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WEDNESDAY • MARCH 23 • 2016
Supreme Court impeachment bill barely advances
SWEET TALK
By John Hanna
More inside
Associated Press
Topeka — A bill declaring that Kansas Supreme Court justices can be impeached for attempting to infringe on the Legislature’s power was narrowly approved Tuesday in the state Senate, but a split among majority Republicans signaled the measure could face difficulty moving ahead. The Senate’s vote of 2119 reflected some misgivings within its GOP supermajority about a proposal that critics labeled an at- LEGISLATURE tack on the court system’s independence. The measure goes next to the House, where similar divisions among Republicans exist. It’s the latest in a series of initiatives putting Kansas at the center of a national effort by GOP conservatives to remake state courts. Those have included failed efforts to change how Supreme Court justices are chosen and a threat by lawmakers — later dropped — to
Mike Yoder/Journal-World Photo
KANSAS COACH BILL SELF TALKS TO MEMBERS OF THE MEDIA TUESDAY at the Hyatt Regency Downtown hotel after the Jayhawks arrived in Louisville, Ky. Kansas plays Maryland in a Sweet 16 matchup on Thursday.
The lowdown on Louisville for KU basketball fans in downtown Louisville.
By Sara Shepherd Twitter: @saramarieshep
Kansas University basketball fans bound for Louisville are in for a long drive but should find a lot to do once they arrive in this colorful and historic Kentucky city, located on the Ohio River. Here’s what you need to know about the game, the KU Alumni Association fan events and things to do
SWEET 16 SECTION COMING THURSDAY
Game time KU tips off against the Maryland Terrapins at approximately 9:40 p.m. (Eastern Time) Thursday. Maryland — coached by former KU basketball player Mark Turgeon (1983-87) — is the No. 5 seed in the NCAA Tournament South Regional bracket.
Thursday’s Journal-World will feature a special section — Journey to the Sweet 16 — providing pictorial highlights of KU’s season and its run thus far in the NCAA Tournament. The special section will be available at newsstands across the area for a $2 price.
Please see LOUISVILLE, page 2A
See more NCAA Tournament coverage in Sports, 1C
• New school finance bills introduced. Page 3A • Lawmakers reject effort to repeal Common Core standards. Page 6A • Senate declines to debate phase out of sales tax on food. Page 6A nullify the court system’s entire budget. The vote Tuesday also came less than six weeks after the Supreme Court ordered lawmakers to increase state aid for poor school districts — or face having all public schools shut down in July. Supporters said the bill simply gives examples of what the state constitution means when it says Supreme Court justices can be impeached and removed from office for “high crimes and misdemeanors.” The new list would include “wanton or reckless judicial conduct” and “attempting to usurp the power” of legislators or executive-branch officials. Please see JUDGES, page 6A
City Commission delays decision on HERE parking ‘mess’ By Nikki Wentling Twitter: @nikkiwentling
The Lawrence City Commission delayed, for a second time, a decision on what commissioners and developers have called a “mess” of a parking situation for a large apartment and retail structure near Kansas University. After hearing about a parking plan slightly revised from what it had been in January, com-
missioners again gave direction to developers on how they want it fixed before they’d approve it. HERE @ Kansas is an under-construction development at 1101 and 1115 Indiana streets that comprises 624 bedrooms and approximately 13,500 square feet of retail space. Under the previous City Commission, it received an incentive package from the city including a 10-year, 85 percent tax rebate. Please see PARKING, page 2A
Business Classified Comics Crave
Low: 36
Today’s forecast, page 10A
Tuesday marked the first City Commission meeting — and the second day on the job — for Tom Markus, Lawrence’s new city manager. Commissioners recognized Markus at the outset of the meeting Tuesday. A public welcome reception will be held for him April 6 from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. in the auditorium of the Lawrence Public Library,
707 Vermont St. Markus talked to the Breakfast Optimist Club on Tuesday morning, saying his first six months on the job “will be full immersion.” “It’s good to finally be here,” he told commissioners. “We’re starting to get familiar with some of the John Young/Journal-World Photo faces and some of the locaNew Lawrence City Manager Tom Markus, left, is introtions in town. It’s started, duced at Tuesday’s City Commission meeting. Pictured at and it’s started well.” — Nikki Wentling right is Assistant City Manager Diane Stoddard.
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High: 77
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Confederate flag ban
Vol.158/No.83 38 pages
A Lawrence school board advisory committee is considering a districtwide ban on the Confederate flag after students submitted a petition. Page 3A
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Wednesday, March 23, 2016
LAWRENCE
.
DEATHS
Mike Yoder/JournalWorld File Photo
THE HERE @ KANSAS apartment and retail project at 1111 Indiana St. is seen looking south from the intersection of 11th and Indiana streets.
KEITH ALBERDING Making you comfortable was what Keith Alberding lived for. Whether that was as a friend, a coworker, a patient in the ER, church member or listening to him sing and play it was about you. His life began September 5, 1948 and ended March 18, 2016. He was a long time resident of Lawrence, Ks. Keith Bender (Chad Bender) of was a graduate of Olathe, Ks., Geoff Branine Hardtner High in south (Robin), grandchildren central Kansas, Braden and Ashley of Southwestern College in Louisburg, Ks. Winfield,Ks, St Paul’s He was previously School of Theology, KC, married to Deborah Mo with a Masters of “Mickie” Voelzke. Divinity and A BSN from Daughters Korrin Washburn University. (Adrian Alberding Proctor) and Under that calm, cool granddaughter Parker of demeanor was a full of life Lawrence and Lindsey personality. Keith blessed Tucker (Jamie Tucker almost everyone with a Broomall) of Seattle, WA., nickname. Sweetie, granddaughters Aurora Toodles, Booger Poot, and Luna. Pumpkin, Baby Doll are A brother, Bruce, but a few examples. Most Logan, Ks., sister Gayle of them you could repeat. (Tom Jackson) Newton, He excelled in trivial Ks., nephews Brett knowledge, joke telling, Jackson, (KC, Mo.) and joke listening, incredible Nick Jackson (Marshall, hugs, antique shopping, Mo.). facial expressions, verbal Memorials may be expressions, and a total directed to: Midnight lack of boundaries. With Farm, 2084B No. 600 Rd., a singing voice of an angel Baldwin,Ks. 66006. and an incredible vocal Midnight Farm strives to range, he often said that make a difference in the his version of heaven was lives of adults and singing and playing his children with special banjo with his band. That needs. To share stories or he was adored by many express condolences, was in evidence by the please go to Keith’s face steady stream of visitors book page. at Lawrence Memorial The family has no Hospital. words to express their He was a Methodist appreciation for the minister at Grinter Chapel tender love and care (KCK), Lawrence given to Keith and family Centenary, Linwood and and friends while at Vinland Churches. Lawrence Memorial Keith's career in Hospital. Special nursing spanned from recognition to the May 1987 February 2015, Emergency Dept., including 17 years as an Oncology and 3rd floor ER nurse. He was an west. And a shout out to accomplished musician The Roost for always and was with Bluestem providing smiles, great Band as a vocalist and service and excellent food banjo player. He had for Keith. played with Marvin Pine A Celebration of Life (Kathy) and Jim Rood will be held Saturday, (Terry) for over 30 years. April 2, 2016 at Midnight Other members, over the Farm, 2084 No. 600 Rd., years, include: Stan Rood Baldwin,Ks. beginning at (Patti), Rick Marshall 5:30 p.m. Food and soft (Lisa Valburg) and Larry beverages will be served. Lintner (Audrey). Musicians please bring Survived by his loving your instruments!! wife Judi (Leaming Please sign this Branine). Stepchildren guestbook at Obituaries. include: Tina Branine LJWorld.com.
ADELAIDE ELLEN SPALDING Adelaide Ellen Spalding, 78, of Lawrence, passed away on March 16, 2016. No Services are planed. More info at rumseyyost.com
Louisville CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A
KU plays the second game of the night in Louisville; Miami-Villanova starts at 7:10 p.m. (Eastern Time). The winners of each game will play Saturday in Louisville, time TBA. For full KU basketball coverage, visit KUSports. com.
Venue KFC Yum! Center, 1 Arena Plaza, Louisville, Ky. A few facts about KFC Yum! Center: Capacity is 22,090, and in addition to hosting entertainers and other sporting events, the arena is the official home of the University of Louisville men’s and women’s basketball programs. Open practice Fans can watch the Jayhawks warm up from 3:10 p.m. to 4 p.m. today at KFC Yum!, according to
L awrence J ournal -W orld
Parking CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A
Developers’ original plan for an automated parking garage for the site was thwarted when the company building it went bankrupt in October. They’ve since been working on a solution to meet the city’s parking requirements with the alreadyconstructed parking deck, which was not built to city standards for a self-park garage. “This is just a mess I feel like I’m continuing to have to clean up,” said Vice Mayor Leslie Soden, after about two hours of discussion. “I do want to see the project successful, no matter how nasty I may say things. It was stuck in our laps, and we have to make the best of what we can.” James Letchinger, the president of the company behind HERE, responded, saying: “This is a mess, and I wish I wasn’t involved in it, either.” “We tried to give you every piece of documentation humanely possible to explain how this works,” Letchinger said. “We’re stuck. We’ve done everything we can to solve our problem.” Letchinger proposed Tuesday operating the parking deck with valets, which would cut the number of spaces in the garage and put the development about 100 short of what the city requires. Because of the shortfall, Letchinger suggested filling only 592 of 624 bedrooms and not filling any retail space until more parking were secured. Letchinger said he’s close to proposing a solution that would create another 100 spaces, though he didn’t divulge details Tuesday. Commissioner Matthew
“
This is just a mess I feel like I’m continuing to have to clean up.” — Vice Mayor Leslie Soden Herbert presented another option that the City Commission directed developers to plan: filling only 486 bedrooms and at least some of the retail space by the time the development opens this August. Herbert said he did not want 108 on-street spaces to be counted toward resident parking, but devoted to the retail. “My concern is, this entire agreement was made with the city based on the notion of this being mixed-use,” Herbert said. “I’ve got to think the (Neighborhood Revitalization Act) would never have happened if they said, ‘Hey, we want to throw up an enormous apartment house.’ What I want to see happen is the mixed-use, from day one.” Commissioners also told developers they didn’t want an entrance to the parking deck off 11th Street, and instead wanted vehicle elevators added into the garage for valets’ use. Mayor Mike Amyx reiterated that he wanted the parking spaces and aisles in the garage to be built to city standards, saying, “I really believe in our code.” But Letchinger said it was impossible with how the columns were built to make the spaces and aisles wide enough to meet code. “What a mess,” Amyx responded. The commission is expecting to see the issue again in two weeks, at the latest. In other business, com-
Celebrating in Lawrence? Mind the glass If Kansas defeats Maryland and you’re celebrating on Massachusetts Street this weekend, be aware: Glass bottles aren’t allowed, and security cameras may be on you. An Elite Eight appearance would trigger a ban on glass bottles and other beverage containers on downtown streets and
sidewalks. The ban will run from noon Saturday to 6 a.m. Monday. If caught with glass, violators face a misdemeanor punishable by a fine of up to $100. The Lawrence Police Department announced via its Twitter account Tuesday that officers would be visiting downtown businesses this week, request-
associate athletics direc- be bought and sold directtor Jim Marchiony. ly with other fans through the official NCAA Ticket Drive from Lawrence Exchange. It’s going to take a lot longer than it did to get Pre-party and pep rally Where KU goes, the to Des Moines. Time to drive from Lawrence to KU Alumni Association Louisville is 8 hours 15 party follows. Thursday’s pre-game minutes, via Interstate 70 and Interstate 64 east, ac- party is set for 3:30 p.m. to cording to Google Maps. 6:30 p.m. (Eastern Time) in Cascade A, B and C Tickets rooms of the Kentucky KU does not have any International Conventickets available for the tion Center, 221 S. Fourth public, Marchiony said. St. in Louisville, about a According to the KFC block south of the arena. Yum! Center, tickets can (Use the Market Street
ing they serve drinks in plastic containers. Your celebrations may also be on security footage. Though the LPD does not use downtown security cameras year-round, they are placed there temporarily to manage and oversee NCAA Tournament celebrations. — Nikki Wentling
entrance.) A pep rally featuring the KU spirit squad is set for 6:15 p.m., so fans who want to watch the early game have time to get there afterward.
Weather Pack an umbrella. The National Weather Service predicts highs in the 50s and 60s for the weekend, with an 80 percent chance of rain and thunderstorms Thursday. What to do in Louisville About five blocks west
missioners: l Voted 3-2 to deny local businessman Rick Sells’ request to move a shooting range into a vacant industrial building at 1021 E. 31st Street, near the 31st and Haskell intersection. Amyx, Soden and Commissioner Stuart Boley voted against a rezoning that would’ve allowed it. Herbert and Commissioner Lisa Larsen voted for the shooting range to be located there. A site plan for Sells’ backup location, in the southwest corner of The Malls shopping center, has already received approval from the city planning office. Because that location is already zoned to allow a shooting range, the plan does not have to go to the City Commission for approval. The city received no correspondence from anyone in favor of The Malls location. Lawrence School Board Member Shannon Kimball and Colby Wilson, director of the Lawrence Boys & Girls Club, spoke against the 31st and Haskell location, saying it would make the area unsafe for students. Kimball said the school board did not have a position regarding The Malls location. “It’s forced me to open a gun range at a busy intersection,” Sells said. “If the people of Lawrence have a problem with that, they can come up here and talk to these people.” l Voted 5-0 to allow the Downtown Lawrence Farmers’ Market to move its Tuesday evening markets to the plaza area near the Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. Tuesday markets start May 3 and run from 4 to 6 p.m. — City Hall reporter Nikki Wentling can be reached at 832-7144 and nwentling@ljworld.com.
of the KFC Yum! Center on Main Street you’ll find the Louisville Slugger Museum and Factory, open daily (look for the giant bat). On the way is the Evan Williams Bourbon Experience, at Sixth and Main streets, where you can tour an operating artisanal distillery, learn about Kentucky bourbon history and — yes — try some if you’re old enough. The featured exhibition right now at the Frazier History Museum, also downtown at 829 W. Main St., is called “Spirits of the Bluegrass: Prohibition and Kentucky.” Downtown Louisville also is home to the Louisville Riverwalk and Waterfront Park along the Ohio River, the Muhammad Ali Center, the Kentucky Science Center and plenty of restaurants.
Here for the Future
GENERAL MANAGER Scott Stanford, 832-7277, sstanford@ljworld.com
EDITORS Chad Lawhorn, managing editor 832-6362, clawhorn@ljworld.com Tom Keegan, sports editor 832-7147, tkeegan@ljworld.com Ann Gardner, editorial page editor 832-7153, agardner@ljworld.com Kathleen Johnson, advertising manager 832-7223, kjohnson@ljworld.com
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CALL US Let us know if you have a story idea. Email news@ljworld.com or contact one of the following: Arts and entertainment: .................832-6388 City government: ..............................832-7144 County government: .......................832-7259 Courts and crime: ..............................832-7284 Datebook: ............................................832-7190 Kansas University: ............................832-7187 Lawrence schools: ...........................832-6314 Letters to the editor: ........................832-7153 Local news: ..........................................832-7154 Obituaries: ............................................832-7151 Photo reprints: ....................................832-7141 Society: ..................................................832-7151 Soundoff: .............................................832-7297 Sports: ...................................................832-7147 SUBSCRIPTIONS: 832-7199 Didn’t receive your paper? For billing, vacation or delivery questions, call 832-7199. Weekday: 6 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Weekends: 6 a.m.-10 a.m. In-town redelivery: 6 a.m.-10 a.m. Published daily by The World Company at Sixth and New Hampshire streets, Lawrence, KS 66044-0122. Telephone: 843-1000; or toll-free (800) 578-8748.
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LOTTERY SATURDAY’S POWERBALL 11 23 43 54 60 (3) TUESDAY’S MEGA MILLIONS 6 19 34 38 70 (5) SATURDAY’S HOT LOTTO SIZZLER 12 19 36 43 45 (13) MONDAY’S SUPER KANSAS CASH 5 15 16 24 27 (16) TUESDAY’S KANSAS 2BY2 Red: 5 18; White: 5 6 TUESDAY’S KANSAS PICK 3 (MIDDAY) 5 9 0 TUESDAY’S KANSAS PICK 3 (EVENING) 7 6 7
Kansas wheat +2 cents, $4.77 See more stocks and commodities in the USA Today section.
BIRTHS Eric and Nikki Dayton, Lawrence, a boy, Tuesday Rabia Sipahi Akbas and Ferhat Akbas, Lawrence, a boy, Tuesday Rochelle and Darik Schmoe, Lawrence, a girl, Tuesday
CORRECTIONS
The Journal-World’s policy is to correct all significant errors that are brought to the editors’ attention, usually in this space. If you believe we — KU and higher ed reporter have made such an error, Sara Shepherd can be reached at call 785-832-7154, or email sshepherd@ljworld.com or 832-7187. news@ljworld.com.
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Lawrence&State
Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com/local l Wednesday, March 23, 2016 l 3A
Panels roll out new plans for school funding
Before the ‘Encore’
spending, and no district would get less overall funding than it is getting New school finance this year. bills were introduced in The bills are aimed at the Kansas House addressing a Kanand Senate on sas Supreme Court Tuesday that would ruling in February rewrite the formuthat struck down las for distributing the current methso-called “equalizaod of distributing tion” aid to local those funds as unLEGISLATURE constitutional beschool districts. But unlike earcause it resulted in lier versions that failed some districts, including to gain traction in ei- Lawrence, being overther chamber, the new taxed compared with othbills would spend only er districts. about $4.4 million more Please see FUNDING, page 4A than the state is already By Peter Hancock
Twitter: @LJWpqhancock
John Young/Journal-World Photo
FROM LEFT, FREE STATE HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS ERNESTO HODISON, DEVIN KIRBY AND RAEMONA WILSON rehearse Tuesday evening at FSHS for the upcoming “Encore 2016” concert. Showtimes are 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Friday and Saturday.
Fire damages apartments; nobody injured By Conrad Swanson
Richard Gwin/ Journal-World Photo
Twitter: @Conrad_Swanson
Firefighters are investigating the cause of a two-alarm fire Tuesday afternoon at Orchard Corners Apartments in west Lawrence. No injuries were reported. At 12:12 p.m. a fire was reported on the balcony of a third-floor apartment at 1403 Apple Lane, near the intersection of Kasold Drive and Bob Billings Parkway, said Lawrence-Douglas County Fire Medical Division Chief Bill Stark. Flames and heavy smoke emerged from the apartment and the roof. Most of the flames were knocked down within 10 minutes of firefighters arriving on scene, Stark said.
FIREFIGHTERS WORK TO CONTROL A FIRE TUESDAY at Orchard Corners Apartments, 1403 Apple Lane. “But it took us quite some time to bring it totally under control,” he added. “Because of the design of the building, it’s very tall and there are a lot of hidden areas where the fire can go.” Crews remained on scene into the evening, checking the complex to ensure the fire was out, Stark said.
Two third-floor apartments received the bulk of the fire, smoke and water damage, Stark said. Many residents living in other apartments in the building were allowed inside Tuesday afternoon. — Reporter Conrad Swanson can be reached at cswanson@ljworld.com or 832-7144.
SCHOOL BOARD
Committee considers Confederate flag ban By Rochelle Valverde Twitter: @RochelleVerde
The Lawrence school board’s policy advisory committee is considering whether to recommend a districtwide ban on the Confederate flag. Three Free State High School students — Abena Peasah, Seamus Ryan and Maame Britwum — attended the board’s meeting Monday and submitted a student petition in sup-
port of creating a district policy to ban the flag. “We, along with hundreds of students from both high schools who have signed the petition, believe that the district has failed its students by ignoring the hostile and disrespectful environment that the Confederate flag promotes,” said Peasah, a junior at Free State and one of the students who drafted the petition. Please see FLAG, page 4A
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Funding CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A
Still, the complexity of the new proposal left many people scratching their heads, trying to figure out which districts would be better or worse off than they are now, and whether it would be seen as acceptable when it’s reviewed again by the Supreme Court. “If you look at what the court actually asked for, it would have been $71 million this school year and $38 million next year, so I’m not sure the way we’ve designed this that it would jibe with the adequacy piece (of the lawsuit),” said Sen. Laura Kelly, D-Topeka. But Senate Ways and Means Chairman Ty Masterson, R-Andover, said he was confident the bill would pass court muster because it is based on a
Flag CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A
The student petition followed an incident in January in which a Free State student flew a full-sized confederate flag from his pickup truck that he parked on school grounds. Some students were upset by the flag, which was displayed from its makeshift flagpole for several days before school administration told the student he could no longer display it. Peasah said that the Confederate flag’s presence on the school grounds endangers the quality of learning for students in the district and should be included with other banned expression. “We, the students of the Lawrence public school district, fail to see how the district can ban hate mes-
LAWRENCE • STATE
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formula used elsewhere in the state’s school funding system that the court has previously upheld. The purpose of equalization aid is to subsidize the property tax levies of less wealthy districts so that all districts can raise comparable amounts of money with comparable tax rates. The bill deals with equalization aid in two areas: local option budgets, which districts can choose to provide on top of their base, statefunded budgets, within limits; and capital outlay budgets, which are generally used for big-ticket purchases such as new equipment and furniture or building renovations. Previously, each of those has been governed by different equalization formulas, ones that Masterson said were developed more for political reasons than for any real policy consideration. But last year, lawmakers repealed those sages on clothing, but not apply those restrictions to one of the most hateful messages in American history,” Peasah said. “We fail to see how we can have a ban on gang symbols, but not on those of white supremacy.” School board President Vanessa Sanburn told the students Monday that the policy advisory committee would review the issue. In addition to Sanburn, the committee is made of up of school board member Shannon Kimball and Dave Cunningham, director of human resources and legal services for the district. The committee met Tuesday to discuss the student petition. Sanburn told the Journal-World after the meeting that she personally agrees with the students and that the committee as a whole is thoroughly considering a districtwide ban of the flag.
Peter Hancock/Journal-World Photo
SENATE WAYS AND MEANS CHAIRMAN TY MASTERSON, R-ANDOVER, and ranking Democrat Laura Kelly of Topeka confer during a hearing on a new proposal for school funding equalization formula. formulas, used a different method of calculating that aid, and folded both of those funds in with each district’s general state aid, and distributed it all in the form of a block grant. The two new bills would pull capital outlay
and local option budget aid back out of the block grant and apply a single, uniform formula for calculating each type of aid. Under the new formulas, most districts would receive more aid for capital outlay but substantially
“
I certainly want (the students) to recognize that the hesitation and discussion that we’re putting into it doesn’t mean that I don’t fully support where they’re coming from and don’t agree completely that the Confederate flag is inappropriate.” — School board President Vanessa Sanburn
“I think, especially given the current political climate that we’re in where ideas of white supremacy and hate speech are gaining some momentum in certain political groups, it’s a scary time,” Sanburn said. “And as a board member and as a person who cares about these issues, I want to take a very vocal stand against that.” However, Sanburn said she realizes that those concerns have to be balanced with freedom of speech, and the policy committee is consulting with legal
counsel as it considers a recommendation. “At the same time, I think it’s important that we recognize our country has very strong laws about freedom of speech,” Sanburn said. “And I don’t want to make a decision as a board member that would tie us up in litigation and cost the district a ton of money defending a policy that may be unconstitutional. And so it’s a matter of figuring out where that balance lies.” The reason that the student was disallowed
L awrence J ournal -W orld less for local option budgets. The net effect statewide would be a reduction of $59.4 million, compared with what districts are receiving this year. But that money, plus about $2 million more, would be redistributed to those districts that would otherwise lose money, holding them harmless from the change. Under that plan, the Lawrence school district would gain $656,309 in capital outlay aid, but it would lose nearly $2.4 million in local option budget aid, for a net loss of $1.7 million. But that money would be replaced with $1.7 million in “hold harmless” money. That new system would be in place only for the 2016-2017 school year. Lawmakers are expected to adopt a new, long-term funding formula before the end of the 2017 session. The Lawrence district has already adopted the highest local option budget allowed, roughly 33
percent of its general state aid. The loss of state aid in that category would result in the district having a smaller local option budget, although there would be more in its general operating budget. The district could, however, raise its local option budget property tax to make up the difference, resulting in higher overall spending authority. The Senate Ways and Means Committee plans to continue its hearing on the bill this morning, and could vote as early as this afternoon to send it to the full Senate. The House Appropriations Committee is working on a similar schedule. Lawmakers are planning to adjourn the 2016 regular session on Thursday and will not return until late April for the annual wrap-up session.
from flying the flag was not because of any school rule or district policy that specifically prohibits the flag, but instead because administrators decided it was disrupting the learning environment. Without a specific policy banning the flag, future decisions regarding its display would be made on a case-by-case basis. Sanburn said she plans to arrange meetings between the policy advisory committee and students from both high schools who are involved with the petition. The dates for those meetings are not set, but Sanburn said she is hoping to schedule them for late April. “We just want to make sure that we get some student representation as we discuss and make decisions about the recommendation that the policy subcommittee wants to bring to the board,” Sanburn said.
If the committee decides to recommend a districtwide ban, that proposal would be submitted to the school board for approval. Sanburn said she is doesn’t want the multiple steps of the process to indicate a lack of support. “I certainly want (the students) to recognize that the hesitation and discussion that we’re putting into it doesn’t mean that I don’t fully support where they’re coming from and don’t agree completely that the Confederate flag is inappropriate,” Sanburn said. “But I think there’s more to it than that and I’m anxious to engage in those conversations.” The committee’s next meeting is April 5 at 9:30 a.m. at the district offices, 110 McDonald Drive.
— Statehouse reporter Peter Hancock can be reached at 354-4222 or phancock@ljworld.com.
— K-12 education reporter Rochelle Valverde can be reached at rvalverde@ljworld.com or 832-6314.
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Wednesday, March 23, 2016
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Businessman to ask county to support installing traffic light at SLT intersection By Elvyn Jones Twitter: @ElvynJ
A Lawrence businessman will ask the Douglas County Commission today to support his alternatives to closing access to the South Lawrence Trafficway from Kasold Drive, including the idea of a traffic light at the intersection. The Kansas Department of Transportation has announced that in October it will eliminate Kasold Drive access to the South Lawrence Trafficway — which is also Kansas Highway 10 — as the eastern leg of the SLT opens. Douglas County Public Works Director Keith Browning said traffic on K-10 was expected to increase significantly with the SLT’s opening, and KDOT was concerned about safety issues at the at-grade Kasold Drive intersection about one mile west of U.S. Highway 59. Frank Male, whose Lawrence Landscape has a nursery south of the intersection, said he would ask commissioners to send a letter of support for short-
and long-term alternatives to eliminating highway access from Kasold Drive, which is East 1150 Road south of the highway. He would ask the Lawrence City Commission for the same support at a later meeting, he said. The short-term solution would be installation of a temporary traffic light at the intersection, which would stop traffic on the highway only when vehicles were waiting on the side streets, Male said. The long-term solution would be construction of a Kasold Drive interchange when the west leg of K-10 is expanded to four lanes in the future. Male said he would share with county commissioners plans for the interchange he had Landplan Engineering develop. The interchange’s separated-grade design would provide entry and exit lanes for eastbound and westbound K-10 traffic at Kasold Drive. The plan would realign Kasold Drive/East 1150 Road about 100 yards to the west. It includes a frontage road south of the
highway from East 1150 Road to Wakarusa Drive. KDOT currently is studying possible designs for an expansion of the SLT west of U.S. Highway 59. But there is no funding in place to expand the road, and KDOT officials have said the earliest a project could start would be 2020. When the four-lane expansion is approved, KDOT plans a separatedgrade interchange to serve the Youth Sports Complex near the intersection of the SLT and Wakarusa Drive. But Male noted that interchange would not provide direct access north into Lawrence or provide those south of the highway access to K-10. Closing access from East 1150 Road to Kansas Highway 10 would force many in the area south of the highway to use County Road 458 and U.S. Highway 59 to get into Lawrence, Male said. The added traffic would increase the danger at the at-grade CR 458/U.S. 59 intersection, which has no traffic light, he said. The closure also would
add traffic to the Clinton Dam road, Male said. He hoped KDOT would reconsider the alternatives with the letters of support from the two commissions, but said he wasn’t sure department officials could be swayed. “I’ve been told KDOT can pretty much do what they want,” he said. “The ball is 100 percent in their court.” The County Commission will meet at 4 p.m. today at the Douglas County Courthouse, 1100 Massachusetts St. — County reporter Elvyn Jones can be reached at 832-7166 and ejones@ljworld.com.
Twitter: @ElvynJ
About 20 residents attended Monday’s Baldwin City Council meeting despite an agenda that had nothing requiring council members to vote. The draw was Baldwin City Public Works Director Bill Winegar’s report on the status of negotiations with the Kansas Department of Transportation about proposed improvements to the U.S. Highway 56 corridor from First to Eisenhower streets. In July 2015, the City Council hired BG Consultants to make application for Kansas Department of Transportation corridor management access construction funds to improve safety on that section of U.S. 56. Early plans shared with the council last year indicated the proposed project would widen the highway to three lanes from First Street to the current Eisenhower Street alignment. It would reroute Eisenhower Street so that it aligns with Third Street to the south of the highway and move the U.S. 56 access to Washington Street to the east so it is halfway between Second and Third streets. The proposal of most concern to residents after last summer’s discussion, however, was the proposed closure of through traffic
of Third Street with the installation of an over-theroadway signal at that location. A final improvement would be the installation of a block of sidewalk on the west side of Eisenhower north of the highway. Based on the U.S. 56/ High Street intersection project, it would probably be at least two years before work started on the proposed improvements, Winegar said. KDOT provided up to $775,000 for the High Street project with the city paying 60 percent of the $137,000 cost of engineering, design and right of way acquisition. Douglas County paid the remaining 40 percent of those costs.
on Washington Street from the highway to Ames Street. Residents said the closure would funnel too much traffic onto First and Eisenhower streets and increase emergency response times. The partial Washington Street closure remained part of a conceptual plan Winegar shared Monday with the City Council, as did the addition of a middle turn lane on the highway, construction of sidewalks on both sides of U.S. 56 along the section and rerouting of Eisenhower and Washington to the east. Winegar noted, however, the city and KDOT were still in negotiations and no funding had been approved for the project. New in the plans shared Monday was the replacement of the current highway crosswalk signal west
— County reporter Elvyn Jones can be reached at 832-7166 or ejones@ljworld.com.
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6A
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Wednesday, March 23, 2016
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LAWRENCE • STATE
Effort to repeal Common Core fails By Peter Hancock Twitter: @LJWpqhancock
After the Kansas House spent more than three hours Tuesday debating a bill that would have repealed the Common Core curriculum standards for English language arts and math in the state, it failed to receive first-round approval by a vote of 44-78. House Bill 2292 would have repealed the current standards, effective July 1, 2017, and it would have required the Kansas State Board of Education to develop new standards by that time. In addition, though, the bill would have prohibited the use of any “federally-provided or required” set of standards, and it would have given the Legislature authority to review and approve any new standards the state board submits. Supporters of the bill called the Common Core
standards an example of federal government meddling in state education policy. But opponents said repealing the standards would have put Kansas out of step with the rest of the nation, and would have put Kansas students at a disadvantage when taking college entrance exams that are designed around the Common Core. An indicator that the bill had little support in the House came early when a majority voted not to accept the committee report, a routine procedure that allows the House to debate the bill as it was amended in committee. GOP leaders then considered sending it back to committee. But opponents of the bill later reversed their move and agreed to have a full debate. Kansas was one of the states that took part in a consortium that de-
veloped the standards in 2008 and 2009. They were intended to raise academic standards nationwide to ensure that students would be prepared for college or the workplace by the time they graduate high school. They replaced standards in place in many states that critics had argued were disconnected from the expectations of higher education and the business world. The Kansas State Board of Education formally approved them in October 2010. But soon thereafter, the Obama administration made adoption of the standards, or others like them, a condition for states to qualify for certain kinds of competitive grants, leading to charges within conservative circles that they were part of a federal effort to take over state education policy. Rep. Amanda Grosserode, R-Lenexa, argued that the new standards
are unpopular among parents and teachers throughout the state. But many opponents argued just the opposite, saying the parents and teachers they talk to fully support the new standards. Opponents also argued that the bill might be unconstitutional because the Kansas Constitution gives the state board general authority for supervising K-12 education. And they said abolishing them would put Kansas students at a competitive disadvantage because many national tests, including the ACT and SAT, are designed around the Common Core. All four House members from Lawrence — Democrats Barbara Ballard, Boog Highberger and John Wilson; and Republican Tom Sloan — voted against the bill. — Statehouse reporter Peter Hancock can be reached at 354-4222 or phancock@ljworld.com.
Legislating religious clubs and restrooms: How does it affect KU?
K
ansas lawmakers in the past week have advanced a couple of measures that could affect certain Kansas University populations: transgender students who need to go to the bathroom, and students who want to join a religious club they don’t necessarily agree with. One was just signed into law, and I’m unqualified to guess whether the other is going anywhere, but I did do some poking around to find out how they compare with the status quo at KU. First, restrooms. In short, two separate but identical bills proposed in the House and Senate would require transgender students at Kansas public schools and universities to use restrooms and locker rooms designated for their chromosomal sex at birth. With help from KU spokeswoman Erinn Barcomb-Peterson, I determined that with the exception of a KU Libraries policy that prohibits use of library restrooms “for purposes other than which they are intended,” KU doesn’t currently have any rules or regulations about where people can go to the bathroom. There are a number of single-occupancy restrooms on campus (often
Heard on the Hill
Sara Shepherd sshepherd@ljworld.com
called family restrooms), some of which have signage specifying that they are gender-neutral — even though by definition they already are. It doesn’t seem this bill would apply to those, but rather only restrooms that are designated for one sex or another. The Kansas Board of Regents doesn’t have any overarching bathroom policies, either, but says federal laws prohibiting sex-based discrimination would dictate what’s required. According to a memo from the Regents legal team, transgender students seeking to use restrooms designated for the sex they identify as have repeatedly won court cases, and the U.S. Department of Education Office for Civil Rights has also ruled that they can use the restroom of their choice. Next, religious clubs.
Gov. Sam Brownback signed this bill into law Tuesday, and it will take effect in July — although, according to The Associated Press, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled nearly six years ago that universities can require membership in such groups to be open to all. The bill will allow college religious groups to restrict membership to like-minded students. Currently at KU, all registered KU organizations are open to all students, KU spokesman Joe Monaco said. Whether they actually receive university funding (clubs often get money in the form of student fee revenue) doesn’t matter, Monaco said — all registered KU organizations are eligible to request it so they’re all in the same category and follow the same rules. There is an overarching Regents policy specifically addressing club membership. Relevant passages: “The established policy of the Board of Regents prohibits discrimination on the basis of age, race, color, religion, sex, marital status, national origin, physical handicap or disability, status as a Vietnam Era Veteran, sexual orientation or other factors which cannot be lawfully considered, within the state universities. All
fraternal and campus related organizations shall follow this policy in the selection of their members, except the prohibition against sex discrimination shall not apply to social fraternities or sororities which are excluded from the application of Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972 (20 U.S.C. Sec. 1681 et seq.).” “The right of organizations to establish standards for membership is acknowledged, provided that all students are afforded equal opportunity to meet those standards. Just as all students have the right to choose those with whom they would associate on the campus, an organization shall have the right to select its members subject to these principles.” There are currently 36 registered KU organizations in the “Religious” category, according to a search of groups listed on RockChalkCentral. ku.edu. Those include lots of Christian groups, several Jewish ones, the Muslim Student Association and the Society of Open-Minded Atheists and Agnostics, to name a few. — This is an excerpt from Sara Shepherd’s Heard on the Hill blog, which appears regularly on LJWorld.com.
Campus religious groups bill becomes law Topeka (ap) — Kansas’ conservative Republican governor signed legislation Tuesday allowing faith-based groups at college campuses to restrict membership to like-minded people, likely putting the state on a collision course with civil liberties groups. The GOP-dominated Legislature approved the legislation earlier this month, even though the U.S. Supreme Court ruled nearly six years ago that universities can require membership in such groups to be open to all. Supporters
have said the bill was a victory for the freedom to exercise religious beliefs, but opponents called it a veiled attempt to legalize discrimination. Kansas already has a religious objections law that prevents state or local governments from limiting people’s freedom to express their religion, though that law doesn’t touch on organizations at universities. With Gov. Sam Brownback’s signature, Kansas becomes the second state after Oklahoma to have a collegespecific law.
“This is very good, narrow, targeted piece of legislation that will serve the betterment of our college campuses,” Brownback said. The new law, which will take effect July 1, will prevent public colleges and universities from denying religious groups funds or campus resources for limiting their memberships. Critics argue that the bill is far broader than its supporters acknowledge and will in effect force minority students and their parents to sup-
port groups that would actively discriminate against them. They said the new law will sanction discrimination not only against gays and lesbians, but based on race, gender or disabilities. The American Civil Liberties Union of Kansas is considering a legal challenge “very seriously,” said Micah Kubic, its executive director. “It’s a step backward to a time when government was actively enabling discrimination against people based on who they are,” Kubic said.
Kansas Senate votes to retain policy on Planned Parenthood funding Topeka — Kansas legislators are moving to make permanent an annual budget policy that prevents the state from providing federal family planning dollars to Planned Parenthood. The Senate approved a
bill Tuesday on a 31-9 vote, sending the measure to the House. The legislation deals with federal family planning dollars for non-abortion services. Lawmakers have included a provision in the state’s
annual budgets since 2011 saying that money must go first to public health departments and then to hospitals. The goal was prevent any of the funds from going to Planned Parenthood of Kansas and Mid-Mis-
souri, which also provides abortions. Putting the policy into state law means lawmakers won’t have to keep renewing it. A federal appeals court upheld the policy in 2014. Planned Parenthood lost about $370,000 a year.
L awrence J ournal -W orld
Senate declines to debate phaseout of sales tax on food By Peter Hancock Twitter: @LJWpqhancock
The Kansas Senate on Tuesday declined, for the time being, to debate a proposed constitutional amendment that would phase out the state sales tax on food over the next three years. Sen. Tom Holland, DBaldwin City, proposed that amendment earlier in the session. But so far it had not received a committee hearing and was in danger of dying as the 2016 session winds to an end. Holland made a motion on the floor of the Senate on Tuesday to force the bill to the top of the Senate calendar for immediate debate and vote. But the motion, which required a two-thirds majority, fell six votes short, 21-19. Had the motion passed, it would have needed another two-thirds m a j o r ity vote in both cham- Holland bers in order to be placed on a general election ballot for public approval. Holland argued that since last year’s increase in the state sales tax rate to 6.5 percent, Kansas now has one of the highest sales tax rates on food in the country. Many other states, including Missouri, do not charge the full sales tax rate on food purchases, and some states exempt food entirely. But Sen. Les Donovan, R-Wichita, who chairs the Senate tax committee, said Democrats had a chance last year to lower the sales tax on food, but voted against the bill. In fact, it was Sen. Marci Francisco, D-Lawrence, who offered that amendment onto a Senate bill last year. And when House and Senate negotiators met in conference committee, that provision was included in one version of a compromise bill. “I went over and made a point to talk to two of the senators across the aisle, face-to-face, and explain to them, this is your opportunity to lower the sales tax on food,” Dono-
Judges CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A
“This bill clarifies the checks and balances on the branches of Kansas government,” said Sen. Greg Smith, an Overland Park Republican who is one of 18 sponsors of the measure. But Rep. Steve Becker, a retired district court judge, said the bill is so broad that any time the court strikes down a law, it could be seen as usurping lawmakers’ power — allowing for judges to be impeached. “It totally handicaps the Supreme Court,” the Buhler Republican said. “It would render the Supreme Court useless, basically.” Republicans hold 32 seats in the Senate, but 11 GOP senators joined all eight Democrats in voting against the bill, including Judiciary Committee Chairman Jeff King, of Independence. A Washington-based group, Justice at Stake, called the measure “an affront to democracy.” The bill’s supporters said they aren’t attacking the Supreme Court. In committee, they added language creating a similar list of examples of impeachable offenses for
van said. “They smiled at me very politely and voted no.” Donovan said Holland’s proposal was meant to back Gov. Sam Brownback and Republican lawmakers into a corner and force a repeal or roll-back of the income tax cuts of 2012 and 2013. Eliminating sales tax on food would reduce state revenues by about $400 million a year. And because the exemption for food would be added to the Constitution, lawmakers would not be able to change it in future years without another constitutional amendment. Holland did not dispute that, and he said a constitutional amendment would be preferable because it could not be vetoed by the governor. Once an amendment passes both chambers with a two-thirds majority, it goes directly onto a ballot without action from the governor. “We’re going to pay for this exactly the way we pay for other sales tax reduction bills,” Holland said. “It’s going to have to be cuts or a combination of reworking Gov. Brownback’s income tax cuts from 2012.” But he denied that reducing the sales tax on food would be the cause of future budget problems. “Let’s not kid ourselves,” he said. “We are in a financial mess now. This sales tax resolution before you has nothing to do with that. What we are asking in this resolution, by my motion today, is simply to have a debate on the floor of the Senate to talk about the feasibility and how we might put forward some sales tax relief for Kansas citizens. Obviously there’s a desire to do that.” Donovan said there are at least two bills in the tax committee that would reduce the sales tax on food, including one that would make up the revenue loss through “other things on the income side.” He said he intends for the committee to work on those bills after lawmakers return from their spring break in late April. — Statehouse reporter Peter Hancock can be reached at 354-4222 or phancock@ljworld.com.
the governor, lieutenant governor, attorney general and secretary of state. Still, as the Senate considered the measure, supporters repeatedly suggested that the Supreme Court has overstepped its authority in some of its decisions. “We live in an era when people believe the independence of the courts and absolute power are synonymous,” said Sen. Mitch Holmes, a St. John Republican and another sponsor of the bill. In other states, conservative groups have spent heavily in contested judicial elections, most recently in Arkansas. But in Kansas, justices are appointed by the governor after a commission led by lawyers screens applicants and picks three finalists, with no role for legislators. Justices face “retention” elections every six years, remaining in office unless more than 50 percent of voters vote against them. Four of Kansas’ seven Supreme Court justices were appointed by Democratic Gov. Kathleen Sebelius, who served from 2003 to 2009, and two by her predecessor, Bill Graves, a moderate Republican. Only one was appointed by current Gov. Sam Brownback, a conservative Republican.
L awrence J ournal -W orld
LAWRENCE • STATE
Wednesday, March 23, 2016
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KU activist facing drug charges fails to appear Lights A & Sirens Kansas University student and former leader of KU’s Black Student Union who recently accused police of racial discrimination did not appear in Lawrence Municipal Court Tuesday morning for an arraignment on drug charges. Kennedi Grant, 20, was arrested Feb. 5 on suspicion of possession Grant of marijuana, a controlled substance and drug paraphernalia. Grant was released from the Douglas County Jail shortly after her arrest when she posted a $5,000 bond. Her first appearance in Douglas County District Court was canceled after the case was referred to Lawrence Municipal
Court. Now Grant, 20, faces one misdemeanor charge each of possession of marijuana and possession of drug paraphernalia, according to a criminal complaint filed in Lawrence Municipal Court. An arraignment, where a judge would formally read her charges and she would be allowed the chance to enter a plea, was scheduled for Grant on Tuesday; however, she did not appear in court. Municipal Court Judge Scott Miller said that when people miss their arraignment typically their case is examined to ensure the date was scheduled in a fair manner before a warrant is issued for their
Conrad Swanson cswanson@ljworld.com
arrest. The process can take several days, he said. In November of last year, Grant, then-president of KU’s Black Student Union, and a group of students calling themselves Rock Chalk Invisible Hawk interrupted KU Chancellor Bernadette Gray-Little and others as they spoke about race at a KU town hall forum.
Date set for hearings on whether teen will be tried as adult in killing ings for June 20 through Twitter: @Conrad_Swanson June 22 to begin at 9 a.m. each day. Long appeared A 17-year-old Law- in court dressed in a black rence resident accused of suit jacket and leg chains. killing his grandmother At the June hearings, has been scheduled to ap- defense and prosecuting pear in court this summer attorneys will present for hearings to determine arguments on whether whether he will be tried Long should be tried as as an adult. an adult, said Douglas The teenager, Jaered County District Attorney Long, was arrested Charles Branson. in late December Because Long is after his 67-yearover 14 and accused old grandmother, of a serious crime, Deborah Bretthauhe is presumed to er, was found dead be an adult under in her apartment on COURTS Kansas criminal Dec. 28 with what statutes, Branson police called “obvious said. However, defense traumatic injuries.” attorneys will have an Long was 16 at the time opportunity to argue othand lived in the apart- erwise in June. ment at 1200 George Initially Long faced a Court with Bretthauer. single charge of first-deDuring a court appear- gree murder in juvenile ance Tuesday, Douglas court. He pleaded not County District Judge guilty to the charge and Kay Huff scheduled hear- was ordered detained in
By Conrad Swanson
the Douglas County Juvenile Detention Center for the duration of the legal process. Pro Tem Judge James George said at the time that Long might be considered a danger to himself or others. On March 9, prosecutors filed a motion to try Long as an adult. If Long is found guilty of first-degree murder in juvenile court, he could face a maximum sentence of 60 months in prison or to the age of 22. If he is prosecuted as an adult and found guilty, he could face more than 40 years in prison. Requests for the arrest affidavit in Long’s case have been denied by the Douglas County District Court. — Public safety reporter Conrad Swanson can be reached at cswanson@ljworld.com or 832-7144.
KU reports no students in Brussels Heard on I the Hill n any given academic year, Kansas University might have more than 1,300 students studying abroad, according to statistics from the Office of Study Abroad. In light of Tuesday morning’s terror attacks in Brussels, I checked with KU to see if there are currently any students there. Fortunately, university spokeswoman Erinn Barcomb-Peterson said there are not. “We do not have any students studying in Belgium right now,” Barcomb-Peterson said Tuesday afternoon via email. She added, “KU’s study abroad office is reaching out to students studying in Europe in the
Sara Shepherd sshepherd@ljworld.com
unlikely event they would have been in Brussels.” She said the office had been able to reach most students and had no reason to believe any KU students were affected by the bombings in Brussels. She said the office would
continue trying to contact students until all had confirmed their well-being. Two explosions occurred during morning rush hour at the Brussels Airport, and another in a subway station near European Union headquarters, according to national media reports. Belgium’s federal prosecutor confirmed the blasts were terrorist attacks. Tuesday afternoon the Belgian government had confirmed at least 30 dead, with more than 180 injured, according to media reports. — This is an excerpt from Sara Shepherd’s Heard on the Hill column, which appears on LJWorld.com.
The group issued a list of diversity-related demands. Grant, who identified herself as Kynnedi Grant to the JournalWorld, said on the stage she and several of her friends were verbally and physically assaulted at an off-campus house party on Halloween, called racial slurs and had a gun pulled on them. She accused Lawrence police of failing to investigate the incident because she and her friends are black. A police report was filed on the incident. That case remains under investigation, Lawrence Police Sgt. Trent McKinley said. Grant has no prior criminal record in Douglas County District Court. — This is an excerpt from Conrad Swanson’s Lights & Sirens column, which appears on LJWorld.com.
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PUBLIC WORKS
Join Us for
Worship in Holy Week
BRIEFLY Fort Riley hospital may open in late July
TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURCH
Fort Riley — Officials say Fort Riley’s long-delayed new hospital is one step closer to opening and could do so by the end of July. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers officials told U.S. Rep. Tim Huelskamp’s office that since last Wednesday, the Army has been able to begin using the facility while the remaining construction is completed. The Corps says the following 120 days are allotted for initial outfitting and transition, including finishing touches, such as installing fixtures and equipment. If all goes according to schedule, the building will likely open for patients in mid- to late July. The new Irwin Army Community Hospital was most recently set to open in January, but officials held back the date after pre-final inspections revealed a list of deficiencies.
Just south of South Park, one block east of Mass St.
1245 NEW HAMPSHIRE • LAWRENCE
Maundy Thursday – March 24 Agape Meal, 5:30 p.m. Potluck in the Fellowship Hall
Holy Eucharist and Foot-washing 6:30 p.m., Sanctuary
Good Friday Service March 25, 6:30 p.m.
Easter Sunday – March 27 Holy Eucharist, 8:30 & 11 a.m. Easter Brunch between services TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURCH 785-843-4150 tlcoffice@tlclawrence.org www.tlclawrence.org
TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURCH
Holy Week at First Presbyterian Church 2415 Clinton Parkway 785-843-4171
All are welcome - we look forward to greeting you!
Burglary suspect falls through ceiling Salina — A Salina man has been arrested after falling through a restaurant ceiling as police responded to a burglary. The Salina Journal reports that the arrest happened early Monday at a Taco John’s. Capt. Chris Trocheck says the suspect told police as he was being arrested that a second person was still inside the restaurant. Trocheck says the police department’s SWAT officers were called in to clear the building and found no one else inside. Police were summoned after the manager heard a banging sound inside and reported that someone might be trying to break into the safe. The suspect fell through the ceiling when officers entered the restaurant.
March 20 - Palm Sunday
Worship at 8:30 and 11:00 am Sunday School at 9:45 am for all ages
March 24 - Maundy Thursday
Worship at 7:00 pm Join us in the Chapel
March 25 - Good Friday Worship at 7:00 pm
Mozart’s Requiem The Seven Last Words of Christ
The Chancel Choir of First Presbyterian Church The Choir of First Baptist Church Directed by Tracy Resseguie Music Director at First Presbyterian
March 27 - Easter! He is Risen!
Worship at 8:30 and 11:00 am Easter Egg Hunt at 10:00 am for children through 5th grade
Fellowship Time at 10:30 am
All are welcome to join us!
Immanuel Lutheran Church & University Student Center Corner of Bob Billings & Iowa St Holy Week Services Palm Sunday, March 20 Communion
8:30 & 11:00 am
Holy Thursday, March 24 Communion
7:00 pm
Good Friday, March 25
7:00 pm
Easter Sunday, March 27 8:30 & 11:00 am “I am the Resurrection and the Life” Communion Breakfast 7:30 till 11:00 am – All are welcome No Sunday School or Bible Study Interpretation in American Sign Language (ASL) and Contact English is available at our 8:30 am Sunday service. Hand held amplification receivers are also available.
www.Immanuellawrence.org 843 - 0620
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Wednesday, March 23, 2016
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L awrence J ournal -W orld
Unwanted visitor in the showers warrants complaint Dear Annie: This evening, I went to the local YMCA to swim. When I was through, I showered, as I always do, since I go back to work afterward. Near the end of the shower, I removed my swimsuit and found a boy of about 8 looking through the curtain at me. I yelled at him and he stopped, but a few seconds later, a woman (I think it was his grandmother) looked in, too. I told her I’d like just a few more minutes, and I’ll admit, my tone wasn’t that friendly. I got out of the shower and locker room as fast as I could. Annie, that boy was too old to be in the women’s locker room. My question is, was I out of line for showering in the nude in a public locker room? This particular shower had four nozzles, so I assume other people would feel free
Annie’s Mailbox
Marcy Sugar and Kathy Mitchell
anniesmailbox@comcast.net
to share the space, even if the curtain was closed. But both the boy and the older woman were not showering. They were just peeking in. That strikes me as rude. This has never come up before, because I usually have the locker room to myself at that hour. Now I don’t know if I should go back. — Not an Exhibitionist Dear Not: These ‘’group showers’’ are intended for multiple people to use simulta-
Scriptwriters take aim at reality TV Layla stops grieving and starts scheming to steal Avery from Juliette on “Nashville” (9 p.m., ABC, TV-PG). If anybody has the right to lash out, it’s the put-upon alt-country chanteuse played by Aubrey Peebles. In many ways, Layla’s character has been the writers’ way of showing their disdain for the cynicism and emptiness of reality television. On “Nashville,” Layla emerges from an “American Idol”-type series only to be treated like a joke by “real” musicians. She later appears on a reality series modeled on the old MTV show “Newlyweds: Nick and Jessica.” There she discovers that everything about her relationship with Will Lexington (Chris Carmack) is bogus. While he’s fond of her, he uses their relationship and, eventually, their marriage to hide his closeted homosexuality. Later, Layla becomes romantically involved with scheming producer Jeff Fordham (Oliver Hudson), a man who manipulates and abuses her and nearly kills her. This plot development made little sense, except to showcase the evil machinations of the corporate interests who have all but killed “real” country music. Throughout all of these convolutions, Layla’s feelings, while misguided, have always been depicted as genuine. Despite her Harvard acceptance letter, she just wasn’t bright enough to see that everything around her was fake. There’s been a long history of scripted dramas depicting reality TV people as the bogeymen. On a very basic level, reality television has eaten into the schedule and reduced the need for scripted shows. Over the years, “Law & Order” and its “SVU” spin-off have included several plots about murders, rapes and predators in the reality TV world. No series has been as caustic in its depiction of the genre as Lifetime’s “UnREAL.” There, the producers go to cruel lengths, even well-researched psychological sadism, to evince “drama” from the contestants on “The Bachelor”-like series. “UnREAL” is also unstinting in its depiction of how little the show’s makers think of their intended audience. This stark message has made “UnREAL” a bitter pill for some. Is it all that surprising that not many people have shown up to watch a series about people who hate their jobs, hate themselves and especially despise their audience? The first season of “UnREAL” is streaming on Hulu. A second season is in the works. Tonight’s other highlights O The stakes get higher on “Survivor” (7 p.m., CBS). O Cam’s sister (Dana Powell) has issues on “Modern Family” (8 p.m., ABC, TV-PG).
neously in order to save time and money. However, no one should be peeking in just to see what’s going on, and you are right that an 8-yearold boy is too old to be checking out the women’s locker room. (We have no explanation for Grandma, other than perhaps responding to something her grandson said about the showers.) You should register a complaint with the facility. There are likely rules regarding the age of opposite-sex children using the locker rooms, and you should ask that they be enforced. If they do not have any restrictions, you should find a place to swim that affords you the privacy you require.
her granddaughter because her moreneglected stepsister would feel left out. Having grown up in a crazy family with full siblings, stepsiblings and half siblings, things like this were a challenge. My dad liked to spoil the three of us who were his biological kids, but my stepdad was more practical. He and my mother both tried hard to keep our household “equal,’’ so my full siblings and I left some of our stuff at my father’s. It was good for us, as it taught us to always be considerate of how others felt. My grandparents made all the siblings feel welcome in their homes. — Happy Child
Dear Annie: Your re— Send questions to sponse to “Sad Nana’’ anniesmailbox@comcast.net, was spot on. She was or Annie’s Mailbox, P.O. Box upset that she couldn’t 118190 Chicago, IL 60611. send gifts home with
JACQUELINE BIGAR’S STARS
For Wednesday, March 23: This year you often notice that when everything seems to be running smoothly a volatile happening strolls into your life and explodes the status quo. You will give more thought to making a change in your life. If you are single, you could meet someone sometime after August. This person knows how to light up your life. If you are attached, the two of you will want to take off together more often. Defer to your partner more often, and refuse to be willful or demanding in your relationship. 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) +++ Your energy might be rather volatile, as the lunar eclipse seem to be directly affecting you. Tonight: Stay levelheaded. Taurus (April 20-May 20) +++ You have the self-discipline to follow through on any decision you want to make. Tonight: Be less available. Gemini (May 21-June 20) ++++ You’ll observe others blow up in smoke or go off with tears in their eyes. Tonight: Lighten up. Cancer (June 21-July 22) +++ Your instinct to lie low is right-on. There is always another day to express your views. Tonight: Order in. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) +++++ Your phone might
jacquelinebigar.com
be constantly ringing, and emails seem to keep appearing. Tonight: Meet up with a pal. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) ++++ A tendency to forget your woes through shopping manifests. Keep your receipts. Tonight: Try to use some discipline. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ++++ You tend not to be overly emotional or difficult, but at this point you might be over the top. Tonight: Go to the gym first. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) +++ Refuse to internalize any criticisms or comments that come your way. Tonight: Early to bed. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) ++++ You could be taken aback by what happens with a long-term desire. Tonight: Where the crowds are. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) +++ You are likely to be affected by stress when you are out or at work. Tonight: Paint the town red. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) ++++ You might want to sign up for a course to increase your expertise in your field. Tonight: Remain responsive. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) ++++ Try not to push an associate unless you would like to see some radical changes. Tonight: Be calm with a loved one. — The astrological forecast should be read for entertainment only.
UNIVERSAL CROSSWORD Universal Crossword Edited by Fred Piscop March 23, 2016
ACROSS 1 Chew out 6 Chowderhead 11 Not “agin” 14 Imam’s book 15 Having a musical key 16 Hurler’s stat 17 Sitcom with the theme song “This Is It”? 19 Prefix with dent or pod 20 Apple-splitting archer 21 Corrida cry 22 Standard typeface 24 Neighbor of St. Pete 26 Card game with melds 28 Crackerjack pilot 30 Cowboy’s topper? 32 Port of Iraq 34 Social pariahs 35 Start the pot 36 Goodygoody 38 Mayberry souse 42 Pick up the tab 44 Quick on the uptake 45 EnglandFrance conflict of 1337-1453? 50 Largo or West 51 Iced tea brand 52 Sans assistance
54 Showy flower 55 Comics bark 56 “Diana” singer Paul 59 Wolfed down 60 Sincere plea for forgiveness? 64 Kia or Fiat 65 Porkers 66 “For ___ sake!” 67 H.S. yearbook section 68 Went for congers 69 Welcome at the door DOWN 1 Bit of improv 2 Programmer’s output 3 Exam without pencils 4 Classic Eric Clapton tune 5 Paternity lab evidence 6 “Hogan’s Heroes” camp 7 Mall bag 8 Prefix with “sex” or “corn” 9 Dawber of “Mork & Mindy” 10 Franklin’s first lady 11 Fixation of sorts 12 Boo-boo list 13 Read the riot act to 18 “___ the mornin’!” 23 Kidnapper’s demand
25 “Rosemary’s Baby” star Farrow 26 Clump of earth 27 Emollient source 28 Lawyers’ org. 29 Part of a sixpack 31 Touches on 33 Key in again 36 Burst of laughter 37 Pinker than medium 39 Pay close attention 40 Ill temper 41 Home to 65-Across 43 Play again, as a role 44 Sign of a full house 45 Designer Arnold Scaasi’s real surname
46 GM’s roadside assistance service 47 Many John Wayne movies 48 Bent out of shape 49 Sporty Italian auto, for short 53 Consumer advocate Ralph 55 Top-ranked 57 Body part that may be “skinned” 58 Support staffer (Abbr.) 61 Run up a bill 62 Dipstick coating 63 Dungeons & Dragons, e.g. (Abbr.)
PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER
3/22
© 2016 Universal Uclick www.upuzzles.com
POWERING UP By Fred Piscop
3/23
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.
CATRT ©2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.
GLITH NETYRD
DIMMUE
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: OFTEN OFFER PIGLET RADIAL Answer: The downpour at the airport turned the tarmac into a — FLOOD “PLANE”
BECKER ON BRIDGE
Opinion
Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com l Wednesday, March 23, 2016
EDITORIALS
Political paralysis How can the federal government function properly when politics takes precedence over sound policy?
I
t’s sad to see Merrick Garland, a respected judge and highly qualified nominee for the U.S. Supreme Court, caught in the political morass that is paralyzing Washington, D.C. Politics never is far from the minds of our elected federal officials, but voters expect those officials to rise above partisan interests when needed to ensure the smooth operation of government. Unfortunately, in this contentious election year, political calculations are taking precedence over sound decision-making. Even before Garland was nominated, Senate President Mitch McConnell vowed that the Senate wouldn’t consider the nomination of anyone named to replace Justice Antonin Scalia. Many senators, including Kansas Sens. Pat Roberts and Jerry Moran, support the decision to block any Supreme Court nomination in the final year of President Obama’s term. Interestingly, Roberts was one of 76 senators who voted in favor of Garland’s appointment to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in 1997. But, sometimes, things change quickly. Less than a week before Obama announced his choice of Garland, Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, suggested Obama “could easily name Merrick Garland, who is a fine man. He probably won’t do that because his appointment is about the election.” At this point, it’s clear that political calculations are far more important than Garland’s qualifications for the job. Obama undoubtedly weighed the political ramifications of his appointment and, in some ways, could be using Garland as a political sacrificial lamb. The Senate’s handling of the nomination almost certainly will be guided by what Senate leaders think will help senators seeking election more: acting on the nomination or simply ignoring it. Senators who want to block the nomination say that duty should go to the next president, but data compiled by news agencies show that, since 1900, the Senate has voted on eight Supreme Court nominees during an election year and confirmed six of those. There also appears to be plenty of time to decide this issue before the end of Obama’s term. Obama has almost 10 months left in his term, and the Senate has never taken more than 125 days to vote on a nomination. The average duration between appointment and the confirmation, rejection or withdrawal of a candidate is 25 days. What kind of precedent would be set by the Senate refusing to consider Garland’s nomination? Obama had 342 days remaining in his term when Justice Scalia died. If that’s too short a time, what is the limit? A year? Two years? How long should politics keep a seat on the Supreme Court empty? Republicans are pointing to the “Biden rule” that harkens back to remarks Vice President Joe Biden made in 1992 arguing against considering any Supreme Court nominations at the end of President George Bush’s term. There were no vacancies on the court or nominations to consider at that point, but maybe Democrats would have followed the same course as Republicans now are taking. Democrats did employ hardball tactics in rejecting the appointment of Robert Bork to the court in 1987. Is this just a high-stakes game of tit for tat? If so, how can the nation break that cycle? Garland is a nominee who, in all likelihood, would have been easily confirmed in a more statesman-like time. Americans need look no further than the current presidential election to see voters’ dissatisfaction with a federal government that puts political agendas ahead of the nation’s welfare. It’s little wonder they are looking for a change. LAWRENCE
Journal-World
®
Established 1891
W.C. Simons (1871-1952); Publisher, 1891-1944 Dolph Simons Sr. (1904-1989) Publisher, 1944-1962; Editor, 1950-1979
Dolph C. Simons Jr., Editor THE WORLD COMPANY
Dolph C. Simons Jr., Chairman Dolph C. Simons III, Dan C. Simons, President, Newspapers Division
President, Digital Division
Scott Stanford, General Manager
9A
Education can help fight terrorism Molenbeek, Belgium — Four days before Tuesday’s grisly bomb attacks in Brussels, the police raided a shabby three-story brick row house in this heavily Moroccan working-class district of Brussels. There they captured Salah Abdeslam, the last surviving member of the terror group that killed 130 people in Paris in November. Abdeslam had eluded police for four months and no one in Moleenbeek betrayed him. Nor did anyone warn police about Tuesday’s plans to bomb Brussels’ airport and metro. So the new attacks raise the same frustrating question: How to deal with the social pathology that has made Molenbeek a notorious jihadi base from which youths travel to Syria and hatch plots to attack Europe? Earlier this week I visited Molenbeek, and found two different communities, one isolated and resentful and the other struggling to advance with insufficient help from the outside. The key to halting the incubation of terror lies in whether officials can offer “the other Molenbeek” a more hopeful future — one that shields its children from the fantasies sold by the shills for jihad. At present, those children grow up isolated from the world outside their ghetto. On the surface, Molenbeek doesn’t look scary. Crowds of locals, including many women in hijab, jostle along a main street lined with halal butcher shops, inexpensive clothing and household goods stores, barber shops, and cafes, where unemployed men gather to sip tea. But residents say that Molenbeek has changed dramatically over the past
Trudy Rubin
“
trubin@phillynews.com
All over Europe, but especially in Belgium, officials are wrestling with how to reach out to alienated and culturally isolated Arab-European youths.” decade, losing its onetime diversity of cultures. Locals no longer mingle with other Belgians. “This municipality has the highest population density in Brussels and one of the most youthful populations,” I was told over coffee by Sarah Turine, deputy mayor of Molenbeek. She says the schools are poor, and the dropout rate high, while unemployment reaches 40 to 50 percent in the 18- to 25-year-old age group. “Recruiters from Syria come looking for them (unemployed youths, and), hang out in cafes and mosques to talk to them. They give them a sense of purpose,” Turine said. Abdeslam was a typical school dropout: He trafficked in drugs with his brother (who was also one of the Paris attackers). There was no hint he was ever involved in radicalism, nor did he attend a mosque. But a childhood friend who had gone to Syria in 2014 recruited the brothers. All over Europe, but es-
pecially in Belgium, officials are wrestling with how to reach out to alienated and culturally isolated Arab-European youths. After many locals left for Syria in the summer of 2013, the Molenbeek municipality set up an outreach program to help families whose children “were in danger of leaving.” They trained social workers to discredit what the recruiters are saying. Clearly these programs are insufficient. “What can we do to manage these young people who prefer death to life?” asked Yves Goldstein, cabinet chief to the Brussels regional president, who addressed the German Marshal Fund’s annual Brussels Forum. Goldstein’s main concern: the failure to integrate isolated urban ghettoes such as Molenbeek into the wider world. Goldstein believes that reaching children ages 7 to 12 — before they quit school — is essential. “We have to create more diverse schools, housing, education, but local governments have no money,” he said in frustration. In other words, Belgian officials are spending hundreds of millions for security but haven’t the funds to bolster schools and expand cultural offerings for youth who are prey for jihadi recruiters. Yet just three blocks from Abdeslam’s hideout, I found a hint of the other Molenbeek, the majority of whom are looking for a better life and fear that their children might be wooed away to fight jihad. The symbol of this other Molenbeek is a new cafe, Le Palais de Balkis, which displays a level of diversity that had leeched out of the district. There I saw Muslims of all ages, including a fam-
ily with a heavily covered mother and chic young girls in hijab, along with nonArab Belgian “bobos” (slang for “bourgeois bohemiens”) whom one wouldn’t expect to see in the neighborhood. Manager Karim Bazah said, “For me this is the real Molenbeek. I was born here. I want to build good things.” Aziz Mouaouia, a factory worker at a local Audi plant, who had stopped for a snack, summed up for me the untapped possibilities in the community. “Molenbeek is a victim of the political failure to integrate,” he states flatly. He hopes his daughters will go to university but “it is difficult because teachers never show up and it is very hard to fire them. At 12 to 13 years old, the students drop out.” “Young people want to live the dream they see in the movies,” he said, but “when they realize it is impossible, they turn to petty crime. Then if they try to reintegrate, society rejects them. “This is the perfect opportunity for these recruiters to pick these guys up and capture them emotionally. Our parents’ organization is trying to organize projects to help the mothers of these guys. The mothers are scared (of the recruiters). They say, ‘I would prefer to see my son in prison.’” Mouaouia suggests higher goals: “I say, ‘He could be a doctor.’” The riddle of Molenbeek is how to convince more youths that they, too, could be doctors. One way would be to use some of the millions allotted to security to beef up the schools. — Trudy Rubin is a columnist and editorial-board member for the Philadelphia Inquirer.
OLD HOME TOWN
100
From the Lawrence Daily Journal-World for March 23, 1916: “A petition is now being circuyears lated in Lawrence asking ago the city commissioners IN 1916 to remove the ban on firecrackers imposed by a recent ordinance, and permit the town to indulge in the orgies of an old fashioned Fourth of July this year. The petition is said to urge that the patriotic spirit of the ‘old time’ Fourth of July has been missing since the ordinance was placed on the city’s books that prevents the time-honored form of celebration.” — Compiled by Sarah St. John
Read more Old Home Town at LJWorld.com/news/lawrence/history/ old_home_town.
Garland would shift court to the left Whenever I hear the words “centrist” or “moderate,” especially when they come from The New York Times and The Washington Post, the words “liberal” and “cover-up” immediately come to mind. Since President Obama’s nomination of Merrick Garland to replace Justice Antonin Scalia, a confirmed conservative, the words “centrist” and “moderate” have been repeated ad nauseam. They were repeated so often, in fact, that they resembled the sound of a skipping needle across a vinyl LP with dust in its grooves. Even the reliably liberal New York Times, while repeating the centrist and moderate line, acknowledged that Garland’s addition to the court “would make the justice at the center of the court more liberal than at any point in nearly 50 years.” This is why Republicans are within their constitutional rights to refuse to grant Garland a hearing or a vote, especially since, according to a new Rasmussen Reports poll, “two-outof-three likely U.S. voters (67 percent) are angry at
Cal Thomas tcaeditors@tribune.com
the current policies of the federal government.” Senate Republicans rightly believe a new president should make the critical next appointment to the court. At the announcement ceremony in the Rose Garden, one could see a tableau of liberalism on display. Does anyone believe those senators, who included uber-leftists Harry Reid, Dick Durbin, Patrick Leahy and Dianne Feinstein, would vote to confirm someone who might not reflect their liberal worldview, including the belief that the Constitution is a “living document” to be tampered with according to the whims of the age? Would a liberal Democrat vote to confirm anyone who might impose restrictions on abortion or rollback same-sex marriage? A Wall Street Journal edi-
torial unmasked the liberal cover-up over Garland, even while other editorialists, columnists and broadcast news anchors extolled his supposed virtues: “Judge Garland’s 19-year tenure on the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals demonstrates a reliable vote for progressive causes, with the arguable exception of criminal law. Two issues in particular make the point: the Second Amendment and deference to the growing power of the administrative state.” The president probably knows that Garland’s nomination isn’t going anywhere and that like so many other things in this administration Garland will be used for political ends in the election. It is amusing to hear liberals claim Republicans are “obstructionists” after all the obstructing Democrats have done. Democratic roadblocks extend back to Robert Bork’s confirmation hearings and include Sen. Barack Obama’s opposition to Justice Samuel Alito for reasons even he admitted were solely political. I suspect, not since John F. Kennedy named Byron R. White to the Supreme Court has there been a justice who
disappointed Democrats. White was one of two justices who dissented in the landmark Roe v. Wade abortion case. The Republican record has been far more checkered, beginning with Dwight D. Eisenhower’s naming of Earl Warren, a nomination he came to regret, calling it “the biggest d—n fool mistakze” he ever made. Perhaps Republicans will cave on the president’s nomination of Garland because they have done so before. Backbone is not a word normally associated with often-squishy Republicans, but so far they appear to be standing as one. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell seems unconcerned that Republicans might lose their majority should voters punish them for refusing to confirm Garland. That’s something Democrats and their big media allies have alluded to during the campaign. Meanwhile, only believe Merrick Garland is not a liberal, if you believe President Obama and most Senate Democrats are moderates. — Cal Thomas is a columnist for Tribune Content Agency
|
10A
TODAY
WEATHER
.
Wednesday, March 23, 2016
THURSDAY
FRIDAY
Windy, very warm, shower
Turning sunny, breezy and cooler
Partly sunny, breezy and warmer
Cloudy with occasional rain
Mostly cloudy, showers; cooler
High 77° Low 36° POP: 40%
High 52° Low 25° POP: 0%
High 64° Low 46° POP: 10%
High 60° Low 32° POP: 55%
High 52° Low 26° POP: 80%
Wind SSW 20-30 mph
Wind NW 12-25 mph
Wind SSE 10-20 mph
Wind SW 7-14 mph
Wind NNE 7-14 mph
McCook 43/20
Kearney 45/23
Lincoln 66/27
Grand Island 47/24
Oberlin 45/23
Clarinda 71/32
Beatrice 71/28
St. Joseph 75/32 Chillicothe 73/35
Sabetha 74/31
Concordia 69/28
Centerville 65/32
Kansas City Marshall Manhattan 78/36 75/39 Salina 77/30 Oakley Kansas City Topeka 72/30 47/24 77/34 Lawrence 77/34 Sedalia 77/36 Emporia Great Bend 75/40 79/32 65/27 Nevada Dodge City Chanute 75/40 61/25 Hutchinson 78/36 Garden City 70/30 55/23 Springfield Wichita Pratt Liberal Coffeyville Joplin 73/39 65/29 74/33 57/25 73/39 78/36 Hays Russell 58/26 66/26
Goodland 43/20
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
LAWRENCE ALMANAC
Through 8 p.m. Tuesday.
Temperature High/low Normal high/low today Record high today Record low today
76°/48° 57°/34° 88° in 1910 10° in 1965
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 0.57 1.71 1.69 4.10
REGIONAL CITIES
Today Thu. Today Thu. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W 78 35 c 52 27 pc Atchison 77 35 pc 49 25 pc Holton Independence 77 37 pc 49 27 pc Belton 75 36 pc 49 28 s Olathe 74 35 pc 49 29 s Burlington 77 36 s 55 28 s Osage Beach 73 43 pc 49 26 c Coffeyville 78 36 t 57 30 s Osage City 80 35 pc 54 28 s Concordia 69 28 c 52 32 s Ottawa 76 37 s 52 26 s Dodge City 61 25 pc 58 32 s Wichita 74 33 pc 57 32 s Fort Riley 76 32 pc 53 26 s Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
NATIONAL FORECAST
SUN & MOON
Full
Last
Mar 23 Mar 31
Thu. 7:18 a.m. 7:37 p.m. 8:55 p.m. 7:58 a.m.
New
First
Apr 7
Apr 13
LAKE LEVELS
As of 7 a.m. Tuesday Lake
Level (ft)
Clinton Perry Pomona
Discharge (cfs)
875.61 890.30 972.79
7 25 15
Shown are today’s noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for today.
Fronts Cold
INTERNATIONAL CITIES Cities Acapulco Amsterdam Athens Baghdad Bangkok Beijing Berlin Brussels Buenos Aires Cairo Calgary Dublin Geneva Hong Kong Jerusalem Kabul London Madrid Mexico City Montreal Moscow New Delhi Oslo Paris Rio de Janeiro Rome Seoul Singapore Stockholm Sydney Tokyo Toronto Vancouver Vienna Warsaw Winnipeg
Today Hi Lo W 88 74 s 48 40 sh 68 58 pc 77 50 s 99 81 pc 58 28 s 46 33 sh 50 40 sh 78 56 s 86 71 pc 52 30 pc 50 40 c 52 36 c 73 61 sh 70 57 pc 62 43 pc 54 41 pc 59 33 s 78 50 pc 35 18 pc 28 12 s 93 65 pc 46 27 pc 53 41 pc 89 76 t 59 46 c 54 32 pc 91 79 c 39 26 sf 78 64 s 60 42 pc 38 31 r 50 42 r 51 34 sh 43 27 s 31 20 pc
Hi 89 50 68 81 97 58 47 50 76 89 50 51 52 63 78 49 53 64 79 32 29 97 42 51 85 61 52 89 42 79 49 41 51 48 41 42
Thu. Lo W 75 pc 41 c 53 pc 60 c 79 pc 30 s 35 pc 42 c 54 s 65 pc 27 sh 36 r 34 pc 52 sh 56 pc 41 r 44 r 36 pc 49 pc 28 sn 17 sn 69 pc 34 c 44 c 76 t 43 sh 32 s 79 t 34 sf 64 s 40 r 33 sn 39 sh 31 pc 26 s 25 pc
Warm Stationary Showers T-storms
WOW DTV DISH 7 PM
7:30
M
Æ
E
$
B
%
D
3
C ; A )
Flurries
Snow
Ice
Today Thu. Today Thu. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Memphis 70 58 pc 61 38 t Albuquerque 59 29 pc 64 35 s 81 72 pc 85 73 t Anchorage 44 33 c 46 35 pc Miami Milwaukee 40 33 r 38 25 sn Atlanta 73 55 s 70 45 t Minneapolis 39 26 sn 41 25 pc Austin 82 54 pc 71 41 s 68 60 pc 64 38 t Baltimore 70 51 pc 74 57 pc Nashville New Orleans 77 65 pc 76 53 t Birmingham 71 59 pc 68 42 t New York 67 50 pc 62 56 c Boise 55 40 pc 56 37 c 59 28 r 44 27 pc Boston 57 38 c 46 43 sh Omaha Orlando 80 60 s 85 67 pc Buffalo 44 34 r 56 40 r 70 49 pc 75 59 pc Cheyenne 34 22 sn 44 29 pc Philadelphia Phoenix 78 51 pc 81 54 s Chicago 49 41 r 47 28 r Pittsburgh 63 52 c 68 43 t Cincinnati 63 55 c 62 35 t Portland, ME 51 29 c 38 35 sn Cleveland 59 50 c 63 34 r Portland, OR 57 45 c 53 44 sh Dallas 83 47 pc 65 42 s 60 34 s 67 37 s Denver 38 24 sn 50 28 pc Reno 74 52 s 77 56 s Des Moines 58 31 t 41 26 sn Richmond Sacramento 68 43 s 71 46 s Detroit 51 43 r 61 33 r St. Louis 70 53 c 55 32 c El Paso 72 39 s 72 43 s Salt Lake City 48 35 sn 57 41 pc Fairbanks 35 12 c 42 21 s 74 54 s 75 56 s Honolulu 81 67 sh 83 69 sh San Diego Houston 77 59 pc 68 44 pc San Francisco 65 51 s 66 52 s Seattle 53 43 c 51 41 r Indianapolis 64 56 c 61 32 r Spokane 49 40 pc 49 34 c Kansas City 77 34 pc 49 28 s Tucson 72 42 pc 79 46 s Las Vegas 69 51 s 75 54 s 82 39 t 61 34 s Little Rock 72 52 pc 61 37 pc Tulsa Wash., DC 72 54 pc 75 59 pc Los Angeles 76 54 s 79 56 s National extremes yesterday for the 48 contiguous states High: Presidio, TX 92° Low: Bangor, ME 9°
WEATHER HISTORY
WEATHER TRIVIA™
long do the vertical rays of the sun stay in the Northern Q: How Hemisphere?
Record floods hit the Midwest on March 23, 1913, with major rainstorms adding to snowmelt.
WEDNESDAY Prime Time Network Channels
Rain
-10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s National Summary: Snow, ice and rain will extend from the Great Lakes to northern New England today. Snow and wind will ramp up from the central Rockies to the northern Plains. Storms will erupt over the South Central states.
Two seasons: spring and summer.
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016
Precipitation
MOVIES
8 PM
8:30
9 PM
9:30
A:
Today 7:19 a.m. 7:36 p.m. 8:00 p.m. 7:28 a.m.
Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset
KIDS
62
62 The Closer h
The Closer h
News
Cops
Cops
Rules
Rules
4
4 Rosewood (N)
Hell’s Kitchen (N)
FOX 4 at 9 PM (N)
News
News
TMZ (N)
Seinfeld
Criminal Minds
News
Late Show-Colbert
5 19
5 Survivor (N) h
19 Nature h
Heartbeat “Twins”
8
9 D KTWU 11 A Q 12 B ` 13
9
9 Middle
Nature h Middle
Gold Gold
Survivor (N) h
C I 14 KMCI 15 L KCWE 17
29
29 Arrow (N) h
ION KPXE 18
50
41 38
41 Heartbeat “Twins” 38 Mother Mother
Criminal Minds (N)
Inside
NOVA h
Secrets of the Dead Globe Trekker
Law & Order: SVU
Chicago P.D. (N)
Mod Fam blackish Nashville (N) NOVA h
Corden
Charlie Rose (N)
KSNT
Tonight Show
News
Jimmy Kimmel Live Nightline
Secrets of the Dead World
Meyers
Business Charlie Rose (N)
Mod Fam blackish Nashville (N)
News
Jimmy Kimmel Live Nightline
Criminal Minds (N)
Criminal Minds
News
Late Show-Colbert
Corden
Law & Order: SVU
Chicago P.D. (N)
News
Tonight Show
Meyers
Commun Commun Minute
Holly
Simpson Fam Guy Fam Guy American
Supernatural (N)
News
ET
Mod Fam Mod Fam Tosh.0
Law & Order
Law & Order
Law & Order
Law & Order
Garden
6 News
The
6 News
Office
Law & Order
Cable Channels WOW!6 6 WGN-A THIS TV 19 CITY
Varsity
Pets
307 239 ››‡ The Bodyguard (1992, Drama)
25
USD497 26
›››‡ Atlantic City (1980) Burt Lancaster.
Movie
Underground (N)
City Bulletin Board, Commission Meetings
School Board Information
Snowboarding
dNBA Basketball: Clippers at Warriors SportsCenter (N)
Game
NBCSN 38 603 151 kNHL Hockey Boston Bruins at New York Rangers. FNC
39 360 205 The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File (N)
CNBC 40 355 208 Shark Tank MSNBC 41 356 209 All In With Chris CNN TNT
44 202 200 Anderson Cooper
UFC
NHL Overtime (N)
Shark Tank
Billion Dollar Buyer Secret
Rachel Maddow
The Last Word
All In With Chris
Anderson Cooper
CNN Tonight
46 242 105 ›› Couples Retreat (2009) Vince Vaughn. 47 265 118 Wahlbrgs Wahlbrgs Wahl Carbon
Anderson Cooper
Anderson Cooper CSI: NY
››› The Devil Wears Prada (2006) Meryl Streep.
Wahl
Donnie
Donnie
Wahlburgers
Wahlbrgs Wahlbrgs
Carbon
Carbon
Carbon
Billy
Carbon
Carbon
Full
Conan Vander
50 254 130 ››› Enemy of the State (1998) Will Smith.
TBS
51 247 139 Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Conan (N) 54 269 120 American Pickers
SYFY 55 244 122 Face Off
Secret
Rachel Maddow
Castle “Bad Santa”
AMC
HIST
Poker
Shark Tank
A&E
BRAVO 52 237 129 Below Deck
Rivals
The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File
USA
Carbon
SportsCenter (N)
Snowboarding
Hannity (N)
45 245 138 ››› Batman Begins (2005, Action) Christian Bale. (DVS)
TRUTV 48 246 204 Carbon
Outsiders “Trust”
City Bulletin Board
School Board Information
ESPN2 34 209 144 dCollege Basketball dCollege Basketball 36 672
Not Late Tower Cam
Underground
›››‡ The Last Tycoon (1976) Robert De Niro.
ESPN 33 206 140 dNBA Basketball New York Knicks at Chicago Bulls. FSM
Compost & Woodchip Sale Event, 8 a.m.-3 p.m., Wood Recovery and Composting Facility, 1420 E. 11th St. Mike Shurtz Trio featuring Erin Fox, 10:1511:30 a.m., Signs of Life, 722 Massachusetts St. Holy Week Ecumenical Worship, noon, Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St. Career Clinic @ the Health Spot, 1-2 p.m., Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. CLACS Merienda Lecture: Information Session: Teaching in Caceres, 4-5 p.m., 318 Bailey Hall, KU Campus. Final Fridays at Essential Goods | Johanna Wright 5-9 p.m., Essential Goods, 825 Massachusetts St. Effecting Change: Hang-12 Art Show, 5-8 p.m., Watkins Museum of History, 1047 Massachusetts St. Bingo night, doors 5:30 p.m., refreshments 6 p.m., bingo starts 7 p.m., Eagles Lodge, 1803 W. Sixth St. Persian Culture Festival: An Evening of Persian Poetry, 6:30 p.m., Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union, 1301 Jayhawk Blvd. Friday Night at the Kino: Syberiada Polska (Siberian Exile), 7 p.m., 318 Bailey Hall, KU Campus. Live in the Lobby: Improv! 7 p.m. (familyfriendly) and 9 p.m., Theatre Lawrence, 4660 Bauer Farm Drive. Out of Bounds: Addressing cyber bullying from a parent’s perspective, 7:30 p.m., Lied Center, 1600 Stewart Drive. C V L T S / Wides / Xix Tropic / Monica Freeman, 10 p.m., Replay Lounge, 946 Massachusetts St.
Red Dog’s Dog Days workout, 6 a.m., Community Building, 115 W. 11th St. Holy Week Ecumenical Worship, noon, Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St. Dinner and Junkyard Jazz, 5:30 p.m., American Legion Post #14, 3408 W. Sixth St. Compost & Woodchip Sale Event, 8 a.m.-3 p.m., Wood Recovery and Composting Facility, 1420 E. 11th St. Caroline Cotter, 7 p.m., Five Bar and Tables, 947 Massachusetts St. Kendrick Lamar’s popular radicalism, 7 p.m., Lawrence Arts
WOW DTV DISH 7 PM
Find more information about these events, and more event listings, at ljworld.com/events.
SPORTS 7:30
8 PM
8:30
Mark Zolman, restaurant consultant, St. Louis “Yes. It’s still hate speech to me.”
Jessica Singer, optician, Lawrence “This is always a tough one. They can’t say anything unless it’s on school property, and it’s also a free speech issue. But it’s a case of ‘your rights end where someone else’s rights begin.’”
Calvin Barnes, auto body work, Lawrence “Yes. It makes certain people upset.”
Kris Chaffee, retired, Emery, S.D. “No. It’s freedom of speech, freedom of opinion.”
March 23, 2016 9 PM
9:30
10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30
Cable Channels cont’d
4 7
25 FRIDAY
24 THURSDAY
10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30
3 5
street
Red Dog’s Dog Days workout, 6 a.m., Sports Pavilion Lawrence soccer field (lower level), 100 Rock Chalk Lane. “Death from the Skies,” a talk by Adrian Melott, noon, Ecumenical Campus Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. Free. Optional light lunch at 11:30; $6.50 or $3.50 for students. Big Brothers Big Sisters of Douglas County volunteer information, noon, United Way Building, 2518 Ridge Court. The National Active and Retired Federal Employees, noon, Conroy’s Pub, 3115 W. Sixth St. Douglas County Commission meeting, 4 p.m., Douglas County Courthouse, 1100 Massachusetts St. American Legion Bingo, doors open 4:30 p.m., first games 6:45 p.m., snack bar 5-8 p.m., American Legion Post #14, 3408 W. Sixth St. AUMI Jam at the SOUND+VISION Studio, 4:30-5:30 p.m., Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. Friends of the Lawrence Public Library Volunteer Orientation Session, 6:30 p.m., Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. Carry On: A One Year Anniversary of The Dinner Party Project, 6:30-10 p.m., The Depot Art Collective, 900 New Jersey St. Milkweed, Monarchs, and You!, 7-8 p.m., Lawrence Public Library Auditorium, 707 Vermont St. Rachel Platten, 7 p.m. doors, 8 p.m. show, Liberty Hall, 644 Massachusetts St. Full Moon Meditation, 7 p.m., Lavender House, 1600 New Hampshire St. KU School of Music Undergraduate Honor Recital, 7:30 p.m., Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall, 1530 Naismith Drive.
BEST BETS
ON THE
Center, 940 New Hampshire St. League of Women Voters Hot Topic: Guns in Public Places, 7 p.m., By Sylas May Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. Read more responses and add Free English as a your thoughts at LJWorld.com Second Language class, 7-8 p.m., Plymouth Should the Lawrence Congregational Church, school district ban 925 Vermont St. the Confederate Affordable community flag? Spanish class, 7-8 p.m., Plymouth Congregational Asked on Massachusetts Church, 925 Vermont St. Street Lawrence Arts & See story, 3A Crafts, 7-9 p.m., Cafe area, Dillons, 1740 Massachusetts St. Acoustic Rooster and Greg Pelligreen, 7:3010:30 p.m., BurgerFi, 918 Massachusetts St.
23 TODAY
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DATEBOOK
SUNDAY
SATURDAY
L awrence J ournal -W orld
Billy
›››‡ The Fugitive (1993)
Below Deck
Below
Happens Real Housewives
Below
American Pickers
Pawn
Pawn
Join-Die
American Pickers
Face Off (N)
The In
The In
Face Off
Pawn
The In
The In
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
401 411 421 440 451
248 249 236 327 326 329 335 277 280 252 253 231 229 299 292 290 296 278 311 276 312 282 304 372 370
136 107 114 166 165 124 162 215 183 108 109 110 112 170 174 172 176 182 180 186 185 184 106 260 261
351 350 285 287 279 362 256
211 210 192 195 189 214 132
501 515 545 535 527
300 310 318 340 350
›››‡ The Avengers (2012, Action)
The Americans (N) The Americans South Pk South Pk South Pk South Pk Broad Broad Daily Nightly ›› Miss Congeniality (2000) L.A. Clippers Dance E! News (N) Last Man Last Man ››› Gridiron Gang (2006, Drama) The Rock, Xzibit. Homes Homes Homes Homes RV 2015 RV 2014 Payne Payne Mann’s Mann’s About the Business Martin Martin Family Therapy Love & Hip Hop Family Therapy Stevie J My Life Expedition Un. Expedition Un. Wild Things Expedition Un. My 600-Lb. To Be Announced Little Women Little Women: LA Terra Terra Terra Terra My Crazy Ex My Crazy Ex (N) I Love You I Love You Restaurant: Im. Restaurant: Im. Diners Diners Diners Diners Property Brothers Property Brothers Property Brothers Property Brothers Rufus (2016) Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Friends Friends Kirby Lab Rats Rebels Gravity Gravity Gravity Spid. Rebels Judy Moody-Summer Best Fr. Bunk’d Girl K.C. Best Fr. King/Hill Burgers Burgers Cleve American American Fam Guy Fam Guy Bering Sea Gold Bering Sea Gold (N) Venom Hunters (N) Bering Sea Gold Young Daddy ››› Clueless (1995) Alicia Silverstone. The 700 Club Wicked Tuna Big Fish, Texas (N) Big Fix Alaska (N) Big Fish, Texas Last Man Last Man Middle Middle Middle Middle Golden Golden North Woods Law North Woods Law North Woods Law North Woods Law Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond Younger Raymond King King John Turning Prince S. Fur Livg BlessLife John Drive EWTN Live (N) News Rosary The Passion Holy Women Taste Taste Taste Taste Cooking Cooking Taste Taste Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. 48 Hours on ID (N) Web of Lies (N) Evil Stepmothers 48 Hours on ID Whitey Bulger: Final El Chapo: Caught! American Lawmen Whitey Bulger: Final Dateline on OWN 20/20 on OWN 20/20 on ID Dateline on OWN So You Think Tornado Alley Tornado Alley Tornado Alley Batman Batman Batman Batman Super. Atom Atom Hornet
››‡ Magic Mike XXL (2015) Girls ››‡ Demolition Man (1993) ›››‡ Up in the Air (2009) ›› Ghost Rider (2007) Nicolas Cage. Avengers: Age
Black Sails “XXVII.”
The People v. At Mid. Broad Reba Reba Homes Homes Wendy Williams ››‡ Roll Bounce Expedition Un. Little Women My Crazy Ex Restaurant: Im. Property Brothers Friends Friends Gamer’s Kirby Raven Raven Chicken Aqua Venom Hunters (500) Days of Big Fix Alaska Golden Golden North Woods Law King King Easter Duplantis Daily Mass - Olam Taste Taste Capitol Hill Capitol Hill Web of Lies El Chapo: Caught! 20/20 on OWN Tornado Alley Hornet Rogers
Vinyl “Cyclone” ››› Spy (2015) Melissa McCarthy. ››‡ The Maze Runner (2014) Zane Zane ››› Big Eyes (2014) Amy Adams. ››› Pride (2014) ››› Superbad (2007) Jonah Hill. ›› Lake Placid ›› Entrapment (1999) Sean Connery. Flight-Phoenix
two day sale!
THURSDAY & FRIDAY MARCH 24TH & 25TH, 2016
10¢
2.50
14.99
Red ripe strawberries
Bloomakers tulip bulbs save 10¢ with each item purchased
3.99 Bakery fresh angel food cake 15 oz.
16 oz. pkg.
3.99
Di Lusso regular sized salads select varieties 9 to 15 oz.
6.00
Hickory House 2 piece smoked chicken dinner with mashed potatoes and corn, dine-in or carry out 4 p.m. to 7 p.m., Thursday, March 24 only
4.99
Chinese one pint entrée with 8 oz. rice for each pint purchased (where available)
Buy any 12" pizza
, get 4 count package of garlic bread Italian Express select varieties, traditional or thin crust
free
Valid at your Lawrence Hy-Vee stores. We reserve the right to limit quantities.
Valid at your Lawrence Hy-Vee stores. We reserve the right to limit quantities.
SECTION B
USA TODAY — L awrence J ournal -W orld
IN MONEY
IN NEWS
How FBI can hack terrorist’s iPhone
Cubans praise Obama’s speech on country’s future
03.23.16 TIMOTHY A. CLARY, AFP/GETTY IMAGES
YAMIL LAGE, AFP/GETTY IMAGES
EXPLOSIONS IN BELGIUM SEND SHOCK WAVES AROUND WORLD 34 dead, scores hurt in airport, metro attacks Kim Hjelmgaard, Delphine Reuter and John Bacon USA TODAY AFP/GETTY IMAGES
An airport camera captured images of three suspects in the attack at Brussels’ airport in Zaventem.
KETEVAN KARDAVA, VIA AFP/GETTY IMAGES
Several people were injured in blasts at Brussels’ airport in Zaventem. The Islamic State terrorist group claimed credit for coordinated attacks at the airport and on a train. Airlines canceled hundreds of flights, and European railways froze links with Brussels.
IN U.S., UNEASE THAT IT COULD HAPPEN HERE
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.
Experts: Security is tight, but transport hubs vulnerable
For the latest national sports coverage, go to sports.usatoday.com
Bart Jansen, Matthew Diebel, Kevin Johnson and Greg Toppo
USA SNAPSHOTS©
Our place in the universe Dark energy
68%
Dark matter
27%
Earth and everything else Less than
5%
Source NASA TERRY BYRNE AND PAUL TRAP, USA TODAY
USA TODAY
Major cities across the U.S. scrambled to harden their security nets after the latest terror attacks — this time, in Brussels — left dozens dead and renewed fear that urban transit stations are easy and attractive targets for suicide bombers. Police in Boston, Chicago, and Los Angeles reported stepped-up security at rail stations and airports. New York City Mayor Bill De Blasio pledged that New Yorkers “will not live in fear.” “NYPD is on increased alert across our city,” De Blasio said. “While we take this threat seriously ... our lives will continue today in honor of those lost to terrorism.” NEW YORK
Intelligence officials assured Americans that there is no evidence of a similar attack being planned here, but experts say the USA’s relatively open transportation system could make it vulnerable to attacks like the ones that struck Brussels. The Islamic State claimed responsibility for Tuesday’s urban assault in Belgium, which brought the capital city’s airport and downtown metro to a terrifying halt, killing more than 30 and wounding at least 150 as screaming commuters dived for cover from shards of bomb shrapnel. Police at the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey increased security at each of the region’s three area airports — John F. Kennedy, LaGuardia and Newark — and at bridges, tunnels and bus terminals. At Manhattan’s busy Penn Station, police checked morning commuters’ briefcases and backpacks. The city’s massive police department deployed additional
Brussels Airport
BE LG I UM E19 E19
Brussels
Salah Abdeslam N22 arrested Schaerbeek March 18 N22
R22 R22
Anderlecht E19 E19
N2
N2
Lxelles
Maelbeek metro station Ukkel 0
N
4
Miles
North United Sea Kingdom
Netherlands
Brussels
Germany
Belgium France
Paris Sources USA TODAY research; ESRI FRANK POMPA, USA TODAY
‘I could feel the building move’
Eyewitnesses recount moments of terror at airport and subway. IN NEWS
BRUSSELS Explosions at an airport and a downtown metro stop during morning rush hour rocked the Belgian capital Tuesday, killing at least 34 people, wounding more than 150 and shutting down all public transportation. Terror alerts rose across Europe, in the USA and around the world. Belgium’s federal prosecutor confirmed the two blasts at the airport and a third at the metro station were terrorist attacks. The metro station is located near buildings that house European Union institutions in central Brussels. “We were fearing terrorist attacks, and that has now happened,” Belgian Prime Minister Charles Michel said. A couple with connections to Tennessee were reported missing while a former Oakland University basketball center was injured. Sebastien Bellin, who was born in Brazil, had leg surgery and was scheduled for more, OU coach Greg Kampe said. The Islamic State claimed responsibility for the attacks in a statement to the Amaq news agency. “Islamic State fighters opened fire inside Zaventem Airport before several of them detonated their explosive belts,” the statement said, adding that a “martyrdom bomber detonated his explosive belt in the Maelbeek metro station.” The attack follows the arrest of Salah Abdeslam, a suspect in November’s attacks in Paris who was captured in Brussels on Friday after a four-month manhunt. A U.S. federal law enforcement official said it was likely that the assaults had been long planned but were accelerated after Abdeslam’s arrest. The official, who was not authorized to comment publicly, discounted the notion that the attacks were a form of retaliation. Rather, they might have been accelerated out of concern that Abdeslam would cooperate with Belgian investigators. President Obama, speaking in Havana on the third day of a Latin American tour, said the United States stands with Belgium, and the attack is “yet another reminder that the world must unite ... in fighting against the scourge of terrorism.”
Hjelmgaard reported from Berlin; Reuter reported from Brussels; Bacon reported from McLean, Va. Contributing: Kevin Johnson in Washington; Belen Diego, Nikolia Apostolou and Maya Vidon in Berlin
v STORY CONTINUES ON 2B
Water systems continue to violate safety standards Report says EPA must improve compliance Laura Ungar and Mark Nichols USA TODAY
More than three-quarters of small-community water systems across the nation that had the most serious health-related violations of federal safe drinking water regulations still were violating those rules three years later, according to a federal report released Tuesday.
The Environmental Protection Agency needs to do more to ensure that the small-community systems, which serve more than 24 million people, stay in compliance, said the report from the EPA’s Office of Inspector General. “The IG’s recommendations will be added to our ongoing efforts to address non-compliance of small drinking water systems nationally,” EPA spokeswoman Monica Lee said in a statement. The report comes a few days after a USA TODAY NETWORK investigation focused on lead contamination in public water systems and found nearly 2,000
A USA TODAY NETWORK investigation found nearly 2,000 systems across the USA with excessive lead levels. GETTY IMAGES
Some water systems have trouble meeting standards.
systems across the USA with excessive lead levels from 20122015. About 48% of the systems in the NETWORK’s analysis meet
the OIG report’s description of small-community water systems, serving 3,300 people or fewer. The OIG report looked at violations overall, not just those involving lead. Contaminants may include bacteria, nitrates, arsenic and copper, all of which pose health risks if people ingest excessive levels in water.
Nationally, the EPA classified 2,252 small-community water systems as serious violators in October 2011, including 193 systems with the most serious problems, according to the report. Top-tier violations require that the public be notified within 24 hours of a water system discovering them. Out of those 193 systems with the most serious violations, only 43, or 22%, were back in compliance within three years — meaning 78% were not. Almost half of the 193 most serious violators were in Kansas, Texas and Puerto Rico.
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L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY WEDNESDAY, MARCH 23, 2016
CUBAN VIEWERS PRAISE OBAMA’S ADDRESS President goes beyond just ‘the blockade’ to share vision of island’s future
Guillermo Isaac Martinez watches President Obama’s speech on Tuesday.
Sitting under a portrait of his grandmother, Angel Cuza watches President Obama's speech inside his home in Old Havana on Tuesday.
Alan Gomez USA TODAY
As President Obama stood in a theater in Old Havana on Tuesday and praised the young, entrepreneurial Cubans who are changing the island’s future, Angel Cuza was watching on his TV a few blocks away and let out a chuckle. “Like the young people who took down Batista?” said Cuza, referring to Fidel Castro’s guerrillas who took down the former Cuban dictator Fulgencio Batista in 1959. “They were kids, too.” As Obama talked about how it was up to the Cuban people, and not the United States, to improve the country’s situation, Cuza’s friend pulled his cigar out of his mouth and nodded his head. “Exactly,” Guillermo Isaac Martinez said. “Exactly.” Cubans throughout this capital city praised Obama’s speech, delivered at the Grand Theater of Havana and broadcast in its entirety by Cuban media. People huddled around TV sets and radios to listen and were overwhelmed that they were hearing directly from a U.S. president standing on their soil. Cuza and Martinez, longtime friends who are now partners in an multi-city domino league, have plenty of reservations about the United States and the recent diplomatic opening that allowed for Obama’s historic trip to the island. Neither of them feel that Cuba needs to adopt the kind of U.S.-style government that Obama highlighted in his speech; both are perfectly content with Cuba’s communist model. “The system is good, it’s solid,” said Martinez, 56. “We have free education, free health care, peoHAVANA
PHOTOS BY JACK GRUBER,USA TODAY
ple have liberties that they don’t have in most places in the world.” The two friends looked exasperated when Obama spoke about the need to improve Cuba’s human rights record. “We shouldn’t mix human rights with politics,” Cuza said, using nearly the exact phrase Cuban President Raúl Castro used the day before. But Cuza, a former member of Castro’s military who spent decades working in Cuban prisons, changed his tone when the president started talking about ways to improve the Cuban economy. Ever since Fidel Castro stepped down and elevated his brother to the presidency in 2008, Raúl Castro has instituted a series of economic changes, allowing people to buy and sell their homes and cars, and to work outside the state-run economy as self-employed entrepreneurs. Some call those changes a shift toward capitalism. Cubans refer to them as “perfecting the socialist model.” “You can call it socialism, capitalism, whatever you want,” Cuza
said. “What I want is improvement.” The two friends then started lamenting how bad their economic situation has become. Martinez, a mechanic who fixes ferry boats that run across Havana Harbor, said he makes 320 Cuban pesos a month — roughly 12 U.S. dollars a month. Cuza, who retired from the military and now works as a maintenance worker at a school, said he gets even less — about $10 a month. “What am I supposed to live on the rest of the month?” Cuza said. That’s why Martinez was happy to hear Obama talk about ways the United States can help young people in Cuba start and expand businesses. Martinez praised the talent on the island and said they just needed the opportunity to flourish on a global level. “Raúl is preparing to pass things on to the younger generation,” Martinez said. Obama got a good laugh out of the two friends when he tried to muster his best Spanish to talk about the ingenuity and resourcefulness Cubans have be-
come famous for. Obama turned to an old Cuban saying to make his point: El Cubano inventa del aire. Or, “The Cuban invents things out of thin air.” To that, Martinez grabbed a chair next to him and said, “He’s right! I can turn this into an airplane if I wanted to.” After the speech was done, they sat still for a moment before marveling at what they had just seen on Cuza’s crackling TV. Cuza said he was excited to be talking about the United States without the economic embargo being the first and only point of discussion. “The only thing we talked about was the blockade,” he said, using the word the Cuban government uses for the economic embargo. “That’s why it’s so good to hear about all these other things, to talk about all these other things.” And with that, Martinez turned to his friend and jokingly quoted a line Obama used in his speech. Todos somos Americanos. “We’re all Americans.”
‘See something’ campaign works, experts say v CONTINUED FROM 1B
officers throughout the city, mainly to crowded areas and busy transit locations “out of an abundance of caution” and to provide “public reassurance,” New York Police Department (NYPD) spokesman J. Peter Donald said. Police Commissioner William Bratton said a special police unit is now permanently assigned to the Times Square subway station, but the Tuesday deployment was planned in advance of the Brussels assault. Worldwide, terrorists have targeted railway systems for more than a decade: In 2004, they bombed a commuter train in Madrid, killing 191 people and injuring 2,000. In 2005, suicide bombers killed 52 people in the London Underground and on a double-decker bus. Like many nationwide, New York’s transit system is vulnerable. The city’s massive, five-borough subway system, which in 2014 carried more than 1.75 billion riders, or about 5.6 million riders each weekday, features more than 1,000 entrances and exits. That makes it much more open than the typical U.S. airport, with its checkpoints and tight security, said U.S. Rep. Peter King, R-N.Y. “We can never have the same level of security on trains as we do on planes,” said King, who supports more railway canine units and random searches. Nationwide, many more passengers travel by rail than plane — five times as many daily, a November report by the Congressional Research Service found: In 2014, passengers took 5 billion rides on subway, commuter and intercity trains. By comparison, travelers take about 730 million airline flights each year. If cities moved to screen even a portion of those rail passengers, experts say, the costs could be high. The Transportation Security Administration estimates that it spends $7 on screening for each airline passenger, a prohibitive cost for any subway or commuter rail system, said Brian Michael Jenkins, director of the National Surface Transportation Security Center at the Mineta Transportation Institute. Add a 10- to 15-minute wait — shorter than what is typical in today’s airport security lines — and “it would destroy public surface transportation,” he said.
EDUARDO MUNOZ, AFP/GETTY IMAGES
New York Mayor Bill de Blasio watches as Police Commissioner William Bratton speaks to the media Tuesday.
CHRISTOPHE PETIT TESSON, EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY
People gather at a growing memorial at Place de la Bourse in Brussels to pay tribute to the victims of the terror attacks that occurred earlier Tuesday.
‘There was panic’: Eyewitnesses speak BRUSSELS Explosions at the Brussels airport and a downtown metro stop rocked the city Tuesday, killing dozens. Here’s a look at the chaotic scene in Brussels from people who witnessed the attack:
burnt off; others had burn wounds on their hands.” ‘A EUROPEAN PROBLEM’
AT THE AIRPORT
Alex Rossi, a journalist for Sky News who was in the duty-free area of the airport at the time of the explosions, told the British broadcaster: “There was panic, people trying to find shelter where they were after we heard those two explosions. I could feel the building move. There was also dust and smoke as well.”
RTL TVI VIA AFP/GETTY IMAGES
“I gave my sweater to a woman who needed it more than I did,” says Rodolphe Devilez, a witness at the metro station bombing. Someone gave him a large bath towel to drape around his shoulders and pro-
A screen grab shows people inside Brussels’ airport after the attack. tect him against the cold. The mover, in his early 50s, was at work with his colleagues in a building next to the Maelbeek metro station when they heard an explosion. “We ran outside, and helped evacuate the people there who came out,” Devilez said. “We couldn’t go in further because of the smoke. We were able to help some 30 people from the exit we were at they all had dust on their faces; some had their hairs
Increasing the number of security personnel does cause terrorists “to back off,” Jenkins said, noting research on terrorists who survived their own attacks. But he said educational campaigns encouraging travelers and transportation workers to report suspicious activity also work. Actually, said Jeff Price, a transportation security expert and associate professor at Metro
State University in Denver, such screening could also make rail systems more attractive terrorism targets. Large crowds backed up at crammed train stations waiting to get through checkpoints create bigger targets. “There would have to be massive changes in facilities throughout the U.S., and ultimately, we would just end up creating more crowds for
METRO STATION BOMBING
Ángela González, 45, of Spain, lives in quartier de Arts-Loi, close to the underground station. She says the area is completely shut down. “Schools are closed, no one is allowed to leave,” she said. “In fact, no one allowed out of wherever they are. All you can hear is sirens and streets are completely deserted.” When asked if she wanted to leave Belgium for Spain, she noted this is not just a problem in Belgium. “No point going back to Spain,” she said. “This is not just a Belgium problem, it is a European problem. We would not be safer elsewhere.” She said hospitals are calling for blood donors. USA TODAY reports
bombers to attack,” he said. Instead, the TSA posts highprofile canine teams with local police in subway and train stations at a small fraction of the cost teams stationed at airports. In Washington D.C., the city’s subway system announced it would conduct more canine sweeps and patrols Tuesday. The city’s police chief, Cathy Lanier, said that police in the nation’s cap-
ital are “at a heightened state of alert at all times,” but she urged local residents to be vigilant in wake of the attacks and report anything unusual. “If you see something, say something,” she said. That tracks with a Mineta Transportation Institute study of worldwide incidents, which found that nearly one in 10 thwarted bombings on trains, buses and ferries was discovered by passengers or workers before the bomb detonated. “The reason for that appears to be the effectiveness of these seesomething, say-something campaigns,” Mineta’s Jenkins said. In Chicago on Tuesday, Mayor Rahm Emanuel said the city remained on alert, but he stressed that there were “no known threats.” Police increased their presence at airports, transportation hubs and other high-profile locations, said Police Department spokesman Anthony Guglielmi. Emanuel said Chicago “will continue standing with the Belgian people both today and in the difficult days ahead as they move forward in their healing process.” Boston officials strengthened security on public transit systems and at airports, Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker said. Boston Police Commissioner William Evans said while there was no specific threat in Boston, “all department personnel are advised to be extremely vigilant as they go about their duties and to pay particular attention to all transportation hubs.” President Obama, visiting Havana, on Tuesday said the attacks were “another reminder we must unite” in the fight against terrorism. “We will do whatever is necessary to support our friends in Belgium,” Obama said. Contributing: Gregory Korte, USA TODAY
3B
USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld WEDNESDAY, MARCH 23, 2016
Ex-mayor of Toronto Rob Ford dies at 46 Stripped of powers after 2013 scandal
Gregg Zoroya and Adam Kovac USA TODAY
Rob Ford, the once eccentric mayor of Toronto whose reign was marked by bombast and substance abuse, died Tuesday after battling a rare, aggressive cancer the past two years, his family announced. He was 46. Ford made international headlines after a 2013 scandal in which he admitted to using crack cocaine, public drunkenness, and drinking and driving, prompting colleagues to strip him of some of his mayoral powers. The scandal vaulted Ford onto the stage of the outrageous. But he remained popular in Toronto. His followers called themselves the “Ford Nation,” and he aimed for a second run as mayor. He was a strong AFP/GETTY IMAGES candidate for Rob Ford re-election, according to the Toronto Star. In the fall of 2014, Ford announced he had a rare form of cancer called liposarcoma that grows in the fat cells, and he had a tumor in his abdomen. The diagnosis forced him to drop his re-election campaign. He re-emerged on the political scene in October 2014, winning by a large margin his old Toronto City Council seat. His chief of staff, Dan Jacobs, said Monday that Ford was receiving palliative care after the former mayor had not responded to chemotherapy. “With heavy hearts and profound sadness, the Ford family announces the passing of their beloved son, brother, husband and father,” Jacobs said Tuesday in a statement. Toronto Mayor John Tory said the city was reeling from the news. “I know there were many affected by his gregarious nature and approach to public service,” he said. “It is my sincere hope that Canadians will remember Rob Ford for his enduring love for his community and country,” said Rona Ambrose, interim leader of Canada’s Conservative Party. “His followers were willing to forgive him a lot,” said Andrew Sancton, political science professor at Western University in London, Ontario. “They understood he was a human who made mistakes and would apologize for them.” MONTREAL
Zoroya reported from Arlington, Va.
Corrections & Clarifications USA TODAY is committed to accuracy. To reach us, contact Standards Editor Brent Jones at 800-8727073 or e-mail accuracy@usatoday.com. Please indicate whether you’re responding to content online or in the newspaper.
DAVID WALLACE, THE ARIZONA REPUBLIC
Sharon and James Farrelly, front, of Phoenix wait in line with others to vote in the Arizona primary at the polling place at Memorial Presbyterian Church in Phoenix. People said they had to wait in line 90 minutes to vote.
BELGIUM BOMBINGS CHANGE CONTEXT OF STATE CONTESTS As Arizona residents endure long waits to vote, candidates decry attacks in Europe
The West no longer can afford “to deny this enemy exists out of a combination of political correctness and fear.” Ted Cruz
Dan Nowicki
The Arizona Republic
Terror attacks that killed dozens in Brussels on Tuesday provided a somber backdrop to Arizona’s presidential primary, which the candidates viewed as a potentially crucial battle of the 2016 Republican and Democratic White House races. All five candidates still in contention paused their campaigning to react to the attacks. Donald Trump, the Republican front-runner who had been running TV ads in Arizona touting his proposal to temporarily ban Muslims from traveling to the USA, tweeted, “I have proven to be far more correct about terrorism than anybody- and it’s not even close. Hopefully AZ and UT will be voting for me today!” In addition to Arizona’s primary, Republicans and Democrats held caucuses in Utah, while Democrats caucused in Idaho. Ted Cruz, a Texas senator favored to win in Utah, said the West no longer can afford “to deny this enemy exists out of a combination of political correctness and fear.” Ohio Gov. John Kasich, who has not actively competed for Arizona, denounced the latest round of terror strikes. “We must also redouble our efforts with our allies to identify, root out and destroy the perpetrators of such acts of evil,” he said. Hillary Clinton, the former secretary of State who has led Bernie Sanders in Arizona polls in the Democratic race, said, “The people of Brussels, of Europe and of the world will not be intimidated by these vicious killers.” Sanders, a Vermont senator who has aggressively campaigned in Arizona, called the Brussels attacks “another cowardly attempt to terrorize innocent civilians.” It was unclear early Tuesday
PHOENIX
MICHAEL CHOW, THE ARIZONA REPUBLIC
Traffic backs up on East University Drive as voters attempt to park Tuesday at Pilgrim Evangelical Lutheran Church in Mesa.
how much, if at all, the Brussels terrorism weighed on the minds of Democratic and Republican voters in Arizona as they endured long lines — in some cases, they reported waits from 90 minutes to two hours or more. A cost-cutting decision in Maricopa County — Arizona’s most populous county — to downsize to 60 polling places from more than 200 in 2012 may have contributed to the logistical nightmare at some sites. Joshua Hart, 20, of Phoenix waited in a long line that snaked around the Church of the Beatitudes in north-central Phoenix. A Democrat, he planned to vote for Sanders, saying he speaks to the issues Hart most cares about: distribution of wealth and income inequalities in the workplace. “You have clear separation between the higher class and lower class,” Hart said. “I’d like to see them closer together.” Phil Garcia, 85, of Phoenix, a retired Department of Defense employee, planned on casting a vote
for Clinton. Garcia said he “hates those Trump” ads and views the GOP front-runner as a “con-artist” because of his business practices and the controversies surrounding Trump University. Many pro-Trump voters cited the New York billionaire’s controversial immigration policies, such as his promised border wall built at Mexico’s expense; his perceived economic prowess; and his anti-establishment swagger. “We need an outsider who will get things done,” Republican Phil Wyatt, 38, said. Chris Rohman, 45, a Mesa Republican, voted for Trump because he represents “a change in D.C.’s establishment handpicked candidates.” Bill Holder, 65, a lawyer in Phoenix, waited 90 minutes to cast a vote for John Kasich. “He’s the only moderate Republican left,” he said. Contributing: Rob O’Dell and Yvonne Wingett Sanchez, The Arizona Republic
IN BRIEF UKRAINIAN PILOT SENTENCED TO 22 YEARS IN PRISON PRESIDENT AND PUBLISHER
John Zidich
EDITOR IN CHIEF
David Callaway CHIEF REVENUE OFFICER
Kevin Gentzel
7950 Jones Branch Dr., McLean, Va. 22108, 703-854-3400 Published by Gannett The local edition of USA TODAY is published daily in partnership with Gannett Newspapers Advertising: All advertising published in USA TODAY is subject to the current rate card; copies available from the advertising department. USA TODAY may in its sole discretion edit, classify, reject or cancel at any time any advertising submitted. National, Regional: 703-854-3400 Reprint permission, copies of articles, glossy reprints: www.GannettReprints.com or call 212-221-9595 USA TODAY is a member of The Associated Press and subscribes to other news services. USA TODAY, its logo and associated graphics are registered trademarks. All rights reserved.
Ukrainian pilot Nadezhda Savchenko, 34, was sentenced Tuesday by a Russian court to 22 years in prison for complicity to murder in the 2014 deaths of two Russian journalists and several civilians, Russian state media reported. Ukraine President Petro Poroshenko offered to exchange two Russian prisoners being held in his country for the return of Savchenko. At the sentencing, the judge said Savchenko — Ukraine’s first female military pilot — will also have to pay a fine for crossing into Russia illegally. Her sentence will start from the date of detention, June 23, 2014, Russia’s TASS news agency reported. — Kim Hjelmgaard SUPREME COURT HITS FIRST POST-SCALIA DEADLOCK
The risk created by last month’s death of Justice Antonin
for being required to guarantee their spouses’ loans. — Richard Wolf
FIERY PROTEST IN GREECE
ALSO ...
ANDREJ ISAKOVIC, AFP/GETTY IMAGES
A man runs after setting himself on fire during a protest Tuesday at a makeshift camp at the Greek-Macedonian border near the village of Idomeni, Greece. Scalia became a reality Tuesday and Senate Republicans: “The when the Supreme Court dead- judgment is affirmed by an equallocked in a bankruptcy case that ly divided court.” The case was one of the high had been pending since the first court’s least noticed — a bankday of the term last October. Chief Justice John Roberts ruptcy dispute between a Missouread the one-sentence verdict, ri bank and a development which could be repeated many company that defaulted on its times before a replacement for loans. The company was owned Scalia overcomes a similar dead- by two couples, and the wives lock between President Obama filed suit, claiming discrimination
uFired Texas trooper Brian Encinia pleaded not guilty Tuesday to a charge of misdemeanor perjury stemming from his arrest of Sandra Bland, according to the Associated Press. Following a traffic stop, Bland was taken into custody and spent the weekend in jail. She was found dead in her cell three days later. No one was indicted in connection with her death, which later was ruled a suicide. uA spring storm will bring snow to the north-central U.S. Wednesday and heavy rain to the south. The storm will likely have its strongest impact on the Upper Midwest and Great Lakes region, where 6 to 10 inches of snow is likely, according to the National Weather Service. Severe thunderstorms are forecast Wednesday in the southern Plains and Mississippi Valley.
4B
MONEYLINE UNITED INVESTORS CLEAR THE AIR ABOUT CHAIRMAN Two United Continental investors said Tuesday they still plan to nominate their own slate of directors, but they aren’t demanding former Continental CEO Gordon Bethune be chairman. Paul Reeder, CEO of PAR Capital Management, and Brad Gerstner, CEO of Altimeter Capital Management, said in a letter to United’s directors that two former airline execs named to the board were “a welcome development. In fact we encourage the board to immediately appoint as chairman one of these two new members.” But Bethune, renowned for resurrecting Continental in the 1990s, remains one of the hedge funds’ nominees — and, they said, would be a worthy contender. GE AIMS TO SELL POWER, MEDICAL GEAR TO CUBA General Electric is exploring the sale of aviation, health care and energy equipment to Cuba as the U.S. moves to lift a 55-yearold trade embargo against the country. Monday, GE and the Cuban government signed memorandums of understanding, or MOUs, to “express our joint interest in exploring potential opportunities” in those sectors, GE said in a statement. TOYOTA MOVES EMERGENCY BRAKING PLEDGE UP TO 2017 Toyota plans to make automatic emergency braking a standard safety feature on nearly all of its vehicles by the end of 2017, beating the deadline under an agreement by 20 automakers announced last week. Twentyfive of the automaker’s Toyota and Lexus models will get the feature. The system uses a camera and a laser beam to detect when a car has stopped in front of it and applies the brakes if a driver doesn’t act to prevent or reduce the severity of a collision. DOW JONES INDUSTRIAL AVG. 17,750
-41.30
17,700 9:30 a.m. 17,650 17,624 17,600 17,550
4:00 p.m.
17,583
17,500
TUESDAY 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
4821.66 2049.80 1.94% $41.45 $1.1216 112.33
x 12.79 y 1.80 x 0.02 x 1.54 y 0.0035 x 0.47
SOURCES USA TODAY RESEARCH, MARKETWATCH.COM
USA SNAPSHOTS©
Social Security to the max
Maximum Social Security monthly benefit for retirees at full retirement age, 66, in 2016 is
$ 2,639
Sources Social Security Administration and Mercer JAE YANG AND PAUL TRAP, USA TODAY
NEWS MONEY SPORTS LIFE AUTOS TRAVEL
L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY WEDNESDAY, MARCH 23, 2016
OLIVIER HOSLET, EPA
TERROR’S SHOCK ON STOCKS USUALLY PROVES FLEETING As attacks become more common, their impact on markets becomes more muted
Adam Shell @adamshell USA TODAY
TERROR IMPACT ON STOCKS WANES
If recent history is a guide, the latest terrorist attack in Brussels, while a terrible human tragedy, won’t scare stock investors into selling or keep the stock market down for long. The impact of terror attacks on financial markets has become less dramatic and far more muted in recent years, compared with the massive sell-off after the Sept. 11 attacks in 2001, when the broad U.S. stock market tumbled nearly 5% in the first trading day after the attack and was down nearly 12% five trading days after planes hijacked by terrorists brought down the twin towers of the World Trade Center in New York. Indeed, as terror attacks become more commonplace, their shock value has diminished. A list of terrorist-related events since 1979 shows that the stock market impact from terrorist events fades within 10 days, according to data from Bill Stone, chief investment strategist at PNC Asset Management Group. “Economies and markets tend to adjust and become desensitized to terror attacks over time,” Stone says. “The fact remains that the impact of terror attacks on the market has always faded over time.” David Kotok, chief investment officer at Cumberland Advisors, agrees each successive attack has less psychological effect on investors. “Shocks work like this: The first one is a surprise and (gets) a big response,” he says. “The next one, less so. And so it goes.” Terror events normally are not on a scale that can create massive downside risk for the economy, says Jim Paulsen, chief investment strategist at Wells Capital Management. “The market appropriately prices each event,” Paulsen says. “There have now been several examples, and it is becoming clear that these events are typically temporary and minor as far as
The stock market reaction to terror attacks has become more muted as attacks become more common. S&P 500 returns measured in trading days following terror attacks: First day
+5 days
+10
+30
6%
Above, employees exit a building near the site of an explosion at the Maelbeek metro station in Brussels on Tuesday.
4% 2% 0% -2% -4% -6% -8% -10% -12% 9/11 2001
4/15 2013
1/7 2015
11/13 2015
12/2 2015
Sept. 11 attacks
Boston Marathon bombing
Charlie Hebdo massacre
Paris attacks
San Bernardino shootings
Source USA TODAY research GEORGE PETRAS, USA TODAY
“Economies and markets tend to adjust and become desensitized to terror attacks over time.” Bill Stone, chief investment strategist at PNC Asset Management Group.
their impact on future economic, business and earnings growth.” While the frequency of terror attacks has picked up in recent months, with three highly publicized attacks occurring since November, the reaction of the stock market has been decidedly hohum as investors put these tragic events into perspective. Data compiled by USA TODAY show stocks often shrug off the terrorist act altogether. After the Boston Marathon bombings in March 2013, the Standard & Poor’s 500 index, which plunged 2.3% on the day of the attack, was close to break-even 10 trading days later. Similarly, following last year’s attacks in Paris at the offices of magazine Charlie Hebdo and the more recent attack in No-
vember at the Bataclan theater and outdoor Parisian cafes, the U.S. stock market finished in positive territory the day of the attacks as well as in the five-, 10and 30-trading day periods after. Tuesday, Wall Street shrugged off the latest attack, with the S&P 500 down less than 0.1%. It would take a terror strike of much larger proportions and shock value to spook investors and cause a major downdraft, Wall Street pros say. The latest strike in Europe, however, could impact markets negatively in different ways, says Barry Bannister, chief equity strategist at Stifel. It could exacerbate political risks and create headwinds related to free trade and immigration, as well as spark a backlash against globalization, he warns. It could exacerbate socalled “Brexit” fears, as England weighs whether to leave the European Union, experts say. “The only market readthrough is how it affects politics in the U.S. and Europe,” Bannister says.
How the FBI can hack killer’s iPhone — without Apple Agency’s method likely uses a digital copy of phone’s chips Elizabeth Weise and Kevin Johnson USA TODAY
In the month since it became public knowledge that the FBI was locked out of an iPhone used by one of the San Bernardino killers, the bureau has been flooded with offers from people who said they could get into the encrypted phone, a federal law enforcement official said Tuesday. Now the agency is getting help from one of these unnamed hackers, presenting this tantalizing SAN FRANCISCO
mystery within the code-cracking community: Which approach seemed promising enough for the government to postpone its court face-off against Apple? One method that has had a lot of notice involves creating a digital copy of the phone’s chips. “The most likely one to my mind is something that was originally suggested by Daniel Kahn Gillmor,” a technology fellow with the ACLU’s Speech, Privacy and Technology Project, said Joseph Lorenzo Hall, chief technologist with the Center for Democracy and Technology, a Washington, D.C.-based nonprofit focused on digital civil liberties. Gillmor’s hack, detailed in a blog post in late February, would allow the FBI to try countless
The hack would allow the FBI to try countless passcodes without touching the actual phone used by Syed Rizwan Farook. passcodes without touching the actual phone used by Syed Rizwan Farook, who with his wife killed 14 in a December shooting spree. That hack would also avoid tripping the self-erase program built into the iPhone, the security hurdle at the crux of the U.S. government’s legal fight with Apple. The Justice Department isn’t
saying which “outside party” is helping it hack into the phone. If the method works, the agency won’t need Apple’s aid unlocking the phone, the department said in a filing late Monday when it asked for a surprise postponement of Tuesday’s scheduled hearing in the Apple dispute. That was quite an about-face from the FBI’s previous stance, which held there was no way to get into the phone without Apple’s assistance. A second government official, who also was not authorized to speak publicly, said the undisclosed party had been in contact with the FBI over a period of days before authorities felt confident enough to seek a postponement of Tuesday’s hearing. Investigators have been able to
bypass the security function on sample phones, providing some measure of confidence. They should have an update to the court by April 5 on their progress, Justice lawyers said Monday. Gillmor’s approach involves making a digital copy of the phone’s chips and then creating a purely digital version of them. The FBI could then try to crack the passcode nine times, delete that digital version, make a new one and keep going until one of them worked. The FBI has the technical experts and necessary hardware in place to do the hack in no more than two days. Even if they had to start with nothing, it wouldn’t take more than a month to unlock the phone, Gillmor told USA TODAY.
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USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld WEDNESDAY, MARCH 23, 2016
AMERICA’S MARKETS What to watch Adam Shell @adamshell USA TODAY
The housing recovery has been a key building block of the economic comeback. And more good news on the housing front is expected Wednesday when new home sales for February are reported. Wall Street is looking for 510,000 new home sales, up a little more than 3% from the disappointing 494,000 new houses sold in January. “January was weak despite the warm weather, so some snapback is likely in February, which also saw generally warmer and less wintery weather,” says John Canally, chief economic strategist for LPL Financial . New home construction, Canally says, will add to economic
Facts about America’s investors who use SigFig tracking services:
growth this year, just as it has every year since 2010. Still, given that housing accounts for roughly 5% of GDP, even a strong housing market likely won’t be enough to “offset weakness elsewhere,” such as weaker exports and less capital expenditure spending from U.S. businesses, he adds. Still, housing continues to enjoy many tailwinds, Canally says. “Taking a longer-term look at things like housing affordability, demographics, the labor market, household formation, mortgage rates, rising rents (which affect the rent vs. buy decision), banks willingness to lend, household balance sheets and housing prices — almost all of these favor ongoing improvement in housing,” Canally says. Housing headwinds include higher prices due to low inventory, which also increases down payment amounts, Canally adds.
DOW JONES
Investors in North Carolina and South Carolina are twice as likely as the average SigFig investor to own an energy company stock.
-41.30
-1.80
INDUSTRIAL AVERAGE
CHANGE: -.2% YTD: +157.54 YTD % CHG: +.9%
CLOSE: 17,582.57 PREV. CLOSE: 17,623.87 RANGE: 17,540.42-17,648.94
NASDAQ
COMP
+12.79
-1.24
CHANGE: +.3% YTD: -185.75 YTD % CHG: -3.7%
CLOSE: 4,821.66 PREV. CLOSE: 4,808.87 RANGE: 4,781.71-4,835.60
CLOSE: 2,049.80 PREV. CLOSE: 2,051.60 RANGE: 2,040.57-2,056.60
RUSSELL 2000 INDEX
CHANGE: -.1% YTD: -38.55 YTD % CHG: -3.4%
CLOSE: 1,097.34 PREV. CLOSE: 1,098.58 RANGE: 1,089.99-1,100.76
S&P 500’S BIGGEST GAINERS/LOSERS GAINERS
Company (ticker symbol)
$ Chg
Staples (SPLS) 10.30 Makes strong case for Office Depot deal as trial begins.
+.73
+7.6
+8.8
Endo International (ENDP) 30.81 +1.97 Buy recommended, makes up loss on generic alternative.
+6.8
-49.7
Western Digital (WDC) Fund manager buys; teams with Revera.
51.34 +2.05
+4.2
-14.5
Alexion Pharmaceuticals (ALXN) 135.71 +4.65 Extends winning streak since suffering in weak industry.
+3.5
-28.9
Mallinckrodt (MNK) Extends winning streak since 2016 low.
61.05 +2.09
+3.5
-18.2
Vertex Pharmaceuticals (VRTX) Fund manager reveals, up along with peers.
86.78
+3.3
-31.0
Sherwin-Williams (SHW) Susquehanna upgrades stock to positive.
+3.2
+8.6
Tenet Healthcare (THC) Climbs as it announces new leadership.
29.24
+.82
+2.9
-3.5
Sealed Air (SEE) Up after raised dividend.
48.53
+1.30
+2.8
+8.8
8.08
+.22
+2.8
+13.6
YTD % Chg % Chg
Price
$ Chg
Transocean (RIG) Shares lower on rig price expectation.
10.00
-.53
-5.0
-19.2
Pepco (POM) Tough Exelon merger, reaches year’s low.
21.24
-.73
-3.3
-18.3
CF Industries (CF) OCI deal investigation begins, dips early.
33.93
-1.13
-3.2
-16.9
Royal Caribbean Cruises (RCL) Slides after terror attacks in Brussels.
75.99
-2.24
-2.9
-24.9
11.01
-.32
-2.8
-28.5
Express Scripts (ESRX) $15 billion Anthem lawsuit not good news.
67.52
-1.82
-2.6
-22.8
TripAdvisor (TRIP) Negative note, explosions in Brussels.
64.04
-1.67
-2.5
-24.9
Gap (GPS) Dips another day as insider sells.
29.08
-.75
-2.5
+18.8
Priceline Group (PCLN) Sector suffers after Brussels attacks.
1319.41
-31.10
-2.3
+3.5
Union Pacific (UNP) Dips premarket as fund managers sell.
82.06
-1.92
-2.3
+4.9
Ensco (ESV) Cowen lowers price target.
-3.09 -14.76 AAPL SUNE LITE
VERY ACTIVE 51%-100% turnover
AGGRESSIVE 100%-plus turnover
5-day avg.: 6-month avg.: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold:
5-day avg.: 6-month avg.: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold:
-3.39 -17.59 AAPL AA AAPL
-3.72 -17.40 AAPL VRX CBK
POWERED BY SIGFIG
4-WEEK TREND
The oil and gas exploration and development company’s CEO Price: $10.00 warned that it will be at least three Chg: -$0.53 years until Transocean can start % chg: -5.0% Day’s high/low: charging higher rates for its offshore drilling rigs. $10.18/$9.91
Wynn Resorts
$6
$10.00
Feb 23
4-WEEK TREND
Mer Telemanagement Solutions
4-WEEK TREND $1.20
Price: $1.16 Chg: $0.44 The online telecom services pro% chg: 61.1% Day’s high/low: vider said its full-year 2015 reve- $0.60 Feb 23 nue more than doubled. $1.29/$0.72 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
Chg. -0.13 -0.02 -0.13 -0.03 -0.14 -0.02 +0.03 -0.04 +0.05 -0.16
4wk 1 +5.6% +6.0% +5.6% +6.0% +5.6% +6.6% +4.5% +4.5% +5.2% +4.2%
YTD 1 +0.8% +0.3% +0.8% +0.3% +0.8% -0.4% -2.3% +2.3% -3.1% +3.1%
1 – CAPITAL GAINS AND DIVIDENDS REINVESTED
ETF, ranked by volume Ticker SPDR S&P500 ETF Tr SPY Barc iPath Vix ST VXX Dir Dly Gold Bear3x DUST Mkt Vect Gold Miners GDX iShs Emerg Mkts EEM SPDR Financial XLF iShare Japan EWJ CS VS 2x Vix ShTm TVIX ProShs Ultra VIX ST UVXY US Oil Fund LP USO
Close 204.56 18.55 3.13 20.58 34.02 22.62 11.57 4.81 21.56 10.54
Chg. -0.11 -0.25 -0.01 +0.01 -0.08 -0.07 +0.07 -0.17 -0.59 -0.05
% Chg %YTD -0.1% +0.3% -1.3% -7.7% -0.3% -81.1% unch. +50.0% -0.2% +5.7% -0.3% -5.1% +0.6% -4.5% -3.4% -23.2% -2.7% -24.0% -0.5% -4.2%
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% 0.37% 0.14% 0.29% 0.01% 1.41% 1.43% 1.94% 2.13%
Close 6 mo ago 3.72% 3.79% 2.80% 2.93% 2.74% 2.66% 3.19% 3.09%
SOURCE: BANKRATE.COM
Commodities Close Prev. Cattle (lb.) 1.36 1.38 Corn (bushel) 3.70 3.70 Gold (troy oz.) 1,248.20 1,243.80 Hogs, lean (lb.) .70 .69 Natural Gas (Btu.) 1.86 1.83 Oil, heating (gal.) 1.25 1.24 Oil, lt. swt. crude (bar.) 41.45 39.91 Silver (troy oz.) 15.88 15.84 Soybeans (bushel) 9.10 9.02 Wheat (bushel) 4.67 4.67
Chg. -0.02 unch. +4.40 +0.01 +0.03 +0.01 +1.54 +0.04 +0.08 unch.
% Chg. -1.4% unch. +0.4% +1.2% +1.9% +1.2% -0.2% +0.2% +0.9% unch.
% YTD +0.5% +3.1% +17.7% +17.3% -20.3% +13.8% +11.9% +15.3% +4.5% -0.7%
FOREIGN CURRENCIES Currency per dollar British pound Canadian dollar Chinese yuan Euro Japanese yen Mexican peso
Close .7040 1.3043 6.4917 .8916 112.33 17.3178
Prev. .6948 1.3068 6.4835 .8888 111.86 17.3930
6 mo. ago .6507 1.3262 6.3731 .8982 120.07 16.8900
Yr. ago .6693 1.2578 6.2061 .9250 120.17 15.0539
FOREIGN MARKETS Country Frankfurt Hong Kong Japan (Nikkei) London Mexico City
Close 9,990.00 20,666.75 17,048.55 6,192.74 45,632.28
March 22
$95.00
March 22
$1.16
March 22
INVESTING ASK MATT
NAV 189.01 50.71 187.15 50.69 187.15 14.39 95.95 20.53 39.99 57.10
COMMODITIES
SOURCE: BLOOMBERG AND THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
$15
Morgan Stanley raised its rating on the casino operator to “over- $100 Price: $95.00 weight” from “equal weight” beChg: $2.26 cause of optimism about the Wynn % chg: 2.4% Day’s high/low: Palace the company is about to $60 open later this year in Macau. $96.60/$93.68 Feb 23
TOP 10 EXCHANGE TRADED FUNDS +8.71
Company (ticker symbol)
5-day avg.: 6-month avg.: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold:
-0.75 -5.12 AAPL BAX DIS
TOP 10 MUTUAL FUNDS
282.00
Southwestern Energy (SWN) Believes future cash flows should cover debts. LOSERS
YTD % Chg % Chg
Price
+2.76
5-day avg.: 6-month avg.: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold:
STORY STOCKS Transocean
RUSSELL
RUT
COMPOSITE
ACTIVE 11%-50% turnover
More than half a million investors nationwide with total assets of $200 billion manage their investment portfolios online with SigFig investment tracking service. Data on this page are based on SigFig analysis.
STANDARD & POOR'S
CHANGE: -.1% YTD: +5.86 YTD % CHG: +.3%
BUY AND HOLD Less than 10% turnover
NOTE: INFORMATION PROVIDED BY SIGFIG IS STATISTICAL IN NATURE AND DOES NOT CONSTITUTE A RECOMMENDATION OF ANY STRATEGY OR SECURITY. VISIT SIGFIG.USATODAY.COM/DISCLOSE FOR ADDITIONAL DISCLOSURES AND INFORMATION.
POWERED BY SIGFIG
S&P 500
SPX
USA’s portfolio allocation by trade activity 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?
February new home sales seen rising 3%
ALL THE MARKET ACTION IN REAL TIME. AMERICASMARKETS.USATODAY.COM
Prev. Change 9,948.64 +41.36 20,684.15 -17.40 16,724.81 +323.74 6,184.58 +8.16 45,482.39 +149.89
%Chg. +0.4% -0.1% +1.9% +0.1% +0.3%
YTD % -7.0% -5.7% -10.4% -0.8% +6.2%
SOURCES: MORNINGSTAR, DOW JONES INDEXES, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
IN-DEPTH MARKETS COVERAGE USATODAY.COM/MONEY
They’re risky, but long term they produce profits Q: When will emerging markets stop plunging? Matt Krantz
mkrantz@usatoday.com USA TODAY
A: If you’ve followed the advice of most financial planners, you’ve added emerging markets stocks to your portfolio. And if you’re like most investors, you’re probably angry about it. Emerging markets have been the blemish on many a diversified portfolio. The Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets exchange-traded fund (VWO) has fallen roughly 20% over the past three years, dragging down what has been a solid period for U.S. stocks. The U.S.-centric Standard & Poor’s 500 is up about 30% during the same period. Weak commodity prices have been brutal for companies in emerging markets. Energy and materials stocks together account for nearly 16% of the weighting of the Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets exchange-traded fund. If anything, emerging markets stocks are living up to their reputation of being one of the riskiest major asset classes. Emerging markets stocks, over the long term, have been 25% riskier than the S&P 500, Index Fund Advisors says. But the payoff is worth it — emerging markets stocks have generated 28% higher returns over the long-term, too. Guessing when emerging markets will finally bounce is impossible. But you’ll want to own the asset class when it does come back.
KBW calls for breakup of Citigroup to boost shareholder value Kaja Whitehouse @kajawhitehouse USA TODAY
Citigroup, the nation’s fourth-largest bank, could boost shareholders’ returns by more than 50% by breaking itself into pieces, a new report says. “We believe that investors could own two companies with a combined market cap of almost $190 billion if Citi were to split up,” KBW banking analysts wrote in a research report. Citigroup is currently valued at $130 billion. KBW’s banking analysts said NEW YORK
TIMOTHY A. CLARY, AFP/GETTY IMAGES
Citi, which has been selling assets since the financial crisis, should divide its consumer banking operations from its corporate bank, along with a separate sale of the company’s international consum-
er business. The asset sales could boost the cash the bank has to spend on shareholders in the form of dividends and stock buybacks, the report suggested. “We believe that the Fed would only allow Citi to return excess capital if the company were actively working to become smaller via a Fed-approved plan,” KBW’s analysts Brain Kleinhanzl and Michael Brown said. The call for a smaller Citi comes as shareholders prepare to vote on that very issue next month. Both Citi and JPMorgan Chase face proposals this year
asking shareholders to weigh in on the sticky matter, which has been a topic of hot debate since “too big to fail” became a common catchphrase during the financial crisis. For shareholders, the issue will turn on whether divestitures can free up cash at a time when banks are facing growth pressures, including rising loan defaults in oil and gas. Banks that fail the government’s stress tests can be prohibited from spending on dividends and buybacks, a problem Citi has faced twice already. But concern over the size of
the banks has also taken on new political life, thanks to the presidential election. Democratic hopeful Bernie Sanders, for example, has made breaking up the banks a major tenant of his campaign. Citigroup declined to comment on the KBW report. But the bank has asked shareholders to vote against this year’s too-big-to-fail proposal, which asks the bank to create a committee of independent directors to assess whether the sale of all noncore banking business segments would enhance returns for shareholders.
6B
LIFELINE
SPORTS LIFE AUTOS TRAVEL
L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY WEDNESDAY, MARCH 23, 2016
SNEAK PEEK WAR DOGS
HOW WAS YOUR DAY? GOOD DAY QUINCY JONES On Monday, Ellen DeGeneres announced she’s making a dream come true for the terminally ill comic (who is not related to the producer): his own HBO stand-up special.
MICHAEL ROZMAN, WARNER BROS.
GOOD DAY MARGOT ROBBIE
PHOTOS BY WARNER BROS. PICTURES
The Aussie will play infamous Olympic figure skater Tonya Harding in the biopic ‘I, Tonya.’ Our next question: Who’ll play her nemesis, Nancy Kerrigan?
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THEY SAID WHAT? THE STARS’ BEST QUOTES “I argued for 30 years for this to happen. And finally, I wore ’em down.” — Harrison Ford discussing the demise of Han Solo in ‘The Force Awakens’ on Monday’s ‘Jimmy Kimmel Live.’ But when he was asked if that meant the character would be absent from future ‘Star Wars’ movies, he locked his lips and threw away the key.
David (Miles Teller) is roped into the world of international arms dealing by his swashbuckling buddy Efraim (Jonah Hill).
When ‘bad decisions’ are weapons-grade Todd Phillips mines comedy from a true story of arms trading gone awry
GARY GERSHOFF, WIREIMAGE
MAKING WAVES Sarah Palin could be daytime TV’s next jurist — despite not having a law degree. The former GOP veep candidate signed a deal to make a courtroom TV show pilot.
JIM LO SCALZO, EPA
IT’S YOUR BIRTHDAY WHO’S CELEBRATING TODAY?
Brian Truitt USA TODAY
Todd Phillips has told some insane stories on screen for years in comedies such as The Hangover and Due Date. With his newest effort, War Dogs, the truth is just as bonkers as any fiction. Directed and co-written by Phillips, the real-life comedic drama (in theaters Aug. 19) stars Jonah Hill and Miles Teller as ambitious young men who become weapons traders for the U.S. government and enjoy the high life multimillion-dollar contracts let them lead before the proverbial chickens come home to roost. “I like making movies about bad decisions,” Phillips says. “This is the ultimate story about these two guys making some key bad decisions in their lives — seeing an angle and exploiting that angle but going too far.” The filmmaker read about the true exploits of David Packouz (Teller) and Efraim Diveroli (Hill) in a 2011 Rolling Stone article that detailed how they kept winning larger contracts with the government in the mid-2000s until their biggest payday: a $300 million cash windfall from the Pentagon for arming U.S. allies in Afghanistan. The tale appealed to Phillips’ penchant for grounded stories. Before he made comedies like Old School and Starsky & Hutch, he chronicled musicians (Hated: GG Allin & the Murder Junkies as well as the Phish doc Bittersweet Mo-
tel) and college life (Frat House) as a documentary filmmaker. “I’ve always strived to draw from the real world, even though The Hangover is ridiculous,” Phillips says. “Comedy plays better when it’s put up against reality.” In War Dogs, David is looking for ways to better himself financially, especially since his girlfriend (Ana de Armas) is pregnant. Efraim, a former school chum, gets him involved in the world of arms trading. “It’s as if your best friend from junior high has made all these crazy ‘advancements’ and he sucks you into this whirlwind life,” Phillips says. Bradley Cooper co-stars as David and Efraim’s idol in the international arms world. (Cooper also is a producer.) While Teller brings a groundedness to David — the movie is told from his point of view — Hill’s unhinged Efraim has a swagger the actor has never shown before, Phillips says.
“He’s almost like a Tony Soprano — he’s not that but he sees himself as that, this swagger that doesn’t match who the character is,” the filmmaker says. “It’s a weird confidence with this guy that I just love.” The central twosome ends up in some dangerous shenanigans, but Phillips was most impressed with how well they deceived the government. “That comes with a youthful ignorance,” he says. “They really thought they could compete with these big defense companies, whether it’s Halliburton or Raytheon, and step into this arena as these two kids working out of an office in Miami Beach. They were in over their head from Day One, and the ballsy part of the story is really interesting — the fact that they thought they could compete and did successfully for a few years.” “It’s more of an indictment on the government than it is on these two kids who saw an angle.”
David (Teller) and Efraim (Hill) let Marlboro (Bradley Cooper) do the driving.
MOVIES
Heroes, action rock ‘Batman v Superman’
Keri Russell is 40. Michelle Monaghan is 40. Chaka Khan is 63.
But it’s a messy trip jump-starting this comic-book universe
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The nation’s best sellers Top five best sellers, shown in proportion of sales. Example: For every 10 copies of Private Paris sold, Property of a Noblewoman sold 5.2 copies: Private Paris James Patterson, Mark Sullivan
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Tomorrow: Top 50 books list (top150.usatoday.com) Source USA TODAY Best-Selling Books MARY CADDEN AND VERONICA BRAVO, USA TODAY
Director Zack Snyder proves he just might be the biggest fanboy of all by creating a superhero movie suitably epic for having Batman, Superman, Wonder Woman and all their derring-do. Is that a good thing for Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice, though? Well, not always in this massive though improved sequel (eee out of four; rated PG-13; in theaters Friday) to Snyder’s Man of Steel. BvS does well laying groundwork for a cinematic universe that could hold an entire Justice League. But it unpacks too much material for even a 2½hour film, leaving Dawn of Justice a superpowered jumble at times. But that takes a backseat to the joys of watching Gal Gadot’s awesome Wonder Woman smile gloriously in the middle of a fight, Ben Affleck turning in a strong take on an older Dark Knight and his alter ego Bruce Wayne, and a story about two orphans. Batman plays a major role from the start, as a quick recountREVIEW BRIAN TRUITT
WARNER BROS. ENTERTAINMENT
Bruce Wayne, aka Batman (Ben Affleck), watches as his city crumbles in Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice. ing of his origin leads to Bruce driving into the 9/11-type destruction of Metropolis and seeing the carnage wrought by Superman’s Man of Steel battle against Zod. Fast-forward 18 months, and Superman becomes part of another incident saving his love, Lois Lane (Amy Adams). Enough’s enough for three folks: Sen. June Finch (Holly Hunter), a congresswoman who wants to hold Superman accountable; Lex Luthor (Jesse Eisenberg), a xenophobic villain planning to whale on this alien interloper; and Batman,
who’s waging his own war against criminals while figuring out what to do about the Man of Steel. BvS starts losing its way when Lois secretly meets with government officials, someone tries to sneak a dirty bomb into Gotham City, Lex is conniving in pretty much every way, and Batman has a post-apocalyptic nightmare that involves evil Superman, a large Omega symbol, a locale that looks like Dark Knight: Fury Road and a fleeting superhero sighting. The subplots dovetail decently into the big finish, one Snyder pulls off with a surprise return,
one huge shocker and the promised throwdown between Batman and Superman. For those wondering why these two have to fight, there is a very good storyline reason for the two frenemies coming to blows, and in the director’s action-packed movie résumé (300, Watchmen), that faceoff and their inevitable alliance with Wonder Woman against Lex’s vicious Doomsday vault to the top of Snyder’s best-told fight sequences. Henry Cavill is again a solid Superman (and Clark Kent), though Affleck and Gadot are really special in their debuts. Whether in an evening dress or brandishing bulletproof bracelets in costume, Gadot proves to be just as entertaining and watchable as either of the headlining heroes. Affleck’s Batman is a surprisingly emotional one. A few scenes showcase a strong, even flirty chemistry between him and Gadot, rivaling that of Cavill and Adams. BvS will please those either waiting for the two main players to lock horns on a movie screen, or those who’ve just been pining for Wonder Woman forever. And for the nerdier crowds, a fleeting glimpse at other superheroes hints this is the Dawn of something potentially sensational.
LHS GIRLS SOCCER EDGES PEMBROKE HILL IN OPENER. 3C
Sports
C
Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com/sports l Wednesday, March 23, 2016
Baker women settle for second By Mack McClure Special to the Journal-World
Tom Keegan tkeegan@ljworld.com
Starting lineup a good fit for Kansas Louisville, Ky. — Give me a dollar for every time Kansas University basketball coach Bill Self has said he doesn’t care who starts, just who finishes games, and I’ll give you a wardrobe worthy of Villanova coach Jay Wright, plus a few threads, on a daily basis. The funny thing is, though, Self hasn’t uttered one of his favorite quotes in a quite a while. Why would he? It hasn’t been an issue since Landen Lucas slid into the starting center spot and everything else fell into place. The lineup, which Self made seem to the starters at the other four spots that the center selection was their idea, has just the right chemistry from a personality and basketball sense, both in the frontcourt and backcourt. Starting guards Frank Mason III, originally committed to Towson University, and Devonte Graham, initially an Appalachian State recruit, both found their way to Kansas as underrated freshmen and immediately exposed the inexact nature of assigning ratings to high school players. Both fit the profile that Self prefers in guards in that neither fits the classic description of either a point guard or a shooting guard. They both personify the hybrid “combo” label, although Graham leans much closer to a point. Russell Robinson, Mario Chalmers and Sherron Collins of the 2008 national-championship squad had “combo” written all over them as well. The same went for Tyshawn Taylor and Elijah Johnson of the 2012 national runner-up. Mason and Graham both attack on the dribble with effectiveness. Mason, when at his healthiest, finishes at the rim and with a variety of floaters, even better than Graham, who is an even more accurate three-point shooter (.438 to Mason’s .390). Mason, such a quick jumper, so strong, is the slightly better rebounder, Graham the more versatile defender. Three inches taller and blessed with longer arms, Graham is equally comfortable guarding shorter and taller scorers. Yet, more than any of their differences as basketball players, it’s their divergent personality types that make them blend so well. Please see KEEGAN, page 4C
Kevin Anderson/Special to the Journal-World
BAKER’S JAMI HODGE, RIGHT, defends MidAmerica Nazarene’s Kylee Weston during the NAIA women’s title game Tuesday night in Independence, Mo. Baker lost, 49-35.
Independence, Mo. — One minute, you’re playing for a national championship and then all of sudden, everything comes crashing down. Baker University’s joyride in the NAIA women’s national basketball tournament had it venturing to Tuesday night’s title game against MidAmerica Nazarene at Silverstein Eye Centers Arena. After leading 25-21 at half-
time, the Wildcats seemed to hit a wall coming out of the locker room at halftime, and MidAmerica Nazarene rode a 12-0 third-quarter run en route to a 49-35 victory for the national crown. “We struggled in the third quarter,” Baker coach Ben Lister said. “I think we were 1-for-17 from the field and obviously, playing that caliber of a team, you’re not going to win.” Baker (28-9), which established a single-season school record for victories,
could never get untracked after intermission. The Wildcats scored only four points during the opening 15 minutes of the second half, a microcosm of their fortunes. “We fought back and never gave up,” said Baker guard Jami Hodge of the Wildcats finishing only 24.6 percent from the field (15 for 61). “It was just one of those nights where our shots weren’t falling. It happens, Please see BAKER, page 4C
KANSAS BASKETBALL
Business trip
Richard Gwin/Journal-World Photo
KANSAS UNIVERSITY SENIOR PERRY ELLIS SIGNS AN AUTOGRAPH FOR SHYANNE GARCIA of Lawrence on Tuesday before the Jayhawks depart Lawrence for Louisville, Ky.
Jayhawks arrive in Louisville By Gary Bedore gbedore@ljworld.com
Louisville, Ky. — If there ever was a perfect travel day for Kansas University’s basketball team it was Tuesday. The Jayhawks, who flew charter to the home of the Kentucky Derby and the Louisville Cardinals, had absolutely no travel delays, arriving at the downtown Hyatt Regency Hotel at 5:10 p.m., Eastern time. “It’s good to still be play-
ing. It feels good to be here with the warm weather,” KU coach Bill Self said after exiting the bus the team took to the hotel from Louisville International Airport. “I’m really excited to see the Yum! Center. I hear it’s fabulous,” Self added of the 22,090-seat downtown arena where the Jayhawks will hold an open practice from 3:10 to 4 p.m., today. It’s in advance of Thursday’s NCAA South Regional Sweet 16 game against
Maryland, set for 8:40 p.m., Central time. “It’s been pretty good,” Self said of the team’s itinerary since defeating UConn, 73-61, in a Round of 32 game on Saturday in Des Moines, Iowa. The Jayhawks traveled to Iowa by bus and returned early Sunday morning after the contest. “It’s been pretty relaxing. We practiced yesterday (Monday) an hour. It was probably average at best. Today we went a little longer
(in Allen before leaving at 1 p.m. for Topeka Regional Airport). “Tomorrow we’ll go real short. The guys seem to be loose and focused and certainly I can tell there’s genuine excitement,” Self added. He said it was nice to be able to actually watch Maryland beat Hawaii, 73-60, on TV on Sunday. “I took notes,” Self said, “then I watched it again and Please see HOOPS, page 3C
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EAST
NORTH
COMING THURSDAY
TWO-DAY
• Preview coverage of Kansas basketball as the Jayhawks prepare for their Sweet Sixteen matchup with Maryland
SPORTS CALENDAR
KANSAS UNIVERSITY
AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE EAST
WOMEN’S GOLF
KU women go 0-2 in San Diego matches San Diego — Kansas University’s women’s golf team started the day finishing its suspended second-round match against third-seeded Arizona at the SDSU Farms Invitational at the Farms Golf Club. Arizona was able to keep its momentum from Monday and defeated Kansas 3-1-1. KU then tied San Diego State, 2.5-2.5, but lost the tiebreaker. KU freshman Ariadna Fonseca Diaz had a tough back-nine, at one point falling four strokes back. She eventually ceded with a 3-and-1 score. KU senior Yupaporn Kawinpakorn lost a hardfought battle to Krystal Quihuis by one hole. Pitsinne Winyarat was not able to provide a win to force a tiebreaker, falling to Lindsey Weaver 3-and-2. After its loss, Kansas was sent to the fifth-place bracket, where it took on the seventh-seed and host, San Diego State. Chandra, who had played in two tight matches earlier, quickly fell to Georgia Lacey 5-and-4. Sakdee remained unbeaten after closing up shop three rounds early against Milagros Chaves, 4-and-3. Fonseca Diaz completely controlled her match against Haleigh Krause, leading for all but the first hole and at one point nursing a six-stroke lead. Fonseca Diaz ended up winning the match 1 up. Kawinpakorn was unable to come up victorious, falling behind by a stroke with three holes left and never recovering. It came down to Winyarat, who had maintained a lead over Emma Henrikson for 14 holes before losing her one-stroke advantage with three holes to go. Winyarat was unable to break their tie finishing all square and the team score was 2.5-2.5. The tiebreaker of total holes won was given to SDSU, leaving Kansas to face eighth-seeded Oregon for seventh place today.
BASEBALL
Tampa Bay defeats Cuban Nationals Havana — In a landmark game attended by presidents Barack Obama and Raul Castro, the Tampa Bay Rays beat the Cuban national team 4-1 Tuesday in the first visit by a major league team to the communist island since 1999. James Loney homered and drove in three runs, and Matt Moore and the Tampa Bay pitchers shut out the Cubans until the ninth inning. But the game will be remembered less for the final score than for the two men sitting in the front row at Estadio Latinoamericano. Obama signaled safe when Kevin Kiermaier safely slid home early, then shook hands with Castro. The near-capacity crowd included former All-Stars Derek Jeter and Dave Winfield, along with Jackie Robinson’s widow, Rachel. The Baltimore Orioles were the last big league team to play in Cuba, in 1999 during spring training.
BASKETBALL
Wilkins, Collins headline HOF class Kansas City, Mo. — Georgia standout Dominique Wilkins and Doug Collins of Illinois State headline the eight-member class that will be inducted into the National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame in November. Wilkins played three seasons for the Bulldogs before embarking on a standout NBA career, making nine All-Star games while playing for the Hawks, Clippers, Celtics, Spurs and Magic. Collins scored 2,240 points during his three-year career with the Redbirds, and was the No. 1 pick in the 1973 draft. He was a four-time All-Star before beginning a long career as a coach. Joining them in this year’s class are DePaul’s Mark Aguirre, Kansas State’s Bob Boozer, LaSalle’s Lionel Simmons and UCLA star Jamaal Wilkes, along with coaches Hugh Durham and Mike Montgomery. The induction ceremony is Nov. 18 in Kansas City.
HIGH SCHOOLS HUB:
TODAY • Women’s golf at SDSU Farms Invitational NORTH • Baseball at Creighton, 6:30 p.m. THURSDAY • Men’s basketball vs. Maryland in NCAA Tournament in Louisville, Ky., 8:40 p.m.
NBA roundup
BRIEFLY
The Associated Press
STANDINGS
How former Jayhawks fared
EASTERN CONFERENCE Thunder 111, Rockets 107 Atlantic Division Oklahoma City — Russell W L Pct GB Toronto 48 21 .696 — FREE STATE HIGH Westbrook had 21 points, 15 as- SOUTH Tarik Black, L.A. Lakers Boston 41 30 .577 8 TODAY WEST sists and 13 rebounds to help the New York 28 43 .394 21 Min: 14. Pts: 0. Reb: 5. Ast: 3. Thunder beat Houston on Tues• Girls swimming at Emporia divBrooklyn 19 51 .271 29½ Philadelphia 9 62 .127 40 day night. ing invitational, 4 p.m. EAST Nick Collison, Oklahoma City ALSoutheast Division Westbrook has 15 triple-douTHURSDAY W L Pct GB Did not play (coach’s decision) bles this season and 34 in his caMiami 41 29 .586 — • Girls swimming at Emporia divAtlanta 41 30 .577 ½ reer. It’s the most triple-doubles Thomas Robinson, Brooklyn ing invitational, 4 p.m. Charlotte 41 30 .577 ½ by a player in a season since Min: 13. Pts: 0. Reb: 4. Ast: 0. Washington 35 35 .500 6 AL CENTRAL 1988-89, when Magic Johnson Orlando 29 41 .414 12 LAWRENCE HIGH Central Division had 17 and Michael Jordan had SOUTH WEST W L Pct GB TODAY 15. 50 20 .714 — New Orleans, which shot only y-Cleveland • Girls swimming at Emporia divIndiana 37 33 .529 13 It was also Westbrook’s sixth 39.1 percent (34 of 87) for the ALChicago 36 33 .522 13½ WEST AL EAST ing invitational, 4 p.m. triple-double in March. AccordDetroit 37 34 .521 13½ game. ing to STATS, it’s the most by a • Baseball vs. St. James, 6 p.m. 30 41 .423 20½ Luke Babbitt scored a season- Milwaukee WESTERN CONFERENCE player in a calendar month since THURSDAY high 23 points for the Pelicans, Southwest Division Jordan had seven in April 1989. • Girls soccer vs. Highland Park, W L Pct GB who trailed by double digits for AL CENTRAL y-San Antonio It was his third in a row and 59 11 .843 — 6 p.m. much of the game before briefly Memphis 41 31 .569 19 fourth in his past five games. • Track at Topeka West getting as close as five points in Dallas 35 35 .500 24 Kevin Durant AFC scored 23 Invitational, 3 p.m. TEAM LOGOS and team logos for the AFC teams; various sizes; Houston 35 stand-alone; 36 .493 24½staff; ETA 5 p.m. the081312: fourthHelmet quarter. points and Dion Waiters added New Orleans 26 44 .371 33 • Girls swimming at Emporia divNorthwest Division 17 to help the Thunder win their MIAMI (113) AL WEST ing invitational, 4 p.m. J.Johnson 2-7 4-6 8, Deng 1-7 3-3 5, W L Pct GB fifth straight. Stoudemire 6-8 4-4 16, Dragic 8-18 2-2 21, Wade y-Oklahoma City 49 22 .690 — James Harden had 24 points, 10-21 5-6 25, Winslow 4-6 0-0 8, Richardson 3-8 Portland 36 35 .507 13 0-0 6, Whiteside 10-11 4-6 24, Green 0-1 0-0 0, Utah 34 36 .486 14½ a career-high 16 assists and sev- McRoberts 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 44-88 22-27 113. SPORTS ON TV Denver 29 42 .408 20 en rebounds for the Rockets. NEW ORLEANS (99) Minnesota 22 48 .314 26½ Babbitt 10-19 1-2 23, Cunningham 1-3 2-2 Dwight Howard had 16 points 4, Asik 3-6 2-5 8, Douglas 4-16 5-6 14, Holiday Pacific Division TODAY W L Pct GB and 13 rebounds and Patrick 7-23 7-7 24, Perkins 2-3 0-0 4, Gee 3-3 1-1 7, y-Golden State 63 7 .900 — College Basketball Time Net Cable Frazier 3-10and 4-4team 11, Ajinca Totals Beverley added points. AFC 16 TEAM LOGOS 081312: Helmet logos 1-4 for 2-3 the 4. AFC teams; various sizes; stand-alone; ETA L.A. Clippers 43 26 staff; .623 19½5 p.m. BALTIMORE ORIOLES
BALTIMORE ORIOLES
BOSTON RED SOX
NEW YORK YANKEES
CHICAGO WHITE SOX
CLEVELAND INDIANS
DETROIT TIGERS
LOS ANGELES ANGELS OF ANAHEIM
BOSTON RED SOX
OAKLAND ATHLETICS
MLB AL LOGOS 032712: 2012 American League team logos; stand-alone; various sizes; staff; ETA 4 p.m.
CLEVELAND INDIANS
DETROIT TIGERS
LOS ANGELES ANGELS OF ANAHEIM
OAKLAND ATHLETICS
SEATTLE MARINERS
Heat 113, Pelicans 99 New Orleans — Hassan Whiteside had 24 points, 14 and three blocked shots, and Miami beat injury-ravaged New Orleans. Dwyane Wade and Goran Dragic each scored 23 points for the Heat, who’ve won nine of 12 games to put Miami in position to grab a playoff seeding as high as third in the Eastern Conference. Jrue Holiday scored 24 for New Orleans, but missed 16 of his 23 shots. His shooting struggles against Miami’s stout defense was part of a theme for
34-87 24-30 99. Miami 35 24 27 27—113 New Orleans 21 19 33 26 — 99 Three-Point Goals-Miami 3-19 (Dragic 3-7, Green 0-1, Winslow 0-2, J.Johnson 0-2, Richardson 0-3, Deng 0-4), New Orleans 7-16 (Holiday 3-8, Babbitt 2-2, Frazier 1-2, Douglas 1-3, Cunningham 0-1). Rebounds-Miami 58 (Whiteside 14), New Orleans 50 (Douglas, Asik 9). Assists-Miami 21 (J.Johnson 6), New Orleans 16 (Holiday 7). Total Fouls-Miami 22, New Orleans 25. Technicals-Miami defensive three second 2. A-16,867 (16,867).
Hornets 105, Nets 100 New York — Nicolas Batum scored 23 points and Charlotte beat Brooklyn. Jeremy Lin added 21 points, a night after scoring 29 in Charlotte’s rally from 23 down to beat the San Antonio Spurs. Brook Lopez had 29 points, nine rebounds and a seasonhigh six assists, and Sean Kilpatrick added a career-high 25 points for the Nets. Batum hit two big shots down the stretch to key the win. Batum had a four-point play to put Charlotte up 91-84 with 4:11 left and three-pointer to extend the lead to 96-88 with 2:44 remaining. Bojan Bogdanovic cut the deficit to 98-97. Kemba Walker then sank two free throws to push Charlotte’s lead to 100-97 and the Hornets never looked back.
said Tuesday, “so it’s too early to tell where he’s at right now, but he’s on the road to recovery.” That timeframe means Houston could return by the start of the season if everything goes perfectly. It also means he could miss the entire season if there are any setbacks. “We’re hoping, just because of his work ethic and he’s been a fast healer in the past, we’re hoping that that’s not the case, that he’ll be able to play this season,” Chiefs coach Andy Reid said. “When and where that is, it’s too early to be able to tell.” Houston has established himself as one of the league’s premier pass rushers, earning All-Pro honors when he led the NFL with 22 sacks in 2014. He parlayed that performance into a huge contract after Kansas City designated him its franchise player, a $101 million, six-year deal with $52 million guaranteed. Despite playing just 11 regular-season games last season,
MINNESOTA TWINS
KANSAS CITY ROYALS
TAMPA BAY RAYS
TORONTO BLUE JAYS TEXAS RANGERS
KANSAS CITY ROYALS
MINNESOTA TWINS
TEXAS RANGERS
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Sacramento 27 43 .386 36 Phoenix 19 51 .271 44 L.A. Lakers 15 55 .214 48 y-clinched division Tuesday’s Games Charlotte 105, Brooklyn 100 Miami 113, New Orleans 99 Oklahoma City 111, Houston 107 L.A. Lakers 107, Memphis 100 Today’s Games Milwaukee at Cleveland, 6 p.m. Atlanta at Washington, 6 p.m. Toronto at Boston, 6:30 p.m. Orlando at Detroit, 6:30 p.m. New York at Chicago, 7 p.m. Sacramento at Minnesota, 7 p.m. Utah at Houston, 7 p.m. Miami at San Antonio, 7:30 p.m. Philadelphia at Denver, 8 p.m. L.A. Lakers at Phoenix, 9 p.m. Dallas at Portland, 9 p.m. L.A. Clippers at Golden State, 9:30 p.m.
CHARLOTTE (105) Batum 7-16 5-5 23, Kaminsky 5-11 2-2 14, Zeller 4-5 0-0 8, Walker 4-14 5-6 14, Lee 3-7 0-0 7, Jefferson 5-8 0-0 10, Lin 8-12 4-6 21, Hawes 1-5 0-0 2, Lamb 2-4 1-2 6. Totals 39-82 17-21 105. BROOKLYN (100) Bogdanovic 4-8 9-9 20, Young 5-12 0-0 10, Lopez 11-19 7-7 29, Sloan 0-5 0-0 0, Ellington 1-4 0-0 2, Hollis-Jefferson 2-4 1-2 5, Brown 0-4 2-2 2, Larkin 2-4 2-2 7, Kilpatrick 9-12 3-3 25, Robinson 0-1 0-2 0, Sims 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 34-74 24-27 100. Charlotte 25 21 21 38—105 Brooklyn 14 22 28 36—100 Three-Point Goals-Charlotte 10-28 (Batum 4-9, Kaminsky 2-5, Lin 1-2, Lamb 1-3, Lee 1-3, Walker 1-5, Hawes 0-1), Brooklyn 8-18 (Kilpatrick 4-5, Bogdanovic 3-5, Larkin 1-1, Lopez 0-1, Hollis-Jefferson 0-1, Ellington 0-1, Sloan 0-2, Brown 0-2). Rebounds-Charlotte 42 (Kaminsky 7), Brooklyn 48 (Lopez 9). Assists-Charlotte 21 (Jefferson, Lin, Walker 4), Brooklyn 21 (Sloan, Lopez 6). Total FoulsCharlotte 21, Brooklyn 24. Technicals-Hawes. A-15,739 (17,732).
Chiefs LB Houston could miss season Kansas City, Mo. (ap) — Pro Bowl pass rusher Justin Houston could miss the upcoming season for the Kansas City Chiefs after having surgery to repair the ACL in his left knee that bothered him in the playoffs. Houston hurt his knee in a game against Buffalo last November, and at the time it was diagnosed as a hyperextension. He missed the remainder of the regular season but returned wearing a brace for the playoffs, playing 44 snaps in a win over Houston, but just eight in a loss to New England. Still feeling discomfort in the knee, Houston visited orthopedist Dr. James Andrews for an arthroscopic procedure during the first week of February. Andrews realized that the ligament was not functioning properly. After discussing his options with the Chiefs, Houston had surgery to repair it on Feb. 16. “As you know from past, those are six-to-12 month recoveries,” Chiefs trainer Rick Burkholder
SEATTLE MARINERS
TORONTO BLUE JAYS
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CHICAGO WHITE SOX
MLB AL LOGOS 032712: 2012 American League team logos; stand-alone; various sizes; staff; ETA 4 p.m.
HOUSTON (107) Ariza 5-18 0-0 13, Motiejunas 4-9 2-2 11, Howard 7-8 2-3 16, Beverley 6-12 0-0 16, Harden 7-17 8-8 24, Beasley 5-12 0-0 11, Capela 2-3 1-2 5, Brewer 1-6 1-2 3, Terry 3-6 0-0 8, McDaniels 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 40-92 14-17 107. OKLAHOMA CITY (111) Durant 8-19 6-8 23, Ibaka 6-15 2-4 15, Adams 3-4 2-3 8, Westbrook 7-18 7-8 21, Roberson 2-3 0-0 4, Waiters 7-11 0-0 17, Foye 0-5 0-0 0, Kanter 3-4 4-6 10, Payne 2-6 0-0 5, Morrow 3-6 0-0 8. Totals 41-91 21-29 111. Houston 27 29 21 30—107 Oklahoma City 28 27 23 33—111 Three-Point Goals-Houston 13-37 (Beverley 4-8, Ariza 3-12, Terry 2-3, Harden 2-8, Beasley 1-1, Motiejunas 1-2, McDaniels 0-1, Brewer 0-2), Oklahoma City 8-35 (Waiters 3-6, Morrow 2-4, Payne 1-4, Ibaka 1-4, Durant 1-5, Roberson 0-1, Foye 0-4, Westbrook 0-7). Fouled Out-Harden. Rebounds-Houston 55 (Howard 13), Oklahoma City 58 (Westbrook 13). Assists-Houston 26 (Harden 16), Oklahoma City 22 (Westbrook 15). Total Fouls-Houston 27, Oklahoma City 17. A-18,203 (18,203).
NEW YORK YANKEES
TAMPA BAY RAYS
Houston still had 71⁄2 sacks. “Right now he’s in the middle of the process of doing rehabilitation,” Burkholder said. “(The injury) was a little bit tricky because his ACL wasn’t torn, but it wasn’t functioning the way it should.” The injury may explain in part why the Chiefs moved quickly to re-sign veteran pass rusher Tamba Hali to a $22 million, three-year contract in free agency. Hali made the Pro Bowl last season, but he battled his own knee issues throughout the year and appears to be on the downward side of his career. Hali had surgery to clean up his right knee in February, but should be back by training camp. “He’s here every day as well. He’ll be ready to go in July,” Burkholder said. “That’ll come down to (Reid) and myself, with some help from our strength coaches, to give him some adequate prep work as well as rehab as well as recovery, just like we did last year.”
Florida v. Geo. Wash. 6 p.m. ESPN2 34, 234 Ga. Tech vs. S. Diego St. 8 p.m. ESPN2 34, 234 Pro Basketball
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LATEST LINE COLLEGE BASKETBALL Favorite.............. Points (O/U)........... Underdog NIT Tournament Quarterfinals GEORGE WASHINGTON.2 (147.5)............................Florida SAN DIEGO ST..................5 (134).................Georgia Tech College Insider Tournament Quarterfinals COLUMBIA.......................71⁄2 (138).............................Ball St COASTAL CAROLINA......4 (143)...............Grand Canyon UL-LAFAYETTE..............21⁄2 (153).......................Cal Irvine CBI Tournament Semifinals OHIO..................................31⁄2 (153)................Morehead St NEVADA...........................31⁄2 (145)........................Vermont Thursday, March 24th. NCAA Tournament KFC Yum Center-Louisville, KY.
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South Regional Semifinals Kansas...................61⁄2 (145).............. Maryland Villanova......................... 41⁄2 (141).............. Miami Florida NCAA Tournament Honda Center-Anaheim. CA. West Regional Semifinals Oregon............................. 3 (156.5)................................Duke Oklahoma...............21⁄2 (146)........... Texas A&M Friday, March 25th. NCAA Tournament Wells Fargo Center-Philadelphia, PA. East Regional Semifinals North Carolina..............51⁄2 (160)..........................Indiana Notre Dame......................1 (131).........................Wisconsin NCAA Tournament United Center-Chicago, IL. Midwest Regional Semifinals Virginia....................5 (142)...................Iowa St Gonzaga..........................41⁄2 (135).......................Syracuse
NBA Favorite.............. Points (O/U)........... Underdog WASHINGTON...................1 (209).............................Atlanta x-BOSTON.......................OFF (OFF).........................Toronto DETROIT.............................7 (209)...........................Orlando y-CHICAGO.....................OFF (OFF)......................New York CLEVELAND................. 111⁄2 (206.5)..................Milwaukee MINNESOTA..................21⁄2 (223.5)...............Sacramento HOUSTON.......................31⁄2 (200)...............................Utah SAN ANTONIO................111⁄2 (196).............................Miami DENVER...........................101⁄2 (212)................Philadelphia PHOENIX..........................41⁄2 (210)......................LA Lakers GOLDEN ST....................10 (225.5)..................LA Clippers PORTLAND...................... 6 (214.5)..............................Dallas x-Toronto Center J. Valanciunas is doubtful. y-New York Forward C. Anthony is questionable. Home Team in CAPS (c) TRIBUNE CONTENT AGENCY, LLC
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L awrence J ournal -W orld
Wednesday, March 23, 2016
| 3C
Jayhawks cultivate a ‘killer instinct’ By Matt Tait mtait@ljworld.com
A couple of recent postseason victories afforded the Kansas University men’s basketball team an opportunity to show off just how far it had come in the killer instinct department. And make no mistake about it, putting teams away is something the Jayhawks absolutely have had on their radar. “At halftime, every game, people will joke around and say, ‘What’s the score,” said KU junior Landen Lucas. “And we’ll all say, ‘Zero-zero.’ It’s just something that we say because we have to go out there and have that mindset.” Leading K-State by 15
at halftime during the quarterfinals of the Big 12 tourney, the Jayhawks, in Louisville prepping for Thursday’s 8:40 p.m. Sweet 16 contest against Maryland, continued to pour it on in the second half and topped the Wildcats by 22. Four games later, during a second-round victory over Connecticut in the NCAA Tournament in Des Moines, Iowa, the top-seeded Jayhawks did not pull back after sprinting out to an 18-5 lead and, instead, built a firsthalf lead of as many as 24 points before coasting to a 12-point victory. Lucas said the 0-0 mantra was used during halftime of each game. And even though the Jayhawks allowed UConn to trim
their lead to nine midway through the second half, the junior forward said KU’s desire to finish the job helped maintain the comfortable lead. “I don’t think it’s new,” he said of referencing the 0-0 score at the break. “I think we’ve always said it. What would be new is us actually going out there and playing like it. We would say it but not really have that mindset. But I think you can see the change in this team. We’re getting more mature in many areas.” That idea of capitalizing on this team’s maturity is something that took awhile to surface. With two juniors and two seniors in the opening-night lineup, many expected KU to take full advantage
of the luxury of having its most veteran team since 2013. But early on, that was not always the case, and it showed up most during KU’s three-game road-losing streak and 5-3 Big 12 Conference start in January. The reasons for KU’s struggles were many, and it was not until KU coach Bill Self settled the lineup and rotation that this team could fully use its wisdom and maturity to its advantage. Since that time, after putting Lucas in the starting lineup for good, the Jayhawks have been on a big time roll and appear, in many ways, to only be getting better. “If you compare us now to the beginning of the year, it’s a big difference
between getting up and putting teams away,” Lucas said. “We would get up on teams early in the year and then the next thing you know we’ve got a ballgame with 10 minutes left.” Junior guard Brannen Greene said seniors Perry Ellis and Jamari Traylor played a huge role in increasing the sense of urgency with which this team played. He also pointed to each player’s personal pride — as well as the collective pride of the team as a whole — for helping the Jayhawks (324) take things to another level. “They’re kind of the catalysts of it all, bringing the energy and making sure that we all know that whenever we lose that’s our last game,” Greene
said of Ellis and Traylor. Asked to define what the phrase “killer instinct” meant to this team, Lucas’ explanation sounded an awful lot like the Jayhawks have looked during the past month and a half. “It’s really just always treating the game like it’s a tie game,” Lucas said. “If we go out there and play a possession like we’re up 15 or 20 points, that’s when you can let a team come back into it. If you play every possession like it’s a tie game, that’s when you extend the lead and that’s what we need in a tournament like this. “You never want to level off. The good teams that make deep tournament runs always get better and improve.”
Hoops CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C
John Young/Journal-World Photo
LAWRENCE HIGH’S MICAELA RILEY, LEFT, kicks the ball away from Pembroke Hill’s Caroline Patterson Tuesday night at LHS.
LHS girls soccer tops Pembroke By Bobby Nightengale bnightengale@ljworld.com
There were times when Lawrence High’s girls soccer team looked dominant on Tuesday, creating offense with strong passes and playing tough defense. Then there were times when the Lions looked like a team playing in their first game of the year. In the season opener, the Lions took the bad with the good in a 2-1 victory against Pembroke Hill (Mo.) at LHS. “I told the girls it was an ugly win, but we’ll take it,” first-year coach Matt McCune said after winning in his LHS debut. “I’m happy for the girls because they’ve been working really hard. But they deserved it. We got better and better as the game went along.” LHS sophomore midfielder Maria Duncan scored the game-winner with 30 minutes left, converting on a penalty kick after a handball in the 18yard box. Duncan drew the PK when she tried to dribble around a defender and the defender fell, which led to the handball. “I was just like, ‘I can’t kick this over. I need to focus and keep my head down,’” Duncan said of her
thoughts before she scored in the lower left corner. Despite first-game jitters, it didn’t take long for the Lions to score their first goal of the season. Junior forward Skylar Drum weaved around defenders on the left side of the box and snuck a pass to junior midfielder Carson Drake, who was wide open and drilled a shot into the net in the 11th minute. “The ball Skylar played to me was just an amazing ball — I couldn’t not put it in,” Drake said. The Lions had chances to add more goals in the first 40 minutes. Freshman forward Anna Chieu had a pair of open looks around the net, but couldn’t sneak shots past the keeper, and Drum had a goal waved off after a lengthy discussion by the officials because she was ruled offsides. In the second half, the Lions found their rhythm. They only scored on Duncan’s penalty kick, but had several opportunities with strong passing by midfielders Drake, Sophie Minder, Erin Ventura, Mikayla Downs and Sofia Dominguez. “In the first half, we were sort of just kicking the ball and running after it,” Drake said. “In the second half, we did a better job of finding feet and finding open space.”
again afterwards. Usually if I casually watch it (and it’s not upcoming KU foe) I wouldn’t watch it more than once. They are really talented. They play terrific in spurts. They’ve been a lot like us in the tournament so far. We’ve been good in stretches, too. Those are going to be two really good teams playing Thursday.” It remains to be seen if some crazy travel affects No. 5-seed Maryland (278). “The problem for Maryland,” Self said, “is they had to get back from Spokane (Wash, site of first two games). That’s a long trip for them. It was good we could relax Sunday, get our legs under us and start hitting it hard yesterday.” Self said Maryland has one of the top teams in the country. “I said personally as soon as the brackets came out Maryland is mis-seeded,” Self said. “They started the season No. 2 in the country (finishing 18). They were No. 3 six to eight weeks ago. They were ranked ahead of us for a stretch once conference play started. Fortunately for us, we hit our dip in January. Unfortunately for them they hit their dip in February. They fell a little bit. They can play to a 1-seed, there’s no doubt about that. I don’t think anybody can argue that this region has as good a teams left as any region,” added Self, whose overall No. 1-seed Jayhawks would play either No. 2-seed Villanova or No. 3-seed Miami on Saturday in the Elite Eight if the Jayhawks stop the Terps. l Injury update: “We’re fine,” Self said. “Perry (Ellis) got his knee bumped (against UConn in first half) which happens once every two weeks. That’s not a big deal. He’s
Mike Yoder/Journal-World Photo
KANSAS UNIVERSITY FORWARD JAMARI TRAYLOR, center, and Wayne Selden Jr. walk through the lobby of the Hyatt Regency Downtown in Louisville, Ky., on Tuesday. fine. He’s not missed any time. Frank (Mason III) ... we’ve made such a deal out of Frank hangnails,” Self added, smiling. “He’s tired. He’s beat up. I think there’s a lot of people tired and beat up at the end of a six-month season. There’s nothing that’s happened with us to date that would keep us from being less than who we are out there.” l Kurtis to WKU?: KU assistant Kurtis Townsend , who played point guard at Western Kentucky from 1978-80, figures to be a candidate for the school’s head coaching vacancy. Ray Harper resigned last week after three Hilltopper guards were suspended. “Right now, the biggest thing is no distractions for these guys (Jayhawks) so they can reach as high as they can,” Townsend said in an interview on Steve Gorman SPORTS! as relayed by kentucky. com. “All that stuff ends up working out the way it’s supposed to.” Townsend played for Western Kentucky after transferring from Menlo (Calif.) Junior College. “I love Western Kentucky,” Townsend told
Gorman. “I found my wife there. She went to school there, too, and is from Nashville originally. ... I loved it out there. They care about basketball, I know that.” l More on Turg: Maryland, of course, is coached by former KU guard Mark Turgeon. “I’ve got great respect for Turg. I actually coached him a year if you could call what I did coaching in those days,” said Self, a member of Larry Brown’s staff in 1986, when Turgeon and the Jayhawks reached the Final Four in Dallas. “He was really fun to be around.” Turgeon went 0-6 vs. KU as Texas A&M coach from 2008-11. “It really doesn’t (hold extra significance playing KU),” Turgeon told reporters on Tuesday as reported by maryland.247sports.com. “The first time I coached against Kansas it was weird, but I was at Texas A&M so I’ve done it five, six, seven times. I’m not sure exactly the number so it’s really not about that. It’s about the Sweet 16. We’re playing the No. 1 seed in the whole
tournament, not just our bracket — and it’s a great opportunity for us.” Noted Terp forward Robert Carter: “We know coach went to Kansas. He always talks about how great of an experience making the Final Four was for him, but nothing this week. Him going to Kansas is not going to help us score any points on the scoreboard on Thursday night.” “He always tell us about the story where they didn’t get a key rebound to win the game (against Duke at Final Four) and he preaches that almost every day because that’s what we’ve lacked — our defensive rebounding,” added guard Melo Trimble. “He talks about that a lot. That’s pretty much the only story we know about him at Kansas.” Forward Jake Layman told 247sports.com: “We’re not trying to worry about that stuff (KU ties). We’re just worried about going out there and playing Maryland basketball. Yeah, coach went there and played there. I’m sure he’s excited. We’re just going to go out there and play Maryland basketball and just worry about us playing well.”
Kansas softball takes twinbill from Evansville J-W Staff Reports
Lily Behrmann hit a two-run, game-winning home run in the bottom of the 10th inning, and Kansas University’s softball team defeated Evansville, 4-2, to complete a doubleheader sweep Tuesday at Arrocha Ballpark. Andie Formby pitched a three-hitter as KU won the opener, 7-0. Formby, who was named co-Big 12 pitcher of the week on Tuesday, started the first game against Evansville and threw her sixth completegame shutout of the season.
“My teammates make it easy,” Formby said. “The defense is excellent, which is really helpful. Plus, our offense has been scoring a lot of runs, so I can put a lot of trust into the team to make it easy.” Formby (11-2) pitched six innings of scoreless relief in the second game. She struck out 13 in 13 innings in the doubleheader. “Andie is doing phenomenal and is one of the hardest workers on our team,” KU coach Megan Smith said. “She has been one of the hardest workers since
just her but our whole team. There were some tense situations, especially in the second game, and she came through big time for us.” Chaley Brickey homered for KU in the opener, and Daniella Chavez, in addition to Berhmann, homered in the nightcap. Behrmann was 4-for-6 with three RBIs for the Richard Gwin/Journal-World Photo day. “We looked pretty KANSAS UNIVERSITY PITCHER ANDIE FORMBY delivers sharp in the first game against Evansville on Tuesday at Arrocha Ballpark. Formby pitched a three-hitter in KU’s 7-0 victory in the first game of and relied on our pitching and defense to get a doubleheader. through the second,” Smith said. “I was disapshe got here and this dividends of that right pointed in our offense fall. We are seeing the now pay off for her, not in the second game, but
loved the fact that our defense and pitching kept us in it so we could figure out a way to win.” The Jayhawks (19-10) will host Wichita State at 6 p.m. Tuesday. Kansas 7, Evansville 0 Evansville 000 000 0 — 0 3 4 Kansas 203 002 x — 7 11 1 W — Andie Formby (10-2). L — Amanda Blankenship (3-7). 2B — Erin McGinley, Daniella Chavez, Taylor McElhaney, KU. HR — Chaley Brickey, KU. KU highlights — Erin McGinley 2-for-4, run; Brickey 2-for-4, 2 runs, 2 RBIs; Lily Behrmann 2-for4, run, RBI.
Kansas 4, Evansville 2 Evansville 000 200 000 0 — 2 6 2 Kansas 200 000 000 2 — 4 7 0 W — Formby (11-2). L — Morgan Florey (5-3). 2B — Danielle Freeman, Courtney Land, E; Harli Ridling, KU. HR — Daniella Chavez, Lily Berhmann, KU. KU highlights — Behrmann 2-for-2, run, 2 RBIs; Ridling 2-for-5, run, 2 RBIs.
4C
|
Wednesday, March 23, 2016
.
SPORTS
Perez homers in KC win Surprise, Ariz. (ap) — Chris Young threw 41⁄3 hitless innings and Salvador Perez homered as the Kansas City Royals beat the Los Angeles Dodgers 3-1 Tuesday night. Young made his fourth start and walked three and struck out five before reaching his pitch limit. He was replaced by rookie left-hander Scott Alexander, who gave up an RBI-double to Rico Noel. “Chris was awesome,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. “We wanted to get his pitch count up to 75 and we did. We got to 78. I went out and told him, ‘CY you exceeded your pitch count. Dave (Eiland, pitching coach) is getting a little nervous.’ He said, ‘Does Dave know that I’m throwing a nohitter.’ I think he does. He was fantastic.” Perez hit his third homer in the fourth on a 3-1 pitch by Alex Wood. He also drove in a run in the second with a groundout. Omar Infante singled home Alex Gordon for the other Kansas City run. “We scratched together a couple of runs there early and Salvy’s home run was all the offense we needed,” Yost said. “Our pitching is right where it needs to be.
Keegan
BOX SCORE Royals 3, Dodgers 1 Los Angeles Kansas City ab r h bi ab r h bi C.Crawford dh 2 0 0 0 A.Escobar ss 3 0 0 0 W.Calhoun ph-dh 1 0 0 0 Barmes ph-ss 1 0 0 0 Utley 2b 2 0 0 0 Moustakas 3b 3 0 1 0 Culberson 2b 1 0 0 0 C.Colon 3b 1 0 0 0 H.Kendrick 3b 4 0 0 0 L.Cain cf 3 0 1 0 E.Herrera 3b 0 0 0 0 Fuentes cf 1 0 1 0 Pederson cf 3 0 0 0 Hosmer 1b 3 0 1 0 A.Barnes c 1 0 0 0 C.Decker 1b 1 0 1 0 K.Hernandez ss 4 0 1 0 K.Morales dh 3 1 2 0 A.Ellis c 2 0 0 0 Calixte pr-dh 1 0 0 0 A.Verdugo cf 1 0 1 0 A.Gordon lf 3 1 1 0 Thompson lf 4 0 0 0 Merrifield lf 0 0 0 0 R.Segedin 1b 3 1 0 0 S.Perez c 3 1 1 2 Noel rf 3 0 1 1 Butera c 0 0 0 0 Snider rf 3 0 0 0 Orlando rf 0 0 0 0 Infante 2b 3 0 1 1 Mondesi 2b 0 0 0 0 Totals 31 1 3 1 Totals 32 3 10 3 Los Angeles 000 010 000—1 Kansas City 020 100 00x—3 E-Moustakas (1). LOB-Los Angeles 7, Kansas City 5. 2B-A.Verdugo (1), Noel (1), Hosmer (4), C.Decker (3), K.Morales (2). HR-S.Perez (3). IP H R ER BB SO Los Angeles A.Wood L,0-2 4 6 3 3 0 4 L.Coleman 1 1 0 0 0 1 Liberatore 1 1 0 0 0 1 1 P.Baez 1 ⁄3 0 0 0 0 4 2⁄3 West 2 0 0 0 1 Kansas City Young W,2-1 41⁄3 0 1 1 3 5 Alexander 12⁄3 2 0 0 1 3 K.Herrera 1 0 0 0 0 2 D.Duffy 1 0 0 0 0 1 Flynn S,1-3 1 1 0 0 0 1 WP-Liberatore, Alexander. Balk-A.Wood. Umpires-Home, Tom Woodring; First, Todd Tichenor; Second, Quinn Wolcott; Third, Tripp Gibson. T-2:33. A-11,781 (10,714).
SCOREBOARD
attacked the strike zone NCAA Men pretty well.” EAST REGIONAL Royals designated hit- Round of 64 ter Kendrys Morales Thursday, March 17 PNC Arena went 2 for 3 with a double At Raleigh, N.C. North Carolina 83, Florida Gulf Coast and scored a run.
Starting time Dodgers: Wood threw 62 pitches, 42 for strikes, and also balked in the Royals’ two-run second inning. “It was kind of a weird second inning with the balk,” Wood said. “It’s my fault. I got a little crossed up with (catcher A.J. Ellis). I wasn’t going to throw a fastball. I didn’t know if he knew what was coming. He didn’t know what I was going to throw.” Royals: Young threw 43 strikes in 78 pitches, facing 17 batters. “His fastball command, he still needs to polish up just a little bit,” Yost said. “His slider was excellent. His changeup was great, but for the most part I We’re progressing very thought he threw the ball really well.” nicely.” Wood allowed three runs on six hits, walked Attendance record The announced atnone and struck out four. “I’m right on track to tendance was 11,781, be good to go for open- breaking the Royals’ ating week for sure,” tendance record for a Wood said. “I thought Surprise Stadium game. my stuff was good. I The previous high was thought I was efficient 11,517, on March 25, 2003 again, which I was hap- against the Arizona Diapy about. I felt I really mondbacks.
he has the edge on most basketball players. He has a great knack for every aspect of rebounding, CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C from positioning to reading shots, to making it a Except when grimactop priority at all times. ing from pain — a freAs his playing time has quent companion for an increased, so too has his athlete who sets himself ability to block shots. up for collisions with Lucas is a power player, much heavier bodies at more heavy-legged than high altitudes; a prescrip- his mates and is the only tion for crash landings member of the starting — Mason’s expression five who doesn’t count doesn’t move much. To perimeter shooting watch Fearless Frank run among his strengths. In so swiftly and contort his fact, he pokes fun at his body with such precision failure to hit the rare on the fly, is to imagine outside shot he takes. him playing cornerback A junior who red-shirtin shut-down fashion. ed as a freshman, Lucas To watch his face during took the longest to join competition is to easily the rotation and didn’t imagine him shoving all become a regular starter of his chips to the center until a third of the way of the table without into the Big 12 schedule. even a hint of a tell. He His offensive game isn’t doesn’t talk a great deal as advanced as his strong and doesn’t emote much abilities at the other end. when he does. Pressure In contrast, Ellis ardoesn’t seem to rattle rived at Kansas with him in the slightest. polished footwork, And then there is Gra- strong ball skills and a ham, the most extrovert- knack for scoring. He ed of the starting five, the has a finesse game, runs chattiest, the one with the floor with the speed the most expressive face, of a point guard, beats a passionate presence his man off the dribble and has the highest whose confidence and three-point percentage aggressiveness forever in the starting lineup grow in lock step with each other. Right around (.444). About the time Lucas joined the startthe time that Self — ing lineup, Ellis’ defense oops, I meant to say the improved in many ways. four original starters — He has all the physidecided the team best cal gifts necessary for functioned with Lucas productive rebounding, manning the middle, Graham shifted his focus but hasn’t been as natural at that as Lucas. Ellis did from deferring to Mapick up eight rebounds son to complementing in the second-round him. Vocal leadership comes more naturally to victory against UConn and will be called upon Graham, but he respects to lend a hand Thursday Mason so deeply that night in a Sweet 16 game it took awhile to do vs. Maryland, the tallest, anything that could be perceived as treading on widest remaining team in the tournament. his territory. Ellis leads the team It happened very with 16.9 points per game smoothly and Mason and Lucas ranks sixth welcomed it. They with a 5.5-point average. communicate so well, sometimes non-verbally, Ellis and Oklahoma’s Buddy Hield are the most so that when one needs a little taken off his plate consistent scorers among Sweet 16 field, the only for a while, the other players with at least 20 knows just when to put points in six of their past more on himself. seven games. Ellis’ game They collaborate so has more beauty than well at both ends. And nastiness. The uberso do the starters in the consistent senior from frontcourt, Perry Ellis Wichita has not scored and Lucas. more than 22 points in Personalities, playing any game during that styles, strengths, chalstretch. For the record, lenges, they sit at opposite ends of the spectrum 22 also is Ellis’ age, which might come as a surprise in so many ways. to those who feel as if On the court, Lucas he has been playing for brings the team’s most physical strength and has Kansas since Lawrence didn’t extend past Iowa a subtle nastiness to his game. He embraces con- Street. Both Ellis and Lucas tact, knowing it’s where
L awrence J ournal -W orld
bank on fertile brains on the floor and in the classroom, but as conversationalists could not be much different. Mature beyond his generation, Lucas has a natural gift for making anyone interviewing him feel at ease. He doesn’t speak in cliches. Equally cooperative and polite, Ellis has worked hard at coming out of his shell, but remains on the quiet side and seldom takes conversations on unpredictable paths. Put the basketball skills, experience level and personalities of the two guards, Mason and Graham, and the two post players, Ellis and Lucas, in a blender and the composite of the four would look like this: A 6-foot-5 junior who can play guard and forward, is above-average in every major aspect of the game, but not phenomenal in any one area, is much more extraverted than Ellis and Mason, but not as sociable as Graham and Lucas. In other words, the composite would walk, talk, emote and play exactly as does Wayne Selden Jr. (Interestingly, Selden’s statistics on neutral courts have been better than on the road or at home and that doesn’t even include his work in South Korea). Selden ranks second on the team in scoring (13.6), tied for fourth in rebounding (3.4), third in assists and third in steals. He brings vertical athleticism, punishes the rim with violent dunks and entices it with a soft shot from long distance. Selden’s skills don’t always look as smooth as those of Mason, Graham and Ellis, but even in those games when the line next to his name in box scores is on the ugly side, the team still seems to perform better with him on the court than the bench. Mason did a nice job of explaining why that is. “He’s a physical presence for us,” Mason said. “He’s always in the right spot. He helps defensively, off ball screens, just in the right spot, sometimes by bluffing to stop the offensive guy from getting in the paint. He’s been huge for us.” All five have been huge for the Jayhawks (32-4, 16 victories in a row), growing steadily since forming a starting lineup that once locked, never changed.
67 Providence 70, Southern Cal 69 At Wells Fargo Arena Des Moines, Iowa Indiana 99, Chattanooga 74 Kentucky 85, Stony Brook 57 Friday, March 18 At Barclays Center Brooklyn, N.Y. Stephen F. Austin 70, West Virginia 56 Notre Dame 70, Michigan 63 At Scottrade Center St. Louis Wisconsin 47, Pittsburgh 43 Xavier 71, Weber State 53 Round of 32 Saturday, March 19 At PNC Arena Raleigh, N.C. North Carolina 85, Providence 66 At Wells Fargo Arena Des Moines, Iowa Indiana 73, Kentucky 67 Sunday, March 20 At Barclays Center Brooklyn, N.Y. Notre Dame 76, Stephen F. Austin 75 At Scottrade Center St. Louis Wisconsin 66, Xavier 63 At Wells Fargo Center Philadelphia Regional Semifinals Friday, March 25 Wisconsin (22-12) vs. Notre Dame (23-11), 6:27 p.m. North Carolina (30-6) vs. Indiana (27-7), 8:40 p.m. Regional Championship Sunday, March 27 Semifinal winners SOUTH REGIONAL Round of 64 Thursday, March 17 At Dunkin’ Donuts Center Providence, R.I. Miami 79, Buffalo 72 Wichita State 65, Arizona 55 At Wells Fargo Arena Des Moines, Iowa UConn 74, Colorado 67 Kansas 105, Austin Peay 79 Friday, March 18 At Barclays Center Brooklyn, N.Y. Villanova 86, UNC Asheville 56 Iowa 72, Temple 70, OT At Spokane Veterans Memorial Arena Spokane, Wash. Hawaii 77, California 66 Maryland 79, South Dakota State 74 Round of 32 Saturday, March 19 At Dunkin’ Donuts Center Providence, R.I. Miami 65, Wichita State 57 At Wells Fargo Arena Des Moines, Iowa Kansas 73, UConn 61 Sunday, March 20 At Barclays Center Brooklyn, N.Y. Villanova 87, Iowa 68 At Spokane Veterans Memorial Arena Spokane, Wash. Maryland 73, Hawaii 60 At KFC YUM! Center Louisville, Ky. Regional Semifinals Thursday, March 24 Villanova (31-5) vs. Miami (27-7), 6:10 p.m. Kansas (32-4) vs. Maryland (27-8), 8:40 p.m. Regional Championship Saturday, March 26 Semifinal winners MIDWEST REGIONAL Round of 64 Thursday, March 17 At PNC Arena Raleigh, N.C. Butler 71, Texas Tech 61 Virginia 81, Hampton 45 At Pepsi Center Denver Iowa State 94, Iona 81 UALR 85, Purdue 83, 2OT Utah 80, Fresno State 69 Gonzaga 68, Seton Hall 52 Friday, March 18 At Scottrade Center St. Louis Syracuse 70, Dayton 51 Middle Tennessee 90, Michigan State 81 Round of 32 Saturday, March 19 At PNC Arena
Baker CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C
and unfortunately, it was the national championship. “We made it as far as we could go, so I’m just real proud of everyone, and I wouldn’t trade this team for anything in the world.” Hodge and teammate Ericka Simpson, both from Spring Hill, were named to the all-tournament first team. Tournament Most Valuable Player Kyleesha Weston scored a game-high 21 points for MidAmerica Nazarene (32-5), hitting six of 15 shots, including 2-for4 on three-pointers and 7-for-8 at the free-throw line. It was Weston’s threepointer just before the halftime buzzer that pulled the Pioneers within 25-21. Then they seized command with their game-changing 12-0 run during the opening seven minutes of the third quarter for a 33-25 lead. “I think we got a little tight when they made their run, and I thought we were a little passive shooting the basketball,” Lister said. “We just couldn’t hit any shots in the second half.” Baker was scoreless the
Raleigh, N.C. Virginia 77, Butler 69 At Pepsi Center Denver Iowa State 78, UALR 61 Gonzaga 82, Utah 59 Sunday, March 20 At Scottrade Center St. Louis Syracuse 75, Middle Tennessee 50 At The United Center Chicago Regional Semifinals Friday, March 25 Virginia (28-7) vs. Iowa State (23-11), 6:10 p.m. Syracuse (21-13) vs. Gonzaga (28-7), 8:40 p.m. Regional Championship Sunday, March 27 Semifinal winners WEST REGIONAL Round of 64 Thursday, March 17 At Dunkin’ Donuts Center Providence, R.I. Duke 93, UNC Wilmington 85 Yale 79, Baylor 75 Friday, March 18 At Chesapeake Energy Arena Oklahoma City VCU 75, Oregon State 67 Oklahoma 82, Cal State Bakersfield 68 Texas A&M 92, Green Bay 65 Northern Iowa 75, Texas 72 At Spokane Veterans Memorial Arena Spokane, Wash. Oregon 91, Holy Cross 52 Saint Joseph’s 78, Cincinnati 76 Round of 32 Saturday, March 19 At Dunkin’ Donuts Center Providence, R.I. Duke 71, Yale 64 Sunday, March 20 At Chesapeake Energy Arena Oklahoma City Oklahoma 85, VCU 81 Texas A&M 92, Northern Iowa 88, 2OT At Spokane Veterans Memorial Arena Spokane, Wash. Oregon 69, Saint Joseph’s 64 At The Honda Center Anaheim, Calif. Regional Semifinals Thursday, March 24 Oklahoma (27-7) vs. Texas A&M (288), 6:37 p.m. Oregon (30-6) vs. Duke (25-10), 8:40 p.m. Regional Championship Saturday, March 26 Semifinal winners FINAL FOUR At NRG Stadium Houston National Semifinals Saturday, April 2 South champion vs. West champion East champion vs. Midwest champion National Championship Monday, April 4 Semifinal winners
NCAA Women
BRIDGEPORT REGIONAL First Round Friday, March 18 At Starkville, Miss. Michigan State 74, Belmont 60 Mississippi St. 60, Chattanooga 50 Saturday, March 19 At Storrs, Conn. UConn 101, Robert Morris 49 Duquesne 97, Seton Hall 76 At Los Angeles UCLA 66, Hawaii 50 South Florida 48, Colorado State 45 At Austin, Texas Missouri 78, BYU 69 Texas 86, Alabama State 42 Second Round Sunday, March 20 At Starkville, Miss. Mississippi State 74, Michigan State 72 Monday, March 21 At Storrs, Conn. UConn 97, Duquesne 51 At Los Angeles South Florida 74, UCLA 56 At Austin, Texas Texas 73, Missouri 55 Regional Semifinals At Bridgeport, Conn. Saturday, March 26 UConn (34-0) vs. Mississippi State (28-7), 10:30 a.m. UCLA (26-8) vs. Texas (30-4), 12:30 p.m. Regional Championship Monday, March 28 Semifinal winners, TBA DALLAS REGIONAL First Round Friday, March 18
entire third quarter, until 28 seconds remained in the period, when post player Macy Wallisch scored a basket from underneath, pulling Baker within 33-27. But Tristin Wicks scored at the buzzer for the Pioneers to end the quarter, giving them a 3527 lead. The Wildcats, who were outscored 14-8 in the final period, were led by Kelsey Larson and Wallisch with eight points apiece. Both teams came out tighter than a drum at the start. Baker missed nine straight field goals after Hodge opened the scoring with a three from above the top of the arc. In the meantime, the Pioneers missed 10 of their first 12 attempts from the floor in grabbing a 5-3 lead at the four-minute mark. The Wildcats finally started getting in sync, getting a basket inside from Wallisch, a three from Larson, a bank shot from Wallisch and a Taylor Chase bucket just before the first-quarter buzzer for a 12-7 lead. With their bench producing seven points, Baker, continuing a 9-0 run, extended its lead to 17-7 with 6 1/2 minutes left in the second quarter. Megan Balcom ended the Pioneers’ drought with a trey at the 6:05
At Waco, Texas Baylor 89, Idaho 59 Auburn 68, St. John’s 57 At Louisville, Ky. DePaul 97, James Madison 67 Louisville 87, Central Arkansas 60 At Corvallis, Ore. Oregon State 73, Troy 31 St. Bonaventure 65, Oklahoma State 54 Saturday, March 19 At College Station, Texas Florida State 72, Middle Tennessee 55 Texas A&M 74, Missouri State 65 Second Round Sunday, March 20 At Waco, Texas Baylor 84, Auburn 52 At Louisville, Ky. DePaul 73, Louisville 72 At Corvallis, Ore. Oregon State 69, St. Bonaventure 40 Monday, March 21 At College Station, Texas Florida State 74, Texas A&M 56 Regional Semifinals Saturday, March 26 At Dallas Baylor (35-1) vs. Florida State (257), TBA DePaul (27-8) vs. Oregon State (304), 5 p.m. Regional Championship Monday, March 28 Semifinal winners, TBA SIOUX FALLS REGIONAL First Round Friday, March 18 At Columbia, S.C. Kansas State 56, George Washington 51 South Carolina 77, Jacksonville 41 At Syracuse, N.Y. Albany (NY) 61, Florida 59 Syracuse 73, Army 56 At Columbus, Ohio West Virginia 74, Princeton 65 Ohio State 88, Buffalo 69 At Tempe, Ariz. Tennessee 59, Green Bay 53 Arizona State 74, New Mexico State 52 Second Round Sunday, March 20 At Columbia, S.C. South Carolina 73, Kansas State 47 At Syracuse, N.Y. Syracuse 76, Albany (NY) 59 At Columbus, Ohio Ohio State 88, West Virginia 81 At Tempe, Ariz. Tennessee 75, Arizona State 64 Regional Semifinals Friday, March 25 At Sioux Falls, S.D. South Carolina (33-1) vs. Syracuse (27-7), 6 p.m. Ohio State (26-7) vs. Tennessee (2113), 8:30 p.m. Regional Championship Sunday, March 27 Semifinal winners, TBA LEXINGTON REGIONAL First Round Saturday, March 19 At South Bend, Ind. Notre Dame 95, North Carolina A&T 61 Indiana 62, Georgia 58 At Stanford, Calif. South Dakota State 74, Miami 71 Stanford 85, San Francisco 58 At Lexington, Ky. Oklahoma 61, Purdue 45 Kentucky 85, UNC Asheville 31 At College Park, Md. Maryland 74, Iona 58 Washington 65, Pennsylvania 53 Second Round Monday, March 21 At South Bend, Ind. Notre Dame 87, Indiana 70 At Stanford, Calif. Stanford 66, South Dakota State 65 At Lexington, Ky. Kentucky 79, Oklahoma 58 At College Park, Md. Washington 74, Maryland 65 Regional Semifinals Friday, March 25 At Lexington, Ky. Kentucky (25-7) vs. Washington (2410), 6 p.m. Notre Dame (33-1) vs. Stanford (267), 8:30 p.m. Regional Championship Sunday, March 27, TBA Semifinal winners, TBA FINAL FOUR At Indianapolis National Semifinals Sunday, April 3 Bridgeport champion vs. Dallas champion, 5 or 7:30 p.m. Sioux Falls champion vs. Lexington champion, 5 or 7:30 p.m. National Championship Tuesday, April 5 Semifinals winners, 7:30 p.m.
mark, closing the gap to 17-10, before Simpson answered with three on the other end for a 20-10 edge at the 4:27 mark. The Pioneers then slashed their deficit to four points after Jasmine Webb hit three straight baskets and then Weston drained her three. Weston had eight firsthalf points, as Baker limited the Pioneers to only 29.0 percent shooting in the opening 20 minutes (9 for 31). Baker made 10 of 28 shots for 35.7 percent in the first half, including 5-for-11 on threes. MidAmerica Nazarene 49, Baker 35 MIDAMERICA NAZARENE (32-5) Jasmine Webb 5-13 0-0 11, Tristin Wicks 4-6 0-0 8, Megan Balcom 1-9 2-4 5 , Kyleesha Weston 6-15 4-7 21, Bailey Rinehart 0-3 0-0 0, Nathalie Felipe 0-3 0-0 0, Whitney Moia 2-4 0-0 4, Ashli Lykins 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 18-53 9-12 49. BAKER (28-9) Sydney Buchel 0-5 0-2 0, Kelsey Larson 3-11 0-1 8, Macy Wallisch 4-9 0-0 8, Jami Hodge 3-15 0-0 7, Ericka Simpson 2-16 0-0 4, Jessica Zweifel 0-0 0-0 0, Courtney Hoag 1-2 0-0 2, Taylor Chase 2-3 0-0 5, Mackenzie Cook 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 15-61 0-7 35. MidAm 7 14 14 14 — 49 Baker 12 13 2 8 — 35 Three-point goals — Baker 5-20 (Larson 2-7, Chase 1-1, Hodge 1-7, Simpson 1-4, Buchel 0-1); MidAmerica 4-13 (Weston 2-4, Balcom 1-6, Webb 1-1, Rinehart 0-1, Felipe 0-1). Total fouls — Baker 15, MidAmerica 7. Fouled out — None. Rebounds — MidAmerica 47 (Webb 8, Wicks 7); Baker 35 (Wallisch 9, Buchel 6, Simpson 5, Hodge 4); Assists — Baker 9 (Buchel 2, Larson 2, Wallisch 2, Simpson 2, Chase 1); MidAmerica 5 ( Weston 2). Steals — Baker 8 (Hodge 3); MidAmerica 6 (Weston 2). Turnovers — MidAmerica 15, Baker 12. Blocked shots — MidAmerica 8 (Wicks 3, Moia 3); Baker 3 (Wallisch 1, Buchel 1, Larson 1).
Wednesday, March 23, 2016
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410 AREA JOB OPENINGS! BRANDON WOODS ...................... 5 OPENINGS
FACULTY/LECTURER/ACADEMIC 100 OPENINGS
MV TRANSPORTATION ................ 20 OPENINGS
CITY OF LAWRENCE ................... 36 OPENINGS
DAYCOM ................................. 11 OPENINGS
PIONEER RIDGE ......................... 5 OPENINGS
KU STUDENT OPENINGS .......... 113 OPENINGS
LAWRENCE PRESBYTERIAN MANOR 5 OPENINGS
THE SHELTER, INC. ................... 10 OPENINGS
STAFF OPENINGS ...................... 73 OPENINGS
MISCELLANEOUS ...................... 25 OPENINGS
WELLSVILLE/BROOKSIDE RETIREMENT 7 OPENINGS
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.
The University of Kansas is committed to providing our employees with an enriching and dynamic work environment that encourages innovation, research, creativity and equal opportunity for learning, development and professional growth. KU strives to recruit, develop, retain and reward a dynamic workforce that shares our mission and core strategic values in research, teaching and service. Learn more at employment.ku.edu.
Administrative Assistant
Individual to assist a new Director of the Specialize Chemistry Center with day-to-day activities and operational logistics. APPLY AT: https://employment.ku.edu/staff/5391BR Deadline: Until position is filled.
Accounting Specialist
Mechanical Engineering seeks Accounting Specialist to be responsible for financial management and reporting needs of a rapidly growing department. APPLY AT: https://employment.ku.edu/staff/5572BR First review starts 3/24/16.
Assistant Researcher
KU Institute for Life Span Studies seeks a Fulltime Assistant Researcher. For more information go to: APPLY AT: https://employment.ku.edu/staff/5630BR Deadline is 3/29/2016.
Clinical Assistant/ Associate Professor
Laboratory Coordinator
Chemical & Petroleum Engineering seeks a Laboratory Coordinator to KU Speech Language Hearing seeks full time, perform highly skilled work in design, Clinical Assistant Professor/ Clinical Associate fabrication and maintenance of Professor for clinical practice. Salary is equipment and apparatus. commensurate with experience. APPLY ONLINE AT: APPLY AT: https://employment.ku.edu/academic/5563BR http://employment.ku.edu/staff/5312BR. Deadline to apply is March 31, 2016. Review of applications begins on 4/22/16.
Appointment Specialist
The University of Kansas Human Resource Management is seeking an Appointment Specialist to assist with the processing and auditing for all campus personnel and payroll related transactions. FOR MORE INFORMATION AND TO APPLY: http://employment.ku.edu/staff/5621BR Deadline for Applications 3/27/16.
Budget & Finance Director
Kansas Geological Survey budget, accounting, and finance. $65K-$72.5K. Bachelor’s degree and 3+ yrs professional budgetary and supervisory exp. required. www.kgs.ku.edu, adelaney@ ku.edu, 785-864-2152 MORE INFO/APPLY AT: https://employment.ku.edu/staff/5637BR Priority deadline 4/3/16. Position avail. 5/2/16
For complete job descriptions & more information, visit:
employment.ku.edu KU is an EO/AAE, full policy http://policy.ku.edu/IOA/nondiscrimination. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex (including pregnancy), age, national origin, disability, genetic information or protected Veteran status.
Lawrence Presbyterian Manor MEDICAL RECORDS COORDINATOR (RN OR LPN) CHARGE NURSE (LPN OR RN) CNA LAUNDRY Part-Time SERVICES AIDE
RNs and LPNs Corizon Health, a provider of health services for the Kansas Department of Corrections, has excellent opportunities at the Lansing Correctional Facility in Lansing, KS.
APPLY ONLINE AT
www.lawrencepresbyterianmanor.org
OR IN PERSON AT 1429 Kasold Dr. Lawrence KS 66049
HOUSEKEEPER Full-Time
Come work where you can really make a difference!
Correctional nursing is a specialized field that encompasses ambulatory care, health education, urgent care and infirmary care. Corizon Health offers EXCELLENT rates and benefits. Send resume/contact:
Ellen Anderson 800.222.8215 x9555 Ellen.Anderson@CorizonHealth.com EOE/AAP/DTR
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FHLBank Topeka’s products and services help our member banks provide affordable credit and support housing and community development efforts. We are accepting resumes for the position listed below.
Community Living Opportunities
TEST AUTOMATION ENGINEER The individual in this position develops and maintains automated test scripts in an iterative, Agile software development environment. This person will supplement the project team on active software development efforts when automated testing is recommended. Additionally, they will work to create and maintain automated tests for Production software.
is a non-profit organization dedicated to helping adults and children with severe developmental disabilities achieve personally satisfying and fulfilling lifestyles.
LEVEL I:
• Participate in the writing of automated test scripts to support active projects as well as Production applications in need of automated testing (this includes preparing test plans, scenarios, and test data). • Help in the identification of opportunities for the application of automated tests. • Stay current with testing techniques and industry standards.
LEVEL II, III, & IV:
SAME AS LEVEL I PLUS THE FOLLOWING:
• Writing of automated test scripts to support active projects as well as Production applications in need of automated testing (this includes preparing test plans, scenarios, and test data). • Mentor BA/QAs on testing topics.
QUALIFICATIONS Four year college degree in business/finance or related field. Three to five years of related experience, including but not limited to prior experience as a loan officer, loan originator, mortgage broker, closing clerk, loan processor and/or loan underwriter. Tact and good interpersonal skills – ability to interact with all levels. Broad knowledge of the banking and thrift industry. Thorough knowledge of lending markets (residential, commercial and agricultural). Effective verbal and written communication skills. Knowledge and proficient use of MS Office applications including Word, Access and Excel. Ability to travel independently. Travel is 60% to 70%. In addition to a rewarding, team-oriented work environment, FHLBank Topeka offers opportunities for growth and development, an attractive benefit package including health and dental insurance, 401(k), short-term incentive plan and much more. To see a more detailed job summary and apply for this position, go to FHLBank’s website at
www.fhl btopeka.com/careers EOE
Teaching Counselors
Must be at least 19 years of age Have a high school diploma/GED Current valid driver’s license. Experience working with persons who have disabilities is a plus.
Family Teachers
Imagine that your career is to work with your partner to raise and care for your family, providing enriching and educational life experiences. Now imagine it includes a: 3-bedroom duplex in a great neighborhood with excellent schools Monthly food and utility allowance Company vehicle (while working) Salary of $42k-$45 per couple And, you’re able to work and care for your children! You’ll teach and support up to four people with developmental disabilities who live in separate, but attached duplexes, managing the home operations and budget. Want a good life for yourself and your family? This could be a terrific career and CLO is hiring couples with or without children. Lawrence & Kansas City Metro locations.
Learn more by visiting our website www.clokan.org, or call 785-865-5520 EOE
Taxi Drivers Administrative Assistant
NEWS EDITOR The Shawnee Dispatch, a division of The World Company, is looking for a News Editor to serve as a key member of our recently expanded newsroom in growing Johnson County. The News Editor will be responsible for story planning, writing and reporting news items, and editing stories for use in all media. In addition, the News Editor will provide guidance to a talented staff of journalists, and will use social media to support and increase user engagement. Position will be located in Shawnee, Kansas.
ACCOUNTING SPECIALIST
Fundraising and public relations firm seeking a full-time administrative assistant to work in team-oriented environment. Duties include database management for numerous clients mail-merge mailings & related clerical and receptionist tasks. Requires strong organization, communication, & computer skills. Must be dependable, detail oriented, motivated, able to work independently & handle multiple projects at the same time. Proficiency in Microsoft Word, Excel, Raiser’s Edge, & Adobe Acrobat preferred. Salary + benefits.
Email resume & cover letter to: employment@penningtonco.com
The World Company, based in Lawrence, Kansas, has an opening for an Accounting Specialist in our Business Office. Specialist performs the accounts payable activity for multiple companies; directs invoice processing and verification, expense coding, and drafts payment checks or vouchers; oversees maintenance of supporting records to ensure compliance with policies and procedures; generates required reports; and interacts with internal and external auditors as assigned. Will accurately process payroll for several locations and ensure payroll is processed in compliance with federal and state laws, including reporting requirements.
AccountingFinance
AdministrativeProfessional
ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE
Bookkeeper
Administrative Assistant
Business Office Bookkeeper for Nursing Facility setting. Must have AR/AP/PR knowledge and experience. Midicare A Skilled & Medicaid billing experience. Multi-tasking a must. Experience with monthly financials. Excellent pay & benefits. Call Administrator:
Financial advisory firm in Lawrence has an opening for full time associate to perform general office duties and assist in daily activites related to servicing clients.
Shawnee Dispatch, a division of The World Company, is seeking individuals who want to help companies grow their business. Our Account Executive’s will develop sales and marketing strategies with clients utilizing print and digital advertising primarily for the Shawnee Dispatch, but will also include Lawrence Journal-World, LJWorld. com, KUsports.com and Lawrence.com, and our websites and digital products. Position will be located in Shawnee, Kansas.
The World Company offers an excellent benefits package including health, dental and vision insurance, 401k, paid time off, employee discounts, tuition reimbursement, career opportunities and more! Background check and pre-employment drug screen required. EOE
Learn more online at: penningtonco.com
785 863 2105 Fax: 785 863 2735 Or send resume to 700 Cherokee Oskaloosa, KS 66066
Accountant/Economist
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Please call (785) 357 4444 or submit resume to yellowcabtaxi@gmail.com Building Maintenance
Customer Service
Lawrence-Douglas County Housing Authority
11 Hard Workers needed NOW!
Property Managment Specialist Clinton Place Apartments
Citizens’ Utility Ratepayer Board
Apply online at jobs.the-worldco.com
Yellow Cab Taxi is currently seeking FT drivers for medical transportation in the Lawrence area. Must must be familiar with the area, possess a valid drivers license with a clean record, and be able to pass a drug screen and background check.
For position details, please view the job posting on the agency website: http://curb.kansas.gov or the State of Kansas website at http://admin.ks.gov EOE
Send resume to: Norman@sunflower.com or fax: 785-843-5971
Smart-Hire Tip
Speak “Job Seeker” Don’t speak “HR” to a job seeker—-Use language they’ll be comfortable reading. Get more applicants by writing job ads that appeal to job seekers; Not a lengthy wish list which can cause qualified job seekers to self-eliminate. Job postings can be sent to Peter at: psteimle@ljworld.com 785-832-7119
Administration of low income senior housing assistance program. Responsible for day-to-day management & operations; ensuring compliance with HUD regulations & Housing Authority policies; enforcing lease & program compliance including federal regulations governing Project Based Section 8; processing tracking & managing work orders & HQS inspections; interdepartmental communications & coordination of dependent program functions w/ other LDCHA departments. Complete job description at :
$10 hr to train. Quickly earn $12-$15 hr Weekly pay checks. Paid Vacations No Weekends
Call today! 785-841-9999
Shop REAL Vintage Fashon! Often featured by our local Auctioneers!
www.ldcha.org Send cover letter, resume, & 3 work related references to: Lawrence-Douglas County
Housing Authority 1600 Haskell Ave. Lawrence KS 66044
by 4 pm on Tues., March 29 or email to housing@ldcha.org with PROPERTY MANAGEMENT SPECIALIST in subject line.
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DriversTransportation
CONSTRUCTION EEO/AA Employer.
Labors and equipment operators needed for work near Lawrence. Excellent pay & benefits. Apply 8am to 4pm at Hamm Companies 609 Perry Place Perry, KS Equal Opportunity Employer
L awrence J ournal -W orld
Wednesday, March 23, 2016
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LAWRENCE Deliver Newspapers! It’s Fun! Outstanding pay Part-time work Be an independent contractor, Deliver every day, between 2-6 a.m. Reliable vehicle, driver’s license, insurance in your own name, and a phone required.
Come in & Apply! 645 New Hampshire 816-805-6780 jinsco@ljworld.com
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Maintenance
HIRING IMMEDIATELY!
Custodial Supervisor
Apply online: lawrencetransit.org/ employment Or come to: MV Transportation, Inc. 1260 Timberedge Road Lawrence, KS. EOE
Interview TIP #6
General
Be Smart JUST DON’T Bring pets Eat in our office Bring children Swear Lie Get angry (We’ve seen it all!)
Driver Requires Class B CDL w/Air Brakes license. Experience in lumber industry a plus but not necessary. Excellent benefits after 60 days. Mon-Fri only. No wknds. Apply in person at: McCray Lumber 1516 W. 6th St. Lawrence, KS 66044 Drug Free & EOE
Full-Time & Part-Time Opportunities! Good with computers. Apply in person at 1401 W 23rd Street Lawrence, KS 66046 785-832-2679
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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.
DO! Follow directions Be polite Turn off phone
Supervises and works with approximately 18 custodians assigned to school district facilities. Duties include: employee supervision; trains employees on proper cleaning techniques and equipment usage; schedules and supervises floor care requirements; custodial quality control and task completion; staffing special events; orders and distributes supplies/materials. Minimum of two years experience in custodial industry, floor care and supervision required. Salary range based upon qualifications: $33,500 to $36,500. Benefits include health care and PTO. Criminal background check and drug screening required. Email resume to: opsmaintains@gmail.com or call 913-231-1032
Funny ‘bout Work Ted: How’s it going at the calendar factory? Bill: Badly! They fired me for taking one day off.
Decisions Determine Destiny
PUBLIC NOTICES TO PLACE AN AD: (First published in the Lawrence Daily JournalWorld March 16, 2016) IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS CIVIL DEPARTMENT U.S. Bank National Association Plaintiff, vs. Scott E. Marcum, et al. Defendants, Case No.14CV350 Court No. 5 Title to Real Estate Involved Pursuant to K.S.A. §60 NOTICE OF SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that 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 South entrance of the Law Enforcement Building, Douglas County, Kansas, on April 7, 2016 at the time of 10:00 AM, the following real estate: LOT 51, BLOCK 10, IN FOUR SEASONS NO. 5, AN ADDITION TO THE CITY OF LAWRENCE, DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS. Tax ID No. U17471, Commonly known as 3801 ShadyBrook Dr., Lawrence, KS 66047 (“the Property”) MS163156 to satisfy the judgment in the above entitled case. The sale is to be made without appraisement and subject to the redemption period as provided by law, and further subject to the approval of the Court. Douglas County Sheriff MILLSAP & SINGER, LLC By: /s/ Chad R. Doornink Chad R. Doornink, #23536 cdoornink@msfirm.com Jason A. Orr, #22222 jorr@msfirm.com 8900 Indian Creek Parkway, Suite 180 Overland Park, KS 66210 (913) 339-9132 (913) 339-9045 (fax) MS File No. 163156.331885 KJFC ATTORNEYS FOR PLAINTIFF MILLSAP & SINGER, LLC AS ATTORNEYS FOR U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION IS ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. _______ (First published in the Lawrence Daily JournalWorld March 23, 2016)
785.832.2222
legals@ljworld.com
Thomas E. Harmon, et al. Defendants.
Case No. 15CV97 Court No.
Case No. 15CV251 Court Number:
Title to Real Estate Involved Pursuant to K.S.A. §60
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 April 14, 2016, at 10:00 AM, the following real estate: Lot 9, Block 6, in SHADOW RIDGE 5TH PLAT, a subdivision in the City of Eudora, Douglas County, Kansas, commonly known as 305 Montrose Cove, Eudora, KS 66025 (the “Property”) to satisfy the judgment in the above-entitled case. The sale is to be made without appraisement and subject to the redemption period as provided by law, and further subject to the approval of the Court. For more information, visit www.Southlaw.com Kenneth M McGovern, Sheriff Douglas County, Kansas Prepared By: SouthLaw, P.C. Kristen G. Stroehmann (KS #10551) 13160 Foster, Suite 100 Overland Park, KS 66213-2660 (913) 663-7600 (913) 663-7899 (Fax) Attorneys for Plaintiff (179515) _______
NOTICE OF SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that 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 south entrance of the Law Enforcement Building, Douglas County, Kansas, on March 31, 2016 at the time of 10:00 AM, the following real estate: THE FOLLOWING DESCRIBED PROPERTY LOCATED IN DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS: LOT 7A, BLOCK 2, PINNACLE ADDITION NO. 2, AN ADDITION IN THE CITY OF LAWRENCE, DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS, AS SHOWN BY THE PLAT OF SURVEY OF THE LOT SPLIT OF LOTS 6 AND 7, BLOCK 2, IN PINNACLE ADDITION NO. 2, FILED IN PLAT BOOK 15, PAGE 146, IN THE OFFICE OF THE REGISTER OF DEEDS OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS., Commonly known as 3815 Pinnacle Circle, Lawrence, KS 66049 (“the Property”) MS171218 to satisfy the judgment in the above entitled case. The sale is to be made without appraisement and subject to the redemption period as provided by law, and further subject to the approval of the Court. Douglas County Sheriff MILLSAP & SINGER, LLC
(First published in the Lawrence Daily Journal- By: /s/ Chad R. Doornink Chad R. Doornink, #23536 World March 23, 2016) cdoornink@msfirm.com Jason A. Orr, #22222 DEMOLITION PERMIT jorr@msfirm.com APPLICATION 8900 Indian Creek Parkway, Suite 180 Date: March 21, 2016 Overland Park, KS 66210 Site Address: (913) 339-9132 417 Forrest Ave (913) 339-9045 (fax) Applicant Signature: Nicole Lauderdale ATTORNEYS FOR PLAINTIFF March 21, 2016 785-979-3284 MILLSAP & SINGER, LLC AS nicolelauderdale@gmail.com ATTORNEYS FOR OCWEN Property Owner LOAN SERVICING, LLC IS Information: ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT Nicole Lauderdale A DEBT AND ANY INFORMarch 21, 2016 MATION OBTAINED WILL 785-979-3284 BE USED FOR THAT PURnicolelauderdale@gmail.com POSE. Brief Description of _______ Structure: Old Garage Contractor Company (First published in the Name: Lawrence Daily JournalNone World March 16, 2016) ________ IN THE DISTRICT COURT (First published in the OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, Lawrence Daily JournalKANSAS CIVIL World March 9, 2016) DEPARTMENT
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS CIVIL DEPARTMENT
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS CIVIL DEPARTMENT
U.S. Bank National Association as successor by merger of U.S. Bank National Association ND Plaintiff,
Ocwen Loan Servicing, LLC Plaintiff,
Wilmington Savings Fund Society, FSB, d/b/a Christiana Trust, not individually but as trustee for Pretium Mortgage Acquisition Trust Plaintiff,
vs.
vs.
Analisa D. Bierig, et al. Defendants,
Chelsea A. Martin a/k/a Chelsea A. Mitts; Brian D.
vs.
| 3D
Martin; John Doe (Tenant/Occupant); Mary Doe (Tenant/Occupant); State of Kansas, Department of Revenue; Mittelman’s Furniture Co. Inc.; Unknown spouse, if any of Brian D. Martin, Defendants. Case No. 16CV80 Court Number: Pursuant to K.S.A. Chapter 60
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MERCHANDISE PETS TO PLACE AN AD:
You are notified that a Petition has been filed in the District Court of Douglas County, Kansas, praying to foreclose a real estate mortgage on the following described real estate: Lot 111, in CIMARRON HILLS NO. 5, an addition to the City of Lawrence, in Douglas County, Kansas, commonly known as 1808 Hampton Street, Lawrence, KS 66046 (the “Property”) and all those defendants who have not otherwise been served are required to plead to the Petition on or before the 26th day of April, 2016, in the District Court of Douglas County,Kansas. If you fail to plead, judgment and decree will be entered in due course upon the Petition. NOTICE Pursuant to the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, 15 U.S.C. §1692c(b), no information concerning the collection of this debt may be given without the prior consent of the consumer given directly to the debt collector or the express permission of a court of competent jurisdiction. The debt collector is attempting to collect a debt and any information obtained will be used for that purpose. Prepared By: SouthLaw, P.C. Kristen G. Stroehmann (KS #10551) 13160 Foster, Suite 100 Overland Park, KS 66213-2660 (913) 663-7600 (913) 663-7899 (Fax) Attorneys for Plaintiff (181155) _______
classifieds@ljworld.com
PUBLIC AUCTION: Saturday, March 26th, 9:30 A.M., 3408 W. 6th American Legion, Lawrence, KS Vintage Pedal Vehicles & Construction Toys: 1960’s AMF Fire Chief car #503 w/bell pedal car; 1960’s Dump Trac dump trailer (RARE!); #281 Fire Truck pedal truck w/bell/hose & reel/ladders; 1960’s Nylint #5500 Pepsi Cola truck w/box; 1950’s Structo sand crane; 1940’s Structo pay-loader; Buddy L Zoo & Coca Cola trucks; 2-Structo car haulers; Nylint #6 Fire truck; #649 Car Hauler w/ramps (unusual); Ertl horse van; McCormick Deering model M engine w/box; IHC Famous Engine 1st series Special Edition w/box; 150 + Farm Toys!!: 1/16th Farm w/boxes: Super 99 Oliver diesel “Mark Twain Series”; Oliver 550 wf & Oliver 770 both Made by C&M Toys; Massey Ferguson 98 diesel “Mark Twain Series”; Rumley 6th Series on steel; Massey Harris Pacemaker w/Massey Ferguson box(MISPRINT Rare!!); Wildcat Series 1 Steiger 30th Anniversary; White 170 Workhorse w/duals; White 6215 w/duels FWA; White 6105 & 6510 FWA’s; IH 4x4 7488; Farmall Super MD diesel; Farmall F20 on rubber; Farmall A Cub Anniversary Edition; IH 660 & 1999 660 Toy Farmers; John Deere: 1956 720 w/blade, 60 nf, a w/man 40th Ann. Comm., C on steel 65th Ann. Two Cylinder Club, 620 Orchard, 9400T on Tracks Collectors Ed., 220 Power Flex disk, Large Round Baler, Gravity Feed Wagon, 4- Row Corn Planter, Hydro Push Spreader, 6-Row Planter, 6 Bottom Plows, 1990 Grain Drill; Agro Allis:9650, 9655 w/duels Sp. Ed., 9655 1997 Farm Show, 9815 w/duels Sp. Ed., 9735,9775, 9650 1993 New Tractor Intro, 8745, 8630, 8630 1992 Coll. Ed., 8765 1997 Ed.; Deutz-Allis: 9150 1989-90 Sp Ed., 1988 9150 Sp. Ed., 6260 Sp. Ed. 1986, 6260 1986, 9150 AWD 1991, 9150 Row Crop Sp. Ed. 1989, 8010 FWDA 1985, 1987 Deluxe Spreader,1987 Tandem Disk w/wings; NH 8260 Toy Farmer; Massey Ferguson: 590, 595, 35 Coll. Ed., 4270 1997, 4900 w/duels 1/32; Waterloo Boy on steel Model R; Minneapolis Moline Highly Detailed Four Star Super Gas Classic Series; Steiger Super Wildcat Series 1 Coll. #3 1/32; 3-Steiger Bearcat Series 1 Coll. Ed. 1/32; MF 8780 Rotary Combine 1/24; Case IH 2188 AF5 Axial Flow Combine 1/32; 1/16th Farm No Boxes: 50’s pull-type JD combine; True Scale: pull type combine, corn picker, auger, hay elevator, grain drill, hay baler, pull-type disc, wide tine disc, 2-trailers, manure spreader & scoop, flare bo wagon, implement trailer w/winch; 2-JD chuckwagons; IH 1586 & 3588 w/duels; Hubley H, F-20 on steel; Farmall 1206’s wf & nf; Agco Allis 9815/9650/8785/8010; JD 7800 demonstrator; Ford 7710; Case L on steel; Massey Ferguson:65/270/50E/690/1100/2805/3070/; 9-IH 3088’s; 3-IH 544’s; MF 850 combine; JD & IH Implements 30 + Shotguns/Rifles/Revolvers/Pistols: Winchester 1906 .22; Winchester 22-250 Model 70 w/Nikon scope; Winchester 300 WIN Model 70; Winchester 30.06 Model 70; Winchester22 Model 67; Winchester 12 ga. Model 37; Winchester 444 Lever Action Model 94AE Like New In Box!; Browning Hunpback 12 ga.; Remington 870 Wingmaster 12 ga. Like New!; Iver Johnson Champion 12 & 16 ga.; Ithaca 12 ga. Model 900; Remington 243 Model 700 w/scope; Weatherby Vanguard 300 Magnum; Remington 22 Model 12; Pat 1915 Ranger 12 ga. Double Barrel; Hopkins & Allen Junior #922 lever-action 22; Winchester Model M59 Win-Lite 12 ga.; Stevens Model 67 Series E 12 ga.; Western Field Model SD59A .22LR; Ruger Super Blackhawk 44 magnum revolver; Colt Official Police Special 38 revolver; FIE Texas Model 22 revolver; Armi Tanfoglio Exam Model TA22 .22 revolver; Sturm Ruger .22 pistol; German Arminius .22 revolver; H&R Model 929 .22 revolver; Raven Arms Model MP-25 .25 auto revolver; German ME17 revolver; Daisy 99 BB; Colt cylinder wrench;100’s rounds of Ammo: Hornaby 444 Marlin, Winchester Silver Tip 30-30, MoMark Federal 12 ga.; 12/16/20 ga., 38’s/etc.; several leather holsters; French Military WWII knife; folding & pocket knives; Go to Web Page for Full Listing! All ATF Rules Apply KANSAS RESIDENTS ONLY!! Collectibles & Misc: 1930’s Fritzel Dairy butter boxes; early 1900’s John Fritzel pictures; Kaw Valley & Fritzel tins; ½ pint ice cream box; 1880’s Windmill picture; Alvin Howell 1963 Old Kaw River Bridge & Old Watkins Bank; Lawrence Advertising: Obers/Pipperts/Bowersock Mills/Winter/Frank’s Furniture/Much More!; costume jewelry; milk bottles w/paper lids; colored jars; marbles(swirls/shooters); marble pouches; 100’s Hallmark ornaments; Numerous items too many to mention! Auction Note: QUALITY IS OUTSTANDING !! Preview Begins at 7:00 A.M. Day of Auction ONLY!!
Elston Auctions (785-594-0505)(785-218-7851)
Please visit us online at www.KansasAuctions.net/elston for pictures!!
THURSDAY, 3/24, 10AM
NOTICE OF SUIT THE STATE OF KANSAS, to the above-named defendants and the unknown heirs, executors, administrators, devisees, trustees, creditors and assigns of any deceased defendants; the unknown spouses of any defendants; the unknown officers, successors, trustees, creditors and assigns of any defendants that are existing, dissolved or dormant corporations; the unknown executors, administrators, devisees, trustees, creditors, successors and assigns of any defendants that are or were partners or in partnership; the unknown guardians, conservators and trustees of any defendants that are minors or are under any legal disability; and the unknown heirs, executors, administrators, devisees, trustees, creditors and assigns of any person alleged to be deceased, and all other persons who are or may be concerned.
785.832.2222
2500 STATE LINE RD. KCKS
American Steel & Pipe Recycling has lost their lease. Forklifts, Air compressors, Shears, Metal brake, Various quantities/ sizes of tubing, flat steel, I-beams, pipe, salvage/parts items. 89 Mazda RX7 no mtr, 10X12 bldg. View the web for more info.
LINDSAY AUCTION & REALTY SVC INC 913.441.1557 LINDSAYAUCTIONS.COM
AUCTIONS Auction Calendar **PAWN SHOP AUCTION** Saturday, April 2, 6 PM 4795 Frisbie Rd Shawnee, KS Preview items at NOON -Great selection of recreational items from hunting, laptops, game systems, tools, coins, jewelry AND MORE! Metro Pawn Inc 913.596.1200 metropawnks.com Lindsay Auction Svc. 913.441.1557 lindsaysauctions.com AMERICAN STEEL & PIPE RECYCLING CENTER AUCTION Thursday, 3/24, 10 AM 2500 Stateline Rd Kansas City, KS FORKLIFTS, TRUCKS, EQUIP., MACHINES. SEE WEB FOR LIST & DETAILS www.lindsayauctions.com LINDSAY AUCTION SVCS 913-441-1557 FARM AUCTION Saturday, April 2, 9:30 AM 818 E. 1300 Rd Lawrence, KS Trucks, Tractors, Trailers, Equipment, OutBuilding, Firearms, Collectibles, Household, & Misc. 70+ Years of Farming! Seller: Bud & Thelma Dillon See website for list & pics! Mark Elston & Jason Flory 785-594-0505|785-218-7851
Auction Calendar TOY AUCTION Saturday, Mar. 26, 9:30 am American Legion, Lawrence 3408 W. 6th St ******** Vintage Pedal Vehicles & Construction Toys, 150+ Farm Toys, 30+ Shotguns /Rifles /Revolvers/ Pistols, Collectibles & Misc. OUTSTANDING QUALITY! Elston Auctions 785-594-0505|785-218-7851 www.kansasauctions.net/elston
Estate Sales
Tools & Building supplies, collectibles, toys tractors & planes, misc., furniture and glassware. 2 sellers! See web for list & pics: www.kansasauctions.net/edgecomb
www.edgecombauctions.com Edgecomb Auctions 785-594-3507|785-766-6074
TV-Video
REMODELING SALE Antiques & Vintage 203 W. 7th, Perry, KS Open 9 am - 5 pm daily Call first: 785-597-5752 Clearing out merchandise so we can paint & repair. Tons of pictures, mirrors, shelving curios & all merchandise will be 50% off O.B.O. No reasonable offers will be rejecetedWe need to clear up & clean out!
Appliances
Revere Camera Co Revere 8mm Projector A125605 Model 85. Excellent condition of camera and case. Original manual. One good lamp included. $40 785-841-7635, Please leave a message
Wine Refrigerator 24” wide, 24” deep, 34” tall. Holds 24 bottles. Glass door. $80. 785-843-7093
PETS
Lawn, Garden & Nursery
Pets
NELSON Traveling Sprinkler Raintrain travels 200 ft.& 13,500 sq.ft. Like New Perfect condition Original Box $40. 785-865-4215
Machinery-Tools
ESTATE SALE BLUE HEELER PUPS -
2713 W.30th St’ Sat., March 26 8:00-5:00 Very nice Baldwin organ, large Hutschenreuther china set, Alvin sterling silver tea set, sterling silver flatware, modern sofa and love seat, large ornate mirror, bookcases, corner cabinet, chests of drawers, several sofas, small butler’s table, end tables, chairs, desk, queen bed, double bed, sofa table w/ benches, washer, dryer, books pottery, lamps, counter stools, lots of misc
Sale by Elvira
MERCHANDISE
3 Males and 1 Females from working parents, $100 each Call 785-418-4524
Craftsman 10” work site table saw Lightly used, never outside. Comes with mitre, blade guard, kickback guard, fence and dust collector. $100 ph# 530-413-8657 Extension Ladder Davidson, 16ft-Aluminium, w/ 200lb load capacity. Type III duty rating. Asking $50. 785-842-2928
Farm Land HAY
GROUND Available Southwest of Vinland 785-838-9009
Farm Supplies
NEW MICHELIN TIRES
Ford 8 N Tractor: $1,500
Antiques OTTAWA ANTIQUE MALL
Music-Stereo
2nd & Walnut Downtown Ottawa, KS Tues - Sat, 10 am - 5 pm 785-242-1078 <<<< >>>> Mitch has listed his building for sale but the mall is open until it sells. His own large inventory (#R01) is all 40% off! Some other dealers discounting also
AGRICULTURE
Miscellaneous
175/70 R14, SET OF 4 $100 913-845-3365
www.kansasauctions.net/elston
PUBLIC AUCTION Saturday, Mar. 26, 10AM 1 3/8th m. West of Jct HWY 56 & 59 (1118 N. 300 Rd) Baldwin, City, KS
Antiques
PIANOS • H.L. Phillips upright $650 • Cable Nelson Spinet $500 • Gulbranson Spinet - $450 Prices include tuning & delivery
785-832-9906
6 ft trimming mower:
$200 6 ft dirt blade: $100 3 pt. dirt scoop: $100 785-418-0695 FREE 2 Week
AUCTION CALENDAR LISTING when you place your Auction or Estate Sale ad with us! Call our Classified Advertising Department for details! 785.832.2222 classifieds@ljworld.com
4D
|
Wednesday, March 23, 2016
.
L AWRENCE J OURNAL -W ORLD
SPECIAL!
10 LINES & PHOTO 7 DAYS $19.95 28 DAYS $49.95 DOESN’T SELL IN 28 DAYS? FREE RENEWAL!
PLACE YOUR AD: RECREATION
Chevrolet Trucks
785.832.2222 Ford Cars
classifieds@ljworld.com
USED CAR GIANT
Ford Cars
2012 FORD F-150 XLT
Campers
2015 FORD FUSION SE
2007 Ford Edge SEL Plus
2008 Rockwood Signature Ultra Lite Trailer Model RLT8272S
Stk#1PL2064
2013 Chevrolet Silverado 1500 LTZ Used minimum times; been garaged since purchase. Includes: hide-a-bed couch w/air mattress, awning, Alum wheels, AC, slide out dinette, LCD TV, microwave, equalizer sway control hitch, & many features.
$17,000.00 785-221-2738/785-221-2445 mkstravel@netzero.com 1987 SKYLINER LAYTON CAMPING TRAILER Asking $5,450. Tonganoxie. Single axel, pulls easy with pick up or car. Has AC, toliet, shower, elec breaks & more! 17.5’ x 7.5’ - overall measurements, including tongue & spare tire. Call or text Richard
Stk#215T279
$31,996 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
2015 Ford Flex Limited Stk#PL2188
$29,987 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!
913-645-8746
$25,995
2015 FORD FUSION TITANIUM
$15,995
Stock #PL2170
2015 FORD EDGE SPORT
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116
UCG PRICE
Stock #PL2119
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116
2007 Ford Crown Victoria LX Mileage is approx 107K; Leather seats Clean, one owner. $5100. 785-766-3876 jraehick@yahoo.com.
Stock #116T610
UCG PRICE
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
$18,565
UCG PRICE
$34,499
Stock #PL2153
785.727.7116
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Chrysler Cars
UCG PRICE
$10,999
2014 Ford Focus SE
23rd & Alabama, Lawrence www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Stk#PL2171
RV
Ford Cars
Ford SUVs
Ford SUVs
Ford Trucks
$13,995
Winnebago 2005 Rialta HD Motorhome for sale, Private Seller. Sleeps two, 22 ft long, gas powered, excellent condition, fully equipped. Very maneuverable, w/ powerful VW V6 engine with 24 Valves. New tires & New coach batteries. 66,xxx miles.
Price $39,900 785-843-2361| 785-865-8075
Chrysler 2007 300 C V8 Hemi, leather heated seats, power equipment, Boston sound, sunroof, dual power seats, well maintained! Stk#367793
Only $11,415 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
TRANSPORTATION
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
2014 Ford Focus SE Stk#PL2131
785-979-4439 amanda.4439@yahoo.com
2012 Ford Mustang GT Premium
105k miles. Slight interior damage, orignal wheels available. 913-269-6518
$21,989 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 785-727-7116
Dodge Cars
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Stk#PL2062
$34,499 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
w/ 4WD
Only $8,997 Call Coop at
$47,999 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
888-631-6458
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785.727.7116
2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785.727.7116
2014 Ford F-150 FX4
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
2014 Ford Fiesta SE
2015 Ford Focus SE Stk#PL2156
$14,495
Stk#PL2137
2015 Ford Explorer XLT
$11,889
Stk#PL2165
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
$29,986 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
2013 Ford Explorer XLT
Stk#115T1093
Stk#PL2174
$27,995
$27,995
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 785.727.7116 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116
2013 Dodge Dart Sedan Limited GT
Interior Camel Leather-Trimmed, SUV, 120k miles STK# F205A
JackEllenaHonda.com
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116
Chevrolet Cars
2015 Ford Expedition Platinum
Stk#PL2153
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
$22,995
Stk#215T1014
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116
$11,994
LOW mileage, under 60,000 mi., well cared for, newer tires, new power steering &O2 sensor $4000 OBO
Stk#116C567
2006 Cadillac XLR
2015 Ford Edge Sport
$19,504
2006 Chrylser PT Cruiser
2004 Chrysler Crossfire $6,500
2015 Ford Fusion Titanium Stk#PL2155
$31,499
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Cadillac Cars
2008 Ford Escape Limited 3.0L
Stk#116C458
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785.727.7116
Buick 1985 Buick Riviera In excellent running condition. 147000 miles. Front wheel drive. Tinted windows. AC. New CD/radio and 4 speakers. 8 cylinder, 307. $4,600. 801-360-3698 pianotech@ku.edu
2015 Ford Mustang GT Premium
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
2013 Ford Fusion Titanium
2014 Ford Fusion SE
Ford Trucks 2011 Ford Escape XLT
Stk#216L122A Stk#115C910
2014 CHEVROLET CAMARO 1LT
FWD Sedan, Black Limited Leather Seats, 49k miles STK# G318A
Only $13,997
Stk#PL1938
$17,787 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Call Coop at
888-631-6458 2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047 JackEllenaHonda.com
Dodge Trucks
$19,458
$15,495 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
2013 Ford Focus SE
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116
$11,995
Stk#PL2160
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
AUTOMOTIVE 2840 Iowa Street (785) 843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
Only $9,998 Call Coop at
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
DALE WILLEY
Lower price!!! 4WD SUV, 106k miles. STK# F803A
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
888-631-6458 2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047
2014 Ford E-250
2012 Ford F-150 King Ranch
Stk#PL2116
Stk#115T1127
$23,498
$30,995
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 785-727-7116
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
JackEllenaHonda.com
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
2014 Ford Focus SE Stk#PL2102
2012 Chevrolet Cruze LTZ
$12,495
2005 Dodge Dakota SLT Won’t last long! Leather seats! FWD Sedan, 21K miles STK# F821C
Only $13,497 Call Coop at
888-631-6458 2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047 JackEllenaHonda.com
2015 Ford Fusion Titanium
Stk#215T1109 Stk#PL2119
$11,994
$18,565
2015 Ford Fusion SE Stk#PL2170
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116
Stk#PL2187
2010 Ford F-150 Lariat
2012 Ford F-150 XLT Stk#116T610
Stk#1PL2034
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
$25,995
$30,995 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 785-727-7116
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
2015 Ford Explorer Limited
$15,995
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
888-631-6458 2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047 JackEllenaHonda.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
$22,987
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
L AWRENCE J OURNAL -W ORLD
Wednesday, March 23, 2016
CARS TO PLACE AN AD: Ford Trucks
SPECIAL! 10 LINES & PHOTO 7 Days $19.95 | 28 Days $49.95 Doesn’t sell in 28 days? FREE RENEWAL!
785.832.2222
$6,949 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116
classifieds@ljworld.com
Honda Cars
Hyundai Cars
Lexus Cars
2014 Honda Civic LX
2012 Hyundai Veloster w/Black
2002 LS 430 $5,500
Lincoln SUVs
200k miles. Clean leather interior, excellent condition. Loaded with lots of extras.
2000 Ford Ranger XLT Stk#215T1065
913-269-6518
2010 Lincoln Navigator
Mazda Cars
Scion
Toyota Cars
2014 Mazda Mazda3 i Sport
2013 Scion tC Base
2012 Toyota Camry Hybrid XLE
Stk#PL2143
Only $13,990 Call Coop at
888-631-6458 2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
JackEllenaHonda.com
Honda Cars Honda Vans
Amazing Vehicle, Great on gas!!! FWD Hatchback, 69K miles STK# G290A
Stk#1PL1991
Stk#PL2152 Stk#116L517
Certified Pre-Owned, 21K miles, 7 Year/100,000 mile warranty, 150-pt. Mechanical Inspection. STK# G096A
| 5D
Lincoln Cars $21,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Only $11,997 Call Coop at
888-631-6458
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116
2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047
$14,999 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116
2014 Lincoln MKX
Mazda Cars
$13,995
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 785-727-7116
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785.727.7116
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
JackEllenaHonda.com
$15,994
Subaru SUVs
Toyota SUVs
Mazda Crossovers
Hyundai SUVs Stk#PL2127
$28,999
2013 Honda Civic LX
2013 Honda Pilot EX-L
2002 Toyota Highlander
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116
2012 Hyundai Tucson Limited
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
2012 Mazda Mazda3 i Grand Touring
2015 Mazda CX-5 Touring
2014 Subaru Forester 2.5i Premium PZEV
Stk#PL2147
Stk#PL2151
$22,987
$18,995
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 785-727-7116
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
We Buy all Domestic cars, trucks, and suvs. Call Scott 785.727.7116
Toyota Cars
Stk#115T1128
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116
Stk#PL2149
Stk#PL2148
$28,596
$17,640 7yr/1000,000 mile warranty, Interior: Black w/Cloth Seat Trim, 27k miles. STK# F798A
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Only $13,995 Call Coop at
888-631-6458
2012 Lincoln MKT EcoBoost
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Stk#115T1100
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Infiniti SUVs
2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Honda 2009 Accord LX, fwd, one owner, power equipment, great gas mileage and dependable. Stk#489001
2007 Honda Odyssey EX-L
Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
LairdNollerLawrence.com
Mercury SUVs
2013 Lincoln MKZ Hybrid Stk#PL2128
$15,739 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Call Coop at
Hyundai Cars
Kia 2010 Forte EX Automatic, ABS, traction control, power equipment, cruise control, great commuter car. Stk#19795A1
Only $10,777 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
Only $7,436
Lincoln SUVs
$12,987 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Motorcycle-ATV
Nissan Crossovers
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116
Stk#PL2111
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Kia 2012 Optima Ex
2008 Honda CBR 600 Motorcycle Stk#116M448
Only $13,977 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785.727.7116 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
2015 Nissan Pathfinder SL Stk#115T1025
2004 Yamaha V-STAR Extremely sharp!!! Sedan, 126k miles STK# F690A
FWD
Only $8,997 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
888-631-6458 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 785.727.7116 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
$5,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
2010 Toyota Corolla LE
$29,999
$54,995
Only $13,714 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
Automatic, power equipment, ABS, low miles! Stk#14346A
Stk#PL2134
2015 Lincoln Navigator
One owner, FWD, heated steering wheel, leather heated & cooled seats, sunroof, premium ride with the premium price! Stk#38349A1
Toyota 2014 Corolla LE
2015 Mazda Mazda5 Sport
$15,994
2013 Hyundai Veloster
Honda 2011 Insight EX
Luxury 4wd, leather, sunroof, tow package, V6, power equipment. Stk#569271
Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
Stk#316B259
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Mercury 2007 Mariner
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Hybrid, low miles, alloy wheels, power equipment, cruise control, great gas mileage. Stk#11869
JackEllenaHonda.com
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116
Only $5,855
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116
Leather, dual climate control, heated seats, well maintained, new tires, brakes, radiator & transmission fluid. $11,500 785-691-5594
Only $14,497
2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
888-631-6458 JackEllenaHonda.com
Move quickly!!! FWD Hatchback, 28k miles STK# G098A
2008 Toyota RAV4 Limited
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Call Coop at
$22,998
Only $10,995
2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047
$24,987
888-631-6458
FWD Minivan, InteriorIvory w/Leather Seat Trim, 126k miles STK# G223B
Stk#116M561
Stk#215T1132A
23rd & Alabama - 2829 Iowa
210k miles. Clean leather interior, excellent condition. Loaded with lots of extras. 913-269-6518
Kia Cars
2010 Toyota 4Runner V6
2012 Mazda Mazda3 S
2005 Infiniti QX56 $8,500
Only $10,415
2013 Honda Civic EX
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116
$28,995
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116
JackEllenaHonda.com
$15,495
4-Cylinder. Front-Wheel Drive. 202,500 miles. Have all service records since purchase as Toyota-Certified used car in 2006. Clean, non-smoker vehicle. $4,350 OBO. Please leave message when you call: 785-832-1175
Call Coop at
888-631-6458 2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047 JackEllenaHonda.com
Stk#415T787C
$1,595 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
NOTICES LAW R EN CE JO UR N A L-WO R LD
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
Ariele Erwine
Classified Advertising Executive + Auction Enthusiast Contact Ariele today to promote your auction and make our audience your audience.
785-832-7168
aerwine@ljworld.com
Special Notices
Parkwood Day School Lawrence NOW OPEN! Early education program offering highquality services for children 6 weeks to 6 years, including children with special needs. Visit our website: www.parkwooddayschool.org Enroll today! 785-856-0409 or parkwoodlawrence@gmail.com
WANTED: 1 BDRM IN COUNTRY Looking for small space in the country to rent. 785-766-0517
6D
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Wednesday, March 23, 2016
.
L awrence J ournal -W orld
SPECIAL! 10 LINES
2 DAYS $50 7 DAYS $80 7 DAYS $80 + FREE PHOTO!
PLACE YOUR AD: FIRST MONTH FREE! 1 & 2 Bedroom Units Available Now!
Cooperative townhomes start at $446-$490/ mnth. Water, trash, sewer paid. Back patio, CA, hardwood floors, full bsmnt., stove, refrig., w/d hookup, garbage disposal, reserved parking. On-site management & maintenance. 24 hr. emergency maintenance. Membership & Equity fee required.
785-842-2545 pinetreetownhouses.com
REAL ESTATE
RENTALS
Lawrence
Apartments Unfurnished
Investment / Development
OPPORTUNITY: ~147 Acres~
785.832.2222
DOWNTOWN
“ Where Carefree, Comfortable Living Begins…”
SPACE
Now Available!
OFFICE 725
Call Donna or Lisa
All Electric
Bill Fair & Company www.billfair.com
785-838-9559
Farms-Acreage 4 ACRES
1st Month FREE!
Open House Special!
3 BR w/2 or 2.5 BA
classifieds@ljworld.com
Townhomes W/D hookups, Fireplace, Major Appliances. Lawn Care & Dbl Car Garage! Equal Housing Opportunity
• 28 Days - $280 Call 785-832-2222 to schedule your ad!
Townhomes
2BR in a 4-plex
Equal Housing Opportunity. 785-865-2505
• 1 Day - $50 • 2 Days - $75
Townhomes
New carpet, vinyl, cabinets, countertop. W/D is included.
Between Lawrence & Topeka on blacktop. Old farmstead, repo, assume owner financing with NO down payment.
(785)554-9663
Call 785-842-2575 www.princeton-place.com
785-841-6565
EOH
Duplexes
800-887-6929
• Fireplace • Easy access to I-70 • Central Air • Includes paid • Washer/Dryer cable. Hookups • 2 Car Garage with • Pet under 20 lbs. allowed Opener
$
1, 2 & 3 BR units Some with W/D, Water & Trash Paid, Small Pet, Income Restrictions Apply
2 Bedroom, 2 Bathroom Townhomes
Single offices, elevator & conference room
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
classifieds@ljworld.com
785-865-2505 grandmanagement.net
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
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
Townhomes
For LEASE Warehouse / Offices
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
SEARCH AMENITIES
VIEW PHOTOS
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
Carpentry
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
785.832.2222 Construction
Dirt-Manure-Mulch
Remodeling Specialist Handyman Services • 30 Yrs Exp Residential & Commercial 785.608.8159 rrodecap@yahoo.com
Cleaning
DECK BUILDER
Auctioneers HOUSE CLEANER ADDING NEW CUSTOMERS Years of experience, References available, Insured. 785-748-9815 (local)
Rich Black Top Soil No Chemicals Machine Pulverized Pickup or Delivery Serving KC over 40 years
913-962-0798 Fast Service
Foundation Repair Decks & Fences
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
Foundation & Masonry Specialist Water Prevention Systems for Basements, Sump Pumps, Foundation Supports & Repair & more. Call 785-221-3568
FOUNDATION REPAIR Mudjacking, Waterproofing. We specialize in Basement Repair & Pressure Grouting. Level & Straighten Walls & Bracing on wall. BBB. Free Estimates Since 1962 Wagner’s 785-749-1696 www.foundationrepairks.com
Auctioneers 800-887-6929 www.billfair.com STARTING or BUILDING a Business?
Concrete 785-832-2222 classifieds@ljworld.com
Advertising that works for you!
Stamped & Reg. Concrete, Patios, Walks, Driveways, Acid Staining & Overlays, Tear-Out & Replacement Jayhawk Concrete Inc. 785-979-5261
Guttering Services Stacked Deck Decks • Gazebos Siding • Fences • Additions Remodel • Weatherproofing Insured • 25 yrs exp. 785-550-5592 STARTING or BUILDING a Business? 785-832-2222 classifieds@ljworld.com
TUCKAWAY APARTMENTS
Tuckawayapartments.com 785-856-0432 TUCKAWAY AT BRIARWOOD
Tuckawayatbriarwood.com
HUTTON FARMS Huttonfarms.com
785-841-3339
JAYHAWK GUTTERING Seamless aluminum guttering.
785-842-0094 jayhawkguttering.com
Downtown Office Space Single offices, elevator & conference room, $725.
769 Grant Street in North Lawrence
Call Donna or Lisa
Loading dock, workshop, multi-use space. Bob Bloom: 842-8204
EXECUTIVE OFFICE
Thicker line? Bolder heading? Color background or Logo?
AVAILABLE at WEST LAWRENCE LOCATION $525/mo., Utilities included Conference Room, Fax Machine, Copier Available
Ask how to get these features in your ad TODAY!! Call 785-832-2222
785-841-6565
Contact Donna
785-841-6565
Advanco@sunflower.com
1 Month $118.95 | 6 Months $91.95/mo. 12 Months 64.95/mo. + FREE LOGO!
classifieds@ljworld.com Home Improvements
Home Improvements
AAA Home Improvements Int/Ext Repairs, Painting, Tree work & more. We do it all! 20 Yrs. Exp. w/ Ins. and local ref. Will beat all est. Call 785-917-9168
Handyman Services Located in Lawrence Family business with the lowest prices & guarantee service. Did you see a great idea on Pinterest? I can make it! Anything from hanging a picture to building decks or pergolas. Interior upgrades, restoration, maintenance. Email or call fcano100@gmail.com Phone: 917-921-6994 Anytime & Any Day! Free estimates!
Full Remodels & Odd Jobs, Interior/Exterior Painting, Installation & Repair of: Deck Drywall Siding Replacement Gutters Privacy Fencing Doors & Trim Commercial Build-out Build-to-suit services Fully Insured 22 yrs. experience
913-488-7320
Home Builders Repair & Remodel. When you want it done right the first time. Home repairs, deck repairs, painting & more. 785-766-9883
IT’S
EASY!
Call: 785-832-2222 Fax: 785-832-7232 Email: classifieds@ljworld.com
Higgins Handyman
Many colors to choose from. Install, repair, screen, clean-out. Locally owned. Insured. Free estimates.
Office Space
SPECIAL! 6 LINES
Placing an ad... New York Housekeeping Accepting clients for weekly, bi-weekly, seasonal or special occasion cleaning. Excellent References. Beth - 785-766-6762
NOW LEASING Spring - Fall
GET MAPS
SERVICES Antique/Estate Liquidation
Lawrence
HARPER SQUARE Harpersquareapartments.com
Call 785-842-2575 www.princeton-place.com
TO PLACE AN AD:
Lawrence
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
Retired Carpenter, Deck Repairs, Home Repairs, Interior Wall Repair & House Painting, Doors, Wood Rot, Power wash and Tree Services. 785-766-5285
Lawn, Garden & Nursery
Mike McCain’s Handyman Service Complete Lawn Care, Rototilling, Hauling, Yard Clean-up, Apt. Clean outs, Misc odd jobs.
Painting
Family Tradition Interior & Exterior Painting Carpentry/Wood Rot Senior Citizen Discount Ask for Ray 785-330-3459 Interior/Exterior Painting Quality Work Over 30 yrs. exp.
Call Lyndsey 913-422-7002
Call 785-248-6410
Plumbing RETIRED MASTER PLUMBER & Handyman needs small work. Bill Morgan 816-523-5703
classifieds@ljworld.com
Tree/Stump Removal
Landscaping YARDBIRDS LANDSCAPING Tractor and Mowing Services. Yard to fields. Lifetime of Experience Call 785-766-1280
Mowing...like Clockwork! 7 or 14 Day Scheduling Honest & Dependable Mow~Trim~Sweep Steve 785-393-9152 Lawrence Only
Lawn, Garden & Nursery
Spring Clean -Up Mowing-Trimming Serving Lawrence Since 1993 Pioneer Lawn Care Call 785-393-3568 or email Pioneerlawncare93@gmail.com
Golden Rule Lawncare Mowing & lawn cleanup Snow Removal Family owned & operated Call for Free Est. Insured. Eugene Yoder 785-224-9436
Need to sell your car? Place your ad at classifieds.lawrence.com or email classifieds@ljworld.com
Fredy’s Tree Service cutdown • trimmed • topped • stump removal Licensed & Insured. 20 yrs experience. 913-441-8641 913-244-7718
KansasTreeCare.com Trimming, removal, & stump grinding by Lawrence locals Certified by Kansas Arborists Assoc. since 1997 “We specialize in preservation & restoration” Ins. & Lic. visit online 785-843-TREE (8733)
OPEN HOUSES
RENTALS & REAL ESTATE
GARAGE SALES
20 LINES: 1 DAY $50 • 2 DAYS $75 + FREE PHOTO!
10 LINES: 2 DAYS $50 • 7 DAYS $80 28 DAYS $280 + FREE PHOTO!
UNLIMITED LINES: UP TO 3 DAYS, ONLY $24.95 + FREE GARAGE SALE KIT!
CARS
SERVICE DIRECTORY
MERCHANDISE & PETS
10 LINES & PHOTO: 7 DAYS $19.95 • 28 DAYS $49.95 DOESN’T SELL IN 28 DAYS? + FREE RENEWAL!
6 LINES: 1 MONTH $118.95 • 6 MONTHS $91.95/ MO 12 MONTHS $64.95/MO + FREE LOGO!
10 LINES & PHOTO: 7 DAYS $19.95 • 28 DAYS $49.95 DOESN’T SELL IN 28 DAYS? + FREE RENEWAL!
ADVERTISE TODAY! Call 785.832.2222 or email classifieds@ljworld.com
Wednesday, March 23, 2016
INSIDE An edition of the Lawrence Journal-World
Roasted radishes for your side Page 2
HOG WILD FOR EASTER Turn that ho-hum holiday classic into something exotic
kids — kept opening the fridge and pulling off a snack. Because it was spiral cut, you didn’t need a knife t Easter, there is just noth- to snag a piece. All you needed to ing better than a spiral-cut do was reach in and grab a thick, ham! Because I grew up meaty slice. with my grandmother The first Easter I hosted the roasting fresh, white, meal, I ordered a sweet-glazed uncured hams, a sweet-glazed spiral-cut ham. I felt so grown up spiral-cut ham has always been a and we ate that ham for days. I disdelicacy to me. covered the joy of a ham sandwich My best friend’s mother bought with thick-cut baked ham, crisp one every Easter and to me it was lettuce and lots of mayo on toasted heavenly. I loved the crunchy white bread. sweet and spicy crust on the ends As time went on, I grew to apof the slices. She served the ham preciate the purity of my grandcold and kept the leftover ham mother’s fresh ham, but soon found loosely covered with foil in the re- that most people expect their holifrigerator. It didn’t last long as we day hams to be pink. So why not — and the rest of the neighborhood give the people what they want?
By Elizabeth Karmel
Associated Press
A
The best part is that it is so easy to customize the ham with your own glaze. My “hack” is to make a sweet and spicy dry rub that bakes into a burnished “glaze” (rather than brushing the meat with a wet sauce). It is so quick and easy that I urge you to throw away any packet of sauce that comes with your ham and try it my way. A dry glaze is a dry spice rub with both sugar and granulated honey (or honey powder) to add sweetness and flavor. You also could use maple sugar granules. Luckily, these powders are easier and easier to find at the grocer or online. My favorite sweet and spicy rub is a combination of cinnamon, allspice, cloves, white
pepper, dried honey, salt and sugar. But feel free to riff with your favorite flavors. Just don’t omit the sugar; it melts and holds the other spices together, creating the glaze.
SWEET-AND-SPICY GLAZED HAM Spiral-cut hams are fully cooked when you purchase them and just need reheating. This is your chance to add tons of flavor in the form of a glaze. This recipe is written for a 5-pound ham, but the recipe is easily adapted to accommodate whatever size you need to feed your Easter crowd. For timing, plan 12 to 15 Please see EASTER, page 2CRA
Matthew Mead/AP Photo
when you spend $300* when you spend $200* *When you buy groceries at Checkers using your XTRA! card March 2 thru March 27, 2016 (Excludes tobacco, alcohol, gift cards & service items) Must present Xtra! card at time of purchase Limit One.While supplies last
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Wednesday, March 23, 2016
CRAVE
.
L awrence J ournal -W orld
SURPRISING SIDE Matthew Mead/AP Photo
HONOR YOUR VEGGIES supper of mine is this beautiful spring pilau. Buttery rice packed Spring is nature’s with spiced fennel, fashion week. After onions and garlic winter’s endless parade cooked slowly until of root vegetables, it soft and finished with feels as though nature a last-minute addition has pressed the big of still-crisp asparagus green button, refreshing and fava beans or peas. the new season’s offerA handful of fresh mint ings. Being showcased and a squeeze of lemon right now is a new look juice is stirred in just for your fridge, in a before serving to lift variety of greens. and unify all the flavors. At my local Sunday It’s a gentle dish. The market in London, on key to spring cooking display are big leafy is never to overpower bunches of spinach, the flavor of the new pointed sweetheart vegetables. They’ve cabbages, fennel with spent a long time getthrusting green tops ting to the point where and spring’s favorite they’re ready. So don’t darling, the slender hijack them with bigger, asparagus. bolder flavors or spices. Even in the village A little cumin, green where I grew up, the chili and garam masala fields have gone from are all they need to help empty to busy overthem sing. night. Workers lob This dish can be about with big wooden eaten by itself, though crates of cut leeks, letadding a little yoghurt tuces and a renewed and mango pickle won’t sense of purpose. It is hurt. But for something catching: All I want to a bit more special, some cook and eat is green, spring lamb cutlets, flash something fresh, light fried with salt, cumin and colorful. and chili would make A favorite green wonderful sidekicks.
Directions: Set the rice in a mesh strainer and run under cool water until the water runs clear. Transfer to a bowl, then Use whichever spring add enough water to cover. vegetables you have Set aside for 20 minutes. available. In a large saucepan, bring Start to finish: the stock to a boil. Drain the 35 minutes. rice, then add to the stock. ReServings: 6 turn to a simmer, then cook until tender, 10 to 12 minutes. Ingredients: Use a mesh strainer to strain 1 1/2 cups basmati rice the rice, then set aside, cov3 cups vegetable stock ered with a kitchen towel. 2 tablespoons unsalted In a larger skillet over mebutter dium, melt the butter. Add 2 medium red onions, the onions and cook for 6 to thinly sliced 8 minutes, or until translu4 cloves garlic, crushed cent and softened, but not 2 green finger chilies, very browned. Add the garlic and thinly sliced chilies, then cook for another 2 medium bulbs fennel, 2 minutes. Add the fennel, trimmed and thinly sliced stir to mix, then add a couple 2 bunches asparagus, tablespoons of water and trimmed and cut into 1-inch cover. Cook for 8 minutes, or pieces until soft. Add the asparagus, 9 ounces fresh or frozen peas or fava beans, cumin, peas or fresh fava beans garam masala and salt. Stir (outer skins removed) and cover, then cook for 1 1/2 teaspoons ground another 5 minutes. Remove cumin the skillet from the heat. 1 1/2 teaspoons garam Stir the herbs and rice masala into the vegetable mixture; 1 teaspoon kosher salt you might need to delicately 1/4 to 1/2 cup chopped break up the clumps of rice fresh herbs, such as mint, using your hands. Transfer to dill or cilantro a serving dish and serve with 1 lemon, cut into wedges wedges of lemon on the side.
By Meera Sodha
SPRING VEGETABLE PILAU
Associated Press
Easter
Ingredients: 5-pound pre-cooked spiral cut ham 1/2 cup honey powder or CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1CRA maple sugar granules 1/4 cup sugar minutes per pound at 275 2 teaspoons cinnamon F. If you decide to cook a 1 teaspoon ground larger ham, you’ll also need cloves to increase the dry glaze 1 teaspoon kosher salt (seasoning mixture). 1/2 teaspoon ground The ham can be cooked ei- allspice ther in the oven or on the grill. 1/2 teaspoon ground For the grill, prepare a grill white pepper for low heat, indirect cookDirections: ing. For a charcoal grill, this Heat the oven to 275 F. means banking the hot coals (For grilling directions, see to one side of the grill and cooking on the other side. For the headnote above.) Use paper towels to pat a gas grill, this means turning dry the ham, then set it, off one or more burners to cut side down, in a shallow create a cooler side, then baking pan. Set aside. cooking on that side. In a blender or food One advantage of the processor, combine the grill is that you can add a handful of wet wood chips remaining ingredients and process until the ingredibefore heating the ham. I like to do this because the ents are reduced to a fine powder. wood adds a fresh layer Gently pry apart the tops of smoke to the ham and of the spiral cuts. Sprinkle gives the ham a justabout 1/3 of the seasoning smoked flavor. mixture over the ham and Start to finish: 1 1/2 push it down between the hours (15 minutes active) slices. Cover loosely with Servings: 12 GET UP TO A
70
$
Matthew Mead/AP Photo
foil. Set the ham on the oven’s middle shelf or on the cooler side of the grill. Cook for 45 minutes. Remove the ham from the oven, turn the ham on its other side, then sprinkle another 1/3 of the seasoning mixture over it, again gently working it into the cuts. Cover the ham with foil again, then return to the oven or grill. Cook for another 30 minutes, or until the ham feels warm all the way through but is
not steaming hot. Remove and discard the foil. Sprinkle the remaining dry glaze over the top of the entire ham. Turn the broiler on in the oven and place the ham under the broiler for 2 to 4 minutes. Watch closely: You want the glaze to bubble and caramelize but you don’t want it to burn. When the ham is burnished to your liking, remove from oven and let rest for 15 minutes before serving.
By Alison Ladman Associated Press
Easter sides are depressingly predictable. There will be asparagus, of course. If you’re lucky, there might even be three or four variations of asparagus. And there will be peas. And gratin potatoes. And probably some sort of salad that most people will only eat to be polite. Not that there’s anything wrong with any of this. It’s just that it would be nice to offer something ... different. So we’ll help you with this one. Try our butter roasted radishes with tarragon and lemon. It’s a simple dish that comes together in minutes, but has a wonderful flavor that is rich, light and lemony — the perfect combination for spring.
Fast, friendly service!
Start to finish: 30 minutes (10 minutes active) Servings: 6
Ingredients: 2 pounds radishes, halved 3 tablespoons butter, melted Kosher salt and ground black pepper Zest of 1 lemon 2 tablespoons chopped fresh tarragon Directions: Heat the oven to 375 F. Pile the radish halves in the center of a rimmed baking sheet. Drizzle with the butter and toss to coat. Sprinkle with salt and pepper. Roast for 20 minutes, or until tender and lightly browned. Arrange on a serving platter, then sprinkle with the lemon zest and tarragon. Serve warm or at room temperature.
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Wednesday, March 23, 2016
NON sEQUItUr
COMICS
.
wILEY
PLUGGErs
GArY BrOOKINs
fAMILY CIrCUs
PICKLEs hI AND LOIs
sCOtt ADAMs
ChrIs CAssAtt & GArY BrOOKINs
JErrY sCOtt & JIM BOrGMAN
PAtrICK MCDONNELL
ChrIs BrOwNE BABY BLUEs
DOONEsBUrY
ChArLEs M. sChULZ
DEAN YOUNG/JOhN MArshALL
MUtts
hAGAr thE hOrrIBLE
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J.P. tOOMEY
ZIts
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BrIAN CrANE
stEPhAN PAstIs
shOE
shErMAN’s LAGOON
MArK PArIsI
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Off thE MArK
MOrt, GrEG & BrIAN wALKEr
PEANUts GArfIELD
BIL KEANE
GrEG BrOwNE/ChANCE wALKEr
BOrN LOsEr BEEtLE BAILEY
L awrence J ournal -W orld
GArrY trUDEAU
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DON’T BE BUY ONE.
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EASTER IS ALL ABOUT THANKS & GIVING
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$ 99 per lb
MARY’S® NON-GMO & ORGANIC TURKEYS
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AS A COMMITTMENT
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when you buy a Mary’s® Turkey for Easter NATURAL GROCERS WILL MATCH YOUR DONATION*
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