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THURSDAY • JANUARY 21 • 2016
Regents OK new guns-on-campus policy “
By Sara Shepherd
Twitter: @saramarieshep
Topeka — The Kansas Board of Regents updated its weapons policy Wednesday to comply with a state law requiring universities to allow concealed carry of guns on their campuses starting July 2017. Now, it’s up to each of the six state universities to develop policies outlining how the controversial law will be implemented on their specific campuses. Board of Regents chairman Shane Bangerter said the state law doesn’t leave a lot of leeway when it comes to
implementation — it’s very clear that lawful concealed carry must be allowed. However, under the new Regents policy schools will have control over which, if any, of their buildings and events to equip with adequate security measures. Universities can legally prohibit guns from buildings and events with security measures such as metal detectors or guards in place. Statistics indicate that only a small percentage of the population carries concealed guns, Bangerter said, so he doesn’t think universities will actually see much of a difference after July 2017.
I think there will continue to be efforts on the campus to look for ways to work with the Legislature over time.” — Kansas University Chancellor Bernadette Gray-Little
“This law isn’t going to change anything a whole lot one way or the other,” he said. “How much time and energy do you want to spend on it, and how much money?” Each university will have to weigh that for itself, he said.
Bangerter said the Regents policy aims to provide “common sense” guidance for implementing the Personal and Family Protection Act on college campuses, which have had an exemption since 2013 that will expire in 2017. The policy requires each university to: l Create policies and procedures for the “safe possession and storage of lawfully possessed handguns.” Those must include directions for reporting policy violations, how the university will educate students and employees about the policy, Please see GUNS, page 2A
Free Eagles Day lands this weekend
Richard Gwin/Journal-World Photo
MARTY BIRRELL, DIRECTOR OF THE PRAIRIE PARK NATURE CENTER, 2730 HARPER ST., works with rescued eagle Kansa at the center, which will be part of the 20th annual Kaw Valley Eagles Day event at Free State High School, 4700 Overland Drive, from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday. Admission is free. For more information, call 843-7665 or visit kawvalleyeaglesday.com. See the video at LJWorld.com/eaglesday16
Death penalty rulings wrong, Supreme Court tells Kansas Justices rule in favor of state officials seeking to put murderers to death By Sam Hananel Associated Press
Washington — The Supreme Court on Wednesday ruled in favor of Kansas officials seeking to reinstate the death penalty for three men, including two brothers convicted in a crime spree known as the “Wichita massacre.” The justices ruled 8-1 that the Kansas Supreme Court J. Carr was wrong to overturn the sentences of Jonathan and Reginald Carr, and Sidney Gleason, who was convicted in a separate case. The state court said juries in both cases should have been told that evidence of the men’s troubled childhoods and other factors R. Carr weighing against a death sentence did not have to be proved beyond a reasonable doubt. The lower court also had ruled that the Carr brothers should have had separate sentencing hearings instead of a joint one. The Supreme Court said the Kansas court’s reasoning was flawed on both counts. Gleason Writing for the court, Justice Antonin Scalia said there is no requirement to tell jurors in a death sentence case that they can consider a factor favoring the defendant even if it’s not proved beyond a reasonable doubt. Please see DEATH, page 2A
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
Parents plead for hemp oil to treat children Council weighs possible changes House Bill 2049 includes path for to city incentives seizure sufferers By Peter Hancock Twitter: @LJWpqhancock
Topeka — Kiley Klug, a young mother from Odin, gave birth to a healthy baby boy eight years ago following a normal pregnancy. But within six months, LEGISLATURE she and her husband began to realize their child, Owen, would be anything but normal. “Out of nowhere at 6 months of age, Owen began having seizures.
Peter Hancock/Journal-World Photo
KILEY AND GAVIN KLUG, PARENTS OF OWEN KLUG, testify Wednesday before a Kansas Senate committee in favor of a bill that would legalize hemp oil to treat certain seizure disorders, such as the one from which Owen suffers. And they haven’t stopped since,” she said. Owen suffers from Dravet Syndrome, according to his mother. It’s a
Business Classified Comics Deaths
Low: 19
Today’s forecast, page 8A
A city and county council focused on economic development informally responded Wednesday to the changes proposed by the Lawrence City Commission to the city’s ecoCITY nomic development incentives. COMMISSION The Joint Economic Development Council, a board appointed by the city, county and the Lawrence chamber of commerce, talked about how it would formally make suggestions to the City Commission. It also requested information about what incentives other, nearby communities offer so the council knows what
Please see HEMP, page 2A
Please see CHANGES, page 2A
INSIDE
Morning snow
High: 30
rare and catastrophic form of epilepsy that occurs in fewer than one in 15,000 infants. Klug said it causes Owen to have multiple
seizures a day. Standing with her husband, Gavin, and with Owen by her side in a wheelState Rep. chair, Kiley John Wilson, Klug told a D-Lawrence, Senate comsponsored the mittee what provision. it’s like to have a child with Dravet Syndrome. “At his worst, Owen had over 200 seizures in an 18hour period, regardless of the four fatigue-inducing medications he was taking at the time,” she said. “On his best day, Owen still suffers from an average of
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By Nikki Wentling Twitter: @nikkiwentling
Fewer school districts? 1C-4C 6A, 8A, 2C 1B-8B
A state legislator’s plan to reduce administrative expenses would more than halve the number of school districts in Kansas. 3A
Vol.158/No.21 24 pages
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Thursday, January 21, 2016
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DEATHS Journal-World obituary policy: For information about running obituaries, call 832-7151. Obituaries run as submitted by funeral homes or the families of the deceased.
Mercedes Lynn Austin Graveside service for Mercedes will be 11 am Friday, Oak Hill Cemetery. Visitation Thursday from 6-7 pm, Rumsey-Yost Funeral Home. rumsey-yost.com
Changes CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A
the city needs to provide in order to be competitive in getting companies to locate in Lawrence. “It will be interesting to know what we’re competing with and knowing, if we really are competing with other communities in this region, what is it that they’re doing that we’re going to lose to if we don’t do it as well,” said Jason Edmonds, who is on the Chamber of commerce’s board of directors. “At least we could know, if we want to be competitive with them, what we need to do.” In a study session Jan. 12, city commissioners proposed a number of changes to the city’s policies governing incentives, including scaling back the cap on the amount of property tax the city will rebate a project. A maximum suggested by Commissioner Matthew Herbert was a 50 percent, 10-year abatement. Commissioners also suggested adding a stipulation to the issuance of industrial revenue bonds that, in order to receive them, developers have to prove they could not complete the project otherwise. All of the commissioners agreed they wanted incentives to be used primarily with the purpose of creating permanent, fulltime jobs that offer good wages and benefits. At the meeting of the Joint Economic Development Council on Wednesday, Brady Pollington, the economic development project manager for the Chamber, asked members to weigh in on the proposed changes. “We haven’t been formally asked by the city to provide any opinion or guidance, but it is the purpose of the JEDC to make recommendations on economic development policies and initiatives,” Pollington said. “Now is a good time.” Besides the council asking for more information about what the city would need in order to remain competitive in attracting businesses, council member Melissa Henderson suggested updating the policy to reflect the city’s initiative of bringing in small businesses. In a later interview, Larry McElwain, CEO of The Chamber, said he viewed economic development incentives as “tools in the toolbox,” none of which he would want taken away.
Hemp CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A
five to 20 seizures a day. I don’t remember the last time this child went a day without a seizure.” Having tried many forms of traditional medications and treatments, all with limited success, the Klug’s pleaded with lawmakers to pass a bill that would let them try a less conventional form of treatment. “Children like Owen who suffer from Dravet Syndrome have seen great success on hemp oil,” she said, citing a study by the American Epilepsy Society that showed a significant reduction in seizures
Referencing the proposed 50 percent cap on tax abatements, McElwain said there have been companies that have received more and have so far met all of their requirements set by the city. “We’d hate for them to get rid of anything that would help attract somebody we may want,” McElwain said. He went on to say he thought the process of reviewing the proposed changes “will work,” and that “everybody is trying to do the right thing.” Britt Crum-Cano, the city’s economic development coordinator, explained some of the city’s incentives, saying the companies that receive them are not “digging into our pockets.” “The thing that’s important to understand is a project has to generate money, and then it gets a portion of it back,” CrumCano said. Crum-Cano told the group that it would have the opportunity to more formally respond in coming months, when it and other boards will be asked to fill out a matrix giving their opinions on all of the changes. It was not yet certain when the council and other city advisory boards would be asked for their recommendations. City Commissioners have one more week to send their ideas for changes to the incentives policies to Interim City Manager Diane Stoddard. Douglas County Administrator Craig Weinaug said the City Commission’s effort to alter the incentives policies was “a healthy process.” He suggested the Joint Economic Development Council work with the City Commission and take its opinions to commissioners about what incentives work and which ones don’t. “You got a new City Commission, a lot of which was elected in reaction to how things had been done before,” Weinaug said. “You will see changes that result from that. … I always see us go through a period of, ‘the sky is falling, the sky is falling,’ but it needs a review. “What you need to say is, ‘This works well, but we need to change it this way’ and ‘This has probably outlived its usefulness,’” he added. “They will listen to you more if you realize that a review needs to take place every few years.” — City Hall reporter Nikki Wentling can be reached at 832-7144 or nwentling@ ljworld.com.
among Dravet Syndrome patients who were given hemp oil as treatment. The Klugs came to testify in favor of House Bill 2049, which contains a provision that would legalize the use of hemp oil for treatment of certain seizure disorders, despite the fact that it has not been approved for such use by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. What makes the bill controversial, though, is that hemp oil is derived from cannabis, the same plants that produce marijuana, although the oil used for medicinal treatment is not intoxicating because it contains only trace amounts of THC, the psychoactive compound in marijuana. But Rep. John Wilson,
LAWRENCE • STATE
Guns
Weapons in general — such as switchblades, explosives or crossbows — will continue to be CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A prohibited on state university campuses, as will and where to find firearm open carry of any firesafety instruction. arms, according to the l Determine whether Regents policy. guns will be prohibited in specific buildings or ar- Faculty oppose guns Earlier in the meeting, eas and, if so, provide adequate security measures the Regents saw results and signage at entrances. of a Council of Faculty Universities must pro- Senate Presidents survey vide the Regents Gover- that indicated 77 percent nance Committee with of university employa list of these buildings, ees statewide don’t want the rationale for ban- guns on campus. Survey results also inning guns from them and the security measures in dicated 54 percent of replace. Security measures spondents think campus also may be implemented carry would negatively on a “temporary, as-need- affect how they teach, and 52 percent said it would ed basis.” l Ensure that, if secu- limit academic freedom. rity measures are used to (At KU, 65 percent said prohibit guns in stadiums guns would negatively or other large venues re- affect how they teach, quiring tickets for admis- and 64 percent said guns sion, tickets state that would limit academic concealed carry will be freedom.) prohibited at the event. “It becomes apparent The Regents policy from the results of this also addresses guns at the survey that this is really individual level. not a Second Amendment “Each individual who issue; this is an issue of lawfully possesses a con- campus safety,” said Tom cealed handgun on cam- Beisecker, associate propus shall at all times have fessor of communications that handgun in their studies at KU, speaking custody and control, and on behalf of the council. shall either keep it on While he acknowltheir person with safety edged the Board of Remechanism, if any, en- gents did not enact the gaged, or stored,” the pol- law, Beisecker said the icy states. board has a duty to ensure Anytime a handgun is a free learning environnot on the individual’s ment and that allowing person, it must be locked the law to remain in place in a secure storage area would create a “chillprovided by the univer- ing effect” on university sity, stored in his or her campuses statewide. residence, or locked in “The implementation a vehicle and concealed will restrict faculty memfrom view, according to bers’ and students’ sense the policy. If the gun car- of academic freedom,” rier lives in a dorm or he said. “It will diminish scholarship hall where their willingness to enguns are allowed, he or gage in robust controvershe must lock the gun, sial debates.” concealed from view, in a Regent Zoe Newdevice that meets “mini- ton requested informamum industry standards tion about universities for safe-keeping of hand- in states where campus guns,” the policy says. carry already has been
Death CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A
“Jurors were told to consider any mitigating circumstance, even those not found to exist by other members of the jury,” Scalia said. “Jurors would not have misunderstood these instructions to prevent their consideration of constitutionally relevant evidence.” The court also ruled that the district court was not required to hold separate a separate sentencing proceeding for each brother. Reginald Carr had argued that his sentence may have been unfairly tainted because Jonathan Carr blamed Reginald for being a bad influence during their childhoods. “Only the most extravagant speculation would lead one to conclude that the supposedly prejudicial evidence introduced by one brother rendered the sentencing proceeding
D-Lawrence, who is sponsoring that provision, said the federal government, while not authorizing the use of hemp oil, has tacitly consented to allowing states to regulate it within their own borders. “If states have a wellregulated medical marijuana infrastructure and process in place, then essentially they are going to stay out of the business of the state,” he said, referring to information from the Marijuana Policy Project, describing U.S. Department of Justice policy. Tiffany Krenz, a young mother from Topeka who also has a son with Dravet Syndrome, said passage of the bill would give her family some
fundamentally unfair to the other,” Scalia said. Scalia said jurors at the sentencing phase heard plenty of evidence “of how these defendants tortured their victims, acts of almost inconceivable cruelty and depravity described firsthand for the jury by the lone survivor.” Prosecutors in the Carr case said the brothers were responsible for a night of mayhem and murder in 2000 when they broke into a Wichita home and, over the course of several hours, forced the three men and two women there to have sex with each other and later to withdraw money from ATMs. The women were raped repeatedly before all five were taken to a snow-covered soccer field and shot in the head. One woman survived a gunshot wound to the head after the bullet was deflected by a plastic hair clip. Justice Sonia Sotomayor was the lone dis-
sense of hope. “We know this is not a cure,” she said, “but the thought of not being able to try one last thing for him because of the legal status is more than heartbreaking.” Supporters of the use of marijuana for medical purposes have pushed in the past for broader legislation that would allow smoking full-strength marijuana for treatments such as relieving nausea and other side effects of chemotherapy in cancer patients. But lawmakers have not gone along with that, and so advocates are now hoping for passage of the much narrower hemp oil legislation. The hemp oil provision was added last
L awrence J ournal -W orld enacted. “Until we’ve actually been through it, we don’t ljworld.com have anything but what people think,” she said. 645 New Hampshire St. (News Center) “It may give us some inLawrence, KS 66044 formation, and maybe (785) 843-1000 • (800) 578-8748 even some comfort.” Julene Miller, general GENERAL MANAGER counsel for the Regents, Scott Stanford, said at least three states 832-7277, sstanford@ljworld.com currently allow guns on EDITORS college campuses, with Chad Lawhorn, managing editor Texas scheduled to im832-6362, clawhorn@ljworld.com plement a similar law Tom Keegan, sports editor later this year. 832-7147, tkeegan@ljworld.com She said those states’ Ann Gardner, editorial page editor policies and laws were 832-7153, agardner@ljworld.com reviewed prior to draftKathleen Johnson, advertising manager ing the Regents policy. 832-7223, kjohnson@ljworld.com
Next steps for KU Bangerter said the board wants to have universities’ policies ready for its review by October. At KU, the next step for administration is to gather a group of university attorneys, campus police and other relevant stakeholders to begin developing a policy, Chancellor Bernadette GrayLittle said. While some groups on the KU campus have pledged to lobby the Legislature to change the law — and Gray-Little herself has stated she personally opposes allowing guns on campus — she said that’s not the plan for university administration. She said KU leaders must now respond to the Regents’ directive. “I think there will continue to be efforts on the campus to look for ways to work with the Legislature over time,” GrayLittle said. “I think for the administration, what our role is at this time is to see what are the best things we can do to keep our campus safe, and comply with the law.”
— KU and higher ed reporter Sara Shepherd can be reached at sshepherd@ ljworld.com or 832-7187.
senter, saying the case never should have been taken up by the Supreme Court. She said the Kansas Supreme Court “has overprotected its citizens” and had a right to do so under its interpretation of federal and state laws. Scalia called Sotomayor’s dissent “misdirected” and took a swipe at the Kansas Supreme Court, which has struck down death sentences in several other cases. “When the Kansas Supreme Court time and again invalidates death sentences because it says the federal Constitution requires it, review by this court, far from undermining state autonomy, is the only possible way to vindicate it,” Scalia said. Gleason was convicted in the February 2004 killing of Mikiala Martinez and Darren Wornkey in Great Bend. Martinez was a potential witness against Gleason in a previous robbery in which he was involved. Wornkey was her boyfriend.
year in the House to another bill that would reduce the penalties for first- and second-time marijuana possession charges. That bill passed the House late in the 2015 session and was held over by the Senate for consideration this year. Currently, first-time possession is a class A misdemeanor, and second-time possession is a Level 5 nonperson felony. The bill would reclassify those crimes to class B and class A misdemeanors, respectively. An official from the Kansas Sentencing Commission testified in favor of that provision, saying it would eventually reduce the state’s prison population by more than 100 beds.
OTHER CONTACTS Ed Ciambrone: 832-7260 production and distribution director Classified advertising: 832-2222 or www.ljworld.com/classifieds
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LOTTERY WEDNESDAY’S POWERBALL 5 39 44 47 69 (24) TUESDAY’S MEGA MILLIONS 2 17 31 39 47 (9) WEDNESDAY’S HOT LOTTO SIZZLER 1 19 22 28 35 (9) WEDNESDAY’S SUPER KANSAS CASH 12 16 25 27 31 (09) WEDNESDAY’S KANSAS 2BY2 Red: 18 24; White: 6 15 WEDNESDAY’S KANSAS PICK 3 6 7 3
Kansas wheat —5 cents, $4.67 See more in the USA Today section.
BIRTHS Kyla Young and Robby Hill, McLouth, a boy, Wednesday. Lidia Dasta and Matthew Taylor, Lawrence, a boy, Wednesday.
And Bob Eye, an attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union of Kansas, said it would also address a growing problem in Kansas and throughout the United States: the mass incarceration of people for nonviolent drug crimes. “As a result of unduly harsh drug sentencing laws, the prison population continues to climb to all-time highs even as crime rates fall to alltime lows,” Eye said. The committee heard testimony only from supporters of the bill Wednesday. It will hear from opponents today. — Statehouse reporter Peter Hancock can be reached at 354-4222 or phancock@ljworld.com.
Lawrence&State
Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com/local l Thursday, January 21, 2016 l 3A
Proposal would slash number of school districts
From the Archives
plan to the House Federal and State Affairs Committee, which agreed to sponTopeka — Kansas would sor it as a bill. have fewer than half of the Several other Republocal school districts it lican lawmakers said now has under a reorgani- they’re interested in findzation that a consering ways to have lovative Republican cal school districts lawmaker proposed operate more effiWednesday because ciently. The GOPhe said it would trim dominated Legisadministrative costs. lature must close a Rep. John Brad- LEGISLATURE projected $190 milford said his mealion budget deficit sure would cut the for the fiscal year beginnumber of local school ning in July, and the state districts to 132 from the expects to spend more current 286 and leave 99 than $4 billion on aid to of the state’s 105 counties its public schools. with one district each. Please see DISTRICTS, page 5A Bradford presented his By John Hanna
Associated Press
Journal-World FIle Photo/University Archives, Spencer Research Library, KU
FIVE LAWRENCE SEVENTH-GRADERS GET READY TO LEAVE ON JUNE 7, 1957, FOR CAMP OPTO in Kansas City’s Swope Park, where 135 boys from a four-state area spent eight days under sponsorship of the Optimist Club. Pictured in front, left to right are Connie Clark, Doug Hargadine, Rick Sampson and Worden Harding. In back are Optimist group leader Jim Black, left, and Dave Brown. Each week, usually on Thursday, the Journal-World runs a photo from its archives, chosen by chief photographer Mike Yoder, that gives a glimpse into Lawrence’s past.
Accidents up after snowfall, but none serious By Conrad Swanson Twitter: @Conrad_Swanson
Around a half an inch of snow and freezing rain fell on Lawrence between Tuesday and Wednesday, and the winter weather led to an increase in car accidents, police said.
Between Tuesday and Wednesday afternoon there were 11 car accidents within Lawrence’s city limits, said Lawrence Police Sgt. Trent McKinley. Within that time, Douglas County Sheriff’s Office Sgt. Kristen Dymacek said, there were an additional eight weather-related
accidents just outside the city limits of Lawrence, Baldwin City and Eudora. In addition to accidents, Dymacek said, several cars also slid off area roads but managed to avoid causing or receiving any damage. Please see ACCIDENTS, page 5A
Trial setting delayed for boy accused of killing grandmother By Conrad Swanson Twitter: @conrad_swanson
The trial setting date for a 16-year-old Lawrence boy accused of killing his grandmother has been pushed back to early March. On Dec. 28 police, responding to a report of a stabbing, found Deborah Bretthauer, 67, dead in her apartment at 1200
George Court with “obvious traumatic injuries.” Jaered Long, Bretthauer’s grandson who also lived in the apartment with her, was soon interviewed and arrested. Long faces one felony charge of first-degree murder. He pleaded not guilty in late December. Please see TRIAL, page 5A
JOIN US THIS SPRING!
KU Opera presents:
DOLE INSTITUTE OF POLITICS
Strawberry Fields & Comedy on the Bridge
EARLY SPRING 2016 PROGRAMS PRESIDENTIAL LECTURE SERIES
THEY ALSO RAN: AMERICA’S WOULD-BE PRESIDENTS Join Richard Norton Smith as he examines the politicians who were nominated to America’s highest office but never elected. Covering their careers and the reasons behind their losses, this timely four-part series will shed light on the impact of presidential elections on U.S. politics.
THE 19th CENTURY
GOVERNORS OF NEW YORK
INFLUENCE IN DEFEAT
CONTEMPORARY MIDWESTERNERS
Sunday, Jan. 31 - 4 p.m.
Tuesday, March 1 - 7 p.m.
Monday, Feb. 1 - 7 p.m.
Wednesday, March 2 - 7 p.m.
AN EVENING WITH LYNN SHERR: SALLY RIDE AND THE U.S. SPACE PROGRAM Wednesday, Feb. 24 - 7 p.m. Astronaut. Physicist.Trailblazer. Many words describe Sally Ride, the first American woman in space, but few encapsulate her impact on science, NASA and the U.S. space program.A longtime ABC News correspondent, Sherr is the author of “Sally Ride:America’s First Woman in Space” and will join us as part of the Lawrence Public Library’s “Read Across Lawrence” program. Ft. Leavenworth Author Series A RaidToo Far: Operation Lan Som 719 with JamesWillbanks Thursday, Feb. 4 - 3 p.m.
DoleInstitute.org
Spring 2016 Discussion Groups AView From the Bench: Politics and Public Policy with Hon. Joyce London Ford Tuesdays at 4 p.m. - Begins March 22
Events are free, open to the public and held at the Dole Institute of Politics 2350 Petefish Dr., Lawrence, KS 66045
Joyce Castle Distinguished Professor Performance:
Strawberry Fields Thursday, January 21 | 6:00 p.m. Crafton-Preyer Theatre Admission Free
Comedy on the Bridge by Bohuslav Martinů & Strawberry Fields by Michael Torke Friday, January 22 & Sunday, January 24 | 7:30 p.m. Crafton-Preyer Theatre $10 adults/ $5 Student and Seniors tickets available in 460 Murphy Hall or by calling 785-864-3436 Free admission with KU School of Music Pass
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NON sEQUItUr
COMICS
. wILEY
PLUGGErs
GArY BrOOKINs
fAMILY CIrCUs
PICKLEs hI AND LOIs
sCOtt ADAMs
ChrIs CAssAtt & GArY BrOOKINs
JErrY sCOtt & JIM BOrGMAN
PAtrICK MCDONNELL
ChrIs BrOwNE BABY BLUEs
DOONEsBUrY
ChArLEs M. sChULZ
DEAN YOUNG/JOhN MArshALL
MUtts
hAGAr thE hOrrIBLE
ChIP sANsOM/Art sANsOM
J.P. tOOMEY
ZIts
BLONDIE
BrIAN CrANE
stEPhAN PAstIs
shOE
shErMAN’s LAGOON
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Off thE MArK
MOrt, GrEG & BrIAN wALKEr
PEANUts GArfIELD
BIL KEANE
GrEG BrOwNE/ChANCE wALKEr
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L awrence J ournal -W orld
GArrY trUDEAU
GEt fUZZY
JErrY sCOtt/rICK KIrKMAN
DArBY CONLEY
LAWRENCE • STATE
L awrence J ournal -W orld
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ON THE
street
By Peter Hancock Twitter: @LJWpqhancock
Topeka — A Senate committee on WednesRead more responses and add day voted unanimously your thoughts at LJWorld.com to recommend confirmation of Antonio Soave to Should medical marijuabe the next secretary of na be legal in Kansas? the Kansas Department of Commerce after he said he Asked at Dillons wants to downplay the use on Massachusetts Street of taxpayer incentives to attract business and focus See story, 1A instead on marketing the advantage of doing business in Kansas. “I don’t think we lead with incentive packages,”
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I did not come here because there was an incentive. I did not move my business here because there was an incentive. I came here because this is a great place to have a business.” — Antonio Soave, commerce secretary nominee Soave told the Senate Commerce Committee. “I really think that diminishes the importance of the state of Kansas and who we are. I did not
come here because there was an incentive. I did not move my business here because there was an incentive. I came here because this is a great
County OKs higher Accidents ambulance rates CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A
By Elvyn Jones
Trevor Patterson, student, Lawrence “It should absolutely be legal. Anyone who needs access to a particular medical treatment should be able to get it.”
Janet Buie, communications, Lawrence “I think medical marijuana is OK.”
ejones@ljworld.com
Douglas County commissioners approved a resolution Wednesday increasing rates for Lawrence-Douglas County Fire Medical for 2016 and the following two years. When the last of the increases becomes effective in 2018, rates for the service will be 25 percent higher than 2015 levels. The Lawrence City Commission is also required to approved the resolution. Lawrence-Douglas County Fire Medical charges five different rates depending on the level of care a patient requires. The rate for the lowest level, requiring no specialized care, will increase to $547 in 2016 and then to $595 in 2018. The rate for the greatest level of care, in which patients are administered at least three intravenous drugs and receive such advanced procedures as an endotracheal intubation, will increase from to $712 this year and jump to $774 in 2018. Mileage rates charged for transporting patients will increase to $8.49 per mile this year for all levels of care. The resolution also set the cost of standby service at high school events at $13 per quarter hour with no provision to increase the fee during the
Districts CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A
Susan Buehler, teacher, Lawrence “I definitely think it should be legal, both for the people who need it and also so we can research its effects more thoroughly.” What would your answer be? Go to ljworld. com/onthestreet and share it.
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Panel endorses commerce secretary nominee
By Sylas May
Shawn Blackwell, campground worker, Lawrence “For medical purposes, if it helps people, it should definitely be allowed.”
Thursday, January 21, 2016
Bradford was careful to describe his plan as a district reorganization, not a consolidation. The state forced hundreds of small school districts to consolidate in the 1960s and for many educators and legislators, the term still carries negative connotations of closing individual schools, which Bradford said he doesn’t advocate. “If we really want to save money, we’ve got to tackle the hard issues,” Bradford said.
Both McKinley and Dymacek said no serious injuries were reported from any of the accidents. In total, around a halfinch of freezing rain and snow fell on Lawrence between Tuesday and Wednesday, said Kyle Poage, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Topeka. Another 1 to 2 inches can be expected to fall by this evening, he added. Temperatures are expected to hover around the 30s, so any recent snowfall likely won’t melt until the weekend when temperatures are expected to rise into the 40s, Poage said. “And then we do have some small chances for rain and snow Sunday night and Monday,” Poage added. Lawrence Director of Public Works Chuck
place to have a business.” Soave has been chairman and CEO of Capistrano Global Advisory Services in Overland Park, a firm he described as a “boutique” advisory services company that invests in joint ventures with other companies, including one joint venture with Disney’s Wide World of Sports. Since being nominated by Gov. Sam Brownback to lead the Department of Commerce, Soave said, he has focused on marketing Kansas through social
media, other marketing campaigns and a soonto-be published monthly newsletter. He also said he wants to reassess many of the state’s incentive programs to attract businesses to Kansas to determine whether they are producing the results that were intended. His nomination now goes to the full Senate for consideration.
Soules said the department’s crew — totaling about 40 people — pretreated the city’s roads with a salt brine before the freezing rain and snow began. That brine mixture helps break down winter precipitation that accumulates on the roadways. Other city departments, including utilities and parks and recreation, also lend a hand clearing roads and sidewalks during times of inclement weather, Soules said. Now that the first round of snow is over and a second is on the way, crews are keeping an eye on the weather and covering any potential problem areas with sand and salt mixes, Soules said. “They’re out there and making sure any icy areas out there are cleared,” Soules said. “And we’re keeping watch on bridges and some of those steeper roads that have a higher percent grade so people don’t get stuck.” There are a few precau-
tions motorists can take in winter weather, McKinley said. Everyone planning to be on the roads should allow more time to arrive at their destination and leave extra space between themselves and the vehicles in front of them. Drivers also shouldn’t drive until their windows, mirrors and head and tail lights are fully cleared of snow and ice, McKinley said. The law requires a vehicle’s lights to be turned on whenever windshield wipers are in use. It is also important to remember that fourwheel drive will only help a vehicle start moving on snow and ice; it doesn’t help vehicles stop any faster, McKinley said. Dymacek added that if the weather is bad and drivers don’t need to go out, it may be best to stay inside and avoid the roads altogether.
the motion to continue his trial setting date so they would have more time to review his case, said Cheryl Wright Kunard, assistant to the Douglas County district attorney. Long’s trial setting date is now scheduled for 1 p.m. March 9. The Journal-World requested the arrest affidavit in Long’s case, but that request was denied by the Douglas County District Court. local school boards would remain if there were fewer or only one district. Rep. Ed Trimmer, a Winfield Democrat on the House Education Committee, said he doesn’t think schools can run smoothly if a single superintendent in a county reports to multiple school boards. He said he believes cutting the number of districts eventually would lead to school closures. “The only way you can get efficiency is by consolidating is if you move students and close schools,” Trimmer said. “You have to do that, or there’s no point in doing what you do.”
three-year span. The increases, which were approved with the commission’s consent agenda, were first brought to commissioners in December. At that time, County Administrator Craig Weinaug said the increases would allow the ambulance service to leverage as many Medicare and Medicaid dollars as possible and, therefore, help limit property tax support for the department. In other business, the commission: l Authorized Eileen Horn, county sustainability coordinator, and Helen Schnoes, food systems coordinator, to negotiate a contract with SCALE Inc. of Virginia to conduct a countywide farmers market analysis for $47,500 in 2016. A USDA Farmers Market Promotion Program Grant of $53,650 that the county received last spring will pay for the survey. l Approved a request from Kansas University swim team coach Clark Campbell to have a Sept. 17 national collegiate championship open-water swim meet at Lone Star Lake. l Renewed an agreement with Blue Valley Public Safety to service the county’s 41 sirens and associated equipment for $29,000.
The prosecution, led by District Attorney Charles Branson, asked that Long be detained because he might be considered a danger to himself or others. Douglas County Judge James George granted Branson’s request. Long is currently being
held without bond in the Douglas County Juvenile Detention Center. Julie Boyle, communications director for the Lawrence School District, confirmed Long is a student in the district. He was not a student at either Lawrence High School or Free State High School, she said, noting that federal privacy laws prohibit discussing his educational record in detail. Long’s attorneys filed
But Rep. Don Hineman, a Republican from Dighton in western Kansas, said he’s skeptical that reducing the number of districts will result in significant cost savings. Mark Tallman, a lobbyist for the Kansas Association of School Boards, said he sees no evidence that Kansas residents are clamoring for consolidation. “This is really going in the wrong direction,” Tallman said. “This is making the false assumption that larger bureaucratic units that are less accessible to voters are better.” A consulting firm hired by the Legislature to find potential budget ef-
ficiencies last week recommended that districts have statewide purchasing of food, fuel, services and computer software. It also recommended having all public school employees in a single health insurance plan. Bradford’s proposal is designed to cut administrative positions, sell off unnecessary equipment, and close and sell off administrative buildings. Bradford said that based on a survey of districts, he believes the state could save about $170 million over 10 years. “There are some savings, I think, that could happen,” said Sen. Tom
Arpke, a conservative Salina Republican who is chairman of a budget subcommittee on education spending. “Let’s have the discussion at least.” Under his proposal, any county with 10,000 or fewer public school students could have only a single district. Counties with more than 10,000 students could have multiple districts, but each would have to have more than 1,500 students. Half of the state’s 286 districts have 550 or fewer students, and 69 of them have fewer than 300. Bradford said he’d leave it to each county to decide whether multiple elected
Trial CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A
— Statehouse reporter Peter Hancock can be reached at 354-4222 or phancock@ljworld.com.
— Public safety reporter Conrad Swanson can be reached at cswanson@ljworld.com or 832-7144.
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Compulsive talker may have hearing problems Dear Annie: I am a healthy, active, 68-yearold divorced man, still employed and productive. About a year ago, I met “Caroline,” a pleasant, generous, compatible woman, and have since enjoyed her company on a regular basis. We spent Christmas together in Europe. It was lovely. Unfortunately, there is one problem that drives me crazy: Caroline is a compulsive talker. It doesn’t matter if we’re in a movie theater, we’re watching a TV show or I’m trying to read the newspaper. She just starts yakking in my ear. I try to ignore it, but she goes right on. She doesn’t get the hint that I’m not interested in chatting at that moment. How do I tell her nicely to shut up for a while? — Patient But Tired
Annie’s Mailbox
Marcy Sugar and Kathy Mitchell
anniesmailbox@comcast.net
Dear Patient: Might Caroline have a hearing problem? Is she insecure and believes she has to fill all the silences between you? The next time she does this, you should gently hold her hand and say, “Caroline, it would be nice for us to watch this show together. Can we talk when it’s over?” If she persists, you might ask her to see her doctor to have her hearing checked. Later, when you have some peaceful time together,
‘Baskets’ is love-it or leave-it Improv classes and shows ask performers to commit to an odd situation or character for a scene. The strange sitcom “Baskets” (9 p.m., FX, TV-MA) demands that the actors and the audience remain in the game for the long haul. If you’re up for the commitment, “Baskets” will get under your skin and leave you shaking with laughter. If not, you’re likely to bail after five minutes. Both reactions are equally valid. It’s that kind of show. Z a c h Galifianakis stars as Chip Baskets, a grown man with a burning desire to work as a clown — a French clown, to be exact. He’s first seen flunking out of a Parisian academy in humiliating fashion. Along the way he marries Penelope (Sabina Sciubba), a French sophisticate quite blunt about the fact that she’s only in it for the green card. They move back to Chip’s hometown of Bakersfield, Calif., where Chip gets a job working for Eddie (Ernest Adams), the sage cowboy and cheapskate in charge of the local rodeo. After totaling his beloved French mo-ped, Chip encounters Martha (Martha Kelly), a seemingly depressed insurance adjuster with a rather obvious crush on her new client. Kelly nearly steals this deliriously silly show with her deadpan performance. Her character also embodies the show’s strange moral: that for every loser at the lower rungs of any pecking order, there’s an even sadder person, just slightly below, besotted with hero worship. O Another dark series that will appeal to some and leave others confused, “London Spy” (9 p.m., BBC America, TV-14) stars Ben Whishaw (“The Hour”) as Danny, a party boy at the end of his tether who strikes up a chance encounter with Alex (Edward Holcroft), a mysterious man who claims to be a brilliant mathematician and investment banker. The unlikely couple is on the verge of the first serious love affair of their respective lives when Alex suddenly vanishes. Danny’s efforts to find him reveal that Alex is not who he claimed to be and that he has deep connections to Britain’s top espionage circles. Relentlessly bleak and visually striking, “Spy” makes the most of inventive camerawork and closeups. Tonight’s other highlights
O Canceled again: “Heroes
Reborn” (7 p.m., NBC, TV-14) airs its final episode. O Humanity’s demise seems certain on the series premiere of “DC’s Legends of Tomorrow” (7 p.m., CW, TV-14). O A crime ring infiltrated on “The Blacklist” (8 p.m., NBC). O Bounty hunters want Clarke’s head on the third season premiere of “The 100” (8 p.m., CW, TV-14). O “Portlandia” (9 p.m., IFC, TV-14) returns for its sixth season.
tell her how much you enjoy just spending quiet time in her company and how nice it is that the silence is comfortable. This will help reinforce the behavior you want. But make sure to pay attention to her when you are, in fact, having a conversation.
to make a donation to charity. Is there a polite way for us to tell them this without appearing to be rude and ungrateful? — Anonymous Dear Anonymous: We suspect these people are trying to be kind and don’t know what else to get you. You must thank them for thinking of you. But when an occasion is coming up where you know they are likely to send you such things, inform them in advance that you no longer eat candy or fancy fruits. Say that you are making a concerted effort to do more good in your lives, and if they insist on honoring you, a gift to suchand-such charity would mean the world to you.
Dear Annie: My wife and I are elderly and no longer enjoy things like fancy candies and fruit. We have tried to subtly let family and friends know this, but they persist, on frequent occasions, in sending us expensive edibles from elegant places, which we then regift to others. (This isn’t easy, as most of our friends are also elderly and won’t enjoy the epicurean treats.) We feel that, to be po— Send questions to lite, we must thank the anniesmailbox@comcast.net, givers. But the truth is, or Annie’s Mailbox, P.O. Box we would much prefer 118190 Chicago, IL 60611. that they use the money
JACQUELINE BIGAR’S STARS
For Thursday, Jan. 21: This year you find that your adventurous spirit is renewed, and you feel the desire to have more fun. Others witness a newfound zest for living. If you are single, you enjoy your dating life now more than ever before. If you are attached, the two of you act like wild things. 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) +++ Tap into your imagination in order to understand the events around you and the reactions of others. Tonight: Happy to head home. Taurus (April 20-May 20) +++++ You’ll have a lot to share. At first you might not believe the clarity you gain. Tonight: Visit with friends. Gemini (May 21-June 20) ++++ You’ll think that you’re ready to go on a strict budget; however, you could decide at the last minute to justify one more indulgence. Tonight: Pay bills. Cancer (June 21-July 22) +++++ You are on top of the world and ready for nearly anything to happen. Tonight: Find a special person. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) +++ You might have intended to be more forthright, but you could decide to pull back instead. Tonight: Keep the partying to a minimum.
jacquelinebigar.com
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) ++++ In a sense, you have pushed someone away. Clear the air by having a discussion. Tonight: Where the fun is. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ++++ Take charge of an important matter. Others look to you with admiration. Tonight: Be aware of a need to please others. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) +++++ Let your mind drift, and ideas will come to you. Tonight: One-on-one relating can only add to the positive vibes. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) ++++ Be direct in how you deal with others. Tonight: In the limelight. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ++++ You have the unique opportunity to open up a situation. State your thoughts clearly. Tonight: The world is your oyster. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) +++ Your ambitious agenda could be waylaid by a need to be more self-indulgent. Tonight: Get some much-needed personal time. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) +++++ You are inspired because of your ability to daydream and fantasize. Make time for a child or a new friend. Tonight: Let your imagination lead the way.
UNIVERSAL CROSSWORD Universal Crossword Edited by Timothy E. Parker January 21, 2016
ACROSS 1 Adjust pillows 6 Los Alamos project, informally 11 “Turn on, tune in, drop out” drug 14 Supernaturally weird 15 Greta of old films 16 Lamb’s mother 17 Gymnastics event 19 Victory sign 20 Quick breads 21 Animal variety 23 Beginning to exist 26 San Andreas and the like 27 Cast members 28 Fireplace floor 30 Competes 31 Enraged 32 “Sixth sense” 35 California Santa 36 People with a sweet tooth, e.g. 38 Snacked 39 Container cover 40 Caravan pit stops 41 Hectic episodes 42 Teenagers 44 Liquefy again
46 Attribute to a cause 48 Hair ointments 49 Part of a river 50 Foul up, as plans 52 Every single one 53 It’s formal 58 Certain fuel 59 Soothe, as hurt feelings 60 Ham’s device 61 Before, back and forth 62 Low playing cards 63 Make changes to DOWN 1 Yearly calendar abbr. 2 Ewe’s milieu 3 Online address, for short 4 Major flops 5 One who parries 6 FBI employee 7 Blue ox of legend 8 Galena and feldspar 9 CEO’s degree, sometimes 10 Assails persistently 11 Like Frankenstein’s monster? 12 Candied
13 Acts of derring-do 18 Inmates 22 Dead-end job 23 Like some ships at sea 24 Raspberry drupelets, e.g. 25 What an ER doctor hopes to find 26 Like a good judge 28 Bee homes 29 Preceding nights 31 Mascara’s target 33 Fur wrap 34 Hecklers, e.g. 36 Most refined, facetiously 37 Assess 41 Dental filling material
43 Unconscious 44 Bay in the stable 45 Political escapee 46 Mirror reflection 47 Bicuspid neighbor 48 Minds someone else’s business 50 Editing mark 51 Jealousy 54 Alternate spelling, in crossword abbrs. 55 Lyrical poem form 56 Come in first place 57 Affirmative action
PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER
1/20
© 2016 Universal Uclick www.upuzzles.com
IN UNIFORM By Gia Kilroy
1/21
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.
— The astrological forecast should be read for entertainment only.
TURET ©2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.
SIPEO TAFSEY
GIRHEH Print your answer here: Yesterday’s
Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app
Thursday, January 21, 2016
Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.
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(Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: WAVER RURAL APPEAR MOTIVE Answer: His moving business really started to take off when the number of jobs started to — RAMP UP
BECKER ON BRIDGE
Opinion
Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com l Thursday, January 21, 2016
EDITORIALS
Audit overdue An audit ordered by state legislators should provide important information about the Kansas foster care and adoption system.
T
wenty years after Kansas privatized its foster care system, a review of how that system is working is overdue. Amid various questions about how the Kansas Department for Children and Families is handling foster care and adoptions in the state, Kansas legislators last week took the prudent action of ordering an audit of those DCF services. The audit will include a number of important questions related to how good a job DCF is doing of keeping Kansas children safe and how it handles the removal of children from their homes and their subsequent placement in the foster care system. The audit will include two questions specifically aimed at the impact of foster care and adoption privatization on Kansas children and families involved with that system and whether privatization has “significantly affected the cost of those services to the state.” Increased efficiency and lower costs were among the selling points of the privatized system when Kansas became the first state to approve such a system in 1996. There are various ways to measure the success of that move, but one indicator is a report issued last fall showing that the number of Kansas children in the state system was at an all-time high. A number of children in the foster care system have died in the last year, and DCF and its contractors reportedly are having trouble attracting enough social workers to provided the needed services. During an appearance before the House Committee on Children and Seniors this week. DCF Secretary Phyllis Gilmore seemed defensive about the issues covered by the audit. She told the committee that the Kansas foster care system is one of the safest in the nation, adding, “I know that’s not what’s reported.” She also contended that “Children die, but they are not in our custody,” which seems to contradict official reports that five children in the foster care system died during fiscal year 2015 — one from maltreatment and four from other causes. The most pointed objections from Gilmore, however, were directed at a question that wasn’t even approved for the audit: “What are the DCF’s formal policies and actual practices regarding the placement of foster care and adoptive children with same-sex couples, and how do they compare to those in other states?” Gilmore called the question “unbelievably accusatory,” and said any questions related to same-sex couples were a potentially harmful distraction to the department. Some Kansans would have liked to see the question on same-sex couples included in this audit, but, even if the audit doesn’t specifically address that issue, it should provide important information to state lawmakers about the overall successes and failures of the state’s foster care and adoption system.
OLD HOME TOWN
100
From the Lawrence Daily Journal-World for Jan. 21, 1916: “The city jail is a cheerless place, according to Paralee Walker, conyears fined there last week after beago ing sentenced in police court last IN 1916 week. Therefore Paralee would much rather be on the outside. This morning she sent in a note by one of the officers to Judge Albach asking for her release. Her note follows: ‘Please be so kind as to overlook me this time and turn me loose. If you will oblige me so, I will pay the rest of my fine by the first of February. This is a lonesome place here by myself. If so I will never give you any more trouble as long as you are a judge. I will behave myself if you will give me a chance.’” — Compiled by Sarah St. John
Read more Old Home Town at LJWorld.com/ news/lawrence/history/old_home_town.
Bill coming due for China prosperity Washington — China produces an astonishing number of astonishing numbers, including this: In the 20th century, America made automobiles mass-consumption items, requiring prodigious road building. China, however, poured more concrete for roads and other construction between 2011 and 2013 than America did in the 20th century. This fact is emblematic of China’s remarkable success. And is related to its current difficulties, including its 2015 growth rate (6.9 percent), its slowest in 25 years. The regime’s contract with its 1.4 billion subjects is that it will deliver prosperity and they will be obedient. Now the bill is coming due for the measures taken to produce prosperity. In 1978, when Deng Xiaoping began the regime’s attempt to leaven Leninism with market reforms, half of the Chinese lived on less than $1 a day. In just six years, collective agriculture almost disappeared and grain production increased 34 percent, freeing people to move from the countryside to more productive urban employment. No Westerner knows more about China’s regime and political economy than Henry Paulson, who, as CEO of Goldman Sachs, then U.S. treasury secretary and subsequently, has made more than 100 trips to China. In his book “Dealing
Leonard Pitts Jr.
“
lpitts@miamiherald.com
Our inattention frees politicians to ignore them as well. And all of a sudden you look up and it’s been almost two years since 100,000 people had safe water to drink …”
Detroit Free Press, just an hour down the road, took note. It wasn’t until March that The New York Times began reporting the story. It wasn’t until Jan. 5 of this year — almost two years later — that Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder saw fit to declare a state of emergency and nine days afterward that he asked President Obama to declare the city a disaster area. And it is not until today that yours truly is writing about it. There are many points of outrage in the story of Flint’s ill-fated attempt to save money by switching
W.C. Simons (1871-1952); Publisher, 1891-1944 Dolph Simons Sr. (1904-1989) Publisher, 1944-1962; Editor, 1950-1979 Dolph C. Simons Jr., Editor Manager
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With China,” he writes: China consumes almost half the world’s cement, coal, iron ore and steel, and 40 percent of the aluminum and copper. Beijing has six ring roads and the seventh, under construction, will be almost 600 miles long, encompassing an area as large as Indiana. (Washington, D.C.’s beltway is 64 miles long.) Demand for roads so exceeds supply that a 2010 traffic jam extended 62 miles and lasted 12 days. China has six of the world’s 15 tallest buildings (America has three) and eight of the 10 tallest under construction. In four years, beginning in 2011, the government built enough housing to shelter the population of the 12th most populous nation, the Philip-
— George Will is a columnist for Washington Post Writers Group.
It was in April of 2014 that the water turned bad. Residents of Flint, Mich., reported that the stuff smelled. It was yellowish brown. You drank it and your hair fell out. Or you developed a rash. Or you were nauseous. Again, this was in April. According to a computer search, it was not until the following January that the
Established 1891
Ann Gardner, Editorial Page Editor Ed Ciambrone, Production and
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China’s prosperity has been fueled by the traditional modernization trek of people from the countryside to cities …”
members, Paulson says, “work first and foremost for the party,” which remains “the alpha and omega of political, economic and social life.” But as Paulson says, “corruption breeds where power meets opportunity.” Because opportunity festers everywhere that the party continues to insinuate itself, inefficient allocation of resources will depress growth. The regime is wagering that it can achieve its second-highest goal, prosperity and the geopolitical weight that can come with it, while preserving its highest priority — a Leninist one-party state acting as the vanguard of an accepting population. But China’s per capita GDP, one-eighth that of the United States, ranks 80th in the world, barely ahead of warravaged Iraq’s. After the U.S. opening to China, Daniel Patrick Moynihan acerbically said that many travelers to China returned more impressed by the absence of flies than by the absence of freedom. The continuing absence of the latter, illustrated by the apparent kidnapping of five Hong Kong booksellers, are not noticed by foreigners mesmerized by bullet trains. The next stage of China’s ascent will test the continuing compatibility of Leninism and dynamism.
“Them that’s got shall get. Them that’s not shall lose” — Billie Holiday
®
Chad Lawhorn, Managing Editor Kathleen Johnson, Advertising
George Will
georgewill@washpost.com
pines. Two months after the September 2014 $25 billion IPO for the Chinese Internet company Alibaba, the world’s biggest IPO, the company had a $280 billion market capitalization, bigger than Amazon and eBay combined. China’s prosperity has been fueled by the traditional modernization trek of people from the countryside to cities — 300 million so far, with another 300 million by 2030. But China has also relied perilously on exports and excessive, grossly inefficient infrastructure spending to employ the former peasants and make burgeoning metropolises habitable. Just between 2010 and June 2013, local government debt alone surged 70 percent to $2.9 trillion. What the regime calls “socialism with Chinese characteristics” is, like sauerkraut ice cream, a combination of incompatible ingredients. A senior Chinese reformer propounded the “birdcage” theory of the “socialist market economy”: The market sector should be as free to fly as a bird in a cage — the cage of a state-commanded economy. Private enterprise, however, creates 90 percent of new jobs. By itself, the private sector, which accounts for perhaps 60 percent of China’s $10 trillion GDP, would be the world’s second biggest economy, trailing only America’s. China’s 87 million party
Focus on Flint came too slowly
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its water supply to the filthy Flint River. You could focus on findings that the river water contained fecal coliform bacteria. Or on the fact that chemicals used to kill said bacteria apparently created new contaminations of their own. Or on reports that much of the problem could have been avoided by adding an anti-corrosive agent to the water for about $100 a day, but the city declined. You could fix your anger on city officials who continued to insist, long after it was obviously untrue, that the water was safe. Or on state regulators who said the same even after a group of doctors reported finding elevated levels of lead in the blood of Flint’s children. The World Health Organization says lead poisoning in kids can lead to brain damage, shortened attention span, antisocial behavior, hypertension, and damage to the reproductive organs, among other things. The effects are irreversible. So yes, this slow-rolling disaster offers many causes for anger. But one of them is
What the Lawrence Journal-World stands for l 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.
the very fact that it has been a slow-rolling disaster. It is inconceivable that it would take so long for public officials to respond or media to notice if the water became unsafe in New York, Miami, Charlotte, Chicago, Atlanta or L.A. But Flint is none of those places. Rather, it is a hard-luck, hardscrabble, postindustrial wasteland, a shrinking town of 100,000 people, with a poverty rate of 41 percent and per capita income of less than $15,000. It doesn’t even have a grocery store. In 2005, when New Orleans drowned, some of us seemed surprised that there were Americans too desperately poor to escape the path of a monster storm. There followed much media handwringing over the failure to report so fundamental a story as the continued existence of poverty. Yet here we are over a decade later, and once again it takes a calamity to make poor people visible. We saw the same pattern in Ferguson, Mo., where it wasn’t until a teenager died and weeks of urban unrest followed that
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we learned how that city was pimping its poor. One is reminded of what happens when there’s a blackout: Windows are broken and merchandise taken. No one is surprised by this. Under cover of darkness, people are seldom their best selves. Under cover of darkness, terrible deeds are often done. Well, news media have left the poor under cover of darkness. Our light shines on politics, the middle class, technological gimmickry and celebrity gossip, yes. But on those the Bible calls “the least of these”? Not so much. Our inattention frees politicians to ignore them as well. And all of a sudden you look up and it’s been almost two years since 100,000 people had safe water to drink and we’re just beginning to notice. That’s unconscionable. News media’s mission, it is often said, is to afflict the comfortable and comfort the afflicted. Where the plight of the nation’s poor is concerned, we seem to have failed on both counts. — Leonard Pitts Jr. is a columnist for the Miami Herald.
Letters Policy
The Journal-World welcomes letters to the Public Forum. Letters should be 250 words or less, be of public interest and should avoid namecalling and libelous language. The Journal-World reserves the right to edit letters, as long as viewpoints are not altered. By submitting letters, you grant the Journal-World a nonexclusive license to publish, copy and distribute your work, while acknowledging that you are the author of the work. Letters must bear the name, address and telephone number of the writer. Letters may be submitted by mail to Box 888, Lawrence Ks. 66044 or by e-mail to: letters@ljworld.com.
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WEATHER
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Thursday, January 21, 2016
L awrence J ournal -W orld
DATEBOOK
Family Owned.
TODAY
FRIDAY
SATURDAY
SUNDAY
MONDAY
Some snow; storm total 1-3”
Cold with periods of sun
Not as cold with variable clouds
Mostly cloudy
An a.m. flurry; cloudy, colder
High 30° Low 19° POP: 75%
High 28° Low 16° POP: 20%
High 35° Low 26° POP: 0%
High 44° Low 29° POP: 10%
High 35° Low 20° POP: 40%
Wind NE 7-14 mph
Wind N 7-14 mph
Wind S 4-8 mph
Wind S 6-12 mph
Wind NW 10-20 mph
POP: Probability of Precipitation
McCook 35/17 Oberlin 35/18
Clarinda 28/18
Lincoln 30/17
Grand Island 30/15
Kearney 31/16
Beatrice 30/18
Centerville 26/16
St. Joseph 30/16 Chillicothe 29/17
Sabetha 28/19
Concordia 33/17
Kansas City Marshall Manhattan 30/20 30/19 Salina 32/22 Oakley Kansas City Topeka 34/22 37/21 30/19 Lawrence 29/17 Sedalia 30/19 Emporia Great Bend 31/20 31/20 34/20 Nevada Dodge City Chanute 35/23 35/19 Hutchinson 35/22 Garden City 34/22 38/19 Springfield Wichita Pratt Liberal Coffeyville Joplin 36/22 35/26 33/20 42/22 36/22 37/24 Hays Russell 36/20 34/19
Goodland 39/15
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
LAWRENCE ALMANAC
Through 8 p.m. Wednesday.
Temperature High/low Normal high/low today Record high today Record low today
29°/21° 39°/18° 73° in 1895 -7° in 1935
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 0.64 0.60 0.64 0.60
REGIONAL CITIES
Today Fri. Today Fri. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W 30 21 sn 27 15 pc Atchison 29 18 sn 26 16 pc Holton Belton 29 19 sn 28 19 pc Independence 30 20 sn 29 19 pc Olathe 29 18 sn 27 17 pc Burlington 32 21 sn 29 15 s Osage Beach 34 22 c 32 18 c Coffeyville 37 24 sn 34 19 s 30 21 sn 28 15 s Concordia 33 17 sf 28 15 pc Osage City Ottawa 31 20 sn 28 16 pc Dodge City 35 19 c 38 23 s 35 26 sf 33 21 pc Fort Riley 31 22 sf 27 14 pc Wichita Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
NATIONAL FORECAST
SUN & MOON
Fri. 7:35 a.m. 5:30 p.m. 4:33 p.m. 6:10 a.m.
Full
Last
New
First
Jan 23
Jan 31
Feb 8
Feb 15
LAKE LEVELS
As of 7 a.m. Wednesday Lake
Level (ft)
Clinton Perry Pomona
Discharge (cfs)
876.74 890.64 976.48
1000 1000 500
Shown are today’s noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for today.
Fronts Cold
INTERNATIONAL CITIES Cities Acapulco Amsterdam Athens Baghdad Bangkok Beijing Berlin Brussels Buenos Aires Cairo Calgary Dublin Geneva Hong Kong Jerusalem Kabul London Madrid Mexico City Montreal Moscow New Delhi Oslo Paris Rio de Janeiro Rome Seoul Singapore Stockholm Sydney Tokyo Toronto Vancouver Vienna Warsaw Winnipeg
Today Hi Lo W 87 73 pc 37 28 pc 53 41 sh 65 47 pc 92 77 pc 28 10 c 28 13 c 37 26 s 89 72 pc 66 47 pc 37 35 c 52 50 c 39 23 s 66 57 sh 55 37 pc 55 21 s 43 39 pc 49 40 s 71 40 pc 16 5 s 14 2 pc 66 41 pc 28 16 s 38 27 s 83 73 t 54 34 c 29 8 s 88 79 c 19 9 s 94 75 pc 47 35 pc 29 12 c 52 43 r 30 17 pc 27 11 sf 8 -7 c
Hi 87 39 51 67 95 18 25 40 97 66 44 53 40 60 54 52 52 54 68 19 11 68 31 42 82 54 30 88 20 87 46 28 50 29 26 15
Fri. Lo W 74 pc 36 c 37 sh 49 pc 75 s -2 pc 17 s 36 c 69 pc 50 s 27 c 42 r 35 pc 48 r 38 c 22 s 39 r 42 c 38 pc 2 s 6 sn 43 pc 30 c 36 c 72 r 35 s 10 pc 79 t 15 c 70 t 34 pc 15 pc 39 pc 18 s 14 sf 11 pc
Warm Stationary
Showers T-storms
Flurries
Snow
Ice
Today Fri. Today Fri. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Memphis 42 32 r 35 25 sn Albuquerque 47 24 s 51 28 s 73 66 pc 77 59 t Anchorage 25 19 c 25 21 sn Miami Milwaukee 27 17 c 29 19 sf Atlanta 48 41 r 51 32 r Minneapolis 24 11 c 21 9 c Austin 64 37 pc 57 29 s 40 36 r 37 26 r Baltimore 37 20 pc 33 27 sn Nashville New Orleans 71 45 t 51 37 pc Birmingham 55 47 r 48 30 r New York 36 24 s 34 26 c Boise 45 32 c 45 35 c 28 18 c 23 11 pc Boston 30 17 s 30 20 pc Omaha Orlando 71 53 pc 72 47 t Buffalo 27 12 sf 28 15 c 38 23 s 35 27 c Cheyenne 36 23 pc 48 33 pc Philadelphia Phoenix 70 46 s 73 48 pc Chicago 28 17 c 30 22 sf 27 12 c 30 20 c Cincinnati 30 20 c 30 22 sn Pittsburgh Portland, ME 26 10 s 27 11 pc Cleveland 26 14 c 29 20 c Portland, OR 54 47 r 54 41 sh Dallas 51 35 sh 49 28 s 52 36 c 53 37 r Denver 38 21 pc 50 31 pc Reno Richmond 37 20 pc 31 29 sn Des Moines 27 17 c 26 15 c Sacramento 64 53 c 58 51 r Detroit 28 17 pc 30 18 c St. Louis 35 22 c 32 21 c El Paso 57 28 s 59 33 s Salt Lake City 37 22 pc 40 30 c Fairbanks -4 -13 pc -4 -9 c San Diego 71 52 pc 68 54 pc Honolulu 80 66 pc 81 68 s San Francisco 61 55 c 60 54 r Houston 67 40 t 54 34 s Seattle 56 48 r 54 42 sh Indianapolis 28 16 c 28 18 c 41 35 c 43 33 r Kansas City 29 17 sn 28 16 pc Spokane Tucson 70 43 s 75 42 s Las Vegas 61 40 pc 62 45 c 41 26 c 39 21 s Little Rock 39 31 r 45 26 sn Tulsa Wash., DC 37 23 pc 34 28 sn Los Angeles 75 52 pc 70 53 c National extremes yesterday for the 48 contiguous states High: McAllen, TX 83° Low: Embarrass, MN -22°
WEATHER HISTORY
WEATHER TRIVIA
™
Q:
On Jan. 21, 1994, the temperature dropped to 21 below zero, which set a new record low for Scranton, Pa.
THURSDAY Prime Time WOW DTV DISH 7 PM
Rain
-10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s National Summary: Rain and thunderstorms will ramp up over the central Gulf Coast states today as a swath of snow and flurries extends from the Dakotas to Missouri. Rain and mountain snow will affect Washington and Oregon.
How much does a foot of snow on an average driveway weigh?
Over 2,000 pounds.
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016
Precipitation
MOVIES
7:30
8 PM
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9 PM
9:30
A:
Today 7:36 a.m. 5:29 p.m. 3:36 p.m. 5:16 a.m.
Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset
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62 dCollege Basketball
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Cops
Cops
Rules
Rules
4
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4 American Idol “Auditions No. 6” (N)
FOX 4 at 9 PM (N)
News
News
TMZ (N)
Seinfeld
Inside
Late Show-Colbert
5
5
5 Big Bang Life in
Mom (N) Angel-
Elementary (N)
News
7
19
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Father Brown
Mercy Street
Bridge TV
The Blacklist (N)
Shades of Blue (N)
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Arts
Heroes Reborn (N)
D KTWU 11 A Q 12 B ` 13
Give It
I’ve Got.
My Diet Is Better Than Yours (N) h
Journey
Travel
Corden
Charlie Rose (N)
KSNT
Tonight Show
News
Jimmy Kimmel Live Nightline
Antiques Roadshow This Old House Hr
World
Meyers Business
Beyond the Tank
My Diet Is Better Than Yours (N) h
News
Jimmy Kimmel Live Nightline
Big Bang Life in
Mom (N) Angel-
Elementary (N)
News
Late Show-Colbert
Corden
The Blacklist (N)
Shades of Blue (N)
News
Tonight Show
Meyers
C I 14 KMCI 15 L KCWE 17
41 38
41 Heroes Reborn (N) 38 Mother Mother
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ION KPXE 18
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Commun Commun Minute
Holly
Simpson Fam Guy Fam Guy American
The 100 (N)
ET
Mod Fam Mod Fam Tosh.0
News
Blue Bloods h
Office
Blue Bloods h
Blue Bloods h
Blue Bloods h
Blue Bloods h
Jayhawk Movie
6 News
Jayhawk Wild
6 News
Not Late Tower Cam
Mother
Mother
Mother
Cable Channels WOW!6 6 WGN-A
307 239 Elementary
THIS TV 19 CITY
25
USD497 26
Varsity
Elementary
››› Fail-Safe (1964) Henry Fonda, Walter Matthau.
Mother
City Bulletin Board, Commission Meetings
City Bulletin Board
School Board Information
School Board Information
ESPN2 34 209 144 dCollege Basketball 30 for 30 36 672
dWm. Basketball
UFC Reloaded
39 360 205 The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File (N)
CNBC 40 355 208 Shark Tank MSNBC 41 356 209 All In With Chris
Parks Fail
SportsCenter (N)
E2016 Australian Open Tennis World Poker Tour
NBCSN 38 603 151 Mecum Auto Auctions “Kissimmee” (N) FNC
Mother
››‡ Fighting Mad (1976) Peter Fonda.
ESPN 33 206 140 dCollege Basketball dCollege Basketball Ohio State at Purdue. SportsCenter (N) FSM
Mecum Auto Auctions “Kissimmee” (N) Hannity (N)
The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File
Shark Tank
The Profit
Restaurant Startup
Restaurant Startup
Rachel Maddow
The Last Word
All In With Chris
Rachel Maddow
Anderson Cooper
Anthony Bourd.
Anderson Cooper
Newsroom
CNN
44 202 200 Anderson Cooper
TNT
45 245 138 dNBA Basketball: Clippers at Cavaliers
USA
46 242 105 WWE SmackDown! (N)
Colony (N)
Law & Order: SVU
A&E
47 265 118 The First 48
The First 48 (N)
Nightwatch (N)
The First 48
The First 48
Jokers
Jokers
Jokers
Jokers
Jokers
Jokers
Jokers
Broke
Big Bang Big Bang Broke
Broke
Conan (N)
Broke
Conan
TRUTV 48 246 204 Jokers
Jokers
dNBA Basketball San Antonio Spurs at Phoenix Suns.
AMC
50 254 130 ›‡ Gone in Sixty Seconds (2000) Nicolas Cage.
TBS
51 247 139 Broke
BRAVO 52 237 129 Top Chef HIST
23 SATURDAY
Red Dog’s Dog Days workout, 7:30 a.m., parking lot in 800 block of Vermont Street. John Jervis, classical guitar, 8-11 a.m., Panera, 520 W. 23rd St. Kaw Valley Eagles Day: “Nesting Bald Eagles in Kansas” and “Eagles and Other Kansas Raptors,” 9-10:30 a.m. (repeats at 1:15-2:45 p.m.), Free State High School, 4700 Overland Drive. Tail Wagging Readers (grades K-5), 10-11 a.m., Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. (Call 843-3833 to register.)
Introduction to Genealogy Class, 10 a.m.noon, Watkins Museum of History, 1047 Massachusetts St. Kaw Valley Eagles Day: Ranger-led eagle viewing field trip, 10:45 a.m., meet at north entrance of Free State High School, 4700 Overland Drive. Super Smash Bros. Tournament, 1-3 p.m., Readers’ Theater, Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. Saturday Afternoon Ragtime, 2-4 p.m., Watkins Museum of History, 1047 Massachusetts St. Americana Music Academy Saturday Jam, 3 p.m., Americana Music Academy, 1419 Massachusetts St. Kaw Valley Eagles Day: Ranger-led eagle viewing field trip, 3 p.m., meet at north entrance of Free State High School, 4700 Overland Drive. Teen Advisory Board, 4-5 p.m., Readers’ Theater, Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. Girls’ Weekend: A farce by Karen Schaeffer, dinner and a show, 6 p.m., Theatre Lawrence, 4660 Bauer Farm Drive. Transformations 2015 Charity Gala, 6 p.m., Liberty Hall, 644 Massachusetts St.
Submit your stuff: Don’t be shy — we want to publish your event. Submit your item for our calendar by emailing datebook@ljworld.com at least 48 hours before your event. Find more information about these events, and more event listings, at ljworld.com/ events.
Schedule available-enroll now! YARN BARN 930 Massachusetts www.yarnbarn-ks.com
22 FRIDAY
Lawrence Public Library Book Van, 9-10 a.m., Clinton Place, 2125 Clinton Parkway. Library Storytime, 10:30-11:15 a.m., Lawrence Public Library, 707
BEST BETS WOW DTV DISH 7 PM
Join in the fun...take classes! SPORTS
7:30
8 PM
8:30
January 21, 2016 9 PM
9:30
10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30
Cable Channels cont’d
3
8
Red Dog’s Dog Days, 6 a.m., Allen Fieldhouse, 1651 Naismith Drive. Stories & Songs, 9:3010 a.m., Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. Toddler Storytime, 9:30-10 a.m., Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. Toddler Storytime, 10:30-11 a.m., Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. Stories & Songs, 10:30-11 a.m., Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. SUA Tea @ 3: MLK “I Have a Dream” speech, 3 p.m., Level Four, Kansas Union, 1301 Jayhawk Blvd. Cottin’s Hardware Farmers Market — Indoors, 4-6 p.m., Cottin’s Hardware and Rental, 1832 Massachusetts St. Throwback Thursday: Freedom Songs, 4:30 p.m., Sabatini Multicultural Resource Center, KU Campus. KU Youth Chorus rehearsal, 4:30 p.m., Room 328, Murphy Hall, 1530 Naismith Drive. Dinner and Junkyard Jazz, 5:30 p.m., American Legion Post #14, 3408 W. Sixth St. NetworQ (Lawrence’s LGBT+ Social Group), 6 p.m., Genovese, 941 Massachusetts St. One-Act Opera: Joyce Castle, “Strawberry Fields,” 6 p.m., CraftonPreyer Theatre, Murphy Hall, 1530 Naismith Drive. Free Dance Night: Intermediate and Advanced Dancers, 6-8 p.m., Point B Dance, Suite 11, 3300 Bob Billings Parkway. Lawrence School District MLK Awards Event, 6:30 p.m., South Middle School, 2734 Louisiana St. Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War (SUVCW), 6:30 p.m., Watkins Museum of History, 1047 Massachusetts St. Library Storytime, 7-7:45 p.m., Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. Big Tent Reading: Randi Hacker and Annette Billings, 7 p.m., The Raven Book Store, 6 E. Seventh St. Team trivia, 9 p.m., Johnny’s West, 721 Wakarusa Drive. Thursday Night Karaoke, 9 p.m., Wayne & Larry’s Sports Bar & Grill, 933 Iowa St. DJ G Train, 10 p.m., Replay Lounge, 946 Massachusetts St.
10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30
Network Channels
M
Vermont St. Lawrence Public Library Book Van, 10:3011:30 a.m., Wyndham Place, 2551 Crossgate Drive. Lawrence Public Library Book Van, 1-2 p.m., Peterson Acres, 2930 Peterson Road. Teen Zone Cafe, 2:305:30 p.m., Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. VFW Friday Night Dinner, 5:30-7 p.m., VFW Post #852, 1801 Massachusetts St. Taizé Service, 6 p.m., First United Methodist Church, 946 Vermont St. Ashes to Immortality, 6-9 p.m., Replay Lounge, 946 Massachusetts St. Bingo night, doors 5:30 p.m., refreshments 6 p.m., bingo starts 7 p.m., Eagles Lodge, 1803 W. Sixth St. Girls’ Weekend: A farce by Karen Schaeffer, 7:30 p.m., Theatre Lawrence, 4660 Bauer Farm Drive. Inner Altar / Hössferatu, 10 p.m., Replay Lounge, 946 Massachusetts St.
21 TODAY
Helping Families and Friends Honor Their Loved Ones for More Than 100 Years. Serving Douglas, Franklin and Osage Counties since 1898. Baldwin City, KS Ottawa, KS Overbrook, KS 712 Ninth Street 325 S. Hickory St 730 Western Heights Drive (785) 594-3644 (785) 242-3550 (785) 665-7141
54 269 120 American Pickers
SYFY 55 244 122 ››‡ The Faculty
Jokers
Law & Order: SVU
››› Top Gun (1986, Action) Tom Cruise.
Top Chef (N)
Recipe
Happens Top Chef
American Pickers
American Pickers
Live to Tell
›‡ The Order (2003, Suspense) Heath Ledger.
Recipe American Pickers
››› Fright Night (2011)
FX 56 COM 58 E! 59 CMT 60 GAC 61 BET 64 VH1 66 TRV 67 TLC 68 LIFE 69 LMN 70 FOOD 72 HGTV 73 NICK 76 DISNXD 77 DISN 78 TOON 79 DSC 81 FAM 82 NGC 83 HALL 84 ANML 85 TVL 86 TBN 90 EWTN 91 RLTV 93 CSPAN2 95 CSPAN 96 ID 101 AHC 102 OWN 103 WEA 116 TCM 162 HBO MAX SHOW ENC STRZ
401 411 421 440 451
248 249 236 327 326 329 335 277 280 252 253 231 229 299 292 290 296 278 311 276 312 282 304 372 370
136 107 114 166 165 124 162 215 183 108 109 110 112 170 174 172 176 182 180 186 185 184 106 260 261
351 350 285 287 279 362 256
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››‡ The Heat (2013) Sandra Bullock.
Baskets Baskets ›‡ The Watch (2012) Ben Stiller. Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Work. Idiotsitter Daily Nightly At Mid. Work. Kardashian Kardas Holly Total Divas E! News (N) ››› Pretty Woman (1990) Richard Gere. I Love I Love I Love I Love Cops Cops You Live in What? You Live in What? You Live in What? You Live in What? You Live in What? Criminals at Work Zoe Ever Zoe Ever Zoe Ever Hus Payne Payne Wendy Williams Love & Hip Hop The Breaks (2016) Afton Williamson, David Call. Hit the Floor Mob Mysteries-Museum My.- Monument My.- Monument My.- Monument My.- Monument My 600-Lb. Life Extreme Weight Loss “Ashley” Skin Tight My 600-Lb. Life Child Genius: Battle Runway: Junior Child Genius: Battle Runway: Junior Child Genius: Battle Blue-Eyed Butcher (2012) Sara Paxton. Bey. Headlines The Real SVU (N) Blue Butcher Chopped Kids Baking Beat Flay Beat Flay Beat Flay Beat Flay Kids Baking Flip or Flip or Flip or Flip or Hunters Hunt Intl Hunters Hunt Intl Flip or Flip or ››‡ Scooby-Doo (2002, Comedy) Full H’se Full H’se Friends Friends Friends Friends Lab Rats Lab Rats: Bio. Rebels Gravity Gravity Ultimate Rebels Lab Rats Lab Rats ›› High School Musical 2 (2007) Austin Best Fr. Girl Austin Jessie Jessie King/Hill Burgers Burgers Cleve American American Fam Guy Fam Guy Chicken Aqua Fast N’ Loud Fast N’ Loud Fast N’ Loud Fast N’ Loud Fast N’ Loud ››› Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince (2009, Fantasy) The 700 Club ›‡ Little Fockers The Boonies Life Below Zero Life Below Zero Life Below Zero Life Below Zero Last Man Last Man Middle Middle Middle Middle Golden Golden Golden Golden Wild West Alaska Alaska Alaska Alaskan Bush Wild West Alaska Alaska Alaska Love-Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond King King King King Trinity Osteen Prince Hillsong Praise the Lord Acts of Faith Bless World Over Live (N) News Rosary Amazing Crossing Defend Women Daily Mass - Olam Fraud Fraud To Not Fade Away Parkinson’s Special Fraud Fraud To Not Fade Away Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. Capitol Hill Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. Capitol Hill Murder Book (N) Dateline on ID (N) Real Detective (N) Murder Book Dateline on ID ››› The Outlaw Josey Wales (1976) Clint Eastwood. Gunslingers Gunslingers 20/20 on ID 20/20 on OWN 20/20 on OWN 20/20 on ID 20/20 on OWN Strangest Weather Tornado Alley Tornado Alley Tornado Alley Tornado Alley ›››‡ Foreign Correspondent (1940) ›››› The Pride of the Yankees (1942) For
›› Fifty Shades of Grey (2015) ››‡ Blackhat (2015) Chris Hemsworth. Imitation Game Behind Enemy Think Like Too
›› Final Destination 3 (2006) ›› Snakes on a Plane (2006)
Billions “Pilot” Shameless Black Sails “XVII.” Spartacus: War ››› Tin Cup (1996) Kevin Costner. iTV.
››› Knocked Up (2007)
Sin City Diaries Dark Net Gigolos Dark Net Billions Spartacus: War Black Sails “XVII.” ››› Superbad (2007)
SECTION B
USA TODAY — L awrence J ournal -W orld
IN MONEY
IN LIFE
Apple gnawed at from many sides
Road-trip film crude fact: Gross good for bottom line
DEC. 31: 17,425
01.21.16 DAVID PAUL MORRIS, BLOOMBERG
UNIVERSAL
MARKET TURMOIL
FEAR SOARS AS STOCKS STALL Wall Street searches for signs this is final washout Adam Shell USA TODAY
First came the Dow’s 565point free fall Wednesday. Then came the rebound rally that trimmed the loss for the day to 249 points, which Wall Street hopes was the final washout that often signals the end of stock market pain. Indeed, the relentless selling early in the new year had panicky investors running Wednesday: uAt one point Wednesday, the Dow Jones industrials were down more than 565 points — and off nearly 2,000 points in the first 12 trading days of 2016. The Dow closed down 249 points. uThe VIX, a Wall Street “fear gauge,” jumped as much as 23%, to its highest level since the last big stock swoon in August.
uThe government bond market saw a torrent of cash pour in, pushing the 10-year Treasury yield below 2% to a three-month low. Was Wednesday the final capitulation, or selling climax, that Wall Street pros say normally accompanies a short-term market bottom after days of brutal selling? It’s still too early to say the market has hit rock bottom, but there are signs panic selling is leading a stampede out of the market that will eventually clear the way for a recovery. “We are probably washed out for now, but nothing is 100%,” says Gary Kaltbaum, president of money-management firm Kaltbaum Capital Management. Wednesday had “the feel of capitulation,” Andrew Adams, a stock research associate at Ray-
mond James, told clients in a report. He compared the plunge and rebound to the market’s turnaround in August after the Dow briefly tumbled more than 1,000 points in a single session, setting up a rebound. “This is selling adding to selling,” says Tom Lee, founder of investment research firm Fundstrat Global Advisors. The market is starting to price in a lot of bad potential outcomes such as a recession or some financial crisis. Investors fear central banks can no longer dampen volatility and backstop the market. The difficult part is trying to determine whether the fallout from plunging oil prices and a slowdown in China will cause a global
Dow Jones industrial average recession and drag down the USA. Brian Belski, chief investment strategist at BMO Capital Markets, who says the long-term bull is intact, debunks the bears’ biggest argument: “This is definitely not a financial crisis.” Be prepared for a violent upswing when stocks turn up, says Quincy Krosby, market strategist at Prudential Financial. “Expect buying, when it happens, to be swift as well.”
JAN. 20 15,767
Oil decline saps former Texas boomtowns Price plummet drags down business
Rick Jervis USA TODAY
PEARSALL , TEXAS
Back when the oil money flowed, the Location 581 Saloon would be crammed with pipefitters, welders, derrick hands, truck drivers and all sorts of oilfield workers — as many as 35 of them a night together shelling out more than $2,000 for drinks and good times. These days, the bar in this
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For the latest national sports coverage, go to sports.usatoday.com
South Texas city 50 miles southwest of San Antonio sits mostly empty, except for a few locals. On a recent early evening, three clients sat at the bar. Only two were drinking. “It’s just like a ghost town again,” said Troy Reeves, the bar’s owner. Pearsall, like other towns that sit atop of the Eagle Ford Shale and soared during the recent oil boom, has had a harrowing crash back to Earth, as the price of
crude has plummeted. Wednesday, the price of West Texas Intermediate dipped below $27 a barrel — a 12-year low. Eighteen months ago, the crude traded for more than $100 a barrel. Crude’s free fall has rattled world markets, erased billions of dollars in stocks worldwide and led to thousands of layoffs in the oil and gas sector. Few places have felt the slide more acutely RICK JERVIS, USA TODAY
v STORY CONTINUES ON 2B
Airstrikes grind down Islamic State Almost 6,500 militants wiped out in past 3 months Jim Michaels USA TODAY
USA SNAPSHOTS©
Undiagnosed diseases Percentage of those afflicted who don’t know they have:
Diabetes
1 in 4 Glaucoma
1 in 2
Sources National Eye Health Education Program of National Institutes of Health; American Diabetes Association TERRY BYRNE AND KARL GELLES, USA TODAY
At the height of the Texas oil boom, Troy Reeves used profits from his oil and gas service company to open a bar in Pearsall, Texas.
Airstrikes by the U.S.-led coalition in Iraq and Syria have killed more than 6,400 Islamic State fighters in the past three months, and the militant group is showing the effect of the losses, according to coalition military statistics. Casualty counts have not been a reliable measure of success against the Islamic State in the past because it replaced fallen fighters with new recruits. But as offensives by Iraqi troops reclaim territory from the radical group, the Islamic State loses its ability to conscript fighters from areas it controlled, which had been the major source of new troops. U.S. commanders said the combination of airstrikes and Iraqi ground offensives weakened the terror group in Iraq and Syria and hurt its morale.
EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY
Smoke rises from U.S. airstrikes against Islamic State fighters in the city of Ramadi, Iraq, on Nov. 20. “We are noticing they are not quite the same skill level that they once were,” Lt. Gen. Sean MacFarland, the top coalition commander, said in an interview. “Maybe they’re having trouble replacing quality with quality.” Defections appear to be increasing, and the group’s ability to mount offensives has waned, MacFarland said. “We take that as a positive indicator that we’re
starting to hit them where it hurts,” he said. The casualty statistics suggest that the air campaign has become more lethal as U.S.-backed Iraqi ground forces have grown more aggressive, and coordination with coalition teams conducting the airstrikes has improved. The statistics show that the airstrikes have killed nearly 500 fighters a week on average over
the past three months. More than 25,000 fighters have been killed by coalition airstrikes since the bombing campaign began nearly 18 months ago, soon after the Islamic State, also known as ISIL or ISIS, seized large portions of Iraq. The U.S. military estimates that the extremist group has 20,000 to 30,000 fighters in Iraq and Syria but acknowledges the numbers are rough. Ground operations have forced militants into the open as they try to defend their positions, making them vulnerable to air attack. “They’re flushing them out,” MacFarland said. Iraq’s military recently captured the city of Ramadi after a six-month-long siege. In a single week in late December, airstrikes killed 1,036 fighters, the statistics show. The statistics do not include fighters killed by Iraqi ground forces or U.S.-backed rebel groups fighting the militants in war-torn Syria, where the Islamic State is headquartered. The death counts are estimated primarily from air surveillance.
Scientists spy signs of ninth planet in solar system No. 9 could be 10 times size of Earth Traci Watson
Special for USA TODAY
The image of our solar system may soon undergo a radical makeover. Scientists revealed evidence Wednesday of a planet five to 10 times more massive than Earth and at least 200 times farther from the sun. If the new planet is confirmed, it would raise the solar system’s planet tally from
eight to nine. It also would verify the presence of a world in the coldest, most remote reaches of the solar system. “This is the first serious claim for the existence of an additional planet in the solar system,” said planetary scientist Alessandro Morbidelli of France’s Observatory of the Cote d’Azur, who was not involved with the study. Other researchers said the existence of “Planet Nine” needs to be confirmed. Experts said the study contains the most convincing evidence yet. “We tried hard ourselves to prove that we were wrong,” study co-author Mike
R. HURT, CALTECH
The planet could be gaseous, similar to Uranus and Neptune.
Brown of Caltech said. “We couldn’t do it, but I hope people are sharpening their pencils.” If Planet Nine is the real deal, it would be one of the most deli-
cious ironies in recent scientific history. Until now, Brown has been best known as the man who killed Pluto. Brown’s discovery a decade ago of an icy body called Eris — roughly the size of Pluto but much farther from the sun — helped goad astronomers into demoting Pluto to “dwarf planet,” a decision that shrank the solar system from nine planets to eight. “OK, OK, I am now willing to admit: I DO believe that the solar system has nine planets,” Brown tweeted Wednesday from his account @plutokiller. Brown and his Caltech colleague Konstantin Batygin base
their argument on an analysis of a handful of distant worlds orbiting the sun far beyond the orbit of Neptune, the farthest true planet. Six of these small objects have orbits that are, against the odds, all aligned at one end. Their paths also are tilted in the same way compared with the eight bona fide planets. That suggested some large object exerts its powers over the outer solar system. Analysis of other small worlds beyond Neptune showed they, too, seemed to be under the influence of a massive planet, the scientists reported in The Astronomical Journal.
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L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY THURSDAY, JANUARY 21, 2016
VOICES
Hey America, you can have Ted Cruz So, we’re sorry, America. Canada had its own Ted Cruz and overwhelmingly voted him out of office.
Adam Kovac
Special for USA TODAY
In Canada, we have a strange tendency to watch American politics almost as closely as we do our own. Part of it is access — depending on your television package, you can be more likely to get Fox News and CNN than our own 24-hour news channels. Another part is entertainment — as handsome as our prime minister, Justin Trudeau, is, he lacks the showmanship of a Donald Trump. There’s also that fabled Canadian inferiority complex, wherein we crave connection to our larger, more powerful neighbor to the south. When the allegations that Barack Obama was actually a Muslim from Kenya first got tossed around, we watched with a chuckle mixed with horror. In a time when each election seems absolutely pivotal, this is what our closest ally and largest trading partner is choosing to focus on? So when the possibility of Republican presidential candidate Ted Cruz being as Canadian as MONTREAL
SCOTT OLSON, GETTY IMAGES
Republican presidential candidate Sen. Ted Cruz, of Texas, speaks to guests at the 2016 South Carolina Tea Party Coalition Convention on Saturday in Myrtle Beach. poutine, Wayne Gretzky and socialized health care emerged, our desire to be noticed collided with an even stronger desire to have absolutely nothing to do with this situation. Basically, our collective response has been,“Hey, keep us out of this. We don’t want any trouble.” It’s not that we don’t enjoy Canadians being in the American
spotlight. Success in the U.S. is seen as an acknowledgment of talent no matter the industry. Alex Trebek would much rather be hosting Jeopardy! than our very own Reach for the Top. Celine Dion was once a simple Quebecois girl singing French ballads; it was only when she began wailing about her heart going on and became a big star in
the U.S. that she turned into as beloved a Canadian songbird as Anne Murray, who herself had some pretty notable hits with the Yanks. Yet there has been little to no effort to claim Cruz as a native Northerner. Perhaps it’s because he was so eager to distance himself from what was once his home and native land. Sure, we like it when one of our own scales to great heights among the Americans, but only if they remember and acknowledge where they came from. Neil Young can still be reached for comments on Canadian elections, and even Carly Rae Jepsen can be counted on to return as a halftime performer at the Grey Cup (it’s like the Super Bowl, but with a longer field and worse commercials). But it sounded like Cruz was almost gleeful when a spokesman announced it “makes sense he should be only an American citizen” upon the senator renouncing his citizen-
ship. That goes against the multiculturalism upon which Canada so stereotypically prides itself. You can get a good feel for Canada’s feeling for Cruz by looking at the result of our own federal election in October. Trudeau’s Liberals, running on a platform of weed legalization, sanctuary for Syrian refugees and deficit spending to get Canada through tough economic times, won a resounding victory. The loser was Stephen Harper, a Calgary-born, right-wing, evangelical Christian who promised more bombing runs against the Islamic State, more closely monitored borders, fewer obligations to international climate-change agreements and smaller government in general. Sound familiar? So, we’re sorry, America. Canada had its own Ted Cruz and overwhelmingly voted him out of office. We’re sorry that we don’t want to take in another. Well, actually. Let’s reconsider. Harper’s Conservative Party is still looking for a new leader. With our notorious politeness, we’re horrified at Justin Bieber being our current preeminent cultural ambassador to the world. How about it, America? Sounds like a fair trade to me. Kovac is a freelance journalist based in Montreal.
D.C. dysfunction gives rise to outsiders NOW PLAYING AT USATODAY.COM
See the entire interview with former senators Daschle and Lott.
Trent Lott was the Senate Republican leader from 1996 to 2003. Tom Daschle was the Senate Democratic leader from 1995 to 2005. Together, they dealt with divisive issues from President Bill Clinton’s impeachment trial to the authorization for the Iraq War. Now they’ve co-authored a new book, Crisis Point: Why We Must — and How We Can — Overcome Our Broken Politics in Washington and Across America, published by Bloomsbury Press. They propose specific remedies, from changing filibuster rules to shortening the length of elections. Questions and answers have been edited for length and clarity. Q: Hasn’t American politics always been a combat sport? Daschle: Politics has never been for the thin-skinned. But I think at the same time, even though we’ve gone through difficult times, through good leadership, through the need and the recognition to cooperate and to find the chemistry required to move forward, we’ve risen to the occasion. What we’re worried about now is our inability to rise to the occasion, to find that chemistry between Republicans and Democrats that allows us to reach the common ground so necessary to move this country forward. Lott: This is different from what we have at least personally
JASPER COLT, USA TODAY
Former senators Trent Lott, left, and Tom Daschle have co-written Crisis Point: Why We Must — and How We Can — Overcome Our Broken Politics in Washington and Across America. witnessed. It has gotten much more consuming, much more dysfunctional. Q: Americans are pretty fed up with their politics. Does that account for the rise of outsider candidates — Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders — in the presidential race? Daschle: I think it does. We’ve so bashed Washington for so long. Washington has been a real piñata and I think as a result people
have a very low impression of anything Washington-related. So that opens up the opportunities for people outside of Washington to say, I’m not Washington, vote for me. ... Just as you wouldn’t trust a doctor who’s never had any experience in a heart transplant to do something with your heart, I really wonder if we want somebody who has had no experience in government to run a country as
sophisticated with the incredible challenges we have today. ... Do we really want somebody with zero experience who claims not to be from Washington with that enormous responsibility? Lott: I don’t think you can come to Washington and get the job done if you haven’t had experience as an elected official and understand how Washington works, understand the legislative process.
Money faded as fast as it came v CONTINUED FROM 1B
than towns of the Eagle Ford Shale, which saw ranchers turned billionaires overnight through mineral rights and city budgets swell with renewed oil revenue as the boom ignited around 2008. Residents have been dealing with the downturn for nearly a year. The steady march of declining prices — with no end in sight — and recent news that lifting of sanctions on Iran could deliver even more oil to the market has nudged the outlook in South Texas from depressed to near desperate. The number of active oil and gas drilling rigs in the Eagle Ford Shale has shrunk from 259 at the boom’s peak in 2012 to 68 today, according to oil field services firm Baker Hughes. “Blood in the streets,” said David Martin Philips, a Karnes City investor who used his royalty checks from the oil companies to buy seven radio stations in the area. Not everyone diversified as smartly, he said.
Those who put their money in hotels and RV parks to house the deluge of oilfield workers that came during the boom lost money fast as those workers were let go, Philips said. “Those people are sweating bullets right now,” he said. “There’s a tremendous amount of bankruptcies about to take place.” Ironically, Eagle Ford Shale’s success and the technology used to unlock millions of barrels of oil stuck in previously unreachable crevices contributed to the oil glut and low prices. Other factors include China’s faltering economy, Saudi Arabia’s unwillingness to scale back its own production and overall weaker global demand. Texas has experienced oil busts before, most memorably in the mid-1980s, when crude fell to less than $10 a barrel and bankrupted towns across the state. This one feels similar to that bust in its length and global impact, said Scott Tinker, director of the Bureau of Economic Geology at the University of Texas-Austin.
But I do think elected officials and people who care about our country better stop and think about what’s happening here. The people are telling us something. They are frustrated. They are angry. I think part of that is because there’s nobody really putting out a positive message. Q: If Trump is the Republican nominee, would you vote for him? Lott: I probably would. I just don’t see right now anybody on the Democratic side I could vote for. I’d have to really struggle with that and try to figure out how we would make that work. Daschle: There are things that have to be changed. People are responding to the dysfunction. They want to see Washington work. We’ve brought this on to a certain extent ourselves. Q: Any glimmers of hope? Daschle: When I talk to young people, I’m still impressed with the degree to which they want to be involved. Lott: I get a little nervous sometimes about the so-called Millennials. They wear their caps backwards. They wear their pants down to their ankles. ... Then I go back to my alma mater and talk to these students. ... I am overwhelmingly impressed — their interest, their desire and their attitude. So there’s hope out there. This is America. We can fix this.
“Those people are sweating bullets right now. There’s a tremendous amount of bankruptcies about to take place.” Investor David Martin Philips
SPENCER PLATT, GETTY IMAGES
An oil pump works Tuesday in Sweetwater, Texas, while global oil prices continue to plunge. “This one is deeper and longer than the other ones in 1999, 2007, 2009,” he said. “And we haven’t seen signs of the bottom yet.” Some towns anticipated the downturn. In Cotulla, which saw a boom of hotels and revenue, city officials made sure to pay off debts on new projects and not overextend their budgets, city administrator Javier Dovalina said. A $1 million loan for a new convention center, for example, was paid off in two payments with their new oil money, he said. Though down, Cotulla’s revenue is still way up. The city’s annual hotel/motel tax revenue soared from $44,000 a year in
2008 to $1 million at the peak of the boom before settling to almost $800,000 this fiscal year, he said. Similarly, sales tax revenue climbed from $440,000 in 2008 to $3.2 million at the peak to about $2 million today. “We may have plateaued, and we may be there for a while,” Dovalina said. “But it’s a comfortable plateau.” In Pearsall, city officials watched in alarm as oilfield workers streamed out of town and the sales tax sank 30%, City Councilman James Leal said. Hordes of workers left Pearsall to seek jobs as construction workers or office clerks in San Antonio, emptying
the city’s bars, restaurants and hotels, he said. “We just hope it goes back up,” Leal said of the price of oil. “And sooner rather than later.” Reeves, the bar owner, moved his oil and gas service company from Shreveport, La., to Pearsall during the recent boom. Business was so robust, he hired three dozen employees for the service company and opened the Location 581 Saloon with his wife. As of last year, he had let go 35 workers at the service company, leaving him with a skeleton crew of eight. The bar limps along on the business of a handful of locals, but he’s not sure how long that will last, either. “No one expected it this soon,” Reeves said of the decline. “All everyone heard then was, ‘10-15 years — boom — boom — boom.’ It made it to about six.”
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USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld THURSDAY, JANUARY 21, 2016
Justices decide against business
Passengers use passport kiosks set up for international travelers at Miami International Airport on March 4, 2015.
High court rules 6-3 payoffs don’t end class-action suits Richard Wolf USA TODAY
FAILURE TO TRACK FOREIGN VISITORS RILES CONGRESS JOE RAEDLE, GETTY IMAGES
The Supreme Court dealt a rare setback Wednesday to companies trying to avoid potentially expensive class-action lawsuits. The justices ruled that offers of full compensation in such a case do not automatically end the legal challenge. The 6-3 decision was written by Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. “An unaccepted settlement offer, like other unaccepted contract offers, creates no lasting right or obligation,” Ginsburg said. The case was among several on the court’s docket this term that could lead to more or fewer classaction lawsuits. It involved an unsolicited text message sent by a Navy recruiting contractor in apparent violation of the Telephone Consumer Protection Act. Other cases argued in the fall test whether class-action lawsuits can be based on violations of law rather than actual injuries, and whether those injuries can be based on statistical averages. When 40-year-old José Gomez received the recruitment offer, he sued the contractor, CampbellEwald Co., personally and as the potential leader of a class action. Rather than face a potentially large group of cellphone users, the company offered Gomez $1,503 in damages for each unauthorized text. WASHINGTON
The justices ruled that offers of full compensation to the lead plaintiff in such a case do not automatically end the legal challenge. That’s the type of deal judges love and lawyers hate; it clears dockets but wipes potentially lucrative lawsuits from the books. In this case, Gomez didn’t take the bait. A federal district judge ruled that the offer ended the case, but an appeals court reversed the judgment. Five justices signed on to Ginsburg’s ruling. A sixth, Justice Clarence Thomas, concurred but on different grounds; he said the lawsuit remains alive because the company merely offered to pay but never made payment. Chief Justice John Roberts wrote the main dissent, arguing that the company’s offer to Gomez should end the lawsuit. 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.
Alan Gomez USA TODAY
In a rare scene of bipartisan agreement in Congress, senators from both parties hammered Department of Homeland Security officials Wednesday over their inability to create a program to accurately track all foreign visitors who leave the country. The hearing came a day after the department released the first report on the number of foreigners who legally enter the USA and are suspected of staying in the country after their visas expired. That number totaled 482,781 in 2015, a fraction of nearly 45 million legal foreign visitors last year. The department compiled that data largely using plane manifests and other information shared by airlines. Since 2004, the department has been required by Congress to capture biometric information, such as fingerprints or iris scans, from every passenger leaving the country. The department has tested out different pilot programs but cannot say when it will be able to start capturing that information for all departing passengers. Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., pointed out the multiple laws passed by Congress over two decades that order the department to complete the program. Sen.
WHERE DO MOST VISA OVERSTAYS COME FROM? The Department of Homeland Security released its first-ever report on foreigners who legally enter the country but stay after their visas expire, known as “visa overstays.” Here’s where most of them came from in 2015:
1
6 11 12
2
7
4 8
5
10
9 3
1. Canada
93,035
7. Colombia
16,434
2. Mexico
42,114
8. China
15,692
3. Brazil
35,707
9. India
12,885
4. Germany
21,394
10. Venezuela
12,242
5. Italy
17,661
11. France
11,973
6. United Kingdom
16,446
12. Spain
10,891
Source Department of Homeland Security. VERONICA BRAVO, USA TODAY
Thom Tillis, R-N.C., said NASA was able to get a man on the moon in less time. An exasperated Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, asked whether such a program might be completed in his lifetime. “Yes, I expect that we will,” said John Wagner, deputy assistant commissioner at Customs and Border Protection. Homeland Security officials said they’ve been working on a solution but have been unable to complete it because of the way U.S. ports of entry are designed. In Europe, many airports have separate areas for domestic and international flights. Foreigners entering U.S. airports are funneled through Customs checkpoints, but departing flights leave from all terminals and all gates. If the biometric data are collected when passengers check in for their flight at an airport terminal, passengers can simply submit their fingerprints, check in for their flights, then walk out of the airport. Their records would indicate they left, but they actually remain in the country. Wagner said the agency tested out a plan in which Customs officers used hand-held devices to gather biometric information as people boarded a plane. He said that would lead to unreasonable delays for all flights and could cost more than $1 billion to hire enough Customs officers to handle each outbound flight.
Taliban raid kills 21 at Pakistan college Naila Inayat
Rescue workers take a man to the hospital after Wednesday’s attack by militants at Bacha Khan University in Charsadda, Pakistan.
Special for USA TODAY LAHORE , PAKISTAN At least 21 people are dead and several others wounded after Taliban gunmen climbed over the wall into a university in northwestern Pakistan on Wednesday and began firing indiscriminately, according to witnesses and Pakistani officials. At least four gunmen were killed. The attack, which included explosions, broke out as about 600 people were attending a poetry recital at Bacha Khan University, serving 3,000 students in Charsadda, near the city of Peshawar. Regional Police Chief Saeed Wazir put the death toll at 21. Army spokesman Lt. Gen. Asim Bajwa said on Twitter that four attackers were killed. The attack erupted in the same
HASHAM AHMED, AFP/GETTY IMAGES
province as the 2014 Peshawar school attack that killed more than 150 people, mostly children, and shocked the nation. Wednesday’s attackers got into the compound by climbing over back walls around 9:30 a.m. and opening fire on a security guard. They then made their way to the
administration building and the male students’ dorms, firing indiscriminately, Wazir said. “I heard two explosions near the boys’ hostel,” said student Zahoor Khan. “I don’t know if these were suicide attacks or grenade attacks.” Attempts to battle the gunmen
were complicated by a deep fog that had settled over the area, making visibility difficult. “I rushed to evacuate the hostel and, while I was running, I got shot with bullets,” said security guard Nur Rehman, who was hospitalized. “Due to the fog, we were unable to see the terrorists.” A Taliban leader, Khalifa Umar Mansoor, claimed responsibility for Wednesday’s attack, the Associated Press reported. Mansoor was the mastermind behind the deadly December 2014 attack on the Peshawar school. A spokesman for the main Taliban faction in Pakistan, however, disowned the group behind the attack. Mohammad Khurasani said Wednesday’s attack was “unIslamic” and that Taliban fighters “consider the students in the non-military institutions the future of our jihad movement.”
IN BRIEF 2015 WARMEST YEAR SINCE RECORDS BEGAN IN 1880
PRESIDENT AND PUBLISHER
John Zidich
EDITOR IN CHIEF
David Callaway CHIEF REVENUE OFFICER
Kevin Gentzel
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Fueled by a combination of the natural El Niño climate pattern and man-made global warming, 2015 was the planet’s warmest year since records began in 1880, federal scientists announced Wednesday. The average temperature across the Earth’s land and ocean surfaces was 1.62 degrees above average in 2015, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). It was largest margin by which an annual global temperature record has ever been broken, NOAA said. A separate analysis of data from NASA concurred with NOAA’s findings. Most of the warming has happened in the past 35 years, and 15 of the 16 warmest years have occurred since 2001, NASA said. — Doyle Rice 95-YEAR-OLD TO BE TRIED ON WWII WAR CRIMES
A 95-year-old former Auschwitz medic will go on trial in Feb-
as a medic, at least 14 trains carrying prisoners, including Anne Frank, arrived at the camp, AFP reported. The proceedings are expected on Feb. 29 and will run through March in Germany, AFP reported. — Mary Bowerman
A COLD BATH
BOY, 3, KILLED WHEN SHOT BY GRANDMOTHER’S GUN
MATT CARDY, GETTY IMAGES
A woman leaps from a boat moored on the frozen Kennet and Avon canal on Wednesday in Bath, England. Many parts of the United Kingdom experienced freezing temperatures recently. ruary for crimes he allegedly committed during World War II. Hubert Zafke was a sergeant at the Nazis’ Auschwitz death camp from October 1943 to January 1944, according to court documents, Reuters reported. He worked as a medical order-
ly from Aug. 15, 1944, to Sept. 14, 1944, according to AFP. Zafke is charged with being an accessory to at least 3,681 murders that occurred during that one month period in 1944, according to AFP news. During the time Zafke served
A 3-year-old boy was killed early Wednesday morning in New Orleans East after his grandmother’s gun discharged under the pillow where the two were sleeping. The boy was taken to the hospital by EMS with a gunshot wound to the chest, but later died. New Orleans Police investigators say the 42-year-old grandmother, Deonca Kennedy, is employed as a security guard. Kennedy was later arrested by police after questioning. She was charged with negligent homicide, second-degree cruelty to a juvenile and child desertion, according to the NOPD. — WWL-TV, New Orleans
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STATE-BY-STATE News from across the USA ALABAMA Huntsville: A former Madison County deputy, indicted in a revenge beatdown, signaled in court documents that he intends to plead guilty, AL.com reported. Justin Watson was charged in the assault of Robert Bryant at a nightclub after he said Bryant said something about Watson’s fiancée in July 2012. ALASKA Fairbanks: FUNding Alaska, an online crowd-funding campaign, asks backers to make individual contributions to help the state with its deficit. The effort probably won’t be able to cover the entire $3.5 billion, but the project is aimed more at starting conversation than reaching an actual goal, newsminer.com reported.
ARIZONA Prescott: The recreation department is working with a subdivision developer on a new system of public hiking trails. The Daily Courier reported that the trails are planned to connect to the Peavine Trail, run through a subdivision known as The Dells and could attach to Prescott Valley’s Iron King Trail to create a loop. ARKANSAS Little Rock: The
Teacher Retirement System is spending a projected $1.1 million to renovate an empty office building to include nine “sleep-able” offices, ArkansasOnline reported. The system plans to market these offices to state officials, lobbyists and others who need a home away from home or don’t require much living space. CALIFORNIA Los Angeles: The
HIGHLIGHT: ALASKA
Palin hints at PTSD role in son’s arrest Doug Stanglin
ian Coffee & Tea paid about $7 million for more than 1,600 scenic acres, the Hawaii TribuneHerald reported. The company wants to grow coffee, tea, fruits and vegetables on the former sugar plantation. IDAHO Boise: Officials with the
Idaho Health and Welfare Department are asking state budget writers for a $26.3 million increase in funding.
L.A. council voted to pay $16.7 million to Kash Register and $7.6 million to Bruce Lisker, resolving two unrelated lawsuits that had accused police of trampling on their rights, the Los Angeles Times reported.
Emanuel’s office rejected the Cubs’ idea of closing Clark and Addison Streets to automobiles on game days as a non-starter, according to the Chicago Tribune.
COLORADO Denver: Police are
INDIANA Greenwood: Brian
investigating if the woman accused of stabbing the Denver fire chief had any prior connection with the 24-year veteran of the department. Marlene ZacevichRodriguez, 42, allegedly attacked Denver Fire Chief Eric Tade while he was parked in his car, KUSA-TV reported. CONNECTICUT Waterbury: A
22-year-old woman died after she was severely injured in a hit-andrun crash here, The RepublicanAmerican reported. DELAWARE Dover: The Dela-
ware Supreme Court is considering an appeal for the former Tower Hill School headmaster convicted of dealing child pornography, The News Journal reported. Christopher Wheeler was convicted last year on 25 counts of dealing child porn and was sentenced to 50 years in prison. DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA: Wood-
row Wilson High School sophomore Kimberly Ortiz, 16, is one of 15 students selected from a national pool to travel to Normandy, France, to study D-Day and research the life of an individual soldier, The Washington Post reported. FLORIDA Indian Harbour
Beach: Friends of the late Bill Heiss, who with chef Scott Earick ran the popular Scott’s on Fifth restaurant in Indiatlantic, will gather Sunday at Lou’s Blues in Indian Harbour Beach for a purple-and-plaid party celebrating Heiss’ life, Florida Today reported. Heiss died Dec. 3 following a stroke.
ILLINOIS Chicago: Mayor Rahm
Persinger, 43, appeared to be trying to save his two dogs when he fell through ice and died, The Indianapolis Star reported.
IOWA Des Moines: Iowa’s longterm care ombudsman delivered an unflinching message to lawmakers Tuesday: Provide proper oversight for a plan to privatize Medicaid or face the fraud and mismanagement fate that has dogged other states. Gov. Branstad called the report, which recommends hiring 134 more ombudsmen, “overkill,” The Des Moines Register reported. KANSAS Salina: Seaport Air-
lines has ended service to Great Bend and here, effective immediately, KAKE-TV reported.
KENTUCKY Frankfort: The
Bevin administration has decided it won’t renew a contract with the director of an advanced battery research and development center in Lexington that sought cooperation between the University of Kentucky, University of Louisville, a big federal energy lab and automakers, The Courier-Journal reported.
LOUISIANA New Orleans: Ste-
vie Wonder, Pearl Jam and the Red Hot Chili Peppers will headline Jazz Fest 2016, The TimesPicayune reported.
HAWAII Hilo: Kau Royal Hawai-
Carnegie Museum scientist Bernardo Riga was part of a team that unearthed a new dinosaur in Argentina, the Pittsburgh PostGazette reported.
RHODE ISLAND Westerly: Ram Point, a summer estate constructed in 1903 in Westerly’s Avondale village, was added to the National Register of Historic Places, the Providence Journal reported. SOUTH CAROLINA Columbia:
FILE PHOTO BY ALASKA GOVERNOR’S OFFICE VIA BLOOMBERG NEWS
Sarah Palin, center, poses with daughters, Piper, center front, Willow, left, Bristol, right, son, Track, back left, and husband Todd, back right, in Juneau in 2007. soldiers do return with.” According to the police affidavit of the incident posted by KTVA-TV, officers were called to the residence Monday night after receiving two 911 calls, the first from Track’s girlfriend, and the second from him. The woman had called to report that a man, later identified as Track, had just “punched her in the face and that a firearm was involved,” according to the affidavit.
a 27-year-old man was seriously injured in a snowmobile crash that occurred in Merrimack County, WMUR-TV reported.
MASSACHUSETTS Princeton: A
Christie took no action on a bill that would have given thousands of state children more protection from lead poisoning, the Asbury Park Press reported. The inaction essentially killed a bill that would have set aside $10 million for the state’s Lead Hazard Control Assistance Fund.
12-year-old boy was injured in a 20-foot fall from a ski lift, The Telegram & Gazette reported. He was taken to the hospital and is expected to recover.
MICHIGAN Detroit: Dan Gilbert’s Bedrock Real Estate Services announced that it has bought three more downtown buildings along Woodward Avenue and the forthcoming M-1 Rail line. Bedrock now owns more than 80 buildings downtown, many overseen by the firm’s private security force, the Detroit Free Press reported. MINNESOTA Albertville: Sony
Pictures and a Minnesota development group plan to build a Hollywood-themed indoor family entertainment center here, the Star Tribune reported. Developers call the $115 million project the “mall of entertainment” that will include a Marriott hotel and a large water park.
MISSISSIPPI Natchez: The
Natchez Eola Hotel building could be one step closer to reopening its doors as senior living apartments. The Natchez Democrat reported that the owner of the former hotel building — Virginia attorney Robert Lubin — is scheduled to appear before the Natchez Planning Commission Thursday to propose the plans as an “upscale” senior living apartment building.
MISSOURI Springfield: The
Springfield News-Leader reported that a 37-year-old bull elephant at the Dickerson Park Zoo was euthanized.
MONTANA Billings: Authorities
are warning of high avalanche dangers in northwestern Montana’s Swan mountains. The center says the risk is most acute above 6,000 feet in elevation.
winter crow hunt will take place in most of the state from Jan. 23 to March 31. There are no bag limits or possession limits on hunting crows.
NEVADA Las Vegas: The Nevada Highway Patrol has increased its presence in the Mount Charleston area to deal with the heavy traffic, KLAS-TV reported. Lee Canyon Ski Resort parking was nearly full by 9 a.m. last weekend and highway patrol officers say they saw heavy traffic as early as 8 a.m.
MARYLAND Salisbury: The
NEW HAMPSHIRE Webster:
MAINE Augusta: Maine’s annual
possibility of winter weather this
In a statement, Wasilla police officer Andrew Kappler said he found Palin, sporting a visible injury to his right eye, walking around outside the residence, where he lives with his parents. “His eyes were bloodshot and I detected a strong odor of alcohol on his breath and person,” the officer wrote. “Upon contacting Palin, he was uncooperative, belligerent, and evasive with my initial line of questions.”
weekend has caused the Salisbury Zoo to postpone the first birthday party for Alba the Andean bear until Jan. 30, The Daily Times reported.
NEBRASKA Omaha: Millard Public Schools Associate Superintendent Mark Feldhausen recommended against the school board giving physical education credit for marching band students, the Omaha World-Herald reported.
GEORGIA Atlanta: Airbnb, the
online home rental site, released its top wish-listed destinations and properties, and treehouses were at the top. The top treehouse was in Buckhead — a living room, bedroom and deck connected by rope bridges. The dwelling rents for $350 to $400 a night, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported.
PENNSYLVANIA Pittsburgh:
USA TODAY
Former Alaska governor Sarah Palin appeared to suggest Wednesday that her son’s arrest this week on domestic violence charges stemmed from the effects of his experiences as a soldier in Iraq. Track Palin, a 26-year-old Iraq veteran, was arraigned Tuesday on charges of domestic violence assault, interfering with a report of domestic violence crime and possession of a firearm while intoxicated. Track was handcuffed and arrested Monday night following a dispute with a girlfriend at the Wasilla home he shares with his parents, according to police documents. The charges were filed on the same day the 2008 Republican vice-presidential nominee made her first public appearance on behalf of GOP presidential hopeful Donald Trump in Iowa. Speaking at a Trump rally Wednesday in Oklahoma, Palin took a moment to address her son’s situation, which she called “the elephant in the room.” Without specifically mentioning Track’s arrest, Palin said she can “relate with other families who feel these ramifications of PTSD (Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder) and source of the woundedness our
on Interstate 84 between here and the Idaho border starting March 1. Speed limits will also go up on other highways in central and eastern Oregon, including portions of U.S. 20, U.S. 95 and State Route 78.
State Fish and Game officials say
NEW JERSEY Trenton: Gov.
NEW MEXICO Albuquerque: A local official wants the city to buy 60 acres of land to preserve the nearby Petroglyph National Monument. The Albuquerque Journal reported that City Councilor Isaac Benton is sponsoring a proposal for purchase by the city. NEW YORK Poughkeepsie: The federal government is weighing a new wildlife refuge spanning eastern Dutchess County and a smaller portion of Connecticut, the Poughkeepsie Journal reported. NORTH CAROLINA Efland:
Orange County sheriff’s deputies investigated the killing of a Durham man shot several times in the parking lot of the Community Center, The News & Observer reported.
State Rep. Mike Pitts, R-Laurens, filed a bill in the House to establish a “responsible journalism registry.” The bill would “establish requirements for persons before working as a journalist for a media outlet and for media outlets before hiring a journalist,” The Greenville News reported.
SOUTH DAKOTA Pierre: Fund-
raising for the Trail of Governors project here hit the halfway mark, the Capital Journal reported. The project eventually will honor with statues all 31 people who have served as governor of South Dakota. The statues cost about $70,000 apiece, for a total of about $2.2 million.
TENNESSEE Nashville: In advance of a House committee’s plans to discuss a controversial bill drafted in response to the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision on same-sex marriage more than 100 people gathered at the Capitol, The Tennessean reported. TEXAS Trinity: A 6-year-old girl died after the golf cart she was riding in overtuned, the Lufkin Daily News reported. The cart was being operated by an 8-yearold. UTAH Salt Lake City: Unified police officer Douglas Scott Barney, 44, who was shot to death last weekend, was working overtime to pay for his cancer treatments when he encountered a fugitive, The Salt Lake Tribune reported. VERMONT Plymouth: A slow
start to winter has stalled snowmobile season in Vermont, cutting down on out-of-state tourists, WCAX-TV reported.
VIRGINIA Richmond: Barring intervention by the courts or the governor, Ricky Javon Gray, who murdered a Woodland Heights family on New Year’s Day 2006, will be executed March 16, the Richmond Times-Dispatch reported.
NORTH DAKOTA Minot: A local man was being held in the Ward County Jail after authorities say he assaulted his fiancée and held her against her will, The Minot Daily News reported. OHIO Cincinnati: Kroger is the
world’s third-largest retailer behind Walmart and Costco, according to a new ranking by the National Retail Federation. The Downtown Cincinnati-based supermarket chain’s 2014 acquisitions of supermarket chain Harris Teeter and digital health goods provider Vitacost.com helped propel Kroger’s growth and lifted its ranking from No. 6 a year ago. OKLAHOMA Shawnee: A state
trooper was struck by a vehicle while investigating an accident along Interstate 40 east of Oklahoma City.
WASHINGTON Okanogan: The state is giving ranchers $500,000 to buy extra hay after losses from 2015 wildfires, the Capital Press reported. Okanogan Conservation District Manager Craig Nelson says the money is a “godsend” for some but only meets one-sixth of the area’s need. WEST VIRGINIA Charleston: Officials dismantled “Tent City” in light of pressure from Waste Management to remove the people living along the Elk River, the Gazette-Mail reported. WISCONSIN Madison: Gov.
Walker delivered his State of the State speech Tuesday, touting the state’s $135.6 million surplus, the Green Bay Press-Gazette reported.
WYOMING Casper: Recent
storms boosted Wyoming’s mountain snowpack, but it remains well below average. Only the Laramie and South Platte basins have received above-average amounts of snow.
OREGON The Dalles: KGW-TV reported that the speed limit will increase from 65 mph to 70 mph
Compiled by Tim Wendel, Nicole Gill and Jonathan Briggs, with Carolyn Cerbin, Linda Dono, Mike Gottschamer, Ben Sheffler and Nichelle Smith. Design by Mallory Redinger. Graphics by Alejandro Gonzalez.
USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld THURSDAY, JANUARY 21, 2016
MONEYLINE 1.2 MILLION WALMART WORKERS TO GET PAY RAISE Most Walmart employees in the U.S. will get a raise next month. More than 1.2 million workers at Walmart and Sam’s Club will see a pay bump on Feb. 20, in line with Walmart’s promise to bring its minimum hourly wage up to $10 this year. Entry-level workers, however, will still receive $9 an hour until completing an inhouse training program. The average full-time hourly wage will become $13.38.
NEWS MONEY SPORTS WALL STREET’S WILD RIDE LIFE SHOWS NO SIGN OF SLOWING AUTOS TRAVEL
5B
Dow bounces back from 550-point drop as fears spark sell-off Adam Shell @adamshell USA TODAY
JOE RAEDLE, GETTY IMAGES
CONSUMER PRICES IN 2015: SMALLEST RISE IN 7 YEARS U.S. consumer prices fell in December, and for 2015 overall rose by the smallest amount in seven years, reflecting a big drop in energy prices. Consumer prices slipped 0.1% last month after a flat reading in November, the Labor Department reported Wednesday. For the entire year, overall inflation was up just 0.7%, even smaller than a 0.8% rise in 2014. Both years were heavily influenced by plunging energy prices. It was the weakest annual increase since a 0.1% rise in 2008. Core inflation, which excludes volatile energy and food costs, edged up 0.1% in December. For the full year, core inflation was up 2.1% after a 1.6% rise in 2014. STAPLES, OFFICE DEPOT EXTEND DEAL DEADLINE Staples and Office Depot agreed to give themselves three more months to complete their merger as regulators attempt to block the deal in court. The Federal Trade Commission’s decision to challenge the deal over concerns about the companies’ combined market share jeopardized Staples’ $6.3 billion acquisition of its chief rival. But the chains have said they are committed to defending the accord in U.S. District Court. They have extended the deadline for completing the deal from Feb. 4 to May 16.
USA SNAPSHOTS©
Average CD yields As of Wednesday: 6-month
This week Last week Year ago 0.16% 0.16% 0.16% 1-year
This week Last week Year ago 0.27% 0.27% 0.28% 21⁄2-year
This week Last week Year ago 0.47% 0.47% 0.41% 5-year
This week Last week Year ago 0.84% 0.84% 0.87% Find more interest rates at rates.usatoday.com. Source Bankrate.com JAE YANG AND VERONICA BRAVO, USA TODAY
Wednesday was a wild roller coaster on Wall Street, with stocks moving off of huge losses and the Nasdaq almost landing in positive territory. After skydiving 565 points earlier in the day, the Dow Jones industrial average ended down about 249 points at 15,767, a 1.6% loss. The Nasdaq, after being hammered 3.7% earlier, sprang into slightly positive territory before ending down just 0.1%. The sell-off that engulfed U.S. stocks early in 2016 intensified from the market open after oil broke below $27 a barrel for the first time since 2003, Japanese stocks skidded into bear market territory and European shares shed more than 3%. “It is fear based selling,” says Nick Sargen senior investment advisor at Fort Washington Investment Advisors. But it is not yet “panic selling” like back in 2008, he adds.
“Stocks are stress-testing the August lows.” Robert Sluymer, a technical stock analyst at RBC Capital Markets
Sparking Wednesday’s stock sell-off around the world were many of the same worries that have dragged down shares all year: fears of slowing growth around the globe and the continued plunge in oil at a time when markets are craving stabilization in the oil patch. U.S.-produced crude, which tumbled as low as $26.19, was down $1.91 a barrel, or 6.7%, to $26.55, its lowest level since May 2003. For now, as many Wall Street pros have been saying, “As oil goes, so goes the stock market.” Unfortunately, signs of stabilization in the oil patch have not appeared amid a supply gut, slowing global growth and Iran brining on more supply after economic sanctions were lifted. “De-risking remains the name of the game in today’s financial markets,” David Rosenberg, chief economist and strategist at Gluskin Sheff, noted in a report. The broader Standard & Poor’s 500 stock index ended down 1.2% at 1859, which put the closely followed U.S. stock benchmark below its closing low in August at the bottom of the market’s last correction. A drop below that key 1868 level could signal even lower prices with the next support around 1800 to 1820, stock chart watchers say. The S&P 500 is trading at levels not seen since April 2014 and
JUSTIN LANE, EPA
Traders on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange watched as U.S. markets plunged Wednesday before making a late-day rally.
Oil slick: Prices close below $27 Lowest since 2003 as glut, worries about global economy batter energy companies Nathan Bomey @NathanBomey USA TODAY
Concerns over the tepid global economy, the U.S. stockmarket sell-off and surplus production that shows no sign of ebbing drove oil prices down further Wednesday. The price of West Texas Intermediate, the U.S. crude benchmark, tumbled 6.7% to $26.55 a barrel, its lowest closing level since May 2003, according to the Oil Price Information Service. The price of Brent crude, the global benchmark, tumbled 3.2% to $27.10, its lowest closing mark since September 2003. Traders are fretting the production boom around the globe won’t end anytime soon. Economic sluggishness in China and U.S. stock-market declines put additional pressure on energy prices, which often decline during worsening economic conditions. Saudi Arabia, the leading producer in the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, and energy companies in the U.S. have kept production high even as prices have dipped. Global oil production rose by an average rate of 2.6 million barrels per day in 2015, according to a report by the International Energy Agency. That led to an additional 1 billion barrels of oil in global inventories, with expectations of an additional 285 million by
DOW JONES INDUSTRIAL AVG. 16,050 16,000 15,950 15,900 15,850 15,800 15,750 15,700 15,650 15,600 15,550 15,500 15,450
9:30 a.m.
16,016
4:00 p.m.
15,767
-249.28
WEDNESDAY MARKETS INDEX
Nasdaq composite S&P 500 T- note, 10-year yield Oil, light sweet crude Euro (dollars per euro) Yen per dollar
CLOSE
CHG
4471.69 1859.33 1.98% $26.55 $1.0894 116.78
y 5.26 y 22.00 y 0.08 y 1.91 y 0.0029 y 0.66
SOURCES USA TODAY RESEARCH, MARKETWATCH.COM
KAREN BLEIER, AFP/GETTY IMAGES
Even as oil production remains high, the number of active U.S. rigs had fallen by 61% from a year ago.
the end of 2016, the IEA says. “Persistent oversupply, bloated inventories and a slew of negative economic news pressured prices,” the IEA reported. The low price of oil is a boon to U.S. consumers, who are enjoying gasoline below $2 per gallon at most stations. But the sharp drop has battered energy companies, leading to more than 258,000 layoffs in 2015 and expectation of more job cuts and bankruptcies in 2016. Shell told investors Wednesday that it expects adjusted fourth-quarter income to fall into the $1.6 billion to $1.9 billion range, down from $3.3 billion a year ago. JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon told CNBC on Wednesday that his “best guess” is that oil settles around $40 per barrel by the end of the year.
flirted with the intraday low of 1820.66 on Oct. 15, 2014, which occurred at the height of the panic selling during the Ebola virus scare. “Stocks are stress testing the August lows,” Robert Sluymer, a technical stock analyst at RBC Capital Markets told clients in a report. Sluymer pointed out to clients that even though the market is oversold and beaten down, the S&P 500 “has yet to show any meaningful evidence of bottoming.” Investors were shedding risk and heading to the safety of perceived havens, such as the 10-year U.S. Treasury note, where prices were rising and yields were falling. The yield on the 10-year note dipped to 1.96%. The last time the yield closed at that low level was in mid-October. “Risky assets (are) retreating as oil prices hit new lows and growth concerns remain elevated,” Guillermo Felices of Barclays told clients in a note. “The pickup in risk aversion has spread.”
Apple being ‘nibbled to death’ as its grip slips Jon Swartz @jswartz USA TODAY
Apple’s first big test of the year is next week. After being the darling of Wall Street for years, it increasingly finds itself under siege. Shares of the company, which reports its latest quarterly results Jan. 26, have fallen below $94 amid reports Apple is slashing production of the iPhone 6S and iPhone 6S Plus by 30% in the January-to-March quarter. The stock is now down 28% off its 52-week high of $134.54. (Apple’s 52-week low, from August, is $92.) It could get worse, and it’s not all of its own making. A roiling stock market, a flat global IT market and a weakening economy in China could have as much imSAN FRANCISCO
pact. Even presidential candidate Donald Trump has piled on: He wants Apple to build all of its products in the U.S. The slowdown in iPhone 6S production “suggests that not only are AAPL’s March numbers likely at risk (which investors have long worried about), but that December also appears at risk,” Bernstein analyst Toni Sacconaghi said in a Jan. 8 report. Relief may not come in the form of a hit product until later this year, with the expected release of iPhone 7 in September. The news isn’t all bad: Apple sits on $200 billion in cash. Its products remain popular among the coveted under-35 demographic. It tops most-admired lists of corporations. Last week, Bank of America upgraded Apple stock to “buy.” And it is the only major PC vendor to gain market share
STILL TOPS IN COLLEGE Apple remains the choice of students but Android is “gaining ground” on Apple in “cooler” features. Apple
Android
Do you prefer Apple or Android? 60% 40% Who has the coolest device? 33% 67% Source Chegg study of 567 students nationwide RAMON PADILLA, USA TODAY
worldwide during the last three months on 2015, according to researcher Gartner. But changes in technology have forced Apple off its perch. The ascendance of social networks and message services, a shortcoming of Apple’s, and the emergence of rivals in key categories — virtual reality, where Facebook, Samsung and Microsoft are making strides, and high-tech cars, where Google and Tesla Motors are leading — have put Apple in a competitive catch-up role. The Android market extended its lead over Apple’s iOS to 54.7% to 45.5% worldwide last year, according to data compiled for USA TODAY by mobile platform Localytics. “Apple’s brand is being nibbled to death by many ducks,” says Frank Catalano, tech analyst and former marketing consultant. Apple’s consumer brand is still
strong. But rivals Samsung Electronics, Amazon and Google have joined Apple in the mix, according to a recent ranking of brand engagement and loyalty by consultancy Brand Keys. Apple’s future rests in making sure its premium-priced products keep, or regain, their status as a must-have purchase for a younger generation in the U.S. and internationally. Despite its recent travails, Apple continues to enjoy an enduring grip among the coveted under-30 demographic in the U.S., according to an independent survey conducted this month by education-resource company Chegg for USA TODAY. The bigger question, says Ian Gertler, chief marketing officer of marketing consultancy Symplegades, is whether Millennials in international markets are embracing the Apple brand as much.
6B
L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY THURSDAY, JANUARY 21, 2016
AMERICA’S MARKETS What to watch David Craig @davidgcraig USA TODAY
YORK Wednesday’s rebound was a relief, but will it quiet talk about a bear market? For a few hours the 2016 stock sell-off looked like it was going to turn into a full-fledged rout. The Dow Jones industrial average briefly was down more than 550 points. But then a powerful late-day recovery hit that cut the loss in half. The Dow closed down 249 points at 15,767 — nothing to celebrate, but a lot easier to swallow. Now the big question is whether Wednesday’s partial rebound will hold. Analysts have been predicting that stocks would find their footing this year. But the market has proved them wrong, with each attempt at a rebound NEW
Facts about America’s investors who use SigFig tracking services:
-249.28
DOW JONES
Apple (AAPL) was the most-bought stock among SigFig millionaires in early January.
-22.00
INDUSTRIAL AVERAGE
CHANGE: -1.6% YTD: -1,658.29 YTD % CHG: -9.5%
CLOSE: 15,766.74 PREV. CLOSE: 16,016.02 RANGE: 15,450.56-15,989.45
NASDAQ
COMP
-5.26
COMPOSITE
CLOSE: 4,471.69 CHANGE: -.1% PREV. CLOSE: 4,476.95 YTD: -535.73 YTD % CHG: -10.7% RANGE: 4,313.39-4,514.92
RUT
+4.44
GAINERS
RUSSELL
Southwestern Energy (SWN) Seen as refuge for energy stock investors.
7.38
+.86
+13.2
+3.8
Chesapeake Energy (CHK) Positive note, rebounds from 15-year low.
3.32
+.24
+7.8
-26.2
Range Resources (RRC) Will benefit from Mariner East 1 pipeline.
21.99
+1.54
+7.5
-10.6
Endo International (ENDP) Sector dips, yet has strong afternoon session.
55.08
+2.42
+4.6
-10.0
9.85
+.43
+4.6
-36.0
Celgene (CELG) Gets outperform rating at Credit Suisse.
107.49 +4.50
+4.4
-10.2
CarMax (KMX) Fund manager buys, revives from 2016 low.
44.89
+1.90
+4.4
-16.8
17.15
+.72
+4.4
-3.1
55.45
+2.17
+4.1
+6.4
AbbVie (ABBV) 57.15 Secures FDA’s breakthrough therapy designation.
+2.16
+3.9
-3.5
EQT (EQT) Gas exposed, declares quarterly dividend.
LOSERS
YTD % Chg % Chg
$ Chg
Cabot Oil & Gas (COG) Gas exposed, shares outperform.
Company (ticker symbol)
5-day avg.: 6-month avg.: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold:
5-day avg.: 6-month avg.: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold:
-4.70 -9.16 VTMB AAPL AAPL
-6.56 -11.32 AAPL AAPL WTFC
POWERED BY SIGFIG
4-WEEK TREND
Zafgen
The biopharmaceutical company announced positive results in trials of beloranib in reducing body weight and hyperphagia-related behavior in patients with PraderWilli syndrome, Benzinga reports.
Fund, ranked by size Vanguard 500Adml Vanguard TotStIAdm Vanguard InstIdxI Vanguard TotStIdx Vanguard InstPlus Fidelity Contra Vanguard TotIntl American Funds GrthAmA m American Funds IncAmerA m American Funds CapIncBuA m
YTD % Chg % Chg
Devon Energy (DVN) Shares decline on plunging oil prices.
21.59
-1.89
-8.0
-32.5
Micron Technology (MU) Shares plunge amid broader market sell-off.
10.05
-.75
-6.9
-29.0
3.94
-.24
-5.7
-15.6
121.86
-6.25
-4.9
-11.5
Ventas (VTR) 52.92 Dips as it reports tax treatment of 2015 cash distributions.
-2.71
-4.9
-6.2
Welltower (HCN) Rating downgraded at BMO Capital Markets.
64.51
-3.26
-4.8
-5.2
Wynn Resorts (WYNN) Casino shares down on China worries.
56.33
-2.80
-4.7
-18.6
Charles Schwab (SCHW) 25.27 Returns gain on earnings beat despite positive news.
-1.24
-4.7
-23.3
Chg. -2.00 -0.46 -1.98 -0.46 -1.98 -0.57 -0.31 -0.19 -0.23 -0.72
4wk 1 -7.1% -7.8% -7.1% -7.8% -7.1% -7.9% -9.9% -8.8% -5.1% -4.8%
YTD 1 -8.9% -9.5% -8.9% -9.5% -8.9% -9.0% -11.2% -10.5% -6.5% -6.2%
ConocoPhillips (COP) Retreats as oil prices drop.
34.75
-1.65
-4.5
-25.6
NRG Energy (NRG) 9.58 Dips in weak industry as investors anticipate dividend.
-.45
-4.5
-18.6
Close 185.65 27.41 1.59 28.25 10.84 99.18 20.99 11.09 100.75 17.96
Chg. -2.41 +0.70 -0.17 -0.63 -0.43 +0.41 -0.42 +0.51 -0.31 -0.46
% Chg %YTD -1.3% -8.9% +2.6% +36.4% -9.7% -59.7% -2.2% -12.2% -3.8% -10.6% +0.4% -11.9% -2.0% -11.9% +4.8% +77.2% -0.3% -9.9% -2.5% -30.4%
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 3.50% 3.25% 0.36% 0.13% 0.25% 0.02% 1.42% 1.71% 1.98% 2.38%
Close 6 mo ago 3.72% 4.14% 2.87% 3.13% 2.80% 2.69% 2.95% 3.24%
SOURCE: BANKRATE.COM
COMMODITIES
SOURCE: BLOOMBERG AND THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Commodities Close Prev. Cattle (lb.) 1.27 1.29 Corn (bushel) 3.69 3.68 Gold (troy oz.) 1,107.10 1,089.90 Hogs, lean (lb.) .63 .63 Natural Gas (Btu.) 2.09 2.09 Oil, heating (gal.) .87 .91 Oil, lt. swt. crude (bar.) 26.55 28.46 Silver (troy oz.) 14.15 14.11 Soybeans (bushel) 8.74 8.84 Wheat (bushel) 4.72 4.75
Chg. -0.02 +0.01 +17.20 unch. unch. -0.04 -1.91 +0.04 -0.10 -0.03
% Chg. -1.6% +0.3% +1.6% unch. unch. -4.5% -6.7% +0.3% -1.1% -0.6%
% YTD -6.3% +2.8% +4.4% +4.9% -10.6% -21.1% -28.3% +2.7% +0.3% +0.3%
FOREIGN CURRENCIES Close .7066 1.4512 6.5749 .9179 116.78 18.5395
Prev. .7054 1.4567 6.5821 .9155 117.44 18.2927
6 mo. ago .6424 1.3001 6.2117 .9235 124.29 16.0134
Yr. ago .6597 1.2097 6.2108 .8659 118.81 14.6454
FOREIGN MARKETS Country Frankfurt Hong Kong Japan (Nikkei) London Mexico City
Close 9,391.64 18,886.30 16,416.19 5,673.58 40,844.41
Dec. 23
Jan. 20
4-WEEK TREND
1 – CAPITAL GAINS AND DIVIDENDS REINVESTED
Currency per dollar British pound Canadian dollar Chinese yuan Euro Japanese yen Mexican peso
$4
$107.74
Jan. 20
INVESTING ASK MATT
NAV 171.62 45.96 169.93 45.94 169.94 90.00 12.87 36.97 18.92 52.37
ETF, ranked by volume Ticker SPDR S&P500 ETF Tr SPY Barc iPath Vix ST VXX CS VelSh 3xLongCrude UWTI iShs Emerg Mkts EEM iShare Japan EWJ iShares Rus 2000 IWM SPDR Financial XLF CS VS 2x Vix ShTm TVIX PowerShs QQQ Trust QQQ CS VS InvVix STerm XIV
Jan. 20
$10.04
$12
Although the video-streaming ser- $120 vice reported better-than-expected earnings, investors may be worried about its slowing U.S. subscriber growth and need to spend to grow $100 Dec. 23 its new global markets.
Price: $107.74 Chg: -$0.15 % chg: -0.1% Day’s high/low: $109.99/$97.05
$103.40
4-WEEK TREND
TOP 10 EXCHANGE TRADED FUNDS
$ Chg
IBM (IBM) Hits five-year low after missing profit forecast.
AGGRESSIVE 71% or more in equities
TOP 10 MUTUAL FUNDS
Price
Frontier Communications (FTR) Hits 2016 low; seen as cheap.
-4.08 -8.27 AAPL AAPL AAPL
MODERATE 51%-70% equities
Netflix
Price
Ensco (ESV) Fund manager keeps stake, makes up early loss.
5-day avg.: 6-month avg.: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold:
-3.27 -8.15 TSPCF EGHT FB
The trendy apparel company was one of the rare bright spots on Wall $120 Price: $103.40 Street after Standpoint Research Chg: $2.02 launched coverage of the stock % chg: 2.0% Day’s high/low: with a “buy” rating, according to $100 ratings tracker Marketbeat. Dec. 23 $105.06/$99.66
Price: $10.04 Chg: $4.42 % chg: 78.6% Day’s high/low: $11.88/$7.33
RUSSELL 2000 INDEX
CLOSE: 999.31 CHANGE: +.4% PREV. CLOSE: 994.87 YTD: -136.57 YTD % CHG: -12.0% RANGE: 958.48-1,008.68
Company (ticker symbol)
5-day avg.: 6-month avg.: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold:
STORY STOCKS Ralph Lauren
CLOSE: 1,859.33 PREV. CLOSE: 1,881.33 RANGE: 1,812.29-1,876.18
S&P 500’S BIGGEST GAINERS/LOSERS
BALANCED 30%-50% equities
More than half a million investors nationwide with total assets of $200 billion manage their investment portfolios online with SigFig investment tracking service. Data on this page are based on SigFig analysis.
STANDARD & POOR'S
CHANGE: -1.2% YTD: -184.61 YTD % CHG: -9.0%
CONSERVATIVE Less than 30% equities
NOTE: INFORMATION PROVIDED BY SIGFIG IS STATISTICAL IN NATURE AND DOES NOT CONSTITUTE A RECOMMENDATION OF ANY STRATEGY OR SECURITY. VISIT SIGFIG.USATODAY.COM/DISCLOSE FOR ADDITIONAL DISCLOSURES AND INFORMATION.
POWERED BY SIGFIG
S&P 500
SPX
USA’s portfolio allocation by risk
Here’s how America’s individual investors are performing based on data from SigFig online investment tracking service:
followed by even more selling. The damage so far is severe. The Dow is off 2,500 points since its record high in May and inching closer to the 20% drop that would qualify as the first bear market since the financial crisis. Some categories of U.S. stocks are already there. The Dow transportation average and smallstock Russell 2000 index are well into bear market territory. The Dow industrial average is now 13.9% off5-day its record avg.: close. -6.33 The good6-month news? avg.: Twice since -15.58 the financialLargest crisis — in 2010AAPL and holding: 2011 — Wall Most Street got closeAAPL to a bought: just bear marketMost butsold: stopped AAPL short. In fact, the Dow’s 2010 slide stopped at 13.6% and its 2011 drop stopped at 16.8% — comparable to its current fall. Past performance never guarantees future results, but stock investors can’t help but hope this time around has a similar ending.
MAJOR INDEXES DJIA
How we’re performing
DID YOU KNOW?
History says Wall Street eyeing turnaround
ALL THE MARKET ACTION IN REAL TIME. AMERICASMARKETS.USATODAY.COM
Prev. Change 9,664.21 -272.57 19,635.81 -749.51 17,048.37 -632.18 5,876.80 -203.22 40,809.25 +35.16
%Chg. -2.8% -3.8% -3.7% -3.5% +0.1%
YTD % -12.6% -13.8% -13.8% -9.1% -5.0%
SOURCES: MORNINGSTAR, DOW JONES INDEXES, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
IN-DEPTH MARKETS COVERAGE USATODAY.COM/MONEY
Video-streaming service’s growth likely to stall Q: Can Netflix be the best stock again? Matt Krantz
mkrantz@usatoday.com USA TODAY
A: Netflix was the best big stock you could buy last year. A repeat performance is not looking likely. Shares of Netflix took a hit Wednesday following the video-streaming service’s fourth-quarter results. Adjusted profit blew away expectations during the quarter by 250%, S&P Capital IQ says. Much of the upside to expectations was driven by the company’s aggressive global expansion. But the stock slid anyway, falling about a quarter of a percent to $107.74. Shares of Netflix are now down more than 5% this year. Analysts are increasingly worried subscriber cancellations could increase in the U.S. with higher pricing. Meanwhile, Netflix remains one of the most expensive stocks you can buy — which is a rising concern as the market corrects. Netflix is trading for more than 280 times its adjusted earnings over the past 12 months. Analysts still remain very bullish on the stock, rating it “outperform” with an 18-month price target of $127.31 a share. If the recent market correction fades and investors turn a blind eye to valuation, the stock could lift again. But it’s hard to imagine Netflix having another year like 2015, when shares jumped 134%. Not one of the 10 best S&P 500 stocks in 2014 were able to generate gains in 2015 that were as large or bigger.
IMF says Europe’s refugee crisis will boost region’s GDP Kim Hjelmgaard @khjelmgaard USA TODAY
DAVOS , SWITZERLAND
The European Union will see a small but positive impact on economic growth from the region’s refugee crisis, the International Monetary Fund said Wednesday. While GDP across the EU will get a boost of 0.05%, 0.09% and 0.13% for 2015, 2016 and 2017, the three countries taking in the most refugees — Austria, Sweden and Germany — will see added growth of 0.5%, 0.4% and 0.3%,
EPA
German President Joachim Gauck highlighted his country’s humanitarian responsibility.
respectively, the IMF said. The group released its findings on the economic impact of refugees in Europe at the World Eco-
nomic Forum. The topic is a major subject at the forum’s annual meeting. The IMF said the immediate increase on GDP was a result of spending more on housing and infrastructure for asylum seekers. The longer-term impact on growth will depend on how fast refugees are integrated into labor markets. The GDP per capita may be lower because of what the IMF said was the “weaker labor market performance of refugees.” “International experience with economic immigrants suggests that migrants have lower employment rates and wages than na-
tives, though these differences diminish over time. Slow integration reflects factors such as lack of language skills and transferable job qualifications, as well as barriers to job search,” the IMF said. “In the case of refugees, legal constraints on work during the asylum application period also play a role.” The assessment comes as German President Joachim Gauck said Wednesday it was “extremely likely” his country would limit the number of refugees entering Germany, saying such measures might be “morally and politically necessary.”
More than 1 million migrants and refugees arrived in Europe’s wealthiest and most populous nation in 2015. His remarks echo statements previously made by German Chancellor Angela Merkel. Gauck said keeping more people out of the country might be the only way to “preserve the state’s ability to function.” “Migration is only politically viable to the extent that citizens are willing to accept it,” he added. Gauck’s comments appeared to refer to a growing sentiment in Germany that Merkel’s government is struggling with the European migrant crisis.
USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld THURSDAY, JANUARY 21, 2016
LIFELINE
SPORTS LIFE AUTOS THE ‘DIRTY’ TRUTH TRAVEL
7B
MOVIES
MAKING WAVES Actress Jamie-Lynn Sigler, 34, revealed in this week’s issue of ‘People’ that she has struggled with MS since acting on ‘The Sopranos’ at age 20. After being mostly symptom-free for years, Sigler says, the autoimmune disease is “manageable,” but “when I walk, I have to think about every single step, which is annoying and frustrating.”
ABOUT ROAD TRIP MOVIES
ALISON BUCK, GETTY IMAGES
THEY SAID WHAT? THE STARS’ BEST QUOTES “Chris Rock do the right thing make a statement – we’re relying on you ... ” — Actor Tyrese on Instagram, encouraging the Oscars host to drop out of the show after criticism of a lack of diversity of nominees
BOB MAHONEY, LIONSGATE
Lecherous Dick (Robert De Niro) ropes his straight-laced grandson, Jason (Zac Efron) into a spring break romp in Dirty Grandpa.
RANDY SHROPSHIRE, GETTY IMAGES
HOW WAS YOUR DAY? GOOD DAY DC COMICS FANS The new ‘Suicide Squad’ film arrives in August, and Wonder Woman doesn’t headline her own movie until 2017, but fans of the DC heroes saw a new ‘Squad’ trailer and a first look at ‘Wonder Woman’ on CW Tuesday night. Also on CW: the premiere of DC’s ‘Legends of Tomorrow’ Thursday.
SUICIDE SQUAD BY CLAY ENOS
TWEET TALK STARS SOUND OFF ON TWITTER Sam Smith: Humans are HUMANS Jim Gaffigan: I was outside this morning for like 50 seconds. I felt like @LeoDiCaprio in Revenant the entire time Jeremy Renner: Though it is one of my favorite ice creams, Rocky Road is Not a fun drive ... hope your day was exponentially better #thatkindofday John Cena: A relationship with the one you love should never be built on control, or dominance. Love them for them, and trust that they do the same Lauren Alaina: I love snowy, watch movie days. Thank you Mother Nature. Compiled by Carly Mallenbaum
USA SNAPSHOTS©
Top music downloads Love Yourself Justin Bieber Stressed Out Twenty One Pilots
146,600 121,000
Hello Adele
91,800
Sorry Justin Bieber
91,500
My House Flo Rida
74,800
Source Nielsen SoundScan for week ending Jan. 14 MAEVE MCDERMOTT AND VERONICA BRAVO, USA TODAY
They’re grosser, but the bottom line is gross can be good Bryan Alexander USA TODAY
Yes, that is Robert De Niro rolling through spring break in Daytona Beach with Zac Efron in trailers for Dirty Grandpa. With a battle cry of “Party till you’re pregnant,” De Niro has rejoined the road trip genre he also drove to perfection in 1988’s Midnight Run. But the R-rated Dirty Grandpa, which Lionsgate hasn’t previewed ahead of its official release Friday, joins 2013’s Jackass Presents: Bad Grandpa as players in a far raunchier road trip resurgence. “Hollywood likes to come back to these films, which are getting cruder and cruder,” says Jeff Bock, box office analyst for Exhibitor Relations. “That’s how they are selling this one: ‘Come see Robert De Niro as grotesquely rude and crude.’ That’s either a master stroke or desperate times.” A look at the wild state of road trip films finds a few key trends:
CRUDE IS KING
A steady stream of major studio R-rated road trip comedies has flowed into theaters, as diverse as July’s Vacation (a successor to 1983’s National Lampoon’s Vacation) and 2014’s Tammy. The rebirth is partly strategic nostalgia. “We’re seeing more of these because today’s filmmakers grew up with classic ’80s road trip movies like Planes, Trains & Automobiles,” says Dave Karger, senior correspondent for Fandango.com. “But these classic films are hard to live up to.” While the crudeness is amped up, often as the critical-approval ratings have dropped, the new films have made money. Dumb and Dumber To raked in $86 million in 2014 with 29% approval on review aggregation site RottenTomatoes.com, while Vacation hit nearly $59 million (27% approval), Tammy made $84 million (23%) and We’re the Millers collected $150 million (47%). Even the beloved Chipmunks hit the highway with the PG-rated Alvin and the Chipmunks: The Road Chip. ParentPreviews.com notes that “potty humor and flatulence jokes are used.” Road Chip has quietly rolled to $81 million (17%).
SOME OF THEM ARE CRITICALLY ACCLAIMED
Film historian Leonard Maltin says quality road adventures are out there, they’re just harder to find. “There’s unlimited life in road trip movies, even if it hasn’t yielded great results of late,” he says. “It’s a staple of the storytelling process, because it’s all about what happens getting here to there.” Maltin points to Lily Tomlin’s Grandma, as well as Jason Segel and Jesse Eisenberg in The End of the Tour, as “sturdy” independent examples in 2015.
ROAD TRIP MOVIES ARE EVOLVING
Grandma writer/director Paul Weitz says the urge to get out and explore America, the essence of many great road trip movies, has lessened in the modern age. “People are having road trips on their iPads,” Weitz says. “Before, if you wanted to have these experiences, you had to get up and go somewhere.” Meanwhile, Weitz believes the genre is heading into bold new worlds, like spaceships. “In a weird way, (the new) Star Wars is a road trip movie with all that stuff happening in the Millennium Falcon.” The future could get odder, Weitz says: “Once there are self-driving cars, that will take it to a whole new level.”
An older (but not wiser) Vacation family hit the road last year.
HOPPER STONE, WARNER BROS. PICTURES
MUSIC
Spike Lee’s ‘From Motown to Off the Wall’ reveals a young and free Michael Jackson Elysa Gardner USA TODAY
When Michael Jackson released Off the Wall in 1979, 19 days shy of his 21st birthday, he was already a showbiz veteran. Having risen to fame as a preternaturally gifted child in the Jackson 5, he saw his solo projects shaped largely by songwriters and producers appointed by the group’s label, Motown Records. Off the Wall — the subject of a new Spike Lee documentary — introduced Michael Jackson, at this point signed to Epic, as a creatively autonomous artist whose charisma could attract wide audiences. With the war between rock and disco still raging, dance-friendly classics Don’t Stop ’Til You Get Enough and Rock With You reached No. 1 on Billboard’s Hot 100. Spike Lee remembers first hearing Don’t Stop as a summer intern at Columbia Pictures. “That was the song, everywhere,” says Lee, who would later direct videos for Jackson’s 1996 single They Don’t Care About Us and 2009’s posthumous This Is It. Michael Jackson’s Journey From Motown to ‘Off the Wall,’ set to premiere Sunday at Sundance
SPIKE LEE
Spike Lee’s documentary Michael Jackson’s Journey From Motown to ‘Off the Wall’ is on Showtime Feb. 5. Film Festival and Feb. 5 on Showtime, marks the second time Lee has turned his attention to the making of a Jackson album. With 2012’s Bad 25, Lee commemorated the silver anniversary of the follow-up to Jackson’s blockbuster Thriller. Just as Bad was informed by Jackson’s yearning to outdo himself, Off the Wall was driven by a joyful sense of emancipation. The synergy that developed between Jackson and producer Quincy Jones proved magical. “It was a marriage made in heaven,” Lee says. “They comple-
mented each other’s strengths.” Adds veteran music journalist and author Alan Light, “This incredibly layered sound they came up with, with these complicated but undeniable grooves that Quincy was constructing ... that were unlike anything people had heard before.” In Lee’s new documentary — also available in CD/DVD/Bluray packages with the reissued album, out Feb. 26 — latter-day stars and innovators such as Pharrell Williams, The Weeknd, Questlove, John Legend and ballet dancer Misty Copeland testify
to Jackson’s multifaceted performance skills and enduring influence. The archival footage includes admirers such as Gene Kelly and Sammy Davis Jr. “Michael Jackson was a scholar of art,” Lee says. “He would study everyone.” But if Off the Wall heralded the student’s arrival as an artist who would be emulated himself, Lee posits it also began a cycle of frustrated aspiration, rooted at least partly in race: “Race is woven into everything in the United States of America. Did you not see the Academy Award nominations?” While the album won Jackson a Grammy Award for best R&B vocal performance (for Don’t Stop), it was ignored in the major categories. “After he got snubbed by the Grammys, he told his mother, ‘I’m coming back next year,’ ” Lee says. “When you see those dollar signs, it can influence what you’re doing.” An ultimately successful struggle to have his videos air on MTV (inhospitable to black artists in its early days) followed, as did darker and more personal challenges. But Off the Wall arrived, as Lee puts it, “before things started turning around — when you could still hear Michael Jackson’s joy.”
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Sports
C
Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com/sports l Thursday, January 21, 2016
KANSAS WOMEN’S BASKETBALL
Punchless
Tom Keegan tkeegan@ljworld.com
Big 12 boasts players who want the ball The Big 12 basketball title might stay in Lawrence, but a list of five players from the conference most capable of taking over a game and leading their teams to victory would not include anyone from Kansas University. The Jayhawks faced one of the five Tuesday night in Stillwater and face two more in a three-day span from Saturday to Monday, when the Jayhawks play Texas in Allen Fieldhouse and Iowa State in Hilton Coliseum. What a brutal conference. 1. Buddy Hield, Oklahoma: National player of the year candidate makes so many deep, well-guarded shots that he makes big deficits seem a lot smaller. He leads the Big 12 with 26.1 points per game and ranks second to Howard’s James Daniel (28.5) nationally. Hield’s a .515 three-point marksman, a remarkable figure for such a highvolume shooter who draws so much attention from defenses. Hield has shot .571 from three in the six games he has torched an opponent for 30-plus points. It sounds like a strange thing to say about a player who scores more than twice as many points as the team’s next high scorer, but at times it seems as if the Sooners don’t feed Hield enough. 2. Jawun Evans, Oklahoma State: His two bullet bounce-passes off the dribble in the blowout victory vs. Kansas were among many examples of why teammates love playing with him. Ranked No. 36 in the Class of 2015 by Rivals, the point guard from Dallas has exceeded expectations. So quick and such a great passer, he has the body control to finish accurately at the rim. “The thing that I like about him, he asserts himself, but he controls the game from an unselfish standpoint too,” Kansas coach Bill Self said of Evans. “He’s so fast. I don’t know that we did an awful job on him, and he got 22 and eight (assists). He makes his free throws. He’s really good. I would say he’s really understanding how to play at this level and really growing a lot real fast right now. People should be excited about him. He’s good.” So good that he dropped 42 points in a two-point loss to Oklahoma with just two three-pointers and four free throws. Teams, including Kansas in the rematch, might decide to play some zone against the Cowboys, based on how well Baylor did with it in a 79-62 victory in Waco. Evans scored eight points in that one. 3. Georges Niang, Iowa State: Double him down low, and he’ll find the open man. Guard him with size, and he’ll pull his man to the perimeter and burn him from outside or drive by him. He has a clever assortment of shots inside and
John Young/Journal-World Photo
KANSAS UNIVERSITY SOPHOMORE CHAYLE CHEADLE (22) LOSES THE BALL as it is stripped away by Kansas State’s Antoinett Taylor, right, while Cheadle tries to escape a double-team by Taylor and Jessica Sheble (0) on Wednesday night in Allen Fieldhouse.
K-State keeps Jayhawks reeling, 59-46 By Matt Tait mtait@ljworld.com
Wednesday night might have given Kansas University women’s basketball coach Brandon Schneider his first true taste of the Sunflower Showdown rivalry with Kansas State, but it offered no relief from his team’s offensive struggles and losing ways. Thanks to a 1-of-15 shooting start that allowed Kansas State to build an early 13-point lead, the Jayhawks dropped their ninth game in
a row and remained winless in Big 12 play, 59-46, at Allen Fieldhouse. Kansas (5-13 overall, 0-7 Big 12) shot just 24 percent from the floor for the game — 14 percent in the first half — and failed to crack the 50-point mark for the eighth time this season. “It’s hard to be in any ball game (when you do that),” Schneider said after the loss. “For us, it’s execution and missing shots. And then there’s another element of the wrong guys taking the
wrong shots, and we have a little bit of that going on, too.” Kansas State’s defense had more than a little to do with KU’s offensive struggles on Wednesday night, but even when the Jayhawks did find the right shooting touch, KState refused to let it matter. Four times during the third and fourth quarters KU cut the KSU lead to 12 or 11 points. And each time, KState (13-5, 3-4) responded with a mini-run that kept any thoughts of a Kansas comeback on the back burner.
“That was a little frustrating,” said senior guard Timeka O’Neal, who led KU with nine points on 3-of-7 shooting from three-point range. “And it’s all on us.” Scoring has become so difficult for this Kansas team that sophomore point guard Lauren Aldridge’s buzzerbeating three-pointer from 27 feet at the end of the third quarter was treated more with amazement and a shrug than excitement and a shriek. Please see KU WOMEN, page 3C
Self sees no reason to panic just yet By Gary Bedore gbedore@ljworld.com
Bill Self, the coach of the country’s No. 3-ranked college basketball team, is not ready to panic after two losses in the last three Big 12 games — both setbacks on the road. “What we need to do is we need to have some good things happen,” Self, Kansas University’s 13th-year coach, said Wednesday on his “Hawk Talk” radio show. “But we need to remember who we are and we’ve got
a darn good team and good players and certainly there’s so much to play for. “But sometimes one loss around this place (KU) seems like three or four or five at other places. That’s not the way it is. It’s too long a season to be totally worried about what potentially could happen. We are going through the same things that every team in the country is going through,” Self added. Self’s Jayhawks (15-3, 4-2) have averaged 67.3 points a game in four games since opening Big 12 play with an
102-74 win over Baylor and 109-106, 3OT victory over Oklahoma. “It’s still early,” said Self. Baylor at this juncture tops the league standings with a 5-1 record, followed by KU, Oklahoma, West Virginia and Texas at 4-2. Iowa State is 3-3, Texas Tech and OSU 2-4, K-State and TCU 1-5. “We haven’t helped ourselves at all by not takNick Krug/Journal-World Photo ing care of business at a couple places (West Vir- OKLAHOMA STATE SECURITY HELPS to shield ginia, OSU). Those are hard as Kansas University coach Bill Self and his staff leave the court following the Jayhawks’ 86-67 Please see HOOPS, page 4C loss Tuesday night in Stillwater, Okla.
Firebirds, Lions set for tournaments “ By Bobby Nightengale bnightengale@ljworld.com
Free State High’s boys basketball players have won five straight games since winter break and were rewarded with a No. 5 ranking in Class 6A. Their next challenge: tournament week. The Firebirds will play in the McPherson Invitational Please see KEEGAN, page 3C over the next three days,
facing Wichita North in the first round at 4:45 p.m. today in McPherson High’s Roundhouse. Free State won the tournament in 2014 and took fourth place at the St. Thomas Aquinas Tournament last year. More than anything, it gives the Firebirds an opportunity to face top teams with different styles of play. “It’s good for us,” junior
guard Jacob Pavlyak said. “It’s kind of like a state tournament-like atmosphere.” The Firebirds (7-1) will face Derby or Junction City on Friday. Both teams are potential sub-state opponents. McPherson (8-1, ranked No. 2 in 4A-I) is the top team on the other side of the bracket. “I think it’s good to get out of the league a little bit
I think it’s good to get out of the league a little bit and play some different teams.”
and play some different teams,” FSHS coach Sam Stroh said. “Playing Wichita North (4-5), they play in the City League, so they won’t be scared of us. They’ll be ready to go. So it’ll be good for us just to see some good opponents.” During their five-game win streak, the Firebirds — Free State coach Sam Stroh Please see TOURNEYS, page 4C
AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE
Sports 2
2C | LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD | THURSDAY, JANUARY 21, 2016
BRIEFLY
EAST
COMING FRIDAY
TWO-DAY
• Coverage of city boys basketball in tournament openers • The latest on Kansas University basketball
SPORTS CALENDAR
FREE STATE HIGH TODAY WEST
SOUTH
AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE
NBA roundup EAST
TENNIS
Ivanovic, Maguruza reach third round
NORTH
The Associated Press
Drummond set a career high and franchise record by AL CENTRAL attempting 36 free throws on a night he was intentionally fouled 21 times. The previous record for most misses was 22, set AL WESTby Wilt Chamberlain on Dec. 1, 1967.
How former Jayhawks fared
• Boys basketball vs. Wichita North at McPherson Invitational, 3:45 p.m. FRIDAY NORTH • Boys basketball vs. TBA at McPherson Invitational • Girls basketball vs. Lansing, 7 p.m.
AL EAST
BOSTON RED SOX
BALTIMORE ORIOLES
NEW YORK YANKEES
TAMPA BAY RAYS
TORONTO BLUE JAYS
Cavaliers 91, Nets 78 Melbourne, Australia — New York — Kevin Love Ana Ivanovic was concerned had 17 points and 18 rebounds, LAWRENCE HIGH Cliff Alexander, Portland SOUTH WEST when she heard a loud noise as and Cleveland bounced back TODAY Late game a spectator fell on some stairs from an embarrassing perfor• Bowling at LHS quad, 3 p.m. at Rod Laver Arena, an accident mance against Golden State Tarik Black, L.A. Lakers AL EAST • Boys basketball vs. Wichita that delayed her second-round with a victory over Brooklyn Late game DETROIT (123) Northwest at Topeka Invitational at match for almost a half hour at on Wednesday night. Morris 6-10 6-6 22, Ilyasova 7-14 2-2 18, Topeka West, 3:15 p.m. Drummond 2-4 13-36 17, Jackson 7-15 2-2 17, the Australian Open. LeBron James also had 17 Nick Collison, Oklahoma City Caldwell-Pope 8-18 3-3 22, Johnson 1-4 5-6 7, • Boys swimming at LHS The 2008 finalist was leading points and neither forward Did not play (coach’s decision) Jennings 2-5 0-0 5, Tolliver 2-5 2-2 7, Baynes 3-5 AL CENTRAL Invitational, 3:30 p.m. 2-2 8. Totals 38-80 35-59 123. AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE qualifier Anastasija Sevasplayed in the fourth quarter, HOUSTON (114) AFC TEAM LOGOS 081312: Helmet and team logos for the AFC teams; various sizes; stand-alone; staff; ETA 5 p.m. FRIDAY Joel Embiid, Philadelphia tova 4-3 in the first set when a welcome rest with a home Ariza 1-8 0-0 3, Capela 5-14 0-0 10, Howard • Boys basketball vs. TBA at 0-1 0-0 0, Lawson 8-13 1-1 18, Harden 9-22 12-12 Did not play, inactive medical personnel rushed to the game against the Los Angeles EAST NORTH 33, Jones 8-9 0-1 18, Harrell 1-1 1-2 3, Terry 4-6 Topeka Invitational at Topeka West woman’s aid in the upper level Clippers today. 0-0 10, Brewer 4-12 0-0 11, Thornton 3-9 2-2 Drew Gooden, Washington SOUTH of the 15,000-seat stadium. 8, McDaniels 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 43-95 16-18 114. AL WEST • Wrestling at Blue Valley WEST CLEVELAND (91) Detroit 33 23 29 38—123 Did not play (inactive) The players stayed on the court James 7-12 2-4 17, Love 5-10 6-8 17, Mozgov Northwest tournament, 4 p.m. Houston 23 24 32 35—114 1-2 11, Irving 4-7 0-0 9, Smith 2-9 0-0 4, during the break, getting regular 5-9 3-Point Goals-Detroit 12-30 (Morris 4-6, Dellavedova 3-3 2-2 8, Thompson 6-8 2-2 14, Kirk Hinrich, Chicago Caldwell-Pope AL EAST 3-9, Ilyasova 2-4, Jennings updates from tournament ofShumpert 2-7 1-2 6, Jones 0-3 0-0 0, Jefferson SEABURY ACADEMY 1-2, Jackson 1-3, Tolliver 1-4, Johnson 0-2), Did not play (left leg injury) 1-2 0-0 3, Williams 1-7 0-0 2, Cunningham 0-0 ficials, before Ivanovic returned Houston 12-24 (Brewer 3-5, Harden 3-7, Jones TODAY 0-0 0. Totals 36-77 14-20 91. 2-2, Terry 2-3, Ariza 1-2, Lawson 1-2, Thornton to win 6-3, 6-3. BROOKLYN (78) • Girls basketball at McLouth tour0-3). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-Detroit 69 Sasha Kaun, Cleveland Johnson 1-7 0-0 3, Young 7-14 0-1 14, Lopez “First I felt really bad. I was (Drummond 11), stand-alone; Houston 51 (Harden 17). TEAM LOGOS1-5081312: Helmet and team logos for the AFC teams; various sizes; staff; ETA 5 p.m. nament, 6 p.m. Did not play (inactive) 8-15 0-1 16, SloanAFC 6-10 0-0 12, Ellington 0-0 Assists-Detroit 23 (Jackson 9), Houston 21 really shaking, because the AL CENTRAL 3, Larkin 3-10 0-0 7, Bogdanovic 3-9 0-0 7, Reed • Boys basketball vs. Riverside at (Harden 14). Total Fouls-Detroit 17, Houston sound of the lady falling was 2-2 2-2 6, Bargnani 2-4 0-0 4, Karasev 0-1 0-0 41. A-17,203 (18,023). Ben McLemore, Sacramento McLouth tournament, 6 p.m. 0, Robinson 2-4 2-4 6, Brown 0-3 0-0 0. Totals really loud,” she said. “I stopped 35-84 4-8 78. Late game immediately.” Cleveland 23 28 22 18—91 Knicks 118, Jazz 111, OT Brooklyn 17 21 17 23—78 Tournament organizers said VERITAS CHRISTIAN Marcus Morris, Detroit 3-Point Goals-Cleveland 5-17 (James 1-1, NewAL WEST York — Carmelo Anthe spectator was treated in the Irving 1-2, Jefferson 1-2, Love 1-3, Shumpert 1-3, TODAY Min: 37. Pts: 22. Reb: 5. Ast: 1. thony had 30 points, nine asWilliams 0-1, Smith 0-2, Jones 0-3), Brooklyn stadium before being taken by • Girls basketball at McLouth sists and seven rebounds, lead4-19 (Ellington 1-2, Larkin 1-3, Johnson 1-4, stretcher for observation and Kelly Oubre, Washington tourn., 6 p.m. Bogdanovic 1-5, Young 0-1, Karasev 0-1, Brown ing New York to victory over 0-1, Sloan 0-2). Fouled Out-Young. Reboundsmore treatment. Min: 19. Pts: 0. Reb: 2. Ast: 0. FRIDAY Utah. 57 (Love 18), Brooklyn 43 (Lopez SOUTH With No. 2-ranked Simon Ha- Cleveland 10). Assists-Cleveland 15 (James, Irving 5), WEST • Girls, boys basketball at UTAH (111) lep and No. 7 Venus Williams Brooklyn 20 (Sloan 9). Total Fouls-Cleveland Thomas Robinson, Brooklyn McLouth tournament Hayward 8-19 10-10 27, Lyles 4-7 2-4 13, 13, Brooklyn 16. A-17,732 (17,732). already out, No. 20 Ivanovic is Min: 11. Pts: 6. Reb: 6. Ast: 0. Gobert 4-8 3-5 11, Neto 2-5 0-0 5, Hood 11-21 2-2 AFC TEAM LOGOS 081312: Helmet and team logos 29, forBurke the AFC teams; various sizes; stand-alone; staff; ETA 5 p.m. 5-13 0-0 12, Booker 0-4 3-4 3, Johnson AL EAST the most experienced player in HASKELL 0-4 3-4 3, Withey 2-2 2-2 6, Ingles 1-3 0-0 2. Brandon Rush, Golden State Wizards 106, Heat 87 her quarter. Totals 37-86 25-31 111. TODAY Min: 12. Pts: 2. Reb: 0. Ast: 1. Washington — John Wall Third-seeded Garbine MuNEW YORK (118) • Men’s basketball at Grace Anthony 13-20 4-4 30, Porzingis 4-9 6-6 16, had 18 points and 10 assists, and guruza is in the same half of the Lopez 11-14 0-0 22, Calderon 4-7 0-0 9, Afflalo University, 7 p.m. Andrew Wiggins, Minnesota Bradley Beal added 18 more as draw, and the 2015 Wimbledon 6-11 0-0 14, Williams 6-13 5-6 18, Galloway 3-9 AL CENTRAL FRIDAY 2-2 9, O’Quinn 0-2 0-0 0, Grant 0-4 0-0 0, Vujacic Min: 40. Pts: 23. Reb: 7. Ast: 3. finalist moved into the third round Washington sent injury-rav0-1 0-0 0. Totals 47-90 17-18 118. • Track at JCC Cavalier aged Miami to its sixth loss in for the third straight year at MelUtah 22 26 28 23 12—111 Jeff Withey, Utah Invitational New York 17 20 31 31 19—118 seven games. bourne Park with a 6-4, 6-2 win 3-Point Goals-Utah 12-27 (Hood 5-10, Lyles Min: 9. Pts: 6. Reb: 1. Ast: 0. • Women’s basketball at Northern Miami played without Dwyover Kirsten Flipkens. Muguruza 3-4, Burke 2-4, Neto 1-1, Hayward 1-4, Ingles New Mexico Classic, 6 p.m. AL WEST 0-2, Johnson 0-2), New York 7-17 (Afflalo will next play Barbora Strycova, ane Wade, who was scratched 2-3, Porzingis 2-5, Williams 1-2, Calderon who beat Vania King 7-6 (5), 6-4. due to shoulder soreness about 17 points and Isaiah Canaan 1-3, Galloway 1-3, Anthony 0-1). Fouled OutSPORTS ON TV a half-hour before the game. On the men’s side, No. Rebounds-Utah 52 (Booker, Gobert scored 15 for Philadelphia, Porzingis. 8), New York 47 (Lopez 12). Assists-Utah 19 Halfway through the second 10-seeded John Isner fired 20 TODAY which has won two of three to (Hayward, Hood 5), New York 20 (Anthony 9). quarter, starting center Hassan aces and 53 winners in a 6-3, Total Fouls-Utah 22, New York 25. Technicalsget to six wins on the season. Calderon. A-19,812 (19,763). College Basketball Time Net Cable 7-6 (5), 7-6 (2) win over Marcel Whiteside abruptly fell to the Granollers, No. 23 Gael Monfils floor and with a strained left PHILADELPHIA (96) KU v. OSU replay noon TWCSC 37, 226 Covington 2-8 2-2 8, Noel 2-2 AFC 0-2 4, teams; Okafor various sizes; stand-alone; staff; ETA 5 p.m. AFC TEAM 081312:toHelmet and team logos for the oblique and didLOGOS not return beat fellow Frenchman Nicolas Kentucky v. Arkansas 6 p.m. ESPN 33, 233 9-17 2-2 20, I.Smith 6-11 1-1 13, Sampson 0-3 Warriors 125, Bulls 94 0-0 0, Grant 3-7 5-8 12, Thompson 7-10 0-0 17, Chicago — Stephen Curry Memphis v. Cincinnati 6 p.m. ESPN2 34, 234 the game. Mahut 7-5, 6-4, 6-1, and No. Canaan 5-8 2-2 15, McConnell 0-5 3-4 3, Holmes MIAMI (87) scored 25 points, and Golden Iowa v. Rutgers 32 Joao Sousa beat Santiago 6 p.m. ESPNU 35, 235 2-3 0-0 4. Totals 36-74 15-21 96. Deng 5-11 3-4 16, Bosh 6-10 5-6 18, Whiteside State made it look easy again in Xavier v. UMKC Giraldo 6-3, 7-5, 3-6 6-1. ORLANDO (87) 1-1 0-0 2, Johnson 6-10 0-0 14, Green 2-10 0-0 7 p.m. KSMO 3, 203 Harris 5-13 4-7 15, Frye 1-6 0-0 3, Vucevic beating Chicago. 4, Richardson 2-7 2-2 6, Winslow 4-8 0-0 9, 7-15 1-2 15, Payton 8-13 5-9 21, Fournier 3-14 CHICAGO WHITE SOX
CLEVELAND INDIANS
LOS ANGELES ANGELS OF ANAHEIM
OAKLAND ATHLETICS
BOSTON RED SOX
BALTIMORE ORIOLES
CLEVELAND INDIANS
DETROIT TIGERS
LOS ANGELES ANGELS OF ANAHEIM
OAKLAND ATHLETICS
SEATTLE MARINERS
Bills hire woman to coaching staff Buffalo, N.Y. — The Buffalo Bills have hired Kathryn Smith to be their special teams quality control coach, making her the first full-time female member of an NFL coaching staff. The team announced the move in a release Wednesday. Smith spent last season working as an administrative assistant for Bills assistant coaches on Rex Ryan’s staff. She spent the previous 12 seasons working for the New York Jets in various capacities, including a player personnel assistant from 2007-13. In 2014, Smith served as the Jets assistant to the head coach in Ryan’s final season in New York.
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
NU-OU to resume storied rivarly Lincoln, Neb. — Old rivals Nebraska and Oklahoma have added two more games against each other to their future schedules. Nebraska on Wednesday announced the games for 2029 and 2030. Those are in addition to previously announced meetings in 2021 and 2022. Nebraska-Oklahoma was one of college football’s greatest rivalries, with games in the 1970s and ‘80s usually deciding the Big Eight championship. OU leads the series 45-38-3, but Nebraska won nine of the last 15. The teams last played in the 2010 Big 12 championship game, the year before the Cornhuskers moved to the Big Ten. The 2021 and 2029 games will be at Oklahoma and the 2022 and 2030 games at Nebraska.
Tech QB Mahomes to give up baseball Lubbock, Texas — Texas Tech quarterback Patrick Mahomes has decided to focus on football and won’t rejoin the Red Raiders baseball team this season. Mahomes said Wednesday that after talking with his family he decided it was in his “best interest” to concentrate on football and academics. He is the son of Pat Mahomes, who played for six major-league baseball teams in an 11-year career.
HIGH SCHOOLS HUB:
Stoudemire 5-6 1-2 11, Haslem 0-1 3-4 3, Stokes 2-4 0-0 4. Totals 33-68 14-18 87. WASHINGTON (106) Oubre Jr. 0-2 0-0 0, Nene 8-15 0-0 16, Gortat 7-12 1-2 15, Wall 7-14 3-3 18, Temple 4-6 2-2 11, Beal 7-13 3-4 18, Dudley 5-9 0-0 10, Sessions 2-7 2-2 6, Neal 3-6 0-0 7, Blair 1-1 0-0 2, Eddie 1-1 0-0 3. Totals 45-86 11-13 106. Miami 22 15 27 23— 87 Washington 26 25 30 25—106 3-Point Goals-Miami 7-15 (Deng 3-3, Johnson 2-2, Winslow 1-1, Bosh 1-4, Green 0-2, Richardson 0-3), Washington 5-16 (Temple 1-1, Neal 1-1, Eddie 1-1, Beal 1-3, Wall 1-5, Dudley 0-1, Oubre Jr. 0-2, Sessions 0-2). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-Miami 39 (Deng 8), Washington 43 (Gortat 12). Assists-Miami 23 (Winslow 6), Washington 27 (Wall 10). Total Fouls-Miami 16, Washington 19. A-17,008 (20,308).
DETROIT TIGERS
LOS ANGELES ANGELS OF ANAHEIM
OAKLAND ATHLETICS
SEATTLE MARINERS
BOSTON RED SOX
NEW YORK YANKEES
CHICAGO WHITE SOX
CLEVELAND INDIANS
DETROIT TIGERS
LOS ANGELES ANGELS OF ANAHEIM
OAKLAND ATHLETICS
SEATTLE MARINERS
76ers 96, Magic 87 Orlando, Fla. — Jahlil Okafor scored 20 points, Ish Smith had 13 points and 11 assists, and Philadelphia beat Orlando. Hollis Thompson added
0-1 0-0 0, Barea 0-5 0-0 0, McGee 3-9 0-2 6, Anderson 0-1 2-2 2. Totals 42-97 17-22 106. Minnesota 33 16 18 22 5— 94 Dallas 23 26 15 25 17—106 3-Point Goals—Minnesota 5-23 (Muhammad 2-7, Towns 1-1, Bjelica 1-2, Wiggins 1-2, Prince 0-1, Martin 0-1, LaVine 0-2, Rudez 0-3, Rubio 0-4), Dallas 5-25 (Parsons 3-6, Matthews 2-8, Harris 0-2, Barea 0-2, Williams 0-3, Villanueva 0-4). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds— Minnesota 55 (Towns 17), Dallas 58 (Parsons, McGee 8). Assists—Minnesota 26 (Rubio 11), Dallas 18 (Matthews, Williams, Harris 4). Total Fouls—Minnesota 21, Dallas 15. Technicals— Minnesota delay of game, Dallas delay of game. Flagrant Fouls—Wiggins. A—19,621 (19,200).
Pistons 123, Rockets 114 Houston — Kentavious Caldwell-Pope and Marcus Morris each scored 22 points, and Detroit beat Houston, despite Andre Drummond setting an NBA record by missing 23 free throws.
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Kentucky...............................11⁄2........................ARKANSAS OLD DOMINION..................... 9...........Western Kentucky MIDDLE TENN ST..................15......................North Texas Georgia St............................. 3.............APPALACHIAN ST UL-MONROE........................... 6...................................... Troy NORTHEASTERN.................31⁄2. ............................ Hofstra Wisconsin.............................. 3...............................PENN ST Florida Intl...........................31⁄2. ..TEXAS SAN ANTONIO UT ARLINGTON.....................14...................... Arkansas St UL-LAFAYETTE.....................17.................South Alabama Arkansas LR.......................... 6.............................TEXAS ST CALIFORNIA.........................51⁄2. .......................Arizona St PEPPERDINE........................121⁄2........................San Diego PURDUE.................................. 11.................................Ohio St OREGON................................41⁄2.................. Southern Cal UTEP...................................... 71⁄2. ............ Florida Atlantic ALA-BIRMINGHAM...............15......................................Rice PACIFIC.................................21⁄2. ..........................Portland UC DAVIS................................ 2.....................Cal Riverside Cal Poly SLO.......................31⁄2. ............CS NORTHRIDGE Arizona.................................51⁄2. ...................... STANFORD Byu.........................................81⁄2..LOYOLA MARYMOUNT Utah.......................................31⁄2. ...........WASHINGTON ST
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GOLDEN STATE (125) Barnes 8-13 0-0 19, Green 3-8 0-2 6, Bogut 3-3 0-0 6, Curry 8-18 6-6 25, K.Thompson 7-18 3-4 20, Iguodala 4-7 0-1 10, Barbosa 5-7 2-3 12, Ezeli 1-2 1-2 3, Livingston 6-8 0-0 12, Speights 2-5 0-0 5, Rush 1-4 0-0 2, J.Thompson 0-0 1-2 1, Clark 2-2 0-0 4. Totals 50-95 13-20 125. CHICAGO (94) Snell 1-8 0-0 2, Gibson 2-6 0-0 4, Gasol 0-8 1-2 1, Rose 12-22 5-5 29, Butler 7-16 9-12 23, Moore 6-9 1-2 13, McDermott 1-6 1-1 3, Mirotic 0-5 0-0 0, Portis 7-14 2-2 16, Brooks 1-4 0-0 3, Bairstow 0-1 0-0 0, Felicio 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 37-100 19-24 94. Golden State 34 29 24 38—125 Chicago 18 26 19 31— 94 3-Point Goals—Golden State 12-32 (Barnes 3-5, K.Thompson 3-8, Curry 3-9, Iguodala 2-4, Speights 1-1, Rush 0-2, Green 0-3), Chicago 1-20 (Brooks 1-3, Felicio 0-1, McDermott 0-1, Moore 0-2, Rose 0-2, Butler 0-2, Portis 0-2, Mirotic 0-3, Snell 0-4). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds— Golden State 61 (Bogut 12), Chicago 59 (Gasol, Portis 8). Assists—Golden State 38 (Curry 11), Chicago 14 (Rose, McDermott, Moore, Mirotic, Butler, Snell 2). Total Fouls—Golden State 17, Chicago 17. Technicals—Green, Livingston, Brooks. A—23,152 (20,917).
CHARLOTTE (95) Hairston 5-11 0-0 11, Williams 1-4 1-2 3, Zeller 0-3 3-4 3, Walker 8-15 3-3 21, Batum 0-4 0-0 0, Hawes 2-8 2-2 6, Lin 6-11 4-4 16, Kaminsky 6-12 1-2 15, Daniels 4-7 0-0 11, Roberts 2-4 4-4 9, Hansbrough 0-2 0-0 0. Totals 34-81 18-21 95. OKLAHOMA CITY (109) Durant 9-20 7-10 26, Ibaka 5-9 0-0 11, Adams 3-5 4-6 10, Westbrook 5-14 6-7 16, Roberson 3-4 0-0 7, Payne 3-8 0-1 7, Kanter 3-7 5-6 12, Singler 4-4 0-0 11, Waiters 2-9 0-0 5, McGary 2-3 0-0 4. Totals 39-83 22-30 109. Charlotte 22 23 25 25— 95 Oklahoma City 30 22 36 21—109 3-Point Goals—Charlotte 9-27 (Daniels 3-5, Walker 2-4, Kaminsky 2-4, Roberts 1-2, Hairston 1-4, Lin 0-1, Williams 0-2, Hawes 0-2, Batum 0-3), Oklahoma City 9-24 (Singler 3-3, Roberson 1-1, Kanter 1-1, Payne 1-3, Waiters 1-3, Ibaka 1-4, Durant 1-5, McGary 0-1, Westbrook 0-3). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Charlotte 43 (Hawes, Kaminsky, Batum 6), Oklahoma City 59 (Adams 10). Assists—Charlotte 17 (Kaminsky 4), Oklahoma City 28 (Westbrook 15). Total Fouls—Charlotte 21, Oklahoma City 16. Technicals—Charlotte Coach Clifford, Charlotte defensive three second, Ibaka, Waiters, Oklahoma City defensive three second. A—18,203 (18,203).
N. Dakota v. N. Arizona 7:30p.m. FCSP 146 Ohio St. v. Purdue 8 p.m. ESPN 33, 233 Belmont v. TN-Martin 8 p.m. ESPNU 35, 235 Arizona St. v. California 8 p.m. FS1 150,227 Gonzaga v. St. Mary’s 10p.m. ESPNU 35, 235 Utah v. Washington St. 10p.m. FS1 150,227 Women’s Basketball Time
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Providence v. Marquette 7 p.m. FS1 Pro Basketball
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150,227
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Abu Dhabi HSBC 1 a.m. Golf 156,289 Career Builder Chall. 2 p.m. Golf 156,289 Mitsubishi Electric 6 p.m. Golf 156,289
LATEST LINE NFL Playoffs Favorite.............. Points (O/U)...........Underdog Sunday, Jan 24th. Conference Championships New England..................3 (44.5)..........................DENVER CAROLINA..........................3 (48)...........................Arizona NBA Favorite.............. Points (O/U)...........Underdog NEW ORLEANS.............11⁄2 (202.5)........................ Detroit x-CLEVELAND................OFF (OFF).................LA Clippers Memphis........................11⁄2 (194.5).......................DENVER SACRAMENTO.................1 (218.5)...........................Atlanta San Antonio................131⁄2 (200.5)...................PHOENIX x-LA Clippers Forward B. Griffin is out. COLLEGE BASKETBALL Favorite................... Points................Underdog TOWSON................................. 4...........Coll of Charleston WILLIAM & MARY...............81⁄2....................................Elon Marshall................................11⁄2..................CHARLOTTE U Iowa........................................ 23............................ RUTGERS CINCINNATI.......................... 71⁄2. ......................... Memphis JAMES MADISON...............111⁄2................................Drexel NC WILMINGTON............... 141⁄2..........................Delaware
TEXAS RANGERS
CLEVELAND INDIANS
Mavericks 106, T’wolves 94, OT Raptors 115, Celtics 109 Dallas — Chandler Parsons Toronto — DeMar DeRozan scored seven of his game-high scored 34 points, and Jonas Va- 30 points in overtime as shortlanciunas had his eighth dou- handed Dallas rallied. ble-double with 19 points and (94) 12 rebounds as Toronto won MINNESOTA Prince 0-2 0-0 0, Towns 12-19 2-3 27, Pekovic its season-high sixth straight 2-5 0-0 4, Rubio 1-9 0-0 2, Wiggins 9-17 4-5 23, Bjelica 2-3 0-0 5, Muhammad 6-16 0-0 14, Dieng Thunder 109, Hornets 95 game. 3-7 0-0 6, LaVine 2-4 0-0 4, Martin 3-6 3-3 9, Oklahoma City— Kevin DuRudez 0-3 0-0 0. Totals 40-91 9-11 94. BOSTON (109) rant scored 26 points to help Crowder 7-11 0-0 17, A.Johnson 1-3 0-0 2, DALLAS (106) Parsons 13-20 1-3 30, Villanueva 5-14 4-4 Oklahoma City beat Charlotte Sullinger 1-7 1-2 3, Thomas 7-19 4-4 21, Bradley 9-14 0-0 19, Smart 2-5 2-2 6, Turner 4-6 3-4 11, 14, Pachulia 4-7 4-4 12, Williams 6-14 0-0 12, for its sixth straight win. Matthews 6-16 1-1 15, Harris 5-10 5-6 15, Powell
Zeller 2-6 0-2 4, Olynyk 7-10 1-1 18, Jerebko 3-4 0-0 8. Totals 43-85 11-15 109. TORONTO (115) J.Johnson 2-3 0-0 5, Scola 8-12 0-0 18, Valanciunas 9-9 1-2 19, Lowry 4-11 2-2 14, DeRozan 13-25 8-9 34, Patterson 3-7 0-0 6, Ross 5-9 0-0 14, Joseph 1-6 0-0 2, Biyombo 1-1 1-4 3. Totals 46-83 12-17 115. Boston 27 35 28 19—109 Toronto 35 21 40 19—115 3-Point Goals-Boston 12-26 (Crowder 3-5, Olynyk 3-5, Thomas 3-7, Jerebko 2-2, Bradley 1-4, A.Johnson 0-1, Smart 0-2), Toronto 11-29 (Ross 4-8, Lowry 4-9, Scola 2-4, J.Johnson 1-2, DeRozan 0-1, Joseph 0-2, Patterson 0-3). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-Boston 42 (Turner, Crowder 5), Toronto 46 (Valanciunas 12). Assists-Boston 30 (Thomas 10), Toronto 23 (Lowry 8). Total Fouls-Boston 19, Toronto 15. A-19,800 (19,800).
MINNESOTA TWINS
KANSAS CITY ROYALS
CHICAGO WHITE SOX
BALTIMORE ORIOLES
1-2 9, Napier 0-3 0-0 0, Gordon 3-7 1-1 7, J.Smith 2-4 0-0 4, Hezonja 3-5 3-3 9, Appling 1-3 2-2 4, Marble 0-0 0-0 0, Dedmon 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 33-84 17-26 87. Philadelphia 23 24 34 15—96 Orlando 21 25 25 16—87 3-Point Goals-Philadelphia 9-19 (Canaan 3-4, Thompson 3-5, Covington 2-7, Grant 1-1, Sampson 0-1, Holmes 0-1), Orlando 4-17 (Fournier 2-5, Harris 1-3, Frye 1-4, Hezonja 0-1, Napier 0-1, Payton 0-1, Gordon 0-2). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-Philadelphia 51 (Covington 11), Orlando 53 (Vucevic 11). Assists-Philadelphia 20 (I.Smith 11), Orlando 19 (Payton 10). Total Fouls-Philadelphia 19, Orlando 14. A-17,746 (18,500).
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SANTA CLARA.....................31⁄2. ...............San Francisco SAINT MARY’S, CA............... 3..............................Gonzaga IPFW........................................11⁄2.............North Dakota St MOREHEAD ST....................51⁄2. ...........Tennessee Tech Tenn Chattanooga...........51⁄2. ..........NC GREENSBORO SIENA..................................... 71⁄2. .................................Rider Samford................................. 6........................................VMI EAST TENN ST....................21⁄2. ............................. Mercer EASTERN KENTUCKY........ 71⁄2. .............Jacksonville St WESTERN CAROLINA.......... 9.........................The Citadel South Dakota St.................11⁄2............... ORAL ROBERTS AUSTIN PEAY........................ 6..............SIU Edwardsville MURRAY ST.........................81⁄2...............Eastern Illinois Monmouth.............................10..................... MANHATTAN NORTHERN ARIZONA...........1..................... North Dakota SOUTHERN UTAH................. 4......... Northern Colorado MONTANA............................81⁄2.................................Idaho Nebraska Omaha................ 2................................DENVER Belmont................................51⁄2. ....TENNESSEE MARTIN Eastern Washington.......... 4..................... MONTANA ST Mount St. Mary’s................. 5................. SACRED HEART Home Team in CAPS (c) TRIBUNE CONTENT AGENCY, LLC
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L awrence J ournal -W orld
Thursday, January 21, 2016
| 3C
KANSAS FOOTBALL
Jayhawks seek to fill recruiting class By Matt Tait mtait@ljworld.com
Tuesday marked the first day of the spring semester and the Journal-World learned that seven new members of the Kansas University football team expected to arrive on campus in time for spring football did, in fact, enroll and attend the first day of the new semester. They include mid-year transfers DeeIsaac Davis (DT), Isi Holani (DT) and Stephan Robinson (WR), 2015 commitments Cam Durley (OL) and Shola Ayinde (DB) who were not able to make it to KU last semester and, therefore, will count in the 2016 recruiting class, and likely walk-ons Dagan Haehn (QB) and Keegan Brewer (WR), Lake Dallas High teammates who committed to the program in December. It remains to be seen what impact these players will have on the program, but adding seven players in time for spring practices, which
KU women CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C
Sophomore Chayla Cheadle and freshman forward Tyler Johnson each added eight points for the Jayhawks during Wednesday’s loss, while Jada Brown chipped in seven and Kylee Kopatich six. Kansas shot 9-of-30 from three-point range and finished with fewer turnovers (16-13) more assists (11-8) and twice as many steals (8-4). But even those numbers could not help KU escape its latest offensive nightmare. While the Jayhawks were struggling to put up points, K-State was getting its baskets right at the rim. K-State scored 34 of its 59 points in the paint, with junior forward Breanna Lewis leading the way with 23 points on 10-of-16 shooting. Had it not been for first-half foul trouble, Lewis, who played just 18 minutes, easily could have topped the 30-point mark in this one, as KU’s defense offered little resistance for any of K-State’s players at the rim. “It’s my fault she only played 18 minutes,” KState coach Jeff Mittie said after the game. “And her fault she got in foul trouble. But some coaches would’ve played her a little more.” After a rough first quarter that ended with Kansas trailing 11-2, Schneider said he was pleased with the intensity his team played with on the defensive end. The easy Wildcat buckets were not the result of complete defensive breakdowns by Kansas, rather poise
are set to begin in midMarch and wrap up with the April 9 spring game, provides the rebuilding program with a big lift, at least in terms of added bodies. Second-year KU coach David Beaty and his staff have two recruiting weekends remaining before the Feb. 3 national signing day, and, as luck would have it, the KU basketball program has two Saturday home games during that stretch, this week vs. Texas and Jan. 30 vs. Kentucky. Throughout the years, several KU coaches, including Beaty, have lauded the huge advantage that bringing recruits into Allen Fieldhouse provides because the potential Jayhawks get to see KU’s fan base and campus rocking at its highest level. That certainly will be the case this year, especially one week from now when KU and UK lock up in what figures to be as wild of an environment as you can find in Lawrence.
Because so many players on the 2015 roster counted forward, KU has five open spots remaining to fill in what will wind up being a 17-man class if all spots are filled. Given that five of those names were names KU football fans already knew about — the three mid-year transfers plus Ayinde and Durley — you’re looking at a maximum of 12 new faces being officially added to the KU roster on signing day in two weeks. The seven future Jayhawks who already have committed and seem to be solid with Kansas are: Antione Frazier (OL), Hunter Harris (OL), Chris Hughes (OL), Maciah Long (LB), Kyle Mayberry (DB), Ian Peterson (DB) and Braylon Royal (WR). Here’s a quick look at some of KU’s remaining targets, according to JayhawkSlant.com, in the current recruiting class. DE Amani Bledsoe — 6-5, 270-pound, 4-star DEnd from Lawrence who has narrowed his list to
KANSAS (46) MIN FG FT REB PF TP m-a m-a o-t Timeka O’Neal 22 3-7 0-0 0-3 1 9 Chayla Cheadle 23 2-10 3-5 3-3 1 8 Kylee Kopatich 38 2-8 0-0 1-7 3 6 Lauren Aldridge 40 1-8 2-2 2-2 2 5 C. Manning-Allen 16 0-4 0-0 1-3 3 0 Tyler Johnson 24 3-7 2-3 1-4 1 8 Jada Brown 17 1-5 4-4 1-1 1 7 Aisia Robertson 11 0-0 0-0 0-2 1 3 J. Christopher 9 0-0 0-0 0-2 1 0 team 1-3 Totals 13-54 11-14 10-30 14 46 Three-point goals: 9-30 (O’Neal 3-7, Kopatich 2-6, Brown 1-1, Cheadle 1-5, Robertson 1-5, Aldridge 1-6). Assists: 11 (Cheadle 3, Aldridge 3, O’Neal, Kopatich, Johnson, Robertson, Christopher). Turnovers: 13 (Manning-Allen 4, Robertson 3, O’Neal, Cheadle, Kopatich, Aldridge, Christopher, team 1). Blocked shots: 1 (Johnson). Steals: 8 (Cheadle 3, Brown 2, Kopatich, Aldridge, Manning-Allen). Kansas State 11 16 16 16 — 59 Kansas 2 11 16 17 — 46 Officials: Tina Napier, Felicia Grinter, Gina Cross. Attendance: 2,529.
Ad Astra swimming: Ad Astra Area Aquatics invites your family to experience Lawrence’s only athlete-centered, coachdirected, parent-supported swim team. Tryouts are open, just contact coach Patrick at 785-331-6940 or coach Katie at 785-7667423 or visit the website at adastraareaaquatics.org. Come find out why AAAA is known in our area for its reliable staff and funfriendly-fast culture! l
Horseshoes anyone?: Anyone interested in pitching horseshoes is welcome at 7 p.m. every Thursday at Broken Arrow. Contact Wynne at 843-8450. l
Aquahawks openings: The Aquahawks are always accepting new members. The Aquahawks are a yearround USA Swimmingsponsored competitive swim team. The Aquahawks offer a swim lesson program and competitive swim team for all ages. The Aquahawks are coached by professional coaches with weekly practices geared toward a variety of skill levels. For information contact Andrew Schmidt and crisp ball movement at andrew.aquahawks@ by K-State in the face of gmail.com KU’s defensive pressure. l Both Mittie and SchneiCycling team: Join der said the energy, emoTeam GP VeloTek (www. tion and excitement of gpvelotek.com) to imthe Sunflower Showprove your road cycling. down added to the effort Open to youth and adults turned in by both teams from beginners to adon Wednesday night. vanced cyclists. Contact “You can find our best coach Jim Whittaker quarters,” said Schneider at 913.269.VELO or vewhen asked if Wedneslotek@aol.com day’s effort was one of l the best this season by Next level lessons: the young Jayhawks. “But Next Level Baseball AcadI’m not gonna say we’ve emy offers year-round had a best game when we private and semi-private haven’t won a game in the baseball lessons ages 8-18. league.” Locations in Lawrence, Big Springs and New Century. For information, email Duncanmatt32@yahoo.com like quickness to get to or visit NextLevelBasebalthe lane with similar lAcademy.com success. Taylor’s 22.2 l scoring average in conFUNdamental softball: CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C frence play ranks second Learn the proper mechanonly to Hield’s (28.2). He ics and techniques to play unlike many big men had a 23-point game vs. who love launching softball. Emphasis placed Kansas as a freshman and on fundamental instructhree-pointers, he actually makes a lot of his (41 another as a sophomore. tion teaching the aspects 5. Monte Morris, percent). Niang’s averagof pitching, catching, Iowa State: As if Niang ing 21.5 points in conferfielding, base-running and doesn’t give teams ence games and has an hitting. Coach and team enough to think about overall shooting perconsulting available, too. in late-game situations, centage of .538, an .836 For information, contact Morris loves to shoot success rate from the LuAnn Metsker at 785line. He was very good as with games on the line 331-9438 or dmgshowa freshman and gets bet- as well. The ball is in pig@aol.com his hands, so he gets to l ter every year. He loves decide where the ball Archery club: The taking the big shot with goes. Morris contributed Junior Olympic Archery games on the line and Development Club meets has averaged 20.3 points a jumper, a big rebound and two free throws at at 9 a.m. every Saturday in in his past five games the end of the Cyclones’ the indoor target range at against Kansas. 82-77 victory Monday Overton’s Archery Center, 4. Isaiah Taylor, Texas: Longhorns junior night against No. 1 Okla- 1025 N. Third Street, Suite 119. Youth age 8-20, all point guard uses Evanshoma.
Keegan
Duquesne, Kansas, UMass, Old Dominion, Pitt, Temple, Toledo and Western Michigan. RB Jawon Hamilton — 5-10, 187-pound 3-star RB from Homestead, Florida, who committed to Central Florida on Jan. 15 but recently told JayhawkSlant.com’s Jon Kirby that he still planned to visit KU during one of the final two weekends of this recruiting period. DB Toyous Avery — 6-foot, 200-pound, 2-star safety from Coffeyville CC, considering Arkansas State, Colorado, Colorado State, Jacksonville State, Kansas, Middle Tennessee State, Missouri, South Alabama, Southern Miss and West Virginia. According to Rivals.com, he is scheduled to visit KU this weekend and Mizzou the weekend of the January 29. DB Julian Chandler — 5-11, 165-pound, 2-star DB from Missouri City, Texas (home of Nick Harwell), who committed to Louisiana Tech on May 9, 2015, but also had offers from Cal, Hous-
ton, K-State, Minnesota, Nevada, North Texas, Northwestern, Oklahoma State, Purdue and Texas Tech. DB Hamp Cheevers — 5-11, 160-pound, 2-star DB from Trenton, Florida, considering Boston College, Buffalo, Eastern Michigan, Idaho, Kansas, Marshall, UMass, Tulsa and Utah State. WR Evan Fairs — 6-3, 182-pound, 2-star WR from Richmond, Texas, considering Colorado, Illinois, Maryland, New Mexico, Sam Houston State, Texas State, UTSan Antonio and UNLV. QB Tyriek Starks — 6-2, 188-pound QB from New Orleans considering Georgia Southern, Louisiana-Lafayette, New Mexico State and UCF. Starks, a late addition to KU’s recruiting board, is expected to visit KU this weekend. DB Desmond Fairell — 6-foot, 180-pound DB from Miami, Florida, considering KU and Northern Iowa. Rivals.com lists Fairell as one of KU’s visitors this weekend.
OUR TOWN SPORTS
BOX SCORE KANSAS STATE (59) MIN FG FT REB PF TP m-a m-a o-t Breanna Lewis 28 10-16 3-4 2-13 3 23 K. Wesemann 35 4-7 2-2 0-1 2 13 Shaelyn Martin 34 3-4 2-2 3-10 0 8 Kaylee Page 26 1-3 2-2 0-4 2 5 Megan Deines 28 2-9 0-0 0-3 0 4 Kelly Thomson 8 0-1 2-2 0-0 0 2 Jessica Sheble 6 1-4 0-0 0-1 2 2 A. Taylor 5 1-1 0-0 0-0 1 2 Kayla Goth 19 0-0 0-0 0-1 1 0 Erica Young 6 0-2 0-2 1-2 0 0 Brianna Craig 4 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 A. Hammaker 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 team 0-3 Totals 22-47 11-14 6-38 11 59 Three-point goals: 4-15 (Wesemann 3-5, Page 1-3, Martin 0-1, Thomson 0-1, Sheble 0-1, Deines 0-4). Assists: 8 (Wesemann 3, Deines 3, Lewis, Page). Turnovers: 16 (Lewis 5, Goth 3, Martin 2, Taylor 2, Wesemann, Deines, Sheble, team 1). Blocked shots: 8 (Lewis 7, Young). Steals: 4 (Lewis, Wesemann, Martin, Sheble).
KU and Oklahoma and is the top target left on KU’s priority board. ATH Isaiah Bean — 6-4, 210-pound, 2-star Athlete from Houston who figures to bulk up and play the rush end position considering Fresno State, Iowa State, Tulsa, UNLV, Illinois, UMass, Louisiana-Lafayette and Prairie View A&M.; Is expected to visit KU this weekend. DT Joshua Bailey — 6-3, 270-pound, 3-star Dtackle from Jacksonville, considering Appalachian State, Iowa State, South Alabama, South Florida, Temple, UCF and Western Kentucky. RB Khalil Herbert — 5-10, 190-pound, 2-star RB from Plantation, Florida, considering Appalachian State, Florida Atlantic, Florida International, Fordham, Georgia State, Kansas, Mississippi State, South Florida and Wisconsin. Expected to visit KU this weekend. RB Jo-El Shaw — 6-1, 230-pound, 3-star Fullback from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, considering Bowling Green,
Let us know Do you have a camp or a tournament or a sign-up session on tap? How about someone who turned in a noteworthy performance? We’d like you to tell us about it. Mail it to Our Town Sports, Journal-World, Box 888, Lawrence 66044, fax it to 785 8434512, e-mail to sportsdesk@ljworld.com or call 832-7147.
Center at Kansas University has courts available for rent for basketball, volleyball, racquetball, soccer, baseball, softball and other sports. For information, contact Bernie Kish at 864-0703 or bkish@ ku.edu. l
Rebels looking: The Kansas Rebels U11 baseball team is looking for players. For a private tryout, text Mark Kern at 785-6916940. l
Group run: At 6 p.m. every Thursday, Ad Astra Running (16 E. 8th St.) levels of experience, are invited to join. The Archery holds a group run from its store. It’s called “Mass Center has a full-service Street Milers,” and all pro shop with rental paces and ability levels are equipment available. For information, call Overton’s welcome. For information, call the store at 785-830Archery Center at 8321654 or visit www.overton- 8353 or e-mail j.jenkins@ adastrarunning.com sarcherycenter.com l
Basketball basics: One-to-one instruction by Frank Kelly, for boys and girls of all ages. Fundamentals of shooting, passing, dribbling, defense and rebounding. Ten years coaching experience. References. Cost: $25 per hour. For information, call 393-3162 or email lingofrank@gmail. com l
Baseball lessons: Hourly lessons. Grades K-12. All skill levels. Fundamentals of hitting, pitching, fielding, baserunning and other baseball-related skills. Have references. Call coach Dan at 785-7606161 (baseballknowhow@ weebly.com).
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Royals looking: The U12 Royals baseball team is interested in adding a new player. The Royals will play in the U12 American DCABA league next summer. Player must be 12 or younger as of May 1, 2016. The Royals have a experienced coaching staff with many years of youth and high school level experience. Player will have unlimited access to indoor hitting and pitching facility. Please contact Andy Vigna at 785-691-5656 or at andyvigna14@gmail.com l
Youth baseball tryouts: A youth baseball team is looking for U10 American League kids l for the 2016 season who Basketball lessons: are interested in playing Gary Hammer offers in competitive, yet fun private and small group DCABA baseball. We will basketball lessons. Hamplay in the U10 American mer is the P.E. teacher and regular-season league and a coach at Veritas Christian possibly look into playing School. Affordable prices a couple of tournaments. and excellent instruction! Contact David Pedersen Contact Gary at gjhamat pedersen@ku.edu or mer@sunflower.com or 785-691-5240. l call 785-841-1800. Douglas County l Basketball Academy: Amateur, Ice/Heinrich & Reign Basketball Academy, Houk League Baseball: LLC., offers year-round Registration is being taken elite level agility, speed and for 2016 DCABA leagues basketball training for all along with the U14 Ice/ youth athletes, ages 5-18. Heinrich and Houk leagues. PRICING: 4-Session PackRegistration information is age (1-hour each) for 5-12 available online at www. is $140. 4-Session Packlprd.org. Deadline for team age for 13 & up is $200. entries is the first eight For more information, teams per division. For contact Rebekah Vann at more information, contact 785-766-3056 or reignbLee Ice at ice@lawbacademy@gmail.com. For renceks.org l more information, go to Winter Speed and reignbasketballacademy. Strength Training: LMH weebly.com. Join us on Twitter @reignbbacademy, Performance and Wellness Center is offering classes YouTube and Facebook. com/reignbasketballacad- for 2-5th grade and 6-8th emy. grade. Varsity Sports Trainl ing for competitive high Robinson Center court school athletes available. availability: The Robinson Train with experienced
Certified Strength and Conditioning Coaches and Sport Physical Therapists. For more information: Email adam.rolf@LMH.org www.LMH.org/perform l
Indoor bicycle workouts: Ten-week program developed for cyclists from experts to beginners. Drills are based on your personal heart-rate zones, and perceived exertion, so they appear to be just right for your ability. A workout typically lasts one hour and consists of a series of progressively more intense cycling drills designed to improve your pedaling effiency, leg strength and endurance. Each drill mimics a real bike ride (sprints, hills, pace lines, etc.), and is set to music that matches the effort of the ride. Meet three times per week (Sunday-TuesdayThursday) through March 10. More information: email John McClure at jmcclure@sunflower.com, or call 785-766-8235. l
Baseball camps: The Jayhawk Baseball Camp has several different camp options for area youth in the coming months. We have a variety of hitting, pitching, and catching academies in January — March, and a two-day Spring Training Camp in March. Camps are open to any and all, limited only by number, grade level, and/ or gender. Please contact the KU Baseball Office for more information at 785864-7907, or go to the camp website at http:// www.kuathletics.com l
Weight training: A beginning weight training and conditioning class will be taught by coach Fred Roll, certified strength and conditioning coach. Class is designed for beginners from seventh grade to weekend warriors that want superior fitness for any sport. Emphasis on techniques, body balance, body composition, flexibility, speed, power and change directions. Classes Tuesday and Thursday from 5:30-7 p.m., optional on Saturday. Classes began Jan. 12 and go for 10 weeks. Ends just before schools’ spring sports. Contact coach Roll at 785331-8200 or freroll13@ gmail.com l
FSHS fundraiser: Free State Fall Softball will be holding its annual biscuit & gravy fundraiser on Saturday, Jan. 30 from 8-11 a.m. at the Free State High School cafeteria. Come support the Firebirds, $5 per person.
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Thursday, January 21, 2016
SPORTS
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FS wrestlers cruise By Chris Duderstadt cduderstadt@ljworld.com
Shawnee — Free State High’s wrestling team jumped to a 23-0 advantage in what ended up being a rout of a 43-16 dual victory over Shawnee Mission Northwest on Wednesday. Free State’s Garrett Bradley, Bennett King, Quailan Fowler, Isaiah Jacobs and Tate Steele each won as the Firebirds swept the first five weight classes. “The kids that we wrestled are pretty tough kids, so our challenge was in the lower weights,” Free State coach Mike Gillman said. “We knew if we got past that, we had a pretty good shot at it.” Despite the lopsided final score, nothing came easily for either squad, as there were injury timeouts in five of the first seven matches. The first victory for the Firebirds was a painful one for FSHS 106-pounder Bradley. Shawnee Mission Northwest’s Jerad Habben — ranked third in Class 6A’s 106-pound division — jumped to a
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games. There will be other people lose at those respective places. Still though it does give you the feeling there’s less margin for error moving forward,” Self said. “We talked about this as a group today (in what he called a ‘little visitation session’) ... we shouldn’t be talking about the league race. We should just be talking about getting better and being as good as this team can be. The No. 11 (league titles in row) and is it going to be 12? We talked openly that it’s not a pressure thing intentionally. When a lot of questions are asked it makes you think and expectations are high. It’s not going for 12. It’s going for the first one with this group. They need to look at it that way.” Self addressed with his players the fact they’ve looked lethargic. “I think your bodies can be fresh sometimes but sometimes you are stressed for whatever reason,” Self said. “There could be different things going on with you to maybe create a situation where you do not quite feel as rested. I really feel the last 10 days or so we’ve looked like a team that was fatigued a little bit. That’s not an excuse by any stretch. It’s reality everybody goes through these things at different times during the season. “We haven’t screened. It seems like we are a quarter-step late which doesn’t have anything to do with trying. It has more something to do
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have won two games in overtime and another by a point after climbing back from an 18-point fourth-quarter deficit. But they’re reminded that if a few plays went a different way, they’d have a losing record. “We have to keep working,” Pavlyak said. “Coach (Stroh) told us today, we’re four possessions away from being 3-5. We’ve got nothing to be happy with right now.” Lawrence High’s boys basketball team opens in the Topeka Invitational Tournament against Wichita Northwest (4-5) at 3:15 p.m. today.
HIGH SCHOOL HOOPS
L awrence J ournal -W orld
COLLEGE BASKETBALL ROUNDUP
Eudora Texas stuns boys WVU, 59-49 win; Veritas falls The Associated Press
Chris Duderstadt/Journal-World Photo
FREE STATE HIGH SOPHOMORE TATE STEELE WRAPS HIMSELF around Shawnee Mission Northwest senior Colin Anthony during a dual Wednesday at SM Northwest. Steele won by technical fall, 16-0. 8-0 first-period lead, but lost it all seven seconds into the second with one illegal move. Although Gillman believes there was no ill intent by Habben, the SMNW sophomore picked up Bradley and slammed him to the mat head-first and was eventually disqualified after a long injury timeout. Bradley said after the dual that he still had a bad headache, but plans to use the match as a learning experience. “Really to just get more hand control because he slammed me pretty
hard, and that did not feel good,” Bradley said. While Bradley’s win came in a sudden turn of events, King’s went down to the wire. King held off Charles Brockmann for a 3-2 win by decision that left the SMNW freshman upset after he thought he had a last-second takedown. “I just didn’t want to give up, and lose the team some points,” King said. “I was entitled to those points.” Fowler won by a 9-3 decision, Jacobs won by fall, and Steele was victorious by tech fall.
with maybe our focus or our magic level that we are not quite getting to that we get to at different times,” he added. “We are not a team that is going to win on talent alone. I don’t care what anybody says. We don’t have the so-called lottery picks. What we have is a bunch of really good players. We need to play with that energy to allow us to have the intangibles to win. Talent can win. Intangibles win championships. I’m not sure we’ve played with the same intangibles the last couple games.” He was asked about junior Wayne Selden, Jr., who scored seven points off 3-of-8 shooting at OSU. “Wayne (Selden, Jr.) hasn’t shot it as well. Shooting comes and goes. He probably hasn’t impacted the game as much of late than what he was earlier,” Self said. “We talked about that today a lot. He sees that. He has to rebound, do some different things that give our team a chance other than him just making shots. I look for him to be much more aggressive doing those things starting Saturday (1 p.m., game vs. Texas in Allen Fieldhouse). “Whether it be Frank (Mason III), Devonté (Graham), Perry or Wayne, look at them individually and you can say they’ve all had really, really good years. Look at them individually the last 10 days we have not been quite as good. You don’t go from being a really, really, really outstanding player to not-a-goodplayer in the span of a week. We’ve just happened to hit a rut for the most part where we col-
lectively haven’t done it as well as we were before, something we need to get out of and climb out of and I think we will. We have too good of players not to.” Of freshman forward Cheick Diallo, who had four points and two boards while playing 13 minutes in his first collegiate start Tuesday, Self said: “He was very nervous and understandably so. I think if he is put in that situation again he’ll react a little bit more positively. He’s such a good kid. We talked about it today. He came by the office. He was the first one at least that I saw today. It’s always good to go over those things (that happened in game). He’ll learn from that. I’m excited for the progress that he’s made and even more excited for the progress I think he’s getting ready to make.”
With a win, the Lions would face Kansas City (Kan.) Washington or Topeka High in the semifinals. Olathe South (7-2, No. 6 in 6A) and Highland Park (5-4) highlight the other side of the bracket. The Lions beat both of those schools earlier in the season. “The intensity goes up a little more,” junior guard Braden Solko said of tournament week, “because if you lose, you won’t get the trophy that you want.” The Lions (9-1, No. 3 in 6A) have some extra experience with tournament week, playing in the Blue Valley Shootout in December. “It’s a test playing three in a row,” LHS coach Mike Lewis said. “That’s always a challenge. But
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Top prospect coming to town: KU recruiting target DeAndre Ayton and his Phoenix Hillcrest Academy squad will meet Sunrise Christian at 7 p.m., Saturday, at Free State High. Ayton, a 6-11, 225-pound junior, is ranked No. 4 in the recruiting Class of 2017 by Rivals.com. Ayton is originally from the Bahamas as is KU redshirt forward Dwight Coleby. Ayton will attend the KU-Texas game Saturday on an unofficial recruiting visit. Also in the stands will be Josh Jackson, No. 1 player in the Class of 2016, who will be in town on an official recruiting trip. Jackson is a 6-7 senior guard from Prolific Prep in Napa, California.
Texas 56, No. 6 West Virginia 49 Morgantown, W.Va. — Javan Felix scored the final nine points for Texas against West Virginia on Wednesday. Felix, who finished with 17 points, shot 4-of-9 from the field, including 2-of-3 from three-point J-W Staff Reports range. He was 7-of-8 from Boys the foul line against the Mountaineers (15-3, 4-2 Eudora 57, Big 12), who had not lost Tonganoxie 37 at the WVU Coliseum Tonganoxie — Eudora this season. held Tonganoxie to two points in the third quar- TEXAS (12-6) Taylor 0-8 4-4 4, Felix 4-9 7-8 17, ter of the Cardinals’ 57- Yancy 3-3 1-3 7, Lammert 1-4 2-2 5, 37 high school boys bas- Ibeh 1-1 0-4 2, Mack 2-5 0-1 5, Holland 1-2 0-0 3, Davis Jr. 1-3 0-0 3, Roach Jr. ketball victory over the 1-3 4-8 6, Cleare 2-3 0-0 4. Totals 16-41 Chieftains on Wednesday 18-30 56. VIRGINIA (15-3) in the Tonganoxie Invita- WEST Holton 5-8 0-0 10, Carter 1-9 0-2 3, tional. Miles Jr. 2-8 2-4 8, Ahmad 1-1 0-2 2, The Chieftains will Williams 4-13 3-6 11, Myers 0-0 0-0 0, Paige 2-12 0-0 4, Adrian 0-0 1-2 1, host Holton on Friday. Phillip 1-5 0-0 2, Watkins 0-0 0-0 0, Eudora 20 13 16 8 — 57 Tonganoxie 12 10 2 13 — 37 Eudora — Rouser 6, Elston 2, Vaugh 3, Tolefree 8, Rouser 18, Downing 16, Fawcett 4. Tonganoxie — Logan Williams 3, Keaton Rickard 3, Dylan Staatz 5, Mason Beach 3, Lee-Roi Johnson 2, Kyle Burge 2, Tyler Novotney 5, Chandler Caldwell 14.
Gardner-Edgerton 67, Veritas 58 Spring Hill — Chad Stieben scored 20 points, but Veritas Christian’s boys basketball team fell to Gardner-Edgerton, 6758, on Wednesday night in the Spring Hill Tournament. Miles Dressler added 14 points, and Trey Huslig scored 10 for the Eagles. “Our kids played really hard and played with a lot of energy,” Veritas assistant coach Brett Temple said. “They were active on defense. We’re really proud of our guys’ effort.” Veritas (8-6) will play in the Spring Hill Tournament at 4:30 p.m. today. Veritas 17 16 11 14 — 58 G-E 13 15 17 22 — 67 Veritas — Weston Flory 2, Trey Huslig 10, Chad Stieben 20, Miles Dressler 14, Michael Rask 5, Mark Weinhold 7. Gardner-Edgerton — Austin Hatton 5, Devan Toomey 19, Tydus Webb 4, Bryson Rohr 9, Jack Sprague 2, Nate Wagner 17, Conner Boyt 5, Jordan McIntyre 6.
Perry-Lecompton 53, Oskaloosa 48 Valley Falls — Cam Christman scored 13 points to pace Perry past Oskaloosa in the Valley Falls tournament. The Kaws will face Valley Falls on Friday. Oskie will meet Topeka Cair Paravel. Perry 12 13 13 15 — 53 Oskaloosa 11 18 5 14 — 48 Perry-Lecompton — C. Christman 13, C. Kellum 9, J. SPreer 9, N. Bays 8, M. Bond 6, D. Daniels 3, B. Johanning 3, I. Christman 2. Oskaloosa — S. Adams 17, D. VanHouton 11, H. Reed 9, K. Hopkins 6, J. Cross 3, J. Webb 2.
Girls
Macon 3-5 2-7 8. Totals 19-61 8-23 49. Halftime-Texas 28-25. 3-Point GoalsTexas 6-15 (Felix 2-3, Davis Jr. 1-2, Holland 1-2, Mack 1-3, Lammert 1-3, Taylor 0-2), West Virginia 3-21 (Miles Jr. 2-7, Carter 1-7, Phillip 0-2, Holton 0-2, Paige 0-3). Fouled Out-Phillip. Rebounds-Texas 33 (Taylor 6), West Virginia 49 (Holton 14). Assists-Texas 9 (Roach Jr., Taylor 3), West Virginia 9 (Carter 4). Total Fouls-Texas 21, West Virginia 21. A-9,881.
No. 2 N. Carolina 83, Wake Forest 68 Chapel Hill, N.C. — Brice Johnson had 27 points and 11 rebounds, and North Carolina beat Wake Forest for its 10th straight win. WAKE FOREST (10-8) Miller-McIntyre 3-7 0-3 6, Thomas 8-13 1-2 17, Wilbekin 0-3 0-0 0, Crawford 5-16 6-7 18, Mitoglou 1-4 2-4 4, Moore 2-2 0-0 4, McClinton 0-0 0-0 0, Collins 3-7 3-4 9, Watson 1-3 0-0 2, Hudson 4-9 0-0 8, Prendergast 0-1 0-0 0, VanHorn 0-1 0-0 0, Rike 0-0 0-0 0, O’Brien 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 27-67 12-20 68. NORTH CAROLINA (17-2) Berry II 2-7 3-4 9, Meeks 4-9 1-2 9, Paige 1-8 0-0 2, Johnson 8-12 11-12 27, Jackson 4-13 0-2 8, Britt 2-6 1-2 6, Pinson 1-3 3-5 5, Hicks 3-7 3-5 9, Coker 0-0 0-0 0, Williams 0-1 2-2 2, White 0-0 0-0 0, Coleman 0-1 0-0 0, Maye 3-5 0-0 6, Egbuna 0-0 0-0 0, Dalton 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 28-73 24-34 83. Halftime-North Carolina 46-30. 3-Point Goals-Wake Forest 2-18 (Crawford 2-6, O’Brien 0-1, Watson 0-1, Miller-McIntyre 0-2, Wilbekin 0-2, Mitoglou 0-3, Hudson 0-3), North Carolina 3-18 (Berry II 2-3, Britt 1-3, Williams 0-1, Coleman 0-1, Dalton 0-1, Pinson 0-2, Jackson 0-2, Paige 0-5). Fouled Out-None. ReboundsWake Forest 47 (Thomas 9), North Carolina 48 (Johnson 11). AssistsWake Forest 14 (Crawford 5), North Carolina 14 (Berry II, Jackson 3). Total Fouls-Wake Forest 24, North Carolina 17. Technical-Wake Forest Bench. A-19,053.
No. 4 Villanova 72, Seton Hall 71 Newark, N.J. — Ryan Arcidiacono hit a goahead layup with 32.4 seconds to play. VILLANOVA (17-2) Jenkins 3-6 4-4 12, Ochefu 3-8 0-2 6, Brunson 3-9 0-0 9, Hart 4-9 5-6 15, Arcidiacono 3-9 2-3 10, Booth 1-2 4-7 7, Bridges 4-4 2-2 10, Reynolds 1-1 1-2 3. Totals 22-48 18-26 72. SETON HALL (13-5) Sanogo 0-1 0-0 0, Delgado 5-8 2-2 12, Carrington 6-15 3-4 17, Whitehead 6-18 7-8 21, Rodriguez 5-8 1-2 14, Nzei 0-1 0-0 0, Anthony 0-0 0-0 0, Gordon 2-6 3-4 7, Singh 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 24-58 16-20 71. Halftime-Villanova 35-33. 3-Point Goals-Villanova 10-19 (Brunson 3-5, Arcidiacono 2-4, Jenkins 2-4, Hart 2-5, Booth 1-1), Seton Hall 7-18 (Rodriguez 3-4, Whitehead 2-6, Carrington 2-7, Singh 0-1). Fouled Out-Sanogo. Rebounds-Villanova 35 (Hart 10), Seton Hall 32 (Delgado, Sanogo 8). Assists-Villanova 14 (Arcidiacono, Brunson, Jenkins 4), Seton Hall 14 (Whitehead 5). Total Fouls-Villanova 21, Seton Hall 21. A-8,788.
St. Joseph, Benton 51, Ottawa 28 Basehor — Kamryn Shaffer led Ottawa with Nebraska 72, we love the Topeka In- 10 points in a losing cause No. 11 Michigan St. 71 East Lansing, Mich. — vitational. …We’ve been at the Basehor-Linwood Shavon Shields scored fortunate over the past tournament. 28 points while playing few years to go over and 4 6 7 11 — 28 through hip pain, and play some pretty big Ottawa St. Joe Benton 15 12 13 11 — 51 games.” Ottawa — Shaffer 10, Ferguson 7, Denzel Valentine missed 6, White 3, Lane 2. a shot just before the The Topeka tourna- DeVore St. Joseph Benton — K. Williams ment has extra meaning 18, Bernard 12, Russell 6, J. Williams buzzer to allow Nebraska for the Lions. They’ve 5, Johnson 4, Murphy 2, Ruffcorn 2, to hold on against Michigan State. made it to the champion- Stillman 2. ship game in each of the NEBRASKA (12-8) past three years, winning De Soto 43, Jacobson 0-2 4-4 4, Shields 12-20 4-5 28, White III 3-8 0-0 7, Watson Jr. 6-12 in 2014. In last year’s title Wamego 30 0-0 13, Parker 1-2 0-0 2, Webster 4-8 Tonganoxie — De Soto 2-5 10, McVeigh 3-5 0-0 8, Morrow Jr. game, they lost to Wichita East — which eventu- High’s Mariah Grizzle 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 29-58 10-14 72. ST. (16-4) ally turned into a state and Kristen Saucerman MICHIGAN Costello 3-6 2-5 8, Davis 5-11 3-6 13, Valentine 9-16 0-0 24, Forbes 1-8 both scored 10 points and championship preview. 3, Harris 5-6 0-0 14, Bess 0-2 3-6 “That’s been on our led the girls basketball 0-0 3, McQuaid 1-6 0-0 2, Schilling 0-2 4-4 mind every game. We team to a 43-30 win over 4, Wollenman 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 24-57 71. just know we were one Wamego on Wednesday 12-21 Halftime-Tied 33-33. 3-Point Goalsgame away from a Tope- in the opening round of Nebraska 4-14 (McVeigh 2-3, Watson 1-2, White III 1-4, Parker 0-1, ka tournament champion- the Tonganoxie Tourna- Jr. Jacobson 0-1, Shields 0-3), Michigan ship and one game from ment. St. 11-18 (Valentine 6-8, Harris 4-4, Forbes 1-5, McQuaid 0-1). Fouled Outa state championship,” Bess, White III. Rebounds-Nebraska 32 LHS junior Jackson Mal- De Soto 9 12 10 12 — 43 (Jacobson 8), Michigan St. 38 (Costello 12 7 3 8 — 30 10). Assists-Nebraska 8 (Webster 3), lory said. “We are going Wamego De Soto — Mariah Grizzle 11, Kristen Michigan St. 19 (Valentine 6). Total to use that to motivate us, Saucerman 11, Julia Johnson 10, Fouls-Nebraska 17, Michigan St. 15. especially for this week.” Sydney Jones 8, Tanith Beal 3. A-14,797.
No. 13 Baylor 79, Kansas St. 72, 2 OT Waco, Texas — Al Freeman scored all 11 of his points after regulation, Lester Medford hit the go-ahead free throws to start the second overtime, and Baylor stretched its home winning streak to 15 games with a victory over Kansas State.
KANSAS ST. (11-7) Wade 4-12 1-3 9, Hurt 1-4 4-4 6, Ervin II 0-0 0-0 0, Edwards 2-7 0-0 5, Iwundu 3-10 4-6 10, Stokes 7-14 3-4 20, Brown 3-6 0-0 7, Winter 0-0 0-0 0, Johnson 5-10 1-2 11, Rohleder 0-0 0-0 0, Budke 1-1 2-2 4. Totals 26-64 15-21 72. BAYLOR (15-3) Gathers 2-3 7-15 11, Prince 7-18 3-4 19, Medford 3-7 2-2 9, Wainright 0-0 0-0 0, Freeman 4-11 2-5 11, Lindsey 0-1 0-0 0, Motley 7-7 1-2 15, McClure 3-6 0-0 9, Maston 2-4 1-1 5. Totals 28-57 16-29 79. Halftime-Kansas St. 34-28. End Of Regulation-Tied 59. End Of 1st Overtime-Tied 66. 3-Point GoalsKansas St. 5-10 (Stokes 3-6, Brown 1-1, Edwards 1-3), Baylor 7-18 (McClure 3-6, Prince 2-7, Medford 1-2, Freeman 1-3). Fouled Out-Maston. ReboundsKansas St. 38 (Iwundu 10), Baylor 38 (Prince 13). Assists-Kansas St. 23 (Iwundu 7), Baylor 20 (Medford 13). Total Fouls-Kansas St. 23, Baylor 20. Technical-Prince. A-NA.
No. 15 Miami 67, Boston College 53 Boston — Sheldon McClellan scored 19 points. MIAMI (14-3) Murphy 3-4 0-3 6, Jekiri 2-8 2-4 6, Reed 2-5 3-4 7, McClellan 7-14 3-4 19, Rodriguez 4-9 4-5 12, Newton 4-7 4-4 12, Lawrence Jr. 0-3 0-2 0, Palmer 1-3 1-2 3, Cruz Uceda 1-2 0-0 2. Totals 24-55 17-28 67. BOSTON COLLEGE (7-11) Owens 1-6 0-0 2, Turner 2-4 0-0 5, Clifford 1-4 2-4 4, Robinson 9-14 2-3 20, Carter 4-18 3-4 12, Hicks 1-2 1-2 4, Diallo 3-4 0-0 6, Meznieks 0-2 0-1 0, Milon 0-1 0-0 0, Barnes-Thompkins 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 21-56 8-14 53. Halftime-Miami 29-28. 3-Point Goals-Miami 2-10 (McClellan 2-3, Palmer 0-1, Lawrence Jr. 0-1, Newton 0-2, Rodriguez 0-3), Boston College 3-14 (Hicks 1-1, Turner 1-2, Carter 1-7, Meznieks 0-1, Barnes-Thompkins 0-1, Owens 0-1, Robinson 0-1). Fouled OutNone. Rebounds-Miami 43 (Jekiri 17), Boston College 37 (Clifford 8). AssistsMiami 10 (Rodriguez 4), Boston College 12 (Carter 8). Total FoulsMiami 15, Boston College 19. A-3,286.
No. 17 Louisville 84, Florida State 65 Louisville, Ky. — Quentin Snider scored 20 points, Damion Lee added 14, and Louisville had no problem with Florida State. FLORIDA ST. (12-6) Bojanovsky 0-1 0-0 0, Bookert 7-14 0-1 18, Bacon 4-17 4-8 12, Beasley 10-16 2-5 23, Brandon 0-1 0-0 0, Bell 1-3 0-0 3, Mann 1-3 2-4 4, Koumadje 2-3 1-2 5, Smith 0-1 0-1 0, Saxton 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 25-59 9-21 65. LOUISVILLE (15-3) Lee 5-16 2-3 14, Johnson 3-4 1-2 7, Onuaku 4-8 3-4 11, Snider 8-12 1-1 20, Mitchell 5-13 3-6 13, Lewis 3-3 0-0 6, Avare 0-0 0-0 0, Stockman 1-1 0-0 2, Spalding 0-5 1-2 1, Mahmoud 3-3 0-1 6, Adel 0-1 2-2 2, Levitch 0-1 2-2 2. Totals 32-67 15-23 84. Halftime-Louisville 41-27. 3-Point Goals-Florida St. 6-18 (Bookert 4-6, Bell 1-1, Beasley 1-5, Bacon 0-6), Louisville 5-16 (Snider 3-4, Lee 2-9, Levitch 0-1, Mitchell 0-2). Fouled Out-Beasley. Rebounds-Florida St. 36 (Bacon 10), Louisville 44 (Onuaku 14). AssistsFlorida St. 12 (Bacon, Beasley, Bell, Bookert, Mann 2), Louisville 12 (Lewis 5). Total Fouls-Florida St. 25, Louisville 20. A-21,349.
Big 12 Women No. 19 Oklahoma 92, Texas Tech 53 Norman, Okla. — Kaylon Williams had 18 points, six rebounds and four assists, and Oklahoma used a big first quarter to beat Texas Tech for the Sooners’ tenth straight win in the series. Williams became the 31st player in Oklahoma history to score 1,000 career points. Oklahoma jumped out to a 12-6 lead and did not allow another point in the first quarter to build a 24-point lead. The 30 points were the most scored in a quarter by Oklahoma this season. No. 6 Texas 65, TCU 58 Fort Worth, Texas — Imani Boyette had 19 points, 10 rebounds and six blocks, and Texas bounced back from its first loss by rallying in the second half. Brooke McCarty had a pair of three-pointers during a 10-2 run in the fourth quarter that put the Longhorns (17-1, 6-1 Big 12) ahead for the first time since the sixminute mark of the first quarter.
Thursday, January 21, 2016
jobs.lawrence.com
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647 AREA JOB OPENINGS! BRANDON WOODS ............................. 20
HOME INSTEAD SENIOR CARE .............. 20
MV TRANSPORTATION ......................... 20
BRIGGS AUTO ................................... 15
KU: FACULTY/ACADEMIC/LECTURERS .... 97
USA800, INC. ................................. 134
CITY OF LAWRENCE ............................ 37
KU: STAFF OPENINGS ......................... 56
VALEO ............................................. 20
CLO ................................................ 12
KU: STUDENT OPENINGS .................. 115
WESTAFF .......................................... 25
FEDERAL HOME LOAN BANK ..................8
LAWRENCE MEMORIAL HOSPITAL .......... 12
FEDEX ............................................. 25
MISCELLANEOUS ............................... 31
L E A R N M O R E AT J O B S . L AW R E N C E . C O M
AT T E N T I O N E M P L OY E R S !
Email your number of job openings to Peter at psteimle@ljworld.com. *Approximate number of job openings at the time of this printing.
LAWRENCE Deliver Newspapers!
Administrative & Database Assistants
It’s Fun! Outstanding pay Part-time work
Fundraising and public relations firm seeking a full-time administrative assistant and a full-time database assistant to work in team-oriented environment. Duties include database management for numerous clients mail-merge mailings & related clerical and receptionist tasks. Requires strong organization, communication, & computer skills. Must be dependable, detail oriented, motivated, able to work independently & handle multiple projects at the same time. Proficiency in Microsoft Word, Excel, Raiser’s Edge, & Adobe Acrobat preferred. Salary + benefits.
Be an independent contractor, Deliver every day, between 2-6 a.m. Reliable vehicle, driver’s license, insurance in your own name, and a phone required.
Email resume & cover letter to: employment@penningtonco.com
645 New Hampshire 816-805-6780 jinsco@ljworld.com
Come in & Apply!
Learn more online at: penningtonco.com
General School Aide BusinessOpportunity NEW YEAR, NEW AIRLINE CAREERS GET FAA certified Aviation Technician training. Financial aid for qualified students. Career placement assistance. Call Aviation Institute of Maintenance 1-877-818-0783 www.FixJets.com
Customer Service
9 Hard Workers needed NOW! $10 hr to train. Quickly earn $12-$15 hr Weekly pay checks. Paid Vacations No Weekends
Sell your structured settlement or annuity payments for CASH NOW. You don’t have to wait for your future payments any longer! Call 1-800-283-3601
Call today! 785-841-9999
Find Jobs & More Jobs.Lawrence.com
Baldwin City USD 348 has an immediate opening for a part-time non-certified ELL aide. 4 hours a day, $9.35/hr Apply online at www.usd348.com Questions? Contact Rob McKim rmckim@usd348.com 785-594-2725 EOE
School Dispatch/ Clerical - Baldwin Baldwin City USD 348 has an immediate opening for a full-time Transportation Dispatcher/Clerical position. $9.41/hr Apply online at www.usd348.com Questions? Contact Russell Harding rharding@usd348.com 785-594-7433 EOE
Management City of Lawrence
Management Solid Waste The City of Lawrence, Kansas’ Public Works Dept is seeking to fill the position of Solid Waste Operations Supervisor. Responsible for division administrative and financial services, hazardous waste programs, recycling and composting mgmt. and outreach activities. Must hv Bachelors Degree and at least 4 yrs of related exp. $54,596 TO $79,165 PER YR DOQ. Must pass background check, and post-offer phys/drg screening. Apply by 1/29/2016 To Apply Go To: www.LawrenceKS.org/jobs EOE M/F/D
MERCHANDISE PETS TO PLACE AN AD:
AUCTIONS Auction Calendar AUCTION Sunday, Jan. 24th, 10 AM 1620 S.E. Green Rd Tecumseh, KS 2006 Mini Cooper, Toro Zero Turn Mower, Tools, Kayak, Native American items, Eclectic items, Antiques & much more PICTURES & LIST ONLINE whunterauctions.com Jack & Sandy Hochstedler Wayne Hunter, Auctioneer 785-554-3049 Public Auction Sat., Jan.23rd, 10:00 AM 408 Pearson, Waverly, KS SIGNS, AUTO & TOOL RELATED ADVERTISING- SODA BOTTLES & OTHER, CALENDARS, DISPLAYS, FURNITURE, ART & DÉCOR, PAPER & OTHER COLLECTIBLES, PRIMITIVES, STONEWARE, DISHES, POULTRY & MISC. JOHN DEERE COLLECTIBLES, METAL TRUCKS & OTHER TOYS
Branden Otto, auctioneer 913-710-7111 www.ottoauctioneering.com CHECK PICS & LIST ONLINE! PUBLIC AUCTION Sat., January 23, 9:30 AM American Legion 3408 W. 6th St Lawrence, KS 200+ Farm & Construction TOYS! Winchester Commemorative Firearms, 35+ Shotguns/ Rifles/ Revolvers/ Pistols, Collectibles & Misc. SEE WEB FOR PICS! Elston Auctions 785-594-0505|785-218-7851 www.kansasauctions.net/elston
PUBLIC AUCTION Skid loader, woodworking welding & powder coating equipment. Online only. Bid now at billfair.com 1.800.887.6929
785.832.2222
Floor Coverings
NOTICES TO PLACE AN AD:
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MERCHANDISE
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Special Notices
Special Notices
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CNA/CMA CLASSES!
AUTO INSURANCE STARTING AT $25/ MONTH! Call 877-929-9397
Lawrence, KS
Business Announcements CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE TRAINING! Online Training gets you job ready in months! FINANCIAL AID AVAILABLE for those who qualify! HS Diploma/GED required. & PC/Internet needed! 1-888-512-7120
Seeking pictures & information of the OLD Kaw Valley School House on E. 15th St. between Eudora & Lawrence, which burned down in 1964. Call 785-690-7129
SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY BENEFITS. Unable to work? Denied benefits? We Can Help! WIN or Pay Nothing! Contact Bill GorSpecial Notices don & Associates at 1-800-706-8742 to start A PLACE FOR MOM. The your application today! nation’s largest senior living referral service. Con- Call now to secure a super low rate on your Mortgage. tact our trusted, local experts today! Our Don’t wait for Rates to inAct Now! Call service is FREE/no obliga- crease. 1-888-859-9539 tion. CALL 1-800-717-2905 All Things Basementy! Base- Are you in BIG trouble with ment Systems Inc. Call us the IRS? Stop wage & for all your basement needs! bank levies, liens & Waterproofing, Finishing, audits, unfiled tax reStructural Repairs, Humidity turns, payroll issues, & reand Mold Control FREE ESTI- solve tax debt FAST. Call MATES! Call 1-800-998-5574 844-245-2287
CNA DAY CLASSES Jan 25 - Feb 17 8.30am-3pm • M-Th Feb 22- Mar 11 8.30am-3pm • M-Th Mar 21 - April 13 8.30am-3pm M-Th CNA EVENING CLASSES LAWRENCE KS Feb 2 - Mar 11 5pm-9pm • T/Th/F CMA DAY CLASSES LAWRENCE KS Dec 1 -Dec 23 8.30am-2pm • M/W/F Feb 2- Mar 11 8.30am-2pm M/W/F CMA EVENING CLASSES LAWRENCE KS Feb 2- Mar 11 5pm-9pm M/W/F
LOST & FOUND
Computer-Camera DESKTOP COMPUTER MONITOR LG. Beautiful condition, 24” used a few months. $50 Cash only. 785-843-7205 DESKTOP COMPUTER MONITOR Samsung hardly used. $45 cash only. 785-843-7205
Machinery-Tools
BEST SALE EVER!!! Need Truck topper with side New Carpet or Floor- tool boxes. Fits small ing??? All this Special truck bed (came off Ford Number for $250.00 off. Ranger) back window. Limited Time. Free In $500 OBO- 785-331-4501 Home Estimate!! Call Empire Today@ Miscellaneous 1-844-369-3371 Find the Right Carpet, Flooring & Window Treat- Acorn Stairlifts. The AFFORDsolution to your ments. Ask about our 50% ABLE off specials & our Low stairs!** Limited time- $250 Price Guarantee. Offer Ex- Off your Stairlift Purchase!** Buy Direct & Save. Please pires Soon. Call now call 1-800-304-4489 for Free 1-888-906-1887 DVD and brochure.
Furniture Work Desk Walnut 60”L x 34”D x 28.5”H. Very sturdy large drawers, side cupboard. Buyer picks up. $85. 785-865-4215
Health & Beauty CPAP/BIPAP supplies at little or no cost from Allied Medical Supply Network! Fresh supplies delivered right to your door. Insurance may cover all costs. 800-902-9352 Got Knee Pain? Back Pain? Shoulder Pain? Get a pain-relieving brace -little or NO cost to you. Medicare Patients Call Health Hotline Now! 1-800-900-5406
Household Misc. DECORATIVE WALL MIRROR beautiful large mirror, 45”x16”, from Pier 1 Imports. Two, each $40 (Original price $135 each) cash only. 785-843-7205
Need an apartment? Place your ad at apartments.lawrence.com or email classifieds@ljworld.com
classifieds@ljworld.com
JAYHAWK BASKETBALL FANS Have some holiday CASH you would like to SPEND? Get ready for basketball with this 3ft x-3ft KU rug— PRICE REDUCED: $35 Please leave a message 785-841-7635
Lawn, Garden & Nursery Gas grill & Patio Furniture: -Weber Gas Grill: $50, -Round Wood Patio Table & 4 chairs: $125
785-842-4530
Advertise your product or service nationwide or by region in over 7 million households in North America’s best suburbs! Place your classified ad in over 570 suburban newspapers just like this one. Call Classified Avenue at 888-486-2466 -Antique Oak “S” Roll top (1900-50’s era)- $1000 OBO -Toro SGR-13 walk behind stump grinder w/ Honda GX 390$1500 OBO -Porter Cable 14”, 2 spd floor band saw- $250 OBO -Antique Oak Pressed Back Rocker- $150 OBO -Fireplace insert, natural gas fired complete- $150 OBO -Lane Cedar Chest, 44” L x 16” W- $75 OBO -Woodburning Fireplace insert, fire brick lined w/gold trim & blower- $350 OBO -Wood Dining Table w/ leaves, extends 78”- $50 OBO CASH ONLY, 785-331-9983 Emergencies can strike at any time. Wise Food Storage makes it easy to prepare with tasty, easy-to-cook meals that have a 25-year shelf life. FREE SAMPLE. Call: 844-797-6877 Get The Big Deal from DirecTV! Act Now- $19.99/mo. Free 3-Months of HBO, Starz, SHOWTIME & CINEMAX FREE GENIE HD/DVR Upgrade! 2014 NFL Sunday Ticket Included with Select Packages. New Customers Only IV Support Holdings LLC- An authorized DirecTV Dealer Some exclusions apply - Call for details 1-800-897-4169
Music-Stereo
PIANOS • H.L. Phillips upright $650 •Whitney Spinet - $500 • Cable Nelson - $500 • Gulbranson Spinet - $450 Prices include tuning & delivery
785-832-9906
PETS Pets
Cavapoo pups, cute and friendly. 1st shot & wormed. 2F $550, 1M $450. Call or text, 785-448-8440
MEET PAN!!! Adoptable 1 yr old male boxer mix, currently being fostered for Lawrence Humane Soc. Foster family loves Pan, but can’t keep him. So loving & sweet!
Has been to puppy training, knows basic commands. Free-roaming while humans are away and is well behaved. Smart & Outgoing- loves walks, jogs, chasing toys. Particular about dogs, not sure about cats. No pets ideal.
785-331-8244
Safe Step Walk-In Tub Alert for Seniors. Bathroom falls can be fatal. Approved by Arthritis Foundation. Therapeutic Jets. Less Than 4 Inch Step-In. Wide Door. Anti-Slip Floors. American Made. Installation Included. UKC Registered Pure Breed Call 800-715-6786 for $750 Rat Terrier Puppies Hand Off. Raised. Born Nov. 9, 2015. 5 boys (4 black & white Need to sell your car? and 1 brown & white). 1 girl, black and white. $500 Call 785-832-2222 firm. Serious calls only, or email 785-249-1221 and leave a classifieds@ljworld.com message.
Found Item FOUND RING What looks to be a woman’s wedding ring. Found in parking lot at Dillon’s on Lawrence Avenue. Call to identify: 785-766-3469
Thicker line? Bolder heading? Color background or Logo?
CNA REFRESHER/CMA UPDATE LAWRENCE Jan 22/23, Feb 5/6, 19/20 Mar4/5, 25/26
Ask how to get these features in your ad TODAY!!
CALL NOW- 785.331.2025 trinitycareerinstitute.com
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renceKS @JobsLawing s at the best for the latest open companies in Northeast Kansas!
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Thursday, January 21, 2016
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L AWRENCE J OURNAL -W ORLD
CARS TO PLACE AN AD:
TRANSPORTATION
785.832.2222 Dodge
classifieds@ljworld.com Ford Cars
USED CAR GIANT
Ford Crossovers
2009 NISSAN MAXIMA 3.5 SV
Buick Cars
Leather, Roof, Loaded!
2007 Dodge Nitro SLT
2014 Ford Fusion Hybrid Titanium Terrific Fuel Economy
Leather, Roof, 4x4 Stk#PL2042 Stk#315C969 Buick 2006 Lucerne CX
$9,495
Remote start, dual power seat, abs, alloy wheels, power equipment, very roomy and surprising comfort. Stk#482591
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Only $7,250
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
$18,495 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
2012 Ford Escape XLS
$13,495 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Stock #2PL1952
$11,495
2014 FORD FUSION TITANIUM Save BIG! Performance! Luxury!
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
UCG PRICE
Stock #1P1244
Stock #PL2048
$17,494
$12,995
2011 FORD TAURUS SHO Performance and Luxury in One!
UCG PRICE
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
AWD, Local Trade
UCG PRICE
Local Owner, Full Power Stk#PL2132
2011 FORD EDGE LIMITED
UCG PRICE
Stock #115C1074
$20,718
785-727-7151
Ford Cars
23rd & Alabama, Lawrence www.lairdnollerlawrence.com Ford Trucks
2014 Ford Focus SE 2012 Buick Regal GS High Performance! 6 Speed Sedan!
2014 Ford Fusion Titanium
Stk#3PL1962
Save Big! Performance! Luxury!
$18,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
Stk#PL2048
$17,494 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Hatchback, Full Power
Ford 2009 Flex SEL
Stk#116B438
One owner, leather heated/ dual power seats, alloy wheels, CD changer, power equip, 3rd row seating the entire family! Stk#54420A1
$12,495 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Ford SUVs
Stk#215T1113B
1992 Ford Ranger Custom Only 58,000 Miles!!
Stk#PL2109
$6,995
$27,810
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
2011 Ford Focus SE Loaded, Local Trade Stk#115T764
2005 Chevrolet Impala Base
2013 Ford Fusion Hybrid Titanium
$10,776
Perfect Starter Car!
What a Price For A Titanium!
Stk#215T926
Stk#115L1044
$2,495
$15,140
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
2012 Ford F-150 XLT Crew Cab, Ecoboost, 4x4
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
$1,000
Stk#115T1084
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
2013 Ford Expedition EL XLT
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Leather, 4x4,Full Power
Need an apartment?
Stk#215T877
$29,384
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Place your ad at apartments.lawrence.com or email classifieds@ljworld.com
GMC SUVs
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
$4,495 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Dodge Trucks
Stk#116C458
$31,499 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
2010 GMC Terrain SLT-1
8 Passenger, 4x4, XLT
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Ford Crossovers
$9,995
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
Call Coop at
888-631-6458
$13,495
2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
4x4, Sport
Stk#PL1992
Stk#2PL2076
$12,995
2013 Ford Escape SE
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
888-631-6458
Dale Willey Automotive 2840 Iowa Street (785) 843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047 JackEllenaHonda.com 4WD Just in time for winter, Moonroof, 115K miles, Local Owner, Great Value Stk# F784A
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
2014 Ford Explorer Limited 4x4, Leather, Loaded
Stk#PL2108
Stk#PL2072
2013 Honda Accord EX
$25,995
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Stk#116T495
2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047
$30,995
GMC 2007 Yukon SLT
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
4wd, premium wheels, remote start, running boards, leather heated seats, sunroof, navigation, Bose sound, DVD, and much more! Stk#369651
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Only $19,814 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
GMC Trucks
JackEllenaHonda.com
Certified Pre-Owned,21K miles, 7 Year/100,000 mile warranty, 182-pt. Mechanical Inspection. Stk# LF722A
Only $18,997 Call Coop at 2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047 JackEllenaHonda.com
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
2003 Ford Ranger XLT 2013 Honda Accord EX
$8,995
2011 Ford Taurus SHO
2013 Ford Escape SE
2012 Ford Explorer XLT
Wow! New Body Stle!
Ecoboost, Leather
Quad Cab, 4x4
Performance and Luxury in One!
Stk#216L122B
Stk#115C1074
Stk#PL2118
Stk#116T361
$11,094
$20,718
$14,709
$20,995
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
We Buy all Domestic cars, trucks, and suvs. Call Scott 785-727-7151
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
23rd & Alabama - 2829 Iowa
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
LairdNollerLawrence.com
Call Coop at
888-631-6458
2013 GMC Sierra 1500 SLE
2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047
Beautiful, White w/ High Polish Wheels!
JackEllenaHonda.com
Stk#216PL356
$28,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
Certified Pre-Owned, 4WD, 78K miles, 7 year/100K mile warranty, 8 Passenger, 182-pt. Inspection. Stk# F053A
Only $23,995
Stk#215T765
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
2012 Honda Pilot EX 4WD
888-631-6458
FX4, Extended Cab, 4X4
2005 Dodge Ram 1500 SLT
Call Coop at
888-631-6458
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Only $14,995
Only 13,000 Miles!
$15,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Honda SUVs
2010 Honda CR-V 4WD
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
Off Lease Special
$6,495
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
JackEllenaHonda.com
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
2013 Ford F-150
2012 Ford Mustang V6
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Stk#2PL2029
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Only $13,997
Leather, Roof, Heated Seats
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Auto, Spolier, Alloys
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
2008 Ford Expedition XLT Stk#1PL2096
Come and Get It!!
2000 Dodge Dakota Sport
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
$52,995
2014 Ford Focus SE
$12,283
2013 Honda Accord EX
$5,995
Stk#PL2062
Stk#115T1126B
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Fully Loaded, 57K miles, Leather, Moonroof, Great Deal, Fully Inspected, Awesome Condition, Well Maintained. Stk# F670A
2015 Ford Expedition Platinum
Stk#PL2131
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Stk#116M448
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
2015 Ford Mustang GT Premium
$4,495
Terrific Condition!
Save $10,000 Off New Price
Leather, Loaded, Only 54,000 Miles!
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Stk#116T233
2008 Honda CBR 600
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Off Lease Special
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
2001 Honda Accord EX Economy and Reliability
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
2002 Chevrolet Impala
Honda Cars
250 Rebel -Cheap Transportation!
Only $12,415 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
Honda Cars
2007 Honda Rebel
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Chevrolet Cars
Ford Trucks
Need to sell your car? Place your ad at classifieds.lawrence.com
Certified Pre-Owned, Local One-Owner, 31K miles, 7 year/100,000 mile Warranty. Stk# F605A
Only $17,888 Call Coop at
888-631-6458
TRANSPORTATION SPECIAL! 10 LINES & PHOTO:
7 DAYS $19.95 28 DAYS $49.95 DOESN’T SELL IN 28 DAYS?
+FREE RENEWAL!
2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047
ADVERTISE TODAY!
JackEllenaHonda.com
CALL 832-2222
L AWRENCE J OURNAL -W ORLD
Thursday, January 21, 2016
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CARS TO PLACE AN AD: Hyundai Cars
785.832.2222 Jeep
classiďŹ eds@ljworld.com
Kia Crossovers
Lincoln Crossovers Nissan Crossovers
Toyota Cars
Toyota SUVs
Volkswagen Cars
2003 Toyota Highlander Limited Local Trade, Terrific Condition Stk#115T1126A
2013 Hyundai Accent SE Hatchback, Full Power
Stk#1PL2094
$10,995
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
2015 Nissan Pathfinder SL
2012 Toyota Camry Hybrid XLE
$9,994
2012 Volkswagen Beetle 2.0TSi
Kia 2006 Sorrento
$47,000 New. Save Big!!
4x4, Low Miles
Rare Find. Toyota Hybrid
4WD LX, alloy wheels, power equipment, cruise control, great communter car and very affordable. Stk#54420A1
Stk#PL2107
Stk#115T1025
Stk#216M062
$32,978
$32,994
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Oscar Mike Edition. Hardtop
Stk#1PL1937
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2015 Lincoln MKC Base
2015 Jeep Wrangler Unlimited Sport
$30,987 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Only $8,555 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
Lincoln Cars
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Stk#1PL1991
$15,994 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Toyota Vans
Turbo Charged
$12,994 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
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Nissan Trucks
Kia Cars
2012 Hyundai Elantra Limited
Dale Willey Automotive 2840 Iowa Street (785) 843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
Loaded, Navigation, Leather, Moonroof, Alloy Wheels, 61K miles, Thousands less than a Honda. Stk# G077A
888-631-6458
2015 Lincoln MKX Local Trade, Terrific Condition
2014 Nissan Frontier PRO
$37,995
Low Miles, Leather, 4x4
Call Coop at 2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047 JackEllenaHonda.com
Great Family Van!
Nissan Cars
Stk#116L515
Only $13,495
888-631-6458
2005 Toyota Sienna LE
2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047 JackEllenaHonda.com
2007 Toyota Camry Solara SLE
Stk#116M169
Leather, Roof, SLE
$8,495
FWD, automatic, power equipment, cruise control, spoiler, alloy wheels. Stk#594834
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
$25,495
2013 Nissan Altima 2.5 SV
Only $6,777
SV, 38 MPG, Great Deal!
Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
Stk#PL2124
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
$9,214 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
2007 Lincoln MKZ Base
Stk#PL2099
Luxury at a Discount!
$16,999
2012 Kia Sorento LX
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Great Space, 77K miles, Local Ower, Automatic, Safe Vehicle, Fully Inspected and Well Maintained. Stk# F368B
Only $15,990 Call Coop at
888-631-6458 2013 Hyundai Veloster
2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047
Sporty, Manual Transmission
JackEllenaHonda.com
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
4wd crew cab, alloy wheels, power seat, v8, power equipment, cd changer, running boards, bed liner, tow package, & more! Stk#371951
We Buy all Domestic cars, trucks, and suvs. Call Scott 785-727-7151
SELLING A MOTORCYCLE? Find A Buyer FAST! Includes: 10 Lines of Text + Photo
28 Days - $49.95 - Doesn’t sell in 28 days? + FREE RENEWAL!
23rd & Alabama - 2829 Iowa
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
LairdNollerLawrence.com
Stk#2PL1952
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
2013 Toyota Sienna LE
Power windows, cruise control, great dependable transportations without paying a lot! Only $4,455 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
7 Passenger, Power Sliding Doors, 76K miles, Local Owner, Awesome Condition, Well Maintained. Stk# G040A
Only $20,490
2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047
Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
JackEllenaHonda.com
Pontiac Cars
Volkswagen
Stk#315T787C Toyota 2005 Prius
Call 785-832-2222
$10,995
FWD, 4 Cyl. Hybrid, power equipment, fantastic fuel economy, great commuter. Stk#13646
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
classifieds@ljworld.com
2010 Harley Davidson Road King Get Ready For The Summer Now!
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
785-832-2222
105 cc’s, Black, 2,500 miles w/extendedservice plan. $19,500. (785)218-1568
Call Coop at
Only $14,486
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Thicker line? Bolder heading? Color background or Logo?
HarleyDavidson 2015 Road Glide FLTRX
888-631-6458
$11,495
Ask how to get these features in your ad TODAY!!
Call Today!
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
2009 Nissan Maxima 3.5 SV
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Motorcycle-ATV
Toyota 2001 Corolla LE Nissan 2008 Titan PRO X
Leather, Sunroof, Loade
7 Days - $19.95
Stk#115T1041
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Stk#1PL2105
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www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
$11,995
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
$12,995
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Stk#1P1244
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
$11,995
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
Kia Crossovers
Leather, Roof, Loaded
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
$14,598 2013 Hyundai Sonata Limited
AWD, Local Trade
Stk#1PL2070
Stk#115T1014 Kia 2008 Spectra SX
2012 Volkswagen Beetle 2.0TSi
Pontiac 2007 G6 GT Coupe, Sporty & Fun to drive, V6, leather heated seats, sunroof, alloy wheels, and more! Stk#32726B2 Only $8,436 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
Only $8,841
Volkswagen 2015 Passat
Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
TSI, one owner, power equipment, only 14K miles— why buy new? Save thousands! Stk#12174 Only $16,500
Need an apartment? Place your ad at apartments.lawrence.com or email classifieds@ljworld.com
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
“I bought an off-road vehicle at a blind auction. ot it delivered...
Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
it was a canoe.�
Landscaping
Pet Services
SERVICES TO PLACE AN AD: Antique/Estate Liquidation
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
Auctioneers
785.832.2222 Carpentry
classiďŹ eds@ljworld.com Concrete
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
CTi of Mid America Concrete Restoration & Resurfacing Driveways, Patios, Pool Decks & More CTiofMidAmerica.com 785-893-8110
Need to sell your car? Place your ad at classifieds.lawrence.com
Stamped & Reg. Concrete, Patios, Walks, Driveways, Acid Staining & Overlays, Tear-Out & Replacement Jayhawk Concrete Inc. 785-979-5261
Cleaning
Decks & Fences
Foundation Repair
DECK BUILDER
FOUNDATION REPAIR
Over 25 yrs. exp. Licensed & Insured. Decks, deck covers, pergolas, screened porches, & all types of repairs. Call 913-209-4055 for Free estimates or go to prodeckanddesign.com
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
Foundation and Masonry Specialist Water prevention systems for basements, Sump pumps, foundation supports & repair and more. Call 785-221-3568
Construction
Home Improvements Full Remodels & Odd Jobs, Interior/Exterior Painting, Installation & Repair of: Deck Drywall Siding Replacement Gutters Privacy Fencing Doors & Trim Commercial Build-out Build-to-suit services Fully Insured 22 yrs. experience
913-488-7320
Higgins Handyman
Auctioneers
HOUSE CLEANER ADDING NEW CUSTOMERS Years of experience, references available, Insured. 785-748-9815 (local)
800-887-6929 www.billfair.com
Dirt-Manure-Mulch
JAYHAWK GUTTERING Seamless aluminum guttering. Many colors to choose from. Install, repair, screen, clean-out. Locally owned. Insured. Free estimates.
785-842-0094 jayhawkguttering.com
Thicker line? Bolder heading? Color background or Logo?
STARTING or BUILDING a Business?
785-832-2222 classifieds@ljworld.com
Remodeling Specialist Handyman Services • 30 Yrs Exp Residential & Commercial 785.608.8159 rrodecap@yahoo.com
75=E O 3L74AE +;6;@9 O 7@57E O 66;F;A@E *7?A67> O /73F:7DBDAA8;@9 "@EGD76 O KDE 7JB 785-550-5592
New York Housekeeping Accepting clients for weekly, bi-weekly, seasonal or special occasion cleaning. Excellent References. Beth - 785-766-6762
Home Improvements
Ask how to get these features in your ad TODAY!!
Rich Black Top Soil No Chemicals Machine Pulverized Pickup or Delivery
Call: 785-832-2222
913-962-0798 Fast Service
Serving KC over 40 years
AAA Home Improvements Int/Ext Repairs, Painting, Tree work & more. We do it all! 20 Yrs. Exp. w/ Ins. and local ref. Will beat all est. Call 785-917-9168
Lawn, Garden & Nursery Golden Rule Lawncare Mowing & lawn cleanup Snow Removal Family owned & operated Call for Free Est. Insured. Eugene Yoder 785-224-9436
Personalized, professional, full-service pet grooming. Low prices. Self owned & operated. 785-842-7118 www.Platinum-Paws.com
Plumbing RETIRED MASTER PLUMBER & Handyman needs small work. Bill Morgan 816-523-5703
Painting Snow Removal
Guttering Services Stacked Deck
YARDBIRDS LANDSCAPING Father (retired) & Son Operation W/Experience & Top of the Line Machinery Snow Removal Call 785-766-1280
Interior/exterior painting, roofing, roof repairs, fence work, deck work, lawn care, siding, windows & doors. For 11+ years serving Douglas County & surrounding areas. Insured.
D&R Painting ;@F7D;AD 7JF7D;AD O K73DE O BAI7D I3E:;@9 O D7B3;DE ;@E;67 AGF O EF3;@ 675=E O I3>>B3B7D EFD;BB;@9 O 8D77 7EF;?3F7E 913-401-9304
Residential Lawrence Free Estimates 785-766-5285
Tree/Stump Removal Fredy’s Tree Service
785-312-1917 Retired Carpenter, Deck Repairs, Home Repairs, Interior Wall Repair & House Painting, Doors, Wood Rot, Power wash 785-766-5285
Snow Removal
Family Tradition Interior & Exterior Painting Carpentry/Wood Rot Senior Citizen Discount Ask for Ray 785-330-3459
STARTING or BUILDING a Business?
Interior/Exterior Painting
785-832-2222 classifieds@ljworld.com
Quality Work Over 30 yrs. exp.
Call Lyndsey 913-422-7002
;ML<GOF S LJAEE=< S LGHH=< S KLMEH J=EGN9D 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 N/7 EB75;3>;L7 ;@ preservation & restorationâ&#x20AC;? Ins. & Lic. visit online 785-843-TREE (8733)
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Thursday, January 21, 2016
SPORTS/CLASSIFIED
.
L awrence J ournal -W orld
SCOREBOARD NFL Playoffs
Wild-card Playoffs Saturday, Jan. 9 Kansas City 30, Houston 0 Pittsburgh 18, Cincinnati 16 Sunday, Jan. 10 Seattle 10, Minnesota 9 Green Bay 35, Washington 18 Divisional Playoffs Saturday, Jan. 16 New England 27, Kansas City 20 Arizona 26, Green Bay 20, OT Sunday, Jan. 17 Carolina 31, Seattle 24 Denver 23, Pittsburgh 16 Conference Championships Sunday, Jan. 24 AFC New England at Denver, 2:05 p.m. (CBS) NFC Arizona at Carolina, 5:40 p.m. (FOX) Pro Bowl Sunday, Jan. 31 At Honolulu Team Rice vs. Team Irvin, 6 p.m. (ESPN) Super Bowl Sunday, Feb. 7 At Santa Clara, Calif. TBD, 5:30 p.m. (CBS)
NBA
EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W L Pct GB Toronto 27 15 .643 — Boston 22 21 .512 5½ New York 22 22 .500 6 Brooklyn 11 32 .256 16½ Philadelphia 6 38 .136 22 Southeast Division W L Pct GB Atlanta 25 17 .595 — Miami 23 20 .535 2½ Washington 20 21 .488 4½ Orlando 20 21 .488 4½ Charlotte 19 23 .452 6 Central Division W L Pct GB Cleveland 29 11 .725 — Chicago 24 17 .585 5½ Indiana 23 19 .548 7 Detroit 23 19 .548 7 Milwaukee 19 25 .432 12 WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division W L Pct GB San Antonio 36 6 .857 — Dallas 25 19 .568 12 Memphis 24 19 .558 12½ Houston 22 22 .500 15 New Orleans 14 27 .341 21½ Northwest Division W L Pct GB Oklahoma City 32 12 .727 — Portland 19 25 .432 13 Utah 18 24 .429 13 Denver 16 26 .381 15 Minnesota 13 31 .295 19 Pacific Division W L Pct GB Golden State 39 4 .907 — L.A. Clippers 27 14 .659 11 Sacramento 17 23 .425 20½ Phoenix 13 30 .302 26 L.A. Lakers 9 34 .209 30 Wednesday’s Games Philadelphia 96, Orlando 87 Washington 106, Miami 87 Toronto 115, Boston 109 Cleveland 91, Brooklyn 78 New York 118, Utah 111, OT Golden State 125, Chicago 94 Detroit 123, Houston 114
Oklahoma City 109, Charlotte 95 Dallas 106, Minnesota 94, OT Sacramento at L.A. Lakers, (n) Atlanta at Portland, (n) Today’s Games Detroit at New Orleans, 7 p.m. L.A. Clippers at Cleveland, 7 p.m. Memphis at Denver, 8 p.m. Atlanta at Sacramento, 9 p.m. San Antonio at Phoenix, 9:30 p.m.
Big 12 Men
Big 12 Overall W L W L Baylor 5 1 15 3 Oklahoma 4 2 15 2 Kansas 4 2 15 3 West Virginia 4 2 15 3 Texas 4 2 12 6 Iowa State 3 3 14 4 Texas Tech 2 4 12 5 Oklahoma State 2 4 10 8 Kansas State 1 5 11 7 TCU 1 5 9 9 Tuesday’s Game Oklahoma State 86, Kansas 67 Wednesday’s Games Texas 56, West Virginia 49 Baylor 79, Kansas State 72, 2 OT Saturday’s Games Oklahoma at Baylor, 11 a.m. (ESPN2) West Virginia at Texas Tech, noon (ESPNews) Texas at Kansas, 1 p.m. (ESPN) Iowa State at TCU, 3 p.m. (ESPNU) Oklahoma State at Kansas State, 5 p.m. (ESPNU) Monday, Jan. 25 Kansas at Iowa State, 8 p.m. (ESPN)
College Men
EAST Alvernia 75, Albright 65 American U. 81, Lafayette 73 Brooklyn 87, CCNY 78 Bucknell 67, Loyola (Md.) 58 Colgate 85, Boston U. 78 Dominican (NY) 61, Caldwell 59 Fordham 73, George Mason 62 Holy Cross 69, Army 65 John Jay 73, Lehman 71 Miami 67, Boston College 53 NJ City 63, Rutgers-Newark 59 Navy 69, Lehigh 64 Philadelphia 73, Goldey Beacom 63 Ramapo 90, William Paterson 82 Stockton 68, Rowan 65 Stonehill 77, Adelphi 60 Susquehanna 98, Goucher 67 Temple 62, La Salle 49 Texas 56, West Virginia 49 Yeshiva 71, Farmingdale 69 SOUTH Belmont Abbey 71, Limestone 63 Charleston Southern 73, Presbyterian 72 Hampden-Sydney 57, Randolph 55 High Point 73, UNC Asheville 69 Howard 71, Delaware St. 67 Johnson C. Smith 78, St. Augustine’s 76 Louisville 84, Florida St. 65 Lynchburg 64, Guilford 59 McDaniel 66, Washington (Md.) 54 Mount St. Joseph 69, Transylvania 60 North Carolina 83, Wake Forest 68 North Greenville 85, Erskine 76 Radford 78, Campbell 66 Randolph-Macon 84, E. Mennonite 76 Roanoke 98, Emory & Henry 90 Thomas More 83, Chatham 58 UCF 64, South Florida 54 VCU 93, Duquesne 71 Vanderbilt 88, Tennessee 74 Winthrop 71, Gardner-Webb 58 MIDWEST Augsburg 94, Macalester 70 Bethel (Minn.) 71, Carleton 61 Calvin 90, Kalamazoo 64
Concordia (Wis.) 86, Milwaukee Engineering 64 Cornerstone 85, Aquinas 66 Davenport 72, Siena Heights 57 DePaul 57, Marquette 56 Edgewood 83, Wis. Lutheran 79 Georgia 60, Missouri 57 Hope 76, Adrian 73 Illinois St. 55, Bradley 52 Madonna 78, Concordia (Mich.) 61 Marian (Wis.) 72, Lakeland 70, OT Marygrove 77, Lawrence Tech 74 Michigan 74, Minnesota 69 Michigan-Dearborn 70, Northwestern Ohio 59 MidAm Nazarene 87, Central Methodist 83 Missouri St. 79, Drake 70 Nebraska 72, Michigan St. 71 North Central (Ill.) 97, Carthage 68 Notre Dame 83, Virginia Tech 81 Olivet 67, Albion 62 Ripon 81, Lawrence 80 S. Illinois 79, Indiana St. 66 Saint Louis 96, Davidson 87 South Dakota 76, W. Illinois 67 St. John’s (Minn.) 87, Gustavus 83 St. Mary’s (Minn.) 70, Hamline 59 St. Norbert 82, Carroll (Wis.) 58 St. Thomas (Minn.) 75, St. Olaf 66 Union (Ky.) at Bryan, ppd. Viterbo 85, Clarke 75 Wichita St. 74, N. Iowa 55 William Penn 92, Graceland 47 Wis.-La Crosse 63, Wis.-Stout 57, OT Wis.-Platteville 84, Wis.-Eau Claire 75 Wis.-River Falls 56, Wis.-Stevens Pt. 48 Wis.-Whitewater 66, Wis.-Oshkosh 60 SOUTHWEST Baylor 79, Kansas St. 72, 2OT FAR WEST Boise St. 94, San Jose St. 69 Colorado St. 83, Air Force 79 Nevada 75, Wyoming 69
Big 12 Women
Big 12 Overall W L W L Texas 6 1 17 1 Baylor 5 1 18 1 West Virginia 4 2 15 4 Oklahoma 4 2 13 4 Oklahoma State 4 3 14 4 Iowa State 3 3 11 6 Kansas State 3 4 13 5 TCU 3 4 11 7 Texas Tech 1 6 10 8 Kansas 0 7 5 13 Wednesday’s Games Oklahoma 92, Texas Tech 53 Texas 65, TCU 58 Oklahoma State 79, Iowa State 76, OT Kansas State 59, Kansas 46 Saturday’s Games Oklahoma at Texas, 11 a.m. (FSN) Baylor at Iowa State, 12:30 p.m. (FS1)
College Women
EAST Army 77, Holy Cross 58 Bucknell 71, Loyola (Md.) 64 CCNY 63, Brooklyn 53 Caldwell 83, Dominican (NY) 70 Colgate 72, Boston U. 63 George Washington 67, UMass 50 Lafayette 60, American U. 51 Lehigh 51, Navy 48 Lehman 107, John Jay 53 McDaniel 58, Washington (Md.) 47 Philadelphia 69, Goldey Beacom 57 Saint Louis 77, Saint Joseph’s 66 Stonehill 56, Adelphi 49 Thiel 69, St. Vincent 57 UConn 106, UCF 51 W. Michigan 92, Buffalo 78
BAKER WOMEN 76, BENEDICTINE 48 Benedictine 14 7 11 16 — 48 Baker 23 8 17 17 — 65 Benedictine — Rutledge 9, Murphy 8, Taff 8, Kramer 7, Villegas 6, Baalman 5, Thomas 5. Baker — Simpson 17, Larson 15, Hodge 14, Buchel 11, Wallisch 2, Chase 2, Cook 2, Hanson 2.
SOUTH Austin Peay 96, Morehead St. 75 Belmont 44, Jacksonville St. 32 Davidson 69, Fordham 51 E. Kentucky 72, Murray St. 60 East Carolina 63, Cincinnati 60 George Mason 70, VCU 54 Incarnate Word 68, McNeese St. 55 Memphis 88, South Florida 87, OT Nicholls St. 70, Northwestern St. 61 Wofford 58, UNC-Greensboro 56, OT MIDWEST Akron 81, Toledo 71 Ball St. 76, E. Michigan 54 Bowling Green 58, N. Illinois 43 Cent. Michigan 72, Miami (Ohio) 58 Indiana 68, Illinois 66 Kansas St. 59, Kansas 46 Maryland 90, Wisconsin 65 Minnesota 95, Northwestern 92 Nebraska 62, Purdue 61 Ohio 93, Kent St. 54 Penn St. 82, Iowa 69 St. Bonaventure 59, Dayton 54 UT Martin 65, E. Illinois 39 SOUTHWEST Oklahoma 92, Texas Tech 53 Oklahoma St. 79, Iowa St. 76, OT Texas 65, TCU 58 Tulane 54, SMU 42 Tulsa 79, Houston 62 FAR WEST Colorado St. 71, Air Force 47
Nov. 1 — Pittsburg State (exhibition), W 80-54 Nov. 8 — Emporia State (exhibition), W 68-57 Nov. 15 — Texas Southern, W 72-65 (1-0) Nov. 19 — Memphis, W 72-63 (2-0) Nov. 23 — at Arizona, L 52-67 (2-1) Nov. 27 — Northern Illinois at SMU Thanksgiving Classic, Dallas, W 66-58 (3-1) Nov. 28 — SMU at SMU Thanksgiving Classic, Dallas, L 64-73 (3-2) Dec. 2 — Creighton, W 67-54 (4-2) Dec. 6 — St. John’s, L 71-86 (4-3) Dec. 10 — UMKC, L 44-47 (4-4) Dec. 13 — Navy, W 61-54 OT (5-4) Dec. 20 — Washington State, L 53-66 (5-5) Dec. 22 — Oral Roberts, L 63-70 (5-6) Dec. 30 — at Oklahoma, L 44-67 (5-7, 0-1) Jan. 3 — West Virginia, L 45-65 (5-8, 0-2) Jan. 6 — Baylor, L 40-58 (5-9, 0-3) Jan. 9 — at Iowa State, L 49-65 (5-10, 0-4) Jan. 13 — Texas, L 38-75 (5-11, 0-5) Jan. 16 — at West Virginia, L 35-27 (5-12, 0-6) Jan. 20 — Kansas State, L 46-59 (5-13, 0-7) Jan. 24 — Oklahoma State, 2 p.m. Jan. 27 — at Texas, 7 p.m. Jan. 30 — at Texas Tech, 5 p.m. Feb. 2 — Iowa State, 7 p.m. Feb. 6 — at Baylor, 2 p.m. Feb. 13 — at Kansas State, 7 p.m. Feb. 17 — TCU, 7 p.m. Feb. 20 — Oklahoma, 2 p.m. Feb. 24 — at Oklahoma State, 7 p.m. Feb. 27 — Texas Tech, 7 p.m. Feb. 29 — at TCU, 6 p.m.
Area College Box Scores
High School
High School Boys
Kansas Women
Wednesday at Baldwin City BAKER MEN 76, BENEDICTINE 71 Benedictine 29 42 — 71 Baker 34 42 — 76 Benedictine — Harris 21, Hatterle 16, Fleming 11, Vallejo 11, Eckert 5, Heinen 4, O’Connor 3. Baker — Wilson 15, Barnes 11, Martin 8, Parker 8, Mick 7, Easter 6, Gray 5, Guscott 5, Johnson 4, Young 4, Bolton 3.
WEST B 60, CENTRAL B 17 West highlights: Cohen Honeywell 10 points; Lovette Eppele 9 points; Rhett May 8 points. West B record: 3-0. Next for West: Tuesday vs. Southwest.
Conway Springs 55, Kingman 18 Baldwin Tournament Augusta 57, Wellsville 56 Bonner Springs 64, KC Bishop Ward 18 KC Harmon 62, Louisburg 47 Cherokee Southeast Tournament Parsons 72, Columbus 32 St. Paul 56, Erie 53 McLouth Tournament KC Christian 80, Pleasant Ridge 44 Riverside 66, McLouth 12 Shawnee Mission West Tournament Grandview, Mo. 66, Lansing 48 South Central Border League Tournament Caldwell 70, Udall 54 Flinthills 46, Oxford 31 First Round Sedan 76, Cedar Vale/Dexter 37 West Elk 58, Argonia 41 Spring Hill Tournament Blue Valley Southwest 70, Osawatomie 29 Gardner-Edgerton 67, Veritas Christian 58 Goddard-Eisenhower 79, KC Sumner 54 Spring Hill 65, KC Piper 51 Sterling Tournament Southeast Saline 60, Lyons 45 Sterling Tournament Consolation Semifinal Smoky Valley 55, Remington 53, OT Tonganoxie Invitational Eudora 57, Tonganoxie 37 Wamego 74, Jefferson West 46 Valley Falls Tournament Jefferson North 77, Cornerstone Family 53 Perry-Lecompton 54, Oskaloosa 48 Rossville 68, Atchison County 31 Valley Falls 67, Cair Paravel 53
High School Girls
Shawnee Heights 42, Leavenworth 40 Spring Hill 58, Louisburg 44 St. Teresa’s Academy, Mo. 47, Bishop Miege 34 Basehor Linwood Invitational Benton, Mo. 51, Ottawa 28 Holton 56, Basehor-Linwood 50 Flint Hills LeagueTournament Chase County 57, Osage City 19 Northern Heights 51, Mission Valley 28 West Franklin 52, Herington 36 McLouth Tournament Riverside 62, Veritas Christian 58 St. Mary’s 51, McLouth 29 Sterling Tournament Southeast Saline 42, Smoky Valley 11 Tonganoxie Invitational Pool Play De Soto 43, Wamego 30
Middle School Boys
Wednesday at West WEST 46, CENTRAL 38 West highlights: Dakari Middleton 13 points; Tate Fanshier 10 points, Willie Dotson 9 points. West record: 1-2. Next for West: Tuesday vs. Southwest
Free State 43, Shawnee Mission Northwest 16 Wednesday at SMNW 106 — Garrett Bradley (FSHS) def. Jared Habben (SMNW), second-period disqualification. 113 — Bennett King (FSHS) won by decision over Charles Brockmann (SMNW), 3-2. 120 — Quailan Fowler (FSHS) won by decision over Noah Herzberg (SMNW), 9-3. 126 — Isaiah Jacobs (FSHS) won by fall over Hayden Ryan (SMNW), 3:35. 132 — Tate Steele (FSHS) won by tech fall over Colin Anthony (SMNW), 16-0. 138 — Trevor Rine (SMNW) won by decision over Sid Miller (FSHS), 7-5. 145 — Efrain Blanco (SMNW) won by major decision over Ben Hill (FSHS), 12-4. 152 — Brian Morelan (SMNW) won by decision over James Wensel (FSHS), 7-2 OT. 160 —Gage Foster (FSHS) won by tech fall over Robert Strain (SMNW), 17-0. 170 — Devin Beers (FSHS) won by decision over Kevin Thompson (SMNW), 10-8. 182 — Cole Dugan (SMNW) def. OPEN (FSHS). 195 — OPEN (SMNW) vs. OPEN (FSHS). 220 — Sky Carey (FSHS) def. OPEN (SMNW). 285 — Reese Todd (FSHS) def. OPEN (SMNW).
Australian Open
Today At Melbourne Park Melbourne, Australia Purse: $30.18 million (Grand Slam) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles Men Second Round Gael Monfils (23), France, def. Nicolas Mahut, France, 7-5, 6-4, 6-1. John Isner (10), United States, def. Marcel Granollers, Spain, 6-3, 7-6 (6), 7-6 (2). Joao Sousa (32), Portugal, def. Santiago Giraldo, Colombia, 6-3, 7-5, 3-6, 6-1. Women Second Round Ana Ivanovic (20), Serbia, def. Anastasija Sevastova, Latvia, 6-3, 6-3. Naomi Osaka, Japan, def. Elina Svitolina (18), Ukraine, 6-4, 6-4. Johanna Konta, Britain, def. Zheng Saisai, China, 6-2, 6-3. Barbora Strycova, Czech Republic, def. Vania King, United States, 7-6 (5), 6-4. Varvara Lepchenko, United States, def. Lara Arruabarrena, Spain, 7-6 (7), 6-4. Garbine Muguruza (3), Spain, def. Kirsten Flipkens, Belgium, 6-4, 6-2. Victoria Azarenka (14), Belarus, def. Danka Kovinic, Montenegro, 6-1, 6-2.
PUBLIC NOTICES
APARTMENTS
TO PLACE AN AD:
TO PLACE AN AD:
(First published in the Lawrence Daily Journal World January 7, 2016) REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS (RFP) The Chamber of Lawrence Kansas on behalf of BizFuel partners are seeking to hire an advertising/marketing agency or individual team to provide strategic implementation of messaging, advertising and marketing strategies as needed for promoting the BizFuel Partnership in Douglas County.
785.832.2222
street parking and loading.
(First published in the Lawrence Daily Journal-World January 21, 2016)
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN AND TO ALL PERSONS INTERESTED: NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that at 7:00 p.m. on Wednesday, February 3, the City of Eudora Planning Commission, in the City Commission Chambers, Eudora Municipal Building, 4 East 7th, Eudora, Kansas, will consider a draft text amendment to revise the existing Zoning Regulations regarding off street parking and loading. As provided in the Zoning and Subdivision Regulations of Eudora, Kansas, the above text amendment will be discussed and considered by the Planning Commission, and all persons interested in said matter will have an opportunity to be heard at this time concerning their views and wishes.
The following vehicle will be sold by Lighthouse Tow & Recovery at public auction for tow and storage fees on January 21, 2016, at 7am at 1200 E 25th St., Lawrence, KS 66046.
BizFuel is a public and private partnership that works to assist Small to Medium Enterprises (SMEs) to start, grow, add jobs, and succeed by building an entrepreneurial environment that will spur educational advancement, networking, technical assistance, research, advocacy, and/or work to CERTIFIED, this 10th day of foster SME collaboration December, 2015. and connections. Pam Schmeck BizFuel Partner and Lead City Clerk Contact for RFP: The City of Eudora ________ Chamber of Lawrence Kansas, Attn: Brady Pollington, (First published in the Economic Development Project Manager, 646 Ver- Lawrence Daily Journalmont St #200, Lawrence, World January 7, 2016) KS 66044, bpollington@lawrencecham ber.com, 785.865.4425. Proposals will only be accepted from January 7th29th, received by 4:30p.m. C.S.T. via local dropoff or postmark date, (RFP bids must be between $10K-$12K). ________ (First published in the Lawrence Daily JournalWorld, December 10, 2015) City of Eudora, Kansas OFFICIAL NOTICE OF Public Hearing for the City of Eudora, Kansas Text Amendment to revise existing Zoning Regulations regarding off
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IN THE SEVENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT DISTRICT COURT, DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS CIVIL DEPARTMENT MID AMERICAN CREDIT UNION, Plaintiff, vs. 2011 ARTIC CAT 450 ATV, VIN#4UF11ATV2BT257217, KANSAS DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE, THE STATE OF KANSAS KANSAS HIGHWAY PATROL, and the unknown spouses, heirs, executors, administrators, devisees, trustees, creditors and assigns of such of the defendants as
1996 HYUNDAI SONATA VIN# KMHCF34TXVU876134 1997 CHEVY BLAZER VIN# 1GNCS13W2V2226430 2002 FORD ECONOLINE VIN# 1FDRE14L52HA45647 1991 FORD MUSTANG VIN# 1FACP42E6MF129829 2004 NISSAN PICK UP VIN# 1N6SD11S4LC32881 2008 NISSAN ROGUE VIN# JN8AS58V38W137541 1983 BUICK LESABRE VIN# 1G4AN69A5DX416879 2001 JEEP WRANGLER VIN# 1J8GA39168C559029 2001 VW JETTA VIN# 3VWSC29M61M083284 1994 NISSAN ALTIMA VIN# 1N4BU31D2RC217843 2000 FORD CROWN VICTORIA VIN# 2FAFP71W6YX148657 1998 FORD WINDSTAR VIN# 2FMZA5141WBD73019 2014 TOYOTA COROLLA VIN# 5YFBURHE0EP126308 1992 CHEVY PK VIN# 1GCDC14Z0NE174104 1994 FORD EXPLORER VIN# 1FMDU34X5RUA80525 2000 ACURA TL VIN# 19UUA5666YA055115 ________ may be deceased; the unknown spouses of the defendants’; the unknown officers, successors, trustees, creditors and assigns of such defendants as are existing, dissolved or dormant corporations; the unknown executors, administrators, trustees, creditors, successors and assigns of such defendants as are or were partners or in partnership; the unknown guardians and trustees of such of the defendants as are minors or are in anywise under legal disability; Unknown persons in possession, Defendant(s).
are or may be concerned in the subject of this action, forever quieting the title to personal property described as 2011 ARTIC 450 ATV, CAT VIN#4UF11ATV2BT257217 and that the Kansas Highway Patrol perform an MVE-1 inspection upon the above described vehicle and upon successful completion of said inspection, the Kansas Department of Revenue, issue a clear title to this motor vehicle; and for such other and further relief as plaintiff may be entitled to, either in law or in equity;
You are hereby required to plead to said Petition on or before the 17th day of February, 2016, in said Pursuant to Chapter 60 of Court at Douglas, Kansas. K.S.A. Should you fail therein, judgment and decree will NOTICE OF SUIT be entered in due course THE STATE OF KANSAS upon said Petition. TO: ALL INTERESTED PARBRUCE, BRUCE & LEHMAN, TIES You are hereby notified L.L.C. that a petition has been P.O. Box 75037 filed in the District Court of Wichita, KS 67275-5037 Douglas County, Kansas by Telephone: 316-264-8000 plaintiff, Mid American Facsimile: 316-267-4488 Credit Union, praying for Attorneys for Mid judgment against the American Credit Union claims of any defendants Plaintiff _______ and the claims of all those classes of persons who Case No: 2015 CV 463
Apartments Unfurnished
REAL ESTATE Lawrence Investment / Development
OPPORTUNITY:
147 acres- Lawrence Schools, large CUSTOM home, barns, 2nd house on property, ponds, just west of 6th & SLTfastest growing intersection in Kansas. $1.6 M
Bill Fair & Company www.billfair.com 800-887-6929 Need to sell your car? Place your ad at classifieds.lawrence.com
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LAUREL GLEN APTS All Electric
1, 2 & 3 BR units Some with W/D, Water & Trash Paid, Small Pet, Income Restrictions Apply
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Duplexes 2BR in a 4-plex
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FIRST MONTH FREE! 1 & 2 Bedroom Units Available Now! Cooperative townhomes start at $446-$490/mnth. Water, trash, sewer paid. Back patio, CA, hardwood floors, full bsmnt., stove, refrig., w/d hookup, garbage disposal, reserved parking. On-site management & maintenance. 24 hr. emergency maintenance. Membership & Equity fee required. 785-842-2545 (Equal Housing Opportunity) pinetreetownhouses.com
Subleases
Sublet 1 Bedrm Apt Newer apartment on Westside near WalMart & restaurants. 2nd story, all appliances; washer/dryer, dishwasher. Water & trash paid, current renter will pay elec. for 3 mo. $665/mo 785-766-0819
New carpet, vinyl, cabinets, countertop. W/D is included.
Lawrence
1st Month FREE!
Equal Housing Opportunity. 785-865-2505 SUNRISE VILLAGE & PLACE
Townhomes
RENTALS
3 BR w/2 or 2.5 BA
Apartments Unfurnished
W/D hookups, Fireplace, Major Appliances. Lawn Care & Dbl Car Garage! Equal Housing Opportunity
Cedarwood Apts 2411 Cedarwood Ave. Beautiful & Spacious 1 & 2 Bedrooms Start at $450/mo. * Near campus, bus stop * Laundries on site * Near stores, restaurants * Water & trash paid ——————————————
CALL TODAY (Monday - Friday)
785-843-1116
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Now Leasing 2 BR’s Close to Campus & Downtown
Pool, On KU Bus Route, Spacious Floorplan, Patios/Decks. Great location: 837 Michigan $200 OFF First Month Rent
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Houses
grandmanagement.net
NOW LEASING Spring - Fall TUCKAWAY APARTMENTS
Tuckawayapartments.com 785-856-0432 TUCKAWAY AT BRIARWOOD
Tuckawayatbriarwood.com HARPER SQUARE Harpersquareapartments.com HUTTON FARMS Huttonfarms.com
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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
Country Home: 4 BD, 3 BA 7 mi. South of Lawrence. Nestled between beautiful hills, farms, & beside working ranch. Granite countertops, refreshed interior. No indoor pets. No smoking. $1300/ mo. 785-893-3708
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10 LINES: 2 DAYS $50 • 7 DAYS $80 28 DAYS $280 + FREE PHOTO!
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10 LINES & PHOTO: 7 DAYS $19.95 • 28 DAYS $49.95 DOESN’T SELL IN 28 DAYS? + FREE RENEWAL!
6 LINES: 1 MONTH $118.95 • 6 MONTHS $91.95/ MO 12 MONTHS $64.95/MO + FREE LOGO!
10 LINES & PHOTO: 7 DAYS $19.95 • 28 DAYS $49.95 DOESN’T SELL IN 28 DAYS? + FREE RENEWAL!
ADVERTISE TODAY! Call 785.832.2222 or email classifieds@ljworld.com