WEEKEND
USA TODAY
GUIDE
Wave discovery affirms Einstein’s theories. 1B
Seeds, sales and cinema. PAGE 3A
Section BB • HometownLawrence.com
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FRIDAY • FEBRUARY 12 • 2016
Oread group, city trade default notices
SCHOOL FUNDING
COURT ENDS BLOCK GRANTS Lawmakers given “ until June 30 to find solution
It’s essentially a temper tantrum by the courts to push their political will on the Legislature.”
By Peter Hancock Twitter: @LJWpqhancock
Topeka — Kansas lawmakers violated the state Constitution last year when they repealed the state’s old school finance formula and replaced it with a system of block grants for two years, the Kansas Supreme Court ruled Thursday. The unsigned decision upheld a June 26, 2015, ruling by a threejudge district court panel, which said the new funding system is not equitable. Lawmakers approved the 2015 law LEGISLATURE as a temporary fix to replace a per-student formula for distributing more than $4 billion a year to school in favor of stable “block grants.” The law was meant to give lawmakers time to devise another system for distributing more than $4 billion a year in aid to its 286 public school districts. However, the court on Thursday said the three-judge panel acted prematurely in ordering the state to add nearly $50 million in additional funding to cure the inequities. Instead, the court gave lawmakers until the end of this fiscal year, June 30, to fix the problem themselves. But the court also warned that it could close public schools next year if lawmakers fail, or refuse, to take action. “Accordingly, the Legislature’s chosen path during the 2016 session will ultimately determine whether Kansas students will be treated fairly and the schoolhouse doors will be open to them in August for the beginning of the 2016-2017 school year,” the court said.
$446,000 Was lost by the Lawrence school district because of the funding change last year, according to finance director Kathy Johnson
By Nikki Wentling
— State Sen. Jeff Melcher, R-Leawood
“
I don’t know what Sam Brownback and his allies expected when they eliminated the school finance formula.”
Twitter: @nikkiwentling
$500 million
In quick succession Thursday in the monthslong $500,000 tax dispute between the city of Lawrence and developers of The Oread hotel, both the city and the developers slapped the other with notices of default on their redevelopment Thomas Fritzel agreement — the city be- leads the cause Oread Inn wasn’t development cooperating, and Oread group behind Inn because the city was The Oread withholding sales and hotel and Oread property tax reimburse- Wholesale. ments. Interim City Manager Diane Stoddard said in a default notice to the development group, Oread Inn, that if the group doesn’t address a list of issues in 30 days, the city has the grounds to terminate the agreement. Oread Inn’s notice of default was sent to the city just
A year in school funding may need to be added back into the state’s budget, a three-judge panel previously ruled
which include block grant funding for next year, and which make no — Senate Minority Leader Anthony Hensley, provision for additional funding. D-Topeka Both bills would leave the state with a projected ending balance of only about $31 million this year and $111 In Lawrence, the change to block million next year. However, because grant funding resulted in an estirevenues have come up short in recent mated net loss of more months, this year’s endthan $446,000 this ing balance could be as Inside: School districts year, according to the low as $9 million. welcome ruling, but district’s finance direcThe House went funding challenges tor, Kathy Johnson. forward Thursday remain. Page 10A That was mainly due with final passage of its to changes in the way budget, 68-56, despite a the state now calculates “supplefailed attempt by Democrats to send mental aid,” which subsidizes it back to committee in light of the districts’ local option budget. court’s ruling. The decision came just as the Rep. Ron Ryckman Jr., R-Olathe, Kansas House and Senate were pre- who chairs the House Appropriaparing to finalize their budget bills, tions Committee, said he wasn’t prepared to comment on the decision until after he’s had time to study it. The decision is likely to increase political tension between the court and the Republican lawmakers, many of whom still argue that the court overstepped its bounds in 2005 when, in an earlier school finance case, it ordered the Legislature to increase funding by hundreds of millions of dollars per year.
Please see OREAD, page 2A
Senate advances budget Ruling on school finance system disregarded By Peter Hancock
Please see COURT, page 10A
Twitter: @LJWpqhancock
Shutterstock
The Kansas Senate worked late into the night Thursday and passed a budget bill, despite the fact that the Kansas Supreme Court ruled earlier in the day that a major part of the budget, the system of funding public schools, was unconstitutional. Please see BUDGET, page 2A
INSIDE
Mostly sunny Business Classified Comics Deaths
High: 36
Low: 11
Today’s forecast, page 10A
2A 5C-8C 6A 2A
Events listings Going Out Horoscope Opinion
Guns on campus
7A, 2C Puzzles 7A Sports 8A Television 9A USA Today
8A 1C-4C 8A, 10A, 2C 1B-8B
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Vol.158/No.43 32 pages
The Senate rejected a proposal Thursday that would have given universities four more years to comply with the state’s concealed carry law. 3A
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Friday, February 12, 2016
LAWRENCE • STATE
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DEATHS Rebecca elaine Fabac Memorial services will be held Friday, February 12th at 4pm at Eudora Baptist Church in Eudora, KS.
Charlene newman Graveside services for Charlene Newman, 88, Lawrence, will be at 1 pm Tuesday at Memorial Park Cemetery. Mrs. Newman died Tuesday, Feb. 9, 2016, at Lawrence Memorial Hospital. She was born Nov. 27, 1927, in Humphrey, Mo., the daughter of Floyd and Cleo McKay Swank. She graduated from high school in Humphrey. Charlene was a homemaker, and had worked at Hallmark Cards and provided child care in her home. She enjoyed traveling and eating out with friends. She married Harvey C. Newman on June 22, 1955, in Madison, Kan. He preceded her in death in 1992. A brother, Phillip ‘Buddy’ Swank, and a sister, June Smith, also preceded her in
death. Survivors include two daughters, Chris Newman, Wichita, and Lori Newman, of the home; and a brother, Carl Swank, Clarkston, Wash. Friends may call from 9 am to 8 pm Monday at Rumsey-Yost Funeral Home, where the family will receive them from 6 to 7:30 pm. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions are suggested to the Arthritis Foundation, or the Kansas Humane Society of Wichita, in care of the funeral home, 601 Indiana St., Lawrence, KS, 66044. Online condolences may be sent at rumsey-yost.com. Please sign this guestbook at Obituaries. LJWorld.com.
Oread
Inn in the two months since city officials announced the findings of an audit that alleged Oread Wholesale, a wholesale company listed as a tenant of The Oread hotel, manipulated sales tax data to inflate sales within a special taxing district at the hotel. The redevelopment agreement requires the city to rebate back to the development group a large percentage of local sales tax dollars collected in the special taxing district at 1200 Oread Ave. “Improper” reimbursements, paid from January 2010 through May 2015, totaled $429,594.74, the audit found. Sending a check for nearly $500,0000 to the city — including reimbursements for the overpayment plus interest — was the one demand Oread Inn complied with. Oread Inn has contested the remaining demands, which included agreeing to amend the redevelopment pact to allow the city better access for audits; handing over financial documents Oread Wholesale used to prepare sales tax returns; and paying for the city’s audit of Oread Wholesale. Oread Inn answered the city’s default notice Thursday with its own set of demands. First, Oread Inn demanded the city give back the $429,592.74 it paid Dec. 31. It also demanded the city pay the reimbursements it withheld from Oread Inn since it halted payments June 9; that it reimburse $158,245 Oread Inn paid in property taxes in 2015 and that the city assure, in writing, that it will keep monthly sales tax returns from the group confidential. In a statement Thursday evening, Edward Frizell, Oread Wholesale’s attorney, said the response was intended to “set the record straight and set out the real facts
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A
hours later. It stated that if the city does not rectify the issues brought up by Oread Inn, the development group would pursue legal action. At stake is $8 million: the amount Oread Inn could still generate in city reimbursements if the redevelopment agreement were to stand. Since its creation in 2008, the agreement has brought in $3 million for developers. Stoddard’s letter to Oread Inn states the development group defaulted on a section of the agreement that requires mutual assistance in carrying out the agreement and its intent. But Oread Inn’s letter to the city late Thursday decried that allegation, saying the development group tried to resolve the dispute through discussions but that the city was unwilling. “It appears the city has no interest in pursuing these discussions and instead wishes to pursue an aggressive agenda that will most likely result in litigation between the parties,” wrote Roger Walter, Oread Inn’s attorney. Because the city had suspended reimbursements to the group starting June 9 during its investigation into the special taxing district established in the agreement, the city had broken the pact, Walter’s letter stated. Oread Inn also said the city’s move to declare default earlier Thursday was “aggressive,” and the group demanded back the nearly $500,000 it paid to the city Dec. 31 “under protest” at the city’s demand. The city has made multiple demands of Oread
Budget CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A
The Senate both debated the bill and passed it on final action, 23-16, the same night. Sens. Marci Francisco, D-Lawrence, and Tom Holland, D-Baldwin City, voted against the bill. Republicans who control the Senate pushed aside efforts by Democrats to delay the entire budget discussion and send it back to committee to revise the school funding system, or to carve out the K-12 funding portion and deal with it separately. “This is nothing more than an opportunity to politically grandstand on a
hot topic,” said Ways and Means Committee Chairman Sen. Ty Masterson of Andover. “Today’s opinion is irrelevant to this particular discussion.” Senate President Susan Wagle, R-Wichita, said after the debate that Senate leaders plan to get a private briefing early today and go over the decision with attorneys from the Legislature’s Revisor of Statutes office and Attorney General Derek Schmidt’s office. But Sen. Laura Kelly, DTopeka, the ranking Democrat on the Ways and Means Committee, said she believes Thursday’s Supreme Court ruling is more serious than Republicans think. She said it requires passage of a new school funding formula this year, not mere tweaking
L awrence J ournal -W orld
BRIEFLY New calendar OK’d for Eudora schools Eudora students will stick around an extra day before Winter Break begins but won’t have an extra Monday in May for the 2016-2017 school year. The Eudora School Board approved a first draft of an academic calendar that will close school for a teacher workday on Dec. 22, with break officially beginning Dec. 23 and classes resuming Jan. 5, 2017. The last full day of school will be May 12, 2017, which is a Friday. The second option, a revision suggested by the district’s calendar committee, would have dismissed students for a teacher workday on Dec. 21 and break beginning Dec. 22, but students would have returned for one final day on May 15, 2017, a Monday. The school year will begin for grades 1 through 9 with an early dismissal day on Aug. 16, and the first full day for grades 1-12 will be Aug. 17. Kindergarten half-days will begin Aug. 18, with full days beginning Aug. 24.
Spring Break will begin for all Eudora students March 10, 2017, when teachers will have a workday. Classes will resume March 20, 2017.
Pipe organ is center of Wichita lawsuit Wichita (ap) — A pipe organ that has served as the musical backdrop to an amusement park clown is now the subject of a civil court case. The Wichita Eagle reports an attorney for Joyland Amusement Park owner Margaret Nelson Spear filed a civil breach-of-contract lawsuit Wednesday in Sedgwick County District Court. The lawsuit claims that ex-Joyland employee Damian Mayes didn’t pay money he owes after agreeing to purchase the Wurlitzer Style 160 “Mammoth” Military Band organ about six years ago. Spear demands that Mayes either pay her the $9,000 he owes or allow her to repossess the organ. Kansas Department of Corrections records say
“
The city has reviewed the letter and report (from Oread Wholesale) thoroughly and find them, legally and equitably, to be wanting.” — Interim City Manager Diane Stoddard of this matter.” The response included more information about a letter and report sent to the city Jan. 27 in response to the audit. Oread Inn had said previously that Oread Wholesale retained its own experts to review the audit and write the report. The city and an attorney for Oread Wholesale declined to release the report Wednesday, but Stoddard’s letter Thursday states the report attempted to legally justify Oread Wholesale’s actions. Stoddard said in an email that the report and letter “did not alleviate the city’s concerns.” “The city has reviewed the letter and report thoroughly and find them, legally and equitably, to be wanting,” Stoddard wrote in the letter to Oread Inn. Later in the city’s notice to Oread Inn, Stoddard states that Oread Wholesale has admitted to having a warehouse at The Oread hotel. A warehouse is listed under the redevelopment agreement as a restricted land use there. The city “brought that to Oread Inn’s attention” in November with a cease-anddesist letter, Stoddard’s letter reads. The city decided not to pursue the cease-and-desist based on feedback from Oread Wholesale and its attorneys, the letter states, but “now, it appears ... Oread Wholesale has reversed course on the issue.” The letter goes on to allege that Oread Inn has acted indifferently about the warehouse violation and that the development group “has not given any assurance to the city,
written or otherwise, that it will cooperate with the city in the event of a similar future occurrence.” Stoddard’s letter also says the city has “growing concerns” that “legal formalities were not maintained” in transactions made between Oread Wholesale, Oread Inn, DFC Company of Lawrence — the name of the group that owns Varsity House — and other entities. Part of that concern stems from the “significant overlap in ownership” of the companies, the letter reads. Lawrence businessman Thomas Fritzel leads Oread Inn, Oread Wholesale and DFC. One of the audit’s findings was that Oread Wholesale would buy items from vendors — everything from construction materials to supplies for The Oread hotel — without paying a sales tax. Oread Wholesale then would “sell” those items to other companies in which Fritzel has an ownership interest. The sales would be recorded as occurring at 1200 Oread Ave., which means the sales taxes paid by Fritzel’s companies would largely be rebated back to the Fritzelled development group. Oread Inn struck back Thursday, saying the city’s findings — compiled by Wichita-based Allen, Gibbs & Houlik — were based on “inaccurate and unsupported conclusions.” Kansas City-based BKD LLP did an analysis of Oread Wholesale’s sales tax procedures and a site visit, the letter states. The letter went on to list
of the current block grant funding system, and failure to comply with the court’s order could have drastic consequences. “It depends upon how we react,” she said. “If we do what we need to do, create a constitutionally sound funding formula and fund it, we’ll be okay. If we decide to buck the court and thumb our noses at them, no. We’ll be in a world of hurt. Our schools will be closed down.” The Senate bill is similar in many respects to the House budget bill, which passed on a final vote earlier in the day, 68-56. It cuts about $70 million from the two-year budget lawmakers approved last year, leaving about $6.3 billion in total spending for each year and the state with tiny projected ending balances
both years. During floor debate, however, senators took one option off the table in the event revenues come up short and the state faces a potential negative ending balance. They approved an amendment that prohibits Gov. Sam Brownback from delaying payments into the Kansas Public Employees Retirement System as a way to reduce general fund spending. But there was no mention during the Senate debate of a controversial proviso that would prohibit Kansas University from using state money or special revenue funds to make lease payments on the $350 million Central District project. The Ways and Means Committee inserted that language as a punitive
Mayes, 40, is serving a sentence at the Norton Correctional Facility and isn’t eligible for parole until 2028. He was convicted of aggravated indecent liberties with a child and aggravated criminal sodomy in Harvey County.
Farm income falls during 4th quarter Omaha, Neb. (ap) — The Federal Reserve says farm income continued to decline during the fourth quarter in Midwestern and Western states, so farmers are borrowing more. But the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, Mo., said Thursday that bankers report few problems with farmers failing to make loan payments. Farm income is down because prices have declined for cattle, soybeans, wheat and corn. The value of farmland continues to decline. The value of non-irrigated land declined 4 percent in the fourth quarter, and irrigated land values slipped 2 percent from the previous year.
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nine observations from BKD’s report, including that Oread Wholesale SUBSCRIPTIONS: 832-7199 was a legitimate business; that transactions between Didn’t receive your paper? For billOread Wholesale and its ing, vacation or delivery questions, call customers were valid re832-7199. tail sales and qualify for Weekday: 6 a.m.-5:30 p.m. reimbursement under Weekends: 6 a.m.-10 a.m. the redevelopment agreeIn-town redelivery: 6 a.m.-10 a.m. ment; and that the city’s allegation that Oread Inn received “improper” re- Published daily by The World at Sixth and New imbursements was false. Company Hampshire streets, Lawrence, KS “In good faith, the 66044-0122. Telephone: 843-1000; Oread companies have or toll-free (800) 578-8748. attempted to work, comPOSTMASTER: Send address municate and cooperate changes to: with the city of Lawrence Lawrence Journal-World, in a thoughtful way,” Fri- P.O. Box 888, Lawrence, KS zell said. “The companies 66044-0888 have reached out on nu- (USPS 306-520) Periodicals postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. merous occasions to the Member of Alliance city of Lawrence and offor Audited Media fered many opportunities Member of The Associated to resolve any issues and Press avoid costly litigation.” He called the city’s process “flawed and improper” and said Oread Inn and Oread Wholesale WEDNESDAY’S POWERBALL have “acted with integ2 3 40 50 62 (5) rity” and had “the upmost TUESDAY’S MEGA respect for this great MILLIONS community.” 3 42 46 56 71 (13) Oread Inn’s letter states WEDNESDAY’S that when the city quesHOT LOTTO SIZZLER 6 28 40 45 47 (16) tioned whether Oread Wholesale had made sales WEDNESDAY’S SUPER KANSAS CASH outside the special taxing 2 3 4 8 28 (17) district but still counted THURSDAY’S them toward the reimKANSAS 2BY2 bursable amount, Oread Red: 13 19; White: 8 24 Wholesale voluntarily THURSDAY’S KANSAS amended its sales tax rePICK 3 (MIDDAY) turns to apply only sales to 1 0 2 Oread Inn and DFC to the THURSDAY’S KANSAS redevelopment district. PICK 3 (EVENING) Under the redevelop8 0 8 ment agreement, the city and Oread Inn each have 30 days to remedy issues before the other can take action. Stoddard’s letter reads —1 cent, $4.44 that the city has the right “... in its own behalf and See more stocks and in behalf of the citizens of commodities in the this community, to take those actions necessary USA Today section. to ensure that the terms, provisions and intent of the redevelopment agreement are carried out.”
LOTTERY
Kansas wheat
— City Hall reporter Nikki Wentling can be reached at 832-7144 or nwentling@ljworld.com.
response to KU’s decision to issue bonds for that project without seeking legislative approval. KU officials and some lawmakers have said that they are working quietly behind the scenes to resolve that issue, and they hope to reach some sort
BIRTHS Adam and Rhea Minx, Lawrence, a girl, Thursday.
of accord before the end of the session. The House and Senate are expected to negotiate their budget bills in a conference committee. — Statehouse reporter Peter Hancock can be reached at 354-4222 or phancock@ljworld.com.
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Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com/local l Friday, February 12, 2016 l 3A
WEEKEND GUIDE Senate rejects By Joanna Hlavacek • Twitter: @hlavacekjoanna
W
ith Valentine’s Day this Sunday, this installment has something for everyone. Here, we outline a few date-worthy activities — as well as amusing distractions for those of us who’d just as soon not this year. More events in the Journal-World’s datebook on page 7A.
Town Talk Live 7 to 10 a.m. Saturday, Munchers Bakery, 925 Iowa St. Come for the doughnuts, stay for the chance to rub elbows with Journal-World managing editor Chad Lawhorn. Yes, he of the popular Town Talk column.
Richard Gwin/Journal-World File Photo
Kaw Valley Seed Fair 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, Douglas County 4-H Fairgrounds Sharing is caring at exchange with other ecoAlso among the attracthis seventh annual event logically minded folks, and tions: farmers’ marketdedicated to sustainability don’t forget baggies and style vendors, educaand biodiversity in the containers to store them tional exhibits for both Kaw Valley Region. in — especially if you kids and adults, and a Bring your saved don’t have any seeds to fundraising raffle. Lunch or packaged seeds to share, organizers stress. will be sold on-site.
LOLA Valentine 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, Lawrence Arts Center, 940 New Hampshire St.
Ailecia Ruscin/Journal-World File Photo
The Ladies of Lawrence Artwork collective is hosting its annual Valentine’s show with more than 12 vendors on hand. This year’s event includes everything from handmade jewelry, printed goods and clothing to ceramics and herbal skincare products.
Jewish Community Women Film Festival: “The Sturgeon Queens” 2 p.m. Sunday, Lawrence Jewish Community Center, 917 Highland Drive The Lawrence Jewish Community Center’s women’s group kicks off a three-part film festival Sunday. This weekend’s selection tells the story of New York City’s Russ and Daughters, the revered Lower East Side lox emporium operated by four generations of a Jewish immigrant family. The screening is free and open to the public, and refreshments will be available for purchase.
“The Princess Bride” 4, 7 and 9:45 p.m., Liberty Hall, 644 Massachusetts St. Beloved by kids and adults alike, the 1987 fantasy-comedy hybrid includes everything from swordplay and oversized rodents to swashbuckling pirates, a gentle giant and yes, plenty of romance. Tickets cost $8, or $7 for senior citizens and children under 12. Courtesy of The Princess Bride Limited
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R-Emporia, offered that as an amendment onto another bill dealing with Topeka — The concealed-carry Kansas Senate on rights. He cited a Thursday rejected a recent Fort Hays proposal that would State University poll have given public that showed strong colleges and univeropposition among sities another four students to allowing years to comply LEGISLATURE concealed weapons with the state’s conon campus. cealed carry law, which Please see CARRY, page 4A will require them to allow concealed-carry weapons l KU leaders discuss on campus by 2017. Sen. Jeff Longbine, security measures. 4A By Peter Hancock
Twitter: @LJWpqhancock
Middle schools to boost tech classes with new STEM labs By Rochelle Valverde Twitter: @RochelleVerde
The Lawrence school district’s technology program will soon be getting modernized, updating student projects from model rockets and circuit boards to design software and robots. Plans are in the works to revamp all four middle schools’ technology classrooms — which before were composed of various two-person modules — into Science,
Technology, Engineering and Math (STEM) labs. The lab at Liberty Memorial Central Middle School is already in place, and labs at the remaining middle schools are scheduled to be added in the next couple years, according to the district’s capital outlay plan. The new technology lab and curriculum were piloted at Liberty last school year and are in the process of expanding to the other three middle schools. Please see LABS, page 4A
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Friday, February 12, 2016
ON THE
street
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By Peter Hancock Twitter: @LJWpqhancock
Topeka — The Kansas Senate advanced a bill that blocks the Kansas Corporation Commission from spending any money to What’s your favorite kind study how to comply with of Girl Scout cookie? the new federal Clean Power Plan until the U.S. Asked on Massachusetts Supreme Court resolves a Street pending legal challenge. Sen. Rob Olson, ROlathe, added that amendment onto a bill that calls for disbanding the Kansas Electric Transmission Authority, an agency that
Read more responses and add your thoughts at LJWorld.com
Rob Schwaller, professor, Lawrence “Thin Mints, of course.”
Bailey Dixon, student, Lawrence “I used to like the Caramel deLites, but I don’t really eat Girl Scout cookies anymore.”
What would your answer be? Go to ljworld. com/onthestreet and share it.
Carry CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A
Under current law, enacted in 2013, state and municipal governments are required to allow people to carry concealed handguns in their public buildings unless the buildings have adequate security to prevent anyone from bringing
Labs CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A
District officials said the program was due for change. “(The old program) gave you a really quick overview of some different technologies; much of that technology currently is a little bit out of date,” said Patrick Kelly, director of career and technical education for the district. About $190,000 is budgeted to add STEM labs to South, Southwest and West middle schools in
was established to coordinate construction of new transmission lines to move wind energy to urban markets. On Tuesday, the U.S. Supreme Court issued an order staying implementation of the Clean Power Plan until a legal challenge by several states, including Kansas, is resolved. The Clean Power Plan requires states to develop plans for reducing carbon emissions from power plants. Each state is assigned targets for reduc-
ing its emissions over the next 15 years. Last year, lawmakers authorized KCC and the Kansas Department of Health and Environment to develop a plan, but it could only be submitted to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency if a legislative oversight committee approves. The KCC is currently in the process of searching for a consulting firm to work on a study of what the state would be required to do. Olson said he thinks the state
KU leaders: Gun bans likely at sports events, ‘sensitive’ areas
T
he subject of guns on campus, as it usually does these days, came up in Thursday’s Kansas University Senate meeting. A KU-specific policy for implementing the law is still in infancy and nothing has been decided, but some tidbits of Thursday’s discussion may be of interest to the KU community. For one, the University Senate’s weapons committee will continue to meet with groups across campus, University Senate President Mike Williams said. He said conversations with KU Athletics leaders indicate KU will at least need to put in place adequate security measures to prohibit guns during games at Allen Fieldhouse and Memorial Stadium. That raises the possibility that fans will have to go through metal detectors at both Allen Fieldhouse and Memorial Stadium. Also, Chancellor Bernadette Gray-Little said areas with sensitive
Heard on the Hill
Sara Shepherd sshepherd@ljworld.com
materials are likely candidates for security measures. (She did not specify any locations, but faculty have previously cited concerns over science and engineering labs housing combustible substances.) “There are places at the campus where, because of the materials there, they’d have to be excluded because an accidental discharge of a weapon would be disastrous,” Gray-Little said. A committee led by KU administration will develop a policy for allowing concealed carry
on campus, which will be required by state law beginning in July 2017. Last month, the Kansas Board of Regents approved a policy requiring each state university to develop a campus-specific plan. In other University Senate news: l The KU Staff Senate has created a Diversity and Inclusion Committee, Staff Senate President Chris Wallace reported. “We’ve come to realize our Senate is not real diverse,” he said, adding that the committee’s goal is outreach to underrepresented groups. l The University Senate elected a new vice president, graduate student and Student Senate representative Brent Lee. Lee will complete the term of Shegufta Huma, who is not enrolled as a student this semester. — This is an excerpt from Sara Shepherd’s Heard on the Hill column, which appears regularly at LJWorld.com.
$1.8 million estate gift to create new KU physics professorship Kansas University will establish a new professorship in physics, thanks to a $1.8 million gift from the estate of an alumnus who — shortly after earning his master’s degree from KU — worked at Los Alamos on the project to develop the atomic bomb. The gift from Ernest D. Klema, who died in 2008, and his wife Virginia Klema, also a scientist, who died in 2015, will create the J.D. Stranathan Professorship of Experimental
Physics in the College of Liberal Arts & Sciences, KU Endowment announced Wednesday. Carl Lejuez, dean of KU’s College of Liberal Arts & Sciences, said he was “incredibly grateful” for the gift. Klema earned his bachelor’s degree in 1941 and his master’s degree in physics in 1942 from KU, according to KU Endowment. While working on his doctorate at Princeton University, his project was transferred to Los Alamos in New Mexico, where he worked on the
Manhattan project to develop the atomic bomb. After World War II, Klema completed his doctorate in physics from Rice University and worked at several universities and labs before becoming a professor and dean of engineering at Tufts University. J.D. Stranathan was a KU professor and physics department chair, whom Klema studied under as a graduate student at KU. Stranathan is known for writing a pioneering textbook, “The ‘Particles’ of Modern Physics.”
in weapons. Public colleges and universities are exempt from that law until July 1, 2017. Longbine’s amendment would have extended the exemption until 2021. Public K-12 school buildings are exempt from the law entirely. Sen. Forrest Knox, RAltoona, said banning guns on campus would actually make students less safe. “The real issues are the
crimes that did not happen because young ladies had the means to protect themselves, or young men, or staff,” Knox said. Longbine’s amendment failed, 11-26. But the Senate also defeated, 14-25, an amendment offered by Sen. Michael O’Donnell, RWichita, that would have moved up the deadline for concealed carry on campus to July 1 of this year.
He offered the amendment onto a bill that would allow public employees who are qualified to own firearms, even if they’re not law enforcement officers, to carry concealed weapons both on and off the premises of their workplaces, including onto private property.
2018. In the meantime, teachers have already been trained on the new technology curriculum — called Project Lead the Way — and it is being rolled out using the district’s current technology classrooms. Kelly said the district has been intentionally phasing in the new classes in order to gather teacher and student feedback. “For us, it’s really important to actually work with students on the curriculum and see is it really addressing their needs,” he said. In addition to the classes at Liberty, Kelly said, some of the new curriculum has
been introduced at Southwest and South middle schools and will begin at West next school year. One of the main elements of the curriculum is using technology and multiple concepts to solve problems, such as a class in which students design and build a robot, he said. “Students are understanding how a gear ratio works, and how electricity and computer programming work,” Kelly said. “There are so many different pieces of technology that go into programing the robots, building the robots, and getting them to do what you want them to do.”
Once the classrooms are updated, the current design of 16 two-person modules will be replaced with more flexible furniture that will enable large groups to work on solving the same problem, Kelly said. “They may come up with different solutions, but they’re all working on the same problem,” he said. “Because you can learn from how other people have solved the same problem; it’s just a different approach to teaching those STEM skills.”
Staff Reports
Vicky Reyes, works at Kansas University, Lawrence “Definitely the chocolate mint ones.”
L awrence J ournal -W orld
Senate moves to block Clean Power Plan research
By Sylas May
Rachel Schwaller, graduate student, Lawrence “The ones with the coconut on the outside. I think they used to be called Samoas, but I don’t know what they’re called now.”
LAWRENCE • STATE
— Statehouse reporter Peter Hancock can be reached at 354-4222 or phancock@ljworld.com.
— K-12 education reporter Rochelle Valverde can be reached at 832-6314 or rvalverde@ljworld.com .
should not move forward on that process until the legal challenges are fully resolved. The underlying bill calls for disbanding the Kansas Electric Transmission Authority and sweeping the balances of its funds, $251,356, into the state general fund. It was supported in committee hearings by Americans for Prosperity, Westar Energy, Kansas City Power and Light, and Empire District Electric Co. The Kansas Sierra Club and the wind energy
company WindSoHy opposed the bill. Sen. Marci Francisco, D-Lawrence, offered amendments to delay the effective date of the bill by a few months to allow for an orderly closing of the authority. She also offered an amendment to have the fund balances returned to consumers in the form of credits on utility bills. Both of those amendments failed. — Statehouse reporter Peter Hancock can be reached at 354-4222 or phancock@ljworld.com.
Thin Mint mania
Richard Gwin/Journal-World Photo
VOLUNTEER NICOLE SABATINI, OF LAWRENCE, helps unload cases of Girl Scout cookies Wednesday at the Douglas County Fairgrounds.
BRIEFLY KU law symposium will focus on voting
shooting deaths of 21-yearold Kaylie Smith Bailey, and her young daughter, A topic on the minds of Lana-Leigh Bailey. He’s also many in this presidential charged with first-degree election year will be the murder in the deaths of focus of the 2016 Kansas 30-year-old Andrew Stout Journal of Law and Public and 31-year-old Steven Policy Symposium next White. week at Kansas University. Prosecutors say they’ll The symposium, “The seek the death penalty. Right to Vote: ExaminDistrict court admining Election Law,” will istrator John Steelman take place from 9 a.m. to said Thursday the trial is 3 p.m. Feb. 19 at the KU now set to begin March School of Law, 1535 W. 7 in Ottawa. It had been 15th St. scheduled to start followThe program is free and ing jury selection, which open to the public. Regisis underway and expected tration is requested, and to end by next week. The may be done online at law. trial had originally been ku.edu/lawjournalsymposcheduled for last Sepsium. tember. Discussion will examine Steelman says he the history and future doesn’t know why the new of contested elections, delay was sought. protection of voting rights and Kansas-specific Advocates call for election law issues. The voting form changes symposium will feature panelists from the ACLU, Wichita (ap) — More Kansas Chamber of than 30 advocacy groups Commerce, KU and other are asking a federal elecuniversities. tions official to withdraw A detailed schedule of changes made to a national the day’s events is also form requiring residents available online. of Kansas, Alabama and “The ability to elect Georgia to provide proof of our representatives is U.S. citizenship in order to a vital component of register to vote. our democracy,” Cody The groups sent a letBranham, third-year KU ter Thursday to the new Law student and senior executive director of the symposium editor for the U.S. Election Assistance Kansas Journal of Law Commission, arguing the & Public Policy, said in a impact would be particunews release. “This event larly significant because brings together some of 2016 is a presidential the leading authorities in election year when people election law and provides typically register in greater an opportunity to ananumbers. lyze whether our voting The EAC had no imsystem is working as mediate comment, but intended.” executive director Brian Newby has insisted that Quadruple murder the action he took at the states’ request is within his trial delayed again authority. Ottawa (ap) — The One of the agency’s capital murder trial of a commissioners has said man accused of killing a Newby’s action contrachild and three adults in dicts policy and preceastern Kansas has been edent. delayed again. Among those signing Kyle Flack is charged the letter were nonprofits with capital murder in Common Cause and Public Franklin County in the 2013 Citizen and the NAACP.
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Friday, February 12, 2016
NON sEQUItUr
COMICS
. wILEY
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fAMILY CIrCUs
PICKLEs hI AND LOIs
sCOtt ADAMs
ChrIs CAssAtt & GArY BrOOKINs
JErrY sCOtt & JIM BOrGMAN
PAtrICK MCDONNELL
ChrIs BrOwNE BABY BLUEs
DOONEsBUrY
ChArLEs M. sChULZ
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L awrence J ournal -W orld
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DArBY CONLEY
Lawrence Journal-World
Friday, February 12, 2016
7A
Lawrence.com
Going Out A guide to what’s happening in Lawrence
SPREADING THE LOVE
Kelley Hunt giving back to Just Food at Valentine’s concert
W
hen musician Kelley Hunt was growing up, her mother could always be counted on to bring cheer to those who needed it most. She’d offer her humor, a few kind words and, perhaps most strikingly, her soulful, bluesy voice, at the drop of a hat to anyone who needed it. Anywhere, too, Hunt recalls. Mary Sue Wade, who still sings at age 86 — though not professionally, as she did for years at church and various Emporia venues — once sang in their neighborhood’s tiny grocery store for the proprietor, who was battling a serious illness at the time. People were moved to tears by the performance. “Even when she was a housewife with four kids, if she could lift somebody up by singing to them, she’d do it,” Hunt says of her mother, whom she regards as her earliest musical influence. “She’d go to that person who wasn’t well or whatever, and she’d sit by them and sing to them. And I thought, ‘That’s how you serve somebody with what you got.’” It’s how Hunt plans to serve her community Saturday, when the Lawrence-based, internationally touring singer-songwriter makes a hometown appearance at Liberty Hall to benefit Just Food. All proceeds from the “Valentine’s throwdown,” appropriately dubbed “Dance of Hearts,” will support the Douglas County food bank. Guests are also encouraged to bring donations of food items. The gig is Hunt’s first Lawrence performance in “quite a while,” says the roots and R&B singer. For nearly two years now, she’s spent most of her time on the road promoting her 2014 release, “The Beautiful Bones.” Saturday’s set list should be “a big chunk” of that album, she says, along with a generous dose of love songs and a handful of new tunes she’s been trying out for audiences lately. Now, after a slew of shows in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., last month, Hunt says she’s excited to return to the town — and the venue — that has served as “home base” for so many decades. “There’s so much talent and creativity in this town. There really is,” says Hunt, who came to Lawrence as a teenager to study music composition at Kansas University. “But it’s a good place for me to come home to, and I don’t play here as often as I used
STYLE SCOUT By Mackenzie Clark
Leslie Butsch
Age: 23 Relationship status: Single Hometown: Olathe Time in Lawrence: Six years Occupation: Social worker Dream job: I haven’t figured that out — a lot of things. Describe your style: I really like the ’60s and ’70s, and I also pretty much only buy secondhand. Fashion trends you love: I guess you wouldn’t call it a fashion trend, but I’m really into this body-positivity thing that’s going on. Fashion trends you hate: There are maybe trends I wouldn’t wear, but I don’t hate any. Fashion influences: Old movies (Jean Seberg, in particular) What are your favorite and least favorite things about Lawrence? Favorite thing is definitely the community of people; least favorite thing is drunk college kids. What’s your spirit animal? A gazelle, because we have the same body type. Tell us a secret: A secret to life is always listen to your music in the car really loud with the windows down, if the weather permits it. Clothing details: jacket, Goodwill, $6; sweater, Salvation Army, $4; shorts, from a friend, free; tights, bought online, $7; Converse, $40; Sennheiser headphones, Amazon, $40; bag, Goodwill, $5. Books: “Transgender History,” by Susan Stryker, and “I Still Believe,” by Anita Hill.
DATEBOOK Ann K. Brown/Contributed Photo
LAWRENCE-BASED SINGER-SONGWRITER KELLEY HUNT will make a hometown appearance Saturday night at Liberty Hall, 644 Massachusetts St. All proceeds from the show, titled “Dance of Hearts,” will go to the Douglas County food bank Just Food.
Out & About
“
In lieu of writing a personal check, which I would love to be able to do, I can do a lot more for more people where I live with my music.” — Kelley Hunt, singer-songwriter
Joanna Hlavacek jhlavacek@ljworld.com
to. I’m glad to be home.” Growing up in Emporia amid a musical family, Hunt’s education began long before her college days. Her parents, both musicians, would bring her along to traveling performances at Emporia State University. In the summer, she’d ride her bike to outdoor concerts. But Lawrence, Hunt says, was something else entirely. It was here that Hunt saw Bonnie Raitt perform live for the first time — or rather, she heard Raitt, sitting outside Hoch Auditorium because she couldn’t afford tickets — and began applying Raitt’s “strong, graceful” presence to her fledgling career. “They took you there because they went there,” Hunt says of the female vocalists, among them
Billie Holiday, Mahalia Jackson and Ruth Brown, whom her mother seemed to embody back home in Emporia. Mary Sue Wade taught her daughter: “Be generous with your gift.” It’s what she’s choosing to do now for Just Food, because, as far as Hunt’s concerned, “In lieu of writing a personal check, which I would love to be able to do, I can do a lot more for more people where I live with my music.” Tickets for “Dance of Hearts” range from $25 to $40 and can be purchased at libertyhall.net or at the Liberty Hall box office, 644 Massachusetts St. Doors open at 7 p.m., and the show starts at 8 p.m. — This is an excerpt from Joanna Hlavacek’s Out and About column, which appears regularly on LJWorld.com.
12 TODAY
family friendly, 9 p.m. adult, Theatre Lawrence, 4660 Bauer Farm Drive. Free State Story Slam: “After Dark,” 7 p.m., Lawrence Arts Center, 940 New Hampshire St. Friday Night at the Kino: Svet-Ake (The Light Thief), in Kyrgyz with English subtitles, 7 p.m., Room 318 Bailey Hall, KU Campus. The Band of the Royal Marines & The Pipes, Drums & Highland Dancers of the Scots Guards, 7:30 p.m., Lied Center, 1600 Stewart Drive. An Intimate Evening of Chamber Music, 7:30 p.m., Lawrence Arts Center, 940 New Hampshire St. Arlo Guthrie: Alice’s Restaurant 50th Anniversary Tour, 7 p.m. doors, 8 p.m. show, Liberty Hall, 644 Massachusetts St. Bill Poss and the Useful Tools with MAW, 9 p.m., Frank’s North Star Tavern, 508 Locust St. I Heart Local Music Presents: SONA / La Guerre, 10 p.m., Replay Lounge, 946 Massachusetts St.
Mike Shurtz Trio featuring Erin Fox, 10:1511:30 a.m., Signs of Life, 722 Massachusetts St. Indian Taco Sale, 11 a.m.-6 p.m., Lawrence Indian United Methodist Church, 950 E. 21st St. Will Penner and Silvia Sánchez-Diaz: Sustainable Development in Rural Guatemala, 4-5 p.m., Room 318 Bailey Hall, KU Campus. CEAS Lunar New Year Party, 5-7 p.m., ECM Building, 1204 Oread Ave. Friday Night Dinner, 5:30-7 p.m., VFW Post #852, 1801 Massachusetts St. Mexican Buffet Dinner, 5:30-7:30 p.m., Eagles Lodge, 1803 W. Sixth St. Bingo night, doors 5:30 p.m., refreshments 6 p.m., bingo starts 7 p.m., Eagles Lodge, 1803 W. Sixth St. Taizé Service, 6 p.m., Immanuel Lutheran Church, 2104 Bob Billings Parkway. Tornado Rose / Sugar Britches, 6-9 p.m., Replay Lounge, 946 Massachusetts St. Culinary Hearts benefit dinner, 6:30 p.m. Van Go Arts, 715 New Jersey St. Live in the LobMore event listings at by: Improv! 7 p.m. ljworld.com/events.
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Friday, February 12, 2016
.
L awrence J ournal -W orld
If hosting friends breaks the bank, go out Dear Annie: We have friends whom we’ve hosted for dinner at least a half-dozen times in the past few years. But they have never invited us to their home. They once invited us to dine with them at a restaurant, but they did not offer to pay for our meal. We are reluctant to keep inviting them to dinner at our house, as they make no effort to reciprocate. However, we do enjoy seeing them. What do you suggest? — Feeling Used
Annie’s Mailbox
Marcy Sugar and Kathy Mitchell
anniesmailbox@comcast.net
that method. Invite them to join you at a restaurant and split the bill. That way, you can continue to enjoy their company, and no one feels taken advantage of. And it’s perfectly OK to periodically entertain them in your home, should you wish to do so, as long as you expect nothing in return.
Dear Used: Had they treated you at a restaurant, that would have been a fine way to reciprocate, because not everyone is comfortable entertaining in their home. But since they expect you to pay Dear Annie: I read your own way, we sug- the letter from “The gest you continue with Ones Left Behind,”
2 timeless ‘Peanuts’ specials ABC offers two “Peanuts” holiday specials, “Be My Valentine, Charlie Brown” (7 p.m., TV-G) from 1975, and “A Charlie Brown Valentine” (7:30 p.m., TV-G), which appeared on ABC in 2002, the first special produced after creator Charles Schulz died in 2000. Both include tales of love and longing and misunderstanding. In the first, Sally mistakes a box of candy that Linus left for his teacher as a token of affection. In the second, Charlie Brown wants to call his longtime crush, the Little RedHaired Girl, but can’t locate her phone number. One wonders if younger viewers can even identify with this very analog 20thcentury problem. Why didn’t Charlie Brown just Google her? At the same time, there is a timeless quality to these stories, perhaps because they are so grounded in grade school. I am continually struck at how much Facebook resembles the routine of grammar school. Like some kindly third-grade teacher, the Facebook algorithm reminds us of our friends’ birthdays and cajoles us to behave and make a nice greeting. Is that so different from the “everybody gets a Valentine’s card” ethos of third grade? In “Be My Valentine,” Charlie Brown makes the most of the rumpled “pity” Valentine’s card he receives from Violet on Feb. 15. How many of us go through life either receiving or bestowing such meager gestures? How many of us have tried to play catch-up on Facebook, wishing somebody a happy birthday a day late, after this friend we had ignored or forgotten had publicly thanked everybody else for the many good wishes? Technology changes, but “Peanuts,” perhaps, is forever. So, it seems, is third grade. O Season 28 of “The Amazing Race” (7 p.m., CBS, TVPG) begins tonight with a gaggle of competitors traveling to Mexico City. This season’s theme is social media and the young-ish people who make it. The 11 teams of “stars” include Tyler Oakley and Korey Kuhl, co-hosts of an iTunes podcast called “Psychobabble.” Although most of the participants remain on the sunny side of 30, some partner up with their parents, folks closer to the average age of the typical viewer of “The Amazing Race.” Tonight’s other highlights
O Jenny investigates Abbie’s
disappearance on “Sleepy Hollow” (7 p.m., Fox, TV-14). O Another gruesome ritual on “Grimm” (8 p.m., NBC, TV-14). O Ghouls wager on Mary’s mortality on “Second Chance” (8 p.m., Fox, TV-14). O Tycoons Chris Sacca and Mark Cuban tangle on “Shark Tank” (8 p.m., ABC, TV-PG).
who said that she and her husband raised her three kids with no help from their birth father. Now that the kids are grown, the father is back in the picture and the kids are hungry for his attention. She feels they are leaving her in the dust. I gave my ex-wife a divorce with no complications. I always paid child support on time. She moved. I paid the plane fare to get my son in the summer. Then she claimed she couldn’t get him to the airport and I had to drive down to pick him up. I got a lawyer involved and that made it worse. I didn’t want to tell my son what kind of mother she really was, so I figured I would stay away and maybe he would someday look me up. It’s been 25
JACQUELINE BIGAR’S STARS
For Friday, Feb. 12: This year you will incorporate a lot of excitement into your daily life. Some observers wonder how you can tolerate so much change or upheaval. If you are single, you are likely to meet your next sweetie in the most unpredictable way. If you are attached, your relationship with your sweetie is very important to you. The stars show the kind of day you’ll have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult Aries (March 21-April 19) ++++ A shake-up around midday will force you to regroup and look at a personal matter. Tonight: Go for the moment. Taurus (April 20-May 20) +++ You could feel as if certain situations are working against you. You can’t change the social scene. Tonight: Enjoy the moment. Gemini (May 21-June 20) +++++ You might be pleased with the outcome of a meeting. Tonight: Let it all hang out. Cancer (June 21-July 22) ++++ You might be unusually emotional and abrupt in your dealings with others. Tonight: Out till the wee hours. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) ++++ You could be taken aback by someone’s unpredictability and/or sudden news. Tonight: Feed your mind, then relax with a favorite game. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) ++++ Recognize that you
years. — Brokenhearted Dear Brokenhearted: We are sorry that you’ve lost this relationship. But parents without custody must work hard to remain in their children’s lives, no matter how difficult the ex makes things. The kids don’t know why you have withdrawn. They only know that you no longer seem interested in them, and a vindictive ex will make sure such negative beliefs are reinforced.
— Send questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or Annie’s Mailbox, P.O. Box 118190 Chicago, IL 60611.
jacquelinebigar.com
keep a key person close because of his or her unpredictability. Tonight: Visit over dinner. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ++++ You might be unusually serious. You are determined to accomplish a key matter. Tonight: TGIF. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) ++++ You might want to rethink a personal decision that has the potential to affect your daily life. Tonight: Be impulsive instead of controlling. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) ++++ Ride an adrenalin wave with care, and use it to accomplish what you must. Tonight: Stop pushing yourself so hard. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) +++ You seem to be quieter than usual. A close loved one will be observing you. Tonight: Happiest with one special person. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) ++++ You are unlikely to jump hurdles right now, especially since all you want is to have a conversation. Tonight: At a favorite spot. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) +++ You are resourceful, but don’t hesitate to reach out to someone else for his or her ideas. Tonight: Pay bills, then decide.
UNIVERSAL CROSSWORD Universal Crossword Edited by Timothy E. Parker February 12, 2016
ACROSS 1 Barn attics 6 Gemstones for some Libras 11 Prankster with pointy shoes 14 Be useful to 15 High hideaway 16 Postal motto conjunction 17 Definitely not now? 19 Word with “cents” or “faced” 20 Longoria of TV 21 Title of respect, abroad 22 Decaf alt. 23 Roof supports 27 Groups of four 29 Sculler’s item 30 Enormous birds of myth 32 In a minute 33 Canton that borders Bern 34 Casino machines, briefly 36 Postgame segment 39 Lushes 41 More in need of liniment 43 Bone-dry 44 Get in 46 Measuring tube (var.) 48 Misfortune 49 Some signatures of old
2/12
51 Kind of helmet 52 Egyptian cobra 53 Square dancer’s need 56 Mariners’ assents 58 Current or former court org. 59 ___ of Good Feelings 60 Movie, in Hollywood lingo 61 Ticket word 62 What a convict seeks 68 Keogh alternative 69 Form of lyric poem 70 Cornball 71 Yorkshire’s home 72 Supergiant in Cygnus 73 Kitchen wrap DOWN 1 Judges lay it down 2 Caesar’s salad ingredients? 3 Wray of “King Kong” 4 Lhasa is its capital 5 Drools 6 Acorn producer 7 Seat at the wedding 8 Buddhist in Nirvana 9 Feudal vassals
10 Washington, D.C. resident 11 Threshold location 12 Emulated a cow 13 Leaping amphibians 18 December ditties 23 Force out 24 Brother of Moses 25 Squander slowly 26 Ice-cream portion 28 Reddish deer 31 Get naked 35 Brown tone 37 Sprang up 38 Makes baby chick sounds 40 Canonical hour 42 Fix a wordprocessing error
45 Continued a subscription 47 Some believers 50 Outerwear in Sonora 53 Home to Notre Dame 54 Cancel, to NASA 55 Synthetic fiber 57 African coastal capital 63 Poem of homage 64 Four winter wks. 65 Gas-station offering, sometimes 66 Bake sale organizer, for short 67 Suffix for “Hallow”
PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER
2/11
© 2016 Universal Uclick www.upuzzles.com
FOLLOW THE PATH By Della Knightley
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.
REXET ©2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.
GINAA NESOSA
NASLOM
Yesterday’s
Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app
8A
Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.
(Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: PLANT USHER FORBID ELIXIR Answer: The spaceship’s orbit encircling the planet was a — ROUND TRIP
BECKER ON BRIDGE
Opinion
Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com l Friday, February 12, 2016
EDITORIALS
School inequity Thursday’s court ruling on school equity puts another huge issue on this year’s legislative agenda.
S
o much for legislative leaders’ hopes for a short, relatively noncontroversial, session. The Kansas Legislature has been speeding toward passage of a budget for fiscal year 2017, which starts July 1. On Thursday, the Kansas Supreme Court brought that process to an abrupt halt with a ruling that the state’s current school finance system doesn’t meet constitutional requirements. Specifically, the court said that “the inequities found to exist” among school districts in the state “have not yet been cured.” The court set a June 30 deadline for legislators to address the problems. If they do not, the court said, “no constitutionally valid school finance system” would exist and no funds could “lawfully be raised, distributed, or spent” for schools in fiscal year 2017. In other words, public schools in Kansas would be out of business. The timing of this ruling was uncertain, but its substance shouldn’t be a surprise. Last year, legislators switched public schools to block-grant funding, based on what districts had received in the previous year, with no provisions for enrollment increases or other factors that affect a district’s budget. They said the block-grant system would be in effect for two years while they crafted a new school finance formula. There seemed to be little progress on drafting a new formula this year, but that apparently will have to change. Although the court said it would not enforce a lower court order to allocate an additional $54 million to Kansas schools, it seems unlikely Thursday’s court ruling could be satisfied without adding money to the coming year’s budget. With the state already struggling to meet its financial obligations, it will be difficult to add money to school budgets without addressing the state’s revenue situation — something that neither the governor nor legislative leaders wants to do. The political lines on this issue were being drawn immediately after the ruling was made public, and the situation will only feed existing tensions between the courts and the other two branches of state government. While Democratic leaders called on legislators to restore school funding, some Republicans quickly saw political motivations in the court action. Sen. Jeff Melcher, R-Leawood, called the ruling “just a temper tantrum by the Supreme Court.” House Speaker Ray Merrick, R-Stilwell, noted the timing of the ruling on the same day as House action on the budget. Sen. Julia Lynn, R-Overland Park, also saw political motives in the court’s decision to release the ruling on Thursday instead of on Friday, a more common day to make rulings public. “I think it’s obviously a strategic move on their part to send a message to the Legislature,” she told the Wichita Eagle. Well, yes. Regardless of when the ruling was released, it sends a clear message to Kansas legislators that their school funding system doesn’t meet constitutional muster and must be changed. Defining and implementing those changes is likely to be a dominant topic for the rest of what now could be a long legislative session.
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Economic protections focus of case Washington — It is frequently said that, unfortunately, Americans disdain government. It is more usefully said that, unfortunately, they have abundant reasons for doing so. In coming days, the Supreme Court, by deciding to hear a case from Connecticut, can begin limiting a contemptible government abuse that the court’s passive deference to legislatures has encouraged. The case concerns a minor economic activity, teeth whitening, but a major principle: Can a state limit Americans’ opportunities by restricting access to particular professions for no reason other than the enrichment of people entrenched in those professions? If the court refuses to hear the case, or if it hears it and decides it incorrectly, the “rational basis” test for judging government regulations of economic activities will no longer test anything — it will be completely severed from reasoning based on evidence. Teeth whitening is a simple, safe procedure that people can perform on themselves with materials — a peroxide-based whitener and an LED “activating light” — bought without prescriptions. Or they can pay whitening salons to do it for them. The salons charge much less, often $150 or less, compared with $350 or more charged by dentists, many of whom regard the salons as competitors to be crushed by political power. Dentists are
“
George Will
georgewill@washpost.com
Can a state limit Americans’ opportunities by restricting access to particular professions for no reason other than the enrichment of people entrenched in those professions?” organized, salons are not, so at least 30 states have defended the strong by giving government-licensed dentists and dental hygienists a whitening monopoly. The Connecticut State Dental Commission, which is run by and for dentists, is empowered by law to write whitening regulations. They can subject salon operators to fines up to $25,000 or up to five years in prison — per customer — for the crime of giving customers assistance (applying the whitener, positioning the LED light in front of the customers’ mouths). This is pure rent seeking — a politically connected faction bending public power for its private benefit by crippling competitors.
The 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has complacently said of other people’s injuries from government favoritism: “While baseball may be the national pastime of the citizenry, dishing out special economic benefits to certain in-state industries remains the favored pastime of state and local governments.” Echoing this in the Connecticut case, the 2nd Circuit has dismissively said, “Much of what states do is to favor certain groups over others on economic grounds. We call this politics.” The rational basis test already is extremely permissive. Courts administering it defer to government restrictions on economic activity whenever legislatures enunciate any reasons for the restrictions. And courts occasionally concoct reasons the legislatures have neglected to imagine. This vast judicial deference is a consequence of the Supreme Court distinguishing, without warrant in the Constitution’s text or history, between “fundamental” rights, infringements of which must survive strict judicial scrutiny, and economic rights that receive lackadaisical scrutiny. In the Connecticut whiteners case, the 2nd Circuit held that courts can render summary judgment on behalf of the government even when plaintiffs in rational basis cases produce undisputed evidence that the challenged
regulations cannot plausibly be said to advance governmental interests in public health or safety. The 5th, 6th and 9th Circuits, however, have held that naked economic protectionism — protecting an economic faction from competition — is not a legitimate governmental purpose. The Supreme Court must referee this dispute. Connecticut’s whiteners are represented by the Institute for Justice, America’s foremost defender of economic liberty and of the entrepreneurial, often minority individuals whose progress up the ladder of social mobility is blocked by cartels such as Connecticut’s dentists. The institute reduces the case to its essence: “It is unconstitutional to require someone to have eight years of higher education (college and dental school) before they can point a flashlight at someone’s teeth.” If the Supreme Court rejects this patent truth by allowing the 2nd Circuit’s conclusion to stand, the rational basis test will become a charade, which will effectively mean the end of judicial review of economic regulations. This will become an unlimited license for government to impede access to professions, reward rent seekers and punish consumers, thereby validating Americans’ deepening disdain for government. — George Will is a columnist for Washington Post Writers Group.
OLD HOME TOWN
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From the Lawrence Daily Journal-World for Feb. 12, 1916: “When work commences on the new years two-story concrete ice ago and refrigeration plant IN 1916 of the Griffin Ice company within the next few weeks, eighteen tons of cork will be freighted to Lawrence from Pennsylvania. The cork will be used between the walls of the rooms for insulation. The plant will be erected at the west end of the present ice plant.” “In an effort to get some pigeons for pets, Edgar McClung fell from a haymow yesterday breaking his arm and dislocating his shoulder. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Crawford McClung.” — Compiled by Sarah St. John
Read more Old Home Town at LJWorld.com/news/lawrence/history/ old_home_town.
Mexico wall an $8 billion hoax For the first time, Donald Trump has disclosed that his proposed wall on the border with Mexico — which has become one of the centerpieces of his campaign — would cost about $8 billion. If so, it would be the biggest waste of money in recent history, even if it were paid for in Mexican pesos. “The wall is probably $8 billion, which is a tiny fraction of the money that we lose with Mexico,” Trump told MSNBC on Tuesday. “It’s a very simple calculation,” Trump said. He explained that the border is 2,000 miles long, “and of the 2,000, we don’t need 2,000, we need a thousand, because we have natural barriers.” Asked how he would pay for the wall, Trump repeated his claim that he would get Mexico to pay for it. Pressed on how he would get Mexico to pay for it, he responded simply, “You tell ‘em, ‘You’re gonna pay for it.’” Needless to say, there was a collective explosion of laughter from the Mexican side of the border. When I called former Mexican President Vicente Fox to ask about Trump’s proposed wall, he responded, “He’s crazy!” He added that Trump would trigger a nationalistic counter-reaction in Mexico, isolate the United States from one of its biggest trading part-
Andres Oppenheimer aoppenheimer@miamiherald.com
“
Like most demagogues, Trump is playing on people’s ignorance and xenophobic instincts to present himself as a new messiah.” ners and hurt the U.S. economy. “He’s a false messiah who says things that people like to hear, but that are irresponsible,” he said. There are at least five reasons why Trump’s border wall would be, to use one of Trump’s favorite terms, stupid. First, there is no serious study showing that there is currently an avalanche of undocumented immigrants to this country. On the contrary, the Pew Research Center and the Center for Migration Studies of New York, based on U.S. Census figures, say that the overall number of undocumented immigrants in the
U.S. has fallen from a record 12 million in 2007 to 10.9 million today. Second, about 40 percent of migrants who enter the U.S. illegally don’t do it by crossing the Mexican border, but come in by plane and overstay their visas, U.S. officials say. A wall across the border would not stop those who come by air. Third, the number of undocumented Mexicans moving to the United States is unlikely to increase in the future for demographic reasons. While Mexico had a birthrate of more than six children per woman in the 1960s, the birth rate has plummeted to 2.2 children per woman today. In other words, the pool of Mexican young people, who are the most likely to migrate, has shrunk. Fourth, a wall along part of the border would push potential migrants to cross through more remote — and dangerous — border areas, raise the fees of people smugglers, and ensure that large numbers of undocumented people stay in the United States. Many Mexican men who now come to the United States to do seasonal work in farms and return to Mexico in the winters would find it too hard, and expensive, to keep circulating between the two countries. They would stay here, and — in the absence of massive
numbers of newcomers — increase the number of undocumented residents here. Fifth, Trump’s proposed wall, along with his statements depicting most Mexican immigrants as criminals and rapists, his vows to renegotiate the NAFTA free trade deal with Mexico and his calls for the deportation of 11 million undocumented people would almost certainly trigger a nationalistic, antiAmerican reaction in Mexico, the rest of Latin America and much of the world. This may be dismissed as irrelevant by many Trump followers, but a trade war with Mexico would hurt the United States, too. Mexico and Canada are the two largest U.S. export markets, and U.S. exports to its two neighbors support more than 3 million American jobs, according to figures from the U.S. Trade Representative. My opinion: Like most demagogues, Trump is playing on people’s ignorance and xenophobic instincts to present himself as a new messiah. But, for the reasons stated above, his proposed wall across the border would be a monumental waste of money, a symbol of isolationism and a recipe for America’s decline as a global power. — Andres Oppenheimer is a Latin America correspondent for the Miami Herald,.
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Districts welcome ruling, but funding worries remain to directly compare the old formula and the block grants because the district changed its mill levy and lost some students, but he said the change resulted in a loss of about $40,000 of state aid in the district’s supplemental general fund. Yoder said the court ruling left many unknowns. “I think anything at this point would just be speculation of what might transpire,” he said. “The Eudora one known is that someFor the Eudora school thing needs to be done district, the change to that the Supreme Court block grant funding re- will support by June 30.” sulted in a loss of about $130,000 in the district’s Baldwin City Officials with the Baldsupplemental general and capital outlay funds, win City school district according to Superinten- didn’t readily have available the difference in funding as dent Steve Splichal. Although he was a result of the block grants. pleased with the ruling, The district’s enrollment Splichal said it raises new decreased slightly from last year to this year, but has concerns. “I think the court went stayed generally stable over out of its way to provide the past several years, acthe Legislature with lee- cording to Superintendent way to arrive at a reason- Paul Dorathy. For his part, Dorathy able solution; the question is will they, and what will said the district would not count on getting more that look like?” he said. money next year. Perry-Lecompton Perry-Lecompton Su— K-12 education reporter Rochelle Valverde can be reached at 832-6314 perintendent Denis Yoor rvalverde@ljworld.com. der said it was difficult students this school year, and is projected to gain another 165 next year. Johnson said they will be watching for the remaining ruling on whether overall funding for public schools is adequate. “The old formula was determined to be constitutional and equitable,” she said. “When they chose not to fund it in the way it was designed it became inequitable.”
By Rochelle Valverde Mostly sunny
Colder with plenty of sunshine
Milder; morning flurries
Cloudy to partly sunny
Mild with partial sunshine
High 36° Low 11° POP: 0%
High 26° Low 22° POP: 15%
High 48° Low 29° POP: 55%
High 54° Low 31° POP: 10%
High 61° Low 38° POP: 10%
Wind N 8-16 mph
Wind ESE 6-12 mph
Wind W 8-16 mph
Wind W 7-14 mph
Wind SW 7-14 mph
POP: Probability of Precipitation
McCook 38/23
Kearney 35/17
Oberlin 37/23
Clarinda 24/0
Lincoln 28/8
Grand Island 30/13
Beatrice 29/11
St. Joseph 33/6 Chillicothe 29/2
Sabetha 30/8
Concordia 35/17
Centerville 22/-7
Kansas City Marshall Manhattan 36/11 31/6 Salina 39/14 Oakley Kansas City Topeka 40/18 42/23 38/14 Lawrence 35/9 Sedalia 36/11 Emporia Great Bend 35/8 40/15 41/20 Nevada Dodge City Chanute 42/13 48/21 Hutchinson 44/16 Garden City 44/17 52/23 Springfield Wichita Pratt Liberal Coffeyville Joplin 45/15 45/20 44/18 58/26 44/16 46/18 Hays Russell 38/19 39/19
Goodland 45/23
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
LAWRENCE ALMANAC
Through 8 p.m. Thursday.
Temperature High/low 39°/21° Normal high/low today 43°/21° Record high today 72° in 1962 Record low today -25° in 1899
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 0.47 1.12 1.45
REGIONAL CITIES
Today Sat. Today Sat. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W 36 12 pc 25 23 pc Atchison 33 9 pc 24 20 pc Holton Independence 36 10 pc 25 21 s Belton 36 10 pc 24 21 s Olathe 35 11 pc 25 20 s Burlington 41 16 s 31 25 s Osage Beach 39 9 pc 27 21 s Coffeyville 46 18 s 41 28 s Osage City 39 14 s 30 24 s Concordia 35 17 s 32 26 c Ottawa 37 12 s 27 22 s Dodge City 48 21 s 45 30 s 45 20 s 43 29 s Fort Riley 39 16 pc 31 25 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
Today Sat. 7:17 a.m. 7:15 a.m. 5:54 p.m. 5:55 p.m. 9:48 a.m. 10:26 a.m. 10:55 p.m. none
First
Full
Last
New
Feb 15
Feb 22
Mar 1
Mar 8
LAKE LEVELS
As of 7 a.m. Thursday Clinton Perry Pomona
Level (ft)
Discharge (cfs)
875.41 890.68 972.51
50 300 69
Shown are today’s noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for today.
Fronts Cold
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016
INTERNATIONAL CITIES Cities Acapulco Amsterdam Athens Baghdad Bangkok Beijing Berlin Brussels Buenos Aires Cairo Calgary Dublin Geneva Hong Kong Jerusalem Kabul London Madrid Mexico City Montreal Moscow New Delhi Oslo Paris Rio de Janeiro Rome Seoul Singapore Stockholm Sydney Tokyo Toronto Vancouver Vienna Warsaw Winnipeg
Today Hi Lo W 89 71 s 42 30 pc 65 54 c 67 45 s 93 77 s 55 36 r 42 31 pc 43 32 pc 90 71 t 73 54 s 42 35 sf 44 39 sh 39 36 r 71 65 pc 58 44 s 42 21 pc 46 37 c 58 54 sh 71 33 s 21 0 sn 32 29 sn 75 51 pc 29 21 pc 42 36 r 85 74 t 58 48 sh 52 42 r 88 79 c 33 23 pc 83 69 t 57 53 pc 25 -5 c 53 41 sh 44 34 pc 42 32 pc -7 -19 pc
Sat. Hi Lo W 89 71 pc 42 36 r 66 56 c 70 46 s 95 75 s 40 19 c 43 34 c 43 37 r 87 60 t 77 56 pc 50 32 c 42 36 sh 46 37 r 70 65 c 62 49 s 44 23 pc 44 36 r 60 48 sh 69 33 pc 0 -13 pc 34 27 pc 75 50 pc 27 15 sf 47 38 r 87 75 t 60 50 sh 56 28 r 89 79 pc 33 22 sf 85 71 s 65 60 pc 2 -10 c 49 41 r 45 36 c 41 34 c 4 3c
Precipitation
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Bones h
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Second Chance (N) FOX 4 at 9 PM (N)
A burga is: a type of avalanche, an animal, or an Alaskan wind?
KIDS
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TMZ (N)
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Late Show-Colbert
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C I 14 KMCI 15 L KCWE 17
41 38
41 Caught on Camera 38 Mother Mother
Commun Commun Minute
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Simpson Fam Guy Fam Guy American
29
29 Vampire Diaries
The Originals (N)
ET
Mod Fam Mod Fam Tosh.0
ION KPXE 18
50
Heart Felt (2016)
Meet My Valentine (2015) Scott Wolf.
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307 239 Person of Interest 25
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In NBA
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45 245 138 ››› Collateral
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46 242 105 NCIS “Troll”
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47 265 118 Duck D.
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50 254 130 Walk
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51 247 139 Broke
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The People’s Couch The People’s Couch The People’s Couch
BRAVO 52 237 129 Real HIST
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Real Housewives
54 269 120 Restoration
SYFY 55 244 122 ››› Men in Black
court said. “The judiciary is not at liberty to surrender, ignore, or waive this sworn duty.” CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A Last week, the House considered a constitutional “Memories on the amendment that would bench must be failing, be- have changed the way cause the opinion came Supreme Court justices just two months after the are selected, adopting a court reaffirmed separa- “federal model” in which tion of powers doctrine the governor appoints in its ruling to retain its justices subject to Senown power regarding the ate confirmation. And selection of chief district while that measure failed judges,” House Speaker to receive the required Ray Merrick, R-Stilwell, two-thirds majority, other said in a statement. “To- proposed amendments are day that was forgotten.” still sitting on the House Gov. Sam Brownback calendar, including one that expressed similar conwould have justices directly cerns following the ruling. elected in partisan races. “Kansas has among the Rep. John Rubin, Rbest schools in the nation, Shawnee, said he supports and an activist Kansas changing the selection Supreme Court is threatprocess, although he inening to shut them down,” sisted that it’s not because Brownback said through of any particular decision his press office. “We of the court. He said he will review this decision thinks the current system closely and work with the is undemocratic, and he Legislature to ensure the has sponsored a resolucontinued success of our tion that calls for changing great Kansas schools.” the membership of the In its decision, howev- current Supreme Court er, the court stressed that Nominating Commission the Kansas Constitution so attorneys do not have gives the judiciary the fi- a guaranteed majority on nal word on interpreting the nine-member panel. the Kansas Constitution. Democratic leaders in “Determining whether the Legislature immedian act of the Legislature is ately called on Republican invalid under the people‘s Gov. Sam Brownback and constitution is solely the GOP leaders to comply duty of the judiciary,” the with the court’s decision.
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Lawrence For the Lawrence school district, the change to block grant funding resulted in an estimated net loss of more than $446,000 this year, according to the district’s finance director, Kathy Johnson. That was mainly due to changes in the way the state now calculates supplemental aid, which subsidizes districts’ local option budgets. The district also gained about 250
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“I don’t know what Sam Brownback and his legislative allies expected when they eliminated the school finance formula, thereby eliminating all equity components — proving they are out of step with Kansans who value good, quality public schools,” Senate Minority Leader Anthony Hensley, of Topeka, said. Thursday’s ruling did not address another, much larger issue in the school finance lawsuit: whether overall funding for public schools is adequate for them to provide students with a suitable education. The three-judge panel has ruled that current funding is not adequate, and has suggested the state may need to add as much as $500 million a year in funding. Oral arguments before the Supreme Court on that portion of the case have not been scheduled but are expected to occur this spring. A decision on that question could come before the November general elections. — The Associated Press contributed to this story. — Statehouse reporter Peter Hancock can be reached at 354-4222 or phancock@ljworld.com.
February 12, 2016 9 PM
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Sat. Lo W 25 s 58 s 4s 5s 18 pc 45 pc 2c 18 sn 44 s 2c 52 s 3 sf -2 sn 48 sh 34 s 9s 45 s 17 s 31 c 54 pc 50 s 46 r 36 c 44 s 34 s 7c
WEATHER TRIVIA™
On Feb. 12, 1899, an Atlantic coast blizzard pulled very cold air southward, causing a low of 8 below zero in Dallas.
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8
Ice
MOVIES
Network Channels
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Flurries
Today Sat. Today Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Memphis 51 23 pc 36 Albuquerque 67 35 s 68 36 s Miami 75 55 s 76 Anchorage 36 28 c 38 30 c Milwaukee 18 1 pc 11 Atlanta 58 27 pc 42 23 s Minneapolis 10 -7 pc 10 Austin 78 42 s 70 50 s Nashville 43 17 pc 29 Baltimore 31 20 pc 22 3 c New Orleans 74 50 pc 60 Birmingham 61 28 s 42 24 s 28 15 pc 18 Boise 51 34 c 51 36 pc New York 25 4 pc 22 Boston 26 17 s 18 -1 sn Omaha 74 53 s 69 Buffalo 26 0 sn 4 -4 sf Orlando Philadelphia 30 19 pc 20 Cheyenne 48 30 s 54 34 s Phoenix 87 53 s 85 Chicago 22 1 pc 14 4 s 25 9 sn 10 Cincinnati 29 7 sf 18 3 pc Pittsburgh Portland, ME 24 13 s 21 Cleveland 25 7 sn 13 1 c Portland, OR 58 45 sh 53 Dallas 70 40 s 62 49 s Reno 67 33 pc 64 Denver 49 29 pc 58 32 s 32 17 pc 28 Des Moines 20 -5 pc 14 12 sn Richmond 71 46 pc 71 Detroit 26 4 sn 16 3 sf Sacramento St. Louis 37 7 pc 22 El Paso 74 43 s 77 43 s Salt Lake City 46 29 c 48 Fairbanks 14 4 pc 18 4 s 80 55 s 76 Honolulu 81 69 s 81 69 pc San Diego Houston 77 50 pc 69 52 pc San Francisco 64 50 pc 63 56 45 sh 51 Indianapolis 27 3 sf 15 4 pc Seattle Spokane 48 36 sh 44 Kansas City 35 9 pc 25 19 s 87 46 s 86 Las Vegas 74 48 pc 74 48 pc Tucson Tulsa 53 24 s 50 Little Rock 60 29 s 41 25 s 34 20 pc 25 Los Angeles 85 55 s 82 55 pc Wash., DC National extremes yesterday for the 48 contiguous states High: Woodland Hills, CA 91° Low: Cotton, MN -35°
FRIDAY Prime Time WOW DTV DISH 7 PM
Rain
-10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s National Summary: Frigid air will spread from the Midwest to the Northeast with flurries and snow squalls today. Much of the Plains, South and West will be dry, except for showers in the coastal Northwest and western Montana.
A strong windstorm in Alaska usually accompanied by snow
Lake
Most of the school districts in Douglas County received less state aid under the block grants than they would have under the old formula. Some of the biggest losses were in districts’ supplemental aid and capital outlay funds, both key sources of operating costs. Because the block grants essentially froze the current levels of the old perstudent funding formula, districts that had increases in enrollment fared worse. Though district officials welcomed the ruling, the level of uncertainly regarding the future funding remained.
Court
A:
Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset
Twitter: @RochelleVerde
Restoration
The Walking Dead
The Walking Dead Angie
Walk Full
Billion Dollar Wreck Smartest Smartest Restoration
›› Men in Black II (2002, Action)
››› Serenity (2005) Nathan Fillion.
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 FREE 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
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›› Battleship (2012) Taylor Kitsch, Alexander Skarsgrd, Rihanna.
›› Battleship (2012) Saturday Night Live Saturday Night Live South Pk South Pk South Pk South Pk South Pk South Pk ›››‡ Sleepless in Seattle (1993) Tom Hanks. Kardas E! News (N) ››› Gran Torino (2008, Drama) Clint Eastwood. Steve Austin’s Foxx Foxx Flea Flea Flea Flea Flea Flea Flea Flea Flea Flea Martin Martin Martin Martin Martin Lip Sync Daily Wendy Williams The Flavor of Love The Flavor of Love The Flavor of Love The Flavor of Love My Life Mysteries-Museum Mysteries- Cas. Mysteries-Museum Mysteries-Museum Mysteries- Cas. Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Love; Swipe Say Yes Say Yes Love; Swipe Bring It! (N) Bring It! (N) The Rap Game (N) Little Women Bring It! Caught (2015) Anna Camp. The Good Mistress (2014) Annie Heise. Caught (2015) Diners Am. Diners Diners Vacation Burgers Diners Diners Diners Diners Love It or List It Love It or List It Hunters Hunt Intl Dream Hunters Love It or List It Monster High: Great Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Friends Friends Friends Friends The 7D Wander Penn Yo-Kai Lab Rats Lab Rats Gravity Gravity Gravity Gravity Bunk’d Girl Gravity Gravity Best Fr. Liv-Mad. Bunk’d Girl Jessie Jessie King/Hill Burgers Burgers Cleve Fam Guy Fam Guy Childrens Neon Eric Aqua Gold Rush: Pay Dirt Gold Rush (N) Deadliest Job Gold Rush Deadliest Job ›› Dear John (2010) Channing Tatum. Shadowhunters The 700 Club Object-Affect. Brain Brain Brain Brain Brain Brain Brain Brain Brain Brain Love in Paradise (2016) Luke Perry. Middle Middle Golden Golden Golden Golden Treehouse Masters Treehouse Treehouse Masters Treehouse Masters Treehouse Masters ››› Love Actually (2003) Hugh Grant. Premiere. King King King King Trinity Lindsey End/ Age P. Stone Praise the Lord The Bible Price Fontaine Life on the Rock (N) News Rosary The Mercy Bridegrm Women Daily Mass - Olam ›› D.O.A. (1988) Dennis Quaid. Bookmark ›› D.O.A. (1988) Dennis Quaid. Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. Capitol Hill Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. Capitol Hill Unusual Suspects Unusual Suspects Stranger--Home Unusual Suspects Unusual Suspects The American Rev The American Rev The American Rev The American Rev The American Rev Neighbor Neighbor Neighbor Neighbor The Haves, Nots Neighbor Neighbor Neighbor Neighbor Super/Natural Secret Earth Secret Earth Secret Earth Secret Earth ›››› Tootsie (1982) Dustin Hoffman. ›››› Kramer vs. Kramer (1979) The Deer Hunter ››‡ Run All Night (2015) Liam Neeson. Taking ›› Black Knight (2001)
Real Time, Bill
VICE (N) Animals
Real Time, Bill
››› X-Men: Days of Future Past (2014) Erotic Billions Meru (2015) Premiere. ›››‡ Good Will Hunting (1997) Shame ›› Next Friday (2000) ›› All About the Benjamins (2002) ›››‡ Boyz N the Hood Avengers: Age ››‡ The Day After Tomorrow (2004) Black Sails “XXI.” ››‡ Office Space
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OPEN SATURDAY 11:30-1:30 Gorgeous Rancher!
• One Level Living/5 Beds/4.5 Bath • Granite/White Oak Hardwood • Covered Deck • Open Living /Formal Dining • Two Living Areas/Bar
$569,900 Erin Jannah 5 Bed, 4 Bath, Bsmt: Yes, 3,902 Sqft Mehojah Laing 393-4013 393-4018 MLS#138666 VT#3688643
NEW CONSTRUCTION 5604 Bowersock Drive
“The Reserve at Alvamar” • • • • •
Spacious, Comfortable Plan Private MIL/Nanny Suite Sauna & Many Amenities Pool & Outdoor Entertaining Exceptional Home and Location
OPEN SATURDAY 11:30-1:30 New 2 Story!
6 Bedroom, 7 Bath, Basement: Yes 7,883 Sqft Price: $1,250,000 MLS# 136611 VT#3583993 5113 Cody Court
• 2 Living Areas / Bar • Covered Large Patio • Main Floor Hickory Hardwood • Formal Dining or Den • Huge Laundry Room off Master
Sheila Santee 766-4410
$520,000 Erin Jannah 4 Bed, 4 Bath, Bsmt: Yes, 3,488 Sqft Mehojah Laing 393-4013 393-4018 MLS#138580 VT#3736166
5653 Villa Drive
NEW CONSTRUCTION 3915 Sophora Drive
OPEN SUNDAY 1:00-3:00 Huge Price Reduction!
• Fabulous Open Floor Plan! • HOA for Lawn, Snow, Pool • Beautiful Trim Detail Throughout • Main Level Living with Laundry and Study • Quiet NW Cul-De-Sac Street
$499,900
5 Bed, 5 Bath, Bsmt: Yes, 4,224 Sqft MLS#138277
Amy LeMert 979-9911
NEW CONSTRUCTION 6325 Steeple Chase Ct
OPEN SATURDAY 12:00-2:00 Langston Heights Luxury!
• Beautiful Townhouse • Special Treatments & Upgrades • Chef ’s Kitchen • 4 Bedrooms, Huge Family Room • Finished Daylight Basement
$365,000
4 Bed, 3 Bath, Bsmt: Yes, 2,988 Sqft MLS#138615
Sheila Santee 766-4410
OPEN SUNDAY 1:00-3:00 Immaculate Villa Home!
• Spacious & Open Main Level • Gorgeous Views Throughout Home • Fabulous Walkout Level • HOA for Lawn Space, Snow & Ext Maint. • Premier Villa Location
$465,000
Amy LeMert 979-9911
5 Bed, 3 Bath, Bsmt: Yes, 3,766 Sqft MLS#137794
OPEN SATURDAY 12:00-2:00 Welcome Home!
• One Level Living • 3 Car Garage • 4 Bedroom/ 3 Bathroom • Denise Floor Plan • Very Open Flow
$334,900
4 Bed, 3 Bath, Bsmt: No, 2,002 Sqft MLS#135927 VT#3686984
3904 Blazing Star Ct.
NEW CONSTRUCTION 5932 Simple Lane
OPEN SUNDAY 12:00-2:00 Henderson Floor Plan
• 4 Bedroom/4 Bathroom • Huge Pantry • Ample Closet Space • Open Plan • Quality Finishes Throughout
$335,900
4 Bed, 4 Bath, Bsmt: Yes, 2,490 Sqft MLS#133597 VT#3686928
4500 Range Ct
Laura Smysor 218-7671
OPEN SATURDAY 12:00-2:00 Henderson Floor Plan
• Oversized 2 Car Garage • Huge Master Closet • 4 Bedroom/4 Bathroom • Open, Spacious Floor Plan • Walk Out Basement
$309,900
4 Bed, 4 Bath, Bsmt: Yes, 2,490 Sqft MLS#138186 VT#3452161
3904 Hollyhock Ct
Shown By Appointment
OPEN SUNDAY 1:00-3:00 Two Living Areas
• Corner Lot on Cul-de-sac • Stainless Steel Appliances • Security System • Full Yard Sprinkler System • Fenced Yard w/Large Deck
$289,900
4 Bed, 3 Bath, Bsmt: Yes, 2,596 Sqft MLS#138216 VT#3715038
Tammy Wendler 393-1949
NEW CONSTRUCTION 6323 Steeple Chase Ct
Fantastic Value
OPEN SATURDAY 12:00-2:00 Luxury Town House!
• No Steps ~ Main Level Living • Arches & 10’ Ceilings • Special Treatments & Upgrades • Lots of Storage & Safe Room • New Langston Heights Addition
$275,000
2 Bed, 2 Bath, Bsmt: No, 1,650 Sqft MLS#138614
Sheila Santee 766-4410
Beth McFall 766-6704
• • • • •
Beautiful 2 Yr Old w/o Rancher Handsome Hardwood Floors Offers 2 Master Suite Options Huge, Oversized 3 Car Garage Nicely Fenced Corner Lot
4 Bedroom, 4 Bath, Basement: Yes 2,929 Sqft Price: $379,500 MLS# 138459
Toni McCalla 550-5206
Pam Bushouse 550-0716
NEW CONSTRUCTION 5617 Chimney Rocks Cir
• One Level Living • Birch Hardwood Floors • Granite & Onyx Counter Tops • Covered Patio • HOA/Lawn Care, Snow Removal
$259,500
1617 Alvamar Drive
OPEN SUNDAY 1:00-3:00 One Level Living!
OPEN SATURDAY 12:00-2:00 Beautiful Location!
5617 Chimney Rocks Cir
OPEN SATURDAY 1:00-3:00 Master Suite w/Safe Room
3 Bed, 2 Bath, Bsmt: No, 1,847 Sqft MLS#136064 VT#3448609
NEW CONSTRUCTION
• Master Suite w/Safe Room • Hardwood Floors • Granite & Onyx Counter Tops • Stainless Steel Appliances • Covered Patio
• Mature Trees, Amazing Setting • Open Formal LR & Dining Area • Family Room w/ Fireplace • Large Master Bedroom • Great Potential
$259,500
Lucy Harris 764-1583
Janet Scott 331-7987
3 Bed, 2 Bath, Bsmt: No, 1,847 Sqft MLS#136064 VT#3448609
$199,900
4 Bed, 2 Bath, Bsmt: No, 2,386 Sqft MLS#138654 VT#3740187
Judy Brynds 691-9414
4309 W 26th Terr
1206 W 29th Ct
2004 Atchison Ave
OPEN SATURDAY 12:30-2:30 New - First Open!
OPEN SUNDAY 1:00-3:00 Outstanding Home
OPEN SATURDAY 1:00-3:00 Won’t Last Long!
• Excellent Location • Beautifully Maintained • Separate Master Bedroom • Open Layout-Fireplace • New Roof / Fenced Yard
$182,000
3 Bed, 2 Bath, Bsmt: No, 1,449 Sqft MLS#138723 VT#3752656
• Huge Family Room • Newer Roof, Windows and Drive • Great Neighborhood • Large Kitchen and Dining Room • Stop By and See This One!
$179,500
Erin L Morgan 760-2221
3 Bed, 2 Bath, Bsmt: Yes, 2,030 Sqft MLS#138463
We Do Homes.
Eddie Davalos 691-7882
You Do Life.
• Large Family Room • Wall Full of Pantry Shelves • Wood Burning Fireplace • 3 Bedroom/3 Bathroom • Walk Out Basement
$164,900
3 Bed, 3 Bath, Bsmt: Yes, 2,052 Sqft MLS#138649 VT#3738323
Emily Willis 691-9986
#AskMcGrew The Real Estate Leader See more at YouTube.com/ AskMcGrew www.AskMcGrew.com
McGrew Gold Star Homes 4916 Colonial Way
3904 Hollyhock Court
CT
TRA N O C R NDE
U
•3 Bedroom, 2 Bath, Basement: No Price: $180,000 •Sqft: 1572 •MLS # 138550
Thomas Howe
550-1169
•4 Bedroom, 4 Bath, Basement: Yes Price: $379,500 •Sqft: 2929 •MLS # 138459
Toni McCalla
550-5206
4604 Cherry Hills Drive
•4 Bedroom, 5 Bath, Basement: Yes Price: $514,900 •Sqft: 4460 •MLS # 138617 VT # 3623146
Connie Friesen Erin Morgan
766-3870 760-2221
Homes marked with the McGrew Gold Star have met the following criteria: Inspected by a certified home inspector, all required repairs or deficiencies corrected, cosmetically enhanced if advisable, priced competitively and provides a one year home warranty for the new buyer.
WEEKEND
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Wave discovery affirms Einstein’s theories. 1B
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FRIDAY • FEBRUARY 12 • 2016
Oread group, city trade default notices
SCHOOL FUNDING
COURT ENDS BLOCK GRANTS Real given Estate Lawmakers “ Leader until June 30 to find solution
The
It’s essentially a temper tantrum by the courts to push their political will on the Legislature.”
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT By Peter Hancock
Was lost by the Lawrence school district because of the funding change last year, according to finance director Kathy Johnson
By Nikki Wentling
— State Sen. Jeff Melcher, R-Leawood
Twitter: @LJWpqhancock
Topeka — Kansas lawmakers violated the state Constitution last year when they repealed the state’s old school finance formula and replaced it with a system of block grants for two years, the Kansas Supreme Court ruled Thursday. The unsigned decision upheld a June 26, 2015, ruling by a threejudge district court panel, which said the new funding system is not equitable. Lawmakers approved the 2015 law LEGISLATURE as temporary fix to replace a per-student formula for distributing more than $4 billion a year to school in favor of stable “block grants.” The law was meant to give lawmakers time to devise another system for distributing more than $4 billion a year in aid to its 286 public school districts. However, the court on Thursday said the three-judge panel acted prematurely in ordering the state to add nearly $50 million in additional funding to cure the inequities. Instead, the court gave lawmakers until the end of this fiscal year, June 30, to fix the problem themselves. But the court also warned that it could close public schools next year if lawmakers fail, or refuse, to take action. “Accordingly, the Legislature’s chosen path during the 2016 session will ultimately determine whether Kansas students will be treated fairly and the schoolhouse doors will be open to them in August for the beginning of the 2016-2017 school year,” the court said.
$446,000
“
I don’t know what Sam Brownback and his allies expected when they eliminated the school finance formula.”
4604 Cherry Hills Dr
Twitter: @nikkiwentling
$500 million
In quick succession Thursday in the monthslong $500,000 tax dispute between the city of Lawrence and developers of The Oread hotel, both the city and the developers slapped the other with notices of default on their redevelopment Thomas Fritzel agreement — the city be- leads the cause Oread Inn wasn’t development cooperating, and Oread group behind Inn because the city was The Oread withholding sales and hotel and Oread property tax reimburse- Wholesale. ments. Interim City Manager Diane Stoddard said in a default notice to the development group, Oread Inn, that if the group doesn’t address a list of issues in 30 days, the city has the grounds to terminate the agreement. Oread Inn’s notice of default was sent to the city just
A year in school funding may need to be added back into the state’s budget, a three-judge panel previously ruled
which include block grant funding for next year, and which make no — Senate Minority Leader Anthony Hensley, provision for additional funding. D-Topeka Both bills would leave the state with a projected ending balance of only about $31 million this year and $111 In Lawrence, the change to block million next year. However, because grant funding resulted in an estirevenues have come up short in recent mated net loss of more months, this year’s endthan $446,000 this ing balance could be as Inside: School districts year, according to the low as $9 million. welcome ruling, but district’s finance direcThe House went funding challenges tor, Kathy Johnson. forward Thursday remain. Page 10A That was mainly due with final passage of its to changes in the way budget, 68-56, despite a the state now calculates “supplefailed attempt by Democrats to send mental aid,” which subsidizes it back to committee in light of the districts’ local option budget. court’s ruling. The decision came just as the Rep. Ron Ryckman Jr., R-Olathe, Kansas House and Senate were pre- who chairs the House Appropriaparing to finalize their budget bills, tions Committee, said he wasn’t prepared to comment on the decision until after he’s had time to study it. The decision is likely to increase political tension between the court and the Republican lawmakers, many of whom still argue that the court overstepped its bounds in 2005 when, in an earlier school finance case, it ordered the Legislature to increase funding by hundreds of millions of dollars per year.
See Page 4
Please see OREAD, page 2A
Senate advances budget
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
Ruling on school finance system disregarded By Peter Hancock
Please see COURT, page 10A
Twitter: @LJWpqhancock
3904 Hollyhock Ct
See Page 3 Shutterstock
The Kansas Senate worked late into the night Thursday and passed a budget bill, despite the fact that the Kansas Supreme Court ruled earlier in the day that a major part of the budget, the system of funding public schools, was unconstitutional. Please see BUDGET, page 2A
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CHILI FEED Lawrence Breakfast Optimist Club
SUNDAY FEBRUARY 21, 2016 11 AM - 2 PM
Kimberly Williams 312-0743
American Legion Hall • 3408 West 6th St.
• Adults $6 Donation • Children (6-12) $3 Donation • Children Under 6 Free Support 26 Youth Programs in Lawrence & Douglas County
Meet Our Agents! Steve Albright 393-9340
Alyssa Brown 764-3332
Doug Brown 766-9355
Judy Brynds 691-9414
Pam Bushouse 550-0716
Kim Clements 766-5837
Eddie Davalos 691-7882
Patrick Dipman 766-7916
Cheri Drake 423-2839
Ernie Eck 749-6084
Paige Ensminger 550-8180
Patrick Flavin 865-8133
Leslie Foust 979-1829
Connie Friesen 766-3870
David Gage 979-8002
Maxine Gregory 393-2063
Michelle Hack 760-1337
Sam Hamm Bronoski 331-8936
David Harper 979-0288
Lucy Harris 764-1583
Stan Herst 979-5088
Dawn Hill 691-8986
Brooke Hothan 550-0046
Thomas Howe 550-1169
Mary Jones 766-3023
Steve Jones 766-7110
Diane Kennedy 979-2748
Amy Krenzin 748-1206
Kenna La Rue 760-3849
Randy La Rue 691-5057
Steve La Rue 766-2717
Jannah Laing 393-4018
Amy LeMert 979-9911
Nicholas Lerner 766-5613
Toni McCalla 550-5206
Beth McFall 766-6704
John McGrew 838-8238
Michael McGrew 865-8115
Patty McGrew 423-3787
Deborah McMullen 766-6759
Erin Mehojah 393-4013
Becky Mondi 766-1598
Erin Morgan 760-2221
John Novotny 766-3054
Angel Nuzum 550-4331
Gary Nuzum 766-2145
Cheryl Puentes 393-2067
Linda Randall 550-8029
Bev Roelofs 766-4393
Caren Rowland 979-1243
Heather Salb 840-7878
Sheila Santee 766-4410
Chris Schmid 766-3934
Ken Schmidt 505-0500
Jonathan Schwarz 979-3586
Janet Scott 331-7987
Sam Shipstead 691-6953
Blake Shmalberg 766-4722
Brad Shuck 766-0171
Laura Smysor 218-7671
Dennis Snodgrass 843-2055
Crystal Swearingen 550-3424
Barbara Trouslot 766-1046
Tammy Wendler 393-1949
Henry Wertin 760-7499
Tasha Wertin 691-8834
Glenda Whalen 218-5872
Kimberly Williams 312-0743
Emily Willis 691-9986
SECTION B
USA TODAY — L awrence J ournal -W orld
IN MONEY
02.12.16 Negative rates not ‘off the table,’ Fed’s Yellen says MICHAEL REYNOLDS, EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY
Gravitational waves confirmed Gravitational waves, ripples that can be unleashed by movements of massive objects in space, travel at the speed of light through the fabric of space-time. Albert Einstein had predicted their existence in 1916. uTwo black holes swinging around each other create gravitational waves as they spiral closer together. uUltimately, the black holes (center of spiral) collide, releasing more gravitational waves.
ILLUSTRATION BY R. HURT, CALTECH-JPL, VIA EPA
NEWSLINE
IN NEWS
Clinton, Sanders agree systems in U.S. are broken Oregon refuge takeover has bizarre ending
On cellphone, last holdout threatens suicide on YouTube live stream. This is an edition of USA TODAY provided for your local newspaper. An expanded version of USA TODAY is available at newsstands or by subscription, and at usatoday.com.
For the latest national sports coverage, go to sports.usatoday.com
USA SNAPSHOTS©
For the love of birds
18,726,079 Number of individual birds representing 5,090 of the planet’s 10,000 species counted by about 144,000 people over 4 days in 2015. Note The 19th annual Great Backyard Bird Count is Feb. 12-15. Source birdcount.org TERRY BYRNE AND VERONICA BRAVO, USA TODAY
‘WHOLE NEW WINDOW U.S., Russia strike ON THE deal for cease-fire UNIVERSE’ Discovery affirms Einstein theory Traci Watson
Special for USA TODAY
I
n a discovery that promises to revolutionize astronomy, scientists have made the first direct observations of gravitational waves — bizarre ripples in space-time foreseen by Albert Einstein a century ago. The find is a triumph for Einstein’s celebrated general theory of relativity, the basis of his 1916 prediction that the fabric of the universe is perturbed by gravitational energy. The find also is a triumph for the mammoth scientific apparatus — the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-wave Observatory (LIGO) — that was the first to pick up the stealthy advance of these waves, in this case created by the violent union of two black holes 1.3 billion years ago. Other scientists hailed the find as the kind of advance that comes along only once or twice in a lifetime. Because gravitational waves carry information about their source, the ability to detect these undulations will allow researchers to study distant and elusive features of the universe. Black holes too far away to
study using today’s techniques, for example, should become easy scientific prey with the help of gravitational waves. Study of the universe via gravitational waves “will be the astronomy of the 21st century,” predicted Arizona State University’s Lawrence Krauss, who is not part of the LIGO team. “This is a whole new window on the universe.” As far back as the 1970s, scientists garnered indirect evidence for such waves, spawned by the movements of massive objects in space, such as spinning supernovae or whirling pairs of neutron stars. The $1 billion LIGO directly captured the wave itself, which, if confirmed, would be “a monumental extra step,” said Cole Miller of the University of Maryland, who is not affiliated with LIGO. LIGO’s twin detectors — in Hanford, Wash., and Livingston, La., — picked up the wave on Sept. 14, 2015 — several days before data collection was to resume after a five-year renovation of the equipment. The gravitational waves detected by LIGO came from the final moments before the collision of the two black holes in the vast outer regions of the cosmos.
in Syria’s civil war
Jim Michaels @jimmichaels USA TODAY
Diplomats meeting in Munich agreed early Friday to implement a “cessation of hostilities” in Syria’s long-running civil war and bring aid into the country to help stem a growing humanitarian crisis that has displaced millions. Secretary of State John Kerry announced the agreement after meeting with his Russian counterpart and other diplomats in an effort to reach a cease-fire in the nearly five-year-long war. The cease-fire, which would take effect in a week’s time, is far from certain to occur because it depends on most forces
fighting in Syria to agree to its terms. Kerry said the agreement would not apply to the fighters for the Islamic State and the alQaeda affiliated al-Nusra front, two groups battling government forces of President Bashar Assad. A U.S.-led coalition is conducting an air war against the Islamic State in Syria. Russia is also conducting airstrikes in Syria in support of Assad, who the United States wants to step down. Russia says the strikes are aimed at terrorists, but the United States said their airstrikes are aimed at propping up Assad. The war has left more than 250,000 dead and created the worst refugee crisis for Europe since World War II.
ALEXANDRA BEIER, GETTY IMAGES
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and Secretary of State John Kerry chat during a meeting Thursday in Munich.
White House bans guns — finally
Signs were finally put up “literally because we have to by law” Gregory Korte USA TODAY
The signs appeared at the White House around the time of a winter storm that closed down much of the federal government for three days last month: “WARNING: Weapons Prohibited.” Posted outside guard shacks with metal detectors, the signs WASHINGTON
threaten fines and prison time for something most visitors probably consider common sense: Don’t bring a gun into the White House. So why the signs? “The signs were put up literally because we have to by law,” said David Iacovetti, the deputy assistant director of public affairs for the U.S. Secret Service. “The only way we can search somebody and have those charges stick is have the sign posted.” That law is the Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1988. Neither the Secret Service nor the Justice De-
partment could explain why it took 28 years to install the signs. They said the lack of signage hasn’t impacted their ability to arrest and convict people threatening the White House complex. Under Section 930 of the federal criminal code, it’s a Class A misdemeanor to bring a firearm or dangerous weapon into a federal facility, punishable by up to a year in prison. If you intend to commit a crime with that weapon, it becomes a Class E felony, carrying up to five years in prison. The same law requires that notice of the penalties “be posted
conspicuously at each public entrance to each federal facility.” Without the notice, a person can’t be convicted. Iacovetti said the Secret Service installed the signs last month on the advice of the U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia. Prosecution under Section 930 is rare. A USA TODAY analysis of court data found only one case since 1995 in which prosecutors in Washington enforced the law: James Von Brunn, the Holocaust Museum shooter in 2009 who was also charged with murder. Contributing: Brad Heath
DAVID JACKSON, USA TODAY
The ‘no firearms’ sign at the White House warns visitors.
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L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2016
VOICES
Time travel summit held in Hollywood
Fans thrilled to take guided tour down TV’s ‘Tunnel’ Christine Brennan USA TODAY Sports
The unexpected text message arrived Oct. 24, 2015, two days after USA TODAY’s commemoration of Back to the Future Day. “For decades now I thought I was the only one left who remembered or cared about The Time Tunnel. I never missed an episode. About 15 years ago, I saw James Darren at the luggage carousel at LAX. I could not have been more thrilled if it had been Babe Ruth. Hope u r well. Bob Costas.” The renowned NBC sportscaster was referring to my Back to the Future Voices column, an ode to time travel in which I dated my obsession back to the 1960s television classic, The Time Tunnel. Each week, Tony Newman and Doug Phillips, played by James Darren and Robert Colbert, found themselves landing in just the right spot as a huge historic event was about to take place: the attack on Pearl Harbor, the sinking of the Titanic, the siege of the Alamo, D-Day. Bob’s text triggered an idea: What if we two time travel nuts could track down our hero James Darren and take him to lunch or dinner? Years earlier, during the O.J. Simpson saga, I had been on a TV show or two with Darren’s son, Jim Moret. It didn’t take long to get his cell number. I texted Jim. He texted back with his father’s e-mail address. Before I could send a message, I received a text from Christian Darren, another of James Darren’s sons, saying they would be “delighted” to meet with us the next time we all were in Los Angeles. Amazingly, all of this was done without once clicking on Facebook. I immediately alerted Bob. It was in the midst of the World Series. “I am more psyched for this than for Game 2 tonite,” he texted. “This is beyond cool! Climbing into our own Time Tunnel and heading for 1966!” And so it came to pass that on Monday, Feb. 8, in the year 2016,
Sportscaster Bob Costas and columnist Christine Brennan got to meet their time-traveling hero James Darren, who starred in the 1960s TV show The Time Tunnel. at precisely 6:30 p.m. California time, James and Christian Darren, Bob and Jill Costas and I converged on Craig’s in West Hollywood to have dinner and engage in our own very personal brand of time travel. James Darren had invited Robert Colbert, but he couldn’t make it. Darren explained that it’s hard to drag Colbert out of his beloved Malibu. Bob and I weren’t quite so sure. I wondered if perhaps Colbert was stuck in Gettysburg. “I heard it was Plymouth Rock, but why quibble?” Bob said. Darren, a onetime teen idol who looks fantastic at 79 and still performs in Las Vegas, was more than agreeable when Bob and I started asking him all about the TV show. Although he
“About 15 years ago, I saw James Darren at the luggage carousel at LAX. I could not have been more thrilled if it had been Babe Ruth.” Bob Costas
seemed to enjoy the reminiscing as much as we did, Bob added a crucial note of caution: “Stop us when we get too obnoxious.” We quickly found out Darren’s favorite episode was also both of ours: “The Day The Sky Fell In,” in which Tony and Doug
travel back to Pearl Harbor on Dec. 6, 1941, the eve of the attack. As luck would have it, Darren’s character, Tony, grew up in Honolulu, where his father was stationed at the U.S. naval office. You can probably see where this is going. Nearly two decades before Marty McFly met his parents in the first Back to the Future movie, adult Tony runs into 7-year-old Tony while he’s trying to warn his — their — father, a Navy commander, about the impending attack. It gets better. Tony’s father died during the attack on Pearl Harbor, but Tony never knew how. He finds out in the show. After the bombs have fallen, time-traveling Tony ends up in an office with his mortally wounded father.
“You said you knew me a long time ago and that you’ve always remembered,” Tony’s father says. “My name is Tony Newman,” Darren says. “Tony Newman. I know you. I know you as well as I know my own son.” Tears well in Darren’s eyes. “I … I am your son.” As we retold the story, we of course uttered those immortal words. To watch James Darren watch us repeat his famous line from nearly 50 years ago was almost too good to be true. Who says time travel is impossible? The evening already was a complete success, and we hadn’t even ordered yet. Brennan is a USA TODAY sports columnist who plans to travel ahead to 2030 to find out if she and Costas ever write a time travel sports novel.
Sanders, Clinton agree systems in U.S. broken Democratic rivals split on viability of plans for change Susan Page USA TODAY
Little more than 48 hours after the polls closed in New Hampshire, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders and former secretary of State Hillary Clinton tangled Thursday night in their sixth presidential debate — their contest transformed by Sanders’ crushing victory in the opening primary. Sanders called for the “courage” to pursue big ambitions; Clinton argued he was making “a promise that cannot be kept.” Sanders added concerns about “a broken criminal justice system” to his litany that includes attacks on the campaign-finance system and the “rigged economy.” Clinton repeatedly embraced President Obama, depicting herself as his natural political heir. Their manner was carefully courteous to one another — after all, the debate was hosted by PBS — but their words often were caustic and cutting, and they became more heated as the debate wore on. Clinton was in search of momentum after her narrow win in Iowa and near-historic defeat in New Hampshire. Sanders was under pressure to demonstrate he could expand his appeal to include more of the minority voters who will be crucial in the next set of contests. Nevada, where nearly one in five voters are Latino, will hold Democratic caucuses Feb. 20. A week later, Democrats in South Carolina, a majority of them African-American, will vote in the Palmetto State primary. That brought a sharper focus on questions that haven’t been at the center of previous debates,
SCOTT OLSON, GETTY IMAGES
“Secretary Clinton, you’re not in the White House yet. I think a Sanders victory would be of some historical accomplishment as well.” Sen. Bernie Sanders
including notorious cases of police violence against unarmed black men and the issue of mass incarceration of African Americans. Both called for comprehensive immigration reform and a path to citizenship for undocumented immigrants now living in the United States. Both opposed immigration raids that the Obama administration has launched. While they espoused similar goals, there were some fundamental differences between them in the proper reach and role of the federal government, and in how its political campaigns should be financed. Sanders once again took Clinton to task for her ties to Wall Street
and a super PAC supporting her campaign. “I think what our campaign is indicating is that the American people are tired of establishment politics, tired of establishment economics,” he said in his opening statement. “They want a political revolution.” Clinton declared she was running for president especially to help “those who have been left out and left behind.” She called Sanders’ proposals on health care and other issues unrealistic. “The numbers don’t add up,” she said of his “Medicare For All” plan. “Many people will be worse
off than they are now.” Neither gave ground. At one point, Sanders said to her dismissively, “Secretary Clinton, you’re not in the White House yet.” Asked about whether he might upending the potential election of the first woman president, he replied, “I think a Sanders victory would be of some historical accomplishment as well.” The debate, moderated by Judy Woodruff and Gwen Ifill, was held at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. It was the final face-to-face Democratic showdown scheduled until after the Super Tuesday contests March 1. By then, the campaign is likely to have taken on a new and sharper definition.
Bernie Sanders and Hillary Clinton debate Thursday at the University of WisconsinMilwaukee.
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USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2016
A bizarre ending to Oregon refuge saga Last holdout makes rambling phone call streamed online Doug Stanglin USA TODAY
Four holdouts at a federal wildlife refuge surrendered peacefully Thursday to end a 41day takeover, but not before one protester balked at the last moment and threatened to shoot himself in a rambling, hour-long discussion livestreamed online. David Fry, 27, speaking by cellphone on an open line broadcast on YouTube, said he was “feeling suicidal” only moments after his three companions peacefully surrendered to the FBI and a group of negotiators led by evangelist Franklin Graham. The four were the last holdouts of the takeover of the refuge Kim Hjelmgaard and Valeria Criscione USA TODAY
While Germany has grabbed most of the attention for its response to Europe’s migrant crisis, little fjord-filled Norway has quietly emerged as one of the largest contributors of humanitarian aid to Syrian refugees. The oil-rich Scandinavian country of 5 million has pledged $1.2 billion over the next four years for people who have fled Syria’s nearly 5-year-old civil war. That compares with $1.7 billion committed by the United Kingdom (population 65 million) and $2.6 billion by Germany (81 million) through 2018. Based on population, Norway is donating $240 a person, compared with $26 by the U.K. and $32 by Germany. Since 2011, the United States (population 323 million) has pledged $5.1 billion in aid, or $16 a person. Norway can afford to be generous: Its GDP of $97,000 per person is nearly double that of the U.S. “Syria will need an educated population to get back on its feet when the war is over,” Norway’s Foreign Minister Børge Brende told USA TODAY. “The country’s future depends on political stability and social and economic development.” Brende said that about 18 million refugees in Syria and neighboring countries, such as Turkey and Lebanon, are in need of humanitarian assistance. In addition to responding to their immediate needs, the money will be used to create jobs and support education. “Norway has a long tradition for providing overseas aid,” Brende said. “I believe that most Norwegians understand that it is important to continue to support the refugees.” Despite Norway’s spending, some critics complain that it’s still not enough and that the nation is sending too much aid into OSLO
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that began Jan. 2 as a protest against federal land-use policies. “I am actually pointing a gun at my head. I am tired of living here,” Fry said at one point. In a long rant to online commentator and activist Gavin Seim and Christian lawyer KrisAnne Hall, Fry complained of his taxes paying for abortions and his marijuana being taken away. Last year, voters in his home state of Ohio turned down a bill to legalize the sale of marijuana. “I will no longer be a slave to this system,” he said, growing increasingly agitated. In the end, Fry gave up after telling an FBI negotiator by phone he wanted everyone to shout “hallelujah” if he walked out. As he fumbled with the cellphone, Fry could be heard shouting, “hallelujah,” and then said, “one more cookie and one more
cigarette” before strolling to the FBI checkpoint. The other three unarmed holdouts gave up without incident. They walked one by one toward an olive green armored vehicle carrying Graham and Nevada lawmaker Michele Fiore. Holding hands, Sean Anderson, 48, of Riggins, Idaho, and his wife, Sandy, 47, went first, their arms held high. Sean Anderson carried an American flag in his right hand. Sandy Anderson was patted down by an FBI agent and then taken away. Jeff Banta, 46, of Yerington, Nev., went next. The FBI said the four would be arraigned before a federal judge in Portland on Friday. Graham, at the request of the protesters and the FBI, was in phone contact with the group for the past week to negotiate an end to the standoff. The North Carolina preacher joined Fiore in an armored vehicle to reach
days so don’t be offended,” Sean the four holdouts. The surrender process capped Anderson replied. At one point, Anderson even a five-week ordeal that included the arrest of almost a dozen pro- joked they were “hoping to stop testers and the shooting death of at Denny’s” before going to jail. one in a confrontation FBI agents also arwith police. rested Nevada rancher The final act of the Cliven Bundy, the father drama Thursday mornof the protesters’ jailed ing played out in real leader, who flew to the time through a phone state in a show of supcall streamed online, port. Bundy, 69, of Bunwith Fiore and Graham kerville, Nev., was staying in touch with the arrested after stepping protesters. “America’s off a plane at Portland COUNTY watching, so nothing is MULTNOMAH International Airport SHERIFF'S OFFICE going to happen,” Fiore Cliven Bundy on Wednesday. said. He faces federal charges related to a Before the surrender, Graham also spoke to the group standoff at his ranch with the by phone. “We are proud of you U.S. Bureau of Land Manageand love you and look forward to ment in 2014, according to the giving you guys a big hug,” Gra- Bundy website. Bundy owes $1 ham said before praying and million in grazing fees and climbing into a vehicle to drive penalties. to the surrender site. “We haven’t bathed in a few Contributing: Kevin Johnson
From little Norway, big bucks on refugee crisis
Nation has pledged $1.2B over next four years for aid to those fleeing Syria
AFP/GETTY IMAGES
the Syrian region at the expense of helping more refugees resettle in Norway. “I wouldn’t call it generous,” said Jan Egeland, secretary-general of the Norwegian Refugee Council, a humanitarian organization with representatives in 25 countries. “I would say (the funding pledges) are close to what you should expect from all countries with a strong economy and with a peaceful society. It’s not like Norway is doing more than it should. It’s the others who are not stepping up to the plate,” he said. According to a “fair share” measure devised by Oxfam, the anti-poverty group, Norway last year contributed 385% of its allocated portion of an $8.9 billion funding appeal for Syria made by the United Nations and interna-
NORWAY’S GENEROSITY Norway is donating far more per person to help Syrian refugees than much larger countries. Amount per person (Total) Norway
$240 ($1.2B) Germany $32 ($2.6B) United Kingdom $26 ($1.7B) United States $16 ($5.1B) Source USA TODAY research JANET LOEHRKE, USA TODAY
Migrants walk and bike to the Norwegian border station at Storskog after crossing the border from Russia on Nov. 12. tional Red Cross and Red Crescent groups. It was beaten only by Kuwait, which gave 554%. Germany donated 152%; the U.S. 76%. For 2016, the international community has pledged $10 billion for Syria. Less than half of the 2015 pledge has materialized, according to the U.N. Linn Herland Landro, founder of the Refugees Welcome to the Arctic activist group, which is campaigning to stop the deportation of about 5,500 asylum seekers who crossed into Norway from Russia, said raising new funds for Syrians is a positive step. “At the same time, I find it problematic that they are not finding good solutions in Europe, and in Norway, for those seeking
protection,” she said. Landro’s comments reflect a debate within Norway and elsewhere in Europe about whether it is better to send aid directly to Syria and surrounding nations or take in more refugees. Like many other countries across Europe, Norway has recently moved to tighten its asylum laws. “It’s not just about politics, speeches and money,” Landro said. “We can’t expect that money will stop people from fleeing. There is a war down there.” Egeland, from the Norwegian Refugee Council, said it was a false choice. “We have to do both,” he said. Hjelmgaard reported from Berlin
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The Congressional Black Caucus PAC endorsed Hillary Clinton for president ahead of the South Carolina primary later this month, saying she’s the most consistent ally of the black community. Both Clinton and Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders have been rolling out endorsements from influential black politicians and stars. Sanders announced Thursday that entertainer Harry Belafonte is backing him. Yet earning of the caucus’s seal of approval will be a huge help to Clinton as many of its members will take their message on the road before the Feb. 27 South Carolina primary and other southern states that follow in March with large black populations. — Heidi M. Przybyla N. KOREA ORDERS MILITARY TAKEOVER OF COMPLEX
North Korea on Thursday declared an industrial complex it jointly ran with South Korea a
SCORES KILLED IN MEXICAN PRISON RIOT
common prosperity for more than a decade.” North Korea said it would expel South Korean workers from the site and freeze the assets, including equipment and products, of firms there. Pyongyang also said it would cut two communication hotlines with the South once the workers were expelled. — Jane Onyanga-Omara WARSHIPS SENT TO AEGEAN TO TACKLE SMUGGLING
MIGUEL SIERRA, EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY
Relatives of prisoners demand information Thursday outside Topo Chico prison in Monterrey, Nuevo Leon, in Mexico, where a riot between rival factions killed 52 inmates. military zone and said it was pulling out all its workers. It comes after South Korea on Wednesday said it would stop operations at the Kaesong Industrial Complex, just over the North’s border, in response to the recent rocket launch and nuclear weap-
ons test by Pyongyang. A statement by the North’s Committee for the Peaceful Reunification of Korea carried by the official Korean Central News Agency called the move “a dangerous declaration of war” and said the site “operated for the
NATO said Thursday it would deploy three warships to the Aegean Sea to help stop the smuggling of migrants between Turkey and Greece. The military alliance said the move was aimed at countering human smuggling and criminal networks, and was not about stopping or sending back boats. Many of those crossing the Aegean are fleeing the nearly 5-yearold war in Syria. The details of the mission, which will see NATO work with national coast guards and the European Union, are being worked out. — Jane Onyanga-Omara
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L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2016
STATE-BY-STATE News from across the USA ALABAMA Birmingham: James Woolley, 50, a family practice and criminal defense attorney, was charged with attempted murder, kidnapping and robbery, AL.com reported. ALASKA Juneau: The state Supreme Court heard oral arguments in a case alleging the wrongful firing of an Alaska Airlines employee, the Empire reported. The case was dismissed by the lower courts. ARIZONA Phoenix: John Feit, 83, a former priest, was arrested in connection with the slaying of Texas beauty queen Irene Garza in 1960, The Arizona Republic reported. ARKANSAS Hot Springs: A
Malvern man praised a woman he admitted to raping and threatening to kill, then asked a jury to sentence him to the maximum prison term, the Sentinel-Record reported. Larry Lavelle Jones, 37, was given the maximum sentence of life plus 60 years. CALIFORNIA Half Moon Bay:
The Titans of Mavericks contest is on for Friday off the coast of Princeton Harbor, the San Francisco Chronicle reported. Excellent conditions are predicted for the 24 invited surfers.
HIGHLIGHT: NEW YORK
Building owner charged in fatal explosion Madison Iszler USA TODAY
NEW YORK A building owner and contractors were indicted Thursday on a host of charges, including manslaughter and homicide, for their roles in an East Village explosion that killed two people and injured more than a dozen others. The charges stem from a gas leak on March 27 that sparked an explosion in a five-story apartment building in Manhattan’s East Village. The explosion leveled the building, destroyed several properties nearby and started a sevenalarm fire. Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance called the gas explosion “foreseeable, preventable and completely avoidable.” He warned that property owners and builders need to resist temptation to break the rules and “take dangerous, and in some instances, deadly shortcuts.” An indictment returned in New York State Supreme Court charges that the building owner and manager hired contractors who filed false paperwork to get gas meters installed, then rented units in the building even after the apartments failed inspections. When the gas inspection failed, workers allegedly constructed an illegal gas
forgery. The Idaho Statesman reported that the two women have been accused of stealing from the estates of three people who died without a will or heirs. ILLINOIS Chicago: Opponents of
COLORADO Denver: State officials say they’ll keep working on the state’s plan to comply with the Obama administration’s clean-power regulations despite a U.S. Supreme Court order delaying enforcement of the rules. The Denver Post reported Wednesday the state Department of Public Health and Environment said Colorado needs to be ready in case the court eventually upholds all or part of the rules. CONNECTICUT New Haven: The
Archdiocese of Hartford has agreed to pay $500,000 to settle sex abuse allegations against a Connecticut priest, the Connecticut Post reports. The Rev. Stephen Bzdyra was accused of beating and sexually abusing an altar boy between 1985 and 1990.
DELAWARE Dover: Gov. Markell signed a resolution formally apologizing for slavery and Jim Crow era laws, The News Journal reported. The long-awaited symbolic gesture aimed at reconciliation took place at the Delaware Public Archives. DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA: Jullette
Saussy, the Fire Department’s medical director, announced her resignation, saying her proposals have been blocked and “people are dying needlessly because we are moving too slow,” The Washington Post reported.
FLORIDA Melbourne: Barre
Taylor, a five-year veteran with the Brevard County Sheriff’s Office, was fired from his position, arrested and charged with one count of felony sexual misconduct after investigators said he engaged in inappropriate relations with an inmate, Florida Today reported. GEORGIA Atlanta: Evangelist
Franklin Graham decried samesex marriage and the push for transgender rights at a prayer rally attended by thousands outside the state Capitol, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported. HAWAII Hilo: The Lyon Arbore-
tum’s Seed Conservation Laboratory is asking for online donations to help deal with a fungus that has spread to 34,000 acres of ohia trees, the Hawaii Tribune-Herald reported. The tree is important to Hawaii’s water supply, endangered native birds and cultural traditions like hula. Donations: gofundme.com/ ohialove. IDAHO Boise: An Ada County
employee and a state employee have been accused of theft and
Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s plan to raise the legal age to buy cigarettes to 21 and hike tobacco taxes blocked a vote after the mayor tried to jump-start the measure by pledging to crack down on illegal smoke sales, the Tribune reported. INDIANA Indianapolis: Heat-
ing, ventilating and air-conditioning manufacturer Carrier is shuttering its manufacturing facility and moving its operation to Mexico, The Indianapolis Star reported, eliminating about 1,400 jobs during the next three years.
IOWA Des Moines: Iowa adults diagnosed with a terminal illness could make a written request for self-administered medication they could use to end their lives under a bill that provoked an emotional debate before an Iowa Senate subcommittee, The Register reported.
SOUTH CAROLINA Berkeley County: Police say a woman charged with killing her mother told investigators that ghosts told her to do so. Paula Anderson, 45, is charged in the death of Frances Anderson, 68, who was found strangled in her Hanahloan home, WLTX-TV reported. SOUTH DAKOTA Parker: Turner
POOL PHOTO
Two people were killed last March when a gas explosion leveled an apartment building in the East Village. supply system, court papers said. Maria Hrynenko, 56, the building owner who is charged with manslaughter, assault, criminally negligent homicide and reckless endangerment, allegedly hired Dilber Kukic, 40, in 2013 to renovate some of her properties in New York, including the apartment building, according to court documents. Kukic, who faces similar charges, then hired Athanasios Ioannidis, 59, to do plumbing work at the building. Ioannidis, who did not have a professional license, allegedly expected to increase, a local group met here to discuss water safety. The Cape Cod Times reported that Leslie Reynolds, chief ranger for the Cape Cod National Seashore, said the aim is to change human behavior and keep people closer to shore. MICHIGAN Iron Mountain: A male cougar found dead along a road about 4 miles north of here had been caught in a snare, WLUC-TV reported. Under state regulations, snares may be used to catch foxes and coyotes Jan. 1 to March 1 on private land, but cougars are an endangered species. MINNESOTA Caledonia: Roger
Lee Olsen, 50, who was wrongfully convicted of child sex abuse will be compensated $475,000 under a new state law, the Star Tribune reported. Olsen spent two years in the Stillwater Correctional Facility. He was released from prison in 2008 when investigators found evidence that his accuser lied about the incident. MISSISSIPPI Houlka: Delta
KANSAS Topeka: A proposal to remove gifted children from the special education realm in Kansas was abandoned after push back from gifted education advocates, The Wichita Eagle reported.
Furniture Manufacturing will locate in the 80,000-square-foot facility formerly occupied by Astrolounger, the Mississippi Business Journal reported. The Chickasaw County project represents a corporate investment of $432,000 and will create 100 jobs.
KENTUCKY Frankfort: A state
MISSOURI Springfield: A school
Senate committee voted for a bill that is intended to shield county clerks from having to put their names on the marriage licenses of same-sex couples, The CourierJournal reported.
LOUISIANA New Orleans: Po-
lice confiscated 30 guns on or near Mardi Gras parade routes, The Times-Picayune reported. MAINE Augusta: A man was
sentenced to less than a month in prison after he admitted to possessing sexually explicit materials of minors under 16, the Kennebec Journal reported.
MARYLAND Annapolis: The
bodies of two duck hunters have been recovered from the Severn River, Maryland Natural Resources Police said. WUSA-TV reported that Earling Stephen Lamp and Matthew Davis, both 23, drowned last month when their boat capsized.
MASSACHUSETTS Wellfleet:
With the number of sharks prowling the waters off Cape Cod
RHODE ISLAND Providence: Police plan to stop enforcing an anti-panhandling ordinance that opponents say has led to the harassment of homeless people, the Providence Journal reported. It comes after the American Civil Liberties Union of Rhode Island sent a letter to Mayor Jorge Elorza in January calling for the change.
nurse was charged with having sex with a 15-year-old student, The Springfield News-Leader reported.
MONTANA Billings: Officials
identified a bicyclist who was struck and killed by a pickup truck here as a veteran who was living in a transitional living facility. The Billings Gazette reported that James Clark, 39, died of injuries suffered when he was struck by the truck. NEBRASKA Lincoln: Thirteen
people were arrested as a part of a sex trafficking sting conducted by a national coalition of law enforcement agencies between Jan. 17 and Feb. 7, the Lincoln Journal Star reported. The sting included 23 law enforcement agencies across 14 states and arrested a total of 552 would-be sex buyers and 30 sex traffickers.
NEVADA Reno: The Washoe County School Board is searching for a replacement for Barbara McLaury, its west county representative who recently resigned due to health problems, the Reno Gazette-Journal reported. McLaury’s resignation forces the board to appoint a replacement representing District G until McLaury’s term ends in December. NEW HAMPSHIRE Conway: A
paid Andrew Trombettas, 57, to use his license and credentials to apply for permits at the city’s building department, according to court papers. Ioannidis is charged with manslaughter, assault, criminally negligent homicide, reckless endangerment and falsifying business records. Trombettas is charged with offering a false instrument for filing. Mark Bederow, the lawyer representing Kukic, called the explosion a “tragedy.” But he said, “Everyone should keep an open mind until the evidence has been tested.” man was presumed dead after he fell through ice at Pequawket Pond here, WMUR-TV reported. NEW JERSEY Camden: Gregory
Pardlo, who won the 2015 Pulitzer Prize for poetry, will join the faculty of Rutgers UniversityCamden in September as a member of the school’s masters of fine arts program in creative writing, the Courier-Post reported.
NEW MEXICO Santa Fe: Mayor Javier Gonzales called Santa Fe “a city on the rise” during his second State of the City address, the Albuquerque Journal reported. NEW YORK Buchanan: A radia-
tion specialist from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission will investigate what led to the radioactive contamination of a monitoring well at Indian Point nuclear power plant, The Journal News reported.
County gave conditional approval to an egg-laying facility that aims to bring 500,000 chickens to a site near here, the Argus Leader reported.
TENNESSEE Dickson: FreedHardeman University and Nashville State Community College are offering joint enrollment that will provide an easier path for community college students to complete a bachelor’s degree, according to a news release from the schools. TEXAS Austin: Texas was ranked
the top exporting state in the country for the 14th consecutive year by the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis. Texas exported more than $251 billion in goods in 2015, more than 16% of all U.S. exports, the Austin Business Journal reported. UTAH Ogden: A report shows that Zion National Park is about $70 million behind on maintenance work, while continuing to see a record number of visitors, The Standard-Examiner reported. VERMONT Montpelier: VSECU,
a credit union for Vermonters, has announced a partnership with Vermont-based equity crowdfunding company Milk Money L3C, Burlington Free Press reported. VIRGINIA Chesterfield: Bon-
Chon Chicken — the fast casual Korean fried chicken chain — is about to open a location at the Towne Crossings Shopping Center, the Richmond Post-Dispatch reported.
NORTH CAROLINA Fayette-
ville: Tom Roberts, president of Aqua North Carolina, told officials he would address problems with the company’s pipes and service to about 13,000 customers in western Cumberland County, The Fayetteville Observer reported.
NORTH DAKOTA Fort Totten:
The Spirit Lake Tribe is getting a $900,000 grant to help improve housing and provide economic opportunities. OHIO Barberton: Vandals cut
down 10 black walnut trees earlier this week that the founder of this Akron suburb planted in 1910, the Akron Beacon Journal reported. The person responsible knew the 50-foot-tall trees’ value because only those black walnut trees were targeted, Barberton Historical Society officials said.
OKLAHOMA Tulsa: The Tulsa County Park Board has approved an $18 million plan to upgrade the 192-acre Chandler Park between Tulsa and Sand Springs, the Tulsa World reported. OREGON Grants Pass: Au-
thorities say a couple here were rescued after spending two nights in their pickup in a snowy ditch in the mountains. The Mail Tribune reported that a woman and 80-year-old man left their home Saturday to go for a drive in a four-wheel drive pickup truck. PENNSYLVANIA Philadelphia:
The city is moving ahead with a $16.5 million, year-long renovation of Love Park, and its namesake Robert Indiana statue.
WASHINGTON Seattle: Presi-
dent Obama’s proposed budget includes $1.2 billion toward a proposed light rail line in Washington’s Puget Sound area. The Seattle Times reported that the federal government might also contribute $75 million to a streetcar line and $43 million toward a bus line.
WEST VIRGINIA Charleston: Corporate officials convicted of pollution crimes such as those connected to the Freedom Industries chemical spill in January 2014 are seldom punished with prison terms. Over the past five years, data from the sentencing commission show that defendants in environmental crime cases were sentenced to probation, the Charleston Gazette-Mail reported. WISCONSIN Green Bay: The
Brown County Drug Task Force on Tuesday reported a big increase in seizures of methamphetamine in 2015, Green Bay Press-Gazette reported. Drug agents seized 1,269 grams of methamphetamine in 2015, compared with 237 grams in 2014 and just 41 grams in 2013. WYOMING Casper: State reg-
ulators denied an application to dispose of wastewater underground for a proposed oil and gas project in Natrona and Fremont counties, the Casper Star-Tribune reported. The Wyoming Oil and Gas Conservation Commission on reversed its earlier approval that would have allowed up to 10 million barrels of wastewater.
Compiled by Tim Wendel, Nicole Gill and Jonathan Briggs, with Carolyn Cerbin, Linda Dono, Mike Gottschamer, Ben Sheffler, Mike B. Smith and Nichelle Smith. Design by Tiffany Reusser. Graphics by Alejandro Gonzalez.
USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2016
MONEYLINE TRUMP, UNIVISION SETTLE MISS USA LAWSUIT Donald Trump and Univision said Thursday they have settled the lawsuit stemming from the Hispanic network’s decision to not broadcast the Miss Universe and Miss USA pageants last year following his remarks about Mexican immigrants. Trump sued Univision last June for $500 million after Univision dropped the pageants, owned by Trump at the time. Terms of the settlement weren’t disclosed. “I’m glad we are able to put these differences behind us,” Trump said in a statement released by Univision. BOEING STOCK PLUNGES ON REPORT OF SEC PROBE Nervous investors drove down the price of Boeing stock by almost 7% in trading Thursday after a report that the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is investigating the company’s accounting practices. Boeing shares tumbled to $108.45. Bloomberg reported that the SEC is probing whether the manufacturing giant properly accounted for the costs of developing its 787 Dreamliner and the 747 jumbo aircraft. YAHOO MAKES ITS FIRST WAVE OF JOB CUTS Yahoo has made official its first wave of job cuts under its revitalization plan. It gave 60-day notices to 107 employees at its Sunnyvale, Calif., headquarters. The layoffs, which take effect April 11, are the first of an expected 1,500-plus job cuts and were spread across a range of departments and job titles. The struggling company this month announced plans to cut about 15% of its workforce. DOW JONES INDUSTRIAL AVG. 15,900 15,850
9:30 a.m.
15,915
15,800
4:00 p.m.
15,660
15,750 15,700
-254.56
15,650 15,600 15,550 15,500
THURSDAY MARKETS INDEX
Nasdaq composite S&P 500 T-note, 10-year yield Oil, light sweet crude Euro (dollars per euro) Yen per dollar
CLOSE
CHG
4266.84 1829.08 1.66% $26.21 $1.1330 112.27
y 16.75 y 22.78 y 0.05 y 1.24 x 0.0053 y 1.41
SOURCES USA TODAY RESEARCH, MARKETWATCH.COM
USA SNAPSHOTS©
More money, more say
1in n5
agree the partner who contributes more to household finances has more influence in non-financial matters.
Source PNC Wealth & Values Survey of 901 adults 35 and older JAE YANG AND PAUL TRAP, USA TODAY
NEWS MONEY SPORTS LIFE AUTOS TRAVEL
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MARKET TUMULT CHARTS NEW WATERS GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOTO
Fears are rampant and emotions high as selling begets selling in a financial world filled with unknowns
Adam Shell @adamshell USA TODAY
The persistent pounding global stock markets are taking seems to be taking on a more sinister tone and more dangerous phase, with emotions and fear taking on a bigger role in the rout, investors questioning the ability of the world’s central bankers to calm the market’s frayed nerves and a volatile environment in which selling begets more selling. At the moment, the world’s stock markets are stuck in a negative feedback loop, in which one part of the globe, sparked by growth fears, sinking oil prices, interest rate confusion and — yes, falling stock prices — is spreading to other places, causing a marketspecific type of contagion that causes a self-fulfilling prophecy of ever-lower stock prices. Indeed, what started out as a sell-off in the energy patch has spread to the key financial sector and once-high-flying tech sector.
Negative rates aren’t off the table, Fed says
she doesn’t expect the economy to wobble enough to warrant a USA TODAY cut in interest rates, let alone a drop into negative territory. Federal Reserve Chair Janet A negative rate likely would Yellen told Congress on force banks to pay to keep Thursday the central reserves at the Fed, inbank has not ruled stead of paying the out imposing negabanks interest, as tive interest rates if the Fed does now. the economy takes That should coax a downward turn banks to lend more but is investigating and spur them to their viability. move cash to higher“I wouldn’t take yielding assets such as them off the table, but stocks, bolstering marMARK WILSON, kets in a free fall. we would have work to GETTY IMAGES Yellen said the Fed dedo to make sure they But Janet would be workable,” she Yellen said cided against using negatold the Senate Banking she doubts tive rates in 2010, largely because they would hurt Committee in her semi- the need annual monetary will arise. money market funds, which support market lipolicy report. The Fed raised its quidity for firms and governbenchmark inter- ments. Another issue, she said, The main fear today est rate in De- is they could disrupt interbank cember for the payments, such as check clearis that we’re in first time in ing, by cutting funds banks unchartered waters, with nine years — keep at the Fed. the U.S. and global economy But the European Central from near zero slowing while the major central to 0.4% — amid Bank and four others are imnear-normal posing negative rates to jolt banks have interest rates at unemployment. sluggish economies and head or near zero.” But China’s trou- off deflation. As a result, she Nick Sargen, senior investment adviser at bles and tanking said, “We’re taking a look at Fort Washington Investment Advisors stock and oil prices have them again” in case the econoraised fears of a slowdown my slows markedly. She added “We’re at the stage when fear and even recession. the Fed is also checking that begets more fear,” says Nick SarStill, Yellen said Thursday there are no legal obstacles. gen at Fort Washington Investment Advisors. Adds Brad McMillan, chief in- off in U.S. shares is based on the stocks not massively affected by vestment officer for Common- fear that a recession is coming, negative trends get crushed. “When emotions overtake reawealth Financial Network, “We even though job growth is robust, are moving from a sell-off based housing is solid and consumers son, behavior becomes bizarre,” on broad general fears, such as a continue to spend. Wall Street is says David Kotok, chief investChinese slowdown, to one based basically pricing in a recession ment officer at Cumberland Adon some specific and credible that might not even happen. visors. If there’s a silver lining, fears around the European bankThere’s also growing fear that Kotok adds, it is that the fearing system.” a big backstop for markets since based selling and jump in irratioThe financial pain is adding up. the last financial crisis in 2008 — nal pessimism could be signaling The Dow Jones industrials cra- the world’s central banks — have that this wretched period for tered another 255 points Thurs- little fresh ammunition to fight markets is transitory. “This is day and is now down 10.1% for the latest firestorm in financial temporary and marks the capitulation stage. Panic intensifies.” the year and 14.5% from its rec- markets. There also is a sense investors ord high in May. The Nasdaq Wall Street is starting to price composite, after Thursday’s 0.4% assets based on the underlying no longer view big market price drop, is now down 18.2% from its strength of the business or econ- dips as a good entry point, as they July 2015 peak and nearing a bear omy, as opposed to simply hoping see few catalysts at the moment the Federal Reserve or other cen- to drive stock prices higher. market, or drop of 20% or more. “Some people that were European banks have gotten tral banks will ride to the rescue. pounded this week on worries In short, the market is re-rating ‘forced’ into stocks due to low inthat bad loans, low profits, stress- the market’s price-to-earnings terest rates are throwing in the es in credit markets and slow multiple downward. towel,” says Bill Hornbarger, growth around the globe have When investor decisions are chief investment strategist at made them vulnerable. The sell- dominated by emotions, even Moneta Group. Paul Davidson
19 big stocks defy market sell-off with big gains Matt Krantz @mattkrantz USA TODAY
Not everyone is getting pummeled by the market’s sell-off. Investors in some rather unexciting corners of the market are getting some pretty exciting gains. There are 19 stocks in the Standard & Poor’s 500 that are flourishing, according to a USA TODAY analysis of data from S&P Global Market Intelligence. Each of these stocks is up for the year, a notable feat given that the S&P 500 is down nearly 11% in this dismal start to 2016. On top of their year-to-date gains, each of these stocks have been rising amid the ongoing turmoil
that started last year. All 19 of these stocks are less than 4% away from their highest levels the past 52 weeks. Finding gains in this stock market is getting increasingly difficult. The S&P 500 is down 14.5% from its high notched last May — and has been struggling to find its footing since. But these 19 stocks are up an average of 21% from that same point when the market tapped out. Investors have been following a tried-and-true playbook when seeking ways to profit amid a market sell-off: focusing on sure things. Companies that sell goods consumers need in good times and bad and utilities have been on a winning strategy. Nearly half of the 19 stocks that are scoring
THRIVING STOCKS S&P 500 stocks that are thriving:
Company
% from market high
Realty Income Tyson Foods Con. Edison Campbell Soup CMS Energy Xcel Energy SCANA McCormick & Co. Hormel Foods AT&T Sysco Altria J. M. Smucker Co. Cincinnati Financial Kellogg TECO Energy AGL Resources Airgas Philip Morris Intl.
% YTD
28.0% 16.4% 38.1% 12.6% 17.6% 12.3% 22.2% 9.1% 14.8% 8.8% 13.0% 8.6% 20.9% 6.7% 13.8% 5.6% 45.0% 5.4% 3.3% 5.2% 11.8% 3.9% 16.2% 3.1% 5.8% 2.3% 18.1% 2.3% 15.2% 2.0% 42.0% 1.7% 29.1% 1.4% 34.6% 1.2% 3.8% 0.5%
SOURCES: S&P GLOBAL MARKET INTELLIGENCE, USA TODAY
are in the consumer staples industry. That’s followed by a third that are in utilities. It’s easy to understand why. Take Tyson Foods. Not only are shares up 13% this year, but they hit a 52-week high this week. The company has been churning out steady revenue growth every year since 2009. Revenue is expected to fall 10% this fiscal year, but analysts are still calling for the company’s adjusted profit to rise 27%, S&P Global Market Intelligence says. It’s tough to beat utilities during times of market distress. Sometimes it takes a market downtown to appreciate these investments. Consolidated Edison, which serves the New York area, is up 18% this year — and that’s
not including its market-beating 3.6% dividend yield. There’s something mmm, mmm good about packaged food companies, too, during periods of economic uncertainty. Campbell Soup has been working to make its products more competitive in an age of grass-fed organic beef and build-to-order cuisine. Shares of Campbell are up 9% this year and are up 22% from last year’s market high. The company pays a 2.2% dividend. If you own hot tech stocks — or most stocks for that matter — you’re feeling the pain. But lately, it’s paying to hunker down with defensive stocks that know how to churn out gains no matter what the economy is doing.
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L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2016
AMERICA’S MARKETS What to watch Adam Shell @adamshell USA TODAY
It’s become painful to watch the ongoing plunge in stock prices. The Dow fell another 255 points Thursday and is now down 10.1% for the year. But it’s hard not to keep checking your smart phone or tune into cable business channels to see if the Dow, S&P 500 or Nasdaq is trading up or down, especially when most Americans have money riding on the stock market. There is really nothing else to watch, frankly. Sure there are economic reports out Friday, including January retail sales, December business inventories and the preliminary reading on February consumer sentiment from the University of Michigan. But the reality is nobody on
Facts about America’s investors who use SigFig tracking services:
Wall Street is really paying attention to fundamentals. All they are reacting to is the reaction of other markets around the world — the stock market, the oil market and the bond market. They are watching for any signs, any shred of news, any comment from an official with power to move markets, that the market funk may finally be nearing an end. So keep your eye on the market, which is as oversold and scary a place as it has been since the dark days of 2008 and 2009. Hopefully, a headline will turn things around or at least stop the bleeding. Wall Street is desperate for good news. And news, by definition, is new information. If the news flow, somehow, some way, can turn positive, there’s a chance the market can enjoy a relief rally that lasts more than a few hours.
-254.56
DOW JONES
SPX
-22.78
INDUSTRIAL AVERAGE
CLOSE: 15,660.18 CHANGE: -1.6% PREV. CLOSE: 15,914.74 YTD: -1,764.85 YTD % CHG: -10.1% RANGE: 15,503.01-15,897.82
NASDAQ
COMP
-16.75
COMPOSITE
Union Pacific (UNP) was the most-bought stock among the most aggressive SigFig portfolios in late January.
CLOSE: 4,266.84 CHANGE: -.4% PREV. CLOSE: 4,283.59 YTD: -740.57 YTD % CHG: -14.8% RANGE: 4,209.76-4,293.22
GAINERS
RUSSELL
YTD % Chg % Chg
TripAdvisor (TRIP) Earnings and revenue above estimates.
61.07 +6.72
+12.4 -28.4
CenturyLink (CTL) Shares surge on earnings beat.
27.29 +2.70
+11.0
+8.5
CSRA (CSRA) Mixed third quarter and strong forecast.
24.76
+2.42
+10.8
-17.5
103.37
+9.02
+9.6
-16.8
Cisco Systems (CSCO) Jumps after forecasting sales growth.
24.68
+2.17
+9.6
-8.4
Realty Income (O) Soars another day after quarterly results.
60.12 +3.34
+5.9
+16.4
Mosaic (MOS) Earnings beat estimates following cost cuts.
24.75
Expedia (EXPE) Shares rise on solid forecast.
O’Reilly Auto Parts (ORLY) Beats fourth quarter, sets buyback, shares up. Chesapeake Energy (CHK) Weak oil, manages to rebound from 2016 low. CF Industries (CF) Insider buy, positive note. LOSERS
Company (ticker symbol)
Mylan (MYL) To acquire Meda for $7.2 billion, shares dip. International Flavors & Fragrances (IFF) Earnings and revenue lag. NRG Energy (NRG) Revenue hurt by New England auction price.
+1.33
+5.7
-10.3
249.53 +12.83
+5.4
-1.5
1.78
+.08
+4.7 -60.4
29.04
+1.21
+4.3
-28.8
Price
$ Chg
YTD % Chg % Chg
41.42
-9.12
-18.0 -23.4
5-day avg.: -2.58 6-month avg.: -13.05 Largest holding: AAPL Most bought: AGNC-B Most sold: AAPL
-1.94 -12.05 AAPL AAPL UNP
-12.9
-16.0
-10.4
-18.5
30.78
-3.50
-10.2 -38.8
Prudential Financial (PRU) Earnings below consensus, dips early.
58.00
-6.06
-9.5
-28.8
108.44
-7.92
-6.8
-25.0
24.07
-1.76
-6.8
-27.7
11.16
-.82
-6.8
-33.7
Universal Health Services (UHS) 101.65 Reverses gain on upgrade and hits 52-week low.
-7.34
-6.7
-14.9
Citigroup (C) Plunges on negative interest rate comment.
-2.43
-6.5
-32.4
34.98
-2.65 -12.86 AAPL MSFT
POWERED BY SIGFIG
4-WEEK TREND
Mylan
The Israel-based pharmaceutical giant was the worst-performing $60 stock in the Standard & Poor’s 500 index after it agreed to acquire Swedish drug company Meda for $40 $7.2 billion in cash and stock. Jan. 14
Fund, ranked by size Vanguard 500Adml Vanguard TotStIAdm Vanguard InstIdxI Vanguard TotStIdx Vanguard InstPlus Vanguard TotIntl Fidelity Contra American Funds IncAmerA m American Funds GrthAmA m American Funds CapIncBuA m
NAV 169.11 45.05 167.45 45.03 167.46 12.76 86.45 19.05 35.47 53.06
Close 1.32 182.86 18.37 29.78 19.66 7.99 28.82 10.32 96.55 94.79
4wk 1 -4.7% -5.5% -4.7% -5.5% -4.7% -5.6% -6.0% -2.2% -7.8% -1.5%
YTD 1 -10.3% -11.3% -10.3% -11.3% -10.3% -11.9% -12.0% -5.8% -14.1% -5.0%
Chg. +0.01 -2.41 +1.23 +1.71 -0.62 +0.03 -0.49 -0.21 -0.14 -1.04
% Chg %YTD +1.0% -66.5% -1.3% -10.3% +7.2% +33.9% +6.1% +48.2% -3.1% -17.5% +0.4% -27.3% -1.7% -10.5% -2.0% -14.9% -0.1% -13.7% -1.1% -15.8%
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% 0.10% 1.14% 1.53% 1.66% 2.14%
Close 6 mo ago 3.53% 3.99% 2.74% 3.02% 2.71% 2.64% 3.13% 3.25%
SOURCE: BANKRATE.COM
SOURCE: BLOOMBERG AND THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Commodities Close Prev. Chg. Cattle (lb.) 1.30 1.32 -0.02 Corn (bushel) 3.60 3.60 unch. Gold (troy oz.) 1,247.90 1,194.70 +53.20 Hogs, lean (lb.) .66 .65 +0.01 Natural Gas (Btu.) 1.99 2.05 -0.06 Oil, heating (gal.) .98 .97 +0.01 Oil, lt. swt. crude (bar.) 26.21 27.45 -1.24 Silver (troy oz.) 15.79 15.28 +0.51 Soybeans (bushel) 8.74 8.62 +0.12 Wheat (bushel) 4.58 4.61 -0.03
% Chg. -1.8% unch. +4.5% +0.6% -2.7% +0.8% -4.5% +3.4% +1.3% -0.7%
% YTD -4.2% +0.4% +17.7% +9.6% -14.9% -10.7% -29.2% +14.6% +0.3% -2.5%
FOREIGN CURRENCIES Currency per dollar British pound Canadian dollar Chinese yuan Euro Japanese yen Mexican peso
Close .6909 1.3934 6.5710 .8826 112.27 19.2759
Prev. .6883 1.3907 6.5706 .8867 113.68 18.8567
6 mo. ago .6425 1.3124 6.3256 .9062 125.15 16.3094
Yr. ago .6559 1.2654 6.2453 .8851 120.29 15.0990
FOREIGN MARKETS Country Frankfurt Hong Kong Japan (Nikkei) London Mexico City
Close 8,752.87 18,545.80 15,713.39 5,536.97 42,359.27
$41.42
Feb. 11
$27.29
Feb. 11
INVESTING ASK MATT Chg. -2.07 -0.56 -2.05 -0.56 -2.05 -0.22 -0.63 -0.19 -0.33 -0.51
1 – CAPITAL GAINS AND DIVIDENDS REINVESTED
ETF, ranked by volume Ticker CS VelSh 3xLongCrude UWTI SPDR S&P500 ETF Tr SPY Mkt Vect Gold Miners GDX Barc iPath Vix ST VXX SPDR Financial XLF US Oil Fund LP USO iShs Emerg Mkts EEM iShare Japan EWJ PowerShs QQQ Trust QQQ iShares Rus 2000 IWM
Feb. 11
4-WEEK TREND
Late Wednesday, the Louisiana- $30 based telecommunications company reported fourth-quarter earnings that topped Wall Street analysts’ expectations. It also add- $20 Jan. 14 ed 16,000 Prism TV customers.
Price: $27.29 Chg: $2.70 % chg: 11.0% Day’s high/low: $27.75/$25.37
$61.07
4-WEEK TREND
COMMODITIES 100.49 -14.84
Lincoln National (LNC) Misses earnings, down year over year.
Bank of America (BAC) Tumbles on sustained concerns about sector.
5-day avg.: 6-month avg.: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold:
TOP 10 EXCHANGE TRADED FUNDS
-1.11
Unum Group (UNM) Dips after earnings estimates lowered.
MORE THAN 80% U.S. INVESTMENTS
TOP 10 MUTUAL FUNDS
9.59
Boeing (BA) Lower after SEC investigation announcement.
51% TO 80% U.S. INVESTMENTS
CenturyLink
$ Chg
Price
5-day avg.: 6-month avg.: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold:
The online travel booking service was a flash of green in Thursday’s $80 Price: $61.07 sea of red in the stock market after Chg: $6.72 it reported fourth-quarter revenue % chg: 12.4% Day’s high/low: and earnings that blew past Wall $50 Street analysts’ expectations. Jan. 14 $64.75/$59.49
Price: $41.42 Chg: -$9.12 % chg: -18.0% Day’s high/low: $44.00/$40.04
RUSSELL 2000 INDEX
CLOSE: 953.72 CHANGE: -1.0% PREV. CLOSE: 963.48 YTD: -182.17 YTD % CHG: -16.0% RANGE: 943.09-958.89
Company (ticker symbol)
5-day avg.: -1.59 6-month avg.: -5.44 Largest holding: AAPL Most bought: GOOGL Most sold: MCD
STORY STOCKS TripAdvisor
S&P 500
S&P 500’S BIGGEST GAINERS/LOSERS
21% TO 50% U.S. INVESTMENTS
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: 1,829.08 CHANGE: -1.2% PREV. CLOSE: 1,851.86 YTD: -214.86 YTD % CHG: -10.5% RANGE: 1,810.10-1,844.27
-9.76
LESS THAN 20% U.S. INVESTMENTS
NOTE: INFORMATION PROVIDED BY SIGFIG IS STATISTICAL IN NATURE AND DOES NOT CONSTITUTE A RECOMMENDATION OF ANY STRATEGY OR SECURITY. VISIT SIGFIG.USATODAY.COM/DISCLOSE FOR ADDITIONAL DISCLOSURES AND INFORMATION.
POWERED BY SIGFIG
STANDARD & POOR'S
RUT
USA’s portfolio allocation by foreign investment 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?
Watch stock market at your own peril
ALL THE MARKET ACTION IN REAL TIME. AMERICASMARKETS.USATODAY.COM
Prev. Change 9,017.29 -264.42 19,288.17 -742.37 16,085.44 -372.05 5,672.30 -135.33 42,535.74 -176.48
%Chg. -2.9% -3.9% -2.3% -2.4% -0.4%
YTD % -18.5% -15.4% -17.4% -11.3% -1.4%
SOURCES: MORNINGSTAR, DOW JONES INDEXES, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
IN-DEPTH MARKETS COVERAGE USATODAY.COM/MONEY
Investors are better off going with S&P 500 Q: Is the Nasdaq for suckers? Matt Krantz
mkrantz@usatoday.com USA TODAY
A: If you like more pain and less gain, the Nasdaq is perfect. But if you’re like most investors and like to get paid for your risk, take a pass. The Nasdaq composite index is now down about 18% from its record high set last July. The Nasdaq is closer to a 20% bear market than any of the three major stock market indexes. The recent declines in the Nasdaq are just a reminder of its off-the-charts risk. Here’s the problem: There’s no additional gain as a result. The Nasdaq is the second-riskiest mainstream stock asset class investors can buy, just shy of the off-the-charts risk of small stocks in growth mode, Index Fund Advisors says. The Nasdaq is 45% riskier than the Standard & Poor’s 500, IFA says. But investors get nothing for the added risk. The average annual gain of the Nasdaq since 1966 is just 9.2%, which is nearly 4% less than the S&P 500. The Nasdaq is a high-octane holding that’s a bum bet for most, even if it’s easy to buy with exchange-traded funds such as the PowerShares QQQ (QQQQ), which owns the most valuable non-financial stocks in the Nasdaq. Most investors should skip the Nasdaq and just diversify with the S&P 500, which owns all the top Nasdaq stocks — plus, it has exposure to other sectors. Get paid for your risk.
Morgan Stanley will pay $3.2B in mortgage settlements Kevin McCoy @kmccoynyc USA TODAY
Morgan Stanley has agreed to pay $3.2 billion to settle civil allegations the New York-based bank misled customers about the quality of mortgage-backed securities that soured during the nation’s financial crisis, federal and state officials said Thursday. The settlements mark the latest in a string of penalties against major banks as the U.S. Department of Justice and state attorneys general complete investiga-
ANDREW GOMBERT, EPA
tions into evidence the financial institutions’ marketing and sales practices helped fuel the crisis. “Morgan Stanley touted the quality of the lenders with which it did business and the due diligence process it used to screen out bad loans. All the while, Morgan Stanley knew that in reality,
many of the loans backing its securities were toxic,” said acting U.S. Attorney Brian Stretch of California’s northern district. Morgan Stanley said its previous financial set-asides for the settlements would prevent the payments from affecting the bank’s 2016 earnings. “We are pleased to have finalized these settlements involving legacy residential mortgage-backed securities matters,” the bank said. The bank in February 2015 said it had reached agreement in principle on a $2.6 billion settlement resolving mortgage-related claims by DOJ’s Civil Division
and federal prosecutors in California. But the settlement, which affected the bank’s fourth-quarter 2014 earnings, wasn’t finalized pending negotiations on documentation of the bank’s conduct. The new agreements cover the bank’s handling of residential mortgage-backed securities between 2005 and 2007, just before the financial crisis erupted. A statement of facts issued with the settlements said Morgan Stanley failed to tell investors that some of the mortgages “did not comply with underwriting guidelines” or “had understated loan-to-value ratios.”
Among other things, the statement said a Morgan Stanley official sent a June 2006 email that warning a colleague not to mention that some mortgage securities the bank marketed to investors had “slightly higher risk tolerance.” The official added: “We are running under the radar and do not want to document these types of things.” The settlement includes $550 million in consumer relief and cash for New York, whose Attorney General, Eric Schneiderman said it would help homeowners avoid foreclosure and spur construction of affordable housing.
SPORTS LIFE AUTOS In theaters this weekend TRAVEL
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USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2016
MOVIES
Compiled from reviews by USA TODAY film critics
Rating; the good and the bad
The 5th Wave
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1 hour, 47 minutes
Kung Fu Panda 3
Rating: PG-13 Upside: The movie breaks out of the teen mold for a wellcrafted invasion tale. Downside: The kids figure out a major twist too quickly to be believable.
Plot: “Dragon Warrior” Po (voiced by Jack Black) meets his long-lost dad and has to face a bullish beast of vengeance. Directors: Jennifer Yuh Nelson, Alessandro Carloni
13 Hours: The Secret Soldiers of Benghazi eegE
2 hours, 24 minutes
Pride and Prejudice and Zombies
Plot: A group of ex-military security contractors are put in harm’s way when Islamic militants attack their Libyan compound. Director: Michael Bay
Rating: R Upside: Bay’s action movies are better with humans than with transforming robots. Downside: The movie is overly long and misses a chance to dig into real-life drama.
Plot: Jane Austen’s 19th-century classic novel is invaded by the undead, with its feisty heroine Elizabeth Bennet (Lily James) turned zombie-killer when she’s not brawling Mr. Darcy (Sam Riley). Directors: Burr Steers
1 hour, 46 minutes
The Revenant
Rating: R Upside: The film entertainingly embraces while also satirizing the superhero movie genre. Downside: It’s so completely bonkers that the movie slows down considerably when things aren’t crazy.
Plot: After a vicious bear mauling, a frontiersman (Leo DiCaprio) is left for dead and has to go on a mission of survival to avenge his son’s death. Director: Alejandro González Iñárritu
1 hour, 49 minutes
Ride Along 2
Rating: PG-13 Upside: The seafaring action is top-notch and visceral. Downside: Chris Pine has better chemistry with his fellow seamen than with his love interest.
Plot: Kevin Hart returns as ever-eager rookie Ben Barber to Ice Cube’s seasoned police detective James Payton and tags along on a case in Miami to prove himself before he gets hitched (to Cube’s sister). Director: Tim Story
1 hour, 46 minutes
Star Wars: The Force Awakens
Rating: PG-13 Upside: Brolin is a great straight man, and Clooney is delightfully clueless. Downside: It’s easy to get lost in its movies-within-a-movie world.
Plot: Youngsters Rey (Daisy Ridley) and Finn (John Boyega) are thrust into a war against the evil First Order and a search for the last Jedi. Director: J.J. Abrams
Plot: A teenage girl (Chloë Grace Moretz) races to save her little brother during various natural disasters and an alien apocalypse. Director: J Blakeson
PARAMOUNT PICTURES, 3 ARTS ENTERTAINMENT/BAY FILMS
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Plot: A masked antihero (Ryan Reynolds) seeks vengeance against the villains who have kidnapped his love. Director: Tim Miller
Rating: PG Upside: Black is again infectiously quirky as a rotund bear with sweet moves. Downside: Three movies of the same plot is getting tiresome.
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Plot: A small Coast Guard crew powers through a nasty Nor’easter to save men stuck on a sinking oil tanker off the coast of Cape Cod. Director: Craig Gillespie
JAY MAIDMENT
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Plot: A studio fixer (Josh Brolin) has a day full of handling crises, including the kidnapping of a Hollywood A-lister (George Clooney). Directors: Joel and Ethan Coen
How to Be Single
FOX
Plot: A relationship girl (Dakota Johnson) dumps her longtime boyfriend to sample the crazy New York single life alongside a bold, staunchly unattached new friend (Rebel Wilson). Director: Christian Ditter
HOW WAS YOUR DAY? GOOD DAY BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN FANS The Boss is taking pen to paper to tell his own story. It was announced Thursday GETTY IMAGES that Simon & Schuster will publish his autobiography, ‘Born to Run,’ on Sept. 27. IT’S YOUR BIRTHDAY WHO’S CELEBRATING TODAY?
Zoolander 2
Rating: R Upside: This rom-com is ultimately selling friendship, not fairy tales. Downside: How did a femaledriven how-to guide on the single life end up feeling so mansplain-y?
Plot: Two idiot male supermodels (Ben Stiller and Owen Wilson) return to infiltrate the world of high fashion and expose a murderous conspiracy. Director: Ben Stiller
MAKING WAVES Meryl Streep weighed in on diversity in film as president of an all white jury at the Berlin International AFP/GETTY IMAGES Film Festival. When asked if she could understand films from North Africa or the Middle East, Streep responded, “There is a core of humanity that travels right through every culture, and after all we’re all from Africa originally” STYLE STAR Amal Clooney outshined hubby George in anything-but-basic black at the red-carpet premiere for ‘Hail, Caesar!’ Thursday night at the 66th Berlinale Film Festival. Amal’s black, floor-length dress sparkled beneath a tulle skirt overlay, while George, the film’s star, played best-supporting spouse in an all-black tux.
Josh Brolin is 48. Christina Ricci is 36. Jesse Spencer is 37. AFP/GETTY IMAGES, USA TODAY
©
Cupid FOMO hits men hardest
Nearly 1 in 4 single men lie about not having a date for Valentine’s Day, compared with 1 in 6 single ladies.
Source Dairy Queen/Toluna Research survey Dec. 29-Jan. 5 of 1,200 U.S. adults TERRY BYRNE AND PAUL TRAP, USA TODAY
FRANZISKA KRUG, GETTY IMAGES
Compiled by Mary Cadden
Rating: PG-13 Upside: Hart and Cube have a knack for making you laugh, whether you’re buying the plot or not. Downside: The case they’re cracking is paper-thin (even though Benjamin Bratt makes a sexy mobster).
eeee
2 hour, 16 minutes Rating: PG-13 Upside: A well-balanced mix of great new characters and old favorites. Downside: The next film is a year and a half away.
LUCASFILM
1 hour, 50 minutes
WARNER BROS.
LIFELINE
1 hour, 41 minutes
UNIVERSAL STUDIOS
UNIVERSAL PICTURES
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2 hours, 36 minutes Rating: R Upside: Iñárritu’s ‘Birdman’ follow-up is brutal and beautifully filmed. Downside: A number of violent scenes are not for the faint of heart.
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DISNEY
Hail, Caesar!
1 hour, 48 minutes Rating: PG-13 Upside: The zombie storyline fits in remarkably easily for a lark, while Elizabeth Bennet takes her strength to new levels (and roundhouse kicks). Downside: Short on true zombie mayhem. And no brain eating? Jane Austen would not be pleased.
MARVEL
The Finest Hours
1 hour, 35 minutes
DREAMWORKS ANIMATION
CHUCK ZLOTNICK
Deadpool
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1 hour, 35 minutes Rating: PG-13 Upside: The sequel introduces a few key new weirdos and brings back Will Ferrell’s Mugatu. Downside: It’s a shoddy mess suffering from tired in-jokes and a parade of instantly forgettable A-list cameos.
PARAMOUNT PICTURES
Bad-look ‘Zoolander 2’ creaks down the runway In one of the very few actually funny sequences in Zoolander 2, Ben Stiller and Owen Wilson’s imbecilic aging male models are made a mockery at a Rome fashion show by wearing T-shirts that say “I am old” and “I am lame.” It’s played for generational laughs in the wholly unnecessary sequel to the 2001 cult comedy, but the latter statement is too true for this flailing franchise. Stiller’s Derek Zoolander (he of the powerful “Blue Steel” and “Magnum” looks) and Wilson’s Hansel (whose signature expression seems to be “Pouty Resting Face”) return for a follow-up of tired in-jokes, a strangely meanspirited family subplot and a parade of forgettable cameos by Alist celebrities. Moviegoers may wish that Will Ferrell’s megalomaniacal supervillain Mugatu had won in the first Zoolander and saved us from another film with these boneheads. Again directed by Stiller, the sequel (eg stars out of four; rated PG-13; in theaters nationwide Friday) picks up the lives of Derek and Hansel years after the demise of the Derek Zoolander Center for Kids Who Can’t Read Good and Who Wanna Learn to Do Other Stuff Good Too. Derek has lost his wife, and his son has been taken away after a very public incident of poor parenting, and Hansel is having issues on the home front with the “family” he met through an orgy. Both are crippled with insecurities when Billy Zane (as himself ) invites them to a show put on by oddball fashionista Alexanya Atoz MOVIE REVIEW BRIAN TRUITT
WILSON WEBB, PARAMOUNT PICTURES
Derek Zoolander (Ben Stiller), Valentina Valencia (Penélope Cruz) and Hansel (Owen Wilson) track a killer in Zoolander 2. (Kristen Wiig). While in town, the dynamically dimwitted duo are tracked down by Interpol agent Valentina (Penélope Cruz) — quite literally the fashion police — and put on the case of why a slew of music stars are being murdered and flashing a signature Derek look as they die. Derek reconnects with his chubby now-teenage son Derek Jr. (Cyrus Arnold), the subject of a little fatshaming from dear old Dad, and he and Hansel are embroiled in a nonsensical mystery involving the Fountain of Youth and the prison breakout of Mugatu, a welcome sight when he arrives, though not in time to redeem any sort of entertainment value. Stiller has shown that he’s a superb director, from his debut Reality Bites to the subversive The Cable Guy to the brilliantly satirical Tropic Thunder, yet Zoolander 2 doesn’t even come close. The script is a team effort by Stiller,
Justin Theroux (who returns as Evil DJ), Nicholas Stoller and John Hamburg that doesn’t do anything new or exciting, other than give Hansel a deep respect for Sting’s tantric sex habits. Plus, one movie in which Derek continually struggles with the simplest of words in English is enough; two is the definition of overkill. Zoolander 2 is modestly successful at crafting memorable fashion-friendly weirdos. Benedict Cumberbatch has a great couple of scenes as All, an androgynous, asexual model who takes flight in the goofier moments. Kyle Mooney, who’s usually right in the middle of Saturday Night Live’s wackier segments, plays a similar role here as Don Atari, a designer with a kooky hipster accent. As for Derek and Hansel, though, it’s high time they left the catwalk.
Your Local City Market!
23rd & Louisiana
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TM
hometown
LAWRENCE Your area real estate resource
hometownlawrence.com
Advertising supplement
FEBRUARY 12, 2016
Take steps to ensure electrical safety in the home
LINDA A. DITCH Hometown Lawrence
Electricity is an essential element to everyday life. It also is one of the major causes of home fires in the country. According to the U.S. Fire Administration, fire departments respond to approximately 25,900 home electrical fires each year. These fires result in around $1.1 billion in property loss, and worse, 280 deaths and 1,125 injuries. For peace of mind, consider having a home electrical system inspection by a licensed electrician. Getting your system checked is a good idea if: • Your home is more than 40 years old. • You have recently renovated your home. • In the past 10 years you have purchased a new major appliance, such as a refrigerator, freezer, air conditioner or electric furnace.
• Your lights often dim or flicker. • You often trip circuit breakers or blow fuses. • Outlets or light switches are hot to the touch or discolored, or if you hear crackling, sizzling or buzzing noises. • You use extension cords or power strips throughout the house. If a problem is found, it doesn’t necessarily mean rewiring the entire house. The solution may be as simple as new switches or circuit breakers. There are also easy steps homeowners can take to prevent an electrical fire. First, make sure all major appliances (refrigerators, dryers, washers, stoves, air conditioners, etc) are plugged directly into the wall and not an extension cord or power strip. This rule also applies for small, heatproducing appliances such as a coffee makers, toasters or space heaters. It also is a good idea to unplug these smaller
appliances when not in use. Lamps, light bulbs, and light fixtures should be kept away from anything that can burn. Plus, make sure the light bulbs are the recommended wattage for the lamp or fixture. You will find a sticker with this information on the socket. Make sure you don’t overload a wall outlet by plugging in too much stuff, and make sure electrical cords do not run under rugs or carpet or across doorways. Also, don’t overload power strips and be sure to use a strip with internal overload protection. Extension cords should only be used as a temporary solution. They are not meant for long-term use. Finally, check to see if ground fault circuit interrupter outlets are installed in bathrooms, kitchens, garages, basements and outdoors. They automatically shut off the electrical circuit to prevent a shock, such as if they come in contact with water. Be sure to
For peace of mind, consider having a home electrical system inspection by a licensed electrician.
test them once a month to make certain they are working. (There is a test and reset button on the outlet.)
fema.gov, or the National Fire Protection Association at www.nfpa.org. Linda A. Ditch writes about the
For more information about electrical Lawrence real estate market for fire prevention, visit the U.S. Fire Hometown Lawrence. Contact her at Administration’s website at www.usfa. thompson.lindaa@gmail.com
Showcase Homes Offered by: Mary Ann Deck 785-760-1205 MaryAnnDeck@ReeceNichols.com
OPEN SATURDAY 1:00 - 3:00
718 Crestline Drive JUST LISTED & FIRST TIME OPEN!!! Clean and cozy 3 bed/1 bath single family home on a slab in west Lawrence -- close to campus! New appliances and roof in 2010. New carpet installed yesterday! Restaurants, shopping and entertainment all nearby! Easy access to I-70 for commuters! Stop by and check out this cutie!!!
$112,900
Offered by: Scot Hoffman 785-760-4356
OPEN SUNDAY 1:00 –3:00 PM
910 N 1452 Road VALENTINE’S DAY SPECIAL! Sprawling custom built rancher by Fritzel. 6000 sq ft, 6 bedrooms, 4 baths, 1 owner, huge rock fireplace, sunrooms, decks, private lake, steel roof, 6” walls and zoned HVAC system. All paved roads, 2 minutes to town. Come by Sunday and view this beautiful lake side home!
MLS# 137644
$598,000
Home Sweet Home
www.stephensre.com
2BB
|
HOMETOWN LAWRENCE
.
Friday, February 12, 2016
L awrence J ournal -W orld
Home & City Services LAWRENCE: CITY SERVICES
City of Lawrence Fire & Medical Department Police Department Department of Utilities Lawrence Transit System Municipal Court Animal Control Parks and Recreation Westar Energy Black Hills Energy (Gas)
AUCTIONEERS
www.lawrenceks.org www.lawrenceks.org/fire_medical www.lawrenceks.org/police www.lawrenceks.org/utilities www.lawrencetransit.org www.lawrenceks.org/legal
We’ll CLOSE in 25 days
832-3000 830-7000 830-7400 832-7878 864-4644 832-6190 832-7509 832-3450 800-383-1183 888-890-5554
www.lprd.org www.westarenergy.com www.blackhillsenergy.com
Bill Fair Real Estate Auctions
887-6900
Jayhawk Guttering (A Division of Nieder Contracting, Inc.)
842-0094
Kurt Goeser, State Farm Insurance Tom Pollard, Farmers Insurance Jamie Lowe, Prairie Land Insurance
843-0003 843-7511 856-3020
Natural Breeze Remodeling Terravest Custom Homes & Remodeling
749-1855 691-6088
GUTTERING
HOME INSURANCE
HOME REMODELING
LAWRENCE HOUSING MARKET QUICK STATS for 2015 THRU 12/31/15
or give you $595!
OPEN
HOUSES
SATURDAY OPEN HOUSE
YOUR HOME TEAM 0-
1:0
$189,900
0
2:3
BUYER & SELLER REPRESENTATION
1637 ILLINOIS ST RARE OPPORTUNITY! 3 BR bungalow adjacent to KU with fresh intr & extr paint & refinished wood floors. Sunroom/ dining area add. in back and large finished A-Frame structure perfect for a studio/office.
IDA LEWIS 785-865-8699
MLS 137727
HOME SALES ARE UP!
AVERAGE SALE PRICE IS UP!
+11%
+2%
1,184 HOMEES
SUNDAY OPEN HOUSES
YOUR HOME TEAM 0-
$201,274
1:0
0
$159,900
2:3
209 KAW CT
NEW CONSTRUCTION
00
MLS 137339
$359,900
- 2:
801 WHEATON DR
LISTING INVENTORY IS DOWN!
55 DAYSS
240 HOMEES
-18%
BEAUTIFUL HARDWOOD FLOORS in this 4 Bdrm 3 Bth Rancher with Walkout finished basement. Gas stove top, Stainless Appliances, Lots of Cabinet space, Formal Dining and 3 car garage. Come see!
BOB KOCOUR , e-PRO 785-766-1234
MLS 136114
0 1:0
-14%
$309,900
LANGSTON HEIGHTS - This one level home is a must see! Open Living/Kitchen, Wood floors, Granite, Beautiful built-ins, storm room, East covered Patio, 3 Car. Come see Sunday 12-2 or Call Don Today.
TOM HARPER CRS, ABR, GRI, e-PRO 785-218-6351 MLS 138798
HOMES ARE SELLING FASTER!
00
- 2:
904 SILVER RAIN RD
• NEW LISTING & 1st open house • 2013 Custom by Bowden • Polished concrete floors • Swanky kitchen & open floor plan • Screened porch & fenced yard • Visual Tour: Tom-Harper.com
30 12:
00
12:
BUYER & SELLER REPRESENTATION
00
0 1:0
DON MINNIS, GRI 785-550-7306
30
$399,000
- 2:
1132 WAVERLY DR
ONE OF A KIND 5 BED, 4 BATH with open plan, one level living, finished w/o basement, bonus 4 seasons room that opens to large deck and wooded lot behind home. This house is full of character!
STEPHANIE A. HARRIS 785-979-5808
MLS 137541
$598,000
- 3:
910 N 1452 RD
VALENTINES DAY SPECIAL! 6000 sq ft, 6 bedrooms, Fritzel custom, 1 owner, huge rock fireplace, sunrooms, decks, private lake, steel roof, 6” walls, 5 acres, Come by Sunday and view this property!
A DETAILED REPORT IS AVAILABLE AT
www.LawrenceRealtor.com
Brought to you by:
SCOT HOFFMAN 785-760-4356
MLS 137644
om hensre co 500/steph 841-4500/stephensre.com 41-45
YOUR HOME TEAM
Every market is different, call a Realtor ® today.
2701 W. Sixth Street 785.841.4500
www.LawrenceRealtor.com | 785-842-1843
BUYER & SELLER REPRESENTATION
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
$210,000
$69,500
$152,500
StephensRE.com
60 ACRES, E 350 RD, LECOMPTON
DENSELY WOODED 60 acres with a pond between Lawrence and Topeka. 3 buildable 20 acre tracts have been platted out. Carve out your homesite and enjoy nature. Check out the drone tour. RANDY RUSSELL 785-331-7954 MLS 137713
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT $132,250 $126,500
StephensRE.com
10 ACRES, 46TH & SARATOGA, MCLOUTH
BUILDING SITE, 10 Acre Tract with Pond and water meter rolling hills and covered in timber. Just minutes north of Lawrence.
MLS 137775
RANDY RUSSELL 785-331-7954
LAND E 850 RD
812 MAIN ST, BALDWIN CITY
• CLOSE TO CITY PARK and golf course • Separate tub and shower in Master Bedroom • Recent roof • Large windows, lots of natural light • Ceramic tile and carpet floors ED PEARSON 785-760-1872 MLS 138621
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
$126,900
$265,000
StephensRE.com
PRICE REDUCED! Nice 23 Acre Tract near Lone Star Lake with partial crops and heavily wooded areas, numerous build sites, Baldwin Schools, Rural Waterline on Property w/ Rural Water Meters Available. DEBBIE MORGAN, GRI 785-760-1357 MLS 137616
StephensRE.com
StephensRE.com
103 10TH ST, BALDWIN CITY
QUICK POSSESSION POSSIBLE! Spacious, Updated, 2-Story Home on Corner Lot, 3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths, New Carpet, Fresh Interior Paint, Large Rooms & Partial Basement. MLS 138145
DEBBIE MORGAN, GRI 785-760-1357
StephensRE.com
928 COVING DR
NEW LISTING! Luxury Townhome at The Cove at Diamondhead! One level living with 3 bedrooms and 2 full baths. Spacious floor plan with Tile, granite and custom features + $95 HOA. Do not miss this one! SCOT HOFFMAN 785-760-4356 MLS 138753
HOMETOWN LAWRENCE
L awrence J ournal -W orld
Friday, February 12, 2016
| 3BB
OPEN 2/13/16
3408 Riverview
15-Year or 30-Year Terms ◆
BED
5 BATH
SQ. FT.
Affordable Competitive Rates
4
3403 BSMT.
◆
Y
Pay-Off Sooner with Re-Fi Accelerator
BRING YOUR ROLLER BLADES TO SCOOT AROUND THE NEW OAK FLOORS. Massive multilevel rear deck overlooks park-like community back yard. Brick fireplace is in vaulted hearth room. Full, finished basement set up for your wood-burning stove.
◆
Local Service, Local Support
Kasold Dr.
But for saving money on your home loan and working with people you know and trust … there’s only one sign: Ours. Envista. Kansans’ home for home loans.
W. Princeton Blvd.
3408 Riverview Rd.
Riverview Rd.
CHARLES GRUBER
Your Vision. Your Banking. Lawrence 865-1545 • envistacu.com
785-766-3400 1037 Vermont, Lawrence, KS 66046 785-841-2400 | hedgesrealestate.com
Federally insured by NCUA. Equal housing lender.
MORTGAGE MARKETPLACE LENDER
LOAN TYPE
Homes for starting out and homes for living out a dream. Homes for fixing up and homes for moving up. Homes for growing kids and homes for hosting the grandkids.
Lawrence Ave.
250,000
For Kansans, building a great life often starts with buying a great home. And when it comes to finding a home in Kansas, there are a lot of signs that can point the way.
There are all kinds of signs for great homes.
Peterson Rd.
$
We’re Your Home For Home Loans.
30-YR. FIXED 15-YR. FIXED
ARMs/EQUITY/ OTHER LOANS RATE/APR/POINTS
Visit Mortgage Marketplace online at hometownlawrence.com
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
Capital City Bank 740 New Hampshire 4505A West 6th St 330-1200 1/19/2016
Conv. Jumbo
3.750% + 0 (3.849%) Call For Rates
3.000% + 0 (3.173%)
FHA Fixed VA Fixed Up to 100% Refinance 80%
Call For Rates Call For Rates 3.750% + 0 (3.849%)
PREAPPROVALS -NO COSTS TO YOU. WE WORK VIA PHONE INTERVIEW, EMAIL OR IN PERSON. EASY FOR YOU! WE OFFER PROGRAMS TO FIT YOU! - 30/20/15/10 YEAR TERMS. VA AND FHA,CONSTRUCTION LOANS, 2ND MORTGAGES. Annual Percentage Rate(APR)based on loans amount of $100,000.00 (80%LTV)with a close date of the first of the month. APR’s may vary depending on the day of the month the loan closes. Rates quoted for 45 days lock time. Capital City Bank - Has 2 LAWRENCE OFFICES: 4505 West 6th St Suite A and 740 New Hampshire Diana Deutsch NMLS#556784 785/330-1220 direct Jeff Schuler NMLS#797607 785/330-1221 direct
Capitol Federal® Savings 1026 Westdale 749-9050 2/9/2016
Conv. Jumbo
3.750% + 0 (3.802%) Please Call
3.000% + 0 (3.092%) Please Call
20 Yr 5/1 ARM/7/1 ARM FHA* 30 Yr./15 Yr.
Please Call N/A
Loan Assumptions: ¹Primary Residence, Purchase Loan with a value of $125,000 and loan amount of $100,000, estimated monthly payment of $678.62 for 180 months. ²Primary Residence, Purchase Loan with a value of $125,000 and loan amount of $100,000, estimated monthly payment of $449.04 for 360 months. Real estate taxes and homeowners insurance could increase the monthly payment. Receive local servicing for the life of the loan on all conventional loans. Please call Mark Hernandez (NMLS#556689) at 785.749.9053 or apply online at www.capfed.com. APR = Annual Percentage Rate. *Registered with HUD as Capitol Federal® Savings Bank.
Central National Bank 838-1882 2/9/2016
Conv. FHA/VA Jumbo
3.625% + 0 (3.695%) 3.250% + 0 (4.758%/3.446%) Call for Rates
2.625% + 0 (2.699%)
HP 97 Fixed Investor 20% Down
Call for Quotes Call for Quotes
*Rates for refinances may be higher *Save money with our “Biweekly Mortgage” program. *We service your loan after closing. Contact Tom Koenig at 785-838-1882, or TomK@centralnational.com. NMLS ID# 472917
Conv. FHA/VA Jumbo
3.625% + 0 (3.695%) 3.375% + 0 (4.451%) 3.500% + 0 (3.590%)
2.875% + 0 (3.033%)
5/1 ARM 7/1 ARM 10/1 ARM 7/1 Jumbo 10/1 Jumbo 20 Yr. Fixed 10 Yr. Fixed
3.000% + 0 (3.250%) 3.250% + 0 (3.338%) 3.500% + 0 (3.493%) 3.125% + 0 (3.413%) 3.375% + 0 (3.512%) 3.375% + 0 (3.500%) 2.500% + 0 (2.728%)
Central Bank of the Midwest 865-1000 2/9/2016
Conv. Jumbo FHA VA
3.625% + 0 (3.742%) 3.875% + 0 (3.933%) 3.250% + 0 (4.121%) 3.250% + 0 (3.510%)
3.000% + 0 (3.200%) 3.250% + (3.344%)
20 Yr.
3.500% + 0 (3.662%)
Fairway Mortgage Corp. 4104 W. 6th St., Ste. B 841-4434 8/25/2015
Conv. Jumbo
Call For Rates Call For Rates
Call For Rates Call For Rates
FHA USDA/Rural Development
Call For Rates Call For Rates
Conv. Jumbo
Call
3.990% + 0 (4.042%)
3.375% + 0 (3.709%)
3/1 ARM 5/1 ARM 7/1 ARM FHA VA
Call 3.500% + 0 (3.407%) 3.625% + 0 (3.748%)
Commerce Bank 865-4721 2/9/2016
First Assured Mortgage 856-LOAN (5626) 9/15/2015 First State Bank & Trust 3901 W. 6th St. 312-6810 2/9/2016 Great American Bank 3500 Clinton Parkway 838-9704 1/19/2016 Landmark Bank 841-6677 2/2/2016
Meritrust Credit Union 856-7878 11/03/2014 Mid America Bank 4114 W 6th St. 841-8055 2/9/2016 Pulaski Bank 3210 Mesa Way, Ste B 856-1450 2/2/2016 Truity Credit Union 749-6804 3400 W. 6th 2/1/2016
University National Bank 841-1988 2/1/2016
Call for Rates
Call
3.500% + 1 (4.088%) 3.500% + 1 (3.551%)
Call Mary Lauer 785-865-4756 for free pre-approval and for more information on mortgages for residential and investment properties. Rates change daily. Rates quoted here on loan amounts of $160,000 to $417,000 with minimum required credit score. Email Mary Lauer at Mary.Lauer@commercebank.com
NOW IS THE TIME TO LOCK IN A GREAT LOW FIXED RATE! WHETHER YOU ARE BUYING, BUILDING OR REFINANCING. CALL ALLISA HURST @ 785-865-1085 FAX: 865-1025 EMAIL: Allisa.Hurst@centralbank.net Unbelievably LOW rates! Now is the time to purchase or refinance! Give us a call or email us for a FREE pre approval or refinance analysis. (Rates subject to change. Posted rates assume credit score > 740 and are for PURCHASE financing with 20% down payment. Refinance rates MAY be slightly higher) NMLS #2889
For your FREE pre-approval or refinance quote. Call 785-856-5626 or Click www.firstassuredmortgage.com Conventional, FHA, VA, and USDA mortgages. Kansas Licensed Mortgage Company MC.0001442 NMLS #17380
Conv. FHA/VA Jumbo
3.625% + 0 (3.812%)
2.875% + 0 (3.205%)
20 Yr. Conv. 3/1 ARM 5/1 ARM 7/1 ARM 7/1 Jumbo
Please Call Please Call Please Call Please Call Please Call
Conv. FHA/VA Jumbo
3.750% + 0 (3.805%) Call for Rate Call
2.990% + 0 (3.087%)
20 Yr. Fixed 10-Yr. Fixed
3.500% + (3.576%) 2.750% + 0 (2.890%)
Free Same Day Pre-Approvals. Rates quoted on loan amounts of $125,000.00 or more, purchase, 45 day lock with a credit score of 740 and above. Rates subject to change without notice. Call us today for your lending needs! Bob Underwood at 785-856-9409, BUnderwood@greatambank.com Derek Bailey at 785-856-9418
Conv. Jumbo
3.625% + 0 (APR 3.663%)
2.875% + 0 (APR 2.942%)
Jumbo 5/1 ARM VA/FHA 30 Fixed 10/1 Jumbo
3.750% + 0 (APR 3.766%) 3.000% + 0 (APR 2.950%) 3.25% + 0 (APR 3.559/4.340%) 3.5% + 0 (APR 3.69%)
New, Landmark Lock and Shop, provides a safeguard while you shop for a home. Contact Brian McFall 785-841-7152. First time homebuyers you may be able to receive up to 4% of your loan amount in down payment assistance if you qualify. Landmark has FHA, Conventional and VA and RD loans. Closing costs vary from lender to lender, call Landmark and compare our costs and rates with any other lender. Rates are based on a loan of $120,000 or higher and a median credit score of 740 or above. Other rate and point options are available.
Conv. Jumbo
3.875 + 0 (4.116% APR) Please call 856-7878 ext 5037
3.125 + 0 (3.321% APR) Please call 856-7878 ext 5037
Please call 856-7878 ext 5037
97% Advantage Program: Please call for rates (credit score 660) 20 year: please call 15/30 Pricing options available
Free Pre-approvals! Apply online or call Colette Wedan at 785-856-7878 ext 5037 for more info. Local Credit Union committed to giving you the smoothest closing! Local servicing for the life of the loan! Rates subject to change & are based on a Purchase loan, 20% down payment and 740 credit score.
Conv. Jumbo
3.625% + 0 (3.709%) 4.375% + 0 (4.395%)
3.00% + 0 (3.149%) Call for Rates
20 Yr. Fixed FHA/VA/USDA
3.250% + 0 (3.366%) Available Please call Individual scenarios may vary Call for Rate Available- Please call Available- Please call
RATES ARE AMAZING! We offer a FREE,No Obligation Pre-Approval Letter. We are first time homebuyer specialists. Consider A USDA loan with NO down payment required! Great options on rental properties too. Call to have us analyze your refinance options. Free borrower education session ** Rates for refinance may vary. APR based on $125,000 purchase loan, 80% LTV and 760 credit score. MEMBER FDIC EQUAL HOUSING LENDER. NMLS#619730 ****
Call For Rates Call For Rates
Call For Rates Call For Rates
Investment 3/1 ARM 5/1 ARM Conv. Jumbo
3.625% + 0 (4.087%)
Conv. Jumbo
3.750% + 0 (3.790%) Please Call for Quote
Conv. Jumbo
3.636% + 0 (3.682%) Call for Rates
3.625% + 0 (3.695%)
2.875% + 0 (3.265%)
20 YR 30 YR
3.250% + 0 (4.568%/3.915%/4.332%) 3.375% + 0 (3.945%) 4.125% + 0 (4.532%)
3.000% + 0 (3.071%) Please Call
20 Yr. Fixed Conv. 97% 30 Yr Fixed Conv 30 Yr Fixed Rental HELOC
3.500% + 0 (3.556%) 4.000% + 0 (4.481%) 4.125% + 0 (4.166%) (as low as) 3.750% APR)
2.868% + 0 (2.949%) Call for Rates
20 Year 10 Year 5/1 ARM 7/1 ARM
3.342% + 0 (3.406%) 2.755% + 0 (2.873%) Call for Rate Call for Rate
Call
FHA/VA/USDA
THE DATA DISPLAYED BELOW IS FOR INFORMATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY. THIS IS NOT AN ADVERTISEMENT FOR CREDIT AS DEFINED BY PARAGRAPH 226.24 OF REGULATION Z. CALL LENDER FOR APR. ARM-ADJUSTABLE RATE MORTGAGE; CAPS MAXIMUM PER ADJUSTMENTS & LIFETIME RATE ADJUSTMENT LTV-LOAN TO VALUE; JUMBO - ANY LOAN AMOUNT OVER $417,000. Email Jessica Wollesen at jessicaw@firststateks.com
CALL TODAY or apply online for a no-obligation rate quote and fee estimate, to be preapproved, or to talk with a Mortgage Advisor about preparing for a future purchase. Pulaski Bank provides loans for purchase, refinance, investment property, second homes, second mortgages/HELOCS and Bridge Loans! We provide options with little or no down payment, and offer Financed Mortgage Insurance to keep your payment as low as possible. Rates shown are for a purchase transaction with a >740 credit score - refinance rates may vary. Contact Geoff Strole at 785-749-6804 or Geoff.Strole@TruityCU.org. Local Servicing. Free Pre-Qualifications within Minutes of Applying. Apply 24/7 at www.LawrenceMortgages.org. Rates quoted are for purchase transactions with a 740 or higher median credit score. Refinance rates may be slightly higher. Call or email for complete details and to obtain a no obligation quote! Equal Housing Lender. We are also proud to be an Approved Lender for the Tenants to Homeowners Program…Creating Permanently Affordable Workforce Housing in Lawrence! Check out complete details at: www.tenants-to-homeowners.org Free same-day approvals! Ask us about the new Fannie Mae 3% Down Loan Product - or, consider a refinance while rates are at an all-time low! Rates are subject to change and are based on a credit score of 740 and a loan amount of $100,000.00. Please call Joylynn Harlow (NMLS #409547) at 785-749-8732 for your custom quote. The University National Bank - NMLS #403070
L AW R E N C E J O U R N A L - W O R L D
Munchers Bakery
join us at
MUNCHERS BAKERY saturday, FEBRUARY 13TH
Stop by Munchers Bakery to chat with Managing Editor, Chad Lawhorn.
7 - 10 AM
INDIANA GETS PAST NO. 4 IOWA, 85-78. 4C
Sports
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Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com/sports l Friday, February 12, 2016
KANSAS BASKETBALL
Tom Keegan tkeegan@ljworld.com
No easy answer to stop Hield The number 60 is so outrageous next to the word points for a basketball player that many thought Bill Self was kidding when he said it five weeks ago. He wanted to make sure everyone knew he wasn’t, so he said it again Thursday. “I’m serious about this,” Self said of Buddy Hield, “if Frank (Mason) had not been on our team, he would have got 60. I mean, he scored, I’d say, 50 percent of the time he touched it when Frank was guarding him. But he didn’t touch it very often. If he’d have gotten 10 more touches, he could have scored 10 more points, easily.” Mason did such a terrific job of denying Hield the ball that even though the leading national player of the year candidate scored 46 points during Kansas University’s 109-106, tripleovertime victory against Oklahoma, he attempted just four field goals in the second half and scored 11 points, two on a tip-in. Hield made 6 of 6 second-half free throws, 1 of 2 two-pointers and 1 of 2 three-pointers. Trying to figure out how to contain Hield raises many possibilities and no easy answers. Kansas guards Mason and Devonté Graham are entrusted with collapsing defenses on drives to the hoop. It’s an exhausting responsibility that comes with bruises delivered by bigger bodies, but not as tiring as chasing Hield all over the place to try to keep him from receiving passes. “I don’t think Frank can guard Buddy the whole game,” Self said. “Is Frank more valuable being on the floor, we talked about, even if he’s maybe a little fatigued, than somebody else being fresh out on the floor? We need Frank on the floor for the most part. So I think we need to sub him smarter, sub him more often for shorter stints, even for 30 seconds here or a minute there. But to say he’s going to lock in on Buddy, that won’t be our game plan going in. That may be the game plan late game in possessions that really matter, but I think we’re going to need him in the game being a little bit more rested offensively the first 30 minutes or so.” Hield will try to drive when Wayne Selden checks him. If he’s too successful doing that, look for Graham and Mason to take their turns, maybe with relief here and there from Brannen Greene and Svi Mykhailiuk. “So it could happen, but it probably won’t happen as much as what the obvious person would think, based on how well he defended him the last 25 minutes the other day,” Self said of Mason checking Hield. “It totally gassed him, though. He was spent.” Once Hield has the ball, he’s tough to stop without Please see KEEGAN, page 3C
Sure shot
Hard work improved Ellis’ range By Gary Bedore gbedore@ljworld.com
Nick Krug/Journal-World Photo
KANSAS FORWARD PERRY ELLIS (34) SHOOTS over West Virginia forward Devin Williams (41) during the Jayhawks’ 75-65 win Tuesday at Allen Fieldhouse.
Kansas University senior forward Perry Ellis’ shooting from two- and three-point range has been uncanny the last three games. In wins over Kansas State, TCU and West Virginia, the 6-foot-8 Ellis has hit 22 of 27 two-pointers for 81.5 percent and four of seven threes for 57.1 percent. Of his two-point accuracy of late Ellis said ThursUP NEXT day: “I would say maybe Who: Kansas I’m attack- (20-4, 8-3) ing the hole vs. Oklahoma a little more, (20-3, 8-3) a little more a g g r e s s i v e When: 1:30 and taking my p.m. Saturtime a little day bit more off Where: Northe dribble. man, Okla. That could TV: ESPN be something (WOW! due to not channels 33, rushing into 233) it, using my dribble a bit.” On the season, Ellis, a 53 percent overall shooter, has made 19 of 40 threes for 47.5 percent. All last year, he made 18 of 46 threes for 39.1 percent and overall hit 45.7 percent of his shots. “This summer, I definitely did (work on perimeter game),” Ellis said. “I tried to get my body and muscle memory get used to taking those shots. That definitely helped me out a lot.” Please see HOOPS, page 3C
Junior Piper nears Free State scoring mark By Bobby Nightengale bnightengale@ljworld.com
Free State High junior Madison Piper doesn’t particularly enjoy talking about her individual success on the basketball court. Piper, last year’s Sunflower League Player of the Year, would much rather turn the attention to her teammates and her team’s attempt to advance to the Class 6A state tournament for the first time in her career.
But by the end of the season, on the wall outside of the school’s main gymnasium, Piper’s name will fill a few prominent spots in the school’s record book. Piper surpassed 1,000 points in her varsity career during Free State’s victory against Shawnee Mission North on Tuesday. The 5-foot-10 wing is only 37 points away from becoming the school’s all-time leading scorer, set by Kennedy Kirkpatrick (1,046 points) from 2009-13.
“It’s actually pretty exciting because you always think, like, ‘Wow, 1,000 points is so many,’” Piper said. “You finally reach that point and it’s a really great feeling.” Piper, the daughter of former Kansas University basketball player Chris Piper, had no idea she was even approaching 1,000 points until her grandfather mentioned it to her. One of the most prolific scorers in the league, Piper has reached double-digit
point totals in 51 of the 59 games in her three-year career. “Madison is extremely humble,” Free State coach Bryan Duncan said. “She’s a lot more interested in doing things for the team. If anything, she’s probably embarrassed by it. That’s just Madison Piper who she is. But certainly she should be very proud of it, her family and I know we are as a basketball program. It’s really, really cool.” Please see PIPER, page 3C
McDermott leads Seabury to big win By Bobby Nightengale bnightengale@ljworld.com
Bishop Seabury Academy sophomore Zach McDermott insists he didn’t do anything out of the ordinary before Thursday’s game against Jayhawk-Linn. He stuck to his normal routine and was on fire for the first quarter. The 6-foot2 point guard scored from everywhere. He ran past
defenders in transition for layups. He hit threes. He knocked down mid-range jumpers. Most importantly, he set the tone for the Seahawks in a 76-55 rout at Dillon Gymnasium. McDermott scored 14 of his game-high 29 points in the first quarter, helping the Seahawks jump to a 19-6 lead in the first eight minutes.
John Young/Journal-World Photo
SEABURY’S ZACH MCDERMOTT (5) FLOATS THROUGH THE AIR for an easy two Please see SEABURY, page 3C points during the Seahawks’ 76-55 win over Jayhawk-Linn Thursday at Seabury.
Sports 2
2C | LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD | FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2016
COMING SATURDAY
TWO-DAY
• Coverage of a full night of city high school basketball • A look ahead to Kansas-Oklahoma men’s basketball
SPORTS CALENDAR
KANSAS UNIVERSITY
AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE
TODAY • Track at Tyson Invitational, ISU Classic NORTH • Softball vs. North Carolina (11:30 a.m.), Jacksonville (4:30 p.m.) in Jacksonville, Fla. SATURDAY • Men’s basketball at Oklahoma, 1:30 p.m. • Women’s basketball at Kansas State, 7 p.m. NORTH • Track at Tyson Invitational, ISU Classic • Softball vs. Coastal Carolina (9 a.m.), North Carolina-Greensboro NORTH (11:30 a.m.) in Jacksonville, Fla.
Royals, Moustakas reach deal EAST
Kansas City, Mo. (ap) — The and $8.7 million next season, Rather than sulk, Moustakas Royals and third baseman Mike keeping general manager Day- spent much of the offseason FOOTBALL Moustakas agreed ThursdayAMERICAN to ton Moore’s streak intactCONFERENCE of making minor adjustments to a $14.3 million, two-year con- never having taken a case to his swing, and he was rewardtract that not only avoids arbi- an arbitration hearing. EAST All of ed with easily the best offentration this year but also buys the Royals’ arbitration-eligible sive season of his career. AMERICAN FOOTBALL out his final year. players are under contract. HisCONFERENCE new contract only solidiComing off his first All-Star Moustakas has long been fies what many view as a twoappearance, the 27-year-old hit considered one of the fran- year window for the Royals EAST .284 last year with 34 doubles, chise cornerstones, ever since to win another World Series. 22 homers and 82 RBIs while he was a first-round pick in the Moustakas will be a free agent also setting career-highs in on- 2007 draft. But after a rapid rise in 2018, along with first basebase percentage and slugging. to the major leagues, he went SOUTH man Eric Hosmer, centerfieldKansas City offered $4.2 mil- through long periods of disap- er Lorenzo Cain, shortstop Allion and Moustakas countered pointment, culminating with a cides Escobar, starting pitcher with $7 million. The sides set- .212 average, 15 homers and 54 Jason Vargas and closer Wade tled on $5.6 million this season RBIs two years ago. Davis.
Recently signed starter Ian Kennedy can also opt out of his contract at that time. Pitchers and catchers are due to report next week to Surprise, Arizona, for spring training, with the rest of the squad reporting the following week. The first spring training game is March 2. Just three players remain scheduled for arbitration hearings: Colorado second baseman DJ LeMahieu, Houston designated hitter Evan Gattis AL EAST New York Yankees closer and Aroldis Chapman. BOSTON RED SOX
BALTIMORE ORIOLES
NBA roundup
COMMENTARY
FREE STATE HIGH TODAY WEST
NEW YORK YANKEES
Manziel future uncertain By Rick Gosselin
Dallas Morning News
Jerry Jones has always had an eye open for talent. But he has always closed the other eye to character. If you have troubles and talent, the Cowboys have always been willing to take you in. Charles Haley, Alonzo Spellman, Demetrius Underwood, Ryan Leaf, Quincy Carter, Terrell Owens, Tank Johnson, Pacman Jones, Dez Bryant, Greg Hardy. When other teams were backing off of a player, the Cowboys were willing to step up. That should be a sign to Johnny Manziel that he needs to voluntarily take a step back, remove himself from football and get his life in order. The Cleveland Browns plan to release him at the first opportunity — March 9, the opening day of the NFL’s fiscal calendar — to rid themselves of the mistake they made in selecting him with a first-round draft pick in 2014. As it turned out his baggage outweighed his ability. If the Cowboys don’t call Manziel on March 9 to offer him shelter in the storm that is his life, I don’t expect any NFL team to call Manziel. And I do not expect the Cowboys to call Manziel. After all the criticism the Cowboys took for signing Hardy on the heels of his domestic abuse issues, I doubt the Cowboys will bring in another player any time soon with those same issues clouding his life and career. I believe Manziel’s drive from Dallas to Fort Worth on the night of Jan. 29 sealed his fate. No more football any time soon. Get your life straightened out and, succeeding there, attempt to resurrect your football career in 2017, 2018 or 2019 — however long it takes. First Manziel must win the game of life before he can once again think about winning a game of football. Manziel became a victim of football affleunza. Too much came his way too soon. Beating the mighty Crimson Tide in Alabama, the first freshman ever to win a Heisman Trophy, his face and image plastered on national magazine covers, first-round selection in an NFL draft … He became addicted to the spotlight. The Johnny Football persona overwhelmed the Johnny Manziel reality. All that made it easy for Manziel to lose perspective. And he did. He lost the football side of his life. What he did off the field became more important than what he did on the field. If I never hear his name or see him on the football field again, that’s fine. It’s more important that Johnny Manziel starts winning again off the field than on the field.
HIGH SCHOOLS HUB:
AL EAST
TORONTO BLUE JAYS
LAWRENCE HIGH WEST TODAY CHICAGO WHITE SOX
How former SOUTH Jayhawks fared
TAMPA BAY RAYS
AL CENTRAL
AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE SOUTH The Associated PressEAST
• Girls, boys basketball at Olathe South, 5:30 p.m. SATURDAY • Wrestling at Sunflower League at SM West, 9 a.m.
• Girls, boys basketball at Olathe NORTH Northwest, 5:30 p.m.
DETROIT TIGERS
CLEVELAND INDIANS
STANDINGS
AL WEST
MINNESOTA TWINS
KANSAS CITY ROYALS
SATURDAY
EASTERN CONFERENCE Thunder 121, Pelicans 95 Atlantic Division • Wrestling at Sunflower League WEST Oklahoma City — Russell W L Pct GB at SM West, 9 a.m. Toronto 35 17 .673 — Westbrook just missed a triCENTRAL Nick Collison, OklahomaALCity Boston 32 23 .582 4½ ple-double, and the Thunder Min: 13. Pts: 2. Reb: 3. Ast: 0. AL EAST New York 23 32 .418 13½ SEABURY ACADEMY beat New Orleans on ThursBrooklyn 14 40 .259 22staff; ETA 5 p.m. AFC TEAM LOGOS 081312: Helmet and team logos for the AFC teams; various sizes; stand-alone; TODAY day night, a day after Thunder Philadelphia 8 45 .151 27½ Drew Gooden, Washington Southeast Division assistant and former Pelicans • Girls, boys basketball vs. Veritas, Min: 2. Pts: 0. Reb: 0. Ast: 0. W L Pct GB AL WEST head coach Monty Williams’ 6 p.m. Atlanta AL CENTRAL 31 24 .564 — wife died. Miami 29 24 .547 1 Kelly Oubre Jr., Washington Charlotte 27 26 .509 3 Ingrid Williams was inMin: 8. Pts: 2. Reb: 1. Ast: 0. VERITAS CHRISTIAN Washington 23 28 .451 6 volved in a car crash Tuesday Orlando 23 29 .442 6½ TODAY night in Oklahoma City and Central Division • Girls, boys basketball at died Wednesday. A moment W L Pct GB AL WEST Seabury, 6 p.m. Cleveland 38 14 .731 — Bucks 99, Wizards 92 of silence was observed for her AFC TEAM LOGOS 081312: Helmet and team logos for the AFC teams; various sizes; stand-alone; 28 25 staff; .528 ETA 10½5 p.m. SATURDAY Milwaukee — Khris Middle- Indiana before the game. Monty WilChicago 27 25 .519 11 • Boys basketball at St. Mary’s, liams coached the Pelicans 27 27 .500 12 SOUTHlast ton scored 27 points, Giannis Detroit WEST season before coming to Okla- Antetokounmpo had 17 points Milwaukee 22 32 .407 17 4 p.m. homa City to help new coach and 13 rebounds, and Milwau- WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division kee held off Washington. Billy Donovan. AL EAST W L Pct GB HASKELL Middleton 14 team points Westbrook had 23 points, 10 LOGOS Antonio 8 sizes; .849 stand-alone; — AFC TEAM 081312: scored Helmet and logos San for the AFC teams; 45 various staff; ETA 5 p.m. 31 22 .585 14 SATURDAY assists and nine rebounds. Kev- in the final quarter, giving the Memphis 29 26 .527 17 in Durant scored 23 points, and Wizards trouble off the dribble Dallas • Women’s/men’s basketball vs. Houston 27 28 .491 19 Serge Ibaka added 18 for the and from the perimeter. Central Christian, 3/5 p.m. New Orleans 20 33 .377 25 AL CENTRAL Washington got within three Northwest Division Thunder. They have won 14 • Track at Highland Classic W L Pct GB of 16 heading into the All-Star when John Wall made a long City 40 14 .741 — three-pointer from the wing Oklahoma break. Portland 27 27 .500 13 Anthony Davis and Jrue Hol- with 1:15 left. But Middleton an- Utah LATEST LINE 26 26 .500 13 22 32 .407 18 in the Denver iday each scored 23 points for swered, hitting a jumper AL WEST Minnesota 17 37 .315 23 lane on the next possession. the Pelicans. COLLEGE BASKETBALL Pacific Division BALTIMORE ORIOLES
LOS ANGELES ANGELS OF ANAHEIM
BOSTON RED SOX
OAKLAND ATHLETICS NEW YORK YANKEES
MLB AL LOGOS 032712: 2012 American League team logos; stand-alone; various sizes; staff; ETA 4 p.m.
CHICAGO WHITE SOX
BOSTON RED SOX
OAKLAND ATHLETICS
SEATTLE MARINERS
CHICAGO WHITE SOX
MLB AL LOGOS 032712: 2012 American League team logos; stand-alone; various sizes; staff; ETA 4 p.m.
TAMPA BAY RAYS
TORONTO BLUE JAYS TEXAS RANGERS
These logos are provided to you for use in an editorial news context only. Other uses, including as a linking device on a Web site, or in an advertising or promotional piece, may violate this entity’s trademark or other intellectual property rights, and may violate your agreement with AP.
DETROIT TIGERS
CLEVELAND INDIANS
BALTIMORE ORIOLES
LOS ANGELES ANGELS OF ANAHEIM
SEATTLE MARINERS
CLEVELAND INDIANS
KANSAS CITY ROYALS
NEW YORK YANKEES
MINNESOTA TWINS
TAMPA BAY RAYS
TEXAS RANGERS
DETROIT TIGERS
KANSAS CITY ROYALS
These logos are provided to you for use in an editorial news context only. Other uses, including as a linking device on a Web site, or in an advertising or promotional piece, may violate this entity’s trademark or other intellectual property rights, and may violate your agreement with AP.
LOS ANGELES ANGELS OF ANAHEIM
OAKLAND ATHLETICS
MLB AL LOGOS 032712: 2012 American League team logos; stand-alone; various sizes; staff; ETA 4 p.m.
BALTIMORE ORIOLES
BOSTON RED SOX
NEW YORK YANKEES
CHICAGO WHITE SOX
CLEVELAND INDIANS
DETROIT TIGERS
SEATTLE MARINERS
TEXAS RANGERS
These logos are provided to you for use in an editorial news context only. Other uses, including as a linking device on a Web site, or in an advertising or promotional piece, may violate this entity’s trademark or other intellectual property rights, and may violate your agreement with AP.
TAMPA BAY RAYS
KANSAS CITY ROYALS
TORONTO BLUE JAYS
MINNESOTA TWINS
Favorite .................. Points............... Underdog
W L Pct GB NEW ORLEANS (95) WASHINGTON (92) Princeton ............................. 8............................. CORNELL Golden State 48 4 .923 — Cunningham 2-4 2-2 6, Davis 8-14 7-12 23, Porter 6-15 1-2 14, Dudley 3-8 0-0 6, Gortat Yale ........................................10..................... DARTMOUTH LOS ANGELES ANGELS OAKLAND ATHLETICS SEATTLE MARINERS TEXAS RANGERS L.A. Clippers 35 18 .660 13½ Asik 1-1 0-0 2, Cole 5-13 4-4 15, Gee 2-5 0-0 7-13 0-0 14, Wall 5-19 2-2 15, Beal 6-15 5-5 19, OF ANAHEIM COLUMBIA ............................10.................... Pennsylvania 22 31 .415 26½ 4, Holiday 11-20 0-0 23, Anderson 2-12 0-0 4, Nene 4-8 6-6 14, Temple 1-2 1-3 3, Sessions 1-4 Sacramento HARVARD ...........................61⁄2............................... Brown 14 40 .259 35 Douglas 4-9 1-2 10, Ajinca 2-6 1-2 5, Babbitt 1-4 3-6 5, Oubre Jr. 1-3 0-0 2, Gooden 0-1 0-0 0, Blair Phoenix These logos are provided to you for use in an editorial news context only. MLB AL LOGOS 032712: 2012 American Dayton ..................................1................... RHODE ISLAND 1-2 3. Totals 38-88 16-24 95. 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 34-88 18-24 92. Lakers 11 44 Other uses, including.200 as a linking38½ device on a Web site, or in.an LeagueL.A. team logos; stand-alone; various advertising or promotional piece, may violate this entity’s trademark or sizes; staff; ETA 4 p.m. OKLAHOMA CITYTEAM (121) LOGOS 081312: Helmet MILWAUKEE (99) logos for the AFC teams; Wednesday’s Southern Cal ....................11⁄2...................... ARIZONA ST AFC and team various sizes;Games stand-alone; staff; ETA other intellectual property rights, and 5 mayp.m. violate your agreement with.AP. Durant 10-17 0-0 23, Ibaka 7-15 3-3 18, Adams Antetokounmpo 6-16 4-5 17, Parker 7-11 3-6 Charlotte 117, Indiana 95 ARIZONA .............................111⁄2.................................... Ucla 2-2 4-4 8, Westbrook 8-14 5-6 23, Waiters 2-6 17, Plumlee 2-2 0-1 4, Mayo 1-4 0-0 2, Middleton Sacramento 114, Philadelphia 110 Monmouth ........................... 5.................................... RIDER 2-2 6, Payne 2-7 0-0 4, Kanter 3-6 5-8 11, Singler 9-17 8-9 27, Monroe 5-13 2-4 12, Carter-Williams San Antonio 98, Orlando 96 ST. PETER’S . ........................ 8................................ Niagara 2-4 0-0 6, Morrow 4-8 0-0 10, Collison 1-1 0-0 2, 1-5 3-4 5, Bayless 3-10 0-0 7, Vaughn 2-4 3-3 8. Memphis 109, Brooklyn 90 McGary 2-3 0-0 4, Novak 2-3 0-0 6. Totals 45-86 Totals 36-82 23-32 99. BUFFALO .............................31⁄2. .................................. Ohio Boston 139, L.A. Clippers 134, OT Washington 27 19 24 22 — 92 19-23 121. NHL Denver 103, Detroit 92 New Orleans 25 28 21 21 — 95 Milwaukee 18 37 14 30 — 99 Favorite .............. Goals (O/U).......... Underdog Oklahoma City 29 33 33 26 — 121 3-Point Goals-Washington 6-32 (Wall 3-12, Atlanta 113, Chicago 90 Pittsburgh ................. Even-1⁄2 (5)................. CAROLINA 3-Point Goals-New Orleans 3-16 (Cole 1-3, Beal 2-6, Porter 1-5, Oubre Jr. 0-1, Temple Minnesota 117, Toronto 112 Montreal ..................... Even-1⁄2 (5)................... BUFFALO Douglas 1-4, Holiday 1-4, Cunningham 0-1, 0-1, Gooden 0-1, Gortat 0-1, Sessions 0-2, New Orleans 100, Utah 96 Gee 0-1, Davis 0-1, Anderson 0-2), Oklahoma Dudley 0-3), Milwaukee 4-14 (Antetokounmpo NY RANGERS ............. Even-1⁄2 (5)............. Los Angeles Cleveland 120, L.A. Lakers 111 City 12-32 (Durant 3-8, Novak 2-3, Singler 2-3, 1-2, Middleton 1-3, Vaughn 1-3, Bayless 1-4, DETROIT .........................1⁄2-1 (5.5)...................... Colorado Golden State 112, Phoenix 104 Morrow 2-4, Westbrook 2-5, Ibaka 1-3, Kanter Carter-Williams 0-1, Mayo 0-1). Fouled OutFLORIDA ...................... Even-1⁄2 (5).................... St. Louis Portland 116, Houston 103 0-1, Waiters 0-2, Payne 0-3). Fouled Out-None. None. Rebounds-Washington 49 (Gortat 10), TAMPA BAY . .............. Even-1⁄2 (5)................... Nashville Rebounds-New Orleans 41 (Cole, Anderson 5), Milwaukee 66 (Antetokounmpo 13). Assists- Thursday’s Games Milwaukee 99, Washington 92 ARIZONA ....................Even-1⁄2 (5.5).................... Calgary Oklahoma City 62 (Kanter 12). Assists-New Washington 25 (Wall 10), Milwaukee 24 Orleans 17 (Holiday, Cole 6), Oklahoma City 28 (Middleton 9). Total Fouls-Washington 24, Oklahoma City 121, New Orleans 95 Home Team in CAPS (Westbrook 10). Total Fouls-New Orleans 17, Milwaukee 19. Technicals-Monroe. Flagrant Friday’s Games (c) TRIBUNE CONTENT AGENCY, LLC Oklahoma City 20. A-18,203 (18,203). Fouls-Mayo. A-14,172 (18,717). No games scheduled
THE QUOTE
SPORTS ON TV Skiing Time Net Cable USSA Fenway Big Air 8 p.m. NBCSP 38, 238
TODAY College Basketball Time Dayton v. Rhode Island 6 p.m. Ohio v. Buffalo 6 p.m. UCLA v. Arizona 8 p.m. Monmouth v. Rider 8 p.m.
Net Cable ESPN2 34, 234 ESPNU 35, 235 ESPN 33, 233 ESPNU 35, 235
Pro Basketball NBA Celebrity Game NBA Rising Stars
Time Net Cable 6 p.m. ESPN 33, 233 8 p.m. TNT 45, 245
Golf Tshwane Open Tshwane Open Chubb Classic Pebble Beach
Time Net 2:30a.m. Golf 6:30a.m. Golf 11 a.m. Golf 2 p.m. Golf
Baseball World Classic qual.
Time Net Cable 2:30a.m. MLB 155,242
Soccer Mainz v. Schalke 04
Time Net Cable 1:30p.m. FS1 150,227
Cable 156,289 156,289 156,289 156,289
Time Net Cable 6:30p.m. FSN 36, 236
College Hockey Time Net Cable Maine v. Notre Dame 5:30p.m. NBCSP 38, 238 Minnesota v. Ohio St. 5:30p.m. BTN 147,237 Prep Basketball Time Net Cable Miege v. BV Northwest 6 p.m. TWCSC 37, 226 Miege v. BV Northwest 7:30p.m. TWCSC 37, 226 Gymnastics Missouri v. Kentucky Perfect 10 Challenge Alabama v. Auburn
Time Net 6 p.m. SEC 7 p.m. FCSC 7:30p.m. SEC
LJWorld.com/highschool • Facebook.com/LJWorldpreps • Twitter.com/LJWpreps
Cable 157 145 157
SATURDAY College Basketball
Women’s Basketball Time Net Cable Villanova v. St. John’s 7 p.m. FS2 153
Pro Hockey St. Louis v. Florida
College Wrestling Time Net Cable N’western v. Nebraska 8 p.m. BTN 147,237
Time Net Cable
G’town v. Providence 11 a.m. Fox 4, 204 Kentucky v. S. Carolina 11 a.m. ESPN 33, 233 N. Iowa v Wichita St. 11 a.m. ESPN2 34, 234 TCU v. W.Va. 11 a.m. ESPNU 35, 235 Wake Forest v. N.C. St. 11 a.m. FSN 36, 236 Texas A&M v. LSU noon CBS 5, 13, 205,213 Kansas St. v. Okla. St. noon ESPNN 140,231 Purdue v. Michigan 1 p.m. ESPN 33, 233 Arkansas v. Mississippi 1 p.m. ESPNU 35, 235 UAB v. La. Tech 1 p.m. FSN 36, 236 Xavier v. Butler 1:30p.m. Fox 4, 204 Kansas v. Oklahoma 1:30p.m. ESPN 33, 233 J. Madison v. N.C.-Wilm. 2 p.m. NBCSP 38, 238 Cent. Fla. v. Houston 2 p.m. ESPNN 140,231 Tennessee v. Missouri 2 p.m. SEC 157 Louisville v. Notre Dame 3 p.m. ESPN2 34, 234 E. Carolina v. Cincinnati 3 p.m. ESPNU 35, 235 Ohio St. v. Rutgers 3 p.m. BTN 147,237 Virginia v. Duke 3:30p.m. ESPN 33, 233 Hofstra v. Delaware 4 p.m. NBCSP 38, 238 Alabama v. Florida 4:30p.m. SEC 157 Vanderbilt v. Auburn 5 p.m. ESPN2 34, 234 Penn St. v. Nebraska 5 p.m. ESPNU 35, 235 R. Morris v. Fa.-Dickinson 5 p.m. FCS 146 Wisconsin v. Maryland 5:30p.m. ESPN 33, 233 Tulsa v. UConn 7 p.m. ESPN2 34, 234 Texas Tech v. Baylor 7 p.m. ESPNU 35, 235 Creighton v. Marquette 7 p.m. FSN 36, 236 Marshall v. W.Ky. 7 p.m. FCS 146 Illinois v. N’western 7 p.m. BTN 147,237 Georgia v. Miss. St. 7 p.m. SEC 157 Texas v. Iowa St. 7:30p.m. ESPN 33, 233
Gonzaga v. SMU 9 p.m. ESPN 33, 233 Colorado St. v. UNLV 9 p.m. ESPNU 35, 235 Cal Poly v. UC Riverside 9:30p.m. FCS 146 Women’s Basketball Time Net Cable Iowa St. v. TCU Idaho v. N. Dakota Rutgers v. Illinois Kansas vs. Kansas St.
2 p.m. 2 p.m. BTN 7 p.m.
FCSC 145 FCSA 144 147,237 TWCSC 37, 226
Pro Basketball
Time Net Cable
All-Star Saturday Night 7 p.m. TNT 45, 245 Golf
Time Net Cable
Tshwane Open 4:30a.m. Golf Pebble Beach noon Golf Pebble Beach 2 p.m. CBS Chubb Classic 2 p.m. Golf
156,289 156,289 5, 13, 205,213 156,289
Baseball
Time Net Cable
World Classic qual. World Classic qual.
1:30a.m. MLB 155,242 9 p.m. MLB 155,242
Soccer
Time Net Cable
Sunderland v. Man. U. 6:40a.m. NBCSP 38, 238 Cologne v. E. Frankfurt 11:20.m. FS2 153 Chelsea v. Newcastle U. 11:25a.m. NBCSP 38, 238 Marathon
Time Net Cable
U.S. Olympic Trials
noon NBC 14, 214
Auto Racing
Time Net Cable
ARCA, Daytona Beach 3 p.m. FS1 150,227 Sprint Unlimited 7 p.m. Fox 4, 204 College Hockey
Time Net Cable
Boston Coll. v. Merrimack 6 p.m. FCSA 144 W. Mich. v. UNO 7 p.m. FCSC 145
TORONTO BLUE
“Maybe time has clouded (my) memory, but I believe it will mark the first time Montana ever threw something on Super Sunday that hit the grass.” — Scott Ostler in the San Francisco Chronicle, on Hall of Fame QB Joe Montana performing the Super Bowl 50 coin flip
TODAY IN SPORTS 1937 — Cleveland is granted an NFL franchise. The Rams play in Cleveland for nine years before moving to Los Angeles. After the 1994 season, the Rams move to St. Louis. 1958 — Boston’s Bill Russell scores 18 points and grabs 41 rebounds to lead the Celtics to a 119-101 victory over the Syracuse Nationals. 1972 — The Soviet Union hockey team wins the gold medal with a 5-2 victory over Czechoslovakia at the Winter Olympics. The U.S. is awarded the silver because it had beaten and tied Czechoslovakia. 2005 — Allen Iverson scores 60 points, a career high, to lead the Philadelphia 76ers to a 112-99 victory over the Orlando Magic. 2007 — Duke, with its first fourgame losing streak in 11 years, falls out of The Associated Press men’s poll for the first time since the end of the 1995-96 season. The Blue Devils had been in the media poll for 200 straight weeks — the second longest streak behind UCLA’s record 221 weeks. 2013 — LeBron James becomes the first NBA player to score 30 points and shoot at least 60 percent in six straight games when the Miami Heat hold off the Portland Trail Blazers, 117-104.
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MINNESOTA TW
LOCAL
L awrence J ournal -W orld
Friday, February 12, 2016
| 3C
Ellis appreciated Hield show Piper
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C
It’s been 40 days since the Kansas University men’s basketball team got an up-close look at the greatness that is Oklahoma senior Buddy Hield. You know the story by now and probably have not forgotten much of it yourself. Forty-six points on 13-of-23 shooting. Eight three-pointers. Twelve free throws. Eight rebounds. Seven assists. Fifty-four minutes. Even at Kansas, where some of the most highly recruited players in the country come to play for one of the most traditionrich programs in the history of college basketball, Hield’s night was one to remember and unlike many — if any — most Jayhawks had ever seen. While KU players, coaches and fans marveled at the performance of the reigning Big 12 player of the year and soon to be national player of the year following that thrilling, triple-overtime KU victory, one Jayhawk, though impressed, was hardly surprised. That’s because Perry Ellis had seen Hield unleash similar performances long before he became a star with the Sooners. Originally from Freeport, Bahamas, Hield moved to the United States in 2010 and began playing high school basketball at Sunrise Christian Academy, a small school in the competitive basketball town of Wichita. That was where Ellis first remembered hearing about Hield and Ellis said the two first met during their sophomore year at
against.... I don’t know what to say. It was just a great effort by him. He did a tremendous job.” Both exhausted by the nearly three halves of high-level basketball they had just played, Ellis and Hield enjoyed a quick moment on the court mtait@ljworld.com after that game. It is not in the nature of either Wichita Heights. The next player to talk much trash summer, Ellis and Hield or get hung up on bragteamed up on the same ging rights. Instead, the AAU team, Kansas Pray exchange was based on and Play, and it was then respect and admiration. that Ellis began to see the “I just said, ‘Man, just types of performances keep going. You’re gonna Hield was capable of putdo big things and it was a ting together. great effort,’” Ellis recalled. At the adidas Invita“He was making all types tional in 2011, Hield scored of shots and making plays. 35 points in a victory over That’s what great players do.” Dream Vision, a team It was clear from the ranked in the Top 5 way Ellis spoke, smiling nationally, and delivered many of the same types of and shaking his head from shots and plays he hit Kan- side to side with every comment about old friend sas with back in January. and former teammate, that Throughout the years, Ellis was impressed by and Hield’s game, like his proud of the player Hield friendship with Ellis, has had become. continued to evolve, and However, just in case now that the two former it wasn’t, Ellis explained teammates are playing what part of Hield’s game for rival schools that are tied at the top of the Big 12 he liked the most. “His heart and his standings, that friendship energy, just what he brings has grown even stronger. to the team,” Ellis said. “It “Every time we go really puts them over the back home, we’re always working out and things of top.” Ellis said he had never that sort,” Ellis said after seen anyone put on that Hield’s 46-point outburst type of performance on on Jan. 4. “He goes back the same floor as him and there quite often in the added that he was appresummer time.” Asked where Hield’s big ciative of the Kansas fans night ranked on the list of who gave Hield a standing ovation as he left the Allen opposing performances, Fieldhouse floor. Ellis did not hesitate to “He deserved it,” Ellis answer. said. “Words can’t de“Definitely the top,” scribe how well he played. he said. “From what I’ve seen and what I’ve played I’ll remember it forever.”
Hoops
“
Matt Tait
(27.4) with a 25.7 scoring average. Self, who almost uses a man-to-man defense with a strong bent on helping, has turned to a triangleand-two defense with some success throughout the years. Junk defenses only work against teams that have multiple non-scoring threats. Oklahoma, with four scorers in double figures, doesn’t qualify. Zone? Oklahoma leads the nation with a .451 three-point percentage, so so much for that idea.
No easy answers, but the same can be said for Oklahoma in coming up with a plan for trying to slow senior forward Perry Ellis. In Big 12 games only, Hield leads the conference with a 25.9 scoring average. Ellis is tied for second with Iowa State’s Georges Niang at 19.5 points per game, so Kansas isn’t the only one with a difficult defensive challenge on its hands. — Tom Keegan appears on The Drive, Sunday nights on WIBW-TV
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Naismith list: KU’s Ellis and Wayne Selden Jr., have been named to the
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Iowa St
fouling. Hield has made 50 percent of his 192 three-point shots, many of them taken when closely guarded. He ranks second in the nation in three-point percentage, ranking behind only Giddy Potts of Middle Tennessee State (.519). Hield’s 4.17 made threes per game leads the nation. Hield ranks second in the nation to Howard’s James Daniel
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Big game part II: KU’s Graham is looking forward to Saturday’s 1:30 p.m., battle at Oklahoma, which is a rematch of KU’s 109-106 three-overtime win on Jan. 4 in Allen. “Last night I was thinking about it kind of all night,” Graham said Thursday. “I was up until 1 o’clock thinking about the game, thinking about last game. Coach tells us to not waste any energy until it’s game time, save it for game time. We need to be happy, be ready for it, energetic, get practice in and get ready.”
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CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C
Making shots definitely is helping me out,” added Graham, who has 10 threes in 25 tries the last six games. Unlike Ellis, Graham was not able to work on his trey shooting much last summer because of a partially torn quad above the knee. “I couldn’t really do anything but stationary jump shots. I couldn’t run, jump,” Graham said.
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Keegan
— Kansas coach Bill Self on OU’s Buddy Hield winning the player of the year award
to have a chance to break Kirkpatrick’s record in her junior year. She’s not a player who pays much attention to stats. Freshman year: 15.6 points Even with the potential per game, 343 total to break the record withSophomore year: 17.5 points in the next week, Piper per game, 386 total would rather focus on Junior year (through 15 wins and losses. games): 18.7 points per “Of course, it’s a great game, 281 total feeling,” Piper said of the record. “But I think it would be an even betthat’s really hard to say.” ter feeling if we make it Piper, who is at 1,010 to state. That’s the end points, never expected goal.”
MADISON PIPER’S SCORING TOTALS
Seabury
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tice shooting threes from past the NBA three-point line, which is 23 feet, 9 inches, compared to college basketball’s 20-9. “It helped me just stretch my range, I think,” Ellis said. “At first it wasn’t real comfortable shooting those (NBA) shots. Gradually it started getting better and better. It worked out.” When Ellis returned to shooting college threes this season, the distance appeared much, much shorter, in effect an easier shot than last year. “Definitely,” Ellis said. “When I first started at the NBA line it seemed so far back I couldn’t even shoot them well until I got used to it. Now it’s really helping,” he added. Another Jayhawk who is faring well from three is sophomore Devonté Graham, who has made 40 of 94 for 42.6 percent. Last year, he cashed 17 of 40 for 42.5 percent. “The coaching staff helped me with it (threes) being confident,” Graham said. “Coach gets on all of us for passing up open shots. If you are open, he wants you to shoot the ball. He instills that confidence in all of us so we play with a free mind, not being hesitant on shots. It’s been going in for me. That boosts confidence.
Sam Goodwin/Special to the Journal-World
FREE STATE FORWARD MADISON PIPER (14) SHOOTS against Derby defenders Jan. 29 at Free State.
Naismith Trophy midseason 35 list, the Atlanta Tipoff Club announced Thursday. Others from rest of his teammates heat- ups in transition or when the Big 12 on list: Georged up. Junior guard Austin McDermott drew extra ates Niang, Monte Morris, Gaumer drilled a three, tention on the perimeter. Iowa State and Buddy senior forward Thomas “His basketball IQ isn’t CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C Hield, Oklahoma. The Uhler made a jumper and super high but his bas“It’s just fun when peo- diZerega scored six of his ketball feel is,” Battles award is presented to player of the year in col- ple are finding you and 13 points in the period. said of diZerega. “That’s your shots are going in,” lege basketball. “(Jayhawk-Linn’s) de- really what you want in l McDermott said. “Noth- fense basically wants guys. He’s 5-10, not a lot Azubuike, others to ing can go bad when us to shoot threes and of tough kids like that.” play in tourney here: Fu- you’re hitting shots.” jumpers,” Seabury coach In the final minutes, ture KU forward Udoka Playing without junior Ashley Battles said. “I with backups on the Azubuike and several guard Mikey Wycoff for told them, ‘Don’t shoot court, Seabury seniors other KU prospects, in- the fifth straight game be- threes and jumpers.’ So Austin Dominguez and cluding Josh Jackson, cause of an ankle injury, of course, we shot threes Thomas Silvestri drilled Thon Maker, DeAndre the Seahawks (12-3) have and jumpers. We were long-range triples. Ayton, Billy Preston, leaned on McDermott. just hitting.” The Seahawks will play Deshawn Corprew and Similar to Wycoff, McDerWhen the Seahawks host to Veritas Christian Trevon Duval will be mott is the do-it-all point are at their best, they are at 7:30 tonight. competing at the Tanager guard. They can score in all filling into their roles. Jayhawk-Linn (55) National Championships bunches and set up team- McDermott and sophoTommy Lankford 3-7 0-0 6, Bryce 2-5 0-0 4, Cole McGrew 5-7 1-1 on March 24-27 at Free mates for open looks. more guard Bansi King Nation 12, Brandon Gray 10-19 5-5 27, Chad State High School, the orMcDermott led the (13 points) are the top Coleman 1-4 0-0 3, Harley Stone 0-6 1, Diego De Bortoli 0-1 0-0 0, Mason ganizer of the event tells Seahawks with five re- scorers while diZerega, 1-2 Barrett 1-3 0-0 2, Wyatt Sandess 0-1 0-0 Matt Scott of 247sports. bounds, five assists and Gaumer and junior Max 0, Hayden Broyles 0-0 0-0 0, Quentin 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 22-53 7-8 com. Game schedules and three steals. Easter focus on rebound- Umphenour 55. specifics will be released “I’ve played with (Mc- ing, defense and every- Bishop Seabury (76) Zach McDermott 12-22 0-0 29, in coming weeks. Dermott) since the seventh thing in between. Thomas Uhler 1-3 1-3 3, Bansi King 4-13 l grade every year and over King and Easter 2-2 13, Austin Gaumer 2-2 0-0 6, Chris 2-3 1-1 5, Thomas diZerega 6-6 Self on OU’s Buddy the summer,” sophomore switched off on face- Green 1-2 13, Max Easter 1-4 0-0 2, Thomas Hield likely winning na- guard Thomas diZerega guarding Jayhawk-Linn Silvestri 1-1 0-0 3, Austin Dominguez 0-0 2, Carter Claxton 0-0 0-0 0. Totals tional player of year: said. “He just constantly junior Cole McGrew, 1-1 30-55 5-8 76. “Yeah, yeah, there’s no- improved. I don’t expect holding him to 12 points. Jayhawk 17 13 7 17—54 19 15 26 16—76 body else. There’s other anything less from him.” Meanwhile, diZerega Seabury Three-point goals: Jayhawk-Linn 4-17 talents. Denzel (ValenWhen McDermott snared five rebounds and (Gray 2, McGrew, Coleman); Seabury 11-23 (McDermott 5, King 3, Gaumer 2, tine, Michigan State) cooled off in the second made all six of his shots Silvestri). Fouled out: Gray. Turnovers: hadn’t got hurt, maybe quarter, diZerega and the from the field — mostly lay- Jayhawk-Linn 16, Seabury 8. you could make a case for him. We saw him when VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE he was as good against Stock us as Buddy was against #A3893 us for the most part. And of course (Ben) Simmons 35 3 MPG M you can make a case for the best prospect, without question. But nobody’s Audio | Cruise on Power Windows, Locks impacted the game this 6 Airbags Steering Wheel year like Buddy has. They could give that award out Carfax Bluetooth now,” Self said. 1 Owner VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE
Nobody’s impacted the game this year like Buddy has. They CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C could give that award Last summer, KU coach Bill Self told Ellis to prac- out now.”
It’s no surprise to her teammates or coaches that she will likely break the school’s scoring record in the next few games. This season, Piper is averaging 18.7 points per game despite regularly being face-guarded by the opposing team’s best defender. She’s one of the top shooters in the state from anywhere on the court — “There’s no doubt that she has the best shot I’ve ever seen from a high school kid,” Duncan said. When she gets a step past a defender, she has the strength to score inside the paint. Kirkpatrick, who is averaging 4.2 points per game as a red-shirt sophomore at Bowling Green, knew years ago that Piper might be the player to break her record. “She used to joke around, ‘You better not beat my record,’ or something like that,” Piper recalled from when they played together during the summer before her freshman year. “So it’s kind of funny now that I have the potential to break it. That’s pretty cool.” But to say Piper is only a scorer would be saying Michael Jackson was only a dancer. Leading the Firebirds to an 11-4 record and No. 6 ranking in the state, Piper is the team’s top shot blocker. When she draws multiple defenders on offense, she finds her teammates for open looks. “Madison is probably the best scorer we ever had, but Madison is also going to break the assist record,” Duncan said. “I think she’s an even better passer than scorer and
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Friday, February 12, 2016
SPORTS
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SCOREBOARD
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Indiana tops No. 4 Iowa The Associated Press
Indiana 85, No. 4 Iowa 78 Bloomington, Ind. — Kevin “Yogi” Ferrell scored 14 points and Troy Williams added 13, and Indiana rallied to upset Iowa on Thursday night after blowing a big lead. Indiana (20-5, 10-2 Big Ten) pulled into a threeway for the conference lead and gave coach Tom Crean his fourth 20-win season at the school. Jarrod Uthoff led the Hawkeyes (19-5, 10-2) with 24 points, and Mike Gesell had 17. Iowa lost for the first time in four games. Indiana was cruising in the first half, building a 16-point lead before giving it away. The Hawkeyes closed to 45-38 at the half and scored the first nine points of the second half to take their first lead since the opening minutes. IOWA (19-5) Uthoff 8-20 6-8 24, Woodbury 6-10 1-3 13, Clemmons 5-13 0-0 12, Gesell 6-9 4-6 17, Jok 4-7 2-4 12, Wagner 0-1 0-0 0, Ellingson 0-0 0-0 0, Uhl 0-2 0-2 0, Baer 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 29-63 13-23 78. INDIANA (20-5) Williams 5-12 3-5 13, Hartman 3-5 0-0 7, Bryant 4-6 2-2 10, Johnson 4-6 2-2 13, Ferrell 2-12 8-8 14, Bielfeldt 5-12 0-0 10, Zeisloft 3-5 0-0 9, Anunoby 1-3 2-2 4, Morgan 1-1 1-2 3, Niego 1-1 0-0 2. Totals 29-63 18-21 85. Halftime-Indiana 45-38. 3-Point Goals-Iowa 7-18 (Jok 2-3, Clemmons 2-6, Uthoff 2-7, Gesell 1-1, Baer 0-1), Indiana 9-25 (Zeisloft 3-5, Johnson 3-5, Ferrell 2-9, Hartman 1-2, Williams 0-2, Bielfeldt 0-2). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-Iowa 35 (Woodbury 15), Indiana 39 (Bryant, Hartman, Williams 7). Assists-Iowa 13 (Gesell 6), Indiana 14 (Anunoby, Bryant, Hartman, Johnson, Williams, Zeisloft 2). Total Fouls-Iowa 18, Indiana 18. A-17,472.
BRIEFLY FSHS bowlers win at SM East Prairie Village — Free State High’s boys and girls bowling claimed victories Thursday at the Shawnee Mission East Invitational. Matthew Eagle (713 series) and Alex Jimenez (680) led the FSHS boys, and Gentry Jordan (570) and Jamie Souders (522) led the FSHS girls. The FSHS boys finished ahead of runner-up Shawnee Mission Northwest, followed by SM East and SM South. The FSHS girls were followed by SM Northwest, SM South and SM East.
Big 12 Men
Big 12 Overall W L W L Oklahoma 8 3 20 3 Kansas 8 3 20 4 West Virginia 8 3 19 5 Baylor 7 4 18 6 Texas 7 4 16 8 Iowa State 6 5 17 7 Texas Tech 4 7 14 9 Kansas State 3 8 14 10 Oklahoma State 2 9 11 13 TCU 2 9 11 13 Saturday’s Games TCU at West Virginia, 11 a.m. (ESPNU) Kansas State at Oklahoma State, noon (ESPNews) Kansas at Oklahoma, 1:30 p.m. (ESPN) Texas Tech at Baylor, 7 p.m. (ESPNU) Texas at Iowa State, 7:30 p.m. (ESPN)
Dec. 12 — Oregon State at Kansas City Shootout, Sprint Center, W 82-67 (8-1) Dec. 19 — Montana, W 88-46 (9-1) Dec. 22 — at San Diego State, W 70-57 (10-1) Dec. 29 — UC Irvine, W 78-53 (11-1) Jan. 2 — Baylor, W 102-74 (12-1, 1-0) Jan. 4 — Oklahoma, W 109-106, 3 OT (13-1, 2-0) Jan. 9 — at Texas Tech, W 69-59 (14-1, 3-0) Jan. 12 — at West Virginia, L 63-74 (14-2, 3-1) Jan. 16 — TCU, W 70-63 (15-2, 4-1) Jan. 19 — at Oklahoma State, L 67-86 (15-3, 4-2) Jan. 23 — Texas, W 76-67 (16-3, 5-2) Jan. 25 —at Iowa State, L 72-85 (164, 5-3) Jan. 30 — Kentucky in Big 12/SEC Challenge, Allen Fieldhouse, W 90-84, OT (17-4) Feb. 3 — Kansas State, W 77-59 (18-4, 6-3) Feb. 6 — at TCU, W 75-56 (19-4, 7-3) Feb. 9 — West Virginia, W 75-65 (20-4, 8-3) Feb. 13 — at Oklahoma, 1:30 p.m. Feb. 15 — Oklahoma State, 8 p.m. Feb. 20 — at Kansas State, 5 p.m. Feb. 23 —at Baylor, 7 p.m. Feb. 27 — Texas Tech, 11 a.m. or 1 p.m. Feb. 29 — at Texas, 8 p.m. March 5 — Iowa State, TBA March 9-12 — Big 12 tournament at Kansas City, Mo.
California 83, No. 11 Oregon 63 Berkeley, Calif. — Jabari Bird scored 16 of his season-high 24 points in the first half and punctuated his big night with a reverse dunk in the final seconds, leading California over Oregon. 12 Women The Golden Bears (16- Big Big 12 Overall 8, 6-5 Pac-12) never trailed W L W L Baylor 11 1 24 1 and led by as much as 25 Texas 11 1 22 1 while remaining unbeat- Oklahoma State 8 4 18 5 West Virginia 8 4 19 6 en at Haas Pavilion this Oklahoma 7 5 16 7 season. Kansas State 5 7 15 8 4 8 12 11 It’s Cal’s third win over Iowa State TCU 4 8 12 11 a ranked team this season Texas Tech 2 10 11 12 and second in less than Kansas Kansas Women 0 12 5 18 Nov. 1 — Pittsburg State (exhibiSaturday’s Games three weeks. tion), W 80-54 Iowa State at TCU, 1 p.m. (FSSW+) Jaylen Brown added Nov. 8 — Emporia State (exhibition), Baylor at Texas Tech, 2 p.m. West Virginia at Oklahoma State, W 68-57 16 points, Ivan Rabb had 5 p.m. Nov. 15 — Texas Southern, W 72-65 13 points and seven reKansas at Kansas State, 7 p.m. (1-0) Nov. 19 — Memphis, W 72-63 (2-0) (COX) bounds, while Tyrone Nov. 23 — at Arizona, L 67-52 (2-1) Wallace finished with 10 Nov. 27 — N. Illinois at SMU College Men Thanksgiving Classic, W 66-58 (3-1) points in his return to the EAST Nov. 28 — SMU at SMU Thanksgiving Binghamton 68, Hartford 54 lineup after missing nearClassic, L 64-73 (3-2) Delaware 69, Drexel 60 Dec. 2 — Creighton, W 67-54 (4-2) ly a month due to injury. Fairleigh Dickinson 91, Bryant 77 Dec. 6 — St. John’s, L 71-86 (4-3) LIU Brooklyn 82, Wagner 69 Dillon Brooks scored 17 Dec. 10 — UMKC, L 44-47 (4-4) Manhattan 84, Quinnipiac 77 points, and Chris BouchDec. 13 — Navy, W 61-54, OT (5-4) Mass.-Lowell 108, Maine 95, OT Dec. 20 — Washington State, L 53-66 er added 11 points and Mount St. Mary’s 66, Sacred Heart (5-5) six rebounds for Oregon. 61NJIT 74, Stetson 70 Dec. 22 — Oral Roberts, L 63-70 (5-6) Dec. 30 — at Oklahoma, L 44-67 The Ducks (20-5, 9-3) had New Hampshire 69, Albany (NY) 68 (5-7, 0-1) Northeastern 47, Towson 44 their six-game winning Jan. 3 — West Virginia, L 45-65 (5-8, Siena 90, Canisius 67 0-2) streak snapped. St. Francis (Pa.) 68, Robert Morris 57 OREGON (20-5) Benson 0-3 0-0 0, Dorsey 2-6 1-2 6, Cook 3-7 1-2 7, Brooks 6-12 4-7 17, Boucher 5-8 0-0 11, Benjamin 3-8 2-6 9, Bell 3-5 0-0 6, Small 1-3 2-2 5, Sorkin 0-2 2-2 2. Totals 23-54 12-21 63. CALIFORNIA (16-8) Brown 7-16 0-3 16, Rabb 6-7 1-1 13, Singer 2-3 2-2 6, Okoroh 1-1 0-1 2, Bird 9-14 1-2 24, Wallace 4-11 2-2 10, Mathews 2-4 0-0 6, Domingo 0-1 0-1 0, Rooks 3-4 0-0 6. Totals 34-61 6-12 83. Halftime-California 42-24. 3-Point Goals-Oregon 5-18 (Small 1-1, Benjamin 1-3, Boucher 1-3, Dorsey 1-3, Brooks 1-4, Benson 0-2, Sorkin 0-2), California 9-16 (Bird 5-8, Brown 2-3, Mathews 2-3, Domingo 0-1, Wallace 0-1). Rebounds-Oregon 26 (Boucher 6), California 39 (Wallace 8). AssistsOregon 13 (Bell, Benson, Brooks, Dorsey 2), California 19 (Singer 10). Total Fouls-Oregon 14, California 22. A-10,628.
league office for recent success, specifically contributions to eight wins — four relays and four as an individual — over the last two weekends.
Kansas baseball names captains
L awrence J ournal -W orld
St. Francis Brooklyn 74, CCSU 67 Stony Brook 75, UMBC 52 Syracuse 85, Florida St. 72 Temple 63, UConn 58 UMass 69, VCU 63 SOUTH Campbell 89, Gardner-Webb 85, OT Charleston Southern 77, Presbyterian 63 Charlotte 102, Rice 73 ETSU 94, Samford 90, OT FAU 79, UTSA 73 Florida Gulf Coast 71, SC-Upstate 64 Furman 95, The Citadel 75 Georgia Southern 77, Troy 71 High Point 68, Coastal Carolina 67 Hofstra 86, William & Mary 80 James Madison 56, Coll. of Charleston 52 Kennesaw St. 101, North Florida 91 Lipscomb 93, Jacksonville 92 Louisiana Tech 73, Middle Tennessee 63 Louisiana-Lafayette 83, Arkansas St. 73 Louisiana-Monroe 86, UALR 82 McNeese St. 87, New Orleans 76 Morehead St. 61, E. Kentucky 50 Old Dominion 67, North Texas 47 Radford 60, UNC Asheville 59 South Alabama 79, Georgia St. 78, OT UAB 80, Southern Miss. 77, 2OT UNC Wilmington 86, Elon 82 UT Martin 77, SE Missouri 64 UTEP 84, FIU 74 VMI 86, UNC Greensboro 72 W. Carolina 67, Chattanooga 61 Winthrop 88, Longwood 80 Wofford 79, Mercer 70 MIDWEST Green Bay 86, Detroit 85 Ill.-Chicago 64, Wright St. 59 Illinois St. 70, Evansville 60 Indiana 85, Iowa 78 Milwaukee 93, Oakland 85 Murray St. 70, SIU-Edwardsville 64 South Dakota 72, N. Dakota St. 58 Valparaiso 64, N. Kentucky 52 SOUTHWEST Oral Roberts 77, IUPUI 56 Texas St. 69, Appalachian St. 68 FAR WEST California 83, Oregon 63 E. Washington 95, North Dakota 85 Idaho St. 88, Portland St. 71 Loyola Marymount 77, Pacific 72 Montana 86, S. Utah 53 Montana St. 101, N. Arizona 58 W. Illinois 63, Denver 60 Weber St. 63, Sacramento St. 50
Kansas head coach Ritch Price announced Thursday that seniors Ben Krauth, Joe Moroney and Colby Wright will handle captains’ duties for the 2016 season. “I am excited about this year’s group,” Price said. “They are not only outCollege Women EAST standing baseball players, Albany (NY) 85, New Hampshire 48 but they are even better Hartford 41, Binghamton 39 Louisville 84, Pittsburgh 61 people. They have comMaine 73, Mass.-Lowell 46 plete respect from everySOUTH LHS bowlers Arkansas St. 74, Louisiana-Lafayette body associated with our program, from our players 62Auburn 65, Mississippi 60 third in Topeka to our coaching staff, and Florida St. 69, Duke 53 Topeka — Lawrence Maryland 73, Purdue 59 to the people within the Miami 58, Georgia Tech 55 High’s boys and girls bowl- athletic department. They Middle Tennessee 68, Louisiana ing teams both placed third represent our program in Tech 57 NC State 74, Boston College 63 in the Washburn Rural a first-class manner on North Carolina 71, Virginia Tech 67 quadrangular Thursday at South Alabama 83, Georgia St. 45 and off the field and in the South Carolina 86, Florida 71 Westridge Lanes. classroom.” Syracuse 91, Virginia 57 Montez Sanchez led Texas A&M-CC 75, New Orleans 64 UAB 53, Southern Miss. 49 the LHS boys with 637 Wake Forest 55, Clemson 45 Aldridge honored series, followed by Adonis MIDWEST Green Bay 69, Youngstown St. 35 Stanwix at 592. for academics Ill.-Chicago 65, Detroit 51 Morgan Daniels topped Michigan 82, Wisconsin 65 Kansas sophomore the LHS girls with a 549 Milwaukee 59, Cleveland St. 58, OT Lauren Aldridge has Minnesota 110, Nebraska 73 series, followed by Izzy Missouri 63, Alabama 52 paced the Kansas women’s Schmidtberger with a Nebraska-Omaha 71, IPFW 64 basketball team on the North Dakota 72, E. Washington 69 541. Oakland 87, Valparaiso 77 Topeka Seaman won the hardwood all season, but Ohio St. 98, Iowa 81 Penn St. 65, Michigan St. 61 boys tournament, followed it’s not just her work ethic S. Dakota St. 60, Oral Roberts 48 by Topeka West, Lawrence on the court that deserves SOUTHWEST recognition. Aldridge’s Charlotte 69, Rice 58 and Washburn Rural. Old Dominion 65, North Texas 48 achievements in the classWashburn Rural won Stephen F. Austin 74, Incarnate room have garnered attenthe girls event, followed by Word 62 tion after being named to Texas A&M 64, Mississippi St. 58 Topeka Seaman, Lawrence Texas St. 87, Appalachian St. 76 the 2016 CoSIDA Academand Topeka West. UTEP 70, FIU 52 ic All-District selection on UTSA 57, FAU 54 FAR WEST Thursday. BYU 65, San Francisco 62 Big 12 coaches On the court, Aldridge Idaho St. 64, Portland St. 42 Montana 81, S. Utah 50 started every game recognize Bishop has Montana St. 83, N. Arizona 72 this season averaging 35.1 Kansas freshman Haley minutes per contest. AlKansas Men Bishop has been getting dridge leads the team with Nov. 4 — Pittsburg State (exhibition), W 89-66 the attention of Col10.4 points per game beNov. 10 — Fort Hays State (exhibilegeSwimming.com for hind 34.9 percent shooting tion), W 95-59 Nov. 13 — Northern Colorado, W weeks, being named Big from the field. She has con109-72 (1-0) 12 swimmer of the week tinued her trend of sinking Nov. 17 — Michigan State at Chicago United Center, L 73-79 (1-1) three straight weeks. On shots from beyond the Nov. 23 — Chaminade at Maui Thursday she received the arc, making 36.8 percent Invitational, W 123-72 (2-1) same recognition from Nov. 24 — UCLA at Maui Invitational, of her attempts from the W 92-73 (3-1) the coaches of the Big 12 three-point line. Aldridge Nov. 25 — Vanderbilt at Maui Conference. Bishop was leads the team with 49 Invitational, W 70-63 (4-1) Dec. 1 — Loyola (Md.), W 94-61 (5-1) one of four Big 12 student- assists and is averaging 1.7 Dec. 5 — Harvard, W 75-69 (6-1) athletes honored by the rebounds per game. Dec. 9 — Holy Cross, W 92-59 (7-1)
Jan. 6 — Baylor, L 40-58 (5-9, 0-3) Jan. 9 — at Iowa State, L 49-65 (5-10, 0-4) Jan. 13 — Texas, L 38-75 (5-11, 0-5) Jan. 16 — at West Virginia, L 35-72 (5-12, 0-6) Jan. 20 — Kansas State, L 46-59 (5-13, 0-7) Jan. 24 — Oklahoma State, L 46-74 (5-14, 0-8) Jan. 27 — at Texas, L 46-70 (5-15, 0-9) Jan. 30 — at Texas Tech, L 44-54 (5-16, 0-10) Feb. 2 — Iowa State, L 53-63 (5-17, 0-11) Feb. 6 — at Baylor, L 49-81 (5-18, 0-12) Feb. 13 — at Kansas State, 7 p.m. Feb. 17 — TCU, 7 p.m. Feb. 20 — Oklahoma, 2 p.m. Feb. 24 — at Oklahoma State, 7 p.m. Feb. 27 — Texas Tech, 7 p.m. Feb. 29 — at TCU, 6 p.m. March 4-7 — Big 12 tournament at Oklahoma City
Middle School Boys
Thursday at West WEST 51, ATCHISON 21 West highlights: Willie Dotson 18 points; Alyus Wisdom 13 points; Olin Yoder 9 points. West record: 5-6. Next for West: Thursday at Atchison tournament. WEST B 43 ATCHISON B 30 West highlights: Rhett May 11 points; Jake Miller 8 points; Ben Miller 6 points; Kendrick Hobson 6 points. West B final record: 9-2.
High School
WASHBURN RURAL QUAD Thursday at Westridge Lanes, Topeka BOYS Varsity team scores: Topeka Seaman 2752, Topeka West 2470, Lawrence High 2432, Washburn Rural 2427. Lawrence scores: Montez Sanchez 187-204-246 — 637; Adonis Stanwix 185-245-162 — 592; Tristan Decker 219-159-190 — 568; Morgan Sisson 237-185-135 — 557; Javier Lemmons 183-182-176 — 541; Hunter Krom 156170-176 — 502. JV team scores: Topeka Seaman 2340, Washburn Rural 2126, Topeka West 1845, Lawrence 1813. Lawrence JV scores: Cameron Stussie 142-172-145 — 459; Noah Goepfert 142-175-135 — 452; Canten Ambrose 149-113-177 — 439; Pride Leggins 176-113-137 — 426; Jared Radford 133-123-150 — 406; Ethan Huslig 148-117-139 — 404. GIRLS Varsity team scores: Washburn Rural 2361, Topeka Seaman 2194, Lawrence 2103, Topeka West 1975. Lawrence scores: Morgan Daniels 196-227-126 — 549; Izzy Schmidtberger 164-173-204 — 541; Diamonique Vann 160-173-172 — 505; Holly Evan: 167152-175 — 494; Miranda Krom 163-148133 — 444; Renea McNemee 120-156122 — 398. JV team scores: Lawrence 1679, Topeka Seaman 1488, Topeka West 1369, Washburn Rural 1196. Lawrence JV scores: Hannah Reed 168-154-179 — 501; Carli Stellwagon 118-142-150 — 410; Ashley Dykes 132134-121 — 387; Sofia Rommel 136-123122 — 381; Sierra Magdaleno 96-120102 — 318; Kira Auchenbach 97-83-72 — 252. SM EAST INVITATIONAL Thursday at Prairie Village BOYS Varsity team scores: Free State 2652, SM Northwest 2381, SM East 2327, SM South 2076. Free State scores: Matthew Eagle 277-234-202 — 713; Alex Jimenez 233238-209 — 680; Matt Meseke 227-225170 — 622; Alex Craig 147-235-202 — 584; Bayn Schrader 187-222-160 — 569; Cameron Edens 200-193-151 —544. JV team scores: SM Northwest 2070, Free State 2057, SM East 1835, SM South 1806. Free State JV scores: Austin Petefish 207-152-207 — 566; Cam Edgecomb 181-167-167 — 515; Zach Lockwood 158-160-176 — 494; Cody Thompson 122-148-177 — 447; Dylan Edwinson 124-174-126 — 424; Tom Reno 126-157105 — 388. GIRLS Varsity team scores: Free State 2082, SM Northwest 1988, SM South 1770, SM East 1517. Free State scores: Gentry Jordan 183-193-194 — 570; Jamie Souders 162181-179 — 522; Hailey Jump 189-145163 — 497; Morgan Wright 140-159-161 — 460; Brianna Burenheide 151-155150 — 456; Sapphie Knight 163-136126 — 425. JV team scores: Free State 1599, SM Northwest 1511, SM South 1411, SM East 1269. Free State JV scores: Sydney Jordan 130-170-159 — 459; Ashley Givens 164-136-129 — 429; Lexie Lockwood 145-104-135 — 384; Raegan Finkeldei 121-103-98 — 322; Mamie Rupnick 117108-82 — 307.
Pebble Beach
Thursday p-Pebble Beach Golf Links, Yardage: 6,816; Par: 72 m-Monterey Peninsula Country Club, Shore Course, 6,914; 71 s-Spyglass Hill Golf Club, 6,953; 72 Pebble Beach, Calif. Purse: $7 million First Round Chez Reavie 33-30—63 -8m Freddie Jacobson 31-34—65 -7p Cameron Smith 29-35—64 -7m Bronson Burgoon 34-30—64 -7m Justin Rose 32-34—66 -6s Dawie van der Walt 32-34—66 -6p Roberto Castro 33-33—66 -6p Ricky Barnes 30-35—65 -6m Shane Bertsch 32-34—66 -6p J.B. Holmes 34-32—66 -6s Spencer Levin 32-34—66 -6p Jason Gore 32-34—66 -5m Hiroshi Iwata 31-35—66 -5m Ryan Ruffels 34-33—67 -5p Rhein Gibson 35-32—67 -5s David Hearn 32-35—67 -4m Troy Merritt 31-36—67 -4m Phil Mickelson 34-34—68 -4s Kevin Na 34-33—67 -4m Brooks Koepka 36-32—68 -4s Bud Cauley 34-34—68 -4s Paul Dunne 32-35—67 -4m Steven Bowditch 36-32—68 -4p Jonas Blixt 33-34—67 -4m Tom Gillis 34-33—67 -4m Matt Jones 31-37—68 -4p Sean O’Hair 33-34—67 -4m Thomas Aiken 36-32—68 -4s Aaron Baddeley 35-34—69 -3s Brian Stuard 33-35—68 -3m Billy Hurley III 33-35—68 -3m Andres Gonzales 34-35—69 -3s Padraig Harrington 33-35—68 -3m Bill Haas 35-34—69 -3s Tim Wilkinson 34-35—69 -3p Greg Chalmers 32-36—68 -3m Chesson Hadley 32-36—68 -3m Andrew Loupe 37-31—68 -3m Dustin Johnson 34-36—70 -2s Hunter Mahan 37-33—70 -2p J.J. Henry 36-34—70 -2p Luke Donald 37-33—70 -2s Tom Hoge 34-35—69 -2m Alex Prugh 35-35—70 -2p Scott Langley 36-33—69 -2m Marc Turnesa 34-36—70 -2s Zac Blair 35-35—70 -2p Stewart Cink 35-35—70 -2p Russell Henley 35-34—69 -2m Kevin Chappell 34-35—69 -2m Brice Garnett 32-37—69 -2m Mark Hubbard 35-35—70 -2p Si Woo Kim 35-35—70 -2p Austin Connelly 34-36—70 -2p Jim Herman 36-33—69 -2m Alex Cejka 36-34—70 -2s Pat Perez 34-35—69 -2m Kevin Streelman 35-35—70 -2s David Toms 33-37—70 -2s Vaughn Taylor 34-36—70 -2p Miguel Angel Carballo 35-34—69 -2m Lucas Lee 35-34—69 -2m Tyler Aldridge 34-36—70 -2s Sam Saunders 35-35—70 -2p Jordan Spieth 35-36—71 -1s Jonathan Byrd 34-36—70 -1m Danny Lee 36-35—71 -1s Will Wilcox 33-38—71 -1p Kyle Stanley 35-36—71 -1p Henrik Norlander 33-37—70 -1m Jhonattan Vegas 36-35—71 -1s Chris Stroud 37-34—71 -1s Russell Knox 34-37—71 -1p Ian Poulter 36-35—71 -1s Andrew Landry 34-36—70 -1m Nick Taylor 36-35—71 -1s Jason Day 34-37—71 -1s Jerry Kelly 34-37—71 -1s Will MacKenzie 35-36—71 -1p Steve Marino 38-33—71 -1p Brett Stegmaier 38-33—71 -1p Steve Stricker 37-35—72 Es Brendon Todd 33-38—71 Em Vijay Singh 34-37—71 Em Patrick Reed 36-36—72 Es Bryce Molder 34-37—71 Em Rory Sabbatini 36-36—72 Es Colt Knost 36-36—72 Ep Jason Bohn 37-34—71 Em Sung Kang 38-34—72 Es David Duval 36-35—71 Em Shane Lowry 33-38—71 Em Jimmy Walker 39-33—72 Es Brandt Snedeker 36-36—72 Es Brian Gay 35-37—72 Ep Dicky Pride 34-37—71 Em Jarrod Lyle 38-34—72 Es Derek Ernst 35-37—72 Ep Richard H. Lee 37-35—72 Es Hunter Stewart 37-35—72 Es Darron Stiles 36-36—72 Ep Jason Dufner 34-37—71 Em Blake Adams 36-35—71 Em Ryan Palmer 37-35—72 Ep Nicholas Thompson 38-34—72 +1m Andres Romero 33-39—72 +1m Robert Garrigus 33-39—72 +1m Scott Brown 38-35—73 +1s Chad Collins 37-36—73 +1p Ted Purdy 35-38—73 +1p David Lingmerth 36-36—72 +1m Jason Kokrak 36-36—72 +1m Ryan Moore 35-38—73 +1s Lucas Glover 36-37—73 +1p Luke Guthrie 36-36—72 +1m Brian Davis 35-38—73 +1p Wes Roach 36-36—72 +1m Michael Putnam 35-38—73 +1p John Rollins 37-35—72 +1m Cameron Beckman 35-38—73 +1p Kelly Kraft 38-35—73 +1s Whee Kim 35-37—72 +1m Bubba Watson 37-36—73 +1s Peter Malnati 35-38—73 +1p Rob Oppenheim 35-38—73 +1p Jon Curran 37-37—74 +2p Davis Love III 37-37—74 +2s James Hahn 35-39—74 +2p Martin Piller 37-36—73 +2m Greg Owen 38-36—74 +2s D.A. Points 37-37—74 +2s Geoff Ogilvy 39-35—74 +2s Joel Stalter 36-38—74 +2s Rod Pampling 39-36—75 +3s Bo Van Pelt 38-37—75 +3p Ben Martin 38-37—75 +3s Luke List 37-38—75 +3p Michael Thompson 39-36—75 +3s Abraham Ancer 36-38—74 +3m Charlie Beljan 40-36—76 +4p Cameron Percy 40-36—76 +4s Tim Herron 39-37—76 +4s Daniel Summerhays 39-37—76 +4p Tyrone Van Aswegen 37-38—75 +4m Derek Fathauer 39-37—76 +4p Mike Weir 37-40—77 +5p Matt Bettencourt 39-38—77 +5s K.J. Choi 36-41—77 +5p Ken Duke 38-40—78 +6p William McGirt 40-38—78 +6s Michael Bradley 42-37—79 +7s Jason Schmuhl 41-38—79 +7p Steve Wheatcroft 39-40—79 +7p D.H. Lee 42-38—80 +8p D.J. Trahan 38-42—80 +8p Joe Affrunti 38-43—81 +9s
Tshwane Open
Thursday At Pretoria Country Club Pretoria, South Africa Purse: $1.14 million Yardage: 6,830; Par: 70 (35-35) First Round Justin Harding, South Africa 33-30—63 Anthony Michael, S. Africa 32-32—64 T. Spangenberg, S. Africa 31-34—65 Jaco Van Zyl, South Africa 32-34—66 Merrick Bremner, S. Africa 35-32—67 Andrew McArthur, Scotland 33-35—68 Shaun Norris, South Africa 33-35—68 Robert Dinwiddie, England 34-34—68 George Coetzee, S. Africa 33-35—68 Scott Henry, Scotland 35-33—68 U. Van Den Berg, S. Africa 33-35—68 Jamie McLeary, Scotland 31-37—68 Dylan Frittelli, South Africa 34-34—68 Daniel Im, United States 32-36—68 Richard Sterne, South Africa 36-32—68 Also Jason Knutzon, U.S. 34-35—69 Bobby Wyatt, United States 37-34—71 John Hahn, United States 38-41—79
BASEBALL American League KANSAS CITY ROYALS — Agreed to terms with 3B Mike Moustakas on a two-year contract. NEW YORK YANKEES — Sent OF Lane Adams outright to Scranton/ Wilkes-Barre (IL). National League ATLANTA BRAVES — Agreed to terms with RHP Carlos Torres on a minor league contract. PITTSBURGH PIRATES — Agreed to terms with LHPs Cory Luebke and Eric O’Flaherty on minor league contracts. SAN DIEGO PADRES — Named Hideo Nomo adviser/baseball operations. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association NBA — Suspended Miami C Hassan Whiteside one game for throwing an elbow and making contact with the head of San Antonio C Boban Marjanovic during a Feb. 9 game. PHOENIX SUNS — Assigned G Jordan McRae to Bakersfield (NBADL). FOOTBALL National Football League DETROIT LIONS — Promoted Emily Griffin to vice president of marketing. Signed LB Jerry Franklin. INDIANAPOLIS COLTS — Promoted defensive assistant Tim Berbenich to offensive assistant and assistant quarterbacks coach. Named Jim Hostler tight ends coach. NEW YORK GIANTS — Named Martin Mayhew director of football operations/special projects. OAKLAND RAIDERS — Re-signed S Nate Allen. COLLEGE CALIFORNIA — Named Jack Spavital offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach. PENN STATE BRANDYWINE — Named Jesse Zafiratos men’s soccer coach. UTAH — Promoted Pablo Cano to director of football player personnel, Robert Blechen recruiting administrative assistant for football and Alema Fitisemanu to director of high school football relations. WEST VIRGINIA — Reinstated F Jonathan Holton to the men’s basketball team.
NHL
EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Florida 54 32 16 6 70 155 123 Detroit 54 28 18 8 64 137 135 Boston 54 29 19 6 64 163 149 Tampa Bay 53 29 20 4 62 142 130 Montreal 55 27 24 4 58 151 146 Ottawa 56 25 25 6 56 161 177 Buffalo 55 21 28 6 48 126 155 Toronto 53 19 25 9 47 127 154 Metropolitan Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Washington 53 40 9 4 84 178 121 N.Y. Rangers 54 31 18 5 67 156 137 N.Y. Islanders 53 29 18 6 64 154 134 Pittsburgh 53 27 19 7 61 139 138 New Jersey 55 27 21 7 61 124 129 Philadelphia 53 24 20 9 57 129 143 Carolina 54 24 21 9 57 130 144 Columbus 56 22 28 6 50 144 176 WESTERN CONFERENCE Central Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Chicago 58 36 18 4 76 161 134 Dallas 55 35 15 5 75 180 149 St. Louis 56 30 17 9 69 136 134 Colorado 57 28 25 4 60 154 158 Nashville 54 25 21 8 58 141 145 Minnesota 54 23 21 10 56 133 136 Winnipeg 54 24 27 3 51 140 159 Pacific Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Los Angeles 53 32 18 3 67 148 126 San Jose 52 28 20 4 60 151 139 Anaheim 53 26 19 8 60 122 128 Vancouver 54 22 20 12 56 129 147 Arizona 53 24 23 6 54 140 164 Calgary 52 24 25 3 51 139 153 Edmonton 56 22 29 5 49 142 169 NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. Thursday’s Games Columbus 4, Anaheim 3, SO N.Y. Islanders 5, Los Angeles 2 Philadelphia 5, Buffalo 1 Colorado 4, Ottawa 3 Washington 4, Minnesota 3 Boston 6, Winnipeg 2 Dallas 4, Chicago 2 Edmonton 5, Toronto 2 Calgary at San Jose, (n) Today’s Games Montreal at Buffalo, 6 p.m. Los Angeles at N.Y. Rangers, 6 p.m. Pittsburgh at Carolina, 6 p.m. Colorado at Detroit, 6:30 p.m. Nashville at Tampa Bay, 6:30 p.m. St. Louis at Florida, 6:30 p.m. Calgary at Arizona, 8 p.m.
NFL Calendar
Feb. 23-29 — NFL combine at Indianapolis. March 7 — Deadline for clubs to designate franchise or transition players, 3 p.m. CST. March 9 — Trading period and free agency for 2016 begins, 3p.m. CST. March 20-23 — Annual league meeting, Boca Raton, Fla. April 22 — Deadline for restricted free agents to sign offer sheets. April 28-30 — NFL draft, Chicago. May 23-25 — Spring league meeting, Charlotte, N.C.
MLB Calendar
Through Feb. 19 — Salary arbitration hearings, Phoenix. Feb. 18 — Voluntary reporting date for pitchers, catchers and injured players. Feb. 23 — Voluntary reporting date for other players. March 1 — Mandatory reporting date. March 16 — Last day to place a player on unconditional release waivers and pay 30 days termination pay instead of 45 days. March 30 — Last day to request unconditional release waivers on a player without having to pay his full 2016 salary. April 3 — Opening day. Active rosters reduced to 25 players. May 18-19 — Owners meetings, New York. June 9-11 — Amateur draft. July 12 — All-Star Game, San Diego. July 15 — Last day to sign for amateur draft picks subject to deadline. July 24 — Hall of Fame inductions, Cooperstown, N.Y. Aug. 1 — Last day to trade a player without securing waivers. Sept. 1 — Active rosters expand to 40 players. November TBA — Deadline for teams to make qualifying offers to their eligible former players who became free agents, fifth day after World Series. November TBA — Deadline for free agents to accept qualifying offers, 12th day after World Series. Dec. 1 — Collective bargaining agreement between MLB and players’ association expires. Dec. 2 — Last day for teams to offer 2017 contracts to unsigned players. Dec. 5-8 — Winter meetings, National Harbor, Md.
Friday, February 12, 2016
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Ford 2006 F150 4WD, Fx4 V8, power seat, power equipment, cruise control, tow package, alloy wheels, running boards, rear park assist. Stk#368172
Only $11,866 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
Dale Willey Automotive 2840 Iowa Street (785) 843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
2010 GMC Terrain SLT-1 Leather, Roof, Heated Seats Stk#2PL2029
$13,495 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Certified Pre-Owned,21K miles, 7 Year/100,000 mile warranty, 182-pt. Mechanical Inspection. Stk# LF722A
Only $18,997 Call Coop at
888-631-6458 2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047 JackEllenaHonda.com
GMC Trucks
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Ext. Cab LT, leather heated seats, dual power seats, sunroof, alloy wheels, bed liner, tow package. Stk#555211
Thicker line? Bolder heading? Color background or Logo?
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
$31,499
Chevrolet 2005 Silverado
Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
$8,995
2013 Honda Accord EX
2013 Ford Escape SE
Ford 2012 Taurus SEL
Only $10,814
Only $11,500
Stk#116T495
Stk#215T765
JackEllenaHonda.com
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Chevrolet Trucks
Only 13,000 Miles!
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
$4,495
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
FX4, Extended Cab, 4X4
2013 Ford F-150
$30,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
2013 Honda Accord EX
$15,140
Stk#115T1126B
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
2003 Ford Ranger XLT
2008 Ford Expedition XLT
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
Stk#216L122B
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
2002 Chevrolet Impala
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
2012 Ford Escape XLS
2012 Ford Explorer XLT
2012 Ford F-150 XLT
Hatchback, Full Power
Local Owner, Full Power
Ecoboost, Leather
Crew Cab, Ecoboost, 4x4
Stk#116B438
Stk#PL2132
Stk#116T361
Stk#PL2109
$12,495
$13,495
$20,995
$27,810
2014 Ford Focus SE
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Ag Equipment & Farm Tools / Supplies Often featured by our local auctioneers! Check our Auction Calendar for upcoming auctions and the
BIGGEST SALES!
2001 Honda Accord EX Economy and Reliability
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Stk#116T233 GMC 2011 Sierra W/T Ext. cab, one owner trade in, tow package, cruise control, power windows, ready for any job! Stk#574301
$4,495 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Only $15,215 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
6C
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Friday, February 12, 2016
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L AWRENCE J OURNAL -W ORLD
CARS TO PLACE AN AD:
785.832.2222
Honda Cars
Hyundai Cars
2013 Honda Accord EX
2012 Hyundai Elantra Limited Loaded, Navigation, Leather, Moonroof, Alloy Wheels, 61K miles, Thousands less than a Honda. Stk# G077A
classiďŹ eds@ljworld.com Jeep
Lincoln Cars
Nissan Cars
2015 Jeep Wrangler Unlimited Sport
2007 Lincoln MKZ Base
2009 Nissan Maxima 3.5 SV
Luxury at a Discount!
Leather, Sunroof, Loade
Stk#1PL2105
Stk#2PL1952
$11,995
$11,495
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
Oscar Mike Edition. Hardtop Stk#1PL2094
Only $13,495
$30,987
Fully Loaded, 57K miles, Leather, Moonroof, Great Deal, Fully Inspected, Awesome Condition, Well Maintained. Stk# F670A
888-631-6458
Only $13,997
JackEllenaHonda.com
Call Coop at Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
Call Coop at
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Pontiac
Pontiac 2008 Grand Prix FWD, V6, great gas mileage, sporty and fun to drive, power equipment, alloy wheels, spoiler. Stk#38925A
Toyota Vans
2005 Toyota Sienna LE Great Family Van!
Turbo Charged
$8,495
Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
Toyota Cars
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
888-631-6458
2012 Volkswagen Beetle 2.0TSi
Stk#116M169
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Only $7,450
Volkswagen Cars
Stk#216M062
$12,994 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Lincoln Crossovers Nissan Crossovers
2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047
Kia Crossovers
Motorcycle-ATV
JackEllenaHonda.com
We Buy all Domestic cars, trucks, and suvs. Call Scott 785-727-7151
2013 Toyota Sienna LE
2013 Hyundai Accent SE 2012 Kia Sorento LX
Hatchback, Full Power Stk#1PL1937
$10,995 23rd & Alabama - 2829 Iowa
LairdNollerLawrence.com
Honda SUVs
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
Great Space, 77K miles, Local Ower, Automatic, Safe Vehicle, Fully Inspected and Well Maintained. Stk# F368B
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
2010 Honda CR-V 4WD
Dale Willey Automotive 2840 Iowa Street (785) 843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
Only $15,990 Call Coop at
888-631-6458
2015 Lincoln MKC Base
2015 Nissan Pathfinder SL
$47,000 New. Save Big!!
4x4, Low Miles
Stk#PL2107
Stk#115T1025
$32,978
$32,994
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047 JackEllenaHonda.com
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
7 Passenger, Power Sliding Doors, 76K miles, Local Owner, Awesome Condition, Well Maintained. Stk# G040A
Get Ready For The Summer Now! Stk#315T787C
Only $20,490
$10,995
Call Coop at
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
888-631-6458 2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047 JackEllenaHonda.com
Mitsubishi SUVs
2010 Harley Davidson Road King
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Nissan SUVs Volkswagen Cars
2008 Honda CBR 600 4WD Just in time for winter, Moonroof, 115K miles, Local Owner, Great Value Stk# F784A
2013 Hyundai Sonata Limited
Only $14,995
Stk#PL2099 Kia 2006 Sorrento
$16,999
2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047 JackEllenaHonda.com
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
4WD LX, alloy wheels, power equipment, cruise control, great communter car and very affordable. Stk#54420A1
Only $8,555 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
Mitsubishi 2012 Outlander Sport
Nissan 2009 Murano LE
SE, 4wd, one owner, automatic, heated seats, power equipment, great finance terms available. Stk#156781
AWD, leather heated memory seats, power equipment, sunroof, alloy wheels, navigation and premium sound. Stk#423321
Only $13,686
Only $15,718
Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Lincoln Cars
Nissan Cars
Stk#116M448
2007 Toyota Camry Solara SLE
Leather, Roof, Loaded
Call Coop at
888-631-6458
Terrific Condition!
Nissan Trucks
2012 Honda Pilot EX 4WD
$5,995
Leather, Roof, SLE Stk#1PL2070 Volkswagen 2015 Passat
$9,214 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
TSI, one owner, power equipment, only 14K miles— why buy new? Save thousands! Stk#12174
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Only $16,500 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
2007 Honda Rebel 250 Rebel -Cheap Transportation!
Toyota SUVs
Stk#215T1113B
$1,000
Certified Pre-Owned, 4WD, 78K miles, 7 year/100K mile warranty, 8 Passenger, 182-pt. Inspection. Stk# F053A
2013 Hyundai Veloster
2015 Lincoln MKX
2013 Nissan Altima 2.5 SV
2014 Nissan Frontier PRO
Local Trade, Terrific Condition
SV, 38 MPG, Great Deal!
Low Miles, Leather, 4x4
Stk#116L515
Stk#PL2124
Stk#115T1014
$37,995
$14,598
$25,495
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Sporty, Manual Transmission Stk#115T1041
$11,995
Only $23,995 Call Coop at
888-631-6458 2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047 JackEllenaHonda.com
2003 Toyota Highlander Limited
2012 Volkswagen Beetle 2.0TSi
Local Trade, Terrific Condition
AWD, Local Trade
Stk#115T1126A
Stk#1P1244
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
$9,994
$12,995
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Foundation Repair
Home Improvements
888-631-6458 2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047 JackEllenaHonda.com
SERVICES TO PLACE AN AD: Antique/Estate Liquidation
785.832.2222 Carpentry
classiďŹ eds@ljworld.com Cleaning
Decks & Fences
FOUNDATION REPAIR
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 Needing to place an ad?
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 House Cleaner 12 years experience. Reasonable rates. References available Call 785-393-1647
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
HOUSE CLEANER ADDING NEW CUSTOMERS Years of experience, references available, Insured. 785-748-9815 (local)
Concrete Stamped & Reg. Concrete, Patios, Walks, Driveways, Acid Staining & Overlays, Tear-Out & Replacement Jayhawk Concrete Inc. 785-979-5261
785-832-2222
Guttering Services
Higgins Handyman JAYHAWK GUTTERING
New York Housekeeping Accepting clients for weekly, bi-weekly, seasonal or special occasion cleaning. Excellent References. Beth - 785-766-6762
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
SERVICE DIRECTORY 6 LINE SPECIAL!
800-887-6929 www.billfair.com
1 MONTH $118.95/mo. + FREE LOGO 6 MONTHS $91.95/mo. + FREE LOGO CALL 785-832-2222
Seamless aluminum guttering.
Rich Black Top Soil No Chemicals Machine Pulverized Pickup or Delivery Serving KC over 40 years
Many colors to choose from. Install, repair, screen, clean-out. Locally owned. Insured. Free estimates.
785-842-0094 jayhawkguttering.com
913-962-0798 Fast Service
Foundation Repair Foundation & Masonry Specialist /2E6C )C6G6?E:@? +JDE6>D 7@C 2D6>6?ED +F>A )F>AD Foundation Supports & Repair & more. Call 785-221-3568
Interior/exterior painting, roofing, roof repairs, fence work, deck work, lawn care, siding, windows & doors. For 11+ years serving Douglas County & surrounding areas. Insured.
785-312-1917
Home Improvements
Construction & Farm Equipment Hauling 7 & 8 axle lowboy 53’ Stepdeck Small Loads & (G6CD:K6 (G6CH6:89E %@25D Russ Duncan 913-205-9249 killcreektrucking@gmail.com
Painting Interior/Exterior Painting Quality Work Over 30 yrs. exp.
Landscaping
Retired Carpenter, Deck YARDBIRDS LANDSCAPING Father (retired) & Son Repairs, Home Repairs, Interior Wall Repair & Operation W/Experience & Top of the Line Machinery House Painting, Doors, Snow Removal Wood Rot, Power wash Call 785-766-1280 785-766-5285
Pet Services
Personalized, professional, full-service pet grooming. Low prices. Self owned & operated. 785-842-7118 www.Platinum-Paws.com
Plumbing
Kill Creek Trucking LLC
Decks & Fences
DECK BUILDER
Moving-Hauling
913-488-7320
Dirt-Manure-Mulch
Auctioneers
Auctioneers
Deck Drywall Siding Replacement Gutters Privacy Fencing Doors & Trim Commercial Build-out Build-to-suit services
Golden Rule Lawncare Mowing & lawn cleanup Snow Removal Family owned & operated Call for Free Est. Insured. Eugene Yoder 785-224-9436
Fully Insured 22 yrs. experience
Stacked Deck 64<D N 2K63@D +:5:?8 N 6?46D N 55:E:@?D *6>@56= N /62E96CAC@@7:?8 "?DFC65 N JCD 6IA 785-550-5592
Full Remodels & Odd Jobs, Interior/Exterior Painting, Installation & Repair of:
Lawn, Garden & Nursery
Call Lyndsey 913-422-7002
STARTING or BUILDING a Business? 785-832-2222 classifieds@ljworld.com
RETIRED MASTER PLUMBER & Handyman needs small work. Bill Morgan 816-523-5703
Tree/Stump Removal Fredyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Tree Service <NM=HPG W MKBFF>= W MHII>= W LMNFI K>FHO:E Licensed & Insured. 20 yrs experience. 913-441-8641 913-244-7718
KansasTreeCare.com Trimming, removal, & stump grinding by Lawrence locals Certified by Kansas ArboristsAssoc. since 1997
M/6 DA64:2=:K6 :? preservation & restorationâ&#x20AC;? Ins. & Lic. visit online 785-843-TREE (8733)
L awrence J ournal -W orld
Friday, February 12, 2016
| 7C
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
1!/ 5ƫđƫ ! .1 .5ƫāć āāčăĀƫ ƫġƫăƫ Peaslee Tech 29th & Haskell Ave.
PLACE YOUR AD:
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.
HIRING IMMEDIATELY!
Drive for KU on Wheels or Lawrence Transit System
We offer flexible part-time schedules, 80% company paid employee health insurance for full time, career opportunities- MV promotes from within!
LAWRENCE Deliver Newspapers! It’s Fun! Outstanding pay Part-time work
Starting rate is
11.50/hr
$
after paid training, must be 21+ with a good MV Transportation, Inc. driving record. 1260 Timberedge Road, Lawrence, KS
APPLY ONLINE
lawrencetransit.org/employment
WALK INS WELCOME
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.
Under the supervision of the Lead Journeyman Lineman, the Journeyman Lineman is a non-exempt position under FLSA. This position is responsible for maintaining, building, and repairing the electric distribution system. This position operates equipment, digs holes and sets poles, strings wire and other duties related to maintenance of the electric distribution system. Working with underground and overhead electrical lines is required. The employee should have a strong mechanical aptitude, an understanding of electric distribution systems and willingness to learn. Excellent beneifts, retirement and a salary range of $16.15/hr to $24.23/hr. For additional information on this position, contact Chris Croucher at 785-594-6907 or email ccroucher@baldwincity.org Apply no later than 2/26/2016. Application available at City Hall and on our website: www.baldwincity.org Submit applications to Laura Hartman at City Hall or at: lhartman@baldwincity.org EOE
Bookkeeper 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
BusinessOpportunity
BusinessOpportunity
NEW YEAR, NEW AIRLINE Sell your structured settleCAREERS GET FAA certi- ment or annuity payments fied Aviation Technician for CASH NOW. You don’t training. Financial aid for have to wait for your fuqualified students. Career ture payments any placement assistance. Call longer! Call Aviation Institute of Main- 1-800-283-3601 tenance1-877-818-0783 www.FixJets.com
AdministrativeProfessional
Customer Service
11 Hard Workers needed NOW! Sales Support Rep Personalized Brokerage Services seeks a dynamic, organized professional. You’ll be the face of the company to visitors and callers, manage incoming and outgoing mail and voicemail, provide admin support to our sales force, licensing team, case designers and clients. Excellent benefits and pay.
info@accesspbs.com
Funny ‘bout Work Ted: How’s it going at the calendar factory? Bill: Badly! They fired me for taking one day off.
$10 hr to train. Quickly earn $12-$15 hr Weekly pay checks. Paid Vacations No Weekends
Call today! 785-841-9999
DriversTransportation
Healthcare
Come in & Apply!
General
General
HIRING IMMEDIATELY!
Kaw Valley Greenhouses is bringing a Garden Center to Lawrence, and is looking for store Supervisors. Seasonal positions working late March – late June. Day and Weekend Supervisors needed. Full Time and Part Time hours available. All positions pay $11.50/hr. Must be able to train and lead a staff of 5-9 people as well as supervise store operations. For more information and online application visit
kawvalleygreenhouses.com or call: 800-235-3945
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
Warehouse/Back-Up Route Driver Needed! Full-time day shift: Mon-Fri 7am-3:30 pm. Must be 21 with valid DL Appy Online: www.kmtire.com 3801 Greenway Circle Lawrence, KS 66046 Steven.Humbert@kmtire.com
Healthcare Dental Hygienist Respected dental office in Lawrence. Must be energetic, friendly and team oriented.
645 New Hampshire 816-805-6780 jinsco@ljworld.com
PT & FT Garden Center Supervisors
Journeyman Lineman
Grounds/Maintenance Specialist Temporary, full-time 4/1/16-12/16/16. 10 jobs w/ WRD, LLC dba Reed Dillon & Associates, Lawrence, KS & job sites in Douglas(KS), Johnson(KS), Shawnee(KS) & Jackson(MO) cntys. Use hand/power tools/equip. Work w/out close supervision to lay sod, trim, plant, dig/rake/mulch; assist w/ install sprinklers/mortarless concrete masonry wall units. Must use independent judgment; demo tasks to other employees. Non-supervisory. 3 mos. landscape exp. req’d. Lift/carry 50 lbs when nec. Post-accident, upon suspicion, random and employer-paid pre-employment drug test req’d. Backgrnd chk req’d.40 hr/wk 8:00 AM-4:30 PM M-F. Sat. work req’d when nec. Wage is no less than $13.09/hr (OT varies @ $19.64/hr). Raise/bonus at emplr discretion.Transport (incl. meals & as nec, lodging) to place of employ provided or paid to wkrs residing outside normal commute distance by completion of 50% of job period. Return transport provided or paid to same wkrs if wkr completes job period or is dismissed early. Wkrs are guaranteed offer of 3/4 of work hrs each 12-wk period. Tools, supplies, equip & uniform provided at no cost. Potential deduct for reasonable cost of lodging may apply. Emplr may assist to secure wkr-paid lodging if needed. Emplr provides incidental transport btw job sites. Interview req’d. Fax resume to (785) 832-0545 or apply at: Lawrence Workforce Ctr, 2920 Haskell Ave Ste 2, Lawrence, KS 66046, (785) 840-9675. JO#9860293.
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
NEW MANAGEMENT TEAM SEEKING EXPERIENCED
DIRECTOR OF NURSING Apply in person at 1010 East Street Tonganoxie, KS 66086
913-369-8705
Email resume to: the3dentists@gmail.com Or fax resume to: 785-843-1218
Part-Time
Custodian The Lawrence Arts Center seeks a part time Custodian for the Evening shift. Monday-Friday. Hours vary. Prior experience preferred. Send resume by February 17, 2015 to 940 New Hampshire, Lawrence KS 66044 or business@lawrence artscenter.org
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
NOTICES ANNOUNCEMENTS Business Announcements CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE TRAINING! Online Training gets you job ready in months! FINANCIAL AID AVAILABLE for those who qualify! HS Diploma/GED required. & PC/Internet needed! 1-888-512-7120
Special Notices
Special Notices
Special Notices
Special Notices
Are you in BIG trouble with the IRS? Stop wage & bank levies, liens & audits, unfiled tax returns, payroll issues, & resolve tax debt FAST. Call 844-245-2287
CNA/CMA CLASSES!
AUTO INSURANCE STARTING AT $25/ MONTH! Call 877-929-9397
Call now to secure a super low rate on your Mortgage. Don’t wait for Rates to increase. Act Now! Call 1-888-859-9539 A PLACE FOR MOM. The nation’s largest senior living referral service. Contact our trusted, local experts today! Our service is FREE/no obligation. CALL 1-800-717-2905
All Things Basementy! Base- SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILment Systems Inc. Call us ITY BENEFITS. Unable to for all your basement work? Denied benefits? needs! Waterproofing, We Can Help! WIN or Pay Finishing, Structural Nothing! Contact Bill GorRepairs, Humidity and Mold don & Associates at Control FREE ESTIMATES! 1-800-706-8742 to start Call 1-800-998-5574 your application today!
Lawrence, KS 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
Indian Taco Sale! Friday, February 12th 11 AM - 6 PM
Lawrence Indian Methodist Church 950 E. 21st St., Lawrence
Thicker line? Bolder heading? Color background?
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TRUCK DRIVER Drivers needed to haul aggregates and asphalt. Benefits include company paid health care, vacationholiday pay, 401k and match. Apply at Hamm, 609 Perry Place, Perry, KS Equal Opportunity Employer
Tuesday
F E B
February 16, 2016 11:30 AM - 3 PM 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
Peaslee Tech 29th & Haskell Ave.
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Friday, February 12, 2016
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L awrence J ournal -W orld
PUBLIC NOTICES
APARTMENTS
TO PLACE AN AD:
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(First published in the rence, Douglas County, Lawrence Daily Journal- Kansas, on February 25, World January 29, 2016) 2016, at 10:00 AM, the following real estate: IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF Lot 10, Block 7, in Prairie Meadows No. 3, an AddiDOUGLAS COUNTY, tion to the City of LawKANSAS CIVIL rence, Douglas County, DEPARTMENT Kansas, commonly known as 2933 Yellowstone Drive, BOKF, N.A., a national 66047 (the banking association d/b/a Lawrence, KS “Property”) Bank of Kansas City, as to satisfy the judgment in successor in interest by the above-entitled case. merger to Bank of The sale is to be made Oklahoma, N.A without appraisement and Plaintiff, subject to the redemption period as provided by law, vs. and further subject to the approval of the Court. For Chad A. Kills Crow and more information, visit Jamie L. Kills Crow, et al., www.Southlaw.com Defendants. Case No. 15CV282 Court Number: 3 Pursuant to K.S.A. Chapter 60 NOTICE OF SALE Under and by virtue of an Order of Sale issued to me by the Clerk of the District Court of Douglas County, Kansas, the undersigned Sheriff of Douglas County, Kansas, will offer for sale at public auction and sell to the highest bidder for cash in hand, at the Lower Level of the Judicial and Law Enforcement Center of the Courthouse at Lawrence, Douglas County, Kansas, on February 25, 2016, at 10:00 AM, the following real estate: Beginning at the Southwest corner of Lot 19, Golf Club Subdivision in the City of Lawrence, thence 24°23’01” West, North along the West line of said Lot 19, 75.00 feet; thence North 66° 26’ 55” East, 209.40 feet to a point on the East line of said Lot 19; thence South 23° 25’07” East, along said East line, 70.00 feet; thence South 65° 04’ 28” West, 208.20 feet to the point of beginning, in Douglas County, Kansas, commonly known as 2114 Greenbrier Drive, Lawrence, KS 66047 (the “Property”)
Kenneth M. McGovern, Sheriff Douglas County, Kansas Prepared By: SouthLaw, P.C. Kristen G. Stroehmann (KS #10551) 6363 College Blvd., Suite 100 Overland Park, KS 66211 (913) 663-7600 (913) 663-7899 (Fax) Attorneys for Plaintiff (177784) _______ (First published in the Lawrence Daily JournalWorld February 12, 2016) Auction Notice If payment is not received, PS ORANGECO, INC will sell the entire contents of rental spaces at the following locations to the highest bidder on Friday, February 19th, 2016 at 9:30AM. The undersigned will sell personal property including furniture, clothing, tools and/or other household items.
legals@ljworld.com
spection. Proposals shall be submitted in sealed envelopes, addressed to the Office of the County Clerk, Courthouse, 1100 Massachusetts, Lawrence, Kansas 66044, upon which is clearly written or printed “Proposal for Douglas County Project No. 2016-01”, and the name and address of the bidder. Any bids received after the closing time will be returned unopened.
DOUGLAS COUNTY PUBLIC WORKS Keith A. Browning, P.E. Director of Public Works Date: 2/11/2016 Publication Date: Friday, February 12, 2016 Saturday, February 20, 2016 _______
Copies of the Contract Documents and Specifications are available from the Office of the Director of Public Works and County Engineer of Douglas County, Kansas. (First published in the Lawrence Daily JournalAll bids must be accompa- World February 12, 2016) nied by a CERTIFIED CHECK, CASHIER’S CHECK IN THE DISTRICT COURT or a BID BOND for not less OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, than Five Percent (5%) of KANSAS the base bid as a guaranSEVENTH JUDICIAL tee that if awarded the DISTRICT Contract, the bidder will CIVIL DIVISION enter into a Contract and give bond as required. STATE OF KANSAS, ex. rel. Said check or bond shall LAWRENCE / DOUGLAS be made payable to the COUNTY DRUG Board of County Commis- ENFORCEMENT UNIT (DEU) sioners, Douglas County, Plaintiff; Kansas. vs. Contracts will be awarded only to such bidders as are 2009 Ford F-150, VIN: on the list of Pre-Qualified 1FTRF14W99KA97596, Contractors for the Kansas $ 705.00 IN U.S. CURRENCY, Department of Transporta(more or less), And tion on the date estab6,724 grams Marijuana lished for receiving and (more or less), opening of bids. Defendants.
The Board of County Commissioners of Douglas County, Kansas reserve the right to reject any or all bids and to waive technicalities, and to award the contract to the bidder that the Commission deems best suited to ac2223 Haskell Avenue, Lawcomplish the work. rence, KS: G0C4 WAUPOOSE, G0C20 STAFDOUGLAS COUNTY PUBLIC FORD, G0D9 MCADAMS, WORKS G0G16 WELLS, G0G17 WILKeith A. Browning, P.E. LIAMS, G0G5 FRENCH, G0G7 Director of Public Works WHITEBREAST Date: 2/11/2016 811 East 23rd Street, Lawrence, KS (Mailing Address: 2223 Haskell Avenue, Lawrence, KS): G0119 VANNATTA, G0213 HIGGINS, G0214 ROLLINS, G0230 WYRICK, G0319 BARNES, G0512 KNOX, ________
The Board of County Commissioners of Douglas County, Kansas reserve the right to reject any or all bids and to waive technicalities, and to award the contract to the bidder that the Commission deems best suited to accomplish the work.
Publication Date: Friday, February 12, 2016 Saturday, February 20, 2016 _______
to satisfy the judgment in the above-entitled case. (First published in the The sale is to be made Lawrence Daily Journalwithout appraisement and World February 12, 2016) subject to the redemption period as provided by law, (First published in the DOUGLAS COUNTY, and further subject to the Lawrence Daily JournalKANSAS approval of the Court. For World January 29, 2016) PROJECT NO. 2016-05 more information, visit BID #16-F-0008 www.Southlaw.com NOTICE TO CREDITORS NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS Kenneth M. McGovern, THE STATE OF KANSAS TO Notice is hereby given that Sheriff ALL PERSONS CONCERNED: sealed proposals for the Douglas County, Kansas You are hereby notified performance of the conPrepared By: that on December 10, 2015, tract above noted will be SouthLaw, P.C. the decedent, Kathleen M. received in the Office of Kristen G. Stroehmann Beer, died a resident of the Douglas County Clerk (KS #10551) Lawrence, Douglas County, until 3:00 P.M., Friday, 6363 College Blvd., Kansas. Robert S. Hiatt, March 4, 2016, and then Suite 100 with a correct post office publicly opened in the Overland Park, KS 66211 address of 1541 Vanderbilt Courthouse, 1100 Massa(913) 663-7600 Place, Glendale, California chusetts Street, Lawrence, (913) 663-7899 (Fax) 91205, is the Trustee of the Kansas. Attorneys for Plaintiff Kathleen M. Beer Trust es(182937) tablished by the decedent Douglas County Project No. _______ on September 14, 2006, as 2016-05 consists of mixing amended thereafter, the cationic asphalt emulsion, (First published in the water and terms of which provide aggregate, Lawrence Daily Journalthat the debts of the dece- other additives as needed World February 10, 2016) dent may be paid by the and applying the mixture Trustee upon receipt of for sealing the asphalt in Notice to Bidders the following Douglas proper proof thereof. County Subdivisions: Douglas County Foxrun, Quinnt’s, Raeta, All creditors of the deceFairgrounds Arena, dent are notified to pres- and Westpoint. This work Restrooms, & Paving ent their claims against shall include Traffic Conthe Trustee within the trol. Mar Lan Construction is later of four (4) months Foxrun, Raeta, and Westthe CM at Risk for the from the date of the first point Subdivisions are loDouglas County Fairpublication of this notice, cated on Rte 442 between grounds Improvements or thirty (30) days after re- Shawnee County and Highproject. Subcontractor ceipt of actual notice, as way 40, west of Lawrence, bids are now being reprovided by law, and if KS. Quinnt’s Subdivision is ceived for the new Arena, their demands are not thus located on E700 Road Restrooms, and Site Pavexhibited, they shall be south of the N1600/E700 Ining. All bidders who are forever barred against the tersection, west of Lawnot on the Mar Lan ConTrustee and the trust prop- rence, KS. struction pre-approved erty. bidders list and wish to bid All bids must be submitted must submit a Mar Lan on forms obtainable at the Robert S. Hiatt, Trustee Construction prequalificaOffice of the Director of tion form prior to submittPublic Works/County EngiPREPARED BY: ing a bid. Requests for neer, 3755 E. 25th Street, Stevens & Brand, L.L.P. documents, questions, and Lawrence, Kansas 66046 or 900 Massachusetts, bids should be submitted Demand Star @ Ste. 500 to Mar Lan Construction, www.demandstar.com, PO Box 189 1008 New Hampshire, Lawand are open for public inLawrence KS 66044-0189 rence, KS 66044, spection. Proposals shall 785.843.0811 785-749-2647, FAX be submitted in sealed enPeter K. Curran, #06424 785-749-9507, Gale Lantis, velopes, addressed to the ________ gale@marlanconstruction.c Office of the County Clerk, om. Subcontractor bids (First published in the Courthouse, 1100 Massawill be received until 10:00 Lawrence Daily Journal- chusetts, Lawrence, KanAM, Wednesday, February sas 66044, upon which is World February 12, 2016) 17, 2016 at the office of clearly written or printed Mar Lan Construction and “Proposal for Douglas DOUGLAS COUNTY, opened privately. Fax and County Project No.” KANSAS email bids will be ac2016-05”, and the name PROJECT NO. 2016-01 cepted. Scope or schedule and address of the bidder. BID #16-F-0004 questions must be submit- NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS Any bids received after the ted in writing or via email. closing time will be reA payment and perforNotice is hereby given that turned unopened. mance bond may be resealed proposals for the quired in the amount of performance of the con- Copies of the Contract 100% of your subcontract tract above noted will be Documents and Specificaamount. received in the Office of tions are available from ________ the Douglas County Clerk the Office of the Director Public Works and (First published in the until 3:00 P.M., Friday of Lawrence Daily Journal- March 4, 2016, and then County Engineer of DougThe World January 29, 2016) publicly opened in the las County, Kansas. Courthouse, 1100 Massa- contract documents, specIN THE DISTRICT COURT chusetts Street, Lawrence, ifications, and plans become the property of the OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, Kansas. prospective bidder and are KANSAS CIVIL DEPARTMENT Douglas County Project not returnable. Copies of 2016-01 consists of ap- the contract documents, U.S. Bank National proximately 42 miles of specifications, and plans Association single bituminous seals are on file and open for which includes 19.6 miles public inspection at the OfPlaintiff, of shoulders, placing fice of the County EngiMirafi MPV 500 Paving Fab- neer. vs. ric along with a double chip seal on approximately All bids must be accompaby a CERTIFIED Charles B Jarrett and 0.40 miles on various nied Lari L Jarrett, et al. County Routes, County CHECK, CASHIER’S CHECK Defendants. maintained subdivisions, or a BID BOND for not less Township roads, and than Five Percent (5%) of Case No. 15CV105 streets for the City of the base bid as a guaranCourt Number: Lecompton located in tee that if awarded the Pursuant to K.S.A. Douglas County, Kansas Contract, the bidder will Chapter 60 with the option to prime enter into a Contract and and double seal approxi- give bond as required. NOTICE OF SALE mately 1 mile of roadway. Said check or bond shall The work will be per- be made payable to the Under and by virtue of an formed during the Summer Board of County CommisOrder of Sale issued to me of 2016 upon receipt of a sioners, Douglas County, Kansas. by the Clerk of the District “Notice to Proceed”. Court of Douglas County, Kansas, the undersigned All bids must be submitted Contracts will be awarded Sheriff of Douglas County, on forms obtainable at the only to such bidders as are Kansas, will offer for sale Office of the Director of on the list of Pre-Qualified at public auction and sell Public Works/County Engi- Contractors for the Kansas to the highest bidder for neer, 3755 E 25th Street, Department of Transportacash in hand, at the Lower Lawrence, Kansas or De- tion on the date estabLevel of the Judicial and mand Star @ lished for receiving and opening of bids. Law Enforcement Center of www.demandstar.com, the Courthouse at Law- and are open for public in-
Case No. 2016-CV-65 Div. 3 Pursuant to the Kansas Standard Asset Seizure and Forfeiture Act, K.S.A. 60-4101 et seq. NOTICE OF PENDING FORFEITURE Pursuant to K.S.A. 60-4109 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that property herein described has been seized for forfeiture and is pending forfeiture to the State of Kansas, Lawrence / Douglas County Drug Enforcement Unit (DEU) pursuant to Kansas Standard Asset Seizure and Forfeiture Act (KSASFA), K.S.A. 60-4101 et seq. If you have not previously received a Notice of Seizure for Forfeiture, this is notice pursuant to the Act. 1. The 2009 Ford F-150, VIN: 1FTRF14W99KA97596 was seized at mile marker 195, Interstate 70 Highway, Lawrence, Douglas County, Kansas, on or about the 1st day of February, 2016, as property subject to forfeiture. The value of the property has been estimated between $6,000.00 and $9,000.00. 2. The $503, $200 and $2 in U.S. Currency were seized from Andrew Meyer, Anthony Pierce, and the 2009 Ford F-150, VIN: 1FTRF14W99KA97596 respectively, at mile marker 195, Interstate 70 Highway, Lawrence, Douglas County, Kansas, on or about the 1st day of February, 2016, as property subject to forfeiture. 3. The 6,652 grams and 72 grams of Marijuana were seized from the 2009 Ford F-150, VIN: 1FTRF14W99KA97596 at mile marker 195, Interstate 70 Highway, Lawrence, Douglas County, Kansas, in the Ford F-150, VIN: 1FTRF14W99KA97596 on or about the 1st day of February, 2016, as property subject to forfeiture. 4. The conduct giving rise to forfeiture and/or the violation of law alleged: the defendant properties are proceeds of and/or was used or intended to be used in an exchange for controlled substances and/or used or intended to be used to facilitate felony violation(s) of the Uniform Controlled Substance Act, act(s), to wit: Anthony Eli Pierce and Andrew Michael Meyer engaged in unlawful possession of marijuana with intent to distribute, unlawful possession of marijuana, unlawful possession of drug paraphernalia and unlawful acts involving proceeds derived from violations of K.S.A. 21-5701 through 21-5717. The State pleads that presumption of forfeitability exist pursuant to K.S.A. 60-4112(j), (k) and (s). 5. You may do any of the following: (1) File a verified claim with the District Court, Plaintiff’s Attorney and the Seizing Agency contact person; or (2) Do nothing. 6. The law also provides for provisional return of the certain property under certain circumstances including the posting of a surety bond or a court hearing on whether probable cause existed when the property was seized. You may wish to consult with an attorney before deciding what is best for you. However, if no petition or claim is filed within thirty (30) days of mailing/publication of this Notice, your interest in the property described above will be forfeited. All such requests, petitions and claims shall comply with the strict affidavit and informational requirements for claims as set out in K.S.A. 60-4111. Please be aware that it is a crime to falsely verify an ownership interest or other information in any request, petition or claim. Copies for the District Court should be mailed to: Clerk of the Douglas County District Court, Civil
REAL ESTATE
RENTALS
Lawrence
Apartments Unfurnished
Investment / Development
OPPORTUNITY: ~147 Acres~
LAUREL GLEN APTS
Lawrence Schools, large CUSTOM home, barns, 2nd house on property, ponds, just west of 6th & SLTfastest growing intersection in Kansas. $1.6 M
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Some with W/D, Water & Trash Paid, Small Pet, Income Restrictions Apply
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Bill Fair & Company www.billfair.com 800-887-6929
Duplexes
Pomona
2BR in a 4-plex
90 Acres, Franklin Co. 4748 Arkansas Rd Pomona, KS
New carpet, vinyl, cabinets, countertop. W/D is included.
1st Month FREE!
Equal Housing Opportunity. 785-865-2505
Townhomes
90 ac of recreational bliss. Beautiful bldg. sites, pond, creek, big deer. 10 mins from Pomona Lake & Clinton Lake. $265,500 Tom at Hill Realty 785-764-0782
Open House Special!
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785.832.2222
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
Townhomes
Lawrence
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
NOW LEASING Spring - Fall
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 2 BEDROOM WITH LOFT 2 bath, 1 car garage, fenced yard, fire place. 3717 Westland Place $790/month. Available now! 785-550-3427
3 BR w/2 or 2.5 BA W/D hookups, Fireplace, Major Appliances. Lawn Care & Dbl Car Garage! Equal Housing Opportunity
785-865-2505 grandmanagement.net
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 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
785-841-6565
Advanco@sunflower.com Need to sell your car? Place your ad at classifieds.lawrence.com
MERCHANDISE PETS TO PLACE AN AD:
AUCTIONS Auction Calendar 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. Call Today 785-828-4476 or cell 785-229-2369 Visit us on the web: www.HarleyGerdesAuctions.com
Estate Sale 1928 153rd Terr. Basehor Thur. 2/11, Fri. 2/12, Sat. 2/13 8 a.m. - 4 p.m. Antique furniture, lamps, power & misc. garage/shop tools, camp & fish gear, outdoor items, jewelry, designer purses & clothing, dolls & Credit clock collections. cards now accepted. Rain or shine. The estate of Garland and Wilma James. FARM AUCTION: Saturday, Feb 20, 9:30 AM 8758 W. 293rd Osage City, KS J.D. Tractors & Equipment, Pickups, Trailers, Planters, Sprayers, Baler, Daycabs & more! Tools, Shop Items, Farm Collectibles & Misc. Full Listing, Pics & details : www.wischroppauctions.com WISCHROPP AUCTIONS: 785-828-4212 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 RJ’s Mid-Winter Coin & Currency Auction Friday, Feb.19th, 6:00 PM 15767 S. Topeka Avenue Scranton, Kansas Over 300 LOTS! Bid online at www.proxibid.com or see www.rjsauctionservice.com Call 785-793-2500 for questions. Preview at 4:30. RJ’s Auction Service located 11 miles S. of Topeka at Hwy 75 & 56
Auctions PUBLIC AUCTION Sunday, February 14
11:00am
13417 W 94th Street Lenexa, KS INDOORS! Motorcycle, Cannon, Jukebox, Toys, Antiques, Jewelry, Collectibles, Furniture, Tools MORE! For Details Contact: Bradley Chapin 816-820-3313 CHAPINAUCTIONEERS.com
785.832.2222
classifieds@ljworld.com
Estate Sales
Machinery-Tools
Estate Sale 1928 153rd Terr. Basehor
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.
Thur. 2/11, Fri. 2/12, Sat. 2/13 8 a.m. - 4 p.m. Antique & vintage furniture, lamps, light fixtures, misc, sofa sectional sleeper, many tables/chairs, sofa, recliner, musical instruments, sheet music, power & misc. tools, air compressor, motorcycle/ATV jack, helmets, camping/fishing gear, mulcher, edger, chipper, smoker, power washer, costume & fine jewelry, designer purses, clothes - size 0-5, doll collection, clock collection. Credit cards now accepted. Rain or shine. The estate of Garland and Wilma James.
785-841-7635 Please leave a message
Miscellaneous
MERCHANDISE Floor Coverings
Acorn Stairlifts. The AFFORDABLE solution to your stairs!** Limited time- $250 Off your Stairlift Purchase!** Buy Direct & Save. Please call 1-800-304-4489 for Free DVD and brochure.
BEST SALE EVER!!! Need Advertise your product or New Carpet or Floor- service nationwide or by ing??? All this Special region in over 7 million Number for $250.00 off. households in North Limited Time. Free In America’s best suburbs! Home Estimate!! Call Em- Place your classified ad in pire Today@ over 570 suburban news1-844-369-3371 papers just like this one. Find the Right Carpet, Call Classified Avenue at Flooring & Window Treat- 888-486-2466 ments. Ask about our 50% Emergencies can strike at off specials & our Low any time. Wise Food StorPrice Guarantee. Offer Ex- age makes it easy to prepires Soon. Call now pare with tasty, 1-888-906-1887 easy-to-cook meals that have a 25-year shelf life. FREE SAMPLE. Call: Furniture 844-797-6877 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
Safe Step Walk-In Tub Alert for Seniors. Bathroom falls can be fatal. Approved by Arthritis Foundation. Therapeutic Jets. Less Than 4 Inch Step-In. Wide Door. Anti-Slip Floors. American Made. Installation Included. Call 800-715-6786 for $750 Off.
Old fashion Butcher Block Switch to DIRECTV and get a Whole-Home Genie Old fashion Butcher Block FREE Starting Heavy & looks like an ol’ HD/DVR upgrade. at $19.99/mo. FREE 3 fashion butcher block, but it is not solid, has wheels months of HBO, SHOWTIME New Customers on legs ~ was over $ 300 ~ & STARZ. ( moving sale ) asking $40 Only. Don’t settle for cable. Call Now 1-800-897-4169 $40 785-550-4142 Wooden Hutch Wooden Hutch 6 ft x 41 W x 20 D ~ Glass doors & cabinet has shelves ~ bamboo style ~ was over $300 ~ asking $30 ~ ( moving sale) reduced price $30 785-550-4142
Health & Beauty CPAP/BIPAP supplies at little or no cost from Allied Medical Supply Network! Fresh supplies delivered right to your door. Insurance may cover all costs. 800-902-9352 Got Knee Pain? Back Pain? Shoulder Pain? Get a pain-relieving brace -little or NO cost to you. Medicare Patients Call Health Hotline Now! 1-800-900-5406
PUBLIC NOTICES Division, 111 E. 11th Street, /s/Patrick J. Hurley, #17638 Lawrence, Kansas 66044. Assistant District Attorney Copies for the Law En- Douglas County District forcement Agency should Attorney’s Office be mailed to: 111 E. 11th Street Sergeant Cooper, Law- Lawrence, Kansas 66044 rence Police Department, (785) 841-0211 4820 Billings Parkway, Fax: (785) 832-8202 Lawrence, Kansas 66049. phurley@douglas-county.com Attorney for Plaintiff Issued this 10th day of _______ February, 2016.
Music-Stereo
GARAGE SALES Lawrence American Estate Sales Estate CLEANOUT Sale 1704 Alabama St
Friday, Feb. 12, 9-5 Saturday, Feb 13, 9-5 Sunday, Feb 14, 9-4 Parking is limited, please be advised. 8 spaces in alley. Respect the neighbors.
Vintage Retro Antiques Thousand items of clothing (sz s/m only) $1 ea. 6 for a dollar on Sunday. Collection of blue glazed pots, furniture, beds, antiques, ammo kit, ammunition, tools, small trailer, books, shell collection, grass roots, blue grass, old country Americana books and sheet music, clogging shoes, t-shirts & paper items from Lawrence music past (Sunday half off). *Clothes 6 for a dollar* Bring truck and men to move items. No early callers!!!
H U G E DOWNSIZING SALE
2908 Sagebrush Dr. Friday, Feb. 12, 8-4 Saturday, Feb. 13, 8-2 Furniture,Electronics, toys, Baby clothes, Camping equip., Books, Games Holiday Decorations, Garage Miscellaneous, Collectibles John Deere Riding lawn mower & SO much more.
Eudora Eudora Parks & Recreation Multi-Family & Friends
Garage & Rummage
SALE Saturday, Feb. 13 9am-12 Noon
Free to a Good Home! Ellington Antique Grand Upright Piano, great sound. Made by Baldwin Company. You Haul :-) Plesae call: 785-841-2990
Eudora Community Ctr
PIANOS
PETS
• H.L. Phillips upright $650 •Whitney Spinet - $500 • Cable Nelson - $500 • Gulbranson Spinet - $450
1630 Elm Street
Pets
Prices include tuning & delivery
785-832-9906
Sports Fan Gear Own a piece of KU Jayhawk History!
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
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
FREE ADS for merchandise
under $100
CALL 785-832-2222