriptions may be found on our website: www.kuendowment.org Applications will be accepted until the positions are filled

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REPORTER Lawrence Journal-World is hiring a general assignment reporter to cover a variety of stories, which may include breaking news and feature stories. The job entails developing, researching and writing compelling stories on deadline for both online and print. We are seeking a well-rounded reporter with experience in digital and print media and the ability to cover a wide range of topics. Ideal candidates must have a bachelor’s degree in journalism or related degree; demonstrated writing and reporting experience; ability to use a broad set of traditional and digital tools to tell stories and engage the audience; an inquisitive nature to ask insightful questions; a passion for the news business; proficiency in Microsoft Office; proficiency with social media such as Twitter and Facebook; and the ability to drive, with valid driver’s license and safe driving record. Experience with photography and InDesign are a plus; one year of shooting and editing video preferred. We offer a competitive salary with an excellent benefits package including health, dental and vision insurance, 401k, paid time off, tuition reimbursement and more! Background check and pre-employment drug screen required. To apply, submit a cover letter, resume and link to your portfolio to hrapplications@ljworld.com. EOE

ŸÚ BĒĉŒŸ TŸŒ TğĒŽĹ&#x;›ŒńŠ äÄ’ÄƒÂź Ä’Ă? :ĂŞÂ?Â?ڟĹ„ ĝĉ ĂŞĹ’Ĺ„Š êĉ <|šğŸÄ‰Â›ŸŠ :Z ĂŞĹ„ ›Ĺ&#x;ğğŸÄ‰Ĺ’Úź Ĺ„ŸŸáêĉÖ¨ .ĉŽĹ&#x;Ĺ„Ĺ’ğê|Ăš B|êĉŒŸĉ|ĉ›Ÿ `Ÿ›äĉê›ê|ĉńŠ Ĺ?ĉŽ |ĉŽ Ĺ—ğŽ ZäêĂ?Ĺ’ š Ĺ?ĉŽ ZäêĂ?Ĺ’ äÄ’Ĺ&#x;ğń |ğŸ Ă”¨ĆƒĆƒĤĪÄƒÄŞĂŠÄƒĂŞÂŽÄ‰ĂŞĂ–äĹ’ š Ĺ—ğŽ ZäêĂ?Ĺ’ äÄ’Ĺ&#x;ğń |ğŸ ÄƒĂŞÂŽÄ‰ĂŞĂ–äĹ’ĂŠĂ„¨ĆƒĆƒ |ÄŞÄƒÄŞ HŜŸğĹ’ĂŞÄƒÂź qÄ’ğá VŸĹĹ&#x;êğŸŽ ŸÚ BĒĉŒŸ B|êĉŒŸĉ|ĉ›Ÿ `Ÿ›äĉê›ê|ĉń šÄ’ğá êĉ | ›ä|ÚڟĉÖêĉÖŠ Ă?|Ĺ„Ĺ’ÊĤ|›ŸŽ ĤğÄ’ÂŽĹ&#x;›ŒêĒĉ ŸĉŜêğÄ’Ä‰ÄƒÂźÄ‰Ĺ’ |ĉŽ |ğŸ ğŸĹ„ĤĒĉńêÂ?ڟ Ă?Ä’Äź ă|êĉŒŸĉ|ĉ›Ÿ |ĉŽ ğŸĤ|ĂŞÄź Ä’Ă? |ÚÚ ĤÚ|ĉŒ ŸĹĹ&#x;êĤÄƒÂźÄ‰Ĺ’ÄŞ `äŸ ĤĒńêŒêĒĉń ğŸĹĹ&#x;êğŸ Ă–Ä’Ä’ÂŽ ŒŸ›äĉê›|Ăš Ĺ„áêÚÚĹ„ |ĉŽ | Â?ğĒ|ŽŠ ֟ĉŸğ|Ăš áĉĒšÚŸŽĂ–Âź Ä’Ă? Â?Ä’Ĺ’ä ÄƒÂźÂ›ä|ĉê›|Ăš |ĉŽ ŸÚŸÂ›Ĺ’ğê›|Ăš ›ğ|Ă?Ĺ’Ĺ„ÄŞ `äŸ |Â?êÚêĹ’Ĺş Ĺ’Ä’ ›ĒăăĹ&#x;ĉê›|Ĺ’Âź |ĉŽ šÄ’ğá ÂźĂ?Ă?Ÿ›ŒêŜŸÚź šêĹ’ä ĤŸÄ’Ĥڟ ĂŞĹ„ ŸńńŸĉŒê|ÚĪ |ĉŽêŽ|ŒŸń ÂŽÂźÄƒÄ’Ä‰Ĺ„Ĺ’Äź|ŒêĉÖ ĤğÄ’Ă?›êŸĉ›ź êĉ | Ĥ|ğŒê›Ĺ&#x;Ăš|Äź ›ğ|Ă?Ĺ’ šêĹ’ä | Â?|ńꛊ ֟ĉŸğ|Ăš áĉĒšÚŸŽĂ–Âź êĉ Ä’Ĺ’äŸğ |ğŸ|Ĺ„ šêÚÚ Â?Âź ›ĒĉńꎟğŸŽĪ ŚĤŸğêŸÄ‰Â›Âź šêĹ’ä ĤğĒ›Ÿńń êĉńŒğĹ&#x;ÄƒÂźÄ‰Ĺ’|ŒêĒĉŠ T< ĂŠ Â?|Ĺ„ŸŽ ›ĒĉŒğĒÚ Ĺ„ĹşĹ„Ĺ’ÂźÄƒĹ„Š |ĉŽ Ĺ—ÊĤä|Ĺ„Âź ĤÄ’šŸğ Ĺ„ĹşĹ„Ĺ’ÂźÄƒĹ„ ĂŞĹ„ ĤğŸĂ?ŸğğŸŽĪ äêĂ–ä ń›äÄ’Ä’Ăš ŽêĤÚĒă| Ä’Äź & Š ŸŚÂ›ŸÚڟĉŒ šÄ’ğá ğŸĂ?ŸğŸÄ‰Â›ÂźĹ„Š |ĉŽ Ĺ„Ĺ&#x;››ŸńńĂ?Ĺ&#x;Ăš šÄ’ğá äêĹ„Ĺ’Ä’ğź |ğŸ ğŸĹĹ&#x;êğŸŽĪ ŸÚ BĒĉŒŸ Ä’Ă?Ă?ŸğĹ„ |ĉ ŸŚÂ›ŸÚڟĉŒ ŸĉŸĂ?Ĺ’Ĺ„ T|›á|Ă–Âź šäê›ä Â?ŸÖêĉń Ēĉ Ĺ’äŸ Ă?ğńŒ ÂŽ|Ĺş Ä’Ă? ÂźÄƒĤÚÄ’ĹşÄƒÂźÄ‰Ĺ’Ă? ZĹ’|ğŒêĉÖ Ĥ|Ĺş ĂŞĹ„ ¡Ĺ?Ĺ—ÄŞÄœĹ—ĹŽäğ šêĹ’ä | Ĺ?ĂŠÄƒÄ’Ä‰Ĺ’ä êĉ›ğŸ|Ĺ„Âź Ĺ’Ä’ ¡Ĺ?ÔĪŗÔŠ ĤÚĹ&#x;Ĺ„ | ¡ĆƒÄŞĂ”Ćƒ Ĺ„äêĂ?Ĺ’ ÂŽĂŞĂ?Ă?ŸğŸÄ‰Ĺ’ĂŞ|Ăš Ă?Ä’Äź Ĺ?ĉŽ Ĺ„äêĂ?Ĺ’ Ä’Äź ¡ĆƒÄŞĂ‘Ă‘ Ă?Ä’Äź Ĺ—ğŽ Ĺ„äêĂ?Ĺ’ÄŞ ŸÚ BĒĉŒŸ B|êĉŒŸĉ|ĉ›Ÿ `Ÿ›äĉê›ê|ĉń |ğŸ |ÚńĒ ŸÚêĂ–ĂŞÂ?ڟ Ĺ’Ä’ Ĥ|ğŒê›êĤ|Ĺ’Âź êĉ Ĺ’äŸ T|Ĺş Ă?Ä’Äź :ĉĒšÚŸŽĂ–Âź TğĒÖğ|ă šäê›ä ›|ĉ êĉ›ğŸ|Ĺ„Âź Â?|Ĺ„Âź Ĥ|Ĺş Ĺ&#x;Ĥ Ĺ’Ä’ ¡Ĺ?ÄŞĆƒĆƒĹŽäğ Ĺ&#x;ĤĒĉ Ĺ„Ĺ&#x;››ŸńńĂ?Ĺ&#x;Ăš ›ĒăĤڟŒêĒĉĪ ŸÚ BĒĉŒŸ |ÚńĒ Ä’Ă?Ă?ŸğĹ„ Ĺś|ğêÄ’Ĺ&#x;Ĺ„ Ä’ĤĤĒğŒĹ&#x;ĉêŒêŸń Ă?Ä’Äź ›ĒĉŒêĉĹ&#x;êĉÖ ŸŽĹ&#x;›|ŒêĒĉ |ĉŽ ›|ğŸŸğ |ÂŽĹś|Ä‰Â›ÂźÄƒÂźÄ‰Ĺ’ÄŞ UĹ&#x;|ÚêĂ?ŸŽ |ĤĤÚê›|ĉŒń Ĺ„äÄ’Ĺ&#x;ڎ ńŸĉŽ Ĺ’äŸêğ ğŸĹ„Ĺ&#x;ÄƒÂź |ĉŽ ›ĒŜŸğ ڟĹ’Ĺ’Ÿğ Ĺ’Ä’¨ ŸÚ BĒĉŒŸ TŸŒ %Ä’Ä’ÂŽĹ„ ŒŒŸĉŒêĒĉ +Ĺ&#x;ă|ĉ VŸńĒĹ&#x;ğ›Ÿń B|ĉ|Ă–Ÿğ Ä’Ĺš ĜĜĹ?Ćƒ <|šğŸÄ‰Â›ŸŠ :Z Ĺ?Ĺ?ĆƒĂ”Ă” HÄź ă|êÚ¨ :|Ĺ’äڟŸÄ‰ÄŞĂ–êÚÚêä|ĉŽŽŸÚÄƒÄ’Ä‰Ĺ’ŸĪ›Ēă CH T+HC <<Z ÄąĹ&#x;|Ăš HĤĤĒğŒĹ&#x;ĉêŒź ăĤÚÄ’źŸğ

TRAFFIC COORDINATOR / GRAPHIC DESIGNER Lawrence Journal-World is hiring for a Traffic Coordinator/ Graphic Designer. Responsible for print and digital ad traffic coordination; daily dummy and layout of the company’s daily and weekly newspapers and special sections; designs ads for print and digital products; manages all daily production deadlines in partnership with vendor; and facilitates and/or approves late ads. This person will work closely with our sales and news team, as well as third party vendors, to ensure layout procedures are followed and daily deadlines are consistently met. We are looking for a team player who is detail oriented, outgoing and has good communication skills to join our team! The ideal candidate will have traffic experience in a fast-paced publishing or printing operation; at least two years of experience with Photoshop, Illustrator, Flash, InDesign, Quark Express and HTML; bachelor’s degree in graphic arts or design preferred; a general understanding of news, print and digital graphic arts and press production procedures; customer focused with exceptional organizational skills and the ability to handle multiple projects simultaneously while meeting deadlines; strong attention to detail; can work with minimal supervision; and is available to work periodic evening hours. We offer an excellent benefits package including medical insurance, 401k, paid time off, tuition reimbursement, employee discounts and more! Background check, pre-employment drug screen and physical lift assessment required. To apply, submit a cover letter and resume to hrapplications@ljworld.com. EOE

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1-785-832-2222 or 1-866-823-8220


2D SUNDAY, *ANUARY 1-, 201General Hotel-Restaurant Ring in the New Year with a Job that’s right for you! If you are serious about a new opportunity where you will enjoy great pay/benefits then check this out. Westaff will be hosting a Career Fair at the following location: Monday, January 14th 9 am to 1 pm Lawrence Workforce Center 2540 Iowa Street Suite R • $9.00 hour • 1st, 2nd, 3rd Shifts • Production line operators • Machine Operators • Background/Drug Screen Re’qd Online Applications my be submitted in advance or you cannot attend please fill out an online application at: www.westaff.com

EOE

Healthcare Heartland Community Health Center now hiring Advanced Practice Registered Nurse & Registered Nurse positions. Heartland Community Health Center is a growing non-profit Christian Community Health Center in Lawrence, KS. HCHC is offering competitive salary and excellent benefits packages to the right candidates: experienced professionals who thrive in a mission-driven, patient -centered, family practice setting serving primarily the under -resourced population of Douglas County with integrated medical and behavioral health care. If you are an APRN or RN with supervisory clinical and / or management experience, send your resume & cover letter to jobs@heartlandhealth. org. To see detailed job descriptions go to heartlandhealth.org/jobsN o phone calls, please.

Lawrence Memorial has the following opportunities available. Physicians Central Billing Office Insurance Representative Health Information Management Services Data Quality Coordinator Information Technology Information Security Manager RN Opportunities Clinical Coordinator Emergency Invasive Cardiology Maternal Child Skilled Nursing Surgery

LMH was named among 2012 Best Companies to Work for by Ingram’s Magazine and Top Performer on Key Quality Measures™ by The Joint Commission. For more information and to apply for this position please go to www.lmh.org EOE

LPN

FT evenings Drug test required. Work on a great team w/compettitive pay Apply in person 1429 Kasold Drive, Lawrence, KS 66049 Physical Therapist & Physical Therapist Assistant Sign on bonus up to $15K avail! ARC has an immediate opening in our Topeka, KS clinic for a full-time PT & PTA. New grads welcome! CEU reimbursement, Med, Dental & Vision insurance, PTO + more benefits avail. Current KS license preferred. Contact Human Resources @ 913-831-2721 or employment@arcpt.com www.arcpt.com

Executive Housekeeper Executive Chef Front Desk Associates Apply in person at 200 McDonald Dr. or submit resume to: jshove@hulsinghotels.com No phone calls please. Immediate opening for kitchen managerexperienced cook. Apply in person at 1540 Wakarusa Dr., Suite L, Lawrence, KS 66047. 785-832-8800. EOE.

Management

Director Undergraduate Academic Services KU School of Engineering seeks a Director to coordinate student services for the rapidly growing student enrollment. Requires: 1. Bachelors degree plus 1 year experience in the engineering profession, student affairs or other relevant experience related to program management OR 5 years administering academic or student services and programs at the higher education level. For complete details and to apply visit http://employment.ku. edu, search key word ‘00003786’. Application review begins 1/22/13. EOE M/F/D/V

FOOD SERVICE FULL TIME

• Lead Dishwasher Ekdahl Dining Sun - Thurs 12:30 PM - 9 PM $9.70 - $10.86

FOOD SERVICE PART TIME

• Food Service Workers Crimson Café Training Table Varied Work Schedules $7.80 - $9.04 Part time employees also Receive 1 FREE Meal ($5.50) per day Job Description & Online Application available at: www.union.ku.edu/hr. KU Memorial Unions Human Resources Office 3rd Floor, Kansas Union 1301 Jayhawk Blvd. Lawrence, KS 66045 EOE

Pre-owned Auto Sales Position We are offering a career opportunity that rewards your hard work. We are looking for committed, honest and goal oriented people to take us to the next level. A top paying profession is just around the corner at one of Kansas’s fastest growing dealerships. We are not looking for sales people we are looking for sales professionals. If you are to be chosen for this position you will not only have an opportunity to make a great income but also receive generous benefits. Please inquire by email danny@dalewilleyauto.com

Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Social Services

Property Manager A Property Management Co. based in Manhattan, KS is currently seeking applicants for a property manager position for multiple properties totaling approx 200 units in Lawrence. Residential property mgmt. experience required. Qualified candidate must also be outgoing, dependable, and selfmotivated who displays good customer service and admininistrative skills. Salary based on exp and qualifications. Competitive benefits with 401K provided. Send cover letter/resume to: McCullough Development, Inc. Attn.: Director of HR P.O. Box 1088, Manhattan, KS 66505-1088 or email to hr@mdiproperties.com EOE PROPERTY MANAGER: FMI is seeking an enthusiastic & experienced Property Manager to run a large apt community in Lawrence, KS. Candidate must be upbeat, able to multi-task, & computer savvy. Marketing experience is a plus & attention to detail a must. Submit Resume to PO Box 1797, Lawrence, KS 66044 or email to jobs@firstmanagementinc.com

Manufacturing & Assembly Brown Industries is seeking quick-learning, self-motivated individuals with exp working with hydraulics, 12V electrical, welding (steel MIG), and an overall strong mechanical background and aptitude for the following positions: Production Mechanic Hy-Rail Hy-rail gear installation experience a plus.

Topeka Community Action Head Start seeks Bilingual Family Services Specialist Will provide supportive family services through a case management approach in the development, implementation of the Family Partnership Agreement for a case load of families (whose primary language is Spanish) of enrolled children, will participate in the development, implementation of parent involvement activities and activities related to recruitment, selection, and enrollment. Required: BS in Social Work, fluent in both English and Spanish. Preferred: 5 years experience in case management, experience delivering home-based services using strength-based approach. Salary: Exempt, $26,517 $35,000/yr., full-time, full-year position. SUBMIT APPLICATIONS OR RESUMES TO: Community Action, Inc., 1000 SE Hancock, Topeka, KS 66607. POSITION CLOSES ON 1/17/13. For inquiries, contact Mike at 785-235-9561. EOE

Trade Skills

Truck Driver, Lowboy truck driver needed to move heavy equipment. Must have previous exp. benefits include company paid health, vacation, 401K. Call Brad at 785-597-5111 or apply at Hamm Companies, 609 Perry Place. EOE

PUT YOUR EMPLOYMENT AD IN TODAY!! Go to ljworld.com or call 785-832-1000. UP TO FOUR PACKAGES TO CHOOSE FROM!

Maintenance Mechanic Preventative maintenance exp required. 5 years plant maintenance experience preferred.

All packages include AT LEAST 7 days online, 2 photos online, 4000 chracters online, and one week in top ads.

To apply, please email your resume with cover letter and salary history to: jobs@bcvi.com, or complete an application between 9-4, Mon-Fri at:

Days in print vary with package chosen.

807 East 29th Street Lawrence, KS 66046 No phone calls, please. EOE/Drug-Free workplace

Found Pet/Animal Lawrence Plant Seeking a Materials Coordinator. Requirements include: MS Office Suite, Overtime /weekends Previous Experience: Processing daily receipts & invoices, raw material data & production reports Qualified candidates forward resume to: Shirley.smith@Adeccona.com

Found: Purebred male choc lab. well mannered, has been in the Wakarusa valley, 4 miles south of Lawrence about 10 days. collar, no tags. 785-830-8012

Lost Pet/Animal LOST dog, 6 year old female Maltese named Lexi has been missing since Saturday, December 29, 2012. If you have found her or know of her whereabouts the past couple days please contact Antoine & Laura Polite, 785-224-7763.

• Food Service Worker Underground Mon-Fri 9 AM - 5:30 PM $9.04 - $10.12 • Cook North College Cafe Wed-Sat 10 AM - 8:30 PM $9.70 - $10.86 • Food Service Worker/Custodian The Studio Mon - Fri 9 AM - 5:30 PM $9.04 - $10.12 • Food Service Worker/C Custodian Underground Mon - Fri 7 AM - 3:30 PM $9.04 - $10.12 •Culinary Asst. Mgr. Ekdahl Dining Mon - Fri Some Weekends 10:30 AM - 7:30 PM $34,996 - $47,294 Full time employees also Receive 1 FREE Meal ($7.50) per day Job Description & Online Application available at: www.union.ku.edu/hr. FT employment contingent upon passing a background check prior to beginning work. KU Memorial Unions Human Resources Office 3rd Floor, Kansas Union 1301 Jayhawk Blvd. Lawrence, KS 66045 EOE

Auctions ESTATE AUCTION

Sales-Marketing

Need to Sell a Car? Place your ad at ljworld.com or email classifieds@ljworld.com

Hotel-Restaurant

Part-Time

Holiday Inn Convention Center is now hiring for the following positions.

Sunday January 13th, 2013 9:30 A.M. 2110 Harper Dg. Fairgrounds Bldg. 21 (Heated), Lawrence, KS 100’s pieces of costume jewelry from the Charles & Lila Shepard Estate (Carbondale, KS); 18K sterling diamond amethyst earrings; necklaces; rings; sterling; gold; compact purses; Bennett’s Ice Cream large metal sign & framed pictures; 1947 Fritzel Dairy receipt/metal sign; 1900’s fire hydrant wrench (Lawrence); Lawrence books; 1930’s Jayhawkers; KS Centennial ashtray; 1933 atlas; 1902 Scarborough’s New York Rail Road full size canvas map; butter crock; crocks; paperweights; Griswold ashtray; 70+ 1950’s Dell comics(Roy Rogers, Dale Evans, Rin Tin Tin, Tarzan); lighters; knives; military pins; advertising pins; belt buckles; money clips; metal toys; 1917 Ann Pennington picture; Hallmark ornaments; misc. coins; Rogers silver plate; many pieces of various glassware; ice cream table & 4 chairs; Shaker made Cherry dining table; matching maple dining table/china cabinet/tea cart; oak dining table & chairs; mahogany custom made dresser; oak child’s desk; full size bedroom suite; trundle bed; Whirlpool chest freezer; oak & maple gliders; new never slept on hospital bed; Pro-Form L18 treadmill; washer/dryer; records; speakers; Power Pro push mower; garden & hand tools; kitchen & seasonal décor; linens; numerous items too many to mention!!! Auction Note: We will be running Two Auction Rings most of the day! Many items to be unpacked, surprises for sure! KS Sales Tax Applies Auctioneers:

Elston Auctions

Home (785-594-0505) Cell ( 785-218-7851) “Serving Your Auction Needs Since 1994” Please visit us online at www.KansasAuctions.net/ elston for pictures!!

PUBLIC AUCTION Saturday, January 19th 9:30 am Knights of Columbus Club 2206 East 23rd Street Lawrence, KS 66046 Several estates combined, only highlights listed, sure to be something for everyone with two rings running. Auction held inside, so plan to attend!! See Complete Sale Bill and Photos at www.dandlauctions.com Collectibles and Glassware: Advertising Signs, Tins and Boxes; Peanut Jars; Macomb, Western & Redwing Crocks; Kellogg Wall Phones; Edison Dictaphone and Shaver; Cast Iron Tractor Seats; Old License Plates; Aladdin, GWTW, Reverse Painted Parlor, Floor and Dresser Lamps; Mantle and Wall Clocks; Pocket Knives; Bayonet; Cigarette Lighters; Adv. Ashtrays; Strength Tester Machine; Longaberger Baskets; Hudson Bay Blanket; Large Collection of Old Buttons; Old Valentines; Photo Albums; Postcards; Prison Art; Ant. Feather Duster; Buffalo Bill Bronze; Several Old Toys; Early Hillclimber Friction Auto; Marbles; Steroescope and Cards; BB and Cork Guns; Salesman Sample CI Caldron; Paperweights; Kitchen Collectibles; Yellowware and Spongeware Mixing Bowls; Pottery, incl. Native American, Weller, Hull and McCoy; Ant. Indian Basket; Copper Kettle & Pails; Papier-Mache Candy Containers; Ant. Canes and Yardsticks; 27 Hummels, incl. 10 1/4” “Apple Tree Boy and Girl”; Glassware, incl. Carnival, Fenton, Depression, Vaseline, Belleek, Wedgewood, Flow Blue Pitcher; Hen’s on the Nest; Toothpick Holders; 1870’s Jaccard Silver Salt/Pepper Shakers; Buffalo Pottery Pitcher; Tealeaf Ironstone; Limoge Collector Plates; Baccarat and Waterford Christmas Ornaments; 40+ David Winter Cottages; Clothique Santa Collection; Browning Compound Bow; Hunting Collectibles; Old Carpenter’s Chests; Huge Assortment of Small Collectibles and More. Jewelry (11:00): Huge Assortment of Estate Jewelry, Costume, Sterling, Some Gold; Fur Jacket; Pocket Watches. Antique and Modern Furniture: Nice Glass Front Display Cabinet; Walnut Parlor Table, Dresser, Chest and Ant. Commodes; 3 Pc. Full Bedroom Set; Quilt Rack; Ant. Oak Kitchen Cabinet; Round Oak Table; Walnut Dropleaf Table; Old Trunks; Mirrors; Old Pictures and More. Concessions Available

D & L Auctions

MANUFACTURING Stouse Inc., a specialty printing company in the Gardner area listed as one of the Top 20 Area Manufacturers, is looking to fill full time positions with energetic individuals who want to be machine operators, packers or shipping clerks. We will train aggressive self-starters with experience or individuals looking for a new career. The position requires a minimum of a high school diploma, some college a plus. We offer a competitive benefit and wage package which includes profit sharing. Call Fran Rumans at 913-764-5757 or send your resume to: frumans@stouse.com Stouse, Inc. Human Resources Dept. 300 New Century Parkway New Century, KS 66031 Drug Free/EEO Employer

Thicker line? Bolder heading? Color background or Logo? Ask how to get these features in your ad TODAY!!

Auction Calendar 2-ESTATE AUCTIONS Sunday January 13th, 2013 9:30 A.M. Bldg. 21 4-H Fairgrounds, Lawrence, KS Elston Auctions 785-218-7851 www.KansasAuctions. net/elston

PUBLIC AUCTION

Saturday, January 19th, 2013, 9:30 am Knights of Columbus Club 2206 East 23rd Street Lawrence, KS 66046 www.dandlauctions.com D & L Auctions 785-766-5630

Lawrence, KS 785-766-5630 Auctioneers: Doug Riat and Chris Paxton

SunflowerClassifieds WorldClassNEK.com

1 & 2 BR Available now, close to KU, downtown & grocery, Call 785-843-5190 1 & 2BR Apartments Call for details on our New Year’s Specials! Units available for immediate move in. Eddingham Apartments 785-841-5444 1 & 2BR Apartments. Utilities & Internet included. Small pets welcome. The Oaks 785-830-0888 Great location 1/2 block to KU at 1034 Mississippi. Energy efficient 1BR (Big BR) with private parking. Avail. now. $475/mo. No pets. Call Neil 785-423-2660 1BR — 740-1/2 Massachusetts, above Wa Restaurant, 1 bath, CA. $550/mo. & 1 month free! No pets. 785-841-5797 1BRs — 622 Schwarz. CA, laundry, off-street parking, No pets. $435/mo. Gas & water paid. 785-841-5797

785.843.4040 Senior Rent Specials & Short Term Leases Avail. fox_runapartments@ hotmail.com 4500 OVERLAND DR.

Townhomes

LUXURIOUS TOWNHOMES * 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

A GREAT PLACE TO LIVE

Move-in Specials Units avail. NOW 1BR apt., 2BR apts, 2BR Townhomes, 3BR Townhomes VILLA 26 APARTMENTS & Townhomes Quiet, great location on KU bus route, no pets, W/D in all units. 785-842-5227 www.info@villa26 lawrence.com

Four Wheel Drive Townhomes Move-in Specials 2859 Four Wheel Drive Amazing 2BR, tranquil intimate setting, free standing townhome w/ courtyard, cathedral ceilings, skylights, & W/D. Most residents professionals. Pets ok. Water & trash pd. $685/mo. 785-842-5227 info@villa26lawrence.com

HIGHPOINTE APTS W/D, pet friendly 1, 2, & 3 Bedrooms Reduced Deposits

NEW SPECIALS! 2001 W 6th Street

785-841-8468

Leasing for Fall 2013!

Chase Court, Applecroft, Campus Locations Studios, 1 & 2 Bedrooms (785)843-8220 Chasecourt@sunflower.com firstmanagementinc.com

Leasing Now!! 448 Grandview Terr - 1/2 month Free! 1745 W. 24th - 1/2 month Free! Contact RMS for Details 866-207-7480 or www.RentRMS.com

PARKWAY COMMONS 3601 Clinton Pkwy *Call For Specials* 1,2,3 BR W/D, Hot Tub Fitness Center, Sm Pet OK! 785-842-3280

2BR, west of hospital, large eat in kitchen, W/D, very nice, available now, $585, no pets, 785-423-1565

NO GAS BILL! LAUREL GLEN APTS 1, 2 & 3BR All Electric units. Water/Trash PAID. Small Dog and Students WELCOME! Income restrictions apply Call NOW for Specials! 785-838-9559 EOH

CAMPUS LOCATIONS!

Arkansas Villas - 3BR 3Bath Rollins - 2 BR Amazing SPECIALS 1008 Emery - 785-749-7744 3BR, 951 Arkansas, 1 month free, 2 bath, C/A, laundry, dw, microwave, $750, no pets, 785-841-5797

Aspen West

1/2 Month Free! 2BRs avail. $530/mo Near KU, on bus route, water/trash paid. No pets. AC Management 785-842-4461

Close to KU, 3 Bus Stops

Bob Billings & Crestline Leasing Immediately, Spring and Aug. 2013 $250 per person deposit No App Fee! www.meadowbrookapartments.net

785-842-4200

FREE RENT!

Hampton Court Apts. 2350 Ridge Court, #20 785-843-6177

Hunters Ridge Apts.

550 Stoneridge 1 and 2 Bedroom Apts. Salt Water Pool, Business Center, Fire Side Lounge and Tennis Court Call Today 785-830-8600 www.HuntersRidgeks.com

Limited time Only: Sign a lease, get $250 off 2nd month’s rent! Prices starting at $449/bedroom. Located on bus route, close to KU and access to upgraded amenities, including 24-hour clubhouse, fitness center, business center, 2 bark parks and indoor basketball court. Call 785-842-5111 for more info or visit www.campuscourtku.com Now leasing for Fall 2013! 1BR available immediately W/D, Pool, Gym Canyon Court Apts 700 Comet Lane (785)832-8805

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

First Month Free!

3BR, 2 or 2.5 bath- 2 car w/openers W/D hookups, FP, major appls. Lawn care & snow removal 785-865-2505

HAWTHORN TOWNHOMES *Call For Specials* 3 Bedroom w/Garage Pets under 60lbs OK! 785-842-3280

NOW LEASING!

Adult Care Provided Trusted Caregiver for you or your loved one. 20 yrs. exp. providing qualtiy day to day care. Respite care. Personal care. M-F or as live-in. prof. refs. Call Yvonne 785-393-3066

* Luxurious Apt. Villas * 1BR, 1 bath, 870 sq. ft. * Fully Equipped * Granite countertops * 1 car covered parking

430 Eisenhower Drive Showing by Appt. Call 785-842-1524 www.mallardproperties lawrence.com SUNRISE VILLAGE Check out our new patios! $300-$400 off 1st mo. rent! 3-4BR, gar, W/D, KU bus route, 785-841-8400 www.sunriseapartments.com

Duplexes Apartments Furnished Rooms (newly remodeled) Rent by week or by month. With cable & internet. Call Virginia Inn 785-856-7536

3BR, 2 bath, 2 car garage. W/D incl., lg basement walkout on golf course. 5 mins to KU. $1,200 +dep. Avail. March 1. 785-841-5010 First Month Free! 2BR, in a 4-plex. New carpet, vinyl, cabinets, countertop. W/D is included. $575/mo. 785-865-2505

Cars-Domestic

Bicycles-Mopeds 20” boys Huffy Rocket, $20 or best offer, please call 785-224-8107 20” Next Turbo kid’s bike, hand and foot brakes, foot pegs, shocks, like new, $65/obo. 785-224-8107 26” Women’s RM Roadmaster Mountain Bike, 10 speed, good condition, $50 or best offer. 785-224-8107

For Sale in Eudora Cemetery, Lot 42, Section 1, 4 grave sites, $900, value of $1200. 785-255-9428

Clothing Jacket, like new dark gray muton fur jacket. size 10 $50. Call 785-856-1144 Jacket, seldom worn, tan/white curly lamb fur jacket size 8, $45. Call 785-856-1144

Collectibles Electric train, American Flyer, 027 gauge (3-rail) ca. 1930, $95. Call 785-843-1378 after 6pm.

A Full Cord Seasoned Hedge, Oak, Locust & mixed hardwoods, stacked & delivered, $180. Call Landon, 785-766-0863 Cured Firewood for sale. Hedge, oak, locust, & other mixed hardwoods. $170/cord. Split, stacked & Delivered. Call Ryan at 785-418-9910 Reasonably Priced Mixed hardwoods. Please call for information 785-640-6658 Seasoned Mixed Firewood for sale. Lawrence area. Delivery available. Call Pine Landscape Center. 785-843-6949

Bed frame - Queen size bed frame, $35. Please call 785-218-2742.

785-766-2722

New Year Specials! Call for Details

625 Folks Rd • 785-832-8200

Houses 2730 Maverick, $850/mo, 3 BR, 1 bath, basement, large fenced yard, available now. Heritage Realty 785-841-1412

Peter Danko Arm Chair, Bent wood frame laminated birch, upholstered seat, back. Seat 19” wide 16 1/2”deep 33”tall. 785-865-4215. $100.

Machinery-Tools

2BR, Amazing old stone 2- Travel-Aire Pet Carrier house just S. of town, Kennels Like new used modern amenities. No only once, $5 each Gray, 24 pets/ smoking. $1170/mo. inches long X 15 inches wide X 13 inches high Call Please call 785- 841-2828. Chris, 785-727-5431 2BR Country home, 2 living areas, appls., full bsmt., Black floor lamp, $10. 124 hard top rd., 1 mi. to K-10, VHS tapes, $5. Crome bar with 3 pretty lights $700/mo. Call 785-979-0767 mounted on wall, $13. 785-838-0056 Canning Jars, glass, quarts, pints, 1/2 pints. $5 a dozen. 2BR, 3ba, 2000 sq. ft, on Mix or match. Call Lake Alvamar, secluded, 3 785-856-1144 acres, 30X40 outbuilding, Motorcraft Oil Change $1,750/mo. 785-749-3649 Pack, 5 qts. 10W-40 & FL1A filter in original carton 2BR, 715 Maine, 2 bath, 3 story, C/A, W/D hookups, (bought for our ‘66 Mus785-843-1378 DW, 2 car garage, 1 pet ok, tang) $35. after 6pm. $1350, 785-841-5797

(785) 841-4785

garberprop.com

Chevrolet 2011 Malibu LT, GM certified with 2 years of scheduled maintenance included, power equipment, cruise control, steering wheel controls, stk#18083A only $16,352 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Twin size mattress and boxspring, new, $100. 785-218-2742.

Bear Axle Straightening Gauge, No. 70, antique, in metal box 3”X11”X40”, from Bowersock Mill, $95. Call 785-843-1378 after 1BR/1BA FOR RENT 5 min 6pm. campus, Bus stop nearby $650/month. Please Call Miscellaneous 785-331-9360

Available Now 2, 3, & 4 Bedroom Homes $850 - $1150

Chevrolet 2001 Malibu LS, ONE owner, NO acccidents, and ONLY 49K miles! Beautiful condition, great gas mileage, NICE car for a great price! Nice navy blue color, clean inside. See website for photos. Rueschhoff Automobiles rueschhoffautos.com 2441 W. 6th St. 785-856-6100 24/7

For Sale: Twin size Tempur Pedic bed, extra long, motorized. 785-979-8260

Parkway 4000/6000

Saddlebrook & Overland Pointe

Chevrolet 2011 Cruze LS, one owner local trade, only 6k miles, power equipment, cd, GM certified with 2 years of scheduled maintenance included, stk#349091 only $16,819. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

4 piece living room, $750 11-piece Thomasville cherry finish dining room, $1450 All good condition Appointment only. Call 785-843-6750

Call for Specials! 2 & 3 BR Townhomes 2 car garage w/opener Fully applianced kitchen W/D hookups Maintenance Free!

LUXURY TOWNHOMES

Chevrolet 2010 Camaro RS, one owner, GM certified, remote start, alloy wheels, On Star, 2 years of maintenance included, very sharp! Stk#328131 only $21,815. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Firewood-Stoves

Furniture

Front Unit at Candletree Feels Like Home! Three bedrooms, two baths, fireplace, washer/dryer, basement, attached garage and swimming pool. Available Feb. 1. Rent $950 No pets. Pat (785) 760-2335

Cadillac 2004 CTS Luxury package, only 45k miles, bought new here, serviced here, one family owned. You won’t find a nicer car! Stk#658111 only $13,815. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Cemetery Lots

Seasoned oak firewood for sale; $160 per cord, $85 per half cord. Quickly delivered and stacked in the area. Call 3BR, 2 ba, all amenities, Lawrence or garage w/opener. 2801 785-331-7435 Four Wheel Drive $795/mo. 785-766-4544. Please leave a message. Avail. Now! 785-766-5950

Wheel barrel, $13. and 1 child’s car seat, $4. 1 Radio Flyer wagon $2. Please call 785-838-0056

Music-Stereo

Chevrolet 2007 Monte Carlo LS, spoiler, alloy wheels, power seat, power equipment and very affordable! Stk#113962 only $9,915. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Chevrolet 2012 Sonic LT hatchback, automatic, GM certified, one owner trade in, power equipment, alloy wheels, remote start, save huge over new and get 2 years of maintenance free! Stk#596471 only $16,425. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

3BR, 2 bath newer ranch w/ 2 car, CH/CA, new paint. Pianos, Kimball console Prairie Park area. $975/mo. $575, Howard Spinet $525, Avail. Now! 785-760-2754 Baldwin Acrosonic Spinet, $475. Gulbranson Spinet 3BR, 2 bath, 2 car garage, $450. Price includes tuning all appls. included, 6201 W. & delivery. 785-832-9906 6th, pets welcome $1,250/mo. 785-218-7264

Sports-Fitness

3BR, 2 story, 2 baths, 2 car Equipment garage, 3624 W. 7th, has study, FP, unfinished bsmt, C/A, dw, W/D hooks, 1 pet Golf Club, (1) New Nickent, $24. Please call ok, $1100, 785-841-5797 785-838-0056

Mobile Homes 2BR, 2 bath, in Lecompton, in quiet park, first month’s rent FREE! $560/mo. Call 785-887-6584

Roommates 1BR available in Deerfield area home. $400/month, utilities paid. 785-979-7643

Tonganoxie

ENHANCE your listing with MULTIPLE PHOTOS, MAPS, EVEN VIDEO!

Apartments Unfurnished

3BR country homes w/ garages, 1 w/ full basement, $700 - $850. Avail. now. 816-807-1832, 913-369-3055

Chevrolet 2011 Volt, GM certified, only 11k miles, leather heated seats, alloy wheels, navigation, this is an incredible car! Stk#19048. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Care-ServicesSupplies Training Classes - Lawrence Jayhawk Kennel Club, 6 wks. $75. Go to www.ljkc.com enroll by Jan. 16 Call 785-841-1781

Office Space Available Now 400 sq. ft. Office Space 5040 Bob Billings Pkwy $500 w/ all utilities paid (785) 842-2 2475

2005 Chevy Cavalier, 4cyl, 91k miles, a/t, clean car, 7995.00

Cars-Domestic

EXECUTIVE OFFICE

AVAILABLE at WEST LAWRENCE LOCATION $525/mo., Utilities included Conference Room, Fax Machine, Copier Available Call Donna at (or e-mail) 785-841-6565 Advanco@sunflower.com Small Offices Available Holiday Plaza 25th & Iowa (Lower Level) 160 sq. ft. to 270 sq. ft. Shared conference room & kitchen $140 - $250/mo (includes all costs) Associated Management Services, Co. Contact Steve 785-228-9595

Call 785-843-3500 LAIRD NOLLER 23rd & Alabama Lawrence

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Buick 2010 Lucerne Super S Edition, one owner trade in, GM certified with 2 years of scheduled maintenance included, remote start for those cold mornings, On Star, power equipment, stk#449741 only $24,415. 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Chevy 2011 Impala LT GM Certified w/2 years scheduled maintenance included, very affordable with low payments, stk#16717 only $14,396.00 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com


SUNDA&' )ANUAR& +,' -.+, ,D

BUSINESS Accounting

Caroline H. Eddinger, CPA, LLC Tax Services Business Consulting lawrencemarketplace .com/eddinger-cpa (785) 550-4149

Auctioneers BILL FAIR AND COMPANY AUCTIONEERS SINCE 1970 800-887-6929

Adult Care Provided Trusted Caregiver for you or your loved one. 20 yrs. exp. providing qualtiy day to day care. Respite care. Personal care. M-F or as live-in. prof. refs. Call Yvonne 785-393-3066

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

Dale and Ron’s Auto Service

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

Carpets & Rugs

Decorative & Regular Drives, Walks & Patios Custom Jayhawk Engraving Jayhawk Concrete 785-979-5261

EXTRA $25 OFF

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

Any Carpet Or Vinyl Remnant

All pieces $199 up. (Clip this ad or mention it.)

Warm, Soft CARPET

Remnants Dozens of Color & Texture Choices Factory-Direct!. Big enough for almost any room!

Easy-Care VINYL FLOORING Remnants

Kitchen, Utility Room, Basements & more in popular styles and colors! Armstrong & More! I First Come - First Served Buy BELOW Wholesale. Save 40%-80% PLUS Extra $25 Off!

Jennings’ Floor Trader 3000 Iowa St. 841-3838 9-5 Mon-Sat. 12-5 Sun. www.FloorTraderLawrence.com Follow us on Facebook too!

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.c om/westside66

Kiddie Clubhouse 2712 Stratford Road Lawrence, Ks 66049 785/856-0530 ccopp@sunflower.com

For Promotions & More Info: http://lawrencemarketplac e.com/kansas_carpet_care

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

Cecil Construction LLC All your home improvement needs specailizing in new const., siding, windows, doors, additions, decks, Fully ins. 785-312-0813

Decks & Fences Looking for Something Creative? Call Billy Construction Decks, Fences, Etc. Insured. (785) 838-9791 www.billyconstruction.com

Electrical

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

785-842-6264

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

Computer Repair & Upgrades Computer Running Slow? Viruses/Malware? Troubleshooting? Lessons? Computer Questions, Advise? We Can Help 785-979-0838

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

Retired Carpenter, Deck Repairs, Home Repairs, Interior Wall Repair & Painting, Doors, Wood Rot, Powerwash 785-766-5285

Insurance

Flooring Installation

Complete interior & exterior painting Siding replacement

785-766-2785

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

“Your Comfort Is Our Business.” Installation & Service Residential & Commercial (785) 841-2665

Foundation Repair

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

Mudjacking, Waterproofing. We specialize in Basement Repair & Pressure Grouting. Level & Straighten Walls & Bracing on wall. BBB . Free Estimates Since 1962

Wagner’s 785-749-1696 www.foundationrepairks.com

Garage Doors

Air Conditioning/ & Heating/Sales & Srvs. Free Estimates on replacement equipment! Ask us about Energy Star equipment & how to save on your utility bills.

Roger, Kevin or Sarajane

Landscaping

General Services

Home Improvements Full Remodels & Odd Jobs, Interior/Exterior Painting, Installation & Repair of: Deck Drywall Siding Replacement Gutters Privacy Fencing Doors & Trim Commercial Build-out Build-to-suit services

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

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

Int. & Ext. Remodeling All Home Repairs Mark Koontz

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

midwestcustompools.com

Lawn, Garden & Nursery Golden Rule Lawncare Lawn cleanup Snow Removal Family owned & operated Eugene Yoder Call for Free Est. Insured. 785-224-9436 Green Grass Lawn Care Mowing, Yard Clean-up, Tree Trimming, Snow Removal. Insured all jobs considered 785-312-0813/785-893-1509 ROCK-SOD-SOIL-MULCH

BATH.KITCHENS TILE.TRIM BASEMENT FINISHING

HANDICAP ACCESABILITY LICENSED & INSURED SINCE 1974 GARY-785-856-2440 gary@winston-brown.com

Retirement Community Drury Place

Professional Service with a Tender Touch

Stress Free for you and your pet.

Call Calli 785-766-8420

Live More Pay Less Worry-free life at an affordable price

1510 St. Andrews

785-841-6845

Lawrencemarketplace.com/ druryplace

www.cnnmobilepetsalons.com

Roofing Plumbing Precision Plumbing

New Construction Service & Repair Commercial & Residential FREE ESTIMATES Licensed & Insured

785-856-6315

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

lawrencemarketplace.com/p recisionplumbing

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

Haul Free: Salvageable items. Minimum charge: other moving/hauling jobs. Also Maintenance/Cleaning for home/business, inside/out plumbing / electrical & more. www.a2zenterprises.info 785-841-6254

STARVING ARTISTS MOVING

15yr. locally owned and operated company. Professionally trained staff. We move everything from fossils to office and household goods. Call for a free estimate. 785-749-5073 http://lawrencemarketplace. com/starvingartist

Painting A. B. Painting & Repair

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

Al 785-331-6994 albeil@aol.com

Taking Care of Lawrence’s Plumbing Needs for over 40 Years (785) 841-2112 lawrencemarketplace. com/kastl

Real Estate Services

Prompt Superior Service Residential * Commercial Tear Off * Reroofs

Free Estimates

Insurance Work Welcome

785-764-9582

Realty Executives - Hedges Joy Neely 785-371-3225 www.happyhomehunters.com

Tree/Stump Removal

Recycling Services 12th & Haskell Recycle Center, Inc. No Monthly Fee Always been FREE! Cash for all Metals 1006 E. 11th Street, Lawrence 785-865-3730 http://lawrencemarketplace. 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 Placing an ad...

Int/Ext/Specialty Painting Siding, Wood Rot & Decks Kate, 785-423-4464 www.kbpaintingllc.com

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

Lawrencemarketplace.com/ mclaughlinroofing

NOT Your ordinary bicycle store!

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

Is winter salt intrusion causing your concrete to flake? Mobile Enviro-Wash 785-842-3030

785-865-0600

1783 E 1500 Rd, Lawrence

Bus. 913-269-0284

REMODELING & HANDYMAN SERVICES

Needing to place an ad?

I COME TO YOU!

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

Moving-Hauling

No Job Too Big or Small

785-856-GOLD(4653) Jewelry, coins, silver, watches. Earn money with broken & Unwanted jewelry

Mold/Mildew on your house?

785-843-2244

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

Fully Insured 22 yrs. experience

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

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

Unsightly black streaks of mold & dirt on your roof?

LawrenceMarketplace.com/ kansasinsurance

http://lawrencemarketplace.co m/rivercityhvac

ADVANCED SYSTEMS Basement & foundation repair Your hometown company Over three decades 785-841-0145 mybasementiscracked.com

Water, Fire & Smoke Damage Restoration • Odor Removal • Carpet Cleaning • Air Duct Cleaning •

Heating & Cooling

Artisan Floor Company

Hardwood Floor Installation, Refinishing and Repair Locally Owned, Insured, Free Estimates 785-691-6117 www.artisanfloorcompany.com

Repairs and Services

Pet Services

Serving individuals, farmers & business owners 785-331-3607

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

785-832-2222

Painting Inside - Out Painting Service

785-842-0094

913-488-7320 Employment Services

LawrenceMarketplace.com/ bpi

Residential Commercial Prof. Window Cleaning Post Construction Gutters • Power Washing Sustainable Options lawrencemarketplace.com/ hawkwash Free Est. 785-749-0244

JAYHAWK GUTTERING

Home Improvements

jayhawkguttering.com

http://lawrencemarketplce.com/ lynncommunications

Janitorial Services Business-Commercial-Industrial Housecleaning Carpet Cleaning Tile & Grout Cleaning The “Greener Cleaner” Locallly Owned Since 1983 Free Estimates

Guttering Services

FOUNDATION REPAIR

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

Kansas Carpet Care, Inc.

785-842-3311

All Your Banking Needs

Cleaning

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

Construction

Child Care Provided

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

Financial

Your Local Lawrence Bank

YEAR-END REMNANT CLEARANCE SALE!

785-842-2108

http://lawrencemarketplace.c om/dalerons

Concrete CONCRETE INC. Your local concrete Repair Specialists Sidewalks, Patios, Driveways, Waterproofing, Basement, Crack repair 888-326-2799 Toll Free

Call 866-823-8220 to advertise.

IT’S

EASY!

Call: 785-832-2222 Fax: 785-832-7232 Email: classifieds@ljworld.com

BUDGET TREE SERVICE, LLC. 913-593-7386

Trimmed, Shaped, Removed Shrubs, Fenceline Cleaned

No Job Too Small Free Est. Lic. & Ins. 913-268-3120 www.budgettreeservicekc.com

Chris Tree Service

20yrs. exp. Trees trimmed, cut down, hauled off. Free Est. Ins. & Lic. 913-631-7722, 913-301-3659

Kansas Tree Care.com

Trimming, removal, & stump grinding by Lawrence locals Certified by Kansas Arborists Assoc. since 1997 “We specialize in preservation and restoration” Ins. & Lic. visit online 785-843-TREE (8733)

Utility Trailers

(785) 550-1565

mmdownstic@hotmail.com Lawrencemarketplace.com/tic STARTING or BUILDING a Business? 785-832-2222 classifieds@ljworld.com

music.movies.art.food.nightlife.

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

Locally owned & operated.

Free estimates/Insured.

EAGLE TRAILER CO.

Firesign Renovations is your solution for home repair/remodeling. 512-791-4366 for an estimate.

Manufacturing Quality Flatbed Trailers 20 years SALES SERVICE PARTS WE SELL STEEL WELDING SERVICES (785) 841-3200


!D SUNDAY, *ANUA+Y 1-, 201Cars-Domestic Cars-Domestic Chrysler 2005 300C, beautiful silver with gray leaher heated seats, and only 45K miles! ONE owner, CLEAN car and history. Fully loaded. Moonroof and backup sensors. Buy below loan value! Sale$14,990. See website for photos Rueschhoff Automobiles rueschhoffautos.com 2441 W. 6th St. 785-856-6100 24 4/7 Chrysler 2005 PT Cruiser Limited Edition. Ft. Riley soldier trade-in, Cool Vanilla, moonroof, chrome wheels, and only $4990 (KBB value $6732, loan value $6300). See website for photos. Rueschhoff Automobiles rueschhoffautos.com 2441 W. 6th Stt. 785-856-6100 24/7

2010 Taurus SHO 365 HP EcoBoost engine and AWD makes this Taurus an exciting car to drive. CARFAX 1-owner and low miles. Remaining factory warranty. P9897 $25,972

Cars-Imports

Infinity 2008 G37, only 39k miles, leather heated seats, sunroof, alloy wheels, power equipment, Bose sound, stk#656231 only $23715. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Cars-Imports

Mitsubishi 2010 Lancer one owner, sunroof, rear spoiler, alloy wheels, steering wheel controls, premium sound, lot of extras, stk#599933 only $15,815 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Cars-Imports

2010 Toyota Prius 41K, FWD, Blue ext, $17.500 Call 785-838-2327 LAIRD NOLLER HYUNDAI 2829 Iowa St. Lawrence

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

23rd & Alabama, Lawrence 843-3500 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Crossovers

Chevrolet 2011 Equinox LT fwd, one owner trade in, GM certified with 2yrs of scheduled maintenance included, sunroof, leather heated seats, alloy wheels, remote start, stk#309831 only $22,884. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Crossovers

2008 Nissan Rogue S AWD crossover with heated leather seats and a 4 cylinder engine that gets great MPG. Local trade bought new here in Lawrence and traded in on a newer crossover. 13T557A $13,874 LAIRD NOLLER 23rd & Alabama 843-3500

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2007 Chrysler PT Cruiser Touring, 4cy, only 47K, $7.800 Call 785-838-2327 LAIRD NOLLER HYUNDAI 2829 Iowa St. Lawrence

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

Lexus 2011 RX350 AWD, one owner, leather heated memory seats, sunroof, alloy wheels, power equipment, save thousands over new! Stk#600721 only $34,812. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Nissan 2010 Altima 2.5 SL leather heated seats, sunroof, alloy wheels, very nice! Stk#366371 only $17,800.00 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Cars-Imports

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2012 Volvo C30 This is a very fun car to drive. Turbocharged 5 cylinder engine with an automatic/manual transmission. Very zippy. Bluetooth technology and memory seats with a hatchback for storage. Over $30,000 brand new. P1078A $24,000

Ford 2010 Edge SEL AWD one owner, power liftgate, SYNC, leather heated seats, CD changer, power equipment, and much more! Stk#113961 only $21,444 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 843-3500

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2011 Ford Focus Ford Certified Pre-owned comes with a great warranty and peace of mind knowing that the car is almost brand new. Great gas mileage and plenty of room. P1074 $14,995

2003 Acura 3.2 tl, v6,a/t, silver ext,black lthr int, 117k miles, 8888.00

Lexus 2007 RX400H Hybrid AWD, one owner, power lift gate, tow package sunroof, leather heated seats, alloy wheels, navigation, very nice!! Stk#32142A1 only $24,588. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Call 785-838-2327 LAIRD NOLLER HYUNDAI 2829 Iowa St. Lawrence

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

BMW 2007 335I, one owner, leather heated memory seats, sunroof, alloy wheels, very nice! Stk#18259 only $22,714. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Call 785-838-2327 LAIRD NOLLER 23rd & Alabama Lawrence

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2009 Nissan Maxima

2008 Ford Edge SEL Great crossover with leather seats. Very safe with Ford’s Safety canopy system and advanced traction control system makes it easy to drive. 12T638B $15,780

Nissan 2006 Sentra 1.8S, automatic, great gas mileage, in shiny silver. CLEAN car, CLEAN history, fun and economical to drive. Famous Nissan reliability. See website for photos. Rueschhoff Automobiles rueschhoffautos.com 2441 W. 6th St. 785-856-6100 24/ /7 Rueschhoff Automobiles rueschhoffautos.com 2441 W. 6th St. 785-856-6100 24/7

2012 Volvo C30 This is a very fun car to drive. Turbocharged 5 cylinder engine with an automatic/manual transmission. Very zippy. Bluetooth technology and memory seats with a hatchback for storage. Over $30,000 brand new. P1078A $24,000

Crossovers

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Call 785-838-2327 LAIRD NOLLER HYUNDAI 2829 Iowa St. Lawrence

Mazda 2011 CX9, one owner, leather heated seat, power equipment, Bose sound, sunroof, tow package, 3rd row seating, stk#10890 only $23,598. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Dale Willey Automotive 2840 Iowa Street (785) 843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Convertible, heated leather seats, and phenomenal gas mileage. Very low miles and perfect for a commuter car. Roomier than you might think. 12C462A $11,000 23rd & Alabama, Lawrence 843-3500 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2012 Ford Fusion SE 4 cylinder that gets great gas mileage and a clean CARFAX. This is one of the most popular mid-size sedans on the road today and a great value. This one was more than $23,000 brand new. P1085 $15,412 Call 785-838-2327 LAIRD NOLLER 23rd & Alabama Lawrence

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2011 Hyundai Accent GLS, 39K, Auto, Gas Saver, $10.000

Call 785-838-2327 LAIRD NOLLER HYUNDAI 2829 Iowa St. Lawrence

The Selection

Premium selected automobiles Specializing in Imports www.theselectionautos.com 785-856-0280 “We can locate any vehicle you are looking for.”

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Call 785-838-2327 LAIRD NOLLER HYUNDAI 2829 Iowa St. Lawrence

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Have your car cleaned by a Professional! We will detail your car the same as our pre-owned inventory. Most vehicles are only $220.95 call Allen @ Dale Willey Automotive to schedule your cars make over! You won’t believe the difference! 785-843-5200 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Mazda 2007 6, one owner, fwd, ABS, power equipment, CD changer, very affordable! Stk#324441 only $9,415. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

2829 Iowa St. Lawrence 843-3500 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2007 Mini Cooper 5 speed, 63K, Blue Ext, Convertible, $13.000

2007 Hyundai Santa Fe Limited, V6, Blue Ext, 118K, $12.995 Call 785-838-2327 LAIRD NOLLER HYUNDAI 2829 Iowa St. Lawrence

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Call for details. 785-843-5200 ask for Allen

Mercedes 2008 E320 diesel, one owner, very nice car! You need to see this one! Leather heated seats, sunroof, alloy wheels, navigation and more! Stk#69828A1 only $25,368. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Hyundai 2006 Tiburon GT, alloy wheels, spoiler, power equipment, V6, fun to drive! Only $10,874.00 stk#485232 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Call 785-838-2327 LAIRD NOLLER HYUNDAI 2829 Iowa St. Lawrence

2011 Mitsubishi Lancer ES Low miles and a lot of factory warranty left. We sold this one brand new. Great gas mileage and a blast to drive. P1077 $15,000 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 843-3500

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2007 Hyundai Tiburon SE, 81K, 2DR, 6 speed, $11.367 Call 785-838-2327 LAIRD NOLLER HYUNDAI 2829 Iowa St. Lawrence

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

GMC 2004 Envoy XL SLT 4wd, room for 7, leather heated seats, sunroof, Bose sound, towing package, running boards, very affordable! Stk#596101 only $10,415. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

GMC 2010 Terrain SLE, one owner, GM certified with 2 years of scheduled maintenance included, alloy wheels, On Star, power equipment, stk#53828A1 only $18,415. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

2006 GMC Yukon Denali AWD -119K, AT, Dual Zone Climate Control, CD Changer, Moonroof, Heated Leather, 1-owner, Third Row $13,900. View pictures at www.theselectionautos.com 785.856.0280 845 Iowa St. Lawrence, KS 66049

2003 Honda CR-V EX 4WD-122K, AT, AC, CD Changer, Moonroof, Cruise, 2-owner, Clean $9,500.

2010 Toyota Rav4 V6 Limited-110k, AT, Dual Zone Climate Control, CD Changer, Navigation, Heated Leather, 1-owner, Clean $20,900. View pictures at www.theselectionautos.com 785.856.0280 845 Iowa St. Lawrence, KS 66049

GMC 2008 Yukon Denali, AWD, sunroof, leather heated seats, remote start, Bose sound, DVD, navigation, running boards, stk#445781 only $29,655. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com GMC 2003 Yukon SLT. Local family trade-in. 4X4, leather, and loads of options! Beautiful platinum gray. 125K miles and under $10,000. See website for photos. Rueschhoff Automobiles rueschhoffautos.com 2441 W. 6th St. 785-856-6100 24/7 7

View pictures at www.theselectionautos.com 785.856.0280 845 Iowa St. Lawrence, KS 66049

2007 Toyota Camry Solara

23rd & Alabama, Lawrence 843-3500 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2008 Buick Enclave CXL 97K, AT, Heated Leather, Dual Moonroof, CD Changer, DVD System, 2-owner, Third Row $17,900. View pictures at www.theselectionautos.com 785.856.0280 845 Iowa St. Lawrence, KS 66049

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

GM CERTIFIED is not like any other dealer backed warranty. Don’t let the other dealers tell you any different. Dale Willey Automotive is the only dealer in Lawrence that GM Certifies their cars and trucks. Come see the difference!

LAIRD NOLLER 23rd & Alabama 843-3500

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Buick 2008 Enclave CXL AWD, one owner, running boards, sunroof, leather heated seats, alloy wheels, navigation, On Star, DVD, loaded! Stk#451741 only $23,888. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Convertible with all the options. Leather, Navigation, Automatic, V6 engine. Only 67K miles. P1033A $16,748

2008 Lincoln MKZ Luxury and comfort come in this great car. Leather seats, remote start, and good gas mileage. P10025A $14,942

Symmetrical AWD from Subaru and great gas mileage from this small SUV. Very easy to drive and a CARFAX 1-Owner. Also has the GIANT sunroof. P1095 $20,495

2005 Honda CR-V LX

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Call 785-838-2327 LAIRD NOLLER HYUNDAI 2829 Iowa St. Lawrence

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

4WD-117K, AT, AC, CD, Cruise, Keyless Entry, 1-owner, Nice $10,900.

2013 Hyundai Elantra GLS, black ext, 4cyl, a/t, cruise, low miles, clean car, 17400.00 Call 785-838-2327 LAIRD NOLLER HYUNDAI 2829 Iowa St. Lawrence

2006 Ford Escape XLT, local trade, 6 cyl, a/t, 4wd, black ext, 93k miles, clean suv, 11988.00

GMC 2011 Terrain SLT, GM certified, one owner, tow package, alloy wheels, remote start, leather heated seats, sunroof, and much more! Stk#47851A1 only $25415. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

View pictures at www.theselectionautos.com 785.856.0280 845 Iowa St. Lawrence, KS 66049

2012 Mazda6i Great mid-size sedan and fun to drive. Sporty looks and room for 5 people. Also gets great gas mileage and of course has the Mazda “Zoom Zoom” effect. P1096 $16,995

LAIRD NOLLER 23rd & Alabama 843-3500

2007 Acura MDX AWD Base -99K, AT, Cruise, CD Changer, Moonroof, Heated Leather, 2-owner, Wow $16,900. View pictures at www.theselectionautos.com 785.856.0280 845 Iowa St. Lawrence, KS 66049

Ford, 2003 Escape XLT in popular Silver two tone. Very clean, V6 automatic and front wheel drive. Low miles for age. Nice little SUV with good gas mileage. See website for photos. Rueschhoff Automobiles rueschhoffautos.com 2441 W. 6th St. 785-856-6100 24/7

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2010 Subaru Forester 2.5X Premium

2009 Smart ForTwo Passion

Chevy 2011 Equinox LS fwd, one owner, GM Certified with 2 years of scheduled maintenance included, power equipment, alloy wheels, stk#397671 only $21,326.00 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

2007 Subaru Forester Symmetrical AWD and the 2.5L Boxer engine make this a very agile SUV. Easy to drive in all types of weather and still gets good gas mileage. Also has the Panoramic Sunroof and heated seats. 13T509A $12,600

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 843-3500

Great car for a first time driver. 5 door hatchback with an automatic transmission. Great gas mileage and a local trade. This one won’t last. 12T1083B $7,995

2009 Honda Accord EX-L, a/t, 4cyl, black ext, black leather int, 37k miles, 18732.00

LAIRD NOLLER 23rd & Alabama 843-3500

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2005 Ford Focus ZX5

Call 785-838-2327 LAIRD NOLLER 23rd & Alabama Lawrence

LAIRD NOLLER 23rd & Alabama 843-3500

4 door sports car. A lot of room in this fun to drive car with a 6-disc cd changer, SMART key with push button start and still gets good gas mileage. P10012A $19,500 Call 785-727-0244 LAIRD NOLLER 23rd & Alabama 843-3500

2004 Lincoln LS V8, 61K, White Ext, Only $11.995

AWD crossover with heated leather seats and a 4 cylinder engine that gets great MPG. Local trade bought new here in Lawrence and traded in on a newer crossover. 13T557A $13,874

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

23rd & Alabama, Lawrence 843-3500 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2008 Nissan Rogue S

Sport Utility-4x4

Thicker line? Bolder heading? Color background or Logo? Ask how to get these features in your ad TODAY!!

2008 Toyota 4Runner V6 SR5 4WD-74K, AT, AC, CD, Cruise, Moonroof, 2-owner, Steal at $17,900.

2008 Hyundai Santa Fe Only 35K miles and loaded with heated leather seats, sunroof, and navigation. CARFAX 1-owner bought new from us and traded back in. 13T622A $18,000

2003 Toyota Corolla 4cyl, Silver ext, only $5.500

LAIRD NOLLER 23rd & Alabama 843-3500

Call 785-838-2327 LAIRD NOLLER HYUNDAI 2829 Iowa St. Lawrence

View pictures at www.theselectionautos.com 785.856.0280 845 Iowa St. Lawrence, KS 66049 Need to Sell a Car? Place your ad at ljworld.com or email classifieds@ljworld.com

Sport Utility-4x4

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Toyota, 2006 Corolla LE. Local one owner, dealer serviced, adult driven. Gas mileage 38 highway, 30 city! Nice blue color and a great price- $1500 BELOW loan value, and qualifies for 2.9% loan. Service records. See website for photos. Rueschhoff Automobiles rueschhoffautos.com 2441 W. 6th St. 785-856-6100 24/7

Cadillac 2011 CTS Luxury Package, AWD, one owner local trade, Cadillac certified! Leather heated & cooled seats, spoiler, moon roof, Bose premium sound, and much more! Stk#675421 only $36,815. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Great AWD crossover with many features. Comes with HID headlights, heated seats, and Bluetooth hands free technology with Mitsubishi?s LINK system. 1 owner bought from us and traded back to us on a newer model. 13X427A $18,995

Toyota 2004 Corolla S. Very clean, two owner no accident car in nice navy blue. 4 cyl automatic for great gas mileage- 34 MPG highway. Very clean interior. See website for photos Rueschhoff Automobiles rueschhoffautos.com 2441 W. 6th St. 785-856-6100 24/7 Toyota 2004 Corolla S. Very clean, two owner no accident car in nice navy blue. 4 cyl automatic for great gas mileage- 34 MPG highway. Very clean interior. See website for photos Rueschhoff Automobiles rueschhoffautos.com 2441 W. 6th St. 785-856-6100 24/7

2011 Mitsubishi Outlander Sport SE

Chevrolet 2011 Equinox LT fwd, one owner trade in, GM certified with 2yrs of scheduled maintenance included, power equipment, On Star, steering wheel controls. Stk#308681 only $21,415. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Buick 2006 Rainier CXL, one owner trade in, running boards, leather heated memory seats, sunroof, alloy wheels, stk#593801 only $12,815. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

2004 Honda Element EX Real Time 4x4 from Honda a great car for the family. Easy to keep clean and drive in bad weather. Clean CARFAX. “Jazz Hands” 13B246B $13,995 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 843-3500 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Jeep 2006 Commander Limited 4wd, leather heated seats, sunroof, alloy wheels, steering wheel controls, towing package, power equipment and more! Stk#377621 only $13,817. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com Jeep 2007 Liberty Sport. Popular white, clean inside and out. 4X4, chrome wheels, ONE owner, NO accident Jeep, on sale for only $7995. See website for photos. Rueschhoff Automobiles rueschhoffautos.com 2441 W. 6th St. 785-856-6100 24/7

LAIRD NOLLER 23rd & Alabama 843-3500

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

FREE ADS for merchandise

under $100

Chevrolet 2012 Traverse special purchase 3 to choose from! Starting at $23,896. stk #17524. Hurry for best selection!! Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

2009 Jeep Wrangler Unlimited X, 65K, 4WD, V6, Black Ext, $20.350 Call 785-838-2327 LAIRD NOLLER HYUNDAI 2829 Iowa St. Lawrence

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com


Wife worried about alcoholic husband Dear Annie: I have been married to “Bart” for 21 years. I knew he had issues with alcohol. He has a pattern of getting sober for a few years and then relapsing over and over. He is truly a wonderful guy, but when he drinks, he’s like a different man. I feel as if I am living with Jekyll and Hyde. I’ve talked to him, cried, begged and threatened separation, to no avail. One Sunday, I spent the afternoon cleaning, and he went to his local hangout. He came home with a friend in tow and barely spoke to me. After dinner, Bart went back to the bar “for a few.” When he returned a couple of hours later, he was very upset. He called me names and claimed I wasn’t cordial to our dinner guest. I normally don’t argue with him when he’s inebriated, but I finally snapped and told him to get out of my room.

Annie’s Mailbox

Marcy Sugar and Kathy Mitchell anniesmailbox@comcast.net

He said he was going to leave, and the next day, he did, although I didn’t find out until his brother called me at work. So, Bart’s left me, and I don’t know whether our marriage is over. He didn’t take all of his belongings, so I’m sure I will hear from him. I don’t know if this is the alcohol or if he has someone else on the side. Either way, he’s a mess, and so am I. I’m worried about him and about what would happen if he gets drunk on the job or drives while impaired. I

‘Enlightened’ really shines Recovery is never easy, particularly for the acquaintances of those who are getting sober. That’s the essential point of “Enlightened” (8:30 p.m. Sunday, HBO). It’s a very smart, small show that offers a sympathetic look at its main character, Amy (Laura Dern), focusing on how her public efforts to live a more high-minded existence echo the same self-absorption that proved so destructive in her hedonistic days. As season two begins, Amy and her shy co-worker, Tyler (series co-creator Mike White), dig up damaging information on their soulless employer, Abaddon, and plan to leak it to ace reporter Jeff Flender (Dermot Mulroney). Amy’s newfound passion for corporate decency barely masks years of cluelessness. While everything she discovers about her corporation’s behavior is shocking and abominable, it’s nothing that hasn’t been widely discussed since the financial collapse of 2008. Is she right? Or delusional? And how much of her crusade is driven by egotism — an effort to “mean something” and “be somebody”? Amy is not afraid to ask those questions. And neither is “Enlightened.” That’s what makes this show so rewarding. — It should be fun to watch Tina Fey and Amy Poehler host the “70th Annual Golden Globe Awards” (7 p.m. Sunday, NBC). But should we really care about an institution that nominates HBO’s “The Newsroom” for best drama? Among the shows all but certain to be acclaimed is Showtime’s “Homeland.” It has certainly burnished that premium cable network’s reputation. The same cannot be said for three of its other returning series: “Shameless” (8 p.m. Sunday), “House of Lies” (9 p.m. Sunday) and “Californication” (9:30 p.m. Sunday).

Sunday’s other highlights

“Italian Cruise Ship Disaster: One Year Later” (6 p.m., National Geographic) recalls one captain’s very wrong turn.

Scheduled on “60 Minutes” (7 p.m., CBS): robotics and its impact on employment; the dangerous sport of free diving; Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor.

Gold tests boundaries on “Once Upon a Time” (7 p.m., ABC).

Peter gets contradictory suggestions on “The Good Wife” (8 p.m., CBS).

Mrs. Hughes seeks medical attention while Lady Mary pressures Matthew to rethink his surprise inheritance on “Downton Abbey” on “Masterpiece Classic” (8 p.m., PBS). — Copyright 2012 United Feature Syndicate, distributed by Universal Uclick.

BIRTHDAYS Comedian Rip Taylor is 79. Actor Richard Moll is 70. Actress Julia Louis-Dreyfus is 52. Country singer Trace Adkins is 51. Actress Penelope Ann Miller is 49. Actor Patrick Dempsey is 47. Actor Orlando Bloom is 36.

admit that the thought of cutting our ties makes me feel a little relieved, but after 21 years, I’m also sad. What do I do? — Heartbroken in New York Dear New York: It’s also possible that Bart is allowing his drinking to sabotage his marriage because he thinks you deserve better. And you do, as would anyone in your situation. Please contact Al-Anon (al-anon-alateen.org) and get some counseling. There are low-cost options through your church, local hospitals, university psychology departments, United Way and the YMCA. Dear Annie: Today in the mail I received a large envelope from a well-known charity. It contained a vinyl folder with a solar calculator, ballpoint pen, scratch pad and small appointment book. In addition, there was a check for me in the amount of $2.50. Of course, they also included

JACQUELINE BIGAR’S STARS

For Sunday, Jan. 13: This year you focus on your financial, emotional and creative assets. You might opt to pursue an innate talent and develop another moneymaking resource. If you are single, you do not need to impress a potential significant other. If you are attached, your significant other might wish you would spend less. The Stars Show the Kind of Day You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult Aries (March 21-April 19) A friendship could be in jeopardy. Stop pushing so hard when you and this person are on different sides of an issue. Tonight: Where the crowds are. Taurus (April 20-May 20) You can deal with a difficult associate for only so long. You need to be able to state when you have had enough. Tonight: Make a call to an older friend. Gemini (May 21-June 20) You can do only so much. Tend to an important matter involving a foreigner or a friend at a distance. Tonight: Your imagination takes the lead. Cancer (June 21-July 22) Do not feel so pressured to respond instantly to the many people in your life. You could be exhausted by recent events and need some time off. Tonight: Make peace. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) You could be overwhelmed by everything that is going on with a partner. You can’t fight this person’s battles, but you can give him or her some supportive feedback. Tonight: Out for dinner. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Let yourself concede to a key person, whether it’s when

an appeal for a donation. This is the sixth calculator we’ve received, to say nothing of the scratch pads and calendars. I stopped keeping track of the return address labels at the 500 mark. And any charity that sends us money is marked off our donation list. If a reputable charity simply sent a letter explaining what the donation would be used for, we would consider responding. Those that can afford to send out envelopes like the one I got today to thousands of potential donors don’t need my money, and they won’t get it, either. — Disgusted Dear Disgusted: We know that some charities believe sending small items will guilt recipients into making donations. And it obviously works, because they continue to do it, regardless of the wastefulness. But we cannot comprehend the justification for sending $2.50. jacquelinebigar.com

you’re making plans or working together to clear up a problem. Though you might not agree with this person’s ideas, you discover that there is validity here. Tonight: A relaxing pastime. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Emphasize having a fun time with a loved one. Don’t be surprised if this person gets giddy with excitement. Tonight: Avoid competitions. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) You might not be as upbeat as you have been in the past. Honor your instincts, and follow through on what you deem important. Tonight: Stay close to home. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Make a call. If someone is hostile, you might want to back off for now; on the other hand, if you know this person well, he or she might need to be pushed into making plans. Tonight: Talk is cheap. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) You might decide not to worry so much about a recent expenditure. You simply are in the mood to indulge someone, and that “someone” easily could be you! Tonight: Order in or go out for dinner. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) You beam under today’s lunar rays. You could be a little too energized for some people, which will make them feel uncomfortable. Tonight: Take care of lastminute errands. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) You could be a bit overindulgent as of late. You might feel some anger brewing within. Tonight: Get some extra R and R. — The astrological forecast should be read for entertainment only.

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53 Wee toy maker

21 Flexible, as a body

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SUNDAY , )ANUA*Y 1,, 201, /D www.upuzzles.com

UNIVERSAL CROSSWORD

LETTERHEAD By Tim Burr

1/13

Universal Crossword Edited by Timothy E. Parker January 13, 2013 ACROSS 1 Bedouin or Omani 5 Sound beginning? 10 Step ___ the plate 14 “Soft” or “silver” suffix 15 Apply thoroughly, as lotion 16 What high spirits do 17 Summit 18 Underground Railroad “passenger” 19 Much-used pencil 20 1978 thriller? 23 Anklebones 24 Tupperware piece 25 Short plane trip 28 Full of ruses 29 Something found in a shed 33 To boot 35 Tremble with cold or fear 37 Unmanned vessel that found the Titanic 38 Comes into being? 43 “Dynamic” prefix 44 Become extinct 45 Handed-out circulars 48 Bakery product 49 Piece of food for dipping 52 H that’s a vowel 53 Wee toy maker

55 Insecticide target 57 Be very well off? 62 Five of hearts, for one 64 Whimsically humorous 65 Anchor store locale 66 Off-color color 67 Britishaccented spokescritter 68 Stage accessory 69 ___ serif (font choice) 70 Notched like a leaf 71 Chart-topping songs DOWN 1 Stands ready for 2 Word with “equality” or “harmony” 3 Weapons storehouse 4 Complaints, in slang 5 Major in astronomy? 6 “To Sir, With Love” singer 7 Alternative to a ski lift 8 Romantic competitor 9 Iron deficiency 10 It dissolved in Dec. 1991 11 Archaeological fragment 12 Fraternity letter 13 Top of some scepters 21 Flexible, as a body

22 Enticing pitches 26 Olympian Korbut 27 Devious maneuver 30 Salad dressing ingredient 31 Roman who recorded Greek mythology 32 Lawful, informally 34 Float gently in the air 35 Word with “lace,” “string” or “horn” 36 Three-toed bird of South America 38 Casual eatery 39 Irish or Welsh ancestor 40 Dress rehearsal 41 Rocky hilltop 42 Beyond the

fringe 46 Clerical abbreviation 47 Sister ___ (“We Are Family” singers) 49 Serengeti expedition 50 Spotted cat 51 Olympics superstar Michael 54 Ending for “sea” or “way” 56 That certain “something” 58 Bad time for Caesar 59 Plumb crazy 60 Varieties or types 61 Arctic Ocean floater 62 Semi professionals use them? 63 Fla. neighbor

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ENHANCE your listing with MULTIPLE PHOTOS, MAPS, EVEN VIDEO!

SunflowerClassifieds WorldClassNEK.com


6D SUNDAY, JANUARY 13, 2013 Sport Utility-4x4 Sport Utility-4x4

Truck-Pickups

Truck-Pickups

Truck-Pickups

Truck-Pickups

Vans-Buses

Lawrence (Published in the Lawrence Daily Journal-World January 13, 2013) DEMOLITION PERMIT APPLICATION

We are now your Chevrolet dealer, call us for your service or sales needs! Dale Willey Automotive 785-843-5200

2004 Nissan Xterra XE, 4WD, 109K, V6, $8.333 Call 785-838-2327 LAIRD NOLLER HYUNDAI 2829 Iowa St. Lawrence

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Jeep 2009 Wrangler X unlimited 4wd, hard top, alloy wheels, automatic, power equipment, hard to find! Stk#596472 only $22,844.00 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com Nissan 2002 Pathfinder LE in beautiful silver with black leather. Famous Nissan V6, 4X4, moonroof, and more. Awesome midsize SUV. See website for photos. Rueschhoff Automobiles rueschhoffautos.com 2441 W. 6th St. 785-856-6100 24/7 Nissan 1997 Pathfinder 4X4. Very clean for age! Chrome wheels. Famous Nissan V6, autmatic. “New sale price- $3995” Burgundy with clean interior. See website for photos Rueschhoff Automobiles rueschhoffautos.com 2441 W. 6th St. 785-856-610 00 24/7 Nissan 1997 Pathfinder 4X4. Very clean for age! Chrome wheels. Famous Nissan V6, autmatic. “New sale price- $3995” Burgundy with clean interior. See website for photos Rueschhoff Automobiles rueschhoffautos.com 2441 W. 6th St. 785-856-610 00 24/7

Nissan 2009 Xterra SE 4wd, running boards, ABS, traction control, alloy wheels, local trade, power equipment, stk#159931 only $17,814 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

FREE ADS for merchandise

under $100

Chevy 2008 Silverado LTZ Z71 4wd Ext cab, one owner trade in, GM certified with 2 years of scheduled maintenance included, bed liner, towing package, alloy wheels, leather heated seats. Stk#382321 only $23,418. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Ford 2010 F150 Lariat 4wd, one owner, very clean, leather heated & cooled seats, running boards, tow package, alloy wheels, navigation, sunroof, stk#626692 only $32,651.00 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

1995 Ford F-250 XL HD, 2wd, A/T, fifth wheel, 163k miles, 7995.00 Call 785-838-2327 LAIRD NOLLER HYUNDAI 2829 Iowa St. Lawrence

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Honda 2004 Odyssey EX another one owner trade in! Alloy wheels, great dependability, DVD, power equipment, stk#52302A1 only $7,815. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

GMC 2008 Yukon Denali AWD leather heated seats, sunroof, running boards, remote start, Bose sound, navigation, and much more! Stk#539791 only $28,794. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

PUT YOUR EMPLOYMENT AD IN TODAY!!

Go to ljworld.com or call 785-832-1000. UP TO FOUR PACKAGES TO CHOOSE FROM! All packages include AT LEAST 7 days online, 2 photos online, 4000 chracters online, and one week in top ads.

2002 Toyota Tacoma PreRunner

2005 Yukon Denali, awd, a/t,fully loaded,tan ext, 131k miles,13995.00 Call 785-838-2327 LAIRD NOLLER HYUNDAI 2829 Iowa St. Lawrence

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Truck-Pickups

Chevrolet 2011 Silverado LS extended cab, one owner, GM certified with 2 years of scheduled maintenance included, tow package, On Star, power equipment, stk#358941 only $22,419. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Dodge 2006 Ram SLT 4wd, 4.7 V8, power equipment, tow package, soft tonneau cover, crew cab, 20” alloy wheels, stk#51222A3 only $19,598. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

2002 Ford F-150 SuperCrew CARFAX 1-owner and very spacious. Running boards, bed liner, tow package, and power equipment. P10004A $9,330

2004 GMC Sierra 1500 SLE

2009 Ford F-150 4WD SuperCrew King Ranch-100K, AT, CD Changer, Navigation, Reverse Camera, Tow Package, 1-owner, Clean $22,900.

Call 785-838-2327 LAIRD NOLLER HYUNDAI 2829 Iowa St. Lawrence

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

(Published in the Lawrence Daily Journal-World January 7, 2013) 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

Vans-Buses

2008 Dodge Grand Caravan

Ford 2011 Explorer Limited, one owner trade in, low miles, leather heated seats, sunroof, alloy wheels, remote start, navigation, 3rd row seats, stk#629041 only $31,415.00 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

2006 Ford F-350 Lariat, 4wd, a/t, v-8 diesel eng, white ext,53k miles, flint int, 27995.00

Autos Wanted

View pictures at www.theselectionautos.com 785.856.0280 845 Iowa St. Lawrence, KS 66049

23rd & Alabama, Lawrence 843-3500 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

View pictures at www.theselectionautos.com 785.856.0280 845 Iowa St. Lawrence, KS 66049 Chevrolet 2011 Silverado Regular cab, one owner local trade, GM certified, tow package, ready for any job!! Under 1000 miles! Save thousands over new, only $18,500. stk#351821 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

GMC 2010 Sierra Ext cab, GM Certified with 2yrs of scheduled maintenance included, one owner, running boards, On Star, power equipment. Stk#386021 only $21,455. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

V6 SR5 2WD-110K, AT, AC, CD, Cruise, Cloth Interior, 2-owner, Save $11,900.

Thicker line? Bolder heading? Color background or Logo? Ask how to get these features in your ad TODAY!!

Crew Cab 4X4-77K, AT, Dual Zone Climate Control, CD, Line-X Bed, Cruise Control, Tow Package, 1-owner, Low Miles $17,900. View pictures at www.theselectionautos.com 785.856.0280 845 Iowa St. Lawrence, KS 66049

ENHANCE your listing with MULTIPLE PHOTOS, MAPS, EVEN VIDEO!

Low miles and 3rd row Sto ‘n’ Go. Built in car seats in the middle row and the LATCH system for other car seats. Great minivan from the original minivan maker. 12C1216A $12,500 23rd & Alabama, Lawrence 843-3500 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com Ford, 2006 Freestar. White with tan leather, very clean, rear heat, DVD player, and dual sliding doors. Nice clean family van, at a great sale price of $6995. See website for photos. Rueschhoff Automobiles rueschhoffautos.com 2441 W. 6th St. 785-856-6100 24/7

Date: Jan. 10, 2013 Project Address: 1545 N. 3rd Street Legal Description: One Lot No. 1 Lawrence Recycle Center Property Owner Information: Advantage Metals Recycling, 510 Walnut St., Suite 300, Kansas City, MO 64106 (816) 861-2700 (321) 626-0726 Signature: on file Person, Firm or Corporation responsible for the building, if it is someone other than the owner: N/A Contractor Information: Bahm Demolition, PO BOX 326, Silver Lake, KS 66539 (785) 582-5190 www.bahmdemolition.com Brief Description of Structure: Demolition and removal of three structures consisting of approximately 21,750 sq. feet Signature of Applicant: Chester Jones ________

Lawrence (Published in the Lawrence Daily Journal-World January 12, 2013)

Need an apartment? Place your ad at ljworld.com or email classifieds@ljworld.com

DBE/WBE Invitation to Bid Leavenworth Excavating & Equipment Co., Inc. solicits proposals from certified DBE/WBE Firms qualified to bid the following projects: KDOT Douglas Co., Call 205 U059-023 U 0015-01 that bids on 1-16-13. Contact Lexeco Inc., Box 168, Leav. KS 66048, 913-682-3584. EOE. ________

NEED TO SELL YOUR CAR? Reach readers in print and online across Northeast Kansas! Create your ad in minutes today on

1-785-832-2222 or 1-866-823-8220

Douglas County, Kansas Request for Proposals No. 12-F-0026 Douglas County, Kansas is soliciting proposals from experienced and qualified construction management companies for the construction of a new Public Works Facility providing construction management at-risk services. A copy of the Request for Proposals can be obtained through Douglas County Purchasing at (785) 832-5358 or jwaggoner@douglas-county.co m. The RFP can also be found through the Douglas County website (www.douglas-county.com/site s/purchasing) by clicking the Douglas County Bids Online link or from the DemandStar website (www.demandstar.com) Sealed proposals must be received in the Office of the Douglas County Clerk’s Office, Douglas County Courthouse, 1100 Massachusetts, Lawrence, KS 66044 before 3:00 p.m. CST, Friday, January 25, 2013. The Board of County Commissioners BY: Jackie Waggoner Purchasing Director


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