Lawrence Journal-World 02-06-2016

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PAINFUL MEMORIES

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SATURDAY • FEBRUARY 6 • 2016

City sued over KTen Crossing decision

‘He made a name for Lawrence High’

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Suit claims denial of shopping center plan was illegal By Chad Lawhorn Twitter: @clawhorn_ljw

Mike Yoder/Journal-World Photo

JENNIFER FREEMAN NAUERTC PLANS TO GO BEFORE LAWRENCE SCHOOL BOARD MEMBERS ON MONDAY to ask them to name the Lawrence High School football field or stadium after her late father, Bill Freeman, who coached the Lions to five state football championships from 1974 to 1989.

School board to hear proposal to name LHS field or stadium after famed coach By Rochelle Valverde Twitter: @RochelleVerde

The daughter of legendary Lawrence High School coach Bill Freeman is hoping his name can become a permanent part of the foot-

ball field at the school. Jennifer Freeman Nauertc will make a short presentation to the Lawrence school board at its meeting Monday to ask that either the stadium or the field be named after her late father. Freeman, who died in De-

cember, led the Lions to five state football championships and two state track crowns during his 16-year tenure as head coach of both teams. Freeman Nauertc, of LeRoy, said she has letters from Please see FIELD, page 2A

The city of Lawrence is getting sued over its denial of a proposed shopping center at the South Lawrence Trafficway and Iowa Street interchange. A lawsuit by landowners and developers was filed Friday in Douglas County District Court alleging that the city used an “improper and illegal basis” for denying a proposed shopping center that would have added about 250,000 square feet of new retail space to the south Iowa Street corridor. City commissioners on Jan. 5 voted 4-1 to deny rezoning and other planning approvals for the proposed KTen Crossing shopping center project, which was slated for about 60 acres of farm ground at the southeast corner of Iowa Street and the SLT interchange. Commissioners cited concerns about whether the shopping center proposal was suitable for the area, which is just north of the Wakarusa River, and whether the city was prepared to grow south of the South Lawrence Trafficway, which is scheduled

Freeman Nauertc Bill Freeman

Please see KTEN, page 2A

University Daily Kansan editors sue top KU officials Lawsuit says funds were cut over student newspaper’s content By Nikki Wentling Twitter: @nikkiwentling

Kansas University Chancellor Bernadette Gray-Little and another top KU official are being sued by current and former editors of The Univer-

sity Daily Kansan for allegedly allowing the student newspaper’s funding to be reduced on the basis of its content. The suit filed Friday in U.S. District Court contends GrayLittle and Tammara Durham, KU’s vice provost for student

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Low: 32

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affairs, gave their approval to a KU Student Senate decision in 2015 to reduce the student fee allocated to the Kansan from $2 to $1 per student per semester, or approximately $45,000 per year. The funding cut was a re-

taliatory decision, the lawsuit argues, made as a result of an editorial published in May 2014 that KANSAS UNIVERSITY called for reforms of the Student Senate election process. Reduced funding has led to

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the elimination of more than a dozen positions from the Kansan’s staff, said current Kansan Editor-in-Chief Vicky Díaz-Camacho. According to the lawsuit, it’s also caused a “significant chilling effect” and left the independent student

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LAWRENCE • STATE

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DEATHS AngelA MAriA HAwkins

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

ConstanCe Marlatt Huested allen Services for Constance Allen, 75, Lawrence, are pending with Rumsey-Yost Funeral Home. Mrs. Allen died Friday, Jan. 29, 2016, at LMH. rumsey-yost.com

Charles l. stansifer Services for Charles L. Stansifer, 85, Lawrence, are pending and will be announced by Rumsey-Yost Funeral Home. He died at LHM. rumsey-yost.com

Ric BuRke Passed January forthcoming.

30,

2016.

Obituary

will

be

CeCil lloyd Miller Jr. Services for Cecil Lloyd Miller Jr., 64, Topeka, are pending and will be announced by Rumsey-Yost Funeral Home. He died Thursday. rumsey-yost.com

Field

Age 52, Died Jan. 22, 2016 in Broomfield,Co. She was born Nov. 1. 1963 at Fort Scott Mercy Hospital to Richard and Martha Heffarnan. She was married to Eddie Hawkins who proceeds her in death. Also grandparents, Dorothy and Preston Patterson. She is survived by her son, Preston Hawkins and Step-Daughter Kari Hawkins, of Florida. Mother Martha DuBois, Step-Father Cesar Gomez and 3 sisters Suzie and Jennifer DuBois and Erin DuBois Hefner. 3 brothers Cesar, Marco and Tim Dubois, and many nieces and nephews. Angela was a very bright and beautiful individual. She was a licensed cosmetologist and graduated from Masonry School in Tallahassee Fl. in 2002. She loved learning

My dad was the most humble guy; he didn’t like the limelight. And he probably wouldn’t want this, but I feel like he deserves CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A it. He made a name for himself, he made a former players, coaches name for Lawrence High football and track.” and friends, and that many will also attend the meeting to show support for the idea. She said naming the field or stadium for her father would pay tribute to the impact he made to athletics at the school, especially the football program. “Dad walked into a program that really needed some help,” Freeman Nauertc said. “They didn’t have a great winning tradition, and, with his assistants, he helped turn the program around.” Some of Freeman’s honors include his induction into the Kansas Sports Hall of Fame in 2014, as well as being named the recipient of the Kansas Sports Hall of Fame’s Pride of Kansas Award in 2012. Freeman Nauertc recognized the team has had other great coaches, but that incorporating his

Kansan CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A

newspaper less likely to express viewpoints critical of the Student Senate. “A lot of us are taking on the roles of editors or copy editors or reporters and photographers and videographers,” DíazCamacho said. “It’s difficult. We feel it. Fewer jobs at the Kansan means fewer opportunities for students.” Díaz-Camacho and Katie Kutsko, who was the editor-in-chief when the editorial was published, are the plaintiffs in the lawsuit. Both Kutsko and Díaz-Camacho are seniors at KU. Kutsko is also currently an intern for Sunflower Publishing, which is owned by The World Company, the parent company of the Lawrence JournalWorld. “The reason why we filed the suit today was because we’ve exhausted all of our other options,” Kutsko said. “We

Earthquakes cause $100,000 damage

— Jennifer Freeman Nauertc name in some way is an honor he deserves. “My dad was the most humble guy; he didn’t like the limelight,” she said. “And he probably wouldn’t want this, but I feel like he deserves it. He made a name for himself, he made a name for Lawrence High football and track.” The naming effort isn’t the only one Freeman Nauertc is making to commemorate her father. Freeman suffered from Alzheimer’s in the years before his death, and last week Freeman Nauertc made a presentation to the Kansas Legislature’s transportation committee in favor of a bill that would allow Kansans to purchase Alzheimer’s license plates. Freeman

Nauertc said the disease took a toll on her father’s final years. “He missed out on my kids’ graduations, he missed out on sporting events, he missed out on everyday life,” Freeman Nauertc said, explaining the license plates would help spread awareness of the disease. Freeman Nauertc said the bill will be considered by the Kansas House in a few weeks. The Lawrence school board meets at 7 p.m. Monday, and Freeman Nauertc said she has been allotted three minutes to present her idea and will also provide board members with the letters of support she has collected. In other business, the

met with Student Senate leadership, with the chancellor, other university officials, with general counsel, and no one would acknowledge this was a First Amendment issue.” The lawsuit states an annual budget review of the Kansan’s fees was used by student senators to “interrogate and punish Kansan leaders for unflattering coverage” and that it was brought up by senators at subsequent meetings. When a Student Senate committee voted Feb. 27, 2015, to reduce funding, one Student Senate leader said it was because of the Kansan’s altered publication schedule. The Kansan had previously published four days per week and was cutting back to a twoday-per-week printing schedule. Kansan leaders argued the newspaper needed to maintain its funding because the cut in published product meant less advertising revenue. But another student senator said the May 2014

editorial was “repeatedly referenced with hostility” during deliberations, the lawsuit states. Another senator said in an interview with a Kansan reporter that the funding was cut partly because “some of the coverage had been really problematic in the past.” According to the lawsuit, no other student organization had its funding reduced that year. The 50 percent cut to the Kansan’s funding caused the newspaper to eliminate 13 paid student positions, and the newspaper has been unable to fill the vacant position of its fulltime news adviser. The Student Press Law Center, a college journalism advocacy group, and Mark Johnson — the chairman of the Kansan Board of Directors and an attorney — reached out to KU officials saying the content-based decision violated the First Amendment. The lawsuit states Gray-Little and Durham, who was tasked with approving the student fees budget, did not intervene

port says about $60,000 of the cost came from repairing 10 water main breaks after Wichita (ap) — Wichita the earthquakes. Other damofficials say the city sufages were to foundations or fered more than $100,000 masonry of city buildings, in damage from two earth- including two recreation quakes in early January. centers, police substations, The Wichita Eagle the Mid-America All-Indian reports the city will pay for Center and the Alford the repairs out of its operLibrary. ating budget because the Scientists suspect recity’s earthquake insurance cent earthquakes in Kansas deductible is $250,000. are being caused by injecAn earthquake incident re- tions of wastewater by oil

and she was inducted into the Phi Theta Kappa International Honorary program in 2008 in Florida. She graduated from Johnson County Community College with a degree in General Studies in May of 2015. She had a passion for music and art but most of all her son and family. She will be deeply missed by all who knew her. We love you Angela. A Celebration of life will be held at a later date. Please sign this guestbook at Obituaries. LJWorld.com.

board will: l Review a report on changes in the district’s professional learning approach. The district has adopted a new model that is more personalized and is intended to mirror a “blended learning” classroom. The district has about 250 such classrooms, which combine traditional instructions, personalized lessons and small group work. l Review a report on capital outlay budget and project planning. A status report of next school year’s Capital Outlay Fund will be presented, as well as a summary of the capital outlay fund’s priority projects for the spring and summer. In addition, a summary of projects planned over the next three years will be reviewed. The school board will meet at 7 p.m. Monday at the district offices, 110 McDonald Drive. — K-12 education reporter Rochelle Valverde can be reached at rvalverde@ljworld.com or 832-6314.

but signed off on the 201516 budget. The Kansan editors are asking for the court to declare the funding decision violated the U.S. and Kansas constitutions. They’re also seeking a preliminary injunction against Gray-Little and Durham that prohibits them from enforcing the reduction of the newspaper’s funding or enforcing further retaliatory reductions in the 2016-17 budget. The plaintiffs are also asking for nominal damages, payment of attorneys’ fees and costs and any additional relief the court thinks appropriate. Officials at KU could not immediately be reached for comment Friday evening. — City Hall reporter Nikki Wentling can be reached at 8327144 and nwentling@ljworld.com. — Editors’ note: Reporter Nikki Wentling was on the staff of the University Daily Kansan from December 2010 to December 2013.

results of hospital tests have not been confirmed. KU youth center Marillac provides behavior health services to young reports up to 18 ill people. The university said Overland Park (ap) in a news release Thursday — Officials at a University that 10 patients and eight of Kansas Hospital youth staff reported illnesses at services center say up to the Overland Park campus. 18 people have fallen ill in The hospital said the staff the last few days. began cleaning the center State health officials told was soon as the symptoms the hospital to treat the ill- surfaced and outside cleannesses at the Marillac cam- ing experts began working pus as norovirus, although at Marillac Thursday.

L awrence J ournal -W orld

KTen ljworld.com

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to be completed later this year. The lawsuit — which was filed on behalf of property owners Armstrong Management, Grisham Management and the development group SLT, LLC — argues that was an improper reason for denial. “Development and city infrastructure is already occurring south of the SLT,” the lawsuit, filed by the Kansas City law firm Polsinelli PC, reads. “Nevertheless, the City Commission’s supermajority selected an arbitrary and capricious reason for denying the applications: The city is not ready to cross over to the south side of the SLT.” An attempt to reach a city official for comment wasn’t immediately successful. Other arguments made in the lawsuit include: l The proposed shopping center plans “generally comply” with Horizon 2020, the city’s comprehensive land use plan. That plan envisions auto-related commercial uses developing on at least a portion of the proposed shopping center site. The development group was seeking to develop a regional shopping center at the site, which would have included big-box stores, restaurants and other retailers. The city’s auto-related commercial designation would not have allowed big-box stores, but instead envisioned auto dealerships, hotels, fueling centers, or other such uses that attracted motorists off the highways that run by the site. City officials have contended the big-box retail shopping center would be significantly more intense than an auto-related commercial center. The lawsuit disputes that contention. l The plaintiffs allege the general public will be harmed by the city’s denial because the property is now likely to sit vacant or remain underutilized. “The public, because of the city’s action, has missed retail shopping opportunities, job opportunities (nearly 500), an opportunity for an attractive southern ‘gateway’ to the city, and missed sales and property tax opportunities,” the lawsuit reads. l The attorneys argue the city has placed the property in a “holding pattern” that is unfair to the property’s owners. The property was annexed into the city limits in 1979, and has been zoned for single-family residential use since that time. But the property has never developed in that fashion, and the lawsuit contends the city has never intended for the property to develop with single-family homes. Attorneys for the city will have a chance to file an answer to the lawsuit in the coming weeks. Representatives with North Carolina-based Collett development previously said Academy Sports, Old Navy, HomeGoods and several other retailers had either signed letters of intent or made other commitments to locate at the project. A representative of the development group wasn’t available for comment on Friday afternoon, and an attempt to reach the plaintiff’s attorney also was unsuccessful.

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LOTTERY WEDNESDAY’S POWERBALL 26 28 31 60 67 (23) FRIDAY’S MEGA MILLIONS 4 6 23 55 75 (2) WEDNESDAY’S HOT LOTTO SIZZLER 10 20 34 38 44 (14) WEDNESDAY’S SUPER KANSAS CASH 11 20 22 27 28 (15) FRIDAY’S KANSAS 2BY2 Red: 15 17; White: 2 23 FRIDAY’S KANSAS PICK 3 5 3 4

Kansas wheat -6 cents, $4.54 See more stocks and commodities in the USA Today section.

BIRTHS Ian Smith and Kara Schrader, Lawrence, a boy, Friday

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 — Managing editor Chad Lawhorn have made such an error, can be reached at 832-6362, or at call 785-832-7154, or email clawhorn@ljworld.com news@ljworld.com.

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Lawrence&State

Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com/local l Saturday, February 6, 2016 l 3A

Shooting suspect faces felony charge

Perfect poise from snout to tail

By Conrad Swanson Twitter: @Conrad_Swanson

A Lawrence man is accused of shooting a bar patron in the stomach at an eastern Lawrence sports bar. Geoffrey Eugene Morrison, 28, faces one felony charge of aggravated battery. Early in the morning hours of Jan. 17, a fight began between two people

Mike Yoder/Journal-World Photo

KATELYN SCOTT, OF PEYTON, COLO., RUNS BESIDE HER BORDER COLLIE, SIN, during an advanced jumpers event Friday at the community building at the Douglas County Fairgrounds. Casa De Canine Agility of Kansas City is holding a USDAA Agility Trial at the fairground through Sunday.

Man accused of exposing himself near KU By Conrad Swanson Twitter: @Conrad_Swanson

A 30-year-old Ottawa man who is a registered sex offender is accused of publicly exposing his genitals to a woman near the Kansas University campus, according to a newly

released arrest affidavit. It’s a crime that often goes unreported but that Lawrence police are encouraging victims to speak up about. Just before noon on Dec. 14, police took a report from a KU student who said she had left class

and was walking north in the 1600 block of High Drive when she saw a man parked alongside the road touching himself, according to the affidavit filed in Douglas County District Court. The man was inside a gold, four-door vehicle. A number of KU

sorority and fraternity houses are located in the area where the incident is alleged to have occurred. The woman said she and the man did not make eye contact; nor did he say anything to her, the Please see EXPOSING, page 4A

just outside Playerz Sports Bar, 1910 Haskell Ave., according to an arrest affidavit filed in Douglas County District Court. Lee Simmons Jr., 32, a bar customer, stepped outside to try to separate the two involved. Eventually the fight came to an end, the affidavit says. Afterwards, Morrison approached Please see FELONY, page 4A

Legislature discusses bills on pot, school accounting, raising insurance minimums

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he Kansas House apparently has a lot of questions about what the Senate did to the House’s marijuana bill and voted Friday to request a conference committee. The original bill, which passed the House last year, would lower the penalties for first- and second-time charges of marijuana possession. That was intended to free up bed space in the state’s already-overcrowded prisons, thus saving the

Statehouse Live

Peter Hancock phancock@ljworld.com

Please see BILLS, page 4A

SATURDAY COLUMN

U.S. needs president who can break the gridlock By Dolph C. Simons Jr.

Appeals for voter and financial support by those seeking the U.S. presidency are bound to become more intense as the various state primary elections and the Nov. 8 general election draw near. The time and money spent by these candidates on the justcompleted Iowa caucuses (really nothing more than holding a moist finger in the air to determine which way the wind is blowing) is almost obscene considering all of today’s pressing needs. As in most election cycles, the name of the game seems to be who or which party can offer the most attractive freebies or subsidies to entice voter support. Ideas relative to effective government, fiscal soundness, national security, the environment, terrorism, immigration, etc., are discussed, but, in far too many cases, voters base their ballot decisions on which candidate appears to mirror their own wishes, rather than on what might be best for the country. Almost 50 percent of this nation’s adult population relies on some form of government subsidy so, for those on either side

of the subsidy divide, it’s almost a matter of voting for or against Santa Claus (Uncle Sam) and the attractive goodies in his bag. This situation is growing more contentious year by year, election by election. Most presidential candidates try to present themselves as open to close cooperation with those in the other party. They promise to use bipartisan efforts to mend severe divisions in the U.S. House and Senate and increase cooperation between Congress and the White House. They pledge tough measures to reduce the nation’s debt, improve trade relations with other countries, combat terrorism and place Social Security on a sound fiscal footing. It all sounds great, but once the election is over, it’s back to the same highly partisan, raw political warfare. Genuine legislative negotiation and compromise are little but a forgotten campaign promise. Campaigns in Iowa, New Hampshire and soon in South Carolina and throughout the country focus on the idea “Washington is wrecked” and that the federal government produces a tremendous amount of lip service but no

meaningful action. Based on the charges, countercharges and accusations among GOP candidates and the two Democratic candidates, along with claims of mismanagement, corruption, lies, etc., across party lines, is there really any justification to believe that once the election is over, everyone will apologize for what was said during the campaign and actually join hands to try to fix the Washington mess?

COMMENTARY Not likely. Just four more years of political gridlock. Consider this possibility. It calls for many “ifs” and one giant “if,” but something needs to be done to correct a Washington situation that is deteriorating, debilitating and potentially deadly for our country. What if Donald Trump, a true outsider who looks like he might have a chance of winning, would announce that, if he is elected, he would serve only one term. He would not move into the White House or, almost from the first day, mold his legislative actions to place

him in a favorable position to win a second term. He would do and demand what is best for the country, not what is best for the Republican or Democratic parties. He would call for changes that have been identified in the past but no one had the political courage to take action. Such leadership might, just might, force leaders in both political parties to join the effort. Certainly such actions would have the support, maybe even the enthusiastic support of the public. Something would be getting done in Washington, not just talk. The big “if” in this is whether Trump would be able to swallow or set aside his ego. In his campaign, he talks about getting the nation’s best and brightest, regardless of party, to serve in critical government positions. He says he would listen and pay attention to what senior and knowledgeable military and intelligence officers advise. Would he follow through on his nicesounding pledge? Something has to be done. The current situation is not working for the benefit of the country and its citizens. The national debt cannot continue to rise

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unchecked, more people need to have meaningful employment, and our national security is weak. There is far more negative than positive thinking and, as one extremely knowledgeable observer said, this country needs “some sunshine. There’s not a drop of sunshine among this year’s class of presidential candidates.” Could an outsider such as Trump, as bombastic as he is and as infuriating as he is to some, be able to initiate actions and policies, with the help of nonpartisan advisers, that would create a new Washington image that would renew the public’s confidence in their government? He is a borderline Republican and, compared to other current presidential hopefuls, carries less partisan political luggage. He’s not a Ted Cruz or Hillary Clinton. As noted above, the one-term Trump possibility carries with it a lot of “ifs,” the biggest of which is Trump’s ego, but something needs to be done. Are there others who would pledge to serve only one term if elected, and would Trump agree to such a radical commitment? Who or where is the true statesman?

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Saturday, February 6, 2016

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LAWRENCE • STATE

Few lawmakers sign transparency pledge By Peter Hancock Twitter: @LJWpqhancock

Topeka — Only a handful of Kansas’ 165 legislators have signed an initiative to promote openness and transparency in state government by taking what is being called the “transparency pledge,” but the list does include most Lawrence-area legislators. The Open Kansas initiative was announced Jan. 27 by a coalition of advocacy groups, including Kansas Appleseed,

El Centro, Communities Creating Opportunity, Kansas Action for Children, and Kansas Association of Community Action Programs. The pledge does not call for any specific legislation but asks lawmakers to support “public and transparent processes, timely and reasonable access to public information and increased public participation.” Reps. John Wilson, DLawrence, and John Rubin, R-Shawnee, were the

first two lawmakers to sign the pledge at a Statehouse news conference Jan. 27. Since then, Rep. Boog Highberger, D-Lawrence, and Sens. Marci Francisco, D-Lawrence, and Tom Holland, D-Baldwin City, have signed on. But according to the group’s website, only eight others have signed the pledge as well. They include: l Sen. Anthony Hensley, D-Topeka l Sen. Tom Hawk, DManhattan

l Sen. Laura Kelly, DTopeka l Rep. Dennis Hedke, R-Wichita l Rep. Will Carpenter, R-El Dorado l Sen. David Haley, DKansas City l Rep. Ben Scott, DTopeka l Rep. Gail Finney, DWichita l Rep. Barbara Bollier, R-Mission Hills

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Vape pipe taken by force, police say

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Lights & Sirens

he rebel look has changed throughout the years. I’m envisioning Marlboro Red cigarettes, an acidwashed jean jacket and that Whitesnake music video (you know the one). These days, however, the old cigarettes have been replaced with electronic and vapor-producing cigarettes or pipes. I’ve Conrad Swanson — Statehouse reporter Peter Hancock read they’re a healthier cswanson@ljworld.com can be reached at 354-4222 or nicotine alternative, but phancock@ljworld.com. now I’m not so sure. grabbed the pipe, raised A man smoking in a his arm as if to hit the downtown alley with pipe-owner, then walked a friend had his vaporaway with the pipe, izer pipe forcibly taken according to the police from him on Wednesday, report. The pipe was according to Lawrence valued around $100. police. The victim then called The victim and his the police, and Miles was friend were in the alley arrested on suspicion of east of the 1000 block robbery. tournament, he said. of Massachusetts Street A jail booking record around 3:50 p.m. when lists the Lawrence Comlll Jeremy Walter Miles, 40, munity Shelter as Miles’ At its recent annual allegedly approached home address. meeting, Baldwin City them, asking if he could Economic Development — This is an excerpt from “take a hit off the pipe,” honored Baldwin Family Conrad Swanson’s Lights & according to a Lawrence Dentistry and Dr. Chris Sirens column, which appears police report. Leiszler with its business regularly on LJWorld.com. Miles then allegedly of the year award and Dr. Bonnie Cramer with its businessperson of the year award. Rainbow Experience Preschool received Bill would require Medicaid patients the organization’s annual community service award.

Open house will welcome new Baldwin City doctor; Eudora bar expanding; economic honors bestowed

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here’s a good deal of policy and discussion about how to recruit doctors to smaller communities in the state. It was demonstrated how fortunate Baldwin City is in that regard when Dr. Cristina Goodwin started at the Baldwin Medical Clinic just two weeks after the departure of Dr. Dara Lowe. Goodwin said local ties played a role in her difficult decision to leave an established practice in Larned to relocate to Baldwin City. “I went to school at Mid-America Nazarene, Kansas University and the KU Med Center,” she said. “I knew the area. It felt like I was coming home.” Goodwin practiced at Larned the past six years as part of one of those rural recruitment programs, the National Health Service Corps. Her obligations to the program were filled a year ago, freeing her to look at other opportunities. She jumped at the opportunity that Ransom Memorial Hospital in Ottawa offered at the Baldwin Medical Clinic in part because of the work Lowe

Area Roundup

Elvyn Jones ejones@ljworld.com

Ransom’s embrace of her compassionate care work. Goodwin said she has made monthlong compassionate care trips through Heart to Heart International to areas in the United States and such locations as Haiti and Mexico. Baldwin City residents will have the opportunity to meet Goodwin during an open house from 4:30 to 6 p.m. Feb. 18 at the clinic, 810 High St.

BRIEFLY

to try cheaper drug treatments first

did in the past four-plus years building the clinic’s client base. Lowe left the clinic Dec. 22 to join her husband, former Baldwin City Administrator Chris Lowe, in Monument, Colo. “She did a fantastic job,” Goodwin said. “I’m hoping to continue and build on that growth and care.” Making the move to Baldwin City with Goodwin are her husband, Darin, and the couple’s four children, ages 4 to 11. Her husband is a “jack of all trades,” who does carpentry and woodworking and is also an emergency medical technician. He is looking to become an EMT locally, she said. Another factor in her decision to relocate was

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D-Dub’s Bar in Eudora is taking advantage of the closing of Anthony’s Diner to expand. Darick Willis, co-owner of D-Dub’s with Travis Turner, said the bar that opened at 10 W. Ninth St. in November 2014 was in the process of converting the closed diner in the east half of the building into a bar and grill. “It will allow us to actually serve food,” he said. “It will be a place people can come to watch games on TV and have a burger.” Plans also include pool tables, Willis said. The hope is the project will be finished in time for the NCAA basketball

The Baldwin City Senior Mix will have its monthly meeting a 2 p.m. Wednesday at Ives Chapel United Methodist Church, 1018 Miami St. The speaker will be Baldwin City Chamber of Commerce director Hank Booth.

was serving time in the Douglas County Jail with work-release privileges. Officers confirmed with the jail that the suspect was temporarily released that morning for “job search,” the affidavit says. On Dec. 15, the next day, the victim called police once more, telling them she saw the suspect’s vehicle driving southbound along Emery Road, near where she saw him the day before, the affidavit says. The suspect did not expose himself the second day. Approximately five minutes later an officer stopped the suspect just west of Tennessee Street, the affidavit says. Another officer drove the woman to the scene, where she identified the man as

the suspect. The suspect was then taken to the Investigations and Training Center, 4820 Bob Billings Parkway, for an interview and was returned to the jail shortly after, the affidavit says. A single charge of lewd and lascivious behavior was officially filed against him on Jan. 22. In the fall of 2015 the man pleaded no contest to two counts of lewd and lascivious behavior. He was sentenced to serve one year in the Douglas County Jail with authorized work release. He was also ordered to register as a sex offender for the rest of his life. The suspect remains in the Douglas County Jail. Lawrence Police Sgt. Trent McKinley said in

an email that this type of crime often goes unreported. “Some (victims) don’t want to take the time required to make a police report, others don’t want to participate in the court process or potentially face the suspect in court, and some individuals don’t feel a crime rises to the level of needing police involvement,” he wrote. Police have seen lewd and lascivious behavior in a wide range of settings, McKinley wrote. The best thing a victim can do is to call the police and provide as many specific details about the incident as possible.

a motion to concur or nonconcur with what the Senate had done. But both the chairman of the CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A Corrections and Juvenile Justice Committee, Rep. state upwards of $1 million John Rubin, R-Shawnee, a year. and the ranking Democrat, But it also included Rep. Boog Highberger provisions legalizing the of Lawrence, said those medical use of hemp oil were some pretty major to treat certain seizure changes to their bill, and disorders and authorizing they want to talk about it the Kansas Department some more. of Agriculture to research It probably won’t be industrial uses of hemp. the only sentencing bill Over in the Senate, on which the House and though, the medical and Senate have different agricultural hemp provipositions. What often sions got stricken out and happens in the Legislature replaced with a proviis to wait until the final sion, pushed by Senate weeks of the session when Vice President Jeff King, the conference commitR-Independence, calltee has a stack of bills to ing for mandatory prison deal with, and then begin sentences for certain aghorse-trading with differgravated burglary charges. ent elements from many Among other things, that different bills, which will would effectively cancel then get bundled together out all of the bed space into a single “omnibus” and financial savings from Corrections and Juvenile lowering marijuana posJustice bill. session charges. That practice, by the Friday, the bill came way, has been a particular back to the House on bone of contention for

Rubin, who has tried, mostly without success, in the past to put strict limits into the House rules about how many different bills can be bundled together in conference reports.

that having a uniform accounting and reporting system would make it easier to compare finances and spending habits across districts to determine who’s being more efficient with their money and who’s being more wasteful. They also argued that having a single, uniform accounting and reporting system might save districts, and the state, some money on software costs. The bill, however, went further and would have required districts to publish on their websites the aggregate annual compensation for their employees as well as the names and salary information of their 10 highest-paid employees, or top three employees in the case of very small districts. But a lot of school officials pushed back, arguing first that the Kansas State Department of Education already has a standard form for reporting top-line, summary data. But they all

Exposing CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A

affidavit says. As soon as the victim noticed the man and realized what he was doing she began to walk away quickly. Once the victim was about 100 yards away she looked back and saw the man driving away, south on High Drive, the affidavit says. She then called the police. Investigating officers did not immediately locate the suspect, but soon discovered records of an Ottawa man who is a registered sex offender and drives a gold, four-door vehicle, the affidavit says. The man

Bills

Uniform accounting and reporting dies Conservatives in the House who have been pushing for a law to make school districts produce more understandable financial reports suffered a setback in the House when their bill to require uniform accounting and reporting systems failed on final action, 58-61. That had been one of the recommendations of Gov. Sam Brownback’s task force on school efficiency, which issued its report in 2013, and the bill calling for such a system passed the Senate in 2015. Groups including the conservative think tank Kansas Policy Institute (whose president Dave Trabert served on the efficiency task force) argued

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The Eudora Parks and Recreation multifamily and friends garage/rummage sale will be from 9 a.m. to noon Feb. 13 at the Eudora Community Center, 630 Elm St. — This is an excerpt from Elvyn Jones’ Area Roundup column, which appears regularly on LJWorld.com.

The Kansas Senate will consider a bill that would require Medicaid patients to try lower-cost drugs before moving to more expensive treatments. The Senate Public Health and Welfare Committee passed the step therapy legislation Thursday, after adding a provision that current

patients won’t be kicked off their medications. The Topeka CapitalJournal reports that the bill would require the state’s managed care organizations to use the lowest-cost, most effective drugs before trying more expensive, less-proven medications.

Senate passes bill to protect minors seeking treatment for alcohol poisoning Underage drinkers could avoid criminal charges if they call for medical help under a bill the Kansas House approved Friday in what supporters said is an effort to head off preventable tragedies. The bill passed, 92-27. The Senate passed the measure last year, but the House Judiciary Committee made technical changes that senators must consider before the bill can go to Gov. Sam Brownback. Underage drinkers would

not be charged if they called law enforcement or emergency medical services for themselves or other drinkers. They also would have to cooperate and remain on the scene. Rep. Tom Phillips, RManhattan, says the bill is designed to prevent alcohol poisoning and deaths of college students, The Wichita Eagle reported. Some opponents said the bill goes beyond compassion by removing consequences for drinking minors.

Felony

condition later that day. Morrison turned himself in to the Douglas County Jail on Jan. 23. He was booked into the jail on $15,000 bond. He posted bond and was released later that day. Friday afternoon, Morrison appeared in court for his first appearance, where he was officially charged. He is scheduled for a preliminary hearing at 2 p.m. March 14.

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A

Simmons, pressed a gun to his stomach and fired once, according to the affidavit. Simmons told officers he and Morrison have known each other for three or four years and hadn’t had any disagreements before, the affidavit says. Simmons was trans— Public safety reporter Conrad ported to a Kansas CitySwanson can be reached at 832-7284 area hospital, where or cswanson@ljworld.com. he was listed in stable

— Public safety reporter Conrad Swanson can be reached at 832-7284 or cswanson@ljworld.com.

else, despite the massive increases in health care costs that have occurred since the 1980s. That limit now stands at $25,000 per person, or $50,000 total. Auto insurance coverage Rep. Scott Schwab, Drivers who carry only R-Olathe, who chairs the the minimum required li- Insurance Committee, ability insurance in Kan- said Kansas is still above sas would have to carry average among states a little bit more under a for injury coverage and bill that passed out of the raising the limit would House Friday, 116-2. have had a bigger impact Since the 1980s, Kansas on the price of an insurhas required drivers to ance policy, which would carry only $10,000 worth likely result in having of coverage for propmore uninsured drivers erty damage. But with on the road. the average cost of new He also said that cars today now well over although there are many $30,000 — and even the horror stories about peocheapest new car on the ple who’ve been severely road pricing at more than injured in accidents, $12,000 — there is now overall, the vast majorgeneral agreement that ity of injury accidents the Kansas coverage mini- result in relatively minor mum just wasn’t enough. injuries. The bill does not, That bill now goes to however, raise the minithe Senate. mum coverage limit for — This is an excerpt from bodily injuries, which is Peter Hancock’s Statehouse the cost of medical care Live column, which appears on if you cause an accident LJWorld.com. that injures someone have individual systems for keeping track of more detailed information because the 286 districts all do things differently.


LAWRENCE • AREA

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Saturday, February 6, 2016

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Auctioneer adds zest to Chocolate Auction By Elvyn Jones Twitter: @ElvynJ

Lester Edgecomb leads a double life. Monday through Friday, Edgecomb spends a great deal of his time alone, delivering mail on his rural route near Baldwin City. On weekends, he is often the center of attention, driving up the bids at one of the 25 to 30 auctions he and wife Carolyn, son Mark Edgecomb and friend Wendell Taul do each year as Edgecomb Auction Services. Edgecomb’s two lives do intersect on the back roads of his mail route. “I practice my chants every day,” he said. “Driving down the road mile after mile, I auction anything and everything. I sell anything that pops in my head. It’s like one guy said, ‘if you’re not gaining, you are losing ground.’” It was behind the wheel of another vehicle in southwest Douglas County that a 16-yearold Edgecomb first began developing his auction voice. “It all started when I was in the field on a John Deere,” he said. “I’d auction the tractor I was driving and the equipment I was pulling. I’d auction the tool box and the tools in it. When I got done with that, I’d look around for something else to sell.” On his mail route this past week, Edgecomb may have practiced auctioning art and chocolate sweets as he prepares for his regular gig as auctioneer of the Lumberyard Arts Center’s annual Chocolate Auction on Sunday. “I’ve been doing it for 10 years or more — I forget when I started,” he said. “I get to see people and have fun. It’s a crowd you can have all kinds of fun with, and they laugh right back with you. You can harass them and do what you want. At a regular auction, people might take offense.” Longtime Lumberyard Arts Center board member Sandy Cardens said although she, too, couldn’t recall what year Edgecomb started, she did remember he made an immediate difference in the annual fundraiser. “We made significantly more money when he started,” she said. “I would give him all the credit.” Edgecomb’s style makes him a star of the fundraiser as he establishes rivalries among bidders, chides husbands or wives for neglecting spouses before Valentine’s Day and sometimes adds his own little tax to a bid, Cardens said.

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Bobby Nightengale/Journal-World File Photo

LESTER EDGECOMB, RIGHT, SCANS THE CROWD FOR BIDS for a painting Becki Dick show off at last year’s Chocolate Auction at Baldwin City’s Lumberyard Arts Center. Longtime arts center board member Sandy Cardens said Edgecomb’s lively style has made him a star of the annual fundraiser.

Elvyn Jones/Journal-World File Photo

EMMA BAILEY LOOKS OVER SOME OF THE SWEETS and art up for bid at the Baldwin City chocolate auction in February 2015 at the Lumberyard Arts Center.

Chocolate Auction returns The annual Chocolate Auction is returning Sunday to Baldwin City’s Lumberyard Arts Center. Connie Deel, chocolate auction event chair, said the arts center, 718 High St., will open at noon Sunday for the Chocolate Auction so that those looking for the ideal Valentine’s Day gift can view what is available at the silent auction. Again this year, there will be a children’s table of silent auction items. Bidding on silent and children’s auction items will start at 12:30 p.m. The live auction of donated art and sweets will start at 2 p.m., Deel said. Arts center board member Sandy Cardens said most of the chocolate cookies, cakes, pies, pastries and candies won’t be donated until the last days before the “He always picks on me, and says I bid more than I do,” she said. “He makes it fun for everyone. The thing I like is all he asks is that we give a donation to St. Jude’s Children’s Hospital, which we do every year in his name.” He has been doing the event long enough to know what items will bring top dollar, such as the chocolate pies Mary Jane Chubb makes each year or last year’s litho-

event, but there are already a good deal of art pieces for auction. “We have quite a few art things,” she said. “We have paintings, ceramic work, photographs and prints. We have something from Walt Bailey (former head of the Baker University Art Department). We do have some candy.” The arts center will be open for donations from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, and from 10 a.m. to noon on Sunday, which is convenient for those donating treats fresh from the oven, Cardens said. Proceeds from the auction will help fund the scholarship the arts center gives annually to a graduating Baldwin High School senior and ongoing programing at the Lumberyard, she said. — Elvyn Jones

graph from Tom Russell, the late head of the Baker University art department who founded the Chocolate Auction 28 years ago with his wife, Alice Anne. “It’s fun to sell a pie for $100 to $125,” Edgecomb said. “It has kind of went away from the chocolate and went more to art, which is OK. We’ve lost some of the people who did the chocolates. It would be nice if new people would step up to

replace them.” Edgecomb decided to fulfill his childhood dream of becoming an auctioneer in 1983 when local auctioneer Claude Myers died. He started working in the business and went to a Kansas City auctioneering school. “I was doing auctions before I went to school,” he said. “They teach you some things there, but if you can’t chant before you go to school, you won’t learn how in two weeks of classes.” Before cutting back in recent years, he was busy nearly every weekend, working mostly within a 40- to 50-mile radius of Baldwin City. The appeal of auctioneering is helping people through the power of competition, Edgecomb said. “It’s a good feeling to help people get out of trouble,” he said. “I’ve had people who were in a real pinch, who got back on their feet. If you get people there for an auction and it gets competitive, you’ll make more money every time.” The auctions that really excite Edgecomb are those he does for nonprofits. Among the charity events he works are the Mennonite Relief Sale at the State Fairgrounds in Hutchinson and a Topeka auction to benefit domestic violence shelters statewide. The Mennonite sale, which will be April 8-9, raised $530,000 last year. “We try to do as many charity auctions a year as we possibly can,” he said. “It takes driving some miles, but it gives you a good feeling when you’re done. When having helped raise $80,000 for battered women and children — more than anybody thought they’d be able to raise — it makes you feel wonderful.”

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Out & About

Joanna Hlavacek jhlavacek@ljworld.com

while and watch it slowly rotate.” The stargazing structure arrived in pieces Tuesday night, when Boy Scouts troops No. 55 and No. 61 assembled the 40 triangular pieces into a geodesic dome and stationed it in the atrium with help from library staffers. It’s since become something of a fixture there and even has its own nickname: Icarus, after the fictional space-

ANNIVERSARY

Cletus and Maureen Wiederholt

Wiederholt 50th Anniversary Cletus and Maureen Wiederholt of rural Baldwin are celebrating 50 years of marriage. They were married February 5, 1966 at St. Johns Catholic Church in Lawrence, KS. They met at a Darryl Starbird car show in Kansas City. Cletus retired from Frito Lay in 1999 and is currently employed with USD348 and a cattle farmer. Maureen has been a nurse for 35 years

and is currently a nursing instructor at Brown Mackie College. The couple have 4 children: Bill Wiederholt, Baldwin, KS; Jim (Lisa) Wiederholt, Baldwin, KS; Mike (Angie) Wiederholt, Edgerton, KS; and Laura (William) Crowe, Eudora, KS. They have 13 grandchildren and 9 great-grandchildren. The couple will celebrate with a family dinner.

BIRTH ANNOUNCEMENT Womack The family of Mary Ann Womack request a card shower to celebrate her 90th birthday on February 18. Birthday greetings may be sent to Mary Ann Womack, Pioneer Ridge Assisted Living, #121, 4851 Harvard, Lawrence, Kansas 66049.

BRIEFLY Jennifer Nettles coming to Lied

Grammy-winning singersongwriter Jennifer Nettles will make a stop in Lawrence this spring as part of the “CMT Presents Jennifer Nettles with 2016 Next Women of Country Tour.” The show is slated for 7 p.m. April 10 at the Lied Center, 1600 Stewart Drive. — County reporter Elvyn Jones can be Nettles, reached at 832-7166 and known for ejones@ljworld.com. her roles Nettles as lead vocalist in the country trio Sugarland, will be joined April 10 by Brandy Clark and guest artists Lindsay Ell and Tara Thompson. The “Next Women of Country” tour is an extension of CMT’s campaign of the same name, an effort that seeks to give more attention and airplay to female country artists. Tickets range from $59.50 to $79.50, and can be purchased at www.lied. ku.edu, 864-2787 or in person at the Lied Center box office.

Scouts’ handcrafted planetarium up at library

targazers, particularly those of the small variety, should appreciate the latest addition to the Lawrence Public Library’s atrium. In honor of the library’s space-themed Read Across Lawrence teen series, which blasted off earlier this week, a pair of local Boy Scout troops have built a miniature planetarium out of cardboard and binder clips, now open to astronomical enthusiasts of all ages at the library. The whole thing fits up to six adults comfortably, says teen librarian Miriam Wallen. Plenty more if we’re talking about little kids. “Overall, it’s been really enjoyed,” Wallen says. “Some people go in for a bit and take a quick glance at the stars, and some people stay for a

Society

War photographer to give KU lecture Award-winning war photographer James Nachtwey will present the keynote lecture for Kansas University’s Common Book Program on March 1 in the Kansas Union, KU announced Thursday. Ernest Hemingway’s “A Farewell to Arms” is the 2015-2016 Common Book, and during a lecture, titled “The Unvanquished,” Nachtwey will discuss how Hemingway has personally influenced him, as well as the parallels between the themes in his photographs and Hemingway’s novels. Nachtwey, a contract photographer for Time magazine and a frequent contributor to National Geographic, is a five-time recipient of the Overseas Press Club’s Robert Capa Gold Medal for war photographers, a 2007 Ted Prize, and is the subject of 2001’s Academy Awardnominated documentary “War Photographer.” Nachtwey’s visit is cosponsored by KU’s School of Journalism. His talk, scheduled for 7 p.m. in the Kansas Union’s Woodruff Auditorium, is free and open to the public.

Mike Yoder/Journal-World Photo

A YOUNG BOY PEEKS INSIDE THE ICARUS PLANETARIUM in the atrium of the Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. Boy Scouts of America Troops 55 and 61 constructed the project out of cardboard and binder clips. From inside the structure a light display of several constellations is projected on the ceiling. ship in “These Broken Stars,” this year’s official Read Across Lawrence selection for teens. The cardboard creation will remain in the library atrium through the end of the month — or possibly sooner, “de-

pending on how many people fall on it,” Wallen says. — This is an excerpt from features reporter Joanna Hlavacek’s Out & About blog, which appears regularly on LJWorld.com.

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Saturday, February 6, 2016

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PLUGGErs

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PICKLEs hI AND LOIs

sCOtt ADAMs

ChrIs CAssAtt & GArY BrOOKINs

JErrY sCOtt & JIM BOrGMAN

PAtrICK MCDONNELL

ChrIs BrOwNE BABY BLUEs

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ChIP sANsOM/Art sANsOM

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BLONDIE

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MOrt, GrEG & BrIAN wALKEr

PEANUts GArfIELD

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L awrence J ournal -W orld

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JErrY sCOtt/rICK KIrKMAN

DArBY CONLEY


L awrence J ournal -W orld

Saturday, February 6, 2016

Couple’s speech was in poor taste, but let it go Annie’s Mailbox

Marcy Sugar and Kathy Mitchell

anniesmailbox@comcast.net

found a better time to express these thoughts. Had it been your anniversary party, this would be in extremely poor taste. However, it was a celebration of your husband’s birthday, and all good memories are to be cherished. His late wife poses no threat to you, and it is natural for your husband to recall her fondly and for her relatives to make the Dear Wife: We think effort to remind him the couple could have of her. They may have

‘Manson’ more MTV than murder Lifetime clings to its obsession with women stuck in basements or crazy cults. But don’t go looking for deep psychological insight in “Manson’s Lost Girls” (7 p.m.). This is a 1960s flashback complete with tie-dyed outfits and a period soundtrack. “Lost Girls” begins with news reports about the 1969 cult murders of actress Sharon Tate and her entourage and flashes back to a teenage runaway-turneds i n g l e m o m (MacKenzie Mauzy) who lands at Charles M a n son’s (Jeff Ward) commune at an old Western movie set called the Spahn Ranch, some years before the grim events. Everything’s groovy and everyone looks trim, fit and healthy. Look for a lot of beach parties and picnics that would not be out of place in a soft drink commercial. Even Manson, a man described here as having spent most of his time in prison, looks more like a handsome assistant professor than a paranoid cult leader. Separated from anything resembling historical context, “Lost Girls” unfolds as one music video after another. Watching the dark Svengali getting mellow to the sounds of The Turtles’ bubblegum hit “Happy Together” almost seems like a spoof or an outtake from an “Austin Powers” movie. Or both. O Recently screened at the Sundance Film Festival, the documentary “Jim: The James Foley Story” (8 p.m., HBO) profiles the photojournalist kidnapped in Syria who went missing for two years before his gruesome execution was disseminated as ISIS propaganda. O With the New Hampshire primary just three days off, ABC News hosts a Republican debate (7 p.m.) moderated by David Muir and Martha Raddatz. O Kevin Frazier hosts “Super Bowl’s Greatest Commercials All-Star Countdown” (7 p.m., CBS), a survey of the top ads of the past 50 years. This is at least the third such clip show of the week and the last we’ll have to endure until Super Bowl 51. O Conan O’Brien hosts the 5th Annual NFL Honors (8 p.m., CBS), an event celebrating the season’s best players and performances and the announcement of the latest Pro Football Hall of Fame class. Tonight’s other highlights

O Our heroes ponder the

horrors of zombies and waiting in line at a supermarket on “MythBusters” (7 p.m., Discovery, TV-PG). O A crisis under the sea on “Doctor Who” (8 p.m., BBC America, TV-PG). O Flint pushes Silver to extremes on “Black Sails” (8 p.m., Starz, TV-MA).

assumed that, with another wife in between, you would not mind too much. Either way, please be the bigger person and let this go. It serves no purpose to hold a grudge or continue to be annoyed. You look so much better when you are gracious about such things. Dear Annie: I think your response to “Confused and Torn” was perfect. She said her boyfriend thought she should put her 15-yearold Pomeranian, “Clover,” to sleep because the dog was in constant pain and not likely to improve. I’ve had to put several pets to sleep because of old age and it’s always a horrific decision to make. However, Clover’s owner is doing a great disservice to the dog by insisting on keeping her alive when

JACQUELINE BIGAR’S STARS

For Saturday, Feb. 6: This year you often feel pressured to add more fun and do the unexpected. You often march to the beat of your own drummer, and others like the excitement that you create with your offbeat personality. If you are single, be careful about whom you choose for a sweetie. A conventional person just won’t fit the bill. If you are attached, you gain by frequently taking off for distant lands and spending time alone as a couple. 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) ++++ Take charge, and stay ahead. Your imagination will take you down a fun path. Tonight: A force to be dealt with. Taurus (April 20-May 20) +++++ Keep reaching out to someone at a distance. Your creativity emerges. Tonight: Do what you want. Gemini (May 21-June 20) +++++ Let someone else run with the ball, as you might have difficulty making a decision. Tonight: Throw a spontaneous party. Cancer (June 21-July 22) ++++ You might be forced to do what another party decides if you want to join in on a project. Tonight: Certainly not alone. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) +++ Your weekend won’t seem like the most exciting one of your life at first, but that could change

she’s in so much agony. I would like to make a suggestion that may make the decision a little easier. She should have Clover cremated and indicate in her will that she would like Clover’s ashes to be put in the coffin with her. In that way, the little dog will be with her forever. I will do this with my one remaining cat when the time comes and just the thought of it makes the burden a little lighter to bear. — Indiana Dear Indiana: Thank you for writing. We hope “Confused and Torn” will consider your advice for Clover’s sake.

— Send questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or Annie’s Mailbox, P.O. Box 118190 Chicago, IL 60611.

jacquelinebigar.com

soon. Tonight: Go for it. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) ++++ Someone who cares a lot about you will encourage you to spend time with him or her. Tonight: Be creative. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ++++ Keep asking for more information. You might not be sure of your choices. Tonight: At home. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) +++++ You’ll say the right words to initiate a fun get-together. Get some feedback from a friend. Tonight: Hang out. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) +++ You can stretch a dollar only so far. Know when to say that you can’t do something. Tonight: Fun doesn’t have to cost much. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ++++ You understand your limits very well, but you don’t always honor them. Tonight: In the limelight. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) +++ You will decide not to tell anyone what you’re doing. You could be bored with your current plans. Tonight: All smiles. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) ++++ You tend to have a lot of fun with friends and loved ones. Today is no exception. Tonight: Where the action is.

UNIVERSAL CROSSWORD Universal Crossword Edited by Timothy E. Parker February 6, 2016 ACROSS 1 Alpha’s counterpart 6 Faux chocolate 11 1/6 of an ounce (Abbr.) 14 Thesaurus man 15 Type of acid 16 “So there you are!” 17 It may form a crown 19 Bard’s “above” 20 Deserving 21 A dot in the ocean 23 Apollo’s sister 26 Expels, as a tenant 27 Like some winter blankets 28 Capital of Cuba 30 “Over the hill,” in the military 31 Colony member of old 32 Unit named for a telephone pioneer 35 Snitch 36 Limerick writers, e.g. 38 Wedding words 39 “The Nanny” has three of them 40 Elephant’s tiny kin 41 Fit of agitation 42 Old-time delivery person

44 Take your pick 46 Trample 48 Italian side dish 49 Fabric with pictorial designs 50 Grosse ___, Mich. 52 Longtime Chinese chairman 53 Was best in the Olympics 58 De-squeak 59 Invisible emanations around people 60 Missouri or Mississippi 61 Everyone 62 Some playing cards 63 Serpentine DOWN 1 Bit for the dog bowl 2 Sound heard in a dairy herd 3 Inflatable item 4 Kind of card 5 “Make yourself ___” 6 Pitches to one side 7 Baby’s nurse, in China 8 Frost-laden 9 What the unified are 10 Venezuelan monetary units 11 Carpenter’s storage place 12 Paper unit

13 Cities with piers 18 Ireland, romantically 22 Go astray, biblically 23 Not duped 24 “Laugh-In” co-host 25 Drummer’s favorite candy? 26 “Glades” or “green” starter 28 “Masters of the Universe” fellow 29 Tip top 31 Vega’s constellation 33 Royal order 34 People are picky about this game 36 Dimmer switch, e.g. 37 “Ave Maria,” e.g. 41 Fizz ingredient

43 Accounting pro 44 Trigonometric function 45 Perfumery compounds 46 “Coming of Age in ___” (Margaret Mead book) 47 Hikers’ path 48 Customary ceremonies 50 Hole in the skin 51 “Is that all right with you?” 54 Your and my 55 What aves lay 56 Albanian currency 57 Not wet at all

PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER

2/5

© 2016 Universal Uclick www.upuzzles.com

TOO TOO By Carla Azure

2/6

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

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

— The astrological forecast should be read for entertainment only.

PALAH ©2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.

RIWTL KOLTEC

Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app

Dear Annie: Please tell me whether I am overreacting. We had a very special surprise birthday in an upscale restaurant for my husband’s 90th birthday. Reluctantly, I invited his first wife’s niece and nephew. The first wife passed away several years ago. (I am his third wife.) During the dinner, this couple stood up and spoke to the assembled guests about my husband’s courtship and marriage to the first wife. This went on for about 12 minutes, dragging down an otherwise joyful occasion. I considered this to be extremely crude and rude, and thought it showed very poor manners. What do you think? — Third Wife

| 7A

VHALIS “ Yesterday’s

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

” (Answers Monday) Jumbles: APRON LIMIT IMMUNE MYSELF Answer: Installation of the new clock was completed in a — TIMELY MANNER

BECKER ON BRIDGE


Religious Directory

AFRICAN METHODIST EPISCOPAL

St Luke African Methodist Episcopal 900 New York Street 785-841-0847 Rev. Verdell Taylor, Jr. Sun. 11:00 am, Sun. School 10:00 am Bible Study Wed. 12:30 pm

ANGLICAN

Lawrence Anglican Mission Meadowlark Chapel 4440 Bauer Farm Rd Saturday, 3:30 PM 816-797-2237 www.stjamesanglican.net

ASSEMBLY OF GOD

Calvary Temple Assembly of God

606 W. 29th Terrace 785-832-2817 Pastor Don Goatlay Sunday Service 10:30 am & 6:30 pm Wed Service 6:30 pm

Eudora Assembly Of God 827 Elm Street 785-542-2182 Pastor Glenn Weld Sunday Worship 10:30 am Sunday Evening 7:00 pm

Lawrence Assembly of God 3200 Clinton Pkwy 785-843-7189 Pastor Rick Burwick Sunday 10:00 am www.lawrence3620church.com

New Life Assembly Of God Church

5th & Baker Baldwin City (785) 594-3045 Mark L. Halford Sun. 11:00 am 6 pm Wed. Family Night 6 pm

Williamstown Assembly of God 1225 Oak St. 785-597-5228 Pastor Rick Burch am wagc@williamstownag.org Sunday Worship 10:30 am

BAHA’I FAITH Baha’i Faith

BIBLE

Community Bible Church 906 N 1464 Rd. Pastor Shaun LePage Worship 10:30 am community-bible.org

Lawrence Bible Chapel

505 Monterey Way *785-841-2607 John Scollon 785-841-5271 Lord’s Supper Sunday 9am Sun. School 10:10am Bible Hour 11:10am Supper: 6:15 PM; Prayer meeting 7pm

BUDDHIST

Kansas Zen Center

1423 New York St. Guiding Teacher Judy Roitman Sunday 9:30 am - 11:30 am Orientation for beginners 9 am kansaszencenter.org

CATHOLIC

Annunciation Catholic Church 740 N 6th Street Baldwin City (785) 594-3700 Fr. Brandon Farrar Sunday 10:30 am & 6:00 pm www.annunciationchurch.org

Corpus Christi Catholic Church

6001 Bob Billings Pkwy (785) 843-6286 Fr. Michael Mulvany Sat. 4:00 pm * Sun. 8:30 am & 10:00 am www.cccparish.org

Holy Family Catholic Church 311 E 9th Street, Eudora 785-542-2788 Fr. Pat Riley Service Sat. 5:00 pm Sun. 9:30 am holyfamilyeudora@sunflower.com

St. John Evangelist Catholic Church 1229 Vermont ST 785.843.0109 www.saint-johns.net Weekend Mass: Sat 4:30 pm Sun. 7 am, 8:30 am, 10:30 am, 5 pm

CHRISTIAN

Lawrence Heights Christian Church

Baha’i Worship Service most Sundays at 10-00 Call 785-843-2703 or friendsoflawrencebahais@gmail.com

2321 Peterson Road 785-843-1729 Pastor Steve Koberlein Sunday Worship 8:45 am & 10:30 am Lawrence-heights.org

BAPTIST

Morning Star Christian Church

First Regular Missionary Baptist Church 1646 Vermont St • 843-5811 Pastor Arsenial Runion Sunday School 9:30 am Wednesday 7:00 pm Prayer Service and Bible Study

Fellowship Baptist Church 710 Locust Street 785-331-2299 Sunday School 9:45 am Worship 11:00 am & 6:30 pm Wednesday Prayer 7:00 pm

Lawrence Baptist Temple

3201 W 31st Street Rev. Gary L. Myers Pastor Sun. School & Worship 10:00 am Sun. Evening Worship 6:00 pm Wed. Evening 7:30 pm

Lighthouse Baptist Church 700 Chapel Street 785-594-4101 Pastor Richard Austin Sunday Worship 10:30 am llbt115@embarqmail.com.

Ninth Street Missionary Baptist Church

901 Tennessee St (785) 843-6472 Pastor Eric A. Galbreath Sun. School 9:30am * Worship 10:45am nsmbclk.org

BAPTIST - AMERICAN

First American Baptist Church 1330 Kasold Dr. * 785-843-0020 Rev. Matthew Sturtevant www.firstbaptistlawrence.com Sunday Worship 8:30 am & 10:45 am Sunday School 9:30 a.m.

BAPTIST - INDEPENDENT Heritage Baptist Church

1781 E 800th Rd. (785) 887-2200 Dr. Scott Hanks Sunday Worship 10:30 am www.heritagebaptistchurch.cc

BAPTIST - SOUTHERN

Cornerstone Southern Baptist Church 802 West 22nd Terrace (785) 843-0442 Pastor Gary O’Flannagan Sun. School 9:30 am * Worship 10:45 am www.cornerstonelawrence.com

Eudora Baptist Church

525 W 20th Street 785-542-2734 Pastor Jeff Ingle Sun. School 9:00 am * Worship 10:15 am eudorabc.org

998 N 1771 Rd. 785-749-0023 Pastor John McDermott Worship 9:00 am & 11:00 am www.msclawrence.com

North Lawrence Christian Church

CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER-DAY SAINTS

Lawrence University Ward (Student) Church Of Jesus Christ Of LDS 1629 West 19th St. Lawrence 785-832-9622 Sacrament Worship 11:00am LDS.org, Mormon.org, institute.lds.org

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints

CHRISTIAN CHURCH DISCIPLES OF CHRIST First Christian Church 1000 Kentucky Street 785-843-0679 www.fcclawrence.org Reverend Dale Walling Sunday 9am & 11am

CHURCH OF CHRIST Church Of Christ

201 N. Michigan St. 785-838-9795 Elders Tom Griffin & Calvin Spencer Sunday 10 am & 1:30 pm, Wed. 7 pm www.lawrencecoc.org

Church Of Christ of Baldwin City 820 High Street, Baldwin City (785) 594-4246 Sunday Worship 11:00 am

Southside Church of Christ

Corner of 25th & Missouri 785-843-0770 Chris Newton, Minister Sun. Bible School 9:15 am Sun. Worship 10:20 am & 5:00 pm Wed. Bible Study 7:00 pm

CHURCH OF GOD

Bridgepointe Community Church 601 W 29th Terrace Lawrence (785) 843-9565 Pastor Dennis Carnahan Sunday 10:45 am www.bridgepointcc.com

Lawrence First Church of the Nazarene 1470 N 1000 Rd. 785-843-3940 Bob Giffin, Senior Pastor Celebration & Praise Service 10:15 am www.lawrencefirstnaz.org

COMMUNITY OF CHRIST Lawrence Community of Christ

711 W. 23rd in the Malls Shopping Center 785-843-7535 Pastor Marilyn Myers Sunday Worship 10:00 am

University Community Of Christ 1900 University Drive 785-843-8427 Pastor Nancy Zahniser Sunday Worship 10:00 am Sunday Classtime 9:00 am

EPISCOPAL

St. Margaret’s Episcopal Church 5700 W. 6th St. 785-865-5777 Father Matt Zimmermann 8 am & 10 am Holy Eucharist www.saintmargaret.org

Trinity Episcopal Church

1011 Vermont St (785) 843-6166 The Reverend Rob Baldwin, Rector 8 am; 10:30 am; 6:00 pm Solemn High Mass www.trinitylawrence.org

EVANGELICAL FREE CHURCH OF AMERICA Christ Community Church

ISLAMIC

Islamic Center Of Lawrence

Southern Hills Congregation

1802 E 19th St * 843-8765 Sun. 1:30 pm Public Talk & Watchtower Study

River Heights Congregation

1802 E 19th St * 843-8765 Sun. 10:00 am Public Talk & Watchtower Study Tues. 7:30, TMS, & Service Mtg

Chabad Center for Jewish Life 1203 West 19th St. Lawrence 785-832-TORA (8672) www.JewishKU.com “Your Source for Anything Jewish!”

Lawrence Jewish Community Congregation 917 Highland Drive 785-841-7636 www.LawrenceJCC.org Worship Friday 7:30pm Religious School Sunday 9:30am

Big City Ability with Hometown Values

A Plus Automotive

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2150 Haskell Ave

Brian D Robb Phone: 785-843-3953

Business Hours: Monday - Friday 7:30 AM - 5:00 PM

785-841-0102 For The People is a registered trademark of Scend, LLC

Westside 66 & Car Wash 2815 West 6th

843-1878

297 E. 2200 Rd. Eudora 785-883-2130 Rev. Kathy Symes Worship 9:00am Sunday School 10:30am

Eudora United Methodist Church 2084 N 1300th Rd. Eudora 785-542-3200 * eudoraumc@gmail.com Sunday Worship 9:00 & 10:45 a.m. Sunday School for All Ages 10:00 a.m. www.eudoraumc.org

Downtown 946 Vermont St. Rev. Dr. Tom Brady Pastor Traditional 10:30 am Contemporary 9:30 am West Campus 867 Highway 40 Contemporary 9:00 am & 11:00 am www.fumclawrence.org

Ives Chapel United Methodist 1018 Miami St Baldwin City (785) 594-6555 Rev. Kate Cordes Sunday Worship 11:00 am Church School 9:45 am

416 Lincoln Street 785-842-4926 Pastor Dan Nicholson Sun. Worship 10:00 am * Wed. 7:00 pm lawrencechristiancenter.org

Lawrence Life Fellowship

911 Massachusetts Basement below Kinkos 785-838-9093 Gabriel Alvarado Worship 10:30 am AWANA, Wednesday, 6:00

Morning Star Church

998 N 1771 Rd. 785-749-0023 Pastor John McDermott Worship 9:00 am & 11:00 am www.msclawrence.com

Mustard Seed Church

700 Wakarusa Drive 785-841-5685 www.mustardseedchurch.com Wed. Youth Service 7:00 pm Sun. Morning Service 10:00 am

New Life In Christ Church At Bridge Pointe Community 601 W. 29 Terrace 10:30 a.m. Sunday Pastor Paul Gray 785-766-3624 www.newlifelawrence.com

New Hope Fellowship

1449 Kasold Dr. Lawrence 785-331-HOPE (4673) Darrell Brazell Pastor 10:15 am Sundays www.newhopelawrence.com 946 New Hampshire St. 785-843-4188 Lts. Matt & Marisa McCluer Sun. School 9:30 am, Worship 10:45 am lawrence.salvationarmy.us

United Light Church 1515 West Main Street Lawrence, KS 66044 785-393-3539

Velocity Church

fresh. modern. relevant. 940 New Hampshire, Lawrence, KS Meeting at Lawrence Arts Center Sundays @ 9:30 am & 11:00 am www.findvelocity.org

ORTHODOX - EASTERN

Saint Nicholas Orthodox Church 1235 Iowa Street 785-218-7663 Rev. Dr. Joshua Lollar Sunday Divine Liturgy 9:30am www.saintnicholaschurch.net

REFORMED-PRESBYTERIAN

Christ Covenant Reformed Presbyterian Church

402 Elmore Street, Lecompton 785-887-6327 Pastor Billie Blair Sunday 8:30 am & 10:45 am www.lecomptonumc.org

Stull United Methodist Church

1596 E 250 Rd. Lecompton (785) 887-6521 Pastor Faye Wagner Worship 11:00am * Sun. School 10:00am www.stullumc.org

LUTHERAN - ELCA

Worden United Methodist Church

Good Shepherd Lutheran Church 2211 Inverness Dr. * 785-843-3014 Pastor Ted Mosher Worship 2.0 9:30 am Classic Worship-11:00 am www.gslc-lawrence.org

2312 Harvard Road; Lawrence (785) 766-7796 Pastor John M. McFarland Sun. Worship 10:45 am; Classes at 9:30 am www.ChristCovenantChurchRPC.org

PRESBYTERIAN - USA Clinton Presbyterian Church 588 N 1200 Rd. Pastor Patrick Yancey Worship Sunday 11:00 am www.clintonchurch.net

First Presbyterian Church 2415 Clinton Parkway 785-843-4171 Rev. Kent Winters-Hazelton Sun. Worship 8:30 & 11:00 am www.firstpreslawrence.org

West Side Presbyterian Church 1024 Kasold Drive (785) 843-1504 Rev. Debbie Garber Worship 9:55 am * Sun. School 10:15 www.westsidelawrence.org

PRESBYTERIAN-EVANGELICAL Grace Evangelical Presbyterian Church 3312 Calvin Drive 785-843-2005 Pastor William D. Vogler Worship 8:15 am & 10:45 am www.gepc.org

RELIGIOUS SOCIETY OF FRIENDS Hesper Friends Church

2355 N 1100th Rd. 2 Mi. South. 11/2 Mi. East Eudora Rev. Darin Kearns Pastor Sunday School 9:30 am Sunday Worship 10:30 am

Oread Meeting 1146 Oregon Street Elizabeth Schultz, Clerk 785-842-1305 Meeting for worship, 10:00 am Sunday www.oreadfriends.org

UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST Unitarian Fellowship of Lawrence 1263 N 1100 Rd. (785) 842-3339 Rev. Jill Jarvis 9:30 am Program & RE; 11:00 am Service www.uufl.net

UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST - UCC

Plymouth Congregational Church, UCC 925 Vermont Street 785-843-3220 Rev. Dr. Peter Luckey Sun. Worship 9:30 am & 11:15 am www.plymouthlawrence.com

St John’s United Church-Christ 396 E 900th Rd. Baldwin City (785) 594-3478 Pastor Heather Coates Sunday School 10:00am Worship 11:00am

St Paul United Church-Christ 738 Church St. Eudora 785-542-2785 Rev. Shannah McAleer Sunday Worship 10:00 am stpaulucceudora.com

UNITY

Unity Church of Lawrence 900 Madeline Lane 785-841-1447 Sunday Meditation Service 9:30 am Sunday Worship 11:00 am Sunday Child/Nursery Care Available Wednesday Meditation 7:00 pm Moment of Inspiration 785-843-8832 www.unityoflawrence.org

WESLEYAN

Lawrence Wesleyan Church 3705 Clinton Parkway 785-841-5446 Pastor Nate Rovenstine Worship 9:00, 10:00 & 11:15 am lawrencewesleyan.com

294 East 900th Rd. Baldwin City 785-594-7598 Pastor Changsu Kim Worship 8:15 & 10:30 wordenumc.com

NON-DENOMINATIONAL

Trinity Lutheran Church

1245 New Hampshire St. 785-843-4150 The Rev. Brian Elster, Lead Pastor Sun. 8:30 & 11:00am; Wed., 6:30 p.m. www.tlclawrence.org

LUTHERAN - MISSOURI SYNOD Immanuel Lutheran Church

Called to Greatness Ministries P.O. Box 550 Lawrence KS 66044 785-749-2100 info@calledtogreatness.com www.calledtogreatness.com

Christ International Church 1103 Main St. Eudora KS 66025 785-312-4263 Sunday 10:30 am Wednesdays 6:30 pm

Country Community Church

878 Locust St Lawrence 913-205-8304 Pastor, John Hart Sun. School 9 am, Fellowship 10 am, Worship 10:30 am

Eagle Rock Church

2700 Lawrence Ave 785-843-8181 * www.rlclks.org Sunday School 9:00 am Sunday Worship 10:00 am Wed. Evening Worship 7:00 pm

1387 N. 1300 Rd. Lawrence, KS 66046 785-393-6791 www.eaglerocklawrence.com Sundays at 10:00 am

ALIGNMENTS COMPLETE BRAKE SERVICE SUSPENSION SPECIALISTS Danny Easum Andy Easum 541 Minnesota Street Lawrence, KS acesteering.com 785-843-1300

15% OFF

when you bring us your bulletin! OPEN 24 hours

24 Hour Answering Service Connect Now, Operators Standing By

841-0111

Absolutely The Best Steak In Lawrence 3050 South Iowa

843-7000

Wempe Bros. Construction Co. wempebros.com

841-4722

open daily

PLUMBING, APPLIANCE HEATING & AIR Lawrence: 843-9559 aceplumbingkansas.com

Dale & Ron’s Auto Service 630 Connecticut

785-842-2108

Longhorn Steakhouse

(785) 843-5111

Crown Automotive 1115 Massachusetts www.fuzzystacoshop.com

Lawrence Christian Center

The Salvation Army

1724 North 692 Rood 785-594-3256 Pastor Joni Raymond Sunday School 9:30 am Sunday Worship 10:30 am

ACADEMY CARS

1527 W. 6th Street Lawrence, KS 66044

1501 Massachusetts St 785-843-7066 New Pastor Moon-Hee Chung Sun. School 9:30 am * Worship 10:45 am www.centralumclawrence.org

722 New Hampshire Street (785) 749-5397 Rabbi’s Neal Schuster www.kuhillel.org

Since 1963

PO Box 460, Eudora David G. Miller, CLU

245 North Elm Street 785-843-1756 Pastor Daniel Norwood Sunday Worship 11:00 am centenarylawrence@yahoo.com

906 North 1464 Rd. * 843-3325 Pastor: Ron Channell Worship 10:30 am Afterglow & Youth Group 6:00 pm www.FCLHome.org

Vinland United Methodist Church

K U Hillel House

Ace Steering & Brake

(785) 856-5100

Centenary United Methodist Church

Lecompton United Methodist Church

JEWISH

Redeemer Lutheran Church

integritymidwestins.com

96 Highway 40 * 785-887-6823 January Kiefer Pastor Traditional Sun. 9:00am Contemporary call for information www.bigspringsumc.org

First United Methodist Church

Praise Temple Church of God in Christ 315 E. 7th St. * 749-0985 Pastor Paul Winn Jr. SS 10:00 am * Worship 11:15 am Wed. & Fri. Bible Teaching 7:00 pm Call early for ride to church

Big Springs United Methodist Church

704 8th Street; Baldwin Rev. Paul Badcock Sunday School each Sunday 9:30 am Traditional Worship 8:30 am Contemporary Worship 10:45 am Combined Worship 10:45 last Sunday month

Victory Bible Church

1942 Massachusetts St www.victorybiblechurch.net (785) 841-3437 Pastor Leo Barbee Sunday Worship 10:30 am

METHODIST - UNITED

First United Methodist Church

1100 Kasold Drive 785-842-7600 Jeff Barclay Pastor Sun. Worship 9:30 am & 10:30 am www.ccclawrence.org

646 Alabama Street * 749-0951 Rev. William A Dulin Sun. School 10:30 am Worship 12:15 pm Tue. 7:00 pm Prayer & Bible Study Thur. 7:00 pm Worship & Pastoral Teaching

Calvary Church Of God In Christ

950 E. 21st Street 785-832-9200 Pastor Jami Moss Sun School 10 am *Worship 11 am Thurs Bible Study 7 pm

Clearfield United Methodist Church

4300 W. 6th Street (785) 843-8167 Pastor Joe Stiles Worship Service 8:30 am & 11:00 am www.fsbcfamily.com

First Southern Baptist Church

Lawrence Free Methodist Church

Central United Methodist Church

2104 Bob Billings Pkwy (785) 843-0620 Pastor Randy Weinkauf Wors. with Holy Communion 8:30 am & 11:00 am Sun. School & Christian Ed 9:45 am Nursery Available & Wheelchair Accessible Ministry to Blind Outreach 3 Thur. 5:30 pm www.immanuel-lawrence.com

CHURCH OF GOD IN CHRIST

METHODIST

Lawrence Indian Methodist Church

JEHOVAH’S WITNESSES

883 E 800 Rd Lawrence, Ks Jane Flora-Swick, Pastor Worship 10:30 * Sun. School 10:45am www.lonestarbrethren.com

615 Lincoln St 785-841-8614 Pastor Joanna Harader Service 10:30 am peacepreacher.wordpress.com

CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE

Perry Christian Church

Lone Star Church of the Brethren

Family Church Of Lawrence

Peace Mennonite Church

3655 West 10th St. Lawrence 1st Ward 785-842-4019, 2nd Ward 785-3315912, Wakarusa Valley 785-842-1283 LDS.org, Mormon.org, institute.lds.org

1917 Naismith Drive (785) 749-1638 Najabat Abbasi Director Friday 1:30 pm www.islamicsocietylawrence.org

CHURCH OF THE BRETHREN

MENNONITE

3001 Lawrence Ave 785-842-2343 Pastor Bill Bump Blended 9:00 am * Contemporary 10:35 am www.lfmchurch.org

7th and Elm Charles Waugh, Minister Bible School 10:00am Worship 10:55 am www.nlawrencechristianchurch.com

603 East Front Street Perry Kansas 785-597-5493 Pastors Will Eickman and Alan Hamer

Contact: amanda@kwnews.com or 1-800-293-4709

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GRACE HOSPICE 1420 Wakarusa Suite 202 Lawrence, KS 66049. • 785-841-5310


Opinion

Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com l Saturday, February 6, 2016 Lawrence City Commission Mike Amyx, mayor 2312 Free State Lane 66047 843-3089 (H) 842-9425 (W) mikeamyx515@hotmail.com Leslie Soden, vice mayor 715 Connecticut, 66044 (913) 890-3647 lsoden@lawrenceks.org Stuart Boley, 1812 W. 21st Terr., 66046, 979-6699 sboley@lawrenceks.org Matthew Herbert 523 Kasold Dr., 66049 550-2085 matthewjherbert@gmail.com Lisa Larsen, 1117 Avalon., 66044, 331-9162 llarsen@lawrenceks.org

Douglas County Commission Jim Flory, 540 N. 711 Road, Lawrence 66047; 842-0054 jflory@douglas-county.com Mike Gaughan, 304 Stetson Circle, 66049; 856-1662; mgaughan@douglas-county.com Nancy Thellman, 1547 N. 2000 Road 66046; 832-0031 nthellman@douglas-county.com

Lawrence School Board Vanessa Sanburn, president 856-1233 765 Ash St., 66044 vsanburn@usd497.org Marcel Harmon, vice president; 550-7749 753 Lauren Street, 66044 mharmon@usd497.org Kristie Adair, 840-7989 4924 Stoneback Place, 66047 kadair@usd497.org Jessica Beeson, 691-6678 1720 Mississippi St. 66044 jbeeson@usd497.org Jill Fincher, 865-5870 1700 Inverness Dr. 66047 jfincher@usd497.org Rick Ingram 864-9819 1510 Crescent Rd. 66044 ringram@usd497.org Shannon Kimball 840-7722 257 Earhart Circle 66049 skimball@usd497.org

Area legislators Rep. Barbara Ballard (D-44th District) Room 451-S, State Capitol, Topeka 66612 Lawrence: 841-0063; Topeka: (785) 296-7697 barbara.ballard@house.ks.gov Rep. Tom Sloan (R-45th District) Room 149-S, State Capitol, Topeka 66612 Lawrence: 841-1526; Topeka: (785) 296-7654 tom.sloan@house.ks.gov Rep. Dennis “Boog” Highberger (D-46th District) Room 174-W, State Capitol, Topeka 66612 Topeka: (785) 296-7122 BoogHighberger@house.ks.gov Rep. John Wilson (D-10th District) 54-S, State Capitol, Topeka 66612 Topeka: (785) 296-7652; john.wilson@house.ks.gov Rep. Ken Corbet (R-54th District) 179-N, State Capitol, Topeka 66612 Topeka: (785) 296-7679; ken.corbet@house.ks.gov Sen. Marci Francisco (D-2nd District) Room 134-E, State Capitol, Topeka 66612 Lawrence: 842-6402; Topeka: (785) 296-7364 Marci.Francisco@senate.ks.gov Sen. Tom Holland (D-3rd District) Room 134-E, State Capitol, Topeka 66612 Lawrence: 865-2786; Topeka: 296-7372 Tom.Holland@senate.ks.gov Sen. Anthony Hensley (D-10th District) Room 318-E, State Capitol, Topeka 66612 Topeka: (785) 296-3245 Anthony.Hensley@senate. ks.gov

9A

Conservatism beats Trump in Iowa Washington — The reigning idiocy of the current political season is the incessant tossing around of “establishment,” an epithet now descending into meaninglessness. Its most recent abuse is by Donald Trump supporters rationalizing his Iowa defeat with the following consolation: If you tally up Trump and Ted Cruz (and throw in Ben Carson), a whopping 60 percent of the vote is anti-establishment! So what? The threat to the GOP posed by the Trump insurgency is not that he’s antiestablishment. It’s that he’s not conservative. Trump winning the nomination would convulse the Republican Party, fracture the conservative movement and undermine the GOP’s identity and role as the country’s conservative party. There’s nothing wrong with challenging the so-called establishment. Parties, like other institutions, can grow fat and soft and corrupt. If, by establishment, you mean the careerists, the lobbyists and the sold-out cynics, a good poke, even a major purge, is well-deserved. That’s not the problem with Trump. The problem is his, shall we say, eclectic populism. Cruz may be anti-establishment but he’s a principled conservative, while Trump has no coherent political philosophy, no core beliefs, at all. Trump offers barstool eruptions and whatever contradictory “idea” pops into his head at the time, such as “humane” mass deportation, followed by mass am-

Charles Krauthammer letters@charleskrauthammer.com

Cruz may be antiestablishment but he’s a principled conservative, while Trump has no coherent political philosophy, no core beliefs, at all.”

nesty when the immigrants are returned to the United States. That’s the reason his harebrained ideas — barring all Muslims from entering the country, a 45 percent tariff on Chinese goods, government-provided universal health care through “a deal with existing hospitals to take care of people” (why didn’t I think of that?) — have received such relatively little scrutiny. No one takes them seriously. His actual platform is all persona — the wonders that will emanate from his own self-proclaimed strength, toughness, brilliance, money, his very yugeness. Trump’s is faith-based politics of the Latin American caudillo variety. “At the (Sarah) Palin rally,” reports John McCormack of The Weekly Standard, “Trump promised

he would localize education. ‘How?’ shouted one man in the crowd. ‘Just you watch,’ Trump replied.” Meaning: I have no idea. Just trust me. Cruz does not lack for selfconfidence. And he constantly wraps himself in anti-establishment rhetoric. He reasonably calculates that his hard-edged conservatism sells best when presented not as pristine ideology but as a revolt against entrenched interests. To imagine, however, that his railing against “the Washington cartel” makes him a Trumpian brother-in-arms is to mistake tactics for strategy, style for substance. To be sure, it’s a misperception Cruz himself encouraged throughout 2015 as he drafted in Trump’s wake. But that’s yesterday’s story. It’s been over for weeks. The story since January is of a bromance blown up, clearing away the anti-establishment veneer and allowing their fundamental political differences to finally emerge: l Over Trump’s “New York (read: liberal) values.” l Over government power. Cruz’s most biting commercial showed Trump enlisting government to tear down the home of a little old lady standing in the way of a casino parking lot. l Over ethanol, which Cruz opposed on classic small-government grounds that the state should not be picking winners and losers, and which Trump supported because “it happens to be a lot of jobs for Iowa.” The Iowa results clarified

the dynamic of the Republican race. There are only three candidates in the race and, as I argued last week, each represents a different politics. The result is a three-way fight between Trump’s personalized strongman populism and two flavors of conservatism — Marco Rubio’s more mainstream version and Cruz’s more uncompromising take-no-prisoners version. We can now read the Iowa results as they affect the Republican future. Trumpian populism got 24 percent, conservatism (Rubio plus Cruz) got 51 percent. There will be a spirited contest between the two conservatives over who has the better chance of winning the general election and of governing effectively. But whatever the piques and preferences of various “establishment” party leaders, there’s no denying that either Rubio or Cruz would retain the GOP’s fundamental ideological identity. Trump would not. Getting thumped in Iowa does not mean that Trump is done. He’s on favorable ground in New Hampshire and leads in practically every other state. But he’s in for a long fight. What Iowa confirms is that whatever beating the “establishment” takes during this campaign, Republicans are choosing conservatism over Trumpian populism by 2 to 1. Which means their chances of survival as the party of Reagan are very good. — Charles Krauthammer is a columnist for Washington Post Writers Group.

PUBLIC FORUM

No-call strategy To the editor: Back in the day, how did my late buddy, Jack, get telemarketers off his back? So that they would never call again, especially during dinner? He asked, “What’s your home phone number?” Pause. “What do you want that for, sir?” “So that I can call you at home and bug you, just like you’re bugging me now.” Slam! This was before the days of random and multiple robo calls from outfits like the one directing my wife and me to call about a possible credit problem. We were to press 1 if we wanted off the call list, 3 to speak to a person. So, day after day, we pressed 1. But for months the calls kept coming. Our moods soured accordingly. Desperate, I turned to the Kansas attorney general’s website. The site said this type of call was in violation of the Kansas No-Call Act. Then I studied our directory of the latest 50 calls. Which unnamed company had used multiple numbers, times, dates, and calling locations? Then I called those numbers. In each case, I got the same recorded announcement from the familiar recorded voice that had called us for the last few months: “If you want off our call list, press 1.” So I did. Haven’t had a call since from this telemarketer. My wife and I now have more quiet and privacy, enough to think I hear Jack proclaiming, “Craiger, I’m proud of you.” Craig Chappell, Lawrence

Frightening thought To the editor: I got a laugh out of Stephen Ware’s comments that the current Kansas judicial selection system is “undemocratic, extreme and secretive” and that “(i)n a democracy, everybody’s vote ought to be worth the same.” (Journal-World, Feb. 4). Tell you what, Mr. Ware, the next time you go into the hospital for brain surgery, we’ll let the managers of the concessions shops in the lobby vote on which doctor you’ll get. I, too, am an attorney, and although I’m not particularly proud of it, neither am I ashamed of it. It’s a job that requires specialized training and

knowledge, just like most others. I don’t know anything about plumbing and I would guess most plumbers don’t know much about the legal system. And that’s fine. We rely on the other’s specialized skills. Do you really want a one-issue right-wing ideologue like Sam Brownback to have the power to choose our Supreme Court justices? The thought frightens me. Richard L. Warrick, Lawrence

Sad state of affairs To the editor: I became an avid newspaper reader in 1939 and have maintained that practice into my eighth decade. In all that time, through wars and depression, I have never been as concerned about our political system. From the deadlock in Washington to the would-be oligarchs in Topeka, I believe our democracy is threatened. I will limit this letter to two immediate concerns. Our education system is under attack. In our state, the teaching profession has been decimated by the failure to fund schools and the removal of teacher rights. As a retired teacher at Lawrence High School, I am concerned about the exodus of good teachers and the quality of education for ALL our youth. Democracy is dependent on an educated and informed electorate. After retiring, I secured a position as a bailiff in the district court. In 23 years, I worked for a number of judges, some still on the bench and some retired. Every one of them, in my opinion, was well-qualified and fair-minded. Training to correctly interpret and apply the law is a long and difficult process. Our current administration would change a fair method of selecting judges to make it political. It appears to be a clear violation of the separation of the powers of our government. So what next? Shall we build a wall From the Lawrence Daily Journal-World around Kansas to prevent a mass exit for Feb. 6, 1916: “Three persons from Lincoln, of teachers, judges and our youth? Neb., were in Lawrence today looking up the Maybe we could fund it without raisrecord of Blanche Owens-Randolph-Bustard, years ing taxes by transferring funds from a former resident of Lawrence. They are ago education, transportation or anything a mother and son and daughter, who have that would benefit those of us who IN 1916 been made the defendants in a damage suit are not wealthy. brought by Blanche Owens, who alleges that Darrell Ward, her husband’s affections were alienated by his relatives.” Lawrence

OLD HOME TOWN

100

— Compiled by Sarah St. John

LAWRENCE

Journal-World

Letters Policy

®

Established 1891

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

Dolph C. Simons Jr., Editor

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Ed Ciambrone, Production and Circulation Manager

The Journal-World welcomes letters to the Public Forum. Letters should be 250 words or less, be of public interest and should avoid name-calling and libelous language. The Journal-World reserves the right to edit letters, as long as viewpoints are not altered. By submitting letters, you grant the Journal-World a nonexclusive license to publish, copy and distribute your work, while acknowledging that you are the author of the work. Letters must bear the name, address and telephone number of the writer. Letters may be submitted by mail to Box 888, Lawrence, KS, 66044 or by email to: letters@ljworld.com

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Scott Stanford, General Manager


WEATHER

.

Saturday, February 6, 2016

L awrence J ournal -W orld

DATEBOOK

Family Owned. Helping Families and Friends Honor Their Loved Ones for More Than 100 Years. Serving Douglas, Franklin and Osage Counties since 1898. Baldwin City, KS Ottawa, KS Overbrook, KS 712 Ninth Street 325 S. Hickory St 730 Western Heights Drive (785) 594-3644 (785) 242-3550 (785) 665-7141

TODAY

SUNDAY

MONDAY

TUESDAY

WEDNESDAY

Plenty of sunshine

Breezy with clouds and sun

Very windy; a little snow

Mostly sunny

Milder with plenty of sun

High 47° Low 32° POP: 0%

High 49° Low 29° POP: 25%

High 33° Low 20° POP: 60%

High 40° Low 22° POP: 0%

High 48° Low 28° POP: 0%

Wind WSW 6-12 mph

Wind WNW 10-20 mph Wind NNW 20-30 mph

Wind NW 7-14 mph

Wind NNW 7-14 mph

St. Joseph 46/30 Chillicothe 45/33

Sabetha 44/32

Concordia 44/30

Kansas City Marshall Manhattan 47/35 46/34 Salina 49/28 Oakley Kansas City Topeka 53/31 41/28 49/32 Lawrence 47/32 Sedalia 47/32 Emporia Great Bend 47/36 49/32 50/27 Nevada Dodge City Chanute 48/36 51/27 Hutchinson 49/32 Garden City 53/29 50/22 Springfield Wichita Pratt Liberal Coffeyville Joplin 50/33 52/30 49/30 56/25 51/34 51/32 Hays Russell 45/28 45/28

Goodland 45/20

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

LAWRENCE ALMANAC

Through 8 p.m. Friday.

Temperature High/low 43°/20° Normal high/low today 42°/20° Record high today 70° in 2009 Record low today -12° in 2014

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

0.00 0.44 0.19 1.12 1.17

REGIONAL CITIES

Today Sun. Today Sun. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Holton 47 32 s 47 28 pc Atchison 46 31 pc 47 28 pc Belton 47 34 s 47 27 pc Independence 47 35 s 48 27 pc 47 32 s 46 26 pc Burlington 48 33 s 49 29 pc Olathe Coffeyville 51 32 s 55 30 pc Osage Beach 49 31 pc 51 31 pc 48 33 s 48 29 pc Concordia 44 30 s 43 28 pc Osage City 47 33 s 49 29 pc Dodge City 51 27 s 47 24 pc Ottawa 52 30 s 51 30 pc Fort Riley 48 30 s 47 30 pc Wichita Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.

NATIONAL FORECAST

SUN & MOON

Feb 8

First

Full

Last

Feb 15

Feb 22

Mar 1

LAKE LEVELS

As of 7 a.m. Friday Lake

Level (ft)

Clinton Perry Pomona

Discharge (cfs)

875.62 890.85 973.57

300 300 500

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

Fronts Cold

INTERNATIONAL CITIES Today Hi Lo W 87 74 pc 51 44 c 51 41 sh 62 48 pc 86 60 pc 42 18 s 52 40 pc 51 44 c 90 73 pc 63 51 s 42 23 c 48 36 r 53 37 pc 59 48 s 52 41 sh 53 24 s 54 41 r 55 42 pc 69 37 pc 35 26 c 28 14 c 73 55 pc 41 33 r 56 45 c 91 77 s 59 47 pc 34 15 s 88 78 c 42 39 r 77 69 sh 50 36 r 39 27 c 49 36 pc 48 39 pc 44 34 pc 30 24 sf

Hi 88 49 54 61 81 46 51 49 85 59 40 47 45 60 46 55 50 52 70 27 32 71 39 51 89 59 35 84 44 79 46 42 48 56 49 24

Sun. Lo W 73 pc 42 r 40 pc 45 sh 60 s 19 s 40 pc 43 c 69 t 47 c 25 pc 39 r 36 r 53 s 37 sh 24 s 44 sh 40 sh 37 pc 15 pc 29 sn 49 pc 35 r 44 c 76 s 50 r 20 s 78 t 36 r 67 s 36 pc 32 pc 42 c 41 pc 40 pc 3c

Showers T-storms

Flurries

Ice

Today Sun. Today Sun. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Memphis 54 35 pc 59 37 pc Albuquerque 50 25 s 54 26 s Miami 77 55 sh 64 45 pc Anchorage 32 22 c 28 25 c Milwaukee 38 31 c 41 28 sf Atlanta 52 32 pc 56 38 s Minneapolis 35 30 c 37 16 sn Austin 61 29 s 68 38 s 53 31 pc 56 36 s Baltimore 46 26 pc 51 31 pc Nashville New Orleans 57 39 pc 61 44 s Birmingham 52 30 pc 57 38 s New York 43 33 pc 46 33 pc Boise 46 28 pc 46 27 s 41 30 pc 41 24 pc Boston 39 29 pc 43 29 pc Omaha Orlando 69 47 pc 59 40 s Buffalo 38 28 sf 46 32 s 46 29 pc 50 33 pc Cheyenne 43 28 pc 33 24 pc Philadelphia 73 45 s 77 50 s Chicago 41 31 pc 43 27 pc Phoenix 42 26 pc 48 30 pc Cincinnati 47 30 pc 50 32 pc Pittsburgh Cleveland 41 28 c 47 33 pc Portland, ME 39 26 pc 42 19 s Portland, OR 53 39 pc 59 42 pc Dallas 55 36 s 65 39 s 52 27 s 54 26 s Denver 47 24 pc 36 18 pc Reno Richmond 48 27 s 47 29 pc Des Moines 38 32 s 41 19 sf 66 42 s 68 43 s Detroit 40 28 c 47 32 pc Sacramento St. Louis 55 35 pc 54 34 pc El Paso 56 29 s 63 34 s Fairbanks 12 -6 pc 8 -1 pc Salt Lake City 37 24 pc 39 23 s San Diego 75 52 s 77 56 s Honolulu 81 65 sh 76 62 s San Francisco 62 49 s 66 49 s Houston 60 35 r 64 41 s 52 40 pc 55 43 pc Indianapolis 46 29 pc 49 28 pc Seattle 40 26 pc 42 30 pc Kansas City 47 32 s 48 26 pc Spokane Tucson 72 39 s 78 45 s Las Vegas 61 41 s 67 44 s Tulsa 54 35 s 59 32 pc Little Rock 55 35 pc 61 38 s Wash., DC 47 32 pc 49 33 pc Los Angeles 78 52 s 83 56 s National extremes yesterday for the 48 contiguous states High: Vista, CA 81° Low: Gunnison, CO -22°

WEATHER HISTORY

WEATHER TRIVIA™

Q:

The “Blizzard of ‘78” was in its early stages on this date in 1978.

7:30

What is the U.S. snowfall record for 24 hours?

MOVIES 8 PM

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9 PM

9:30

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Saturday Night Live KSNT Father Brown

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Saturday Night Live News

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Saturday Night Live (N) Austin City Limits Castle “Sleeper”

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Leverage Blue

Saturday Night Live (N)

Commun Commun Mike

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Two Men Big Bang Mod Fam Big Bang Anger

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Luther

Republican Debate GOP primary candidates discuss issues. (N) 41 Dateline NBC h 38 Mother Mother

Broke

Law & Order: SVU

Fam Guy Fam Guy Law & Order: SVU

Cable Channels WOW!6 6 WGN-A

Tower Cam/Weather Information 307 239 Blue Bloods

THIS TV 19 CITY

25

USD497 26

Blue Bloods

››› But Not for Me (1959) Clark Gable.

›› Anger Management (2003) Batman Returns ››‡ Can-Can (1960, Musical) Frank Sinatra.

City Bulletin Board, Commission Meetings

City Bulletin Board

School Board Information

School Board Information

ESPN 33 206 140 dCollege Basketball dNBA Basketball: Thunder at Warriors ESPN2 34 209 144 dCollege Basketball FSM

36 672

FNC

39 360 205 Stossel

CNBC 40 355 208 Undercover Boss MSNBC 41 356 209 Kill For Me CNN

Blues

dCollege Basketball Blues

Game

Monster Jam

Skiing

FIS Alpine Skiing

Justice Judge

Greg Gutfeld

Red Eye-Shillue

Undercover Boss

Undercover Boss

Undercover Boss

Undercover Boss

Lockup: Holman

Lockup: Holman

Lockup: Raw

Lockup: Raw

Anthony Bourd.

CNN Republican Debate Special (N)

NCIS (DVS)

Colony “Blind Spot”

44 202 200 Anthony Bourd.

Anthony Bourd.

TNT

45 245 138 ›› Valentine’s Day (2010) Jessica Alba. (DVS)

USA

46 242 105 NCIS (DVS)

NCIS (DVS)

A&E

47 265 118 The Secret Tapes of the O.J. Case

TRUTV 48 246 204 World’s Dumbest...

SportsCenter (N) (Live)

dCollege Basketball

kNHL Hockey Minnesota Wild at St. Louis Blues.

NBCSN 38 603 151 Snowboarding

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BEST BETS WOW DTV DISH 7 PM

SPORTS 7:30

8 PM

8:30

February 6, 2016 9 PM

9:30

10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30

Cable Channels cont’d

3

8

2013 HYUNDAI SONATA SE

10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30

Network Channels

M

Submit your stuff: Don’t be shy — we want to publish your event. Submit your item for our calendar by emailing datebook@ljworld.com at least 48 hours before your event. Find more information about these events, and more event listings, at ljworld.com/ events.

VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE

Snow

-10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s National Summary: Dry and mild air will return to the Northeast today as high pressure builds. Snow showers will dot the Great Lakes and northern Rockies. Showers will impact portions of Florida and eastern Texas.

SATURDAY Prime Time WOW DTV DISH 7 PM

Rain

2016 Program Series: “Firebrand: The Amazing Story of Bleeding Kansas Fighter August Bondi,” 2-3 p.m., Constitution Hall, 319 Elmore St., Lecompton. Jazzhaus Big Band rehearsal (open to the public), 2-4 p.m., American Legion, 3408 W. Sixth St. Drop-In Tutoring, 2-4 p.m., Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. The Raising of America: The Economics of Child Care, viewing and panel discussion, 3-4:30 p.m., First United Methodist Church, 946 Vermont St. Stories & Songs, 3:304 p.m., Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. Super Bowl/ Pasta Cook off, 4 p.m., Eagles Lodge #309, 1803 W. Sixth St. Irish Traditional Music Session, 5:30-8 p.m., upstairs Henry’s on Eighth, 11 E. Eighth St. O.U.R.S. (Oldsters United for Responsible Service) dance, doors 5 p.m., potluck 7:15-7:45 p.m., dance 6-9 p.m., Eagles Lodge, 1803 W. Sixth St. Smackdown! trivia, 7 p.m., The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St.

Iowa St

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

Warm Stationary

76 inches at Silver Lake, Colo., April 14-15, 1921.

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016

Precipitation

hee

New

Sun. 7:22 a.m. 5:48 p.m. 6:26 a.m. 5:09 p.m.

A:

Today 7:23 a.m. 5:47 p.m. 5:38 a.m. 4:05 p.m.

Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset

r

Oberlin 43/28

Beatrice 41/31

Centerville 42/33

lD

McCook 46/26

Lincoln 42/29

Grand Island 41/30

Kearney 44/28

Clarinda 40/29

VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE

POP: Probability of Precipitation

more info.) American Legion Red Dog’s Dog Days Bingo, doors open 4:30 workout, 7:30 a.m., p.m., first games 6:45 parking lot in 800 block of p.m., snack bar 5-8 p.m., Vermont Street. American Legion Post John Jervis, classical #14, 3408 W. Sixth St. guitar, 8-11 a.m., Panera, Film: “Say Anything,” 520 W. 23rd St. 6:30 p.m. refreshments, German School of 7 p.m. movie, Lawrence Northeast Kansas, 9:30Arts Center, 940 New 11 a.m., Bishop Seabury Hampshire St. Academy, 4120 Clinton Dinner and a Movie: Parkway. (Ages 3 and “Say Anything” (1989), up.) 7 p.m., Lawrence Arts Chinese Storytime, Center, 940 New Hamp10:30-11:30 a.m., Lawshire St. rence Public Library, 707 Arnie Johnson & the Vermont St. Midnight Special, 7-10 Souper Bowl, 11 a.m.p.m., Eagles Lodge, 1803 2 p.m., Lawrence Arts W. Sixth St. Center, 940 New HampConcert: KU Wind shire St. Ensemble, Jazz EnsemSchool of Dance ble I, and Symphony informational meetings Orchestra, 7:30 p.m., for interested parents, Lied Center, 1600 Stewart 11:45 a.m. and 12:30 Drive. p.m., Lawrence Arts West Side Folk: A Center, 940 New HampNight of Phil Ochs shire St. Songs by Zachary SteSaturday Afternoon venson, 7:30 p.m., Cider Ragtime, 2-4 p.m., WatGallery, 810 Pennsylvania kins Museum of History, St. 1047 Massachusetts St. Kim and the Quake, Great Books Discus9 p.m.-midnight, Slow sion: Miller, A View From Ride Roadhouse, 1350 N. the Bridge, 2-3:30 p.m., Third St. Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. 7 SUNDAY Americana Music Earth Care Forum: Academy Saturday Jam, 3 p.m., Americana Music “A Reflection on Current Capitalist EcoAcademy, 1419 Massanomic Model Promotchusetts St. ing Overconsumption Classical guitarist Ryan Marquardt, 6 p.m., as Described in Pope Francis’ Encyclical on St. John the Evangelist ‘Care for Our Common Church, 1234 Kentucky Home,’” 9:40-10:45 a.m., St. First Presbyterian Church, Dueling Dukes! A Benefit for Theatre Law- 2415 Clinton Parkway. 28th Annual Chocorence, 6:30 p.m., Theatre late Auction, noon, Lawrence, 4660 Bauer Lumberyard Arts Center, Farm Drive. 718 High St., Baldwin. Lawrence Bridge Prairie Winds & SunClub, 6:30 p.m., Kaw flower Strings Concert, Valley Bridge Center, 1025 N. Third St. (Partner 12:30 p.m., Lied Center, 1600 Stewart Drive. required; first two visits Bleeding Kansas free; call 760-4195 for

6 TODAY

World’s Dumbest...

NASCAR Match of the Day Justice Judge

››‡ It’s Complicated (2009) Meryl Streep.

Suits (DVS)

O.J. Speaks: The Hidden Tapes

Secret Tapes

World’s Dumbest...

World’s Dumbest...

World’s Dumbest...

AMC

50 254 130 ››› Twister (1996, Action) Helen Hunt.

››› Twister (1996, Action) Helen Hunt. TBS 51 247 139 Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Angie ››› Zoolander (2001) BRAVO 52 237 129 Real ››› The School of Rock (2003) Jack Black. ››‡ Legally Blonde (2001), Luke Wilson HIST

54 269 120 Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars

SYFY 55 244 122 ››‡ Cloud Atlas (2012, Drama) Tom Hanks, Halle Berry.

››‡ Surrogates (2009) Bruce Willis.

VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE

|

10A

FX 56 COM 58 E! 59 CMT 60 GAC 61 BET 64 VH1 66 TRV 67 TLC 68 LIFE 69 LMN 70 FOOD 72 HGTV 73 NICK 76 DISNXD 77 DISN 78 TOON 79 DSC 81 FAM 82 NGC 83 HALL 84 ANML 85 TVL 86 TBN 90 EWTN 91 RLTV 93 CSPAN2 95 CSPAN 96 ID 101 AHC 102 OWN 103 WEA 116 TCM 162 HBO MAX SHOW ENC STRZ

401 411 421 440 451

248 249 236 327 326 329 335 277 280 252 253 231 229 299 292 290 296 278 311 276 312 282 304 372 370

136 107 114 166 165 124 162 215 183 108 109 110 112 170 174 172 176 182 180 186 185 184 106 260 261

351 350 285 287 279 362 256

211 210 192 195 189 214 132

The Wolverine ››‡ Thor: The Dark World (2013, Action) The People v. Louie Step ››› Wedding Crashers (2005) Owen Wilson. ››› Zombieland (2009) Premiere. ››‡ Two Weeks Notice (2002) Sandra Bullock. ›› Miss Congeniality (2000) 2 Last Man Last Man ›› What to Expect When You’re Expecting Cops Cops Cops Log Log Log Log Log Log Log Log Log Log ››‡ I, Robot (2004) Will Smith. ››‡ I, Robot (2004) Will Smith, Bridget Moynahan. Love, Hip Hop Love, Hip Hop Love, Hip Hop Love, Hip Hop Love, Hip Hop Ghost Adventures Ghost Adventures Ghost Adventures The Dead Files Ghost Adventures Stories of the ER Stories of the ER Sex Sent Me Sex Sent Me Stories of the ER Manson’s Lost Girls (2016) Premiere. Manson Girls Cleveland Abd. Manson Lost Lethal Seduction (2015, Suspense) Accidental Obsession (2015) Lethal Seduction Chopped Chopped Chopped Chopped Chopped Property Brothers Property Brothers House Hunters Log Log Property Brothers Game Nicky 100 Thunder Full H’se Full H’se Friends Friends Friends Friends Pickle Gravity Ultimate Guardi Rebels Pickle Gravity Ultimate Guardi Rebels The Princess and the Frog K.C. Lab Rats Lab Rats Best Fr. Austin Jessie Jessie Oblongs King/Hill King/Hill Cleve Cleve American Fam Guy Fam Guy Dragon Akame MythBusters (N) Deadliest Job Deadliest Job To Be Announced ›› National Treasure (2004) Nicolas Cage, Diane Kruger. National Treasure: Book of Secrets M. M. The Boonies Human Race The Boonies Human Race All Things Val Appetite for Love (2016) Taylor Cole. Golden Golden Golden Golden Treehouse Masters Yankee Jungle (N) Pit Bulls-Parole Treehouse Masters Pit Bulls-Parole Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond King King King King In Touch Hour of Power Graham Classic The Wedding Chapel (2013) Book Bakhita Living Right Media Apostle Daily Mass - Olam Cooking Cooking Cooking Cooking Stanley Stanley Cooking Cooking Cooking Cooking Book TV After Words Book TV Book TV Washington This Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. Capitol Hill Shadow of Doubt Shadow of Doubt I’d Kill For You (N) Shadow of Doubt Shadow of Doubt Almost, Away Almost, Away Almost, Away Almost, Away Almost, Away It’s Not You It’s Not You Oprah: Where Now? It’s Not You It’s Not You Prospectors Prospectors Prospectors Prospectors Prospectors ›››‡ Broadcast News (1987) William Hurt. And the Oscar Goes To... Easy

501 515 545 535 527

300 310 318 340 350

Walk Among Jim: The James Foley Story (2016) ››‡ The Divergent Series: Insurgent Austin ›‡ The Comebacks (2007) ›››‡ Gone Girl (2014) Ben Affleck. Premiere. Wicked Billions “Pilot” Billions Billions “YumTime” Shameless Michael Jackson ›››› The Terminator (1984) iTV. ›››› Terminator 2: Judgment Day White Men Black Sails “XX.” Black Sails “XXI.” Black Sails “XXI.” Black Sails “XXI.” ››› Backdraft


SECTION B

USA TODAY — L awrence J ournal -W orld

IN MONEY

IN LIFE

Nasdaq falls to 15-month low

Coens hail bygone era of the Hollywood fixer

02.06.16 SPENCER PLATT, GETTY IMAGES

JOSH BROLIN BY ALISON ROSA

FIRST TAKE JOBS REPORT

Disappointing growth masks positive signs Mixed signals could dissuade Fed from raising interest rates in March Paul Davidson USA TODAY

A disappointing employment report — just 151,000 jobs were added in January — was so chockfull of encouraging signs and mitigating factors that economists say it likely doesn’t portend a weakening labor market. Yet analysts say there are enough mixed signals in the monthly survey to help lead the Federal Reserve to pause again in March as it considers another interest-rate hike after lifting its

benchmark rate in December for the first time in almost a decade. The Fed’s policymaking committee “will likely desire to see further evidence,” Michael Gapen, chief U.S. economist of Barclays, wrote in a note to clients. The 151,000 job gains marked a substantial slowdown from the average 279,000 monthly additions recorded in the fourth quarter. Those totals are from a survey of business and government establishments that feed Note are seasonally adjusted into Numbers the headline job tally. But a separate survey of households indicated employment in-

EMPLOYERS ADD 151,000 JOBS IN JANUARY In thousands: 300 250 200

151,000

150 100 50 0 M J

J A

S O N D

2015

J

’16

Note Numbers are seasonally adjusted Source U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics JANET LOEHRKE, USA TODAY

creased by an eye-popping 615,000. Even after adjusting for revised annual estimates of the U.S. population, the ranks of workers increased by 409,000, according to Capital Economics. That caused the jobless rate to fall to 4.9% from 5%. The establishment survey is deemed a more reliable measure of employment, but the two surveys tend to converge over time, and it’s not always clear which is a better gauge in any month. Another encouraging signal is that average hourly earnings jumped 12 cents and were up 2.5% the past year. Tepid wage growth of 2% or just above it has been the biggest source of frustration in the jobs recovery. But employers finally appear to be

raising pay more rapidly to attract workers in a tighter market. Meanwhile, there were plenty of excuses for the sluggish payroll gains in the establishment survey. Unusually warm weather inflated job growth late last year, so some payback in January was expected. And while the big Northeast snowstorm hit after the Labor Department conducted its surveys, harsh weather still kept many workers home. The number of Americans who didn’t work because of bad weather increased by 144,000, notes Jim O’Sullivan, chief US economist of High Frequency Economics. Job growth in services sectors slowed, raising concerns the global troubles afflicting manufacturers may be spreading.

Jeb Bush embraces famous last name But as voters seek out newcomers, does it help or hurt him? David Jackson USA TODAY

U.S. court for injuries she suffered on a train platform in Innsbruck. Two weeks later, he joined the court’s 6-3 majority ruling that California customers cannot join a class-action lawsuit against satellite TV provider DIRECTV be-

DERRY, N.H. — In a middle school cafeteria, as voters rose to take pictures of 90-year-old former first lady Barbara Bush, Jeb Bush spent some more time writing the latest chapter in the political saga of his family — a short chapter if he doesn’t do well in New GETTY IMAGES Hampshire or South Carolina. Jeb Bush After remarks from Mrs. Bush, the family matriarch who told the crowd her second-oldest son has “everything we need in a president,” Jeb Bush made his case for the White House in part by citing the frontrow seat he has had to decades of history. “I’m proud of being a Bush,” the former Florida governor said. Jeb Bush finished sixth in Monday’s Iowa caucuses — with about 3% of the vote — and is well back in some polls in New Hampshire. But he says he is confident that voters will respond to his message in the end, starting with Tuesday’s New Hampshire primary. While he entered the GOP nomination race with big money and a big legacy — the son of one president and the brother of another — the name “Bush” has

v STORY CONTINUES ON 2B

v STORY CONTINUES ON 2B

Chief justice seeks to limit role of courts USA SNAPSHOTS©

Super expensive

Efforts to streamline judicial system bring cases close scrutiny Richard Wolf USA TODAY

How much Super Bowl 50 tickets near the 30-yard line were going for:

$15,000 each Note As of Feb. 1 Source Ticketmaster’s NFL Ticket Exchange TERRY BYRNE AND KARL GELLES, USA TODAY

WASHINGTON By siding with the Supreme Court’s liberal wing on two major cases last week, Chief Justice John Roberts lent credence to conservatives’ concerns that they can’t count on his vote. But as he moves into his second decade as the nation’s 17th chief justice, Roberts is proving to be strikingly consistent in one area that conservatives applaud. He wants to close the courthouse doors to challengers with tenuous

legal grounds or claims, thereby limiting the role of the judicial branch he leads. That desire has been on display regularly during the first half of the high court’s 2015 term, both in rulings Roberts joined and in those he opposed. At nearly every opportunity, he voted to limit plaintiffs’ access — demanding they prove being harmed and opt for arbitration over litigation. The chief justice wrote the court’s first decision of the term, ruling Dec. 1 that a California woman had no right to sue the Austrian national railroad in a

John Roberts is consistent in his efforts to limit lawsuits. Top, protesters hold placards challenging Obamacare outside the Supreme Court last March. PHOTOS BY MANDEL NGAN, AFP/GETTY IMAGES AND AP

Twitter says it has shut down 125,000 ISIL-related accounts Jessica Guynn and Elizabeth Weise USA TODAY

Twitter has suspended 125,000 accounts connected to the Islamic State over the past six months, the company said Friday. Twitter said it has expanded its team to comb through suspect accounts and to root out automated accounts that publish extremist views to react more swiftly to terrorist content on the service. SAN FRANCISCO

“We also look into other accounts similar to those reported and leverage proprietary spamfighting tools to surface other potentially violating accounts for review by our agents,” the company said in a blog post. “We have already seen results, including an increase in account suspensions and this type of activity shifting off of Twitter.” Twitter has been heavily criticized for not more effectively policing the presence of the extremist group. Pressure has heated up from the Obama ad-

ministration and presidential candidates in the wake of the terrorist attacks in Paris and in San Bernardino County. The Islamic State — also known as ISIL or ISIS — use popular Internet services such as Twitter and Facebook to spread propaganda and to attract and train new recruits. Twitter says it does not permit tweets that promote terrorism or make violent threats. It relies on users to alert the company about violations to its policies. Tech companies have been reluctant to appear as if they are

Twitter says it does not permit tweets that promote terrorism or make violent threats.

JUSTIN SULLIVAN, GETTY IMAGES

working with government requests for data since 2013, when Edward Snowden revealed the extent to which the U.S. was conducting digital surveillance of cit-

Follow USA TODAY senior technology writer Jessica Guynn @jguynn

izens. Online privacy groups have mounted strong opposition to any measures that would undermine individual rights to privacy and free speech rights.


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U.N. panel: WikiLeaks’ Assange ‘arbitrarily detained’ U.K. will continue fight to have him sent to Sweden to face charge in rape case

Jane Onyanga-Omara USA TODAY

LONDON The United Nations ruled Friday that WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has been “arbitrarily detained” by the United Kingdom and Sweden since he was arrested in 2010 and that he should be allowed to leave Ecuador’s Embassy in London without facing arrest. In a statement, the U.N.’s Working Group on Arbitrary Detention, called on both countries “to end Mr. Assange’s deprivation of liberty, respect his physical integrity and freedom of movement, and afford him the right to compensation.” It said Assange’s detention in a London prison, his subsequent house arrest and “confinement” at the embassy were “disproportionate” reactions. Assange has been holed up at the embassy since June 2012. If

he steps outside, British police said he would immediately be arrested and face extradition to Sweden and the United States. Sweden is seeking his extradition because Assange is accused of being involved in a rape case, an allegation he denies. He has not been formally charged. Assange had faced three other sexual assault charges there, but they expired in August because of the statute of limitations. The U.S. Justice Department said it is considering charging Assange with espionage related to WikiLeaks’ publication of thousands of diplomatic letters. He told a news conference in London by video link that the U.N. panel’s findings proved that he had been unlawfully detained. Later, addressing media from an embassy balcony, he said that the British and Swedish governments had deprived his children of their father for over five years. He said the ruling was a “vic-

JOHN STILLWELL, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

tory” for his cause. The British and Swedish governments maintain the ruling from the U.N. is not legally binding, but the U.N. says the organization’s conclusions “are legally binding to the extent that they are based on binding international human rights law.” A statement from Sweden said, “Swedish authorities have no control over his decision to stay

1 DEAD, 3 INJURED IN NYC CRANE COLLAPSE

Massive construction machinery tumbles onto street in lower Manhattan during morning rush Kevin McCoy and Doug Stanglin USA TODAY

NEW YORK A pedestrian was killed and three people were injured Friday when a huge construction crane collapsed in lower Manhattan as workers were trying to lower and secure it against rising winds, Mayor Bill de Blasio said. Pronounced dead at the scene was 38-year-old David Wichs, of Manhattan’s Upper West Side, the New York City Police Department said. The injured, whose names were not immediately released, were hit by falling debris, authorities said. Two were listed in serious condition. The mayor initially said the person killed had been sitting in a car, but the police later said he had been walking near a car. The Daily News reported that one of the injured, Thomas O’Brien, 73, was in the nearby car waiting for his daughter when the heavy metal crushed much of the vehicle. O’Brien received a head laceration. The crane, with a 565-foot boom that stretched roughly as long as a city block, plummeted around 8:24 a.m. ET near 40 Worth Street in the TriBeCa neighborhood, the New York City Fire Department said. Jesse Natale, a 26-year-old civil engineer from Westfield, N.J., told the Daily News he was waiting at a traffic light at the site when the crane came down. “If I caught that light, I’d be dead probably,” he said. Twisted red-colored metal from the plunging boom smashed into parked cars, and debris littered streets and sidewalks. More than 100 firefighters and emergency personnel and more than 30 firetrucks and other equipment responded to the scene. City officials said utility workers were taking gas readings in the area and making plans to excavate and cap a low-pressure gas main in the wake of the collapse. De Blasio said construction work was halted on the building Thursday after operators decided to lower and secure the crane against winds, which gusted past 20 mph Friday morning. “They were in the process of

KEVIN V. SMITH VIA TWITTER

NEW YORK CITY POLICE DEPARTMENT VIA TWITTER

One witness said Friday’s crane collapse “looked like an avalanche — or that the roof was caving in from the snow.” securing the crane ... actually preparing to bring it down, to secure it,” he said. De Blasio said there likely would have been more victims if workmen hadn’t already cleared the area of traffic and people to prepare for lowering the crane. Glenn Zito, who was working on the upper floors of a building across the street, captured the crane’s collapse in a dramatic

video. Zito and two other workers were asked to come down from the upper floors because of the wind and were making their way down when they stopped to watch the crane being lowered. It was the city’s first major crane collapse since 2008. Contributing: Michael Struening in New York City. Stanglin reported from McLean, Va.

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange is staying inside the Ecuadorean Embassy in London.

there. Mr. Assange is free to leave the Embassy at any point.” The U.K. said it will formally contest the panel’s decision. “This changes nothing. We completely reject any claim that Julian Assange is a victim of arbitrary detention,” the British government said in a statement. “An allegation of rape is still outstanding ... so the U.K. continues to have a legal obligation to extradite him to Sweden,” it said. Duncan French, a professor of international law at the University of Lincoln in England, said a the ruling was only recommendation. “My main concern is that it (the decision) dilutes much more genuine cases of arbitrary detention where the state really is locking people up and throwing away the key. For me, this is an unfortunate engagement by the U.N. system — it’s something that should be dealt with by the normal legal process,” he said.

Judge Bush on his own merits, those who see him say v CONTINUED FROM 1B

been as much hindrance as help in a year in which anti-establishment politics are all the rage. “I would say take a chill pill, let the democracy work, let people go see who the candidates are, what their record is, what detailed plans they have,” Bush told NBC News. “We got a long way to go.” Timothy J. Naftali, a biographer of President George H.W. Bush, said Jeb’s campaign problems probably don’t reflect dislike of the Bush family so much as dislike for the so-called Republican “establishment.” Few things say Republican establishment more than the name “Bush.” “This is a very bad time for a Bush to be running,” Naftali said. At this stage of the campaign, Bush is highlighting his family’s connections, including Thursday’s appearance by Barbara Bush at West Running Brook Middle School in Derry, N.H. Voters chuckled as Jeb Bush joked about his mother’s sometimesstern ways, and smiled as the former first lady appeared to snap pictures of the presidential hopeful on a pink iPhone. “I wore my pearls in her honor,” said Mary Darby-Bencivenga, 53, a real estate appraiser from Hooksett, N.H. “I just thought it was so cute how she’s still a cheerleader for her son.” Another relative, former president George W. Bush, has cut an ad for his brother’s super PAC. In addition, Jeb Bush has said the ex-president plans to campaign for him ahead of the Feb. 20 South Carolina primary, a sign he plans to press on regardless of what happens Tuesday in New Hampshire. As he has at many campaign stops over the past year, Bush told the crowd in Derry he loves his father and his brother, but he is his own person with his own views of how the presidency should be conducted. Whether the name has been much of an asset is open to debate. For the past year, Republican voters across the country — from New Hampshire to South Carolina to Florida — have said they cannot support the idea of putting a “third Bush” in the White House in the last 30 years. In addition, one of the Republican candidates who is running against the so-called establishment — Donald Trump — did Bush incalculable damage by labeling him the “low energy”

candidate. “He was ‘Trumped’ more than any other candidate in this race,” said historian John Robert Greene, who wrote a book on the George H.W. Bush presidency and is at work on another one about George W. Bush’s two terms in the White House. New Hampshire residents who saw Jeb and Barbara Bush in Derry said they were impressed with the candidate. He should be judged on his own merits, they said, though some voters seem predisposed to oppose him.

JACQUELYN MARTIN, AP

Barbara Bush jokes with her son Jeb while introducing him at a town hall meeting in Derry, N.H., on Wednesday.

“I think a lot of people are holding it against him even before they listen to him,” said Katelynn Freeman, 26, a nursing student from Derry. Ernie Bencivenga, 56, Mary’s husband and an electrical engineer from Hookset, said Trump, Ted Cruz, and their supporters have labeled Bush “as part of the establishment, and that’s what people are revolting against.” If Jeb Bush pulls off a comeback, the family’s history book will grow. Even if he goes down, historians like Greene said it likely won’t affect the legacies of the two presidents Bush. There are also signs that the Bush saga will go on one way or another, as attention shifts to members of the up-and-coming generation, such as Texas Land Commissioner George P. Bush, one of Jeb’s sons. And a loss wouldn’t necessarily end Jeb Bush’s career, with the prospect of becoming a running mate or Cabinet secretary still at least a possibility. “He brings a lot of money to the table,” Greene said. “He brings a lot of gravitas to the table.”

Roberts still like an umpire at a baseball game v CONTINUED FROM 1B

cause a federal law favoring arbitration trumps state law. Roberts closed out the month in his year-end report Dec. 31 by lauding federal rules changes aimed at cutting down on frivolous lawsuits and dilatory practices that delay justice. In essence, he called for a leaner, meaner federal bench and bar. “We must engineer a change in our legal culture that places a premium on the public’s interest in speedy, fair and efficient justice,” Roberts said.

More malleable on other issues, to the consternation of conservatives, Roberts has been a stickler on court access his entire career. Over the years, the chief justice has consistently voted to close the courthouse doors on claims and claimants he judged dubious — and not only when it benefited the conservative cause. His refusal in 2013 to let opponents of gay marriage in California represent the state in a lawsuit brought by gay and lesbian couples brought same-sex marriage to the state. In a report on Roberts’ first decade as chief justice, the liberal

Constitutional Accountability Center found him uniformly stingy on standing and generous on forced arbitration. Roberts’ preferences and his court’s precedents are starting to filter down to lower federal courts. In the year ending Sept. 30, the number of federal appellate, district and bankruptcy cases all declined, following a trend begun several years ago. To liberals, the trend is ominous. Brian Wolfman, co-director of the Supreme Court litigation clinic at Stanford Law School and former director of Public Citizen

“We must engineer a change in our legal culture that places a premium on the public’s interest in speedy, fair and efficient justice.” Chief Justice John Roberts

Litigation Group, says the trend from class-action lawsuits toward arbitration penalizes consumers and workers who cannot afford to sue on their own.

Conservatives say Roberts isn’t picking winners and losers. They see his goal as cajoling courts to play a more limited role, like that of an umpire at a baseball game — a favorite Roberts analogy. “The chief justice, in particular, and the majority on the court are suspicious of using the courts as a way of addressing larger questions of social or economic policy,” says Jonathan Adler, a professor at Case Western Reserve University School of Law. “The chief does not want the court to be at the center of highprofile, high-consequence fights.”


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Feds to study health benefits of social services Keeping people well by solving their other problems will save money, improve life Jayne O’Donnell USA TODAY

The Obama administration is working to build evidence supporting increased federal and state spending on anti-violence, social service and other programs to improve life in poor neighborhoods and limit the growth in health care costs. The move is designed to create a paper trail that makes the need for and efficacy of the programs for Medicare and Medicaid recipients indisputable by showing the cost savings. In the next step in the Affordable Care Act, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services will spend nearly $160 million in grants to community groups, health care providers or other BALTIMORE

public or private entities that will screen patients for unmet social needs and link them with services that help with housing, hunger, interpersonal violence and other social ills. The agency will then study whether this access improves health and lowers costs. International data show the United States spends far more on health care and far less on social services than other developed countries that have far healthier citizens. Numerous studies have shown how stable housing and other social supports keep people out of the hospital, while efforts to combat inner-city violence sharply reduce gun-related homicides. The research was inspired in part by Yale public health professor Elizabeth Bradley and her 2013 book, The American Health

YALE UNIVERSITY

Yale public health professor Elizabeth Bradley, right, is studying how states’ social services spending relates to better overall health.

Care Paradox, which analyzed global health care and determined that higher social service spending led to better overall health. Her new report compares states’ social service spending

with health status and will appear in an upcoming issue of Health Affairs. CMS’ challenge, she says, “comes down to politics.” “It does require a shift in a very large industry in the U.S. — the health care industry,” which is a powerful lobbying force in Washington, Bradley says. The public’s attention on health care lately has been on insurance enrollment and political battles over costs. “It’s not that people don’t agree that (social services are) important and it’s not that they don’t care, but we haven’t adequately made the case that it saves money and has value,” says Darshak Sanghavi, a physician who heads population and preventive health at CMS’ innovation center. Despite the ACA’s push to reward hospitals and doctors for improving people’s overall health — or penalize them if they don’t — there’s still no clear way for the

government to pay them for improving people’s often-traumatic lives. Nearly 18 million people have gained health coverage under the ACA, but many still can’t pay for their drugs, transportation to their appointments or nutritious food that can help keep them healthy. Unlike in other countries, social services are thought of as charity for the poor, while health coverage is for the middle class. It’s “part of our American values,” Bradley says. A report out Wednesday by the Prevention Institute calls for far more focus on the “traumaplagued communities” that result when these social ills including violence, hunger and homelessness are ignored. Exposure to violence alone gives the United States one of the highest rates of trauma-related mental illness in the world, says the report, funded by Kaiser Permanente of Northern California.

FACT CHECK: THE FIFTH DEMOCRATIC DEBATE Eugene Kiely, Brooks Jackson, Lori Robertson, Robert Farley, D’Angelo Gore and Vanessa Schipani l FactCheck.org

We found several false and misleading claims in the debate between former secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Sen. Bernie Sanders. Thursday’s debate, held in Durham, N.H., was hosted by MSNBC a few days ahead of Tuesday’s New Hampshire primary. uSanders claimed Clinton called Barack Obama “naive” in 2007 because he “thought it was a good idea to talk to our enemies.” That lacks context. Clinton objected not to meeting with enemies, but to Obama’s statement that he would do so without preconditions. uSanders claimed that NAFTA and other trade deals have cost “millions” of U.S. jobs, but independent economists have said the impact on the economy was small. uClinton revised history in discussing her opposition to the Trans-Pacific Partnership. She supported the trade deal as secretary of State. uSanders mixed and matched two different sets of data to claim that “millions of Americans … are working longer hours for low wages.” uSanders said his campaign “did not suggest that we had the endorsement” of the Nashua Telegraph in a new TV ad running in New Hampshire. In fact, the ad leaves that false impression. uClinton said “the Wall Street guys are trying so

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.

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hard to stop me.” But Clinton and PACs that support her have raised millions from Wall Street interests. uSanders said his campaign could better deliver a large voter turnout, the key to a Democrat winning the White House in November. But statistics on voter turnout in presidential elections don’t show such a clear partisan trend. uSanders wrongly claimed that “not one Republican has the guts to recognize that climate change is real.” Two of the Republican presidential candidates, not to mention more Republicans in Congress, have said climate change is real and humans contribute to it. uWhile discussing the Trans Pacific Partnership, Sanders ascribed an inaccurately low figure for the minimum wage in Vietnam. uSanders claimed the United States has “the highest rate of childhood poverty of almost any major country on earth.” But the childhood poverty rate is higher in several industrialized economies.

CHIP SOMODEVILLA, GETTY IMAGES

Republican presidential candidate Marco Rubio poses for a photo at a town hall in Exeter on Feb. 2.

New Hampshire voters look for personal touch Fifth-smallest state makes it easy for candidates to traverse Chrissie Thompson The Cincinnati Enquirer

EXETER , N. H . Tom Diggins wouldn’t give his short list for the New Hampshire primary. It turns out, in the week before Granite State voters cast ballots in the nation’s second nominating contest, the 70-year-old retired postal worker had yet to narrow down his choices. “I like sizing them up. I can’t do it on TV. There’s too many people asking weird questions,” said Diggins, of Exeter, who had come to see Marco Rubio in his town Tuesday night. “I want to see them all. You can do this in New Hampshire.” Indeed, presidential candidates are spending the eight days between the Iowa caucuses Mon-

day and the New Hampshire primary next Tuesday touring the state, and many voters are waiting to see them all — sometimes for the second time — to make their final decision. New Hampshire ranks as the country’s fifth-smallest state, making it easy for candidates to visit the border with Vermont at lunchtime and the metropolitan Boston area in the evening, sometimes with a stop in between. The Granite State’s primary encourages last-minute decisions. Close to half of the state’s 874,000 voters don’t register with a party, which allows them to vote in either the Republican or Democratic primary. While statistics show nearly all of them will cast the same party’s ballots as they did in previous years, many undeclared voters consider candidates

from both parties up until the primary. Indeed, half of all voters in the last two elections hadn’t made up their minds by the Sunday before the primary, according to Andrew Smith, director of the University of New Hampshire Survey Center. And while many voters insist they won’t pay attention to the results of last week’s Iowa caucus, New Hampshire polls have shown some changes. Donald Trump, who had led the field by 20 percentage points, has slipped a bit, to around 31%, according to the RealClearPolitics polling average. Rubio has moved into second place with 15% support after a stronger-than-expected showing in Iowa. Ted Cruz, John Kasich and Jeb Bush are several points back, competing for third.

IN BRIEF BERNIE SANDERS TO APPEAR ON ‘SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE’

Bernie Sanders may be teaming up with his doppelgänger this weekend. The Washington Post reports that Sanders, who’s leading Hillary Clinton in New Hampshire ahead of the state’s Tuesday primary, is taking a break from campaigning in the Granite State to head to New York on Saturday. While there, he is “likely” to appear on Saturday Night Live, The Post says, citing a source with direct knowledge of plans. CNN was more definitive, quoting senior Sanders adviser Tad Devine as saying, “We’ll be live in New York.” Why would this Saturday be a particularly significant episode for the Vermont senator to appear on the show? Larry David, the comedian who’s impersonated Sanders on SNL, will be hosting. — Cooper Allen 3 PEOPLE INFECTED WITH ZIKA DIE IN COLOMBIA

Three people infected with the Zika virus in Colombia died from the rare Guillain-Barre syn-

emergency concern.”

FUNERAL FOR FINICUM

of

international

— Katharine Lackey

ASSAD FORCES ENCIRCLE REBEL-HELD ALEPPO

GEORGE FREY, GETTY IMAGES

A funeral was held Friday in Kanab, Utah, for rancher Robert “LaVoy” Finicum, who was part of the Burns, Ore., standoff. He was shot and killed by FBI agents when they tried to detain him at a traffic stop Jan. 27.

drome, Colombian health officials said Friday. The deaths confirm the Zika virus can be deadly, National Health Institute Director Martha Lucia Ospina said. Experts aren’t sure Zika can activate the syndrome, which can be caused by other infections and conditions. Doctors have previously linked

Zika to cases of Guillain-Barre, a rare disorder that can cause temporary paralysis as the body’s immune system attacks the nervous system. The World Health Organization declared the outbreak — which spread to least 25 countries in Latin America and the Caribbean — a “public health

Syrian President Bashar Assad’s military forces were closing in on the opposition-held city of Aleppo on Friday, highlighting the growing success of regime forces who are backed by a wave of Russian airstrikes. The offensive into rebel territory by government troops sent thousands of Syrians fleeing toward the border with Turkey and threatened to unleash a new humanitarian disaster in a 5-yearold war that has already led to the deaths of more than 250,000 people. Retaking Aleppo, a key commercial center in Syria, would be a critical victory for the regime and the latest in a series of setbacks for opposition forces. Regime successes have made prospects for a brokered political solution even more remote since Assad would not be encouraged to make concessions. — Kim Hjelmgaard and Jim Michaels


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NEWS MONEY SPORTS Nasdaq hits 15-month low LIFE following Friday freefall AUTOS TRAVEL Tech-stock wreck

L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2016

MONEYLINE BEN & JERRY’S LAUNCHES VEGAN LINE OF DESSERTS The South Burlington, Vt.- based company known for its outrageous flavors launched four vegan ice creams this week. The ice creams — technically called “frozen dessert” because ice cream has to have a certain amount of milkfat — are made from an almond milk base and will roll out to grocery stores over the next four to six weeks.

Weak jobs report sends Dow Jones down 212 points Adam Shell

BEN & JERRY'S

DORITOS OFFERS $50,000 FOR SUPER BOWL TWEETS Frito-Lay, the Doritos parent company, will award $50,000 to three people on Super Bowl Sunday who make what the company feels are the most compelling tweets for the product. The awards will go to the best text, best photo and best 15-second video submission, according to contest rules. Submissions will be accepted between 3 p.m. EST on Sunday until the game’s final whistle is blown, the rules state. To be eligible, tweets should include the hashtags #Doritos and #entry. TYSON FOODS RISES ON PROFIT INCREASE Shares of Tyson Foods rose Friday after the U.S. meat and poultry giant reported higher than expected first-quarter earnings and raised its financial forecasts for 2016. Net income attributable to the Springdale, Ark.-based company rose to $461 million or $1.15 per share, up from $309 million and 74 cents per share for the first quarter last year, Tyson said. Quarterly sales totaled $9.15 billion, down 15.4% from the nearly $10.82 billion reported for the same period last year. The earnings result easily topped the 89-cent consensus forecast of financial analysts surveyed by S&P Capital IQ. REPORT: APPLE WILL LET YOU TRADE IN BROKEN IPHONE Apple is exploring an update to its smartphone trade-in program allowing users to submit iPhones with damaged touchscreens, cameras or buttons, reports 9to5Mac. The report says an iPhone 5S, for example, could fetch $50, while an iPhone 6 can get $200. The report says the idea behind the program is to get more customers to buy a new iPhone instead of send in their current device for repairs. DOW JONES INDUSTRIAL AVG. 9:30 a.m.

16,400

16,417

16,350 16,300

4:00 p.m.

16,205

16,250 16,200 16,150

-211.61

FRIDAY MARKETS INDEX

CLOSE

CHANGE

Nasdaq composite 4363.14 y 146.42 Standard & Poor’s 500 1880.02 y 35.43 Treas. note, 10-year yield 1.84% unch. Oil, lt. sweet crude, barrel $30.89 y 0.83 Euro (dollars per euro) $1.1144 y 0.0070 Yen per dollar 116.89 x 0.18 SOURCES USA TODAY RESEARCH, MARKETWATCH.COM

destroys $529B this year

SPENCER PLATT, GETTY IMAGES

Traders on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange have had an anxious start to the year.

Massive drops are a big reason for Nasdaq’s pain Matt Krantz USA TODAY

The bad year for stocks is getting worse by the minute — and tech investors are feeling the brunt of the pain. The 462 information technology stocks in the broad Russell 3000 index have shredded a total of $529 billion this year thanks to their average decline of 14%, according to a USA TODAY analysis of data from S&P Capital IQ. Crashing stocks have served up a brutal reminder why betting on speculative stocks in the technology sector is dangerous business when investors get nervous about growth. The tech-heavy Nasdaq composite index is the worst hit major index of the major ones investors watch — sliding 13% this year while the broader Standard & Poor’s 500 is off just 8%. The Nasdaq’s losses from the high are starting to get nervously close to the unofficial definition of a bear market: A decline

BIGGEST WEALTH DESTROYERS Biggest shareholder wealth destroyers among technology stocks in the Russell 3000: % Market cap destroyed this change YTD Company year ($ billions) Apple -$62.3 -10.7% Alphabet -$51.0 -9.5% Microsoft -$42.1 -9.6% Intel -$25.5 -15.7% Cisco Systems -$21.6 -15.7% MasterCard -$16.3 -15% LinkedIn -$15.3 -51.8% Visa -$14.4 -7.7% salesforce.com -$13.3 -25.4% IBM -$8.8 -6.6% SOURCES: S&P CAPITAL IQ, USA TODAY

of 20% or more. The Nasdaq is down more than 16% from its highest point over the past 12 months. The S&P 500, on the other hand, is down just 11.8%. Massive drops in technology stocks are a big reason for the Nasdaq’s pain. The latest stunning example is online social networking company for professionals, LinkedIn. After telling investors that profit would grow this year — just not as much as previously thought — shares Friday closed down $83.79, or 44%, to $108.49. That devastating drop erases $15.3

Machine co-workers welcome About automation, smart machines replacing people for repetitive work, I feel ...

Positive

55% Negative

45% Source ADP survey of 2,403 workers globally JAE YANG AND PAUL TRAP, USA TODAY

billion in market value this year. What’s even more startling, though, is that LinkedIn’s massive wealth destruction this year ranks just seventh among the tech stocks in the Russell 3000. Gadget maker Apple is the biggest destroyer of wealth this year — chewing through $62.3 billion this year as investors brace for the company to morph from a growth engine to a shrinking giant. Shares of Apple Friday closed down $2.58, or 2.7%, to $94.02. Even Alphabet, the online advertising giant that briefly became the most valuable company in the world this week, has been sinking. Shares are down more than 10% since the company reported blow-out quarterly profit this week. Now, the stock has wiped out $51 billion in market value this year. Shares closed down $26.27, or 3.6%, to $703.76 Friday. LinkedIn isn’t the only former tech darling that’s crashing. Salesforce.com, a cloud-based provider of worker tracking systems, is cratering and wiping out $13.2 billion in shareholder value this year. The stock closed down 13%, or $8.69, to $58.51 Friday.

Wall Street’s short winning streak came to a brutal end Friday as a disappointing jobs report sent stocks skidding and the Nasdaq composite to its lowest level in more than 15 months. The Dow Jones industrial average, which had patched together two consecutive days of gains, was down 211.61 points, or 1.3%, to 16,204.97. The broader Standard & Poor’s 500 was down 35.40 points, or 1.9%, to 1880.05. The real carnage was in the Nasdaq, which tumbled 146.41 points, or 3.3%. to 4363.14 — its lowest close since Oct. 20, 2014. The Nasdaq is 16.4% below its record close last year, creeping ever closer to a 20% loss that would qualify as a bear market. Stocks slid from the opening bell following the release of a weak January jobs report, a key data point that shows a possible downshift in the U.S. economy amid global tumult and which adds further uncertainty to Federal Reserve interest rate policy. The government reported that 151,000 new jobs were created last month, below the 190,000 jobs economists had forecast. The unemployment rate ticked lower to an eight-year low of 4.9%, down from 5% in December.

Investors were analyzing the jobs number closely, as the not-too-strong, not-too-weak print could put the Fed back in play for a March rate hike. Given the market turbulence to start the year, “Jobs Friday” holds even more weight on Wall Street as it provided the first glimpse into the state of the employment market following the recent market and economic tumult around the globe. At the start of the year the Fed was eyeing four quarter-point rate hikes totaling 1%, but the early-year tumult in markets resulted in Wall Street dialing back its expectations, with many investors betting on fewer rate hikes and ruling out another hike next month. Kate Warne, investment strategist at Edward Jones, says, on balance, the employment report was positive and suggests still solid jobs growth and an economy still on track for modest growth, despite the miss on the headline number.

Shkreli taunts Internet debaters ‘People with AIDS actually like me,’ former drug CEO says Nathan Bomey USA TODAY

USA SNAPSHOTS©

USA TODAY

Controversial drug entrepreneur Martin Shkreli taunted people to debate him online Friday over his decision to increase the price of a life-saving drug from $13.50 to $750, arguing that he had actually made the drug more accessible for poor patients. Periodically picking at an acoustic guitar on a live video feed open to the world, Shkreli chatted with random users a day after he refused to testify before Congress, citing his Fifth Amendment right not to incriminate himself. Shkreli defended his decision to increase the price of Daraprim by more than 5,000%. The pill is used to treat toxoplasmosis, a parasitic disease that afflicts people with weakened immune sys-

BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

Martin Shkreli refused to testify before Congress Thursday.

tems, such as those with AIDS and pregnant women. He said his previous company, Turing Pharmaceuticals, which still controls the rights to the drug, had increased availability of the drug for people who can’t afford it, even though the price remains $750 for most users. “People with AIDs actually like me,” Shkreli said on the live stream. Shkreli repeatedly challenged participants to articulate arguments against his position. “I’m looking for someone who wants to debate and hate,” he said.

And he periodically insulted participants whom he deemed to be insufficient. “That was a feeble attempt at a debate,” he said after one person chatted with him. “Sorry everyone for witnessing that. If we could get someone a little better, a little smarter.” When one user named Ben appeared animated but was not audible because of his live-stream settings, Shkreli burst into laughter. “It sounds like you’ve got a lot of hate — a lot of hate in your heart, which is good,” he said. “If you put half the amount of hate you have into learning how to use a computer, you’d be in much better shape.” One person, whose screen name was Pop Music Girl, suggested that Shkreli’s price increase had correspondingly increased the price of insurance health care premiums for other Americans. Shkreli took exception to that argument. “This is one of the smallest drugs in existence,” he said. “It’s

just too small. No one takes this drug. It’s not a commonly used medicine. It’s not going to change insurance premiums.” He added: “You should be having a webcast with the CEO of Pfizer or Merck, not me.” Shkreli did not discuss multiple criminal securities charges he is facing over allegations that he took stock from a previous biotech company to pay off business debts and lied about the investment returns of his former hedge fund. The live stream was not a first for Shkreli, who has cultivated a flamboyant and defiant personality by setting up a web cam to film himself working, posting sarcastic messages on Twitter and paying $2 million for the only copy of a new Wu Tang Clan album. But his sudden verbosity on Friday contrasted sharply with his appearance before the House Committee on Oversight & Government Reform on Thursday, where he smirked and grinned while facing fiery lectures but refused to answer any questions.


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USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2016

AMERICA’S MARKETS What to watch Adam Shell @adamshell USA TODAY

Maybe a Federal Reserve rate hike in March is back on the table — considering the way the market reacted to the January jobs report, which missed on the headline number of jobs created but had enough positives imbedded in it to cause stock investors to sell off the market yet again. Fed confusion has returned, and with it another wild day on Wall Street, with stocks skidding lower amid fears the Fed will make a mistake and hike rates too fast and cause harm to an economy that’s growing slowly as it is. You’d think the weaker-thanexpected 151,000 jobs created in January would have everyone on Wall Street saying a March rate is off the table. Instead, some good

Facts about America’s investors who use SigFig tracking services:

data points in the report, such as the unemployment rate hitting an eight-year low of 4.9% and signs employers are paying workers more — witnessed by a rise of 0.5% in average hourly wages — has some stock pundits saying a March hike is still very much on the table. “The big question following today’s jobs report, will one moderate headline rise in employment be enough to derail the Fed’s plans to continue raising -2.30 rates 5-day avg.: ‘gradually’ throughout the year? 6-month avg.: -13.42 Most likely, Largest no,” Lindsey Piegza, holding: AAPL at Stifel Fixed Inchief economist Most bought: AAPL come, told clients in a report.IBM Most sold: So, there you have it. Wall Street, which had pretty much made up its mind that no rate hikes were coming due to earlyyear financial turbulence and slowing global growth, now is rethinking that view. And that rethink means lower stock prices.

DOW JONES

LESS THAN $100,000

-211.61

-35.43

INDUSTRIAL AVERAGE

CHANGE: -1.3% YTD: -1,220.06 YTD % CHG: -7.0%

COMP

-146.42

CLOSE: 16,204.97 PREV. CLOSE: 16,416.58 RANGE: 16,129.81-16,423.63

NASDAQ

RUT

-29.17

COMPOSITE

CLOSE: 4,363.14 CHANGE: -3.2% PREV. CLOSE: 4,509.56 YTD: -644.27 YTD % CHG: -12.9% RANGE: 4,350.38-4,493.19

GAINERS

RUSSELL

LOSERS

YTD % Chg % Chg

$ Chg

Tyson Foods (TSN) Soars as profit forecast raised.

57.10

+5.15

+9.9

+7.1

Southwestern Energy (SWN) Idled gas rigs to trigger recovery, nears 2016 high.

9.34

+.50

+5.7

+31.4

Estee Lauder (EL) Beats second-quarter estimates.

90.99

+3.98

+4.6

+3.3

Aon (AON) Beats earnings, margin expands.

92.87

+3.92

+4.4

+.7

Newmont Mining (NEM) Gold overcomes early drop, shares do the same.

24.41

+1.03

+4.4 +35.7

ADT (ADT) 27.97 Rating upgraded to equal weight at Morgan Stanley.

+1.00

+3.7 +3.3

-8.9

+3.3

+15.2

Symantec (SYMC) Fund mangers take stake, shares up.

19.76

+.58

+3.0

-5.9

88.55

+2.22

+2.6

-2.3

Price

$ Chg

YTD % Chg % Chg

24.96

-4.43

-15.1

-15.2

Salesforce.com (CRM) 58.51 Dragged down by Tableau on missing fourth quarter.

-8.69

-12.9

-25.4

Hess (HES) Falls after announcing $1.43 billion share sale.

38.02

-5.45

-12.5

-21.6

11.10

-1.11

-9.1

-16.9

24.88

-2.37

-8.7

-23.6

17.12

-1.63

-8.7

-33.4

TripAdvisor (TRIP) Margins fall, low mobile conversion rate.

58.37

-5.44

-8.5

-31.5

Adobe Systems (ADBE) Dragged down with suffering sector.

79.20

-7.16

-8.3

-15.7

Red Hat (RHT) Reverses gain on rating upgrade in weak sector.

63.14

-5.48

-8.0

-23.8

Teradata (TDC) Returns gain on mixed results in weak sector.

23.54

-2.04

-8.0

-10.9

Hanesbrands (HBI) Misses estimates, dips to 2016 low.

News (NWSA) Earnings trail estimates on ad revenue. Newfield Exploration (NFX) Fund manager maintains, dips in weak sector. Williams Companies (WMB) Shares follow weak oil prices.

-1.27 -7.48 GE DAL MWA

POWERED BY SIGFIG

4-WEEK TREND

The social network for professionals shocked Wall Street with a rev- $250 Price: $108.38 enue forecast that fell far short of Chg: -$83.90 expectations. At least seven bro% chg: -43.6% Day’s high/low: kerages cut the stock from “buy” $100 Jan. 8 $128.99/$102.81 to “hold” or their equivalent.

Tyson Foods

Ticker SPY UWTI GDX VXX QQQ XLF EEM EWJ IWM UGAZ

Chg. -3.26 -0.96 -3.22 -0.96 -3.23 -0.17 -3.40 -0.16 -1.07 -0.45

Close 187.95 1.86 17.05 26.36 98.12 20.95 30.01 10.95 98.04 1.51

4wk 1 -6.6% -7.4% -6.6% -7.4% -6.6% -5.9% -8.4% -3.3% -9.7% -1.8%

YTD 1 -7.9% -8.7% -7.9% -8.7% -7.8% -7.9% -10.3% -3.9% -11.5% -2.5%

Chg. -3.65 -0.13 +0.90 +1.00 -3.53 -0.28 -0.35 -0.19 -2.76 +0.13

% Chg %YTD -1.9% -7.8% -6.5% -52.9% +5.6% +24.3% +3.9% +31.1% -3.5% -12.3% -1.3% -12.1% -1.2% -6.8% -1.7% -9.7% -2.7% -12.9% +9.4% -38.1%

INTEREST RATES

MORTGAGE RATES

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

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

Close 6 mo ago 3.50% 3.25% 0.38% 0.14% 0.28% 0.07% 1.24% 1.65% 1.84% 2.27%

Close 6 mo ago 3.69% 3.93% 2.80% 3.02% 2.72% 2.69% 3.07% 3.22%

SOURCE: BANKRATE.COM

COMMODITIES

SOURCE: BLOOMBERG AND THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Commodities Close Prev. Cattle (lb.) 1.36 1.37 Corn (bushel) 3.66 3.69 Gold (troy oz.) 1,157.80 1,157.60 Hogs, lean (lb.) .65 .65 Natural Gas (Btu.) 2.06 1.97 Oil, heating (gal.) 1.06 1.08 Oil, lt. swt. crude (bar.) 30.89 31.72 Silver (troy oz.) 14.76 14.84 Soybeans (bushel) 8.68 8.74 Wheat (bushel) 4.67 4.73

Chg. -0.01 -0.03 +0.20 unch. +0.09 -0.02 -0.83 -0.08 -0.06 -0.06

% Chg. -0.7% -0.8% unch. unch. +4.6% -2.0% -2.6% -0.5% -0.8% -1.3%

% YTD +0.2% +2.0% +9.2% +8.4% -11.7% -3.8% -16.6% +7.2% -0.4% -0.7%

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

Close .6897 1.3892 6.5731 .8974 116.89 18.4408

Prev. .6850 1.3729 6.5660 .8917 116.71 18.2922

6 mo. ago .6411 1.3191 6.2127 .9176 124.90 16.3894

Yr. ago .6523 1.2442 6.2524 .8717 117.57 14.7948

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

Close 9,286.23 19,288.17 16,819.59 5,848.06 43,229.67

$57.10

Feb. 5

$18.53

$30

$15

Jan. 8

Feb. 5

INVESTING ASK MATT

NAV 173.68 46.38 171.97 46.36 171.98 13.35 88.14 19.44 36.55 54.45

1 – CAPITAL GAINS AND DIVIDENDS REINVESTED

ETF, ranked by volume SPDR S&P500 ETF Tr CS VelSh 3xLongCrude Mkt Vect Gold Miners Barc iPath Vix ST PowerShs QQQ Trust SPDR Financial iShs Emerg Mkts iShare Japan iShares Rus 2000 CS VelSh 3xLongNatGs

Feb. 5

4-WEEK TREND

The movie company posted thirdquarter sales and profit that trailed analysts’ estimates and did not provide a new forecast.

Fund, ranked by size Vanguard 500Adml Vanguard TotStIAdm Vanguard InstIdxI Vanguard TotStIdx Vanguard InstPlus Vanguard TotIntl Fidelity Contra x American Funds IncAmerA m American Funds GrthAmA m American Funds CapIncBuA m

$108.38

4-WEEK TREND

Lions Gate Entertainment

Price: $18.53 Chg: -$6.92 % chg: -27.2% Day’s high/low: $24.13/$16.21

-15.2

+.29

Company (ticker symbol)

NOTE: INFORMATION PROVIDED BY SIGFIG IS STATISTICAL IN NATURE AND DOES NOT CONSTITUTE A RECOMMENDATION OF ANY STRATEGY OR SECURITY. VISIT SIGFIG.USATODAY.COM/DISCLOSE FOR ADDITIONAL DISCLOSURES AND INFORMATION.

TOP 10 EXCHANGE TRADED FUNDS

71.94 +2.30

5-day avg.: 6-month avg.: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold:

-1.57 -8.79 AAPL AAPL NKE

TOP 10 MUTUAL FUNDS

Consol Energy (CNX) 9.10 Shares higher as developed gas reserves increase.

CME Group (CME) Beats estimates, ups dividend.

5-day avg.: 6-month avg.: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold:

The biggest U.S. meat processor reported better-than-expected earn- $60 Price: $57.10 ings and raised its full-year profit Chg: $5.15 forecast, helped by a sharp drop in % chg: 9.9% Day’s high/low: feed and livestock costs, sending its $40 shares to a record high. $58.95/$55.83 Jan. 8

RUSSELL 2000 INDEX

Price

Mead Johnson Nutrition (MJN) Price target increased, fund manger ups stake.

MORE THAN $1 MILLION

STORY STOCKS LinkedIn

CLOSE: 985.62 CHANGE: -2.9% PREV. CLOSE: 1,014.79 YTD: -150.27 YTD % CHG: -13.2% RANGE: 985.61-1,014.31

Company (ticker symbol)

-1.79 -10.18 AAPL AAPL GM

More than half a million investors nationwide with total assets of $200 billion manage their investment portfolios online with SigFig investment tracking service. Data on this page are based on SigFig analysis.

CLOSE: 1,880.02 PREV. CLOSE: 1,915.45 RANGE: 1,872.65-1,912.05

S&P 500’S BIGGEST GAINERS/LOSERS

5-day avg.: 6-month avg.: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold:

-2.85 -12.90 AAPL AMD NFLX

$250,001$1 MILLION

POWERED BY SIGFIG

STANDARD & POOR'S

CHANGE: -1.8% YTD: -163.92 YTD % CHG: -8.0%

$100,001$250,000

5-day avg.: 6-month avg.: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold:

SigFig investors have strong home bias. Dunkin Donuts was the most popular stock in Massachusetts, Shake Shack in New York, Under Armour in Maryland and Las Vegas Sands in Nevada. Each is headquartered in that state.

S&P 500

SPX

USA’s portfolio allocation by wealth

Here’s how America’s individual investors are performing based on data from SigFig online investment tracking service:

MAJOR INDEXES DJIA

How we’re performing

DID YOU KNOW?

Wall Street blinks as Fed is back in play

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

Prev. Change 9,393.36 -107.13 19,183.09 +105.08 17,044.99 -225.40 5,898.76 -50.70 43,751.93 -522.26

%Chg. -1.1% +0.6% -1.3% -0.9% -1.2%

YTD % -13.6% -12.0% -11.6% -6.3% +0.6%

SOURCES: MORNINGSTAR, DOW JONES INDEXES, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

IN-DEPTH MARKETS COVERAGE USATODAY.COM/MONEY

Automaker’s troubles leave investors wanting Q: Why is Ford stock doing so poorly? Matt Krantz

mkrantz@usatoday.com USA TODAY

A: Ford shares reflect the realization profit growth probably won’t be as strong as it was — and investors want to pay less. Investors have pushed shares of Ford down 18% this year to roughly $12. Analysts think the automaker’s adjusted profit per share will rise just 2% this year — a significant slowdown from the 66% growth in 2015. Investors see Ford’s revenue rising 3.6% in 2016 — roughly in line with 2015’s top-line growth. Falling expectations for profit growth are being priced into the stock. Ford trades for 9.6 times its earnings over the past 12 months, S&P Capital IQ says, down dramatically from its more than 16-times multiple just a year ago. Ford shares now have a P-E that’s below the company’s long-term expected annual growth rate of 15%. Ford’s troubles are more about the stock than the company. The volatile stock market and worries of a global economic slowdown are causing investors to reprice what they think Ford is worth. Analysts have actually been increasing their estimates for what they think the company will earn this year. Analysts expect adjusted profit of $1.97 a share this year, which is 2.6% more than they expected six months ago, S&P Capital IQ says.

IRS resumes tax return processing after computer outage Kevin McCoy USA TODAY

The IRS resumed processing of 2015 federal tax returns after a suspected hardware failure that knocked some of the tax agency’s computers out of service. Processing of returns for individuals and businesses started anew around 5 p.m. ET Thursday after IRS teams worked on the problem, the agency said. Other electronic tools and applications, including the “Where’s My Refund” function on the IRS.gov website, were restored earlier.

Taxpayers, including those who e-filed their 2015 returns just before or during the outage, don’t need to take any additional action, the IRS said. Although some IRS computer systems were out from at least Wednesday evening until Thursday evening, taxpayers were able to continue to send their returns to their e-filing providers. Those providers, such as tax-preparation firms, accountants, attorneys and others, have resumed transmissions of the tax returns, the IRS said. Additionally, filers who received a specific date from the IRS’ Where’s My Refund tool

should face no impact from the outage, the agency said. Nine out of 10 taxpayers will receive their refunds within 21 days after their tax returns are received and accepted, IRS Commissioner John Koskinen said. “Taxpayers should see little, if any, impact on their tax returns or refunds,” Koskinen said. “We apologize for the inconvenience this caused, and we appreciate the support and patience from taxpayers as well as our partners in the tax community and state revenue departments.” Apart from attributing the outage to an apparent hardware fail-

ure, the IRS offered no immediate response to questions seeking more explanation. Rep. Jason Chaffetz, R-Utah, a frequent IRS critic, on Thursday suggested the IRS computer systems might have been attacked by electronic hackers. The IRS did not respond to questions about the assertion. Apart from the recent outage, the nation’s tax agency has suffered numerous computer-related problems and issues in recent years. Cyber thieves last year stole as much as $39 million by filing roughly 13,000 fraudulent tax refunds after gaining access to

taxpayer information via the IRS “get transcript” application, Koskinen told Congress in June. The application is an interactive program that enables legitimate taxpayers to access copies of their own federal tax returns from previous years. The management report also said the IRS did not meet U.S. Department of Homeland Security performance levels set to ensure that government computer systems “are maintained in an organized, secure and approved manner, including timely installing patches to resolve known security vulnerabilities.”


6B

LIFELINE

SPORTS LIFE AUTOS TRAVEL

L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2016

MOVIES

HOW WAS YOUR DAY? GOOD DAY ‘ORANGE IS THE NEW BLACK’ FANS The award-winning show set in a women’s prison was renewed for three more seasons, Netflix announced Friday. “Three more years!” exulted show creator Jenji Kohan.

‘ORANGE IS THE NEW BLACK’ BY NETFLIX

BAD DAY SOLANGE KNOWLES She lost her wedding ring Thursday night while riding in a New Orleans parade as an honorary member of the Krewe of Muses, according to the group’s Facebook page. An unspecified reward is being offered. THEY SAID WHAT? THE STARS’ BEST QUOTES “I said, ‘Look, you know I hope the answer is yes, but I need an answer ‘cause I’m 52, and I could throw out my hip pretty soon if I don’t get an answer.’ And then she said, ‘Oh, oh yes.’” — George Clooney to Ellen DeGeneres on Thursday, describing wife Amal’s stunned reaction to his bent-knee proposal.

Academy Award nominee Josh Brolin stars as Hollywood fixer Eddie Mannix in Hail, Caesar!

Coens hail bygone era of the Hollywood fixer Eddie Mannix makes it happen, whatever ‘it’ is Brian Truitt

JB LACROIX, WIREIMAGE

STYLE STAR Kristen Wiig attended a screening of her latest, ‘Zoolander No. 2,’ in London on Thursday night in a cheeky, vintage Yves Saint Laurent little black dress: strapless and low-cut with a giant orangebronze satin bow at the waist.

WIREIMAGE

IT’S YOUR BIRTHDAY WHO’S CELEBRATING TODAY?

PHOTOS BY ALISON ROSA

@briantruitt USA TODAY

Since the dawn of the movie industry, stars have said dumb things, film productions have gone off the rails — budgetary or otherwise — and scandals have been covered up. Nowadays, that job is done by several people: publicists, agents, producers, managers, you name it. Back in the 1950s, though, a “fixer” would make sure everything was kosher before the gossip columnists could get ahold of the news. That’s the kind of character writer/directors Joel and Ethan Coen most wanted to explore with the comedy Hail, Caesar! — a day in the life of a Hollywood problem-solver. “The character intrigued us,” Joel says. “He has a lot of balls in the air, and it’s on a 24-hour clock.” Eddie Mannix (Josh Brolin) has religious and family concerns, but as soon as he steps on the Capitol Pictures lot, he has to

ALISON ROSA

From left, filmmakers Joel and Ethan Coen go over a scene with Josh Brolin and George Clooney. deal with kidnapped movie stars, pregnant actresses, pesky reporters and ego clashes. “The studio is kind of the world, and Eddie Mannix checks in with (his boss) Mr. Schenk every morning,” Ethan says. “Mr. Schenk decides this Western star should be in a drawingroom drama. It seems idiotic when you meet the actor and you see him interact with the director, but Mr. Schenk is always right.” Adds Joel: “It’s very, very loosely this idea that Mr. Schenk is God and Eddie is the son of God.” The real Eddie Mannix worked

“The character (Eddie Mannix) intrigued us. He has a lot of balls in the air, and it’s on a 24-hour clock.” Joel Coen

as a fixer at MGM, but Ethan says they only took his job and name. “The real Eddie Mannix was pretty much a thug.” Plus, the situations encountered by Brolin’s Mannix are heightened for dramatic effect. Would fixers still work the same way now, in a modern time of selfies and sex tapes? The Coens don’t think so — for one, “The celebrities are different in terms of people’s access to them,” Ethan says. “The media is so different,” Joel says. “It’s the same as in movies. As in every other aspect of life, the media is so pervasive. “Social media is such a huge thing in terms of people’s access to information and having to control information. (The early 1950s), which is the setting of this movie, was a more manageable era in terms of being able to control information the way that our character does in this movie.” When it comes to movie-making, though, the Coens feel there are aspects that haven’t changed in the last 60 years, and some things need fixing every day. “It’s still storytelling, so it’s still hard to control,” Ethan says. “And it’s still done by lunatics.” Have the Coens felt the need for a fixer in their long career? Joel laughs: “No, we’re not lunatics. We’re the exception.”

MOVIES

Netflix, Amazon make it rain at Sundance Amazon Studios landed the Casey Affleck drama Manchester By the Sea for $10 million.

Andrea Mandell @AndreaMandell USA TODAY FROM LEFT, WIREIMAGE, FILMMAGIC, INVISION

Alice Eve is 34. Axl Rose is 54. Kathy Najimy is 59. Compiled by Maria Puente

USA SNAPSHOTS©

Fired-up football fans

28%

of grill owners plan to cook out on Super Bowl Sunday.

Source Hearth Patio & Barbecue Association’s 2015 Barbecue Lifestyle, Usage & Attitude Study TERRY BYRNE AND JANET LOEHRKE, USA TODAY

PARK CITY, UTAH Most Sundance Film Festival attendees packed down jackets and snow boots. Netflix and Amazon filled their bags with cash. Both streaming platforms invaded the festival this year, often shoving traditional distributors aside by driving up bidding wars for films. “There were no movies we were outbid on,” says Amazon Studios head Roy Price, who bought the Kate Beckinsale-starring Jane Austen tale Love & Friendship ($2 million), Rachel Weisz’s Complete Unknown (just over $2 million), oddball comedy Wiener-Dog (a seven-figure deal) and the documentary Author: The JT LeRoy Story ($1 million). Before the festival, Netflix wrote big checks for hot titles such as Ellen Page’s Tallulah ($5 million for streaming rights) and Paul Rudd’s The Fundamentals of Caring ($7 million). This week, it also purchased the documentary Audrie & Daisy and the Iranian horror film Under the Shadow. Last year, Amazon attended

CLAIRE FOLGER VIA SUNDANCE INSTITUTE

the festival and went home with nothing. “We were just starting then,” Price says, noting his mandate is the same: visionary films “that you’re going to remember, that are compelling.” Wallet size matters, but so does return on investment. Streaming sites don’t have to worry about box office bombs. “There’s a big opportunity for streaming services like Netflix and Amazon to snatch up buzzy movies that will not do well theatrically but will

find a healthy audience at home streaming,” Fandango.com managing editor Erik Davis says. They’re also keeping an eye on awards films. Amazon is betting big on Manchester By the Sea, a top pick for critics at the festival. Amazon prevailed in an all-night fight for the Casey Affleck drama, paying $10 million with the promise of a theatrical release and an awards season push. “Streaming services want in on Oscar nominations,” Davis says.

The tide turned when The Birth of A Nation hit the market. The slavery drama from director/ writer/star Nate Parker, which won the U.S. Grand Jury Prize and the Audience Award, had distributors scrambling to win the potential Oscar candidate. Netflix, which Deadline reportedly offered $20 million for the film, ultimately lost to Fox Searchlight, the studio behind best-picture nominee Brooklyn and 12 Years a Slave, which took home best picture at the Oscars in 2014. Searchlight secured Birth for $17.5 million. “It was about aligning with a partner that really shared the same passion for getting this thing seen by the masses on a global scale, and the connection we had personally,” Parker says. But it probably didn’t help that Netflix’s first major awards contender, Beasts of No Nation, was shut out of this year’s Oscar nominations. The film streamed on Netflix and was simultaneously released in just 31 theaters, pulling in only $91,000. “Movies that have major Oscar potential want to send a message they should be seen on as many screens as possible,” Davis says. Netflix declined to comment.


SOIL& WATER

CONSERVATION

Douglas County Conservation District Conservation Edition

Special advertising focus of the Lawrence Journal-World

MAKING (SOME) SENSE OF THE GOVERNMENT ALPHABET Farmers and landowners looking to implement conservation practices have a variety of assistance opportunities here in Douglas County. Cost-share and technical assistance is available at federal, state, and county levels from different organizations. The Farm Service Agency (FSA) administers farm commodity, disaster, and conservation programs for farmers and ranchers, and makes and guarantees farm emergency, ownership, and operating loans through a network of State and county offices. Popular programs associated with the FSA include the Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) and Agriculture Risk Coverage & Price Loss Coverage (ARC/PLC) program. The Conservation Reserve Program allows landowners to take eligible land out of agricultural production and place it into an appropriate conservation practice while still receiving an annual payment on the land. The ARC/PLC programs primarily allow producers to continue to produce for the market by making payments on a percentage of historical base production, limiting the impact on production decisions. The Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS), formerly known as the Soil Conservation Service (SCS), is an agency of the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) that provides technical assistance to farmers and other private landowners and managers. One of the most accessed NRCS programs in Douglas County is the Environmental Quality Incentives Program

(EQIP). The purpose of EQIP is to provide technical and financial assistance to landowners to help them improve their soil, water and related natural resources, including grazing lands, wetlands, and wildlife habitat Watershed Restoration and Protection Strategy (WRAPS) is a planning and management framework that engages stakeholders within a particular watershed in a process to identify watershed restoration and protection needs and opportunities, establish management goals for the watershed community, create a cost-effective action plan to achieve goals, and then implement the action plan WRAPS represents a shift from “top-down” government intervention in watershed issues, to a more citizen-stakeholder approach, in which funds, guidance and technical assistance are provided for stakeholders to reach consensus on issues of relevance in their watershed, and then design and execute a plan to address those issues. Five WRAPS are located in Douglas County; Upper Wakarusa, Lower Kansas, Hillsdale Lake, and Marais des Cygnes Basin, and Middle Kansas. The creation of Kansas Conservation Districts resulted from problems associated with severe soil erosion during the Dust Bowl. In 1937, the Kansas legislature passed

the Conservation District Law leading to the formation of conservation districts in Kansas. The conservation district is the primary local unit of government responsible for the conservation of soil, water and related natural resources within the county boundary. Kansas conservation districts are political subdivisions of state government charged with this vital role. Funding comes from county and state allocations, with some districts generating funds by providing conservation goods and services. Your Douglas County Conservation District provides cost-share assistance to local landowners using funding provided by the state and county. Some projects are funded up to 70% of the actual cost. Possible projects include terraces, underground tile and outlets, range planting, brush management, livestock watering facility and pipeline, field borders, internal fencing, spring development, forage and biomass planting, and septic repairs. All projects are ranked using objective criteria and funding is then allocated based upon those rankings. A multitude of agencies and organizations are on the scene and each one has something to offer. The role of the district is to either offer assistance that is available or be able to refer a landowner to another organization that may be able to help. These agencies are in place to help the landowner with conservation resource concerns, and help to make Douglas County a better place to live. If you are interested in learning more, please join the Douglas County Conservation District in a Conservation Conversation on March 14 at 7:00 p.m. at the Baldwin City Library.

DOUGLAS COUNTY CONSERVATION DISTRICT – THE BEGINNING Severe soil erosion problems during the “Dust Bowl” days prompted the passage of the Conservation District Law by the Kansas legislature in 1937, which led to the formation of conservation districts in Kansas. Across the state, 105 conservation districts (one in every county) provide local leadership by helping people address their natural resource needs. The Douglas County Conservation District was formed by farmers and landowners at referendums held on August 17-20, 1945. Most farmers believed that a soil conservation district would be of great help in solving the serious erosion problems of the county. Two farmers, Emil Heck of Lawrence and Wilson Counts of Baldwin, were appointed supervisors by the State Soil Conservation Committee. On January 4, 1946 Homer Gerstenberger of Eudora, George Butell of Baldwin, and Leslie Demeritt of Clinton were elected supervisors. Current Supervisors include David Brown, Baldwin City; Mike Florey, Lawrence; Jordan Olsen, Lawrence, Luke Ulrich, Baldwin City and Karen Willey, Baldwin City. On January 11, 1946, The Douglas County Conservation District requested technical assistance from the USDA Soil Conservation Service (SCS), which changed its name to the Natural Resource Conservation Service (NRCS) in 1994. M. H. Wertzberger was assigned

as technician to the district. This was the beginning of a partnership between Douglas County landowners, the Douglas County Conservation District and the NRCS that continues to this day. Current NRCS personnel partnering with the District include Tim Miller, supervisory district conservationist, and Coleen Davison, soil conservationist. In the seventy years the Conservation District has existed, much has changed. Farming practices have improved, technology has advanced, equipment has gotten larger, and money has gotten tighter. The Conservation District of today serves as a conduit for technological advances, funding opportunities and education. After 70 years, many things have changed within the district, but the focus has remained the same – providing leadership and assistance in promoting individual responsibility for the conservation of Douglas County natural resources.


SOIL &WATER CONSERVATION

Douglas County Conservation District Conservation Edition

Special advertising focus of the Lawrence Journal-World

DOUGLAS COUNTY CONSERVATION DISTRICT – PROMOTING EDUCATION “An investment in knowledge pays the best interest” – Benjamin Franklin. One of the Douglas County Conservation District’s primary goals is to provide educational opportunities and information related to conservation and environmental education. This goal is accomplished through outreach to youth and adults in the county. The Douglas County Conservation District (DCCD) offers a variety of resources to assist educators in incorporating conservation education in their classrooms. We have many educational kits on a range of topics including soil and water conservation, and other environmental concerns. The kits include the lesson plan and materials needed to present the idea. The kits are available to borrow at no cost! The DCCD Education and Outreach Coordinator is ready to help any Douglas County educator advance conservation education, just give the office a call. Adults are also included in the DCCD Education program. Through a new series of lectures entitled

“Conservation Conversations”, a wide variety of topics are presented around the county every other month. Subscribe to our e-newsletter and friend us on Facebook to keep up with all of our happenings. This summer, we will be providing education on pollinators through the installation of a pollinator garden at our office site located at the USDA Service Center. Thanks to the Elizabeth Schultz Environmental Fund of the Douglas County Community Foundation, we will be planting native and introduced plants that will help provide food and cover for bees, butterflies and other pollinators. Through signage, we hope to provide education on plants and practices that will encourage even a small increase in pollinator numbers. Invest your time in learning more about conservation. Contact Sue Ann Funk, the DCCD Education and Outreach Coordinator at Sue.Funk@ks.nacdnet.net or (785) 843-4260, ext. 1128. Also, check out our website for more information about educational opportunities at www.douglasccd.com area encouraged with nesting boxes placed on water structures. The farmstead at Cedar Ridge has also been cleaned up. Shade trees, a small orchard, and a windbreak are planted around the house, and along with a new wood burning stove, the Pishnys should see decrease heating/cooling expenditures in the next few years.

burning regimen. The quail population has been improved through the planting of over 300 Sandhill plum seedlings for escape cover, removal of tall trees, and burning only one-third of the native prairie each year to provide equal nesting cover, foraging grounds, and loafing areas for the quail. Turkey, deer and coyotes also enjoy the property, and wood ducks

Congratulations 2015 GRASSLAND AWARD The Douglas County Conservation district is proud to announce our 2015 Grassland Award winners, Lyle and Jan Pishny of Stilwell, Kansas. The Pishnys own “Cedar Ridge” property in Eastern Douglas County. The property has been recognized for years in Douglas County for a unique feature. As you travel south on 1061 highway east out of Vinland the property is marked with red granite rocks on each fence post for half a mile. Lyle and Jan have made a tremendous environmental impact on the rangeland. Their “Cedar Ridge” farm, acquired in about 2008, was quickly becoming a victim of mismanagement, no management, noxious weed and brush invasion, erosion, overgrazing, and declining water quality. The Pishnys have implemented several environmentally conscious management

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practices to bring the property back into highly productive rangeland to benefit both livestock and wildlife. Cedar Ridge now comfortably carries 25-35 fall-calving Black Angus cows that are rotationally grazed across the north 160 acres of cool season grass, and through the heat of the summer on 13 acres of native grass that was planted in 2012, along with 40 acres of native prairie which will begin its 3rd year of restoration in 2016. These cattle enjoy the luxury of clean drinking water, courtesy of a concrete, coffin-style drinker below a fenced pond helping to regulate water contamination. In the interest of maintaining proper wildlife habitat, native prairie restoration, and brush control the Pishnys implemented a rotational prescribed

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SOIL &WATER

CONSERVATION

Douglas County Conservation District Conservation Edition

Special advertising focus of the Lawrence Journal-World

DOUGLAS COUNTY SOIL CONSERVATION AWARD Off 1061 Highway between Eudora and Wellsville, Arlen Gabriel lives in a farmhouse built in 1912. Arlen purchased the 123-acre farm where the farmhouse sits in 1990, and reports this is the last of the farmland he owns that needs conservation work installed. With more than 900 acres in two counties, he is no stranger to conservation practices. Arlen runs a three crop, wheat, bean, corn rotation on farm ground primarily comprised of Woodson silt loam. While he knows that wheat farming is not very common in this part of the state and does not necessarily provide the best return on investment, he also knows the three crop rotation is beneficial from a conservation perspective. With 900 acres in row-crops in both Douglas and Johnson County, saving the soil is a priority with Arlen. This is a philosophy handed down from his father, Arthur Gabriel, who started installing some of the first

conservation practices on farms in western Johnson County as far back as 1960. Arlen started conservation work on this farm in 2013 with the installation of grass waterways. After the waterways were seeded and grassed in, he then began installing terraces to funnel water into those waterways. Conservation work can be slow, and timing the work between weather and crop rotations can be difficult. 2015 was a perfect example of the weather not cooperating. The rains this past Spring and Fall delayed some terrace installations, but those terraces that were installed, saved a great deal of soil and reduced a lot or erosion that would have occurred had they not been in place. Conservation is seldom easy, but it is well worth the effort. Arlen stated that you just have to take it one piece of land at the time, and he is grateful for the help and technical assistance provided by the NRCS and the Douglas County Conservation District.

WILDLIFE AWARD As a young man, John McGrew remembers standing on some high ground overlooking a field covered with water during the flood of 1951. He had been invited to go duck hunting over the flooded field by a local farmer and family friend. While standing there that morning, waiting for the ducks to fly in, John thought to himself, someday I would like to own this land. Growing up on the Kansas River gave John a special appreciation for the area. Around 1980 John’s dream came true when he purchased the 220-acre farm in northern Douglas County adjacent to the Kansas River. For most of that time, the farm was row cropped. Eventually John added an irrigation system to help keep the sandy Stonehouse-Eudora loam watered during dry times. With the fields lying low next to the Kansas River, flooding from heavy rains and wet seasons would also create problems in one corner of the field. Unable to predict the weather, John could never be sure if planting the six-acre corner was worth the cost or if rains would flood out the crops or limit their yields. Then in 2013, John received some information from one of the men farming his land about a new program called a farmable wetland CRP. John learned he could take the land

out of production, receive assistance with building a wetland, and receive an annual payment on the acreage no longer in production. Unfortunately, the program was left unfunded in 2013 and 2014 so John was unable to build the wetland and continued planting row crops while hoping for the best. In 2015, John was tired of waiting, so with some assistance from Wildlife Biologist Brad Rueschhoff with the Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks, and Tourism and USFWS Partners for Wildlife Program he started work on the six-acre wetland knowing there would be no annual payment involved. As John thought about his property, he realized that building something for waterfowl and other wildlife had a value beyond what he might receive financially. Doing something good for the environment was its own reward. John completed the wetland in April 2015. He installed wood duck boxes around the perimeter and hopes to have nesting next year. He said that with the warm winter he has not seen the number of waterfowl he had hoped for initially, but believes they will come now that the wetland is established. He enjoys watching the birds, and enjoys walking the area with his dog. And for those of you wondering, John did shoot some ducks that morning more than 60 years ago.

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SOIL &WATER CONSERVATION

Douglas County Conservation District Conservation Edition

Special advertising focus of the Lawrence Journal-World

THE YEAR THAT WAS: THE INTERNATIONAL YEAR OF SOILS JEFFREY A. HELLERICH, RESOURCE SOIL SCIENTIST Many rural Kansans recognize the value and importance of our soil resource, but the same may not be true for those living near urban centers. Although Kansas is a heavily agricultural state, it should be noted that in 2009 over 80 percent of the United States population lived in urban areas, and that number is expected to increase to over 90 percent by 2050. As our civilization becomes more urbanized, we will continue to lose the connection with the agricultural backbone that is responsible for feeding more than seven billion people. Our soil is one of the most significant, and most overlooked, of our natural resources. Nearly everyone is aware of our need for clean air and clean water, but maintaining healthy soils is just as important. Recognizing this information gap, the United Nations adopted a resolution declaring 2015 as the International Year of Soils with the goal to “raise awareness and to promote sustainability of the limited soil resources, using the best available scientific information.” Key messages of the campaign are to educate the public on: • Healthy soils are the basis for healthy food production • Soils are the foundation for vegetation which is cultivated or managed for feed, fiber,

fuel, and medicines • Soils support biodiversity and they host one-fourth of the planet’s biodiversity • Soils play a key role in the carbon cycle • Soils store and filter water, improving our resilience to floods and droughts • Soil is a non-renewable resource; its preservation is essential for food security and a sustainable future Although proclamations like these have the potential to be lost in the shuffle of everyday life, what is impressive about this resolution is the international nature of this effort. Last summer my parents were on a vacation in Europe and during a stop in Rome just a few blocks from

the Colosseum, they saw a giant banner hanging from a multi-story building proclaiming 2015 as the International Year of Soils. Even halfway across the world, people are starting to take notice of the importance of soils to all terrestrial life. Here in Kansas we are incredibly fortunate to be blessed with large areas of abundant and productive soils, but that does not mean we can take this resource for granted. Looking back on 2015 as the International Year of Soils provides a great opportunity to pause and reflect on just how valuable our soils are, and to put effort into management practices that conserve and enhance this vital resource. For more information, visit the Kansas NRCS Web site (www.ks.nrcs.usda.gov) or your local U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Service Center.

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LAWRENCE HIGH GIRLS, BOYS CLAIM VICTORIES. 3C

Sports

C

Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com/sports l Saturday, February 6, 2016

HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL

Tom Keegan tkeegan@ljworld.com

Kansas football recruiting will take some time Sheahon Zenger hired David Beaty in part because he is well-connected in Texas, where he won a high school state championship as a head coach in the Dallas area, worked at Rice and Texas A&M as an assistant and brought with him a reputation as a strong recruiter. So, naturally, Beaty cleaned up on signing day, bringing in A&M-caliber athletes, right? Wrong. It doesn’t work that way. In college football, the school that finishes last picks last for recruits after the winning programs fill their spots. Just two paths to a slow, steady climb up the basement steps exist. The first involves evaluating well when trying to project which high school athletes bypassed by the Texas titans have the potential to develop into Big 12-caliber players. Picking the right football prospects/projects requires knowing which high school coaches tend to oversell their players, which ones tell the truth, warts and all. It requires looking at the physical traits — body shape, limb length, agility, flexibility, raw strength, speed, quickness — and making an educated guess as to a player’s ceiling in each area. The same projection is required pertaining to a teenager’s football intelligence, emotional maturity and mental and physical toughness. The second path involves the staff developing athletes in practice on a daily basis. On that front, this staff appeared up to the task because practices moved along at a crisp pace and were packed with consistent instruction delivered at in-your-face distance, but not in a way as to disgrace. That Beaty’s second recruiting class didn’t crack the top 90 comes as no surprise. For one thing, by taking transfers that counted against the Class of 2016, 17 scholarships, not 25, were available. Plus, opposing coaches had at their disposal negative recruiting grist galore. An 0-12 record doesn’t excite anybody. And then there is the perception that Kansas is a basketball school, a tough rap to beat when every one of the other

In the clutch

FSHS boys slip past Northwest in overtime

By Benton Smith basmith@ljworld.com

Sam Goodwin/Special to the Journal-World

FREE STATE’S CHRISION WILBURN (10) LAUNCHES A SHOT AGAINST Shawnee Mission Northwest on Friday night at FSHS. The Firebirds won, 59-58, in overtime.

Free State High’s boys basketball team hadn’t trailed since the opening minutes Friday night against Shawnee Mission Northwest. But when Cougars senior guard Ferdinand Handy guided his team to a late-game surge, the Firebirds had to fall back on their crunch-time experience. After Handy’s third threepointer of the fourth quarter tied the game at 50 with more than a minute left in regulation, some hustle plays and free throws gave FSHS just enough to prevail, 59-58, in overtime at FSHS. The Firebirds took the lead for good in the final minute of the extra period, when senior forward Chrision Wilburn chased down a loose ball and made two free throws with 46 seconds left. And although SMNW senior guard Dylan Dirks drilled a three-pointer in the closing seconds of OT, it wasn’t enough to extend the game, because Free State senior Kristian Rawls (1-for-2 at the free-throw line in overtime) and junior Jay Dineen (2-for-2) had padded the lead in the final 30 seconds. “Jay hit some big free throws down the stretch to (extend) the lead,” FSHS coach Sam Stroh said of Dineen’s successful trip with 11.2 seconds remaining, putting the home team up four, “and we got a couple stops Please see FSHS BOYS, page 3C

Jayhawks remember nightmare at TCU By Gary Bedore gbedore@ljworld.com

Fort Worth, Texas — Jamari Traylor remembers the fateful day Kansas University’s basketball team temporarily forgot how to put the ball in the basket. Back on Feb. 6, 2013, during the 6-foot-8 forward’s freshman season, the Jayhawks managed to score a mere two points the first 12 minutes, six points the Please see KEEGAN, page 4C initial 16 minutes and 13 the

(entire) first half of a 62-55 loss to a TCU team that entered not only as an 18-point underdog, but 0-8 in the Big 12 and 9-12 overall. “I was thinking, ‘Oh, man. We are in a hole right now,’’’ senior forward Traylor said of his thoughts with KU down, 22-13, at halftime in the Horned Frogs’ DanielMeyer Coliseum. “At the time, I still thought we were going to win the game. I didn’t think we were going to lose, but

we did. That was a bad point in time for us. We had lost two in a row (actually the previous game to Oklahoma State) or three in a row, something crazy. We had to turn it around, and we did that year. We won it that year,” Traylor added of the league title. An 18-4, 6-3 KU team today returns to the same building — now referred to as 8,500-seat Schollmaier Arena — to face a TCU team (10-12, 1-8) that, as it

did in February of 2013, resides in the cellar of the Big 12 Conference. This time, the Jayhawks, who beat TCU, 70-63, on Jan. 16 in Allen Fieldhouse, say they are taking nothing for granted entering today’s 11 a.m. tipoff. “We haven’t been good on the road this year (1-3 in league). We’ve got to play better on the road than we have been,” Traylor said. “I

UP NEXT

Who: Kansas (18-4, 6-3) vs. TCU (1012, 1-8) When: 11 a.m. today Where: Fort Worth, Texas TV: ESPN (WOW! channels 33, Please see HOOPS, page 4C 233)

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Sports 2

2C | LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD | SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2016

AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE

COMING SUNDAY

TWO-DAY NORTH

EAST • Coverage of the Kansas-TCU men’s basketball game • A report on the Kansas-Baylor women’s basketball game

SPORTS CALENDAR

KANSAS UNIVERSITY

TODAY • Men’s basketball at TCU, 11 a.m. • Women’s basketball at Baylor, 2 p.m. • Women’s tennis vs. North Texas, NORTH 1 p.m. • Track at Husker Invitational • Swimming at Iowa St., 6 p.m. SUNDAY • Tennis vs. Colorado, noon

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AREA HIGH SCHOOL ROUNDUP

Eudora boys hammer Louisburg

EAST

FREE STATE HIGH TODAY WEST

SOUTH AL EAST

Spring Hill 50, De Soto 48 Spring Hill — Isaac Albert had 13 points and Noah Wilson 11 in a losing cause for De Soto. De Soto 6 9 11 22 — 48 Spring Hill 11 5 16 18 — 50 De Soto — Isaac Albert 13, Noah Wilson 11, Jackson Reynolds 9, Cooper Hancock 8, Alex Wilcox 5, Jacob Jennings 2. Spring Hill — Hughes 23, Heinrich 7, Ewing 7, Powell 5, Hodge 4, Burrell 3, Feeback 1.

Girls Louisburg 27, Eudora 25 Louisburg — LeAnne Anderson, Chloe Jo Fewins and Elana Howe scored five points apiece to lead Eudora. The Cardinals will host Baldwin on Tuesday. Eudora 2 8 8 7 — 25 Louisburg 4 8 11 5 — 27 Eudora — Corrinne Yoder-Mulkey 1, LeAnne Anderson 5, Chloe Jo Fewins 5, Sadie Pitman 4, Liz Kendall 4, Catherine Grosdidier 2, Elana Howe 5. Louisburg — C. Buffington 5, Lamke 2, Holtzen 2, Simpson 8, P. Buffington 7, Overbay 4.

Baldwin 59, Paola 51, OT Baldwin City — Madeline Neufeld had 25 points, and Kyna Smith scored 20 to lead Baldwin. The Bulldogs (12-2) will play Monday at Topeka Hayden. Paola 12 8 12 16 3 — 51 Baldwin 17 16 11 4 11 — 59 Paola — Taylor Williams 3, Lechner 10, Morgan 20, Skylar Williams 1, Laudan 8, Karr 9. Baldwin — Fayth Peterson 2, Abby Ogle 6, Taylor Cawley 4, Kyna Smith 20, Madeline Neufeld 25, Lily Fursman 2.

Spring Hill 57, De Soto 39 Spring Hill — A four-point second quarter doomed De Soto against Spring Hill. De Soto 10 4 14 11 — 39 Spring Hill 13 14 10 20 — 57 De Soto — Grizzle 10, Johnson 10, Saucerman 9, Jones 5, Beal 3, Plake 2. Spring Hill — Delker 15, Goff 11, Williams 10, Waddle 7, Jones 6, Hoffman 4, Lovefinsky 2, Leaton 2.

Three Firebirds top qualifiers at league swims J-W Staff Reports

Olathe — Free State High’s Jordan Portela, Evan Yoder and Evan Eskilson each led qualifying in two individual events during the first day of the two-day Sunflower League swimming and diving meet on Friday at California Trail Middle School. Portela led qualifying in the 200 free (1:45.80) and 100 free (47.76); Yoder was top qualifier in the 200 IM (2:00.59) and 100 breast (1:00.96); and Eskilson led qualifying in the 100 fly (53.93) and 100 back (53.83). Free State also had the fastest 200 medley and 400 freestyle relay teams. Lawrence High’s top qualifiers were Stephen Johnson (second in the 200 free in 1:45.83 and third in the 500 free, 4:53.95) and Alex Heckman, who was third in the 100 free (49.09) and fifth in the 100 back, 58.17. The final round of league will be today.

HIGH SCHOOLS HUB:

TAMPA BAY RAYS

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LAWRENCE HIGH WEST TODAY

SOUTH

Boys

Eudora 14 30 11 11 — 66 Louisburg 8 8 7 7 — 30 Eudora — Grant Elston 9, Ben Van Diest 2, Jordan Vaughn 4, David Hornberger 2, Brian Tolefree 12, Austin Downing 14, Ryan Verbanic 3, Jomain Rouser 2, Mason Fawcett 5, Hayden Brown 2, Avery Rouser 4, Jacob Pearson 2. Louisburg — Geirman 1, Welsh 4, Hill 5, Dunn 4, Harding 8, Riberrdy 2, Dover 6.

NEW YORK YANKEES

AL CENTRAL

J-W Staff Reports

Eudora 66, Louisburg 30 Louisburg — Austin Downing had 14 points, and 12 Eudora players scored in the Cardinals’ high school boys basketball victory over Louisburg on Friday night.

BOSTON RED SOX

BALTIMORE ORIOLES

• Boys swimming at Sunflower League, Olathe California Trail Middle School, 1 p.m. • Wrestling at Silver Lake Invitational, 9:30 a.m.

CHICAGO WHITE SOX

AL EAST

DETROIT TIGERS

CLEVELAND INDIANS

AL WEST

BALTIMORE ORIOLES

AL CENTRAL

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LOS ANGELES ANGELS OF ANAHEIM

OAKLAND ATHLETICS NEW YORK YANKEES

SEATTLE MARINERS

• Boys swimming at Sunflower League, Olathe California Trail Middle School, 1 p.m. KANSAS CITY ROYALS

MINNESOTA TWINS

VERITAS CHRISTIAN

TAMPA BAY RAYS

TORONTO BLUE JAYS TEXAS RANGERS

TODAY These logos are provided to you for use in an editorial news context only. MLB AL LOGOS 032712: 2012 American Other uses, including as a linking device on a Web site, or in an Timothy D. Easley/AP Photo League team logos; stand-alone; various • Girls/boys basketball vs. advertising or promotional piece, may violate this entity’s trademark or sizes; staff; ETA 4 p.m. AFC TEAM LOGOS 081312: Helmet and team logos for the AFC teams; various sizes; stand-alone; staff; ETA other intellectual property rights, and 5 mayp.m. violate your agreement with AP. Northland Christian, 4 p.m. FROM LEFT, LOUISVILLE PLAYERS RAY SPALDING, QUENTIN SNIDER, ANAS MAHMOUD AND JAY

HENDERSON listen to teammates Damion Lee and Trey Lewis during a news conference Friday in WESTa one-year postseason ban for the Louisville, Ky. The university president announced earlier in theALday Cardinals men’s basketball team amid ongoing investigations into a sex scandal. CHICAGO WHITE SOX

CLEVELAND INDIANS

DETROIT TIGERS

Louisville announces self-imposed postseason ban

KANSAS CITY ROYALS

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NFL Favorite.............. Points (O/U)........... Underdog Sunday These logos are provided to you for use in an editorial news context only. Super Bowl 50 MLB AL LOGOS 032712: 2012 American Other uses, including as a linking device on a Web site, or in an League team logos; stand-alone; various Louisville , Ky. — The president of Loufor a tournament berth they had not won thepiece, advertising or promotional may violate this entity’s trademark or sizes; staff; ETAif 4 p.m. Levi’s Stadium-Santa Clara, CA. AFC TEAM LOGOS 081312: Helmet and team logos for the AFC teams; various sizes; stand-alone; staff; ETA other intellectual property rights, and 5 mayp.m. violate your agreement with AP. isville announced a one-year postseason ban league title. Carolina........................... 51⁄2 (45)........................... Denver NBA Friday for the Cardinals men’s basketball team The 63-year-old Pitino has denied knowledge Favorite.............. Points (O/U)........... Underdog amid ongoing investigations into a sex scandal, of allegations in a book by Katina Powell that HOUSTON..........................5 (217).......................... Portland a decision that stunned coach Rick Pitino. former director of men’s basketball operations CHARLOTTE................. 41⁄2 (209.5)...............Washington President James Ramsey said at a news Andre McGee paid $10,000 for 22 shows INDIANA.........................31⁄2 (204.5).........................Detroit conference that an investigation revealed performed by her and other strippers, including CLEVELAND......................10 (211)..................New Orleans PHILADELPHIA.................2 (203).........................Brooklyn violations did occur when the school reviewed three of her daughters. MEMPHIS......................... 6 (193.5)..............................Dallas allegations by an escort that a former Louisville Powell’s allegations in her tell-all book x-Chicago.......................OFF (OFF)................. MINNESOTA staffer paid her and other dancers to strip and rocked the Louisville community and led to four SAN ANTONIO................. 15 (201).......................LA Lakers have sex with recruits and players. separate investigations into Pitino’s program. Utah....................................6 (192)..........................PHOENIX Ramsey said the ban is for all postseason GOLDEN ST.....................81⁄2 (231)............ Oklahoma City GOLF tournaments, including the NCAA and the x-Chicago Forward P. Gasol is questionable. COLLEGE BASKETBALL Atlantic Coast Conference tournaments. The Favorite................... Points................ Underdog president said he received the latest results of Temple..................................41⁄2......... CENTRAL FLORIDA Scottsdale, Ariz. — James Hahn shot a the investigation on Thursday, but noted the VA COMMONWEALTH.......81⁄2......George Washington bogey-free 6-under 65 on Friday to take the review of the allegations is continuing. Virginia....................................1.........................PITTSBURGH “We found out yesterday that we had a prob- lead in the suspended second round of the Florida St............................... 3.....................WAKE FOREST Kansas.........................12.............................TCU lem,” said athletic director Tom Jurich, adding Waste Management Phoenix Open. LOUISVILLE............................21..................Boston College Hahn had a 10-under 132 total on TPC Scottthat university wanted to deal with the findings Cincinnati............................31⁄2. .......................... MEMPHIS sdale’s Stadium Course to enter the weekend a as quickly as possible. XAVIER....................................13............................Marquette stroke ahead of Rickie Fowler and Danny Lee. While it is unclear if Louisville will impleEVANSVILLE..........................13..........................Missouri St Fowler birdied his final hole for a 68, and Lee ment additional self-imposed penalties if its DUQUESNE............................. 2..............................Davidson Oakland.................................. 8................... CLEVELAND ST had a 66. investigation uncovers more violations, the DUKE..................................... 101⁄2............................NC State An estimated 160,415 fans, not counting a NCAA could hit the men’s program with more St. Joseph’s.......................... 7.............................FORDHAM large bobcat that sauntered between the first sanctions. TEXAS.......................... 9..................Texas Tech Pitino was not consulted about the decision, and second holes in the afternoon, packed the Iowa St......................... 5.............OKLAHOMA ST grounds. The crowd broke the Friday record of but the coach said he was “a soldier in this NEBRASKA...........................171⁄2..............................Rutgers 123,674 set in 2014 and was the 10th-largest army, and I do what the generals say.” Marshall................................. 11....... TEXAS SAN ANTONIO OHIO.......................................41⁄2.............Northern Illinois figure for any day in tournament history. That does not mean he agreed with the BALL ST.................................. 5.............Western Michigan Hahn is right at home at golf biggest party, move. Michigan St.........................31⁄2. .........................MICHIGAN “This is a punishment I never thought would becoming an internet sensation as a rookie in Northern Iowa..................... 7................................... DRAKE 2013 when he celebrated a birdie on the par-3 have happened this season,” said Pitino, who CREIGHTON............................ 11...................................DePaul 16th with a “Gangnam Style” dance. He won also attended the news conference with Boise St..................................12............................AIR FORCE GEORGIA ST............................1........................UT Arlington last year at Riviera for his first tour title. Ramsey, Jurich and former NCAA investigator WILLIAM & MARY.................15.............................Delaware Former Kansas University golfer Gary Chuck Smrt. “This is as harsh as anything I’ve Villanova................................ 5........................PROVIDENCE Woodland is tied for 21st, seven strokes back ever seen in college basketball.” ALABAMA............................ 101⁄2.............................Missouri of the leaders. He shot a 1-over 72 Friday to The Cardinals (18-4, 7-2 ACC) are currently MIAMI-OHIO............................1.................... Bowling Green give him a two-day total of 139, which is 3-unranked No. 19 and scheduled to play Boston SAN DIEGO ST.....................61⁄2......................New Mexico der on the 7,266-yard, par-71 course. College today. They would have been a lock TEXAS A&M............................ 8...................South Carolina CALIFORNIA......................... 71⁄2. ...........................Stanford KENTUCKY........................... 71⁄2. ...............................Florida Valparaiso............................ 23............ILLINOIS CHICAGO BYU....................................... 161⁄2................................Pacific COLL OF CHARLESTON...... 8....................................Drexel MARYLAND............................ 5..................................Purdue Clemson................................. 2....................VIRGINIA TECH TEXAS TCU v. Oklahoma 2 p.m. FCSC 145 KU v. TCU replay 6 a.m. TWCSC 37, 226 Louisiana Tech.................... 6.....................NORTH TODAY COLORADO ST.....................21⁄2. ..............................Nevada Kansas v. Baylor 2 p.m. FSN+ 172 KU v. TCU replay 9 a.m. TWCSC 37, 226 Butler...................................... 11...........................ST. JOHN’S College Basketball Time Net Cable KU v. Baylor replay 7 p.m. FCSC 145 KU v. TCU replay noon TWCSC 37, 226 Arizona................................... 4......................WASHINGTON Boston Coll. v. Louisville 11 a.m. KSMO 3, 203 UTEP........................................ 3............Western Kentucky St. Louis v. St. Bona. 1 p.m. NBCSP 38, 238 GEORGIA.............................. 101⁄2...............................Auburn Kansas v. TCU 11 a.m. ESPN 33, 233 Pro Basketball Time Net Cable Iowa v. Illinois noon BTN 147,237 LSU........................................... 9..................... Mississippi St Cincinnati v. Memphis 11 a.m. ESPN2 34, 234 Okla. City v. Golden St. 8 p.m. ESPN 33, 233 Utah v. Oregon 3 p.m. ESPN2 34, 234 WYOMING................................1...................................Utah St Temple v. Cent. Fla. 11 a.m. ESPNU 35, 235 ELON........................................ 3.................................Towson Golf Time Net Cable KU v. TCU replay 4 p.m. TWCSC 37, 226 Dayton................................. 101⁄2..............GEORGE MASON Mo. St. v. Evansville 11 a.m. FSN 36, 236 RICHMOND.............................10..................Massachusetts Marquette v. Xavier 11 a.m. FS1 150,227 Dubai Desert Classic 3 a.m. Golf 156,289 Oklahoma..................... 5..................KANSAS ST Phoenix Open noon Golf 156,289 Women’s Basketball Time Net Cable Fla. St. v. Wake Forest 11 a.m. FSN+ 127 LOYOLA MARYMOUNT......21⁄2. ........................... Portland Arizona St............................. 3................WASHINGTON ST LSU v. Kentucky 11 a.m. SEC 157 Davidson v. Duquesne 11:30a.m. NBCSP 38,238 Phoenix Open 2p.m. NBC 14, 214 MIDDLE TENN ST..................10..........................Florida Intl Mich. St. v. Michigan 1 p.m. CBS 5, 13, St. John’s v. Seton Hall 12:30p.m. FS1 150,227 ARKANSAS LR.................... 151⁄2...............South Alabama 205,213 N. Dame v. Louisville 1 p.m. ESPN2 34, 234 North Carolina...................21⁄2. ...................NOTRE DAME Pro Hockey Time Net Cable N.C. St. v. Duke 1 p.m. ESPN 33, 233 Texas Tech v. Okla. St. 1 p.m. FSN 36, 236 Old Dominion........................1......................CHARLOTTE U Unlv.......................................... 2...........................FRESNO ST Iowa St. v. Okla. St. 1 p.m. ESPN2 34, 234 Minnesota v. St. Louis 7 p.m. FSN 36, 236 Auburn v. Alabama 1 p.m. SEC 157 KENT ST.................................11⁄2.................................Toledo Rutgers v. Nebraska 1 p.m. ESPNU 34, 234 Mo. St. v. Dreka 2 p.m. TWCSC 37, 226 Indiana St............................121⁄2............................BRADLEY Time Net Cable ARKANSAS...........................61⁄2........................Tennessee DePaul v. Creighton 1 p.m. FSN 36, 236 Soccer Minnesota v. N’western 2 p.m. BTN 147 Vanderbilt...........................31⁄2. ..................... MISSISSIPPI Delaware v. Wm. & Mary 1:30p.m. NBCSP 38,238 Man. City v. Leic. City 6:40a.m. NBCSP 38,238 N.C. St. v. Wake Forest 2 p.m. FSN+ 172 SOUTHERN ILLINOIS.........81⁄2...............Loyola Chicago Villanova v. Providence 1:30p.m. FS1 150,227 Tottenham v. Watford 8:55a.m. NBCSP 38,238 Tenn. v. Texas A&M 3 p.m. ESPN 33, 233 RICE........................................ 71⁄2. ................Southern Miss B.-Lev. v. B. Munich 11:30a.m. Fox 4, 204 ALA-BIRMINGHAM...............14.................Florida Atlantic Weber St. v. N. Dakota 2 p.m. FCS 146 y-LA SALLE..........................OFF.................... Rhode Island S’hampton v. West Ham 11:30a.m. NBC 14, 214 KU v. Baylor replay 10p.m. FCSC 145 Florida v. Kentucky 3 p.m. CBS 5, 13, WEST VIRGINIA............ 7......................... Baylor 205,213 Indiana.................................... 8................................PENN ST Time Net Cable Time Net Cable Pro Basketball Purdue v. Maryland 3 p.m. ESPN 33, 233 Gymnastics ARKANSAS ST....................... 7........................................Troy 1 p.m. ABC 9, 209 OREGON ST..........................21⁄2. .......................... Colorado 11 a.m. BTN 147,237 Clippers v.Miami Stanford v. California 3 p.m. ESPN2 4, 234 Nebraska v. Iowa SETON HALL.......................... 5........................Georgetown S. Carolina v. Texas A&M 3 p.m. ESPNU 35, 235 Nebraska v. Oklahoma 5 p.m. FCSC 145 Saint Mary’s, CA................131⁄2........................SAN DIEGO Golf Time Net Cable Arizona v.Washington 3:30p.m. Fox 4, 204 Hawaii...................................41⁄2................. CAL POLY SLO Butler v. St. John’s 3:30p.m. FSN 36, 236 Women’s Hockey Time Net Cable Dubai Desert Classic 2:30a.m. Golf 156,289 CAL RIVERSIDE..................... 6...............................UC Davis CAL SANTA BARBARA........ 11........................CS Fullerton Auburn v. Georgia 4:30p.m. SEC 157 Syracuse v. Penn St. 1:30p.m. BTN 147,237 Phoenix Open noon Golf 156,289 Wichita St............................121⁄2.......................ILLINOIS ST Miss. St. v. LSU 5 p.m. ESPN2 34, 234 Phoenix Open 2 p.m. NBC 14, 214 LONG BEACH ST.................121⁄2.................CS Northridge Okla. St. v. Kanasas St. 5 p.m. ESPNU 35, 235 College Hockey SAN FRANCISCO.................31⁄2. ..................... Santa Clara Time Net Cable Gonzaga................................. 6........................PEPPERDINE N. Carolina v. Not. Dame 6 p.m. ESPN 33, 233 Michigan v. Mich. St. 4 p.m. BTN 147,237 Pro Hockey Time Net Cable y-Rhode Island Guard J. Garrett is doubtful. Baylor v. W.Va. 7 p.m. ESPN2 34, 234 NHL UConn v. Merrimack 6 p.m. FCSA 144 Phila. v. Washington 11:30a.m. NBC 14, 214 Vanderbilt v. Miss. 7 p.m. ESPNU 35, 235 Favorite............... Goals (O/U)........... Underdog Indiana v. Penn St. 7 p.m. BTN 147,237 Washington................. Even-1⁄2 (5)..............NEW JERSEY Skiing Time Net Cable NY Rangers................. Even-1⁄2 (5)..........PHILADELPHIA Soccer Time Net Cable Tennessee v. Arkansas 7 p.m. SEC 157 DETROIT........................ Even-1⁄2 (5)............. NY Islanders FIS World Cup 9 p.m. NBCSP 38,238 Utah Valley v. N.M. St. 8 p.m. FCS 146 Bourne. v. Arsenal 7:25a.m. NBCSP 38, 238 MONTREAL..................Even-1⁄2 (5.5)................Edmonton UMKC v. Seattle 9 p.m. KSMO 3, 203 Hamburg v. Cologne 8:30a.m. FS1 150,227 BOSTON.............................1⁄2-1 (5)............................Buffalo SUNDAY FLORIDA........................ Even-1⁄2 (5)................. Pittsburgh Wichita St. v. Illinois St. 9 p.m. ESPN2 34, 234 OTTAWA.......................Even-1⁄2 (5.5).................... Toronto Super Bowl Time Net Cable Hawaii v. Cal Poly 9 p.m. ESPNU 35, 235 DALLAS........................Even-1⁄2 (5.5).....................Chicago Bowling Time Net Cable 5:30p.m. CBS 5, 13, Gonzaga v. Pepperdine 11 p.m. ESPN2 34, 234 Denver v. Carolina NASHVILLE.................. Even-1⁄2 (5).................... San Jose 205,213 Tourn. of Champions 11 a.m. ESPN 33, 233 ST. LOUIS...................... Even-1⁄2 (5)..................Minnesota COLORADO..................Even-1⁄2 (5.5)..................Winnipeg Women’s Basketball Time Net Cable VANCOUVER................ Even-1⁄2 (5)....................... Calgary Baseball Time Net Cable College Basketball Time Net Cable Texas v. Iowa St. 1:30p.m. FS2 153 Home Team in CAPS UTEP v. W. Ky. 2 p.m. FCSA 144 KU v. TCU replay 3 a.m. TWCSC 37, 226 Caribbean World Series 1:30p.m. ESPNN 140,231 (c) TRIBUNE CONTENT AGENCY, LLC

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HIGH SCHOOL HOOPS

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Saturday, February 6, 2016

| 3C

LHS boys scrap past SMS By Bobby Nightengale bnightengale@ljworld.com

John Young/Journal-World Photo

LAWRENCE HIGH SENIOR PRICE MORGAN (11) TAKES THE BALL TO THE RIM after getting by Shawnee Mission South defender Yor Anei during the Lions’ 49-42 victory Friday at LHS.

Lawrence High senior Price Morgan went straight to the school’s training room after Friday’s 49-42 victory against Shawnee Mission South to get taped up — the result of a physical and grinding boys basketball game in the Jungle. “I’ve felt worse,” Morgan said with a wide smile. Winning always helps, and Morgan was the key for the Lions, who were playing their second straight game without senior point guard Justin Roberts. Morgan scored 14 points in the fourth quarter and marked his territory in the paint. A 6-foot-4 linebacker headed to Air Force, Morgan enjoys the physical-

Free State girls stifled By Benton Smith basmith@ljworld.com

Two of the Sunflower League’s best girls basketball players squared off Friday night at Free State High, and when the final buzzer sounded, Shawnee Mission Northwest senior forward Brenni Rose left the court smiling. FSHS junior Madison Piper, on the other hand, exited in frustration, following a 33-29 defeat at the hands of SMNW. The Firebirds’ leading scorer, Piper hit a floater in the first quarter and a jumper in the second, but couldn’t get another field goal to fall through the net on her 2-for-9 night. The Cougars, ranked No. 3 in Class 6A, never let Piper get open for more than a second or two, and when they did, they recovered defensively to make sure she could neither find her comfort level nor see the basket well enough to rise and fire. “We just had a hard time getting her open, inside or out,” FSHS coach Bryan Duncan said, “and they did a pretty good job on defense.” SMNW (12-2) limited Free State (10-4) to 7-for25 shooting in the final three quarters by taking away Piper, who finished with five points and seven rebounds. “I think they’re just a better team,” Duncan said. “They’re long. They face-guarded her, but everybody else was pretty good, too. I don’t think they did anything different than what we’ve seen

Sam Goodwin/Special to the Journal-World

FREE STATE FORWARD HANNAH WALTER (CENTER, POINTING) SHOUTS TO HER TEAMMATES during the Firebirds’ 33-29 loss to Shawnee Mission Northwest on Friday at FSHS. all year. They just did it a lot better.” The Firebirds, ranked No. 7 in 6A, made Rose work, but the 6-foot senior often outmaneuvered her defender with cross-over dribbles and spin moves, allowing her to get to the paint for baskets and assists. Rose scored a gamehigh 17 points on 5-for-12 shooting and made six of her seven free throws on a night the entire FSHS team went 1-for-7 at the foul line. The Firebirds played well enough in the first quarter to get out to a 12-4 lead, thanks to timely three-pointers from Caiti Schlesener (eight points) and Jaelyn Two Hearts (10 points off the bench), who hit her bomb from the corner in the waning seconds of the period. FSHS also stymied the Cougars’ offense early, limiting the visitors to 1-for-11 shooting in the first eight minutes. How-

ever, SMNW controlled the game for the majority of the final three quarters, seemingly flipping a switch after a dismal start. “We knew they’d be coming back,” Duncan said, adding the Firebirds also expected both teams to scrap on defense — both shot 12-for-35 from the field. “We really thought the first team to 40 would win. It turned out the first team to 30 won.” SM NORTHWEST (33) Shelbie McLain 0-4 0-0 0, Emmalee Rose 1-7 0-0 2, Jordann Nachbar 3-5 0-0 6, Danielle Rehor 1-3 0-1 3, Brenni Rose 5-12 6-7 17, Melissa Schmidt 1-2 0-0 2, Gena Ojeda 0-0 0-0 0, Carson Vielhauer 1-1 0-0 3, Hannah Black 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 12-35 6-8 33. FREE STATE (29) Cameryn Thomas 2-10 0-0 4, Caiti Schlesener 3-5 0-3 8, Madison Piper 2-9 1-2 5, Hannah Walter 0-2 0-0 0, Peyton Brown 1-2 0-0 2, Jaelyn Two Hearts 4-6 0-0 10, Jaycie Bishop 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 12-35 1-7 29. SMNW 4 12 12 5 — 33 Free State 12 4 6 7 — 29 Three-point goals: SMNW 3-11 (B. Rose, Rehor, Vielhauer); FSHS 4-12 (Two Hearts 2, Schlesener 2). Turnovers: SMNW 9; FSHS 10.

CITY BASKETBALL Veritas girls fall to WAHAA Eudora — Tori Huslig had 13 points and Chloe Holland added 12, but Veritas Christian School fell to Wichita Home School, 38-35, in high school girls basketball Friday night at the Eudora Community Center. The Eagles (10-10) will meet Northland Christian at 6 p.m. today in Eudora. WAHAA 10 10 11 7 — 38 Veritas 13 4 11 7 — 35 WAHAA — F. Schwemmer 11, Zimmerman 2, Cole 3, Collins 6, Warner 2, S. Schwemmer 12. Veritas — Titi Shephard 2, Delaney Shelton, 4, Ashley Stieben 4, Allison Tichenor 2, Chloe Holland 12, Tori Huslig 13.

Veritas boys nab narrow win

the Eudora Community Center. Miles Dressler led the Eagles with 16 points, and Stieben scored 11. “The kids play hard,” Veritas coach Carl Huslig said. “As a coach, you can’t ask for more than that.” The Eagles (13-2) will meet Northland Christian at 4 p.m. today in Eudora. WAHAA 21 8 7 9 — 45 Veritas 16 5 14 12 — 47 WAHAA — Luke Lallement 5, T.J. Masterson 3, Grant Mellinger 10, Josh Paul 10, Isaac McClure 15, Judah Townsend 2. Veritas — Weston Flory 4, Trey Huslig 5, Chad Stieben 11, Miles Dressler 16, Michael Rask 4, Mark Weinhold 7.

Ottawa girls roll over Seabury

Ottawa broke open a close game in the second quarter and handily Eudora — Chad Stieben defeated Bishop Seabury hit two free throws with 56-24 in girls basketball .7 seconds remaining, and action Friday night at Veritas Christian defeated Seabury. Wichita Home School, Ottawa led 12-9 after 47-45, in high school boys the first quarter but used basketball Friday night at a 20-5 burst in the second

quarter to take control of the game. Senior Regan Zaremba had 20 of Seabury’s 24 points. Seabury (5-8) plays host to Veritas next Friday. Ottawa 12 20 12 12 — 56 Seabury 9 5 6 4 — 24 Ottawa — White 13, Ferguson 17, Devore 3, Jung 3, Shaffer 18, Wray 2.. Seabury — Celia Taylor-Puckett 4, Regan Zaremba 20.

Seabury boys fall to Ottawa Zach McDermott scored 29 points, but Bishop Seabury Academy fell to Ottawa, 71-62, in high school boys basketball Friday night at Seabury. Bansi King added 13 points, and Thomas DiZerega scored 10 for the Seahawks (11-2). Seabury will host Metro Academy on Tuesday. Ottawa 14 17 22 18 — 71 Seabury 13 16 15 18 — 62 Seabury — Zach McDermott 29, Thomas DiZerega 10, Max Easter 3, Thomas Uhler 4, Bansi King 13, Austin Gaumer 3.

ity. When he wasn’t trying to post up on offense, he was diving across the hardwood for loose balls or fighting for rebounds. “Once you get a little momentum going, everybody just starts to feed off of it, even yourself,” said Morgan, who had a team-high 21 points and 11 rebounds. The tide finally turned at the end of the third quarter when LHS junior forward Kobe Buffalomeat grabbed a rebound and passed it ahead to senior Anthony Harvey, who went to the rim for a buzzer-beating layup. After Morgan took a charge on SM South’s first possession of the fourth quarter, Harvey drilled a triple — the team’s only three-pointer in 14 attempts. Harvey’s three gave the top-ranked

team in Class 6A its first lead since early in the first quarter. SM South (7-7 overall, 2-3 in Sunflower League) answered Harvey’s threepointer with a layup, but Morgan elicited from the crowd a full-pitched roar with a layup-and-thefoul bucket. That started a stretch of nine straight LHS points by Morgan. Facing a 2-3 zone for most of the night, the Lions (13-1, 5-0) struggled to make any shots from the outside. Awaiting inside of the three-point line were SM South forwards AJ Webster and Yor Anei. The 6-9 sophomore Anei blocked five shots, and the 6-8 Webster added three blocks. “Those guys had five or six inches on him, it felt like, but he’s quick, and he anticipates pretty

well,” LHS coach Mike Lewis said of Morgan. “And he just fights, so you better be ready to battle when you’re playing against him.” Despite problems shooting the ball, the Lions stayed strong defensively. The Raiders shot 1-of-17 from behind the threepoint line. SMS senior point guard CJ Hill scored a game-high 22 points on 7-for-20 shooting. SM SOUTH (42) AJ Webster 4-6 1-1 9, Bailey Obersteadt 1-4 0-0 2, Sam King 0-2 0-0 0, Brady Anderson 1-13 0-0 2, CJ Hill 7-20 7-7 22, Yor Anei 3-8 0-0 6, Dom Esparrago 0-0 1-2 1. Totals 16-53 9-10 42. LAWRENCE (49) Braden Solko 0-2 0-0 0, Price Morgan 7-14 7-10 21, Fred Brou 3-7 5-9 11, Anthony Harvey 4-11 2-2 11, Jackson Mallory 2-10 2-2 6, Noah Butler 0-6 0-4 0, Kobe Buffalomeat 0-1 0-0 0, Austin Miller 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 16-52 16-27 49. SM South 13 6 7 16 — 42 Lawrence 6 11 8 24 — 49 Three-point goals: SM South 1-17 (Hill); Lawrence 1-14 (Harvey). Fouled out: Morgan. Turnovers: SM South 18, Lawrence 11.

FSHS boys CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C

and just got out with a win. We’ve got to get better.” Four third-quarter turnovers and five more in the fourth contributed to the Cougars’ comeback, and Stroh characterized Free State’s decision-making as “interesting” at times in the second half. But the Firebirds (11-2) have reached a point where they know how to win these types of games. This marked their third overtime victory of the season, and they’ve defeated three other opponents by five or fewer points. Said Wilburn: “Some games we don’t play hard enough for 32 minutes. But we start fighting harder the last couple of minutes, try to get the win.” Added Stroh: “We like playing extra minutes, I guess. I don’t know. I’m not happy. I know the guys weren’t satisfied.” Senior Hunter Gudde scored both of Free State’s OT field goals on drives to the paint, and led the team with 14 points. Those baskets helped offset layups from the Cougars’ Jamey Fisher and Handy (23 points) in four minutes of extra time. Soon after, Dineen kept a FSHS possession alive by diving on the floor for a loose ball, causing a tie-up. Wilburn fed off that energy on defense less than 30 seconds later, when the 6-foot-3 forward out-hustled everyone else on the court for a steal. “I was mostly trying to go get the two points, try to get the and-one, get the game going,” Wilburn said of his mid-chase strategy. Although he had missed two free throws 30 seconds earlier, Wilburn made two on his second OT trip to the foul line. “I just kind of put it out of my head, took a deep breath,” Wilburn said, “just went through my flow to try and make free throws.” Gudde only scored one field goal in the first three quarters, but had seven points in the fourth quarter and overtime, after SMNW made a 9-0 run to close the third and make the Firebirds sweat. SM NORTHWEST (58) Ferdinand Handy 9-16 0-0 23, Jamey Fisher 3-6 0-0 6, Austin Sanders 2-3 2-4 7, Jalen LyDay 3-7 0-1 6, Dylan Dirks 3-10 2-4 9, Noah Kendall 0-1 1-2 1, Zach Smith 1-1 1-2 4, Christian Ghilardi 0-1 0-0 0, Manik Kapoor 1-1 0-0 2, Joe Specht 0-0 0-0 0, Jaylen Love 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 22-47 6-12 58. FREE STATE (59) Kristian Rawls 1-2 5-6 7, Chrision Wilburn 0-2 2-4 2, Sloan Thomsen 2-5 0-1 6, Jacob Pavlyak 5-6 3-5 13, Hunter Gudde 4-8 6-9 14, Jay Dineen 1-1 3-4 5, Cameron Clark 1-2 0-0 2, Shannon Cordes 2-2 0-0 4, Drew Tochtrop 1-2 1-2 3, Simon McCaffrey 1-3 0-0 3. Totals 18-32 20-32 59. SMNW 8 10 18 14 8 — 58 Free State 12 14 12 12 9 — 59 Three-point goals: SMNW 8-14 (Handy 5, Sanders, Dirks, Smith); FSHS 3-9 (Thomsen 2, McCaffrey). Fouled out: SMNW LyDay. Turnovers: SMNW 14; FSHS 15.

John Young/Journal-World Photo

LAWRENCE HIGH SOPHOMORE TALIMA HARJO (13) LEAPS past Shawnee Mission South sophomore Robyn MacDonald in the Lions’ 63-27 victory on Friday at LHS.

LHS girls roll to 1st league win By Bobby Nightengale bnightengale@ljworld.com

Lawrence High’s girls basketball players believe their third-place finish at the Capital City Classic last week was a turning point in their season. The future looked bright Friday. The Lions played their best game of the season defensively in a 63-27 rout of Shawnee Mission South in the Jungle. The Lions, who picked up their first Sunflower League win, held the Raiders to just two points in the first seven minutes. Afterward, they led by double-digits for the rest of the way. “The first half defense was as good as we’ve played all year,” LHS coach Jeff Dickson said. “We weren’t allowing as many second shots. We weren’t putting them on the free-throw line and bailing them out with reaching and grabbing. People were in help position. I thought we did a better job of boxing out.” The Lions went on a 13-0 run in the first quarter after the Raiders (4-10 overall, 1-4 in Sunflower League) scored on a layup in the first 20 seconds. Sophomore guard E’lease Stafford, who scored a game-high 15 points, highlighted the spurt with a few strong drives to the rim. Sophomore Talima Harjo and junior Olivia Lemus added three-pointers. Freshman guard Hannah Stewart ended the first quarter with a buzzer-beating three-pointer. Stewart, a steady point guard who is becoming a better scorer, finished with 11 points and three assists. “I’ve been struggling

with my shot,” Stewart said. “I finally made one. I just went shot by shot, making sure I’m getting my feet set and relaxing.” The Lions (7-7, 1-4) didn’t do anything fancy defensively, but they pressured the ball and closed out on shooters. When the Raiders did reach the paint, freshman 6-foot-3 center Chisom Ajekwu blocked four shots and affected countless others, holding SM South to 13 percent (8-of63) shooting. Ajekwu completed a double-double with 10 points and 10 rebounds. Harjo added 10 rebounds, and Stafford grabbed nine boards. “I was super proud of our defense,” Stewart said. “We just came out and played with all of the adrenaline. It was really fun.” A young team becoming older and wiser each game, the Lions focused on not letting up after taking a 27-13 lead into halftime. The Lions only allowed three points in the final six minutes of the third quarter. The Lions will travel to SM Northwest at 5:30 p.m. Tuesday. SM SOUTH (27) Elizabeth Holmes 4-10 6-9 15, Karoline Shelton 2-13 2-2 6, Robyn MacDonald 0-10 0-5 0, Madi McAvoy 1-13 0-0 3, Clara Sitas 0-6 1-2 1, Meredith Bunker 0-3 0-0 0, Crimson Barker 0-5 0-0 0, Gabi Green 0-0 0-0 0, Carolyn Schneck 1-2 0-0 2, Rakeya Martin 0-0 0-0 0, Abby Gerber 0-0 0-0 0, Morgan Cossairt 0-0 0-0 0, Lauren Anderson 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 8-63 9-18 27. LAWRENCE (63) Hannah Stewart 4-6 0-0 11, Olivia Lemus 5-11 0-0 13, Talima Harjo 2-10 0-0 6, E’lease Stafford 6-12 2-2 15, Chisom Ajekwu 5-7 0-4 10, Leslie Ostronic 0-1 2-4 2, Alexis Boyd 1-5 0-0 2, Emma Bentzinger 0-1 0-0 0, Gracie Reinsch 1-3 2-2 4, Sammy Williams 0-0 0-0 0, Tyrin Cosey 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 24-56 6-12 63. SM South 3 10 8 6 — 27 Lawrence 16 11 16 20 — 63 Three-point goals: SM South 2-19 (Holmes, McAvoy); Lawrence 9-21 (Stewart 3, Lemus 3, Harjo 2, Stafford). Turnovers: SM South 12, Lawrence 14.


4C

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Saturday, February 6, 2016

KANSAS UNIVERSITY

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L awrence J ournal -W orld

FOOTBALL

Tech game moved to Thursday, Sept. 29 By Matt Tait mtait@ljworld.com

The Big 12 Conference on Friday morning announced the move of two conference football games during the upcoming season to accommodate requests from the

Hoops CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C

feel like going there we’ve got to be more focused in order to get a win.” A 5-0 home record is what has kept the Jayhawks in contention for a 12th-straight Big 12 title. “We talk about it all the time. We’ve got to win games on the road,” noted sophomore guard Devonté Graham. “It’s huge in the league, and we haven’t done it yet (victory at Texas Tech with losses at West Virginia, Oklahoma State and Iowa State). Coming up on the road we have to be more focused.” The Jayhawks, by the way, are 7-0 versus TCU since that unforgettable game in 2013. KU followed that contest with wins over the Frogs by 26, 22 and 30 points. The last four games in the series have been much closer, KU winning by seven, three, nine and five points. “For whatever reason, we’ve played well at times against TCU, but not consistently well, and they’ve done some things to kind of mess with us defensively,” KU coach Bill Self said. The Horned Frogs snapped a five-game losing streak by beating Tennessee, 75-63, last Saturday in the Big 12/SEC Challenge in Fort Worth. Malique Trent scored 15 points, while Chris Washburn and Brandon Parrish each had 14 points. Washburn had a career-high five assists. “It had a flow because we were making a lot of shots we had been missing,” TCU coach Trent Johnson told the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. “That was one of the first times in a long time where the ball went down for us, so that helps our assists.” On Tuesday, TCU was pounded by Oklahoma, 95-72, in its return to league action in Norman. In KU’s seven-point win over TCU on Jan. 16, Wayne Selden Jr. led the way with 11 points. Perry Ellis, Frank Mason III, Graham and Carlton Bragg Jr. each had 10 points. Ellis had nine rebounds as KU outboarded TCU, 44-37. TCU’s Michael Williams led all scorers with 13 points, while Vlad Brodziansky grabbed 12 rebounds. “We’ve got to go down there and be physical with those guys. They are a physical team. We’ve got to go out there and compete hard and go out there and try to get a win,” Traylor said. l

More on Greene: Self reiterated Friday that junior Brannen Greene would not be suspended for flushing a meaningless dunk before the final buzzer sounded in Wednesday’s 77-59 home win over Kansas State. “Yes, he’ll be in uniform. Well, it’s only noon. We haven’t practiced yet. That’s a joke. He’ll be in uniform tomorrow, obviously,” Self said. Self was criticized by radio personality Colin Cowherd on Thursday for calling out Greene publicly after the game. “I am an emotional guy. I was so upset after the game because

Big 12’s television partners, ESPN and FOX. One of the moves will affect the Kansas University football program. Originally slated for Saturday, Oct. 1, KU’s Big 12 opener, at Texas Tech, will now be played two days earlier

on Thursday night in Lubbock, Texas. The Jayhawks’ game with the Red Raiders will follow KU’s first bye week, so the earlier-thanexpected kickoff should not have a negative impact on KU’s preparation for the game.

Kansas University vs. TCU

KU will close out the nonconference portion of its schedule at Memphis on Saturday, Sept. 17 and won’t play again until Sept. 29 at Texas Tech. Tech will have the same advantage. The Red Raiders close out their noncon schedule at home

against Louisiana Tech and won’t play again until Kansas comes to AT&T Stadium for the Thursday night clash. A kickoff time and television designation will be announced at a later date. The Thursday night game will mark the first

time the Jayhawks have played on a Thursday since they hosted Kansas State on Thursday, Oct. 14, 2010. KU, under second-year head coach David Beaty, will open the 2016 season Saturday, Sept. 3 at home against Rhode Island.

KU WOMEN’S HOOPS PREVIEW When: 2 p.m. today Where: Ferrell Center, Waco, Texas Who: No. 4 Baylor Series: Baylor leads 248, 11-2 in Waco

first-year Kansas coach Brandon Schneider was particularly pleased with the way the Jayhawks followed the game plan, started the game with high energy and showed a willingness to compete for all four quarters and over all 94 feet of the floor. KU held the Bears to just eight points in the fourth quarter, marking only the third time this season BU, which sits in a first-place tie with Texas atop the Big 12 standings, was held to single digits in a quarter.

game in a row and third time this season, one of Schneider’s first choices off the bench led the Jayhawks in scoring during Tuesday’s home loss to Iowa State. Junior forward Jada Brown is coming off of one of the best offensive games in her KU career. The Las Vegas native scored 14 points on 6-of-7 shooting and cracked double digits in scoring for the second time this season.

Robinson) with three years left were the only non-high school recruits, and all three will CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C appear on the two-deep depth chart. football coaches in the After years of recruitBig 12 earns more than ing junior-college offentwice the $800,000 salary sive linemen and living Kansas pays Beaty. Iowa to regret it, Kansas finally State’s Matt Campbell loaded up on high school will earn $2 million in the blockers, by far the most first season of a six-year significant development deal. of this class. Four high The KU Class of 2016 school blockers received includes just one Kanscholarships. sas high school athlete, Even the staff can’t Free State High’s Bryce accurately predict which Torneden, who projects five high school recruits as a safety. That doesn’t from the Class of 2016 make Beaty a hypocrite will have the best careers for saying the rebuildat Kansas, but guessthat (dunking instead be available for duty to- ing must start at home ing is such an enjoyable of running out clock day. and build outward. It exercise, so why not give in a rout) goes against “I don’t know if we’ll just demonstrates how it a try. everything I believe in get him in just because he far ahead Kansas State Here’s mine: and everything this uni- won’t be 100 percent, but has grown, based on 1 — Antoine Frazier, versity believes in from he is definitely out there longer-lasting relation6-5, 250, OT, Huffman, a sportsmanship-type (practicing this week),” ships and more sucTexas: Beaty said of topic. That just doesn’t Self said. cess stories involving Frazier’s mother, “We l happen,” Self said. “We unheralded prospects almost recruited her. This, that: TCU has developing into alltalk about how we don’t Bigger arms than most rush the court. We talk had some adversity again conference players. The of our players.” Not about how much pride this season. Washburn considerable time the only that, for such a big we have in the inventor missed the first 11 games Kansas staff devoted to man, her son can really of the game was our first due to a broken finger, recruiting the state will run. coach and how much Trent three games be- pay off, little by little, “He stayed with us,” history is here and also cause of a team rules eventually. Beaty said of Frazier. spawned off the Univer- violation and Dalton Dry Beaty took necessary “Just like a lot of these several weeks because of long-range steps with sity of Kansas. people in this class, they “We win the national an illness. ... Johnson is this class, the most sig- stayed with us even championship, and we 48-70 in his fourth sea- nificant when he broke though at the very end, don’t even celebrate but son at TCU and 274-255 the heavy reliance on Baylor, a bunch of other for a brief moment be- in his 17th season overall junior-college players. teams around the state cause they (Jayhawks) as a coach. TCU is 8-5 in Two jucos (defensive were coming after this had too much respect home games this season, tackles DeeIsaac Davis guy.” As was the case for the situation and got including 4-3 in Scholl- and Isi Holani) with with former Kansas back in the handshake maier Arena. The Horned two remaining years All-American left tackle line. Those are things we Frogs average 68.7 points of eligibility and one Anthony Collins, Frazier talk about if not every and 35.6 rebounds per (cornerback Stephan was a basketball standout day, weekly or monthly. game. TCU shoots 41.5 That’s the fabric of how percent from the field, we’ve done things. To makes 5.4 3-pointers per have somebody totally go game and averages 12.4 against the grain in that, assists, 6.1 steals and 3.5 it certainly didn’t sit well blocked shots per game. back, 56.22; Walker, 200 with me or (Greene’s) Sophomore G Malique KU swimmers fly, 2:04.03; and Haley teammates. It’s over. I Trent leads TCU in scorshine at ISU Bishop, 50 free, 23.22. apologized because that’s ing at 11.5 points per game. KU also won the Ames, Iowa — Kansas not the way we want to Sophomore F Vladimir 200-meter relay, with Yulconduct ourselves. It’s Brodziansky is second on University won all but one duz Kuchkarova, Bryce also a youngster that the team with 11.0 scoring event in the pool during the Hinde, Pavlic and Bishop, didn’t make a very good and 5.0 rebound averages. first day of a two-day colin 1:43.96. decision. I made a ton of Sophomore G Chauncey lege swimming and diving The meet concludes ’em (bad decisions) in my Collins leads TCU in dual with Iowa State on today. time at the inappropriate league games with a 12.1 Friday. KU finished the day with time. It’s forgotten, but scoring average. Overall, KU’s McCorkle I don’t think we’ll have Collins scores 10.4 points 90.5 points to ISU’s 59.5. Kansas’ individual to address it again,” Self and his 2.03-pointers 6th in long jump made are fifth in the Big winners: Libby Walker, added. Lincoln, Neb. — Kanl 12, while his 40.2 three- 1,000-yard freestyle, Mickelson update: Self point field goal percent- 10:17.95; Madison sas University junior said Hunter Mickelson age is seventh in the con- Straight, 200 free, Allanah McCorkle took (high ankle sprain) might ference. sixth in the long jump 1:52.24; Pia Pavlic, 100

before he became serious about football. 2 — Maciah Long, 6-2, 230, LB, Houston: At various stages of his recruitment he reportedly heard from schools such as Ohio State, Missouri and UCLA. He already has the build of a Big 12 linebacker and showed great leadership instincts at quarterback in high school. He attended the same high school as Dorance Armstrong, who showed so much promise during his freshman season. 3 — Kyle Mayberry, 5-11, 163, CB, Tulsa: Confident and fast enough to compensate for lack of size. Cornerbacks coach Kenny Perry did a great job of recruiting him and can’t wait to coach him up. 4 — Evan Fairs, 6-3, 182, WR, Richmond, Texas: Kansas hitting the Houston area so hard can only be a good thing. Fairs decommitted from Maryland and disappointed Illinois to light up the scoreboard for the Jayhawks. 5 — Isiah Bean, 6-4, 210, DE, Houston: A quarterback as a junior, he moved to defensive end his senior season and has a highlight video that makes it look as if he was born to play the position. He can really move and once he packs on the pounds could join Armstrong as a quick edge rusher.

Probable Starters KANSAS (18-4, 6-3) F — Perry Ellis (6-8, Sr.) s F — Landen Lucas (610, Fr.) G — Frank Mason III (5-11, Jr.) G — Wayne Selden Jr. (6-5, Jr.) G — Devonté Graham (6-2, Soph.)

TCU (10-12, 1-8) F — Devonta Abron (6-8, Sr.) F — Chris Washburn (6-8, Jr.) G — Brandon Parrish (6-6, Jr.) G — Chauncey Collins (6-0, Soph.) G — Malique Trent (62, Soph.)

Tipoff: 11 a.m. today, Schollmaier Arena, Fort Worth, Texas TV: ESPN (WOW! channels 33, 233)

Rosters KANSAS 0 — Frank Mason III, 5-11, 185, Jr., G, Petersburg, Virginia. 1 — Wayne Selden, Jr., 6-5, 230, Jr., G, Roxbury, Massachusetts. 2 — Lagerald Vick, 6-5, 175, Fr., G, Memphis. 4 — Devonté Graham, 6-2, 175, Soph., G, Raleigh, North Carolina. 5 — Evan Manning, 6-3, 170, Sr., G, Lawrence. 10 — Sviatoslav Mykhailiuk, 6-8, 195, Soph., G, Cherkasy, Ukraine. 11 — Tyler Self, 6-2, 165, Jr., G, Lawrence. 13 — Cheick Diallo, 6-9, 220, Fr., F, Kayes, Mali, Africa. 14 — Brannen Greene, 6-7, 215, Jr., G, Juliette, Georgia. 15 — Carlton Bragg, Jr., 6-9, 220, Fr., F, Cleveland. 21 — Clay Young, 6-5, 205, Soph., F, Lansing. 22 — Dwight Coleby, 6-9, 240, Jr., F, Nassau, Bahamas. 31 — Jamari Traylor, 6-8, 220, Sr., F, Chicago. 33 — Landen Lucas, 6-10, 240, Jr., F, Portland, Oregon. 34 — Perry Ellis, 6-8, 225, Sr., F, Wichita. 42 — Hunter Mickelson, 6-10, 245, Sr., F, Jonesboro, Arkansas. Head coach: Bill Self. Assistants: Kurtis Townsend, Norm Roberts, Jerrance Howard.

TCU 0 — Lyrik Shreiner, 6-3, 190, Fr., G, Phoenix. 1 — Chauncey Collins, 6-0, 180, Soph., G, Oklahoma City. 2 — Michael Williams, 6-2, 195, Jr., G, San Antonio. 3 — Malique Trent, 6-2, 185, Soph., G, Portsmouth, Virginia. 10 — Vladimir Brodziansky, 6-10, 215, Soph., F, Prievidza, Slovakia. 11 — Brandon Parrish, 6-6, 210, Jr., G, Arlington, Texas. 15 — JD Miller, 6-8, 235, Fr., F, Dallas. 20 — Dalton Dry, 6-3, 195, Soph., G, Fort Worth, Texas. 23 — Devonta Abron, 6-8, 260, Sr., F, Dallas. 32 — Karviar Shepherd, 6-10, 230, Jr., F, Dallas. 33 — Chris Washburn, 6-8, 240, Jr., F, Grand Prairie, Texas. 34 — Kenrich Williams, 6-7, 205, Jr., G, Waco, Texas. Head coach: Trent Johnson. Assistants: Kwanza Johnson, Brent Scott, Chris Tifft.

Road test: Three of KU’s next five games are on the road, where Kansas has just one victory this season, a 66-58 win over Northern Illinois on Nov. 27 in the SMU Thanksgiving Classic on a neutral court. After facing No. 4 Baylor today, KU will travel to in-state rival Kansas State next Saturday and head down to Stillwater, Okla., for a showdown with Oklahoma State on Feb. 24 after home games with TCU and Oklahoma. KU’s upcoming road foes combined to defeat the Jayhawks earlier this season by an average score of 64-44.

Probable starters Kansas (5-17 overall, 0-11 Big 12) Dangerous Davis: G — Lauren Aldridge, Baylor forward and reign5-7, so. ing Big 12 player of the G — Aisia Robertson, year, Nina Davis, is one 5-7, fr. of the most dynamic and G — Kylee Kopatich, versatile players in the 5-10, fr. conference. The junior G — Chayla Cheadle, ranks fifth in the Big 12 in scoring (16.2 ppg) and 10th 6-0, so. F — Caelynn Manningin field-goal percentage Allen, 6-4, jr. (54.5). She also averages six rebounds per game and Sweet memories: KU may be due for a good out- Baylor (22-1 overall, played host to Baylor on Jan. ing against Kansas. Back in 9-1 Big 12) G — Alexis Jones, 5-9, jr. 6 and, despite falling 58-40, January, when KU hosted G — Kristy Wallace, 5-11, played one of its best games Baylor, Davis finished with so. of the 2015-16 season. KU just nine points and two G — Niya Johnson, 5-8, sr. trailed by just eight at halfrebounds. F — Nina Davis, 5-11, jr. time and tied or outscored C — Beatrice MompreBaylor in two of the game’s Streaking: The KU mier, 6-4, fr. four quarters. In that one, bench. For the second

Keegan

BRIEFLY

and sophomore Laura Taylor was 10th in the pole vault during the first day of the Husker Track and Field Invitational on Friday at the Devaney Center. McCorkle was sixth with a leap of 19 feet, 51⁄4 inches. Taylor cleared 1283⁄4 to place 10th. On the men’s side, Curtis placed 16th in the long jump (22-11⁄2), and Ivan Henry took 23rd in the 400 in 48.70 seconds. The meet concludes today.


SPORTS

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Saturday, February 6, 2016

SCOREBOARD

NBA roundup The Associated Press

NFL Playoffs

Wizards 106, 76ers 94 Washington — John Wall had his fourth career triple-double with 18 points, 13 rebounds and 10 assists, leading Washington over Philadelphia Friday night. Marcin Gortat had 21 points and 13 rebounds for the Wizards, who had lost five of their previous six. PHILADELPHIA (94) Covington 0-5 0-0 0, Noel 3-8 3-4 9, Okafor 4-11 1-1 9, Smith 11-25 0-0 22, Stauskas 3-6 0-0 9, Grant 3-5 2-4 9, Thompson 3-8 1-1 7, Canaan 5-12 4-4 18, McConnell 4-6 0-0 9, Landry 1-1 0-0 2. Totals 37-87 11-14 94. WASHINGTON (106) Porter 2-8 0-0 5, Dudley 5-7 1-2 13, Gortat 10-16 1-2 21, Wall 7-13 1-2 18, Beal 10-16 2-2 22, Temple 2-3 4-6 8, Gooden 2-5 0-0 4, Neal 5-10 1-2 11, Sessions 1-4 2-2 4, Blair 0-1 0-2 0, Oubre Jr. 0-0 0-0 0, Eddie 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 44-84 12-20 106. Philadelphia 18 29 25 22 — 94 Washington 38 22 22 24—106 Three-Point Goals-Philadelphia 9-26 (Canaan 4-8, Stauskas 3-5, Grant 1-1, McConnell 1-1, Smith 0-2, Covington 0-4, Thompson 0-5), Washington 6-22 (Wall 3-5, Dudley 2-3, Porter 1-5, Gooden 0-1, Eddie 0-1, Temple 0-1, Beal 0-2, Neal 0-2, Sessions 0-2). Rebounds-Philadelphia 44 (Noel 8), Washington 57 (Gortat, Wall 13). Assists-Philadelphia 23 (Smith 5), Washington 26 (Wall 10). Total Fouls-Philadelphia 18, Washington 15. Technicals-Washington defensive three second 2. A-17,305 (20,308).

Clippers 107, Magic 93 Orlando, Fla. — Chris Paul had 21 points and six assists, DeAndre Jordan had 12 points and 18 rebounds, and Los Angeles beat Orlando for its fifth win in six games. J.J. Redick and Jamal Crawford each scored 20 points for the Clippers. L.A. CLIPPERS (107) Pierce 4-6 2-2 12, Mbah a Moute 0-0 0-0 0, Jordan 4-7 4-6 12, Paul 8-15 4-5 21, Redick 6-14 4-5 20, Johnson 2-6 0-0 5, Crawford 8-14 4-4 20, Prigioni 1-2 0-0 2, Aldrich 1-3 0-0 2, Stephenson 6-6 1-1 13, Ayres 0-0 0-0 0, Wilcox 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 40-74 19-23 107. ORLANDO (93) Harris 4-9 5-5 13, Gordon 3-6 0-1 6, Vucevic 6-16 1-2 13, Payton 2-7 2-4 6, Oladipo 5-12 7-8 18, Hezonja 3-6 2-2 9, Smith 4-7 0-0 8, Fournier 6-13 2-4 16, Napier 1-4 0-0 2, Appling 0-1 0-0 0, Nicholson 0-0 0-0 0, Dedmon 0-0 2-2 2. Totals 34-81 21-28 93. L.A. Clippers 28 27 22 30—107 Orlando 20 24 29 20 — 93 Three-Point Goals-L.A. Clippers 8-27 (Redick 4-9, Pierce 2-4, Paul 1-4, Johnson 1-5, Prigioni 0-1, Crawford 0-4), Orlando 4-20 (Fournier 2-5, Hezonja 1-3, Oladipo 1-4, Vucevic 0-1, Appling 0-1, Gordon 0-1, Payton 0-1, Harris 0-2, Napier 0-2). ReboundsL.A. Clippers 49 (Jordan 18), Orlando 43 (Vucevic 9). Assists-L.A. Clippers 15 (Paul 6), Orlando 19 (Napier, Vucevic 4). Total Fouls-L.A. Clippers 23, Orlando 20. Technicals-Orlando defensive three second. A-16,647 (18,500).

Heat 98, Hornets 95 Charlotte, N.C. — Hassan Whiteside had 10 points, 10 rebounds and 10 blocked shots, and Miami came up with two key steals in the closing seconds. Dwyane Wade scored 22 points, and Chris Bosh added 20 points for the Heat. MIAMI (98) Deng 3-8 2-3 8, Bosh 9-20 2-3 20, Stoudemire 2-5 3-6 7, Dragic 5-10 2-2 12, Wade 11-20 0-0 22, Winslow 4-6 0-0 8, Udrih 2-6 0-0 4, Whiteside 4-8 2-3 10, Green 3-11 1-1 7. Totals 43-94 12-18 98. CHARLOTTE (95) Kidd-Gilchrist 4-7 1-1 9, Williams 12-17 1-1 27, Zeller 2-7 2-3 6, Walker 7-18 2-2 20, Batum 7-12 3-3 21, Lin 1-6 4-5 6, Kaminsky 0-2 0-0 0, Hawes 1-5 0-0 2, Hairston 0-1 0-0 0, Lamb 2-6 0-0 4. Totals 36-81 13-15 95. Miami 25 22 20 31—98 Charlotte 31 16 26 22—95 Three-Point Goals-Miami 0-9 (Deng 0-1, Dragic 0-2, Bosh 0-2, Green 0-4), Charlotte 10-26 (Batum 4-7, Walker 4-8, Williams 2-4, Hairston 0-1, Kaminsky 0-1, Lamb 0-2, Hawes 0-3). ReboundsMiami 57 (Whiteside, Winslow 10), Charlotte 47 (Zeller 8). Assists-Miami 20 (Dragic 9), Charlotte 23 (Batum 7). Total Fouls-Miami 16, Charlotte 16. Technicals-Miami defensive three second. Flagrant Fouls-Hairston. A-19,147 (19,077).

Hawks 102, Pacers 96 Atlanta — Paul Millsap scored 24 points, Al Horford added 21 points, and Atlanta won its third straight game. Paul George finished with 31 points for Indiana, which has lost 17 of its last 19 regular-season matchups in Atlanta. INDIANA (96) George 11-21 2-2 31, J.Hill 1-5 1-2 3, Turner 6-11 0-0 12, Ellis 4-13 0-0 11, G.Hill 3-8 0-0 7, Allen 6-10 1-1 13, Young 0-2 0-0 0, S.Hill 1-7 2-2 4, Miles 5-12 1-2 13, Robinson III 1-2 0-0 2. Totals 38-91 7-9 96. ATLANTA (102) Bazemore 5-11 3-4 15, Millsap 10-14 1-5 24, Horford 8-16 4-4 21, Teague 5-9 6-7 16, Korver 2-7 0-0 6, Muscala 2-2 0-0 4, Sefolosha 0-2 0-0 0, Schroder 4-9 0-0 9, Hardaway Jr. 1-3 0-0 3, Scott 2-3 0-0 4. Totals 39-76 14-20 102. Indiana 29 22 21 24 — 96 Atlanta 26 24 23 29—102 Three-Point Goals-Indiana 13-31 (George 7-12, Ellis 3-7, Miles 2-6, G.Hill 1-2, Young 0-1, S.Hill 0-3), Atlanta 10-27 (Millsap 3-6, Bazemore 2-5, Korver 2-6, Schroder 1-2, Hardaway Jr. 1-2, Horford 1-4, Teague 0-2). ReboundsIndiana 59 (Allen 14), Atlanta 39 (Horford 7). Assists-Indiana 23 (G.Hill 8), Atlanta 29 (Bazemore 8). Total Fouls-Indiana 18, Atlanta 16. A-17,225 (18,729).

John Raoux/AP Photo

THE LOS ANGELES CLIPPERS’ PAUL PIERCE, RIGHT, LOOKS TO PASS the ball as he is guarded by Orlando’s Aaron Gordon (00) and Tobias Harris during the Clippers’ 107-93 victory Friday in Orlando, Fla.

How former Jayhawks fared Cole Aldrich, L.A. Clippers Min: 8. Pts: 2. Reb: 2. Ast: 0. Darrell Arthur, Denver Did not play (quadriceps injury) Mario Chalmers, Memphis Min: 17. Pts: 8. Reb: 3. Ast: 0. Joel Embiid, Philadelphia Did not play (inactive) Drew Gooden, Washington Min: 13. Pts: 4. Reb: 1. Ast: 0. Kirk Hinrich, Chicago Min: 16. Pts: 0. Reb: 4. Ast: 0. Sasha Kaun, Cleveland Did not play (coach’s decision) Ben McLemore, Sacramento Min: 12. Pts: 5. Reb: 0. Ast: 2. Kelly Oubre Jr., Washington Min: 1. Pts: 0. Reb: 0. Ast: 0. Paul Pierce, L.A. Clippers Min: 20. Pts: 12. Reb: 3. Ast: 1. Thomas Robinson, Brooklyn Min: 6. Pts: 1. Reb: 2. Ast: 0. Jeff Withey, Utah Did not play (coach’s decision)

Nets 128, Kings 119 New York — Joe Johnson had season highs with 27 points and 11 assists, and Brooklyn had its best offensive performance of the season in beating Sacramento. SACRAMENTO (119) Gay 1-2 0-0 2, Cousins 9-18 2-3 24, Cauley-Stein 7-8 2-2 16, Rondo 7-15 0-0 15, Belinelli 5-12 3-3 13, Casspi 3-10 0-0 7, Koufos 2-3 0-0 4, McLemore 0-4 5-5 5, Collison 7-9 9-9 25, Acy 0-0 0-0 0, Anderson 4-8 0-0 8. Totals 45-89 21-22 119. BROOKLYN (128) Johnson 11-16 0-0 27, Young 6-10 2-2 14, Lopez 11-21 4-4 26, Sloan 6-10 1-1 17, Ellington 2-10 5-5 10, Bogdanovic 8-10 0-0 23, Larkin 1-3 0-0 3, Bargnani 2-5 0-0 4, Robinson 0-0 1-2 1, Brown 1-1 1-1 3. Totals 48-86 14-15 128. Sacramento 25 36 24 34—119 Brooklyn 33 32 38 25—128 Three-Point Goals-Sacramento 8-26 (Cousins 4-4, Collison 2-3, Rondo 1-4, Casspi 1-7, Gay 0-1, McLemore 0-1, Anderson 0-2, Belinelli 0-4), Brooklyn 18-28 (Bogdanovic 7-9, Johnson 5-7, Sloan 4-5, Larkin 1-1, Ellington 1-6). Rebounds-Sacramento 36 (Cousins 10), Brooklyn 48 (Young 14). Assists-Sacramento 30 (Rondo 15), Brooklyn 29 (Johnson 11). Total Fouls-Sacramento 19, Brooklyn 20. Technicals-Acy. A-14,432 (17,732).

| 5C

Wild-card Playoffs Saturday, Jan. 9 Kansas City 30, Houston 0 Pittsburgh 18, Cincinnati 16 Sunday, Jan. 10 Seattle 10, Minnesota 9 Green Bay 35, Washington 18 Divisional Playoffs Saturday, Jan. 16 New England 27, Kansas City 20 Arizona 26, Green Bay 20, OT Sunday, Jan. 17 Carolina 31, Seattle 24 Denver 23, Pittsburgh 16 Conference Championships Sunday, Jan. 24 AFC Denver 20, New England 18 NFC Carolina 49, Arizona 15 Pro Bowl Sunday, Jan. 31 At Honolulu Team Irvin 49, Team Rice 27 Super Bowl Sunday, Feb. 7 At Santa Clara, Calif. Denver vs. Carolina, 5:30 p.m. (CBS)

Grizzlies 91, Knicks 85 New York — Jeff Green scored 16 points, including two free throws with 6.2 seconds left, to help NBA CONFERENCE Memphis hold off New EASTERN Atlantic Division York. W MEMPHIS (91) Allen 2-4 2-4 7, Randolph 5-10 0-0 10, Gasol 5-11 0-0 10, Conley 2-9 4-4 8, Lee 1-6 0-0 3, Chalmers 3-6 2-2 8, Je.Green 5-11 6-6 16, Barnes 4-9 2-2 12, Hollins 2-2 4-4 8, Carter 4-8 1-2 9. Totals 33-76 21-24 91. NEW YORK (85) Galloway 2-10 0-0 4, Porzingis 6-12 2-2 17, Lopez 4-7 1-2 9, Calderon 7-14 1-1 18, Afflalo 4-15 4-4 14, O’Quinn 2-6 0-0 4, Williams 1-4 0-0 2, Grant 1-4 3-4 5, Seraphin 1-3 0-0 2, Vujacic 2-5 4-4 10. Totals 30-80 15-17 85. Memphis 24 26 19 22—91 New York 18 22 22 23—85 Three-Point Goals-Memphis 4-18 (Barnes 2-5, Allen 1-1, Lee 1-3, Je.Green 0-1, Chalmers 0-1, Randolph 0-1, Carter 0-3, Conley 0-3), New York 10-29 (Porzingis 3-5, Calderon 3-7, Vujacic 2-5, Afflalo 2-7, O’Quinn 0-1, Grant 0-2, Galloway 0-2). ReboundsMemphis 44 (Barnes, Gasol 7), New York 54 (Lopez, Porzingis 10). AssistsMemphis 17 (Conley 9), New York 15 (Calderon 5). Total Fouls-Memphis 18, New York 23. Technicals-New York defensive three second. Flagrant Fouls-Chalmers. Ejected-Chalmers. A-19,812 (19,763).

Nuggets 115, Bulls 110 Denver — Danilo Gallinari scored 33 points, and Denver rallied after Chicago lost Jimmy Butler to a sprained left knee. CHICAGO (110) Moore 3-7 0-0 8, Gibson 7-14 4-6 18, Bairstow 1-4 2-2 4, Rose 13-27 4-6 30, Butler 6-8 7-9 19, Portis 4-12 0-2 8, Felicio 0-0 0-0 0, Hinrich 0-3 0-0 0, McDermott 6-11 0-0 15, Snell 1-3 0-0 2, Brooks 2-4 2-2 6. Totals 43-93 19-27 110. DENVER (115) Gallinari 7-12 18-18 33, Faried 4-5 3-9 11, Jokic 5-13 2-2 14, Mudiay 8-18 5-11 22, Harris 3-7 0-0 6, Barton 8-17 0-0 18, Lauvergne 1-6 1-2 3, Nurkic 0-4 2-2 2, Foye 3-5 0-0 6. Totals 39-87 31-44 115. Chicago 26 31 32 21—110 Denver 30 25 18 42—115 Three-Point Goals-Chicago 5-12 (McDermott 3-4, Moore 2-2, Hinrich 0-1, Bairstow 0-1, Brooks 0-1, Rose 0-3), Denver 6-18 (Jokic 2-2, Barton 2-5, Mudiay 1-2, Gallinari 1-3, Lauvergne 0-1, Foye 0-2, Harris 0-3). Fouled OutJokic. Rebounds-Chicago 55 (Rose 9), Denver 64 (Jokic 12). Assists-Chicago 21 (Rose 8), Denver 22 (Foye 6). Total Fouls-Chicago 31, Denver 24. A-19,155 (19,155).

Spurs 116, Mavs 90 Dallas — Kawhi Leonard scored 16 of his 23 points in the first half, and San Antonio handed Dallas its largest halftime deficit in franchise history in a blowout. SAN ANTONIO (116) Leonard 9-16 3-3 23, Aldridge 5-11 4-4 14, West 1-3 2-2 4, Parker 4-8 0-0 9, Green 3-8 0-0 8, Diaw 2-4 0-0 5, Mills 6-8 2-3 16, Simmons 2-4 3-4 8, K.Anderson 1-5 3-3 5, Marjanovic 2-3 3-4 7, Butler 2-4 0-0 5, McCallum 2-4 0-0 5, Bonner 2-2 2-2 7. Totals 41-80 22-25 116. DALLAS (90) Parsons 3-9 0-0 6, Nowitzki 4-8 2-2 10, Pachulia 1-4 2-4 4, Williams 3-9 2-2 8, Matthews 2-5 0-0 4, Felton 3-4 0-0 6, Villanueva 5-10 2-2 13, Barea 1-5 3-4 5, Mejri 1-3 1-2 3, J.Anderson 4-7 3-3 13, McGee 4-5 0-0 8, Powell 1-3 6-8 8, Evans 1-1 0-0 2. Totals 33-73 21-27 90. San Antonio 27 35 26 28—116 Dallas 12 14 34 30 — 90 Three-Point Goals-San Antonio 12-22 (Mills 2-2, Leonard 2-4, Green 2-5, Diaw 1-1, Bonner 1-1, McCallum 1-1, Parker 1-2, Simmons 1-2, Butler 1-2, Aldridge 0-1, K.Anderson 0-1), Dallas 3-15 (J.Anderson 2-3, Villanueva 1-2, Felton 0-1, Parsons 0-1, Powell 0-2, Williams 0-3, Barea 0-3). ReboundsSan Antonio 48 (Aldridge 10), Dallas 40 (Nowitzki 8). Assists-San Antonio 19 (Diaw 4), Dallas 17 (Felton 4). Total Fouls-San Antonio 23, Dallas 23. Technicals-West, Matthews, Pachulia 2. Flagrant Fouls-Pachulia. Ejected— Pachulia. A-20,404 (19,200).

Celtics 104, Cavs 103 Cleveland — Avery Bradley made a corner jumper at the horn to give Boston a stunning win over Cleveland.

Jazz 84, Bucks 81 Salt Lake City — Rodney Hood scored 23 points, and Utah pulled away late.

BOSTON (104) Crowder 1-9 0-0 3, Johnson 3-3 0-0 6, Sullinger 5-11 2-5 12, Thomas 5-19 11-11 22, Bradley 5-12 0-0 14, Jerebko 0-0 2-2 2, Olynyk 0-1 2-2 2, Turner 8-16 3-4 19, Smart 3-7 1-1 8, Zeller 8-10 0-0 16. Totals 38-88 21-25 104. CLEVELAND (103) James 9-23 12-17 30, Love 4-10 0-0 10, Thompson 1-3 1-2 3, Irving 7-15 5-6 19, Smith 7-15 1-2 20, Shumpert 1-6 1-2 4, Williams 2-3 0-0 4, Mozgov 3-6 0-3 6, Jefferson 3-6 1-3 7. Totals 37-87 21-35 103. Boston 20 23 22 39—104 Cleveland 32 17 24 30—103 Three-Point Goals-Boston 7-20 (Bradley 4-8, Thomas 1-2, Smart 1-3, Crowder 1-5, Sullinger 0-1, Turner 0-1), Cleveland 8-30 (Smith 5-10, Love 2-6, Shumpert 1-5, Irving 0-2, Jefferson 0-2, James 0-5). Fouled Out-Smith. Rebounds-Boston 56 (Turner 12), Cleveland 62 (Thompson 10). AssistsBoston 21 (Turner 6), Cleveland 21 (Irving 6). Total Fouls-Boston 27, Cleveland 25. Technicals-Thomas, Boston defensive three second. A-20,562 (20,562).

MILWAUKEE (81) Antetokounmpo 4-8 5-8 14, Parker 1-6 0-0 2, Monroe 5-9 4-6 14, CarterWilliams 5-14 0-1 10, Middleton 6-16 5-5 18, Bayless 5-8 0-1 15, O’Bryant 1-5 0-0 2, Plumlee 3-4 0-0 6, Ennis 0-0 0-0 0, Vaughn 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 30-71 14-21 81. UTAH (84) Hayward 6-14 3-3 18, Favors 4-15 3-6 11, Gobert 6-7 3-4 15, Neto 3-8 1-2 8, Hood 9-18 2-2 23, Booker 0-3 0-0 0, Johnson 0-2 3-4 3, Burke 0-2 0-0 0, Ingles 1-3 1-2 3, Lyles 1-5 0-0 3, Green 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 30-77 16-23 84. Milwaukee 19 25 16 21—81 Utah 18 22 21 23—84 Three-Point Goals-Milwaukee 7-14 (Bayless 5-6, Antetokounmpo 1-2, Middleton 1-4, Carter-Williams 0-2), Utah 8-27 (Hayward 3-8, Hood 3-9, Lyles 1-2, Neto 1-3, Johnson 0-1, Ingles 0-2, Burke 0-2). Rebounds-Milwaukee 50 (Monroe 9), Utah 52 (Favors 15). Assists-Milwaukee 9 (Carter-Williams 4), Utah 13 (Neto 4). Total FoulsMilwaukee 17, Utah 18. TechnicalsMilwaukee defensive three second, Utah defensive three second. Flagrant Fouls-Plumlee. Ejected-Plumlee. A-19,911 (19,911).

L Pct GB Toronto 34 16 .680 — Boston 30 22 .577 5 New York 23 30 .434 12½ Brooklyn 13 38 .255 21½ Philadelphia 7 43 .140 27 Southeast Division W L Pct GB Atlanta 30 22 .577 — Miami 29 22 .569 ½ Charlotte 24 26 .480 5 Washington 22 26 .458 6 Orlando 21 28 .429 7½ Central Division W L Pct GB Cleveland 35 14 .714 — Chicago 27 22 .551 8 Detroit 27 24 .529 9 Indiana 26 24 .520 9½ Milwaukee 20 32 .385 16½ WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division W L Pct GB San Antonio 42 8 .840 — Memphis 30 20 .600 12 Dallas 28 25 .528 15½ Houston 27 25 .519 16 New Orleans 18 31 .367 23½ Northwest Division W L Pct GB Oklahoma City 38 13 .745 — Utah 24 25 .490 13 Portland 24 27 .471 14 Denver 20 31 .392 18 Minnesota 15 36 .294 23 Pacific Division W L Pct GB Golden State 45 4 .918 — L.A. Clippers 33 17 .660 12½ Sacramento 21 29 .420 24½ Phoenix 14 37 .275 32 L.A. Lakers 11 41 .212 35½ Friday’s Games L.A. Clippers 107, Orlando 93 Washington 106, Philadelphia 94 Miami 98, Charlotte 95 Atlanta 102, Indiana 96 Boston 104, Cleveland 103 Brooklyn 128, Sacramento 119 Memphis 91, New York 85 Denver 115, Chicago 110 Utah 84, Milwaukee 81 San Antonio 116, Dallas 90 Today’s Games Portland at Houston, 4 p.m. Detroit at Indiana, 6 p.m. Washington at Charlotte, 6 p.m. New Orleans at Cleveland, 6:30 p.m. Brooklyn at Philadelphia, 6:30 p.m. Chicago at Minnesota, 7 p.m. Dallas at Memphis, 7 p.m. L.A. Lakers at San Antonio, 7:30 p.m. Oklahoma City at Golden State, 8 p.m. Utah at Phoenix, 8 p.m. Sunday’s Games Sacramento at Boston, noon Atlanta at Orlando, noon Denver at New York, noon L.A. Clippers at Miami, 1 p.m.

High School Boys

Andover Central 70, Andover 46 Argonia 51, Cedar Vale/Dexter 46 Atchison 68, KC Wyandotte 35 Barstow, Mo. 89, Heritage Christian 33 Baxter Springs 63, Frontenac 53 Beloit 66, Ellsworth 38 Bennington 63, Marion 45 Berean Academy 49, Ell-Saline 28 Bishop Miege 54, BV West 33 Blue Valley Southwest 57, GardnerEdgerton 45 BV Northwest 66, St. Thomas Aquinas 53 Central Burden 60, Udall 50 Central Plains 46, St. John 45 Chase 70, Glasco/MiltonvaleSouthern Cloud 50 Cheney 68, Chaparral 32 Cimarron 49, Lakin 43 Circle 80, Winfield 49 Derby 51, Wichita Campus 48 Dighton 50, Ingalls 37 Doniphan West 59, Linn 28 Ellis 53, Stockton 37 Eudora 66, Louisburg 30 Flinthills 54, Oxford 42 Fort Scott 54, Parsons 42 Frankfort 59, BV Randolph 36 Fredonia 86, Cherryvale 61 Garden Plain 44, Conway Springs 37 Girard 77, Southeast 49 Goddard 61, Maize South 56 Goddard-Eisenhower 66, Arkansas City 45 Hanover 72, Wetmore 41 Hartford 50, Chase County 41 Haven 62, Lyons 61 Hays-TMP-Marian 76, Norton 50 Herington 38, Mission Valley 37 Hesston 54, Smoky Valley 46 Hill City 71, Smith Center 57 Hillsboro 38, Pratt 35 Hodgeman County 71, Bucklin 46 Holcomb 60, Colby 26 Holton 60, Atchison County 48 Humboldt 61, Caney Valley 51 Hutchinson Central Christian 75, Pretty Prairie 58 Hutchinson Trinity 68, Remington 61 Immaculata 45, McLouth 39 Independence 54, Labette County 38 Iola 57, Central Heights 29 Jackson Heights 66, Maur Hill Mount Academy 28 Junction City 56, Topeka 50 KC Harmon 66, KC Washington 63 KC Piper 67, Tonganoxie 51 Kingman 63, Hoisington 39 Larned 61, Halstead 59, OT Lawrence 49, SM South 42 Lawrence Free State 59, SM Northwest 58, OT Liberal 60, Great Bend 57 Little River 49, Centre 35 Maize 59, Hutchinson 38 Manhattan 62, Topeka West 37 McPherson 75, Dodge City 69 Medicine Lodge 43, Belle Plaine 36 Mill Valley 60, KC Bishop Ward 28 Moundridge 62, Inman 56 Mulvane 49, El Dorado 47 Ness City 63, LaCrosse 29 Northern Heights 67, Madison/ Hamilton 48 Norwich 69, Cunningham 43 Olathe East 32, SM North 28 Olpe 43, Lyndon 40 Ottawa 71, Bishop Seabury Academy 62 Paola 66, Baldwin 30 Pittsburg 67, Coffeyville 59 Pittsburg Colgan 59, Columbus 22 Pleasanton 55, Altoona-Midway 17

Pratt Skyline 59, Burrton 37 Riverside 61, Perry-Lecompton 45 Riverton 50, Galena 47 Rock Creek 63, Riley County 28 Rock Hills 59, Lakeside 50, OT Rossville 65, Wabaunsee 60 Royal Valley 52, Hiawatha 42 Sabetha 48, Jefferson West 23 Salina Central 48, Newton 28 Salina Sacred Heart 68, Minneapolis 43 Salina South 83, Valley Center 60 Santa Fe Trail 33, Prairie View 32 Satanta 59, Kiowa County 49 Scott City 59, Hugoton 51 Sedan 83, South Haven 29 Sedgwick 46, Canton-Galva 39 Shawnee Heights 65, Emporia 58 SM East 64, Olathe North 61 SM West 59, Olathe Northwest 46 Solomon 48, Rural Vista 45 South Barber 77, Stafford 40 South Gray 74, Pawnee Heights 52 Southeast Saline 74, Chapman 52 Southwestern Hts. 56, JohnsonStanton County 54 St. Francis 65, Hoxie 56 St. James Academy 51, Rockhurst, Mo. 50 St. John’s Beloit-Tipton 71, Wilson 37 St. Mary’s 46, Silver Lake 45 Sterling 74, Nickerson 59 Syracuse 45, Elkhart 42 Troy 72, Valley Heights 63 Veritas Christian 47, Wichita Home School 45 Wamego 67, Osage City 61 Washburn Rural 61, Topeka Seaman 48 Washington County 64, Centralia 44 Wellington 73, Augusta 69 West Elk 68, Yates Center 56 Wichita Collegiate 76, Buhler 72 Wichita Heights 52, Wichita Northwest 40 Wichita Independent 67, Bluestem 41 Wichita Southeast 60, Wichita West 39 Wichita Trinity 56, Douglass 25 Western Kansas Liberty League Tournament Semifinal Logan 39, Garden Plain 33 Wheatland-Grinnell 44, TriplainsBrewster 37

Wellington 61, Augusta 44 Wellsville 48, Osawatomie 14 West Franklin 52, Lebo 35 Wichita Bishop Carroll 65, Wichita East 33 Wichita Independent 68, Bluestem 40 Wichita Southeast 77, Wichita West 40 Wichita Trinity 46, Douglass 40 Winfield 57, Circle 51 Western Kansas Liberty League Tournament Consolation Semifinal Logan 49, Cheylin 37 Semifinal Golden Plains 50, Northern Valley 33 Wheatland-Grinnell 50, TriplainsBrewster 29

High School Gorls

High School Boys

Abilene 68, Marysville 44 Andover Central 44, Andover 28 Argonia 39, Cedar Vale/Dexter 31 Arkansas City 40, GoddardEisenhower 36 Attica 60, Fairfield 37 Baldwin 59, Paola 51, OT Basehor-Linwood 56, Bonner Springs 44 Berean Academy 63, Ell-Saline 29 Bishop Miege 63, BV West 25 Blue Valley Southwest 49, GardnerEdgerton 43 Buhler 61, Wichita Collegiate 37 Burlington 55, Erie 34 Caney Valley 48, Humboldt 41 Central Plains 58, St. John 21 Centralia 67, Washington County 47 Centre 44, Little River 42, OT Chase County 51, Hartford 29 Cheney 47, Chaparral 20 Chetopa 45, Crest 42 Cimarron 44, Lakin 24 Clay Center 44, Council Grove 27 Conway Springs 46, Garden Plain 34 Cornerstone Alt. Charter 46, Marais des Cygnes Valley 37 Derby 58, Wichita Campus 35 Dighton 57, Ingalls 52 Dodge City 45, McPherson 39 Doniphan West 35, Linn 33 El Dorado 33, Mulvane 27 Elkhart 37, Syracuse 33 Ellis 59, Stockton 49 Ellsworth 80, Beloit 35 Flinthills 50, Oxford 13 Fort Scott 58, Parsons 48, OT Frankfort 41, BV Randolph 31 Fredonia 60, Cherryvale 46 Frontenac 42, Baxter Springs 34 Garden City 59, Guymon, Okla. 54 Girard 50, Southeast 21 Glasco/Miltonvale-Southern Cloud 57, Chase 41 Goddard 47, Maize South 26 Goessel 59, Elyria Christian 32 Goodland 53, Ulysses 46 Greeley County 33, Oberlin-Decatur 23 Hanover 44, Wetmore 42 Haven 62, Lyons 61 Hays-TMP-Marian 61, Norton 47 Hesston 50, Smoky Valley 34 Hiawatha 61, Royal Valley 52 Hill City 40, Smith Center 33 Hillsboro 47, Pratt 35 Holcomb 49, Colby 37 Holton 50, Atchison County 28 Hugoton 62, Scott City 32 Hutchinson Central Christian 49, Pretty Prairie 20 Hutchinson Trinity 40, Remington 24 Immaculata 39, McLouth 17 Iola 34, Central Heights 28 Jefferson North 45, Horton 33 KC Piper 66, Tonganoxie 25 Kingman 38, Hoisington 26 Labette County 74, Independence 46 Lakeside 58, Rock Hills 41 Lansing 57, KC Turner 27 Lawrence 63, SM South 27 Lincoln 46, Pike Valley 37 Louisburg 27, Eudora 25 Lutheran (Kansas City), Mo. 58, Maranatha Academy 34 Madison/Hamilton 44, Northern Heights 42 Maize 37, Hutchinson 12 Manhattan 64, Topeka West 35 Marion 50, Bennington 22 Maur Hill - Mount Academy 48, Jackson Heights 32 Medicine Lodge 53, Belle Plaine 37 Mill Valley 56, KC Bishop Ward 16 Minneapolis 52, Salina Sacred Heart 40 Mission Valley 48, Herington 39 Moundridge 55, Inman 37 Ness City 60, LaCrosse 52 Newton 51, Salina Central 39 Northeast-Arma 53, Jayhawk Linn 49 Norwich 48, Cunningham 18 Olathe East 32, SM North 28 Olathe South 65, Leavenworth 50 Osborne 44, Natoma 38 Otis-Bison 54, Trego 47 Ottawa 56, Bishop Seabury Academy 24 Perry-Lecompton 48, Riverside 29 Pittsburg 69, Coffeyville 46 Pittsburg Colgan 35, Columbus 24 Pleasanton 62, Altoona-Midway 26 Prairie View 50, Santa Fe Trail 24 Pratt Skyline 37, Burrton 26 Riley County 50, Rock Creek 37 Riverton 37, Galena 32 Rossville 65, Wabaunsee 55 Sabetha 62, Jefferson West 49 Satanta 50, Kiowa County 46 Sedan 38, South Haven 37 Sedgwick 54, Canton-Galva 49 Shawnee Heights 47, Emporia 40 SM East 44, Olathe North 42 SM Northwest 33, Lawrence Free State 29 SM West 70, Olathe Northwest 63 Solomon 51, Rural Vista 40 South Barber 69, Stafford 18 Southeast Saline 56, Chapman 41 Southwestern Hts. 53, JohnsonStanton County 33 Spring Hill 57, DeSoto 39 St. John’s Beloit-Tipton 62, Wilson 39 St. Thomas Aquinas 46, BV Northwest 34 Sterling 56, Nickerson 28 Thunder Ridge 56, Sylvan-Lucas 49 Topeka 85, Junction City 53 Topeka Hayden 81, Highland Park 37 Udall 36, Central Burden 30 Valley Center 37, Salina South 27 Valley Heights 53, Troy 39 Victoria 47, Macksville 23 Wamego 53, Osage City 23 Washburn Rural 47, Topeka Seaman 26

College Women

Friday at Ames KANSAS 90.5, IOWA STATE 59.5. Kansas results (through first of two days) 200-yard medley relay — 1. Kansas A (Yulduz Kucharova, Bryce Hinde, Pia Pavlic, Haley Bishop), 1:43.96; 4. Kansas B (Hannah Angell, Lydia Pocisk, Leah Pfitzer, Breonna Barker), 1:47.02; 6. Kansas C (Madison Hutchison, Gretchen Pocisk, Chelsie Miller, Haley Molden), 1:50.02. 1,000-yard freestyle — 2. Lindsay Manning, 10:29.15; 5. Laura Bilsborrow, 10:52.44. 200-yard freestyle — 1. Madison Straight, 1:52.24; 3. Haley Molden, 1:53.55; 4. Sammie Schurig, 1:55.04. 100-yard backstroke — 1. Pia Pavlic, 56.22; 2. Yulduz Kucharova, 56.26; 6. Hannah Angell, 58.11. 100-yard breaststoke — 2. Bryce Hinde, 1:04.6; 4. Lydia Pocisk, 1:05.79; 5. Gretchen Pocisk, 1:06.98. 200-yard butterfly — 1. Libby Walker, 2:04.03; 2. Chelsie Miller, 2:04.5; 4. Cassaundra Pino, 2:08.02. 3-meter diving — 4. Nadia Khechfe, 237.07; 5. Amanda Maser, 234.67; 6. Graylyn Jones, 223.8. 50-yard freestyle — 1. Haley Bishop, 23.22; 2. Breonna Barker, 24.18; 5. (tie) Leah Pfitzer, 24.67.

Sunflower League Meet Friday at Olathe Preliminaries Lawrence city results 200-yard medley relay — 1. Free State (Evan Eskilson, EvanYoder, Ethan Kallenberger, Carson Ziegler), 1:41.81; 8. Lawrence (Alex Heckman, Isaac Springe, Chase Odgers, Patrick Oblon), 1:47.48. 200-yard freestyle — 1. Jordan Portela, FS, 1:45.8; 2. Stephen Johnson, L, 1:45.83; 6. John Walpole, FS, 1:49.37. 200-yard IM — 1. Evan Yoder, FS, 2:00.59; 8. Isaac Springe, L, 2:10.03; 10. Matthew Wilkus, FS, 2:12.67. 50-yard freestyle — 6. Carson Ziegler, FS, 23.1; 8. Brandon Bunting, FS, 23.56. 100-yard butterfly — 1. Evan Eskilson, FS, 53.93; 3. Ethan Kallenberger, FS, 55.32; 11. Chase Odgers, L, 57.02; 12. Brett Carey, FS, 58.44. 100-yard freestyle — 1. Jordan Portela, FS, 47.76; 3. Alex Heckman, L, 49.09; 6. Carson Ziegler, FS, 51.58. 500-yard freestyle — 3. Stephen Johnson, L, 4:53.95; 6. John Walpole, FS, 4:56.17; 8. Brett Carey, FS, 5:15.7; 10. Landon Sloan, FS, 5:17.68: 12. Isaac Springe, L, 5:21.04. 200-yard freestyle relay — 3. Free State (Ethan Kallenberger, Brandon Bunting, John Walpole, Carson Ziegler), 1:33.27; 5. Lawrence (Chase Odgers, Hunter Boehle, Patrick Oblon, Stephen Johnson), 1:34.7. 200-yard IM — 1. Evan Yoder, FS, 2:00.59; 8. Isaac Springe, L, 2:10.03; 10. Matthew Wilkus, FS, 2:12.67. 100-yard backstroke — 1. Evan Eskilson, FS, 53.83; 5. Alex Heckman, L, 58.17; 6. Ethan Kallenberger, FS, 58.18; 9. Landon Sloan, FS, 1:00.18; 11. Jake Viscomi, FS, 1:00.65. 100-yard breaststroke — 1. Evan Yoder, FS, 1:00.96; 3. Corey SchultzBever, FS, 1:04.66; 9. Sydney Lin, FS, 1:06.7. 400-yard freestyle relay — 1. Free State (Evan Eskilson, John Walpole, EvanYoder, Jordan Portela), 3:18.19; 2. Lawrence (Chase Odgers, Isaac Springe, Alex Heckman, Stephen Johnson), 3:21.43.

College

Husker Invitational Friday at Lincoln, Neb. Kansas Results WOMEN 400 — 12. Nicole Montgomery, 56.16. 22. Megan Linder, 56.94. 37. Morgan Lober, 57.91. Pole vault — 10. Laura Taylor, 12-83⁄4. 22(t). Hannah Swift, 11-9. 24. Morgan Griffiths, 11-9. Long jump — 6. Allanah McCorkel, 19-51⁄4. 23. LaTyria Jefferson, 17-7. 27. Kelli McKee, 17-11⁄2. Pentathlon — Overall: 15. Olivia Vincent, 3,274 points. 60 hurdles: 16. Vincent, 9.32. High jump: 13(t). Vincent 5-01⁄2. Shot put: 8. Vincent, 36-4. Long jump: 16. Vincent, 15-4. 800: 10. Vincent, 2:30.09. MEN 400 — 23. Ivan Henry, 48.70. 26. Drew Matthews, 48.78. 34. Jaime Wilson, 49.28. Long jump — 16. Curtis Ray, 22-11⁄2. 17. Barden Adams, 21-113⁄4. Weight throw — 21. Brandon Lombardino, 54-10.

PGA Phoenix Open

Friday At TPC Scottsdale, Stadium Course Scottsdale, Ariz. Purse: $6.5 million Yardage: 7,266; Par: 71 Partial Second Round Note: Six golfers unable to complete the second round James Hahn 67-65—132 Rickie Fowler 65-68—133 Danny Lee 67-66—133 Hideki Matsuyama 65-70—135 Shane Lowry 65-70—135 Harris English 68-67—135 William McGirt 69-67—136 Chad Campbell 68-68—136 Jeff Overton 71-66—137 Scott Piercy 72-65—137 Keegan Bradley 68-69—137 Bubba Watson 69-69—138 Brandt Snedeker 67-71—138 Tyrone Van Aswegen 68-70—138 Jon Curran 69-69—138 Colt Knost 69-69—138 Ben Crane 68-70—138 Alex Cejka 70-68—138 Michael Kim 70-68—138 Brendan Steele 72-67—139 Brett Stegmaier 68-71—139 Kyle Stanley 69-70—139 Brooks Koepka 67-72—139 Chris Kirk 72-67—139 Brian Gay 70-69—139 Boo Weekley 71-68—139 Gary Woodland 67-72—139 Charles Howell III 70-69—139 Blayne Barber 68-71—139 Ryan Moore 68-71—139 Webb Simpson 68-71—139 Zach Johnson 73-66—139 Matt Every 70-69—139 John Huh 69-70—139 Kevin Na 68-71—139


Saturday, February 6, 2016

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L AWRENCE J OURNAL -W ORLD

Saturday, February 6, 2016

SPECIAL! 10 LINES & PHOTO

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Hyundai Cars

| 7C

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Jeep

2007 Lincoln MKZ Base

TO PLACE AN AD: Lawrence

Stk#1PL2105

$11,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2014 Nissan Frontier PRO Low Miles, Leather, 4x4 Stk#115T1014

$25,495 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Only $23,995 Call Coop at

888-631-6458 2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047 JackEllenaHonda.com Need an apartment? Place your ad at apartments.lawrence.com

2015 Jeep Wrangler Unlimited Sport Oscar Mike Edition. Hardtop Stk#1PL2094

Toyota Cars 2015 Lincoln MKC Base $47,000 New. Save Big!!

$30,987 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Kia Cars

Stk#PL2107

$32,978 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Mitsubishi SUVs

Honda Trucks

2012 Toyota Camry Hybrid XLE Rare Find. Toyota Hybrid Stk#1PL1991

$15,994 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Kia 2008 Spectra SX Honda 2007 Ridgeline RTS 4wd, one owner, crew cab, power seat, power equipment. Stk#379191 Only $13,500 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

FWD, automatic, power equipment, cruise control, spoiler, alloy wheels. Stk#594834

785.832.2222

legals@ljworld.com

Luxury at a Discount!

Lincoln Crossovers

Certified Pre-Owned, 4WD, 78K miles, 7 year/100K mile warranty, 8 Passenger, 182-pt. Inspection. Stk# F053A

PUBLIC NOTICES

Mitsubishi 2012 Outlander Sport

Thicker line? Bolder heading? Color background or Logo?

Only $6,777

SE, 4wd, one owner, automatic, heated seats, power equipment, great finance terms available. Stk#156781 Only $13,686

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

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

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

Call: 785-832-2222

Lawrence

Lawrence

(First published in the calibration of values based resolution/ordinance. Lawrence Daily Journal- on sales of similar proper- NOW THEREFORE, BE IT ORWorld February 6, 2016) ties. DAINED BY THE GOVERNING BODY OF THE CITY OF PUBLIC NOTICE In accordance with the LAWRENCE, KANSAS: NOW K241AR - Lawrence, KS provisions in K.S.A. THEREFORE, BE IT OR79-1476, the Property Valu- DAINED BY THE BOARD OF On January 28, 2016, Edu- ation Division (PVD), Kan- COUNTY COMMISSIONERS cational Media Foundation sas Department of Reve- OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, filed an application with nue is required to annually KANSAS: Section 1. From the Federal Communica- furnish each county the re- and after the effective tions Commission request- sults of its study relating date of this Joint ing the Commission’s con- to changes, if any, of the Resolution/Ordinance, sent to the assignment of Use Value of agricultural Section 8-401 of the Code FM translator K241AR, land. Changes can and do of the City of Lawrence, Lawrence, Kansas from Ed- occur as a result of several Kansas, 2015 Edition and ucational Media Founda- factors including cropping amendments thereto, and tion to University of Kan- practices, commodity Section 5-201 of the Code sas. prices and production of Douglas County, Kansas, costs. Based on the values 2000 Edition, are hereby Upon consummation of the per acre provided by PVD, amended and restated to assignment, K241AR will agricultural use values in read as follows: EMERrebroadcast KANU(AM), Douglas County have in- GENCY MEDICAL SERVICES; Lawrence, Kansas. Univer- creased from 2015 to 2016. FEES. The rates for ambusity of Kansas is the licen________ lance service in City Code see of KANU(AM). A copy Section 8-401 and in Dougof this application is on file (First published in the las County Code 5-201 for public inspection dur- Lawrence Daily Journal- shall be as follows: A. ALS ing regular business hours World February 6, 2016) 2: All inclusive advanced at 2288 Airport Boulevard, life support emergency ORDINANCE NO. 9197 Santa Rosa, California and routine service pro95403. vided where at least three COUNTY RESOLUTION ________ medications are adminisNO. 16-01 tered by intravenous (First published in the A JOINT RESOLUTION/ OR- push/bolus or by continuLawrence Daily Journal DINANCE OF THE BOARD OF ous infusion excluding World February 6, 2015) COUNTY COMMISSIONERS crystalloid, hypotonic, isoOF DOUGLAS COUNTY, tonic, and hypertonic soluResults of the Market KANSAS AND THE CITY tions (Dextrose, Normal Study Analysis for COMMISSION OF THE CITY Saline, Ringer’s Lactate) or Douglas County OF LAWRENCE, KANSAS, one ALS procedure (e.g., For the Appraisal CONCERNING CHARGES manual Year 2016 January 1, 2016 FOR AMBULANCE SERVICES defibrillation/cardioversion, Pursuant to L. 1991, ch 279 endotracheal intubation, WHEREAS, the City of Law- central venous line, carA study of the residential rence, Kansas and the diac pacing, chest decomreal estate market in Board of County Commis- pression, surgical airway, Douglas County indicated sioners of Douglas County, intraossesous line) is prothat the market is stable Kansas have entered into vided: i. January 1, 2016 to with no general upward or an agreement for the pro- December 31, 2016: base downward trend from 2015 vision of ambulance serv- rate $712.00 plus $8.49 per to 2016. Market analysis of ice in all of Douglas loaded mile. ii. January 1, the monthly sale price per County; WHEREAS, pursu- 2017 to December 31, 2017: square foot shows no ap- ant to said agreement, the base rate $743.00 plus preciable change. A study City of Lawrence, Kansas $8.86 per loaded mile. iii. of the commercial real es- and the Board of County January 1, 2018 to Decemtate market indicated the Commissioners of Douglas ber 31, 2018: base rate market is stable with no County, Kansas have $774.00 plus $9.23 per appreciable upward or agreed to jointly establish loaded mile. B. Emergency downward trend from 2015 fees for emergency medi- ALS - Level 1: All inclusive to 2016. A study of the real cal life support services; and advanced estate market for vacant WHEREAS, the governing emergency and routine lots indicated that the body of the City of Law- service where specialized market is stable with no rence, Kansas and the services are provided: i. general upward or down- Board of County Commis- January 1, 2016 to Decemward trend. Values on sioners of Douglas County, ber 31, 2016: base rate specific properties change Kansas have agreed to $643.00 plus $8.49 per because of changes in the amend such fees in ac- loaded mile. ii. property, correction of de- cordance with the provi- January 1, 2017 to Decemscriptive information or sions of this joint ber 31, 2017: base rate

Lawrence $671.00 plus $8.86 per loaded mile. iii. January 1, 2018 to December 31, 2018: base rate $699.00 plus $9.23 per loaded mile. C. Emergency BLS: All inclusive advanced life support emergency and routine service where no specialized services are provided: i. January 1, 2016 to December 31, 2016: base rate $547.00 plus $8.49 per loaded mile. ii. January 1, 2017 to December 31, 2017: base rate $571.00 plus $8.86 per loaded mile. iii. January 1, 2018 to December 31, 2018: base rate $595.00 plus $9.23 per loaded mile. D. Non-Emergency ALS Level 1: All inclusive advanced life support routine scheduled service with specialized services provided: i. January 1, 2016 to December 31, 2016: base rate $643.00 plus $8.49 per loaded mile. ii. January 1, 2017 to December 31, 2017: base rate $671.00 plus $8.86 per loaded mile. iii. January 1, 2018 to December 31, 2018: base rate $699.00 plus $9.23 per loaded mile. E. Non-Emergency BLS: All inclusive advanced life support routine scheduled service with no specialized services provided: i. January 1, 2016 to December 31, 2016: base rate $547.00 plus $8.49 per loaded mile. ii. January 1, 2017 to December 31, 2017: base rate $571.00 plus $8.86 per loaded mile. iii. January 1, 2018 to December 31, 2018: base rate $595.00 plus $9.23 per loaded mile. F. Standby Time: High School Events, per quarter hour: $13.00. All other events exclusive of High School Events shall be determined by an agreement that has been properly executed for actual employee costs plus a 15% administrative fee. H. Medical Equipment: Medical equipment will be part of the all inclusive ad-

PUBLIC NOTICE CONTINUED ON 9C


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Saturday, February 6, 2016

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PLACE YOUR AD:

L awrence J ournal -W orld

785.832.2222

classifieds@ljworld.com

A P P LY N O W

573 AREA JOB OPENINGS! CITY OF LAWRENCE ............................ 37

FEDERAL HOME LOAN BANK ..................8

MV TRANSPORTATION ......................... 20

CITY OF SHAWNEE ...............................6

KU: FACULTY/ACADEMIC/LECTURERS .... 97

USA800, INC. ................................. 120

CLO ................................................ 12

KU: STAFF OPENINGS ......................... 56

VALEO ............................................. 20

CORIZON HEALTH ................................6

KU: STUDENT OPENINGS .................. 115

WESTAFF .......................................... 25

COTTONWOOD................................... 11

MISCELLANEOUS ............................... 40

L E A R N M O R E AT J O B S . L AW R E N C E . C O M

AT T E N T I O N E M P L OY E R S !

Email your number of job openings to Peter at psteimle@ljworld.com. *Approximate number of job openings at the time of this printing.

Bookkeeper

Flexible, Part-Time Position working with the Youth Activities Grant administered by Neosho County Community College at Peaslee Tech, Lawrence KS This grant involves helping out-of-school Youth age 16-21 complete GED programs and obtain employment. This position will assist the Director in securing internship positions for youth and tracking and reporting grant progress and performance. Excellent communication and computer skill required. Associate degree or higher required. Visit our website at: www.neosho.edu/careers for a more detailed description of the position as well as directions for submitting your application.

Neosho County Community College EOE/AA employer

LAWRENCE Deliver Newspapers! It’s Fun! Outstanding pay Part-time work Be an independent contractor, Deliver every day, between 2-6 a.m. Reliable vehicle, driver’s license, insurance in your own name, and a phone required.

Come in & Apply! 645 New Hampshire 816-805-6780 jinsco@ljworld.com

Director of Property Management This position reports to the President of First Management. Manages the operations of the company’s multifamily portfolio by overseeing the daily operations of a group of properties. Requires at least 5 years of experience in property management. Acts as a team member with all employees of the corporate office as well as the property level. Must be self-motivated to investigate new procedures and systems that will reduce operating expenses while maintaining resident satisfaction. Strong financial aptitude and analytical skills. This is a full time position in a fast-paced environment. Benefits include health, dental, vision and 401(k). Please email resume with cover letter to jobs@firstmanagementinc.com

Customer Service Eyewear Customer Service Come work with one of Lawrence’s best eye care teams! Established private practice, specializing in eye health care for all ages has an immediate full time opportunity. Seeking a responsible individual who would enjoy patient care. Must be team oriented, confident, friendly, able to multitask in an exciting fast-paced environment, motivated to provide exceptional customer service, and have strong computer skills. Sales experience a plus, but not required. $12-16/hr, depending on qualifications. Excellent full-time benefit package! Send resume and cover letter to: eyecarelawrencejobs@g mail.com

Customer Service

9 Hard Workers needed NOW! $10 hr to train. Quickly earn $12-$15 hr Weekly pay checks. Paid Vacations No Weekends

Call today! 785-841-9999

Thicker line? Bolder heading? Color background or Logo? Ask how to get these features in your ad TODAY!! Call: 785-832-2222

DriversTransportation Part Time Limo Driver. Flexible hours. 15 years driving experience. Clean. 785-841-0463

COF Training Services, Inc., a non-profit organization providing services to individuals with disabilities, is seeking a full time bookkeeper in our Ottawa office. A bachelor’s degree in business from a four-year college/university or two years bookkeeping experience and/or training, or equivalent combination of education and experience is required. Supervisor experience preferred. Applicants must be able to pass background checks and drug/alcohol testing (pre-employment and random testing required). COF offers competitive wages and excellent benefits including medical, dental, and life insurance, paid time off and KPERS.

Apply at: 1516 N. Davis Ave Ottawa, KS 66067 Equal Opportunity Employer

Executive Management

General

Submit cover letter, resume and 3 references by 2/19/16 to: dcss.search@gmail.com

General Appliance Delivery /Installer Valid drivers license and heavy lifting required. Full-Time/Part-time and some Saturdays. Apply at: Stoneback Appliance 925 Iowa St. No phone calls please.

HUMOR is good medicine. I got fired from my job making calenders—just because I took 1 day off! Hang in there!

Dietary FT PM 1 Cook 1 Dietary Aide

Nursing FT 1 Evening & 1 Night RN/LPN PT RN/LPN Apply in Person Tonganoxie Nursing & Rehab Center 1010 East St. Tonganoxie, KS 66086

913-369-8705

Be Smart

Douglas County Senior Services

JUST DON’T

DeSoto Management & Drivers! Please apply in person. Immediate interviews. Drivers must be 18 and have no more than 3 moving violations. Call Today!

913-585-1265

Bring pets Eat in our office Bring children Swear Lie Get angry Try to bribe us Be a pain (We’ve seen it all!)

DO! Follow directions Be polite Turn off phone Decisions Determine Destiny

HIRING IMMEDIATELY! Drive for KU on Wheels or Lawrence Transit System. Flexible part-time schedules, 80% company paid employee health insurance for full time. Career opportunities. $11.50/hr after paid training. Must be 21+ w. good driving record. Apply online: lawrencetransit.org/ employment Or come to: MV Transportation, Inc. 1260 Timberedge Road Lawrence, KS. EOE

Office-Clerical

Program Technician

Interview TIP #6

Executive Director

Provides overall strategic, visionary, and operational leadership for an agency serving seniors in Douglas County. Complete job description at: dgcoseniorservices.org

Healthcare

NEW MANAGEMENT TEAM SEEKING EXPERIENCED

DIRECTOR OF NURSING Apply in person at 1010 East Street Tonganoxie, KS 66086

913-369-8705

The Douglas County Farm Service Agency has a permanent full-time Program Technician position available. Salary ranges from $28,886 to $46, 831 (CO-4 to CO-6), depending on experience/education. Benefits include health, life, retirement, annual and sick leave. Must be a US citizen. High school graduate or GED. Person selected will be subject to background investigation. To see full vacancy announcement and apply online see: http://www.usajobs.gov (type Farm Service Agency in the “Keyword” box and Kansas in the “Location” box) PLEASE READ ALL INSTRUCTIONS ON “HOW TO APPLY” and “REQUIRED DOCUMENTS”! Complete application packages must be submitted by 11:59 pm EDT, Tuesday, February, 16 2016. USDA is an Equal Opportunity Provider and Employer.

Part-Time

Custodian The Lawrence Arts Center seeks a part time Custodian for the weekend shift. Hours vary. Prior experience preferred. Send resume by February 17, 2015 to 940 New Hampshire, Lawrence KS 66044 or business@lawrence artscenter.org

You Miss 100% of the shots you don’t take.

APPLY! Decisions Determine Destiny

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

Tuesday, February 16, 2016 • 11:30 AM - 3 PM • Peaslee Tech, 29TH & Haskell Ave. Meet, mingle & connect with great local employers with many job openings. Includes a special presentation, “What Employers Want” by Peter Steimle.


L awrence J ournal -W orld

Saturday, February 6, 2016

MERCHANDISE PETS

APARTMENTS

TO PLACE AN AD:

TO PLACE AN AD:

AUCTIONS

Baby & Children Items Child Booster chairs 7”x14” decorated $20. 785-424-5628

Building Materials

classifieds@ljworld.com

Machinery-Tools

MERCHANDISE

Auction Calendar **PAWN SHOP AUCTION** Saturday, February 6, 6 PM 4795 Frisbie Rd Shawnee, KS Preview items at NOON -Great selection of recreational items from hunting, laptops, game systems, tools, coins, jewelry AND MORE!

785.832.2222

PETS

16 foot Extension Ladder 200 lb capacity. Davidson. Asking $65- 785-842-2928 Roadside Emergency Kit- $20 Set includes; Booster cable, 2-in-1 6” screwdriver, 6” long-nose pliers, Warning triangle, 7/8” - 11/16”, 13/16” 3/4” wrench, 8” adjustable wrench, First aid kit includes Insulation tape, 10-pc. car fuse, 7-1/2, 10, 15, 20 and 25, 12-volt air compressor with 3 nozzles, Custom-molded plastic carry case.

785-841-7635 Please leave a message

Call Today 785-828-4476 or cell 785-229-2369 Visit us on the web: www.HarleyGerdesAuctions.com

PUBLIC AUCTION Skid loader, woodworking welding & powder coating equipment. Online only. Bid now at billfair.com 1.800.887.6929 REAL ESTATE AUCTION Sat., Feb. 13 at 1:30 pm Overbrook Library 317 Maple St. Overbrook, KS 501.4 Acres m/l of Eastern Osage County, 3 Tracts For more info or to schedule a viewing call: Cline Realty & Auction, John E. Cline, Broker 785-889-4775 mcclivestock.com/clinerealty

Estate Sales

Sat. 2/6, Sun. 2/7 9:00 am - 5:00 pm —————————————— Furniture, Primitives, Old Toys, Books, Fenton Glass, Cast Iron, Linens, Lamps, etc. VERY LARGE SALEBuilding is Full! 1/2 Price Every Day!

Place your ad at apartments.lawrence.com or email classifieds@ljworld.com

Collectibles

Miscellaneous

Mantle Clocks - Fancy & Boots: black Chimes, your choice, Danner “Acadia,” Size 10, excel$35-$85. Call 785-424-5628 lent condition, $100. Call (785) 830-8304 anytime.

Food & Produce

MEET PAN!!!

Investment / Development

Hello, we are fostering Pan for the Lawrence Humane Society. He’s a great dog; loving, sweet, hilarious, great with kids! Pan is in Need of a Forever Home! You can adopt Pan at LHS.

147 acres- Lawrence Schools, large CUSTOM home, barns, 2nd house on property, ponds, just west of 6th & SLTfastest growing intersection in Kansas. $1.6 M

Range & Refrigerator included. W/D on-site. $600 deposit, $700/mo. with utilities paid.

Bill Fair & Company www.billfair.com

LAUREL GLEN APTS

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

FURNITURE FOR SALE Lawrence Leather couch, upholstered recliner (chair & and-a-half), mission style recliner w/ southwestern style ulpholstery, 2 night stands, sweater dresser, & dresser mirror. Call or Text 785-312-0764

785-832-9906

Sports Fan Gear Own a piece of KU Jayhawk History!

Household Misc.

Hunting-Fishing Winchester Multi Tool + Knife w/ pocket clip- $69 785-424-5628

785 - 331 - 8244

713 W. 25th, Avail. Now!

785-979-7812

All Electric

1, 2 & 3 BR units

Office Space

785-838-9559 Duplexes 2BR in a 4-plex

16 E. 13th St. Professional Office Space for Lease in beautifully restored historic home in Downtown. 3 options: Mini Suite, Single, or Spacious Room w/ plenty of natural light. 785.393.4966

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

1st Month FREE!

Equal Housing Opportunity. 785-865-2505

Income Property ESU Properties Owner Finance. 13 houses 2-5 bd, 27 apts 1-3 bd. Fixer-upper. $57k each. 620-757-1220.

Zebra Finches

Lawrence

 NOW LEASING  Spring - Fall TUCKAWAY APARTMENTS

Tuckawayapartments.com 785-856-0432 TUCKAWAY AT BRIARWOOD

Tuckawayatbriarwood.com HARPER SQUARE Harpersquareapartments.com HUTTON FARMS Huttonfarms.com

785-841-3339

Office Space

2BR, 2 bath, fireplace, CA, W/D hookups, 2 car with opener. Easy access to I-70. Includes paid cable. Pet under 20 lbs. allowed Call 785-842-2575 www.princeton-place.com

Downtown Office Space Single offices, elevator & conference room, $725. Call Donna or Lisa

785-841-6565

EXECUTIVE OFFICE AVAILABLE at WEST LAWRENCE LOCATION $525/mo., Utilities included Conference Room, Fax Machine, Copier Available Contact Donna

W/D hookups, Fireplace, Major Appliances. Lawn Care & Dbl Car Garage! Equal Housing Opportunity

785-865-2505 grandmanagement.net

SUNRISE PLACE Now Leasing 2 BR’s Close to Campus & Downtown Pool, On KU Bus Route, Spacious Floorplan, Patios/Decks. Great location: 837 Michigan CALL FOR SPECIALS!

Call now! 785-841-8400 www.sunriseapartments.com

785-841-6565

Advanco@sunflower.com

Thicker line? Bolder heading? Color background? Ask how to get these features in your ad! Call 785-832-2222

BE MY VALENTINE?

8 weeks old, ready for a new home. One is white & grey and one is white w/ grey belly. 1 female & 1 possible male. $5 ea. 785-542-2699- Eudora

SHARE THE LOVE!

Valentine’s Day is to show the loved ones in our lives how much we care. Share that love with the Douglas County Visiting Nurses! Submit a photo of you and your Valentine to be printed in a special section of the Journal-World, Sunday, February 14 and a portion of the proceeds will be donated to Douglas County Visiting Nurses.

for merchandise

under $100 Call 785.832.2222

Need to sell your car? Place your ad at classifieds.lawrence.com or email classifieds@ljworld.com

Townhomes 3 BR w/2 or 2.5 BA

Rat Terrier Puppies Your Perfect Valentine! UKC Registered, Pure Breed, Hand Raised. Born 11-9-15. 4 boys- 3 b&w & 1 brown & white. Serious calls only, please leave a message. 785-249-1221

FIRST MONTH FREE! 1 & 2 Bedroom Units Available Now! Cooperative townhomes start at $446 -$490/month. Water, trash, sewer paid. Back patio, CA, hardwood floors, full basmnt., stove, refrigeratpr, w/d hookup, garbage disposal, reserved parking. On-site management & maintenance. 24 hr emergency maintenance. Membership & Equity fee Required. 785-842-2545 (Equal Housing Opportunity) pinetreetownhouses.com

EOH

FREE ADS KANSAS JAYHAWK COFFEE TABLE Made from original oak flooring from Hoch auditorium, with Jayhawk logo, crimson & blue baselines. 21 x 54 x 14. $600. Call 785-760-6991

2BR, small apt. in 4-plex.

Some with W/D, Water & Trash Paid, Small Pet, Income Restrictions Apply

Available 2/1 Open House : Feb 7, 5pm

PIANOS

Furniture

Plant Stands... many sizes, decorated- $35 785-424-5628

 Has been to puppy training, knows basic commands.  Free-roaming while humans are away & is well behaved.  Smart & Outgoing- loves walks, jogs, chasing toys.  Particular about dogs, not sure about cats. No other pets would be ideal.

Apartments Unfurnished

800-887-6929

GREAT JOGGING PARTNER!

Music-Stereo

Solid Wood Dinning Table w/ 4 chairs. 42” Diam. that extends to 58” Diam. Asking $ 200.00 Call 785-760-1481

Sale Held Over Antiques & Vintage 203 W. 7th St Perry, KS

Need an apartment?

T-Bar Natural Wood Hinged Screen Door (Actual: 36-in x 80-in) $10 785-841-7635 Please leave a message

Townhomes

RENTALS

Lawrence OPPORTUNITY:

classifieds@ljworld.com

785.832.2222

Pets

Metro Pawn Inc 913.596.1200 metropawnks.com Lindsay Auction Svc. 913.441.1557 lindsaysauctions.com Harley Gerdes Consignment Auction Saturday, Mar. 12, 9:00 am, Lyndon, KS (ad deadline Feb. 24th) Demand is High. We need your equipment of all types.

REAL ESTATE

| 9C

Email your photo, along with your name and telephone number to submissions@ljworld.com to be included.

JUST

$20

Call 785-832-2222

SERVICES TO PLACE AN AD: Antique/Estate Liquidation

785.832.2222 Carpentry

classifieds@ljworld.com Concrete

Stamped & Reg. Concrete, Patios, Walks, Driveways, Acid Staining & Overlays, Tear-Out & Replacement Jayhawk Concrete Inc. 785-979-5261

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

The 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

Placing an ad...

IT’S

EASY!

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

Auctioneers

Place your ad at apartments.lawrence.com

Decks & Fences

DECK BUILDER Over 25 yrs. exp. Licensed & Insured. Decks, deck covers, pergolas, screened porches, & all types of repairs. Call 913-209-4055 for Free estimates or go to prodeckanddesign.com

HOUSE CLEANER ADDING NEW CUSTOMERS Years of experience, references available, Insured. 785-748-9815 (local)

Dirt-Manure-Mulch

Guttering Services

JAYHAWK GUTTERING Seamless aluminum guttering.

913-962-0798 Fast Service

Serving KC over 40 years

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

Foundation Repair

jayhawkguttering.com

785-842-0094

Foundation & Masonry Specialist Water Prevention Systems for Basements, Sump Pumps, Foundation Supports & Repair & more. Call 785-221-3568

FOUNDATION REPAIR 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

“I bought an off-road vehicle at a blind auction. Got it delivered...

it was a canoe.”

800-887-6929 www.billfair.com

785-312-1917

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

Landscaping

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

YARDBIRDS LANDSCAPING Father (retired) & Son Operation W/Experience & Top of the Line Machinery Snow Removal Call 785-766-1280

Deck Drywall Siding Replacement Gutters Privacy Fencing Doors & Trim Commercial Build-out Build-to-suit services Fully Insured 22 yrs. experience

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

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

Home Improvements

913-488-7320 Auctioneers

Moving-Hauling

Pet Services

Higgins Handyman Rich Black Top Soil No Chemicals Machine Pulverized Pickup or Delivery

STARTING or BUILDING a Business?

New York Housekeeping Accepting clients for weekly, bi-weekly, seasonal or special occasion cleaning. Excellent References. Beth - 785-766-6762

Home Improvements

Painting D&R Painting interior/exterior • 30+ years • power washing • repairs (inside & out) • stain decks • wallpaper stripping • free estimates 913-401-9304

Need to sell your car?

Lawn, Garden & Nursery

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

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

KansasTreeCare.com

Place your ad at classifieds.lawrence.com or email classifieds@ljworld.com

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

785-832-2222 classifieds@ljworld.com

Kill Creek Trucking LLC Construction & Farm Equipment Hauling 7 & 8 axle lowboy 53’ Stepdeck Small Loads & Oversize/Overweight Loads Russ Duncan 913-205-9249 killcreektrucking@gmail.com

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

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

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?

Quality Work Over 30 yrs. exp.

785-832-2222 classifieds@ljworld.com

Lawrence

Lawrence

E. JOLLY; CHARLES C. FAWL AND DORIS J. FAWL, TRUSTEES OF THE CHARLES C. FAWL LIVING TRUST DATED JUNE 23, 2004; CHARLES C. FAWL AND DORIS J. FAWL, TRUSTEES OF THE DORIS J. FAWL LIVING TRUST DATED JUNE 23, 2004; LEONARD A. LANG AND KAREN ROSE LANG; DANIEL SQUIRES; DONALD F. BRUNS AND BONNIE S. BRUNS; CLINT A. JENNINGS; CHARLES VAN DUEN; AMES STREET APARTMENTS, LLC; WESLEY F. SMITH AND LISA M. LEROUX-SMITH; SETH T. GRIFFIN, JR. TRUSTEE OF THE SETH T. GRIFFIN, JR. TRUST DATED OCTOBER 27, 2005; VERMA JEWELL GRIFFIN, TRUSTEE OF THE VERMA JEWELL GRIFFIN LIVING TRUST

DATED OCTOBER 27, 2005; KELSIE J. RAY AND ASHLEY P. RAY; B.A. GREEN CONSTRUCTION CO., INC.; PHYLLIS A. ULRICH, TRUSTEE OF THE PHYLLIS A. ULRICH REVOCABLE TRUST DATED JULY 2, 1997; FIRST SECURITY BANK OF OVERBOOK; KAW VALLEY STATE BANK; MID-AMERICA BANK; DOUGLAS COUNTY BANK; FAIRWAY INDEPENDENT MORTGAGE CORP; TCF NATIONAL BANK; AND the UNKNOWN HEIRS, EXECUTORS, ADMINISTRATORS, DEVISEES, TRUSTEES, CREDITORS and ASSIGNS of any DECEASED

Call Lyndsey 913-422-7002

PUBLIC NOTICES 785.832.2222 Lawrence

PUBLIC NOTICE CONTINUED FROM 7C vanced life support base rate.I. Additional Service Policies: 1. Specialized services for purposes of this section shall be defined as services, which include either electrocardiogram monitoring, intravenous solutions administration or advanced airway establishment. 2. The all-inclusive base rates will consist of all disposable supplies including pharmaceuticals and solutions. 3. When a helicopter is used instead of an ambulance to transport the patient from the scene, the patient will be charged the applicable base rate. 4. When a patient receives

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specialized services and is not transported, the patient will be charge the applicable base rate. 5. When service is rendered and either the City of Lawrence or Douglas County would be responsible for the fee, the all fees will be waived. 6. When service is provided for emergency service personnel while performing their official duties the fee(s) will be waived. 7. Lawrence-Douglas County Fire Medical shall accept assignment on all Medicare or Medicaid claims or when Medicare/Medicaid benefits have been waived by a beneficiary in conjunction with a managed care plan. In addition, Lawrence-Douglas County Fire and Medical shall accept allowable amounts

from the State Crime Victims Fund, the Veterans Administration, Tricare/Champus and Worker Compensation claims. 8. Lawrence-Douglas County Fire Medical shall be a contracting provider of ambulance services for Blue Shield of Kansas. 9. All ambulance services must be provided by a Kansas licensed advanced life support capable ambulance. Section 2. Section 8-401 of the Code of the City of Lawrence, Kansas, 2015 Edition, as amended, is repealed, it being the intent of this City Ordinance to supersede the repealed provisions. Resolution No. 08-28 of the Board of County Commissioners, as codified at Section 5-201 of the Code of Douglas

County, Kansas, is repealed, it being the intent of this County Resolution to supersede the repealed provisions. Section 3. This joint resolution/ordinance shall take effect and be in force after its passage and publication as provided by law. PASSED by the governing body of the City of Lawrence, Kansas this 2nd day of February, 2016. ADOPTED by the Board of County Commissioners of Douglas County, Kansas this 20th day of January, 2016. APPROVED: /s/Mike Amyx Mike Amyx Mayor ATTEST: /s/ Brandon McGuire Brandon McGuire

Lawrence Acting City Clerk Approved as to form and legality /s/ Toni R. Wheeler Toni R. Wheeler City Attorney BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS /s/Jim Flory Jim Flory Chair /s/Nancy Thellman Nancy Thellman, Commissioner /s/Mike Gaughan Mike Gaughan, Commissioner ATTEST: /s/ Jameson D. Shew

Lawrence Jameson D. Shew, County Clerk ________ (First published in the Lawrence Daily Journal World February 6, 2016) IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS In the Matter of the Acquisition of Property by Eminent Domain PUBLIC WHOLESALE WATER SUPPLY DISTRICT NO. 25, A QUASI-MUNICIPAL CORPORATION Plaintiff v. JAMES JOLLY a/k/a JAMES

PUBLIC NOTICE CONTINUED ON 10C


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Saturday, February 6, 2016

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L awrence J ournal -W orld

NOTICES

PUBLIC NOTICES 785.832.2222 Lawrence

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ANNOUNCEMENTS

Special Notices North Lawrence Improvement Association

PUBLIC NOTICE CONTINUED FROM 9C DEFENDANTS; the UNKNOWN SPOUSES of any DEFENDANTS; the UNKNOWN OFFICERS, SUCCESSORS, TRUSTEES, CREDITORS and ASSIGNS of any DEEFENDANTS, including EXISTING, DISSOLVED or DORMANT CORPORATIONS or other legal entities; the UNKNOWN EXECUTORS, ADMINISTRATORS, DEVISEES, TRUSTEES, CREDITORS, SUCCESSORS and ASSIGNS of any DEFENDANTS, including those who are or were PARTNERS or in PARTNERSHIP; the unknown GUARDIANS, CONSERVATORS and TRUSTEES of any DEFENDANTS that are MINORS or are under any LEGAL DISABILITY; and the UNKNOWN HEIRS, EXECUTORS, ADMINISTRATORS, DEVISEES, TRUSTEES, CREDITORS and ASSIGNS of any PERSON ALLEGED to be DECEASED. Defendants Case No. 2016 CV 22 NOTICE OF EMINENT DOMAIN PROCEEDINGS PUBLIC WHOLESALE WATER SUPPLY DISTRICT NO. 25; TO ALL INTERESTED PARTIES: Notice is hereby given that on the 15th day of January, 2016, Public Wholesale Water Supply District No. 25 filed with the District Court of Douglas County, Kansas, its Petition for Eminent Domain Proceedings in regard to the following described real estate, and filed its First Amended Petition for Eminent Domain Proceedings on January 29, 2016, to wit: TRACT I Owners of Record: James Jolly, a/k/a James E. Jolly 445 E 150 Road Overbrook, KS 66524 Contract Purchaser: None. Lessees and Sublessees: None. Lienholders of Record: First Security Bank of Overbrook 312 Maple St. Overbrook, KS 66524 Party in Possession: Owner. Existing Easements and Rights-of-Way: Well Transfer Agreement between Douglas Co. and Owner. Easement: A perpetual easement thirty (30) feet in width, adjacent to the road right-of-way line(s), upon the following property: The Northeast Quarter of the Southwest Quarter of Section 25, Township 14 South, Range 17 East of the 6th P.M. in Douglas County, Kansas. TRACT II Owners of Record: Charles C. Fawl and Doris J. Fawl, Trustees The Charles C. Fawl Living Trust dated June 23, 2004 515 E 300 Road Overbrook, KS 66524 Contract Purchaser: None. Lessees and Sublessees: None. Lienholders of Record: None. Party in Possession: Owners. Existing Easements and Rights-of-Way: Easement for RWD#5, Douglas County for water pipeline. Easement: A perpetual easement thirty (30) feet in width, the North line of which is the existing water line of RWD #5, Douglas County as laid, upon the following property: The North Half of the Southeast Quarter of Section 25, Township 14 South, Range 17 East of the 6th P.M. in Douglas County, Kansas. TRACT III Owners of Record: Charles C. Fawl and Doris J. Fawl, Trustees The Charles C. Fawl Living Trust dated June 23, 2004 and the Doris J. Fawl Living

Trust dated June 23, 2004 515 E 300 Road Overbrook, KS 66524 Contract Purchaser: None. Lessees and Sublessees: None. Lienholders of Record: None. Party in Possession: Owners. Existing Easements and Rights-of-Way: Easement for RWD#5, Douglas County for water pipeline. Easement: A perpetual easement thirty (30) feet in width adjacent to the road right-of-way line, except that for that land upon which there is an existing water line owned by RWD #5, Douglas County, Kansas; then such easement shall be defined as thirty (30) feet in width, the North line of which is the existing water line of R.W.D. #5, Douglas County, Kansas, all upon the following property: The Southwest Fractional Quarter and the West Half of the Southeast Quarter of Section 30, Township 14 South, Range 18 East of the 6th P.M. in Douglas County, Kansas. TRACT IV Owners of Record: Charles C. Fawl and Doris J. Fawl, Trustees The Charles C. Fawl Living Trust dated June 23, 2004 515 E 300 Road Overbrook, KS 66524 Contract Purchaser: None. Lessees and Sublessees: None. Lienholders of Record: None. Party in Possession: Owners. Existing Easements and Rights-of-Way: Easement for RWD#5, Douglas County for water pipeline. Easement: A perpetual easement thirty (30) feet in width, adjacent to the road right-of-way line(s), upon the following property: The East Half of the Southeast Quarter of Section 30, Township 14 South, Range 18 East of the 6th P.M. in Douglas County, Kansas; LESS 3 acres in the Northeast corner thereof, described in the deed recorded in Book 307 at page 1281. TRACT V Owners of Record: Leonard A. Lang and Karen Rose Lang 317 N 450 Road Overbrook, KS 66524 Contract Purchaser: None. Lessees and Sublessees: None. Lienholders of Record: None. Party in Possession: Owners. Existing Easements and Rights-of-Way: Easements for RWD#5, Douglas County for water pipeline. Easement: A perpetual easement thirty (30) feet in width, adjacent to the road right-of-way line(s), upon the following property: The North Half of the Southwest Quarter of Section 29, Township 14 South, Range 18 East of the 6th P.M., in Douglas County, Kansas; less 1 acre in the Northeast corner thereof formerly used for school, and described as: Beginning at the Northeast corner of said Southwest Quarter, thence West 208.7 feet, thence South 208.7 feet, thence East 208.7 feet, thence North 208.7 feet to the place of beginning. TRACT VI Owners of Record: Charles C. Fawl and Doris J. Fawl, Trustees The Charles C. Fawl Living Trust dated June 23, 2004 515 E 300 Road Overbrook, KS 66524 Contract Purchaser: None. Lessees and Sublessees: None. Lienholders of Record: None. Party in Possession: Owners. Existing Easements and Rights-of-Way: None. Easement: A perpetual easement

thirty (30) feet in width, adjacent to the road right-of-way line(s), upon the following property:

North 89° 24’ 54” West a distance of 30.00 feet; Thence North 00° 11’ 07” West a distance of 312.30 feet; Thence South 89° 24’ 54” East a distance of 30.00 feet to the point of beginning, excluding public road right-of-way, upon the following property:

The Northwest Quarter of Section 29, Township 14 South, Range 18 East of the 6th P.M., in Douglas County, Kansas; less .5 acre in the Southwest corner thereof deeded to A parcel of land located in Catholic Church in Book 39 the Southwest Quarter of at page 162. Section 22, Township 14 South, Range 19 East of the TRACT VII 6th P.M., Douglas County, Kansas, more particularly Owners of Record: described as follows: BeDaniel Squires ginning at the Northwest 508 N Rebecca Lane corner of the Southwest Lawrence, KS 66044 Quarter; thence South Contract Purchaser: 89°24’54” East a distance None. of 698.86 feet, said point Lessees and Sublessees: being on the North line of None. the Southwest Quarter; Lienholders of Record: thence South 00°21’11” None. West a distance of 312.28 Party in Possession: feet; thence North Owners. 89°24’54” West a distance Existing Easements and of 698.86 feet, said point Rights-of-Way: being on the West line of Easement for RWD#5, the Northwest Quarter; Douglas County for water thence North 00°21’11” pipeline. East a distance of 312.28 Easement: feet to the point of beginnA perpetual easement ing. thirty (30) feet in width, TRACT X adjacent to the road right-of-way line(s), upon Owners of Record: the following property: The East Half of the North- Charles Van Deun west Quarter of Section 28, 220 N. Dithridge St. Apt 707 Township 14 South, Range Pittsburgh, PA 15213 18 East of the 6th P.M., in Contract Purchaser: None. Douglas County, Kansas. Lessees and Sublessees: TRACT VIII None. Lienholders of Record: Owners of Record: None. Party in Possession: Donald F. Bruns and Bonnie S. Bruns Owners. Existing Easements and 811 N 500 Road Rights-of-Way: Baldwin City, KS 66006 Contract Purchaser: Easement for RWD #2 None. Douglas County. Lessees and Sublessees: Easement: None. A perpetual easement Lienholders of Record: thirty (30) feet in width, Kaw Valley State Bank adjacent to the road 739 Main Street right-of-way line(s), upon Eudora, Kansas 66025-0702 the following property: Party in Possession: Owners. The South 20 acres of the Existing Easements and North 40 acres of the Rights-of-Way: Northeast Quarter of SecNone. tion 12, Township 14 South, Easement: Range 19 East of the 6th A perpetual easement P.M., in Douglas County, thirty (30) feet in width ad- Kansas; and jacent to the road The South 20 acres of the right-of-way line, except North 60 acres of the for the east (80) feet of the Northeast Quarter of Secfollowing described prop- tion 12, Township 14 South, erty. For the east (80) feet Range 19 East of the 6th of this property a perpet- P.M., in Douglas County, ual easement (40) feet in Kansas. width adjacent to the road TRACT XI right-of-way line, all upon the following property: Owners of Record: A parcel of land located in Ames Street Apartments, the Northwest Quarter of LLC Section 30, Township 14 P. O. Box 644 South, Range 19 East of the Baldwin City, KS 66006 6th P.M., Douglas County, Contract Purchaser: Kansas more particularly None. described as follows: Be- Lessees and Sublessees: ginning at the Northwest None. corner of the Northwest Lienholders of Record: Quarter; thence South Mid-America Bank 89°59’52” East, a distance 802 Ames St. of 1282.61 feet, said point PO Box 4 being on the North line of Baldwin City, KS 66006 the Northwest Quarter and Party in Possession: the East line of the North Owners. Half of the West Half of the Northwest Quarter; thence Existing Easements and South 00°16’08” East, a dis- Rights-of-Way: tance of 983.24 feet, said Easement for RWD #2 point being on the East Douglas County. line of the North Half of the West Half of the Northwest Easement: perpetual easement Quarter; thence North A 89°59’22” West, a distance thirty (30) feet in width adto the road of 1279.76 feet, said point jacent being on the West line of right-of-way line, except the Northwest Quarter; that for that land upon thence North 00°26’07” which there is an existing West, a distance of 983.07 water line owned by RWD feet to the point of beginn- #4, Douglas County, Kansas; then such easement ing. shall be defined as thirty TRACT IX (30) feet in width, the East line of which is the existOwners of Record: ing water line of RWD #4, Clint A. Jennings Douglas County, Kansas, 1105 N 550 Rd all upon the following Baldwin City, KS 66006 property: Contract Purchaser: None. A parcel of land located in Lessees and Sublessees: the Northeast Quarter of None. Section 12, Township 14 Lienholders of Record: South, Range 19 East of the Douglas County Bank 6th P.M., Douglas County, 3101 Iowa Street Kansas, described as folLawrence, KS 66046 lows: Beginning a the Party in Possession: Northeast corner of the Owners. Northeast Quarter; thence Existing Easements and South 00°11’44” East a disRights-of-Way: tance of 329.75 feet, said Easement for RWD #2 and point being on the East Tauy Creek Watershed line of the Northeast QuarDist. #82. ter; thence South 88°44’40” Easement: West a distance of 2661.72 Commencing at the North- feet, said point being on west corner of the South- the West line of the Northwest Quarter of Section 22, east Quarter; thence North Township 14 South, Range 00°4’11” West a distance of 19 East of the 6th P.M., 332.45 feet, said point beDouglas County, Kansas; ing the Northwest corner Thence South 89° 24’ 54” of the Northeast Quarter; East, coincident with the thence North 88°48’10” North line of said South- East a distance of 2661.91 west Quarter, a distance of feet to the Point of Beginn91.12 feet to the point of ing; and beginning; Thence South 00° 11’ 07” East a distance A parcel of land located in of 312.30 feet; Thence the Southeast Quarter of

Section 1, Township 14 South, Range 19 East of the 6th P.M., Douglas County, Kansas, described as follows: Commencing at the Southeast corner of Section 1; thence South 88°48’10” West a distance of 274.80 feet to the Point of Beginning, said point being on the South line of the Southeast Quarter; thence continuing South 88°48’10” West a distance of 110.73 feet, said point being on the South line of the Southeast Quarter; thence North 24°44’30” East a distance of 155.60 feet; thence South 70°31’53” East a distance of 100.00 feet; thence South 24°44’30” West a distance of 116.35 feet to the point of beginning. TRACT XII

Mortgage Corp. 4104 W. 6th St. Lawrence, KS 66049 TCF National Bank 1405 Xenium Lane North Plymouth, MN 55441 Party in Possession: Owners. Existing Easements and Rights-of-Way: None. Easement: A perpetual easement thirty (30) feet in width adjacent to the road right-of-way line, except for the east (80) feet of the following described property. For the east (80) feet of this property a perpetual easement (40) feet in width adjacent to the road right-of-way line, all upon the following property:

Owners of Record: Karl W. Reynolds, Helen Reynolds Bennett and Kevin M Reynolds Trustees

Beginning at a point on the North line of the Northeast Quarter of Section 30, Township 13 South, Range 20 East of the 6th P.M., Karl W. Reynolds Revoca- Douglas County, Kansas, ble Trust dated September said point being 367.93 feet 20, 2001 West of the Northeast corner of said Northeast 1429 N. 1110 Rd. Quarter; thence West Lawrence, KS 66046 along the North line of said Northeast Quarter, 479.55 Contract Purchaser: feet; thence South 1°02’10” None. West, 455.12 feet; thence East 479.55 feet; thence Lessees and Sublessees: North 1°02’10” East, 455.12 None. feet to the point of beginning. Lienholders of Record: None. TRACT XIV Party in Possession: Owners. Existing Easements and Rights-of-Way: Pipeline easements for RWD #5, Union Gas System, Inc. and Southern Star Central Gas Pipeline Easement: A perpetual easement thirty (30) feet in width, the North line of which is the existing water line of RWD #5, Douglas County as laid; AND a tract of land thirty (30) feet in width, the east line of which is the existing gas line upon said property, within the North five hundred and forty (540) feet of the East sixty (60) feet, upon the following property: The Northwest fractional Quarter of Section 30, Township 13 South, Range 20 East of the 6th P.M., Douglas County, Kansas, EXCEPT the following described tract: Beginning at the Southwest corner of the Northwest fractional Quarter of said Section, thence North 0°08’15” West 663.46 feet, said point being on the West line of the Northwest fractional Quarter and the North line of the Southwest Quarter of the Southwest Quarter of the Northwest Quarter; thence South 89°58’05” East 657.79 feet, said point being on the North line of the Southwest Quarter of the Southwest Quarter of the Northwest fractional Quarter; thence South 0°08’15” East 663.63 feet, said point being on the South line of the Northwest fractional Quarter; thence North 89°57’12” West 657.79 feet to the point of beginning; and EXCEPT the following described tract: Commencing at the Northwest corner of the said Northwest fractional Quarter; thence South 89°57’04” East a distance of 370.00 feet to the point of beginning, said point being on the North line of the Northwest Quarter; thence continuing South 89°57’04” East a distance of 395.15 feet; thence South 00°02’56” West a distance of 589.00 feet; thence North 89°57’04” West a distance of 395.15 feet; thence North 00°02’56” East a distance of 589.00 feet, to the point of beginning.

Owners of Record: Seth T. Griffin, Jr., Trustee of The Seth T. Griffin, Jr. Living Trust dated October 27, 2005 and Verma Jewell Griffin, Trustee of The Verma Jewell Griffin Living Trust dated October 27, 2005 1716 Kent Terrace Lawrence, KS 66046 Contract Purchaser: None. Lessees and Sublessees: None. Lienholders of Record: None. Party in Possession: Owners. Existing Easements and Rights-of-Way: None.

Contract Purchaser: None. Lessees and Sublessees: None. Lienholders of Record: Fairway Independent

CNA/CMA CLASSES! CNA DAY CLASSES Feb 22- Mar 11 8:30 am-3pm • M-Th Mar 21 - April 13 8:30 am-3pm  M-Th May 13 - May 27 8:00 am-5pm  M-Th June 1 - June 16 8:30 am- 4:30pm  M-Th June 20 - July 8 8:30 am-4:30pm  M-F CNA EVENING CLASSES LAWRENCE KS Mar 29 - May 6 5pm-9pm  T/Th/F June 2 - July 7 5pm-9pm  T/Th/F CNA REFRESHER/CMA UPDATE LAWRENCE February 12/13 March 4/5, 25/26 CALL NOW- 785.331.2025 trinitycareerinstitute.com

Lawrence the following property: A tract of land in the Northwest and the Southwest Quarters of Section 10, Township 13 South, Range 20 East of the 6th P.M., in Douglas County, Kansas, described as follows: Beginning at the Northeast corner of said Southwest Quarter; thence South 01°42’00” East, along the East line of said Quarter Section, 82.50 feet; thence South 88°11’25” West, 2096.85 feet; thence North 01°33’06” West, 941.24 feet to the centerline of North 1360 Road; thence South 80°49’35” East, along said centerline, 2133.98 feet to the East line of said Northwest Quarter; thence South 01°32’30” East, along said East line, 452.16 feet to the point of beginning; LESS that part conveyed to The Secretary of Transportation of the State of Kansas, in the deed recorded in Book 1096 at page 5271.

TRACT XVI Owners of Record: B. A. Green Construction Co., Inc. 1207 Iowa Street Lawrence, KS 66044

Owners of Record: Kelsie J. Ray, Ashley P. Ray and Lown J. Ray 820 E 1000 Road Lawrence, KS 66047

Contract Purchaser: None.

Contract Purchaser: None.

Lienholders of Record: None.

Lessees and Sublessees: None.

Party in Possession: Owners.

Lienholders of Record: None.

Existing Easements and Rights-of-Way: None.

Party in Possession: Owners. Existing Easements and Rights-of-Way: None. Easement: A perpetual easement thirty (30) feet in width, adjacent to the road right-of-way line(s), upon

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Easement: A perpetual easement thirty (30) feet in width, Contract Purchaser: adjacent to the road None. right-of-way line(s), upon Lessees and Sublessees: the following property: None. All of the Southwest Quarter of Section 20, Township Lienholders of Record: 13 South, Range 20 East of None. the 6th P.M., in Douglas County, Kansas; EXCEPT Party in Possession: Owners. the following Tracts: (1) The South Half of the Southwest Quarter of the Existing Easements and Southwest Quarter of said Rights-of-Way: Easements for Central Section; and Utility Company, (2) A tract dedicated for West Kansas Electric Power Co. church purposes, described as follows: Begin- and Catellus Fiber Optics, ning at a point on the LLC. South line and 23 rods (379.50 feet) West from the Easement: perpetual easement Southeast corner of the A Southwest Quarter of said thirty (30) feet in width, to the road Section; thence North 8 ½ adjacent rods (140.25 feet); thence right-of-way line(s), upon on a line forming a com- the following property: plete semicircle Northwesterly to a point 10 rods Lot 1 of Noria Station Sub(165.0 feet) due West; division, a subdivision in thence South 8 ½ rods Douglas County, Kansas. (140.25 feet) to the South line of said Southwest Quarter; thence East along TRACT XVII said South line to the point Owners of Record: of beginning. Phyllis A. Ulrich, Trustee 2354 255th Street Hamilton, KS 66853 TRACT XV

TRACT XIII Owners of Record: Wesley F. Smith and Lisa M. Leroux-Smith 1092 E. 1479 Rd. Lawrence, KS 66046

Special Notices

Lessees and Sublessees: None.

Easement: A perpetual easement thirty (30) feet in width, adjacent to the road right-of-way line(s), upon the following property: Beginning at a point 869.2 feet East of the Southwest corner of the Southeast fractional Quarter of Sec-

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Lawrence tion 33, Township 12 South, Range 20 East of the 6th P.M.; thence North parallel to West line of said Southeast fractional Quarter to a point on the South bank of the Kansas River; thence in a Southeasterly direction along the South bank of said river to a point 1695 feet due East of the West line of said Southeast fractional Quarter; thence South parallel with the West line of said fractional Quarter to a point on the South line of said Southeast fractional Quarter; thence West 825.8 feet to place of beginning; LESS the following described tract: Commencing at the Southwest corner of the Southeast Quarter of said Section 33; thence South 90°00’00” East along the South line of the Southeast Quarter of said Section 33 a distance of 868.83 feet (869.20 deed) for the point of beginning; thence North 00°45’54” West parallel to the West line of the Southeast Quarter of said Section 33 a distance of 573.16 feet; thence South 90°00’00” East a distance of 380.00 feet; thence South 00°45’54” East a distance of 573.16 feet to the South line of the Southeast Quarter of said Section 33; thence North 90°00’00” West along the South line of the Southeast Quarter of said Section 33 a distance of 380.00 feet to the point of beginning; Also, beginning at the Southeast corner of the Southeast fractional Quarter of Section 33, Township 12 South, Range 20 East of the 6th P.M.; thence North 89°30’ West 712.08 feet for the point of beginning; thence North 0°08’ East to the South bank of the Kansas River, thence in a Westerly direction along the South bank of the Kansas River to a point 960.6 feet due West of the East line of said Southeast fractional Quarter; thence South to the South line of said Southeast fractional Quarter; thence East to the point of beginning, in Douglas County, Kansas. You are required to file your written defenses thereto on or before the 24th day of February, 2016, at 3:30 p.m. in the District Court of Douglas County, Kansas, Division 5, at which time and place the subject Petition will be taken up and considered by the Court, as provided in K.S.A. 26-501 et seq. At the time set out for consideration in this Petition, the Court will examine the Petition, and if it is found that Public Wholesale Water Supply District No. 25 has the power of eminent domain, and that the subject taking its necessary for the Plaintiff’s lawful purposes, then appraisers will be appointed and a date set for filing the appraisers’ reports. PUBLIC WHOLESALE WATER SUPPLY DISTRICT NO. 25 By: s/ Gary H. Hanson GARY H. HANSON #11340 TODD A. LUCKMAN #16535 2887 SW MacVicar Ave. Topeka, KS 66611 (785) 267-3410 Attorneys for Public Wholesale Water Supply District No. 25

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