Lawrence Journal-World 01-20-2017

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BIG RECRUITING WEEKEND AHEAD FOR KANSAS FOOTBALL. PAGE 1D INAUGURAL ADDRESS WILL BE BIG TEST FOR TRUMP.

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Friday • January 20 • 2017

PUBLISHED SINCE 1891

Lawmakers begin debating repeal of LLC exemption By Peter Hancock phancock@ljworld.com

Topeka — The largest committee room in the Statehouse was packed Thursday, with many people left standing in the

halls, as the House Taxation Committee opened hearings on one of the weightiest issues of the session: whether to repeal one of Gov. Sam Brownback’s signature tax cuts of 2012 that benefits the owners of more

than 330,000 farms and businesses. House Bill 2023 would put a sunset, retroactive to Jan. 1, on what is commonly called the LLC exemption, a law that completely exempts from state taxes income

earned from pass-through entities such as limited liability companies, partnerships and sole proprietorships. The issue has been pushed to the forefront as the state faces a mounting revenue shortfall that

analysts say could continue for years into the future unless the Legislature either raises taxes or cuts spending to bring the budget back into structural balance.

> DEBATE, 6A

LEGISLATURE

KanCare WHY THEY’RE MARCHING renewal request denied —

Colyer denounces federal action as politically motivated By Peter Hancock phancock@ljworld.com

Nick Krug/Journal-World Photos

Topeka — Citing a host of problems and noncompliance with federal laws and regulations, the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services has denied the state’s request to extend a waiver that allowed it to operate This is its privasimply an tized manugly parting aged care Medicaid shot from system the Obama known as administration KanCare. at Governor In a letter datBrownback on ed Jan. their way out 13, CMS the door.” said that through— Lt. Gov. Jeff Colyer out 2016 it received numerous complaints from Medicaid patients and health care providers, complaints it said were verified during an on-site review in October. “Due to the severe and pervasive nature of the on-site review findings and the resulting impacts this has on the beneficiaries and providers, CMS is

ABOVE: REV. ELEANOR MCCORMICK OF PLYMOUTH CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH kneels in the driver’s seat of a bus to get a group photograph of those on board headed to Washington, D.C., for Saturday’s Women’s March on Washington. The group left Thursday night from the church. BELOW: Dorothy Hoyt-Reed, Lawrence, gives her husband Ralph Reed a hug as she prepares to board the bus.

Hundreds bound for women’s rally in D.C.

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Hundreds of Lawrence and area residents are on their way. On Saturday, the At least three charday after Donald tered buses are leaving Trump’s inauguration from Lawrence to carry as President of the people — most, though United States, tens of not all, are women — to thousands are expect- the nation’s capital for ed to participate in the event. the Women’s March > MARCH, 2A on Washington. By Sara Shepherd

sshepherd@ljworld.com

This is very much a personal, a professional, a faith walk — march — for me.” — Eleanor McCormick

I want to say that I’m part of this community, I’m part of this country, I’m part of the history now.”

I want (my grandchildren) to grow up in a world where people are kind to each other.”

— Marylin Hinojosa

— Judy Prather

> KANCARE, 2A

Public meetings next week will kick off city’s first parking study

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neighborhoods, as well as collect ideas from those who live or work in the area. The The City of Lawrence’s first study area encompasses a parking study begins next dozen neighborhoods, includ— Brandon McGuire, assistant to the city manager week with public meetings ing East Lawrence, Old West to gather feedback from resiLawrence and the Oread dents, business owners and Neighborhood. developers in the core of the The meeting will inform parking issues afflicting The feedback will be one elcity. a consultant-led study on downtown and surrounding ement of the study, which will By Rochelle Valverde

rvalverde@ljworld.com

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VOL. 159 / NO. 20 / 24 PAGES

We get contacted almost weekly by residents, especially with ideas about different types of solutions that the city ought to think about implementing for parking.”

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be used to develop the city’s first strategic parking plan. Brandon McGuire, assistant to the city manager, said they are looking for both concerns and suggestions to improve parking. “We get contacted almost

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Friday, January 20, 2017

KanCare CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A

requiring Kansas to develop a Corrective Action plan (CAP) describing the actions it will take to correct the identified noncompliance,” James G. Scott, CMS’s associate regional administrator in Kansas City, said in the letter. The official notification of CMS’s denial came in a separate letter dated Tuesday, Jan. 17. Some of the deficiencies cited relate to the very core concepts that were supposed to make KanCare superior to traditional Medicaid programs. The idea behind KanCare was that the state would hand over administration of the program to private insurance companies that would operate it as a “managed care” program, meaning each patient would have a plan of care, agreed to by the patient, and the companies, known as Managed Care Organizations, or MCOs, would ensure that

.

LAWRENCE • STATE

We were telling CMS before KanCare was officially established (in 2013) that these problems were going to exist.” — Sen. Laura Kelly, D-Topeka, the ranking Democrat on the Senate Public Health and Welfare Committee

patients were getting the care outlined in the plan. In order to do that, however, the state needed a waiver from CMS to operate its Medicaid program differently from the traditional fee-for-service model. That waiver is set to expire Dec. 31, 2017. Kansas applied for a one-year extension. The letters indicate that CMS is denying that request for the time being, at least until state officials submit a corrective action plan detailing how they will come into compliance. In the Jan. 13 letter, CMS said it uncovered “significant compliance deficiencies” in the planning process, such as MCOs asking patients to sign incomplete forms, and even revising the plans without input from the patient. CMS also said there was a lack of coordination

between the Kansas Department of Health and Environment and the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services, the two agencies responsible for KanCare. It also noted that, “The State’s oversight of the MCOs has diminished over the four years of KanCare operation.” It noted that the first annual report of the KanCare program was a comprehensive document that identified issues and included corrective action plans for the MCOs. But the 2014 and 2015 reports “were each two pages long, with little content of substance.” Lt. Gov. Jeff Colyer, who is considered the chief architect of KanCare, was in Washington Thursday to attend the inauguration of President-elect Donald Trump and to meet with

congressional leaders about the future of Medicaid. He issued an email statement dismissing CMS’s action as politically motivated and said the renewal process is “on track.” “This is simply an ugly parting shot from the Obama administration at Governor Brownback on their way out the door,” Colyer said. “It is politically motivated pure and simple, and we expect this situation to be resolved quickly once the new administration in Washington comes into office.” Colyer said the state received a preliminary audit report in November and that it had already begun to address issues raised in that report. “In November the state received a preliminary audit report and we had already begun to address these issues,” Colyer said. “There are no revelations in this most recent audit report.” Kansas lawmakers, however, had a far different response to the news, which was first reported on the Topeka Capital-Journal’s website Wednesday night.

March

Sen. Vicki Schmidt, RTopeka, who chairs the Senate Public Health and Welfare Committee, said she plans to hold hearings starting Monday to ask questions of KDHE Secretary Susan Mosier, whose department is primarily responsible for administering KanCare. “Secretary Mosier was in my office for a halfhour yesterday (Wednesday) and never mentioned this,” Schmidt told reporters Thursday. Sen. Laura Kelly, of Topeka, the ranking Democrat on the health committee who has also served on the joint KanCare oversight committee, said lawmakers have known for some time about the problems identified by CMS. “We were telling CMS before KanCare was officially established (in 2013) that these problems were going to exist,” Kelly said. “We have been in regular communication with CMS over the last few years, keeping them abreast of what the issues were with the program.” — Statehouse reporter Peter Hancock can be reached at 354-4222. Follow him on Twitter: @LJWpqhancock

being deeply opposed to anything that celebrates misogyny.” In Topeka, Jahanbani hopes to ensure lawmakers whose decisions directly affect her life see her, along with other marchers. “What’s happening in Washington, things that the president-elect has said and the things that by implication many Republicans have endorsed, physically standing up to that on Saturday is why I want to do this,” she said. “This is what believing in equal rights for all looks like.”

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A

Other residents are heading there in smaller groups by road or plane. Though not naming Trump, the Women’s March on Washington mission statement calls the rhetoric of the presidential election insulting, threatening and demonizing to women and other marginalized groups. “We join in diversity to show our presence in numbers too great to ignore,” the mission statement says. “The Women’s March on Washington will send a bold message to our new government on their first day in office, and to the world that women’s rights are human rights. We stand together, recognizing that defending the most marginalized among us is defending all of us.” Lawrence resident Megan Brokaw is a costate administrator for the Women’s March on Washington initiative in Kansas. She said she volunteered to help with the Kansas chapter a few days after the election. The group has organized three 54-passenger buses departing — two from Lawrence and one from Wichita — this morning, driving overnight to Washington, and leaving the capital Saturday evening after the march. All three buses are full, Brokaw said. She said her group also helped coordinate ride-sharing for people who wanted to drive to Washington or were wait-listed for the buses. Another 56-seat bus — also full — left Thursday night from Plymouth Congregational Church. Associate Pastor Eleanor McCormick said a “generous” member of the congregation enabled the church to charter the bus. Other donations enabled people who couldn’t afford the $100 fee to ride. Plymouth bus riders, mostly church regulars, will be hosted Friday night in the homes of members of another church congregation in Alexandria, Va., McCormick said. Marches in Topeka and Kansas City, Mo., are among more than 600 “Sister Marches” expected to involve an additional 1.3 million people worldwide, according to the Women’s March on Washington website. Lawrence residents are headed to those, as well. Participants say they hope to keep gathering and continue their movement after they return. Here are six of the Lawrence women who

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Nick Krug/Journal-World Photo

SISTERS AND LAWRENCE NATIVES TENNERY CARTTAR, KANSAS CITY, KAN., RIGHT, REBBECCA LU, OLATHE, AND JOHANNA CARTTAR, LENEXA, join hands in prayer next to their father, Stephen Carttar, of Lawrence, and his wife, Cindy Carttar, at Plymouth Congregational Church. The three sisters, their father and about 50 others boarded a bus bound for the Women’s March on Washington at the church on Thursday night.

Area marches “Sister Marches” to the Women’s March on Washington are planned Saturday in Topeka and Kansas City, Mo. The Topeka march is set for 1 p.m. at the Kansas Statehouse, 300 SW 10th Ave. The Kansas City march is set for 1 p.m. at Washington Square Park, Pershing Road and Grand Boulevard. The Women’s March on Washington website, womensmarch.com, has a complete list of Sister Marches. The Emily Taylor Center for Women and Gender Equity at the University of Kansas has chartered a bus to the Topeka march, which is free for KU community members. As of Thursday afternoon, two seats remained on the 46seat bus. To RSVP, email emilytaylorcenter@ ku.edu. are planning to march in Washington or closer to home, and why they’re doing so.

Judy Prather Prather, 64, is “very aware” that she is white, educated and has enjoyed a good life and support to realize her potential. “This is my first protest,” said Prather, who is going to Washington on the Plymouth bus. “There are people who would like to be there who are too poor, too frightened or too marginalized to be there, and so I would like to lend a voice to them.” Prather does not like Trump — she thinks he’s “unqualified” for the office — but protesting

him is not her motivation. She gave that a lot of thought before signing up, and she wants to promote kindness, in particular for the future for her three young grandchildren. “I want them to grow up in a world where people are kind to each other,” she said. “I want them to know that’s not the way you treat anybody who’s different than you.”

what you’re for.”

Marylin Hinojosa Hinojosa, 27, is a Latina artist heading to Washington in the Makerspace van, a trip she said would have been “impossible” for her to afford on her own. After they return from Washington, she and her fellow marching “makers” plan to put together an exhibit inspired by their experience. Hinojosa said the Barbara Alane Kerr election cycle preceding Kerr, distinguished Trump’s inauguration professor of counselwas “hurtful,” but also ing psychology at the energized her. University of Kansas, is “I never voted before flying to Washington, this year. I never felt like where she said she plans it was important for a perto take care of National son like me to vote — it Science Foundation busi- was like one not-so-great ness on Friday and to choice over another,” march on Saturday. Hinojosa said. “His hate But shortly after the speech and rhetoric and election, Kerr started a all this negativity that he’s GoFundMe campaign to bringing out, it’s made raise money for others to me feel that I’ve been join her, specifically artists targeted, specifically as a and other creative people woman and a person who from the Lawrence Creis Mexican-American. I ates Makerspace, which feel like it is very personal she co-founded. at this point.” “I was concerned at the Hinojosa said she wants very beginning when the to represent “brown march was announced people” in Washington. that it was going to be a “I want to say that I’m white woman’s march,” part of this community, said Kerr, who is white. I’m part of this country, “I wanted creative people I’m part of the history to be represented, and I now,” she said. wanted women of color to Sheyda Jahanbani be represented.” Jahanbani, an associThe $3,000 she raised ate professor of history in about three days is at KU, is going to the funding a van, hotel Topeka march with her rooms, food and some all-weather gear for nine 3-year-old daughter and “makers,” who Kerr said her 67-year-old mother. are all women of color, to She’s participating for feminism and against go to Washington. misogyny, which she said “We’re not marching was conveyed in stateagainst Trump, we’re ments by Trump. marching for the rights “In my lifetime there of women,” Kerr said, listing health care access, has not really been a galvanizing moment for equal pay and safety feminist solidarity ... I in relationships among other examples. “It’s silly want to be part of building a new feminism for the from my point of view to respond, ‘Well, we are future,” said Jahanbani, 40. “I want to make sure against Trump.’ Being to go on record with my against something is not own body, in a sense, to as powerful as saying

Megan Brokaw Brokaw, 31, said she needed a positive, constructive way to channel her frustration after the election. “I feel very deeply that being a part of this movement was not only for me personally, but for those who fought for my rights before me and for those who will come after me,” she said. “I also feel that as a straight, white woman I have a responsibility to stand up for those who are most vulnerable and most at-risk in the current climate.” With the Washington march and through local meetings after it, Brokaw hopes to bring together what she called various fractured movements. “We want to move forward as a united group and let our legislators know that we are here,” she said. “We hope to continue this work and help bring about cultural changes that are necessary to preserve and uphold the rights of all Americans.” Eleanor McCormick “This is very much a personal, a professional, a faith walk — march — for me,” McCormick said. “I can’t think of anything more important to be doing with my time and ministry right now.” As a pastor in the United Church of Christ, McCormick, 33, said she was troubled by election rhetoric and felt compelled to go to Washington to publicly stand with “those that have been demonized or threatened.” She said that includes women, immigrants such as her German-citizen husband and people from diverse religious faiths. “For myself, I would like to see in the spirit of democracy our elected leaders voicing their concern for human rights, their concern for human dignity and their commitment to a justice that respects all of our neighbors as ourselves,” she said. — Reporter Sara Shepherd can be reached at 832-7187. Follow her on Twitter: @saramarieshep

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BIRTHS No births were reported Thursday.

CORRECTIONS Page 1A of Thursday’s Journal-World had the wrong day. It should have read Thursday, January 19, 2017. The Journal-World’s policy is to correct all significant errors that are brought to the editors’ attention, usually in this space. If you believe we have made such an error, call 832-7154, or email news@ljworld.com.


L awrence J ournal -W orld

LAWRENCE • STATE

Friday, January 20, 2017

| 3A

Longtime Lawrence chef joins local brewery project

I

have additional news about the Lawrence Beer Company project in East Lawrence’s Warehouse Arts District.

Adam Williams said. “He just brings instant street cred to the venture.” As I was writing this, I also got a bit more information from Matt Williams, who will serve as president of the brewery, about the beer offerings. He said the beer production will be overseen by a brewer who learned his craft at Half Acre Beer Company in Chicago and at Boulevard in Kansas City. The lineup is expected to focus on a clawhorn@ljworld.com few core styles with a lot of rotating varieties, and Ken Baker, the longa mix of “classic styles time Lawrence chef tweaked with different who previously owned hop and malt varieties.” Pachamamas restaurant, Construction work on Paul Werner Architects/Contributed image the site is well underway. has signed on to be a A RENDERING OF THE REDEVELOPMENT OF 826 PENNSYLVANIA ST., which is planned to house a brewery, restaurant and Matt Williams said to partner and lead the food residential development. look for a midsummer operations of the Lawopening. When comrence Beer Company, 826 pleted, the old building, Pennsylvania St. met these guys, it soundBaker didn’t give me the type of food, I didn’t Adam Williams, a local he said, will feature large For 15 years, Baker ed like something I could a full rundown of the get a lot of hints there, real estate developer, windows and garage owned Pachamamas, really throw my back menu, but he gave me although Baker said some Matt Williams, a local doors that open onto a which gained a reputainto.” some hints. He said a ro- of the dishes would take liquor executive, and large wraparound deck. tion as one of the leaders Pachamamas was tisserie is being installed, advantage of the spent Brendon Allen, who The deck will lead to a in fine dining in Lawknown for having fancy and there would be “a lot grains used in the brewamong other things will beer garden that will inrence and the region. food, or, perhaps more of open fire cooking” and ing process. bring some local hisPachamamas closed in accurately, new world a wood-fired oven, all “It is going to be a tory to the project as the clude Adirondack chairs, picnic tables, trees, 2015, and Baker said he cuisine. (To this day, situated where patrons little bit different than grandson of Phog Allen. casual sitting areas and had been enjoying his when I want to look can easily watch the standard brew pub fare,” Adam Williams said all “semi-retirement” from international I wear a tie cooking process. Baker said. “But it should the partners were excited yard games. the food business. with stains on it from a Baker said the menu all be familiar, too. We to get Baker on board. — This is an excerpt from “I had a lot of offers Pachamamas meal.) But will feature some entrees definitely want it geared “Everybody knows Chad Lawhorn’s Town Talk to do other projects, but don’t expect the same but will have a heavy to eat with beer.” Ken Baker and Pachamacolumn, which appears on nothing really excited type of menu at the Law- focus on small plates Baker joins the brewmas and the quality and LJWorld.com. me,” Baker said. “When I rence Beer Company. and shared plates. As for ery group that includes service he created there,”

Town Talk

Chad Lawhorn

New codes for storm shelters won’t affect district’s bond issue officials reached out to the city’s planning department to discuss their New building and con- concerns. At the time, struction codes regard- t h e n - S u p e r i n t e n d e n t ing storm shelter safety Rick Doll noted the “high requirements will cost” of designing have no effect and building such on the Lawrence shelters. That ulschool district’s uptimately led to an coming bond issue. ad-hoc review comThe code amendmittee comprising ments, approved SCHOOLS r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s Tuesday by the from local public Lawrence City Commis- and private schools, arsion, require storm shel- chitects and structural ters for any new K-12 ed- engineers, and city offiucational facilities as well cials. as any existing schools After a series of meetwhere an addition would ings from June to late increase current square October, the now-newly footage by more than 25 approved code amendpercent. This rules out ments were brought to any ongoing projects, in- the review committee, cluding the final renova- which reached a general tions being carried out consensus that the lannow as part of the dis- guage used was accepttrict’s 2013 bond issue able. Originally, Barron for elementary schools, as well as the proposed said, “the concern was $87 million bond issue the small additions that slated for a May elec- we would have budgeted tion that would renovate for.” The code initially Lawrence’s secondary “read that anything with an occupant load of 50 schools. “We’re going to meet or more, you would be the code as it stands, but required to build a storm the code is not requiring shelter for the entire us to build any ICC-500 school,” he continued. shelters,” said Tony Bar- “So, that means if we have ron, the district’s director a capacity of 2,000 students, and we’re of facilities and only going to put operations. a 50-student addiDistrict leaders tion in, the code as voiced concern it read would have over the new rerequired us to quirements first build a storm shelproposed in early ter for the current 2016, which incorpopulation.” porated the 2015 Most classeditions of the In- Barron rooms have an ternational Code Council (ICC) model occupancy load of 30 construction codes, to 35 students, meanamong other standards. ing the addition of more At issue then was the than one classroom to a requirement that storm school would trigger the shelters be designed and requirement for a storm constructed to withstand shelter that could fit the winds of up to 250 mph, occupancy of the entire a mandate in line with school. Both Lawrence standards developed by High School and Free the ICC in consultation State High School are with the National Storm expected to receive addiShelter Association and tional classrooms, to accommodate the district’s FEMA. Although renova- growing population, as tions at all 20 Lawrence part of the proposed 2017 schools as part of the bond issue. According to city doc2013 bond issue included “hardened space” shel- uments, the “hardened ters with steel reinforce- space” shelters already ments and concrete ceil- in Lawrence schools can ings, those spaces do not withstand wind speeds meet international or of 160 to 180 mph, which national FEMA-approved would theoretically procodes for storm shelters, tect buildings against district spokeswoman Ju- most, but not all, tornado lie Boyle told the Journal- categorizations on the Enhanced Fujita Scale. World last February. Last spring, district Current shelter spaces By Joanna Hlavacek

jhlavacek@ljworld.com

would be able to withstand the four — or possibly five, depending on wind speed — least destructive tornado types out of the six designated on the EF Scale. The most dangerous of these, EF4 and EF5 tornadoes, are rare but not undocumented in Kansas. Nearly 10 years ago, an EF5 tornado struck the tiny southwestern Kansas community of Greensburg, leveling nearly the entire town and killing 11 people and injuring 63 others in the process. For now, the school district feels confident in the shelter spaces already provided, Barron said. He feels just as confident, however, that talks about school safety will remain an ongoing conversation moving forward. “We have dedicated areas that we go to right now that are interior spaces that we feel are adequate,” Barron said. “In the future at some point, if our school board or the community decides that that’s something they want to engage in, we’d be more than happy to sit down and discuss it.” The new storm shelter requirements will apply to facilities typically built by the city or county as well. The requirements wouldn’t cover renovations, but would apply to newly constructed facilities deemed critical to operate during an emergency, such as 911 call centers, police stations and fire stations. City officials said the idea is to ensure the viability of such facilities in event of a tornado or other disaster. “That’s the idea, that you have those first responders available when you really need them, after a tornado or something like that,” said Kurt Schroeder, assistant director of development services. “So hopefully the responders in that facility or the communications in that facility are still available.”

BRIEFLY Chamber names award winners The Lawrence chamber of commerce announced the recipients of two awards recognizing outstanding commitment to the Lawrence community and its citizens. City commissioner and former mayor Mike Amyx is the recipient of the Citizen of the Years award. Amyx, the Amyx owner of Amyx Barber Shop, began his political career in the 1980s. Emprise Bank Market President Cindy

Yulich will receive the ATHENA Award, presented by Crown Automotive. Yulich has served on multiple community boards, including the Lawrence school board and the Dwayne Peaslee Technical Training Center board. She is currently the chair of the Lawrence Memorial Hospital Board of Trustees. Both awards will be pre- Yulich sented to the winners at The Chamber’s annual meeting on Jan. 27 at Abe & Jake’s Landing, 8 E. Sixth St.

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— K-12 education reporter Joanna Hlavacek can be reached at 832-6388. Follow her on Twitter: @HlavacekJoanna — City Hall reporter Rochelle Valverde contributed to this story.

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Friday, January 20, 2017

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L awrence J ournal -W orld

Dates prove burdensome for student on a budget Dear Annie: I have been dating this girl, ‘‘Laura,’’ for about two months. Things are going extremely well. She’s kind, funny, intelligent — all the things I look for in a woman. But we’ve been on many, many dates, and she’s only offered to pay once. I am happy to pay, and I want to — she’s a special girl, so I feel fortunate to have the pleasure of her company, and I really do care for her — but I’m in law school right now, and my well doesn’t run that deep. I’ve tried to drop hints here and there — suggesting we go to a more casual restaurant instead of the one with the tablecloth, hit the matinee rather than the movie at the Saturday date-night hour, etc. — and she’s always down for the change of plans,

Dear Annie

Annie Lane

dearannie@creators.com

but she doesn’t seem to get it. I don’t know whether she’s just that clueless or she actually has that expectation (and will continue to have it for as long as we’re together). There’s also a twinge of feeling as if she’s ungrateful for what I do, which I don’t want to grow. What’s the best way to proceed? — I Ain’t No Mr. Moneybags Dear Mr.: Generally, I think whoever

Corporations play villains in new series Good stories need villains. And three new series have cast huge, globe-spanning, soul-crushing corporations in the part. Set in the future, Syfy’s “Incorporated” follows rebels against a vast business entity out to control, well, everything. In FX’s “Taboo,” Tom Hardy’s character takes on the East India Company, a corporate arm of the British Empire that controlled wide swaths of the globe with money, spies and private armies. Streaming today on Netflix, the six-part 18th-century period drama “Frontier” (TV-MA) stars Jason M o m o a as Declan Harp, a larger-than-life rebel who challenges the Hudson Bay Company’s monopoly on trade with Northern trappers. Born of Irish and Native American parents, Harp projects authority and menace in equal measure. He’s first seen slitting the throats of two British Redcoats and then releasing a third, so he will return home to terrorize his confederates with tales of savagery. The setting of ‘‘Frontier’’ may seem like a Western, but the strategizing of rival, violent men over control of territories is straight out of gangster movies. While neither as violent nor as opulent and weird as ‘‘Taboo,’’ ‘‘Frontier’’ presents an entertaining, easy-to-follow adventure story about a rebel and the mercenary agents of a faceless business out to destroy him. And both series offer dark histories of large trading companies responsible for the settling and colonization of territories as far-flung as Canada and India. In many ways these corporate entities created the British Empire that the queen, now seen on Sunday nights on PBS’ ‘‘Victoria,’’ inherited. But it’s not all history and intrigue. ‘‘Frontier’’ packs in many familiar elements of adventure stories. There’s a teenage stowaway (Landon Liboiron), a drunken priest (Christian McKay), a fawning trapper middleman out to play both sides, and the tough-as-nails saloon owner (Diana Bentley) who seems to know everything and everyone west of Halifax. It’s easy to wheedle information out of drunken soldiers and adventurers when your assistant, a fetching-yet-innocent bar wench (Lyla Porter-Follows), wears such revealing outfits. While engaging, the production values of ‘‘Frontier’’ seem more ‘‘basic cable’’ than some of Netflix’s more ambitious projects. Perhaps that’s because it originally aired on Discovery Canada. Tonight’s other highlights

Anderson Cooper, Erin Burnett and Don Lemon attend the Inaugural Ball (6 p.m., CNN).

Nick has a plan for Capt. Renard on “Grimm” (7 p.m., NBC).

Escape artist can’t evade death on “Rosewood” (7 p.m., Fox).

Dorothy and Lucas meet another lost girl on “Emerald City” (8 p.m., NBC). Copyright 2017 United Feature Syndicate distributed by Universal Uclick.

does the asking should do the paying. So if your partner’s favorite restaurant is a ritzy, three-dollar-sign steakhouse downtown, by all means, she can take you. But she can’t propose the idea and then expect you to foot the whole bill. Seeing as how this is bothering you, it seems to be a red flag that she hasn’t been offering to pay. Try raising your budgetary concerns in a friendly way, and keep the focus positive. Good on you for being generous these past two months. Chivalry is alive and kicking. Dear Annie: I’m writing not with a solution for ‘‘Tired in Tulsa’’ but about her comment about being tired all the time since the birth of her baby. I want to encourage all people, especially women, to take

JACQUELINE BIGAR’S STARS

For Friday, Jan. 20: This year you feel an innate tension between who you are and your professional obligations. Sometimes this subconscious struggle adds a level of fatigue to your days. If you are single, you could meet someone of significance sometime after summer. If you are attached, so much goes on between you and your sweetie that people never seem to know whether you are coming or going. 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) Deal with others directly for the best results. Others prefer the personal contact. Tonight: Have a meaningful talk. Taurus (April 20-May 20) Others seek you out. You enjoy this position, where you can say “yes” or “no.” Tonight: Join a fun yet flaky friend for dinner. Gemini (May 21-June 20) Pace yourself, and know how much you need to accomplish. Tonight: Off to join friends. Cancer (June 21-July 22) If you feel somewhat exhausted by recent arguing, just let the feeling go. Tonight: Out for TGIF! Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) You could be going over several issues in your head. You will know the right way to proceed. Tonight: Make it an early night.

better care of themselves. I was exhausted and tired while raising my children and working full time. I wish now I had not expected myself to do it all. I would have been a better person, parent and wife if I had done something to reduce my workload either at work or at home. And I might be feeling better now in my 60s if I’d taken better care of myself. So my advice to everyone is to do the best you can to get enough rest, exercise and good food and take care of your emotional needs. It’s not selfish, because it does benefit everyone around you. — Wishing I Had Taken Better Care — Send your questions for Annie Lane to dearannie@ creators.com.

jacquelinebigar.com

Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You can be annoying when you are on a quest to get information. Tonight: Hang with pals. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Be sensitive to the costs of proceeding in a certain direction. Tonight: Treat a friend. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Encourage others to be more open. As a result, you’ll get more information. Tonight: Zero in on what you want. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) You are all smiles, and are ready to move forward. Sometimes you don’t realize how significant your presence can be. Tonight: Opt for more privacy. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Activity surrounds friends. You might be in weekend mode already. Tonight: With your favorite people. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Take charge of an important project. Your associates might decide to leave you alone to tend the shop. Tonight: A must appearance. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) Reach out to a loved one. If you have been considering getting together in the near future, set up a visit. Tonight: Try something new. — The astrological forecast should be read for entertainment only.

UNIVERSAL CROSSWORD Universal Crossword Edited by Timothy Parker January 20, 2017 ACROSS 1 Nest egg nugget 4 One in the reeds 10 Jazz singing technique 14 Mai ___ (cocktail) 15 Exercise that gets the heart pumping 16 Checked-off type of list 17 Retaliated and how 19 Prefix with “European” 20 Turns around an axis 21 A scolding and then some 23 Places where weddings become official 25 Didi of “Grease” 27 Team’s best starting pitcher 28 Things locked in battle 29 Place where chemicals are mixed 30 Was in harmony 32 Mr. in India 33 Some, but not all 35 Phrase on a buck 40 Sexual desire 41 Security for a tightrope walker 43 Wash dishes, perhaps 46 Away from WSW

13 Drove (along) 18 ___ Bator, Mongolia 22 Pear variety 23 Satisfied sounds 24 Folktale stuff 25 Light automatic rifle 26 Like an angle greater than 90 degrees 29 Hang around 31 Traveler’s rest 33 Major-league athlete 34 Organ attachment? 36 Romanian currency 37 City-related 38 Thing requiring a balancing act 39 Selfreferencing, as a work of art

47 Port-auPrince’s island 49 “What ___ the choices?” 50 It can be a lot of land 52 Worker with lots of baggage 53 Hispanic 55 Prolix 56 In a bit, of yore 57 Indian Ocean island 62 Puts out there for all to see 63 A real sight 64 Tell tall tales 65 Groening of animation 66 Covered like three-ring circuses 67 Santa’s helper DOWN 1 Old TV’s “___ Academic” 2 Fink 3 You can really take off from here 4 Transpires 5 Makes cookies 6 Bubbles, moons and the like 7 President McKinley’s first lady 8 (As written) 9 Coin that’s not legal currency 10 Start to wake up 11 Casual talk 12 Provide evidence for

42 Good service indicator 43 Muslim greeting 44 They’ve got brains 45 Parting shot 47 “Hark! The ___ Angels Sing” 48 Throws in 51 Heavenly body with a tail 52 Run-amok elephant 54 “Meet Me ___ Louis” 55 Float gently, as an aroma 58 Skipper’s word of approval 59 Home office locale, often 60 Catch a bug? 61 Field marshal?

PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER

1/19 © 2017 Andrews McMeel Syndication www.upuzzles.com

IN A JAM By Timothy E. Parker

1/20

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

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

LOGIO ©2017 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.

SMOTP GUCATH

BOWLEB

Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app

4A

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

Print answer here: Yesterday’s

(Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: BRISK FANCY EASILY TUGGED Answer: After weighing herself, and seeing she’d lost 50 pounds, she had a — BIG FAT GRIN

BECKER ON BRIDGE


Opinion

Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com l Friday, January 20, 2017

EDITORIALS

Much needed Medicaid talk Lawmakers are right to press for a discussion on expanding Medicaid.

I

t’s good that a bill to expand Medicaid in Kansas has been introduced in the Legislature. It’s a debate that lawmakers need to have even with the looming threat that Congress will pull the plug on Obamacare. State Rep. Sue Concannon, R-Beloit, asked for the bill to be introduced. “What we heard during the campaign season was that there are a lot of Kansans who want us to talk about this,” she said. Concannon is vice chair of the Health and Human Services Committee. The committee is set to hold hearings on expansion in early February. Kansas has one of the strictest eligibility requirements for Medicaid of any state. It is available only to pregnant women, children, disabled adults and seniors who meet certain income guidelines. Medicaid expansion provided for under the Affordable Care Act extends Medicaid to those younger than 65 whose family income is at or below 133 percent of federal poverty guidelines. The federal government paid for 100 percent of the Medicaid expansion for 2014 through 2016. Federal funding dropped to 97 percent this year and will gradually decrease to 90 percent by 2020. Kansas is among 19 mostly conservative states that have refused to participate in Medicaid expansion out of opposition to Obamacare. Gov. Sam Brownback has said repeatedly that Obamacare is part of the problem in Kansas, not the solution. The governor blamed Obamacare for cuts in Medicare that he said have been far more devastating to health care in Kansas than any benefits Medicaid expansion could provide. But the Kansas Hospital Association estimates Kansas has forfeited more than $1.6 billion — and counting — in federal funds by not participating in expansion since the program began on Jan. 1, 2014. An estimated 150,000 Kansans would be covered by the expansion. That’s a lot of residents to overlook and significant funding to dismiss. There is the issue of Congress, which has already taken steps to repeal Obamacare. But it’s important not to confuse the unpopularity of Obamacare with the popularity of certain aspects of Obamacare. In other words, even if Obamacare is repealed, it’s reasonable to expect that aspects of the program, including Medicaid expansion, could continue. “We need to at least have a thorough discussion about the needs of 150,000 Kansans who don’t have health insurance,” said state Rep. John Wilson, a Lawrence Democrat. “And we need to get a sense of what it would cost us should we want to provide coverage for them if it’s in a different form than under the Affordable Care Act.” Wilson is right. Kansas has left a lot of money on the table by not participating in Medicaid expansion and the state has yet to offer an alternative solution. It’s past time to put the politics of Obamacare aside and look seriously at what federal Medicaid expansion might do to help Kansans.

Russia’s info warfare on the rise Washington — Last February, a top Russian cyber official told a security conference in Moscow that Russia was working on new strategies for the “information arena” that would be equivalent to testing a nuclear bomb and would “allow us to talk to the Americans as equals.” Andrey Krutskikh, a senior Kremlin adviser, made the startling comments at the Russian National Information Security Forum, or “Infoforum 2016,” held Feb. 4 and 5. His remarks were transcribed by a Russian who attended the gathering and translated for me by an independent European cyber expert. Krutskikh’s comments are important because they may help explain the radical strategic doctrine that underlies Russia’s hacking and attempted manipulation of the 2016 presidential campaign in America, as well as Russian political subversion in Europe. His title is “special representative of the president for international cooperation in the field of information security.” A senior Obama administration official described Krutskikh as a “seniorlevel adviser” to President Vladimir Putin and “a longstanding player in cyber issues” at the foreign ministry. The official said he couldn’t confirm the details of Krutskikh’s remarks, but that “they sound like something Andrey would say.” According to notes of Krutskikh’s speech, he told his Russian audience: “You think we are living in 2016.

Letters to the editor

fewer. l Letters can be submitted via mail to P.O. Box 888, Lawrence KS 66044 or via email at letters@ ljworld.com.

LAWRENCE

Journal-World

®

Established 1891

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

Scott Stanford, Publisher Chad Lawhorn, Editor Kim Callahan, Managing Editor Kathleen Johnson, Advertising Manager Joan Insco, Circulation Manager Allie Sebelius, Marketing Director

David Ignatius

davidignatius@washpost.com

Russian hacking during the 2016 presidential campaign, as outlined in the unclassified report released this month by U.S. intelligence agencies, is an example of Russia’s use of new tools in this continuum of conflict.” No, we are living in 1948. And do you know why? Because in 1949, the Soviet Union had its first atomic bomb test. And if until that moment, the Soviet Union was trying to reach agreement with [President Harry] Truman to ban nuclear weapons, and the Americans were not taking us seriously, in 1949 everything changed and they started talking to us on an equal footing.” Krutskikh continued, “I’m warning you: We are at the verge of having ‘something’ in the information arena, which will allow us to talk to the Americans as equals.” Putin’s cyber adviser stressed to the Moscow audience the importance for Russia of having a strong

hand in this new domain. If Russia is weak, he explained, “it must behave hypocritically and search for compromises. But once it becomes strong, it will dictate to the Western partners [the U.S. and its allies] from the position of power.” Krutskikh’s comments may have been a precursor of a new doctrine for information operations announced publicly by the Kremlin in December. The senior administration official described the Russian strategy: “They think of information space as a domain of warfare. In the U.S, we tend to have a binary view of conflict — we’re at peace or at war. The Russian doctrine is more of a continuum. You can be at different levels of conflict, along a sliding scale.” Russian hacking during the 2016 presidential campaign, as outlined in the unclassified report released this month by U.S. intelligence agencies, is an example of Russia’s use of new tools in this continuum of conflict, the U.S. official said. “Certainly, I believe the Russians are working to increase their capabilities in cyberspace, because they’ve realized they can use cyberspace to pursue their foreign policy goals,” he said. In Russia’s view, America is pushing just as aggressively in the information space, but denies it. “Things we perceive as free speech, they perceive as aggressive behavior from the West,” noted the senior U.S. official. Putin, for example, saw Hillary Clinton’s support for

anti-Putin dissidents as an attempt to foment a “color revolution.” Russians also claim (without public evidence) that the U.S. orchestrated last year’s disclosure of the “Panama Papers,” which included allegations of Russian money laundering, and last year’s allegations by the World AntiDoping Agency of drug use by Russian athletes. In Putin’s mind, the U.S, attacked first in the information war. Russia is now strong enough to retaliate, as Krutskikh signaled in his February 2016 speech. Krutskikh and other Russian cyber experts don’t appear to have been deterred by public warnings or sanctions. Krutskikh was quoted by the Russian Information Agency Dec. 29 describing U.S. sanctions announced that day as “the agony of the ruling elite,” reflecting “the personal hatred” of President Obama, and “an attempt to prevent future cooperation.” “We don’t exclude the lifting of the sanctions after Trump enters office,” Krutskikh said. Krutskikh’s comments highlight the emerging world of information warfare, where “fake news” and hacking are tools for covert warriors in many nations. The senior administration official warns: “The Russians are particularly advanced — in technology, organization and doctrine. They’re at the head of the pack. But there will be others.” —David Ignatius is a columnist for Washington Post Writers Group.

TODAY IN HISTORY On Jan. 20, 1942, Nazi officials held the notorious Wannsee conference, during which they arrived at their “final solution” that called for exterminating Europe’s Jews. l In 1265, England’s first representative Parliament met for the first time. l In 1649, King Charles I of England went on trial, accused of high treason (he was found guilty and executed by month’s end). l In 1887, the U.S. Senate approved an agreement to lease Pearl Harbor in Hawaii as a naval base. l In 1936, Britain’s King George V died after his physician injected the mortally ill monarch with morphine and cocaine to hasten his death; the king was succeeded by his eldest son, Edward VIII, who abdicated 11 months later to marry American divorcee Wallis Simpson. l In 1937, President Franklin D. Roosevelt became the first chief executive to be inaugurated on Jan. 20 instead of March 4.

Some predictions for the coming year By Leonard Krishtalka

l Letters should be 250 words or

5A

After 2016’s wild ride in politics, science, sports, and entertainment, no one in their right mind would dare venture predictions for 2017. Here goes. 1. This is easy. A total eclipse of the sun will occur on Aug. 21, when the moon will pass between the sun and the Earth. Lawrence will be on the geographic 50-yard line for this pre-season No-Sun Bowl (see No. 5 below). 2. About half the U.S. population will deliberately avoid using the word “trump” — as in, “Climatechange denial in Congress continues to trump science, reason and evidence.” People will rush to the thesaurus for synonyms: beat, eclipse, override. Similarly, “bush” was bushwhacked for eight years. 3. Science deniers on Capitol Hill will stick to their spiel that climate change is a hoax. Some will cite Julian Assange in blaming the Chinese for hacking the computers and data banks at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, NASA, the Department of Energy, the Democratic National Committee and Al

Gore’s house. Others will blame a global scienceinternet conspiracy led by Meryl Streep. Trumping these denials Krishtalka is an article by Francis Molena in the March 1912 issue of Popular Mechanics (page 339): The effects of the combustion of coal on the climate. “Since burning coal produces carbon dioxide it may be inquired whether the enormous use of that fuel in modern times may not be an important factor in filling the atmosphere … indirectly raising the temperature of the earth.” It’s 1912. Molena might have been influenced by film star Mary Pickford, but not Meryl Streep. He also couldn’t have been part of a worldwide science conspiracy — no internet, no computers, no analytical models to smear. Molena just used solid empirical reasoning and solid data to connect the dots. He tied CO2 to global warming with two facts: 500 million tons of coal were mined for fuel in 1911; and above normal temperatures for 11 out of the 12 months that year. What

would Molena’s facts be today? Billions of tons of coal mined during the past 140 years, hitting a peak of 1.2 billion in 2008. During the same time, a dramatic spike in atmospheric CO2 and increasingly hotter average global temperatures. 2016 was the hottest yet. Then there’s ice sheets melting, glaciers disappearing, Arctic ice cover shrinking, seas warming, coastlines rising, oceans acidifying, birds breeding earlier, plants blooming earlier. 4. Secretary-elect Rick Perry, nominated to lead the Department of Energy, will mysteriously be AWOL from work until the August eclipse. Why? He forgot the name of the agency he was supposed to head. For Perry, this is a case of “deja adieu,” bid memory goodbye — again. His first DOE lapse was during the 2012 Republican debates, when he vowed to shut down three federal agencies as president — “Education, Commerce, and … and … can’t remember the third.” In his absence, DOE scientists continue working on climate-change research. 5. In sports, it’s heartening that the number of college bowl games has kept

pace with the rise in global temperature and CO2 concentration. There were five bowl games in the 1930s, 12 by the 1970s, 21 by 2000, 35 by 2010 and 41 by the 20162017 season, counting the championship game. With few exceptions, bowl games were once reserved for the best teams — champions of their conference; those with an overwhelming winning record. No more. If the NCAA is good at anything, it’s math. Forty-one bowls means 82 teams—too many for each to have a winning record. So, the NCAA lowered the bowl-eligible bar— first in 2010, to teams with as many wins as losses; then, in 2012, to teams with, yes, losing records. A quarter of the 80 teams in the current bowl season didn’t have a winning record. Hey, it could get worse. Nine more bowl games, including the as yet unnamed Dubai Bowl, are in the NCAA hopper for approval. So, 50 bowl games next season with 100 teams, some, likely, with only one win. Well, as long as they won it for the Gipper. — Leonard Krishtalka is director of the Biodiversity Institute and a professor in the department of ecology and evolutionary biology at the University of Kansas.


|

6A

TODAY

WEATHER

.

Friday, January 20, 2017

SATURDAY

SUNDAY

TUESDAY

MONDAY

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Debate CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A

Fog in the morning; cloudy, mild

Mostly cloudy and mild

Mostly cloudy and cooler

Mostly sunny

A couple of showers

High 55° Low 34° POP: 25%

High 55° Low 31° POP: 10%

High 47° Low 25° POP: 5%

High 50° Low 34° POP: 5%

High 56° Low 27° POP: 65%

Wind SE 6-12 mph

Wind SW 4-8 mph

Wind NNW 8-16 mph

Wind SSE 4-8 mph

Wind S 8-16 mph

POP: Probability of Precipitation

McCook 45/26

Kearney 44/30

Oberlin 45/28

Clarinda 47/40

Lincoln 46/33

Grand Island 42/29

Beatrice 47/34

St. Joseph 51/36 Chillicothe 52/39

Sabetha 49/37

Concordia 48/31

Centerville 48/41

Kansas City Marshall Manhattan 55/38 57/43 Salina 53/32 Oakley Kansas City Topeka 52/32 43/26 55/34 Lawrence 54/36 Sedalia 55/34 Emporia Great Bend 59/44 56/32 49/28 Nevada Dodge City Chanute 60/44 48/27 Hutchinson 60/35 Garden City 52/31 47/24 Springfield Wichita Pratt Liberal Coffeyville Joplin 61/43 55/32 47/28 52/26 63/43 63/37 Hays Russell 46/29 47/28

Goodland 43/22

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

LAWRENCE ALMANAC

Through 8 p.m. Thursday.

Temperature High/low 48°/38° Normal high/low today 39°/18° Record high today 68° in 1986 Record low today -15° in 1985

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

0.00 0.93 0.58 0.93 0.58

REGIONAL CITIES

Today Sat. Today Sat. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Holton 53 37 c 54 33 pc Atchison 52 36 c 53 31 c Belton 55 38 c 55 35 pc Independence 55 39 c 56 36 pc Olathe 55 35 c 54 33 pc Burlington 57 36 c 57 35 c Coffeyville 63 37 c 61 39 pc Osage Beach 59 46 pc 64 40 pc Osage City 56 36 c 56 34 c Concordia 48 31 c 51 29 c 56 37 c 56 35 c Dodge City 48 27 c 52 30 pc Ottawa Wichita 55 32 c 56 36 pc Fort Riley 53 34 c 54 31 c Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.

NATIONAL FORECAST

SUN & MOON

Today Sat. 7:36 a.m. 7:35 a.m. 5:28 p.m. 5:29 p.m. 1:05 a.m. 2:01 a.m. 12:22 p.m. 12:55 p.m.

New

First

Full

Last

Jan 27

Feb 3

Feb 10

Feb 18

LAKE LEVELS

As of 7 a.m. Thursday Lake

Level (ft)

Clinton Perry Pomona

Discharge (cfs)

874.50 889.35 974.19

7 25 100

INTERNATIONAL CITIES Hi 85 38 51 64 89 34 37 35 92 66 35 42 41 66 53 41 41 51 77 36 26 69 39 36 86 58 31 87 38 77 50 46 46 31 37 35

Sat. Lo W 71 pc 23 sh 38 pc 43 pc 73 pc 13 s 25 sh 22 c 71 pc 48 s 24 s 33 c 27 s 56 s 41 pc 24 c 28 sh 27 pc 43 pc 32 c 14 sn 49 c 27 pc 23 pc 76 t 42 pc 17 sf 76 pc 30 pc 68 pc 37 pc 37 c 38 sh 20 c 29 sh 30 c

Precipitation

Warm Stationary Showers T-storms

Flurries

Snow

Today Sat. Today Sat. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Memphis 67 55 pc 70 53 c Albuquerque 46 31 pc 44 25 c 83 66 s 84 71 s Anchorage 11 8 sn 12 2 sn Miami Milwaukee 42 39 r 50 38 c Atlanta 74 57 pc 69 58 r Minneapolis 40 36 r 43 34 r Austin 78 52 pc 77 51 c 69 56 pc 69 52 sh Baltimore 48 41 r 55 46 pc Nashville New Orleans 76 64 t 77 56 t Birmingham 72 59 pc 71 57 r New York 46 40 r 54 46 pc Boise 39 27 sf 35 27 c 48 37 c 46 29 c Boston 43 35 s 48 38 pc Omaha Orlando 83 60 pc 83 64 pc Buffalo 46 41 r 51 40 c 46 40 r 56 46 pc Cheyenne 42 23 sf 43 25 pc Philadelphia Phoenix 57 49 r 61 44 pc Chicago 44 41 r 54 40 c Pittsburgh 56 46 r 62 44 c Cincinnati 61 50 c 60 47 c Portland, ME 38 27 s 41 30 c Cleveland 54 47 r 61 46 c Portland, OR 43 35 r 44 38 r Dallas 72 48 s 70 46 c 41 30 sn 39 34 c Denver 42 24 sn 41 26 pc Reno 53 44 r 61 51 pc Des Moines 46 39 c 48 30 pc Richmond Sacramento 54 45 sh 55 49 pc Detroit 43 39 r 53 44 c St. Louis 59 48 c 64 44 pc El Paso 54 44 sh 51 38 c Salt Lake City 38 30 c 36 25 sn Fairbanks -7 -18 c -15 -31 c 62 55 r 62 52 sh Honolulu 81 70 pc 80 69 sh San Diego San Francisco 56 47 sh 57 50 sh Houston 77 59 c 74 56 c Seattle 49 38 c 48 38 r Indianapolis 56 48 c 61 47 c 37 27 c 36 26 sf Kansas City 54 36 c 54 32 pc Spokane Tucson 55 46 r 57 39 c Las Vegas 51 43 r 55 42 c Tulsa 66 44 pc 64 41 pc Little Rock 67 50 pc 67 48 c 51 45 r 59 49 pc Los Angeles 60 49 r 62 52 pc Wash., DC National extremes yesterday for the 48 contiguous states High: Opa Locka, FL 85° Low: Lake George, CO -18°

WEATHER HISTORY

WEATHER TRIVIA™

it true that January has the thunderstorms in the Q: Isfewest U.S.?

Extreme cold froze the Midwest in January 1994. In Detroit, the temperature stayed below zero for 57 straight hours.

MOVIES 7:30

Ice

-10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s National Summary: Rain will soak areas from the Great Lakes to the midAtlantic with locally gusty storms joining in over the Deep South today. Flooding rain is forecast along with heavy mountain snow for the Pacific coast.

FRIDAY Prime Time WOW DTV DISH 7 PM

Rain

No. December has the fewest.

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2017 Today Hi Lo W 85 69 pc 40 29 pc 50 39 c 64 41 s 92 73 pc 33 13 s 36 31 i 38 24 s 90 72 pc 68 49 c 40 23 s 46 31 pc 35 24 pc 66 55 pc 56 41 pc 39 21 pc 44 28 s 47 35 sn 74 45 pc 36 26 pc 32 18 sn 67 47 c 44 32 pc 34 21 s 89 76 t 54 35 s 31 14 sf 88 74 pc 40 29 pc 89 70 t 43 37 r 39 34 r 48 37 c 28 18 pc 34 32 sf 34 32 c

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A

Fronts Cold

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

Parking

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

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

A:

Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset

KIDS

10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30

Æ

E

$

B

%

D

3

C ; A )

3

62

62 Ninja Warrior

Ninja Warrior

News

4

4

4 Rosewood (N)

Sleepy Hollow (N)

FOX 4 at 9 PM (N)

Inside

Dish Nat. Friends

Rules

Rules

News

TMZ (N)

Seinfeld

News

5

5

5 Change and

Hawaii Five-0 (N)

Blue Bloods (N)

News

Late Show-Colbert

7

19

19 Wash

Alicia

American Masters

Cinema

Arts

9

9 Last Man Dr. Ken

9

D KTWU 11 A Q 12 B ` 13

Review

Grimm (N) h

8

Wash

Charlie

Last Man Dr. Ken Change and

Emerald City (N)

Shark Tank h Alicia

Shark Tank h

Dateline NBC (N)

Corden

Charlie Rose (N)

20/20 (N) h

KSNT

Tonight Show

News

Jimmy Kimmel Live Nightline

20/20 (N) h

News

Jimmy Kimmel Live Nightline

American Masters h

World

Meyers

Business C. Rose

Blue Bloods (N)

News

Late Show-Colbert

Corden

41 38

41 Grimm (N) h 38 Jeopardy Million.

Hawaii Five-0 (N)

C I 14 KMCI 15 L KCWE 17

Emerald City (N)

Dateline NBC (N)

News

Tonight Show

Meyers

Holly

The List

Broke

Broke

29

29 Vampire Diaries

Crazy Ex-Girlfriend

KMBC 9 News

Mod Fam Mod Fam ET

ION KPXE 18

50

Criminal Minds

Criminal Minds

Criminal Minds

Saving Hope

Clinton

6 News

Turnpike Movie

6 News

Minute

Minute

Simpson Fam Guy Extra (N)

Saving Hope

Cable Channels WOW!6 6 WGN-A THIS TV 19 CITY

25

USD497 26

Pets

Our

Cops

City Bulletin Board, Commission Meetings

City Bulletin Board

School Board Information

School Board Information

ESPN 33 206 140 dNBA Basketball: Warriors at Rockets ESPN2 34 209 144 SportsCenter (N) FSM

36 672

Polaris

Spotlight Mizzou

NASCAR the

39 360 205 The O’Reilly Factor America’s Newsroom (N)

CNBC 40 355 208 Secret

Trump:

MSNBC 41 356 209 All In With Chris CNN

dNBA Basketball: Pacers at Lakers

E2017 Australian Open Tennis Third Round. From Melbourne, Australia. (N) (Live)

Tennis

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45 245 138 ››› Edge of Tomorrow (2014) Tom Cruise.

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46 242 105 Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Shooter

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47 265 118 The First 48

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determining factor in their decision to do business in Kansas or in Finney County,” DuVall said. “Not one prospect has told us that. Meanwhile, Dave Trabert, president of the conservative think tank Kansas Policy Institute, urged the panel to reject the bill, even though he agreed with those who said the tax break was fundamentally unfair. “Fairness is a legitimate issue,” he said. “But this legislation only addresses one of at least dozens of fairness issues that are in statute. In fact, one is baked into our Constitution.” That was a reference to Article 11 of the Kansas Constitution dealing with property taxes, and providing that commercial property is taxed on 30 percent of its market value while residential property is taxed on only 11.5 percent. But he pointed to other inequities in the tax code, including sales tax exemptions for a long list of items and provisions that allow state employees not to pay taxes on the employer contributions into their pension plans, either when the money is put in or when it’s taken out after retirement. The purpose of Thursday’s hearing was only to receive public testimony. The committee is expected to work on the bill and possibly vote to send it to the full House at a later date.

requirement for new development downtown to provide additional parking, and no permitting systems are in place for the on-street parking in adjacent neighborhoods. McGuire said the strategic plan will look at city policy, zoning or otherwise, that affect parking. “Ultimately, that’s one of the 30,000-foot questions that needs to be addressed through this study,” McGuire said. “And the public input in particular is going to help a lot with fleshing out what is the community’s preference. And then — the more tangible part of it — how do we make sure we’re accomplishing that?” In addition to city policy, McGuire said the parking strategic plan will look at parking facilities, metering, technology, as well as potential programs, such as permitting or parking sharing. McGuire said the city will also provide an online survey through Lawrence Listens, and it plans to get input from University of Kansas students. A list of meeting times and locations follows:

businesses in downtown Lawrence l 6-7 p.m.: Residents and businesses in neighborhoods surrounding KU l 7-8 p.m.: Residents and businesses in the East Lawrence neighborhood and Warehouse Arts District

weekly by residents, especially with ideas about different types of solutions that the city ought to think about implementing for parking,” McGuire said. “… We’re just trying to cast a wide net and capture anything that’s important to people in the study area.” The public meetings will include nine sessions for various stakeholder groups, such as employees and owners of downtown businesses, bars and restaurants, neighborhood residents, as well as developers and Realtors working in the area. The consultants, from Desman Design Management, will facilitate the meeting, and city staff will also be present. The strategic parking plan will guide the operation of the parking system in downtown and surrounding neighborhoods for the next five to 10 years. The city’s public parking systems downtown currently include metered spaces, free two-hour lots, Jan. 24 at City Hall, 6 permitted 10-hour lots, E. Sixth St. l 4-5 p.m.: Owners, opand three parking garages. Generally, there is no erators and employees of

BEST BETS WOW DTV DISH 7 PM

SPORTS 7:30

8 PM

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— Statehouse reporter Peter Hancock can be reached at 354-4222. Follow him on Twitter: @LJWpqhancock

Jan. 25 at the Carnegie Building, 200 W. Ninth St. l 5-6:30 p.m.: Downtown residents Jan. 26 at City Hall, 6 E. Sixth St. l 8-9 a.m.: Owners, operators and employees of businesses in downtown Lawrence l 9-10 a.m.: Dining and drinking establishments in downtown Lawrence l 10-11 a.m.: Organizations, attractions and events in downtown Lawrence l 11 a.m.-noon: Residents and businesses in neighborhoods surrounding KU l 1-2 p.m.: Developers and Realtors working in the study area Public comments, including comments from people who don’t live or work within the study area, can also be provided at the City Commission’s work session on Feb. 14. The parking study portion of the session will be facilitated by the consultant.

January 20, 2017 9 PM

9:30

10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30

Cable Channels cont’d

Network Channels

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But Acting Revenue Secretary Sam Williams urged the panel not to pass the bill, arguing that it has done what it was intended to do — create new jobs and boost the Kansas economy. “Kansas boasts five consecutive years of record new business formations,” Williams said. “We’ve reversed 20 years of cumulative wealth losses to Missouri. Unemployment has remained under 5 percent for 17 consecutive months.” But Williams got off to an awkward start when he admitted that the fiscal note his agency had prepared underestimated how much new revenue the state would receive by repealing the tax cut. Williams said the $178.6 million projected in the note for next fiscal year was too low, and he said a revised fiscal note would be submitted soon. Others have estimated the LLC exemption costs the state upwards of $250 million a year. Williams specifically pointed to Kansas City, Kan., as an example of one community that has seen rapid job growth since the tax cuts. But Democratic Rep. Kathy Wolfe Moore, who represents that area, said the tax cuts had nothing to do with it.

“There has been gubernatorial assistance in Kansas City, Kan., that has helped us tremendously, but it just wasn’t this governor,” she said. Committee Chairman Steve Johnson, R-Assaria, said the low unemployment could be due to any number of factors. “Our unemployment number by virtually all measures is low, but yet we don’t seem to be finding the revenue,” Johnson said. Some of the most stinging criticism of the tax cut came from former Rep. Mark Hutton, a Wichita Republican, who supported the bill in 2012, but who said he has since changed his mind about the business tax exemption, in part because of what he said was a basic unfairness about the law. Hutton did not run for reelection in 2016. “For me, this has never been about the income,” Hutton said. “It’s been about a balanced tax policy and the fact that we should respect all of our taxpayers equally.” Lona DuVall, president of the Finney County Economic Development Corporation, drove from Garden City to Topeka to testify in favor of the bill. She said that community has seen significant growth in recent years, but she said none of it has been due to the tax cuts. “We have never had a prospect, either before or after 2012, who identified state corporate income tax rates as any kind of

54 269 120 Transition of Power The Making of Trump: Recut (N)

SYFY 55 244 122 Shutter Island

›› Faster (2010) Dwayne Johnson.

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›› Doom (2005) The Rock.

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HBO 401 MAX 411 SHOW 421 STZENC 440 STRZ 451

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››‡ The Equalizer (2014) Denzel Washington, Marton Csokas.

››‡ The Equalizer (2014) South Pk South Pk South Pk South Pk South Pk South Pk Daily Drunk South Pk South Pk ››› Friends With Benefits (2011), Mila Kunis So E! News (N) ››› Crazy, Stupid, Love. (2011) Steve Carell. Rose. Rose. Rose. Rose. Flea Flea Flea Flea Flea Flea Flea Flea Flea Flea Movie Martin Martin Fresh Prince Prince ››‡ Tower Heist ››‡ Shallow Hal (2001) Gwyneth Paltrow. ›› Happy Gilmore (1996) Expedition Un. Expedition Un. Expedition Un. Expedition Un. Expedition Un. Paranormal Paranormal A Haunting (N) Paranormal A Haunting Bring It! Bring It! (N) The Rap Game (N) The Rap Game Bring It! A Surrogate’s Nightmare (2017) Mommy’s Little Girl (2016, Drama) Surrogate’s Ginor Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Dream Dream Dream Dream Hunters Hunt Intl Hunters Hunt Intl Dream Dream Henry Danger Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Friends Friends Friends Friends Beyblade Beyblade Beyblade Beyblade Beyblade Beyblade Beyblade Beyblade Beyblade Beyblade Stuck A Cinderella Story: If Stuck Stuck Jessie Jessie Cali Style Liv-Mad. King/Hill Cleve Cleve American Burgers Burgers Fam Guy Fam Guy Chicken Aqua Gold Rush: Pay Dirt Gold Rush (N) The Wheel (N) Gold Rush The Wheel Home 2 ››› Free Willy (1993) Jason James Richter. The 700 Club Alice-Wonder. Return/Dead Cradle to Grave Cradle to Grave Home Home Middle Middle Middle Middle Golden Golden Golden Golden Treehouse Masters Puppy Bowl Treehouse Masters Treehouse Masters Puppy Bowl Griffith Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond King King King King Best of 2016 Lindsey End/ Age P. Stone Watch Best of 2016 Price Spirit Euthanasia News Rosary The A Saint In the Making Fr. Spitzer ››‡ My Dear Secretary (1948) Book Book Documentary Documentary Public Affairs Events Public Affairs Public Affairs Politics and Public Policy Today Politics-Public I, Witness Wives With Knives Forbidden-Dying I, Witness Wives With Knives Secret Service Armored Car To Be Announced Secret Service Armored Car American Scandals American Scandals Hard Evidence American Scandals American Scandals Strangest Weather Strangest Weather Extreme Jobs Amazing Moments Weather Mysteries ››› The Saint in New York Saint Strikes ›› The Saint in London Saint’s Double ››› Hail, Caesar! (2016) Josh Brolin. ››› Dumb and Dumber (1994) ›››‡ Cinderella Man (2005) Hang ’Em High Money Monster

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››› American Pie (1999) ››› Mistress America (2015) sBoxing (N) (Live) Home Black Sails “XVIII.” ›› Windtalkers (2002) Nicolas Cage. Spartacus: War Spartacus: War ››› Death Proof


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L awrence J ournal -W orld

Friday, January 20, 2017

3201 Riverview Road

NEW CONSTRUCTION

NEW CONSTRUCTION

313 Fort Laramie Drive

339 Headwaters Drive

CANCE OPEN SUNDAY 1:00-3:00 Wow Factor!

• Farmhouse Style • Open Plan with Hickory Floors • 2 Living Rooms Plus a Bar • Custom Barn Door and Beams • Close to K-10/I-70 and Rock Chalk

$469,900

4 Bed, 3 Bath, Bsmt: Yes, 3,088 Sqft MLS# 141550

LLED OPEN SUNDAY 1:00-3:00 Main Level Master Suite

Beautiful Home

• Open Floor Plan • Stainless Steel Appliances • Granite Kitchen Counter Tops • Two Living Areas • Close to Rock Chalk Park

• Spectacular Setting! • Lots of Space • Dream Kitchen with Island • Walk-out Basement • Move-in Ready! Amy LeMert 979-9911

$450,000

Judy Brynds 691-9414

5 Bed, 6 Bath, Bsmt: Yes, 5,560 Sqft MLS# 141053 VT# 3903205

1130 Emery Road

5714 Villa Drive

$415,900

Janet Scott 331-7987

4 Bed, 3 Bath, Bsmt: Yes, 2,714 Sqft MLS# 141579

NEW CONSTRUCTION 516 N Blazing Star Drive

OPEN SUNDAY 12:00-2:00 Beautiful Oread Home

• Main Level Master Suite • Refinished Hardwood Floors • Stainless Steel Appliances • Three Living Areas • Close to Rock Chalk Park

$339,900

4 Bed, 3 Bath, Bsmt: Yes, 2,593 Sqft MLS# 141228

Kate Carnahan 423-1937

OPEN SUNDAY 1:00-3:00 The Villa’s at Alvamar

• One Level Living • Wonderful Open Concept • Enjoy Life - Travel More • Handicap Accessible ~ HOA • Quiet Peaceful Neighborhood

$339,900

2937 Kensington

3416 Green Meadows Court

OPEN SUNDAY 1:00-3:00 Main Level Living!

• Wonderful Updated 1.5 Story • Hardwood Floors, New Carpet • Main Level Master Bedroom • Finished Walk-out Basement • Beautiful Yard Backs to Creek

$259,900

5 Bed, 4 Bath, Bsmt: Yes, 3,400 Sqft MLS# 141399

Connie Friesen 766-3870

3 Bed, 2 Bath, Bsmt: No, 2,385 Sqft MLS# 140908 VT# 3901479

Michelle Hack 760-1337

OPEN SUNDAY 12:00-2:00 Great Central Location!

• Still Under Builder Warranty • All Appliances Stay • Hardwood Floors/Ceramic Tile • Granite Counters in Kitchen • Storm Shelter in Garage

$219,900

Kim Clements 766-5837

3 Bed, 3 Bath, Bsmt: No, 1,532 Sqft MLS# 141367

OPEN SATURDAY 2:00-4:00 Open Floor Plan

• One Level Living • Double Master Bedroom • Covered Porch/Tall Ceilings • FEMA Rated Storm/Safe Room • Oversized 3 Car Tandem Garage

$329,900

Lucy Harris 764-1583

3 Bed, 3 Bath, Bsmt: No, 2,120 Sqft MLS# 139980

3024 W 30th Court

OPEN SATURDAY 11:30-1:30 So Much New!

• Many Updates - Remodeled • All New Carpet, New Driveway • Beautiful Tiled Master Shower • All Appliances Included • Quick Closing Possible!

$189,900

Angel Nuzum 550-4331

3 Bed, 2 Bath, Bsmt: No, 1,567 Sqft MLS# 141505

3505 Firefly Court

843 W 22nd Terrace

326 Birch Lane

OPEN SATURDAY 11:30-1:30 Open Floor Plan

OPEN SATURDAY 12:00-2:00 1st Time Open!

OPEN SUNDAY 12:00-2:00 New Roof!

• 3 Bedroom/3 Bath • Updated Kitchen • Remodeled Baths and Bedrooms • Vaulted Ceilings/Fireplace • 2 Car Garage/Patio/Firepit

$145,000

3 Bed, 3 Bath, Bsmt: No, 1,462 Sqft MLS# 141296 VT# 3924759

• Hardwood Floors • All Appliances Stay • Large Deck and Greenhouse • Fenced Yard • Close to KU and LHS

Lucy Harris 764-1583

$129,900

Kim Clements 766-5837

2 Bed, 1 Bath, Bsmt: Yes, 912 Sqft MLS# 141551

A Taste of San Francisco ‘A Seafood Extravaganza’ Join us for an evening inspired by The City by the Bay. Dinner will feature the freshest catch flown in from San Francisco for the event.

• Brand New Carpet • Fresh Interior/Exterior Paint • Two Living Spaces • Upstairs Laundry Area • Large Master with Bath

$118,500

Kimberly Williams 312-0743

3 Bed, 3 Bath, Bsmt: No, 1,455 Sqft MLS# 140681

Lawrence Breakfast Optimist Club Chili Feed Sunday, February 12 11 am - 2 pm

THURSDAY, JANUARY 26, 2017

6:00-10:00 PM ARTERRA EVENT GALLERY 2161 QUAIL CREEK DRIVE

Proceeds from the event will benefit Community Village Lawrence, a 501 (c) 3 non-profit organization dedicated to enhance quality of life for the entire community by helping neighbors remain in their homes as they age.

All-inclusive evening: Food. Drink. Live and silent auction. Bid items include ‘The Final Battle’, of the KU-MU game, painted by John Bukaty and signed by Bill Self.

David J. Ekerdt, Director of the KU Gerontology Center, will be our featured speaker.

To purchase tickets:

www.communityvillagelawrence.org $150 Individual. Tax deductible.

For questions: Community Village Lawrence office at (785) 505-0187

Emily Willis 691-9986

Kimberly Williams 312-0743

American Legion Hall 3408 West 6th St. Adults $6 Donation

Children (6-12) $3 Donation Children under 6 free Support Youth Programs • Lawrence & Eudora

| 7A


8A

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Friday, January 20, 2017

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.

L awrence J ournal -W orld

CONGRATULATIONS TO ALL OF OUR LBOR AWARD RECIPIENTS AND OFFICE HOLDERS

Deborah McMullen DISTINGUISHED SERVICE AWARD

Kate Carnahan RISING STAR AWARD

Henry Wertin

Kimberly Williams

ERIN MORGAN

2017 LBOR PRESIDENT ELECT

2017 LBOR SECRETARY

2017 LBOR DIRECTOR

Deborah McMullen

Mike McGrew

2016 KAR PAST PRESIDENT

2016 NAR PAST TREASURER

(LBOR = LAWRENCE BOARD OF REALTORS® • NAR = NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® • KAR = KANSAS ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®)


SECTION B

USA TODAY — L awrence J ournal -W orld

IN MONEY

IN LIFE

Mnuchin vies for top Treasury post

Q&A with inaugural singer Jackie Evancho

01.20.17 J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE, AP

PAUL MORIGI

INAUGURATION 2017

Trump’s test: Finding his voice Stakes are high as divided world awaits his inaugural speech Susan Page USA TODAY

Never has a new president needed a spectacular inaugural address more than Donald Trump does. Just after noon Friday, the real estate mogul and reality TV star will be sworn in as the nation’s 45th president amid fiercer controversy and bigger protests than any incoming commander in chief in modern times. Even during economic depression and world war, civil rights struggles and Vietnam protests, presidential transitions typically have been marked by a sense of national unity and goodwill, even if it doesn’t last long. Not this time. The polarized era, the blunt weapon of social media, critics’ questions about the legitimacy of his election and his own divisive rhetoric since Election Day mean Trump actually seems to be losing ground. His approval ratings in a string of nationwide polls out this week are lower than the 46% of the vote he carried Nov. 8. His disapproval rating in an ABC/Washington Post poll is higher than the disapproval ratings of the previous three presidents at this point — combined. That includes George W. Bush, sworn in after his own disputed election. Standing on the West Front of the Capitol, Trump will address the largest audience of his life as battle lines are drawn around his presidency. It will be a test for a man known more for communicating in blistering 140-character tweets than in a scripted, longform oration. “This is a time everybody’s tuned in,” former Virginia congressman Tom Davis, a Republican, said in an interview. “This is his opportunity, if not to turn it around, at least to get on a different trajectory.” “I think the goal is to be optimistic; the goal is to be inclusive; the goal is to outline your agenda,” said Florida Gov. Rick Scott, an early Trump supporter. “It’s no different than in your business life: If you say where you’re going to go, there’s a greater chance you’ll find people who will help you get there.” Not surprisingly, previews of NEWS ANALYSIS

President-elect Donald Trump and his wife, Melania, arrive at a pre-inaugural celebration at the Lincoln Memorial.

This is an edition of USA TODAY provided for your local newspaper. An expanded version of USA TODAY is available at newsstands or by subscription, and at usatoday.com.

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

EVAN VUCCI, AP

Was President Obama a positive influence on the labor market? Amid economic agony, he racked up more than 10 million jobs

Paul Davidson and Roger Yu USA TODAY

USA SNAPSHOTS©

Oldest president At

70,

Donald Trump is the oldest elected president in the USA.

NOTE Average age of all 44 presidents: 55 SOURCE Statista Research MICHAEL B. SMITH AND PAUL TRAP, USA TODAY

Of the myriad ways to judge a U.S. presidency, one measure emerges as the bottom line for many Americans: jobs. Much like a baseball player’s runs batted in or a company’s earnings, the number of jobs created during a president’s tenure is the vital statistic etched in memory decades later. Bill Clinton? 23 million. Ronald Reagan? 16 million. By that barometer, President Obama, who took office during the depths of the worst economic downturn since the NEWS ANALYSIS

v STORY CONTINUES ON 2B

EVAN VUCCI, AP

President Obama gets generally high marks for his record in job creation during his eight years in the White House.

v STORY CONTINUES ON 2B

A whirlwind two days for the White House’s newest occupants Gregory Korte l USA TODAY

President-elect Donald Trump has a busy 48 hours of inaugural-related activities, highlighted by his swearing-in as the 45th president of the United States at noon Friday. Trump press secretary Sean Spicer announced the official schedule Thursday. All times are Eastern and subject to change — except for the oath of office, which is mandated by the Constitution.

FRIDAY u8:30 a.m.: Trump, Vice President-elect Mike Pence, their Cabinet nominees and their families and friends will attending a church service at St. John’s Episcopal Church, known as “the church of the presidents” because every president since James Madison has attended services there. u9:30 a.m.: Trump, Pence and their families will attend a tea hosted by President and Mrs. Obama on the South Portico of the White House. u10 a.m.: President Obama and Vice President Biden will escort their successors to the Capitol for

the inauguration. u11 a.m.: The inauguration program begins. uNoon: Pence will be sworn in as vice president, followed by Trump’s oath of office as president. Trump will deliver his inaugural address. u1 p.m.: Trump, Pence and their wives will will attend a Joint Congressional Inaugural Committee luncheon at the Capitol. JACK GRUBER, USA TODAY

The West Front of the Capitol is ready a day before Friday’s inauguration.

u2:30 p.m.: Trump and Pence will attend a military review at the East Front of the Capitol, and then parade down Pennsylvania Avenue to the White House.

u3 p.m.: Trump and Pence attend the Inaugural Parade in stands just outside of the White House. Afterward, he will work in the White House, where he may sign some executive orders.

u7 p.m.: Trump, Pence and their wives will attend the Liberty and Freedom Ball at the Washington Convention Center, followed by the Military Ball at the National Building Museum.

SATURDAY u10 a.m.: Trump, Pence and their families will attend the National Prayer Service at the Washington National Cathedral.


2B

L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY FRIDAY, JANUARY 20, 2017

INAUGURATION 2017

Addresses are about inspiration v CONTINUED FROM 1B

the speech by Trump advisers say he will strike the themes that propelled his presidential candidacy. Expect to hear his campaign promise to “make America great again” and the phrase “America first.” He’ll spotlight his vow to bring back well-paying manufacturing jobs to the Rust Belt and defeat the terror threat from the Islamic State. “He wants to continue to talk about issues and areas where he can unite the country, bring it together,” spokesman Sean Spicer said Thursday. The most successful inaugural addresses have been less a laundry list of legislative goals — that’s the stuff of State of the Union speeches — and more about inspiration and aspiration, especially at times of division. “We are all Republicans; we are all Federalists,” Thomas Jefferson declared in the country’s first peaceful transfer of power, in 1801. During the Great Depression, in 1933, Franklin Roosevelt reassured Americans, “The only thing we have to fear is fear itself.” Even Richard Nixon, after an election in a time of race riots, war protests and political assassination, embraced conciliation in 1969. “We cannot learn from one another until we stop shouting at one another,” he said. Clearly there are limits to what even the most soaring rhetoric can achieve. Nixon ended up resigning under threat of impeachment in his second term. Abraham Lincoln called on “the better angels of our nature” in 1861, but the Civil War soon followed. In 1865 in his second inaugural address, perhaps the most eloquent one in American history, Lincoln urged a riven nation to bind up its wounds “with malice toward none, with charity for all.” That’s precisely the message Trump needs to deliver, advised Tad Devine, the top strategist for Sen. Bernie Sanders’ bid for the Democratic presidential nomination last year. “What he should do is ‘with malice toward none, with charity for all,’ ” he said. “So far, he’s had malice toward everybody from John Lewis to Meryl Streep.” A spate of provocative postings on Twitter — including tweet

SHAWN THEW, EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY

People protest against President-elect Donald Trump in front of the Supreme Court in Washington on Nov. 15. storms with the civil rights icon (“all talk, talk, talk, no action”) and the award-winning actress (“overrated”) — have grabbed headlines and fueled the frenetic air surrounding Trump’s transition. Thursday morning, he posted a tweet arguing he wasn’t to blame for a divided country. Trump has taken fewer steps than other presidents-elect in modern times to reach out to the Americans who didn’t vote for him, presumably one reason he has gained the approval of few of them. When he embarked on a post-election “thank you” tour, he went only to states he carried, speaking to supporters in campaign-style rallies. Unlike his recent predecessors, he didn’t reach across the aisle to name a Democratic officeholder to his Cabinet. President Obama has warned he might break with a modern precedent himself. Bush and oth-

“We cannot learn from one another until we stop shouting at one another.” Richard Nixon in his inaugural address after a tumultuous election during a time of race riots, war protests and political assassination

ASSOCIATED PRESS

President Richard Nixon dedicates his new administration to the cause of “peace among nations” in his inaugural speech Jan. 20, 1969.

er recent former presidents have largely stepped away from political combat after moving out of the Oval Office. At his final White House news conference Wednesday, the outgoing president said he would speak out if he saw threats to “core values,” a term he indicated could include

establishing a Muslim registry and deporting young undocumented immigrants, the so-called DREAMers. Trump’s defenders cite his remarks on election night, after his unexpected victory, as an apt template for his inaugural address. Then, in a 15-minute speech, reading from teleprompters before a bank of American flags, Trump congratulated Democratic opponent Hillary Clinton on “a very, very hard-fought campaign” and thanked her for her service to the country. He promised to be a president for “all Republicans and Democrats and independents.” Friday, he’ll have another chance to speak to the supporters who will be massed on the National Mall to cheer him — and an unprecedented influx of demonstrators who have flocked to town to protest him.

Unemployment cut more than half under Obama v CONTINUED FROM 1B

Great Depression and departs Friday, achieved historic success. The economy has added 15.5 million jobs since employment bottomed in early 2010, and the 156,000 picked up in December marked the 75th straight month of payroll gains, an all-time record. The grand total for Obama’s two terms, after figuring in the severe job losses of 2009: 10.5 million. The unemployment rate has plunged to 4.7% from 10% in 2009. Wages are finally climbing in earnest. “He was about as good a job creator as can be expected, given the cards he was dealt,” says Mark Zandi, chief economist of Moody’s Analytics. Besides a devastating financial crisis, those cards included a recalcitrant Republican-dominated Congress for much of his term, a weak global economy and sharp federal budget cuts. Some critics point to the dimmer side of the employment picture. The share of Americans working or looking for jobs is near historic lows. About 10 million prime-age men aren’t in the labor force — a lingering casualty of the Great Recession. Wage increases were stagnant at about 2% for most of the 71⁄2-year-old recovery. “Several million people are not earning income, not producing,” says Dan Mitchell, senior fellow at the conservative Cato Institute. “I don’t think it’s good for the economy, and it’s not good for those people.” Mitchell at least partly blames the substantial increase in the disability and food stamp rolls during and after the recession, which he says encouraged some Americans to remain idle.

GERALD HERBERT, AP

Vice President Biden watches as President Obama signs the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act on Feb. 17, 2009. “We’ve expanded the welfare state,” he says. Lawrence Mishel, president of the left-leaning Economic Policy Institute, says such payments, along with extended unemployment insurance, provided laid-off Americans a lifeline and propped up consumer spending and the economy. Zandi says most of the decline in labor force participation can be traced to retiring Baby Boomers. Most economists say Obama’s actions during and after the 2008-09 financial crisis and recession revived a teetering economy that was losing 800,000 jobs a month when he was sworn in and left nearly 9 million unemployed. Obama spearheaded the $831 billion American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, otherwise known as the economic stimulus, a sprawling package that included infrastructure spending, tax credits, state and local aid and extended unemployment benefits.

The program added nearly 3 million jobs at its peak in 2010 and cut the unemployment rate by 1.5 percentage points, according to a study in 2015 by Zandi and Princeton economist Alan Blinder. “The key to turning around the job market was the Recovery Act,” says Zandi, who also credits Federal Reserve bond purchases that lowered long-term interest rates. “We were looking into the abyss.” “I really don’t buy the numbers,” says Aparna Mathur, an economist at the conservative American Enterprise Institute. In light of the stimulus’ size, “we really didn’t see a big recovery in the labor market,” which she says took nearly eight years to return to pre-recession levels. Obama carried through the Troubled Asset Relief Program, also known as the bank bailout. It resuscitated the largest banks whose capital was depleted by the housing crash, spurring lending

and economic activity and adding 3 million or so jobs, Zandi and Blinder estimate. Although Bush signed TARP into law, Obama used the funds to significantly expand the rescue of the auto industry — a highly controversial move at the time — saving hundreds of thousands of jobs. The White House pushed jobtraining programs that better coordinated efforts among industry, community colleges and state and local officials; supplied grants and other funds for apprenticeships; and established a national public-private network to promote innovation in manufacturing, among other programs. After losing more than 2 million jobs in the recession — which accelerated a decades-long trend — manufacturers have added 822,000 jobs since early 2010. “I think (Obama) did a very good job in laying a foundation for manufacturing in America,” says Scott Paul, president of the Alliance for American Manufacturing. He says the administration could have acted earlier in taking a tough stance toward China’s currency manipulation and in challenging its dumping of products in the USA at below-market prices. Republicans branded Obama a job killer for imposing too many regulations and failing to cut corporate taxes. Often cited: the Affordable Care Act, or Obamacare, which prompted some employers to convert full-time employees to part-time or keep full-time staff below 50 to avoid the health coverage mandate. Similarly, Mathur says, the Dodd-Frank financial overhaul restrained banks, particularly small players removed from the meltdown, curtailing growth. Zandi says that there’s little ev-

idence the health care law hurt payrolls and that it created thousands of jobs by expanding coverage to millions of Americans. Dodd-Frank, he argues, generated legal and other jobs to comply with new requirements. Corrections & Clarifications USA TODAY is committed to accuracy. To reach us, contact Standards Editor Brent Jones at 800-8727073 or e-mail accuracy@usatoday.com. Please indicate whether you’re responding to content online or in the newspaper.

PRESIDENT AND PUBLISHER

John Zidich

EDITOR IN CHIEF

Patty Michalski CHIEF REVENUE OFFICER

Kevin Gentzel

7950 Jones Branch Dr., McLean, Va. 22108, 703-854-3400 Published by Gannett The local edition of USA TODAY is published daily in partnership with Gannett Newspapers Advertising: All advertising published in USA TODAY is subject to the current rate card; copies available from the advertising department. USA TODAY may in its sole discretion edit, classify, reject or cancel at any time any advertising submitted. National, Regional: 703-854-3400 Reprint permission, copies of articles, glossy reprints: www.GannettReprints.com or call 212-221-9595 USA TODAY is a member of The Associated Press and subscribes to other news services. USA TODAY, its logo and associated graphics are registered trademarks. All rights reserved.


USA TODAY - L J 6B FRIDAY, JANUARY 20, 2017

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USA TODAY FRIDAY, JANUARY 20, 2017

awrence ournal -W orld

AMERICA’S MARKETS

ALL THE MARKET ACTION IN REAL TIME. MARKETS.USATODAY.COM

STORY STOCKS

INVESTING ASK MATT

Top lesson in 17 years? Get started

Price: $56.66 Day’s high: $57.60 Low: $56.39

Q: How can I make money on stocks?

The bank agreed to pay a $25 million fine after being hit with “spoofing charges.” U.S. derivatives regulators accuse one of the bank’s units of entering U.S. Treasury futures market orders with the intent of canceling.

Matt Krantz

mkrantz@usatoday.com USA TODAY

A: Today is the final Ask Matt column. I’m joining a moneymanagement firm as a writer. It seemed the right time for me to impart the top lesson I’ve learned from answering your questions for 17 years. Here goes: If you want to make money on stocks, stop obsessing about minutiae. Get started. Invest, diversify and hold on. If you don’t know how, hire help. It’s easy to fixate on details like choosing which stock to buy, which investment accounts to

Citigroup

Change -$0.73

open and fees. But investors get so bogged down with details they often make the big mistake — they sit out the market. Consider this. Let’s say 25 years ago, you invested $10,000 in a disappointing investment that trails the market by 2 percentage points a year. Let’s make it even uglier and say this investment charges a 1.5% annual fee, which is twice the average of mutual funds. Even this horrible investment would have gained 274% over the 25-year period to $38,934. Had you sat out the market and bought six-month CDs instead, your $10,000 would have increased just 81% to $18,057. Don’t make it hard. Just buy a diversified stock and bond fund. If you don’t know how, get help. Just get started.

% chg -1.3%

Change -$1.98 % chg -0.9%

-8.20

Change $0.01 % chg 0.2%

-15.57

CLOSE: 19,732.40 PREV. CLOSE: 19,804.72 RANGE: 19,677.94-19,824.14

CHANGE: -.4% YTD: +24.86 YTD % CHG: +1.1%

-12.82

Allergan

The pharmaceutical company is hoping to develop medicines that will treat symptoms of Alzheimer’s since there is no treatment for the disease itself. Meanwhile, the FDA approved the company’s Rhofade cream for persistent facial redness in adults.

$250

Price: $5.44

4-WEEK TREND

Day’s high: $5.48

$150

Low: $5.41

$214.58

Dec. 22

Jan. 19

$6

$5

$5.44

Dec. 22

Jan. 19

19,732.40

CLOSE: 5,540.08 PREV. CLOSE: 5,555.65 RANGE: 5,528.37-5,571.53

July

CLOSE: 1,345.75 PREV. CLOSE: 1,358.57 RANGE: 1,342.14-1,360.75

Price

$ Chg

+3.9

+5.9 +11.8

22.48

+.81

+3.7

-3.8

Mallinckrodt (MNK) Shares rise as company settles with FTC.

48.12

+1.59

+3.4

-3.4

+2.4

July

+2.21

+2.1

-1.5

Emerson Electric (EMR) Positive company note, wins contract.

58.43

+1.21

+2.1

+4.8

NRG Energy (NRG) 15.56 Shares climb as it announces quarterly dividend.

+.30

+2.0 +26.9

HP (HPQ) Shares gain as UBS upgrades rating.

+.28

+1.9

14.86

+.1

YTD % Chg % Chg

Price

$ Chg

Chesapeake Energy (CHK) 6.62 Shares dip in losing sector as oil production plummets.

-.36

-5.2

-5.7

-3.67

-3.7

-2.8

94.36

AP

Fund, ranked by size Vanguard 500Adml Vanguard TotStIAdm Vanguard InstIdxI Vanguard TotStIdx Vanguard InstPlus Vanguard TotIntl Vanguard TotStIIns Vanguard WelltnAdm American Funds GrthAmA m American Funds IncAmerA m

NAV 209.04 56.72 206.27 56.70 206.28 15.12 56.73 67.85 43.42 21.84

Chg. -0.75 -0.23 -0.74 -0.23 -0.74 -0.02 -0.23 -0.12 +0.01 -0.06

4wk 1 +0.2% +0.2% +0.2% +0.1% +0.2% +3.3% +0.2% +0.2% +2.1% +0.6%

YTD 1 +1.2% +1.1% +1.2% +1.1% +1.2% +2.6% +1.1% +0.6% +3.3% +0.8%

-2.23

-3.6

+1.1

Newell Rubbermaid (NWL) Earnings estimate lowered, shares follow.

45.97

-1.58

-3.3

+3.0

Western Union (WU) 21.13 Will pay $586 million for wire fraud, money laundering.

-.72

-3.3

-2.7

Pitney Bowes (PBI) 15.67 Shares slide as it mentions others’ shipping rate increases.

-.54

-3.3

+3.2

Nordstrom (JWN) Weak holiday sales stretched into January.

42.93

-1.38

-3.1

-10.4

Sysco (SYY) Stock dips to year’s low in losing sector.

53.62

-1.63

-3.0

-3.2

Bank of New York Mellon (BK) Shares decline as revenue trails estimates.

44.84

-1.39

-3.0

-5.4

Urban Outfitters (URBN) Fund manager reduces in lagging industry.

26.19

-.79

-2.9

-8.0

SOURCE: BLOOMBERG AND THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SECTOR

PERFORMANCE DAILY YTD

Energy

-0.5%

23.1%

Industrials

0.7%

19.7%

Materials

-0.6%

16.6%

Technology

-0.1%

15.6%

Utilities

-0.9%

12.2%

1 – CAPITAL GAINS AND DIVIDENDS REINVESTED

ETF, ranked by volume Dirx Jr GoldMin Bull SPDR S&P500 ETF Tr VanE Vect Gld Miners SPDR Financial Dir Dly Gold Bull3x iShs Emerg Mkts CS VelSh 3xInvrsNGs Barc iPath Vix ST iShares Rus 2000 iShares Brazil

Ticker JNUG SPY GDX XLF NUGT EEM DGAZ VXX IWM EWZ

Close 8.28 225.91 22.88 23.04 9.81 36.35 3.83 21.54 133.75 36.13

Chg. -0.07 -0.84 -0.13 -0.10 -0.20 -0.11 -0.01 +0.23 -1.10 +0.47

% Chg %YTD -0.8% +48.4% -0.4% +1.1% -0.6% +9.4% -0.4% -0.9% -2.0% +28.4% -0.3% +3.8% -0.3% +26.4% +1.1% -15.6% -0.8% -0.8% +1.3% +8.4%

INTEREST RATES

MORTGAGE RATES

Type Prime lending Federal funds 3 mo. T-bill 5 yr. T-note 10 yr. T-note

Type 30 yr. fixed 15 yr. fixed 1 yr. ARM 5/1 ARM

Close 6 mo ago 3.75% 3.50% 0.66% 0.40% 0.51% 0.31% 1.95% 1.11% 2.47% 1.56%

Close 6 mo ago 4.07% 3.42% 3.23% 2.69% 3.04% 2.83% 3.38% 2.92%

SOURCE: BANKRATE.COM

COMMODITIES

Nucor (NUE) 60.15 Shares dip in negative fourth-quarter expectations.

Jan.

MARKET PERFORMANCE BY SECTOR

TOP 10 EXCHANGE TRADED FUNDS 105.16

J.B. Hunt Transport (JBHT) Fourth quarter seen as “disappointing.”

Jan.

+2.5

Nvidia (NVDA) Positive company note, evens 2017.

Company (ticker symbol)

2,050

July TOP 10 MUTUAL FUNDS

Cabot Oil & Gas (COG) Natural gas pipelines move forward.

+2.47

2,263.69

5,000

Netflix (NFLX) 138.41 Gaps up premarket after beating fourth quarter.

106.24

2,250

5,600

+23.4 +26.7 +4.0

+5.15

STANDARD & POOR’S 500

5,540.08

YTD % Chg % Chg

Norfolk Southern (NSC) 114.42 +4.45 Shares rise with optimistic Canadian Pacific Railway.

Union Pacific (UNP) Company sees operating ratio improving.

Jan.

NASDAQ COMPOSITE

CHANGE: -.9% YTD: -11.39 YTD % CHG: -.8%

Company (ticker symbol)

17,500

RUSSELL 2000 INDEX

CSX (CSX) 45.51 +8.63 Company is said to be targeted by activists; shares jump.

LOSERS

4-WEEK TREND

CLOSE: 2,263.69 PREV. CLOSE: 2,271.89 RANGE: 2,258.41-2,274.33

S&P 500’S BIGGEST GAINERS/LOSERS GAINERS

Price: $214.58 Day’s high: $217.46 Low: $214.15

Jan. 19

20,000

RUSSELL

RUT

COMPOSITE

CHANGE: -.3% YTD: +156.96 YTD % CHG: +2.9%

Dec. 22

STANDARD & POOR'S

NASDAQ

COMP

$50

The banking and insurance holding company reportedly will take a multibillion charge for a U.S. mortgage securities probe. Its stock rating was downgraded to neutral at Goldman Sachs. Shares jumped premarket before falling back.

S&P 500

SPX

INDUSTRIAL AVERAGE

CHANGE: -.4% YTD: -30.20 YTD % CHG: -.2%

$56.66

DOW JONES INDUSTRIALS

DOW JONES

-72.32

$90

Royal Bank of Scotland Group

MAJOR INDEXES DJIA

4-WEEK TREND

Commodities Close Prev. Cattle (lb.) 1.21 1.20 Corn (bushel) 3.66 3.65 Gold (troy oz.) 1,200.90 1,211.30 Hogs, lean (lb.) .65 .65 Natural Gas (Btu.) 3.37 3.30 Oil, heating (gal.) 1.62 1.61 Oil, lt. swt. crude (bar.) 51.37 51.08 Silver (troy oz.) 16.97 17.24 Soybeans (bushel) 10.70 10.75 Wheat (bushel) 4.24 4.31

Chg. +0.01 +0.01 -10.40 unch. +0.07 +0.01 +0.29 -0.27 -0.05 -0.07

% Chg. +0.6% +0.3% -0.9% +0.3% +2.0% +0.6% +0.6% -1.6% -0.4% -1.7%

% YTD +1.7% +4.1% +4.4% -1.1% -9.6% -5.1% -4.4% +6.5% +7.4% +3.8%

Close .8106 1.3320 6.8766 .9382 114.80 21.9551

Prev. .8141 1.3240 6.8342 .9377 113.74 21.9303

Close 11,596.89 23,049.96 19,072.25 7,208.44 46,265.27

Consumer staples -0.4%

3.5%

Telcom

0.1%

3.5%

Health care

-0.6%

-2.8%

Financials

-0.4%

-3.3%

CBOE VOLATILITY INDEX Measures expected market volatility based on S&P 500 index options pricing:

12.78

20 30

10

6 mo. ago .7638 1.3023 6.6951 .9079 106.09 18.5450

Yr. ago .7054 1.4567 6.5821 .9155 117.44 18.2927

40

Prev. Change 11,599.39 -2.50 23,098.26 -48.30 18,894.37 +177.88 7,247.61 -39.17 46,360.63 -95.37

%Chg. unch. -0.2% +0.9% -0.5% -0.2%

15

IN-DEPTH MARKETS COVERAGE USATODAY.COM/MONEY

7.5

YTD % +1.0% +4.8% -0.2% +0.9% +1.4%

SOURCES: MORNINGSTAR, DOW JONES INDEXES, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

+0.30 (+2.4%)

S&P 500 P/E RATIO The price-to-earnings ratio, based on trailing 12-month “operating” earnings:

FOREIGN MARKETS Country Frankfurt Hong Kong Japan (Nikkei) London Mexico City

7.1%

0

FOREIGN CURRENCIES Currency per dollar British pound Canadian dollar Chinese yuan Euro Japanese yen Mexican peso

Consumer discret. -0.3%

20.80 22.5

0 SOURCE BLOOMBERG

-0.07 (-0.3%)

30

Hyundai plans $3.1B investment in U.S. plants, research Chris Woodyard @ChrisWoodyard USA TODAY

It’s not just Detroit automakers that are feeling pressure from President-elect Donald Trump to boost their automotive operations in the U.S. Now Hyundai Motor Group says it’s going to beef up its U.S. factories and operations, spending $3.1 billion by 2021. The South Korean automaker made the announcement in South Ko-

2012 PHOTO BY MONTGOMERY ADVERTISER VIA AP

Worker at Hyundai Motor Manufacturing of Alabama plant.

rea, where it is based, in a move that may have been intended to head off any additional broadsides from Trump, who has already chastised General Motors,

Ford Motor and Toyota, among others, about plans to expand factories abroad, especially Mexico, and import vehicles to the U.S. Hyundai Motor Group, which includes the Hyundai and Kia brands in the U.S., will spend its billions on research and development, its president, Chung Jin Haeng, told reporters in Seoul. The investment will also augment its Hyundai and Kia factories in Alabama and Georgia. If demand rises, the group will consider building a new plant in the U.S., he says. The Hyundai brand sold 775,005 new vehicles

in the U.S. last year, up 1.7%, compared to an overall rise in U.S. sales of 3.1%, Autodata reports. Kia fared better, selling 647,598 new cars and SUVs, up 3.5%. The added investment would mark a 50% gain compared to the $2.1 billion Hyundai Group sunk into U.S. operations over the past four years, Haeng said. Trump has singled out the auto industry when it comes to adding jobs to the U.S. in a series of Twitter messages, including threats of a 35% tariff on imported vehicles. Ford Motor, which received its share of grief from Trump tweets

during the campaign, said this month it is canceling plans to build a $1.6 billion plant in Mexico. Also this month, Trump went after Toyota, which is building a $1 billion plant to make Corolla sedans near Guanajuato in central Mexico. In a tweet, Trump said “NO WAY!” to the plans for south of the border. “Build plant in U.S. or pay big border tax.” Toyota responded by saying “it has been part of the cultural fabric in the U.S. for 60 years” and builds many vehicles in America. Contributing: The Associated Press


SPORTS LIFE AUTOS In theaters this weekend TRAVEL 4B

7B

USA TODAY FRIDAY, JANUARY 20, 2017

L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY FRIDAY, JANUARY 20, 2017

MOVIES

Fences

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Plot: A Pittsburgh garbage man (Denzel Washington) finds success at work but increasing tension at home. Director: Denzel Washington

The Founder

2 hours, 19 minutes

Passengers

Rating: PG-13 Upside: Both Washington and co-star Viola Davis give powerhouse, award-ready performances. Downside: It’s more filmed play than movie, so it doesn’t feel cinematic in scope.

Plot: Two beautiful passengers (Jennifer Lawrence and Chris Pratt) are awakened 90 years early on a journey to a distant space colony when their sleeping pods malfunction. Director: Morten Tyldum

1 hour, 55 minutes

Patriots Day

Rating: PG-13 Upside: Keaton exudes folksy likability with an edge as the biopic’s iconic subject. Downside: The plot meanders with subplots and veers wildly from its initial feel-good tone.

Plot: Cops and residents pull together after the 2013 bombings at the Boston Marathon rock the city. Director: Peter Berg

2 hours, 7 minutes

Rogue One: A Star Wars Story

Rating: PG Upside: The film has a strong cast as well as heady themes of civil rights. Downside: The space drama sometimes takes the focus off the three stars’ magnetic chemistry.

Plot: A group of Rebel spies embark on a mission to steal the secret plans for the Empire’s Death Star. Director: Gareth Edwards

2 hours, 8 minutes

Sing

Rating: PG-13 Upside: The movie revisits the Hollywood musical in joyous and dazzling fashion. Downside: Not for Grinches who don’t like good tunes and Broadway-style showstoppers.

Plot: A showman koala (voiced by Matthew McConaughey) tries to save his theater with a singing competition. Director: Garth Jennings

2 hours, 9 minutes

Split

Rating: R Upside: There’s no shortage of style, and it offers a narrative appealing to gangster-movie fans. Downside: The plot is haphazard, and the good stuff gets caught up in well-trodden crime clichés.

Plot: A man (James McAvoy) with 23 distinct personalities takes three teenage girls captive. Director: M. Night Shyamalan

1 hour, 53 minutes

Why Him?

Rating: PG Upside: The charming seafaring epic is buoyed by a bevy of Lin-Manuel Miranda tunes. Downside: The plot drifts away at times.

Plot: Traditional Midwestern dad Ned (Bryan Cranston) watches Christmas go to the dogs in Palo Alto, where his daughter (Zoey Deutch) insists that he give Laird (James Franco), her tattooed billionaire boyfriend, a chance. Director: John Hamburg

PARAMOUNT PICTURES

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Plot: The journey of Ray Kroc (Michael Keaton) from struggling salesman to the face of the McDonald’s franchise. Director: John Lee Hancock

Compiled from reviews by USA TODAY film critics

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Plot: Three mathematicians (Taraji P. Henson, Octavia Spencer and Janelle Monáe) overcome racial and gender inequality to help America during the space race. Director: Theodore Melfi

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Plot: An aspiring actress (Emma Stone) and a jazz pianist (Ryan Gosling) fall in love while trying to make their dreams come true. Director: Damien Chazelle

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Plot: A Boston criminal (Ben Affleck) ends up running a busy rum business in Florida while on a mission of revenge. Director: Ben Affleck

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Plot: A teenage adventurer (voiced by Auli‘i Cravalho) hits the high seas to return a mystical gem and save her island. Directors: John Musker and Ron Clements

Rating: PG-13 Upside: The drama effectively captures the real tragedy and the “Boston Strong” spirit. Downside: The plot is exposition-heavy at first before settling into an action-packed pace.

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2 hours, 14 minutes Rating: PG-13 Upside: Edwards has a strong handle on what makes ‘Star Wars’-ready spectacle. Downside: The spinoff is upended by a glut of fan service and a lack of strong characterization.

LUCASFILM LTD.

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1 hour, 48 minutes Rating: PG Upside: The musical sequences are done well, plus there are hilariously quirky moments. Downside: It’s not a very deep story, and on the whole can’t compare in a strong year of talking-animal fare.

UNIVERSAL PICTURES

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WARNER BROS. PICTURES

Moana

2 hours, 13 minutes

CBS/LIONSGATE

LIONSGATE

Live by Night

Rating: PG-13 Upside: Lawrence and Pratt have chemistry, but android bartender Arthur (Michael Sheen) steals the show. Downside: Events spin madly out of control and crash into a sappy ending.

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20TH CENTURY FOX

La La Land

1 hour, 56 minutes

COLUMBIA PICTURES/SONY

THE WEINSTEIN COMPANY

Hidden Figures

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1 hour, 57 minutes Rating: PG-13 Upside: McAvoy is captivating in a taxing and physical role. Downside: Stock characters and thriller clichés bog down the movie’s twisty narrative.

UNIVERSAL PICTURES VIA AP

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DISNEY

LIFELINE

1 hour, 51 minutes Rating: R Upside: If ‘Bad Santa’ is your favorite flavor of holiday comedy, this expletive-laden tale is for you. Downside: Megan Mullally, who steals the film as Ned’s wife Barb, should have gotten more screen time.

20TH CENTURY FOX

MUSIC

THEY SAID WHAT? THE STARS’ BEST QUOTES “Thank you for sending a message to Hollywood that people want to hear stories about women, and we want to hear your stories. ... Now more than ever, you need to be heard, you are valuable, and no one can limit you.” — Blake Lively to her female fans at this week’s People’s Choice Awards

CAUGHT IN THE ACT Actress Drew Barrymore jokes around with Spanish chef Ramon Freixa while promoting her new series, ‘Santa Clarita Diet,’ at a press event in Madrid. The series debuts on Netflix Feb. 3.

Inaugural’s Jackie Evancho: ‘It’s not about the politics’ Sixteen-year-old is riding a wave of attention

Q

Patrick Ryan

A

USA TODAY CARLOS ALVAREZ, GETTY IMAGES

JEFF KRAVITZ, FILMMAGIC

USA SNAPSHOTS©

Top workout jams of the Tiger 1. Eye Survivor

STYLE STAR ‘Westworld’ star James Marsden looked sharp at the Louis Vuitton Menswear show Thursday in Paris. The actor opted to forgo a tie but was anything but casual in a blue suit with pocket square and polka dot shirt. DOMINIQUE CHARRIAU, WIREIMAGE

IT’S YOUR BIRTHDAY WHO’S CELEBRATING TODAY?

Funk 2. Uptown Bruno Mars Yourself 3. Lose Eminem

If you’ve been anywhere on social media in the past month, you’ve undoubtedly seen the name “Jackie Evancho.” The 16-year-old classical singer (and America’s Got Talent alum) was hit by a tidal wave of attention when it was announced that she will perform the national anthem at Donald Trump’s presidential inauguration Friday. Though many were supportive of the soft-spoken teen — contributing to a minor sales spike during the holidays — others criticized her decision to sing for the outspoken presidentelect, especially considering that her sister, 18-year-old Juliet Evancho, is transgender. Evancho, who will release a still-untitled new album this spring, caught up with USA TODAY to discuss the inauguration and the response she has gotten on social media. You performed for Donald Trump once before (at his Mar-a-Lago resort in Palm Beach, Fla., in 2011). What do you remember about him? He was actually very polite, grateful that I was

Q

NOTE Selected among three in five fitness enthusiasts who pick specific songs to sweat to. SOURCE LG TONE music survey among 2,010 U.S. adults who exercise at least an hour per week TERRY BYRNE AND VERONICA BRAVO, USA TODAY

GETTY IMAGES; USA TODAY

Evan Peters is 30. Stacey Dash is 50. Rainn Wilson is 51.

A

exact same way that I do. It’s not exactly about the politics of the event, it’s about the honor. How do you cope with the hateful messages you’ve received on social media? Are you able to block them out? Yeah, for the most part. There’s nothing else you can do. My family and I just kind of ignore it as if it wasn’t there. Was there one particular note that ever really got to you or made you take a step back from social media? No, there are a million different opinions out there. People are always going to state it, whether it’s hateful or not. And that’s no reason to back out of anything or shut down anything, unless you really need a break from it all. But I don’t really need a break from it, because I don’t pay much attention to it. Your sister has similarly gotten backlash as she has advocated against trans discrimination. Has this experience brought you closer? It has, and we’ve always been very close, but just to kind of put up with stuff like that brings our family closer. Is there another milestone you’d like to check off after this? Well, actually, because I’ve performed for (President Obama) and I will be performing for our next, I’m thinking it might be fun to try to perform for as many presidents as possible. That’d be fun.

Q

PAUL MORIGI, GETTY IMAGES, FOR CAPITAL CONCERT

Jackie Evancho will perform the national anthem Friday.

there to perform. It was a great experience. Despite all the controversy around his election and politics, why did you decide to perform at his inauguration? Because it’s an honor to perform for my country, and I don’t really do politics. So I don’t let that stand in between an honor to perform for the country. I understand that your sister won’t be attending. Will the rest of your family be there? Everyone except for my sister and my mom will be attending, yeah. How did your sister react to the news that you’ll be performing, given Mike Pence’s track record with opposing LGBTQ rights? She was very supportive of me because she views it the

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LAWRENCE • AREA

L awrence J ournal -W orld

BRIEFLY Theater company restaging ‘Arturo Ui’ in time for inauguration weekend Lawrence’s Card Table Theatre is restaging its production of “The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui,” Bertolt Brecht’s 1941 allegorical satire about the ascent of Nazism in 1930s Germany, in local venues this week and next. “Arturo Ui,” which chronicles the rise and fall of a Chicago gangster modeled after Adolf Hitler but who also “uses the tactics of Donald Trump,” was originally staged in Lawrence last spring as a protest against “the rise of the Trump candidacy,” according to Card Table’s website. Now, in light of the election results and Trump’s inauguration, the company is restaging “Arturo Ui,” bringing back the nearly entire all-female cast, today and Saturday at Kansas City, Mo.’s The Fishtank, 1715 Wyandotte St., and again the following weekend, Jan. 27-28, at Lawrence’s The Eagles Lodge, 1803 W. Sixth St. Curtain time is 7:30 p.m. for all shows. Tickets cost $20 for the Kansas City show and $15 for the Lawrence show. They can be purchased at the door or online at cardtabletheatre. com.

Sex crime reported; details sparse A sex crime was reported to Lawrence police on Wednesday. The report was made shortly after 11 a.m. Wednesday, according to the Lawrence Police Department’s incident log for the day. The location was listed as “city at large.” Officer Drew Fennelly, a spokesman for the department, said Thursday that he was unable to provide any information on the case or victim because of the nature of the investigation. Fennelly said the investigation was ongoing and that no one had been arrested.

Dense fog advisory issued for Lawrence area until 10 a.m. today The National Weather Service in Topeka issued a dense fog advisory for the Lawrence area in effect from 10 p.m. Thursday until 10 a.m. today. The fog could make travel difficult, as visibility will likely be reduced to a quarter of a mile or less, the news release said. The weather service is cautioning motorists to slow down, use their headlights and leave plenty of distance ahead of them.

DEATHS Journal-World obituary policy: For information about running obituaries, call 832-7151. Obituaries run as submitted by funeral homes or the families of the deceased.

BUD (DAVID E.) JONES 83, Tonganoxiee, died 1/15/17. Funeral 10 am Saturday 1/21 at Quisenberry Funeral Home, Tonganoxie, with visitation 6­8 pm Friday at the funeral home. www.quisenberryfh.com

CHRISTOPHER C. KASPAREK died Tuesday, January 17, 2017. Service 3pm, Saturday, McLouth First Baptist Church, McLouth. Visitation 6­8pm, Friday McLouth First Baptist Church. www.barnettfamilyfh.com

MARGARET "MICKEY"ELIZABETH RAYBURN­RICHARDS Arrangements for Mickey Rayburn­Richards, 88, will be announced in February by Rumsey­ Yost Funeral Home. She died Thursday at Medicalodges Eudora. rumsey­yost.com

JOANN TRAVIS JoAnn Travis, 81, of Decatur, IL (Formally of Lecompton) died Saturday, January 14, 2017. A Celebration of life will be held at a later date in Wapello, IA. Survivors include her husband, Charles; Daughters, Cheryl of Waterloo, IA; Jodee of Grandview, IA; Sons, Bill (Diane) of Muscatine, IA;

Tom of Wapello, IA; 11 grandchildren; 20 great grandchildren; 5 great­ great grandchildren. She was preceded in death by her parents and one brother. Please sign this guestbook at Obituaries.LJWorld.com ¸

ELIZABETH (BETTY) KITTERMAN Elizabeth "Betty" Kitterman,86, McLouth, KS, passed peacefully on January 18, 2017. Betty was born and raised in Monett, Missouri and came to Kansas to raise her family. She is preceded in death by her husband David Kitterman and son Lawrence "Larry" Kitterman. Loving mother to Leon, Patricia and Janice. Treasured grandmother to Jessica, Justin, Penny, Jodi, Holly, Alex , Sara and Joseph. Proud great­grandmother to Jordyn, Avery, Taylor, Jerzey, Gage, Cole,Reid, Ella, Kali, Adley and Daxton. Betty worked at various local restaurants sharing her love for cooking and most recently volunteered at the Good

Shephard Thrift Shop in Tonganoxie. She took great pleasure in making chicken dinners for her family and they took great pleasure in eating them. Memorial gathering January 21, 2017 from 10:00 a.m., until Memorial Mass at 11:00 a.m. at Sacred Heart Church, 1100 West St. Tonganoxie, Kansas 66086. Cremation has taken place. Arrangements by Quisenberry Funeral Home 604 4th St. Tonganoxie, Kansas. Memorial contridutions may be made to Sacred Heart Church building fund. ¸

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KU vice chancellor top pick for WKU job By Sara Shepherd sshepherd@ljworld.com

University of Kansas vice chancellor for public affairs Tim Caboni has been named the preferred candidate to become the next president of Western Kentucky University. The Western Kentucky Board of Regents made the announcement Monday. Caboni is scheduled to visit the university for a series of meetings and campus forums next week, on Caboni Jan. 25 and Jan. 26, according to the announcement. The Board will consider extending a formal offer to Caboni at its quarterly meeting on Jan. 27. Board chair Frederick A. Higdon noted Caboni’s academic credentials and external relations experience, saying that if he is ultimately selected, his “talent, innovation and

energy” would position Western Kentucky to embark on its next chapter. “He possesses all the attributes the Board was seeking in our next president, including the ability to lead the University’s next capital campaign and guide the creation of a new strategic plan,” Higdon said in a statement. “He has been a member of the faculty and served in academic administration, where he led efforts to increase the number of graduate and professional students in the Peabody College of Education and Human Development at Vanderbilt University. His experience in legislative relations and as a communications professional has resulted in significant enhancements for the University of Kansas.” Caboni would begin July 1 and succeed Gary A. Ransdell, who is retiring

this summer after 20 years as Western Kentucky’s president, according to the Board’s announcement. Western Kentucky has more than 20,000 students, with the main campus located in Bowling Green, according to the school’s website. Caboni has been KU’s vice chancellor of public affairs since 2011. He also is an associate professor of educational leadership and policy in KU’s School of Education. Originally from New Orleans, Caboni received his doctoral degree in higher education leadership and policy from Vanderbilt University, a master’s degree in corporate and organizational communication from Western Kentucky University, and his bachelor’s degree in speech communication and rhetoric from Louisiana State University, according to his KU profile. Prior to arriving at KU, he was associate dean of the Peabody College of

Education and Human Development at Vanderbilt. This is at least the third university president job for which Caboni has been a publicly announced finalist in the past year. The other schools were Georgia Southern University and Valdosta State University. Caboni did not immediately respond to a request for comment. However, he tweeted on Wednesday that he was “humbled and honored” to be named the preferred candidate to lead Western Kentucky. In another tweet, Caboni said he and his wife, Kacy Schmidt Caboni, who works for KU Endowment, looked forward to continuing Western Kentucky’s tremendous growth and leading it “to even greater national prominence.” — KU and higher ed reporter Sara Shepherd can be reached at 832-7187. Follow her on Twitter: @saramarieshep

Report: City lacks space for job growth By Rochelle Valverde rvalverde@ljworld.com

A new market report from the Lawrence office of real estate agency Colliers International indicates that the past year was a healthy one for retail, office and industrial activity in Lawrence, but that a lack of industrial inventory is hurting the city’s prospects for growth. The report, presented by Colliers on Thursday at the Lawrence Arts Center, indicated that there is little to no industrial inventory in Lawrence. There are only 14 vacant industrial spaces, and the year-end industrial vacancy rate for 2016 was 2.3 percent, which the report said presented challenges for new prospects and existing businesses looking to expand. Three panelists discussed the report at the presentation: Tim Cowden, president and CEO of the Kansas City Area Development Coun-

cil; Kevin O’Malley, principal and equity agreement manager for O’Malley Beverage; and Daniel Smith, principal and co-owner of Big Industrial LLC. Cowden said some manufacturing jobs are returning to the U.S. from out of the country, but that there is competition in the region to attract those employers. He said though Lawrence does have VenturePark — a currently vacant business park in eastern Lawrence — the lack of already built space could make the city less competitive. “We have to have available product to bring these clients into town,” Cowden said. “We had one in just two weeks ago looking out at the VenturePark for property, but we’ve got to have product on the shelf, that’s one common theory.” But that was not to say the city was without its strengths. The completion of the South Lawrence Trafficway and the

“livability” of the city — its schools, universities, parks, neighborhoods and proximity to Kansas City — were both touted as attractive features and a boon to the city’s economy. “I think one of the real strong suits that Lawrence has to offer is the livability aspect,” Smith said. “As we deal with large employers, they have to bring in talented people and management — and you talk about a problem to overcome in some of these more remote areas where you don’t have the amenities of Lawrence.” Still, having more than just “raw land” for sale was key, Smith said. “It’s prime to attract some major, major employers if it can get the platform set up,” Smith said. O’Malley said economic development went hand in hand with keeping up the area’s amenities and addressing needs

such a new police facility and jail expansion. “Here in Lawrence and Douglas County, we have a pretty high appetite for nice things,” O’Malley said. “... We need to grow the economy, grow jobs and help us fund those wants and needs.” Still, the overall outlook was said to be positive. The report indicated retail activity and office market were both active last year. The retail vacancy rate was 5.2 percent, an increase of about a percent over the 2015 rate. The office vacancy rate was 7.5 percent, a decrease of about a percent from the 2015 rate. “2016 was a healthy year, with strong activity in all sectors and we expect that to continue in 2017,” Marilyn Bittenbender, senior vice president of Colliers International of Lawrence, told attendees. — City Hall reporter Rochelle Valverde can be reached at 832-6314. Follow her on Twitter: @RochelleVerde

KU announces annual race and sports symposium event Sports sociologist Harry Athletics will present “The Edwards will be the Power of Sport: A keynote speaker Conversation on at the University Business, Race of Kansas’ annual and Sports” at race and sports 6 p.m. Feb. 2, in symposium, KU anthe Kansas Union nounced WednesBallroom. The day. event is free and The KU School open to the public, of Business, the but registration is Edwards Langston Hughes required to attend Center and Kansas and can be done online at

eventbrite.com. Donations benefiting the Langston Hughes Center will be accepted. Edwards, an author and professor emeritus at the University of California, Berkeley, advocated a black athlete boycott of the 1968 Olympics and later consulted on diversity issues for the MLB, NBA and NFL.

The event also includes a panel discussion featuring former KU basketball and WNBA player Tamecka Dixon and KU track athlete and Olympic gold medalist Billy Mills. The moderator will be Shawn Alexander, associate professor and graduate director of African and African-American studies and director of the Langston Hughes Center.

DATEBOOK parking lot behind Kizer-Cummings Jewelers, 833 Massachusetts St. Lawrence Restaurant Week, Jan. American Legion Bingo, doors 20-28. open 4:30 p.m., first games 6:45 Career Clinic, 1-2 p.m., Lawp.m., American Legion Post No. rence Public Library Health Spot, 14, 3408 W. Sixth St. 707 Vermont St. 21st Annual Kaw Valley Bingo night, doors 5:30 p.m., Eagles Day, 8:30 a.m.-4 p.m., bingo starts 7 p.m., Eagles Lodge, Free State High School, 4700 1803 W. Sixth St. Overland Drive. Art Reception: Shan O’Hara, Introduction to DNA for Gene5:30-7:30 p.m., Landmark National alogists, 10 a.m.-noon, Watkins Bank, 4621 W. Sixth St. Museum of History, 1047 MassaTech N9ne featuring Krizz chusetts St. Kaliko, 7 p.m., The Granada, 1020 Making Sense of the Chaos: Massachusetts St. How plants respond to their enviOpening Night: The Last Roronment, 10:30-11:30 a.m., Dreher mance, A Comedy by Joe DiPiBuilding, Douglas Co. Fairgrounds, etro, 7:30 p.m., Theatre Lawrence, 2110 Harper St. 4660 Bauer Farm Drive. Saturday Afternoon Ragtime, Concert Fundraiser for Kansas 2-4 p.m., Watkins Museum, 1047 Progress Institute, 8 p.m.-2 a.m., Massachusetts St. Jackpot Saloon, 943 MassachuAmerciana Music Academy setts St. Community Jam, 3-5 p.m., Americana Music Academy, 1419 Massachusetts St. 21 SATURDAY Magic Tree House Club (ages DON’T MISS: 5-8), 3:30 p.m., Lawrence Public Boot Camp for New Dads, 9 Library, Readers’ Theater, 707 a.m.-noon, Lawrence Memorial Vermont St. Hospital, 325 Maine St. American Legion Bingo, doors open 4:30 p.m., first games 6:45 Red Dog’s Fun Run, 7:30 a.m., p.m., American Legion Post No.

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14, 3408 W. Sixth St. A Conversation with Kerry Gooch, Executive Director of the Kansas Democratic Party, 5:30 p.m., Baldwin City Library, 800 Seventh St., Baldwin City. The Last Romance, A Comedy by Joe DiPietro, 7:30 p.m., Theatre Lawrence, 4660 Bauer Farm Drive.


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Hometown Lawrence Lawrence Journal-World l Homes.Lawrence.com l Friday, January 20, 2017

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New owner for East Lawrence’s ‘historic hut’ Plus, a new affordable housing project is in the works

E

arlier this week I told you about plans for a pair of new, architecturally interesting apartment buildings that developers hope to construct in East Lawrence’s Warehouse Arts District. Now, I have news in the same neighborhood about another piece of interestJournal-World File Photo ing architecture: the old A GROUP LED BY LAWRENCE BUSINESSMAN ADAM WILLIAMS has purchased the old Black Hills Energy maintenance yard Quonset hut-like building near Eighth and Delaware streets. at the former Black Hills Energy site. would have 38 apartment not a Quonset brand, but and Williams is using the debate when his group units. About 32 of them looks similar.) old Black Hills Energy bought the property. would be enrolled in the Regardless, the propsite to store construction “We do like the buildstate’s rent-controlled erty has a new owner. A material. ing,” Williams said. “It’s program that requires group led by Lawrence Down the road, the site an interesting building they be offered at belowbusinessman Adam Wil- could be used to bottle that is in decent shape. market rates to people liams has purchased the and can beer made at the We think it has multiple old Black Hills Energy brewery, which will be uses. We’re just not sure who have incomes between 50 percent and maintenance yard near dubbed the Lawrence which ones we want to pursue yet.” 60 percent of the average Eighth and Delaware Beer Company. Wilmedian income in the streets. liams said there could be More on affordable county. Williams told me he a number of other uses clawhorn@ljworld.com housing This project, though, doesn’t have any plans to for the property too. A The recent news was wouldn’t involve tratear down the building. residential use may not about how the developYou perhaps rememditional apartment He said, at the moment, be in the equation, as ers of the Warehouse ber it. The old metal buildings. Instead, it he doesn’t have any real the property in the late Arts District hope to building is across the envisions more townlong-term plans for the 1800s had a facility that again use state income street from the Poehler house-like units. Plans property. He said he burned a lot of coal to tax credits to partially Lofts building near Eight thought it would be a call for a mix of two- and produce gas. In the late and Delaware streets. good investment given 1990s, remediation work finance their affordBlack Hills Energy once the momentum of the was done on the site, and able housing apartment tried to tear the building Warehouse Arts District. state environmental offi- projects. Well, there is at least one other local down, but some neighPlus, the site can come in cials have said the propbors and historic preser- handy for one of Wilerty poses no significant affordable housing projvationists objected. Some liams’ current projects. risk to the public. But the ect that also is seeking income tax credits from people think a Quonset Williams is part of a state did require deed hut is a good example group that is renovating restrictions that prohibit the state of Kansas. The Wheatland Investment of period architecture. the old SeedCo buildresidential construction Group out of Gardner Other people think Jabba ing at 826 Pennsylvaon the site. is seeking tax credits the Hutt is more apnia St. into a brewery, The property is about for a project it hopes to pealing. (To not offend restaurant and apart2 acres, and the buildeither Quonset or Jabba ments. Construction ing is about 7,000 square build on the east side of O’Connell Road. the Hutt, it probably is work — which involves feet, Williams said. WilThe project, dubbed best to call this building adding two stories to the liams said he was well Quonset hut-like. It is building — is underway, aware of the Quonset hut the Estates of Lawrence,

Town Talk

Chad Lawhorn

three-bedroom, twostory town homes with a garage. The town homes would be built in a fourplex style. The project would be built on property just north and east of East 27th Terrace and O’Connell Road. If this project sounds familiar, it may be because we reported on it around this time last year. Wheatland last year applied for the income tax credits but didn’t receive them. The process is a pretty competitive one, so it is not unusual that a project has to apply multiple times before it is successful. Wheatland also is the group that is building the townhome-like units on the west side of O’Connell Drive, just a bit south of 23rd Street. That project is called Bethel Estates of Lawrence. It will feature oneand two-bedroom units for qualifying seniors 55 and older. Construction work is well underway on that project. I’ve put a call in to Wheatland officials for an update, but I would think some of those units will be ready for occupancy this spring. — This is an excerpt from Chad Lawhorn’s Town Talk column, which appears on LJWorld.com.

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Home & City Services

L awrence J ournal -W orld

REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS Following are real estate transactions filed at the Douglas County Clerk’s Office from Jan. 10 through Jan. 16:

Revocable Trust to Darrell E. Lamer and Linda M. Lamer, 2516 Century Dr., Lawrence. Howard Z. Smith, Trustee and Fredonna L. Smith, Tuesday, Jan. 10 Trustee to Richard F. Leiker Heather Miller and and Marilyn L. Leiker, 176 Mark A. Miller to Robert N. 1900 Rd., Rural. E. Durgan, Jr. and Terry L. Corey A. Dunn RevocaDurgan, 1128 Pennsylvania ble Trust and Raymond C. St., Lawrence. Dunn Revocable Trust and Mark E. Lehmann and Sally S. Dunn Revocable Diana L. Lehmann to Travis Trust to Scott D. Schultz J. Narum and Melissa N. and Linda Schultz, Vacant Narum, 639 Mississippi St., Land, Baldwin City. Lawrence. Stanley P. Sheldon to Daniel D. Bailey, Sr. and Steve Wambold and Linda Robin A. Bailey to Marvin Wambold, 1624 University Schaal and Mindy Schaal, Dr., Lawrence. 500 Perry St. Block 1 and Chester L. Surmacze501 Maple St., Lawrence. wicz and Cynthia P. Garber Enterprises, Surmaczewicz to Randy Inc. to Cuilian Zhao, 1452 M. Lewis, 626 E. 15th St., Brighton Cir., Lawrence. Eudora. RCB Bank to Salb Raymond C. Poteet and Homes, LLC, 2250 Lake Beulah I. Poteet to Scott Pointe Dr. #101, Lawrence. W. Schlesener and Jodi R. Janet Bius to George Schlesener, Vacant Land, C. Frank and Juli C. Frank, Rural. 4716 Carmel Ct., Lawrence. Debra Bouse to Lisa Deutsche Bank National Reed, 718 E. 14th Pl., Trust Company, Indenture Eudora. Trustee to Mary J. ChrisMonica Walters and man and Cheryl R. Perry, Katherine L. Elliott to Jill 3920 Willshire Dr., LawKoehler, 627 Maine St., rence. Lawrence. Sylvia S. Kallsen, Trustee to AXROM, LLC, 2341 Harp- Thursday, Jan. 12 Charles O. Leifer and er St., Lawrence. Industrial Square Corpo- Leslie A. Leifer to Noah R. ration to AXROM, LLC, 2110 Dumpert and Jennifer L.B. Dumpert, 4309 Teal Dr., Delaware St., Lawrence Lawrence. and . Robert L. Koch to Bryce Industrial Square N. Ansel, 814 4th St., BaldCorporation to AXROM, win City. LLC, 2001 Delaware St., Mark R. Joslyn and Mary Lawrence. L. Joslyn to Prime ConWednesday, Jan. 11 struction, inc, Vacant Land, Zabrina Doerck and Rural. Jason Doerck to Linda B. Sharon R. Gunther and Johnson and Jeffrey S. Patricia A. Miller to Joe L. Johnson, 716 Mississippi Harness, 1633 E. 18th St., St., Lawrence. Lawrence. Thomas A. Heath and Patrick A. Davis, Jr. and Pamela A. Heath to Layne Tasha M. Bastemeyer to J. Richardson and Susan J. Beckmeisters, LLC, 2726 Richardson, 556 N 775 Rd. Ponderosa Dr., Lawrence. & and Vacant Land, Rural. Knology of Kansas, Inc. James R. Thrasher and to Midcontinent Communications, 210 E. 7th St. and Wanda M. Thrasher to 644 New Hampshire St., Aaron L. Fullen and Alison C. Fullen, 2121 Carolina St., Lawrence. Laura Green to Susan Lawrence. White, 1302 N. 200 Rd., Carol W. Sneegas

Rural. Norman F. Gee, Trustee and Helen K. Gee, Trustee to Laura A. Green, 2115 New Hampshire St., Lawrence. Colt Energy, Inc. to Bronz T. Peterson and Cara L. Peterson, 1829 N. 700 Rd., Rural.

Friday, Jan. 13 Timothy E. Hornick and Catherine M. Smith to Samuel P. Tabor and Nancy A. Tabor, 604 N. Pennycress Dr., Lawrence. Charles F. Smith to Michael A. Scherschligt, 1901 Crossgate Dr., Lawrence. Perry Construction, Inc to John M. Feeney, 2520 E. 25th Pl., Lawrence. Drippe Construction, Inc to Kang J. Wang, 6312 Serenade Ct., Lawrence. Robert S. Tungate and Marianne A. Tungate to Charles M. Deen and Patricia A. Deen, 1336 Massachusetts St., Lawrence. Matthew T. Clark and Theresa M. Clark to William Jones and Brooke Jones, 620 Elm St., Eudora . James S. Chaney to Blake R. Hamilton, 2142 Massachusetts St., Lawrence. Margaret M. Bearse and Robert C. Bearse to Paul Hefferon, 1215 W. 28th Ct., Lawrence. Holtkamp Holdings, LLC to Stan D. Avery and Frances M.B. Avery, Vacant Land, Rural and . Arnold H. Weiss, Trustee to Joshua G. Toevs, 3008 Steven Dr., Lawrence.

LAWRENCE: CITY SERVICES www.lawrenceks.org 832-3000 City of Lawrence www.lawrenceks.org/fire_medical 830-7000 Fire & Medical Department www.lawrenceks.org/police 830-7400 Police Department www.lawrenceks.org/utilities 832-7878 Department of Utilities www.lawrencetransit.org 864-4644 Lawrence Transit System www.lawrenceks.org/legal 832-6190 Municipal Court Animal Control 832-7509 www.lprd.org 832-3450 Parks and Recreation www.westarenergy.com 800-383-1183 Westar Energy www.blackhillsenergy.com 888-890-5554 Black Hills Energy (Gas) GUTTERING Jayhawk Guttering (A Division of Nieder Contracting, Inc.) 842-0094 HOME INSURANCE Kurt Goeser, State Farm Insurance 843-0003 Tom Pollard, Farmers Insurance 843-7511 Jamie Lowe, Prairie Land Insurance 856-3020 RESIDENTIAL AND COMMERCIAL SECURITY Select One Security selectonesecurity.com 843-3434

LAWRENCE HOUSING MARKET STATISTICS QUICK STATS for the year 2016 thru 11/01/16 1,048 Homes $213,013 Sold in Avg. Sold 2016 Price

-0.8% +5.7%

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-13.2%

3.500% + 0 (3.542%) 3.250% + 0 (4.568%)

3.625% + 0 (3.764%) 3.000% + 0 (3.255%) Call For Rates Call For Rates Call For Rates

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION 330-1200 330-1200 www.capcitybank.com www.capcitybank.com 740 New New Hampshire 740 Hampshire 4505A West 6th St

4505A West 6th St 749-9050 749-9050 capfed.com capfed.com 1026 Westdale

1026 Westdale Rd. 30 Yr. 97% Conventional

3.750%+ 0(4.252%)

Central National Bank

838-1882 www.centralnational.com 838-1882

www.centralnation.com

Central National Bank Conv. FHA/VA Jumbo

4.125% + 0 (4.197%) 4.000% + 0 (5.138%) 4.000% + 0 (4.071%)

3.375% + 0 (3.536%) 3.375% + 0 (4.192%) 3.250% + 0 (3.410%)

20 Yr. Fixed 10 Yr. Fixed

Conv. FHA VA Jumbo

4.125% + 0 (4.249%) 3.625% + 0 (4.490%) 3.625% + 0 (3.894%) 4.375% + 0 (4.438%)

3.375% + 0 (3.582%)

20 Yr. Fixed 10 Yr. Fixed

Conv. Jumbo

Call For Rates Call For Rates

Call For Rates Call For Rates

3.875% + 0 (3.973%) 3.250% + 0 (3.481%)

www.commercebank.com 1500 Wakarusa Dr

Commerce Commerce Bank Bank

Central Bank of the Midwest

4.099% 3.481%

3.625% + 0 (3.724%) FHA USDA/Rural Development

Call For Rates Call For Rates

Conv. FHA/VA Jumbo

3.375% + 0 (3.482%)

Conv.

4.125% + 0 (4.317%)

3.125% + 0 (3.395%) Call

856-LOAN (5626) www.firstassuredmortgage.com 856-LOAN (5626) 4830 Bob Billings Pkwy. Ste. 100A

3.375% + 0 (3.709%) Call Call

www.firstassuredmortgage.com 4830 Bob Billings Pkwy. Ste. 100A

First Assured Mortgage

First State Bank & Trust

FHA/VA

Please Call

Please Call Please Call

Conv. Jumbo

3.500% + 0 (3.554%) Call for Rates

3.375% + 0 (3.709%) Please Call Please Call

5/1 ARM 10 & 20 Yr. HELC USDA

Please Call Please Call Please Call Please Call

2.875% + 0 (2.971%) Call for Rates

20 Yr. Fixed 10 Yr. Fixed

3.375% + 0 (3.451%) 2.750% + 0 (2.890%)

First State Bank & Trust

Great American Bank

4.125% + 0 (4.164%) 3.625% + 0 (4.721%) 3.625% + 0 (3.940%) 4.375% + 0 (4.392%)

3.25% + 0 (3.316%)

Conv. Jumbo

3.625 + 0 (4.116% APR) Please call 856-7878 ext 5037

3.125 + 0 (3.321% APR) Please call 856-7878 ext 5037

Please call 856-7878 ext 5037

97% Advantage Program: Please call for rates (credit score 660) 20 year: please call 15/30 Pricing options available

Conv.

4.000% + 0 (4.095%)

3.375% + 0 (3.54%)

20 Year Fixed Construction

3.75% + 0 (3.88%) 4.75%

Conv. FHA/VA Jumbo

4.125% + 0 (4.189%) Please Call 4.125% + 0 (4.189%)

3.375% + 0 (3.487%) Please Call 3.375% + 0 (3.487%)

10 Yr. Fixed 20 Yr. Fixed HELOC 3% Down Home Possible 15/30 Year Rental

3.375% + 0 (3.487%) 3.875% + 0 (3.963%) 4.000% Please Call Please Call

Conv.

4.001% + 0 (4.048% APR)

3.215% + 0 (3.297% APR)

15 YR Investment 30 YR Investment 10 YR FIXED 20 YR FIXED VA 30, 15 YR

4.291% - APR 4.376% 4.636% - APR 4.685% 3.018% - APR 3.137% 3.713% - APR 3.778% Call For Rates

Mid America Bank

Pulaski Bank

University National University National Bank Bank

www.meritrustcu.org 650 Congressional Dr

856-7878 www.meritrustcu.org 841-8055 650 Congressional Dr www.mid-americabank.com 4114 W 6th St.

841-8055 www.mid-americabank.com 856-1450 4114 W 6th St. www.pulaskibank.com 3210 Mesa Way, Ste B

Truity Credit Union

Truity Credit Union

www.greatambank.com 3500 Clinton Parkway 838-9704

www.landmarkbank.com 2710 Iowa St 856-7878

Meritrust Credit Union

Mid America Bank

www.firststateks.com 609838-9704 Vermont St.

www.landmarkbank.com 2710 Iowa St 841-7152

Conv. FHA VA Jumbo

Landmark National Bank

Meritrust Credit Union

312-6810 www.firststateks.com 3901 W. 6th St. 312-6810

www.greatambank.com 3500 Clinton Parkway 841-6677

Great American Bank

Landmark Bank

841-4434 www.fairwayindependentmc.com 841-4434 4104 W. 6th St., Ste. B www.fairwayindependentmc.com

4104 W. 6th St., Ste. B

Fairway Mortgage Corp.

First Assured Mortgage

865-1000 865-1085 www.centralbankmidwest.net www.centralbankmidwest.net 300 W 9th St

4340 W 6th (and Folks Rd)

Central Bank of the Midwest

Fairway Mortgage Corp.

865-4721 865-4721 www.commercebank.com

749-6804

749-6804 www.truitycu.org www.truitycu.org 3400 3400 W. W. 6th 6th

841-1988 841-1988 www.unbank.com www.unbank.com 1400 Kasold KasoldDr Dr 1400


HOMETOWN LAWRENCE

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Friday, January 20, 2017

| 3C

Home & Garden SERVICES DIRECTORY

CALL

See your ad here for as little as $35 per week!

832-v2ert2is2e!2 to Ad

classifieds@ljworld.com

We’re Your Residential & Commercial Roofing Experts

Service You Can Trust

FOR A CLEANER & HEALTHIER HOME

Over 30 years of experience within the roofing industry

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1-800-STEEMER 785-841-8666

785-749-0462

Kastl Plumbing,

INC.

BUSINESS HOURS Mon-Fri: 8am - 5pm

CARPET & FLOORS 3000 Iowa Street, Lawrence, KS 785-841-3838 FloorTraderLawrence.com

WITH OVER 66 YEARS’

Call: 785.856.1818 or email: HedgesMgmt@aol.com for a Management Bid this month and receive FREE advertising & low cost ongoing monthly Management Services! Does your investment property need updating? Lawrence • Baldwin • Eudora • DeSoto • Olathe, KS areas.

repairing and installing all major brands and styles of windows, Kennedy Glass is the undisputed local best.

Hedges Realty Management

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Serving Lawrence, KS and the surrounding areas

785-749-4391

Kansas Carpet Care Comprehensive Cleaning Solutions

AFTER HOURS Mon-Fri: 5pm - 7pm Sat: 8am - 12pm

(785) 841-2112

4920 Legends Dr. Lawrence, KS 66049

730 New Jersey St. Lawrence, KS 66044

(785) 843-4416

Lawrence, KS | 785-842-3311 www.HedgesRealtyManagement.managebuilding.com

785-856-1818 or 785-218-0296

1

Our knowledge of the Appliances we sell sets us high above the competition

#

in the Region for Electrical Work

PDS - PROFESSIONAL DELIVERY SERVICES When you need the area's best electrical work, call on Quality Electric Inc.

801 E 9th St, Lawrence, KS 785-312-0351

Time to Start thinking ABOUT WINTER! There are a lot of options available when it comes to replacing an old furnace. Call us and we can show you what options are available for your system.

pdslawrence@yahoo.com www.pdsmoving.com

Hours: Mon-Sat 8am-7pm, Sun 8am-2pm

SAVE

10%

on Painting Services

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up to

150

on Interior Painting

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Complete Range of Services Available • Residential - Small Commercial • Remodel - New Construction

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785.423.4464 • kbpaintingllc.com

PROMPT SUPERIOR SERVICE

Place your ad today!! Call: 785.832.2222

Having a properly installed, quality roof can save you tons on energy costs.

PUBLIC NOTICES 3514 Clinton Pkwy #426A Lawrence, KS 785-764-9582

Your Local Garage Door Experts

Call me for help with your home loan needs Alan Hoggatt

You can trust Kansas’ best garage door experts and installers with your next door or repair.

Financial Center Lending Officer NMLS ID: 640517 785.766.9825 Cell alan.hoggatt@bankofamerica.com http://mortgage.bankofamerica.com/alan-hoggatt

McGrew is one of the few remaining major real estate firms in Kansas that is both locally owned and independent (not part of a national franchise). Decisions are made locally and quickly.

785.843.2055 We install the best and repair the rest!

• Garage Doors & Parts • Garage Door Openers • Service & Repairs Bank of America, N.A., Member FDIC. Equal Housing Lender. © 2016 Bank of America Corporation. Credit and collateral are subject to approval. Terms and conditions apply. This is not a commitment to lend. Programs, rates, terms and conditions are subject to change without notice. HL-109-AD 08-2016 AR7VKQGV

Royal Cleaning

We Give Your Home A

Residential and Commercial Water Heater Installation & Repair

Sewer Repair & Replacement

Sink Replacement & New Installation

Toilet Repair & Replacement

Shower & Bathtub Replacements

Sump Pump Replacements

And much more! 785.843.5670

SERVICE & REPAIR WATER HEATERS REMODELING

801 Comet Ln. Suite D Lawrence, KS 66049 actionplumbinglawrence.com

1100 E. 11th St., Suite B • Lawrence 785-842-5203 • www.FreestateDoors.com

Doing the job right the first time • Mini-splits

• Air Conditioners

• Ice Machines

• Furnaces

• Boilers

• Humidifiers

• Geothermal

• Heat Pumps

71 years experience in the heating and cooling business

Call for Greener, Healthier Cleaning

(785) 842-6264

Because Brighter is Better.

785.843.2244 1815 Bullene Avenue Lawrence, KS 66044 www.scott-temperature.com

ANTIQUES AND

TOPEKA 785-234-3384

Uniques

LAWRENCE 785-843-9559

MOST REPAIRS SAME DAY SERVICE WE SERVICE ALL BRANDS RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL 24-HOUR EMERGENCY SERVICE AVAILABLE www.aceplumbingkansas.com

JASON TANKING CONSTRUCTION Construction with a new frame of mind

CONTACT JASON TODAY FOR YOUR FREE ESTIMATE!

785.760.4066

jason@jasontankingconstruction.com jasontankingconstruction.com

785.749.0244

Our Mission

Hawk Wash Window Cleaning Inc. will contribute to a cleaner, more pleasant home or work environment by providing prompt, professional service at a fair price. We will consistently exceed customer Window Cleaning Inc. expectations through attention to detail on pleasant, courteous and trouble-free hawkwash.com service visits.

Hawk Wash

We Keep Lawrence Flowing VITO’S PLUMBING 785-865-0008 645 Locust Street, Lawrence, KS

When You Need Us, We’re There!

quality-electric.net • 1011 E 31st St • Lawrence, KS

CALL 785.841.COOL (2665) VISIT US ON FACEBOOK https://www.facebook.com/ rivercityheatingandcooling

Heating & Air Conditioning

CALL TODAY 785-842-2258 www.cloudhvac.com

785-843-9211 • 913-712-0757

up to

250

kansascarpetcare.com

Locally and Family Owned Since 1970

Moving, Delivery, Storage for Lawrence, KS & the surrounding area

925 Iowa • Lawrence • 785.843.4170 StonebackAppliance.com

See Testimonials and Specials online:

644 Locust St., Lawrence Thurs. 12 -5, Fri & Sat 9 - 5 785-856-3139 • TooterandTillayes.com It all begins with a Master Plan... Our Mission Is To Be The Best, Not The Biggest Nothing transforms your backyard like your very own swimming pool. Our expert staff can assist you in designing the perfect Swimming Pool and Landscape options to fit your yard, your style, and your budget.

810 Pennsylvania St. Lawrence, KS 913.645.3135

strangercreekpools.com

Lawrence

Lawrence

(First published in the ment may be entered upon Lawrence Daily Journal- the petition. World on January 20, 2017) You are required to file your answer to the petition ABANDONED PROPERTY with the Court and to serve a copy upon the TO: STACY CHRISTIAN Petitioner’s attorney, as who gave notice January 1, follows: 2017, that she moved out of my Baldwin City farm: LEE & MCINERNEY, LLC 719 MASSACHUSETTS ST., I intend to claim ownerSUITE 101 ship of the 12’ x 16’ shed in LAWRENCE, KS 66044 accordance with Kansas law, KSA 58-2565 Subsec- Within 41 days after the tion D, unless you meet the date this notice is first following conditions. published. 1) Pay in full the following reasonable amounts: $1,425 in delinquent rent; $1,200 to replace missing bathroom tub and sink; and $100 for missing cabinet hardware. Only after you have paid $2,725 in full, do you have legal right to remove or sell the shed.

If you fail to do so, judgment by default will be taken against you for the relief demanded in the petition, which is incorporated herein by reference. Any related claim which you may have against the Petitioner must be stated as a counterclaim in your answer, or you will there2) The removal of the after be barred from makshed will be at your own li- ing such claim in any other ability and expense, and action. the shed site must be restored to original condi- Respectfully Submitted, tion including proper removal of electricity to the LEE & MCINERNEY, LLC shed, and must be completed by February 4, 2017 /s/ Michael Scott Lee per statute. I intend to sell Michael S. Lee, the shed and property in KS Bar # 24930 Lara L. McInerney, mid-February 2017. KS Bar # 23651 719 Massachusetts Sreet Carole Gall, Landlord Suite 101 _______ Lawrence, KS 66044 (First published in the michael@ Lawrence Daily Journal- leemcinerneylaw.com World on January 6, 2017) lara@ leemcinerneylaw.com IN THE DISTRICT COURT Tel. (785)856-2449 OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, Fax (785)842-4025 KANSAS Attorneys for Petitioner ________ In the Matter of (First published in the the Marriage of Lawrence Daily JournalJEFFREY BENJAMIN WAY, World January 13, 2017) Petitioner, and AMANDA MAE WAY, Respondent. Case No. 2016-DM-001087 Division 2

NOTICE OF ACTION FOR DISSOLUTION OF MARRIAGE TO: Kimberly Shannon Oldham, address unknown

NOTICE OF SUIT You are notified that I, Oldham, do To Amanda Mae Way and Leonard all other concerned per- hereby declare my intent to dissolve this marriage. sons: You are hereby notified that a petition has been filed in the District Court of Douglas County, Kansas by Jeffrey Benjamin Way, seeking dissolution of marriage. You are hereby required to plead to, or answer, the petition in the District Court of Douglas County Kansas. If you fail to plead or appear in Court on February 15, 2017 at 9:00 a.m. in Division 2 of the District Court of Douglas County Kansas, judg-

You have until March 15, 2017 at 9:30am, in the District Court of Douglas County Kansas, 111, E. 11th St., Lawrence, KS to file your defenses. Leonard Oldham 1306 Tennessee St. Lawrence, Kansas 66044 785-304-5521 _______

PUBLIC NOTICES CONTINUED ON 5C


Friday, January 20, 2017

jobs.lawrence.com

CLASSIFIEDS

Do you have Customer Service skills? Put your skills to work in our community!

Drive for Lawrence Transit System KU ON WHEELS & SAFERIDE/SAFEBUS SERVICES Daytime, nighttime, full-time, part-time. 80% company paid employee health, dental, vision insurance for full time. Genuine opportunities for advancement—MV promotes from within! No experience necessary. Age 21+ $11.50/hr, after $11/hr Training. $12/hr for SafeBus

MV Transportation, Inc. 1260 Timberedge Road, Lawrence, KS

Medical Assistant The University of Kansas Watkins Health Services has an opening for a Medical Assistant to work full time during the 9 month academic year.This unique setting provides a combination of immediate & primary care in a stimulating academic environment with an emphasis on patient education.

Application deadline is 1/23/17.

For more information, a complete position description with required qualifications, and to apply, please visit:

785-856-3504

http://employment.ku.edu/staff/7832BR

WALK INS WELCOME

APPLY ONLINE: lawrencetransit.org/employment

KU is an EO/AAE. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex (including pregnancy), age, national origin, disability, genetic information or protected Veteran status.

We are an equal opportunity employer and all qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, national origin, disability status, protected veteran status, or any other characteristic protected by law.

Saferide Now Age 19!

AdministrativeProfessional

Do you have customer service skills? Drive the Lawrence T, KU on Wheels, & Saferide/ Safebus. • NO experience necessary! • Day & Night shifts. • Age 19+ for non-CDL SafeRide positions • 21+ for CDL positions • $11.50/hr after paid training. • Full-time benefits! • Part-time flexibilty • Genuine Career opportunities!

MLS Assistant Part time admin position at member based organization. 20-25 hrs per week. Full job desc. @ www. Lawrence Realtor.com/job Contact Rob at 785-842-1843 or email Rob@LawrenceRealtor.com

Apply online: lawrencetransit.org/employment Or come to: MV Transportation, Inc. 1260 Timberedge Road Lawrence, KS

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

We are an equal opportunity employer and all qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, national origin, disability status, protected veteran status, or any other characteristic protected by law.

General

Road Maintenance Wakarusa Township Road Department Must have knowledge of operating heavy equipment, road maintenance, asphalt, snow removal. Must be 18+ yrs old, and have Class B CDL. Submit applications from 7:00 am to 3:30 pm 300 W 31st. Lawrence, KS Deadline: Noon, Feb 8th

785-843-0051

SERVICES TO PLACE AN AD: Antique/Estate Liquidation

785.832.2222

Decks & Fences Pro Deck & Design

Specializing in the complete and expert installation of decks and porches. Over 30 yrs exp, licensed & insured. 913-209-4055

prodeckanddesign@gmail.com

Deck Drywall Siding Replacement Gutters Privacy Fencing Doors & Trim Commercial Build-out Build-to-suit services

Stacked Deck Decks • Gazebos Siding • Fences • Additions Remodel • Weatherproofing Insured • 25 yrs exp. 785-550-5592

Estate Sale Services In home & Off site options to suit your tag sale needs. 785.260.5458

Carpentry

Rich Black Top Soil No Chemicals Machine Pulverized Pickup or Delivery Serving KC over 40 years

Quality Office Cleaning We are here to serve you, No job too big or small. Major CC excepted Info. & Appointments M-F, 9-5 Call 785-330-3869

Concrete Concrete Driveways, Parking lots, Pavement repair, Sidewalks, Garage Floors Foundation walls, Remove & Replacement Specialists Call 843-2700 or Text 393-9924

Foundation Repair Limestone wall bracing, floor straitening, sinking or bulging issues foundation water-proofing, repair and replacement Call 843-2700 or text 393-9924

Family Owned & Operated 20 Yrs

Mike - 785-766-6760 mdcraig@sbcglobal.net

Seamless aluminum guttering.

Providing top quality service and solutions for all your insurance needs. Medicare Home Auto Business

Call Today 785-841-9538

Lawn, Garden & Nursery Golden Rule Lawncare Mowing & lawn cleanup Snow Removal Family owned & operated Call for Free Est. Insured. Eugene Yoder 785-224-9436

A.B. PAINTING & REPAIR

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

Int/ext. Drywall, Siding, 30 plus yrs. Locally owned & operated.

jayhawkguttering.com

albeil@aol.com

785-842-0094

For Sale by Owner

Apartments Unfurnished

Get ready for summer in your newly remodeled town home. New open floor plan. Mud room with W/D. Lot backs to green space. Newer roof. New paint inside & out. Brand new kitchen w/ SS appliances. Nice dining area. New light fixtures. Large fenced yard. Neighborhood Pool. 785-766-9999 Open Sat 1/21 • 2 - 3:30 PM

 FREE MONTH OF RENT SIGN BY MARCH 1

LAUREL GLEN APTS All Electric

2 BR & 3 BR/2BA Units

Available Now! Water & Trash Paid Small Dog

785-838-9559

Apartments Unfurnished

Townhomes

DOWNTOWN LOFT Studio Apartments 600 sq. ft., $725/mo. No pets allowed Call Today 785-841-6565 advanco@sunflower.com

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

2BR, 2 bath, fireplace, CA, W/D hookups, 2 car with opener. Easy access to I-70. Includes paid cable. Pet under 20 lbs. allowed Call 785-842-2575 www.princeton-place.com Need an apartment? Place your ad at apartments.lawrence.com or email classifieds@ljworld.com

EOH



Call: 785-832-2222

785.832.2222

Chevrolet Trucks

Chevrolet Cars

classifieds@ljworld.com Ford SUVs

Pontiac Cars

2010 Ford Edge Limited

convertible, get a jump on spring in this one of a kind car! Only 1900 miles, one owner, leather, alloy wheels, power equipment and more fun than you probably deserve!! stk#406532

Interior/Exterior Painting Quality Work Over 30 yrs. exp.

Call Lyndsey 913-422-7002

Plumbing

Professional Organizing

Attic, Basement, Garage, Any Space ORGANIZED! Items sorted, boxed, donated/recycled + Downsizing help. Call TILLAR 913-375-9115

Roofing BHI Roofing Company

Painting JAYHAWK GUTTERING

Family Tradition Interior & Exterior Painting Carpentry/Wood Rot Senior Citizen Discount Ask for Ray 785-330-3459

Up to $1500.00 off full roofs UP to 40% off roof repairs 15 Yr labor warranty Licensed & Insured. Free Est. 913-548-7585

FOUNDATION REPAIR

Craig Construction Co Driveways - stamped • Patios • Sidewalks • Parking Lots • Building Footings & Floors • All Concrete Repairs Free Estimates

Insurance

785-832-2222 classifieds@ljworld.com

Guttering Services

RENTALS

2007 Chevrolet Silverado

2010 Chevrolet Camaro SS V8 V8 loaded with leather heated seats, sunroof, remote start, 20” alloy wheels, Boston sound, power to spare and more! Stk#32211A2

4wd Ext cab, running boards, bed liner, tow package, remote start, power equipment, stk#327561

Only $18,500

Only $19,814

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

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

heated leather seats, alloy wheels, power equipment, cruise control, SYNC, home link stk#36358A1

Only $10,814

2006 Pontiac Solstice

Only $12,814

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

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

Ford Trucks

Toyota SUVs

785-312-1917

Retired Carpenter, Deck Repairs, Home Repairs, Interior Wall Repair & House Painting, Doors, Wood Rot, Power wash and Tree Services. 785-766-5285

STARTING or BUILDING a Business?

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

REAL ESTATE

3211 Rainier Dr - Lawrence 3 BR, 1.5 BA - $124,000

classifieds@ljworld.com

785.832.2222

TO PLACE AN AD:

& Handyman needs small work. Bill Morgan 816-523-5703

Interior/exterior painting, roofing, roof repairs, fence work, deck work, lawn care, siding, windows & doors. For 11+ years serving Douglas County & surrounding areas. Insured.

TO PLACE AN AD:

CARS

RETIRED MASTER PLUMBER

Higgins Handyman

Foundation Repair

Cleaning

913-488-7320

Dirt-Manure-Mulch

913-962-0798 Fast Service

The Wood Doctor - Wood rot repair, fences, decks, doors & windows - built, repaired, or replaced & more! Bath/kitchen remodeled. Basement finished. 785-542-3633 • 816-591-6234

Fully Insured 22 yrs. experience

RENTALS REAL ESTATE

Painting

AAA Home Improvements Int/Ext Repairs, Painting, Tree work & more- we do it all! 20 Yrs. Exp., Ins. & local Ref. Will beat all estimates! Call 785-917-9168 Full Remodels & Odd Jobs, Interior/Exterior Painting, Installation & Repair of:

Downsizing - Moving? We’ve got a Custom Solution for You! Estate Tag Sales and Cleanup Services Armstrong Family Estate Services, LLC 785-383-0820 www.kansasestatesales.com

THE RESALE LADY

classifieds@ljworld.com

Home Improvements

The University of Kansas is committed to providing our employees with an enriching and dynamic work environment that encourages innovation, research, creativity and equal opportunity for learning, development and professional growth. KU strives to recruit, develop, retain and reward a dynamic workforce that shares our mission and core strategic values in research, teaching and service. Learn more at http://provost.ku.edu/strategic-plan

Call Al 785-331-6994

Tree/Stump Removal

Chevrolet 2013 Silverado 4wd Z71 LT

2015 Chevrolet Spark LT automatic, power equipment, alloy wheels, more room and gas mileage than you would expect! Stk#15413

Only $9,974

cutdown • trimmed • topped • stump removal Licensed & Insured. 20 yrs experience. 913-441-8641 913-244-7718

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

Only $26,755 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

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

Chevrolet Trucks

Chrysler Vans

Toyota 2006 Highlander V6, power equipment, alloy wheels, traction control, 3rd row seating stk#473112

Only $9,736

Hyundai Crossovers

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

Cars-Domestic DALE WILLEY AUTOMOTIVE 2840 Iowa Street (785) 843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

ARBOR-TECH Licensed and Insured tree climber - trimming, removal, stump removal, storm damage, rigging. Free estimates Dave 785-312-1690

Fredy’s Tree Service

ext cab, tow package, power equipment, alloy wheels, great finance terms are available. Stk#33169B1

2011 FORD F150 XLT Super Crew - Can Seat 6. 49K Mi, Tow Pkg, 5.8 V8, 2 WD, Roll Up Cover, Sirius Ready, Never Wrecked or Needed Repair. Beautiful blue with grey interior. Call 785-842-4515 or 785-979-7719

Chrysler 2008 Town & Country Limited,

2003 Chevrolet Silverado 2500 LS crew cab, tow package, alloy wheels, dual power seats, Bose sound, stk#124861

Only $11,555 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

alloy wheels, leather heated seats, power equipment, DVD, navigation and more! Stk#160681

Autos Wanted

2008 Hyundai Veracruz Limited Limited leather heated seats, sunroof, power equipment, 3rd row seating, room for the family and leaves room in your wallet! Stk#346331

Only $9855

Only $10,814

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

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

BUYING JUNK VEHICLES CASH PAID & FREE PICK UP. All makes & models. Call OR Text for quote.

CONTACT US TO ADVERTISE!

785-633-7556

785.832.2222 | CLASSIFIEDS@LJWORLD.COM


L awrence J ournal -W orld

Friday, January 20, 2017

NOTICES TO PLACE AN AD:

PUBLIC NOTICES

785.832.2222

classifieds@ljworld.com

TRINITY CAREER INSTITUTE

NEW !!!!!!!: Special Discount for High School Students !

Lawrence

Jun 5 - Jun 16 M-F 8a-5p Jun 19 - Jun 30 M-F 8a-5p CNA 10 hr REFRESHER LAWRENCE KS CMA 10 hr UPDATE LAWRENCE KS Jan 27/28 Feb 17/18 March 17/18 April 28/29 May 12/13 Classes begin 8.30am

CNA DAY CLASSES Jan 31-Feb 16 M-Th 8.30-2.30 Feb 27-March 16 8.30a-2p Apr 3 -April 20 8.30a-2p CNA EVENING CLASSES LAWRENCE KS Feb 21-Mar 17 T/Th/F 5p- 9p Apr 4 -May 5 T/Th/F 5p- 9p

HOME HEALTH AIDE:TBA

CMA EVE CLASSES LAWRENCE Mar 22-April 28 5p-9p

There will be no classes Spring Break May 20-May 26

SUMMER CLASSES: May 15 - May 26 M-F 8a-5p

CALL NOW- 785.331.2025 trinitycareerinstitute.com

PRINCETON STEINWAY STUDIO Piano-Voice Lessons $10-$20 • All Ages treblesue@yahoo.com Superior Ratings

MERCHANDISE PETS TO PLACE AN AD:

785.832.2222

Auction Calendar FARM TOY AUCTION SAT, JAN 21 @ 9:30 AM WISCHROPP AUCTIONS OSAGE CITY, KS

AUCTION PREVIEW: FRI. JAN 20th 4:30-7:30 PM

classifieds@ljworld.com Furniture

Estate Sales

AUCTIONS

Want To Buy

FREON R12 WANTED: Sofa table- solid oak, exble saw, shop vacs, cellent condition $50. Certified buyer will pickup tools, snow shovels, 785-393-3837 nationwide and pay CA$H music books, sheet music, book shelves, jew- Solid oak deacon’s bench. for cylinders and cases of elry, patio set, Maytag Excellent condition, $75, cans. (312)291-9169 washer and dryer, 2 (785) 393-3837. small freezers, Amana fridge w/ bottom freezer, clothes, misc.

GARAGE SALES

Sale by Elvira

Mrs. Dale ‘Judy’ Fowler

MERCHANDISE

View Pictures Online at: www.wischroppauctions.com Wischropp Auctions (785) 828-4212

Antiques

Living Estate Sale of Jerold and Joan Binkley 4536 SW Elevation Ln. Topeka, KS 66610

Celebration Hall, 220 W. 17th, Ottawa, KS

L.A. ‘Art” Witham, Jr. Estate, Seller Howard Witham, Admin

Friday - Saturday 10am - 4pm Sunday 10am - 3pm

Miller & Midyett Real Estate - Osage County Branch Office

View Pictures Online at: www.wischroppauctions.com Wischropp Auctions (785) 828-4212

PUBLIC AUCTION Saturday, Jan 28th 9:30 A.M. 3408 West 6th American Legion Lawrence, KS Sellers: Farm Toys: Jerry & Kim Neis Coins: Paul Fellers Auctioneers: Elston Auctions (785-594-0505) (785-218-7851) “Serving Your Auction Needs Since 1994” Please visit us online at www.KansasAuctions.net/ elston for pictures!!

Estate Sales ESTATE SALE 3413 Tam O’ Shanter Dr. Sat., January 21 9:00a.m. - 5:00p.m. DUX Folke Ohlsson, Vildbjerg bar cart, Bauhaus Plates, Apple computer, HP printer, original paintings, 2 large modern dining tables w/ chairs, very nice queen bed, pr. twin beds, studio piano, coffee tables, hanging swing chair, buffet, modern serving cart, love seat, small tables, modern lamps, quality cookware, upholstered desk chair, 2 rooms of books, area carpet, stacks of fabric, ornamental windmill, large variety of modern dishes and serving pcs., glassware, pottery, Craftsman ta-

Lawrence

Lazy Boy Sofa in nice condition. $50 (785) 856-3133

LAND AUCTION Tuesday, Jan 24, 2017 Beginning at 6: 30 PM Ottawa, KS

Wayne Wischropp, Realtor / Auctioneer Michelle Loeffler, Realtor

Charming cast Iron range used for cooking or heating your home. Purchased new over 35 years ago. Stored inside home unused for many years – perfect condition!Olympic Wood/Coal B-18-1 Range (Washington Stove Works, Everett, Washington). $525.00 Call Jo 785-764-6316

ANTIQUE OAK BUFFET Height 40” to tabletop mirror 14” tall, 39.5” wide, 18.5” deep. $100 OBO. Call 785-749-2822

Household Misc. Hoover SteamVac Great machine to clean rugs, & easy to use. Has all equipment ( downsizing ) Was $265 ~ asking $65 $65 785-550-4142 Salad Bowl: Hand blown glass salad bowl, unusual shape. 10” x 5”. $5.00. Please call 785-749-4490

Appliances

Craftsman 16 Gal 6.5 HP Wet/Dry Shop Vac CraftsLawn, Garden & man 16 Gal 6.5 HP Wet/Dry Shop Vac Hoses Nursery ~ Filter ~ (Was $110) ~ downsizing ~ $30 TOOLS , etc , etc 2 100ft 785-550-4142 hoses, w/ quick disconn. & faucets,, 2 sprinklers, other tools, of all sorts, Christmas Trees (downsizing ) GREAT SAVINGS $10 785-550-4142 Nine Ft Christmas Tree With stand, Topper Angel, Miscellaneous 1000 (separate) white lights, storage box ~ (downsizing) $50 CELL PHONES 785-550-4142 Red Samsung Gravity Smart (T-Mobile) SGH-T589 cell phone, slide-out keyClothing board, Manual, camera, newish battery, charger, Purse: Dooney and Bourke PC cord. No Sim card. Aplarge zipper pocket sac, pearance OK. Extra batT-Moro brown pebble tery. $40. Call or leave a grain leather. Like new. msg. 785-843-5566 Paid $270.00, sell for $50.00. Please call Music-Stereo 785-749-4490 Shoes: Birki by Birkenstock, gray/blue clog with double black belted buckle. Like new, size 36. $8.00. Please call 785-749-4490

Firewood-Stoves Firewood: Mixed woods, mostly Stacked/delivered. James 785-241-9828

PIANOS

Pictures and info on our Facebook The Resale Lady Estate Sales

• H.L. Phillips upright $650 • Cable Nelson Spinet $500 • Gulbranson Spinet - $450 • Sturn Spinet - $400

hardsplit. $85.

Large 6 bedroom home filled with furniture & treasures. Some of the highlighted items are: Leather couches, mid-century bedroom set, mid-century coffee and end tables, Bassett bedroom set, mid-century credenza and matching desk, Maytag washer/dryer, LG stainless refrigerator, 5 month old King Serta Prodigy III mattress, large hand blown glass and signed paperweight collection, Llandro collectables, vintage Pyrex, Fostoria and Anchor Hocking, formal & informal dining tables with chairs, indoor/ outdoor decor including large statue collection, many outdoor small engine equipment, hand tools and power tools, Cub Cadet Heavy Duty GT 2544, numerous crocks and jugs, records LP’s & 45’s, collection of vintage electronics, antique child’s pedal car, vintage and antique toys & collectibles. Pool table, air hockey table, Bumper pool/game table, bar collectibles, signed JR Hamil lithograph, signed watercolors by local artist, Coca Cola & Pepsi items, westerfield-mossberg 410 ga pump shotgun & Marlin Mdl 795, 22lr w/ synthetic stock, Holiday items plus much much more!

Prices include delivery & tuning

785-832-9906

classifieds@ljworld.com

PUBLIC NOTICES TO PLACE AN AD: Lawrence

785.832.2222 Lawrence

legals@ljworld.com Lawrence

Lawrence

(First published in the Lawrence Daily Journal-World on January 20, 2017) Douglas County Clerk’s Office 4th Quarter Fund Balance 2016 Fund 100 General Fund 201 Road and Bridge 218 Employee Benefits 222 Special Liability 224 Special Parks & Recreation 225 Special Alcohol Programs 226 Special Building 231 Economic Development 235 Emergency Telephone Service 236 Youth Services 240 Ambulance 245 Motor Vehicle Operations 253 Employee Activities 255 Donation 256 Workers Compensation 257 Sheriff Special Use 258 Prosecuting Training & Assistance 259 Special Law Enforcement Trust 260 District Attorney’s Bad Ck Admin Cost 261 Sheriff Holding 301 Bond & Interest 302 Local County Sales Tax1% 450 Capital Improvement Plan 451 Capital Improvement Plan-Sales Tax 452 Valley View Building 501 Youth Services Grants

TO PLACE AN AD:

Special Notices

ANNOUNCEMENTS Business Announcements

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Begin. Balance 16,366,420.24 4,469,826.05 6,870,100.22 369,582.36 24,631.14 22,844.79 887,225.79 2,575.36 959,907.03 613,553.11 1,691,673.61 147,242.53 11,574.35 42,183.64 346,696.56 41,994.81 19,627.63 641,122.60 12,006.56 66.28 165,658.30 960,358.81 12,274,679.67 2,557,813.62 101,535.73 29,887.58

Revenues 5,260,124.46 542,110.02 320,028.73 2,820.82 1,945.41 1,736.07 135,827.42 40,437.04 44,773.17 164,250.49 1,344.43 1,396.40 5,435.00 2,107.13 12,281.02 38.62 2,733.00 94.09 1,090,351.43 3,960.00 116,800.97

Expenditures Ending Balance 9,728,577.32 11,897,967.38 2,184,365.91 2,827,570.16 3,731,663.68 3,458,465.27 16,332.62 356,070.56 5,525.00 21,051.55 22,844.79 75,080.00 813,881.86 2,575.36 229,853.48 865,880.97 403,396.48 250,593.67 1,380,587.17 355,859.61 162,787.33 148,705.69 590.00 12,328.78 336.15 41,847.49 110,405.00 237,687.96 5,041.55 42,388.26 4,099.29 17,635.47 11,090.18 642,313.44 12,045.18 2,799.28 19,400.00 146,352.39 960,358.81 3,077,361.05 10,287,670.05 2,557,813.62 105,495.73 100,577.41 46,111.14

502 503 601 602 603 604

Grant Programs Community Correction Plan Special Highway Improvement Equipment Reserve Register of Deeds Technology Ambulance Capital Reserve

TOTALS:

785.832.2222 Lawrence

legals@ljworld.com Lawrence

Lawrence

106,529.90 132,136.85 536,607.06 7,728,333.83 618,161.21 821,903.57

187,283.49 10,371.51

120,401.67 87,838.43

10,000.00 50,196.00

2,063,229.16 61,313.01

59,574,460.79

8,008,446.72

23,579,851.89

173,411.72 54,669.93 536,607.06 5,675,104.67 607,044.20 821,903.57 44,003,055.62

A detailed statement of expenditures is available for public inspection at the County Clerk’s Office. KSA 19-228

(First published in the Lawrence Daily Journal-World January 13, 2017) RESOLUTION 2016-15 A RESOLUTION OF THE GOVERNING BODY OF THE CITY OF EUDORA, KANSAS, DETERMINING THAT THE CITY IS CONSIDERING ESTABLISHING A TAX INCREMENT FINANCING REDEVELOPMENT DISTRICT WITHIN THE CITY, ESTABLISHING THE DATE AND TIME OF A PUBLIC HEARING ON SUCH MATTER, AND PROVIDING FOR THE GIVING OF NOTICE OF SUCH PUBLIC HEARING (NOTTINGHAM PROJECT). WHEREAS, pursuant to K.S.A. 12 1770 et seq., as amended (the “Act”), the City of Eudora, Kansas (the “City”), is authorized to assist in the development and redevelopment of eligible areas within the City in order to promote, stimulate and develop the general and economic welfare of the State of Kansas and its communities; and WHEREAS, the City hereby finds and determines it desirable to encourage the development and redevelopment of certain real property generally located Locust Street (on the West) and Church Street (on the East), and between 14th Street (on the North) and the City’s Community Recreation Center (on the South), all within the City, and to consider the establishment of a redevelopment district at such location (the “Redevelopment District”); and WHEREAS, pursuant to the Act, the City must adopt a resolution stating that the City is considering the establishment of the Redevelopment District and include in such resolution notice that a public hearing will be held to consider the establishment of said Redevelopment District; NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE GOVERNING BODY OF THE CITY OF EUDORA, KANSAS: Section 1. Proposed Redevelopment District. A legal description of the proposed Redevelopment District is attached hereto as Exhibit A, and a map depicting the boundaries of the proposed Redevelopment District is attached hereto as Exhibit B. A description and map of the proposed Redevelopment District are available for public inspection prior to the public hearing during regular office hours in the Office of the City Clerk, at City Hall, 4 East Seventh Street, Eudora, Kansas 66025. Section 2. Proposed Redevelopment Project. A description of the proposed district plan to be performed within the Redevelopment District, and the general description of the proposed buildings, facilities, and improvements to be constructed or improved (the “Nottingham Project”) is described as follows: a mixed use commercial development consisting of some or all of the following uses; retail uses; restaurant uses; other general commercial development with parking, access and site improvements. Section 3. Public Hearing. Notice is hereby given that a public hearing will be held by the City Commission to consider findings necessary for the establishment of the proposed Redevelopment District on January, 23rd, 2017, at the City Commission Chambers, located at City Hall, 4 East Seventh Street, Eudora, Kansas 66025, the public hearing to commence at 7:00 p.m. or as soon thereafter as the City Commission can hear the matter. At the public hearing, the City Commission will receive public comment on the foregoing matters. Such public hearing date is not less than thirty (30) days, nor more than seventy (70) days following adoption of this resolution. Section 4. Notice of Public Hearing. The City Clerk is hereby authorized and directed to provide for notice of the public hearing by taking the following actions: (a) A copy of this resolution shall be mailed by United States certified mail, return receipt requested, at least ten (10) days prior to January, 23rd, 2017, to each owner of land within the proposed Redevelopment District. (b) A copy of this resolution shall be mailed by United States certified mail, return receipt requested, at least ten (10) days prior to January, 23rd, 2017, to both the Board of County Commissioners of and for Douglas County, Kansas, and to Unified School District No. 491. (c) This resolution, specifically including Exhibits A and B attached hereto, shall be published in the Lawrence Journal World twice, on January 13th, 2017, and then again on January, 20th, 2017, such dates being not less than one (1) week and not more than two (2) weeks preceding the date fixed for the public hearing. The City Clerk shall otherwise give notice of the public hearing in accordance with the provisions of the Act. Section 5. Effective Date. This resolution shall be effective upon its adoption by the City Commission of the City of Eudora, Kansas. ADOPTED by the City Commission of the City of Eudora, Kansas, on December 12th, 2016. APPROVED: ATTEST: Pam Schmeck, City Clerk

Tim Reazin, Mayor

Exhibit A LEGAL DESCRIPTION E 1/2, SEC. 08, TWP. 13, RNG. 21; BLOCKS 161 THRU 163 AND BLOCKS 188 THRU 190, EUDORA; AND ALL OF LOTS 1 AND 2, BLOCK ONE, HOOVER ADDITION CITY OF EUDORA, DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS All that part of the East Half of Section 8, Township 13, Range 21; and all that part of Blocks 161 thru 163 and Blocks 188 thru 190, EUDORA; and all of Lots 1 and 2, Block One, HOOVER ADDITION, both being subdivisions of land in the City of Eudora, Douglas County, Kansas; and portions of the road rights-of-way lying adjacent thereto, all more particularly described as follows: Beginning at the Northwest corner of Lot 4, GREENWAY ADDITION NO. 2, a subdivision of land in the City of Eudora, Douglas County, Kansas; thence S 1° 41’ 47” E (S 0° 03’ 05” W, Plat), along the West line of said GREENWAY ADDITION NO. 2, a distance of 695.99 feet, to point on the North right-of-way line of Kansas Highway 10, as shown on KDOT Plans 10-23-078-6(23), dated 1975; thence S 88° 18’ 13” W, along said right-of-way line, a distance of 100.00 feet, to a point on the West right-of-way line of Church Street, as shown on ALTA/ACSM Survey by Landplan Engineering, project # 2014076, and dated October 22, 2014; thence S 1° 41’ 47” E, along said West right-of-way line, a distance of 529.93 feet, to a point of curvature; thence Southeasterly along said West right-of-way line, being a curve to the left having a radius of 550.84 feet, a central angle of 14° 49’ 17”, an arc distance of 142.49 feet; thence N 89° 12’ 56” W, a distance of 220.53 feet; thence S 88° 11’ 16” W, a distance of 115.25 feet; thence N 41° 36’ 00” W, a distance of 135.52 feet; thence S 1° 44’ 00” E, a distance of 395.69 feet, to a point on the centerline of vacated 17th Street, as shown on plat of said EUDORA, thence S 88° 12’ 41” W, along the centerline of said vacated 17th Street, a distance of 86.98 feet, to a point on the East line of Elm Street, as now established; thence S 1° 44’ 06” E, along the East right-of-way line of said Elm Street, a distance of 436.00 feet, to the Southwest corner of Lot 9, Block 160 of said EUDORA, said point being on the North right-of-way line of Kansas Highway 10, as now established; thence S 88° 12’ 41” W, along said North right-of-way line, a distance of 64.11 feet, to a point on the Southerly extension of the East line of LAKEVIEW ADDITION, a subdivision of land in the City of Eudora, Douglas County, Kansas; thence N 1° 37’ 42” W, along the West right of way line of Elm Street, said being the East line of said LAKEVIEW ADDITION, a distance of 396.10 feet, to the Northeast corner of said LAKEVIEW ADDITION; thence N 88° 15’ 54” E, along the West right-of-way of said Elm Street, said being the Easterly extension of the North line of said LAKEVIEW ADDITION, a distance of 3.37 feet, to a point on the West line of Elm Street, as now established; thence N 1° 44’ 06” W, along the East line of Blocks 155 thru 152, said being the West right-of-way line of said Elm Street, a distance of 1770.44 feet, to the Southeast corner of Block 151, of said Eudora, said being on North right-of-way line of 14th Street, as now established; thence N 88° 12’ 41” E, along the North right-of-way line of said 14th Street, said being the South line of Block 164, of said Eudora, a distance of 275.27 feet, to the Southeast corner of said Block 164; thence N 1° 40’ 20” W, along the East line of said Block 164, said being the West rightof-way line of said Locust Street, as now established, a distance of 532.33 feet, to a point on the Westerly extension of the North line of Lot 2, Block One, HOOVER ADDITION; thence N 88° 13’ 33” E (S 89° 59’ 08” E, Plat), along the North line of said Lot 2, and its Westerly and Easterly extensions, a distance of 376.08 feet, to a point on the Northerly extension of the West line of Block Two, GREENWAY ADDITION, a subdivision in the City of Eudora, Douglas County, Kansas, said being the East right-of-way line of Church Street, as now established; thence S 1° 44’ 52” E (S 0° 00’ 00” E, Plat), along the East right-of-way line of said Church Street, said being the West line of said Block Two, and its Northerly extension, a distance of 534.33 feet, to the Southwest corner of Lot 1, Block Two, said GREENWAY ADDITION; thence S 1° 42’ 56” E, along the East right-of-way line of said Church Street, a distance of 80.00 feet, to the point of beginning. The above described tract of land contains 1,139,614 square feet, or 26.162 acres, more or less.


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Friday, January 20, 2017

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FSHS GIRLS EARN ROAD VICTORY AGAINST HIGHLAND PARK. 4D

Sports

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Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com/sports l Friday, January 20, 2017

FOOTBALL NOTEBOOK

KU football lands in-state commitment By Benton Smith

Tom Keegan

basmith@ljworld.com

tkeegan@ljworld.com

Bragg too quick to brag?

A

lthough he doesn’t grade on a particularly difficult curve, at least Kansas sophomore forward Carlton Bragg Jr. isn’t in denial about his own performance 18 games into the season. “I would say I’m below average,” Bragg said. “I could be even more effective than what I am now.” Aside from a 15-point, 11-rebound effort vs. overmatched Siena, and a 10-point, six-rebound night vs. vertically challenged Iowa State, Bragg hasn’t had all that many games in which he has been able to both produce offensively and stay out of foul trouble. So being “even more effective” is not asking more of him than he’s capable of giving. He vows better days are ahead. “I know a lot of people have been waiting, but you’ll see,” he said. He explained what makes him so sure he’s on the brink of a breakthrough. “I’m having good practices consistently and I’m trying to carry that over to the game,” Bragg said. “Once I get going, no stopping me.” Hmmm. Well, Kansas coach Bill Self did predict his big game against Iowa State and did say he has shown serious improvement of late, so that can only be taken as good news. Now that Udoka Azubuike is lost for the season, Bragg qualifies as the team’s biggest X factor, the player with the most unfulfilled potential. But just how good is the McDonald’s All-American from Cleveland? He jumps well and looks even taller than his listed 6-foot-10. He runs the floor well for a man his size and has a soft shooting touch. But he doesn’t move particularly well laterally on defense, is a bit of a flincher in crowds and has slippery hands. Someone wondered if his hands have improved in the past week and Bragg responded, “Oh, for sure. I think you guys can see that as well.” Hmmm. Maybe he is on the verge of a breakthrough. It does happen with players who need time to adjust to playing in heavy traffic. For example, Texas freshman Jarrett Allen, a 6-11 forward recruited by Kansas, averaged 9.3 points and 6.3 rebounds in his first nine games, and didn’t seem to have an appetite for mixing it up. In nine games since, he’s averaging 14.6 points and 9.2 rebounds. If Bragg can bring KU as much as Allen gives UT in Saturday’s 1 p.m. tipoff in Allen Fieldhouse, how does Kansas lose? Bragg agreed with an observation that he still seems hurried at times, adding, “I get out of control as well.” Saturday would be a nice time for Bragg to take control and get going. Remember, he assures us that once he gets going, there will be no stopping him.

Kaufman

Another in-state prep football player is headed to the University of Kansas. Pratt senior Hunter Kaufman announced via Twitter his decision to attend KU and join the Jayhawks’ football program.

“Can’t wait to get to work,” Kauffman, a 5-foot11 high school running back and safety tweeted out with his declaration. Kaufman, who helped Pratt win the Class 4A DII state championship this past fall, joins Sunflower State prep commitments Joey Gilbertson (Wichita North-

west), Cooper Root (Wichita Collegiate), Kenyon Tabor (Derby) and Jay Dineen (Lawrence Free State) in the Class of 2017. In his final season at Pratt (12-1), Kaufman averaged 9.7 yards per carry and scored 21 rushing touchdowns, made 30 catches for 472 yards and six scores and ac-

counted for 1,396 yards of total offense. As a defensive back, he made 50 total tackles and three interceptions. Expected to be a walkon with the Jayhawks, Kaufman’s commitment tweet included the following note: “I am blessed and

> FOOTBALL, 3D

HIGH SCHOOL SWIMMING

LIONS SWIM TO A WIN

Nick Krug/Journal-World Photo

LAWRENCE HIGH BACKSTROKE SWIMMER BRADEN AUGUSTINE watches teammate and breast stroke swimmer Reed Pfeiffer dive into the pool while competing in the second heat of the Boys 200 Yard Medley Relay during the Lawrence Invitational Thursday at LHS.

LHS lands first swim meet victory of season By Evan Riggs eriggs@ljworld.com

M

oments before the final event Thursday, the 400yard freestyle relay, Lawrence High coach Kent McDonald got the attention of junior Alex Heckman and had a simple message for him. “Hey, 10 points,” McDonald said. The Lawrence High boys swimming team responded by overtaking McPherson and placing first at the eight-team Lawrence Invitational on Senior Night. It’s the first time the Li-

ons have won a meet this season. “We had some really good swims,” McDonald said. “A lot of people swam best times and guys come through when we needed them to.” When the Lions needed them most, the relay team of Heckman, senior Patrick Oblon, senior Jakob Busch, and junior Stephen Johnson took first place in what McDonald called the “best performance” of the day. Their time of 3:29.67 was their best of the season by three seconds. That put the Lions in position to win, and a fifth- and eighth- place finish by two other LHS teams in the

same relay sealed the victory. “When everybody pulls everything together and everyone goes fast, it’s always fun,” Johnson said. “As a team that doesn’t win all the time, having at least one victory is awesome.” Johnson led the way for the Lions with victories in both the 200 and 500-meter freestyle. His win in the 200 was routine, but things were much more difficult in the 500-meter race. Shawnee Heights sophomore Josh Florence finished with a time of

> LIONS, 4D

FSHS boys edge LHS loses, 69-66, to Wichita Southeast Washburn Rural, 63-58 I do like the way our By Bobby Nightengale

bnightengale@ljworld.com

By Shane Jackson

sjackson@ljworld.com

Overland Park — Through the early part of the season, the Free State boys basketball team has struggled to effectively close teams out. Once again the Firebirds were put to the test in Thursday’s opening round matchup against Washburn Rural. FSHS answered the bell, edging the Junior Blues, 63-58, in the first round of the Saints Classic at Saint Thomas Aquinas High School. “The one thing about us is that every game we seem to make it interesting,” Free State coach Sam Stroh said. “We have to figure out ways to not only hold the lead but

extend a lead and put a team away. Overall, it was good to get a first round win and move forward.” The Firebirds (6-2, No. 9 in 6A) have now won four consecutive games after staving off a Washburn Rural (6-3, No. 10 in 6A) comeback attempt. FSHS will have a second round matchup with Blue Valley (6-2, No. 5 in 6A) at 6:15 p.m. Stroh watched as his team let a seven-point advantage slip away in the early minutes of the final quarter. With 5:01 left to play, senior Zachary Ebert nailed a 3-pointer from the left wing to pull within two. However, in attempt to get a hand

> FSHS, 4D

Topeka — Walking off of the court Thursday, Lawrence High senior guard Jackson Mallory slammed his hand on one of the chairs on his team’s bench. Mallory, one of the most vocal and emotional leaders for the LHS boys basketball team, wasn’t afraid to show his frustration after a 69-66 loss to Wichita Southeast in the first round of the Topeka Invitational Tournament at Topeka High. Senior center Kobe Buffalomeat said it was a game that “slipped away.” For the first time since 2012, the Lions won’t be playing in the championship game. Most of the damage was done in the first quarter.

‘‘

The Golden Buffaloes (64) scored 30 points while shooting an eye-popping 12-for-16 from the floor (75 guys fought. I percent). liked the way “It’s tough when they we finished. score 30 in a quarter,” said the 6-foot-7 Buffalomeat, We weren’t who scored 17 points on always in 7-of-7 shooting with a big sync, but height advantage. “We’d like to put that up in a half they were fighting and sometimes.” After trailing by 17 points they were in the first half, the Lions wanting it. (7-2, ranked No. 4 in Class 6A) tied the score with 2:41 Just a game remaining on two made free where Wichita throws from senior guard Southeast Austin Miller. But all game long South- was the east junior wing Israel better team.” Barnes was a thorn in the Lions’ side. He drilled a — Lawrence High

> LHS, 3D

basketball coach Mike Lewis


Sports 2

2D | LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD | FRIDAY, JANUARY 20, 2017

TWO-DAY SPORTS CALENDAR

KANSAS

4 QBs left have both talents, flaws

COMMENTARY

Son reflects on BP’s HallAMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE of Fame NASCAR career By Howard Fendrich

AP Pro Football Writer

By Keith Parsons For The Associated Press

Charlotte, N.C. (ap) — Benny Parsons made it to the NASCAR Hall of Fame because of his victories on the track and his work as a broadcaster after he retired. He is there also because of one other factor — the kindness of his competitors. Don’t misunderstand, he wasn’t voted in simply because people liked my father. During his 19-year driving career, the man most everyone called “BP” won 21 races, including the 1975 Daytona 500, and the 1973 NASCAR championship. In fact, he was the only Hall of Fame-eligible driver who had accomplished those two feats who had yet to Benny Parsons be selected. He’ll be inducted tonight, along with Rick Hendrick, Richard Childress, Mark Martin and Raymond Parks, and he’s included in that group on merit. Yet the way he treated others in the sport over the years ended up helping him as much as it did them. His championship is a great example. The 1973 season ended with a race at Rockingham, about 10 miles from where BP’s underfunded team was based. All he needed to do to clinch the title was to finish the race, thanks to the convoluted points system used at the time. His crew had everything it needed to fix nearly anything that could go wrong during a race. As fate would have it, no one could have anticipated one item that would be needed: a replacement roll cage. On the 13th lap, my dad hit a car which had spun in Turn 2, ripping the entire right side away from his car. The damage included the steel bars used to reinforce the driver’s cockpit, which were peeled away from the chassis and laying on the track.

> PARSONS, 3D

Among QBs with at least 250 passing attempts, Brady ranked No. 1, Roethlisberger No. 3 in fewest sacks, while Ryan was No. 3, Brady No. 5 in completion percentage. These guys are not perfect, though. They make mistakes. And chances are, one or more will do so again this weekend. “Joe Montana would say, ‘I don’t have to make every throw; I have to deliver the mail. I have to make the right decisions. Just try to get the mail to the right person at the right time and not beat myself trying to do more than I should,’” Lott said. “Which one of these quarterbacks is going to put themselves in a situation where in their weakest EAST moment — because all ofALthem have moments when they’re going to be weak — do you try to do something more than you AL CENTRAL need to do?” What stands out about these QBs:

TDs, no INTs. Negatives: Can be troubled by blitzes: 78.6 passer rating this season, 24th in the league. Brady, in contrast, led the NFL at 126.8, according to Sportradar; Ryan No. 2 at 122.5. They said it: “He is just making really good pre-snap decisions and post-snap decisions. ... He is doing a better job of not trying to make a ‘Ben-like’ play all the time.” — offensive coordinator Todd Haley.

There are some overlooked EAST NORTH FREE STATE HIGH truths about the four superb quarterbacks left chasing a SuTODAY per Bowl title: • Wrestling at Paola tournament, l Tom Brady’s career AFC 1 p.m. championship game stats hard• Boys basketball vs. Blue Valley ly should scare an opposing at St. Thomas Aquinas tournament, defense, nor should his deep6:15 p.m. throw efficiency in the play• Girls basketball at Lansing, 7 p.m. offs. SATURDAY l Ben Roethlisberger be• Bowling at Bishop Miege tournacomes rather ordinary when ment, 1 p.m. Aaron being blitzed. • Boys basketball vs. TBA at St. l Aaron Rodgers is hardly Rodgers Thomas Aquinas tournament, TBA Positives: the king of the fourth-quarterTerrific out back comeback, no matter his of the pocket, recent Hail Mary completions LAWRENCE HIGH SOUTH often via deand a certain final-seconds, WEST TODAY signed rollouts. throw-on-the-run play. • Boys basketball vs. Wichita East l Matt Ryan produces interThis postseaat Topeka Invitational Tournament, ceptions nearly as often as TDs son, according 3:15 p.m. when trailing late. to Sportradar, • Wrestling at Blue Valley There’s a lot of talk heading he’s 16 for 20 for 234 yards, 2 Northwest Invitational, 4 p.m. into Sunday’s conference title TDs, 0 INTs, 148.8 rating on SATURDAY games about the accomplishsuch plays; every other playoff • Wrestling at Blue Valley ments, talents and legacies of QB has thrown for 182 yards Northwest Invitational, 10 a.m. the four starting QBs, which combined and a 56.2 rating. makes sense. New England’s Negatives: Only 17-36 with a • Boys basketball vs. TBA at Tom Brady Brady, Pittsburgh’s Roethlisgame-winning drive or comeAL WEST Topeka Invitational Tournament, P o s i t i v e s : back opportunity, a .321 winberger, Green Bay’s Rodgers TBA Diagnoses a ning percentage that’s by far and Atlanta’s Ryan are as good blitz and shifts the worst of this bunch, acas it gets today at the NFL’s SEABURY ACADEMY the play; 126.8 cording to Scott Kacsmar of most important position. SATURDAY passer rating Football Outsiders. “Watching these quarter• Boys basketball vs. TBA, at against blitzes backs play has been extraorThey said it: “Look at the AFC TEAM LOGOS 081312: Helmet and team logos for the AFC teams; various sizes; stand-alone; staff; ETA 5 p.m. McLouth tournament, 6 p.m. led the league, flexibility, the ability to turn dinary,” said Hall of Fame • Girls basketball vs. Osawatomie, according to his hips, the flexibility he has defensive back Ronnie Lott, at McLouth tournament, 10 a.m. S p o r t r a d a r . in his shoulder and elbow.” a teammate of Joe Montana’s on four Super Bowl champi- Turns seemingly anyone into — coach Mike McCarthy on ons from 1982-90 with the San an effective receiver, putting Rodgers’ ability to throw while VERITAS CHRISTIAN Francisco 49ers. “They’re very the football where teammates moving to his left. TODAY good at identifying: ‘OK, I see can make big plays; sixth in the • Boys basketball vs. Osawatomie, Matt Ryan an opening. I recognize it. Now NFL this season in percentage at Spring Hill tournament, 3 p.m. Positives: I’m going to deliver it.’ They’ve of total yards after the catch SATURDAY Spreads the shown their ball skills. They’ve (49.1), according to Sportradar. • Girls basketball vs. Maranatha at ball around, Negatives: In 10 conference shown their foot skills. They’ve McLouth tournament, noon setting an NFL given us a little bit of every- title games, owns 76.3 passer record with thing. ... That’s, for me, where rating with 12 TDs, 12 INTs. On TD passes to this game has evolved. You’ve postseason deep throws (more LATEST LINE 13 receivers got quarterbacks that can be a than 20 yards in the air) since this season. combination of Joe Montana, 2007: 50.6 rating; 26 compleNFL His 135.4 pass- Favorite.............. Points (O/U)........... Underdog Steve Young and Brett Favre.” tion percentage, 4 TDs, 6 INTs. Sunday They said it: “He does such er rating on deep throws led They share attributes, such Conference Championships as reading a defense, arm a good job of relating to you NFL, according to Sportradar, 1/2 (61).....................Green Bay strength, leadership skills and ... the way that he likes things and his 9.3 yards per attempt ATLANTA.........................4 NEW ENGLAND.................. 6 (51)....................... Pittsburgh more. And each member of to be run, his route details and were surpassed only by three NBA this quartet has unique abili- that type of stuff.” — WR Chris QBs since the AFL-NFL merg- Favorite.............. Points (O/U)........... Underdog er. Durable, making 120 con- Portland.........................1 1/2 (209)...........PHILADELPHIA ties, too. That’s why they’re the Hogan. CHARLOTTE.....................1 (215.5).......................... Toronto secutive starts. four QBs with the most wins Ben Negatives: Only had seven Milwaukee.................. 2 1/2 (209.5)...................ORLANDO since 2008, and by next month, NEW ORLEANS............9 1/2 (214.5).....................Brooklyn Roethlisberger INTs this season, but four ATLANTA..................... 5 1/2 (203.5)......................Chicago why they’ll own a combined 12 P o s i t i v e s : came in losses — three in the MEMPHIS.......................6 1/2 (202)...............Sacramento Super Bowl appearances, eight Long known final four minutes; another Golden St.................... 4 1/2 (236.5).................. HOUSTON titles and quite possibly five for extend- was a pick-6 late in the first x-DALLAS.......................OFF (OFF)...............................Utah league MVP awards. ing plays, now half. Trailing by one posses- Indiana...............................3 (220).....................LA LAKERS This season, Ryan led the x-Utah Guard G. Hill is questionable. quickly under- sion in the fourth quarter, NFL in passer rating at 117.1, College Basketball stands what’s career passer rating is 81.9, Favorite................... Points................ Underdog the fifth-best ever, followed available and with 16 TDs, 14 INTS. Just Oakland................................1 1/2.........NORTH. KENTUCKY by Brady at No. 2 and Rodgers gets the ball 2-4 in playoff games, with 7 WRIGHT ST..........................6 1/2................................Detroit at No. 4, with Roethlisberger Yale.......................................7 1/2...............................BROWN at No. 11. Rodgers led in TD to playmakers. Trailing in the INTs. MILWAUKEE..............1 1/2.................... Cleveland St They said it: “We’ve got a WISC passes with 40, two more than fourth quarter of one-possesWISC GREEN BAY................. 11..................Youngstown St Ryan. Brady set a record for sion games this season, com- lot of different moving parts Added Games best TD-to-interception ratio piled near-perfect 156.1 passer and different guys that can IONA......................................8 1/2.............................Fairfield Canisius...............................2 1/2...................... QUINNIPIAC with 28 scores and two picks. rating, 27 for 31 for 371 yards, 4 make plays.” — Ryan. BALTIMORE ORIOLES

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Ivan Rodriguez appeared to deny using steroids during his career. The catcher spoke Thursday at a news conference alongNew York (ap) — A day after side fellow inductees Jeff his election to the Hall of Fame, Bagwell and Tim Raines.

Rodriguez appears to deny steroid use during career

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D-League: Salt Lake City v. Iowa 11:30 a.m. ESPNU 35, 235 D-League: Delaware v. Greensboro 2 p.m. ESPNU 35, 235 D-League: Austin v. North. Ariz. 5 p.m. ESPNU 35, 235 Warriors at Rockets 7 p.m. ESPN 33, 233 D-League: Long Island at Raptors 905 7:30 p.m. ESPNU 35, 235 Pacers at Lakers 9:30 p.m. ESPN 33, 233 Golf

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TODAY • Tennis vs. St. Louis, 5 p.m. • Track at Kentucky Invitational, all day SATURDAY • Track at Kentucky Invitational, all day • Men’s basketball vs. Texas, 1 p.m.

Ill. at Mich. 1:15 p.m. BTN 147, 170, 171, 237 Marquette at Creighton 1:30 p.m. FOX 4, 204 Rhode Island at Duquesne 1:30 p.m. NBCSN 38, 238 Idaho St. at N. Dakota 2 p.m. FCS 146 Mississippi at Missouri 2:30 p.m. SECN 157 Ariz. at UCLA 3 p.m. CBS 5, 13, 205, 213 Mich. St. at Ind. 3 p.m. ESPN 33, 233 Alabama at Auburn 3 p.m. ESPN2 34, 234 S. Carolina at Kentucky 5 p.m. ESPN 33, 233 W. Virginia at Kansas St. 5 p.m. ESPN2 34, 234 Houston at SMU 5 p.m. ESPNU 35, 235 Mississ. St. at Tenn. 5 p.m. SECN 157 Baylor at TCU 7 p.m. ESPNU 35, 235 Drake at Ill. St. 7 p.m. FSN 36, 236 Miami at Duke 7:15 p.m. ESPN 33, 233 LSU at Ark. 7:30 p.m. SECN 157 UMKC at New Mexico St. 8 p.m. KSMO 3, 203 Long Beach St. at Cal Poly 9 p.m. ESPNU 35, 235

Stoke City v. Manchest. Untd 8:55 a.m. NBCSN 38, 238 Wolfsburg v. Hamburg 8:30 a.m. FSPLUS 148 W. Bremen v. B. Dortmund 8:30 a.m. FS1 150, 227 Augsburg v. Hoffenheim 8:30 a.m. FS2 153 Crystal Palace v. Everton 9 a.m. CNBC 40, 240 Leipzig v. E. Frankfurt 11:30 a.m. FS2 153 Manch. City v. Tottenham 11:30 a.m. NBC 14, 214 Fla. Cup 2:10 p.m. FSPLUS 148 Fla. Cup 4:55 p.m. FSPLUS 148

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TODAY IN SPORTS 1937 — Nels Stewart of the New York Americans becomes the NHL’s all-time scorer with his 270th goal in a 4-0 victory over the Montreal Canadiens. 1952 — George Mikan scores 61 points, a career-high, to lead the Minneapolis Lakers to a 91-81 double-overtime victory over the Rochester Royals. 1968 — Elvin Hayes scores 39 points to lead Houston to a 71-69 victory and end UCLA’s 47-game winning streak. A regular-season record 52,693 fans attend the game at the Houston Astrodome. 1970 — Cincinnati’s Tom Van Arsdale and Phoenix’s Dick Van Arsdale are the first brothers to play in the same NBA AllStar game. Dick scores eight points for the West team, while Tom scores five for the East, which wins the game 142-135 at Philadelphia. 1980 — President Carter announces the U.S. Olympic team will not participate in the Summer Olympics in Moscow to protest the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan the previous month. 1980 — Terry Bradshaw passes for 309 yards and sets two passing records to help the Pittsburgh Steelers beat the Los Angeles Rams 31-19 and become the first team to win four Super Bowls. 1985 — Joe Montana passes for a Super Bowl record 331 yards and three touchdowns to lead the San Francisco 49ers to a 38-16 victory over the Miami Dolphins. Roger Craig scores a record three touchdowns. 1996 — Rudy Galindo, in the biggest upset in decades, wins the U.S. Figure Skating Championships, earning two perfect marks along the way.

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NBA Roundup The Associated Press

Cavaliers 118, Suns 103 Cleveland — Kyrie Irving scored 26 points, All-Star teammate LeBron James had 21 points and 15 assists, and Cleveland looked more like itself at home in a win over Phoenix on Thursday night. PHOENIX (103) Warren 8-12 2-4 18, Chriss 3-7 0-0 6, Chandler 9-14 4-6 22, Bledsoe 7-21 6-7 22, Booker 4-12 13-14 21, Tucker 1-5 0-0 2, Bender 1-5 0-0 3, Len 2-3 0-0 4, Knight 1-2 0-0 3, Ulis 1-4 0-0 2, Barbosa 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 37-85 25-31 103. CLEVELAND (118) James 8-12 5-8 21, Thompson 1-6 0-2 2, Irving 10-20 4-5 26, J.Jones 5-8 0-0 14, Shumpert 6-8 0-0 17, Jefferson 2-5 0-0 4, Frye 6-11 2-2 18, Felder 1-2 0-0 2, McRae 0-0 0-0 0, Liggins 1-3 2-2 5, Korver 3-10 0-0 9. Totals 43-85 13-19 118. Phoenix 21 20 35 27 — 103 Cleveland 29 30 30 29 — 118 3-Point Goals-Phoenix 4-19 (Bledsoe 2-5, Knight 1-1, Bender 1-5, Tucker 0-1, Ulis 0-1, Warren 0-2, Booker 0-4), Cleveland 19-43 (Shumpert 5-7, J.Jones 4-6, Frye 4-8, Korver 3-9, Irving 2-7, Liggins 1-2, James 0-2, Jefferson 0-2). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-Phoenix 46 (Chandler 16), Cleveland 36 (Frye 10). Assists-Phoenix 23 (Bledsoe 9), Cleveland 29 (James 15). Total FoulsPhoenix 22, Cleveland 24. TechnicalsPhoenix defensive three second, Phoenix team. A-20,562 (20,562).

Wizards 113, Knicks 110 New York — John Wall had 29 points and 13 assists as the surging Washington beat New York.

How former Jayhawks fared Cole Aldrich, Minnesota Late game. Darrell Arthur, Denver Did not play (knee injury). Markieff Morris, Washington Min: 35. Pts: 14. Reb: 6. Ast: 4. WASHINGTON (113) Porter 7-13 3-3 23, Morris 6-11 0-0 14, Gortat 6-12 0-0 12, Wall 11-21 6-8 29, Beal 4-13 0-0 8, Oubre 3-6 3-3 10, Smith 5-8 0-0 11, Burke 1-2 0-0 3, Satoransky 1-2 0-0 3. Totals 44-88 12-14 113. NEW YORK (110) Kuzminskas 1-5 3-4 6, Anthony 13-27 5-7 34, O’Quinn 7-10 0-0 14, Rose 7-16 6-6 20, Baker 1-4 0-0 2, Porzingis 6-11 3-3 15, Plumlee 0-1 0-0 0, Jennings 1-4 0-0 3, Lee 2-6 0-0 5, Holiday 4-6 2-2 11. Totals 42-90 19-22 110. Washington 38 28 34 13 — 113 New York 27 40 19 24 — 110 3-Point Goals-Washington 13-32 (Porter 6-10, Morris 2-3, Satoransky 1-1, Smith 1-2, Burke 1-2, Wall 1-3, Oubre 1-4, Beal 0-7), New York 7-24 (Anthony 3-7, Jennings 1-2, Lee 1-3, Holiday 1-3, Kuzminskas 1-5, Baker 0-1, Porzingis 0-3). Fouled OutNone. Rebounds-Washington 40 (Gortat 12), New York 41 (Anthony 10). Assists-Washington 29 (Wall 13), New York 20 (Jennings 5). Total Fouls-Washington 19, New York 14. Technicals-Washington defensive three second, Washington team. A-19,812 (19,812).

Kelly Oubre Jr., Washington Min: 25. Pts: 10. Reb: 3. Ast: 1. Paul Pierce, L.A. Clippers Late game. Brandon Rush, Minnesota Late game. Andrew Wiggins, Minnesota Late game.

Heat 99, Mavericks 95 Miami — Goran Dragic had 32 points, Tyler Johnson scored 10 of his 23 in the fourth quarter and Miami topped Dallas. DALLAS (95) Barnes 7-14 1-1 15, Nowitzki 7-16 3-5 19, Curry 6-11 0-1 15, Dero.Williams 2-8 1-2 6, Matthews 7-14 0-0 18, Finney-Smith 1-1 0-0 3, Powell 0-3 2-2 2, Mejri 2-2 0-0 4, Harris 0-3 0-0 0, Barea 5-10 0-0 13, Anderson 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 37-82 7-11 95. MIAMI (99) Babbitt 1-3 0-0 3, Whiteside 6-12 1-1 13, Dragic 11-15 6-10 32, Waiters 5-12 1-2 12, McGruder 1-4 0-0 3, White 0-1 0-0 0, J.Johnson 1-6 3-4 5, Reed 3-3 2-3 8, T.Johnson 7-13 7-9 23, Ellington 0-4 0-0 0. Totals 35-73 20-29 99. Dallas 22 31 20 22 — 95 Miami 29 15 26 29 — 99

3-Point Goals-Dallas 14-36 (Matthews 4-9, Curry 3-5, Barea 3-6, Nowitzki 2-6, Finney-Smith 1-1, Dero.Williams 1-5, Powell 0-1, Barnes 0-3), Miami 9-20 (Dragic 4-4, T.Johnson 2-2, Waiters 1-2, McGruder 1-2, Babbitt 1-3, White 0-1, J.Johnson 0-3, Ellington 0-3). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-Dallas 33 (Barnes 7), Miami 40 (J.Johnson, Whiteside 8). Assists-Dallas 17 (Dero. Williams 9), Miami 16 (J.Johnson 4). Total Fouls-Dallas 20, Miami 15. A-19,600 (19,600).

Spurs 118, Nuggets 104 San Antonio — Kawhi Leonard scored 34 points, rookie Dejounte Murray added a season-high 24 and short-handed San Antonio overcame a pregame injury to Pau Gasol. DENVER (104) Barton 5-12 7-7 18, Hernangomez 3-9 1-2 8, Faried 2-7 1-2 5, Jokic 14-22 5-5 35, Mudiay 4-10 2-2 12, Arthur 0-0 0-0 0, Nurkic 2-5 1-5 5, Nelson 2-7 0-0 5, J.Murray 4-15 3-3 13, Miller 1-4 0-0 3. Totals 37-91 20-26 104. SAN ANTONIO (118) Leonard 12-22 8-8 34, Lee 5-7 0-0 10, Aldridge 4-9 2-2 10, D.Murray 7-11 7-7 24, Green 2-5 0-0 5, Bertans 1-2 1-2 4, Anderson 0-0 0-0 0, Dedmon 3-5 1-1 7, Mills 1-5 0-2 3, Ginobili 6-11 1-1 14, Simmons 3-9 1-2 7. Totals 44-86 21-25 118. Denver 23 35 23 23 — 104 San Antonio 28 31 33 26 — 118 3-Point Goals-Denver 10-31 (Mudiay 2-4, Jokic 2-4, J.Murray 2-8, Miller 1-2, Hernangomez 1-4, Nelson 1-4, Barton 1-5), San Antonio 9-22 (D.Murray 3-5, Leonard 2-5, Bertans 1-2, Ginobili 1-3, Mills 1-3, Green 1-3, Simmons 0-1). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-Denver 43 (Jokic 12), San Antonio 43 (Lee 16). Assists-Denver 27 (Nelson 9), San Antonio 28 (Aldridge 6). Total FoulsDenver 19, San Antonio 19. TechnicalsSan Antonio coach Gregg Popovich 2. A-18,418 (18,418).

TOP 25 COLLEGE BASKETBALL ROUNDUP The Associated Press

No. 11 Oregon 86, California 63 Eugene, Ore. — Jordan Bell scored a career-high 26 points, Casey Benson had 15 on five 3-pointers and Oregon rolled to a victory over California on Thursday night. CALIFORNIA (13-6) Rabb 2-10 0-0 4, Okoroh 3-3 0-0 6, Moore 4-8 1-1 10, Bird 7-19 2-4 21, Mullins 2-6 2-3 8, Moute a Bidias 0-0 0-0 0, Welle 0-1 0-0 0, Davis 1-3 0-0 2, Rooks 1-2 1-3 3, Singer 0-0 0-0 0, Coleman 3-5 3-3 9, Hamilton 0-0 0-0 0, Domingo 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 23-58 9-14 63.

Football CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1D

excited to announce that I will continue my academic and athletic career for the University of Kansas as a Jayhawk. I would like to thank God for this awesome opportunity and my parents and my past and current coaches for their support.” Since taking over the program ahead of the 2015 season, KU head coach David Beaty and his staff have proclaimed their desire to recruit and land more in-state players. In 2016, KU had 20 homegrown Jayhawks on its roster: Lawrence Free State’s Bryce Torneden, Sam Skwarlo, Joe Dineen and Keith Loneker Jr., Bishop

LHS CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1D

3-pointer after the Lions tied the score, then a swished jumper on the next possession. Southeast made six straight free throws in the final 45 seconds and the Lions couldn’t close the gap. “Frustrating is a good word,” Lawrence coach Mike Lewis said. “I do like the way our guys fought. I liked the way we finished.

Parsons CONTINUED FROM PAGE 2D

The car was towed back to the garage, where BP and his crew dejectedly pondered what they could do. Suddenly, Ralph Moody, a founder of the famed Holman & Moody organization that dominated NASCAR for much of the 1960s, had a solution. For some reason, the car of Bobby Musgrover still was sitting in the garage after failing

OREGON (17-2) Bell 11-12 4-5 26, Brooks 3-3 2-4 10, Pritchard 2-5 0-0 5, Dorsey 4-10 7-9 16, Ennis 1-3 0-0 3, Sorkin 1-3 2-2 5, BigbyWilliams 1-2 2-2 4, Boucher 1-7 0-0 2, Noebel 0-0 0-0 0, Benson 5-5 0-0 15. Totals 29-50 17-22 86.

LOUISVILLE (16-3) Mahmoud 2-3 2-2 6, Adel 6-9 3-4 18, King 5-8 2-2 14, Johnson 4-6 4-5 12, D.Mitchell 8-15 0-0 18, Spalding 0-1 0-0 0, Mathiang 6-9 0-1 12, Levitch 1-3 0-0 3, Sharpe 0-1 0-0 0, McMahon 0-0 0-0 0, Henderson 0-1 0-0 0, Hicks 4-8 0-2 9. Totals 36-64 11-16 92.

2-2 14, Melton 2-5 4-5 8, Rakocevic 2-4 0-0 4, Mathews 1-5 0-0 2, Aaron 1-7 5-5 7. Totals 22-59 15-18 66.

No. 25 Maryland 84, Iowa 76 Iowa City, Iowa — Melo No. 12 Louisville 92, Trimble scored 20 points No. 14 Arizona 73, Clemson 60 and Maryland earned its Southern Cal 66 Louisville, Ky. — Deng Los Angeles — Lauri fourth straight victory. Adel scored 18 points to Markkanen scored 23 points MARYLAND (17-2) match a career high in and Arizona held on late. Dodd 4-5 2-2 10, Jackson 4-9 4-4 12, the first half as Louisville Trimble 6-12 3-4 20, Huerter 2-6 0-0 5, Cowan 5-6 4-6 15, Gill 0-1 0-2 0, Bender closed on a 10-0 run. ARIZONA (17-2) 3-4 0-0 6, Brantley 4-7 0-0 10, Nickens CLEMSON (11-7) Grantham 3-10 3-4 11, Blossomgame 4-8 0-0 10, Djitte 2-4 1-4 5, Holmes 3-7 0-0 8, S.Mitchell 1-3 2-4 4, Thomas 1-4 0-1 2, Robertin 0-0 0-0 0, Reed 6-13 0-0 13, Hudson 0-0 0-0 0, DeVoe 3-6 0-0 7, Fields 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 23-55 6-13 60.

Markkanen 8-12 2-2 23, Ristic 2-5 3-6 7, Allen 4-11 2-2 11, Simmons 3-9 3-4 10, Alkins 3-11 5-6 14, Pinder 2-3 0-0 4, Comanche 1-1 2-2 4, Jackson-Cartwright 0-6 0-0 0. Totals 23-58 17-22 73. SOUTHERN CAL (16-4) Buggs 0-0 0-0 0, Metu 4-13 3-5 11, Stewart 7-13 1-1 20, McLaughlin 5-12

2-3 0-0 6. Totals 30-53 13-18 84. IOWA (11-9) Pemsl 4-8 1-2 9, Cook 1-6 6-8 8, Jok 4-12 4-4 14, Bohannon 4-14 0-0 11, Moss 3-8 2-2 8, Wagner 3-5 6-8 12, Kriener 2-6 0-0 4, Jones 0-2 0-0 0, Baer 3-6 0-1 7, Williams 0-0 0-0 0, Ellingson 1-3 0-0 3. Totals 25-70 19-25 76.

to Virginia Tech.

prospect. Cole, a 6-1 cornerback from Highland Community College, is a threestar juco player, according to the recruiting website. Hampton, a 5-8 prep receiver from Texarkana, Texas, is considered a threestar prospect by Rivals. National Signing Day is Feb. 1.

Friday, January 20, 2017

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SCOREBOARD Big 12 Women

League Overall Baylor 7-0 18-1 Texas 7-0 13-4 Kansas State 5-2 15-4 Oklahoma 5-2 14-5 Texas Tech 3-3 11-6 West Virginia 3-4 15-4 Oklahoma State 2-4 12-5 Iowa State 1-6 10-8 TCU 1-6 9-9 Kansas 0-7 6-12 Wednesday’s Games West Virginia 62, Kansas 51 Iowa State 42, Baylor 68 TCU 63, Kansas State 74 Saturday’s Games Baylor vs. West Virginia, 1 p.m. Iowa State vs. Kansas State, 5 p.m. Texas Tech vs. Texas, 6 p.m.

Big 12 Men

League Overall Kansas 6-0 17-1 Baylor 5-1 17-1 West Virginia 4-2 15-3 Kansas State 3-3 14-4 TCU 3-3 14-4 Texas Tech 3-3 14-4 Iowa State 3-3 11-6 Oklahoma 2-4 8-9 Texas 1-5 7-11 Oklahoma State 0-6 10-8 Tuesday, Jan. 17 Baylor 74, Texas 64 Wednesday’s Games Oklahoma 89, West Virginia 87 TCU 69, Texas Tech 75 Kansas State 96, Oklahoma State, 88 Saturday’s Games Oklahoma vs. Iowa State, 1 p.m. Texas Tech vs. Oklahoma State, 1 p.m. Kansas vs. Texas, 1 p.m. Kansas State vs. West Virginia, 5 p.m. TCU vs. Baylor, 7 p.m. Monday’s Games Oklahoma State vs. TCU, 6 p.m. Texas vs. Oklahoma, 8 p.m. Tuesday’s Games West Virginia vs. Kansas, 6 p.m. Iowa State vs. Kansas State, 8 p.m.

Olathe North triangular

Thursday at Olathe Lanes East Boys team scores: Olathe North 2624, Free State 2364, SM East 1957. FSHS boys results: 3. Alex Jimenez 210-223-216 — 649; 4. Cameron Edens

229-213-178 — 620; 7. Alex Craig 176221-149 — 546; 8. Bayn Schrader 161192-172 — 525; 10. Zach Lockwood 155-187-173 — 515; 17. Cam Edgecomb 154-102-116 — 372. Girls team scores: Olathe North 2174, Free State 1946, SM East 1603. FSHS girls results: 2. Morgan Wright 158-183-208 — 549; 6. Nicole Miele 176-128-193 — 497; 7. Sydney Jordan 178-141-163 — 482; 9. Lexie Lockwood 140-149-129 — 418.

Shawnee Mission West triangular

Thursday at College Lanes LHS boys results: Javier Lemmons 202-201-266 — 669; Adonis Stanwis 242203-217 — 662; Cameron Stussie 227214-218 — 659; Hunter Krom 171-236-193 — 600; Ethan Huslig 157-230-190 — 577; Noah Goepfert 174-170-221 — 565. LHS girls results: Dominique Vann 176-157-182 — 515; Morgan Daniels 134-191-177 — 502; Renea McNemee 147-144-161 — 452; Holly Evans 153130-159 — 442; Carli Stellwagon 137157-132 — 426; Emilie Rodman 113133-146 — 392.

NFL Playoff Glance

Wild-card Playoffs Saturday, Jan. 7 Houston 27, Oakland 14 Seattle 26, Detroit 6 Sunday, Jan. 8 Pittsburgh 30, Miami 12 Green Bay 38, N.Y. Giants 13 Divisional Playoffs Saturday, Jan. 14 Atlanta 36, Seattle 20 New England 34, Houston 16 Sunday, Jan. 15 Green Bay 34, Dallas 31 Pittsburgh 18, Kansas City 16 Conference Championships Sunday, Jan. 22 NFC Green Bay at Atlanta, 2:05 p.m. (FOX) AFC Pittsburgh at New England, 5:40 p.m. (CBS) Pro Bowl Sunday, Jan. 29 At Orlando, Fla. AFC vs. NFC, 7 p.m. (ESPN) Super Bowl Sunday, Feb. 5 At Houston TBD, 5:30 p.m. (FOX)

BRIEFLY FSHS girls, boys bowling places 2nd Alex Jimenez and Cameron Edens placed inside of the top five at the Olathe North triangular Thursday at Olathe Lanes East, leading the FSHS boys bowling team to second place. Free State’s girls team also finished second, led by Morgan Wright, who finished second individually.

Osawatomie — Wallace 10, Hendrickson 3, Shippy 8, Schmidt 9, Johnson 2, Riley 4.

Seabury girls lose to Maranatha Kayleigh Boos scored 27 points but Bishop Seabury’s girls basketball team fell to Maranatha, 51-39, in the McLouth Tournament. Seabury will play in the seventh-place game at 10 a.m. Saturday vs. Osawatomie.

Miege’s Ryan Willis and Montell Cozart, Basehor-Linwood’s Ben Johnson, Wichita native and Andover alum DeeIsaac Davis, Louisburg’s Mesa Ribordy, Prairie Village native and Rockhurst alum Joe Gibson, Olathe South’s Frank Seurer Jr., Wichita Northwest’s Deron Thompson (a running back transfer from Colorado State), Baldwin’s Reese Randall, Hesston’s Ryan Schadler, Topeka Washburn Rural’s Nathan Miller, Blue Valley’s Mazin Aqi, Blue Valley West’s Hunter Saulsbury, Blue Valley Southwest’s Beau Lawrence, Blue Valley Northwest’s Austin Moses and Shawnee Mission Northwest’s Will Smith. Smith was a senior last season and Willis transferred out of the program,

Big recruiting weekend ahead According to Jon Kirby of Jayhawk Slant, KU football will have three recruits who are not committed to the program visiting campus this weekend. While preps Dominic Williams, Robert Topps, Kenyon Tabor, Liam Jones and Jay Dineen will make official visits, too, all have previously committed to Beaty and his staff. They will be joined by un-committed Darreon Jackson and Antonio Cole, as well as well as Quan Hampton, who currently is committed to Texas State. Rivals ranks Jackson, a 6-foot-1 safety from Coffeyville Community College, as a three-star juco

Some Jayhawks returning Though nothing official has yet been announced, a pair of former KU football defensive players soon are expected to join the staff as graduate assistants. Kansas teammates from 2013 to 2014, former safety Cassius Sendish and ex-linebacker Victor Simmons, who finished their careers playing for Charlie Weis and interim head coach Clint Bowen, will help out on Beaty’s staff.

We weren’t always in sync, but they were fighting and they were wanting it. Just a game where Wichita Southeast was the better team.” Barnes, a 6-4 wing who leads the City League in scoring, proved why he’s so tough to guard. He rewards good defense by just making tougher buckets. He made his first five shots, only missing in the first quarter on an attempted buzzer beater. “There’s no words to describe it,” Mallory said of guarding Barnes. “He’s

an incredible player. He’s gotten a lot better in the last year. He completely expanded his game.” The only thing that nearly stopped Barnes was foul trouble. He picked up his fourth foul — after back-to-back offensive fouls — with two minutes left in the second quarter. Mallory said he looked over to the bench at his team’s coaches and muttered, “We’ve got this.” That sparked the Lions, who weren’t clicking offensively. They shot 1-of-15 from behind the

3-point arc. They missed nine free throws. But they went on a few runs by driving to the rim for layups, drilling mid-range jumpers and scoring on floaters. Sophomore Clarence King scored 15 points while Mallory added 14 points and eight assists. Each time the Lions looked on the verge of taking the lead, Barnes was there using the scoreboard like Batman uses a Bat Signal. Even with four fouls, he was just as dominant. He scored 13 of his

All-Academic selections Five Lawrence players were named the Topeka Invitational Tournament’s all-academic team: Buffalomeat, Mallory,

Kobe Buffalomeat 7-7 3-4 17, Anthony Selden 1-2 1-2 3, Noah Butler 2-7 0-2 4, Trey Quartlebaum 2-5 0-0 4, Austin Miller 2-5 3-4 7. Totals 28-57 9-18 66. Southeast 30 13 8 18 — 69 Lawrence 15 18 11 22 — 66 3-point goals: Southeast 8-14 (Barnes 4, Riley 2, McGee, Murdock); Lawrence 1-15 (King). Fouled out: Perkins. Turnovers: Southeast 20, Lawrence 13.

to qualify. Moody had done some work for Musgrover, as he had for my dad’s L.G. DeWitt Racing Team, so he told everyone to use the parts from the idle car. Pit crew members from other teams pitched in, joining a large group of mechanics around the battered car. And 136 laps later, it rolled back on the track to complete enough laps to secure the title. Something such as this would be unheard of now. Rival teams providing manpower to help someone else win the

championship? Not a chance. But they did it for Benny Parsons, largely because they knew he would have done it for them. The generosity of others also helped my dad to his greatest victory: the Daytona 500. He wasn’t quite fast enough that day in 1975 to keep up with David Pearson, and as the race wound toward conclusion, he found himself about 5 seconds behind in second place. But Richard Petty, laps behind after some troubles earlier in the race, jumped in front of BP and waved to him to

join up in a draft. Soon enough, they began to track down Pearson, and with three laps remaining, the margin was only 2 seconds. Perhaps it was the pressure Pearson felt from behind, or perhaps it was just racing circumstances. Whatever the reason, Pearson bumped into the lapped car of Cale Yarborough and spun on the backstretch, effectively ending his race. My dad — still running in Petty’s wake— motored past, and since there were no overtime rules at the time, he went on to win.

Petty certainly didn’t have to do that, and part of his motivation might have been to keep Pearson, his top rival at the time, from winning. Regardless, it was another life-altering moment for BP, and it came about partly with the help of others. I’ve thought about that a lot in the past few months, since my dad’s selection for the NASCAR Hall of Fame. For years, I thought maybe he had been too nice when he was a driver, that perhaps he could have had more success if

he had been a little more selfish. Yes, maybe he would have won a race or two more. But at what cost? He had the respect of everyone in the garage, people who readily jumped in to help him when he needed it most. My dad, who died 10 years ago after complications from lung cancer, would say that was worth more than a couple more trophies and checkered flags, worth even more than an earlier induction to the Hall of Fame. He would say it means everything.

Veritas girls win at McLouth tournament Veritas Christian’s girls basketball team scored 32 points in the second half and outpaced Osawatomie for a 57-36 victory Thursday in the McLouth Tournament. With a strong fullcourt press, the Eagles (7-4) advanced to the fifth-place game at noon Saturday against Marantha. Veritas 15 10 18 14 — 57 Osawatomie 6 12 9 9 — 36 Veritas — Titi Shepherd 6, Holly Scott 8, Alyssa Krestan 11, Maria Stieben 1, Alex Avila 2, Delaeny Shelton 6, Tori Huslig 23.

Seabury 6 17 8 8 — 39 Maranatha 13 19 8 11 — 51 Seabury — Allison Eckert 1, Sami Dennon 2, Celia Taylor-Puckett 2, Emily Heinz 7, Kayleigh Boos 27.

LHS bowling sweeps SMW triangular Lawrence High’s boys and girls bowling teams swept the Shawnee Mission West triangular Thursday at College Lanes. Javier Lemmons led the boys with a 669 series, while Dominique Vann rolled a 515 series for the girls.

game-high 36 points in the Jake Rajewski, Braden last four minutes. Solko and Trey Quartle“I thought we respond- baum. ed well,” Buffalomeat said. WICHITA SOUTHEAST (69) “We fought back the whole Israel Barnes 13-21 5-7 36, Treyveyon game. We just couldn’t get Campbell 2-3 3-4 7, Ollie McGee 2-3 0-0 5, Johnny Murdock 3-8 1-3 8, Tarik those last couple points to- Adkins 2-3 1-7 5, Tony Riley 2-4 0-0 6, Malik Perkins 1-2 0-0 2, Ty Butner 0-0 ward the end.” 0. Totals 25-44 10-21 69. The Lions will play 0-0 LAWRENCE (66) Wichita East at 3:15 p.m. Braden Solko 0-2 1-2 1, Brett Chapple 0-1 1-2 1, Clarence King 7-13 today. 0-2 15, Jackson Mallory 7-15 0-0 14,


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Friday, January 20, 2017

SPORTS

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L awrence J ournal -W orld

HOOPS NOTEBOOK

KU’s strength of schedule a work in progress By Matt Tait mtait@ljworld.com

Depending on where you look, strength of schedule can be a difficult statistic to trust, with the various rankings including everything from detailed data points to the eye test and most recent performances. According to the average strength of schedule numbers from Ken Pomeroy (16), CBS Sports (20) and ESPN (26), the Kansas men’s basketball team, ranked No. 2 in the nation by The Associated Press and No. 1 in the USA Today coaches poll, registers a number between 20 and 21. This reveals that the Jayhawks have had the fifth toughest schedule to date among Top 10 teams. There is something to be said for consistency, though, and outside of No. 6 Baylor, which has an average strength of schedule of 17, only one other Top 10 team has less of a gap between the three numbers than the Jayhawks. The difference between KU’s best strength of schedule number (16) and its worst (26) is just 10 spots. Baylor’s gap is the smallest (16 to 17) and topranked Villanova’s is eight (11 to 19). Beyond that, things get interesting and significantly more spread out, with third-ranked UCLA having a gap of 44 spots between its best (96) and worst (140) and fourth-ranked Gonzaga registering an even wider gap, from 56 on kenpom.com to 126 on ESPN.com.

BRIEFLY Veritas boys routed by BV Southwest Veritas Christian’s boys basketball team was shut out in the third quarter against Blue Valley Southwest in an eventual 52-29 loss Thursday in the Spring Hill Tournament. The Eagles (3-7), who will play in the seventhplace game at 3 p.m. today, were led by Tucker Flory (eight points, 10 rebounds). Southwest 17 10 10 15 — 52 Veritas 11 10 0 8 — 29 BVSW — Nick Parker 11, Will Eldridge 6, Jack Johnson 12, Billy Bartlett 10, Ryan Davis 1, Dylan Pandjaris 2, Daniel Foulon 3, Nathan Gish 7. Veritas — Tucker Flory 8, Trey Huslig 7, Weston Flory 5, Kammal Dowdell 4, Jackson Rau 3, Michael Rask 2.

Lions CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1D

4:56.62, but Johnson was able to hold him off with a time of 4:56.47. Johnson has trained with and raced against Florence, so he knew the race would be close. “I knew he was going to have an all-out sprint and I was ready for it,” Johnson said. “When we race in that race I usually end up pulling out the final sprint.” However, even after Johnson’s wins — as well

FSHS CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1D

in the shooter’s face, Free State senior Jay Dineen blew threw a screen and was called for the foul. Since the Firebirds were already in the bonus, the foul sent senior Sam Wingert to the freethrow line, where he knocked down both attempts, to even the score at 47-47. It was the first time the score had been tied since the 5:40 mark in the first period. “Once they started putting pressure on us, it got to us at first,” senior Jacob Pavlyak said. “But then once we got used to it we did fine and were able to keep our lead.” Rather than crumble

‘‘

I think our team is respected nationally. But I don’t think we’re thought of as highly as other teams. I think some people rank us high because our record’s good. Whereas, if you look at us, we haven’t done anything to really knock anyone’s socks off since the Duke game because we haven’t had a chance because of the schedule.”

— Kansas coach Bill Self

Even fifth-ranked Kentucky (7 to 32) and ninth-ranked North Carolina (11 to 24) have wider margins between their best and worst strength of schedule numbers than Kansas, even though both have a better average than the Jayhawks. So what does it all mean? According to Kansas coach Bill Self, it’s merely one of many signs that the season remains a work in progress. Although Kansas is used to living in the Top 10 in strength of schedule year after year, these Jayhawks (17-1 overall, 6-0 Big 12) have not made it there quite yet. Outside of back-to-back, season-opening games against then-No. 7 Indiana (now unranked) and thenNo. 1 Duke (now 18th), KU’s schedule has not carried its usual pop. “I think our team is respected nationally,” Self said Thursday. “But I don’t think we’re thought of as highly as other teams. I think some people rank us high because our record’s good. Whereas, if you look at us, we haven’t done anything to really knock anyone’s socks off since the Duke

game because we haven’t had a chance because of the schedule.” That’s about to change. After facing just one team currently ranked in the Top 25 in the season’s first 19 games — KU hosts Texas at 1 p.m. Saturday at Allen Fieldhouse in Game No. 19 — the Jayhawks will rip off a nine-game stretch that features five games against the current Top 7 — two against West Virginia, two against Baylor and one at Kentucky. Self said it was that reality that likely kept Kansas out of the No. 1 spot this week and allowed Villanova to jump from third to first. But neither Self nor his players had any issue whatsoever with the way things have shaped up in the national polls. “We’ve played good teams, but we haven’t had a chance to play a Top 5 team again or Top 10 team again,” Self said. “Whereas Villanova goes and plays at Butler, and Villanova blows out Xavier, those types of things. So I’m not disappointed at all where we are. I can certainly understand it. But I do think that we’ll have

an opportunity here in the next two to three weeks to show whether or not we deserve to be there.” Sophomore forward Carlton Bragg Jr. agreed and said the team was looking forward to the challenges that lie ahead. “I believe we’re still trying to find out who we are and these big challenges that are coming up, we’ve just gotta prepare for it and we will see,” Bragg said. Asked if the Jayhawks had reached their full potential yet, Bragg answered immediately. “I don’t think so. Not at all. Not at all,” he said. “Not defensively, and I think we can play a lot faster than we’re playing now.”

Mason OK Senior point guard Frank Mason III, who tweaked his right knee Monday night during the Jayhawks 76-72 victory in Ames, Iowa, is doing fine and is not expected to miss any time, including practice. That message was right in line with Self’s thoughts following Monday’s victory. “Just like what we said,” Self said Thursday. “He practiced (Wednesday), and he may be a little sore or stiff or whatnot, but structurally, he’s OK.” Azubuike progressing Freshman big man Udoka Azubuike, who broke his wrist in late December and will be sidelined for the remainder of the season, recently had his stitches from surgery removed

and is wearing a regular cast. That’s good news, according to Self, who said that was the first step in Azubuike’s long road to a full recovery. “He’s able to do cardio and stuff now,” Self said. “And he needs to. So he’s back on the mend as far as working out and things, but he’s still gonna have the cast on for another two months, I believe.”

Vick a pro? After a strong summer and good start to his sophomore season, Lagerald Vick has leveled off a bit and settled into a role as one of KU’s primary bench players. Asked Thursday to assess where Vick was in his development, Self paid the Memphis native a strong compliment. “Oh, I think he could be a pro,” Self said. “I think Lagerald Vick could play in the NBA. I think he’s got the length, he’s got the ball handling, he’s got the body, he’s a natural athlete, all of these things. I think that he was a little bit further along than what we anticipated early in the season, and I think now he’s probably where we anticipated him being at this point in time. So I think he’s right where we had hoped he would be. But after seeing how well he played early in the season, I think that there’s something in there that he will get that back. He’s on an uptick now, and I think he’ll get that back, playing at that very high level.”

FSHS girls beat out Highland Park, 58-50, in road win By Bobby Nightengale bnightengale@ljworld.com

Topeka — Back on the court for the first time in nine days, Free State High’s girls basketball team had its good moments and not-so-good moments against Highland Park on Thursday. The not-so-good: The Firebirds committed seven turnovers in an eightpossession stretch at the end of the third quarter, helping the Scots fight back from a double-digit deficit. The good: Once Highland Park tied the score with six minutes remaining, the Firebirds responded with some of their best defense of the

night in an eventual 58-50 road victory. “I’ve got to remember that a win is a win and we go on to tomorrow,” Free State coach Ted Juneau said. After the Scots tied the score, 44-all, Free State senior Madison Piper and freshman point guard Caely Kesten grabbed steals on back-to-back possessions with their fullcourt pressure. Piper made two free throws and Kesten scored four straight points, including a put-back on a miss from sophomore Sam Lawrence for a sixpoint advantage. The Scots (1-8) wouldn’t pull any closer

and the Firebirds continued on to a 14-4 run. “I told them when we were up four, six in the last two or three minutes, ‘This is going to be great practice for us,’” Juneau said. “For us to build a lead and hold the ball, from that standpoint it was OK. From my perspective, it never should’ve been that close in the first place, but you have to give Highland Park credit. They worked hard.” The Firebirds (5-3) weren’t at their most crisp offensively, but they received a strong boost from their bench in the first half. Senior Jaycie Bishop and junior

Erin Cushing scored six points each while freshman Haley Hippe added two points and a steal. Then when it came to crunch time, the Firebirds stepped up with key baskets and smart decisions with the ball. Piper, signed to play at Santa Clara, led with 13 points, 15 rebounds and three steals. Kesten, who had 13 points with two assists, said the Firebirds “weren’t really connected” at the start. “She grows every game,” Juneau said of Kesten. “There are times when you shake your head. But you know, you’ve got to let her be her.”

Kesten added: “Win or lose, we can always learn from opportunities.” Free State will travel to Lansing at 7 p.m. today. FREE STATE (58) Sam Lawrence 2-5 2-4 7, Cameryn Thomas 1-1 3-4 5, Caely Kesten 4-8 5-8 13, Madison Piper 3-10 6-8 13, Jaelyn Two-Hearts 2-5 1-2 7, Jaycie Bishop 2-2 0-0 6, Erin Cushing 2-4 0-1 5, Haley Hippe 0-0 2-2 2. Totals 16-35 19-29 58. HIGHLAND PARK (50) Ariyana Grassity 0-9 9-10 9, Cierra Sherman 2-9 0-0 6, Mayela Edwards 4-9 0-0 11, Dariaua Carter 2-10 0-1 4, La’Shai Clark 2-5 3-4 7, Tamira Carter 1-2 4-5 6, Areionn Smith 3-5 1-2 7, Allie Williams 0-0 0-0 0, Aaliyah Washington 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 14-49 17-22 50. Free State 13 23 8 14 — 58 Highland Park 10 19 11 10 — 50 3-point goals: Free State 7-15 (Two-Hearts 2, Bishop 2, Lawrence, Piper, Cushing); Highland Park 5-20 (Edwards 3, Sherman 2). Fouled out: Two-Hearts. Turnovers: Free State 26, Highland Park 18.

as Heckman’s wins in both the 50-meter freestyle and the 100-meter freestyle — McDonald still wasn’t sure his team had enough in the tank to come back. “I didn’t think we would do it,” McDonald said. “But they only had one relay and we had three and scored two, so it was our numbers over their quality, really.” Lawrence will travel to Topeka at 4 p.m. Tuesday, its final meet before the start of the Sunflower League. “We’re going to keep working hard until we get Nick Krug/Journal-World Photo those meets and hope it all pays off,” McDonald said. LAWRENCE HIGH’S STEPHEN JOHNSON COMPETES in the 200-yard freestyle event during Thursday’s Lawrence Invitational. under the pressure, Free State responded with an 8-2 run over the next few minutes to reclaim control. Time and time again, junior Garrett Luinstra got a bucket when his team needed it the most. He scored 9 of his teamhigh 19 points in the final period, including a driving baseline layup following the five-point play by Washburn Rural. Luinstra is now averaging just shy of 19 points per contest in four games this calendar year, and has cemented himself as the go-to option on the offensive end for the Firebirds. “He has been scoring really well the last four or five games,” Stroh said. “He’s only a junior. Heck, if you add up the games, he’s probably only

played seven or eight varsity games in his career. Whereas some of the guys he’s playing have played 20, 40 or even 50.” But it was other reinforcements that helped FSHS get out to an early lead. At the start of the game, Free State and Washburn Rural traded buckets. But following an 8-8 tie at the 5:40 mark in the first period, the Firebirds orchestrated a 10-0 run to cease the advantage. Three of those buckets came via senior Cameron Clark, who notched 10 points. Clark was one of four double-digit scorers for his team. Senior Shannon Cordes finished with 12 points on five shots, while Dineen added 13 points, including seven in the opening quarter. Meanwhile, sophomore

Jordan White netted 19 points in a losing effort for the Junior Blues. “I think it was one of our better games of the season,” Pavlyak said. “We talk about playing a full game well and I think that’s probably as close as we have gotten to playing a full 32 minutes well.” FREE STATE (63) Jay Dineen 5-7 3-3 13, Sloan Thomsen 1-3 0-0 3, Shannon Cordes 3-5 5-6 12, Cameron Clark 5-6 0-0 10, Jacob Pavlyak 0-3 1-2 1, Garrett Luinstra 8-13 0-0 19, Jalan Robinson 2-3 1-2 5, Simon McCaffrey 0-1 0-0 0. Totals: 24-41 10-13. WASHBURN RURAL (58) Zachary Ebert 4-8 0-0 12, Brayden White 3-5 2-2 9, Jordan White 7-13 2-3 19, Sam Wingert 1-4 2-2 4, Jack Hamilton 1-6 1-1 3, Raymond Swopes 0-1 0-0 0, Tyler Cummings 0-1 0-0 0, Jenner Hickel 3-8 4-4 11. Totals: 19-47 11-12. Free State 18 12 12 21 — 63 Washburn Rural 11 11 13 23 — 58 3-point goals: Free State 5-11 (Luinstra 3, Cordes, Thomsen ); Washburn Rural 9-23 (Ebert 4, Jordan White 3, Brayden White, Hickel). Fouled out: None. Turnovers: Washburn Rural 10, Free State 17.

Shane Jackson/Journal-World Photo

FREE STATE JUNIOR GARRETT LUNSTRA, right, finishes a driving layup in the fourth quarter on Thursday.


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