Lawrence Journal-World 01-29-2017

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Sunday • January 29 • 2017

Filing: City suspected one officer of abusing another

LAWRENCE PUBLIC SCHOOLS

HOW TO

EVEN KIDS’ ODDS? —

By Conrad Swanson

With data in hand, leaders set to tackle racial equity issues

cswanson@ljworld.com

Nick Krug/Journal-World File Photo

By Rochelle Valverde

If you go

lll

rvalverde@ljworld.com

O

f the more than 500 students identified as gifted in the Lawrence public school district, only eight are black. Instead, a black student in the district is more likely to be identified as having a learning disability than as being gifted. When the educational paths of students are parsed out, other students of color also face lopsided odds. For them, as compared with their

The Lawrence school district’s Community Conversation about racial equity will be 6 p.m. Monday in the Lawrence High School cafeteria, 1901 Louisiana St. white peers, the numbers show a pattern of inequity that overlays placement in gifted programs, identification as learning disabled and the severity of discipline meted out. As part of the district’s years-long effort to address inequities, a

comprehensive report breaks down racial demographics regarding academic, discipline and special education programs districtwide. With those numbers in hand, board members and district leaders are refocusing their equity efforts, and are set to host a community conversation on race Monday. School Board President Marcel Harmon said previously established district-level equity groups have fizzled out, and he sees the event as a re-initiation of engagement with the community around issues with race and its impact on the district.

> EQUITY, 2A

BREAKING DOWN THE EQUITY REPORT The district’s equity report outlines the racial demographics of many groups of students — students identified as gifted, students who have been suspended, students who participate in various sports and extracurricular activities, and many more. Here’s how they compare in a few categories. To see the full report, go to ljworld.com/equityreport012917.

KEY:

PUBLISHED SINCE 1891

IN THE DISTRICT

IDENTIFIED AS GIFTED

White

The Lawrence Police Department collected large amounts of evidence showing that one of its officers beat a fellow officer, chained her inside a dog kennel and choked her until she blacked out, court documents show. According to the documents, which are part of a more than $500,000 lawsuit against the city, that evidence was used to arrest then-Officer William Burke, search his home and seize his property.

> OFFICER, 2A

UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS

Sex assault prevention center had busy start ——

IDENTIFIED AS LEARNING DISABLED

In first year, it trained nearly 15,000 people

Black

By Sara Shepherd

Hispanic

sshepherd@ljworld.com

Asian

Jen Brockman, in keeping with a national call to action, is part of an effort to eliminate sexual violence in a generation. At the University of Kansas, Brockman and the new office she Brockman leads have started scratching the surface.

Native American Multiracial* *Multiracial students are those who have stated they identify as more than one race.

66.7 percent of the district’s students are white. Black students make up 6.5 percent, and Hispanic students are 9.4 percent.

Whites make up 78.2 percent of students in gifted classes. Asian students, at 10.8 percent, are the next largest group. Black students make up 1.6 percent, and Hispanics 2.6 percent.

50.1 percent of students identified as having learning disabilities are white. 12.9 percent are black, and 15.6 percent are Hispanic.

Source: Lawrence Public Schools

Sylas May/Journal-World Graphic

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Sunday, January 29, 2017

Equity CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A

“To move forward, it’s going to take more than just the district looking at this,” Harmon said. “We need to work with the community to help address these issues as well.”

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52 percent of those given out-of-school suspension. Conversely, white students represented 78 percent of the students in gifted and 75 percent of students in advanced placement classes. Asian students are only about 4 percent of the population, but represent more than 11 percent of gifted students and 5 percent of advanced placement classes.

LAWRENCE disproportionate representation. School Board Vice President Shannon Kimball said that recommendation is testament to the fact that there is no “overnight fix” for improving the disparities. “If there was an easy fix to this, we would already be doing it,” Kimball said. “But it’s hard work; it’s change over time that has to happen. The bigger picture thing is that our district is committed to doing that hard work to make a difference, and we’re not afraid to look at that data and talk about it and be open and transparent about it.”

right?” Kimball said. “I believe that institutional racism is real, but I also believe that our district is doing more work than most districts do to confront that.”

What makes an institution? Behind some of the disproportionate numbers, there is an institution, with policies and norms, but also with What the numbers people making decisions. show Special education Though there are When it comes to iden- program guidelines for discipline The learning disabled tifying racial disparities and academic placement, and gifted programs are within the district, it’s a there is still an element run by the district’s spestudy of comparisons. of teacher or administracial education program, When compared to tor discretion. For inwhich was the subject their white peers, some stance, testing for gifted of a separate districtstudents of color are placement or learning Reasons for disparity commissioned review twice as likely to land disabilities can be done For improvements released on Monday. in certain subgroups, at the request of a parent, to be made, causes will That report offered a such as students identibut also at the referral of have to be pinned down. a teacher. positive assessment for fied as learning disabled Harmon said examinseveral aspects of the or those given out-ofThe district has ing the reasons for the school suspension. Other program itself, such as already undertaken an satisfaction of parents of disparities, both societal groups, such as white effort to address potenand institutional, will be special education stuand Asian students, are tial bias. part of the board’s effort dents. But it also noted underrepresented in The district has had the racial disparities and to address the issue. those categories and equity as one of its three “I’m sure aspects of recommended that the have disproportionmain goals for the past racism probably play a district study the issue ate representation in 10 years. Teachers and academically accelerated and take steps to correct part of it, unconscious other staff have underbiases I’m sure play a it. classes. gone diversity training, role in it, all of those do,” curriculum has been exFor schools where For instance, black Harmon said. “But teasstudents made up 6.5 per- racial discrepancies are panded to include more ing out what the specifics cultural perspectives, cent of the student popu- more than two-fold, the are and how we address consultants who conlation, according to the and racial disparities them, we have to investi- have gotten increased ducted the review rec2016 equity report. That gate further, I think.” same year, black students ommended that special scrutiny. The achievement gap education administrators represented 13 percent “It’s a comprehensive between subgroups of review all referrals for of those identified as effort,” Kimball said. “It’s special education prior to students is a nationwide learning disabled and 17 not just one thing or two issue, and socioecoevaluation. percent of those given things or even a checklist But addressing the spe- nomic status of students’ of things.” out-of-school suspension. cial education program families is often cited Black students’ repThere have been can’t only be a policy as a main indicator for resentation in accelerimprovements, includacademic success. ated academic programs decision, district leading better graduation ers said. Kevin Harrell, Similar to the rest of was also lopsided: They rates, as well as the the country, many of the establishment of school were 1.6 percent of those executive director of student services, said it highest achieving stuidentified as gifted and equity councils and new couldn’t be about caps or dents in the district tend programs. One such about 3 percent of those quotas. to be both white and eco- program is AVID, which in advanced placement “If it really is a disnomically advantaged, classes. Though the supports underrepremeaning they don’t numbers vary, other stu- ability, we have to meet sented middle and high that need,” Harrell said. meet the low-income dents of color were also school students who guidelines to qualify for unequally represented on “Now the question bewant to take advanced comes, are we meeting reduced school fees and both sides of the specplacement classes. those students’ needs in lunches. trum. But still, the disprogeneral ed prior to that? Kimball said those out- portion in some of the For white and Asian Because if you meet their side factors are part of students, the reverse numbers suggests the needs and they’re not re- the discussion, but that pattern was true. For problem needs further ferred for special educa- institutional biases also instance, white stuattention. Harmon said tion, then you don’t have play a role. dents made up about 67 he thinks they are startto worry about a cap.” “It’s all part of the percent of the student ing to realize that more The consultants also same set of societal population in 2016. That resources, and potentialsuggest a year of studyissues that we have same year, white stuly additional staff at the been trying to confront dents represented 50 per- ing data regarding the district level, are needed program and coming up through our focus on cent of those identified to meet the district’s with a plan to improve equity in our classrooms, equity goals. as learning disabled and

Officer CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A

However, for reasons the city has not explained, police department leaders did not fire Burke, but instead allowed him to resign. Among the evidence the city says investigators collected are text messages from Burke to the female officer. “I’ve never hit a girl before. I beat you,” one message read. “I’m not sure next time it won’t keep going,” read another. The Journal-World previously reported Burke filed a lawsuit against the City of Lawrence in September. The lawsuit is seeking $525,000 in damages and claims Burke was illegally searched and defamed. In addition, Burke claims he resigned from his position as an officer after a Lawrence police captain called his attorney and said he would be given a “favorable disposition” regarding criminal charges if he were to step down. Both the city and Douglas County District Attorney Charles Branson deny that allegation. “We were never a party to any agreement or offer to that extent whatsoever,” Branson said. Ultimately, however, no criminal charges were filed against Burke and he is still licensed to work as a police officer in Kansas. In 2015, Branson’s office said there was insufficient evidence to file charges. When asked on Friday what evidence LPD shared with his office, he declined to offer additional comment, citing

the ongoing lawsuit. The city’s answer to Burke’s lawsuit, which was filed on Jan. 17, denies Burke’s claims that he was illegally searched and defamed, as well as other allegations made against the police department. When asked why the city accepted Burke’s resignation in light of the probable cause leading to his arrest, Lawrence City Attorney Toni Wheeler declined to comment on the case, citing the pending litigation. Burke’s attorney, Theodore Lickteig, also declined to comment on the case. It is unclear what information the Lawrence Police Department submitted to Branson’s office because the arrest affidavit in Burke’s case has not yet been made available to the Journal-World. An arrest affidavit is a document written by police justifying an arrest. After an arrest, the documents are submitted to the DA’s office, which will decide whether to file criminal charges.

What LPD knew The following details come from the city’s Jan. 17 filing, which includes a summary of a February 2015 interview between investigators and Burke’s alleged victim. The woman and Burke dated sporadically for more than two years and the relationship had been “tumultuous,” she said. “Burke was domineering, jealous, and possessive.” The two previously had rough, but consensual sex, she said. However, one incident in January 2015 went too far. During the incident, Burke slapped the woman harder than ever before

and began choking her, she told investigators. “When she started to see spots, she told Burke, ‘Stop’ as best she could,” the report says. “She reached up and tried to pull Burke’s arms away but she couldn’t and she blacked out.” Having never been “strangled to unconsciousness” before, the woman told investigators she was scared. Shortly afterwards, Burke told her to join him downstairs, where he demanded she undress and get inside a dog kennel. Burke then demanded the woman drink a beer and hand over her cell phone and password, she told investigators. He then “took a thick chain and wrapped it around the dog kennel to prevent her from leaving” and left her downstairs for several minutes. When Burke returned he gave the woman another beer, told her he had looked through her phone and left again, she reported. At this point the woman told investigators she was “shivering and tried to wrap herself in the towel at the bottom of the dog crate.” Once more Burke returned, the report says. He lectured the woman “about how she should learn to keep her mouth shut and that she should not talk to anyone about their relationship.” “Burke took a mallet and started swinging at the dog kennel,” the report says. “He hit the kennel numerous times and she was scared of the plastic cover breaking and the mallet striking her head.” Burke then opened the kennel and let the woman out, the report says. She got into his bed and spent the night because “she

felt it was safer to stay with Burke than to try and leave.” The next morning the woman said she took pictures of her injuries, which include hemorrhaging to her face and swelling on her top lip, the report says. “Burke told her that she had better keep her mouth shut and wear a lot of makeup,” the report says. The woman told investigators “she was hesitant to report the incident” and that “Burke owned several firearms and had told her several times that he could kill her and that he knew people who could make her body disappear,” the report says. In late February, the woman spoke informally with a male officer about her relationship with Burke. In that conversation, the two officers discussed the bruises on the woman’s body. The male officer then reported to a supervisor that he believed Burke was abusing the female officer, which launched an investigation into their relationship. The Lawrence Police Department does not have a policy addressing romantic relationships between officers or other employees. Burke was soon arrested, and several Lawrence police officers searched his home and vehicle, seizing two cellphones, according to the lawsuit. Burke’s cellphones were returned that August, and in December, the arrest was expunged from his record, the lawsuit says.

Moving forward Currently, Burke’s license to work as a police officer is “in good standing,” according to Matt

L awrence J ournal -W orld “I think we’ve come to the realization that we need to put additional resources to this to make them happen more effectively,” Harmon said. “Training is a big thing, really. I know we need more effort in that regard: Teacher training, staff training and building administrative training relative to the equity work.”

Community Conversation The district’s equity work, but also the reasons it is necessary, are likely to play into the Community Conversation on racial equity Monday. Pastor Adrion Roberson, an adaptive leadership facilitator on the faculty of the Kansas Leadership Center in Wichita, will lead the community conversation. In addition to a way to engage the public, Harmon said the community conversation will be a way to find people who would like to participate in the equity council. He said the council will include members of the public, a couple of board members and district administrators. Like Harmon, Kimball said the goal of the conversation was to directly involve the community in the district’s efforts. “That’s part of what the (community) conversation next week is designed to do,” Kimball said. “To continue to help us build those groups of support outside of our buildings and involve them more in our discussions of what we’re doing, how we’re doing it and how we can continue to improve what we’re already doing.” The Community Conversation about racial equity in Lawrence Public Schools will be 6 p.m. Monday in the Lawrence High School cafeteria, 1901 Louisiana St. — Reporter Rochelle Valverde can be reached at 832-6314. Follow her on Twitter: @RochelleVerde

Deffner, central registration manager for the Kansas Commission on Peace Officers’ Standards and Training, which is the organization responsible for the licenses. Burke is not currently working as a police officer, however, Deffner said. Whenever a police officer is fired or resigns, the department is required to submit a Notice of Termination or Status Change document to KS-CPOST, said Michelle Meier, the organization’s counsel. The Lawrence Police Department submitted that document to KSCPOST on March 6, 2015, Meier said. However, the substance of the document is not open to the public, she said. Neither Burke nor the female officer has a criminal record in Douglas County District Court. The female officer is no longer employed with the Lawrence Police Department, Assistant City Manager Diane Stoddard said in September. Both she and Burke began working for the department in 2011. Burke’s lawsuit maintains his relationship with the female officer was rough but consensual and claims seven causes of action against the defendants: l Unlawful search warrant l Assault l Battery l False imprisonment l Defamation l Trespass l And trespass to chattel. The lawsuit is requesting a trial by jury, though a trial date has not yet been set. — Public safety reporter Conrad Swanson can be reached at 832-7284. Follow him on Twitter: @Conrad_Swanson

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LOTTERY SATURDAY’S POWERBALL 12 20 39 49 69 (17) FRIDAY’S MEGA MILLIONS 17 37 53 54 61 (8) SATURDAY’S HOT LOTTO SIZZLER 2 17 23 26 38 (5) THURSDAY’S LUCKY FOR LIFE 3 11 13 31 42 (6) SATURDAY’S SUPER KANSAS CASH 1 3 8 9 10 (17) SATURDAY’S KANSAS 2BY2 Red: 13 26; White: 3 21 SATURDAY’S KANSAS PICK 3 (MIDDAY) 3 1 8 SATURDAY’S KANSAS PICK 3 (EVENING) 3 4 2

BIRTHS Lawrence Memorial Hospital reported no births Saturday.

CORRECTIONS The Journal-World’s policy is to correct all significant errors that are brought to the editors’ attention, usually in this space. If you believe we have made such an error, call 832-7154, or email news@ljworld.com.


LAWRENCE • AREA

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Sunday, January 29, 2017

| 3A

Baldwin City Council to discuss housing incentives

B

aldwin City residents may remember the success of a moderate-income housing grant program that led to the construction of 10 new homes in the community in 2015 and 2016. The program that the Kansas Housing Authority Corporation approved in late 2014 made a $200,000 grant available for Baldwin City, which provided $20,000 that qualifying “moderate-income” individuals or families could use toward the down payment of a newly constructed

Area Roundup

Elvyn Jones ejones@ljworld.com

home. Dave Hill, chairman of the Baldwin City Economic Development Corporation

and president of Mid America Bank, made the application for the grant. The $200,000 for incentives is now gone, and some fear the newhome boomlet with it. At a work session scheduled for 7 p.m. Monday at the Baldwin City American Legion Hall, 803 High St., Baldwin City Council members will discuss two proposals meant to incentivize new-home starts. No decisions will be made at the work session, which is open to the public. One proposal to be

discussed would have the city recreate the down payment incentive grant by having the city provide $10,000 for use toward the down payment on a newly constructed home. Baldwin City Economic Development Corporation Executive Director Hank Booth said he envisioned the incentive could lead to 10 to 15 new-home starts a year in the $150,000 to $250,000 price range. The proposal would also be an incentive for owners of large lots on the city’s edge to open

Booth

“I don’t think it’s a good use of taxpayers’ dollars,” she said. “If we did 10 homes, it would be $100,000. That’s 3.3 mills. I don’t think that’s right.” The city’s payback from additional property taxes would be eight years, which Pearse said was too long for the investment. The other proposal to be discussed would create a citywide neighborhood revitalization plan. The plan would provide property tax rebates to help offset the

Pearse

them for development with some assurance that lots would be purchased and they wouldn’t be stuck with higher property tax bills from rezoning, Booth said. The proposal does not have the support of Baldwin City Mayor Marilyn Pearse.

> AREA, 4A

Group seeks nominations for annual peace, justice awards

Extra motivation

Staff Reports

The Lawrence Coalition for Peace and Justice is seeking nominations for an individual and a community organization whose work exemplifies the group’s goals of peace, mutual respect and generosity. Since 1994, the coalition has awarded the Tom and Anne Moore Peace and Justice Award to individuals and organizations whose work on a local, national or international level has advanced peace and justice. All Douglas County residents and organizations are eligible for the award. Nominations are to be made in the form of a letter, not to exceed 250 words, describing the person’s or organization’s contribution to peace and justice. Supporting documentation such as newspaper stories or endorsements may be included. Those submitting

Nick Krug/Journal-World Photo

KANSAS GUARD FRANK MASON III (0) GIVES SOME OF HIS FAMILY MEMBERS A HUG following the Jayhawks’ 79-73 victory over Kentucky on Saturday at Rupp Arena in Lexington, Ky. See more photos and read more from the game in Sports, Page 1C.

lied.ku.edu 785-864-2787

nominations are asked to include their names and phone numbers. Nominations can be emailed to lcpjinfo@lcpj. org with “Moore Award” in the subject line, or mailed to Lawrence Coalition for Peace and Justice, Box 474, Lawrence, KS, 66044. The nomination deadline is March 15. Those nominated in previous years may be resubmitted with approval of the nominee. Winners will receive their awards at an as-yet unscheduled spring ceremony. Longtime Lawrence residents, the Moores were among the founders of the Lawrence Coalition for Peace and Justice. Tom Moore was the director of the University of Kansas YMCA for 23 years, and his wife Anne Moore ran the volunteer clearinghouse for Volunteers in Service to America.

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Sunday, January 29, 2017

LAWRENCE • STATE

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L awrence J ournal -W orld

Kansas casino competitors make final attempt to stop project Topeka (ap) — Cherokee County and two casino developers presented legal challenges to the Kansas Supreme Court for a state-owned casino as a final attempt to stop the high-stakes project. The state’s Lottery Gaming Facility Review Board chose a $70 million Pittsburg facility called Kansas Crossing

in June 2015 when considering three proposals to build a casino, the Topeka Capital-Journal reported. Wichita entrepreneurs Brandon and Rodney Steven, along with Cherokee County commissioners, filed lawsuits to try and block the casino. They appealed to the Supreme Court after a Shawnee County judge dismissed

the suits. Attorneys for the Stevens and Cherokee County said the gaming board sided with Kansas Crossing without properly determining why. “There are literally hundreds of millions of dollars at risk,” attorney William Sampson said. The Stevens had also proposed a casino

to the gaming board called Castle Rock, further south in Cherokee County. Sampson argued that the gaming board didn’t explain its determination that Castle Rock’s proposal was unfeasible. Multiple justices disagreed with Sampson, saying the gaming board explained it was concerned about Castle

Rock’s viability. The Stevens’ proposal was deemed less viable than Kansas Crossing, which justices said is why it was picked. Developers said Wednesday that more than 200 people have been offered jobs at Kansas Crossing, which is expected to open in March. Pittsburg Mayor John Ketterman said residents

are excited for the casino to open. “The delay which was sought by this lawsuit would not only be a severe economic hit for years, but also would be a disastrous setback to the spirits of southeast Kansans who need this project after the many unanticipated challenges we’ve faced recently,” Ketterman said.

Area

plan, the Douglas County Commission and Baldwin school board would decide if those taxing entities would participate in the rebate program. By statute, municipalities must define revitalization areas within their boundaries and the proposed plan must be presented at a public hearing. If both the proposed programs were approved, buyers of newly constructed homes would have their choice of using one of the incentives. Booth said it was the BCEDC’s hope that at least one of the incentives was approved. The city badly needs newhome starts and affordable housing of singlefamily homes, duplexes and apartments, he said. There also are currently fewer than 15 lots in the community available for development, he said.

son teams to test themselves against a running course through Eudora, a canoe or kayak trip from Eudora to De Soto and a return bicycle trip on mostly gravel roads back to Eudora. “Last year, we had the bounce house, food trucks and entertainment,” he said. “We want to try to grow that and open it up to a more community type thing. I really think the community should be aware of the history of the town we live in. The more we know about the history of the place we live in, the more involved people will be.” The plan is to create a Friday and Saturday festival that celebrates the community’s cultural heritage, Reazin said. He said he already has approached representatives of Haskell Indian Nations University about participating in the event, and they have an interest in having an American Indian dance demonstration and a food booth with flatbread and other foods. Eudora’s German heritage would also be celebrated, he said.

celebration in Eudora next month to mark the start of Lawrence-Douglas County Fire Medical’s ambulance service in the city. Reazin said the service would become active in the first week of February, perhaps as early as Wednesday. The plan is to have a formal dedication of the service in the second or third week of February, he said.

manner of chocolate treats for the children’s auction, silent auction and live auction will be accepted from 9 a.m. to noon on Feb. 11 and from 9 to 11:30 a.m. the day of the auction.

— This is an excerpt from Elvyn Jones’ Area Roundup column, which appears regularly on LJWorld.com.

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A

cost of new construction or reinvestment in existing properties. The rebates can equal all or a percentage of a property owner’s investments. The rebates can be available for up to 10 years. In a report shared two years ago with the Baldwin City Council, then-community development director Collin Bielser gave the example of a rebate available to the owner of newly constructed $200,000 home in a program that provides a 95 percent rebate on improvements. As new construction, the entire value of the home would be considered an improvement and eligible for rebates. Using 2015 mill levies, Bielser figured rebates would total $30,210 during the 10 years the home was eligible. The above example assumed the participation of Douglas County and the Baldwin school district in the neighborhood revitalization plan. Should the city move forward with a neighborhood revitalization

l l l

The Eudora community is looking to build on the success of last September’s Great Kaw Adventure Race. Eudora Mayor Tim Reazin said a committee is exploring creating a two-day event around the race that drew about 30 two-per-

l l l

There will be another

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The Baldwin City Economic Development Corporation had its annual banquet and awards banquet Tuesday at The Lodge. A&H Air Conditioning and Heating and its owners, Bill Harmon and Alan Wright, were honored as Business of the Year; Homestead Kitchen and Bakery owner and operator Lori Gardner was named New Business of the Year; and Bill Neuenswander received the Community Service Award. l l l

The Lumberyard Arts Center is seeking art and sweets for its annual Chocolate Auction, which will start at 12:30 p.m. Feb. 12 at the center, 718 High St. Art and all

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L awrence J ournal -W orld

Sunday, January 29, 2017

| 5A 2017 Presidential Lecture Series

Kansas special election adds urgency to pending court cases The 4th congressioAssociated Press nal district has nearly 427,000 registered voters, Wichita — The special including those covered election for the by the court decicongressional seat sions. formerly held by The American new CIA Director Civil Liberties Mike Pompeo has Union of Kansas added urgency to said it believes pending court dethe federal incisions in multiple junctions remain federal lawsuits in effect for the challenging respecial election strictive voter reg- Pompeo as well. istration requireLehman said ments in Kansas. that’s the case. Gov. Sam “The instrucBrownback has tion we have been called an April 11 given by the secspecial election to retary of state’s fill the 4th District office is that, until seat, which repwe are told differresents southern ently by a judge, Kansas. the same rules P r e l i m i n a r y Brownback will be in effect court orders alfor this election as lowed Kansans who reg- they were for the general istered using a federal (election) of 2016,” said form or at motor vehicle Lehman. “We will not do offices to vote in the No- anything differently unvember election even if less we have been told to they didn’t conform to a by a judge.” disputed Kansas requireThe uncertainty comes ment to provide docu- in part because federal mentary proof of citizen- judges hearing three sepship to vote, such as a arate cases unfolding in birth certificate, natural- Kansas and in Washingization papers or a pass- ton, D.C., could rule on port. pending motions seeking That affects some 3,178 summary judgment that voters in the 4th District could affect April’s spewho either registered cial election. at motor vehicle offices Here’s where that litior with a federal form gation stands: l The 10th Circuit without providing proof of citizenship, said Sedg- Court of Appeals has wick County Election upheld the preliminary Commissioner Tabitha decision by U.S. DisLehman. Another 1,450 trict Judge Julie Robinwho used the state form son that allowed people to register, but did not who registered at motor provide citizenship doc- vehicle offices to vote uments, will not be al- in the primary and genlowed to vote unless they eral elections in a case provide the documenta- filed under the National Voter Registration Act. tion. By Roxana Hegeman

Robinson now has before her the ACLU’s motion for a partial summary judgment on its Fourth Amendment claim that the Kansas’ proof-of-citizenship law violates the right to travel because it places a discriminatory burden on the voting rights of citizens who come to Kansas from other states. l Also pending before Robinson is a related, earlier case filed on behalf of a Kansas voter challenging the state’s proof-of-citizenship law as unconstitutionally burdening the right to vote and the right to travel. Motions seeking a summary judgment have already been filed by both sides in that case. The parties have asked the judge to hear oral arguments for a summary judgment together with the ACLU case because some arguments overlap. l A federal appeals court in September preliminarily blocked Kansas, Georgia and Alabama from requiring residents to prove they are U.S. citizens when registering to vote using a national form. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia sided with the League of Women Voters and other civil rights groups, returning it to the district court for a full hearing on the merits. But U.S. District Judge Richard Leon has yet to rule on languishing motions for summary judgment filed months ago. Any rulings in all the cases are almost certain to be appealed.

February Drive Away the Winter Doldrums Health and Wellness Challenge Program

Feb. 6-March 19 Enrollment Deadline: Fri, Feb. 3, Noon Feeling inactive or stagnant? Winter weather got you down? Drive away the winter doldrums by participating in this free, do-on-your-own, six-week wellness challenge. Challenges may include health screenings, fitness, nutrition and setting personal wellness goals. Successful participants will receive a small wellness-related incentive at the end of the program. Enroll at lmh.org or contact Aynsley Anderson Sosinski at (785) 505-3066 or aynsley. anderson@lmh.org.

LMH Performance and Wellness Center Classes Classes at LMH Performance and Wellness Center, Suite 100, Sports Pavilion, Lawrence.

Heel Bone Density Screening

Wed, Feb. 8, 6:30-8 pm Make an appointment at (785) 505-33066 This quick and easy heel screening can indicate if further testing for osteoporosis is needed. Education provided. $15/person.

Cholesterol and Glucose Screening

Fri, Feb. 3, 7-8:30 am or Sat, Feb. 4, 7:30-8:30 am Drop in for a lipid profile (full cholesterol) and blood sugar (glucose) by finger stick. $20/ test (exact cash or check). Fasting 9-10 hours is recommended; water and necessary medications are okay. You may experience short wait times.

LMH Main Campus Classes Classes at LMH, 325 Maine St, Lawrence. Registration

requested, unless notedVisit lmh.org for details or call 785-505-5800.

Healthy Hearts Fair

Sat, Feb. 18, Blood work: 7:30-10 am Screenings & Free, unless otherwise exhibits: 8-10:30 am noted. Information and Join us to learn about cardioregistration at lmh.org. vascular disease, its prevention, diagnosis and treatment. Free: How to Have BMI, blood pressure screening, and Keep a finger stick blood glucose and Healthy Heart educational information. Fri, Feb. 3, Full lipid (cholesterol) blood 9:30-10:30 am screening ($20 if registered Join us and learn more before 2/10 or $25 at the door). about risk factors, Watch for an enrollment form nutrition, exercise, and in the Journal-World or call other lifestyle man(785) 505-6179 and request a agement strategies registration form from a “health to keep your heart fair specialist.” healthy. We will also review the signs of How to Have and Keep heart attack and a Healthy Heart stroke. Advance regWed, Feb. 22, 6:30-7:30 pm istration requested Join us for a program to help you due to limited learn more about risk factors, space. $5/person. nutrition, exercise,

THE U.S.AND THE

GREAT WAR GR R 100 YEARS LATER

AMERICA’S ROAD TO WAR Thursday, Feb. 2 - 7 p.m. When war broke out in Europe in 1914, the U.S. stood on the sidelines as President Wilson asked his fellow citizens to remain neutral “in thought as well as in deed.” Michael Neiberg, noted scholar and chair of war studies in the U.S. Army War College, introduces the 2017 Presidential Lecture Series, exploring the complex paths of politics, economics and cultural divisions that came together and brought America into the war in 1917.

A GIANT WITH FEET OF CLAY: THE AMERICAN MILITARY IN THE GREAT WAR Thursday, Feb. 9 - 7 p.m. The story of how the U.S.Army sought to transform itself over the course of 18 months into a comparable or superior military force to the European armies is grounded in irony. Richard Faulkner, professor with the U.S.Army Command and General Staff College, lays out how the American Expeditionary Forces played a pivotal role in the brutal campaigns that led to Germany’s defeat on the battlefield.

AMERICANS ALL: THE HOMEFRONT IN WORLD WAR I Thursday, Feb. 16 - 7 p.m. In America,World War I brought expanded involvement in global politics, the experience of modern warfare—and equally important domestic changes. Noted scholar from Chapman College Jennifer Keene will discuss the responses of Americans to the introduction of the draft, economic mobilization, the patriotism crusade and its effects and much more.

BOLDNESS AND FRAILTY:WOODROW WILSON’S FIGHT FOR THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS Thursday, Feb. 23 - 7 p.m. Acclaimed biographer of Woodrow Wilson and professor emeritus at the University of Wisconsin, John Milton Cooper closes the series by painting a portrait of Wilson and his transformative leadership.Wilson guided the nation through World War I and sought to bring about an international system to ensure lasting peace.

2350 Petefish. Dr., Lawrence, Kan. - doleinstitute.org

Community Health Education Events and other lifestyle management strategies to keep your heart healthy. Class also reviews the signs of heart attack and stroke. Advance registration requested due to limited space. $5/person.

Senior Supper and Seminar

Tues, Feb. 21, Supper, 5 pm & Presentation, 6 pm Topic: Hypertension in the Elderly; Don’t Confuse Me with Facts Presented by: Roger Dreiling, MD, Cardiovascular Specialists of Lawrence Each month, we bring you a three-course supper and a health seminar. Reservations required 24 hours in advance. Space is limited. $5.50 for the meal.

Cholesterol and Glucose Screening

Wed, Feb. 8, 8-9:30 am Drop in for a lipid profile (full cholesterol) and blood sugar (glucose) by finger stick. Located in the west lobby, near the gift shop. $20/test (exact cash or check). Fasting 9-10 hours is recommended; water and necessary medications are okay. You may experience short wait times.

Breastfeeding Your Baby

Sun, Feb. 26, 3-6 pm Learn how to have a good and a lasting breastfeeding experience. $20/ person. Partner is free.

Babycare Workshop Tues, Feb. 7, 6-9 pm Bathing, cord care, diapering, sleeping, crying, nutrition and safety. $25/ person. Partner is free.

Newborn Safety

Wed, Feb. 22, 6-8:30 pm Learn about infant CPR and choking; child passenger safety; safe sleep; and safety issues. $25/person or $40/couple.

Pediatric First Aid/ CPR Renewal

Better Breathers Club

Tues, Feb. 14, 10-11 am Topic: Back to Basics, Part 2 (785) 505-2850.

Diabetes Education Group

Wed, Feb. 8, 6 pm Topic: Diabetes & Heart Disease Presented by: Leann Dickson, RN, BC, MSED; LMH Cardiac Rehab (785) 505-3062.

Sat, Feb. 11, 9-11 am Meets KDHE child care licensing requirements for child care providers with a current American Cancer Support Group Wed, Feb. 15, 5:30 pm Heart Association Pediatric No registration necessary. At First Aid card and a Heartsaver LMH Oncology Center. (785) CPR certification. $50. 505-2807 or liv.frost@lmh.org.

Heartsaver AED CPR

Sat, Feb. 25, 9-11:30 am This American Heart Association class, provides CPR certification for child care or other licensing requirements. Includes a practical test for certification and covers use of an AED. Not usually acceptable for healthcare provider certification. $50.

Free Support Services

All groups are free at LMH, 325 Maine St. Call the numbers provided for more information. No registration required, unless noted.

Stroke Support Group Tues, Feb. 21, 4 pm (785) 505-2712.

Grief Support Group Mon, Feb. 6 & 20, 4 pm (785) 505-3140.

Build Your Village – a Perinatal Support Group Call (785) 505-3081 for dates.

Breastfeeding & New Parent Support Group

Mon, Feb. 6, 13, 20 & 27 10-11:30 am Infant weight checks available.

Look Good, Feel Better

Wed, Feb. 15, 1-2:30 pm Trained voluteer beauty professionals offer free advice on nonmedical beauty techniques to help manage appeaance-related side effects of cancer treatment. Call (785) 505-2807 to enroll.

To enroll or for information, call ConnectCare at (785) 505-5800 or visit lmh.org.


6A

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Sunday, January 29, 2017

Center CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A

KU’s Sexual Assault Prevention and Education Center, or SAPEC, marked its one-year anniversary this month. That’s “too short of a time to really expect a culture shift. We’re looking to address attitudes, behaviors and beliefs,” Brockman said. “We are playing what we call the long game.” A chancellor-appointed sexual assault task force that met throughout the 2014-15 school year named such a center one of its top priorities in its final report. KU announced plans for the center in October 2015, and a few months later Brockman was hired as its first director. The center has had a busy first year. l For one, nearly 15,000 people have received training through the center, according to the center’s annual summary. More than 9,000 students, more than 1,000 employees and more than 4,800 community partners including KU parents participated in live trainings. l The center provided some 70 awareness events, has been active on social media and did a lot of collaborating with students and departments to develop all those trainings and programs in the first place, Brockman said. l The center’s many trainings have taken place at fraternities, sororities, student club meetings, a few KU classrooms, academic departments and also with all KU Athletics teams, Brockman said. She said the center worked with teams to do most trainings in their

.

L awrence J ournal -W orld

‘‘

(One year is) too short of a time to really expect a culture shift. We’re looking to address attitudes, behaviors and beliefs. We are playing what we call the long game.”

— Jen Brockman, director of KU’s Sexual Assault Prevention and Education Center

off-seasons. In addition to SAPEC’s small group “training camps,” Brockman said coaches and athletes helped choose other trainings for their respective groups, such as consent, bystander intervention or healthy relationships. l The center also developed KU’s mandatory online sexual assault prevention training, in its first year. The training, called “Think About It,” was chosen after KU focus groups reviewed four national online programs, Brockman said. All students are required to complete the training — or face a registration hold — unless they have been affected by trauma and feel the training would negatively affect them, Brockman said. Those students can sign up to take an alternative program through KU’s CARE coordinator at Watkins Health Services. Last semester, 20 students did that, Brockman said, and about half of them continued working with the CARE coordinator for other resources. The center now is up to its full staff of three fulltime employees and one

part-time employee. Last summer, two prevention educators joined Brockman. One is Dustin Struble, formerly with KU’s Student Involvement and Leadership Center, whose work focuses on bystander intervention and men’s engagement. The other is Meagan Collins, who focuses on healthy relationships and consent. SAPEC also has a parttime intern, a graduate student employee, who focuses on data analysis and assessment. The center’s total budget is about $240,000, Brockman said. Most is from the chancellor’s office budget, with some from KU’s student affairs budget, she said. A small amount, about $3,000 a year, is grant funded. With the center staffed and organized and with key programs developed, Brockman said a big goal for coming years is finding more outside funding. “My goal is to secure private and public grants that would help our program grow and sustain, and doing so in a way that does not compromise or negatively impact our community base,” she said.

Brockman believes her center can make a difference. She said it’s important for her center’s educational work to be done in tandem with proper policies and procedures for when an assault does occur. In addition to Watkins Health Center, SAPEC does works with other units at KU, such as Student Affairs and the Office of Institutional Opportunity and Access. “Prevention is the method that will stem the flow of violence and create this cultural change,” Brockman said. “If all we’re doing is responding, then we’re never affecting it happening in the first place.”

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Opinion

Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com l Sunday, January 29, 2017

EDITORIALS

Gun decisions A bill in the Kansas Senate that would allow local entities to ban guns is wise from the standpoint of both security and finances.

P

ublic entities in Kansas should retain the leeway to determine if concealed handguns should be banned from their facilities. Senate Bill 53 would allow this and should be approved. In 2013, lawmakers approved a bill requiring that concealed weapons be allowed in most public buildings unless the building is equipped with adequate security to ensure that nobody can bring a weapon inside. Public colleges and universities, along with cities and counties and other public entities, were allowed to exempt themselves from that law for four years. The exemption expires July 1. Senate Bill 53 repeals the expiration date, effectively leaving the exemption in place indefinitely. The Senate Federal and State Affairs Committee held a hearing on the bill on Thursday and a standing room only crowd turned out to speak, mostly in favor of Senate Bill 53. Most of the supporters were from Kansas colleges and universities. “I am in full support of this bill because I don’t want to get shot,” said Megan Jones, a graduate student and instructor at the University of Kansas. “I don’t want to watch someone else get shot. I don’t want to wonder if a guy sitting in my classroom is pulling out a cellphone or a firearm.” Jones is right. It’s hard to fathom how the KU campus is made safer by allowing students and faculty to carry guns to class and inside other buildings on campus. Travis Couture-Lovelady, a former Republican state representative who is now a lobbyist for the National Rifle Association, testified Thursday against Senate Bill 53, saying that current law is a compromise, allowing public entities to enforce a ban by implementing adequate security at public buildings to ensure no weapons can get inside. He said public entities have had four years to come up with a plan. But Couture-Lovelady ignores the cost of implementing such security measures. City Manager Tom Markus has already said it would be cost prohibitive to implement security equipment and/or personnel at the approximately 50 public buildings the city oversees. Imagine how costly such security would be for KU buildings. And given that the cash-strapped state of Kansas has been in cut-and-slash mode the past four years, the concealed carry law amounts to an unfunded mandate for public agencies that want to reasonably restrict where guns can be carried. Though colleges and universities were the most outspoken Thursday, several other organizations support Senate Bill 53, including the League of Kansas Municipalities, the Kansas Association of Counties and the Kansas Hospital Association. That’s a pretty strong lineup of supporters. Such deep support will be needed to take on the lobbying strength of the NRA. Senate Bill 53 makes sense financially and it makes sense from a security standpoint. It should be approved.

TODAY IN HISTORY On Jan. 29, 1820, King George III, the British monarch whose 59-year reign included the loss of the American colonies, died at Windsor Castle at age 81; he was succeeded by his son, who became King George IV. l In 1845, Edgar Allan Poe’s poem “The Raven” was first published in the New York Evening Mirror. l In 1861, Kansas became the 34th state of the Union. l In 1919, the ratification of the 18th Amendment to the Constitution, which launched Prohibition, was certified by Acting Secretary of State Frank L. Polk. l In 1936, the first inductees of baseball’s Hall of Fame, including Ty Cobb and Babe Ruth, were named in Cooperstown, N.Y. l In 1964, Stanley Kubrick’s nuclear war satire “Dr. Strangelove Or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb” premiered in New York, Toronto and London.

LAWRENCE

Journal-World

®

Established 1891

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

7A

Appalling behavior as a child dies A few thoughts on the lonely death of Naika Venant. As you may have heard, Naika, a Miami teenager, hanged herself in the dark hours of a Sunday morning. She did this live on Facebook. We’ll likely never know why she chose to do it that way. Perhaps she felt invisible. Perhaps she wanted to be seen. Her self-destruction drew attention, all right, but surely not the kind she wanted. To read the report by The Miami Herald’s Carol Marbin Miller and Alex Harris is to cringe with disgust: “A thousand people watched for nearly an hour as Naika Venant prepared to kill herself. They kept watching for another hour as the 14-year-old dangled on her scarf from the shower door in the bathroom of her Miami Gardens foster home. “People mocked the young girl, called her names and reacted to the video with Facebook’s laughing emoji, said Antonio Gethers, one of her 4,500 Facebook friends. Others posted cruel parody videos pretending to hang themselves, too.” The bleak despair and dead-end hope that cause people to take their lives is,

Leonard Pitts Jr. lpitts@miamiherald.com

That behavior speaks to moral stupidity, to the objectification of other people and their pain, to a selfish inability to extend compassion beyond the barricades of one’s own life.” unfortunately, all too familiar. And those feelings can be magnified dangerously in adolescence, an age where all emotions are outsized, all passions urgent and raw. Factor in that she was a survivor of physical abuse and sexual assault, and it becomes depressingly easy to imagine the forces that drove Naika to destroy herself. It is less easy to understand why that act was received the way it was.

The harsh laughter and cold ridicule of “people” — the word is used advisedly — who watched Naika’s suicide suggest that we flatter ourselves when we call ourselves a higher species. Apparently, only one individual tried to help; a friend saw the live feed and called police, but inadvertently sent them to the wrong address. By the time it got sorted out, Naika was beyond saving. Miami-Dade schools chief Alberto Carvalho blames Facebook for what happened, which is as understandable as it is misguided. Might as well blame the sidewalk where Kitty Genovese was killed in 1964 as she screamed for help that didn’t come. Or the Golden Gate Bridge, where a 2006 documentary, “The Bridge,” shows passersby passing by without intervening as people climb up on the ledge, preparing to jump. Or the walkway behind a Salem, N.J., McDonald’s where a young mother was brutally beaten in 2014 while observers laughed and recorded it on their cellphones. Facebook is an easy target, but it is not the web service whose behavior is appalling here. It is, rather, the ordinary people, the ev-

eryday Janes and Joes who could have acted to save this child, but did not. One is mindful of what’s called “the bystander effect,” which, according to Psychology Today, “occurs when the presence of others hinders an individual from intervening in an emergency situation.” But that doesn’t explain the laughter. It does not make sense of the mocking derision of a troubled child. No, that behavior speaks to moral stupidity, to the objectification of other people and their pain, to a selfish inability to extend compassion beyond the barricades of one’s own life. All of which have come to feel far too commonplace. It cries out for families, worship houses and schools to rededicate themselves to teaching what it means to be a truly human being. That would be a good way to give meaning to this tragedy. It’s haunting to think Naika might have killed herself on Facebook hoping to be seen. Yes, a thousand people watched her die. Then they clicked their browsers to see what else was on. — Leonard Pitts Jr., winner of the 2004 Pulitzer Prize for commentary, is a columnist for the Miami Herald.

An excess of intellectual emptiness Washington — In 2013, a college student assigned to research a deadly substance sought help via Twitter: “I can’t find the chemical and physical properties of sarin gas someone please help me.” An expert at a security consulting firm tried to be helpful, telling her that sarin is not gas. She replied, “yes the [expletive] it is a gas you ignorant [expletive]. sarin is a liquid & can evaporate ... shut the [expletive] up.”

George Will

georgewill@washpost.com

Much attention has been given to the noncollege-educated voters who rallied to Trump. Insufficient attention is given to the role of the college miseducated.” Tom Nichols, professor at the U.S. Naval War College and the Harvard Extension School, writing in The Chronicle Review, says such a “storm of outraged ego” is an increasingly common phenomenon among students who, having been taught to regard themselves as peers of their teachers, “take correction as an insult.” Nichols relates this to myriad intellectual viruses thriving in academia. Carried by undereducated graduates, these viruses infect the nation’s civic culture. Soon the results include the presidential megaphone being used to amplify facially preposterous assertions, e.g., that upward of 5 million illegal votes were cast in 2016. A presidential minion thinks this assertion is justified because it is the president’s “long-standing belief.” “College, in an earlier time,” Nichols writes, “was supposed to be an uncomfortable experience because growth is always a challenge,” replacing youthful simplicities with adult complexities. Today, college involves the “pampering of students as customers,”

particularly by grade inflation in a context of declining academic rigor: A recent study showed “A” to be the most commonly awarded grade, 30 percent more frequent than in 1960. And a 2011 University of Chicago study found that 45 percent of students said that in the previous semester none of their courses required more than 20 pages of writing and 32 percent had no class that required more than 40 pages of reading in a week. “Unearned praise and hollow successes,” Nichols says, “build a fragile arrogance in students that can lead them to lash out at the first teacher or employer who dispels that illusion, a habit that carries over into a resistance to believe anything inconvenient or challenging in adulthood.” A habit no doubt intensified when adults in high places speak breezily of “alternative facts.” “Rather than disabuse students of their intellectual solipsism,” Nichols says, “the modern university reinforces it,” producing students given to “taking offense at everything while believing anything.” Many colleges and universities, competing for tuition dollars “too often drawn thoughtlessly from an inexhaustible well of loans,” market a “college experience” rather than an education. The experience “turns into five and, increasingly, six [years].” Nichols notes that “the fragility of 21st-century students” re-

sults from “the swaddling environment of the modern university” that “infantilizes students” who demand “trigger warnings” and “safe spaces.” Much attention has been given to the noncollegeeducated voters who rallied to Trump. Insufficient attention is given to the role of the college miseducated. They, too, are complicit in our current condition because they emerged from their expensive “college experiences” neither disposed nor able to conduct civil, informed arguments. They are thus disarmed when confronted by political people who consider evidence, data and reasoning to be mere conveniences and optional. For all the talk in high places about emancipating the many from “the elites,” political philosopher Walter Berns was right: The question always is not whether elites will govern but which elites will. And a republic’s challenge is to increase the likelihood that the many will consent to governance by worthy elites. So, how is our republic doing? What is most alarming about the president and his accomplices in the dissemination of factoids is not that they do not know this or that. And it is not that they do not know what they do not know. Rather, it is that they do not know what it is to know something. The republican form of government rests on representation: The people do

not decide issues, they decide who will decide. Who, that is, will conduct the deliberations that “refine and enlarge” public opinion (Madison, Federalist 10). This system of filtration is vitiated by a plebiscitary presidency, the occupant of which claims a direct, unmediated, almost mystical connection with “the people.” Soon, presidential enablers, when challenged about their employer’s promiscuous use of “alternative facts,” will routinely use last week’s “justification” of the illegal voting factoid: It is the president’s “long-standing belief,” so there. In his intellectual solipsism, he, too, takes correction as an insult. He resembles many of his cultured despisers in the academy more than he or they realize. — George Will is a columnist for Washington Post Writers Group.

Letters to the editor l Letters should be 250 words or fewer. l Letters should avoid name-calling and be free of libelous language. l Letters can be submitted via mail to P.O. Box 888, Lawrence KS 66044 or via email at letters@ljworld.com.


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8A

TODAY

WEATHER

.

Sunday, January 29, 2017

MONDAY

TUESDAY

L awrence J ournal -W orld

THURSDAY

WEDNESDAY

BRIEFLY Flu spreading across state

Times of clouds and sun

Mostly sunny and not as cool

Intervals of clouds and sunshine

Partly sunny

Partly sunny

High 45° Low 27° POP: 0%

High 58° Low 28° POP: 0%

High 49° Low 26° POP: 0%

High 43° Low 23° POP: 5%

High 34° Low 22° POP: 10%

Wind NW 8-16 mph

Wind WSW 7-14 mph

Wind NNW 4-8 mph

Wind NNE 6-12 mph

Wind E 6-12 mph

POP: Probability of Precipitation

McCook 57/30

Kearney 47/31

Oberlin 56/32

Clarinda 38/27

Lincoln 43/27

Grand Island 45/29

Beatrice 45/29

St. Joseph 42/27 Chillicothe 39/26

Sabetha 42/28

Concordia 52/31

Centerville 35/24

Kansas City Marshall Manhattan 43/30 41/29 Salina 52/29 Oakley Kansas City Topeka 56/31 57/32 47/29 Lawrence 44/28 Sedalia 45/27 Emporia Great Bend 41/29 51/30 59/32 Nevada Dodge City Chanute 45/31 61/32 Hutchinson 52/31 Garden City 57/32 59/29 Springfield Wichita Pratt Liberal Coffeyville Joplin 44/30 57/32 56/30 61/29 48/31 54/32 Hays Russell 59/31 58/30

Goodland 57/30

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

LAWRENCE ALMANAC

Through 7 p.m. Saturday.

Temperature High/low 51°/26° Normal high/low today 40°/19° Record high today 69° in 2013 Record low today -10° in 1966

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

0.00 0.98 0.87 0.98 0.87

REGIONAL CITIES

Today Mon. Today Mon. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Holton 46 29 pc 60 30 s Atchison 43 27 pc 57 30 s Independence 42 30 pc 55 32 s Belton 42 29 pc 54 30 s Olathe 42 29 pc 55 30 s Burlington 49 30 pc 61 30 s Osage Beach 42 30 c 55 32 s Coffeyville 54 32 pc 63 32 s Osage City 48 30 pc 62 30 s Concordia 52 31 pc 58 27 s Ottawa 46 29 pc 59 30 s Dodge City 61 32 s 64 28 s Wichita 57 32 pc 66 31 s Fort Riley 51 28 pc 61 26 s Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.

NATIONAL FORECAST

Topeka (ap) — Kansas health officials say the flu is spreading across the state. The state health department says six outbreaks have been confirmed so far during the 2016-17 flu season — two in Leavenworth County and one each in Osage, Harvey, Cherokee and Saline counties. The Wichita Eagle reports that Via Christi and Wesley Healthcare in Wichita have both seen an increase in the flu, with a 50 percent increase at Wesley Healthcare since the same period last year. Health officials say it’s not too late to get the flu vaccine because the disease might spread for two to three more months. The health department says Influenza or pneumonia contributed to or was the direct cause of 903 deaths of Kansas residents during the 2015-16 flu season.

Payless to lay off 110 Topeka employees Topeka (ap) — Payless ShoeSource has announced plans to lay off 165 people, 110 of whom work at locations in Topeka. Spokeswoman Meghan Spreer tells The Topeka Capital-Journal that the positions are in corporate, distribution center and field leadership roles. She says the layoffs make up about 2 percent of the company’s total associate base. Payless’ headquarters are located in

Topeka. GO Topeka and Greater Topeka Chamber of Commerce leader Matt Pivarnik says that the community feels “the pain of these cutbacks,” but GO Topeka is ready to assist laid off workers in several ways. Pivarnik says the competition from the industry can “lead to tough decisions.” Spreer says these types of decisions are necessary for Payless to keep up in an evolving retail environment.

Kansas seeks citizenship proof from longtime voter Wichita (ap) — Attorney David Morantz has turned to Twitter to raise the public alarm after getting a notice from Johnson County election officials telling him he needed to submit proof of citizenship to register to vote. He tweeted a copy of it, asking “What’s up with this,” and noting he has been a registered Kansas voter since 2002. The county election office tweeted back Thursday telling him to disregard the letter, saying it was mailed in error. Deputy Election Commissioner Debbie Tyrrel says it was a data-entry error that affected only Morantz. Morantz says he has real concerns about what he calls “anti-voter laws,” adding he wanted to alert others who got similar letters. The county has been sending out notices to people telling them to submit citizenship documents to complete registrations.

SUN & MOON

Mon. 7:29 a.m. 5:40 p.m. 9:04 a.m. 8:43 p.m.

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LAKE LEVELS

As of 7 a.m. Saturday Lake

Level (ft)

Clinton Perry Pomona

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874.57 889.55 973.37

7 25 200

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BEST BETS WOW DTV DISH 7 PM

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Living your best life is easy at Pioneer Ridge Independent Living, a community built with YOU in mind.

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SUNDAY Prime Time WOW DTV DISH 7 PM

Rain

-10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s National Summary: Snow showers and heavier squalls will coat the Midwest and East today. Rain will streak across the Florida Peninsula. Freezing fog will plague the interior Northwest, as rain moves into Washington.

Global warming

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2017

Precipitation

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SECTION B

USA TODAY — L awrence J ournal -W orld

IN MONEY

IN LIFE

Dow 20,000? Try S&P 2300

Political satirist: Trump era is no laughing matter

01.29.17 RICHARD DREW, AP

JARRAD HENDERSON, USA TODAY NETWORK

“There is no evidence that refugees — the most thoroughly vetted of all people entering our nation — are a threat to national security.” CAIR National Litigation Director Lena F. Masri

Trump, Putin in step vs. terror President speaks with 5 world leaders on a busy Saturday Gregory Korte and David Jackson USA TODAY

A crowd at New York City’s John F. Kennedy International Airport protests the Muslim travel ban Saturday.

STEPHANIE KEITH, GETTY IMAGES

Judge grants stay, halts deportations

WASHINGTON President Trump and Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin spoke by phone Saturday and agreed to establish “real coordination” to “crush ISIS and other terrorist groups in Syria,” the Kremlin said, referring to the Islamic State. The White House put out a short statement on the onehour phone call, saying it “ranged in topics from mutual cooperation in defeating ISIS to efforts in working together to achieve more peace throughout the world including Syria.” It added that “the positive call was a significant start to improving the relationship between the United States and Russia that is in need of repair.”

Lawsuits begin as detentions of travelers cause chaos This is an edition of USA TODAY provided for your local newspaper. An expanded version of USA TODAY is available at newsstands or by subscription, and at usatoday.com.

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

USA SNAPSHOTS©

Holiday sales up

$658.3 billion

Amount spent on retail sales for the 2016 holiday season, a 4% increase. SOURCE National Retail Federation MICHAEL B. SMITH AND JANET LOEHRKE, USA TODAY

Doug Stanglin and Alan Gomez

MICHAEL REYNOLDS, EPA

President Trump connects Saturday with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

USA TODAY

President Trump’s ban on immigration by citizens from seven Muslim-majority countries ran into at least a temporary roadblock Saturday night, after a U.S. District judge in Brooklyn granted an emergency stay sought by immigrants’ rights lawyers. The judge’s ruling applies to those who have already arrived in the U.S. and those who are in transit who hold valid visas. The decision halts part of Trump’s executive order, which barred citizens from those seven countries for the next 90 days. The Department of Homeland Security said that by Saturday evening, its agents had stopped 109 foreigners at U.S. airports based on Trump’s order and prevented another 173 people from boarding flights v STORY CONTINUES ON 2B

CRAIG RUTTLE, AP

Protesters assembled at JFK after two Iraqi refugees were detained while trying to enter the country.

What you need to know about the refugee ban

Immigrants on U.S. soil are left in lurch

How can President Trump do this legally? 2B

They’re fearful, uncertain about future, 3B

Cooperation with Russia in Syria would represent a break with current policy and create a rift among GOP foreign policy leaders. Sen. John McCain, R.Ariz., on Friday warned Trump against cooperating too closely with Putin, whom he accused of propping up a “murderous regime” in Syria. Word of warming relations also comes after the U.S. intelligence concluded the Russians meddled in the presidential election. The Kremlin’s statement said nothing about reports that Trump is considering lifting sanctions on Russia. McCain also warned Trump not to ease up on sanctions, saying he would work in Congress to give them the force of law. The Kremlin said the two presidents also discussed “mav STORY CONTINUES ON 2B

Fans try to predict Supreme Court pick at fantasy site Colorado judge is in lead to be new justice Richard Wolf @richardjwolf USA TODAY

Before the last time a Supreme Court seat was filled, court watchers and legal beavers visiting the “FantasySCOTUS” website correctly predicted it would be Elena Kagan. If the survey proves prescient again, Colorado’s Neil Gorsuch could be President Trump’s guy. WASHINGTON

Gorsuch, 49, who sits on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit, has led a field of 22 potential nominees listed. At last count, he had 649 votes to 512 for Alabama’s more controversial William Pryor, the early favorite among conservatives and cognoscenti. The Supreme Court nerds who frequent FantasySCOTUS aren’t as impressed with the other two potential finalists: Michigan’s Raymond Kethledge is in eighth place with 160 votes; Pennsylvania’s Thomas Hardiman is 10th with 91. “I was shocked that Judge Gorsuch shot up so quickly at the

USA TODAY

Justice Elena Kagan was correctly predicted on FantasySCOTUS.

AP

U.S. Court of Appeals Judge Neil Gorsuch

outset,” says Josh Blackman, a South Texas College of Law professor who founded the online prediction market in 2009. “I think this is one case where the ‘wisdom of the crowds’ actually identified the leading candidate long before everyone else.” FantasySCOTUS allows attorneys, law students and others to predict how justices will vote on cases pending before the high court. Winners and prizes are announced at the end of each term. The chance to guess who will fill a vacancy has come around only once since the site was created. That was in 2010, when Presi-

dent Obama chose Kagan, then the U.S. solicitor general and a former Harvard Law School dean, to replace retiring Justice John Paul Stevens. Voters on the site were way ahead of Obama, predicting early that Kagan would outpace other potential nominees — including federal appeals court Judge Merrick Garland, who got the nod after Justice Antonin Scalia’s death last year but was blocked by Senate Republicans. “These are not random people on the street,” Blackman, 32, says of the thousands who participate on FantasySCOTUS. “They’re people who follow this closely.”


2B

L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY SUNDAY, JANUARY 29, 2017

America is ‘land of freedom,’ says detained traveler v CONTINUED FROM 1B

HASSAN JARRAH, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

Syrian children play in the snow in the Deir Zeinoun refugee camp in eastern Lebanon on Saturday. President Trump has issued a temporary ban on all immigrants from Syria.

Can Trump legally block new refugees? Oren Dorell and Alan Gomez l USA TODAY

President Trump suspended the U.S. refugee program for 120 days, banned immigrants from seven Muslim nations for 90 days and ordered his administration to develop “extreme vetting” measures for immigrants from those countries to keep “radical Islamic terrorists” out of the U.S. The order, signed Friday, bars all Syrians from entering the U.S., and gives preference in admission to Christians. What’s the How many Q Q difference between refugees has the immigrants and refugees? U.S. admitted in the past?

Immigrants come from other countries to the U.S. for a variety of personal reasons, such as seeking a better life. Refugees are a special class of immigrants who seek asylum from war, persecution and other risks to their safety. They have protected status under international law.

Q

Who are the refugees admitted to the U.S. in 2016? Most of the 85,000 refugees admitted in 2016 came from countries that are at war or under the control of repressive governments. Top admissions from Africa came from the war-torn Democratic Republic of Congo (16,370) and Somalia (9,020). From East Asia, most came from Myanmar, formerly known as Burma, (12,347). The greatest number of Europeans came from Ukraine (2,543), which is at war with Russian-backed irregular troops in the east. Colombians (529) fleeing an insurgency topped the list from South America, and Syrians (12,587) and Iraqis (9,880) fleeing civil war and terrorist groups topped the list from the Near East and South Asia.

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.

Total U.S. refugee admissions have dropped steadily from 146,158 in 1975, when 135,000 came from Asia, according to the State Department. Does Trump have Q the legal authority to block refugees and

other immigrants? He might on security grounds. A president has the power to shut down the refugee program without approval from Congress. Federal law allows the president to bar entry to any immigrant “or any class” of immigrants if he deems them “detrimental to the interests of the United States,” and to “impose on the entry of aliens any restrictions he may deem to be appropriate,” according to the law. How many immigrants Q does the U.S. admit, and how many from the seven

countries on Trump’s list? The State Department issued 617,752 immigrant visas and 10,891,745 non-immigrant (tourist and worker) visas in 2016. One out of 20 immigrant visas — roughly 30,000 — went to people from the seven majority Muslim countries cited by the president: Iran, Iraq, Syria, Libya, Sudan, Somalia and Yemen.

John Zidich

EDITOR IN CHIEF

Patty Michalski

How are refugees Q now vetted? The State Department says it

has the most exhaustive background system in the world. Refugees are first interviewed in their home countries and their backgrounds are checked carefully during a process that can take up to two years. Some refugees worked for the U.S. military in Iraq as translators or in other jobs and are seeking asylum for fears of being singled out for their association with the U.S. government. Why a total ban Q on Syrians? Syria is a concern because the

Islamic State militant group that is behind terrorist acts around the world still operates in the country. About 11 million Syrians — half of the population — have been displaced.

“The impact of what President Trump was looking for is in full effect. Complete chaos.” Abed Ayoud, legal and policy director, American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee

“It’s working out very nicely. We’re going to have a strict ban, and we’re going to have extreme vetting, which we should have had in this country for many years,” he said. Speaking to hundreds of demonstrators at JFK Airport, Rep. Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y., called the ban ineffective, discriminatory, “disgusting,” and said it “goes against every ounce of our traditions from George Washington onward.” “We are here to say it should be stopped and be revoked,” he said. Hameed Khaldi Darweesh, who was a translator for American forces for 10 years, was detained overnight at JFK along with 11 others following his arrival from Istanbul. After being released Saturday, Darweesh said he had feared he would be sent back to Iraq, which his family fled because of death threats. When asked by reporters outside the airport what he thought of Trump, Darweesh said, “I don’t know. He’s a president, I’m a normal person.” He said he was focused instead on the lawyers who won his release. “This is the soul of America,” Darweesh said. “This is what pushed me to move, to leave my country and come here. America is the land of freedom.”

Who are the Syrians Why did he single out Q admitted to the U.S.? Q those seven countries? Three of them — Iran, Sudan The State Department says the

and Syria — comprise the State Department’s list of state sponsors of terrorism. The other four — Iraq, Libya, Somalia and Yemen — are designated “terrorist safe havens” by the State Department. Have any refugees Q from those countries recently committed

PRESIDENT AND PUBLISHER

the Pulse nightclub in Orlando last June, was a U.S.-born Afghan-American who’d traveled to Saudi Arabia in recent years. And Syed Rizwan Farook and Tashfeen Malik, the married couple who killed 14 people in San Bernardino, Calif., on Dec. 2, 2015, also had no ties to those seven countries. Farook was born in the U.S. to Pakistani immigrants, and his wife was a recent arrival from Saudi Arabia, which Farook had visited.

headed for the U.S. After U.S. District Judge Ann Donnelly granted the stay, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), which had filed suit to block Trump’s ban, issued a one-word celebratory tweet: “Victory!!!!!!” Trump’s executive order, signed Friday, suspends the entry of all refugees to the U.S. for 120 days, halts admission of refugees from Syria indefinitely and bars entry for three months to residents from the predominantly Muslim countries of Iraq, Syria, Iran, Sudan, Libya, Somalia and Yemen. A senior Homeland Security official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the department quickly overhauled its screening procedures after Trump signed the order Friday. The department issued new guidance to its Customs and Border Protection officers in the field and adjusted its computerized targeting system to identify people who are barred entry through the executive order. The official said the order allowed legal permanent residents — known as green-card holders — and foreigners who were granted special visas for Iraqi and Afghan interpreters, to enter after undergoing a full background check and in-person interview. The official said 81 people made it through that process and were allowed to enter the country. In Virginia, another federal judge issued a temporary restraining order Saturday night, directing the Department of Homeland Security to allow lawyers to meet with legal permanent residents detained at Washington Dulles International Airport. U.S. District Judge Leonie Brinkema forbade Homeland Security from deporting any of the green-card holders for seven days. “President Trump never gave a second thought to how his discriminatory, un-American order would actually play out on the ground,” Virginia Attorney General Mark Herring said after the judge’s ruling. Karen Tumlin, legal director for the National Immigration Law Center, which was part of the suit in New York, said the lawyers were “tremendously relieved” by the judge’s stay. But she said the legal team was quickly moving to free the immigrants who remained in U.S Customs and Border Protection custody Saturday night based on Trump’s executive order. She challenged the DHS numbers, calling them “alternative facts.” “We have 50 Iranian greencard holders being held from

one single flight at (Los Angeles International Airport),” Tumlin said. “It doesn’t add up.” The fallout from the president’s temporary ban struck with full force earlier Saturday, blocking some travelers from boarding their planes overseas, compelling others to turn around upon arrival in the U.S., and prompting customs agents at New York’s JFK Airport to detain at least a dozen people, including a former Iraqi translator for the U.S. military in Baghdad. The growing chaos sparked legal challenges, airport protests, condemnations from politicians and denunciations from advocacy groups. The reverberations began only hours after Trump signed the executive order Friday. In brief remarks while signing his latest executive orders Saturday, Trump maintained the order isn’t a “Muslim ban.”

terrorist acts in the U.S.? No. The two major U.S. terrorist attacks that occurred in 2015 and 2016 involved people with ties to countries not on that list: Omar Mateen, who killed 49 people at

vast majority of the 12,587 admitted last year are women and children, and only 2% are single young men who are most likely to commit terrorist acts. Can Trump block Q or favor refugees based on their religion?

Legal experts say a ban on Muslim immigrants rather than a ban on immigrants from specific countries that have Muslim majorities would be challenged based on the First Amendment, which guarantees freedom of religion.

SPENCER PLATT, GETTY IMAGES

Travelers enter the international arrivals terminal at New York’s John F. Kennedy International Airport in 2014.

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McCain warns Trump against ‘reckless course’ v CONTINUED FROM 1B

jor aspects of the Ukrainian crisis,” and “possible dates and venue of their personal meeting.” The two agreed to “maintain regular personal contacts.” Russia boosted its military support to the regime in Syria in 2015 after it appeared rebels trying to overthrow Syrian President Bashar Assad were threatening his hold on power. Moscow claimed that its airstrikes in Syria were aimed at terrorists. The White House, State Department and Pentagon maintained that Russian attacks primarily target-

ed moderate opponents of Assad and not the Islamic State, also known as ISIL or ISIS, and alQaeda-linked terrorists. The Pentagon and Russian military have established communication links to prevent accidents between warplanes. The Pentagon has stressed that this effort does not indicate cooperation with the Russian military. McCain labeled Putin a “murderer and a thug” and said he would “never be our partner, including in fighting ISIL.” “Russia has propped up the murderous Assad regime as it has waged war on the Syrian people

and killed more than 400,000 civilians,” McCain said in a statement. Citing Russian aggression in Ukraine and its threats to NATO, McCain urged Trump to end speculation about lifting sanctions, calling it a “reckless course.” The call with Putin and other world leaders capped off a dizzying nine-day stretch in which Trump appeared to be in perpetual motion, signing 15 executive actions, speaking to 11 world leaders, visiting three federal agencies and, on Friday, hosting British Prime Minister Theresa May. In addition to Putin, Trump

spoke Saturday with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzō Abe, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President François Hollande. He was scheduled to speak with Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull on Saturday night. Trump also signed more executive orders: One to reorganize the National Security Council, another to strengthen ethics rules for the executive branch, and a third requesting the military to present him a plan to defeat the Islamic State. Not signed: an order to investigate alleged voter fraud in the 2016 campaign.


3B 5B

USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld SUNDAY, JANUARY 29, 2017

DRAWING A LINE ON IMMIGRATION President Trump spent much of his first week in office tackling immigration — legal and illegal. He pushed forward with his pledge to complete the wall between the U.S. and Mexico, suspended the refugee program and threatened to cut money to approximately 300 municipalities that offer sanctuary to undocumented immi-

WHERE IS ‘SANCTUARY?’ Communities that offer some sort of protection to undocumented immigrants, and might also limit cooperation with federal immigration enforcement agents.

Seattle

WASH.

Sanctuary cities

Sanctuary counties

CANADA

N.D.

MONT.

Sanctuary state

MINN. MAINE WIS.

S.D.

VT.

IDAHO

ORE.

IOWA

WYO.

MICH.

N.Y.

N.H.

NEB. ILL.

Denver NEV. San Francisco

UTAH

KAN.

COLO.

CALIF.

N.J.

Topeka

W. VA.

MO.

Las Vegas

KY.

Los Angeles

ARK.

Atlanta

N.M. TEXAS

Tucson

MISS.

Dallas

VA.

N.C.

TENN.

OKLA.

ARIZ.

ALA.

S.C.

GA.

LA.

DEL.

MD.

NO SANCTUARY FOR THESE FUNDS Sanctuary programs that could be cut off and the total grants provided in fiscal year 2015: JUSTICE HOMELAND DEPARTMENT SECURITY

Austin New Orleans

$1.03 BILLION $1.04 BILLION FLA.

Gulf of Mexico

Pacific Ocean

Atlantic Ocean

R.I. CONN.

PA.

OHIO

IND.

N

MASS.

Chicago

$55 million

$399 million

Miami-Dade County announced Thursday that it will work more closely with federal immigration authorities.

MEXICO

Operation Stonegarden

Office on Violence Against Women grants

State Homeland Security Program

State Criminal Alien Assistance Program

$402 million

$165 million

Urban Areas Security Initiative

Community Oriented Policing Services program

$587 million

$208 million

BORDER SECURITY

Edward Byrne Justice Assistance Grant Program

The border between the United States and Mexico stretches 1,954 miles. Pedestrian fencing

$265 million

Vehicle fencing

EL PASO SECTOR

ARIZ.

CALIF.

EL CENTRO SECTOR

YUMA SECTOR

TUCSON SECTOR

SAN DIEGO San Calexico SECTOR Diego

TUCSON SECTOR

Sásabe

BAJA CALIFORNIA NORTE

Pacific Ocean

TEXAS

N.M. El Paso

BIG BEND SECTOR

MEXICO

Nogales

Del Rio Eagle Pass

Rio PresIdio G Riv rande er

LAREDO SECTOR

RIO GRANDE VALLEY SECTOR Gulf of Mexico

Laredo

Brownsville

The Rio Grande creates a 1,252-mile natural border CHIHUAHUA

SONORA

N

DEL RIO SECTOR

COAHUILA

NUEVO LEON

TAMAULIPAS

FEWER ARRESTS AT THE BORDER ...

... AS BORDER PATROL BUDGET INCREASES

Total undocumented immigrant arrests at the U.S.-Mexican border, fiscal years:

Enacted border patrol program budget, in billions of dollars, in fiscal years1:

2.0 million

$4.0

1.64 million

$3.64 billion

$3.5

1.5

$3.0 $2.5

1.0

$2.0

408,870

0.5

$1.5 $1.06 billion $1.0 $0.5

0

$0 ’00

’01

’02 ’03 ’04 ’05 ’06 ’07 ’08 ’09

WHERE REFUGEES ARE COMING FROM AND ... Number of refugees admitted from Oct. 1, 2015, to Sept. 30, 2016: Near East South Asia Asia

’11

’12

’13

’14

’15

’16

’00

’01

’02 ’03 ’04 ’05 ’06

’07 ’08 ’09

’10

’11

’12

’13

’14

’15

’16

... WHERE THEY GO

BORDER FENCING TYPES

Number of refugees arriving between Oct. 1, 2015, and Sept. 30, 2016:

PEDESTRIAN FENCE

Fewer than 100

100 to 1,000

1,000 to 2,900

2,900 or more

Africa

Latin America, Caribbean

40,000

’10

Europe

35,000

35,555

30,000

31,625

AFP

Pedestrian fencing between Mexico and the U.S., in Tijuana, Mexico.

25,000 R.I. D.C.

20,000

VEHICLE FENCING

15,000 12,581

10,000 5,000

3,957 0

1,340 ’07

’16

TOP STATES California Texas New York Michigan Ohio Arizona

5,026 4,258 4,194 4,110

7,909 7,802

USA TODAY

Vehicle barriers are in place along the desert near El Centro, Calif.

1 — 2003 includes carry-over funds from FY 2002; 2005 includes emergency supplemental funds; 2007 includes FY 2006 war supplemental carry-over funds; 2011 includes FY 2010-11 border security supplemental; FY are Oct. 1 through Sept. 30 SOURCE The Center for Immigration Studies, Justice Department, Homeland Security Department, State Department, USA TODAY research ALAN GOMEZ, PIM LINDERS, GEORGE PETRAS, JIM SERGENT AND JANET LOEHRKE, USA TODAY


4B

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Sunday, January 29, 2017

PUZZLES

.

L awrence J ournal -W orld

THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD MISHMASH By Dan Schoenholz Puzzles Edited by Will Shortz ACROSS 1 Inconceivably vast 7 Hard looks 13 Stream, as of revenue 19 Baseball-like game 21 Flowery 22 Et ____ 23 Witty British judge? 25 Conquistador Cortés 26 Copies, informally 27 It shows who’s who or what’s what 29 Perform a full-body scan? 30 Pizza, e.g. 32 Quest of 25-Across 33 Ortiz of “Ugly Betty” 34 Site of Spaceship Earth 37 Language akin to Thai 38 Three-legged race, e.g.? 44 School chum, say 46 “Mr. Blue Sky” band, for short 47 World’s most voluminous river 48 Chapter in early 20th-century history: Abbr. 49 Property inheritor, legally speaking 51 On point 53 Julie of TV’s “Big Brother” 54 “One of the most civilized things in the world,” per Hemingway 55 Nail? 58 Consider anew, as a

decision 60 Girl with a ball 61 Sound investments, in more ways than one 62 ____ Minor 65 A– 66 “America”? 71 Hindi word for “spice mix” 74 Brief second? 75 ____ generis 76 Theological inst. 79 What Cubs fans get carried away by? 81 Grant a girl permission to dis Drake? 86 Fortify 87 Page (through) 90 1990s Indian P.M. 91 Week, on Martinique 92 Alias inits. 93 Game for the goal-oriented? 95 Keeps in the loop, in a way 97 Worn out 98 Ability to score at Madison Square Garden, e.g.? 102 Mouse’s resting place 103 Take a timeout 104 French ____ 105 Title at Topkapi Palace 106 Egg container 107 Religious image 109 Piano dueler with Donald in 1988’s “Who Framed Roger Rabbit” 112 Quiz-bowl fodder 114 Like Serbia and Croatia 117 Diving disaster? 122 Maintain 123 Bawdy

124 Gently show the door 125 Give a new tournament ranking 126 Pulls on, as heartstrings 127 Speakers’ spots DOWN 1 Bluecoat 2 Only woman to sing lead vocals on a Beatles song 3 Darn things 4 Sierra ____ 5 Drink commonly served with a spoonstraw 6 H.O.V. lane user 7 Farm females 8 Lateral opening? 9 Chest pain 10 Grist for analysts 11 Californie, e.g. 12 Gaming giant 13 I, to Izaak 14 Word for a namedropper? 15 1960s sitcom set in the 1860s 16 From one side to the other 17 Kind of history 18 Ebb 20 Grammy-winning drummer ____ Lyne Carrington 24 Lorna of literature 28 Codger 30 Opposite of ruddy 31 Thyroid need 33 Embrace 35 Bus. card info 36 N.L. Central squad, on scorecards 37 Don’t work too hard

38 Half of a swinging couple? 39 Goes by 40 Alternative to Cinemax 41 “That’ll be the day!” 42 Take responsibility for something 43 Atheist’s lack 45 Place to hang tools 50 Leave a good impression? 52 One lifting spirits? 54 Jet measure 56 Think-tank product 57 Chi follower 59 Diesel in movies 63 Reeling 64 Shivering fit 67 Key locale: Abbr. 68 They’ll take your measure 69 Manhattan, e.g.: Abbr. 70 They’re dubbed 71 Mullally of “Will & Grace” 72 Hard to tell apart 73 Informal measures of popularity 77 It lies between Cleveland, O., and Buffalo, N.Y. 78 Nut 80 Made out 82 Showy in a cheap way 83 Salmon roe, by another name 84 “Don’t worry about me!” 85 Await resolution 88 Relative of “Aargh!” 89 Wetland

1

2

3

4

5

6

19

7 20

23

8

9

10

11

12

13

21

27 32

37

40

46

49

51

52

56 60

71

72

87

92

70

81 88

89

82

94

83

95

96

109 115

116

110

123

125

126

93 Measly amount 94 Guitar Hero activity 96 Wolf (down) 99 Mantle, e.g. 100 Some vaults 101 Like cats, typically 106 Secure spots

102 106

112

113 119

118

122

85

97

105

111

117

78

84

101

104

108

77

91

100

103

114

76

90

99

107

65

75

93

98

59

64

69

80

86

43

54 58

63

74

79

42 48

53

62

68

73

18

36

41

57

61 67

35

47

50

55

17

29

34

39

45

66

28

33

38

44

16

25

26 31

15

22

24

30

14

107 Certain steel beam 108 Racer Yarborough 110 Fig. on a periodic table 111 Mrs., abroad 112 Bedouin shelter 113 ____ facto 115 Common thing to lie about

120

121

124 127

116 ____ Yost, 2015 World Serieswinning manager 118 Mauna ____ 119 Poland’s main airline 120 Start of the Lord’s Prayer 121 Education support grp.

UNITED FEATURE SUNDAY CROSSWORD ACROSS 1 Falafel bean 5 Figure of speech 10 Colder than cold 16 Pine cousin 21 Historical periods 22 Uptight 23 Conductor Antal -24 January, in Jalisco 25 Volt or watt 26 High mark (hyph.) 27 Made up for 28 Nobelist from Egypt 29 Water color? (2 wds.) 31 Japanese honorific 33 Famous last words 35 Ltd. cousin 36 “Nick of Time” singer 37 Film, as of dust 40 Baja “Mrs.” 41 Hermes’ mother 42 Tattered cloth 45 Steely, as nerves 46 Ecol. bureau 48 Labor org. 50 Erudite person 52 Votes in 54 Scrooge’s nephew 55 Chilly in Chile 57 Drag along 58 Taboos (hyph.) 59 Brown songbird 60 Vitamin amts. 62 Calculus pioneer 66 1960s space chimp 67 Latin dance (hyph.) 69 Apollo’s priestess at Delphi 71 Luxury car 72 Back down (2 wds.) 74 Rural elec. provider 76 Tizzies 78 Pen part 79 Reebok rival 80 Some Voltaire works

83 Foot pedal 85 Here, to Pierre 88 No longer chic 89 Salvers 90 Town named for a Great Plains tribe 93 Fools with photos 95 Entre -- (confidentially) 97 “-- be a pleasure” 98 In the wake of 100 Auntie Em’s st. 101 Elephant or swan 106 Simon or Diamond 108 Lens settings 110 Junk food 112 Ogden or old car 113 Horse handler 115 Hobgoblin 116 Thinnest coin 117 Ipso -118 King, to monsieur 120 Canceled 122 “Star Trek” speed 123 Softly lustrous 124 Anchoring place 128 Fair-hiring abbr. 129 Authorizes 130 Blimp, for short 131 Weathervane dir. 132 “Judith” composer 133 Shale extract 135 El -- (ocean current) 137 Olfactory stimulus 139 Pouch 140 Map collection 142 Funny-peculiar 144 Menacing 148 Hot coffee hazard 150 Tabloid staffer 153 Win by -- -155 Fidel’s country 156 J.R.’s mama 157 Some macaroni 158 Talks up

159 Premed class 160 Shoulder muscles 161 Get cozy 162 Mete out 163 Sheet of stamps DOWN 1 Satyr 2 Hindu god of fire 3 Hide 4 Purplish flower 5 Emphatic letters 6 Agent 7 Small bay 8 Columbus sch. 9 Muddle 10 Bell town of fiction 11 Compost 12 -- -Magnon 13 Indian Ocean feeder 14 Things 15 Apple juice 16 Reduced 17 Santa -- winds 18 Call again 19 They have brains 20 Stolen auto (2 wds.) 30 Worms and flies 32 School (abbr.) 34 Table salt 38 -- Wiedersehen 39 Dawdle 41 Ski slope bump 42 Keep subscribing 43 Solo 44 Columbus’ port 46 Builds 47 Phnom -49 AAA or EE 51 Shade 53 Steppes horseman 54 Herr’s spouse 56 Where Waikiki is 59 Rider’s command 61 Go through carefully 63 Evans or Hunt

64 A Bronte sister 65 Pajama coverers 67 XV x X + 1 68 Raids 69 Pastors 70 Egypt’s cont. 73 A Peron 75 Far-reaching view 77 Organize (2 wds.) 81 PFC mail drop 82 Always, to Whitman 84 Weapons cache 85 Striving to win 86 Movie with a posse 87 “City of Festivals” 91 -- the wall 92 Crash-probing org. 93 Small parachute 94 Cellar access 95 Microwave 96 Mantra chants 99 Jacket style 102 Sgt. Preston’s group 103 Pushpins 104 Basso Simon -105 Avignon’s river 107 “The Maltese Falcon” villain 109 Bridge tower 111 Can. neighbor 114 Kiwi’s extinct cousin 117 Sitar music 119 “-- -- Rhythm” 121 Luau welcome 122 Knock on -123 Earliest 124 Crowded together 125 Ancient consultant 126 Carrying a beeper (2 wds.) 127 Soprano -- Farrell 130 Monte -- sandwich 134 King-size spoon 136 Vikings 137 “Don’t tell -- --!”

UNIVERSAL SUDOKU

See both puzzle SOLUTIONS in Monday’s paper. 138 Show biz org. 140 Citrus coolers 141 Twins, e.g. 143 PC fodder

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

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

145 Popular salad 146 Diplomat Abba -147 Deem 149 Put a match to

151 Booster seat user 152 Mouse catcher 154 Cambodia’s Lon --

HIDATO

See answer next Sunday

©2017 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.

LONELP SHLAPS KOCIOE

Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app

SUFEED

MURBEM PILSAR

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

PRINT YOUR ANSWER IN THE CIRCLES BELOW

Solution and tips at sudoku.com.

Last week’s solution

See the JUMBLE answer on page 6B. Answer :

SPLASH BUMMER DEFUSE COOKIE SPIRAL POLLEN After knocking out his opponent in the first round, the boxer was —

PLEASED AS PUNCH

JANUARY 29, 2017

Last week’s solution


L awrence J ournal -W orld

Sunday, January 29, 2017

Mom still wants birthday cards from adult kids Dear Annie: What should I do about my adult children’s birthdays? My birthday is Jan. 1. Most years, my children acknowledge it with a card, not just a text. This year, all I got were texts from them. I was very hurt. Their father’s birthday is later in the year, and they will buy him a gift plus a card. May I just text them on their birthdays to reciprocate their behavior? Their father won’t remember to get a card, etc. I feel like giving to charities in their names for their birthdays. Would that be OK? I’m in a pickle regarding what to do. — Birthday Blues Dear Birthday: First, happy belated birthday. And shame on your children. The least they could have done was send a card. I’m guessing you’re such a giver that they take dear old Mom for granted. Perhaps they need to be

Dear Annie

Annie Lane

dearannie@creators.com

reminded that you have feelings. Tell them — or have your husband tell them — that their actions (or lack thereof) hurt you. As for what to do for their birthdays, giving to charity is always a great idea. Go for it. I dare them to complain. Dear Annie: I am hoping this letter can help open the public’s eyes to the fact that kids, not just adults, can have mental illness issues. They often appear normal to others, and even their families

‘Black Sails’ still violent, convoluted The epic sailing ship and pirate adventure “Black Sails” (8 p.m., Starz, TV-MA) embarks on its fourth and final season. A sweeping tale of pirate conspiracies against the British crown and battles for control of Nassau and the riches of untold islands, ‘‘Black Sails’’ has always been a tad too convoluted and violent for my tastes. But you can’t say that it’s not an expensive-looking production that delivers dramatic battle scenes rivaling any series or motion picture. With ‘‘Taboo’’ on FX and ‘‘Frontier’’ on Netflix (by way of Discovery Canada), pirate shows are in vogue again. But neither have the production values of ‘‘Black Sails.’’ Bottom line: I find myself drawn into the spectacle but not carried away enough to want to follow the plot. Truth be told, I feel the same way about ‘‘Game of Thrones.’’ O It gets a tad boring pointing out all the dumb superstitious nonsense being passed off as ‘‘documentary’’ television. But then again, programmers keep making it. You can waste 15 whole hours of your life watching a marathon of “Finding Bigfoot” (2 p.m. through 6 a.m. Monday, Animal Planet, TV14), or you can wise up and realize they will never find him. Over on National Geographic, a venerable, once-respected institution given the Fox treatment, it’s “Atlantis Rising” (8 p.m., TV-PG), a two-hour search for the mythical kingdom from producer James Cameron (‘‘Titanic’’). I hope he doesn’t get trampled by a unicorn! O “Conviction” (9 p.m., ABC, TV-14) becomes the third series this week to air its final episode without much fanfare. It joins the CW’s ‘‘Frequency’’ and CBS’ ‘‘Pure Genius’’ among network television’s freshman class fatalities. O Just to make things crystal clear, the Miss Universe pageant (6 p.m., Fox, TV-PG), formerly owned by the president of the United States, is airing opposite “The New Celebrity Apprentice” (6 p.m., NBC, r, TVPG), a show he used to host and still partially owns! Tonight’s other highlights O Scheduled on “60 Minutes” (6 p.m., CBS): finding survivors of an Italian avalanche. O “Dateline” (8 p.m., NBC, TV-PG) glances back at Tom Brokaw’s half-century in television journalism. O A murder roils Israeli-Iranian relations on “Madam Secretary” (8 p.m., CBS, TV-14). O Albert lands in the royal doghouse on ‘‘Victoria’’ on “Masterpiece” (8 p.m., PBS, TV-PG, check local listings). O Voiello sets a trap on “The Young Pope” (8 p.m., HBO, TVMA). Copyright 2017 United Feature Syndicate distributed by Universal Uclick.

tend to forget that these issues — severe anxiety, for example — are going on inside their minds. My granddaughter has certain sensitivities and has been bothered in recent months by strangers coming up to her, and I want to remind everyone that under no circumstances should a stranger touch a child. We have encountered problems with this many times. Before Halloween, I was at a pumpkin patch with my granddaughter. The man selling pumpkins said to me, ‘’You can leave your granddaughter with me. We will carve a pumpkin, and you can come back and pick her up.’’ I politely said no. My granddaughter picked out a pumpkin, and he touched her on the arm. We got in the car, and she was near tears, saying, ‘’He scared me, and he touched me. I will never

JACQUELINE BIGAR’S STARS

For Sunday, Jan. 29: This year you break past selfimposed restrictions and feel much better. You also adjust your financial perspective as well. If you are single, you could meet someone whom you find to be very exciting, and vice versa. If you are attached, the two of you opt to be more adventurous. 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) +++ Use the early morning for any matter that is important to you. Make necessary adjustments. Tonight: Early to bed. Taurus (April 20-May 20) +++++ Friends surround you. Know that you need to stick to your original plans. Tonight: Think outside the box. Gemini (May 21-June 20) ++++ You might not have realized that you were going to play such an active role today. Tonight: A must appearance. Cancer (June 21-July 22) +++++ Keep reaching out to someone you care about. This person might be unusually tired or withdrawn. Tonight: Let others decide. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) +++++ Others seem to fall into line with ease. Your perspective could change radically if you decide to relax and go with the moment. Tonight: Get into a spontaneous happening. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) ++++ You are capable of making

go back there again.’’ In a local mall, we were sitting in an eatery, when an older man came over and started asking about my daughter. My granddaughter was again upset by a stranger and thanked me for not telling him her name. In the future, these people may touch a child in front of someone who will turn them in. Please don’t touch kids you don’t know or don’t have permission to touch, even if they are so cute you can hardly resist. — Concerned Grandmother Dear Concerned: I’m sure many of these strangers are trying to be friendly, but thank you for reminding all of us to respect the personal space of children. It’s always best to exercise caution. — Send your questions for Annie Lane to dearannie@ creators.com.

jacquelinebigar.com

great choices. Nevertheless, a close loved one could decide to run with the ball and make plans for both of you. Tonight: Listen to a partner. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) +++ You have a lot to accomplish. How you proceed and what you decide to do needs to remain in your hands. Tonight: An intense conversation emerges from out of the blue. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) ++++ You might want to head in a certain direction without having to explain every action and decision. Tonight: Dinner at a favorite hamburger joint. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) +++ You might want to do certain activities, but a demanding domestic situation and a need to have an important conversation could push you in a different direction. Tonight: Soak away stress in a hot tub. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) +++++ You seem to be in the process of breaking certain patterns, and others are wondering why. Know that you are being quietly observed. Tonight: As you like it. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) ++++ Your smile elicits a strong response from others, especially in the morning. . Tonight: Treat a friend to a fun place and interesting food. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) ++++ You are likely to become unusually resourceful and full of life. Tonight: Among the crowds.

| 5B

UNIVERSAL CROSSWORD Universal Crossword Edited by Timothy Parker January 29, 2017 ACROSS 1 Minimal amount 6 Nursery rhyme porridge 11 Org. mentioned on tubes of toothpaste 14 Result of a metallic mixture 15 Monster with 100 peepers 16 Dreamy state for sleepers 17 What Chris Paul floats on? 19 Kabuki costume belt 20 High-pressure position 21 ___ pro quo 22 Neutral possessive 25 Captain’s pronoun for a vessel 26 Parts of action films 28 Thing for a musician to read 30 “___ it my way,” sang Sinatra 33 Possessed, to Caleb or Jeremiah 34 Newspaper reviewer 36 Brown-___ (human lapdog) 38 Place to land with no land in sight 43 One doing some unearthing? 44 Sewing necessity 45 Seasoning in an Indian restaurant

1/29

48 Penicillin was created from it 50 What to pay for irregulars 51 Mr. X, in mysteries 53 Aged 55 Tennis subdivision 56 Thing to salute 57 Prevent overheating, as an engine 61 Result of basking 62 What Buck Showalter floats in? 66 Unhittable serve 67 Declares openly 68 Tart taker of nursery rhymes 69 Marge Simpson’s neighbor 70 Hat for a stereotypical beatnik 71 Leaf under a bloom DOWN 1 Fond du ___, Wisconsin 2 90-degree building addition 3 Last name among boxing legends 4 Jr.-to-be 5 Clerical errors 6 Deconstructed grammatically 7 What some Irish speak 8 Title for a Turkish military leader 9 Some businesswear 10 Psychic ability

11 Circa 12 Bookkeeping entries in red 13 Somewhere in the crowd 18 Unlikely to cheat or steal 21 Fisticuffs preceder, often 22 Peruvian empire builder 23 Spelling of TV’s “Beverly Hills, 90210” 24 Mix in a kitchen 27 Not here 29 Using acid for art’s sake 31 College freshman’s course, often 32 Hospital VIP, informally 35 Writing style with a twist? 37 Urban baseball field 39 Not masc. 40 Date that “stuck” with Caesar 41 “Have anything ___ up your sleeve?”

42 One thing to get while on vacation 45 Cloaklike dress 46 Loosen, as skates 47 Sounded like someone in pain 49 Swarming insect 52 Shade close to lilac 54 Port features 58 “Young Frankenstein” helper 59 Investment firm T. ___ Price 60 Thing in an Olympic swimming pool 62 Unmeasured bit of hair gel 63 What a couch may be preferred over a bed for 64 Eggs, in ancient Rome 65 Sniggler’s prey

PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER

1/28 © 2017 Andrews McMeel Syndication www.upuzzles.com

FLOTATION DEVICES By Timothy E. Parker

— The astrological forecast should be read for entertainment only.

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Sunday, January 29, 2017

LAWRENCE • AREA

.

DATEBOOK

DEATHS

29 TODAY

Earth Care Forum, Journal-World obituary policy: “Rooted Stewardship: For information about running obituaries, call The Depth of the Human 832-7151. Obituaries run as submitted by funeral Fingerprint,” 9:40-10:45 homes or the families of the deceased. a.m., First Presbyterian Church, 2415 Clinton Parkway. Kansas statehood om untzinger anniversary celebration: Services for Tom Huntzinger, 69, Lawrence are Natural Symbols of Kanpending and will be announced by Warren-McElwain sas, 1:30-2 p.m., Prairie Mortuary. He died Jan. 27, 2017 at the KU Med Center. Park Nature Center, 2730 Harper St. Digital Douglas AUL ESLIE WOPE County History Launch 67, Lansing, died 1/21/17. Memorial 2­4 pm Party, 2 p.m., Lawrence Saturday February 4, 2017 at Quisenberry Funeral Public Library Auditorium, Home. Memorials to Basehor Linwood High 707 Vermont St. School Scholarship Fund. Russian National Ballet Theatre: “Swan Lake,” 2 p.m., Lied CenLARENCE AYMOND OBJOY R ter, 1600 Stewart Drive. Bead Society Meeting, A Memorial visitation for Clarence R. Pobjoy 2-5 p.m., Lawrence PubSr., 74, Lawrence, will be 11­12 pm Monday, January 30, 2017, at Rumsey­Yost Funeral Home. He died lic Library, 707 Vermont St. Thursday in Tonganoxie. rumsey­yost.com The Last Romance, A Comedy by Joe DiPietro, 2:30 p.m., Theatre ONALD NDREW UTTHOFF Ronald Andrew Louise Putthoff of Kansas Lawrence, 4660 Bauer Putthoff (85) died in the City, Mo. Five nieces and Farm Drive. New Life in Christ early morning hours of four nephews are joined January 9, 2017 at his with numerous family Pastor Fundraiser/Conhome in Lawrence, Ks. He members and friends in cert, 3-5 p.m., Eldridge was in hospice care with mourning his passing. A Hotel, 701 Massachusetts his wife, Patsy Joyce celebration of Ron's life St. Story Circles: PeoFaulkender and caring will be held May 20 at family members. Ronald is Mission Lake Club House, ple’s State of the Union, survived by his wife, three 12101 Charolette St, 3:30-6 p.m., Lawrence loved stepchildren, Kansas City, MO from 1 to Public Library, 707 VerWilliam Robert Keaton of 3 PM. Ron's greatest mont St. Virginia, Martha Keaton­ legacy is the acceptance Poetry Reading, 5-7 Ferren of Overland Park, and love he consciously p.m., Eighth Street TapKs, and Rebecca Sue brought to each and every room, 801 New HampKeaton of Kansas City, person he encountered. shire St. Mo; six beloved An example of a life well Old Time Fiddle granddaughters; sister lived. Tunes Potluck and Jam, Joan Putthoff of Kansas Please sign this 6-9 p.m., Steve Mason City, Mo. and sisters­in­ guestbook at Obituaries. Luthiers and Violin Shop, law Nancy Faulkender of LJWorld.com. 3809 W. 24th St.

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KANSAS WOMEN’S BASKETBALL CLAIMS FIRST BIG 12 WIN. 3C

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Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com/sports l Sunday, January 29, 2017

KANSAS 79, KENTUCKY 73

ELITE EXPERIENCE Jayhawk veterans spark comeback victory By Matt Tait mtait@ljworld.com

Lexington, Ky. — The games-played experience factor in the starting lineups favored Kansas, 426-132, and the second-ranked Jayhawks used every bit of wisdom at their disposal to knock off No. 4 Kentucky, 79in the I thought 73, featured we showed g a m e of the extreme fourth upperannual classman S E C / B i g Challeadership 12 l e n g e tonight.” Saturday night at R u p p — KU coach Bill Arena. Self F a c ing four fantastic freshmen and one super sophomore in Kentucky blue, KU’s crew of two seniors, two juniors and one freshman rallied from a 12-point first-half hole to control most of the second half en route to the bragging-rights victory. “I thought we showed extreme upperclassman leadership tonight,” KU coach Bill Self said after the win. “And I thought we played pretty tough. But I told ’em it doesn’t mean anything if we don’t gather momentum from this and build off of it. I think our guys are really excited, not that we played great. I think they were excited because we didn’t play great and we fought through it and we ended up winning the game.” KU’s starting five of Frank Mason III (21

Nick Krug/Journal-World Photo

KANSAS FORWARD LANDEN LUCAS (33) FINISHES A DUNK IN FRONT OF Kentucky guard Malik Monk (5) and UK forward Edrice Adebayo (3) during the > JAYHAWKS, 4C second half of the Jayhawks’ 79-73 victory Saturday at Rupp Arena in Lexington, Ky. For more photos, please visit: kusports.com.

Lucas proves most valuable

Nick Krug/Journal-World Photo

KANSAS GUARD FRANK MASON III, LEFT, puts up a shot against Kentucky forward Derek Willis.

Lexington, Ky. — World-famous ring announcer Michael Buffer found the stage so big he even tweaked his trademarked slogan and said, “Let’s get ready for roundbaaaaaaall!” And 24,418 basketballcrazed spectators, most anticipating a slaughter that would send them home from Rupp Arena in a euphoric state, let out a roar. The pre-game buildup centered on the celebrity coaches on both benches, the four McDonald’s All-Americans in Kentucky’s starting lineup and the

Tom Keegan tkeegan@ljworld.com

one in Kansas’, plus his senior teammate, the national-player-of-theyear candidate. In other words, this was just a routine day at the office for Kansas fifth-year senior Landen Lucas, ever the plow

Nick Krug/Journal-World Photo

KANSAS GUARD DEVONTÉ GRAHAM (4) turns to the bench with excitement as the Jayhawks pull away during the > KEEGAN, 4C second half.


Sports 2

2C | LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD | SUNDAY, JANUARY 29, 2017

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Serena sets record in win over Venus Melbourne, Australia (ap) — Serena Williams held up a Grand Slam winner’s trophy for the 23rd time, celebrating her place in history, and received a congratulatory letter and a pair of custom-made shoes from Michael Jordan, the name most synonymous with No. 23. Venus Williams got to watch from close range again, and shed tears more of joy than regret after being beaten in a major final for the seventh time by her record-breaking younger sister. Serena won the all-Williams final, the ninth in Grand Slam history and the second in Australia, 6-4, 6-4 on Saturday night. With her record seventh Australian Open title, Serena moved ahead of Steffi Graf for the most major titles in the Open era. The Williams sisters are close. They started out playing together in Compton, Calif., hardly a hotbed for tennis, with their father Richard and mother

Oracene as coach and mentor. And they still practice and travel together around the world. They met for the first time at a major at Melbourne Park in 1998 — Venus won that one. In 2003, when the younger of the Williams siblings completed her “Serena Slam” of four consecutive titles, Venus was on the other side of the net. She didn’t reach another Australian final for 14 years. When Serena sat on the court, holding both arms up to celebrate on Saturday, Venus walked over to her sister’s side of the net for a hug. “This was a tough one,” Serena said. “I really would like to take this moment to congratulate Venus, she’s an amazing person — she’s my inspiration. “There’s no way I would be at 23 without her — there’s no way I would be at one without AP Photo/Dita Alangkara her. Thank you Venus for inspiring me to be the best player SERENA WILLIAMS, LEFT, IS EMBRACED BY HER SISTER VENUS, right, I can be and inspiring me to after winning their women’s singles final at the Australian Open tennis championships in Melbourne, Australia, on Saturday. work hard.”

Warriors 144, Clippers 98 Oakland, Calif. — Stephen Curry scored 25 of his 43 points in the third quarter following his first halfcourt buzzer-beater of the season at the end of the first half to lead the Golden State Warriors to their ninth win in 10 games over the Los Angeles Clippers on Saturday night. Curry’s 51-foot shot was the spark on a night that began with his playing status in doubt because of a sore left quad. After testing his leg in warmups, Curry was cleared to play and showed no signs of being slowed by the injury, hitting nine 3-pointers. Kevin Durant added 23 points, and Klay Thompson had 16 to give Golden State its eighth straight win over its Southern California rival. Blake Griffin scored 20 points for the struggling Clippers. They have lost four of five since star point guard Chris Paul went down with a torn ligament in left thumb. L.A. CLIPPERS (98) Griffin 9-14 2-3 20, Mbah a Moute 1-4 2-2 5, Jordan 4-4 0-3 8, Rivers 3-11 3-6 10, Redick 4-8 2-2 13, Anderson 2-4 0-0 6, W.Johnson 1-4 0-0 3, Speights 2-6 0-0 5, Bass 4-6 1-2 9, Stone 1-2 2-2 4, Felton 3-12 2-2 10, Crawford 2-7 0-0 5. Totals 36-82 14-22 98. GOLDEN STATE (144) Durant 9-11 2-2 23, Green 1-4 3-4 5, Pachulia 2-3 0-0 4, Curry 15-23 4-4 43, Thompson 7-11 0-1 16, McAdoo 5-8 0-0 10, Looney 2-4 0-0 4, McGee 4-5 1-1 9, Varejao 1-1 1-2 3, Livingston 4-6 0-0 8, Iguodala 3-6 2-2 9, McCaw 2-5 0-0 5, Clark 2-5 0-0 5. Totals 57-92 13-16 144. L.A. Clippers 22 29 23 24 — 98 Golden State 31 41 45 27 — 144 3-Point Goals-L.A. Clippers 12-28 (Redick 3-5, Anderson 2-3, Felton 2-5, Mbah a Moute 1-1, Speights 1-3, Crawford 1-3, W.Johnson 1-3, Rivers 1-4, Griffin 0-1), Golden State 17-34 (Curry 9-15, Durant 3-4, Thompson 2-3, Iguodala 1-3, Clark 1-3, McCaw 1-4, Green 0-1, Looney 0-1). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-L.A. Clippers 32 (Felton 7), Golden State 48 (Curry 9). Assists-L.A. Clippers 24 (Rivers 6), Golden State 35 (Durant 7). Total Fouls-L.A. Clippers 18, Golden State 17. A-19,596 (19,596).

Celtics 112, Bucks 108, OT Milwaukee — Isaiah Thomas had 37 points, and Jae Crowder scored four of his 20 points on free throws in the final 28 seconds of overtime to help Boston beat Milwaukee. Boston won its third straight after squandering a 16-point second half lead and a 42-point first quarter, its best of the season. Giannis Antetokounmpo led Milwaukee with 21 points, and Greg Monroe had 14 points and 13 rebounds. The Bucks have lost three in a row and eight of nine. BOSTON (112) Crowder 5-13 6-6 20, Brown 3-9 2-2 9, Johnson 5-7 0-1 11, Jerebko 0-4 0-0 0, Thomas 11-21 9-9 37, Green 2-7 0-0 5, Zeller 2-6 0-2 4, Olynyk 7-12 2-3 17, Rozier 0-4 0-0 0, Smart 2-6 5-7 9. Totals 37-89 24-30 112. MILWAUKEE (108) Snell 4-6 0-0 12, Antetokounmpo 8-16 3-4 21, Maker 2-5 0-0 4, Parker 2-13 0-0 4, Dellavedova 4-7 5-6 14, Beasley 7-10 2-2 17, Henson 1-2 6-8 8, Monroe 4-10 6-9 14, Terry 1-6 0-0 3, Brogdon 4-12 3-3 11. Totals 37-87 25-32 108. Boston 42 22 17 21 10 — 112 Milwaukee 27 26 20 29 6 — 108 3-Point Goals-Boston 14-40 (Thomas 6-11, Crowder 4-10, Johnson 1-1, Green 1-3,

HIGH SCHOOLS HUB:

Cousins scored the go-ahead basket with 14.3 seconds left on a driving layup. The Hornets had a chance to take the lead in the closing seconds, but Frank Kaminsky shot an airball on a 3-pointer. Cousins grabbed the rebound and was fouled, making one free throw. Darren Collison added 17 points for the Kings. Kemba Walker had 20 points of his 26 points in the third quarter for Charlotte.

How former Jayhawks fared Cole Aldrich, Minnesota Min: 2. Pts: 0. Reb: 0. Ast: 0. Darrell Arthur, Denver Min: 15. Pts: 3. Reb: 3. Ast: 0. Ben McLemore, Sacramento Did not play (coach’s decision). Marcus Morris, Detroit Min: 36. Pts: 14. Reb: 2. Ast: 2. Paul Pierce, L.A. Clippers Did not play (coach’s decision). Brandon Rush, Minnesota Did not play (coach’s decision). Andrew Wiggins, Minnesota Min: 38. Pts: 23. Reb: 3. Ast: 4. Jeff Withey, Utah Did not play (coach’s decision).

Brown 1-3, Olynyk 1-5, Smart 0-1, Rozier 0-3, Jerebko 0-3), Milwaukee 9-21 (Snell 4-5, Antetokounmpo 2-3, Beasley 1-1, Dellavedova 1-2, Terry 1-4, Brogdon 0-3, Parker 0-3). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-Boston 44 (Brown 8), Milwaukee 47 (Monroe 13). Assists-Boston 26 (Thomas 8), Milwaukee 23 (Dellavedova, Antetokounmpo 6). Total Fouls-Boston 23, Milwaukee 25. Technicals-Boston defensive three second, Boston team, Thomas. A-18,717 (18,717).

Heat 116, Pistons 103 Miami — Goran Dragic scored 23 points and Miami beat Detroit to push the NBA’s longest current winning streak to seven games. Wayne Ellington added 19 points, James Johnson had 18, and Dion Waiters 17 for the Heat. They tied a season high with 14 3-pointers, with Ellington making three in less than two minutes in the final quarter. The Heat outscored Detroit 26-12 in the fourth. Miami was 11-30 at the midway point of its season — and hasn’t lost since. Reggie Jackson scored 24 points for Detroit. Andre Drummond had 17 points and 20 rebounds. DETROIT (103) Morris 7-11 0-1 14, Leuer 4-5 0-1 8, Drummond 8-15 1-3 17, Jackson 10-17 2-2 24, Caldwell-Pope 2-11 0-0 5, Harris 7-11 2-2 16, S.Johnson 3-4 0-1 7, Bullock 1-4 0-0 2, Baynes 0-2 2-2 2, Smith 4-9 0-0 8. Totals 46-89 7-12 103. MIAMI (116) Babbitt 3-3 0-0 9, Whiteside 4-9 1-2 9, Dragic 8-14 5-7 23, Waiters 7-18 2-4 17, McGruder 3-7 4-4 12, White 2-3 2-2 7, Reed 1-2 0-0 2, J.Johnson 7-13 4-4 18, Ellington 7-10 0-0 19. Totals 42-79 18-23 116. Detroit 33 27 31 12 — 103 Miami 35 29 26 26 — 116 3-Point Goals-Detroit 4-12 (Jackson 2-2, S.Johnson 1-1, Caldwell-Pope 1-4, Leuer 0-1, Bullock 0-1, Drummond 0-1, Morris 0-2), Miami 14-28 (Ellington 5-7, Babbitt 3-3, Dragic 2-2, McGruder 2-4, White 1-2, Waiters 1-9, J.Johnson 0-1). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-Detroit 41 (Drummond 20), Miami 37 (Whiteside 12). Assists-Detroit 11 (Jackson 3), Miami 18 (Waiters 7). Total Fouls-Detroit 16, Miami 19. Technicals-Detroit defensive three second, Detroit team, Drummond. A-19,600 (19,600).

SACRAMENTO (109) Cousins 13-22 7-9 35, Koufos 1-3 1-2 3, Collison 7-11 1-1 17, Afflalo 4-8 3-4 13, Temple 2-7 2-4 7, Barnes 0-4 0-0 0, Tolliver 5-9 0-0 14, Cauley-Stein 6-7 1-4 13, Lawson 2-6 1-2 5, Richardson 1-2 0-0 2. Totals 41-79 16-26 109. CHARLOTTE (106) Kidd-Gilchrist 3-5 3-4 9, Williams 5-12 2-2 14, Hibbert 2-2 2-2 6, Walker 8-16 7-8 26, Batum 6-11 4-4 19, Hawes 4-6 4-4 12, Kaminsky 3-10 0-0 8, Sessions 2-3 0-0 5, Belinelli 3-10 0-0 7. Totals 36-75 22-24 106. Sacramento 24 28 33 24 — 109 Charlotte 22 22 33 29 — 106 3-Point Goals-Sacramento 11-27 (Tolliver 4-8, Cousins 2-2, Afflalo 2-4, Collison 2-6, Temple 1-3, Lawson 0-1, Richardson 0-1, Barnes 0-2), Charlotte 12-37 (Batum 3-6, Walker 3-6, Williams 2-8, Kaminsky 2-8, Sessions 1-1, Belinelli 1-7, Hawes 0-1). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-Sacramento 38 (Cousins 18), Charlotte 34 (Hawes, Batum 7). AssistsSacramento 27 (Lawson 9), Charlotte 24 (Batum, Walker 7). Total Fouls-Sacramento 23, Charlotte 25. Technicals-Cousins, Hawes, Charlotte coach Steve Clifford. A-18,597 (19,077).

Nuggets 123, Suns 112 Phoenix — Danilo Gallinari scored 32 points and Denver took advantage of a thirdquarter parade to the freethrow line to beat Phoenix for the second time in three nights. Eric Bledsoe scored a careerhigh 41 for the Suns. Devin Booker added 23. Kenneth Faried had 21 points and 13 rebounds for the Nuggets, winners of three straight and seven of their last nine. Denver won despite the absence of center Nikola Jokic, who left with a left hip flexor strain late in Thursday night’s 127-120 victory. The Nuggets were 18 of 19 at the foul line in the third quarter, when Phoenix starting forwards T.J. Warren and Marquese Chriss had five fouls and Booker four. Denver finished 37 of 42 at the line. DENVER (123) Gallinari 9-14 11-11 32, Faried 6-9 9-11 21, Nurkic 2-4 1-1 5, Nelson 4-9 7-8 17, Harris 6-15 2-3 15, W.Chandler 2-10 2-2 6, Barton 2-5 2-3 6, Arthur 1-4 0-0 3, Murray 7-10 3-3 18. Totals 39-80 37-42 123. PHOENIX (112) Warren 3-10 0-0 6, Chriss 2-4 0-2 4, T.Chandler 6-8 3-4 15, Bledsoe 12-27 14-15 41, Booker 8-16 7-11 23, Dudley 0-1 0-0 0, Tucker 5-10 0-0 12, Len 0-1 0-0 0, Knight 1-8 0-0 2, Barbosa 4-6 0-0 9. Totals 41-91 24-32 112. Denver 21 38 36 28 — 123 Phoenix 33 28 22 29 — 112 3-Point Goals-Denver 8-25 (Gallinari 3-5, Nelson 2-6, Arthur 1-2, Murray 1-2, Harris 1-6, W.Chandler 0-2, Barton 0-2), Phoenix 6-21 (Bledsoe 3-8, Tucker 2-4, Barbosa 1-1, Warren 0-1, Chriss 0-1, Dudley 0-1, Booker 0-2, Knight 0-3). Fouled Out-None. ReboundsDenver 48 (Faried 13), Phoenix 43 (T.Chandler 13). Assists-Denver 17 (Nelson 6), Phoenix 20 (Bledsoe 8). Total Fouls-Denver 25, Phoenix 36. Technicals-Nelson, Phoenix defensive three second 2, Phoenix team 2. A-18,055 (18,422).

Kings 109, Hornets 106 Charlotte, N.C. — DeMarcus Cousins had 35 points and Grizzlies 102, Jazz 95 Salt Lake City — Zach Ran18 rebounds, and Sacramento handed Charlotte its fourth dolph scored a season-high 28 points, Marc Gasol added 18 straight loss.

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and Memphis beat Utah. Randolph bullied defenders in the post throughout the night and Gasol worked the Utah defense both inside and out, routinely hitting turnaround fade-away jumpers and going 4-of-5 on 3-pointers. The Grizzlies took a 52-43 lead into halftime after a 13-2 run gave Memphis a 10-point lead. Randolph had his way with the Jazz post defenders and had 10 of his 14 first-half points in the second quarter. The Jazz shot just 26.3 percent from the field in the second quarter and never led in the second half. Mike Conley helped keep the Jazz at bay in the fourth quarter and finished with 23. Rodney Hood led the Jazz with 20 points. MEMPHIS (102) Ennis 3-4 1-2 8, Green 3-7 2-2 9, Gasol 7-12 0-0 18, Conley 9-14 2-2 23, Allen 3-8 0-0 6, Randolph 12-20 4-4 28, Harrison 2-4 0-0 4, Carter 0-7 0-0 0, Daniels 2-4 0-0 6. Totals 41-80 9-10 102. UTAH (95) Hayward 4-13 6-7 14, Lyles 0-3 0-0 0, Gobert 3-5 9-9 15, Hill 7-13 1-1 16, Hood 7-12 2-2 20, Johnson 3-7 0-0 8, Ingles 1-1 2-2 5, Diaw 0-3 0-0 0, Exum 0-0 2-2 2, Burks 4-5 5-6 15. Totals 29-62 27-29 95. Memphis 26 26 28 22 — 102 Utah 27 16 31 21 — 95 3-Point Goals-Memphis 11-26 (Gasol 4-5, Conley 3-7, Daniels 2-3, Ennis 1-2, Green 1-3, Allen 0-1, Randolph 0-1, Harrison 0-1, Carter 0-3), Utah 10-25 (Hood 4-6, Burks 2-2, Johnson 2-4, Ingles 1-1, Hill 1-5, Diaw 0-2, Lyles 0-2, Hayward 0-3). Fouled Out-None. ReboundsMemphis 31 (Randolph 9), Utah 31 (Gobert 9). Assists-Memphis 13 (Gasol 5), Utah 20 (Hayward, Hill 5). Total Fouls-Memphis 23, Utah 18. A-19,911 (19,911).

Timberwolves 129, Nets 109 Minneapolis — Karl-Anthony Towns had 37 points and 13 rebounds to lead Minnesota to a victory over Brooklyn. Andrew Wiggins added 23 points and four assists, and Zach LaVine scored 20 points for the Timberwolves, who have won seven of their last 10 games. Minnesota shot 51 percent and outscored Brooklyn 17-8 in second-chance point to respond after a tough home loss to Indiana on Thursday night. Brook Lopez had 25 points and seven rebounds and hit 3 of 6 3-pointers for the Nets, who have lost five straight and 21 of their last 23 games. Sean Kilpatrick added 14 points. BROOKLYN (109) Booker 3-4 0-0 6, Lopez 10-15 2-3 25, Dinwiddie 3-7 7-8 13, Bogdanovic 4-12 2-3 10, Foye 2-6 0-0 5, Scola 0-0 1-2 1, Acy 2-6 0-0 5, Hamilton 4-7 0-0 9, Whitehead 3-9 4-4 10, LeVert 4-8 2-3 11, Kilpatrick 6-10 2-2 14, HollisJefferson 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 41-85 20-25 109. MINNESOTA (129) Wiggins 9-18 4-5 23, Towns 15-26 5-8 37, Dieng 4-9 4-4 12, LaVine 6-11 5-7 20, Rubio 5-9 4-4 14, Muhammad 6-11 4-4 18, Payne 0-0 0-0 0, Bjelica 1-4 0-0 3, Aldrich 0-1 0-0 0, Jones 0-1 0-0 0, Dunn 1-2 0-0 2. Totals 47-92 26-32 129. Brooklyn 26 29 23 31 — 109 Minnesota 33 30 29 37 — 129 3-Point Goals-Brooklyn 7-21 (Lopez 3-6, Acy 1-2, LeVert 1-2, Hamilton 1-2, Foye 1-3, Bogdanovic 0-1, Kilpatrick 0-1, Whitehead 0-2, Dinwiddie 0-2), Minnesota 9-20 (LaVine 3-6, Muhammad 2-3, Towns 2-3, Wiggins 1-1, Bjelica 1-4, Dunn 0-1, Rubio 0-2). Fouled OutNone. Rebounds-Brooklyn 40 (Lopez, Hamilton 7), Minnesota 48 (Towns 13). Assists-Brooklyn 20 (Whitehead 8), Minnesota 27 (Dunn 7). Total Fouls-Brooklyn 18, Minnesota 21. TechnicalsBrooklyn defensive three second, Brooklyn team.

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LATEST LINE NFL Favorite ............. Points (O/U).......... Underdog Pro Bowl Camping World Stadium-Orlando, Fla. NFC ................................. 4 1/2 (82)................................ AFC Sunday, Feb. 5 Super Bowl 51 NRG Stadium-Houston New England . .................3 (59)............................. Atlanta NBA Favorite ............. Points (O/U).......... Underdog ATLANTA ..........................8 (211)....................... New York CLEVELAND . ...................7 (220)............. Oklahoma City Washington .....................1 (218).............. NEW ORLEANS a-TORONTO ..................OFF (OFF)....................... Orlando Houston ...........................3 (226)......................... INDIANA SAN ANTONIO ............... 13 (196)............................. Dallas CHICAGO ......................6 1/2 (206).............. Philadelphia b-Golden St .................OFF (OFF).................. PORTLAND a-Toronto Guard D. DeRozan is questionable. b-Golden St Guard S. Curry is questionable. COLLEGE BASKETBALL Favorite .................. Points............... Underdog LOUISVILLE ...................... 14 1/2........ North Carolina St VILLANOVA .......................... 5................................ Virginia MICHIGAN ST ....................... 3............................. Michigan OAKLAND ...........................11 1/2............... Wis Milwaukee Wis Green Bay .................... 5............................... DETROIT ARIZONA ST .....................10 1/2.............. Washington St VALPARAISO . ......................10........ Northern Kentucky ARIZONA ...............................19....................... Washington Illinois St .............................. 7....................... EVANSVILLE Wichita St . ....................... 17 1/2......................... BRADLEY Wright St ............................1 1/2......... ILLINOIS CHICAGO CINCINNATI ......................25 1/2................ South Florida Purdue ..................................10......................... NEBRASKA Xavier .................................6 1/2....................... ST. JOHN’S NORTHWESTERN .............6 1/2............................. Indiana VIRGINIA TECH ................ 12 1/2............. Boston College CALIFORNIA ......................7 1/2........................... Stanford IONA ....................................... 6........................... St. Peter’s AMERICAN .........................3 1/2............................. Colgate Home Team in CAPS (c) TRIBUNE CONTENT AGENCY, LLC

TODAY IN SPORTS 1958 — The St. Louis Cardinals give Stan Musial a contract for $100,000, making him the highest paid player in the National League. 2000 — Utah’s Karl Malone becomes the third player in NBA history to score 30,000 points when he makes a layup with 8:53 left in the third quarter of a 96-94 loss to Minnesota.

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Sunday, January 29, 2017

| 3C

KU women earn first Big 12 win By Evan Riggs eriggs@ljworld.com

Moments after the final buzzer, the Kansas bench erupted, and players on the court made a beeline to their bench to celebrate. Finally, for the first time this season, it was the Jayhawks celebrating a win in the Big 12 Conference. The Kansas women’s basketball team topped Texas Tech, 66-60, for its first Big 12 win of the season, and its first regular-season conference victory under second-year coach Brandon Schneider. It was KU’s first Big 12 win since March 2015. “I just think it means that our players have not lost faith, and that they trust what we’re doing in practice every day, and (they) trust our staff,” Schneider said. “Most importantly, I think they trust each other.” Junior Jessica Washington led the Jayhawks with 24 points, while sophomore Kylee Kopatich added 14 points. The backcourt ensured the Jayhawks got off to a good start, as they combined for three 3-pointers to spark a 13-4 start in the first three minutes. “I thought especially early in the game we moved the ball well against the zone,” Schneider said. “We played through the zone instead of around it. We created some good looks and some looks that we missed.” Kansas (7-14, 1-9 in the Big 12) began to miss those looks after its quick start, and scored just two points over the next five minutes to end the quarter. The second quarter was more of the

Mike Yoder/Journal-World Photo

KANSAS GUARD KYLEE KOPATICH, LEFT, REACHES for a steal against Texas Tech on Saturday in Allen Fieldhouse. same, as the Jayhawks struggled a bit with the Red Raiders’ triangleand-two defense. But the Jayhawks stepped up on the defensive end, and as a result, they led 29-23 at halftime despite shooting just 30 percent in the first half. They held the Red Raiders to 33 percent shooting in the first half and forced eight turnovers. Throughout the second half, KU’s defense continued to give the Red Raiders (11-9, 3-6) problems. Entering Saturday’s game, the Red Raiders were ninth in the country in 3-point percentage, but they shot just 3-of-17 (18 percent) against the Jayhawks and turned the ball over 14 times. “Today I thought we made fewer mistakes in terms of assignments,” Schneider said. “I thought for the most part today our guys were really assignment correct and played to the scouting report.” In the third quarter, the Jayhawks started to get to the basket

more often. Senior Sydney Umeri converted a three-point play to give the Jayhawks a 40-28 lead, and then fellow senior Caelynn ManningAllen scored on three consecutive possessions to open up a 17-point lead. Manning-Allen had her best game of the season, scoring a seasonhigh 10 points with eight rebounds, including a season-high six offensive rebounds. “It was definitely a confidence booster,” Manning-Allen said, “and just knowing that my team was behind me the whole step of the way makes it even better.” Texas Tech rallied in the final minutes, but 3-pointers by Kopatich and Washington, as well as free throws from Washington was enough to for Kansas to hold on and end a nine-game losing streak. “This win means a whole lot to our team,” Manning-Allen said, “and we’re extremely happy with what we’ve got (going).”

BOX SCORE TEXAS TECH (60) MIN FG FT REB PF TP m-a m-a o-t I. CookTaylor 37 7-15 0-2 2-8 3 14 Jada Terry 26 6-11 2-3 1-4 5 14 Larryn Brooks 35 5-10 0-0 0-5 1 11 Recee Caldwell 33 1-10 1-2 2-7 3 4 A. Guirantes 27 1-6 0-0 0-1 1 2 B. Brewer 19 3-5 2-2 3-6 2 8 Dayo Olabode 9 1-2 2-4 2-6 1 5 Zuri Sanders 7 1-2 0-0 1-3 0 2 Grayson Bright 7 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 team 2-4 Totals 25-61 7-13 13-44 16 60 Three-point goals: 3-17 (Olabode 1-2, Brooks 1-3, Caldwell 1-6, CookTaylor 0-3, Guirantes 0-3). Assists: 9 (Caldwell 8, CookTaylor 1). Turnovers: 14 (CookTaylor 5, Brooks 2, Caldwell 2, Terry 1, Guirantes 1, Brewer 1, Olabode 1, Bright 1). Blocked shots: 6 (Terry 5, Brewer 1). Steals: 2 (CookTaylor 2). KANSAS (66) MIN FG FT REB PF TP m-a m-a o-t J. Washington 32 8-20 6-12 0-4 3 24 Kylee Kopatich 31 5-9 0-0 0-4 1 14 J. Christopher 32 2-5 2-2 0-5 1 7 Sydney Umeri 21 3-4 1-3 1-5 1 7 Chayla Cheadle 25 1-5 0-0 2-5 4 2 C. Manning-Allen 19 5-12 0-0 6-8 1 10 Aisia Robertson 9 0-0 2-2 0-1 2 2 Jada Brown 16 0-2 0-0 1-1 1 0 M. Calvert 10 0-4 0-0 0-1 1 0 Timeka O’Neal 5 0-1 0-0 0-1 0 0 Totals 24-62 11-19 10-35 15 66 Three-point goals: 7-25 (Kopatich 4-8, Washington 2-7, Christopher 1-4, O’Neal 0-1, Cheadle 0-2, Calvert 0-3). Assists: 13 (Christopher 5, Cheadle 3, Washington 2, Umeri 1, Manning-Allen 1, Calvert 1). Turnovers: 7 (Brown 2, Christopher 1, Manning-Allen 1, Robertson 1, Calvert 1, O’Neal 1). Blocked shots: 3 (Christopher 2, Umeri 1). Steals: 5 (Christopher 2, Kopatich 1, Umeri 1, Calvert 1). Texas Tech 12 11 16 21 — 60 Kansas 15 14 21 16 — 66 Officials: Felicia Grinter, Brenda Pantoja, Bryan Enterline. Attendance: 2,047.

BRIEFLY

FIREBIRD WINTER CLASSIC

FSHS girls top Schlagle, take 3rd in tournament By Shane Jackson sjackson@ljworld.com

A little over 13 hours after nearly pulling off an upset bid over the top team in the state, Wichita South, the Free State girls basketball team had to regroup against a very tough Kansas City (Kan.) Schlagle team. Rather than fall victim to the quick turnaround, Free State handed Schlagle its second loss in as many days, with a 67-59 victory in the third-place game of the Firebird Winter Classic on Saturday at FSHS. It was certainly no easy task, considering the Stallions entered the tournament boasting a 9-0 record. “It gave us a lot of motivation that we lost to a great team by five,” FSHS senior Madison Piper said. “We just had to get our legs back, which I’m really surprised we got our legs back that quickly. I think we played really well today.” For the second straight day, Piper saw a gimmick defense in attempt to slow her down. After being held to seven points on four shots in Friday’s loss, Piper notched a team-high 15 points on 11 attempts from the floor. But eight of those 15 points came in the first quarter alone, when Schlagle matched up on the defensive end. As a result, FSHS (8-

4) jumped out to a 14-7 advantage, and never trailed for one second in the opening period. Then the Stallions started the second quarter with a box-and-one look, following Piper everywhere she went, which stymied their offensive attack. Moments later, junior Riana Lawson bottomed a 3-pointer at the 3:32 mark, to give Schlagle its first lead of the contest. “We know teams are going to target Madison,” Free State coach Ted Juneau said. “I guarantee you Madison will do everything she can to help the team. People may look at her numbers and go, ‘Gosh, Madison isn’t scoring.’ But basketball isn’t about scoring. She will have her nights.” The Firebirds responded well to their first and only deficit of the afternoon, going on a 13-2 run to close out the half. Jaelyn Two Hearts, Cameryn Thomas, Caely Kesten and Sam Lawrence all spearheaded the team’s statement run. At one point during the stretch, Schlagle (10-2) even attempted a triangle-and-two with a defender chasing Two Hearts, who had 24 points on Friday night. But whatever defensive set the Stallions threw at them, the Firebirds had an answer. Five different players reached double figures in Saturday’s win. “Everyone shared the

ball pretty well,” Juneau said. “(But) I challenged Cameryn. I told her ‘They are ignoring you.’ We have enough tools that junk defenses shouldn’t really do too much. The more they junk it up the better it is for us.” Thomas responded to the challenge netting 11 points, including seven in the second half, as Free State held a comfortable lead for much of the second half. Thomas knocked down five of her 12 shots from the floor. Lawrence posted 14 points as she went 6-of-8 for the game. Two Hearts added 13 points on 12 attempts, while Kesten rounded out the unit with 11 points. “We always want to get everyone involved, if everyone is scoring then we know we are doing something right,” Thomas said. Free State will play host to Olathe Northwest at 5:30 p.m. Friday. KC SCHLAGLE (59) Riana Lawson 1-6 0-0 3, Ashley Daniels 3-6 0-0 6, Ishante Suttington 1-9 0-0 2, Kiara Brown 3-19 6-7 12, Virja Walker 4-7 0-0 8, Sa’Mone Springsteen 8-10 0-0 23, Kiara Walker 0-3 0-0 0, Quaniesha Davis 2-2 0-0 5, Diarra Searcy 0-1 0-0 0. Totals: 22-63 6-7 59. FREE STATE (67) Sam Lawrence 6-8 0-0 14, Cameryn Thomas 5-12 1-2 11, Caely Kesten 2-4 7-8 11, Madison Piper 4-11 5-5 15, Jaelyn Two Hearts 6-12 0-0 13, Jaycie Bishop 1-4 0-0 3, Erin Cushing 0-1 0-0 0, Haley Hippe 0-2 0-2 0. Totals 24-54 13-17 67. Schlagle 7 12 17 23 — 59 Free State 14 15 16 22 — 67 Three-point goals: Schlagle 9-28 (Springsteen 7, Laweson, Davis); Free State 6-17 (Lawrence 2, Piper 2, Two Hearts, Bishop). Turnovers: Schlagle 14, Free State 11.

Mike Yoder/Journal-World Photo

KANSAS’ JESSICA WASHINGTON DRIVES to the basket during the Jayhawks’ 66-60 victory over Texas Tech on Saturday in Allen Fieldhouse.

LHS girls fall to Derby in title game Lawrence High’s girls basketball team saw its four-game win streak come to an end after a 56-33 loss to Derby in the Glacier’s Edge Invitational title game Saturday at Emporia High. Playing in the championship game of their midseason tournament for the first time since 2007, the Lions had trouble shooting the ball against Derby’s size and length. E’lease Stafford led with nine points. DERBY (56) Madi Young 1 5-6 7, Aliyah Myers 2 0-2 4, Alexis Winkle 0 0-0 0, Sydney Nilles 2 2-3 7, Ahdaya Myers 0 0-0 0, Jade Winter 2 0-0 5, Jalina Johnson 1 0-0 3, Tor’e Alford 5 0-1 10, Heather Mills 0 0-0 0, Kenni Henson 0 0-0 0, Kennedy Brown 8 2-2 20. 21 9-14 56. LAWRENCE (33) Hannah Stewart 1 0-0 2, Olivia Lemus 2 0-0 6, Skylar Drum 1 0-0 2, Leslie Ostronic 0 0-0 0, Sammy Williams 0 2-2 2, Talima Harjo 0 0-0 0, Kiikto Thomas 0 2-2 2, Tyrin Cosey 1 0-0 2, Tamo Thomas 1 0-0 3, Asia Goodwin 1 0-0 2, E’lease Stafford 3 1-2 9, Chisom Ajekwu 1 1-3 3. Totals 11 6-9 33. Derby 14 12 14 16 — 56 Lawrence 7 9 5 12 — 33 Three-point goals: Derby 5 (Brown 2, Nilles, Winter, Johnson); Lawrence 4 (Lemus 2, T. Thomas, Stafford).

FSHS diver Bourdon wins at SM East Free State High senior diver Chad Bourdon won an individual title at the Shawnee Mission East diving Invitational on Saturday. Bourdon took first place with 431.5 points. Teammate Skylar Eklund took eighth with 348.05 and Carson Juhl was 16th with 228.30. Lawrence High diver Anton Martinez was 14th with 290.90 points and Patrick Steinbach placed 15th with 235.75.

Veritas boys rip Derby Invasion Trey Huslig scored 22 points, Kammal Dowdell added 12 and Weston Flory scored 10 to help Veritas Christian’s boys basketball team claim a 75-56 home victory over Derby Invasion on Saturday, Michael Rask scored nine points and Kyle Weinhold seven for the Eagles. Derby 10 15 13 18 — 56 Veritas 17 18 23 17 — 75 Derby Invasion — Graham Parker 2, Cody Matlock 4, Kole Barger 4, Thomas King 22, Kaden Campbell 13, Kollin Barger 2, Tariq Izard 9. Veritas — Weston Flory 10, Trey Huslig 22, Jaylon Donohoe 1, Jackson Rau 5, Kammal Dowdell 12, Quinton Donohoe 6, Michael Rask 9, Peyton Donohoe 3, Kyle Weinhold 7.

Veritas girls prevail, 48-46 Behind 19 points from Tori Huslig and 15 points from Alyssa Krestan, Veritas Christian’s girls basketball team withstood a fourth-quarter rally from Derby Invasion for a 48-46 win at the East Lawrence Rec Center on Saturday. The Eagles (11-3) will play host to Manhattan CHIEF on Tuesday. Derby 10 10 12 14 — 46 Veritas 10 9 16 13 — 48 Derby — Angel Marias 4, Emma Enochs 2, Rebecca Denholm 1, Lydia King 17, Kelly Armstrong 3, Anna Davis 17, Beth Manson 2. Veritas — Holly Scott 6, Alyssa Krestan 15, Chloe Holland 8, Tori Huslig 19.

KU tennis falls to Vandy Kansas’ doubles team of Nina Khmelnitckaia and Tess Bernard-Feigenbaum defeated the nation’s No. 53-ranked doubles team, Sydney Campbell and Christina Rosca, but the Jayhawks’ women’s tennis team fell to Vanderbilt,

4-0, on Saturday in Nashville, Tenn. Khmelnitckaia and Bernard-Feigenbaum won 6-2 at No. 1 doubles, but KU dropped the other two doubles matches as the Commodores claimed the point.

Steele, Foster take titles Free State junior wrestler Tate Steele remained unbeaten after taking first place in the 138-pound weight class Saturday at the Junction City Invitational, improving his record to 19-0 this season. Along with Steele, junior Gage Foster won an individual title at 170 pounds, helping the Firebirds to second place in the 14team tournament. Foster, who has a 16-3 record, won his championship match by disqualification. Free State’s Isaiah Jacobs (126 pounds) and Elijah Jacobs (145) took second in their weight classes.

LHS wrestlers 9th at O-North Lawrence High’s wrestling team tied for ninth place Saturday at the Olathe North duals Invitational. The Lions tied against Shawnee Mission West, 30-30, in their last dual of the tournament. Lawrence senior Santino Gee posted a 4-0 record at 170 pounds while Ja’Melle Dye had a 2-1 record at 138 pounds. The Lions, who had several empty weight classes, lost in duals against Olathe North (66-12), Blue Valley Northwest (59-14), St. Thomas Aquinas (54-24) and Kansas City Wyandotte (29-24).


4C

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Sunday, January 29, 2017

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KANSAS 79, KENTUCKY 73

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Jayhawks CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C

points), Landen Lucas (13), Devonté Graham (12), Svi Mykhailiuk (8) and Josh Jackson (20 and 10 rebounds) combined to score all but five of KU’s points and played 168 of 200 minutes. With NBA scouts in all corners of the building and Big Blue Nation roaring from start to finish, the Jayhawks (19-2 overall, 7-1 Big 12) and Wildcats (17-4 overall, 7-1 SEC) put on a show that lived up to the sensational hype that preceded Saturday’s blue blood battle of the two winningest programs in college basketball history. The game’s opening minutes featured a dose of just about everything analysts, fans and the players and coaches themselves expected. Both teams played fast. Kentucky, which missed its first five shots before scoring, pounded it inside to Bam Adebayo (10 points, 8 rebounds) repeatedly. And the pregame atmosphere featured a lot of noise, hype and excitement. Kansas led in the early going but quickly found the game slipping away when the Wildcats unleashed a 13-2 run midway through the first half to build a 10-point lead. “I thought this could get ugly really fast,” Self admitted after the game. “I thought it was already ugly.... We didn’t shoot it at all, we played tight and they had all the momentum.” But a strategic call from the KU bench, moving from man-to-man defense to a 2-3 zone slowed the game down and paved the way for the Jayhawks to crawl back into it. Despite trailing 29-17 with 4:58 to play in the first half, the Jayhawks trailed by just five — 32-27 — at the break thanks to that zone defense and a 10-3 run to close the first half. “There’s not gonna be any educational tapes on that zone tonight,” Self said. “But I do think we played it pretty well. It helped us. We would not have won the game unless we switched up.”

Nick Krug/Journal-World Photo

KANSAS GUARD DEVONTÉ GRAHAM (4) PUTS UP A 3-POINTER DURING THE FIRST HALF of KU’s 79-73 victory over Kentucky on Saturday at Rupp Arena in Lexington, Ky. Added Mason of the switch to zone: “Hopefully we don’t have to do that moving forward because we take pride in playing man-to-man, but whatever helps us get the win, we’re willing to do.” With momentum resting in the Kansas locker room, the Jayhawks regrouped and started the second half with a statement. Backto-back 3-pointers from Josh Jackson, who has hit 8-of-14 from 3-point range in the past three games, gave Kansas its first lead since 8-7 and helped return the swagger to the Kansas bench. “We went down 12 points at one time, but we all had it in our heads that we were gonna come back,” Jackson said. For the next several minutes, the teams battled back and forth, with Kentucky maintaining a slim lead and Kansas charging hard. Lucas’ tipin with 12:55 to play put KU back on top and, from

there, Kansas trailed just one more time. Jackson was a big reason for that. Not only did the freshman from Detroit outshine all of Kentucky’s brightest stars, he also delivered his best in the game’s biggest moments and recorded his fifth double-double of the season. A tip-in of his own miss put KU back up one with 7:15 to play and his offensive rebound and put-back with 1:09 to play gave Kansas a seven-point lead. “I thought he was really good tonight,” Self said of Jackson. “I thought he got his hands on loose balls, he rebounded great, the offensive rebound, put-back late was a huge play. And to me, he’s a complete basketball player. He’s one of the few guys out there that can do a little bit or a lot of everything.” Added freshman forward Mitch Lightfoot, who played just four minutes while spelling Lucas:

“Wow. He just showed you guys why he’s gonna be a top-5 pick in the (NBA) draft. There’s no doubt about that. He’s an amazing player.” Even though the Kentucky faithful started filing out with around 2:00 remaining, the Jayhawks made things interesting down the stretch, allowing the Wildcats to trim a 69-59 KU lead with 4:41 to play all the way to four, 77-73, with 19.2 seconds remaining. But Mykhailiuk’s two free throws with 16 seconds to play pushed the margin back to six and Kentucky’s final attempts to crawl closer fell short. Those free throws and a pair by Graham 36 seconds earlier proved to be just enough on another poor-shooting free throw night by the Jayhawks. “Neither team shot free throws worth a flip,” said Self, whose team finished 10-of-18 from the stripe, just three percentage points worse than Kentucky’s 13-of-

22 effort. “I mean, we could’ve won the game easily or they could’ve probably won the game if either team could step up to the line and make free throws.” True as that may have been, Saturday’s game was not about free throws. It was about stars and hype, play makers and big moments. And the Jayhawks, thanks to all of that experience, had just a few more than the Wildcats on this night. “It helped us a lot to come in here and get a win against a great team, great program. The tradition is great here,” Mason said. “Just for all the guys to come here and experience that will help us a lot moving forward when it really matters.” Added Lightfoot, still in awe of what his teammates did to will Kansas to victory: “They’re great and all, but I have Frank Mason, Devonté Graham and Josh Jackson. That’s kind of hard to match.”

to-man, and a forgotten reserve, Dwight Coleby, but in many ways Lucas was as important as just CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C about anybody on the floor. horse among thoroughHe finished with 13 breds, the unnoticed points, made 6 of 6 field foundation holding up goals, had five rebounds, the magnificent mansion. a block and a steal and Not surprisingly, Lucas didn’t turn it over once. willed and wiled his Adebayo gave Kenway to a big second half tucky 10 points and eight to help Kansas defeat rebounds. favored Kentucky, 79-73, The number that best Saturday in a game the captured Lucas’ impact: Jayhawks trailed by 12 Kansas outscored Kenpoints in the first half. tucky by 13 points in the No way Kansas had a 27 minutes Lucas played chance of winning Satur- before fouling out. In the day, not with freshman 13 minutes he sat, KenBam Adebayo emerging tucky held a seven-point of late for Kentucky with advantage. dunks heard ’round the “Without Landen, I college basketball world. don’t know where we Lucas is more of a would be,” said Jackson, stealth enforcer. He co-star of the game with didn’t come out of high Frank Mason III. “He’s school with a nickname just an amazing force or much of a shot at down there. He really developing into a pivotal helps us out. Without player at a school that him, I don’t know who attracts NBA post proswould have guarded pects the way the presiBam.” dent attracts headlines. At that point, Mason Yet, there he was interrupted: “I would again, standing his have guarded him.” ground, keeping at It hasn’t quite come bay the more muscuto that, but if ever it lar, broader, longer, does, Mason won’t back 20-sculpted-poundsup an inch. Mason and heavier Adebayo, who Lucas have been around looks about five years long enough to know a Lucas’ senior instead of 12-point deficit in the four years younger. first half means nothing Even with Udoka Azu- when stacked against buike gone for the season the meaning of the next and Carlton Bragg suspossession. Mason uses pended, Lucas had plenty strong will, savvy and of help, from a coach amazing athleticism to who mixed defenses, make plays that belie his playing a 2-3 zone and a height. triangle-and-two, along How does Lucas with his preferred manconsistently get it done

against bigger, faster, quicker, much louder talents? “Just being in the right spots,” Coleby said. “He’s been playing so long, so he’s one of the best sealers there is, so he knows how to get angles, just knows how to be in the right spot. I’m always asking him how he does it, because I’m trying to learn how to do it, too.” Intimidation doesn’t enter Lucas’ world because he has spent the past five years battling more athletic and skilled basketball players daily in practice. Jeff Withey and Joel Embiid blocked his shots. Perry Ellis tied up his feet with fancy footwork. McDonald’s All-American Cliff Alexander came on board to keep Lucas on the bench, but by the end of the season, when Alexander was suspended, Lucas started. A year later, Cheick Diallo, MVP of the McDonald’s game and so much faster and bouncier, was sure to plant Lucas right back on the bench. Didn’t even come close to happening. Good luck trying to find an event at a track meet in which Lucas could defeat Jamari Traylor, but Lucas eventually beat him out too. Hunter Mickelson had a much more natural knack for blocking shots and far more range as a shooter. He sat and watched Lucas play his spot. Azubuike showed seri-

ous promise until a wrist injury knocked him out of the season in December. Not to worry, one more McDonald’s AllAmerican stood taller in the talent department, but Carlton Bragg Jr. didn’t make the trip and has been suspended indefinitely. Lucas helped Kansas give John Calipari just his sixth loss in 135 games in Rupp Arena (Bill Self is 132-3 in his last 135

Allen Fieldhouse games) and when Calipari sent praise KU’s way, you could see plays made by Jackson and Lucas dancing in his head. “We don’t normally lose here, but Kansas, you got to give them credit,” Calipari said. “They came in here and all the plays they had to make in the second half, even when we made a run to make it close again, they were effort plays, too. They were tip-

Keegan

BOX SCORE KANSAS (79) MIN FG FT REB PF TP m-a m-a o-t Landen Lucas 27 6-6 1-1 3-5 5 13 Frank Mason III 37 9-18 2-5 0-3 0 21 Devonté Graham 37 4-11 2-2 2-7 2 12 Svi Mykhailiuk 28 2-6 4-6 1-2 2 8 Josh Jackson 39 9-17 0-2 2-10 1 20 Lagerald Vick 18 1-4 0-0 0-3 1 2 Dwight Coleby 10 1-1 1-2 0-1 4 3 Mitch Lightfoot 4 0-1 0-0 1-1 0 0 team 1-2 Totals 32-64 10-18 10-34 15 79 Three-point goals: 5-19 (Jackson 2-5, Graham 2-7, Mason 1-4, Vick 0-1, Mykhailiuk 0-2). Assists: 9 (Mason 4, Jackson 3, Graham 1, Mykhailiuk 1). Turnovers: 12 (Graham 5, Mason 4, Jackson 2, Lightfoot 1). Blocked shots: 2 (Lucas 1, Lightfoot 1). Steals: 9 (Mason 2, Jackson 2, Vick 2, Lucas 1, Graham 1, Coleby 1). KENTUCKY (73) MIN FG FT REB PF TP m-a m-a o-t Edrice Adebayo 37 3-7 4-10 4-8 4 10 Wenyen Gabriel 14 0-3 0-0 0-2 1 0 De’Aaron Fox 38 5-12 0-0 0-2 3 10 Malik Monk 39 6-13 4-5 1-4 2 18 Isaiah Briscoe 26 4-9 3-4 3-8 3 12 I. Humphries 4 0-0 0-0 0-0 2 0 D. Hawkins 17 2-4 1-1 1-4 1 5 Derek Willis 25 6-7 1-2 0-6 1 18 team 0-1 Totals 26-55 13-22 9-35 17 73 Three-point goals: 8-20 (Willis 5-6, Monk 2-6, Briscoe 1-2, Hawkins 0-1, Fox 0-2, Gabriel 0-3). Assists: 14 (Briscoe 6, Adebayo 3, Fox 2, Monk 2, Hawkins 1). Turnovers: 17 (Fox 5, Adebayo 4, Briscoe 3, Monk 2, Gabriel 1, Humphries 1, Willis 1). Blocked shots: 4 (Willis 2, Adebayo 1, Humphries 1). Steals: 5 (Adebayo 2, Fox 2, Gabriel 1). Kansas 27 52 — 79 Kentucky 32 41 — 73 Officials: Doug Shows, Joe DeRosa, Keith Kimble. Attendance: 24,418.

ins, they were grabs, they were second and third shots.” They were basketball plays made by a player who knows how to block out doubts and doubters as well as he does potential rebounders trying to gain an advantageous position on him. This was the perfect stage for the imperfect prospect, and he didn’t miss his shot at a slice of fame. In fact, he didn’t miss a shot, period.

MULTI-PAR LAND AUCTION 253 ACRES M/L DOUGLAS CO., OVERBROOK, KS LAND

Thursday, February 16, 2017 - 10:00am

On-site property preview with information packets available: Tues. Feb. 7 from 4-5pm

AUCTION LOCATION: Frontier Farm Credit 1270 N 300 Rd, Baldwin City, KS 66066 TRACT 1: 136 acres m/l. Located 1/2 mile west of 1023 Rd. on 950 N Rd., Douglas Co., Overbrook, KS. Combination of approximately 95 +/- acres cropland, 36 +/- acres pasture, & 5 acres +/- timber, with an excellent stocked pond. TRACT 2: 117 acres m/l. Located 1.5 miles of 458 Rd. on County Rd. 1023, Douglas Co., Overbrook, KS. Combination of 55+/- acres cropland, 32+/- acres pasture, & 30 a +/- acres timber. Hard surface road. TRACT 3: Tracts 1 and 3 combined. These tracts are situated across the road from each other. Auction by: Heck Land Co. 785-865-6266 email: kelvin@hecklandco.com Kelvin Heck, Broker United Country-Heart of America Real Estate & Auction 785-806-6921 or 785-863-3322 email: andy@ucheartofamerica.com Andy Conser, Auctioneer


KANSAS 79, KENTUCKY 73

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Sunday, January 29, 2017

| 5C

NOTEBOOK

KU stays focused in spite of issues By Matt Tait mtait@ljworld.com

Lexington, Ky. — It was a wild and taxing week for the Kansas men’s basketball team, which lost for just the second time all season and endured a string of off-the-court news that threatened to steal the team’s focus. But the week ended with the second-ranked Jayhawks walking into hostile Rupp Arena on Saturday night and walking away with a thrilling, 79-73 victory over No. 4 Kentucky. “I thought it was great,” said KU coach Bill Self when asked about his team’s focus. “I think our focus was pretty good (Friday), too. When some things hit, it, obviously, is a punch in the gut and, naturally, you’re gonna be distracted. But I think our guys feel good about each other and I was really proud of ‘em. “That (off the court stuff is) not gonna go away immediately. But it’s nothing for these players to hang their heads about. The train doesn’t stop moving. You still gotta do your job and perform and nobody cares what the excuses are. I’ll deal with that more than anybody else. That responsibility’s on my shoulders and not theirs.” Noticeably giddy when the final horn sounded on the season’s second win over one of college basketball’s traditional powers, the Jayhawks themselves said their minds were fixed on basketball and little else from the moment they woke up on Saturday until the time they left Rupp Arena. “We forgot about that until you just asked,” said senior point guard Frank Mason III in a matter-offact manner. “Coach tells us (to) focus on the things we can control, and I think we do a pretty good job with that, and we just have to do that moving forward and not get distracted by anything.” Added freshman Josh Jackson, who said basketball provided a welcome escape from the program dominating headlines for other reasons this week: “No matter what’s happening off the court, basketball, when we’re out here, it’s always our main focus. And I think everybody did a really good job of just staying focused today.” Sophomore forward Carlton Bragg Jr., who was suspended late Thursday night for a violation of team rules that Self said was not related to the reported rape at the team’s on-campus housing in December, did not make the trip, and no update was given on his status. Regardless of when, or even if, Bragg returns, Self said he was impressed by his team’s approach and resolve in a tough place to play. “Sometimes, when you’re a little bit depleted, a lot of times that creates more focus,” Self said.

Jackson’s shot falling The Jackson Five is already taken, but the Jackson 3 has a nice ring to it. Kansas’ victory was sparked by a pair of 3-point swishes from freshman Josh Jackson, who, for the third game in a row, made a big impact with his outside shot. “Josh’s two 3s to start the second half took the lid off, and we were pretty good from there,” Self said. “He’s made eight his

Nick Krug/Journal-World Photo

KANSAS’ DEVONTÉ GRAHAM AND Kentucky’s Malik Monk compete for a loose ball.

Nick Krug/Journal-World Photo

KANSAS FORWARD LANDEN LUCAS DELIVERS A DUNK during the second half of KU’s 79-73 victory over Kentucky on Saturday in Lexington, Ky.

Nick Krug/Journal-World Photo

KENTUCKY COACH JOHN CALIPARI pumps his fist in frustration. last three games, at above 50 percent. I think that’s an area that’s getting better, and, of course, if he makes shots, then you gotta guard him. That’s something he’s worked hard on and I think it is evolving nicely.” Said Jackson of his game-changing triples: “I find times where I’m in practice shooting with the guys and they’re all making 3s and it gets kind of contagious a little bit. I kind of opened it up for us a little bit. It got kind of contagious.”

AAU atmosphere With so many highprofile players on the floor, Las Vegas-style hype filling the building and the fact that neither team really lost much no matter what the outcome was, Self said the game had an AAU feel to it. “If you go to an AAU tournament, it’s kind of like the showcase game,” Self said. “If you win or lose it doesn’t matter because it doesn’t affect the bracket. And that’s kind of what I thought about this game. Of course, I know it means a lot to the fans of both schools and there’s a lot of tradition on the line.” That tradition, which has been well documented, certainly meant something to the Kansas players. “Statistically, it didn’t mean anything more than any other win, but pride for us,” freshman Mitch Lightfoot said. “We were fighting for each other and we were fighting for our coaches and we were fighting for all those fans back home. We wanted to get a ‘W’ for everyone.

And it was kind of cool to have it happen how it did.” Kentucky still leads all of college basketball in all-time victories, with 2,222, but Kansas crawled one game closer and now has 2,205.

Guinness World Record The featured attraction in a night full of all kinds of pregame and in-game hype and excitement was the Kentucky crowd’s attempt to break the Guinness World Record for loudest indoor crowd in history. Gunning for the Sacramento Kings’ record of 126 decibels, set in 2013, Big Blue Nation topped that mark thanks to the efforts of 24,418 screaming fans. The record breaker came just before tip-off, when the crowd reached a verified level of 126.4 decibels. This and that... Kentucky’s lead in the all-time series with Kansas dropped to 22-8, including a 7-2 mark in Lexington.... The Wildcats lost for just the fourth time under John Calipari in games which they led by 10 points or more and now have lost back-toback just eight times in seven seasons under Calipari.... The Jayhawks improved to 5-1 this season in true road games and 9-2 in games away from Allen Fieldhouse.... KU is 3-1 all-time in the SEC/ Big 12 Challenge and has won two straight over the Wildcats and two straight in Rupp Arena.... Former KU coach Larry Brown attended Saturday’s game.

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Sunday, January 29, 2017

SPORTS

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COLLEGE BASKETBALL ROUNDUP The Associated Press

Big 12

Babb 0-1, Bowie 0-1, Mitrou-Long 0-5, Burton 0-5), Vanderbilt 13-30 (Cressler 4-4, Fisher-Davis 3-6, Kornet 3-9, Roberson 2-4, Toye 1-3, Willis 0-2, LaChance 0-2). Fouled Out-Fisher-Davis, Morris. Rebounds-Iowa St. 26 (Burton 10), Vanderbilt 31 (Roberson 9). Assists-Iowa St. 11 (Mitrou-Long 4), Vanderbilt 17 (Roberson 6). Total Fouls-Iowa St. 18,

No. 5 Baylor 78, Mississippi 75 Oxford, Miss. — Manu Lecomte Vanderbilt 12. A-9,851 (14,316). scored 17 points, leading Baylor to the win in the SEC-Big 12 Challenge. Oklahoma State 99, Arkansas 71 Baylor (20-1) rallied from a 15-point Stillwater, Okla. — Jeffrey Cardeficit in the first half to win its fifth roll scored 20 points and grabbed straight game. seven rebounds, Phil Forte had 18 points and six assists, and OklahoBAYLOR (20-1) ma State beat Arkansas. Lual-Acuil 5-7 6-9 16, Motley 5-8 6-9 16, Lecomte 6-9 0-0 17, Wainright 1-3 3-4 6, Freeman 0-4 0-0 0, Omot 3-7 0-0 9, Maston 0-0 0-0 0, Lindsey 3-7 2-2 9, McClure 1-4 2-2 5, Mitchell 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 24-49 19-26 78. MISSISSIPPI (12-9) Hymon 0-3 0-0 0, Saiz 7-17 5-5 20, T.Davis 3-6 2-2 9, Tyree 6-9 6-6 20, Neal 2-5 7-7 13, Furmanavicius 3-4 1-2 7, Brooks 1-3 0-0 2, Burnett 1-10 1-1 4. Totals 23-57 22-23 75. Halftime-Mississippi 42-35. 3-Point Goals-Baylor 11-25 (Lecomte 5-6, Omot 3-6, Wainright 1-2, Lindsey 1-4, McClure 1-4, Freeman 0-3), Mississippi 7-18 (Tyree 2-3, Neal 2-4, Burnett 1-2, T.Davis 1-3, Saiz 1-3, Hymon 0-1, Brooks 0-2). Fouled Out-T. Davis. Rebounds-Baylor 34 (Lual-Acuil, Motley 9), Mississippi 24 (Saiz 10). Assists-Baylor 15 (Wainright 5), Mississippi 14 (Brooks, Neal 3). Total Fouls-Baylor 19, Mississippi 20. A-9,411 (9,500).

No. 18 W. Va. 81, Texas A&M 77 Morgantown, W.Va. — Jevon Carter had 19 points and nine rebounds, helping West Virginia hold on for the win. TEXAS A&M (11-9) Williams 3-12 2-3 8, Trocha-Morelos 1-7 0-0 3, Davis 7-10 5-6 19, Collins 0-2 0-1 0, Gilder 7-16 6-8 24, Miller 1-1 0-0 2, Carlton 0-0 0-0 0, Hampton 8-9 0-0 21, Eubanks 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 27-57 13-18 77. WEST VIRGINIA (17-4) Macon 2-4 0-2 4, Adrian 2-8 0-1 5, Ahmad 3-11 6-12 14, Miles 4-9 0-0 10, Carter 6-10 3-4 19, West 1-4 0-0 3, Konate 2-2 0-0 4, Watkins 3-4 1-1 7, Bender 0-1 0-0 0, Bolden 1-1 0-0 3, Phillip 3-7 2-3 8, Myers 2-4 0-0 4. Totals 29-65 12-23 81. Halftime-West Virginia 45-29. 3-Point Goals-Texas A&M 10-21 (Hampton 5-6, Gilder 4-9, Trocha-Morelos 1-4, Williams 0-1, Collins 0-1), West Virginia 11-26 (Carter 4-5, Ahmad 2-4, Miles 2-7, Bolden 1-1, West 1-3, Adrian 1-4, Phillip 0-2). Fouled Out-TrochaMorelos. Rebounds-Texas A&M 40 (Davis 18), West Virginia 31 (Carter 9). Assists-Texas A&M 15 (Gilder 6), West Virginia 19 (Ahmad 6). Total Fouls-Texas A&M 20, West Virginia 13. A-12,836 (14,000).

No. 25 Florida 84, Oklahoma 52 Norman, Okla. — Kevarrius Hayes scored a career-high 20 points to help Florida roll to the road win in the Big 12-SEC Challenge. FLORIDA (16-5) Leon 2-9 0-0 5, Robinson 3-7 4-4 13, Egbunu 1-3 5-6 7, Hill 5-12 2-4 12, Allen 3-8 0-0 8, Stone 0-1 0-0 0, Gak 1-1 0-0 2, Hayes 7-11 6-9 20, Rimmer 0-0 0-0 0, Barry 4-7 5-5 15, Hester 1-2 0-0 2, Chiozza 0-2 0-0 0. Totals 27-63 22-28 84. OKLAHOMA (8-12) Doolittle 3-11 2-2 8, Lattin 1-4 3-5 5, Odomes 5-9 3-4 13, Woodard 0-7 0-0 0, McGusty 5-10 0-0 10, Cole 0-0 0-0 0, Freeman 0-4 2-2 2, McNeace 3-6 0-0 6, James 0-6 4-4 4, Shepherd 1-8 1-2 4. Totals 18-65 15-19 52. Halftime-Florida 43-28. 3-Point Goals-Florida 8-21 (Robinson 3-4, Barry 2-3, Allen 2-5, Leon 1-3, Hester 0-1, Stone 0-1, Chiozza 0-2, Hill 0-2), Oklahoma 1-16 (Shepherd 1-5, Woodard 0-1, Doolittle 0-2, James 0-2, McGusty 0-2, Freeman 0-4). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-Florida 46 (Hayes 9), Oklahoma 39 (Doolittle 9). Assists-Florida 16 (Hill 8), Oklahoma 4 (James 2). Total Fouls-Florida 20, Oklahoma 26. A-10,859 (11,562).

Tennessee 70, Kansas State 58 Knoxville, Tenn. — Grant Williams scored 17 points as Tennessee defeated Kansas State for the Volunteers’ third consecutive victory. KANSAS ST. (15-6) D.Johnson 2-6 0-0 4, Wade 1-2 0-0 3, Iwundu 5-8 4-7 14, Brown 6-16 2-2 17, Stokes 3-7 5-7 11, Budke 1-2 0-0 2, Sneed 1-6 3-5 6, Maurice 0-1 1-2 1, Patrick 0-0 0-0 0, Ervin 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 19-48 15-23 58. TENNESSEE (12-9) G.Williams 7-10 2-4 17, Alexander 3-4 2-3 8, Hubbs 5-10 0-0 10, Bowden 3-9 5-7 13, Bone 2-8 0-1 4, Evans 2-7 4-5 9, Schofield 1-3 0-1 2, Phillips 0-1 0-0 0, Turner 3-6 0-0 7. Totals 26-58 13-21 70. Halftime-Tennessee 39-22. 3-Point Goals-Kansas St. 5-16 (Brown 3-7, Wade 1-1, Sneed 1-3, Budke 0-1, Stokes 0-2, Iwundu 0-2), Tennessee 5-14 (Bowden 2-5, G.Williams 1-1, Turner 1-3, Evans 1-4, Phillips 0-1). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-Kansas St. 28 (D.Johnson 9), Tennessee 37 (Alexander 9). Assists-Kansas St. 12 (Brown 4), Tennessee 16 (Bone, Turner 5). Total FoulsKansas St. 19, Tennessee 18. A-14,398 (21,678).

Georgia 59, Texas 57 Athens, Ga. — Yante Maten scored 21 points and J.J. Frazier overcame poor first-half shooting with 14 to lead Georgia to a win over Texas. TEXAS (8-13) Cleare 4-5 0-2 8, Allen 2-7 0-1 4, Davis 4-8 1-2 11, Roach 4-8 1-2 10, J.Young 1-5 0-0 3, Banks 2-3 1-1 5, Yancy 0-1 0-0 0, Jones 5-11 4-5 16. Totals 22-48 7-13 57. GEORGIA (13-8) Ogbeide 2-5 0-0 4, Maten 6-11 9-12 21, Jackson 1-2 0-0 2, Parker 3-8 3-3 9, Frazier 5-16 4-4 14, Edwards 1-1 0-1 2, Diatta 0-2 1-2 1, Kessler 0-1 0-0 0, Harris 2-3 0-0 6, Crump 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 20-49 17-22 59. Halftime-Texas 32-23. 3-Point Goals-Texas 6-20 (Davis 2-5, Jones 2-7, Roach 1-3, J.Young 1-4, Yancy 0-1), Georgia 2-12 (Harris 2-3, Diatta 0-1, Maten 0-1, Jackson 0-1, Frazier 0-6). Fouled Out-Cleare. Rebounds-Texas 27 (Roach 7), Georgia 28 (Maten 7). Assists-Texas 10 (Jones 8), Georgia 11 (Diatta, Frazier 3). Total FoulsTexas 20, Georgia 18. A-100,029 (10,523).

Texas Tech 77, LSU 64 Lubbock, Texas — Zach Smith led Texas Tech in points with 25 as the Red Raiders downed the LSU Tigers. LSU (9-11) Reath 5-7 2-4 12, Epps 2-4 1-1 6, Blakeney 8-16 4-7 23, Patterson 3-6 0-0 8, Mays 0-3 2-2 2, Sims 4-8 0-0 10, Bridgewater 0-0 0-0 0, Sampson 1-4 0-0 3, Jenkins 0-1 0-2 0. Totals 23-49 9-16 64. TEXAS TECH (15-6) Livingston 4-9 0-0 12, Ross 5-11 2-2 15, Gray 1-6 2-4 4, Smith 8-10 7-9 25, Thomas 2-4 2-2 6, Brandsma 0-0 0-0 0, Temple 0-2 0-0 0, Millinghaus 0-1 0-2 0, Stevenson 5-9 2-2 15. Totals 25-52 15-21 77. Halftime-Texas Tech 39-27. 3-Point Goals-LSU 9-21 (Blakeney 3-7, Sims 2-3, Patterson 2-4, Epps 1-1, Sampson 1-2, Reath 0-1, Mays 0-3), Texas Tech 12-23 (Livingston 4-7, Ross 3-5, Stevenson 3-6, Smith 2-2, Millinghaus 0-1, Temple 0-1, Thomas 0-1). Fouled Out-None. ReboundsLSU 25 (Reath 11), Texas Tech 31 (Smith 8). Assists-LSU 13 (Patterson 6), Texas Tech 17 (Gray 5). Total Fouls-LSU 17, Texas Tech 15. A-11,056 (15,098).

Vanderbilt 84, Iowa State 78 Nashville, Tenn. — Luke Kornet scored 21 points, and Vanderbilt stopped a skid, holding off Iowa State. IOWA ST. (13-7) Holden 0-0 0-0 0, Mitrou-Long 2-7 0-0 4, Burton 5-12 3-6 13, Thomas 5-8 0-0 14, Morris 10-17 4-4 25, Bowie 0-2 0-0 0, Weiler-Babb 3-5 0-0 6, Jackson 5-10 2-2 16. Totals 30-61 9-12 78. VANDERBILT (10-11) Roberson 3-7 8-8 16, Kornet 7-14 4-6 21, Cressler 8-10 0-0 20, LaChance 2-4 3-5 7, Fisher-Davis 4-9 3-3 14, Brown 0-0 0-0 0, Baptiste 0-1 0-0 0, Willis 0-3 3-4 3, Toye 1-4 0-0 3. Totals 25-52 21-26 84. Halftime-33-33. 3-Point Goals-Iowa St. 9-28 (Jackson 4-6, Thomas 4-6, Morris 1-4, Weiler-

ARKANSAS (16-5) Cook 0-2 0-0 0, Kingsley 3-11 4-5 10, Macon 0-8 0-0 0, Beard 3-7 3-4 11, Barford 8-13 3-4 21, Thomas 3-3 3-3 9, Thompson 0-0 0-0 0, Bailey 1-1 0-0 2, Jones 0-0 0-0 0, Hannahs 4-10 5-6 13, Watkins 2-3 0-1 5. Totals 24-58 18-23 71. OKLAHOMA ST. (13-8) Solomon 0-3 2-2 2, Hammonds 4-5 0-0 10, Evans 4-8 7-8 16, Forte 6-12 2-2 18, Carroll 6-15 8-10 20, McGriff 1-2 2-2 4, Lienhard 0-0 0-0 0, Reeves 0-0 0-0 0, Averette 3-6 2-2 8, Waters 2-3 0-0 5, Dziagwa 0-1 0-0 0, Underwood 0-0 0-0 0, Dillard 4-7 1-1 10, N’Guessan 3-4 0-2 6. Totals 33-66 24-29 99. Halftime-Oklahoma St. 59-33. 3-Point GoalsArkansas 5-18 (Beard 2-3, Barford 2-3, Watkins 1-2, Kingsley 0-1, Hannahs 0-3, Macon 0-6), Oklahoma St. 9-20 (Forte 4-9, Hammonds 2-2, Waters 1-1, Dillard 1-1, Evans 1-2, Averette 0-1, Dziagwa 0-1, Carroll 0-3). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-Arkansas 23 (Thomas 5), Oklahoma St. 40 (Solomon, Evans, Carroll 7). Assists-Arkansas 7 (Bailey 2), Oklahoma St. 24 (Evans 8). Total Fouls-Arkansas 26, Oklahoma St. 20. Technicals-Arkansas team. A-13,611 (13,611).

Auburn 88, TCU 80 Fort Worth, Texas — Freshman Austin Wiley scored a season-high 25 points and Auburn won in the SEC/Big 12 Challenge for the first time in four tries, beating TCU. AUBURN (14-7) Spencer 1-3 1-2 3, Wiley 11-13 3-7 25, Dunans 2-9 0-0 4, Harper 4-6 3-5 13, Heron 7-11 2-2 17, Purifoy 1-5 0-0 3, McLemore 6-6 1-2 13, Brown 2-8 0-0 4, Johnson 2-6 2-2 6. Totals 36-67 12-20 88. TCU (14-7) Miller 8-17 0-1 17, Brodziansky 7-9 5-9 19, Robinson 9-16 1-3 20, Fisher 1-5 0-0 3, K.Williams 1-2 0-2 3, Shepherd 2-4 2-2 6, B.Parrish 0-1 0-0 0, Bane 5-8 1-3 12, M.Williams 0-3 0-0 0. Totals 33-65 9-20 80. Halftime-Auburn 45-43. 3-Point Goals-Auburn 4-15 (Harper 2-4, Heron 1-1, Purifoy 1-5, Johnson 0-1, Dunans 0-1, Brown 0-3), TCU 5-20 (Robinson 1-2, Bane 1-2, K.Williams 1-2, Fisher 1-4, Miller 1-6, B.Parrish 0-1, Brodziansky 0-1, M.Williams 0-2). Fouled Out-K.Williams, Heron. Rebounds-Auburn 36 (Wiley, Dunans 7), TCU 33 (Brodziansky 8). AssistsAuburn 23 (Dunans 7), TCU 20 (Robinson, Miller 6). Total Fouls-Auburn 18, TCU 22. A-6,874 (7,201).

Top 25 No. 3 Gonzaga 96, Pepperdine 49 Malibu, Calif. — Przemek Karnowski scored 16 points, helping Gonzaga easily roll past Pepperdine. GONZAGA (22-0) Williams 4-8 0-0 8, Karnowski 8-11 0-0 16, Mathews 2-9 3-3 7, Perkins 3-7 0-0 7, Williams-Goss 6-9 0-0 12, Jones 1-1 0-0 2, Collins 5-5 4-5 14, Hachimura 3-4 0-1 6, R.Edwards 2-3 0-0 4, Triano 0-0 0-0 0, Melson 5-6 2-2 15, Alberts 2-6 0-0 5, Bakamus 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 41-70 9-11 96. PEPPERDINE (6-16) Reyes 4-9 3-7 11, Taylor 1-8 0-0 2, Lee 1-6 2-2 4, Major 5-14 3-4 13, Murray 5-14 2-2 12, Hempy 0-0 0-0 0, LeCesne 0-3 0-0 0, Gehring 0-0 0-0 0, Keenan 1-3 0-0 2, Hellums 1-4 0-0 3, Allen 1-2 0-0 2. Totals 19-63 10-15 49. Halftime-Gonzaga 43-21. 3-Point Goals-Gonzaga 5-21 (Melson 3-3, Perkins 1-4, Alberts 1-4, Williams 0-1, Hachimura 0-1, Bakamus 0-1, Williams-Goss 0-2, Mathews 0-5), Pepperdine 1-12 (Hellums 1-2, Lee 0-1, Reyes 0-1, Allen 0-1, Murray 0-2, Major 0-5). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-Gonzaga 43 (Williams 7), Pepperdine 32 (Taylor 6). Assists-Gonzaga 21 (Williams-Goss 8), Pepperdine 6 (Lee 3). Total FoulsGonzaga 16, Pepperdine 13.

Technicals-Bell, Ennis, Johnson, Peters.

GEORGETOWN (12-10) Derrickson 2-3 0-0 5, Hayes 3-3 0-1 6, Mulmore 1-4 2-2 4, Pryor 8-14 1-2 20, Peak 6-9 7-8 22, Cameron 0-0 0-0 0, Agau 0-0 2-2 2, Govan 8-9 1-1 20, Mosely 0-1 0-0 0, Johnson 2-4 2-2 6. Totals 30-47 15-18 85. BUTLER (18-4) Wideman 1-2 1-2 3, Martin 8-15 3-4 22, Chrabascz 5-7 6-6 16, Baldwin 5-14 0-0 10, Lewis 2-2 0-0 6, Fowler 3-3 0-0 6, Savage 2-4 4-4 8, Woodson 3-6 0-0 8, Baddley 1-2 0-0 2. Totals 30-55 14-16 81. Halftime-Butler 41-40. 3-Point Goals-Georgetown 10-20 (Govan 3-3, Peak 3-5, Pryor 3-6, Derrickson 1-2, Mosely 0-1, Johnson 0-1, Mulmore 0-2), Butler 7-18 (Martin 3-6, Lewis 2-2, Woodson 2-5, Savage 0-1, Baldwin 0-4). Fouled Out-None. ReboundsGeorgetown 21 (Hayes 5), Butler 18 (Wideman, Martin 4). Assists-Georgetown 17 (Peak 6), Butler 16 (Lewis 5). Total Fouls-Georgetown 21, Butler 17. A-9,116 (9,100).

Ga. Tech 62, No. 14 Notre Dame 60 Atlanta — Josh Okogie made a fast-break layup as time expired and Georgia Tech earned another surprising victory over a ranked opponent. NOTRE DAME (17-5) Colson 6-10 1-3 13, Beachem 10-16 0-0 23, Geben 0-2 2-2 2, Farrell 5-14 2-2 15, Vasturia 1-7 2-2 5, Torres 1-4 0-2 2, Ryan 0-1 0-0 0, Pflueger 0-1 0-0 0, Gibbs 0-2 0-0 0. Totals 23-57 7-11 60. GEORGIA TECH (13-8) Stephens 2-8 0-0 5, Lammers 7-14 1-2 15, Heyward 0-2 0-0 0, Heath 4-6 1-2 9, Okogie 2-5 4-6 8, Jackson 11-19 0-2 25, Moore 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 26-54 6-12 62. Halftime-Georgia Tech 35-31. 3-Point Goals-Notre Dame 7-17 (Farrell 3-5, Beachem 3-6, Vasturia 1-4, Pflueger 0-1, Gibbs 0-1), Georgia Tech 4-16 (Jackson 3-6, Stephens 1-6, Heyward 0-2, Heath 0-2). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-Notre Dame 27 (Colson 13), Georgia Tech 36 (Stephens 13). Assists-Notre Dame 13 (Farrell 4), Georgia Tech 18 (Heath 8). Total FoulsNotre Dame 12, Georgia Tech 9.

WISCONSIN (18-3) Brown 0-8 3-4 3, Happ 12-18 8-16 32, Hayes 2-7 3-4 7, Koenig 2-13 4-4 10, Showalter 2-4 0-0 4, Thomas 1-1 0-0 2, Pritzl 0-1 0-0 0, Trice 0-2 0-0 0, Hill 1-3 0-0 3, Iverson 0-3 0-0 0. Totals 20-60 18-28 61. RUTGERS (12-10) Freeman 2-6 1-3 5, Omoruyi 2-4 0-0 4, Gettys 3-4 2-2 8, Sanders 6-17 2-2 15, Johnson 3-12 6-7 13, Thiam 1-2 0-0 2, Sa 0-2 0-2 0, Diallo 0-0 0-0 0, Doorson 0-0 0-2 0, Williams 2-7 2-2 7. Totals 19-54 13-20 54. Halftime-Rutgers 25-20. End Of Regulation-Tied 45. 3-Point Goals-Wisconsin 3-25 (Koenig 2-10, Hill 1-2, Pritzl 0-1, Iverson 0-1, Showalter 0-2, Trice 0-2, Hayes 0-2, Brown 0-5), Rutgers 3-10 (Williams 1-1, Sanders 1-2, Johnson 1-4, Freeman 0-1, Sa 0-1, Omoruyi 0-1). Fouled Out-Diallo, Showalter. Rebounds-Wisconsin 38 (Hayes 11), Rutgers 33 (Williams, Johnson 7). AssistsWisconsin 10 (Hayes 4), Rutgers 6 (Johnson 3). Total Fouls-Wisconsin 20, Rutgers 25. A-8,631 (19,812).

LHS results (tournament record) 132 — Marquis Jones (1-2) lost by fall to Riley Alderman, ON; lost by fall to Eric Gawlick, BVNW; pinned Corbin Haskett, STA; def. Christian Wyaff, SMW, 17-1. 138 — Ja’Melle Dye (2-1) lost to Tyler Flood, ON, 5-2; def. Brock Winstein, BVNW, 17-6; pinned Colby Landers, STA. 145 — Alden Hunt (1-4) lost by fall to Ruben Castaneda, ON; pinned Luke Vega, BVNW; lost by fall to Tommy Carroll, STA; lost to Javier Contreas, WYA, 16-0; lost by fall to Richard Waeltermann, SMW. 160 — Gentry Dennison (2-2) lost by fall to Terrell Garraway, ON; lost by fall to Nathan Kenney, BVNW; pinned Manny Oregel, STA; pinned Jack Anderson, SMW. 170 — Santino Gee (4-0) pinned Nicholas Troung, ON; def. Garrett Parks, BVNW, 19-8; pinned Jayro Silvan, WYA; pinned Mason Wyatt, SMW. 182 — AJ Powell (2-3) pinned Math Martin, ON; lost to Garrett Tierney, BVNW, 16-0; lost by fall to Eli Berggren, STA; lost by pin to Yaseen Chapell, WYA; def. Zayvion Ray, SMW, 11-3. 195 — Isaac Flint (0-5) lost by fall to Nick Bozinos, ON; lost by fall to Max Wagoner, BVNW; lost by fall to Anthony Gaona, STA; lost to Roberto Neives, WYA, 7-5 OT; lost by fall to Hunter Remigio, SMW. 220 — Billy Phiavilayvong (1-4) lost to Matt Burks, ON, 1-0; lost by fall to Josh Cruz, BVNW; lost by fall to Peyton Reeves, STA; lost to Alex Pena, WYA, 11-4; def. Ryan Gellings, SMW, 7-5. 285 — Ethan Rorabaugh (0-1) lost by fall to Byron Sherwin, SMW.

Junction City 145, Salina Central 133, Salina South 89.5, Atchison 60, Shawnee Mission Northwest 58.5, Topeka 56, Highland Park 54, Wabaunsee 41, Herington 39, Southeast of Saline 36, Topeka West 22.5. FSHS placings (tournament record) 106 — 3. Lou Fincher (3-1). 113 — 5. Garrett Bradley (2-2). 120 — 3. Bennett King (3-1). 126 — 2. Isaiah Jacobs (2-1). 132 — 6. Charlie Bermel (1-3). 138 — 1. Tate Steele (3-0). 145 — 2. Elijah Jacobs (3-1). 152 — Ben Hill (0-2). 160 — 4. Joey Eddis (2-2). 170 — 1. Gage Foster (3-0). 182 — Elijah Denmark (0-2). 195 — 3. Devin Beers (2-2). 220 — 3. Nick Eddis (3-1).

No. 16 Creighton 83, DePaul 66 Omaha, Neb. — Khyri Thomas scored 18 points, leading Creighton NBA EASTERN CONFERENCE to the win at home. Atlantic Division DEPAUL (8-13) Hanel 3-4 2-2 8, McCallum 3-9 1-2 7, Garrett 6-10 2-2 18, Cyrus 2-7 6-6 12, Cain 4-17 0-1 9, Eichelberger 0-0 0-0 0, Gazi 0-0 0-0 0, Gage 2-4 0-1 4, Harrison-Docks 3-10 0-0 8. Totals 23-61 11-14 66. CREIGHTON (19-3) Huff 4-5 3-5 12, Patton 4-6 6-8 14, Foster 6-14 2-2 15, Mintz 1-4 2-2 4, Thomas 7-14 2-4 18, Krampelj 0-0 0-0 0, Hegner 0-0 0-0 0, Hanson 4-4 1-3 9, Scurry 1-1 0-0 3, Clement 1-3 0-0 3, Paras 0-0 0-0 0, Zierden 1-1 2-2 5. Totals 29-52 18-26 83. Halftime-Creighton 44-29. 3-Point Goals-DePaul 9-22 (Garrett 4-5, Cyrus 2-3, Harrison-Docks 2-6, Cain 1-5, McCallum 0-3), Creighton 7-21 (Thomas 2-6, Scurry 1-1, Zierden 1-1, Huff 1-2, Clement 1-3, Foster 1-6, Mintz 0-2). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-DePaul 26 (Hanel 9), Creighton 34 (Thomas 7). Assists-DePaul 16 (Cain 5), Creighton 20 (Thomas 6). Total Fouls-DePaul 20, Creighton 13. Technicals-McCallum. A-17,611 (18,320).

DUKE (16-5) Tatum 2-6 3-4 8, Jefferson 2-2 0-0 4, Jones 1-10 0-0 3, Kennard 11-14 6-10 34, Allen 5-13 4-4 19, White 0-0 0-0 0, Giles 3-5 0-0 6, Bolden 0-0 0-0 0, Vrankovic 1-1 0-0 2, Jackson 3-7 2-2 9. Totals 28-58 15-20 85. WAKE FOREST (12-9) Mitoglou 2-4 0-0 4, Arians 2-6 1-2 7, Collins 7-10 6-9 20, Woods 6-9 1-2 15, Crawford 5-15 15-15 26, McClinton 0-0 0-0 0, Moore 1-1 2-4 4, Japhet-Mathias 0-0 0-0 0, Wilbekin 1-4 0-0 3, Childress 2-6 0-0 4. Totals 26-55 25-32 83. Halftime-Wake Forest 42-32. 3-Point Goals-Duke 14-31 (Kennard 6-6, Allen 5-11, Tatum 1-3, Jackson 1-3, Jones 1-8), Wake Forest 6-20 (Woods 2-4, Arians 2-5, Wilbekin 1-4, Crawford 1-4, Mitoglou 0-1, Childress 0-2). Fouled Out-Tatum. Rebounds-Duke 30 (Allen 6), Wake Forest 29 (Collins 8). Assists-Duke 18 (Jones 6), Wake Forest 16 (Childress 7). Total Fouls-Duke 30, Wake Forest 20. Technicals-Allen, Crawford, Childress. A-14,681 (14,665).

MARYLAND (19-2) Dodd 1-3 1-2 3, Jackson 9-15 5-8 28, Huerter 7-10 0-0 19, Trimble 5-9 3-4 13, Cowan 2-7 4-6 8, Bender 4-5 0-0 8, Cekovsky 0-4 1-2 1, Gill 1-1 0-0 2, Brantley 0-3 0-0 0, Nickens 1-2 0-0 3. Totals 30-59 14-22 85. MINNESOTA (15-7) Murphy 3-6 4-7 10, Lynch 4-9 2-3 10, Coffey 3-9 2-2 11, Springs 9-15 2-2 23, Mason 2-10 8-8 14, Curry 2-5 1-2 5, Hurt 0-1 0-0 0, Konate 0-0 0-0 0, McBrayer 2-5 0-0 5. Totals 25-60 19-24 78. Halftime-Minnesota 33-26. 3-Point GoalsMaryland 11-18 (Jackson 5-5, Huerter 5-7, Nickens 1-2, Brantley 0-1, Cowan 0-1, Trimble 0-2), Minnesota 9-17 (Coffey 3-4, Springs 3-7, Mason 2-3, McBrayer 1-1, Hurt 0-1, Murphy 0-1). Fouled Out-Lynch, Bender. Rebounds-Maryland 30 (Jackson 10), Minnesota 38 (Lynch, Curry 10). Assists-Maryland 19 (Trimble 9), Minnesota 21 (Coffey 9). Total Fouls-Maryland 18, Minnesota 18. A-11,191 (14,625).

Colorado 74, No. 10 Oregon 65 Boulder, Colo. — Derrick White scored 17 of his 23 points in the sec- No. 23 S. Carolina 63, Missouri 53 Columbia, Mo. — Sindarius Thornond half, keying Colorado’s upset of Oregon that snapped the Ducks’ well had 16 points and 11 rebounds and South Carolina beat Missouri. 17-game winning streak. OREGON (19-3) Bell 3-6 1-2 7, Brooks 2-6 5-6 9, Ennis 3-10 1-4 10, Pritchard 6-12 2-2 19, Dorsey 4-12 0-0 9, Smith 0-0 0-0 0, Boucher 3-8 1-2 9, Sorkin 0-0 0-0 0, Benson 1-3 0-0 2. Totals 22-57 10-16 65. COLORADO (12-10) Gordon 4-5 0-1 8, D.White 8-16 4-5 23, Collier 1-7 2-2 5, King 4-10 3-4 13, Johnson 2-5 5-10 10, Miller 2-4 0-0 4, Siewert 1-1 2-2 5, Akyazili 1-2 0-0 2, Brown 1-3 0-0 2, Peters 0-3 0-0 0, Fortune 1-3 0-2 2. Totals 25-59 16-26 74. Halftime-Colorado 35-34. 3-Point Goals-Oregon 11-34 (Pritchard 5-9, Ennis 3-7, Boucher 2-6, Dorsey 1-7, Benson 0-2, Brooks 0-3), Colorado 8-22 (D.White 3-4, King 2-5, Siewert 1-1, Johnson 1-2, Collier 1-5, Akyazili 0-1, Peters 0-1, Fortune 0-1, Brown 0-2). Fouled Out-Bell, Boucher, Ennis. Rebounds-Oregon 34 (Bell, Boucher, Brooks 7), Colorado 38 (Johnson 9). Assists-Oregon 11 (Brooks 4), Colorado 14 (Gordon, D.White 4). Total Fouls-Oregon 24, Colorado 17.

4. Olathe North, 5. Leavenworth, 6. St. Thomas Aquinas, 7. Emporia, 8. Wyandotte, t-9. Lawrence, t-9. Shawnee Mission West.

No. 15 Wisconsin 61, Rutgers 54 New York — Ethan Happ scored Junction City Invitational at Junction City seven of his career-high 32 points in Saturday Team scores: Shawnee Heights 203.5, Free State 188.5, Kapaun Mt. Carmel 181, overtime, helping Wisconsin win.

Miami 77, No. 9 North Carolina 62 Coral Gables, Fla. — Freshman No. 22 Maryland 85, Minnesota 78 Minneapolis — Justin Jackson Bruce Brown scored a career-high 30 points, and Miami snapped North had a career-high 28 points and 10 rebounds, making all five of his Carolina’s seven-game win streak. 3-point attempts, and Maryland NORTH CAROLINA (19-4) earned its sixth straight win. Meeks 1-3 3-4 5, Hicks 3-6 1-2 7, Jackson 7-16 3-4 21, Berry 0-8 2-2 2, Williams 1-8 0-0 2, Rush 0-0 0-2 0, Bradley 3-7 0-1 6, Rohlman 0-0 0-0 0, Maye 2-5 0-0 4, Britt 3-4 2-2 10, White 0-0 0-0 0, B.Robinson 1-2 2-2 5, Coker 0-0 0-0 0, Woods 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 21-60 13-19 62. MIAMI (14-6) Murphy 2-5 0-0 4, Brown 8-11 10-13 30, Reed 3-12 7-9 14, Newton 6-14 6-6 18, Lawrence 1-5 0-0 3, Stowell 0-0 0-0 0, Huell 2-3 1-2 5, Izundu 0-1 0-0 0, M.Robinson 0-0 0-0 0, Vasiljevic 1-5 0-0 3. Totals 23-56 24-30 77. Halftime-Miami 39-22. 3-Point Goals-North Carolina 7-24 (Jackson 4-10, Britt 2-3, B.Robinson 1-2, Berry 0-4, Williams 0-5), Miami 7-20 (Brown 4-6, Vasiljevic 1-4, Reed 1-4, Lawrence 1-4, Newton 0-2). Fouled Out-Britt. Rebounds-North Carolina 31 (Bradley, Meeks, Hicks 6), Miami 36 (Murphy 9). Assists-North Carolina 12 (Berry 4), Miami 14 (Brown 5). Total Fouls-North Carolina 25, Miami 20. Technicals-Berry. A-7,563 (7,972).

SCOREBOARD

Georgetown 85, No. 11 Butler 81 Indianapolis —L.J. Peak scored 22 points and Jessie Govan beat the shot Olathe North Invitational at Olathe North clock with a key 3-pointer with 1:03 Saturday Team placings: 1. Cameron, 2. Blue left, helping Georgetown to the win. Valley Northwest, 3. Washburn Rural,

Syracuse 82, No. 6 Florida State 72 Syracuse, N.Y. — Andrew White scored 24 points, John Gillon had 21 points and matched his career high with 11 assists, and Syr- No. 17 Duke 85, Wake Forest 83 Winston-Salem, N.C. — Luke Kenacuse beat Florida State. nard hit a 3-pointer with 6.6 seconds FLORIDA ST. (18-4) left, helping Duke rally for a road win. Isaac 5-9 8-10 19, Ojo 0-1 0-0 0, Mann 0-3 3-4 3, Rathan-Mayes 5-10 2-6 16, Bacon 8-18 0-0 19, Smith 2-3 2-2 6, Cofer 0-1 0-0 0, Allen 0-1 0-0 0, Koumadje 1-2 0-0 2, Angola-Rodas 1-3 1-2 4, Walker 1-3 1-2 3, Forrest 0-4 0-0 0, Savoy 0-2 0-0 0. Totals 23-60 17-26 72. SYRACUSE (13-9) Lydon 4-8 4-4 14, Thompson 1-4 0-0 2, White 8-17 4-4 24, Gillon 3-8 13-14 21, Battle 3-10 2-2 9, Roberson 5-8 0-6 10, Howard 1-3 0-0 2. Totals 25-58 23-30 82. Halftime-Syracuse 44-26. 3-Point Goals-Florida St. 9-25 (Rathan-Mayes 4-9, Bacon 3-7, Isaac 1-2, Angola-Rodas 1-2, Smith 0-1, Allen 0-1, Savoy 0-1, Walker 0-2), Syracuse 9-24 (White 4-11, Gillon 2-4, Lydon 2-5, Battle 1-3, Thompson 0-1). Fouled OutNone. Rebounds-Florida St. 35 (Isaac 12), Syracuse 36 (Lydon 11). Assists-Florida St. 14 (Rathan-Mayes 5), Syracuse 20 (Gillon 11). Total Fouls-Florida St. 21, Syracuse 20. A-24,978 (35,446).

L awrence J ournal -W orld

SOUTH CAROLINA (17-4) Silva 2-4 3-3 7, Kotsar 1-5 0-0 2, Thornwell 4-15 7-7 16, Notice 3-6 0-0 9, Dozier 3-13 0-3 7, Gueye 0-0 0-0 0, Felder 4-7 2-4 13, McKie 1-1 0-0 3, Gravett 1-3 2-2 4, Blanton 1-3 0-0 2, Schmitt 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 20-57 14-19 63. MISSOURI (5-15) Woods 7-9 4-7 18, Puryear 3-9 1-1 7, Barnett 1-7 0-0 2, Walton 3-8 6-8 12, Geist 3-11 0-0 6, Kemp 0-0 0-0 0, Smith 0-0 0-0 0, Nikko 0-0 0-0 0, VanLeer 1-5 0-0 3, Phillips 2-7 1-1 5. Totals 20-56 12-17 53. Halftime-South Carolina 26-22. 3-Point Goals-South Carolina 9-25 (Felder 3-4, Notice 3-6, McKie 1-1, Dozier 1-4, Thornwell 1-7, Gravett 0-1, Blanton 0-2), Missouri 1-17 (VanLeer 1-5, Puryear 0-2, Barnett 0-2, Geist 0-4, Phillips 0-4). Fouled Out-Silva. Rebounds-South Carolina 33 (Thornwell 9), Missouri 33 (Woods 8). Assists-South Carolina 7 (Felder, McKie 2), Missouri 7 (VanLeer, Geist, Phillips 2). Total Fouls-South Carolina 19, Missouri 20.

W L Pct GB Toronto 29 18 .617 — Boston 29 18 .617 — New York 21 27 .438 8½ Philadelphia 17 28 .378 11 Brooklyn 9 38 .191 20 Southeast Division W L Pct GB Atlanta 27 20 .574 — Washington 26 20 .565 ½ Charlotte 23 25 .479 4½ Orlando 18 30 .375 9½ Miami 18 30 .375 9½ Central Division W L Pct GB Cleveland 31 14 .689 — Indiana 24 22 .522 7½ Chicago 23 25 .479 9½ Milwaukee 21 26 .447 11 Detroit 21 26 .447 11 WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division W L Pct GB San Antonio 36 10 .783 — Houston 35 15 .700 3 Memphis 28 21 .571 9½ New Orleans 19 28 .404 17½ Dallas 16 30 .348 20 Northwest Division W L Pct GB Utah 30 19 .612 — Oklahoma City 28 19 .596 1 Denver 21 25 .457 7½ Portland 21 27 .438 8½ Minnesota 18 29 .383 11 Pacific Division W L Pct GB Golden State 40 7 .851 — L.A. Clippers 30 18 .625 10½ Sacramento 19 28 .404 21 Phoenix 15 32 .319 25 L.A. Lakers 16 34 .320 25½ Friday’s Games Indiana 115, Sacramento 111, OT Boston 128, Orlando 98 Cleveland 124, Brooklyn 116 New York 110, Charlotte 107 Toronto 102, Milwaukee 86 Houston 123, Philadelphia 118 Miami 100, Chicago 88 New Orleans 119, San Antonio 103 Washington 112, Atlanta 86 Portland 112, Memphis 109 Saturday’s Games Sacramento 109, Charlotte 106 Miami 116, Detroit 103 Boston 112, Milwaukee 108, OT Golden State 144, L.A. Clippers 98 Denver 123, Phoenix 112 Memphis 102, Utah 95 Minnesota 129, Brooklyn 109 Today’s Games New York at Atlanta, 2 p.m. Oklahoma City at Cleveland, 2:30 p.m. Houston at Indiana, 5 p.m. Orlando at Toronto, 5 p.m. Washington at New Orleans, 5 p.m. Dallas at San Antonio, 6 p.m. Philadelphia at Chicago, 6 p.m. Golden State at Portland, 8 p.m. Monday’s Games Sacramento at Philadelphia, 5 p.m. Brooklyn at Miami, 6:30 p.m. Detroit at Boston, 7 p.m. Orlando at Minnesota, 7 p.m. Cleveland at Dallas, 7:30 p.m. Memphis at Phoenix, 9:30 p.m. Tuesday’s Games New Orleans at Toronto, 6 p.m. New York at Washington, 6 p.m. Sacramento at Houston, 7 p.m. Oklahoma City at San Antonio, 7:30 p.m. Charlotte at Portland, 9 p.m. Denver at L.A. Lakers, 9:30 p.m.

Big 12 Men

League Overall Baylor 7-1 20-1 Kansas 7-1 19-2 West Virginia 5-3 17-4 Iowa State 5-3 13-7 Kansas State 4-4 15-6 Texas Tech 3-5 15-6 TCU 3-5 14-7 Oklahoma State 2-6 13-8 Oklahoma 2-6 8-12 Texas 2-6 8-13 Saturday’s Games Kansas 79, Kentucky 73 Texas A&M 77, West Virginia 81 Kansas State 58, Tennessee 70 LSU 64, Texas Tech 77 Florida 84, Oklahoma 52

Iowa State 78, Vanderbilt 84 Arkansas 71, Oklahoma State 99 Texas 57, Georgia 59 Baylor 78, Mississippi 75 Auburn 88, TCU 80 Monday, Jan. 30 Oklahoma State at Oklahoma, 8 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 31 West Virginia at Iowa State, 8 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 1 Baylor at Kansas, 8 p.m. TCU at Kansas State, 6:30 p.m. Texas Tech at Texas, 8 p.m.

Big 12 Women

League Overall Baylor 9-0 20-1 Texas 9-0 15-4 Oklahoma 7-2 16-5 Kansas State 6-4 16-6 West Virginia 4-5 16-5 Oklahoma State 3-6 13-7 Texas Tech 3-6 11-9 Iowa State 3-7 12-9 TCU 2-8 10-11 Kansas 1-9 7-14 Saturday’s Games Texas Tech 60, Kansas 66 TCU 69, Iowa State 72 Oklahoma State 69, Kansas State 74 Today’s Games West Virginia at Texas, 3 p.m. Oklahoma at Baylor, 5:30 p.m.

Major Scores

Saturday, Jan. 28 EAST Bucknell 96, Army 75 Clemson 67, Pittsburgh 60 Columbia 65, Harvard 62 Cornell 75, Dartmouth 62 Davidson 84, Fordham 66 Elon 84, Hofstra 70 Fairfield 72, Marist 62 Florida A&M 81, Delaware St. 68 George Mason 76, UMass 74 George Washington 63, Saint Louis 55 Navy 60, Holy Cross 47 Niagara 80, Rider 67 Northeastern 69, Towson 62 Penn St. 71, Illinois 67 Syracuse 82, Florida St. 72 West Virginia 81, Texas A&M 77 Wisconsin 61, Rutgers 54, OT SOUTH Alabama 71, Mississippi St. 62 Baylor 78, Mississippi 75 Belmont 93, Tennessee St. 76 Duke 85, Wake Forest 83 E. Kentucky 79, Tennessee Tech 66 Miami 77, North Carolina 62 SE Missouri 82, Austin Peay 71 Texas State 52, Coastal Carolina 50 Texas-Arlington 83, Appalachian St. 67 UAB 87, Southern Miss. 43 UNC-Asheville 80, Radford 69 UTEP 91, Marshall 68 MIDWEST Ball St. 84, W. Michigan 78 CS Bakersfield 74, UMKC 63 Georgetown 85, Butler 81 Grand Canyon 85, Chicago St. 77, 2OT Iowa 85, Ohio St. 72 Ohio 96, Bowling Green 72 Providence 79, Marquette 78 S. Dakota St. 88, Nebraska-Omaha 84 S. Illinois 85, Missouri St. 84, OT South Carolina 63, Missouri 53 SOUTHWEST Auburn 88, TCU 80 Fort Wayne 87, Oral Roberts 83 Oklahoma St. 99, Arkansas 71 Rice 84, Charlotte 67 Sam Houston St. 71, SE Louisiana 69 Stephen F. Austin 71, New Orleans 61 Texas A&M-CC 72, Abilene Christian 60 Texas Southern 70, Alabama St. 68 Texas Tech 77, LSU 64 Tulsa 77, UCF 66 FAR WEST BYU 85, Loyola Marymount 77 Boise St. 80, Wyoming 65 Idaho 85, Montana 77, OT Nevada 82, New Mexico 65 New Mexico St. 74, Utah Valley 69 San Francisco 81, Pacific 60 San Jose St. 76, UNLV 72 UC Davis 74, UC Irvine 65

Farmers Insurance Open Scores

Saturday San Diego s-Torrey Pines (South); Yards 7,698; Par 72 n-Torrey Pines (North); Yards 7,258; Par 72 Purse: $6.7 million Third Round Patrick Rodgers 68n-72s-67s—207 Brandt Snedeker 68n-69s-70s—207 Tony Finau 73s-68n-67s—208 Cheng Tsung Pan 70s-69n-69s—208 Pat Perez 68n-74s-67s—209 Marc Leishman 69s-72n-68s—209 Stewart Cink 68n-72s-69s—209 Jonas Blixt 68n-72s-69s—209 Harris English 71s-69n-69s—209 Ollie Schniederjans 69s-69n-71s—209 Robert Streb 68n-71s-70s—209 Justin Rose 65n-71s-73s—209 Paul Casey 69n-73s-68s—210 J.J. Spaun 72n-69s-69s—210 Jon Rahm 72s-69n-69s—210 Franesnco Molinari 71s-70n-69s—210 Charles Howell III 67n-74s-69s—210 Gary Woodland 67n-75s-69s—211 Kyle Stanley 70s-73n-68s—211 Hunter Mahan 71s-70n-70s—211 Jhonattan Vegas 73s-70n-68s—211 Phil Mickelson 71n-72s-68s—211 Adam Hadwin 66s-71n-74s—211 Ryan Armour 71s-71n-70s—212 Kevin Tway 72n-70s-70s—212 Kyle Reifers 76s-67n-69s—212 Hideki Matsuyama 71s-70n-71s—212 Lucas Glover 71s-70n-71s—212 Tyrone Van Aswegen 72s-68n-72s—212 Charley Hoffman 74s-70n-68s—212 Brian Harman 68s-71n-73s—212 Zac Blair 70n-69s-73s—212 Keegan Bradley 69n-69s-74s—212 Michael Thompson 71s-71n-71s—213 Sebastian Munoz 72n-71s-70s—213 Emiliano Grillo 72s-69n-72s—213 Louis Oosthuizen 71n-72s-70s—213 Brendan Steele 69s-74n-70s—213 Roberto Castro 70n-70s-73s—213 Ryan Brehm 68n-72s-73s—213 Kevin Streelman 69n-70s-74s—213 Ryo Ishikawa 74s-68n-72s—214 Rory Sabbatini 70s-72n-72s—214 Kelly Kraft 72s-70n-72s—214 Graham DeLaet 68s-73n-73s—214 Trey Mullinax 67n-74s-73s—214 Ryan Blaum 71n-72s-71s—214 Mackenzie Hughes 70n-70s-74s—214 Cameron Smith 73n-71s-70s—214 Johnson Wagner 73s-71n-70s—214 Julian Etulain 71s-73n-70s—214 Camilo Villegas 72n-71s-72s—215 Martin Flores 71s-72n-72s—215 Cameron Tringale 69s-72n-74s—215 Jonathan Randolph 73s-67n-75s—215 Brad Fritsch 67s-76n-72s—215 Brian Campbell 73n-71s-71s—215 Beau Hossler 67n-75s-74s—216 Tim Wilkinson 70n-72s-74s—216 Scott Brown 71s-72n-73s—216 Nick Taylor 69n-74s-73s—216 Aaron Wise 71n-72s-73s—216 Richy Werenski 73s-70n-73s—216 Billy Horschel 71s-73n-72s—216 J.B. Holmes 73s-71n-72s—216 John Senden 70n-70s-76s—216 Bryce Molder 70n-74s-72s—216 Shane Lowry 71n-73s-72s—216 Michael Kim 72s-70n-75s—217 Derek Fathauer 76n-67s-74s—217 Cameron Percy 69s-72n-76s—217 Mark Anderson 70n-73s-74s—217 Byeong Hun An 71n-73s-73s—217 Made cut did not finish Martin Laird 70n-72s-76s—218 Jon Curran 73s-70n-75s—218 John Huh 74s-70n-75s—219 Brian Stuard 68n-75s-77s—220 Billy Hurley III 69n-75s-76s—220 Morgan Hoffmann 74s-70n-76s—220


January 29, 2017

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ARTS ENTERTAINMENT LIFESTYLE PEOPLE Sunday, January 28, 2017

D

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TOP LEFT: THE PRIMARY COLOR MUSIC TEAM IS SHOWN. Clockwise from front, founder Sam Billen, Kosuke Anamizu, Ryan Pinkston, Dan Billen and Josh Atkinson. TOP RIGHT: The team takes a walk in Tokyo. BOTTOM LEFT: Sam Billen and Pinkston work in their studio. BOTTOM RIGHT: The musicians pose with mascot characters.

SOUNDS THAT SELL Area composers are behind ad music here and abroad By Nick Krug lll

nkrug@ljworld.com

I

f the names Sam and Dan Billen ring a bell, it might be that you heard their music while popping around the Lawrence music scene at The Bottleneck or Jackpot Saloon in the early- to mid2000s. But you’ve likely heard their music and not known it — and it may even have caused you to grab your wallet. The Billen brothers and their Lawrence-based company Primary Color Music is now doing what their old band, The Billions, never quite could — get heard by the millions. The key has been making their music more commercial: They provide music for advertisements heard all over television and radio. “The crazy thing is that with our band, The Billions, really in terms of the people who ever heard any of our songs, the reach was probably maybe 20,000, max,” says Sam, 35. “It’s funny,” adds Dan, 38. “(Now,) maybe almost everybody in the U.S. at one time has probably heard something that we’ve done. When you’re in a band, it’s all about your

face and your ego, and now it’s the opposite. It’s like we’re invisible.” But their clients, which include the likes of McDonald’s, Wendy’s, Cessna, H&R Block, Dairy Queen and many others, are some of the most visible in America. In 2013, Sam started the Lawrence commercial music business Primary Color Music, which initially began with just him picking up freelance work, composing music for various local advertisers. As his business grew nationally, he brought in Dan and eventually three other commercial composers, including Ryan Pinkston, who, in 2009, performed on the David Letterman Show with The Republic Tigers. In a series of commercials for the Baconator sandwich at Wendy’s that the company provided music for, adolescent strips of bacon confront various pressures and moments of temptation. The commercials, hilariously contrived, are as unforgettable as the anti-drug spots aimed at teens decades ago. So, as the two curious bacon buddies find an older brother’s stash of “wood” under a bed, the heavily synthesized music carries a suspenseful moment of contemplation straight out of the ’80s as

can basically do any style.” Although the team draws inspiration from each other, the brothers Billen are quick to jump back to their roots of growing up in a musical home with a heavy influence from their father, Bill Billen, who has spent a lifetime working in ad— Dan Billen, of Primary Color Music vertising. The two explain that for a stretch in the late ’70s and the two bacon puppets ultiAmerica, Primary Color’s ’80s, before moving to Topeka, mately decide against getting orchestral music creates a tri- their father wrote jingles for “smoked.” umphant and uplifting mood companies in Oklahoma City. Bacon burger spots and as Japanese actress Haruka While talking about the other such efforts have done Ayase, whose popularity Dan popularity of his jingles in a more than expand Primary likens to that of American conference room in their East Color’s business nationally. actress Angelina Jolie, realLawrence studio, the two siThey’ve also taken the musiizes the unshackling freedom multaneously launch into song, cians overseas in a bit of a of the perfume while racing reciting the finale of a ditty toward an ocean cliffside. trans-Pacific partnership of their father wrote for United It’s probably safe to say their own. Sam, who studied Technical Institute, which that switching musical genres crescendos with the line “Put Japanese at the University — from orchestral to an urban the future in our hands.” of Kansas and whose wife is beat style to rock — is not Japanese, began cultivating “It’s 35 years later and still easy to do for any composer. business relationships in Jatoday, people in Oklahoma “All of us kind of bring to the City can still tell you the phone pan while making trips there. table slightly different styles,” “I had this idea going in number of that place,” Dan Sam says. “The really cool my head, ‘Hey, I’m going to says. thing is every one of us is sort Tokyo once a year, I might Looking into the future, of a Renaissance man, and we as well try to start getting in Sam believes more and more all do tons of different styles. with people there,’” explains of Primary Color’s client book Before I added anybody I was Sam, whose creations have will be based out of Japan. been featured in Japanese ads doing heavy rock ‘n’ roll, super- Currently, he’s working with for Toyota, Mitsubishi, Puma, pretty acoustic stuff, classical the business support compapiano-type stuff. It was kind of ny JETRO, Japanese External Toshiba, Uber and BMW. all over the place. I added Dan Trade Organization, to set up In a commercial for SK-II and Ryan and they brought a perfume, a Japanese cosmeta company branch in Tokyo. few new things to the table. I ics brand that Sam says is But for now, music heard added Josh (Atkinson) and Ko- around the world will continabout as popular there as suke (Anamizu) and now we Maybelline cosmetics are in ue to get its start in Lawrence.

“(Now,) maybe almost everybody in the U.S. at one time has probably heard something that we’ve done.”


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HEALTHCARE OPPORTUNITIES

Program Analyst

CSL Plasma has excellent opportunities for Medical Customer Service positions available in our Lawrence facility, located at 816 W. 24th St.

KU University Career Center seeks a FT Program Analyst with a BA + 2yrs experience. Information & Application at: http://employment.ku.edu/staff/7870BR Application deadline is February 12.

Competitive compensation & benefits: Flexible scheduling, medical, dental, vision & life, 3 weeks paid time off, 401k and more.

Transition Coalition, a unit within the KU Beach Center on Disability seeks a full-time Research Project Specialist. Information & Application at: https://employment.ku.edu/staff/7875BR Deadline is 2/05/17.

Apply online at www.cslplasma.com

Research Project Specialist

EOE/DFWP

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

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


L awrence J ournal -W orld

Sunday, January 29, 2017

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F E B P R E S E N T E D B Y J O B S . L AW R E N C E . C O M

Wednesday • February 1 11:30 AM - 2:30 PM East Lawrence Rec. Center 1245 East 15th Street

PLACE YOUR AD:

785.832.2222

classifieds@ljworld.com

See KU job announcements at:

employment.ku.edu KU is an EO/AAE, full policy http://policy.ku.edu/IOA/ non nondiscrimination. All qualified applicants will receive con consideration for employment without regard to race, color, reli religion, sex (including pregnancy), age, national origin, dis disability, genetic information or protected Veteran status.

GRAPHIC APHIC DESIGN DESIGNER Sunflower Publishing, a division of Ogden Publications, is hiring for a Graphic Designer to maintain all design of marketing and advertising material, as well as managing client communication among a series of city/regional titles. If you love magazines that are the heart and soul of a community, this opportunity is unmatched. Established in 2004 Sunflower Publishing, based in Lawrence, Kansas, is a leading publisher for city/regional magazines, trade publications and directories. Premier publications include KANSAS! magazine, Lawrence Magazine, Topeka Magazine, Manhattan Magazine, Best of Lawrence magazine, Kansas Weddings Magazine and more. For more information, visit www.sunflowerpub.com. Ideal candidates should have two-plus years of graphic design experience,preferably in advertising or marketing design.A Bachelor’s degree in Graphic Design, Fine Arts, Visual Communications or equivalent work experience preferred. Understanding of marketing and ad design. Ability to communicate design/printing principles to advertising clients. Experience producing a high volume of design products using InDesign, Photoshop and Illustrator. Ability to handle multiple projects under deadline pressure. Excellent organizational skills. Successfully builds relationships with customers and coworkers. This is an ideal, long-term position for a starting or seasoned graphic designer. Apply online via email or by mail with resume,cover letter,and portfolio (if applicable). Attn: General Manager General Manager 645 New Hampshire Lawrence, KS 66044 Editorial@sunflowerpub.com

Apply online: lawrencetransit.org/employment Or come to: MV Transportation, Inc. 1260 Timberedge Road Lawrence, KS We are an equal opportunity employer and all qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, national origin, disability status, protected veteran status, or any other characteristic protected by law.

Math Teacher Bishop Seabury Academy, an independent college-preparatory school, is seeking a full-time Middle/High School math teacher. Candidates should have a degree in math and relevant teaching experience. Applicants should send a resume & cover letter to donschawang@seaburyacademy.org

AccountingFinance Accountant/Bookkeeper Full time opening in our bookkeeping and payroll department. Quickbooks experience required as well as knowledge of federal and state laws regarding wage and payroll tax, sales tax and liquor tax. Sandy Miller 785-842-3431

Follow Us On Twitter!

@JobsLawrenceKS

Find the latest openings at the best companies in Northeast Kansas!

AccountingFinance

ACCOUNTING CLERK Entry level accounting position for growing construction firm. Position will be responsible for receivables, payables and compliance for construction contracts. No experience necessary. Proficient in all Microsoft applications a plus. Full-time position with benefits. Send resume Attn: HR, to PO Box 17 Perry, KS 66073 Or apply at Hamm 609 Perry Place Perry, KS Equal Opportunity Employer

TO PLACE AN AD:

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

Member Service Representative Part-Time Performs a wide variety of teller and member service functions. Must be enthusiastic, dependable and service minded. Previous sales or customerservice experience preferred, but not required. Professional appearance and a positive attitude is a must. Envista offers an excellent benefits package including competitive pay, performance incentives and a full range of employee benefits including health and life ins-urance, 401(k) plan, paid holidays, vacation and more. Please apply in person at 1555 Wakarusa Drive in Lawrence or e-mail your resume to human.resources@envistacu.com Learn more about our career opportunities by visiting www.envistacu.com/careers

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

Carpentry

Lawrence

It’s Fun, part-time work

Come in & Apply! Journal-World Media

AdministrativeProfessional

EXECUTIVE ASSISTANT Send questions, letter, resume, references to mwilliamson@YourSRC.org by Feb 8. 785-727-7880

Payroll Coordinator Ottawa USD 290 is accepting applications for Payroll Coordinator at the District Office. If you are interested in the position please apply online at

www.usd290.org

under the employment opportunities tab. If you have questions please contact Teri George at 785-229-8010. Need an apartment? Place your ad at apartments.lawrence.com or email classifieds@ljworld.com

DriversTransportation

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

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

Shuttle Driver Rockland West

Concrete

Great Compensation & Benefits! Transportation/Real Estate

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

The Shuttle Driver will transport residents in company vehicles to and from predetermined and scheduled destinations in a safe and courteous manner. Interested? Send your resume to hquijas@peakcampus.com

General Senior Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) Analyst, Porter McGuffie, Inc., Lawrence, KS. Perform single phase and two-phase flow analysis for thermalfluid systems. Mail resume to M. Porter, 544 Columbia Dr., Ste. 19, Lawrence, KS 66049.

CUSTODIAN

Technician Ottawa USD 290 is accepting applications for a HVAC Technician.

USD 458 is seeking a custodian.

If you are interested in the position please apply online at

www.usd290.org

under the employment opportunities tab. If you have questions please contact Darrell Moore at 785-229-8120.

785.832.2222

Decks & Fences

Apply online at www.usd458.org

Interview TIP #1 Learn a few things about the company before you interview. Decisions Determine Destiny

classifieds@ljworld.com

Home Improvements

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

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

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

913-962-0798 Fast Service

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

on a Driving Route in

Be an independent contractor. Deliver every day, between 2-6 a.m., so your days are free! Reliable vehicle, driver’s license, insurance in your own name, and a phone required.

Maintenance

Basehor-Linwood

Fully Insured 22 yrs. experience

913-488-7320

Guttering Services

Seamless aluminum guttering.

Pro Deck & Design

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

prodeckanddesign@gmail.com

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

785-842-0094

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

Call Today 785-841-9538

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

A.B. PAINTING & REPAIR Int/ext. Drywall, Siding, 30 plus yrs. Locally owned & operated.

Call Al 785-331-6994 albeil@aol.com

Home Improvements

Pet Services

Personalized, professional, full-service pet grooming. Low prices. Self owned & operated. 785-842-7118 www.Platinum-Paws.com

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

Professional Organizing

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

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

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

Fredy’s Tree Service cutdown • trimmed • topped • stump removal Licensed & Insured. 20 yrs experience. 913-441-8641 913-244-7718

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

STARTING or BUILDING a Business?

Higgins Handyman

785-312-1917

Call Lyndsey 913-422-7002

BHI Roofing Company

jayhawkguttering.com

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

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

Roofing

Painting JAYHAWK GUTTERING

Decks & Fences

Insurance

FOUNDATION REPAIR

Craig Construction Co

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

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

785-832-2222

Family Owned & Operated 20 Yrs

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

AAA Home Improvements Int/Ext Repairs, Painting, Tree work & more- we do it all! 20 Yrs. Exp., Ins. & local Ref. Will beat all estimates! Call 785-917-9168

Needing to place an ad?

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

Painting

Plumbing

Dirt-Manure-Mulch

Deliver Newspapers

645 New Hampshire, or call/email Joan: 785-832-7211, jinsco@ljworld.com

785-832-1717 www.seaburyacademy.org

HVAC

Full Remodels & Odd Jobs, Interior/Exterior Painting, Installation & Repair of:

Saferide Now Age 19!

• NO experience necessary! • Day & Night shifts. • Age 19+ for non-CDL SafeRide positions • 21+ for CDL positions • $11.50/hr after paid training. • Full-time benefits! • Part-time flexibilty • Genuine Career opportunities!

Installation-Repair

SERVICES Antique/Estate Liquidation

Sunflower Publishing and Ogden Publications, Inc., offers training, a benefits package including health, dental and vision insurance, 401k, paid time off and more. EOE

Do you have customer service skills? Drive the Lawrence T, KU on Wheels, & Saferide/ Safebus.

Grounds/Maintenance Specialist Temporary, full-time 4/1/2017-12/15/2017. 10 jobs w/ WRD, LLC dba Reed Dillon & Associates, Lawrence, KS & job sites in Douglas(KS), Johnson(KS), Shawnee(KS) & Jackson(MO) cntys. Use hand/power tools/equip. Lay sod, trim, plant, dig/rake/mulch; assist w/ installing sprinklers/mortarless concrete masonry wall units. Must use independent judgment; demo tasks to other employees. Non-supervisory. 3 mos. landscape exp. req’d. Lift/carry 50 lbs, when nec. Drug test req’d prior to starting work & post-hire random, upon suspicion, & post-accident. Post-hire background check req’d.40 hr/wk 8:00 AM-4:30 PM M-F. Sat work req’d, when nec. Wage is no less than $13.19/hr (OT varies @ $19.79/hr). Raise/bonus at emplr discretion.Transport (incl. meals & as nec, lodging) to place of employ provided or paid to wkrs residing outside normal commute distance by completion of 50% of job period. Return transport provided or paid to same wkrs if wkr completes job period or is dismissed early. Wkrs are guaranteed offer of 3/4 of work hrs each 12-wk period. Tools, supplies, equip & uniform provided at no cost. Potential deduct for reasonable cost of lodging may apply. Emplr may assist to secure wkr-paid lodging if needed. Emplr provides incidental transport btw job sites. Interview req’d. Fax resume to (785) 832-0545 or apply at: Lawrence Workforce Ctr, 2920 Haskell Ave Ste 2, Lawrence, KS 66046, (785) 840-9675. JO#10260410.

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

785-832-2222 classifieds@ljworld.com Advertising that works for you!


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Sunday, January 29, 2017

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L awrence J ournal -W orld

MERCHANDISE PETS

CARS

TO PLACE AN AD:

TO PLACE AN AD:

785.832.2222

classifieds@ljworld.com

Chevrolet Cars

785.832.2222

Chrysler Vans

classifieds@ljworld.com Ford Trucks

Hyundai Crossovers

REAL ESTATE - HOUSEHOLD

5613 Flint St. Shawnee, KS 66203 Nice clean older 3 bdrm, 1.5 baths, approx. 1,176sf Open House Feb 6, 10-2pm or by appointment

2013 Chevrolet Cruze LT This is a fantastic car for a commuter or someone who just wants a dependable car around town with a low monthly payment. Stk#529181

Only $10,655 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Real Estate sells 6pm Feb 8, Wed. Household items selling online now.

2011 FORD F150 XLT Chrysler 2008 Town Super Crew - Can Seat 6. & Country Limited, 49K Mi, Tow Pkg, 5.8 V8, 2 alloy wheels, leather heated seats, power equipment, DVD, navigation and more! Stk#160681 Only $9,455

WD, Roll Up Cover, Sirius Ready, Never Wrecked or Needed Repair. Beautiful blue with grey interior. Call 785-842-4515 or 785-979-7719

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

GMC SUVs

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

Only $10,814

Ford Crossovers

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

Volkswagen Cars

View www.lindsayauctions.com for more info, or call. Seller Warren L. Wicker, living estate

LINDSAY AUCTION & REALTY SVC INC

THOMAS J. LINDSAY | 913.441.1557 | LINDSAYAUCTIONS.COM TAGGED ESTATE SALE

Miscellaneous

228 Earhart Circle Lawrence, KS 66049

9 Ft Christmas Tree Angel, FREON R12 WANTED: 1000 lites, garland, stand, Certified buyer will pickup box, golden heavy stock- nationwide and pay CA$H ing holders, outdoor lites , for cylinders and cases of big box of globe orna- cans. (312)291-9169 ments, etc, etc ( downsizing ) $35. 785-550-4142

Take 6th Street to Wakarusa, turn North to Dole, turn right on Earhart to 228. LIVING ESTATE OF RALPH & SONYA BONNER Fri. Feb. 3rd 9:00-5:00 Sat. Feb. 4th 9:00-1:00 This downsizing sale has many delightful and quality products. Wicker furniture, patio furniture, much art work, numerous beautiful old frames, Cuisinart coffee maker, glassware, kitchenware, Oster mixer, Revere cookware, copper antique kettle, books, antique collectibles, cockery, jugs, area and book shelving, Panasonic flat 42” TV, buffet w/mirror, leather table chairs, antique dining room table w/5 chairs, floor and table lamps, Russian Samovar, decorative balls, large set of red glasses, candle holders, place settings, 3 Amoire’s, rugs, small coffee size table of pine, buffet w/ mirror and marble top, side chairs, tapestrys, sofas, clocks, decorative spindles, mirrors, 2 king size beds, linens, pillows, pine trunks, decorative wood shelving, cedar chest, GE microwave, office chairs, Samsung washer/dryer, side tables, games, vanity table, bar chairs, 2 leather recliners, entertainment center, small childs trunk, Toshiba CD player, Oval dining room table w/ 6 chairs, bird cages, 6 drawer chest, old sewing machine, fabric, easels, art equipment, 1930’s kitchen cabinet, 6’ tall oak cabinet, blank canvases, shelving, walnut pie cupboard, 35MM cameras, Vest pocket Kodak model b, 3 drawer walnut chest w/ mirror, bar refrigerator, small work bench w/ 6 drawers, Oak jewelers work bench, collectibles, Husky work cabinets on wheels, Jewelry making equipment, antique signs, 8’ heavy duty workbench, acetylene torch w/tips and tank, jewelry work bench, steel tapping set, vintage West Lake jewelers staking set in wooden case, Dremel stand, bench metal shear, Tyobi 6” grinder, 6’ cabinet w/ tin front, Toshiba 12” TV, 18” Dynex TV Flat screen, golf clubs, steamer trunks, wicker coffee table, Forge tool cabinets and matching drawers on wheels, Skill 3 tool drill set, router w/ base and 13 bits, wrought iron gate, wheel barrow, space heater, hand tools, decorative tin shelf, marble base scale, Black and Decker hedge trimmer, Homelite gas weed eater, Toro hand mower and much misc.

GARAGE SALES

MERCHANDISE

Auction Calendar ESTATE AUCTION Monday February 6th 6:00 PM Ron Stricker’s Auction Co. 790 N. Center St. Gardner KS. 66030

Estate of Mr. Donald Wilson and consignors For more info and pictures see web ronstrickersauction.com Ron Stricker Auctioneer 913 963 3800 Office: 913-856-6890

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

hardsplit. $85.

Furniture Huge Dresser & 2 Big End Tables ( No Mirror ) Color black w/ mild slim white streaks thru it here & there ~ In great condition ~ (downsizing ) $100. 785-550-4142

DART BOARD Marlboro Country Store Dart Board with 12 darts…never used…sells new for over $140.00 Asking $50.00 316-992-5678

Magazines Life - Look Saturday Evening Post Magazines 8-Saturday Evening Post from 1944-1967 1-Look April 1969 14-Life from 1962-1981 $25.00 316-992-5678

Estate Sale 4309 SW Cochise Ave Topeka Saturday, January 28th 10:00AM-3:00PM Sunday, January 29th 12:00PM-3:00PM Packed house! Tons of NEW and NEW old stock items: kitchen, golf, fishing, electronics, camping items, linens, men’s name brand clothing and more including Frankoma, tribal collectibles, Native American Pottery. For complete list and photos, please see www.kansasestatesales.com

Only $11,777

Only $20,885

Only $9,455

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

Ford SUVs

2012 Volkswagen Jetta fwd power equipment, leather, great gas mileage, stk#183581

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

Hyundai Cars

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

Pets

PIANOS

785-832-9906

Serta I-Series Mattress Set 4 years old Asking $100 785.764.2853

Free TV. 27inch Sony Television. Very good condition. Located in Lawrence Call 785-813-5023

785.832.2222

RENTALS Apartments Unfurnished Large 2BR / 1 BA

Ask how to get these features in your ad TODAY!!

Lawrence

(First published in the Lawrence Daily Journal-World on January 29, 2017) NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC The Lawrence/Douglas County Metropolitan Planning Commission will hold their regularly scheduled monthly meeting on February 22, 2017 at 6:30 p.m. in the Commission Meeting Room on the first floor of City Hall, 6 E. 6th Street. The Planning Commission will consider the following public hearing and non hearing items at their Wednesday, February 22, 2017 meeting: Z-17-00022: Consider a request to rezone approximately 0.58 acres from County B-1 (Neighborhood Business) District to County R-1 (Single-Family Residential) District, located at 697 E 1725 Rd, Baldwin City. Submitted by Vinland Preservation LLC, property owner of record. Joint meeting with Baldwin Planning Commission. PP-16-00544: Consider a Preliminary Plat for Paxton Place Addition, a two lot residential subdivision, on approximately 49 acres located at the southeast corner of W. 31st St and Michigan St. (future address of 1101 W 31st St). Submitted by BG Consultants, for Castle Rock LC, property owner of record. Z-16-00545: Consider a request to rezone approximately 1.07 acres located at 3215 Ousdahl Rd from PD-[Pine Ridge Plaza] (Planned Commercial Development) District to CS (Commercial Strip) District,. Submitted by Paul Werner Architects on behalf of Jayhawk Acquisitions LLC, property owner of record. SUP-16-00547: Consider a Special Use Permit to allow a building addition for Bullwinkle’s, located at 1340 Tennessee Street, to expand onto property in a MU (Mixed Use) zoning district. Submitted by Paul Werner Architects on behalf of Sorrentino Investments LLC, property owner of record. CSU-17-00004: Consider a variance request per Section 20-804 of the Subdivision Regulations to allow a Certificate of Survey on property containing less than 20 acres, located at about 1144 E 1200 Rd. Submitted by Grob Engineering Services LLC on behalf of Brian E & Cheri L Ezell, property owners of record. TA-16-00511: Consider a Text Amendment to Chapter 12 of the County Code, Zoning Regulations for the Unincorporated Territory of Douglas County, Kansas to revise Section 12-319-4.31, Radio, television, telecommunication, and microwave towers, to bring the standards and definitions into compliance with State law. Initiated by County Commission on 11/30/16.

Only $12,836 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

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

785-633-7556

classifieds@ljworld.com

785.832.2222 Apartments Unfurnished

Duplexes

Townhomes

1st MONTH FREE!! 2BR in a 4-plex

DOWNTOWN LOFT

New carpet, vinyl, cabinets, countertop. W/D is included.

Studio Apartments 600 sq. ft., $725/mo. No pets allowed Call Today 785-841-6565

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

grandmanagement.net Equal Housing Opportunity. 785-865-2505

advanco@sunflower.com

Townhomes

FREE MONTH OF RENT SIGN BY MARCH 1

Call 785-842-2575 www.princeton-place.com

3 BR w/2 or 2.5 BA W/D hookups, Fireplace, Major Appliances. Lawn Care & Dbl Car Garage! Equal Housing Opportunity

LAUREL GLEN APTS All Electric

2 BR & 3 BR/2BA Units

Available Now!

Rooms ROOM FOR RENT IN HOME Furnished BR Quiet, near KU, on bus route. $375/mo. Utils Included 785-979-4317

Water & Trash Paid Small Dog

785-838-9559

785-865-2505

EOH

Call: 785-832-2222

grandmanagement.net

NOTICES TO PLACE AN AD:

785.832.2222

classifieds@ljworld.com

Special Notices

legals@ljworld.com Lawrence

Only $10,814 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

TO PLACE AN AD:

Thicker line? Bolder heading? Color background? 4 Female • 1 Male Chocolate champion bloodlines, blocky heads, parents on site, vet & DNA checked, shots, hunters & companions. Born 12/21/16, Ready 2/8/16. $650. Call 785-865-6013

2013 Hyundai Sonata one owner, heated seats, power equipment, alloy wheels, steering wheel controls, stk#17030

RENTALS REAL ESTATE

785-550-7325

AKC LAB PUPPIES

2010 Ford Edge Limited heated leather seats, alloy wheels, power equipment, cruise control, SYNC, home link stk#36358A1

Only $24,886 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Near hospital. CentralA, off-street parking, on bus route, W/D hookups, no smoking. $600/mnth. Available Immediately!

• H.L. Phillips upright $650 • Cable Nelson Spinet $500 • Gulbranson Spinet - $450 • Sturn Spinet - $400 Prices include delivery & tuning

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

PETS

Music-Stereo

TV-Video

Lawrence

4wd leather heated & cooled seats, sunroof, remote start, navigation, Bose sound, DVD, and much more! Stk#38467A1

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

Chevrolet Trucks

Chevrolet 2013 Silverado 4wd Z71 LT

PUBLIC NOTICES Lawrence

Only $9,974 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

AWD heated leather seats, power equipment, alloy wheels, great finance terms are available. Stk#477331

2011 GMC Yukon XL SLT

Autos Wanted

Holiday Decor

TO PLACE AN AD:

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

2010 Ford Escape LTD

Topeka

Shown by John I. Hughes - Certified Appraiser 785-979-1941

AUCTIONS

Want To Buy

2015 Chevrolet Spark LT

CNA/CMA CLASSES IN LAWRENCE

CNA EVENING CLASSES LAWRENCE KS Feb 21-Mar 17 T/Th/F 5p- 9p Apr 4 -May 5 T/Th/F 5p- 9p

SUMMER CLASSES: May 15 - May 26 M-F 8a-5p Jun 5 - Jun 16 M-F 8a-5p

WANTED: 1 BDRM IN COUNTRY

Jun 19 - Jun 30 M-F 8a-5p

CNA DAY CLASSES Jan 31-Feb 16 M-Th 8.30-2.30 Feb 27-March 16 8.30a-2p Apr 3 -April 20 8.30a-2p

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

Special Notices

CNA 10 hr REFRESHER LAWRENCE KS CMA 10 hr UPDATE LAWRENCE KS Jan 27/28 Feb 17/18 March 17/18 April 28/29 May 12/13 Classes begin 8.30am

Looking for small space in the country to rent. 785-766-0517

HOME HEALTH AIDE:TBA

Lost Item

There will be no classes Spring Break May 20-May 26 CALL NOW- 785.331.2025 trinitycareerinstitute.com

LOST & FOUND

Men’s Rolex watch. Lost 1/22 a.m. in the vicinity of Peterson and Monterey Way. Reward. 785-832-0526

PUBLIC NOTICES TO PLACE AN AD: Lawrence

785.832.2222 Lawrence

(First published in the Parks & Recreation HistoLegal descriptions for public hearing properties listed above are on file in the Planning Office for review dur- Lawrence Daily Journal- cal and General Carpentry BID #1708 World on January 29, 2017) ing regular office hours, 8-5 Monday - Friday. Parks & Recreation HVAC NOTICE TO BIDDERS Communications to the Commission: Contract Work Written comments are welcome and encouraged on all items to be considered by the Planning Commission. The BID #1709 Sealed proposals will be Commission has established a deadline for receipt of all written communications of no later than 10:00 a.m. received by the City of Parks & Recreation Painton Tuesday, February 21, 2017. This ensures your transmittal to the Commission can be received and read prior Lawrence, Kansas, in the ing Contract Work to their meeting. BID #1710 Office of the City Clerk, 6 East Sixth Street until 2:00 Parks & Recreation ConSheila M. Stogsdill crete Contract Work p.m., Tuesday, February 7, Planning Administrator BID #1711 2017, for the following: www.lawrenceks.org/pds/ Parks & Recreation Electri_______ cal Contract Work BID #1707

legals@ljworld.com Lawrence

Lawrence

BID #1712 Parks & Recreation Excavation Contract Work BID #1713 Parks & Recreation Engineering Contract Work BID #1714 Parks & Recreation Architecture and Design Work BID #1715 Parks & Recreation Plumbing Contract Work

Contractors and specifications may be obtained at the Finance Department at the above address. The City Commission reserves the right to reject any or all bids and to waive informalities. City of Lawrence, Kansas

Sherri Riedemann, City Clerk Copies of the Notice to _______


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