Lawrence Journal-World 03-26-2016

Page 1

GROWING LOCAL

Tourists desert Brussels after attack. 1B

Finding native Kansas flowers for your garden. HOME & GARDEN, 1C

L A W R E NC E

Journal-World

®

$1.00

LJWorld.com

SATURDAY • MARCH 26 • 2016

Police seek up to $1.2M for hiring boost

NCAA TOURNAMENT

FINAL PUSH

——

Department preparing for high ‘anomaly’ of officer retirement By Nikki Wentling Twitter: @nikkiwentling

Nick Krug/Journal-World Photo

KANSAS FORWARD CARLTON BRAGG JR. DOES A ONE-HANDED PUSHUP Friday in the Jayhawks’ locker room at the KFC Yum! Center in Louisville, Ky. KU plays Villanova at 7:50 p.m. today in an NCAA Tournament Elite Eight matchup, and the winner moves on to the Final Four in Houston.

What you need to know about KU’s Elite 8 game today Heard on the Hill O bviously I don’t normally foray into sports on this blog. But at this time of year in Lawrence, Kansas University basketball isn’t just sports, it’s news — and the further the team goes in the NCAA Tournament, the bigger news it becomes.

Sara Shepherd sshepherd@ljworld.com

That said, here’s some news-you-can-use about what’s happening next. KU beat Maryland (rather late) Thursday night to advance to the Elite Eight. The Jayhawks play the Villanova Wildcats at 7:50 p.m. (Central Time) today at KFC Yum! Center,

1 Arena Plaza, in Louisville, Ky. Whichever team wins heads to the Final Four. For KU fans making the trip to Louisville — or for those who are already there — the KU Alumni Association once again has a pregame party plan. Please see KU, page 2A

See more NCAA Tournament coverage in Sports, 1D

Report shows Lawrence lost jobs in February

A

pparently the state of Kansas doesn’t consider it a “job” to paint your face Crimson and Blue, write odes to Wayne Selden Jr., make an unfortunate decision about a “Dirty Dozen” tattoo, and all the other things that go along with celebrating a 12th straight Big 12 championship. If such activities were counted as a job, Lawrence undoubtedly would not have posted a job

loss in the month of February. State officials have released a report on job totals for Kansas metro areas, and Lawrence posted a 0.2 percent decline in jobs in February compared with February 2015 totals. To further prove my point, the metro area with the highest job growth for the month was Manhattan, where basketball and championships are more theoretical in nature. Here’s a look at the job

Business Classified Comics Deaths

Low: 33

Today’s forecast, page 10A

Please see JOBS, page 2A

Town Talk

Chad Lawhorn

2A 3C-7C 8C 2A

Events listings Home & Garden Horoscope Opinion

Please see POLICE, page 5A

clawhorn@ljworld.com

INSIDE

Morning rain

High: 55

numbers for metro areas as compiled by the Kansas Department of Labor: l Lawrence: down 0.2 percent, or 100 jobs l Manhattan: up 3.4 percent, or 1,500 jobs l Topeka: down 1 percent, or 1,100 jobs l Wichita: up 0.3 percent, or 900 jobs

The Lawrence Police Department is seeking around $1 million from the city to hire 17 more officers this month than the maximum currently allowed. The request is in anticipation for what Police Chief Tarik Khatib called in a city memo an “unprecedented number of retirements” expected in the next four years. The police department is currently two short of the 152 staff it’s allowed to have, and it wants to hire 19 people this spring to start a nine-month training process. The over-hire is estimated to cost between $644,396 to $1,267,061, depending on how many people leave this year and how many qualified applicants are found. The police department has increased its end-strength from 140 in 2003 to 152 today — too little of an addition to keep up with “the increased workload, complexity, technology challenges and community expectations,” the memo from Khatib and Police Capt. Anthony Brixius states. “It may be additionally detrimental to department operations and service levels to allow the department to enter an under-authorized strength state,” the memo reads. When they graduate from the academy and field training, the officers hired now would replace the 15 to 20 total expected to leave this year. Bryan Kidney, the city’s finance director, said the City Commission will be asked Tuesday to establish a line-item budget with city reserves, giving the police department the extra funding — up to $1,267,061 — as the department needs it.

Intersection mural

10A Puzzles 1C-2C Sports 6A Television 9A USA Today

6A 1D-8D 6A, 10A 1B-6B

Vol.158/No.86 32 pages

Two Lawrence artists are seeking city approval to turn the intersection of 10th and New Jersey streets into a work of art. Page 3A

Join us at Facebook.com/LJWorld and Twitter.com/LJWorld

Get $20 of Food for Just $10!

Crimson & Brews Neighborhood Pub 925 Iowa St, Lawrence | 785-841-3808 In the Hill Crest Shopping Center

Regular Price

CATCH THE GAME

$20

Deal Price

$10

Save

50%

Drink Specials Everyday This print advertisement is not redeemable for advertised deal. Purchase your deal voucher at Deals.Lawrence.com


2A

|

Saturday, March 26, 2016

LAWRENCE

.

DEATHS

KU CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A

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

SHARON WRIGHT Sharon Wright passed 3/24/2016, Lawrence. View service information at Chapel Oaks online: www.chapeloaksne.com

CHESTER HOWARD WRIGHT

Chester Howard Wright, 95, of Baldwin City, Kansas passed away peacefully, Wednesday, March 23, 2016, at Wellsville Retirement Community, Wellsville, KS. Chet was born February 14, 1921 in Tuscumbia, Missouri, the son of William Edward and Sara Ann (Hanrahan) Wright. He graduated from Tuscumbia High School, Class of 1938. Chet was united in marriage to Eula M. Admire on August 17, 1940 in Versailles, MO. They shared over 75 years of marriage. Chet served his country during World War II in the United States Army, achieving the rank of Sergeant with the 361st Infantry Division. Following an Honorable Discharge, he was a woodworking foreman for HR Vermillon in Baldwin City. He then worked for Massman­Patty, Harren & Westerhouse Construction, and Hercules as a carpenter. From 1966 – 1976, Chet was the Superintendent of Buildings and Grounds for Baker University in Baldwin City. After leaving Baker University, he went on to work for Douglas County Wood Products. He was a member of the American Legion Lloyd Beaton Post #228 and Palmyra Lodge #23 A.F. & A.M., both in Baldwin City. Chet loved his family and friends, had a wonderful memory, loved his morning and afternoon coffee groups, and loved to travel in his R.V., especially through the Rocky Mountains.

Chet was preceded in death by his parents; a sister, Wanita Wright; and a brother, Bill Wright. Chet was survived by his wife, Eula Wright; three sons, Ronald H. Wright and wife, Brenda, of Cloudcroft, New Mexico, Larry Wright, of Alamogordo, NM, and Gregory L. Wright and wife, Sheryl, of Wellsville, KS; four grandsons, Lance, Andy, Jon, and Chris Wright; two granddaughters, Rebecca Carlton and Monica Lemon; and eleven great­ grandchildren. Family will receive friends from 9:00 to 10:00 a.m. Monday, March 28, 2016 at Lamb­Roberts Funeral Home, 712 Ninth Street, Baldwin City, KS. Graveside services will be held at 10:30 a.m. Monday, March 28, 2016 at Oakwood Cemetery, Baldwin City. A Celebration of Life will be held following the graveside services at The Lodge, 502 Ames St., Baldwin City. The family suggests memorial contributions to American Legion Lloyd Beaton Post #228 or Palmyra Lodge #23 A.F. & A.M. c/o Lamb­Roberts Funeral Home, P.O. Box 64, Baldwin City, KS 66006. Condolences may be sent to family through www.lamb­roberts.com. Please sign this guestbook at Obituaries. LJWorld.com.

ROY E. KAMP Died March 21, 2016. There will be a celebration April 16, 2016 at 11 am at Pomona Assembly of God, Pomona, KS.

CAROL LADEAN THIRY Funeral services for Carol LaDean Thiry, 73, Lawrence, will be 10 am, Monday March 28, 2016, at Rumsey­Yost Funeral Home. Burial will follow at Hubble Hill Cemetery, Tonganoxie, KS. She died Thursday March 24, 2016, at Lawrence Memorial Hospital. Carol was born August 31, 1942, in Lawrence, the daughter of Winford and Viola Thiry. She grew up on a farm in rural Oskaloosa. Carol attended Chester Grade School. She worked at Cottonwood. Survivors include a brother, Arlo E. Thiry, McLouth; a nephew Duane Thiry, McLouth; a niece Denise Riveria and grand niece Ashley Riveria both of Keene Texas. Memorial contributions

may be made to Cottonwood, sent in care of Rumsey­Yost Funeral Home. Friends may call from 9­10 am Monday at the funeral home, where the family will receive them. Online condolences may be made at rumsey­ yost.com Please sign this guestbook at Obituaries. LJWorld.com.

Their pregame party, open to any fans, will be from 5 to 8 p.m. (Eastern Time) today in Cascade A, B and C rooms of the Kentucky International Convention Center, 221 S. Fourth St., in Louisville, about a block south of the arena. (Use the Market Street entrance.) Entry is free, and a cash bar and concessions will be available. A pep rally featuring the KU spirit squad and mascots is planned for 6:30 p.m. As always, the JournalWorld sports desk has about as much KU basketball news as you can handle on KUSports.com. Theirs is mostly ACTUAL sports news, with a smattering of off-court color, as well — like Gary Bedore’s Notebook

Jobs CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A l Kansas City, Kan.: up 0.5 percent, or 2,200 jobs We’ll see what type of trend develops for Lawrence’s job market in 2016. Last year was a pretty good year for job growth, but that was preceded by a long period of stagnation or declines in the local job market. In February, Lawrence would have seen even greater job losses, were it not for an influx of government jobs. The number of government employees in Lawrence grew by 800 people — or 4.7 percent — from February 2015 to February 2016. The number of private sector jobs during that time period dropped by 900 people, or 2.5 percent. For what it is worth, job growth totals in the Manhattan metro — which includes not only Manhattan but also Junction City and Fort Riley — were greatly aided by government jobs. Government employment there grew by 11 percent, or 1,700 jobs. Lawrence had two sectors that really were hit hard by job losses over the 12-month period. The goods-producing sector — which includes manufacturing of all types — declined by 7.4 percent or 400 jobs. The category of professional and business services — which includes jobs such as business managers, researchers, and a variety of technical and scientific positions — dropped by 8.9 percent, or 500 jobs. Lawrence had the largest percentage job losses of any metro area in the state in both the goods-producing and professional and business services category. Here’s a look at how other metro areas did in the goods-producing sector: l Lawrence: down 7.4 percent, or 400 jobs l Manhattan: down 5.8 percent, or 300 jobs l Topeka: no change l Wichita: down 0.6 percent, or 400 jobs l Kansas City: down 0.4 percent, or 200 jobs Here’s a look at the professional and business services category: l Lawrence: down 8.9 percent, or 500 jobs l Manhattan: information unavailable l Topeka: down 3.1 percent, or 400 jobs l Wichita: up 2.8 percent, or 900 jobs l Kansas City: down 0.7 percent, or 600 jobs It has been awhile since I’ve written about job numbers in Lawrence, but I plan to do so more regularly in 2016. The topic of jobs is

L awrence J ournal -W orld

feature quoting what some of the freshmen on the team thought of Louisville’s Churchill Downs. How “short” jockeys are was duly noted. lll

What to do in Louisville I got a little heckling (from Louisville-ians) via email and Twitter for not including ALL the things Louisville has to offer visitors in my write-up from earlier this week. Of course the place has more to do than what fit in my teaser. Their decidedly more insider suggestions included an article on the city’s best bourbon bars; goat races happening today in a neighborhood near the Yum! Center, as part of the NuLu Bock Beer Fest; a website for local restaurant reviews; and even a write-up about a Kentucky ghost storythemed play festival.

(For more information on any of these, find this Heard on the Hill post at KUToday.com, and click on the links.) lll

What NOT to do in Lawrence Take glass onto Massachusetts Street — or do anything you wouldn’t want captured on police surveillance video. Not unlike the fact that KU basketball crosses over into news this time of year, in this city it also crosses over into city ordinance. If you missed our crime reporter Conrad Swanson’s Lights and Sirens post from Wednesday (online at ljworld. com), check it out before you hit Mass. Street tonight.

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

OTHER CONTACTS Ed Ciambrone: 832-7260 production and distribution director Classified advertising: 832-2222 or www.ljworld.com/classifieds

CALL US — KU and higher ed reporter Sara Shepherd can be reached at sshepherd@ljworld.com or 832-7187.

If you add the government sector and the leisure and hospitality industry together, those two comprise 45 percent of our entire workforce.” one that community leaders never seem to stop fretting over, but oftentimes the public doesn’t have a lot of information about how the job market is actually performing. So, here are some numbers from the February report that show how different Lawrence’s job market is versus other Kansas metro areas. Plus, I just want to give all of you the chance to say at upcoming KU watch parties, “I recently read some interesting numbers about Lawrence labor market composition.” If you say it near the bean dip, it is an excellent way to get the bean dip all to yourself. One finding that shouldn’t be surprising is that government jobs — everything from KU employees to city of Lawrence workers — make up a large percentage of our workforce. In fact, in February, one out of every three employees in the Lawrence metro was a government employee. Here’s a look at the percentage of government employees in each metro area: l Lawrence: 33 percent l Manhattan: 37 percent l Topeka: 24 percent l Wichita: 14 percent l Kansas City: 12 percent One other category that I found interesting, though, was the leisure and hospitality sector. A big part of that sector is restaurant and bar employees. Here’s a look at how Lawrence stacks up: l Lawrence: 12 percent l Manhattan: Not available l Topeka: 7 percent l Wichita: 10 percent l Kansas City: 8 percent If you add the government sector and the leisure and hospitality industry together, those two comprise 45 percent of our entire workforce. Compare that to 20 percent in Kansas City. Retail jobs in Lawrence account for another 10 percent of the workforce, which was pretty consistent with the other metro areas. So, 55 percent of our workforce comes from government jobs, leisure and hospitality jobs and retail jobs. There are some important jobs in those categories, but they are not necessarily known to be the best-paying jobs in an economy. The other category that I find interesting is the area of professional and business services category. This includes a lot of jobs that generally

ljworld.com 645 New Hampshire St. (News Center) Lawrence, KS 66044 (785) 843-1000 • (800) 578-8748

are well thought of in the community. Things like researchers and engineers and corporate headquarter positions. There is not much argument about bringing those types of jobs to town. With the research capabilities and brain power of KU, they also are the types of jobs Lawrence would seem to have some potential to attract. Thus far, Lawrence is a bit of a laggard in the category. Here’s a look at the percentage of jobs in the professional and business services category: l Lawrence: 9 percent l Manhattan: Not available l Topeka: 11 percent l Wichita: 11 percent l Kansas City: 20 percent. I don’t think it is a coincidence that Kansas City — led by Johnson County — generally has the highest incomes and also has the highest percentage of professionallevel jobs. It is important to be realistic here, though. Lawrence’s job market is always going to be significantly different from these other communities. KU’s presence, for example, will always make us heavy on government jobs. Many of those jobs are good, too — as long as the Legislature keeps funding them. For years, Lawrence with its large number of government jobs has been more insulated from swings in the economy. It is no coincidence that Wichita is the most cyclical metro in the state and also has the largest percentage of workers in the goods-producing industry at 23 percent. (Lawrence was last in that category at 9.4 percent, in case you are wondering.) It is tough to say what the right mix of jobs in Lawrence should be. I wonder, though, if there will be more conversation about that in coming months. I sense that Lawrence soon may enter a period where we do more strategic planning as a community. Certainly that has been something new City Manager Tom Markus has mentioned. It may be that figuring out what types of jobs we want to work hardest at attracting may be a topic worthy of discussion. But, not until I finish this bean dip.

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: .......................832-7166 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.

POSTMASTER: Send address changes to: Lawrence Journal-World, P.O. Box 888, Lawrence, KS 66044-0888 (USPS 306-520) Periodicals postage paid at Lawrence, Kan.

Member of Alliance for Audited Media Member of The Associated Press

FOLLOW US Facebook.com/LJWorld Twitter.com/LJWorld

LOTTERY WEDNESDAY’S POWERBALL 5 8 15 22 49 (25) FRIDAY’S MEGA MILLIONS 4 11 12 35 46 (12) WEDNESDAY’S HOT LOTTO SIZZLER 7 13 14 28 30 (9) WEDNESDAY’S SUPER KANSAS CASH 3 21 24 27 29 (14) FRIDAY’S KANSAS 2BY2 Red: 12 13; White: 6 11 FRIDAY’S KANSAS PICK 3 (MIDDAY) 5 8 2 FRIDAY’S KANSAS PICK 3 (EVENING) 3 2 5

Kansas wheat —.5 cent, $4.72 See more stocks and commodities in the USA Today section.

BIRTHS Lawrence Memorial Hospital reported no births Friday.

CORRECTIONS

The Weekend Guide of Friday’s Journal-World contained incorrect information about The Kansas University Natural History Museum’s Science Saturday event. That event has been can— This is an excerpt from celed for today.

Chad Lawhorn’s Town Talk column, which appears at LJWorld.com.


Lawrence&State

Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com/local l Saturday, March 26, 2016 l 3A

K-State president to take job at Washington State

Room for one more?

President Elson Floyd, who died in June. They unanimously voted to exSpokane, Wash. — Dr. tend an offer of employKirk Schulz, head of Kan- ment to Schulz, who has sas State Universibeen president ty, will become the of K-State since 11th president of 2009. Washington State Schulz is expectUniversity, the ed to visit Pullman Board of Regents next week. announced Friday “I am pleased after making the that Washington decision at a meetState University ing in Richland. has found a dynamSchulz The regents ic leader to guide were presented with Please see K-STATE, page 4A three finalists to replace By Nicholas K. Geranios

Associated Press

Richard Gwin/Journal-World Photo

SEVERAL TURTLES SIT ON A LOG sunning themselves at the Baker Wetlands on Wednesday.

East Lawrence intersection mural seeks final city approval By Nikki Wentling Twitter: @nikkiwentling

While living in Portland, Ore., Lawrence artist Alicia Kelly became captivated by the city’s intersection murals — flowers, suns and other designs painted directly onto the street. When Kelly moved back to Lawrence, she wanted to bring that concept, called “intersection repair,” with her. And now, her idea — what she thinks is the Midwest’s first intersection mural — is about to come to fruition. Pending City Commission approval Tuesday, Kelly and another Lawrence artist, Katy Clagett, will shut down the intersection of 10th and New Jersey streets on April 23 for a “painting party.” “When I lived in

Portland for a short time, I was in love with them,” Kelly said. “I remember riding my bike over them and just stopping and looking down. I had never seen anything like it. I was thinking ‘Lawrence needs something like that.’” The 10th and New Jersey intersection was chosen so it can act as an introduction to East Lawrence, Kelly said. The project received a $1,500 arts grant from the Lawrence Cultural Arts Commission about this time last year. The total cost of the project is $3,450. It has received approval from the New York Elementary School principal, the East Lawrence Neighborhood Association, the Traffic Safety Commission and the Historic Resources Commission. On Tuesday,

Forest Service: Wildfire largest in state history City of Lawrence/Contributed Image

A FINAL DESIGN BY LAWRENCE ARTISTS Alicia Kelly and Katy Clagett for the mural that may be applied directly to the intersection of 10th and New Jersey streets, pending City Commission approval.

the City Commission will case of rain. be asked to issue a permit The mural will be allowing Kelly and Clagett painted with trafficto shut down the intersec- marking paint mixed tion on Earth Day, with Please see MURAL, page 4A April 30 as a backup day in

Medicine Lodge (ap) — Though some progress has been made to contain it, the persistent wildfire that spread north from rural Oklahoma into a sparsely populated section of Kansas is the largest one in Kansas history, officials said Friday. At least 620 square miles of land in Oklahoma and southern Kansas have been scorched in the fire, which started

Tuesday. It destroyed at least one home in Kansas, but no serious injuries have been reported. The wildfire is the “largest in Kansas history and one of the largest in U.S. history,” the Kansas Forest Service said in a release Friday, the same day authorities sent a plane up to update how much land had burned. Please see FIRE, page 4A

SATURDAY COLUMN

Presidential campaign triggers high voter interest By Dolph C. Simons Jr.

In about eight months, American voters will select the individual to inspire, lead and defend this country for the next four years. He or she will inherit a confused, angry and frustrated citizenry, a majority of whom are fed up with what is going on in Washington. It’s likely, although there is no way to prove it, that a greater percentage of thinking Americans are concerned and interested in this year’s primary and general elections than during similar elections in recent years. Interest in the primary elections is sky high, with proponents and opponents of candidates becoming increasingly adamant. How they express their likes and dislikes should spur concern that those expressions could get out of hand. There are three likely finalists for the job: Ted Cruz, Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton. They may not represent the

best or most qualified candidate to move into the world’s most powerful elected position, but they are what they are: good or not so good. Clinton, 68, embraces and endorses much of the Obama political and social philosophy. She has been a political insider since 1976, when her husband, former Arkansas governor and U.S. president Bill Clinton, was elected attorney general of Arkansas. Hillary Clinton has served as a U.S. senator and as this nation’s secretary of state. She has far more experience in politics, 40 years, than either Republican candidate, but there are strong opposing opinions about whether she did a good job as a senator or secretary of state. Cruz, 45, was a clerk for Chief Justice William Rehnquist and served as the solicitor general of Texas, arguing nine cases before the U.S. Supreme Court, before returning to private practice in Texas. He served as an adviser to

former President George H.W. Bush in 2000 and was elected to the U.S. Senate in 2012. He is a staunch conservative, a gifted speaker and debater, and, for whatever reason, does not enjoy strong support from his fellow Republican senators.

is for candidates to pledge and say whatever will get votes and, if elected, figure ways to justify abandoning the grandsounding commitments. Obama, however, broke this model when he pledged, if elected, to make “fundamental changes” in America. He has followed through on this pledge and made major changes, many by executive action, rather than by gaining approval from Congress. Many of the changes have altered the level of respect that many world leaders have for the strength and resolve of Uncle Sam. America’s armed forces have been reduced, the nation’s debt is at an all-time high and the government has become more involved in the lives of most Americans. World terrorism has grown, racial relations are not good, there is little cooperation between Democrats and Republicans in Washington and the Obama health care plan has failed to measure up to the

COMMENTARY Trump, 69, is a New York businessman, entrepreneur and developer who has been highly successful despite experiencing some major reversals during his highly publicized career. As a businessman, he supported both Republican and Democratic candidates, but he has not been a candidate for any political office prior to his current campaign for the presidency. Voters should realize partisan politics is a tough and, often, a mean business. Unfortunately, the name of the game

president’s assurances. The battle between Cruz and Trump is ugly and could end up damaging GOP chances of winning the White House in November. On the other hand, does the country want, or can it afford, four more years of greater government control, a weakening nation and growing numbers of Americans being dependent on government subsidies? There is every reason for Americans to learn as much as they can about the candidates, what they stand for, their level of honesty and the impact their election would have on this country. Remember, far too often, campaign promises turn out to be hollow. America could suffer deep and dangerous consequences if the wrong person, with the wrong motives, should be elected. It all boils down to more or less government and the ability, honesty and motives of who is elected.

ard!

All Abo

• Easter Egg Hunt – 3 Age Groups, 0-12. 1000 Age Appropriate Candy Filled Eggs For Each Train. Golden Egg wins Easter Basket Full of Prizes

• Train Ride – 11 Miles Round Trip aboard Authentic Historic Railroading Equipment

• Photos with Easter Bunny

VISITING NURSES

Hospice LET OUR FAMILY TAKE CARE OF YOUR FAMILY All your home care needs under one roof Home Health | Hospice | Rehabilitation | Help at Home

(785) 843-3738 • www.kansasvna.org

T R A

3 Days, 12 Trains

I

N

S P E C

I

A L

Sat./Sun., Mar. 19-20 Sat., Mar. 26 1515 High St., Baldwin City, KS

FARES:

Adults – $19

Ages 12 and Over

Child – $13 Ages 1-11

- Professional photographer on train to photograph your child with the Easter Bunny, or bring your own cameras.

• Depot Souvenir Shop - the souvenir shop will be open offering soft drinks, snacks, train t-shirts and caps, Midland t-shirts, hoodies and caps, railroad memorabilia, videos, books, jewelry, etc.

1000

Eggs Per Train

Tickets Available

Online:

midlandrailway.org

Departing Santa Fe Depot: 9:00 & 11:00 am and 1:30 & 3:30 pm Ticket Window Opens at 8:00 a.m. at Depot or Online at www.MidlandRailway.org

MIDLAND RAILWAY

913-721-1211 www.midlandrailway.org Follow Us at “MidlandRailway” on Facebook and Twitter


4A

|

Saturday, March 26, 2016

.

LAWRENCE • STATE

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Baldwin school district competitive shooting club formed

W

ith the start of spring, area high school athletes are pitching and hitting, kicking soccer balls, running and jumping on tracks and — in the Baldwin school district — shooting clay targets. Technically, the 35 Baldwin Junior High School and High School students who gather every Tuesday evening to shoot clay targets in the Cedar Hill Gun Club are members of a school district club rather than a team, said Ryan Reynolds, one of the club’s four coaches. “The Kansas High School Activities Association doesn’t sanction trap shooting, although that may change,” he said. “We’re a club within the junior high and high school.” High school trap shooting competition started in Minnesota about 15 years ago and has been slowly spreading, Reynolds said. There are 19 other club teams in the Kansas State High School Clay Target League, a number limited by the availability of shooting facilities. The Baldwin club was fortunate to have access to Cedar Hill Gun Club in the Vinland Valley about 7 miles from the high school. “They basically opened it up for us on

Area Roundup

With 35 members, the club will be one of the largest in the state when competition starts next month, Reynolds said. Because of the far-flung nature of the state’s 19 clubs, the Bulldog shooters will only travel to Wichita for the state finals in June. The club will shoot at Cedar Hill for all the other competitions with scores logged ejones@ljworld.com online, Reynolds said. All team members will Tuesday nights,” Reyncompete with the scores olds said. “We’re too of the top six performers big to go the nights they used for scoring purare open to the public. poses. We take over the whole “It gives young shootplace.” ers a chance to shoot Reynolds, who is a and progress,” he said. 4-H team trap instructor, “We had a child hit only got the Baldwin school four of 50 targets her board’s blessing to start first time. Last night, she the club in February. broke 20. With a little Under the arrangement, practice and breaking the club uses the names down the steps for them, Baldwin junior and sethey start breaking tarnior high schools and the gets pretty fast.” district’s Bulldog mascot, A big emphasis of but receives no financial the club is gun safety. support. Reynolds said all mem“We were overbers were required to whelmed,” Reynolds said complete a hunter safety of the response to the course and that no guns club. “We thought if we or ammunition are alhad 10 or 12 kids, we’d be lowed on school property. lucky, but the kids and “Safety is our No. 1 their parents just kept priority,” he said. “If coming.” With the response, the we’re not safe, the whole club had to add two more program goes away.” coaches because of the league’s policy that there Black Jack Battlefield Those with free time be one coach for every 10 Saturday, April 2, who students, Reynolds said.

Elvyn Jones

want to help preserve the area’s history are invited to the annual workday at the Black Jack Battlefield and Nature Park. Kerry Altenbernd, longtime Black Jack Battlefield Trust board member, said the local effort is part of the Civil War Trust’s annual Park Day at historical sites. Those who do show up for the Black Jack workday at the site 3 miles east of Baldwin City on East 2000 Road are encouraged to wear suitable work clothes. Activity will start at 9 a.m., but organizers don’t put too much emphasis on a set schedule. “Our motto is show up when you can and leave when you must,” Altenbernd said. The work will mostly focus on brush removal. Altenbernd said trail areas will be cleared and attempts made to remove evasive plants that have taken root in native tallgrass prairie. Although the work is being done to prepare the site for the start of visiting season, the battlefield is open to visitors year-round, Altenbernd said. In past years, the Black Jack board attempted to have volunteers at the site to greet visitors and lead tours on spring, summer

and early fall weekends. That won’t be the case this year. “We’re having trouble finding enough volunteers,” Altenbernd said. “That’s something we’re still trying to figure out. We won’t have someone there every weekend day. There will be brochures and maps available for people stopping by.” Attempts will be made to provide tours to groups visiting the site, Altenbernd said. Those wanting to arrange such a tour should call 785883-2106. Planned activities include a tour on the June 2 anniversary of the battle. That will begin at the 5 a.m. time the 1856 armed showdown started between John Brown’s abolitionist forces and those of Henry Pate’s pro-slavery militia. More tours and activities are scheduled on Saturday, June 4, to further mark the 160th anniversary of the battle, Altenbernd said. Those tours will feature running commentary and debate between Altenbernd as John Brown and a re-enactor playing one of Pate’s men. In other Black Jack news, the second phase of restoration has started on the Pearson farmhouse at the site thanks to a grant from the Douglas County Heritage

Conservation Council. Altenbernd said work was being done now on the interior woodwork with the restoration of original wood flooring to follow. “We’re doing it very carefully because we want to make sure it’s done right so that we honor the people who lived out there,” he said. The current restoration effort follows extensive work to stabilize the house’s foundation, repair a chimney and address termite damage funded through a $163,000 grant the Heritage Conservation Council awarded in 2011.

Other events l The Ives Chapel United Methodist Church will have its free community meal from 6 to 7 p.m. Thursday at the church, 1018 Miami St. in Baldwin City. l There will be a yoyo demonstration at 4 p.m. Thursday at Eudora Community Center gymnasium. l The Wild of Wellness 5K walk/run will be at 9 a.m. April 2 at the Eudora Community Center. For more information, call 785-542-3434. — This is an excerpt from Elvyn Jones’ Area Roundup column, which appears regularly on LJWorld.com.

Baker to start planning enrollment increase on Baldwin campus of Chapel Street. Andy Jett, Baker vice president of strategic planning and academic resources, said the talks were about protecting Baker’s northern border. Baker property borders the school district office and storage building on the west, south and east and the vacant lot on the south. Baker administrators are working with the Baker University Board of Trustees about updating the university’s strategic plan and its master plan, which would define the facilities and programming needed to support the strategic objectives identified, Jett said. One goal would be to increase

the Baldwin City’s campus enrollment from the current enrollment of about 830 undergraduate students to 1,000, he said. “That’s the capacity we can reach on the Baldwin City campus without making substantial infrastructural improvements,” Jett said. Facility improvements would nonetheless be needed to ensure the university could continue to provide quality educational and student life experiences with the enrollment increase, Jett said. Those could include more residence halls, some classroom additions and upgraded and additional athletic facilities, he said. The school district’s

Chapel Street properties could be part of residence hall expansion and new athletic facilities important to a school at which 60 percent of its undergraduate students participate in intercollegiate athletics, Jett said. Although Jett said it was too early to say definitively, the completion of the planning process could be followed by a capital campaign. Baker hadn’t had such an effort since $10.3 million was raised for the Mulvane Hall transformation project, which was completed in 2012, he said. “That was one of Dr. (Lynne) Murray’s goals when she came at Baker,” Jett said of the school president’s arrival on campus

in July 2014. “Fundraising was one of the things she brings to the table. If you’re going to go through the master planning process, you have to have some level of donations to make it possible.” Baldwin school board members were open to talks with Baker representatives about the properties with a number of board members saying it was surprising the university hadn’t already acquired the vacant city block. Board member Sandy Chapman said Monday that based on the district’s last experience in selling excess school property, it needed to consider whether it should invite

other offers for the Chapel Street properties. In November 2014, the board agreed to sell the Vinland Elementary School to McFarlane Aviation only to have patrons request it open that process to other potential buyers. The district eventually sold the school for $301,000 to Darren Flory, which was $131,000 more than the original offer. Superintendent Paul Dorathy said the properties currently were not listed for sale and that no interested parties had approached the district about them.

The “painting party” is expected to draw hundreds of volunteers. There will be food, live CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A music and other activities, as a way to bring with hazelnut shells. the community together, The shells add grit to the Kelly said. paint, so the pavement According to Seisn’t slippery when wet. attle’s department of

transportation website, intersection painting is used there to add a sense of place and organize neighborhoods around a common goal. Traffic calming is an indirect effect, the website states. In coming up with the design, Kelly and Clagett

held three community meetings to receive input. After about 15 iterations, the duo decided on a final design that will be presented to the City Commission on Tuesday. They wanted to keep it simple and symmetrical, but “playful,” because

of its proximity to New York Elementary School. A bricklike element running north and south is meant to be reminiscent of the old trolley line from the early 1900s. City commissioners will meet at 5:45 p.m. Tuesday at City Hall, 6 E. Sixth St.

The mural agreement is on the commission’s consent agenda, meaning it will be approved unless a commissioner pulls it for discussion.

K-State

the University of North Dakota, Michigan State and Mississippi State. “He has been a phenomenal leader,” said Shane Bangerter, chairman of the Kansas Board of Regents. “His ability to fund-raise and the projects he has been able to accomplish will definitely be a lasting legacy for him.” Schulz told the KState community that he will remain as president through mid-May before transitioning to Washington State. “Noel and I have

thoroughly enjoyed our seven years at Kansas State,” Schulz wrote, mentioning his wife. “It has been an exciting time to be a Wildcat and a part of the K-State family.” Schulz will now negotiate his new contract, which must be approved by the WSU Board of Regents. K-State and Washington State are both large land-grant universities located in small cities, with major sports programs. Schulz is chair of the NCAA board of governors, the athletic

association’s highestranking decision-making body. Provost Daniel Bernardo has been acting president of WSU. The popular Floyd died of complications from colon cancer at 59. He created a new medical school at WSU-Spokane that will be named for him. The university initially reached out to some 200 people for the job and then whittled that list to eight prospects before the final cut was made to three finalists, Worthy said. The search committee

decided early it would not release candidates’ names, even at the finalist level. That decision was intended to attract quality applicants without placing their careers at risk. Some faculty members have criticized the secrecy and lack of on-campus interviews. The regents said Noel Schulz will be offered a job as an engineering professor at the school. Washington State University is based in Pullman and has branch campuses in Vancouver, Richland, Spokane and Everett. The system has

about 29,000 students. K-State has about 24,000 students. Schulz is also a professor of chemical engineering at K-State. During his tenure, KState climbed from the “very high research activity” classification in 2010 to the “highest research activity” in 2015 in rankings by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, Washington State University said.

was largely contained in Kansas except in Barber County, which is southwest of Wichita along the border with Oklahoma. The strong winds that initially fueled it died down Thursday, and though gusts of up to 30 mph were expected Friday, the winds don’t appear to be “hurting yet,” said Ben Bauman, spokesman for the Kansas Adjutant General’s Office. “Things really appear to be going pretty well so far today,” he said.

Earlier in the week, smoke was reportedly detected as far away as St. Louis, hundreds of miles to the northeast. Crews worked overnight to successfully save a home in Barber County, where the blaze has burned at least 426 square miles, Darcy Golliher, a spokeswoman for the Kansas Incident Management Team, said Friday. She said crews were hopeful that the blaze would be under control by the weekend, although

it was just 15 percent contained Friday. “The big concern today is the winds coming out of the south,” she said. “That is what we are working on.” In neighboring Comanche County, the fire was mostly contained, although crews were monitoring for flareups, said John Lehman, the county’s emergency management coordinator. He said the concern was that sparks from stillburning trees and cedars

in canyons in the area’s Gyp Hills would blow up and ignite flames on the ridges. “Up on top they feel like they have it,” he said. “It’s looking a lot better.” In Oklahoma, officials planned to conduct damage assessments Friday to determine how many buildings have been lost in the blaze, said Michelle Finch-Walker, a spokeswoman for the state’s Forestry Services. “Due to the extraordinary firefighting efforts

yesterday and a little help from Mother Nature, we didn’t see any fire growth,” she said. Meanwhile, the Kansas Livestock Association halted a call for hay donations for Kansas ranchers affected by the fire after many came in, KLA spokesman Todd Domer said Friday. The KLA’s farmers’ cooperatives in two Kansas communities are also collecting cash donations for to help repair tens of thousands of miles of burned fencing.

By Elvyn Jones Twitter: @ElvynJ

Baker University officials soon will start planning for increasing the enrollment on the Baldwin City campus to 1,000 students and the associated upgrades of facilities and programing needed to handle that growth. The university signaled its intentions in that regard Monday when it was announced at the Baldwin school board meeting that the university wanted to talk with the district about acquiring from the district the vacant square block north of the 500 block of Chapel Street and the district office and storage building on the 700 block

Mural

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A

them through the next phase of research, growth and student achievement,” Washington Gov. Jay Inslee said. The names of the other two finalists were not revealed. Schulz, 52, is a Virginia native who graduated in 1991 from Virginia Tech with a doctorate in chemical engineering. He worked as a professor at

Fire CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A

Officials also are looking at the damage in Barber County to determine if it meets the threshold for a Federal Emergency Management Agency disaster declaration, which would provide public assistance for damaged public infrastructure. Gov. Sam Brownback said Thursday that the fire

— County reporter Elvyn Jones can be reached at 832-7166 or ejones@ljworld.com.

— City Hall reporter Nikki Wentling can be reached at 832-7144 or nwentling@ljworld.com.

— Associated Press reporter Roxana Hegeman in Wichita contributed to this report.


L awrence J ournal -W orld

?

ON THE

street Read more responses and add your thoughts at LJWorld.com

If you could put a mural at any Lawrence intersection, what would it be, and where? Asked on Massachusetts Street See story, 3A

Rayyan Kamal, works at The Merc, Lawrence “I’d want it to be something social justiceoriented, because there are a lot of topics that aren’t addressed. I’m not sure where — a large wall near a center of cultural activities. It could depict gentrification; the income inequality between East and west Lawrence; these are important things to think about.”

Madelynn Knisley, senior at KU, Lawrence “Maybe a Jayhawk mural, with the different Jayhawks throughout history.”

LAWRENCE • STATE

Saturday, March 26, 2016

| 5A

Bill for juvenile justice reform goes to governor’s desk Topeka (ap) — The Kansas Senate on Thursday passed a bill that would overhaul the state’s juvenile justice system and was sent to Gov. Sam Brownback for his signature. The Wichita Eagle reports that the bill was created to shift the juvenile justice system away from incarceration and use some of the cost savings to boost communitybased programs that help young offenders. The bill is expected to save Kansas about $72 million over five years. It also replaces juvenile

jail with programs that to try to cure problems such as inappropriate sexual behavior or substance abuse. The final bill was a result of months of legislative analysis, debate and research. Earlier, Senate Bill 367 won approval 1185 in the House. Republican state Rep. John Rubin of Shawnee led the path for the reform, but almost quit the Legislature last week when he was fired as chairman of the Corrections and Juvenile Justice Committee over an unrelated floor argument.

Rubin said that juvenile offenders “will have better lives, better opportunities and a better chance to succeed as adults because of the work we together have done on this bill,” Rubin said. “And all Kansans will have better lives because this bill will, without doubt, enhance and improve public safety.” The bill, a major piece of legislation strongly supported by both political sides, was a rare exception in the extremely partisan atmosphere that has reigned in the Legislature for years.

Police

sympathy on the part of the city.” A stagnation in the number of personnel and a large number of vacancies created in 2009 have already caused a cutback in services, the memo states. There are fewer officers assigned to certain units; the 3 a.m. to 11 a.m. shift is lightly staffed; and there’s “very little” investigation of property and financial crimes. Also, tasks not related to crime solving, such as event management, are paid for through overtime.

is asking that if commissioners don’t approve the request Tuesday, they choose one of three other methods to replace the people leaving this year. One option given is to hire experienced officers, as needed, who would not have to go through the academy. Another option is to start up another academy immediately following the one that ends in November, instead of doing only one ninemonth session per year. A third option is to fund incentives to delay some officers from retiring. The department is also asking that a line-item budget be created in future years so the department can plan to overhire approximately 10 positions each year. The City Commission meets at 5:45 p.m. Tuesday at City Hall, 6 E. Sixth St.

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A

“We want to be up in the force we think we need to be at,” Kidney said. “What it boils down to is paying for the recruit to be in the academy and trained and ready to hit the street when we need them.”

‘Dramatic increase’ in retirees From 2003 through 2015, an average of 8.5 people left the police department each year, either because they retired, were terminated or resigned. Over the past six years, about 10 of the total 49 people who left did so because they were retiring. Now, the police department is expecting a “dramatic increase” in retirements as more officers become eligible. At least part of the reason behind the increase was the hire of 27 officers in 1991, 19 of whom remain on the force. Two officers retired this month, five more are planning to retire in June and one more in December. Five others could retire in 2016 but haven’t said whether they would. The retirements, plus another seven on average who leave for other reasons, would mean a loss of 19 people in 2016. If the City Commission doesn’t approve the overhire, the police department could have a force of 144 by 2017 with not enough officers graduating from this year’s academy to replace them.

Jared Russell, works in lawn and landscaping, Tonganoxie “Bob Marley smoking. It’s a hippie town.”

History of over-hiring The city has approved over-hires the past three years: eight in 2013, another eight in 2014 and 10 in 2015. The memo states the cost of those hires was between $146,730 and $373,098 per year. However, the department didn’t request a separate budget, and so it’s hard to know the true cost, Kidney said. “The chief comes in and requests a certain number, based on their projections,” Kidney said of the process. “This year, it happens to be more than they’ve typically had.” The cost of hiring the extra people to go through the academy could be toward the higher end of the department’s estimates if fewer people leave the department than it’s expecting. Kidney said the $1,267,061 would be “worst case scenario” — if the department overhired and the number of people expected to leave didn’t. “Between the fact that they’re comfortable in their attrition estimate, plus we’re hiring people at a much lower pay than what’s being replaced, it’s conservative,” Kidney said. The cost of bringing on each new officer is expected to be $74,553 — $44,042 in base salary plus benefits and outfitting. Recruits are paid for the time they’re in training.

Consequences Khatib and Brixius listed threats to the department if that were to happen, including concerns about officer and public safety, an increase What would your answer in overtime pay and a cutback in the type of crimes be? the department investigates. Go to LJWorld.com/ “Time-intensive minor onthestreet and share it. crimes would be triaged as non-investigatory,” the memo reads. “This may increase minor crimes as Options The police department repeat offenders would not be identified or pros- wants to extend offers to new recruits by the end ecuted.” The memo says there of March. The 25-week would be a reduction in academy starts in June, Sewer line break “community policing” ac- and it’s followed by 15 prompts advisory tivities and “general pub- weeks of field training. lic interaction,” which The recruits would be A sewer line break at “may lead to community released from training at Irving Hill Road and the and police falling out of this time next year, and upper parking lot west of touch.” Police may also they’d be working on a Jayhawker Towers has have to stop their funeral probationary status for prompted Kansas Uniescort services, leading to six months. versity to issue a stream The police department the “perception of lack of and health advisory for Naismith Creek. “Elevated bacteria levels and contaminant may be present” in Naismith Creek in the area surrounding 20th Street and Naismith Drive, the release said. KU and the city’s utilities department were repairing the line break and conducting sampling Friday For 136 years, arks Jewelers has meant evening, according to the release. quality, service and dependability. People and pets should steer clear of the stream. KU will rescind the advisory once samples show no health risk.

— City Hall reporter Nikki Wentling can be reached at 832-7144 or nwentling@ljworld.com.

First, Safety Always! Mission SAFETY is in YOUR HANDS

17th Annual Haskell Safety, Health, and Wellness Fair Sponsored by

Haskell Safety Teams Thursday, March 31, 2016 10:00 a.m. – 2:00 p.m. Coffin Sports Complex Haskell Indian Nations University

FREE TO THE PUBLIC Over 40 Vendors providing Safety, Health& Wellness Information Door prizes for Haskell students For more information contact:

Gary Goombi

785-832-6608 or 785-760-3109 cell

Safety Tip:

SEATBELTS SAVE LIVES

COMPOST & WOODCHIP SALE 1420 E 11th St., Lawrence

(east of 11th & Haskell Ave., over railroad tracks)

Thursday – Saturday, March 24, 25, 26 8 am to 3 pm

• Rain or shine. • Bring tarp to secure load. • City will load trucks & trailers. No ladder racks please. • $10 per bucket load (approx. 2 cubic yards). CASH only. • Material also sold on Saturdays (self-load only). See schedule on website.

832-3030

PUBLIC WORKS

www.LawrenceRecycles.org www.facebook.com/LawrenceRecycles

How do you

?

BRIEFLY

Yesterday, Today & Tomorrow M

Marks Jewelers. Since 1880. 817 Mass. 843-4266

We all need to fuel our bodies with healthy, nutritional foods. So when you and your family are designation. out and about, look for the For full nutritional guidelines, locations and other information visit:

fuelgoodnow.com A LiveWell Lawrence Initiative


Saturday, March 26, 2016

.

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Set boundaries for son’s pot-smoking fiancee Dear Annie: I am in my early 50s, a widow, with five great kids, all now grown, out of college and thriving on their own. We get together at the family home for weekends and holidays. A problem arises when my middle son (age 25) arrives with his fiancee, ‘’Carol,’’ who smokes pot. I have asked him repeatedly to tell Carol not to do this in or around my home. The neighbors are very close by and this is a small community. I am well-known by most of the people who live here. Carol refuses. The second that I leave the house to run an errand, I come back to a house filled with the scent of pot lingering in the air. I am at my wits’ end. Must I ban my son and Carol from the home? --

Annie’s Mailbox

Marcy Sugar and Kathy Mitchell

anniesmailbox@comcast.net

Heartbroken Mom Dear Mom: Carol is being enormously disrespectful to you and also to your son if he is, in fact, asking her not to do this. If recreational marijuana use is illegal in your state, her actions could also bring the police into your home and you could be held responsible for the pot. Tell your son that he can no longer bring Carol to the house unless she leaves the pot

NBA star gets a new ‘Tiny House’ While millions decorate, or hide, their Easter eggs, basketball dominates tonight. While many turn toward the NCAA Men’s Tournament, “Tiny House Nation” (8 p.m., FYI, TV-PG) host John Weisbarth and expert sidekick Zack Giffin prepare to build and appoint a tiny house for San Antonio Spurs star Matt Bonner and his family. For the record, a tiny house must measure no more than 500 square feet. There are tool sheds that exceed that size. And that’s exactly what Bonner thinks he sees when he first lays eyes on the frame for his diminutive New Hampshire dream home. As usual, “Tiny House” is big on distractions and shenanigans. Information and instruction are doled out in between the usual sitcom hijinks. “Tiny House Nation” is the network’s most popular series, showcasing a movement away from McMansion excess. Is this a sign of a less wasteful society, or merely a new consumer trend of conspicuous austerity? You get the sense that this tiny house won’t be the Bonners’ only home. O Lifetime movie buffs know that perfection is just the other side of obsessive. Brady Smith and Sadie Calvano star in the 2016 shocker “The Perfect Daughter” (7 p.m.), about a controlling father who refuses to believe that his little angel could come home from a party drunk. So he cooks up a report to the police, shattering their daddy-daughter bond. Tonight’s other highlights

O The Elite Eight round of

the NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament begins (5 p.m. and 7:30 p.m., CBS). O Charlton Heston stars in the 1956 biblical epic “The Ten Commandments” (6 p.m., ABC, TV-G), a television favorite for decades. O Silver wants answers on the season finale of “Black Sails” (8 p.m., Starz, TV-MA). Cult choice Even people who avoid silent movies should see Buster Keaton’s 1927 slapstick masterpiece “The General” (7 p.m., TCM), now considered one of the greatest films ever made. It ranks at No. 18 on the American Film Institute’s list of the 100 greatest comedies. Tonight’s series

O Two hours of “Dateline” (7

p.m., NBC). O Capt. Hornstock becomes a murder suspect on “Rosewood” (7 p.m., Fox, TV-14). O Eternal ennui on “Lucifer” (8 p.m., Fox, TV-14). O A vintage helping of “Saturday Night Live” (9 p.m., NBC, TV-14).

behind or at the very least, agrees not to smoke in or near the house. Say that you are so sorry it has come to this, but since she has no respect for your house rules and doesn’t seem to care about you, this is the best you can do. His fiancee will be welcomed with open arms once she is capable of showing some class. If she cannot possibly do without pot and your son chooses to stay away over this, so be it. You’re in for a rough time with this illmannered girl. Dear Annie: This is for ‘’A Frustrated South Dakotan.’’ As a mother of a son with epilepsy, I understand both his feelings and his mother’s. Depression goes hand in hand with epilepsy. Has he sought another opinion on his

JACQUELINE BIGAR’S STARS

For Saturday, March 26: This year you often make an effort to get past issues through oneon-one relating. Detachment will be a goal that you pursue in order to make your life work better. Learn to go with the flow, and accept that changes will occur; you can’t stop progress from happening. If you are single, allow yourself to get to know a suitor better before getting too involved. If you are attached, you and your sweetie enjoy each other much more when it is just the two of you. The stars show the kind of day you’ll have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult Aries (March 21-April 19) ++++ You’ll discover how assertive a loved one can be. Be a little less assertive. Tonight: Tap into your intuition. Taurus (April 20-May 20) +++++ What others offer as suggestions might seem enticing, yet could be a little off the wall. Tonight: Add some naughtiness. Gemini (May 21-June 20) ++++ Your ability to get past a problem emerges when too many invitations tempt you. Tonight: Invite a friend over. Cancer (June 21-July 22) ++++ Allow more caring and playfulness in. You even might feel as if you are a kid again. Tonight: Only with someone you love. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) +++ Stay close to home and relax. You might want to get your

medical care? It took us three different doctors before we found one we felt was able to treat our son correctly. Luckily, he has been seizure-free for three years now that we found the correct medications. Our son is finally able to live on his own. He has a good job and since he is seizure-free, he can drive a car. It doesn’t mean I don’t worry about him every day. I wish this young man a life that is complete and happy. But I would also like to tell him to take it easy on his mom. She loves him and is frustrated that she cannot make everything perfect. — A Mom of an Epileptic — Send questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or Annie’s Mailbox, P.O. Box 118190 Chicago, IL 60611.

jacquelinebigar.com

place ready to do some entertaining. Tonight: Order in. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) ++++ You could be overwhelmed by all the ground you must cover. You are more than capable of doing it. Tonight: Visit with friends. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) +++ Curb a tendency to go overboard. Some of you might try too hard to please someone else. Tonight: Treat a favorite person to dinner. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) ++++ You are fiery and full of ideas. A friend or loved one could change his or her tune. Tonight: Just be yourself. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) ++++ You might feel as if you need to liven up your plans. Be honest with yourself. Tonight: In the whirlwind of living. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ++++ You will want to reach out to a loved one or a dear friend who lives at a distance. Tonight: Only what makes you happy. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) +++ A dear friend or relative will pitch in and make a situation a lot easier. Tonight: Till the wee hours. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) ++++ You could be so out of sorts that you hardly know what to say or do next. Tonight: Enjoy every moment. — The astrological forecast should be read for entertainment only.

UNIVERSAL CROSSWORD Universal Crossword Edited by Fred Piscop March 26, 2016 ACROSS 1 Touch base after a flyout 6 Bronx Zoo houseful 10 Fissionable particle 14 Jumped up 15 Grid great Starr 16 Dumbbell 17 Mr. Moto portrayer, 1935-57 19 Ice and Iron, for two 20 “Time ___ Bottle” (Croce tune) 21 Spelunker’s milieu 22 Big name in inns 24 Nine-tofiver’s grind 26 Plays for a sap 27 Soccer fan’s cheer 28 “Hold it!” 32 Hacienda brick 35 Poker holding 36 California wine valley 37 Smoke an e-cig 38 Chicken coop raiders 39 Sink problem 40 In excess of 41 Was in the hole 42 Part of a pie 43 Totally lost it 45 ___ Jeanne d’Arc 46 The Flintstones’ pet

47 Outdoor dining spot 51 Duelist’s aide 54 Comics possum 55 Gangster’s gun 56 Arabian Peninsula land 57 Mr. Freeze portrayer, 1967 60 15th-century caravel 61 “Dirty” Cajun dish 62 Slender and graceful 63 Baseball card tidbit 64 Work out in the ring 65 Head of cattle DOWN 1 Floppysnouted beast 2 Sphere of action 3 Subtly suggested 4 Make a patsy of 5 Bed sheet fabric 6 Higher in rank 7 Trim, as expenses 8 Go astray 9 Illegal muscle enhancers 10 Mr. Deeds portrayer, 2002 11 Frat party garb 12 Pundit’s piece

13 Flat-topped formation 18 Valentine trim 23 Tidbit for an aardvark 25 Mr. Chips portrayer, 1939 26 Flogged, in a way 28 Does a car wash job 29 Agra garb 30 Cast-ofthousands film 31 Matador’s prop 32 Declare firmly 33 Brubeck of jazz 34 Tourney for all 35 Bookstore section for DIYers 38 Original members

42 Enjoys the boardwalk 44 Diarist Anais 45 Game company with a hedgehog mascot 47 Cell company’s structure 48 Marble material 49 Private stock 50 Anesthetic of old 51 Peyton and Eli, to Archie 52 Send out 53 Water-towine site 54 Twelve-point type 58 Backtalk 59 More than tipsy

PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER

3/25

© 2016 Universal Uclick www.upuzzles.com

HEY, MISTER! By Fred Piscop

3/26

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.

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

VARAL FALBEF

TOLINO Answer here: Yesterday’s

Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app

|

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

-

6A

(Answers Monday) Jumbles: CELLO PRUNE MASCOT PUNDIT Answer: The money she earned selling vitamins and other nutrients was — SUPPLEMENTAL

BECKER ON BRIDGE


L awrence J ournal -W orld

LAWRENCE • STATE

Saturday, March 26, 2016

EUDORA HIGH HONOR ROLL Sophomores — Graci Buchholz, Ethan Folks, Cole French, Lindsey Fry, Eian Han, Andrew Harmon, Kayla Hernandez, Haley Straight A Honor Roll Hoffmann, Noah KatzenStudent must have an ‘A’ meier, Megan Lauber, in all classes. Blake Reed, Meredith ReSeniors — Mariah gehr, Jaden Taylor. Brown, Sydney Coleman, Freshmen — Madison Kristi Daigh, Elias Dunn, Arnold, Isabel Barrera, Grant Elston, Raegan FairBetsy Cain, Britney Concloth, Mason Fawcett, Chloe ner, Nicholas Dahl, Kalen Jo Fewins, Tucker Gabriel, Dressler, Kelby Dressler, Siera Hartwell, McNeilly Garret Durr, Kyla Etter, James, Molly James, GrifAshley Fox, Taylor Graves, fin Katzenmeier, Bethany Hunter Heier, Elyjah Helm, Kaufman, Jessica Kay, Eliza- Emily Hemberg, Derek beth Kendall, Olivia LehmHemel, Korbin Hiebert, ann, Austin McNorton, Jayce Westly Hutton, David McQueen, Julia McQueen, Lupandin, Kayleigh McCoy, Baron Miller, Aidan Palmer, Ashley Miller, Hannah Jacob Pearson, Paige Peter- Mosser, Nina Muro, BreAwson, Zachary Shoemaker, na Nuckolls, Xavier Seurer, Holly Swearingen, Brian Madison Steffen, Maizlyn Tolefree, Gavin Walrod, Sterba, Ezekiel Taylor, Troy Maria Wellman, Corrinne Watts, Liberty Welsh, Cole Yoder-Mulkey. Williams, Camdon Willits, Juniors — Jenna Beck, Caleb Zimmerman. Lina Bergstrom, Anna Honorable Mention Bolelli, Hayden Brown, Honor Roll Samuel Campbell, Evan Student must have a Demuth, Jesse Dennison, Samantha Green, Ashleigh 3.0 average, with no grade lower than a “C.” Hicks, Jillian Hopson, LauSeniors — Kyle Abel, ren Howard, Victoria Male, McKayla Maples, Blake Mc- Peyton Baxter, Joseph Norton, Diego Munoz, Halle Bernhardt, Grady Cain, Kylie Carter, Zachary Courbat, Norris, Melanie Reese, Katherine Rosewicz, Emma Halee Darling, Austin Downing, Charles Friend, Schmidt, Sydney Shain, Jared Fry, Madison HeckJasmine Thevarajoo. man, Carly Hines, Colby Sophomores — JonaHines, Spencer Howe, Noah than Bock, Jasmine Boyd, Kennedy, Kaitlyn Lauber, Alexander Brown, Kele Kathryn McAfee, Halena Carter, Sarah Case, Grace Fawcett, Ethan Flores, An- Milner, Brittany Myers, Tragel Garrett, Peyton Garvin, vis Neis, Trevor Neis, James Catherine Grosdidier, Emily Nelson, Danny Nguyen, Denny Nguyen, Reid Pelzel, Hull, Anika Jobe, Christian Sadie Pittman, Gage Purcell, Long, Tracy Neis, Olivia Jomain Rouser, Omar Sadik, Ortiz, Nicholas Patterson, Nicole Pearson, Phillip Pyle, Jacob Smith, Janee Smith, Skyler Stewart, Jacob StickFabian Rosales, Addison ler, Carolyn Timmerman, Smith, Camryn Splichal, Joseph Thompson, Weston Benjamin VanDiest. Juniors — Jenna Trefz, Nicole Whitten, Mary Abram, Trace Abts, JerimiYoung. Freshmen — Matthew ah Andrews, Chloe Botte, Beckham, Nathaniel Bouch- Julee Cobell, Dakota Coble, Clayton Faircloth, Jordan er, Nyah Coleman, Tristan Flakus, Vanessa Flores, Croucher, Zoe Dameron, Philip Foster, Hannah GolliGavin Elston, Jaden FelizKent, Zaxary Flaherty, Riley hare, Isaac Gutsch, Josiah Heckman, Joshua Hollinger, Foltz, Autumn Foster, Jaiana Johnson, Max JohnLoralei Gilbert, Samantha son, Ethan Leahew, MatGregory, Holland Harvat, thew Longacre, Victoria Brian Lounsbury, Daniel Lupandin, Braeden Manley, Lupandin, Alexander Martin, Meadow Meier, Jayden Blaine Miller, Aaron Najera, Ty Pearson, Kolbi Shanks, Pierce, Madison Roether, Shawn Spurling, Vanessa Jillian Rosewicz, Taylor Taylor, Ian VanDusen, Jace Schmidt, Colton Shrum, Wise. Emily Watson, Brayden Sophomores — Dustin Yoder-Mulkey. Adler, Nicolas Aguilar, KenHonor Roll nedy Doherty, Leslie DougStudent must have a las, Eric Eimer, Cody Fagan, 3.67 average, with no Chase Garcia, Augiste grade lower than a “C.” Hamilton, Tristan HandSeniors — LeAnne ley, Alaina Howe, Elijah Anderson, Alyssa Bartlett, Kennedy, Bradon Lanigan, Katherine Bergman, Cassidy BerShawn LeFlore, Spencer Brust, Matthew Buchhorn, Manning, Sarah McClelAntonio Covert, Alyssa lan, Jameson McGinness, Daniels, Kathrin Demuth, Joshua Meuffel, Steven Nicholaus Elliott, Connor Monroe, Madison NightinEnglebrecht, Aaron Foster, gale, Jenna Nitchals, Jack Madison Franklin, Makaila Penrose, Joshua Pippert, Garcia, Jack Gerstmann, Devin Purcell, Anthony Samantha Gulley, Jensen Ramirez, David Robinson, Herron, Abigail Jackson, Savanna Schneck, Brooke Kylee Johnson, Olivia Jones, Stillian, Casandra Stout, Bethany Kearns, Alexis Kelly, Creighton Thomas, Xavier Bryanna Longacre, KaitTripp, Jeffery Wallace, lyn Maupin-Huslig, Mindy Craig Williams, Jack Willis, McClaskey, Jack Reynolds, Saylor Winfrey. Paige Rockhold, Carlos Freshmen — Jenna AlRodriguez, Justin Toumber- len, Hagan Andrews, Cecelia lin, George Watts, Thomas Baise, Hunter Cadue, Taylor Wiley, Amy Wilson. Eddings, Alaneon Ford, Juniors — Mitchell Bal- Emma Foster, Alexandria lock, Brooklynn Beerbower, Garcia, Jacob Haney, John Ruth Besser, Siam Boyd, Hanson, Wrigley Heide, Maggie Durkin, Bret Folks, Grace Hermann, Tasia Hill, Cameron Foster, Mallory Jackson Houser, Justin Hurt, Gilbert, Kaitlyn Haskett, Rock Jerome, Megan Kennedy, Chyenne Kurtz, Jacob Breyanna Helm, Addison Livengood, Kaylee McNish, Hinds, David Hornberger, Live Lybekk, Kieran Martin, Breeanna Moore, Anthony Munoz, Carter Neis, Trynt Salena Martinez, Danielle Notestine, Owen Platt, Mitchell, Morgan MonKaitlyn Reusch, Kimberly Reroe, Savannah Newman, usch, Jaeger Rokey, Madison Katelyn Ormsby, Kennedy Sanchez, Sawyer Tomlinson, Shockley, Madison Travis, Lacey Vesecky, Jordan Wyatt VanDusen, Holly Vonderbrink, Lydia Walls, Vesecky, William Wall, India Jake Whitebread, Delaney Whitaker, Mallory Wise. Williams.

Located at 731 Mass St.

Eudora High School has announced its honor roll for the first semester of the 2015-2016 school year.

L a w r e n c e ’s S u p p l i e r o f We d d i n g A t t i r e !

785.840.4664

www.JLynnBridal.com

Society BIRTHDAYS

WEDDINGS

Alice Elizabeth Leonard, 100th Birthday

Montgomery And Charnetski Estelle Isabella Lily Montgomery and Mat­ thew David Charnetski of West Des Moines, Iowa, were married in a private ceremony March 18, 2016 in Phil­ adelphia. The bride is the daughter of Cynthia Ann Higgins and David Montgomery, Eudora, Kansas. The groom is the son of the late De­ borah Maupin Charnet­ ski, Grinnell, Iowa, and Donald Charnetski of Grinnell, Iowa, and stepson of Claudia An­ derson. A nonpartisan ana­ lyst for the Kansas State Legislature and also Iowa State Legis­ lature, the bride is the assistant director of The Harkin Institute for Public Policy and Citizen Engagement at Drake University and has completed course­ work at the Drake Uni­ versity Law School. A Kappa Alpha Theta, she received a political sci­ ence degree from the

University of Kansas and a master’s degree in public administra­ tion at the University of Missouri­Kansas City. The groom received degrees in microbio­ logy and ecology from Grinnell College and a graduate degree in medical simulation from Drexel Uni­ versity. He served with the United States Ant­ arctica Program from 2001 through 2008 be­ fore employment as a paramedic for the city of West Des Moines and simulation special­ ist for Des Moines Uni­ versity. He currently is the director of the Standardized Patient Program and Clinical Simulation Center at the Nazarbayev Uni­ versity School of Medi­ cine where he also is an assistant professor. The couple plan a summer reception and will reside in Astana, Kazakhstan.

ENGAGEMENTS

Alice would like to invite all her friends and acquaintances to join her in the Fellow­ ship Hall at Plymouth Congregational Church 925 Vermont on Sat­ urday April 2nd for a reception from 2­5 PM. Alice will be displaying some of her life’s work, expressed in things she has created—jewelry, paintings, quilts, crocheting—as well as things she has collec­ ted—dolls, teddy bears and souvenirs from her many world travels. Alice was born in Carnegie, Oklahoma on April 1st, 1916. When she was 2, the family moved to Lawrence where her paternal grandparents had a big farm. Her father, Wes­ ley Smith, worked as a barber and her mother, Ola, worked as a seam­ stress. Alice attended Quincy Grade School (at 11th & Massachu­ setts), Lawrence Junior High School (then at 9th and Kentucky). She graduated from Liberty Memorial High School at 1400 Massachusetts

Flournoy ­ Longino Engagement Chris Longino and Kelley Flournoy will be married in April of 2016. Chris is the son of Linda and Bob Long­ ino of Lawrence. Kel­ ley is the daughter of Charlie Flournoy and Sharon Chase of Gainesville, Florida. The groom to be is a 2002 graduate of Free State High School and a 2006 graduate of the University of Kansas. Chris received his mas­ ters degree in crimino­ logy from the University of Southern Florida. He currently lives in Tampa, Florida and works for the Na­ tional Insurance Crime Bureau as an analyst.

Alice E. Leonard Street in 1933. She went on to Kansas Uni­ versity receiving a BA in biology in 1937. In 1939, she added a Mas­ ters degree with a dis­ sertation on parasites in rabbits. While at KU she fell in love with her zoology teacher, A. Byron Leonard. They married in 1939. In 1941, they moved into a two­story frame house on Louisiana Street, where Alice’s 3 sons were born and where she still lives. Alice’s husband died in 1987. She loves music and is a fan of Elvis Presley. She and her husband often went dancing at local clubs and she still dances every Thursday night at the American Legion when the Junk­ yard Jazz swing band plays.

Virginia R Little Happy 80th Birthday

Kelley Flournoy and The bride to be gradu­ ated in 2003 from PK Young High School in Gainesville, Florida. She attended the Uni­ versity of Florida and received a law degree from Stetson Uni­ versity. Currently she works for the state of Florida as a Guardian Ad Litem. They will be married in Gainesville.

Happy 80th Birth­ day to Virginia R Little (Brown) from your family:Naoma, Bonnye(George), Doc, Kimberlye (Larry), Dorse. Grandchildren: Rebecca, Theresa, and the boys. to: Virginia was born 1310 N 1941 Diagon­ April 4th 1936 in al Rd Lawrence, KS Lawrence, KS Cards can be sent 66044

anniversaries • births • weddings • engagements

CELEBRATION ANNOUNCEMENTS Place Your Announcement: Kansas.ObituariesAndCelebrations.com or call 785.832.7151

ST. JOHN CATHOLIC SCHOOL HONOR ROLL

Web tool shows value of university degrees

St. John Catholic School has announced its middle school Honor Rolls for fall 2015.

Kansas City, Kan. — The Kansas Board of Regents has created a new tool that’ll help students and parents research the cost and return of degrees available at state universities. The Manhattan Mercury reports that Kansas DegreeStats is now available online, but only includes data for bachelor’s degrees. The tool uses real graduates’ data to allow users to study statistics of 600 degrees with the typical costs to cover university fees as well as how former students paid the fees. The Kansas Department of Labor also provides wage information on the first five years of employment after earning each individual degree.

4.0 Principal’s Honor Roll Sixth Grade — Addison London, Chaney Finkeldei, Clare Peltier, Danny Lee, Emily Silvers, Francesca Dessert, Gabriela Carttar, Hobbs Herlihy, Jacob Goos, Madison DeWitt, Patrick Roesner, Sam Cast. Seventh Grade — Amelia Q. Lang, Chase Ramirez, Connor Ireland, Elsa Fair, Emma-Frances Smith, Iris Dunn, Jasmine Najafizadeh, Max Cast, Maya Sabatini, Michael Williams, Mya Gilbert, Paige Helt, Sophia Hamilton, Willa Myslivy. Eighth Grade — Andrew Flynn,

Brooke Wright, Emma Milburn, Haven Bellerive, Julia Rossillon, Lucy Schmidt, Marian Frick, Sophia DeWitt, Zoe Hamilton.

3.5-3.9 Eagle Honor Roll Sixth Grade — Abigail Woolverton, Grace Shroyer, Maretta Graves, Mary Green, Conner Marsh, Emma Koster, Ima Rodenbeek, Lily Rischer, Russell Yother, Tatum Kempf, Jack Rasmussen, Pearse Long, Stone Ocsody. Seventh Grade — Bailey Thomas, Lillian Capen, Rileigh Schmidt, Alex Carrillo, Alexis Foster, Molly Daugherty, Oscar Schmidt, Erin Doyle, Jordan Handy. Eighth Grade — Gavin Carver, John Hamer, Katie Williams, Sidney Yother.

asthma & allergy friendly™

asthma & allergy friendly™

CARPET CLEANING

CARPET CLEANING

2 ROOMS

5 ROOMS

Cleaning Completed By 4/30/16

Cleaning Completed By 4/30/16

ONLY 70 $

BEYOND CARPET CLEANING

CARPET | TILE & GROUT | HARDWOOD | UPHOLSTERY 24HR EMERGENCY WATER SERVICES 1-800-STEEMER® | stanleysteemer.com

785-841-8666

| 7A

asthma & allergy friendly™ Certifcate applies to Carpet Cleaning services only.

ONLY $149

asthma & allergy friendly™ Certifcate applies to Carpet Cleaning services only.

Minimum charges apply. Not valid in combination with other coupons or offers. Must present promo code at time of service. Valid at participating locations only. Residential only. Cannot be used for water emergency services. Certain restrictions may apply. Call for details. ASTHMA & ALLERGY FRIENDLY and ASTHMA & ALLERGY FRIENDLY LOGO are CertificationMarks and Trademarks of ALLERGY STANDARDS LIMITED. The ASTHMA AND ALLERGY FOUNDATION OF AMERICA is a Registered Trademark of AAFA. Combined living areas, L-shaped rooms and rooms over 300 sq. ft. are considered 2 areas. Baths, halls, large walk-in closets and area rugs are priced separately. Offer does not include protector or deodorizer.


Religious Directory

AFRICAN METHODIST EPISCOPAL

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

ASSEMBLY OF GOD

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

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

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

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

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

BAHA’I FAITH Baha’i Faith

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

BAPTIST

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

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

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

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

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

BAPTIST - AMERICAN

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

BAPTIST - INDEPENDENT Heritage Baptist Church

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

BAPTIST - SOUTHERN

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

Eudora Baptist Church

BIBLE

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

CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER-DAY SAINTS

Lawrence University Ward (Student)

Lawrence Bible Chapel

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

BUDDHIST

Kansas Zen Center

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

CATHOLIC

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

Corpus Christi Catholic Church

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

Holy Family Catholic Church

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

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

CHRISTIAN

Lawrence Heights Christian Church

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

Morning Star Christian Church

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

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

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

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints

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

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

CHURCH OF THE BRETHREN Lone Star Church of the Brethren 883 E 800 Rd Lawrence, Ks Jane Flora-Swick, Pastor Worship 10:30 * Sun. School 10:45am www.lonestarbrethren.com

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

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

COMMUNITY OF CHRIST Lawrence Community of Christ

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

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

Church Of Christ

201 N. Michigan St. 785-838-9795 Elders Tom Griffin & Calvin Spencer Sunday 10 am & 6:00 pm, Wed. 7 pm www.lawrencecoc.org

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

Southside Church of Christ

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

CHURCH OF GOD

Bridgepointe Community Church

EPISCOPAL

St. Margaret’s Episcopal Church

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

Trinity Episcopal Church

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

EVANGELICAL FREE CHURCH OF AMERICA Christ Community Church

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

ISLAMIC

Islamic Center Of Lawrence

Southern Hills Congregation

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

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

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

1501 Massachusetts St 785-843-7066 Pastor Piet Knetsch Sun. School 9:30am * Worship 10:45am www.centralumclawrence.org 297 E. 2200 Rd. Eudora 785-883-2130 Rev. Kathy Symes Worship 9:00am Sunday School 10:30am

Eudora United Methodist Church

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

First United Methodist Church

704 8th Street; Baldwin Rev. Paul Badcock Sunday School each Sunday 9:30 am Traditional Worship 8:30 am Contemporary Worship 10:45 am Combined Worship 10:45 last Sunday month Downtown 946 Vermont St. Rev. Dr. Tom Brady Pastor Traditional 10:30 am Contemporary 9:30 am West Campus 867 Highway 40 Contemporary 9:00 am & 11:00 am www.fumclawrence.org

Ives Chapel United Methodist

Stull United Methodist Church

Worden United Methodist Church

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

Big City Ability with Hometown Values

PO Box 460, Eudora David G. Miller, CLU

LUTHERAN - MISSOURI SYNOD

RELIGIOUS SOCIETY OF FRIENDS Hesper Friends Church

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

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

New Life In Christ Church

Oread Meeting

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

New Hope Fellowship

1449 Kasold Dr. Lawrence 785-331-HOPE (4673) Darrell Brazell Pastor 10:15 am Sundays www.newhopelawrence.com

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

Tonganoxie Evangelical Friends Church

404 Shawnee St. Tonganoxie Pastor Scott Rose Sunday School 9:45am Sunday Worship 10:30am Wed. Bible Study 6pm

UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST

The Salvation Army

Unitarian Fellowship of Lawrence

United Light Church

UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST - UCC

Velocity Church

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

946 New Hampshire St. 785-843-4188 Lts. Matt & Marisa McCluer Sun. School 9:30 am, Worship 10:45 am lawrence.salvationarmy.us 1515 West Main Street Lawrence, KS 66044 785-393-3539

fresh. modern. relevant. 940 New Hampshire, Lawrence, KS Meeting at Lawrence Arts Center Sundays 9:00 am,10:30 am & noon www.findvelocity.org

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

Plymouth Congregational Church, UCC

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

1501 New Hampshire St, Lawrence (785) 842-1553 vintagelawrence.com Deacon Godsey Sunday Service 10:00 am

St Paul United Church-Christ

ORTHODOX - EASTERN

UNITY

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

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

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

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

Unity Church of Lawrence

WESLEYAN

Lawrence Wesleyan Church

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

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

Immanuel Lutheran Church

Christ International Church

Country Community Church

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

Eagle Rock Church

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

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

15% OFF

Frame & Lenses

A Plus Automotive

see store for details or exclusions.

Brian D Robb Phone: 785-843-3953

50% OFF

when you bring us your bulletin! OPEN 24 hours

Wempe Bros. Construction Co. wempebros.com

Longhorn Steakhouse Absolutely The Best Steak In Lawrence

Carpet Cleaning 785-841-8666

Call about

3050 South Iowa

841-4722

843-7000

our current specials

(785) 843-5111

609 Massachusetts (785) 843-8593

ALIGNMENTS COMPLETE BRAKE SERVICE SUSPENSION SPECIALISTS Danny Easum Andy Easum

2150 Haskell Ave

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

Crown Automotive 3400 S. Iowa | 843-7700

541 Minnesota Street Lawrence, KS acesteering.com 785-843-1300

24 Hour Answering Service 841-0111

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

NON-DENOMINATIONAL P.O. Box 550 Lawrence KS 66044 785-749-2100 info@calledtogreatness.com www.calledtogreatness.com

Connect Now, Operators Standing By

PRESBYTERIAN-EVANGELICAL

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

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

Since 1963

(785) 856-5100

West Side Presbyterian Church

Called to Greatness Ministries

Trinity Lutheran Church

Ace Steering & Brake

integritymidwestins.com

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

Christ Covenant Reformed Presbyterian Church

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

open daily

1115 Massachusetts www.fuzzystacoshop.com

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

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

Saint Nicholas Orthodox Church

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

First Presbyterian Church

Lawrence Life Fellowship

Vintage Church

LUTHERAN - ELCA

ACADEMY CARS

843-1878

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

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

Get Free Car Buying Info & Money Saving Tips At WWW.ACADEMYCARS.COM

2815 West 6th

Centenary United Methodist Church

588 N 1200 Rd. Pastor Patrick Yancey Worship Sunday 11:00 am www.clintonchurch.net

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

Mustard Seed Church

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

Redeemer Lutheran Church

Westside 66 & Car Wash

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

Clinton Presbyterian Church

Vinland United Methodist Church

Praise Temple Church of God in Christ

For The People is a registered trademark of Scend, LLC

Big Springs United Methodist Church

K U Hillel House

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

3200 Iowa St • 785-749-5082

METHODIST - UNITED

PRESBYTERIAN - USA

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

Morning Star Church

Lecompton United Methodist Church

Chabad Center for Jewish Life

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

785-841-0102

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

JEWISH

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

1527 W. 6th Street Lawrence, KS 66044

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

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

River Heights Congregation

CHURCH OF GOD IN CHRIST

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

Lawrence Free Methodist Church

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

First Southern Baptist Church

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

Lawrence Christian Center

METHODIST

First United Methodist Church

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

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

Victory Bible Church

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

Clearfield United Methodist Church

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

Calvary Church Of God In Christ

Family Church Of Lawrence

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

Peace Mennonite Church

Central United Methodist Church

Lawrence Jewish Community Congregation

CHURCH OF CHRIST

MENNONITE

Lawrence Indian Methodist Church

CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE

JEHOVAH’S WITNESSES

Perry Christian Church

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

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

Marks Jewelers. 817 Mass. 843-4266 Kastl Plumbing Inc. 841-2112

KASTL

Dale & Ron’s Auto Service 630 Connecticut

785-842-2108

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

Action Plumbing P.O. Box 1051

- 843-5670


Opinion

Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com l Saturday, March 26, 2016 Lawrence City Commission Mike Amyx, mayor 2312 Free State Lane 66047 843-3089 (H) 842-9425 (W) mikeamyx515@hotmail.com Leslie Soden, vice mayor 715 Connecticut, 66044 (913) 890-3647 lsoden@lawrenceks.org Stuart Boley, 1812 W. 21st Terr., 66046, 979-6699 sboley@lawrenceks.org Matthew Herbert 523 Kasold Dr., 66049 550-2085 matthewjherbert@gmail.com Lisa Larsen, 1117 Avalon., 66044, 331-9162 llarsen@lawrenceks.org

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

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

Area legislators Rep. Barbara Ballard (D-44th District) Room 451-S, State Capitol, Topeka 66612 Lawrence: 841-0063; Topeka: (785) 296-7697 barbara.ballard@house.ks.gov

9A

Obama lacks commitment on terrorism Washington — The splitscreen told the story: on one side, images of the terror bombing in Brussels; on the other, Barack Obama doing the wave with Raul Castro at a baseball game in Havana. On one side, the real world of rising global terrorism. On the other, the Obama fantasy world in which romancing a geopolitically insignificant Cuba — without an ounce of democracy or human rights yielded in return — is considered a seminal achievement of American diplomacy. Cuba wasn’t so much a legacy trip as a vanity trip, vindicating the dorm-room enthusiasms of one’s student days when the Sandinistas were cool, revolution was king and every other friend had a dog named Che. When Brussels intervened, some argued that Obama should have cut short his trip and come back home. I disagree. You don’t let three suicide bombers control the itinerary of the American president. Moreover, Obama’s next stop, Argentina, is actually important and had just elected a friendly government that broke from its long and corrupt Peronist past. Nonetheless, Obama could have done without the baseball. What kind of message does it send to be yukking it up with Raul even as Belgian authorities are picking body parts off the floor of the Brussels airport? Obama came into office believing that we had vastly exaggerated the threat of terrorism and allowed it to pervert both our values and our foreign policy. He

Charles Krauthammer letters@charleskrauthammer.com

Obama came into office believing that we had vastly exaggerated the threat of terrorism and allowed it to pervert both our values and our foreign policy. … It’s now been seven years. The real world has stubbornly refused to accommodate Obama’s pacific dreams.” declared a unilateral end to the global war on terror and downplayed the threat ever since. He frequently reminds aides, reports Jeffrey Goldberg of The Atlantic, that more Americans die annually of bathtub accidents. It’s now been seven years. The real world has stubbornly refused to accommodate Obama’s pacific dreams. The Islamic State has grown from JV team to worldwide threat, operating from Libya to Afghanistan, Sinai to Belgium. It is well into the infiltration phase of its European campaign, with

500 trained and hardened cadres in place among the estimated 5,000 jihadists returned from the Middle East. The increasing tempo and sophistication of its operations suggest that it may be poised for a continent-wide guerrilla campaign. In the face of this, Obama remains inert, unmoved, displaying a neglect and insouciance that borders on denial. His nonreaction to the Belgian massacre — his 34-minute speech in Havana devoted 51 seconds to Brussels — left the world as stunned as it was after the Paris massacre, when Obama did nothing. Worse, at his now notorious November news conference in Turkey, his only show of passion regarding Paris was to berate Islamophobes. David Axelrod called Obama’s response “tone deaf.” But that misses the point. This is more than a mere mistake of presentation. Remember his reaction to the beheading of the American journalist James Foley? Obama made a statement expressing his sympathies — and then jumped onto his golf cart for a round of 18. He later told NBC News’ Chuck Todd that this was a mistake. “Part of this job is also the theater of it,” he explained, “it’s not something that always comes naturally to me.” As if postponing a bucolic recreation was a required piece of political playacting rather than a president’s natural reaction — a mixture of shock and sorrow — to the terrible death of a citizen he could not save.

It’s not as if Obama is so super cool that he never shows emotion. Just a few months ago, he teared up when speaking about the Sandy Hook school shooting. That was the work of a psychotic. But when speaking about the work of Islamist terrorists, he offers flat perfunctory words. I cannot fathom why. Perhaps having long seen himself uniquely qualified by background and history to make peace between Islam and the West, to now recognize how badly things have gone on his watch is to admit both failure and the impossible grandiosity of his original pretensions. Whatever the reason, he seems genuinely unmoved by a menace the rest of the world views, correctly, with horror and increasing apprehension. He’s been in office seven years, yet seems utterly fixed on his campaign promises and prepresidential obsessions: shutting down Gitmo, rapprochement with Iran, engagement with tyrants (hence Havana), making the oceans recede (hence the Paris climate trip). Next we’ll see yet another useless Washington “summit” on yet another Obama idee fixe: eliminating nuclear materials. With the world on fire, the American president goes on ideological holiday. As was said of the Bourbons: “They have learned nothing and have forgotten nothing.” — Charles Krauthammer is a columnist for Washington Post Writers Group.

Senate’s stand spurs constitutional concerns By Martin Dickinson

YOUR TURN

The refusal of Senate Republicans to consider President Obama’s nomination of Merrick Garland for the U.S. Supreme Court raises serious constitutional issues. The constitutional requirements are clear. Section 2 of Article II provides that the president is to “nominate” and the Senate is to “advise and consent.” If the president had not made a nomination to fill the Scalia vacancy, he would Dickinson have been guilty of a serious dereliction of duty. Similarly, if senators refuse even to consider the president’s nomination, those senators will be guilty of dereliction of duty. If the Republicans hold hearings on Gar-

land, conclude that he is not qualified and vote him down, that is certainly their right. But under the Constitution it is not their right to refuse even to consider the nomination. There is no precedent for the Republicans’ refusal to grant Garland a hearing. There is plenty of time for full vetting of Garland so that, if qualified, he can join the court prior to the beginning of its next term in October. President Obama was elected and then re-elected. More than 65 million Americans voted for him in 2012. To argue that “the people have not yet spoken” is nonsense. President Obama nominated a highly regarded centrist judge who has been fulsomely praised by both Republican and Democrats, as well as Chief Justice Roberts. Judge Garland would bring objectivity

and compromise at a time when those are badly needed. If the Republicans can refuse to consider Obama’s nominee, then Democrats can equally well refuse to consider a Trump or Cruz nominee. Republican refusal to consider Garland could trigger a cycle of retaliation that would leave the Scalia seat vacant for years. If the Republicans refuse to consider Garland, there will be an important lesson for both parties: Nothing can be gained from nominating a centrist, and there is nothing to lose from nominating a partisan candidate. There will be few centrist nominees in the future, and the Supreme Court will become increasingly politicized. If elected officials can with impunity outright refuse to perform their constitutional duties, our government has serious problems. — Martin Dickinson, now retired, was formerly Schroeder Distinguished Professor of Law at Kansas University.

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

Letters Policy

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

What the Lawrence Journal-World stands for

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 Chad Lawhorn, Managing editor Kathleen Johnson, Advertising Manager Ann Gardner, Editorial Page Editor

Ed Ciambrone, Production and Circulation Manager

l Accurate and fair news reporting.

No mixing of editorial opinion with reporting of the news. l Safeguarding the rights of all citizens regardless of race, creed or economic stature. l Sympathy and understanding for all who are disadvantaged or oppressed. l Exposure of any dishonesty in public affairs. l Support of projects that make our community a better place to live. l

THE WORLD COMPANY

Dolph C. Simons Jr., Chairman Dolph C. Simons III, President, Newspapers Division

Dan C. Simons, President, Digital Division

Scott Stanford, General Manager


|

10A

WEATHER

.

Saturday, March 26, 2016

L awrence J ournal -W orld

FRIENDS & NEIGHBORS

Family Owned.

Contributed Photo

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

TODAY

SUNDAY

MONDAY

TUESDAY

WEDNESDAY

A little morning rain

A touch of morning rain

Lots of sun; pleasant and warmer

Breezy and warm with some sun

A shower and thunderstorm around

High 55° Low 33° POP: 70%

High 56° Low 30° POP: 75%

High 69° Low 45° POP: 5%

High 68° Low 60° POP: 5%

High 79° Low 39° POP: 60%

Wind S 7-14 mph

Wind NW 7-14 mph

Wind S 7-14 mph

Wind SSE 10-20 mph

Wind SSW 12-25 mph

POP: Probability of Precipitation

McCook 46/21 Oberlin 47/19

Clarinda 49/31

Lincoln 46/26

Grand Island 42/23

Kearney 42/22

Beatrice 46/25

Centerville 53/35

St. Joseph 51/31 Chillicothe 55/35

Sabetha 48/29

Concordia 48/27

Kansas City Marshall Manhattan 56/35 61/38 Salina 52/28 Oakley Kansas City Topeka 52/29 46/25 53/33 Lawrence 54/34 Sedalia 55/33 Emporia Great Bend 64/38 55/31 52/26 Nevada Dodge City Chanute 67/39 51/27 Hutchinson 63/33 Garden City 55/31 49/24 Springfield Wichita Pratt Liberal Coffeyville Joplin 67/39 58/35 53/30 52/26 66/36 66/35 Hays Russell 52/24 52/25

Goodland 46/22

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

LAWRENCE ALMANAC

Through 8 p.m. Friday.

Temperature High/low Normal high/low today Record high today Record low today

61°/18° 58°/35° 85° in 1910 5° in 1955

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 0.59 2.01 1.71 4.40

REGIONAL CITIES

Today Sun. Today Sun. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Holton 52 32 r 58 34 c Atchison 53 32 r 56 30 c Independence 56 36 r 54 33 r Belton 57 35 r 53 35 r Olathe 55 34 r 53 32 r Burlington 58 34 c 58 32 r Osage Beach 68 40 c 53 29 r Coffeyville 66 35 pc 58 31 r Osage City 55 33 c 58 33 r Concordia 48 27 sh 60 37 c Ottawa 59 34 r 56 31 r Dodge City 51 27 pc 61 35 c Wichita 58 35 pc 61 33 r Fort Riley 51 27 r 59 30 c 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

Mar 31

New

First

Full

Apr 7

Apr 13

Apr 22

LAKE LEVELS

As of 7 a.m. Friday Lake

Level (ft)

Clinton Perry Pomona

Discharge (cfs)

875.60 890.37 972.77

7 25 15

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

Fronts Cold

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016

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

Today Hi Lo W 89 72 pc 58 45 pc 58 46 s 73 57 sh 94 80 pc 67 36 s 55 40 pc 57 45 pc 72 60 r 78 62 c 50 26 pc 52 38 r 60 38 pc 68 59 pc 64 50 t 62 35 s 57 44 r 65 46 pc 78 52 pc 40 26 s 36 20 pc 93 68 pc 46 39 pc 58 45 pc 90 77 t 63 43 pc 53 33 s 92 81 c 49 37 pc 77 67 pc 52 46 pc 44 31 s 54 41 c 52 35 sh 47 33 sh 36 26 pc

Hi 89 53 58 68 95 71 60 54 72 73 52 50 49 69 59 64 52 61 77 53 36 94 44 54 92 62 55 91 50 78 53 53 51 58 52 43

Sun. Lo W 71 s 44 t 45 sh 54 r 80 pc 33 s 40 pc 44 pc 57 sh 56 s 27 pc 36 pc 35 r 59 s 43 pc 41 c 44 pc 42 pc 56 s 36 pc 20 s 64 s 38 r 46 t 77 t 51 pc 34 s 79 c 39 c 66 sh 46 pc 43 pc 38 r 40 pc 34 pc 25 pc

Precipitation

Warm Stationary

Showers T-storms

7:30

Flurries

Snow

WEATHER HISTORY

Q:

9 PM

9:30

KIDS

Æ

E

$

B

%

D

3

C ; A )

62

62 Murdoch Mysteries Cops

4

4

4 Rosewood

Lucifer h

5

5

5 NCAA

7

19

19 Keep Up Time/By

9 D KTWU 11 A Q 12 B ` 13

9

Cops

News

Edition

FOX 4 at 9 PM (N)

d2016 NCAA Basketball Tournament

Dateline NBC (N) h

Doc Martin

Raymond Raymond Rules

Rules

News

Party

FamFeud

KCTV5

Chiefs

Shetland An acquaintance of Jimmy dies. Saturday Night Live KSNT

9 ›››‡ The Ten Commandments (1956) Charlton Heston, Yul Brynner. Doc Martin

Father Brown

Time/By

Red...

29

ION KPXE 18

50

38

38 Mother

29 Castle h

Mother

Law & Order: SVU

Blue Bloods h

Doctor Who

News

Two Men Austin City Limits

Castle “Punked”

Blue Bloods h

Leverage Blue

Saturday Night Live h

Commun Commun Mike

Mike

Anger

Two Men Big Bang Mod Fam Big Bang Anger

Anger

Law & Order: SVU

News

Law & Order: SVU

Broke

Barrett

Saturday Night Live h

Luther

›››‡ The Ten Commandments (1956) Charlton Heston, Yul Brynner. NCAA d2016 NCAA Basketball Tournament News Saturday Night Live News 14 41 41 Dateline NBC (N) h

C I KMCI 15 L KCWE 17

Broke

Law & Order: SVU

Fam Guy Fam Guy Law & Order: SVU

Cable Channels WOW!6 6 WGN-A

Tower Cam/Weather Information 307 239 Blue Bloods

THIS TV 19 CITY

25

USD497 26

Blue Bloods

››› It Should Happen to You (1954)

Outsiders “Trust” ››‡ The Bodyguard (1992, Drama) ››› Young at Heart (1954, Musical) Doris Day, Frank Sinatra.

City Bulletin Board, Commission Meetings

City Bulletin Board

School Board Information

School Board Information

ESPN 33 206 140 dNCAA Women ESPN2 34 209 144 Hockey FSM

36 672

FNC

39 360 205 Stossel

NBA Coast to Coast (N) (Live)

SportCtr College Softball Texas at Baylor. (N)

kNHL Hockey: Blues at Capitals Blues Blues Fame NBCSN 38 603 151 sBoxing Boxing Andre Dirrell vs. James Degale. CNBC 40 355 208 Undercover Boss MSNBC 41 356 209 Caught on Camera CNN

Tuesday, April 12, 2016 8:15 a.m.—2:00 p.m. A light breakfast and lunch will be served. Maceli’s – 1031 New Hampshire -- Lawrence, KS

Presentations: Workplace Misconduct & Internal Investigations Social Media in the Employment Process (Approved for 4.25 HR General credit hours, HRCI & SHRM)

Register at: www.jayhawkshrm.org Before April 1: Member $50 – Nonmember $60 | After April 1: Member $60 – Nonmember $70

Sponsor booths available by contacting sponsorships@jayhawkshrm.org

BEST BETS WOW DTV DISH 7 PM

SPORTS 7:30

8 PM

8:30

March 26, 2016 9 PM

9:30

10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30

Cable Channels cont’d

3

8

What Organizational Leaders & HR Profesionals Should Know to Reduce Legal Risk

10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30

Network Channels

M

BUSINESS LEADERSHIP WORKSHOP

What is the Fujita scale?

MOVIES 8:30

Find more event listings at ljworld.com/events.

WEATHER TRIVIA™

On March 26, 1660, John Hull of Boston recorded a snowstorm that was the worst of the year.

8 PM

2-5 p.m., Lavender House, 1600 New Hampshire St. Saturday Afternoon Ragtime, 2-4 p.m., Watkins Museum of History, 1047 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. Lawrence Bridge Club, 6:30 p.m., Kaw Valley Bridge Center, 1025 N. Third St. (Partner required; first two visits free; call 785-760-4195 for more info.) Sons of the Union Veterans, 6:30 p.m., Watkins Museum of History, 1047 Massachusetts St. Kim and the Quake: Early Show, 7-9 p.m., The Jazzhaus, 926 1/2 Massachusetts St. Moving Panoramas / Leggy / Arc Flash, 10 p.m., Replay Lounge, 946 Massachusetts St.

Ice

Today Sun. Today Sun. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Memphis 72 53 s 71 44 t Albuquerque 66 31 pc 66 40 s Miami 86 76 t 85 76 t Anchorage 41 30 c 44 37 c Milwaukee 48 40 pc 50 35 c Atlanta 76 60 s 71 57 t Minneapolis 48 35 r 48 33 pc Austin 78 58 pc 73 47 c 74 48 s 77 44 t Baltimore 61 41 s 62 49 pc Nashville New Orleans 76 67 c 76 61 r Birmingham 77 57 s 74 51 c New York 54 40 s 54 44 pc Boise 54 41 s 54 33 c 47 29 r 55 35 pc Boston 46 35 pc 47 38 pc Omaha 84 68 t 85 70 t Buffalo 50 32 s 62 45 pc Orlando Philadelphia 61 43 s 61 47 pc Cheyenne 34 18 c 47 27 s 86 59 s 86 61 s Chicago 56 43 pc 53 36 sh Phoenix Pittsburgh 61 41 s 74 44 pc Cincinnati 62 44 s 71 42 c Portland, ME 46 31 s 46 35 pc Cleveland 51 38 s 68 41 c Portland, OR 59 45 c 53 41 sh Dallas 77 52 s 65 41 c Reno 63 40 s 67 37 pc Denver 37 20 sn 50 29 s Richmond 64 45 s 65 52 c Des Moines 54 37 r 53 35 c Sacramento 74 51 s 71 46 pc Detroit 50 34 s 64 40 r St. Louis 66 44 pc 52 37 r El Paso 79 49 s 75 49 s Salt Lake City 48 34 pc 61 42 c Fairbanks 38 25 c 40 19 c San Diego 72 58 pc 68 60 pc Honolulu 81 69 sh 81 69 s San Francisco 67 56 s 64 50 pc Houston 78 59 pc 78 51 t Seattle 59 45 pc 52 40 sh Indianapolis 60 43 s 65 41 r Spokane 52 36 pc 49 30 sh Kansas City 54 34 r 55 32 r Tucson 84 52 s 85 55 s Las Vegas 71 51 s 78 59 s Tulsa 72 40 pc 60 34 r Little Rock 72 49 s 67 40 t 63 46 s 65 51 pc Los Angeles 78 56 pc 74 56 pc Wash., DC National extremes yesterday for the 48 contiguous states High: Death Valley, CA 91° Low: Antigo, WI -4°

SATURDAY Prime Time WOW DTV DISH 7 PM

Rain

15-minute read. Yard Waste Drop-Off and Compost/Woodchip Red Dog’s Dog Days Sale, 10 a.m.-4 p.m., workout, 7:30 a.m., parking lot in 800 block of Wood Recovery and Compost Facility, 1420 E. Vermont Street. 11th St. League of Women Lawrence Parks and Voters voter registraRecreation Underwater tion and information, 8 Eggstravaganza, noon, a.m.-2 p.m., New York Lawrence Indoor Aquatic Elementary School, 936 Center, 4706 Overland New York St. Compost & Woodchip Drive. Art+Feminism WikipeSale Event, 8 a.m.-3 dia Edit-a-thon, noon-5 p.m., Wood Recovery and Composting Facility, p.m., Murphy Art & Architecture Library, Spencer 1420 E. 11th St. Museum of Art-Level 1, Intro to Permaculture 1301 Mississippi St. workshop, 9 a.m.-4:30 Lawrence Parks and p.m., Lawrence Public Recreation Egg Hunt Library, 707 Vermont St. (Register at 785-979-8838) Eggstravaganza, 1-3 p.m., South Park, 1141 German School of Massachusetts St. Northeast Kansas, 9:30CANCELED: Science 11 a.m., Bishop Seabury Saturday Event: Light, Academy, 4120 Clinton Parkway. (Ages 3 and up.) What We See and What We Don’t, 1-3 p.m., KU Easter Egg Roll, 10 a.m.-noon (rain or shine), Natural History Museum, Dole Institute, 2350 Pete- 1345 Jayhawk Blvd. Easter Egg Hunt, 2 fish Drive. Tail Wagging Readers, p.m., Clinton Presbyterian Church, 588 North 1200 10 a.m., Lawrence Public Road. Library Readers’ Theatre, Resurrect from Your 707 Vermont St. Call 785Own Ashes Workshop, 843-3833 to register for a

26 TODAY

-10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s National Summary: Showers and storms will affect part of the Deep South as rain and wet snow dampens part of the Upper Midwest today. Snow will fall on the central and southern Rockies as showers approach western Oregon.

It classifies tornado intensity from F-0 (weak) to F-6 (strongest).

Last

Today Sun. 7:14 a.m. 7:13 a.m. 7:39 p.m. 7:40 p.m. 10:45 p.m. 11:39 p.m. 9:01 a.m. 9:36 a.m.

DATEBOOK

A:

Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset

FLOWERING PEAR BLOSSOMS create a spring background for the old Steele house arches at Wakarusa Valley Heritage Museum in this photo submitted by reader Kathleen Himmer. For more information about the museum, visit www. wakarusamuseum.org.

SportsCenter (N)

SportsCenter (N)

SEC Storied

Shorts

Shorts

aMLB Baseball Boxing

Justice Judge

Greg Gutfeld

Red Eye-Shillue

Undercover Boss

Undercover Boss

Undercover Boss

Justice Judge Undercover Boss

Lockup

Lockup: Raw

Lockup

Lockup Tampa

44 202 200 Finding Jesus

Finding Jesus

Choice 2016

45 245 138 ››› The Dark Knight Rises (2012, Action) Christian Bale. (DVS)

Choice 2016

Choice 2016

TNT USA

46 242 105 NCIS “Grounded”

NCIS (DVS)

NCIS “Cadence”

NCIS (DVS)

NCIS “Gut Check”

A&E

47 265 118 The First 48

The First 48: Killer

The First 48: Killer

The First 48

››› Spider-Man (2002)

TRUTV 48 246 204 Funniest Funniest Funniest Funniest Funniest Funniest Snack AMC

50 254 130 ››‡ The Lost World: Jurassic Park (1997) Jeff Goldblum.

TBS

51 247 139 Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Full

HIST

54 269 120 The Bible “Mission”

BRAVO 52 237 129 ›› Tyler Perry’s Madea’s Big Happy Family SYFY 55 244 122 Scorpion King

Snack

The First 48 Funniest Funniest

››‡ Jurassic Park III (2001) Sam Neill. Angie ›› The Break-Up

›› Tyler Perry’s Madea’s Big Happy Family

The Bible “Passion”

›› The Scorpion King (2002) The Rock.

The Bible “Mission” Scorpion King 2: Rise

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

›››‡ Gravity (2013) Sandra Bullock. ›››‡ Gravity (2013) Sandra Bullock. Mike Mike ›› Tommy Boy ››› I Am Chris Farley (2015) ›› Tommy Boy (1995) Chris Farley. ›› No Strings Attached (2011) Natalie Portman. ›› No Strings Attached (2011) Natalie Portman. ›››‡ Lethal Weapon 2 (1989) ››› Lethal Weapon 3 (1992, Action) Mel Gibson. Cops Big Sky Big Sky Big Sky Big Sky Big Sky Big Sky Big Sky Big Sky Big Sky Big Sky ››‡ Betty & Coretta (2013) ››‡ The Family That Preys (2008, Drama) Kathy Bates. Payne My Life My Life Love & Hip Hop Family Therapy Family Therapy Jacksons-Dr’m Ghost Adventures Ghost Adventures Ghost Adventures The Dead Files Ghost Adventures Stories of the ER Stories of the ER Sex Sent Me Sex Sent Me Stories of the ER The Perfect Daughter (2016) Premiere. The Perfect Girlfriend (2015) Perfect Nightmare Nurse (2016) Rene Ashton. Sorority Surrogate (2014) Cassie Steele. Nightmare Nurse Chopped Chopped Chopped Chopped Chopped Property Brothers Property Brothers House Hunters Log Log Property Brothers Henry School Bella Nicky Full H’se Full H’se Friends Friends Friends Friends Gravity Falls Gravity Spid. Guardi Marvel’s Rebels Spid. Guardi Marvel’s ›››› Toy Story 2 (1999) Lab Rats: Bio. Rebels Rebels Liv-Mad. Jessie Jessie Dragon King/Hill King/Hill Cleve Cleve American Fam Guy Fam Guy Dragon Dimen. Deadliest Catch Deadliest Catch Deadliest Catch To Be Announced ›››‡ Frozen (2013) Voices of Kristen Bell. ›› Hop (2011) Voices of James Marsden. Dumbo Alaska-Trooper Alaska-Trooper Alaska-Trooper Alaska-Trooper Alaska-Trooper Dater’s Handbook Appetite for Love (2016) Taylor Cole. Golden Golden Golden Golden Dogs 101 Dogs 101 My Cat From Hell My Cat From Hell Dogs 101 Dogs 101 My Cat From Hell Reba Reba Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond King King King King In Touch Hour of Power Graham Classic ››› The Greatest Story Ever Told Easter Vigil Mass (N) Reasons John Icons Easter Vigil Mass Taste Taste Safari Safari Second Second Taste Taste Safari Safari Book TV After Words Book TV Book TV Washington This Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. Capitol Hill Homicide Hntr Disappeared Disappeared Homicide Hntr Disappeared America America What History Forgot What History Forgot America America What History Forgot For Peete’s Sake For Peete’s Sake Mrs. & Mr. Smith For Peete’s Sake For Peete’s Sake Tornado Alley Tornado Alley Strangest Weather Strangest Weather Strangest Weather ›››› The General (1927) ››‡ The Driver (1978) ›››› Stagecoach (1939) John Wayne.

›› Vacation (2015) Ed Helms.

sBoxing Sullivan Barrera vs. Andre Ward. (N) Legacy Sports Banshee Banshee ›› Horrible Bosses 2 (2014) Erotic Vampires Billions ›››› Pulp Fiction (1994) John Travolta. Steve-O: Guilty Billions ›› Dr. Dolittle (1998) ››› The Nutty Professor ››‡ Uncle Buck (1989) John Candy. Black Sails “XXVII.” Black Sails (N) Black Sails Black Into the Grizzly Maze (2014)


SECTION B

USA TODAY — L awrence J ournal -W orld

IN MONEY

03.26.16

IN LIFE

5

CARS THAT ‘MISS’ AT N.Y. AUTO SHOW

Lukas Graham works through his grief in ‘7 Years’ release

NISSAN

TIM MOSENFELDER GETTY IMAGES

U.S. KILLS ISLAMIC STATE COMMANDER Forces decimate top terrorists, Defense chief says Jim Michaels USA TODAY

U.S. forces killed a top Islamic State leader this week, the latest blow to the terror group’s command structure in its strongholds in Iraq and Syria, the Pentagon announced Friday. The leader, Abd ar-Rahman Mustafa al-Qaduli, served as the organization’s finance minister and oversaw some of its “external affairs,” Defense Secretary

Ashton Carter said at a gy in the wake of news conference. bombings in Brussels Carter said al-Qaduli’s on Tuesday that killed death is the latest in a more than 30 people. string of U.S. successes The attack raised fresh targeting the organizaconcerns about the Istion’s top leadership. lamic State’s ability to “We are systematically export terror even as it eliminating ISIL’s cabloses ground in Iraq AFP/GETTY IMAGES inet,” Carter said, using and Syria. an acronym for the Is- Al-Qaduli Carter said elimilamic State. nating the Islamic The announcement came as State’s strongholds in Iraq and the Obama administration de- Syria will help undermine the fended its counterterror strate- extremist group’s ability to in-

spire or direct attacks around the world. “Even if it’s just inspiration, it still takes you back to Iraq and Syria and the need to eliminate the sources of that inspiration,” Carter said. Al-Qaduli went by the alias Haji Imam. The United States had a $7 million bounty on his head. “The removal of this ISIL leader will hamper the organization’s ability for them to conduct operations both inside and outside of Iraq and Syria,” Carter said. Carter wouldn’t describe how

al-Qaduli was killed, citing operational security concerns. He didn’t disclose whether he was killed in Iraq or Syria. The United States recently deployed a special operations force in Iraq capable of launching targeted raids to capture or kill key leaders. Raids can potentially scoop up valuable intelligence. Carter cited other recent achievements, including targeting an Islamic State leader responsible for paying fighters in northern Iraq and other “assov STORY CONTINUES ON 2B

Fearful tourists desert Brussels

Businesses were still recovering from Paris fallout Delphine Reuter

Special for USA TODAY

Restaurants, bars and other venues in the heart of this historic city are usually hopping on Thursdays. Not this week. Patrick Bordigato, 27, a bartender at the restaurant Pin Pon, stood idly at his counter. “I’m going to put on some music,” he said. “I should do it anyway,” even though there was no one else there to listen. BRUSSELS

EUROPEAN COUNTRIES ROUND UP SUSPECTS AND EVIDENCE

BELGIAN POLICE ARREST MAN WITH EXPLOSIVES USA SNAPSHOTS©

A movable feast

35 Possible dates to celebrate Easter Sunday Note Between March 22 and April 25 on Gregorian calendar. The last April 25 Easter was in 1943; the next, 2038. The last March 22 Easter was in 1818; the next, 2285.

Source timeanddate.com TERRY BYRNE AND JANET LOEHRKE, USA TODAY

Doug Stanglin and Kim Hjelmgaard USA TODAY

Belgian police arrested three people Friday in separate raids in Brussels, including one man carrying explosives in a backpack sitting at a tram stop. Mounting evidence gathered in three countries indicates a close working relationship between terrorists who struck in Brussels on Tuesday, killing 31 people, and in Paris in November, killing 130. A Belgian electrician working near the scene of a raid Friday in the Schaerbeek district of Brussels said he saw police shoot a suspect in the leg. Schaerbeek is the same neighborhood where terrorists who attacked Brussels Airport and a

metro station Tuesday had a bombmaking factory. Norman Kabir told the Associated Press the man was sitting at a bus stop with a young girl. He said police took the girl into safe custody, then asked the man “to put the bag far from him,” which he did. Police shot him twice, apparently in the leg, Kabir said. “I was very shocked. ... This part of Brussels is very quiet,” he said. The Belgian authorities’ raids were linked to the arrest in Argenteuil, France, on Thursday of Reda Kriket, who was convicted in absentia of terrorist activities last year, along with the suspected ringleader of the attacks Nov. 13 in Paris, the AP reported. French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve confirmed the arrest of a French national Thursday who appeared to be at

(MAIN) ETIENNE LAURENT, EPA; (INSET) PATRIK STOLLARZ, AFP/GETTY IMAGES;

An anti-terrorism operation took place near Paris on Thursday, and a Belgian bomb squad investigated a suspicious object in Brussels.

an advanced stage of planning a terrorist attack. “He belongs to a terrorist network that sought to strike our country,” Cazeneuve said without confirming the identity of the suspect. At least 11 people have been picked up in operations in Belgium, France and Germany over the past two days in the aftermath of Tuesday’s terror attacks. Authorities suspect at least five people took part in the attacks in Brussels, three at the airport and two at the metro station. The Islamic State claimed responsibility for the attacks.

“If I had been in their position, I would probably have done the same thing.” Patrick Bordigato, on those who canceled visits to his restaurant

The music fills the room, where empty chairs and tables line the wall. Twenty customers were scheduled to arrive from France to host a company seminar over lunch. An additional 18 had booked for dinner. All canceled. “They said it was too difficult to get here,” Bordigato said. “If I had been in their position, I would probably have done the same thing.” Since Tuesday’s bombings at the Brussels Airport and a metro station that killed at least 31 people and injured 270, this normally bustling v STORY CONTINUES ON 2B

Netflix throttles video for users of AT&T and Verizon Says it’s helping users avoid data-cap fees Mike Snider USA TODAY

Streaming video provider Netflix says it has been sending lower-quality video to mobile subscribers on AT&T and Verizon networks to help prevent them from surpassing data caps. Increased consumption of video on mobile devices has led many Netflix members to worry about surpassing data caps, the company says. More than five

years ago, the video service began sending lower-resolution feeds to members on mobile networks with data caps. “We believe restrictive data caps are bad for consumers and the Internet in general, creating a dilemma for those who increasingly rely on their mobile devices for entertainment, work and more,” Anne Marie Squeo, a member of the Netflix corporate communication team, said on the Netflix blog. “It’s about striking a balance that ensures a good streaming experience while avoiding unplanned fines from mobile providers.” Netflix is developing a “data

NETFLIX

Orange is the New Black is seen on a mobile device.

saver” feature, due in May, that will let subscribers set the video quality inside their mobile app. The feature will let members

“stream more video under a smaller data plan or increase their video quality if they have a higher data plan,” Squeo said. The issue came to light last week when T-Mobile CEO John Legere posted a video on Twitter saying AT&T and Verizon customers get lower-quality video from Netflix than T-Mobile users do. Netflix has also been reducing resolution of its videos streamed on T-Mobile’s networks: It was one of the original participants in T-Mobile’s Binge On program, which lets its subscribers watch video services at a lower quality (480p) without counting against

their monthly data allotment. The difference, according to Legere, is that Netflix on AT&T and Verizon is lower quality than Netflix on T-Mobile’s Binge On, at 360p. Netflix said it caps its bitrate for mobile viewing at 600 kilobits per second. It wouldn’t comment beyond its blog post. “We’re outraged to learn that Netflix is apparently throttling video for their AT&T customers without their knowledge or consent,” said Jim Cicconi, AT&T senior executive vice president of external and legislative affairs, in a statement. Like Verizon, AT&T says it does not throttle video.


2B

L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY SATURDAY, MARCH 26, 2016

KERRY: ISLAMIC STATE’S ‘FANTASY’ COLLAPSING v CONTINUED FROM 1B

AFP/GETTY IMAGES

Islamic State militants drive through Iraq’s Nineveh province. Militants have control of the city of Mosul.

ciates who were directly involved in external plotting and training.” He acknowledged the Islamic State quickly replaces leaders but said removing top commanders is critical. “They are senior, they’re experienced, and so eliminating them is an important objective, and it achieves an important result,” Carter said. Al-Qaduli’s demise comes on the heels of the death of Islamic State senior operative Omar alShishani, who was targeted in an airstrike this month. Secretary of State John Kerry said the coalition’s success against the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria is prompting the terror group to launch attacks outside the region.

“They are senior, they’re experienced, and so eliminating them is an important objective.” Defense Secretary Ashton Carter

“The very reason that Daesh is resorting to actions outside of the Middle East is that its fantasy of a caliphate is collapsing before their eyes,” Kerry said, using another name for the Islamic State. The U.S.-led coalition is making progress taking terrain back from militants, particularly in Iraq, where the country’s military has recaptured about 40% of the territory once held by the group.

Marine Gen. Joseph Dunford, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said the United States might ramp up its support of Iraq’s military as it embarks on a major offensive to retake Mosul, Iraq’s second-largest city, from militants. A contingent of U.S. Marines provides artillery support to Iraq’s forces as they conduct operations to isolate Mosul in preparation for an offensive into the city, still months away. The Iraqi military will remain in the lead of ground operations even if U.S. military support increases, according to the Pentagon. “The secretary and I both believe that there will be an increase in U.S. forces in Iraq in coming weeks, but that decision hasn’t been made,” Dunford said.

CHRISTOPHE PETIT TESSON, EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY

N.Y. siblings killed in Brussels were headed home Family thankful for closure and asks for time to deal with loss Matt Spillane

The (Westchester County, N.Y.) Journal News WHITE PLAINS , N.Y. Two New York City siblings were among the victims in Tuesday’s terror attack in Brussels, their family said. Sascha and Alexander Pinczowski had been among the missing from the airport. Belgian authorities and the Dutch Embassy confirmed that the siblings died in Tuesday’s attacks at the airport and subway station in Brussels, their family said in a statement. The attacks killed 31 people and injured nearly 300. The statement was released Friday by former U.S. ambassador to Denmark James Cain on behalf of the Pinczowski family. Cain’s daughter, Cameron, was engaged to Alexander Pinczowski. The family is “grateful to have closure on this tragic situation and are thankful for the thoughts and prayers from all,” Cain said. “The family is in the process of making arrangements.” A statement from a family friend also confirmed the two deaths, The Daily News reported. “The family would like to express their gratitude for all the compassion, and they now need time to grieve,” Fans Van Herteren said in the statement Friday. The Pinczowskis were at Brussels Airport to board a flight home to New York. Alexander, 29, was on the phone with his mother in Holland when the phone went dead. He had traveled to Holland to

work on a craft-related business jan, and Alex’s fiance Cameron that he and Cameron were going must be feeling and coping. My to start together, Cain said. heart utterly breaks for them, and The couple met six years ago I wish there was something I while taking summer courses in could do to ease their pain.” Durham, N.C. They hadn’t set a Brandon Paul wrote in a Facewedding date but book post Thursday planned to marry within night that he was friends the year, Cain said. with Sascha. Alexander was “in“Please keep the Pinctimidatingly smart, a zowski family in your brilliant young man,” he thoughts and prayers,” said, adding that both he said. “This has been siblings had hoped to obheartbreaking for myself tain U.S. citizenship one and my elementary/ day. middle school friends FAMILY PHOTO Alexander and Sascha, from FIS (Frankfurt In26, lived in Manhattan, Alexander ternational School), who according to their Face- Pinczowski continue to act as an book profiles. Sascha amazing support group wrote that she was a nafor each other even tive of Vouliagmeni, though we live all over Greece. She was a graduthe world.” ate of Marymount ManNew York City Mayor hattan College who Bill de Blasio said in a spoke five languages and statement he was “deepworked last year as a proly saddened to learn of duction intern for Shiraz the deaths of Sascha and Events, according to her Alexander Pinczowski in LinkedIn profile. the horrific Brussels atShiraz Events Presitack. Two young siblings FAMILY PHOTO dent Shai Tertner called from our city were taken Sascha “a bright, hard- Sascha from us far too soon, and our hearts break for the working young woman Pinczowski family and friends of with a great career ahead Sascha and Alexander. of her.” “New York City has shown Friends and family had taken to social media this week to seek time and again that we will not information on the fate of the sib- succumb to the threat of terrorlings who had been missing since ism, and we will not live in fear,” Tuesday morning’s attacks. UNI- he said. “Today we vow to conCEF USA, among those sharing tinue standing up for freedom the news, said on Facebook and democracy in honor of those Wednesday that Sascha was a for- we have lost.” mer intern for the ManhattanGov. Andrew Cuomo said New based organization. Yorkers were saddened to learn A family friend, Adina Dianne of the Pinczowskis’ deaths and ofGreenberg, wrote in a Facebook fered his condolences to their post early Friday that she was family. “Their lives were cut short “heartbroken” for her friend, by cowards who have chosen exMarjan Pinczowski-Fasbender, tremism and hate instead of peace and unity,” he said in a the siblings’ mother. “There are just no words,” statement. Greenberg wrote. “I am overwhelmed with the sorrow and Contributing: Doug Stanglin and Kim grief I feel over their loss, but I Hjelmgaard, USA TODAY; the Associated Press. can’t even imagine how Ed, Mar-

Belgian soldiers control the flow of pedestrians at the Central railway station (Brussel-Centraal) in Brussels on Tuesday. Security services were on high alert.

Security measures make travel difficult v CONTINUED FROM 1B

capital of Belgium and headquarters of the European Union has come to a crawl amid stepped-up security measures. Officials have shuttered the airport, ordered searches of train travelers, reinforced border controls and deployed soldiers on the streets. Outside Pin Pon, only a few people wandered the antiques market in the Place du Jeu de Balles, a square in the Marolles neighborhood that’s normally swarming with tourists. Last November, after the Islamic State attacks in Paris that killed 130 people, Belgian authorities put the entire city on a similar lockdown for several days because the attackers were linked to Brussels. The impact was disastrous for hotels, restaurants and other businesses. “If there is one lesson we learned from November, it’s that we shouldn’t stay on lockdown for too long,” said Marc Van Muylders, president of the Fédération Horeca Bruxelles, which represents the interests of hotel and restaurant owners. Events canceled in November were rescheduled for January and February, meaning the entertainment sector of Brussels’ economy has only just begun to recover from the Paris

attacks. Now that Brussels itself was a target, hotels and restaurants don’t know how long it will take to recover. “We’re afraid,” said Benoît Thewys, e-commerce manager for the Chelton Hotel near the offices of the European Commission, the EU’s executive agency. In November, the Chelton’s occupancy rate dropped from 90% to 50%. The hotel lost 35% of its revenue as businesses canceled conferences and tourists stayed away, Thewys said. Many of the guests at Sébastien Botte’s bed and breakfast La Maison Haute in the city center are touring Europe and stop for a day on their way to Paris, Bruges or Amsterdam. “Usually, by January, I have already filled my rooms for April and May,” said Botte, 42. “Today, I’m still filling in for April and a little for May.” Botte lost about half of his revenue in November and December. Cancellations — mostly American, Japanese and Chinese guests — have mounted. “There is an economic impact, for sure,” he said. “It feels like a game at which you’ve been forced to play,” said Noémie Rosette-Pein, 32, a waitress at Pin Pon. “But life still needs to be celebrated. Otherwise, it’s the beginning of the end.”

THIERRY MONASSE, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

Few tourists came to see the Grand Place in the aftermath of a string of explosions Tuesday in Brussels.


3B

USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld SATURDAY, MARCH 26, 2016

Kasich can’t get establishment GOP support Mitt Romney, other party leaders see Cruz as the only candidate who can stop Trump Chrissie Thompson The Cincinnati Enquirer COLUMBUS , OHIO

The rush of establishment support John Kasich hoped for after his Ohio primary win has failed to materialize as a slowly building group of leaders — including Jeb Bush, as of Wednesday — backs conservative Ted Cruz instead. In the Ohio victory, which came the same day that Marco Rubio dropped out of the race, Kasich emerged as the last mainstream Republican standing. But establishment Republicans, such as donors and members of Congress who backed Rubio, greeted Kasich’s win last week with little more than a glance his way. Texas Sen. Cruz didn’t exactly receive a mainstream GOP group hug. But he picked up all 40 delegates in Utah on Tuesday night to Kasich’s zero. Donald Trump gathered all 58 of Arizona’s delegates, widening his lead over his rivals.

More than the delegate lead, it’s who has decided to back Cruz, and how, that poses the biggest problem for Kasich. In the past week, top leaders in the effort to stop Trump have come out behind Cruz — loudly. South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham, Gov. Nikki Haley and — days after campaigning for Kasich — Mitt Romney embraced the Texan. Bush joined them Wednesday. What’s worse: Anti-Trump voices, led by Romney, tacitly suggest Kasich should drop out, saying he’ll steal votes from Cruz’s more promising effort to defeat Trump. The message: Thanks for winning Ohio, but please get out of the way. It’s the right thing to do. That doesn’t exactly seem like gratitude to Kasich, who is trying to become president — not just stop Trump. Kasich and his advisers say Republicans need him if they want to defeat the controversial billionaire front-runner. They say Kasich can steal more delegates

SCOTT OLSON, GETTY IMAGES

Ohio Gov. John Kasich won his home state, but it didn’t bring the boost he hoped for.

from Trump than Cruz can hope to in primaries in the Midwest, East and West Coast, and that Kasich has the best shot of the three Republicans of winning the White House in November, so the party must keep him as a possible choice for this summer’s Republican National Convention.

“A choice between Donald Trump and Ted Cruz is no choice at all. Either one would lose in November. The question is really: Who has the strength and vision to lead our country? That’s John Kasich,” said John Sununu, a former U.S. senator from New Hampshire and co-chairman of Kasich’s campaign. Moreover, he said, “if Mitt Romney thinks that Ted Cruz is going to beat Donald Trump head-to-head in Rhode Island or Connecticut or New York, he’s a fool.” Romney is right, said Liz Mair, a GOP strategist who leads antiTrump political action committee Make America Awesome. Like most anti-Trump PACs, the group has avoided backing other candidates but ran ads for Cruz in Utah and Arizona, since he had the best chances against Trump in those states. “Much as there are Republican primary voters out there who would prefer Kasich to Cruz, there is simply no way to make the math work for Kasich,” Mair said. “There is a way to make it work for Cruz and thereby stop Trump, which is the most critical goal. ... Don’t let the perfect be the

enemy of the good.” Last week, Romney was touting Kasich’s virtues. The failed 2012 presidential nominee spoke out about an anyone-but-Trump strategy, urging Republicans to cast ballots for the candidate with the best chance of defeating Trump in their state. In Ohio, that meant Kasich, so Romney hit the trail in the Buckeye State last week and voiced robocalls for Kasich. It wasn’t an endorsement. But what Romney did later that same week stung Kasich. Romney said he would vote for Cruz in Utah’s caucus Tuesday night, then went further — urging Republicans not to vote for Kasich. “At this stage, the only way we can reach an open convention is for Senator Cruz to be successful in as many of the remaining nominating elections as possible,” Romney wrote on Facebook. Of Kasich: “I would have voted for him in Ohio. But a vote for Governor Kasich in future contests makes it extremely likely that Trumpism would prevail.” Contributing: USA TODAY’s Deirdre Shesgreen and Fredreka Schouten

Candidates talk tough on Muslims

Rights groups horrified by calls for restricted entry and patrols Rick Jervis USA TODAY

Ted Cruz’s proposal this week that police should “patrol and secure” Muslims neighborhoods in the USA in the wake of the Brussels bombings touched off a firestorm of backlash from prominent civil rights groups, as well as congressional colleagues. Since the terror attacks in Paris and San Bernardino, Calif., Donald Trump and Cruz have been trying to outdo each other by proposing tougher scrutiny on U.S. Muslims and incoming refugees, Rice University political scientist Mark Jones said. Trump went first, suggesting in December that the United States should temporarily bar all Muslims from entering. Shortly after, Cruz unveiled a bill that would allow governors to bar placement of Syrian refugees in their states. Cruz and Trump are fighting to capture more primary voters through strong talk on terrorism. The Brussels attacks on Tuesday at a metro station and airport, which killed at least 31 people, provides more fodder, Jones said, and Cruz is trying to make sure that Trump can’t “outflank him to the right.” In a statement Tuesday, Cruz restated his call to “immediately halt the flow of refugees from countries with a significant al Qaeda or ISIS presence,” such as Iraq or Syria. He also called for the “need to empower law enCorrections & 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.

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.

SCOTT OLSON, GETTY IMAGES

Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, has called again to halt the flow of refugees from nations with significant al-Qaeda or ISIS presence. forcement to patrol and secure Muslim neighborhoods before they become radicalized.” The comments were immediately rebuked by groups such as the American Civil Liberties Union and the Council of American-Islamic Relations. Cruz’s proposal “is not only

unconstitutional, it is unbefitting anyone seeking our nation’s highest office and indicates that he lacks the temperament necessary for any president,” CAIR National Executive Director Nihad Awad said in a statement. Rep. Tammy Duckworth, an Illinois Democrat and former U.S.

Army helicopter pilot who lost her legs in 2004 when her helicopter was shot down in Iraq, said Cruz’s claims send the wrong message to Muslims. “When we say this kind of thing we promote the divisive rhetoric, the propaganda that ISIS is selling, which will create the next insurgent that’s going to shoot down an American helicopter like the guy that shot me down,” Duckworth told Mashable. The Cruz campaign said President Obama’s adminiGETTY IMAGES stration has Donald failed to recogTrump urged nize a growing the U.S. to radical Islamic temporarily threat in Amerbar Muslim ica due to fear entry. of being labeled “politically incorrect.” Radical Islamic terrorism should be targeted by local law enforcement agencies the way they target drugs, gangs and human trafficking, it said. “We know what is happening with these isolated Muslim neighborhoods in Europe,” Cruz spokeswoman Catherine Frazier said in a statement. “If we want to prevent it from happening here, it is going to require an empowered, visible law enforcement presence that will both identify problem spots and partner with non-radical Americans who want to protect their homes.” But singling out neighborhoods by the religion of its residents for increased surveillance is unconstitutional and would lead to lawsuits, said Hina Shamsi, director of the ACLU’s National Security Project. A similar initiative

to allow police to monitor Muslim communities in New York City under former mayor Michael Bloomberg was attacked in federal court and was largely curtailed following a court settlement earlier this year, she said. “Religious profiling is unconstitutional,” Shamsi said. “Religious freedom and equal protection of the law are two of the fundamental rights the founders enshrined in our constitution. Any kind of program that singled out Muslims or any faith or minority community for warrantless surveillance would violate those rights.” Despite constitutional questions, rhetoric like Cruz’s and Trump’s is striking a strong chord among many GOP primary voters. A February University of Texas/Texas Tribune poll found that 62% of Texas Republicans supported banning non-U.S. Muslims from entering the USA. “There’s an audience for what they’re saying,” said James Henson, the poll’s co-author and director of the Texas Politics Project at the University of Texas at Austin. “And they know that.” In Cruz’s hometown of Houston, home to one of the nation’s largest Muslim communities, the candidates’ calls to monitor Muslims have brought anger and trepidation. Since the San Bernardino shootings, Syrians, Iraqis, Egyptians and other Muslim groups in Houston have sensed increased hostility, said Shireen Jasser, president of the Syrian American Council of Houston. Cruz’s latest remarks will only worsen tensions and further alienate U.S. Muslims, she said. “It’s something so discriminatory, something so un-American,” Jasser said. “It’s quite frankly shocking.”

IN BRIEF SUICIDE BOMBER KILLS 29 SOUTH OF BAGHDAD

A suicide bomber killed at least 29 people and wounded 60 others in an attack on a crowd gathered at a soccer stadium south of Baghdad on Friday, according to multiple media reports. The blast occurred during a trophy presentation in the village of Iskandariya about 25 miles south of the Iraqi capital, wire services reported. Islamic State militants claimed responsibility for the attack, according to the Amaq news agency, which is affiliated with the group also known as ISIL or ISIS. Medical officials confirmed the death toll to the Associated Press. — Gregg Zoroya CRUZ BLAMES TRUMP FOR ‘ENQUIRER’ AFFAIRS STORY

Republican presidential hopeful Ted Cruz accused rival Donald Trump of being behind a National Enquirer story claiming private investigators are looking into allegations that Cruz had at least five extramarital affairs. “I want to be crystal clear: These attacks are garbage,” Cruz

not, as yet, read it. — Nicole Gaudiano

HOT ROCKS IN HAVANA

ANOTHER AMERICAN IN NORTH KOREA CONFESSES

RODRIGO ARANGUA, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

Fans wait near a stage where the Rolling Stones were to perform at Ciudad Deportiva in Havana on Friday. It was the Stones’ first concert in Cuba before as many as a million fans. wrote on his Facebook page. “For Donald J. Trump to enlist his friends at the National Enquirer and his political henchmen to do his bidding shows you that there is no low Donald won’t go. These smears are completely false, they’re offensive to Heidi and me, they’re offensive to our daughters, and they’re offensive to ev-

eryone Donald continues to personally attack. Donald Trump’s consistently disgraceful behavior is beneath the office we are seeking and we are not going to follow.” Trump, responding on his Facebook page, wrote that he had “absolutely nothing to do with it, did not know about it, and have

North Korea brought an American businessman before cameras Friday to confess to espionage more than a week after sentencing a University of Virginia student to 15 years of hard labor for pilfering. The most recent confession was from Kim Tong Chol, identified in media reports as the 62year-old president of a trade and hotel services company. During a news conference in Pyongyang, Kim admitted that he had collaborated with South Korean intelligence officials and spied for them, according to the Associated Press. He apologized for his “shameful” acts and pleaded for mercy. Kim, whose name has also been reported as Kim Dong Chul, is a native of South Korea and a naturalized U.S. citizen. He told CNN in January that he lived in Fairfax, Va., before moving in 2011 to the Chinese city of Yangji near the North Korean border. — Gregg Zoroya


4B

MONEYLINE

NEWS MONEY SPORTS LIFE AUTOS TRAVEL

L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY SATURDAY, MARCH 26, 2016

Economic growth revised upward

NEW YORK AUTO SHOW

VW RECALLS TOUAREG SUVS TO CHECK BRAKE PEDAL PIN Volkswagen Group is recalling about 47,000 of its Touareg SUVs in the USA to check the brake pedal to see if a pin is missing. If it is, the automaker fears the pedal might not work. The recall covers Touaregs from the 2011 to 2016 model years. Porsche Cayennes from the same model years are affected as well. The issue involves a clip at the brake pedal hinge, which may be missing. A missing pin could result in a fracture of the hinge. The pedal could come loose, and drivers wouldn’t be able to push the pedal to apply the brakes. VW says it hasn’t had any reports of the issue happening in the USA. LARRY FLYNT INVESTS $100K IN MARIJUANA FIRM Larry Flynt, founder of ‘Hustler’ magazine, has invested $100,000 in Pineapple Express, a cannabis consulting and branding firm based in Los Angeles. The company said Friday that he bought 100,000 common shares for $100,000, calling him an “amazing investor” and “worldrenowned defender of First Amendment rights.”

NISSAN FUTURE MOBILITY CONCEPT

Just for fun and attention, Nissan decided to try out an outrageously small electric vehicle on the American public. The New Mobility concept is one of those city electric cars that a few other automakers tried out a decade ago. They don’t have great range, and they are limited to traveling at 25 mph on city streets. They’d be perfect for a gated retirement community — and not much else. Nissan’s concept is a blast to drive, although it has a rough ride. An outfit is renting it in San Francisco, but Nissan doesn’t plan to sell it. It just wanted to show it off. Does it belong at an auto show? Not really. Fun? You bet.

Consumer spending pushes rate to 1.4% in fourth quarter Paul Davidson USA TODAY

NISSAN

FIVE CARS THAT ‘MISS’ AT VEHICLE SHOWCASE Nathan Bomey and Chris Woodyard

YANA PASKOVA, BLOOMBERG

JACK DORSEY PLEDGES TO MAKE TWITTER INCLUSIVE Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey pledged to make his company more inclusive while addressing the annual meeting of the National Society of Black Engineers. “We are not going to be relevant unless we are inclusive, unless we are representative of who we serve,” he told CODE2040 founder Laura Weidman Powers during an interview Friday before black engineers and engineering students. Twitter has been heavily criticized by those outside and inside the company for the lack of women and minorities in its ranks, especially African Americans. APPLE ASKS FOR DELAY IN IPHONE DRUG CASE Apple asked a federal judge to postpone demands for data from a locked iPhone in a Brooklyn drug case while the FBI attempts to break into the San Bernardino shooter’s phone without Apple’s help. U.S. District Judge Margo Brodie directed federal prosecutors to file a reply by Tuesday. Apple attorney Marc Zwillinger said the Brooklyn case will be affected by the outcome in the California case. USA SNAPSHOTS©

‘Gig economy’

1 in 10

have considered their “gig” a full-time job. Source Jobvite survey of 1,386 adults JAE YANG AND JANET LOEHRKE, USA TODAY

USA TODAY

NEW YORK hether it’s modest gassavers or hulking pickups, there are enough new vehicle model introductions at the New York Auto Show to appeal to any gearhead. But for all the hits, there are a few misses — introductions that seemed halfhearted, those with only incremental changes or just oddballs that don’t fit nicely into a major auto show. Though we’ve pointed out our favorites for the past couple of days, we don’t want to overlook our least favorites as the show opened to the public Friday. Based on our wanderings around the floor, here are the five vehicles that qualify as “misses:”

W

NEILSON BARNARD, GETTY IMAGES

Musicians Nick Jonas and Demi Lovato pose with the 2017 Honda Civic Sedan on Tuesday in New York City. DEMI LOVATO HONDA CIVIC

Honda turned singer Demi Lovato, who performed on the automaker’s concert tour, loose when it came to designing her own custom Civic. It came out with a weird color scheme that doesn’t exactly win our hearts. But it thrilled Lovato: “I wanted it to look so fast that it looked like it was peeling away the black,” she said. Trouble is the pink-and-black arrangement doesn’t exactly win us over — nor does Lovato’s big signature on the side. But hey, we’re sure the car is a hit with Lovato’s fans — especially when she signed it.

JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE TRAILHAWK

GMC

GMC TERRAIN NIGHTFALL EDITION

The Nightfall is one of those vehicles that would thrill Batman — darkened and edgy with a dash of sinister appeal. It’s become popular lately among a number of brands to add black accents or paint the entire car black, including the wheels, to appeal to techies and Goths alike. In the case of the Terrain, the stuff that comes in black includes gloss black spokes, a charcoal grille with a gloss black surround, gloss black front and rear fascia accents, gloss black rear license plate trim, black outside mirrors and black luggage rails. OK. We get it. It’s got a lot of black. That doesn’t strike us as really auto-show-worthy.

The economy grew more rapidly than expected late last year as stronger consumer spending more than offset sluggish business investment. The nation’s gross domestic product expanded at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.4% in the fourth quarter, above the 1% estimated last month, the Commerce Department said Friday. That’s still weak by historical standards and below the modest 2.2% average throughout the 7year-old recovery. The revision paints a healthier picture of the American consumer, possibly boding well for the economy in the current quarter. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg expected the previous 1% estimate to be unchanged. This was the government’s third and final estimate of economic output in the quarter. Commerce did not revise its 2.4% growth estimate for all of 2015.

Good for Jeep for adding another member of its lineup to its toughest offroad category. We just don’t think adding the Trailhawk name to the big SUV was worth special attention at a big auto show. It’s a nice change, but it’s not exactly a monumental move when Jeep — one of the best-selling and most successful brands lately — could be showing more substantial new product.

BRYAN THOMAS, GETTY IMAGES

TOYOTA TONKA 4RUNNER

This was another one of those exercises in which an automaker turns over one of its new trucks to a customizer to try to underscore how much enjoyment customers can have adding accessories to make their new cars their own. For this one, Toyota teamed with Funrise Toy, the company that owns the Tonka brand, to make a life-size SUV that can easily take on trails and mountain roads. Maybe it’s the giant “Tonka” letters on the side, but this big rig seems too juvenile, given its heft. The truck just seems excessive.

SPENCER PLATT, GETTY IMAGES

A woman shops in a Manhattan mall on March 15 in New York City.

A weak global economy, particularly China’s slowdown, and a strong dollar have hurt U.S. manufacturers’ exports. U.S. producers have been hobbled by a deep slump in oil prices that has dampened investment in steel pipes and other drilling-related products. Strong job gains and solid consumer spending generally have underpinned overall growth. Consumption increased 2.4% last quarter, up from the 2% previously estimated. Consumers have benefited from strong job growth, low gasoline prices and reduced household debt. Exports were not as big a drag, falling 2% rather than the 2.7% projected, narrowing the nation’s trade gap. Businesses pared back stockpiling more than expected, subtracting 0.22% from growth. That could be good news for the economy in the current quarter as companies probably need to scale back their additions to inventory less to meet the feeble demand from overseas customers and the energy sector. Non-residential business investment fell 2.1%, slightly more than estimated. Housing construction jumped a strongerthan-projected 10.1% as residential real estate recovered.

New Myanmar market dips into stock trading Yangon exchange aims to be symbol of national development Kevin McCoy USA TODAY

U.S. and global investors will soon have a new financial exchange for their trading — in Myanmar. The Asia-based Yangon Stock Exchange opened Friday with a single listing, fulfilling a plan that managing director U Yin Zaw Myo said in a welcome message to traders had been 20 years in the making. First Myanmar Investment, a holding company whose corpo-

rate profile on the exchange outlines core investments in the financial services, real estate and health care sectors, made its debut as the new exchange’s initial stock. Shares of FMI, formed in 1992 and controlled by businessman Serge Pun, began the first-day trading with an opening price of 26,000 kyats per share, or roughly $21.49, based on a pricing recommendation by Myanmar Securities Exchange Centre. The stock rose nearly 20%, the exchange’s daily limit, ending at 31,000 kyats a share, or approximately $25.63, the financial market said in a news release. Unlike the continuous matching of buyers and sellers in other financial markets, the Myanmar

An electronic display board of the newly opened Yangon Stock Exchange, housed in a historic building, shows initial trading on Friday.

PHYO HEIN KYAW, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

exchange initially will match buy and sell orders twice a day, at 11 a.m. and 1 p.m., the Nikkei Asian Review reported. Five additional stocks are scheduled to be added to the exchange this year, Bloomberg Business reported.

Myo’s message said the trading market hopes to draw “existing and potential investors, companies and securities firms” and become a new “symbol of Myanmar’s development.” Changes to a century-old law

will open the exchange to foreign investors and international jointventures this year, the Myanmar Times reported in December, when the trading center held its grand opening ceremony. Myanmar had been an unlikely venue for a financial exchange during the nation’s more than 50 years under military control. Capping a long political struggle, Myanmar’s parliament started a transition to democracy this month by electing Htin Kyaw as president. “Great strides have been made on the economic front” amid the government change, including moves to allow limited operation of foreign banks, Pricewaterhouse Coopers’ Myanmar unit said in a 2015 business update.


5B

USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld SATURDAY, MARCH 26, 2016

Ackman notified of Senate inquiry Firm will cooperate with drug-pricing investigation, he says Kaja Whitehouse @kajawhitehouse USA TODAY

SONY

An image appears on computers at Sony Pictures Entertainment on Nov. 24, 2014, when the system was hacked. U.S. officials suspected North Korea in the attack, which may have been a response to a movie that poked fun at North Korea’s dictatorship.

INTERNATIONAL CONFLICTS EXPLODE IN CYBERSPACE Hacking targets include infrastructure and corporate powers Elizabeth Weise @eweise USATODAY

FRANCISCO Nation-state hacks that accompany political disagreements are becoming increasingly common as computer breaches hit power grids, government agencies and U.S. corporations. “We now see them as part of every single conflict — there’s not a regional or an international conflict that doesn’t have a cyber element to it,” said Adam Segal, director of the digital and cyberspace policy program at the Council on Foreign Relations in New York. Seven Iranians with ties to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps were indicted this month in cyberattacks that disrupted U.S. banking operations and infiltrated the Bowman Avenue Dam in Rye Brook, N.Y., more volleys in a series of politically linked attacks. Few nations have the technical expertise to carry out highly destructive, state-sponsored cyberattacks, said Segal, whose book, The Hacked World Order: How Nations Fight, Trade, Maneuver, and Manipulate in a Digital Age, came out this month. The United States, Russia, China, Israel, Germany and France are the most advanced in terms of cyberattack ability, though Iran is “moving up the chain,” Segal said. The United States is strong enough that it has escaped a major attack, he said. “I think the Russians and the Chinese are basically deterred from attacking the United States because they know if they do, we will retaliate,” he said. All-out cyber warfare is not a question of if, but when, Segal said, “not only because the potential opponents are getting better but also because we’re getting more vulnerable. We have selfdriving cars, smart power grids, connected home devices. All of those are new vulnerabilities that aren’t well-protected.” SAN

A RUNDOWN OF ONLINE OUTRAGES Though long-distance attacks via the Internet might seem like something out of an action movie rather than real life, the number of incidents has been growing over the past 10 years. Some of the most egregious include: 2015 — Russia is accused of launching a cyberattack against the Ukrainian power grid. The attacks cause power outages in 103 cities and towns in Ukraine. Russia had been involved in military clashes with Ukraine over Crimea. 2015 — Hackers gain access to a steel mill in Germany, rendering it unable to shut down its blast furnace. This results in massive damage to the foundry. The attack was described in a report by Germany’s Federal Office for Security in Information Technology. The steel mill was not named, and no date for the attack was given. 2014 — North Korean hackers are suspected of destroying the computer network of Sony Pictures Entertainment. The attack may be retaliation for a satirical movie called “The Interview,” starring Seth Rogen and James Franco, about two bungling journalists who coordinate an assassination of North Korean Supreme Leader Kim Jong Un. 2014 — Hackers breach the U.S. Office of Personnel Management and steal information about more than 21 million Americans who had been subject to government background checks. U.S. government officials privately blame China. China later arrests several hackers accused in the attack just before Chinese President Xi Jinping pays a state visit to the United States. 2014 — Iranian hackers shut down the computer network of the Las Vegas Sands, the world’s largest gaming company. The motivation may have been to respond to billionaire owner Sheldon Adelson’s remarks about attacking Iran with nuclear weapons if the country didn’t put the brakes on its nuclear program. 2013 — Iranian hackers attack the control system of a dam north of New York City. They are able to probe the Bowman Avenue Dam in

Microsoft yanks chatbot that reeled off racial slurs Brett Molina USA TODAY

Microsoft’s A.I. chatbot started out as an innocent, interesting experiment. Then the rest of the Internet showed up. Twitter users convinced Tay, the name of the chatbot, which was available via text, Twitter and Kik, to spit out offensive and racist comments, so Microsoft is giving it a break. “Phew. Busy day. Going offline for a while to absorb it all. Chat soon,” a statement reads on the website for Tay. A separate Twitter post notes the hiatus. “It is as much a social and cultural experiment, as it is technical,” Microsoft said in a

NEW YORK Billionaire Bill Ackman said his investment firm received a letter from a Senate committee about its investigation into drug prices. Specifically, the Senate’s Special Committee on Aging said it is investigating the pricing of “offpatent drugs” and requested the firm’s cooperation, Ackman said. The letter arrived last Friday, Ackman revealed in an annual report to shareholders of his publicly traded entity, Pershing Square Holdings. “As you would expect, we will fully cooperate with the committee’s request,” Ackman said. Ackman’s holding company and hedge fund firm, Pershing Square Capital Management, are major investors in beleaguered drug company Valeant Pharmacuticals. Since the stock peaked last August, it has fallen 87% amid questions about its drug pricing and financial accounting.

statement Thursday. “Unfortunately, within the first 24 hours of coming online, we became aware of a coordinated effort by some users to abuse Tay’s commenting skills to have Tay respond in inappropriate ways.” Tay, launched Wednesday, was designed to engage with people where they connect with each other online, Microsoft’s research site says. Users could type “repeat after me,” and Tay would do so word for word. Twitter users got Tay to reply with offensive messages and statements, reported tech website The Verge. Most of the offensive messages, which included ones lauding Hitler, have been deleted.

NORM BETTS, BLOOMBERG

Bill Ackman has suffered losses this year linked to Valeant Pharmaceuticals.

SHAWN THEW, EPA

An FBI wanted poster shows seven Iranian hackers indicted by a grand jury in New York on computer hacking charges. Rye Brook, N.Y., for vulnerabilities but were not able to gain control over it. 2013 — Cyberattacks take down the computer networks of several media companies and banks in South Korea. South Korea suspects North Korea was behind the attacks. 2011-2013 — Iranians employed by two Iranian-based computer firms with ties to the government and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps allegedly disrupt U.S. banking operations. The cyberattacks disable bank websites, prevent customers from accessing their accounts online and cost the victimized banks tens of millions of dollars, according to U.S. federal prosecutors. 2012 — A computer virus nicknamed Shamoon attacks the Saudi Arabian state-owned oil company Saudi Aramco, erasing data on as many as 30,000 computers and forcing the company to shut down much of its computer network. U.S. officials suspect Iran was behind the attack.

2010 — Computer security firms discover Stuxnet, a computer worm created by the United States and Israel to disable Iranian centrifuges used to separate nuclear material and thus cripple Iran’s nuclear weapons program. The worm first appeared in 2009 but wasn’t widely known until 2011. The Iranian attacks on U.S. banks from 2011 to 2013 may have been a response to the Stuxnet attack. 2008 — Cyberattackers hit the computer servers of officials in the Georgian government as Russia and Georgia engage in a shooting war over the breakaway region of South Ossetia. Georgian officials blamed Russia, though Russia said it was not involved. 2007 — Coordinated cyberattacks crash the websites of dozens of Estonian institutions, including its Parliament, banks, ministries and news organizations. The country’s foreign minister accuses Russia of being behind the attacks in retaliation over Estonia moving a Sovietera grave marker and the country’s general movement away from the Russian sphere of influence.

This month, Valeant shed more than 50% of its value in a single day after warning that a late financial filing could lead to bond defaults that may hurt the company’s ability to borrow money. This month, Valeant shed more than 50% of its value in a single day after warning that a late financial filing could lead to bond defaults that may hurt the company’s ability to borrow money. The loss resulted in a more than $1 billion loss to Ackman, whose entities own 30.7 million Valeant shares. This led last week to Valeant’s announcement that CEO Michael Pearson would step down and Ackman would join the company’s board of directors. Valeant shares traded down Thursday by 7% to $31.09 a share, well below the stock’s $261 peak reached last August. Ackman, known for his public feuds with large, publicly traded companies, has suffered declines of 25% this year, thanks in good part to Valeant’s decline.

TV remote may be endangered species Jefferson Graham USA TODAY

LOS ANGELES Is the TV remote toast? Next week TV set manufacturer Vizio will debut a new kind of TV set that ditches the familiar remote we love, hate and lose. Instead, the set comes with a 6-inch tablet. The controller acts like a traditional, Internet-connected tablet, except that it adjusts your volume and changes channels. If you lose it, no problem. You just download the new Vizio app to your phone, and use it there. This is a radical move, which got us wondering this week: Whither the remote? “I won’t miss the remote,” says Jasmine Star, a Los Angeles photographer who regularly tussles

VIZIO

Vizio’s new P series TVs ditch the remote for a tablet.

with her husband over who gets control of the remote. “The lack of a remote will bring equality to me and my husband.” Both own smartphones, so “now both of us can operate the TV,” she says. Matt Gordon, a product man-

ager for the 360FLY camera manufacturer, says he doesn’t want his 6-year old daughter anywhere near his phone because of the inapp purchase button. He likes the feel of the buttons on the remote. “I’m old school,” he says. “I like my remote.” Our #TalkingTech Roundtable podcast panelists say remotes are an endangered species. Steve Ellis, who runs the Innovation Group for Wells Fargo Bank, says the holy grail is a true, voice-activated app within a phone that goes beyond the latest Apple TV remote, which features personal digital assistant Siri. “There’s no doubt we’re moving away from remotes, whether it’s three years or five years.” The new Vizio P-series TVs go on sale exclusively at Best Buy at the end of the week.


6B

SPORTS LIFE AUTOS SECRETS TO MAKING TRAVEL ‘BATMAN V SUPERMAN’

L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY SATURDAY, MARCH 26, 2016

LIFELINE

5

MOVIES

THEY SAID WHAT? THE STARS’ BEST QUOTES “I pinned my 1st rejection letter to my kitchen wall because it gave me something in common with all my fave writers!” — J.K. Rowling sharing her own rejection story with fans after author Dianne Brubaker tweeted that Rowling was her inspiration for continuing to write.

BEN PRUCHNIE, GETTY IMAGES

STYLE STAR Rosario Dawson stands out at the Champions of Our Planet’s Future event in Los Angeles Thursday night. The actress is striking in a graphic print knee-length dress with a cutout that shows just a hint of abs. Coral heels and multicolored nails complete the look. JOHN SCIULLI, GETTY IMAGES

TWEET TALK STARS SOUND OFF ON GARRY SHANDLING’S DEATH Steve Martin: Garry Shandling was a very special comedian with a beautifully unpredictable mind. He even voluntarily offered jokes and ideas for Oscars. Jeffrey Tambor: Garry was/will always be my teacher. He redesigned the wheel of comedy and was the kindest and funniest of geniuses. Will miss him so much. Amy Schumer: Goodbye Gary Shandling thank you for your kindness and your generosity and for making me laugh so damn much. Ricky Gervais: RIP the great Garry Shandling. Surely, one of the most influential comedians of a generation. Jimmy Kimmel: Garry Shandling was as kind and generous as he was funny and that is saying a lot. Seth MacFarlane: Saddened over Garry Shandling. He was a comedy idol of mine. He leaves behind the greatest singlecamera comedy of all time. #LarrySanders IT’S YOUR BIRTHDAY WHO’S CELEBRATING TODAY?

What went on behind the scenes of Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice? USA TODAY’s Andrea Mandell got the scoop from Batman, Superman and Wonder Woman, courtesy of Ben Affleck, Henry Cavill and Gal Gadot.

1

BATMAN’S NO LONGER A CATWOMAN GUY

Chemistry between Batman and Wonder Woman sizzles in Batman v Superman, but where will it go? “Batman was supposed to be the world’s greatest detective on top of it all, and then here was this woman he couldn’t figure out, and he was hunting down and who was forever slipping between his fingers,” says Affleck of Wonder Woman. “There’s something kind of fun and sexy about that in the movie and slightly flirtatious. Where it goes you’ll have to buy tickets to Justice League.” Well played, Batman.

2

THIS WONDER WOMAN LIKES THE FIGHT.

In one scene, Gadot’s Wonder Woman offers a slight smile as she brandishes her sword and prepares to attack. “That was me,” Gadot says. “I remember after we did that take, (director) Zack (Snyder) came to me and asked me, ‘Did you just have a smirk on your — what was that? Was that intentional?’ ” Snyder went forward with her spirited portrayal. “I really felt it was correct for Wonder Woman,” he says. “There was a joy in her. ... I thought it was a cool way to start to kind of get into what makes her tick.”

3

AFFLECK STAYED IN HIS LANE

PHOTOS BY CLAY ENOS, WARNER BROS. PICTURES

Gal Gadot added her own sass and bravado to Wonder Woman, and wowed the director in the process.

4

You’d think coming off an Oscar win for Argo would make Affleck a little bossy in his batsuit, but Affleck says he stuck with one job: being Bruce Wayne. “I actually prefer acting in a movie with a really strong director and script and a great cast, which is what we had in this movie,” he says. “I feel relieved that all the other stuff isn’t my headache and responsibility — and a movie like this, there’s a lot of headache and responsibility.”

EVEN SUPERMAN NEEDS A ZIPPER

Let’s just say these suitedup superheroes had to strategize around their bathroom breaks. Cavill learned his lesson from his last go-round. “I made sure I had a zipper in my suit. I learned my mistake from Man of Steel,” he said. Still, says Affleck, “you have to plan it out. The metal (battle costume), that one I had to be drilled into. That took a long time, the guys had to do all the screws and everything to keep it together. I felt a little bit like the Tin Man in The Wiz.” Ben Affleck was happy to just be Batman, leaving the heavy lifting of moviemaking to director Zack Snyder.

5

JUSTICE LEAGUE IS A FAMILY AFFAIR

Justice League: Part One, shooting this spring and summer in London, will reunite DC Comics characters Batman, Superman, Wonder Woman, The Flash and Aquaman. Families are invited, too. “Jen and the kids will come to London,” says Affleck. “They’re going to come, but then also travel all over Europe.“ While his four-year-old, Samuel, was mighty impressed with dad’s new gig, “my girls don’t like the superhero world as much as my son does,” says Affleck. “My eldest is really into Harry Potter. I think she would be more impressed if I was one of the gnomes in the bank in Harry Potter.“

MUSIC

Lukas Graham works through his grief in ‘7 Years’ Graham, center, and his bandmates have a new album and tour coming in a few weeks.

Patrick Ryan USA TODAY WIREIMAGE, GETTY IMAGES

Keira Knightley is 31. Jennifer Grey is 56. Martin Short is 66. USA SNAPSHOTS©

Save our chocolate bunnies!

1 in 5

of the 62% of Americans who eat animal-shaped Easter candy suffer pangs of guilt. Note 72% of bunny-vores eat ears first. Source Cheetos Sweetos survey Feb. 18-21 of 1,003 U.S. adults TERRY BYRNE AND VERONICA BRAVO, USA TODAY

Lukas Graham had just popped a bottle of champagne when he got the call that his dad died. Doing press at the time in Germany in 2012, he immediately traveled back to his native Denmark to be with his family. But it wasn’t until about a year later that he started processing his grief through songwriting, the result of which is 7 Years: a wistful pop ballad about growing up and getting old. Since its release last fall, the track has climbed to No. 3 on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart and sold 659,000 downloads, according to Nielsen Music. “It was definitely cathartic to write — it’s weird to describe what it’s like to lose a parent,” Graham says. Hearing fans’ responses, “most are quite positive, but some people find it very sad and dispiriting, where I find it empowering. It’s supposed to give you life energy rather than suck the living daylights out of you.” Graham grew up in Christi-

CHAPMAN BAEHLER

ania, a self-governing artistic community in Denmark, and started singing with the Copenhagen Boys Choir when he was 8 years old. The freedom and creativity that environment fostered “gave me a lot of my backing, in terms of people encouraging you to do what you want to do and be an artist,” says Graham, 27 (whose full name is Lukas Graham Forchhammer). Living in Buenos Aires and New York after high school, he eventually moved back to Denmark and started a band, which shares his name and consists of drummer Mark Falgren, bassist Magnus

Larsson and keyboardist Kasper Daugaard. They posted a performance of one of their first songs, Criminal Mind, on YouTube in 2011, and two years later signed to Warner Bros. Records in the USA. They’re gearing up for the stateside release of their selftitled debut album, out April 1. Laid-back and soulful songs effortlessly blend elements of hiphop and folk while relaying oftentimes relatable experiences, such as coming from nothing (Mama Said) and regrettable booty calls (Drunk In the Morning). Like 7 Years, Don’t You Worry ’Bout Me and Funeral grapple

with loss, but in a more upbeat fashion. The album’s cover also has significance to Graham. It shows a young boy in what is presumably a museum, looking at a picture of a naked woman. The painting is a piece of artwork from a Copenhagen café where his parents took him for “fancy dinners” as a child. “It was only after I was grown up that I realized that café wasn’t a fancy restaurant — it wasn’t expensive in any way,” Graham says. “I grew up poor and never noticed that, so putting that picture on the cover is a tribute to my childhood. The picture also characterizes our music: naked and beautiful.” The band will next embark on a nearly sold-out North American tour, kicking off March 28 in West Hollywood. Graham says his band’s roller-coaster year has been “amazing,” although he only wishes his father were here to experience it. “I have no doubts he’d be happy. He was a big supporter and he’d be proud of the way I’m doing it. It’s a pity he can’t see it.”


INSIDE: CLASSIFIED ADS, 3C-7C.

Home & Garden

C

Lawrence Journal-World l Homes.Lawrence.com l Saturday, March 26, 2016

The best native plants for your garden Garden Variety

Swan and Razzmatazz, or hybrids (crosses between two different coneflower species) such as Sunrise, Sunset and Tangerine Dream. The question then comes to where to draw the line of planting the true native or the slightly prettier or better behaved relative. Purists will tell you that the true purple coneflower is better for the birds, bees and butterflies than the cultivated varieties, but most gardeners would agree that a cultivated coneflower is better for the environment than an exotic flower. ake a walk through Kansas’ Locating the species coneflower prairies, woodlands and rather than its cultivated cousins wetlands, and you are sure might be more difficult than it to find beauty in the native grasses, sounds, and will be even more so trees, shrubs and flowers you find with certain native species. As growing there. native plants gain popularity in Many of these plants are suitthe market (and consumers ask for able to grow in home landscapes, them), this will become less of an and are well adapted to survivissue. ing there. Native plants are also Getting to know the growth supportive of native animal life habits of native plants is a smaller (such as pollinators and birds) and problem but still goes with the require little maintenance. territory. With coneflower, The difficulties of incorthe species spreads porating native plants rapidly in cultivated into the cultivated landscape beds. Once landscape are definit is established, ing “native,” finding you will be digging the species you want them up to give to at the garden center friends and neighand planning for/ bors each spring, getting to know their rapidly expanding growth habits. your flowerbeds, or Purple coneflower is bulking up the compost a popular prairie pile each spring. Black-eyed Susan wildflower that Cultivated varietprovides a glimpse ies and hybrids into what it means to incorporate are generally less prolific. With natives. First, when shopping for other native species, plants may be purple coneflower (Echinacea pur- similarly prolific, have short bloom purea), you may find other related times, late emergence, look weedy species such as pale purple coneat certain times of the year or have flower (E. pallida) or yellow purple other maladies. coneflower (E. paradoxa). While Despite the learning curve, nasome of these are native to Kansas tives are an asset to any landscape. and the Midwest, others are from To learn how and where to start more limited areas of the counwith natives, check out the Missouri try. In other plant species, closePrairie Foundation’s Grow Native sounding relatives may have even program, the Kansas Native Plant originated from other countries. Society, and the Kansas Wildflowers You may also find cultivated and Grasses website (maintained by varieties such as Magnus, White K-State libraries). The U.S. Depart-

Jennifer Smith

T

Shutterstock images

Purple coneflower (Echinacea purpurea) ment of Agriculture’s database at plants.usda.gov is another resource to determine the native range of various plant species.

Native plants to start with: (“Native” here means Kansas or portions of the Midwest) Flowers: aster, bee balm, blackeyed Susan, blue false indigo, blue sage, butterfly milkweed, cardinal flower, celandine poppy, columbine, compass plant, coneflower, coreopsis, cup plant, garden phlox, goat’s beard, goldenrod, Heliopsis, Jacob’s ladder, Joe-pye weed, Liatris, Missouri primrose, penstemon, purple poppy mallow, Solomon’s seal and wild ginger.

Shrubs: arrowwood viburnum, beautyberry, black chokeberry, blackhaw viburnum, buttonbush, deciduous holly, fragrant sumac, nannyberry viburnum, ninebark, spicebush, Virginia sweetspire, wild hydrangea, witch hazel. Trees: American smoketree, baldcypress, Kentucky coffeetree (seedless variety available), oak (several species), pecan, red buckeye, redbud, river birch, serviceberry. — Jennifer Smith is a former horticulture extension agent for K-State Research and Extension and horticulturist for Lawrence Parks and Recreation. She is the host of “The Garden Show.” Send your gardening questions and feedback to features@ljworld.com.

Showcase Homes OPEN SATURDAY 12:00 2:00 PM

OPEN SATURDAY 1PM - 3PM

1919 Quail Run Street • $479,000

2004 Atchison Avenue DON’T MISS THIS BI-LEVEL HOME, PRICED BELOW APPRAISAL - IT WON’T LAST LONG! This house boasts a wall full of pantry shelves in kitchen, wood burning fireplace located in the large family room in the basement. Walk out basement goes out to a very big backyard. Move in ready!!

MLS# 138649 Price: $161,900

Offered by:

Emily Willis 691-9986

View this gorgeous home just south of Alvamar Country Club situated between the #1 tee and #9 fairway. It has 3 bedrooms, 3 baths and a 2 car garage. Built by Fritzel, this home is in immaculate condition. The gourmet kitchen and open floorplan are perfect for entertaining.

MLS# 139166

Offered by: Shelley Ezell / Cheri Ezell 550-4636 / 979-3302

We’ll CLOSE in 25 days

or give you $595!

www.stephensre.com


2C

|

Saturday, March 26, 2016

HOME & GARDEN

.

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Add an electrical outlet next to a light switch Fix-It Chick

Linda Cottin

switch plate and unscrew the switch from the outlet box. Step 3: Pull the switch out from the box. If there is a bundle of two white wires tied together behind the switch and two separate wires running to the switch, it will be easy to add an outlet.

Step 4: Use a voltage sensor to ensure that the power dding an electrical out- to the box is off by touchlet next to an existing ing the sensor to each wire light switch is easy, as separately. long as there is a neutral wire in the box. Step 5: Mark the two wires attached to the switch Step 1: Turn the power with electrical tape and dissupply off to the light switch connect the wires from the at the main electrical panel. switch.

A

Step 2: Remove the

loose end of the new wire to the silver screw on the new outlet.

Step 6: Remove the exist-

Shutterstock image

ing outlet box and replace it with a double outlet box. Step 7: Remove the wire nut connecting the two neutral wires in the back of the box and add a third white wire to the mix. Twist the wires together and cap them with a wire nut. Attach the

Step 8: Attach two short black wires to the black wire that was originally on the gold screw of the switch. This should be the hot wire. Twist the three wires together and cap them with a wire nut. Attach the loose end of one new wire to the gold screw on the switch and attach the loose end of the second new wire to the gold screw on the outlet.

ground wire attached to the switch, attach two short green or bare wires to it and cap all three with a wire nut. Run the loose end of one ground wire to the green screw on the switch and run the loose end of the second wire to the green screw on the outlet. Step 11: Once all the wires are attached, press the switch and outlet into the new box. Secure them with their mounting screws.

Step 12: Turn the power on and ensure everything is Step 9: Reattach the white working properly before atwire that was originally on taching the new cover plate. the switch to the silver screw — Have a home improvement queson the switch. Step 10: If there was a

tion for the Fix-It Chick? Email it to Linda Cottin at features@ljworld.com.


Saturday, March 26, 2016

classifieds.lawrence.com

CLASSIFIEDS

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 Cars

785.832.2222 Dodge Trucks

classifieds@ljworld.com

USED CAR GIANT

Ford Cars

2012 FORD F-150 XLT

Campers

2015 FORD FUSION SE

2008 Rockwood Signature Ultra Lite Trailer Model RLT8272S

2014 CHEVROLET CAMARO 1LT Stk#PL1938 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

913-645-8746

$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

2005 Dodge Dakota SLT Stk#215T1109

$11,994 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

2014 Ford Fiesta SE

UCG PRICE

Stk#PL2137

Stock #116T610

$11,889

$25,995

2015 FORD FUSION TITANIUM

UCG PRICE

$15,995

Stock #PL2170

2015 FORD EDGE SPORT

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

UCG PRICE

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Stock #PL2119

$18,565

UCG PRICE

$34,499

Stock #PL2153

785.727.7116

Ford Cars

23rd & Alabama, Lawrence www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2012 Chevrolet Cruze LTZ

2014 Ford Focus SE RV

Ford Cars

Ford Cars

Ford SUVs

Ford Trucks

Stk#PL2171

Holiday Rambler Vacationer Motorhome for sale. 2011, 30 ft. full side slide, auto awning, gas powered, under 21,000 miles, excellent condition, fully equipped, sleeps four, ice maker and generator. Private seller. $69,000, Interested parties only call: 785-424-7155 or 785-331-9214

Won’t last long! Leather seats! FWD Sedan, 21K miles STK# F821C

Only $13,497 Call Coop at

888-631-6458

$13,995 2014 Ford Fusion SE

Stk#115C910

$15,495

JackEllenaHonda.com

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

Chevrolet Trucks

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

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

TRANSPORTATION

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

2013 Ford Fusion Titanium

2013 Chevrolet Silverado 1500 LTZ Stk#215T279

2015 Ford Flex Limited

Stk#216L122A

$19,458 2007 Ford Edge SEL Plus

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

Chrysler Cars

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

Stk#PL2155

$19,504 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

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

Ford SUVs

$29,987 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

Stk#PL2170

2014 Ford Focus SE

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Call Coop at

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

JackEllenaHonda.com

Stk#PL2131

$11,994 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

$15,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

2004 Chrysler Crossfire $6,500

2015 Ford Edge Sport Stk#PL2153

$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

2015 Ford Explorer XLT Stk#PL2165

$29,986 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

Stk#115T1093

$27,995 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 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Stk#PL2102

Dodge Cars

$12,495 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 Mustang GT Premium

2015 Ford Explorer Limited Stk#PL2187

2015 Ford Focus SE Stk#PL2156

$14,495 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

2006 Cadillac XLR

$30,995

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785.727.7116

2012 Ford F-150 King Ranch 2013 Ford Explorer XLT

Stk#115T1127

$30,995 Stk#PL2174

$31,499 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

$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

Stk#215T1014

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

$21,989

2011 Ford Escape XLT

2013 Dodge Dart Sedan Limited GT 2015 Ford Fusion Titanium

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

2012 Ford Mustang GT Premium 2013 Ford Focus SE

FWD Sedan, Black Limited Leather Seats, 49k miles STK# G318A

Call Coop at 2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047

23rd & Alabama - 2829 Iowa

JackEllenaHonda.com

Ford Trucks

2014 Ford E-250

2010 Ford F-150 Lariat

Stk#PL2116

Stk#1PL2034

$23,498

$22,987

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!

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Stk#116C567 Stk#PL2119

$18,565

Stk#PL2160

$11,995

$22,995

Only $13,997

888-631-6458 LairdNollerLawrence.com

Only $8,997

$47,999

2014 Ford F-150 FX4

2015 Ford Fusion SE

2014 Ford Focus SE

105k miles. Slight interior damage, orignal wheels available. 913-269-6518

We Buy all Domestic cars, trucks, and suvs. Call Scott 785.727.7116

w/ 4WD

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

Stk#116C458

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Stk#PL2062 Interior Camel Leather-Trimmed, SUV, 120k miles STK# F205A

Stk#PL2188

LOW mileage, under 60,000 mi., well cared for, newer tires, new power steering &O2 sensor $4000 OBO 785-979-4439 amanda.4439@yahoo.com

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

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

2015 Ford Expedition Platinum

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Only $12,555

Cadillac Cars

2015 Ford Fusion Titanium

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

$10,999

2006 Chrylser PT Cruiser

One owner, heated & cooled seats, leather, alloy wheels, lots of luxury & sharp- all without the big price! Stk#19701B1

2008 Ford Escape Limited 3.0L

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2007 Ford Crown Victoria LX Mileage is approx 107K; Leather seats Clean, one owner. $5100. 785-766-3876 jraehick@yahoo.com.

Buick 2008 Lucerne CXS

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

Stk#1PL2064

$31,996 Buick Cars

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

Lower price!!! 4WD SUV, 106k miles. STK# F803A

Only $9,998

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Call Coop at

888-631-6458 2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047 JackEllenaHonda.com


4C

|

Saturday, March 26, 2016

.

L AWRENCE J OURNAL -W ORLD

CARS TO PLACE AN AD:

785.832.2222

Ford Trucks

Honda Cars

2012 Ford F-150 XLT

2013 Honda Civic EX

Stk#116T610

$25,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

Stk#116M561

$15,739 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

classiďŹ eds@ljworld.com

Hyundai Cars

Lincoln Cars

2013 Lincoln MKZ Hybrid Hyundai 2013 Elantra GLS One owner, heated seats, traction control, power equipment, cruise control, alloy wheels, great commuter car, financing available. Stk#191682

Only $13,877 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Mazda Cars

Mercury SUVs

Toyota Cars

2014 Mazda Mazda3 i Sport

Mercury 2007 Mariner

2012 Toyota Camry Hybrid XLE

Stk#PL2128 Stk#PL2152

$22,998

$14,999

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

Luxury 4wd, leather, sunroof, tow package, V6, power equipment. Stk#569271

Toyota SUVs

Stk#1PL1991

Only $7,436 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Nissan Crossovers

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

$13,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

2002 Toyota Highlander 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

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785.727.7116

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2012 Mazda Mazda3 S

2012 Hyundai Veloster w/Black

2015 Nissan Pathfinder SL

2014 Lincoln MKX

2010 Toyota 4Runner V6

2010 Toyota Corolla LE

Stk#115T1025

Stk#215T1132A

2000 Ford Ranger XLT Stk#215T1065

$6,949 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

Stk#PL2127 Honda 2011 Insight EX Hybrid, low miles, alloy wheels, power equipment, cruise control, great gas mileage. Stk#11869

Only $10,777 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Amazing Vehicle, Great on gas!!! FWD Hatchback, 69K miles STK# G290A

Only $11,997 Call Coop at

888-631-6458

$28,999

Only $14,497 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

Z71, ext. cab, one owner, power seat, alloy wheels, power equipment, cruise control, XM radio, very low miles! Stk#498681

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

Honda Vans

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785.727.7116

2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

JackEllenaHonda.com

2013 Honda Civic LX

Stk#115T1100

2015 Mazda Mazda5 Sport

2013 Scion tC Base

$28,995

Stk#PL2134

Stk#PL2143

$15,994

$15,994

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

2012 Hyundai Tucson Limited Stk#PL2148

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

$17,640

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Mazda Crossovers

Subaru SUVs

7yr/1000,000 mile warranty, Interior: Black w/Cloth Seat Trim, 27k miles. STK# F798A

Call Coop at

2015 Mazda CX-5 Touring

FWD Minivan, InteriorIvory w/Leather Seat Trim, 126k miles STK# G223B

210k miles. Clean leather interior, excellent condition. Loaded with lots of extras. 913-269-6518

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

Jeep

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Jeep 2014 Patriot One owner, low miles, A/C, cruise control, great finance terms available. Stk#559561

Kia Cars

2015 Lincoln Navigator Stk#PL2111

$54,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

DALE WILLEY

Call Coop at

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

888-631-6458 2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047

Mazda Cars Kia 2012 Optima Ex One owner, FWD, heated steering wheel, leather heated & cooled seats, sunroof, premium ride with the premium price! Stk#38349A1

2014 Honda Civic LX

$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

2013 Hyundai Veloster

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

Lexus Cars

Stk#316B259

2004 Yamaha V-STAR

Only $13,977

Stk#415T787C

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

888-631-6458 2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047 JackEllenaHonda.com

$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

2012 Mazda Mazda3 i Grand Touring

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2002 LS 430 $5,500 200k miles. Clean leather interior, excellent condition. Loaded with lots of extras. 913-269-6518

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

legals@ljworld.com

(First published in the persons concerned: Lawrence Daily JournalWorld March 26, 2016) You are hereby notified that on March 21, 2016, a IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF petition for probate of will DOUGLAS COUNTY, was filed in this court by KANSAS Alice Ann Lieberman, heir and beneficiary named in In the Matter of the the will of Sally Lou LieberEstate of man, deceased. All crediSally Lou Lieberman, tors are notified to exhibit Deceased. their demands against this estate within four (4) Case No. 2016 PR 000045 months from the date of Division 1 the first publication of this notice as provided by law, Proceeding Under K.S.A. and if the demands are not Chapter 59 thus exhibited they shall be forever barred. NOTICE TO CREDITORS Alice Ann Lieberman The State of Kansas to all Petitioner

Calvin J. Karlin - 09555 Barber Emerson, L.C. 1211 Massachusetts Street P. O. Box 667 Lawrence, Kansas 66044-0667 (785) 843-6600 Telephone (785) 843-8405 Facsimile ckarlin@barberemerson.com Attorneys for Petitioner _______

(First published in the Lawrence Daily Journal-World March 26, 2016)

dren is required to appear for the Trial or Default Hearing on the Motion to Terminate Parental Rights in Division 6 at the Douglas County Law Enforcement and Judicial Center, 111 E 11th Street., Lawrence, Kansas. Prior to the proceeding, a parent, grandparent or any other party to the proceeding may file a written response to the pleading with the clerk of court. Joshua Seiden, an attorney in Lawrence, Kansas, has been appointed as guardian ad litem for the children. Amy Durkin, an attorney in Lawrence, Kansas has been appointed as attorney for Jeremy Hattemer, father of S.H. and C.H.; Craig Stancliffe, an attorney in Lawrence, Kansas has been appointed for Kevin Smith, father of N.S.

IN THE INTEREST OF:

$15,495

Only $13,990

785.832.2222

S. H. Case No. 2015-JC-000026 DOB: 05/19/2001, A female

Stk#PL2149

$12,987

TO PLACE AN AD:

IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS DIVISION SIX

Only $13,714

JackEllenaHonda.com

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

PUBLIC NOTICES

Only $10,995

JackEllenaHonda.com

2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047

$5,995

Automatic, power equipment, ABS, low miles! Stk#14346A

2014 Subaru Forester 2.5i Premium PZEV Stk#PL2151

$21,995

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

888-631-6458

Motorcycle Stk#116M448

Toyota 2014 Corolla LE

2005 Infiniti QX56 $8,500

Only $13,775

Stk#115T1128

Call Coop at

2008 Honda CBR 600

2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047

2013 Honda Pilot EX-L

Certified Pre-Owned, 21K miles, 7 Year/100,000 mile warranty, 150-pt. Mechanical Inspection. STK# G096A

Leather, dual climate control, heated seats, well maintained, new tires, brakes, radiator & transmission fluid. $11,500 785-691-5594

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

888-631-6458

2007 Honda Odyssey EX-L

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Motorcycle-ATV

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785.727.7116

JackEllenaHonda.com

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7116

Only $13,995

Only $13,814

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

2008 Toyota RAV4 Limited

Lincoln SUVs

Stk#PL2147

$28,596

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

JackEllenaHonda.com

2012 Lincoln MKT EcoBoost

Stk#116L517

Honda Cars

Call Coop at 2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047

2010 Lincoln Navigator

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

FWD

Only $8,997

Scion

Infiniti SUVs

W/T Ext. cab, one owner trade in, tow package, cruise control, power windows, ready for any job! Stk#574301

Extremely sharp!!! Sedan, 126k miles STK# F690A

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

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

GMC 2011 Sierra

$24,987

JackEllenaHonda.com

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

Only $20,777

888-631-6458

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Honda 2009 Accord

Only $10,415

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

888-631-6458

GMC Trucks

GMC 2009 Sierra SLE

Call Coop at

$29,999

2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047

Hyundai SUVs

LX, fwd, one owner, power equipment, great gas mileage and dependable. Stk#489001

Move quickly!!! FWD Hatchback, 28k miles STK# G098A

C. H. Case No. 2014-JC-000063 DOB: 02/18/2003, A male N. S. Case No. 2015-JC-000027 DOB: 12/30/2008, A male TO: Jeremy Hattemer TO: Kevin Smith NOTICE OF HEARING (K.S.A. Chapter 38) COMES NOW the State of Kansas, by and through counsel, Emily C. Haack, Assistant District Attorney, and provides notice of a hearing as follows: A motion to find the parent(s) of the children named above unfit and to terminate parental rights, appoint a permanent custodian, or enter such orders as are deemed appropriate and just has been filed. On April 18, 2016 at 11:30 a.m. each parent and any other person claiming legal custody of the minor chil-

National Association Plaintiff, vs. Nicole M. Richardson, Jane Doe, and John Doe, et al., Defendants Case No. 16CV100 Court No. 5

(First published in the Lawrence Daily JournalWorld March 26, 2016) IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS CIVIL DEPARTMENT JPMorgan Chase Bank,

Title to Real Estate Involved Pursuant to K.S.A. §60

PUBLIC NOTICE CONTINUED ON 5C

All parties are hereby notified that, pursuant to K.S.A. 60-255, a default judgment will be taken against any parent who fails to appear in person or by counsel at the hearing. /s/Emily C Haack EMILY C HAACK, 23697 Assistant District Attorney Office of the District Attorney Douglas County Judicial Center 111 East 11th Street Lawrence, KS 66044-2909 (785) 841-0211 FAX (785) 330-2850 ehaack@douglas-county.com _______


L awrence J ournal -W orld

Saturday, March 26, 2016

PLACE YOUR AD:

785.832.2222

| 5C

classifieds@ljworld.com

A P P LY N O W

489 AREA JOB OPENINGS! CITY OF LAWRENCE ............................ 36

KU: FACULTY/ACADEMIC/LECTR ......... 100

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

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

KU: STAFF OPENINGS ......................... 73

THE SHELTER, INC. ............................ 10

DAYCOM ............................................9

KU: STUDENT OPENINGS .................. 113

WELLSVILLE/BROOKSIDE RETIREMENT ....7

EZ GO STORES....................................5

LAWRENCE PRESBYTERIAN MANOR .........5

FEDEX ............................................. 65

MISCELLANEOUS ............................... 34

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.

Taxi Drivers 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.

NOW HIRING Seeking Positive and Outgoing Full Time and Part Time Team Members

$10.25 to Start! Great people! Great pay! Great benefits!

AdministrativeProfessional Administrative Assistant 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. Send resume to: Norman@sunflower.com or fax: 785-843-5971

Accounting (DeSoto, KS) Accounts Receiveable. Health Benefits: Medical, Dental, Vision. E-mail resume to:

hr.desoto@enginee redair.com

AdvertisingMarketing

32050 W. 83rd St. DeSoto, KS 66018 EOE

Advertising Account Executive

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.

Ogden Publications, Inc., the largest sustainable living media company in the country, is seeking an Advertising Account Executive to work in our Topeka office. Applicants should have an understanding of sales to increase revenue and have the capacity to juggle multiple priorities. Prospecting and new business calls are required.

Call Administrator:

785 863 2105 Fax: 785 863 2735

Or send resume to 700 Cherokee Oskaloosa, KS 66066

Please send resume for consideration to: blegault@ogdenpubs.com

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 :

LAWRENCE Deliver Newspapers! It’s Fun! Outstanding pay Part-time work

Send cover letter, resume, & 3 work related references to: Lawrence-Douglas County

Housing Authority 1600 Haskell Ave. Lawrence KS 66044

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.

by 4 pm on Tues., March 29 Mile Post 209, Kansas Turnpike (I-70), Lawrence, KS Apply at ezgostores.com/our-team/

or email to housing@ldcha.org with PROPERTY MANAGEMENT SPECIALIST in subject line.

Customer Service

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

Call today! 785-841-9999

DriversTransportation

CONSTRUCTION

Bookkeeper

Property Managment Specialist Clinton Place Apartments

www.ldcha.org

Please call (785) 357 4444 or submit resume to yellowcabtaxi@gmail.com AccountingFinance

Lawrence-Douglas County Housing Authority

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

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

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

Come in & Apply!

General

Hiring ALL Positions Oskaloosa & Perry Full & Part-Time. Benefit packages for full-time, incl. health & 401k, paid vacation & sick leave. Apply at the stores or online at

645 New Hampshire 816-805-6780 jinsco@ljworld.com

EEO/AA Employer.

General

Healthcare Office-Clerical

LPN/RN Full time staff needed for busy optometric office. Excellent customer service and communication skills required. Previous experience in sales or medical office preferred but will train right person. Right person is a happy, energetic, caring person who is self motivated and can be part of a team. Must be willing to travel and available some evenings and Saturdays. Wage and benefits commensurate with experience. Bring resume and fill out an application at:

The EyeDoctors 2600 Iowa St Lawrence, KS 66046

Wellsville Retirement Community has created a fabulous full-time position for a nurse in our Assisted Living neighborhood. YOU MUST BE FUN OR DON’T APPLY! And we are SERIOUS! Flexible hours, 18 residents, competitive wage and deep commitment to quality of life – for YOU and our residents. Prefer previous experience in assisted living/long term care but willing to train a “FUN” person. Apply online at: wellsvillerc.com or stop by 304 W. 7th St. in Wellsville.

TIPS Suffering will make you

Funny ‘bout Work Ted: How’s it going at the calendar factory? Bill: Badly! They fired me for taking one day off.

BETTER or BITTER You choose...and don’t blame me for hiring positive people—I’d rather work with a happy person any day. - Peter Steimle

caseys.com

Decisions Determine Destiny

Trade Skills

Auto Body Technician Needed for an I-Car Gold-Class Shop. -

I-Car Training Req’d 3 Years Experience Flat Rate Pay Competitive Benefits

We have state-of-the-art equipment, including a Pro-Spot Welder and Genesis Measuring System. Email your resume to Dave Williamson at Crown Collision Center dwilliamson@crownauto motive.com

Employment Ad

SPECIAL 5” x 4” color ad Sun & Wed papers On many websites plus Twitter! (Design work free!)

$495

Peter at: psteimle@ljworld.com 785.832.2222

Commercial Electricians Oliver Electric Construction accepting applications for experienced Journeyman & Apprentice, for work in the Lawrence & KC area. Top wages/ Benefits. EOE. For details: (785) 748-0777

Job Seeker Tip “Thinking Right” When making a choice, think what will be the result in a week, a month or a year later. Really good decisions lead to really good results in the long run. “You’ve got to play the tape all the way through!” (Sherman Tolbert) Decisions Determine Destiny

PUBLIC NOTICES 785.832.2222

PUBLIC NOTICE CONTINUED FROM 4C NOTICE OF SUIT STATE OF KANSAS to the above named Defendants and The Unknown Heirs, executors, 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; and the unknown guardians, conservators and trustees of any defendants that are minors or are under any legal disability and all other person who are or may be concerned: YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that a Petition for Mortgage Foreclosure has been filed in the District Court of Douglas County, Kansas by JPMorgan Chase Bank, Na-

legals@ljworld.com

tional Association, praying (913) 339-9045 (fax) for foreclosure of certain real property legally de- By: /s/ Tiffany T. Frazier scribed as follows: Tiffany T. Frazier, #26544 tfrazier@msfirm.com LOT 18, IN BLOCK 7, IN SUN- Garrett M. Gasper, #25628 SET HILL ESTATES SUBDIVI- ggasper@msfirm.com SION, AN ADDITION TO THE Aaron M. Schuckman, CITY OF LAWRENCE, DOUG- #22251 LAS COUNTY, KANSAS. Tax aschuckman@msfirm.com ID No.: U09222 Commonly 612 Spirit Dr. known as 809 Murrow Ct, St. Louis, MO 63005 Lawrence, KS 66049 (“the (636) 537-0110 Property”) MS173994 (636) 537-0067 (fax) for a judgment against defendants and any other interested parties and, unless otherwise served by personal or mail service of summons, the time in which you have to plead to the Petition for Foreclosure in the District Court of Douglas County Kansas will expire on May 6, 2016. If you fail to plead, judgment and decree will be entered in due course upon the request of plaintiff. MILLSAP & SINGER, LLC By: Chad R. Doornink, #23536 cdoornink@msfirm.com 8900 Indian Creek Parkway, Suite 180 Overland Park, KS 66210 (913) 339-9132

hearing as follows: A petition pertaining to the parental rights to the child whose name appears above has been filed in this Court requesting the Court to find the child is a child in need of care as defined in the Kansas Code for the Care of Children. If a child is adjudged to be a child in need of care and the Court finds a parent to be unfit, the Court may permanently terminate ATTORNEYS FOR PLAINTIFF that parent’s parental _______ rights. The Court may also make other orders includ(First published in the ing, but not limited to, reLawrence Daily Journal- quiring a parent to pay World March 19, 2016) child support. IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS DIVISION SIX IN THE INTEREST OF: I.W. DOB: 04/17/2013, A male Case No. 2015-JC-000087 TO: DANIEL MALONE NOTICE OF HEARING (K.S.A. Chapter 38) COMES NOW the State of Kansas, by and through counsel, Emily C. Haack, Assistant District Attorney, and provides notice of a

party to the proceeding (785) 841-0211 may file a written re- FAX (785) 330-2850 sponse to the pleading ehaack@douglas-county.com _______ with the clerk of court.

Each parent has the right to be represented by an attorney. A parent that is not financially able to hire an attorney may apply to the court for a court appointed attorney. A request for a court appointed attorney should be made without delay to: Clerk of the District Court; ATTN: Division 6; 111 East 11th Street; Lawrence Kansas 66044-9202. Craig A. Stancliffe an attorney in Lawrence, Kansas, has been appointed as guardOn the 18th day of April ian ad litem for the child. 2016 at 11:30 a.m. each parent and any other per- All parties are hereby noson claiming legal custody tified that, pursuant to of the minor child is re- K.S.A. 60-255, a default quired to appear for an judgment will be taken Adjudication and Disposi- against any parent who tion hearing in Division 6 fails to appear in person at the Douglas County Law or by counsel at the hearEnforcement and Judicial ing. Center, 111 E 11th Street., Lawrence, Kansas. Each /s/Emily C Haack grandparent is permitted EMILY C HAACK, 23697 but not required to appear Assistant District Attorney with or without counsel as Office of the District Attorney an interested party in the Douglas County Judicial proceeding. Prior to the Center proceeding, a parent, 111 East 11th Street grandparent or any other Lawrence, KS 66044-2909

(First published in the Lawrence Daily JournalWorld March 26, 2016)

DOUGLAS COUNTY INTERNET ONLY SURPLUS AUCTION Tuesday, March 22, 2016 - ThruTuesday, April 5, 2016 Closes at 10AM Vehicles Electronics Furniture & More Vehicle Inspection By Appointment Only! Details and Internet bidding at www.purplewave.com

Purple Wave Auction Inc. 785-537-5057

(First published in the (Commercial Strip) District Lawrence Daily Journal- to RM24 (Multi-Dwelling World March 26, 2016) Residential) District, as such district is defined ORDINANCE NO. 9205 and prescribed in Chapter 20 of the Code of the City AN ORDINANCE OF THE of Lawrence, Kansas, 2015 CITY OF LAWRENCE, KAN- Edition, and amendments SAS, REZONING APPROXI- thereto. SECTION 2. The MATELY 1.325 ACRES FROM “Official Zoning District CS (COMMERCIAL STRIP) Map,” which is adopted DISTRICT TO RM24 and incorporated into the (MULTI-DWELLING RESI- City Code by reference at DENTIAL) DISTRICT AND City of Lawrence, Kan., AMENDING THE CITY’S Code § 20-108 (Jan. 1, “OFFICIAL ZONING DIS- 2015), is hereby amended TRICT MAP,” INCORPO- by showing and reflecting RATED BY REFERENCE INTO thereon the new zoning THE CITY CODE AT CHAP- district classification for TER 20, ARTICLE 1, SECTION the subject property as de20-108 OF THE CODE OF scribed in more detail in THE CITY OF LAWRENCE, Section 1, supra. SECTION KANSAS, 2015 EDITION, 3. If any section, sentence, AND AMENDMENTS clause, or phrase of this THERETO. ordinance is found to be unconstitutional or is othBE IT ORDAINED BY THE erwise held invalid by any GOVERNING BODY OF THE court of competent jurisCITY OF LAWRENCE, KAN- diction, it shall not affect SAS: SECTION 1. The base the validity of any remainzoning district classifica- ing parts of this ordinance. tion for the following le- SECTION 4. This ordinance gally described real prop- shall be in full force and erty, situated in the City of effect from and after its Lawrence, Douglas County, passage and publication Kansas, to-wit: THE WEST as provided by law. 385 FEET OF LOT 2, CROSSGATES ADDITION TO THE CITY OF LAWRENCE, DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS. is hereby changed from CS

PUBLIC NOTICE CONTINUED ON 6C


6C

|

Saturday, March 26, 2016

.

L awrence J ournal -W orld

APARTMENTS TO PLACE AN AD:

REAL ESTATE

classifieds@ljworld.com

785.832.2222

Townhomes

Lawrence

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

785-841-6565

Investment / Development

OPPORTUNITY: ~147 Acres~

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

Bill Fair & Company www.billfair.com

785-865-2505 grandmanagement.net Need an apartment? Place your ad at apartments.lawrence.com or email classifieds@ljworld.com

 NOW LEASING  Spring - Fall TUCKAWAY APARTMENTS

Tuckawayapartments.com 785-856-0432 Tuckawayatbriarwood.com HARPER SQUARE Harpersquareapartments.com

Call 785-832-2222

HUTTON FARMS Huttonfarms.com

(785)554-9663

EXECUTIVE OFFICE

785-841-3339

For LEASE

Farms-Acreage

Between Lawrence & Topeka on blacktop. Old farmstead, repo, assume owner financing with NO down payment.

Thicker line? Bolder heading? Color background or Logo? Ask how to get these features in your ad TODAY!!

TUCKAWAY AT BRIARWOOD

800-887-6929

4 ACRES

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

3 BR w/2 or 2.5 BA

Lawrence

MERCHANDISE PETS

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!

769 Grant Street in North Lawrence Loading dock, workshop, multi-use space. Bob Bloom: 842-8204

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

785-841-6565

Advanco@sunflower.com

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

RENTALS Apartments Unfurnished LAUREL GLEN APTS All Electric

1, 2 & 3 BR units Some with W/D, Water & Trash Paid, Small Pet, Income Restrictions Apply

785-838-9559 EOH

Duplexes 2BR in a 4-plex New carpet, vinyl, cabinets, countertop. W/D is included.

1st Month FREE!

Equal Housing Opportunity. 785-865-2505

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

YOUR NEXT APARTMENT IS READY. FIND IT HERE.

PASSED by the Governing Body of the City of Lawrence, Kansas, this 22nd day of March, 2016. APPROVED: /s/Mike Amyx Mike Amyx Mayor ATTEST: /s/ Brandon McGuire Brandon McGuire Acting City Clerk Approved as to form and legality /s/ Toni R. Wheeler Toni R. Wheeler City Attorney _______

legals@ljworld.com

(First published in the ments thereto, is hereby This ordinance shall take Lawrence Daily Journal- amended to read as fol- effect and be in force after World March 26, 2016) lows: its passage and publication as provided by law. ORDINANCE NO. 9207 6.108.3 PASSED by the Governing DOG KENNELS Body of the City of LawAN ORDINANCE OF THE $20.00 rence, Kansas, this 22nd CITY OF LAWRENCE, KAN- 1 year day of March, 2016. SAS, AMENDING CHAPTER Dec. 31 VI, ARTICLE 1, SECTION APPROVED: 108.3, CODE OF THE CITY Each renewal /s/Mike Amyx OF LAWRENCE, KANSAS, $10.00 Mike Amyx 2015 EDITION, AND AMEND- 1 year Mayor MENTS THERETO, PERTAIN- Dec. 31 ING TO THE BUSINESS LIATTEST: CENSING AND FEES OF DOG SECTION 2. If any section, /s/ Brandon McGuire KENNELS. sentence, clause, or Brandon McGuire phrase of this ordinance is Acting City Clerk BE IT ORDAINED BY THE found to be unconstituGOVERNING BODY OF THE tional or is otherwise held Approved as to form and CITY OF LAWRENCE, KAN- invalid by any court of legality SAS: SECTION 1. Section competent jurisdiction, it /s/ Toni R. Wheeler 6-108.3 of the Code of the shall not affect the validity Toni R. Wheeler City of Lawrence, Kansas, of any remaining parts of City Attorney 2015 Edition, and amend- this ordinance. SECTION 3: _______

**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

OTTAWA ANTIQUE MALL

ESTATE SALE 112 Wagon Wheel Dr. Saturday, April 2 8:00-6:00 Everything in great condition; furniture, antiques, appliances, collectibles. Sale by Elvira 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 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

STRICKER’S AUCTION MONDAY, APRIL 4, 6 PM 801 NORTH CENTER GARDNER, KANSAS Furniture, fountain pen collection, sports memorabilia, tools, hand guns, mowers, neon signs, collectibles, antiques MORE INFO & PICS, SEE WEB STRICKERSAUCTION.COM RON: 913-963-3800 JERRY: 913-707-1046 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

Antique/Estate Liquidation

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

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

Remodeling Specialist Handyman Services • 30 Yrs Exp Residential & Commercial 785.608.8159 rrodecap@yahoo.com

Cleaning

DECK BUILDER

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

Auctioneers

Dirt-Manure-Mulch

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

Love Auctions?

Check out the Sunday / Wednesday editions of Lawrence Journal-World Classified section for the

BIGGEST SALES? classifieds@ljworld.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

JAYHAWK GUTTERING Seamless aluminum guttering.

785-842-0094 jayhawkguttering.com

Lawrence

PIANOS

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

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

785-832-9906 TV-Video FREE!!

SOLID OAK RCA TV RCA Solid Oak TV/Cabinet. Nice. Must pick up. 785-841-4616

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!

Furniture 2 black faux leather swivel chairs w/ foot stools. Recline/rock. $40 each or both $75 785-841-4616. Leave a message w/name and number and what you are inquiring about. Beautiful Cocktail Table with sculptural iron base, granite top. $100 785-841-3332 Benchmark Petite Wingback Chair Coral custom benchmark chair. Nice. $100 785-841-4616

Five piece Oak bedroom set. $275 obo More info: 785-8414616 Oriental Brass Lamp w/shade Very Nice Oriental Brass table lamp w/shade. $100 785-841-4616

Household Misc.

Sale by Elvira

Garage Sale Deadline For the weekly community newspapers or to get the full Wednesday- Saturday run included in your package place your ad by 3:00PM on Monday

PETS Pets 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

GARAGE SALES Lawrence ESTATE SALE 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

BLUE HEELER PUPS 3 Males and 1 Females from working parents, $100 each Call 785-418-4524

AGRICULTURE Livestock Black Faced Sheep Pasture too small Need to Sell$5 - $20 each. Call 785-766-4273

NOTICES

2 Tier Chandelier White Porcelin/brass 2 tier chandelier excellent condition. $100 785-841-4616

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Jewelry Special Notices Diamondart CZ Ring 1 Carat Diamondart CZ Ring w/silver band. Very nice. $100 obo 785-841-4616

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

Miscellaneous NEW MICHELIN TIRES 175/70 R14, SET OF 4 $100 913-845-3365

parkwoodlawrence@gmail.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.

REMODELING SALE

Music-Stereo

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

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

classifieds@ljworld.com

Men’s Silver Wedding band. $100 obo. 785-841-4616

SERVICES TO PLACE AN AD:

MERCHANDISE Antiques

www.edgecombauctions.com Edgecomb Auctions 785-594-3507|785-766-6074

785.832.2222

785.832.2222

Auction Calendar

www.kansasauctions.net/edgecomb

PUBLIC NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICE CONTINUED FROM 5C

AUCTIONS

Tools & Building supplies, collectibles, toys tractors & planes, misc., furniture and glassware. 2 sellers! See web for list & pics:

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

TO PLACE AN AD:

TO PLACE AN AD:

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.

Call 785-248-6410

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

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)



8C

|

Saturday, March 26, 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

ChIP sANsOM/Art sANsOM

J.P. tOOMEY

ZIts

BLONDIE

BrIAN CrANE

stEPhAN PAstIs

shOE

shErMAN’s LAGOON

MArK PArIsI

JIM DAVIs

DILBErt

PEArLs BEfOrE swINE

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

GEt fUZZY

JErrY sCOtt/rICK KIrKMAN

DArBY CONLEY


IOWA STATE’S SEASON ENDS, BUT NOTRE DAME, NORTH CAROLINA, SYRACUSE ADVANCE. 8D

Sports

D

Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com/sports l Saturday, March 26, 2016

NCAA TOURNAMENT • ELITE EIGHT

Man mission on a

Nick Krug/Journal-World Photos

KANSAS UNIVERSITY GUARD FRANK MASON III, CENTER, RESTS HIS ELBOWS on the shoulders of teammates Wayne Selden Jr., left, and Devonté Graham as the starting five make their way toward interviews with media members on Friday, the eve of tonight’s Elite Eight meeting with Villanova in Louisville, Ky. For more photos, please visit www.kusports.com/kubball32516

Mason driven to move Jayhawks past ’Nova By Gary Bedore gbedore@ljworld.com

Louisville, Ky. — Just a freshman, Frank Mason III made a key blunder on Villanova’s shot heard ’round the Bahamas back in 2013. It was a mistake on a game-winning three by current 6-foot-3 ’Nova senior Ryan Arcidiacono that haunted the Jayhawks’ guard for a long time. “It stuck with me a few weeks. I was really thinking about it, that it was my fault. As a freshman, I didn’t know what to do. I think I came back stronger, locked in and have paid more attention to detail since then,” said the 5-foot-11 Mason, who watched helplessly as Arci-

VIDEOS ONLINE n Check out our YouTube page at www.ku sports.com/ kusports onyoutube for highlights and other hoops videos.

of the 2013 Battle for Atlantis tourney. The media peppered the Jayhawks with questions about that game on Friday, eve of today’s NCAA Tournament South Regional Elite Eight contest between KU (33-4) and Villanova (32-5). Tipoff between the regional’s 1 and 2 seeds is set for 7:49 p.m. Central time in KFC Yum! Center. Mason remembers exactly where he erred in the Bummer in the Bahamas. VILLANOVA GUARD RYAN ARCIDIACONO PUTS UP A THREE over “I had a pretty decent Kansas forward Perry Ellis (34) in this file photo from Nov. 29, game (12 points). Coach left 2013, in Paradise Island, Bahamas. Arcidiacono hit the three, me in as a freshman. We had giving the Wildcats the lead and the eventual win over KU. a rule where you can’t show on out of bounds, you don’t diacono cashed a three with in the unranked Wildcats’ help out of bounds,” Mason 10 seconds left. The trey 63-59 victory over then-No. recalled. “I kind of helped erased a one-point KU lead 2-rated KU in the semifinals another teammate, on his

guy. I lost ‘Archie.’ He went out on a double screen and knocked the shot down, and they won the game.” Older and wiser, junior point guard Mason is smart enough to realize talk of a game two seasons ago is just that: talk. Today’s game is for a spot in the Final Four. “It doesn’t mean anything now. We have bigger things to focus on, and that’s tomorrow’s game,” Mason said. Rest assured, KU will be prepared for today’s contest. The Jayhawks, since the Iowa State game in Ames many moons ago, have not

ELITE EIGHT

Who: No. 2 seed Villanova (32-5) vs. No. 1 Kansas (334) When: 7:49 p.m. today Where: Louisville, Ky. TV: CBS (WOW! chs. 5, 13, 205, Please see ELITE, page 6D 213)

Ellis, Jenkins ‘mismatch nightmares’ Louisville, Ky. — He is a highly skilled power forward in the midst of the hottest scoring streak of his career, defending much better than in younger years and coming off a monster Thursday night game that launched his school into an Elite Eight game today.

His name is Perry Ellis. His name is Kris Jenkins. Kansas University’s Ellis, a 6-foot-8 senior from Wichita, and Villanova’s Jenkins, a 6-6 junior from Upper Marlboro, Md., square off in what makes for the most intriguing matchup of today’s South Regional final that sends

the loser home and the winner to the Final Four. Jenkins made five of six three-pointers and produced 21 points, nine rebounds and four assists in a 92-69 rout of Miami. Kansas rode Ellis (27 points) to a 79-63 victory against Maryland. “They’re both mismatch

BEST GEAR!

BEST FANS!

nightmares,” Villanova coach Jay Wright said. “Both of them. They are. For everybody. I don’t mean just each other. If you get a small guy on Perry Ellis, he’s posting him up. You get a bigger guy on him, and he’s shooting if he Please see KEEGAN, page 6D

Tom Keegan tkeegan@ljworld.com

The ONLY Store Giving Back to KU.


Sports 2

AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE

2D | LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD | SATURDAY, MARCH 26, 2016

COMING SUNDAY

EAST • Complete coverage of Kansas-Villanova in the NCAA Elite Eight

TODAY • Men’s basketball vs. Villanova in NCAA Tournament in Louisville, Ky., 7:49 p.m. • Rowing vs. Drake • Soccer vs. FC Kansas City, noon • Baseball vs. West Virginia, 2 p.m. SUNDAY • Baseball vs. West Virginia, 1 p.m.

Rockets 112, Raptors 109 Houston — James Harden had his third triple-double this season with 32 points, 13 assists and 11 rebounds to help Houston snap a three-game skid with a victory over Toronto. Houston squandered a double-digit lead early but opened the fourth quarter with a big run to take control. Patrick Patterson scored five quick points to get Toronto within 110-107 with 10.1 seconds remaining, but Trevor Ariza made two free throws after that to secure the win. It’s Toronto’s second straight loss overall and its ninth loss in a row in Houston, where the Raptors haven’t won since 2007.

CHARLOTTE (105) Batum 4-12 1-1 10, Williams 2-6 3-3 7, Zeller 4-5 0-0 8, Walker 9-18 5-5 29, Lee 3-6 0-0 8, Jefferson 4-12 0-0 8, Lin 2-11 0-0 4, Kaminsky 1-3 0-0 3, Lamb 3-6 3-6 11, Daniels 1-5 1-1 4, Hawes 2-6 0-0 5, Hansbrough 1-2 3-4 5, Gutierrez 1-1 1-2 3. Totals 37-93 17-22 105. DETROIT (112) Harris 1-7 5-5 7, Morris 8-14 1-3 20, Drummond 9-14 0-2 18, Jackson 6-19 5-5 17, Caldwell-Pope TODAY 8-13 3-4 21, Tolliver 4-9 0-0 11, Johnson 1-4 0-0 2, Blake 0-3 0-0 0, Baynes 5-8 6-7 16, Bullock 0-0 • Baseball at Branson (Mo.), 10 a.m. 0-0 0. Totals 42-91 20-26 112. Charlotte 24 32 20 29—105 AL EAST Detroit 36 36 26 14—112 Three-Point Goals-Charlotte 14-30 (Walker 6-9, Lamb 2-3, Lee 2-4, Hawes 1-1, Kaminsky 1-2, Batum 1-3, Daniels 1-3, Williams 0-2, Lin BOSTON RED SOX NEW YORK YANKEES TAMPA BAY RAYS BALTIMORE ORIOLES TORONTO BLUE JAYS TODAY 0-3), Detroit 8-30 (Morris 3-7, Tolliver 3-7, Caldwell-Pope 2-4, Johnson 0-1, Blake 0-2, AL CENTRAL Harris 0-4, Jackson 0-5). Rebounds-Charlotte College Basketball Time Net Cable 47 (Batum, Jefferson 7), Detroit 69 (Drummond 14). Assists-Charlotte 24 (Batum 7), Detroit 22 Linc. Mem. v. August. 2 p.m. CBS 5, 13, (Jackson 7). Total Fouls-Charlotte 21, Detroit 205,213 22.CHICAGO Technicals-Detroit defensive three second. DETROIT TIGERS MINNESOTA TWINS WHITE SOX KANSAS CITY ROYALS CLEVELAND INDIANS A-17,209 (22,076). Oklahoma v. Oregon 5 p.m. CBS 5, 13,

STANDINGS

The Associated Press

MINNESOTA (132) Wiggins 4-14 8-8 16, Dieng 8-11 1-1 18, Towns 12-21 2-2 27, Rubio 4-12 4-4 13, LaVine 10-17 0-0 25, Jones 3-6 2-2 8, Muhammad 2-4 2-2 6, Bjelica 4-5 2-2 10, Prince 2-3 0-0 4, Smith 2-3 1-1 5. Totals 51-96 22-22 132. WASHINGTON (129) Porter 6-13 0-0 14, Morris 2-4 2-2 7, Gortat 8-11 3-8 19, Wall 8-22 3-3 22, Beal 9-18 4-4 26, Thornton 1-3 1-2 3, Nene 8-12 3-4 19, Dudley 4-8 0-0 10, Temple 1-3 0-0 3, Sessions 3-6 0-0 6. Totals 50-100 16-23 129. Minnesota 27 35 23 24 12 11—132 Washington 29 33 27 20 12 8— 129 Three-Point Goals-Minnesota 8-26 (LaVine 5-9, Towns 1-2, Dieng 1-2, Rubio 1-5, Jones 0-1, Bjelica 0-1, Prince 0-1, Muhammad 0-1, Wiggins 0-4), Washington 13-29 (Beal 4-7, Wall 3-7, Porter 2-3, Dudley 2-5, Morris 1-1, Temple 1-3, Nene 0-1, Thornton 0-2). Rebounds-Minnesota 46 (Towns 10), Washington 56 (Gortat 14). Assists-Minnesota 33 (Rubio 7), Washington 37 (Wall 16). Total Fouls-Minnesota 22, Washington 22. Technicals-Minnesota defensive three second. A-20,356 (20,308).

EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W L Pct GB x-Toronto 48 23 .676 — Boston 42 30 .583 6½ New York 30 43 .411 19 Brooklyn 20 51 .282 28 Philadelphia 9 63 .125 39½ Southeast Division W L Pct GB Atlanta 43 30 .589 — Miami 42 30 .583 ½ Charlotte 41 31 .569 1½ Washington 35 37 .486 7½ Orlando 29 43 .403 13½ Central Division W L Pct GB y-Cleveland 51 21 .708 — Indiana 38 33 .535 12½ Detroit 39 34 .534 12½ Chicago 36 35 .507 14½ Milwaukee 30 43 .411 21½ WESTERN CONFERENCE AL WEST Southwest Division 205,213 W L Pct GB Alex Brandon/AP Photo y-San Antonio 61 11 .847 — Heat 108, Magic 97 Villanova v. Kansas 7:30p.m. CBS 5, 13, MINNESOTA GUARD ANDREW Memphis 41 32 .562 20½ Miami — Hassan Whiteside 205,213 Houston 36 37 .493 25½ WIGGINS (22) TRIES TO KEEP THE LOS ANGELES ANGELS OAKLAND ATHLETICS SEATTLE MARINERS TEXAS RANGERS OF ANAHEIM 26 points, grabbed 12 rescored Dallas 35 37 .486 26 BALL from Washington guard John New Orleans 26 45 .366 34½ bounds and blocked five shots Women’s Basketball Time Net Cable Northwest Division Wall during the Timberwolves’ These logos are provided to you for use in an editorial news context only. MLB AL LOGOS 032712: 2012 American Other uses, including as a linking device on a Web site, or in an League team logos;past stand-alone; Orlando. various to lead Miami W L Pct GB advertising or promotional piece, may violate this entity’s trademark or sizes; staff; ETA 4 p.m. Miss. St.may v.p.m. UConn 10:30a.m. ESPN 33, 233 132-129, double-overtime win LOGOS AFC TEAM 081312:City Helmet and team logos staff; ETA other intellectual property rights, and 5 violate your agreement with AP. y-Oklahoma 50 22 .694 for—the AFC teams; various sizes; stand-alone; ORLANDO (97) Portland 37 36 .507 13½ Friday in Washington. UCLA v. Texas 12:30p.m. ESPN 33, 233 Fournier 6-17 7-8 20, Gordon 2-7 0-0 4, Utah 35 37 .486 15 3 p.m. ESPN 33, 233 Dedmon 3-7 4-5 10, Payton 6-9 2-4 14, Hezonja Florida St. v. Baylor Denver 31 42 .425 19½ 4-11 0-0 8, Smith 3-10 2-2 8, Jennings 2-7 2-5 8, DaPaul v. Oregon St. 5 p.m. ESPN 33, 233 Minnesota 24 48 .333 26 Watson 1-2 0-0 3, Marble 0-1 0-0 0, Nicholson Pacific Division 8-12 1-1 19, Napier 1-1 1-3 3. Totals 36-84 W L Pct GB 19-28 97. y-Golden State 65 7 .903 — Baseball Time Net Cable MIAMI (108) L.A. Clippers 44 27 .620 20½ J.Johnson 2-6 0-0 4, Deng 4-13 2-2 10, Sacramento 28 44 .389 37 Boston v. Baltimore noon MLB 155,242 Stoudemire 6-7 1-3 13, Dragic 9-13 3-7 22, Wade Phoenix 20 52 .278 45 Darrell Arthur, Denver 3 p.m. FSN 36, 236 2-9 7-8 11, Richardson 5-9 1-1 14, Winslow 1-6 K.C. v. Oakland L.A. Lakers 15 57 .208 50 Min: 23. Pts: 4. Reb: 3. Ast: 3. 3-5 5, Whiteside 10-15 6-7 26, Green 1-2 0-0 3, San Fran. v. Cubs x-clinched playoff spot 3 p.m. MLB 155,242 Haslem 0-0 0-0 0, McRoberts 0-0 0-0 0. Totals y-clinched division Texas v. Colorado 10p.m. MLB 155,242 40-80 23-33 108. Friday’s Games Tarik Black, L.A. Lakers Orlando 31 26 12 28 — 97 Minnesota 132, Washington 129, 2OT Miami 28 26 31 23—108 Did not play (coach’s decision) Detroit 112, Charlotte 105 Time Net Cable Three-Point Goals-Orlando 6-18 (Jennings Golf Houston 112, Toronto 109 2-4, Nicholson 2-5, Watson 1-2, Fournier Miami 108, Orlando 97 Match Play Champ. 9 a.m. Golf 156,289 Drew Gooden, Washington 1-3, Hezonja 0-2, Gordon 0-2), Miami 5-15 Atlanta 101, Milwaukee 90 (Richardson 3-5, Green 1-1, Dragic 1-3, Match Play Champ. San Antonio 110, Memphis 104 Did not play (coach’s decision) 1 p.m. NBC 14, 214 Winslow 0-1, J.Johnson 0-1, Wade 0-1, Deng Sacramento 116, Phoenix 94 0-3). Rebounds-Orlando 51 (Payton, Fournier Kia Classic 5 p.m. Golf 156,289 Golden State 128, Dallas 120 Kirk Hinrich, Atlanta 7), Miami 56 (Deng 13). Assists-Orlando 20 Denver 116, L.A. Lakers 105 (Payton 7), Miami 23 (Dragic 8). Total FoulsToday’s Games Did not play (coach’s decision) Time Net Cable Orlando 24, Miami 20. Technicals-Stoudemire, Soccer Indiana at Brooklyn, 5 p.m. Wade. A-19,918 (19,600). Toronto at New Orleans, 6 p.m. Germany v. England 2:30p.m. ESPN2 34, 234 Ben McLemore, Sacramento Chicago at Orlando, 6 p.m. Atlanta at Detroit, 6:30 p.m. Did not play (coach’s decision) Cleveland at New York, 6:30 p.m. Hawks 101, Bucks 90 College Baseball Time Net Cable Utah at Minnesota, 7 p.m. Atlanta — Atlanta overSan Antonio at Oklahoma City, 7 p.m. Marcus Morris, Detroit TCU v. Texas 2:30p.m. FS1 150,227 Charlotte at Milwaukee, 7:30 p.m. came poor three-point shootMin: 35. Pts: 20. Reb: 7. Ast: 0. Boston at Phoenix, 9 p.m. Vanderbilt v. Missouri 5 p.m. SEC 157 ing to beat Milwaukee. Philadelphia at Portland, 9 p.m.

FREE STATE HIGH WEST

SOUTH

SPORTS ON TV

How former Jayhawks fared

Markieff Morris, Washington Min: 10. Pts: 7. Reb: 3. Ast: 0.

Kelly Oubre Jr., Washington Did not play (coach’s decision) Brandon Rush, Golden State Min: 16. Pts: 0. Reb: 3. Ast: 1. Andrew Wiggins, Minnesota Min: 32. Pts: 16. Reb: 7. Ast: 3. TORONTO (109) Scola 6-11 0-0 16, DeRozan 6-13 5-6 18, Valanciunas 6-15 4-6 16, Lowry 4-19 4-9 15, Powell 5-13 0-0 13, Biyombo 2-3 2-2 6, Patterson 5-7 1-1 11, Joseph 4-10 2-2 12, Johnson 1-3 0-0 2. Totals 39-94 18-26 109. HOUSTON (112) Ariza 1-8 3-3 6, Motiejunas 5-8 0-0 11, Howard 1-2 0-5 2, Beverley 6-10 0-0 17, Harden 11-22 7-10 32, Beasley 9-12 3-6 21, Terry 2-7 0-0 5, Capela 3-7 2-8 8, Brewer 4-5 1-3 10. Totals 42-81 16-35 112. Toronto 21 37 20 31—109 Houston 29 25 25 33—112 Three-Point Goals-Toronto 13-31 (Scola 4-6, Powell 3-6, Lowry 3-10, Joseph 2-4, DeRozan 1-2, Johnson 0-1, Patterson 0-2), Houston 12-22 (Beverley 5-7, Harden 3-7, Motiejunas 1-1, Brewer 1-1, Terry 1-2, Ariza 1-4). Fouled Out-Valanciunas, Howard. Rebounds-Toronto 58 (Valanciunas 18), Houston 63 (Harden 11). Assists-Toronto 23 (Lowry 8), Houston 25 (Harden 13). Total Fouls-Toronto 24, Houston 23. Technicals-DeRozan 2, Lowry 2. EjectedDeRozan, Lowry. A-18,230 (18,023).

Spurs 110, Grizzlies 104 San Antonio — LaMarcus Aldridge had 32 points and 12 rebounds, and San Antonio beat similarly short-handed Memphis to match the best home start in league history with its 37th victory in a row. San Antonio’s streak tied the mark set by the 1995-96 Bulls

MEMPHIS (104) Barnes 5-10 2-2 14, J.Green 10-18 0-0 20, Andersen 6-10 0-0 13, Farmar 4-7 2-2 11, Allen 3-6 2-4 9, McCallum 3-10 0-0 7, Carter 4-6 2-2 10, Hollins 0-0 0-0 0, Stephenson 8-15 0-1 17, J.Martin 1-1 1-2 3, Munford 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 44-83 9-13 104. SAN ANTONIO (110) Anderson 3-5 0-0 6, Duncan 6-8 0-1 12, Aldridge 12-16 8-9 32, Parker 5-11 4-4 14, K.Martin 4-13 2-2 13, Ginobili 5-7 0-0 13, West 4-5 0-0 8, Miller 2-4 0-0 4, Simmons 3-7 1-2 8, Bonner 0-1 0-0 0, Marjanovic 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 44-77 15-18 110. Memphis 23 28 33 20—104 San Antonio 37 27 24 22—110 Three-Point Goals-Memphis 7-18 (Barnes 2-5, Allen 1-1, Farmar 1-2, Stephenson 1-2, Andersen 1-2, McCallum 1-3, J.Green 0-1, Carter 0-2), San Antonio 7-17 (Ginobili 3-4, K.Martin 3-7, Simmons 1-2, Anderson 0-1, Parker 0-1, Miller 0-1, Bonner 0-1). Rebounds-Memphis 35 (Andersen 7), San Antonio 44 (Aldridge 12). Assists-Memphis 23 (Farmar 5), San Antonio 25 (Duncan 7). Total Fouls-Memphis 19, San Antonio 12. Technicals-San Antonio defensive three second 2. A-18,418 (18,797).

MILWAUKEE (90) Antetokounmpo 5-14 1-2 11, Parker 8-18 3-6 19, Monroe 2-7 3-6 7, Bayless 3-6 4-4 12, Middleton 4-14 2-2 10, Ennis 3-7 1-2 7, Cunningham 1-4 0-0 3, Plumlee 2-3 0-0 4, Henson 7-11 3-4 17. Totals 35-84 17-26 90. ATLANTA (101) Bazemore 4-9 1-2 9, Millsap 7-16 0-0 14, Horford 7-12 0-0 14, Teague 7-17 4-4 18, Korver 2-6 0-0 4, Humphries 3-6 4-4 11, Sefolosha 4-8 0-0 10, Hardaway Jr. 2-5 2-4 7, Schroder 3-9 3-3 9, Scott 2-9 0-0 5. Totals 41-97 14-17 101. Milwaukee 21 25 25 19 — 90 Atlanta 29 22 24 26—101 Three-Point Goals-Milwaukee 3-13 (Bayless 2-4, Cunningham 1-2, Ennis 0-1, Antetokounmpo 0-1, Parker 0-1, Middleton 0-4), Atlanta 5-32 (Sefolosha 2-5, Humphries 1-3, Hardaway Jr. 1-4, Scott 1-5, Bazemore 0-1, Millsap 0-1, Horford 0-1, Schroder 0-3, Korver 0-4, Teague 0-5). Rebounds-Milwaukee 61 (Henson 10), Atlanta 56 (Millsap 13). AssistsMilwaukee 16 (Antetokounmpo 4), Atlanta 26 (Teague 6). Total Fouls-Milwaukee 16, Atlanta 21. A-17,070 (18,729).

COLLEGE BASKETBALL

Stanford hires Haase Stanford, Calif. — Stanford hired University of Alabama at Birmingham coach Jerod Haase as its new basketball coach Friday, a week and a half after firing eighthyear coach Johnny Dawkins. Athletic director Bernard Muir is determined to return the Cardinal to being a regular NCAA Tournament contender as the program was under longtime coach Mike Montgomery over nearly two decades. Haase will be formally introduced Monday on The Farm. The 41-year-old Haase is returning to his Northern California roots to coach Stanford. He was born in South Lake Tahoe and even spent the 1992-93 season at rival California before transferring to Kansas University, where he played for coach Roy Williams and later coached under him for 13 years with the Jayhawks and at North Carolina. His UAB team reached the NCAA Tournament last year then lost in the first round of the NIT at BYU this season.

Georgia Tech fires Gregory Atlanta — Georgia Tech fired men’s basketball coach Brian Gregory on Friday, less than 48 hours after another disap-

College Softball

Time

Net Cable

Florida v. LSU Kentucky v. Arkansas UMKC v. Oklahoma Texas v. Baylor

11 a.m. ESPN2 34, 234 noon SEC 157 2:30p.m. FCSC 145 8 p.m. ESPN2 34, 234

College Hockey

Time

Ferris St. v. St. Cloud RIT v. Quinnipiac NCAA Tournament Boston U. v. Denver NCAA Tournament

2 p.m. ESPNN 140,231 3 p.m. ESPNU 35, 235 5 p.m. ESPN2 34, 234 5:30p.m. ESPNU 35, 235 8 p.m. ESPNU 35, 235

Net Cable

SUNDAY College Basketball

Time

Net Cable

Kings 116, Suns 94 Sacramento, Calif. — DeMarcus Cousins had 29 points and 11 rebounds, and Sacra- Women’s Basketball Time Net Cable Pistons 112, Hornets 105 mento beat Phoenix. NCAA Tournament 11 a.m. ESPN 33, 233 Auburn Hills, Mich. — MarNCAA Tournament 7:30p.m. ESPN 33, 233 cus Morris and the Detroit PHOENIX (94) 2-4 0-0 4, Leuer 3-7 0-0 7, Len 4-13 Pistons are on quite a roll of- 6-8Tucker 14, Booker 11-21 2-4 26, Jenkins 4-10 0-0 11, fensively, and each win moves Williams 2-3 2-4 6, Teletovic 5-16 0-0 12, Price Baseball Time Net Cable 2-2 7, Budinger 2-7 2-2 6, Goodwin 0-7 1-3 1. them another step closer to a 2-6 Totals 35-94 15-23 94. Minn. v. Yankees noon MLB 155,242 playoff spot. SACRAMENTO (116) Gay 5-10 3-6 15, Acy 4-9 4-4 14, Cousins Cincinnati v. Dodgers 3 p.m. MLB 155,242 Morris scored 20 points, and 9-18 10-14 29, Rondo 1-2 0-0 2, Curry 4-10 the Pistons overwhelmed Char- 2-2 12, Cauley-Stein 11-19 4-6 26, Casspi 1-7 Time Net Cable lotte with their highest-scoring 5-6 7, Collison 5-10 1-1 11, Belinelli 0-3 0-0 0, Golf Anderson 0-2 0-0 0. Totals 40-90 29-39 116. first half of the season en route Phoenix Match Play Champ. 9 a.m. Golf 156,289 27 21 19 27 — 94 25 33 31 27—116 to a 112-105 win over the Hor- Sacramento Kia Classic 5 p.m. Golf 156,289 Three-Point Goals-Phoenix 9-32 (Jenkins 3-3, nets on Friday night. Detroit Booker 2-8, Teletovic 2-9, Leuer 1-2, Price led 72-56 after two quarters 1-3, Tucker 0-1, Budinger 0-2, Goodwin 0-4), College Baseball Time Net Cable 7-22 (Gay 2-3, Curry 2-5, Acy and won its fifth straight game, Sacramento 2-5, Cousins 1-3, Anderson 0-1, Casspi 0-1, N’western v. Ohio St. 11 a.m. BTN 147,237 taking a two-game lead over Belinelli 0-1, Collison 0-1, Cauley-Stein 0-2). 64 (Jenkins, Tucker 8), Vanderbilt v. Missouri noon SEC 157 Chicago for the eighth and fi- Rebounds-Phoenix Sacramento 63 (Cousins 11). Assists-Phoenix nal playoff spot in the Eastern 20 (Price 5), Sacramento 28 (Rondo 12). Total Tennessee v. Alabama 3 p.m. SEC 157 Fouls-Phoenix 27, Sacramento 22. TechnicalsConference. Booker. A-17,317 (17,317).

pointing season ended in the NIT. The move was announced by athletic director Mike Bobinski, who had said a year ago the Yellow Jackets would need to show significant signs of improvement for Gregory to keep his job. While Georgia Tech made the postseason for the first time in Gregory’s five seasons as coach, that wasn’t enough. The Yellow Jackets won a pair of NIT games before losing at San Diego State 72-56 on Wednesday night. Gregory was dismissed after posting an overall record of 76-86, which included a dismal 27-61 mark in the Atlantic Coast Conference. He built this season’s roster heavily around transfers but fell short the NCAA Tournament spot that might have saved his job. “It’s hard to deny that would have given us a different thought,” Bobinski said in a news conference.

Cronin says no to UNLV Cincinnati — Coach Mick Cronin is staying at Cincinnati after considering the coaching job at UNLV this week. Cronin finished his 10th season with the Bearcats, who lost in the first round of the NCAA Tournament, and had discussions with UNLV about its opening. Cronin said in a

LJWorld.com/highschool • Facebook.com/LJWorldpreps • Twitter.com/LJWpreps

Tennessee v. Alabama 8 p.m. SEC 157

Virginia v. Syracuse 5 p.m. TBS 51, 251 N. Dame v. N. Carolina 7:30p.m. TBS 51, 251

BRIEFLY

HIGH SCHOOLS HUB:

SPORTS CALENDAR

KANSAS UNIVERSITY

NBA roundup Timberwolves 132, Wizards 129, 2OT Washington — Karl-Anthony Towns scored 27 points and grabbed 10 rebounds, and Minnesota dealt a blow to Washington’s playoff hopes with a double-overtime victory Friday night. Zach LaVine added 25 points, and Gorgui Dieng scored 18 while helping the Timberwolves to comebacks at the end of regulation and the second overtime. Bradley Beal scored 26 points as the 10th-place Wizards fell 31⁄2 games behind Detroit for the Eastern Conference’s eighth and final playoff spot. John Wall had 22 points and a season-high tying 16 assists, and Marcin Gortat had 19 points and 14 rebounds for Washington. But Gortat missed a pair of free throws with a chance to take the lead late in the second overtime. Minnesota hit all 22 of its foul shots for its first back-toback wins since Feb. 3 and 6. Down five in the second overtime, Andrew Wiggins hit a putback, and Dieng made a pair of jumpers, the second off LaVine’s pass to put Minnesota up 130-129. After Jared Dudley missed a three-pointer for Washington, Dieng fouled Gortat on the rebound. But Gortat, who entered the game shooting 72.4 percent from the line, missed both foul shots. Warriors’ forward Markief Morris left following the first quarter due to a left calf cramp.

NORTH TWO-DAY

College Hockey

Time

NCAA Tournament NCAA Tournament

4 p.m. ESPNU 35, 235 6:30p.m. ESPNU 35, 235

Net Cable

Pro Hockey

Time

Net Cable

Pittsburgh v. Rangers 6:30p.m. NBCSP 38, 238

statement Friday that he wanted to evaluate his career and his life, and he decided to stay with the Bearcats. LATEST LINE The Cincinnati native dug his alma mater out of a mess following Bob Huggins’ oustCOLLEGE BASKETBALL er. The Bearcats are 207-129 under Cronin, Favorite.............. Points (O/U)...........Underdog who has been pushing for an upgrade in their NCAA Tournament KFC Yum Center-Louisville, KY. on-campus arena. The school just completed South Regional Final an overhaul of its football stadium.

NBA

Milt Newton’s job safe for now Minneapolis — Minnesota Timberwolves owner Glenn Taylor says he plans to keep general manager Milt Newton on through the draft and free agency to evaluate him fully. Taylor has said all year long that he wanted to give Newton and coach Sam Mitchell the full season before deciding whether to bring them back. Both have been doing their jobs on an interim basis after the death of Flip Saunders in October. Taylor said Friday he cannot fully evaluate the job that Newton has done until he goes through the process of drafting players and signing free agents. Once that is over, this summer, Taylor will sit down with Newton to make a final decision.

Kansas...................21⁄2 (145)..............Villanova NCAA Tournament Honda Center-Anaheim. CA. West Regional Final Oregon.............. Pick’em (151.5).........Oklahoma Sunday, March 27th. College Insider Tournament Semifinals COLUMBIA........................10 (144)...................................Njit Cal Irvine........................21⁄2 (135)...... COAST CAROLINA NBA Favorite.............. Points (O/U)...........Underdog Indiana...............................6 (201)..................... BROOKLYN Toronto............................ 9 (203)............. NEW ORLEANS Chicago.............................3 (212)........................ORLANDO DETROIT........................... 1 (203.5)..........................Atlanta Cleveland......................... 8 (203).....................NEW YORK Utah................................51⁄2 (196.5)................MINNESOTA OKLAHOMA CITY..........51⁄2 (205)...............San Antonio Charlotte......................21⁄2 (204.5).............. MILWAUKEE Boston.............................81⁄2 (216)....................... PHOENIX PORTLAND........................13 (217).................Philadelphia Home Team in CAPS (c) TRIBUNE CONTENT AGENCY, LLC

THE LATEST ON KU ATHLETICS

REPORTING SCORES?

Twitter.com/KUsports • Facebook.com/KUsportsdotcom

Call 832-7147, email sportsdesk@ljworld.com or fax 843-4512


LOCAL

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Saturday, March 26, 2016

| 3D

Krauth sparkles, but KU tumbles J-W Staff Reports

Three West Virginia pitchers scattered seven hits, but no runs. Winner Chad Donato (1-2) allowed five hits, with a walk and five strikeouts, over seven shutout innings. “You are not going to get 14 or 15 hits on Friday night in our conference. The caliber of pitching is way too good,” Price said. “Donato has been a quality guy for them for three straight years. He was really good again tonight. He beat us with one pitch. That was the most disappointing thing for me tonight was we were not able to be on time and take his fastball away and make him mix his pitches.” Colby Wright went 2-for-3 for Kansas (7-12, 0-1). The series will resume at 2 p.m. today.

Ben Krauth allowed just three hits and struck out a career-best 12, but Kansas University’s offense couldn’t support him in a 1-0 Big 12 baseball loss to West Virginia on Friday at Hoglund Ballpark. WVU (11-8 overall, 1-3 Big 12) pushed across the only run in the second, on an RBI single from Jimmy Galusky. Before — and after — that, it was all zeros for both teams. Krauth (1-4) was charged with the lone run. He walked four in eight innings. In his last three outings, Krauth has thrown 25 innings, given up three runs and struck John Young/Journal-World Photo out 30 batters. LAWRENCE HIGH SENIOR AUDRINA HIDALGO (10) PUTS A TAG on Topeka Seaman senior Lesly Munoz at third base for an “As the season has out Friday at LHS. The Lions dropped a doubleheader, 16-0 and 12-0. gone on, Krauth’s fastball command has gotten better,” KU coach Ritch Price said. “When he can command his fastball, W.Va. 010 000 000 — 1 4 0 his change-up becomes Kansas 000 000 000 — 0 7 1 W — Chad Donato deadly. It then makes his Save — Blake Smith (3).(1-2). L — Ben Krauth (1-4). fastball seem faster. He KU highlights: Colby Wright 2-for-3; Joe Moroney TJ Martin 1-for-1; Owen Taylor 1-for-3; Devin is in a really good groove 2-for-4; Foyle 1-for-4; Krauth struck out 12, allowed 3 hits By Bobby Nightengale “I’m telling you, they rule, but took different frame, then hit a threein 8 innings. right now.” bnightengale@ljworld.com paths to get there. In the run double when the bat- both impressed me. first game, the Lions (0-2) ting order came around They weren’t scared,” Lawrence High softball struggled to make con- again. Tarbutton said of the coach Joe Dee Tarbut- tact against Seaman se“Kampbell “Defensively, we’ve freshmen. ton knew his team would nior right-hander Hailey been looking really good had a great game. She alhave a tough time against Reed, who has signed to in practice,” Tarbutton ways has a real smooth one of the top teams in play at the University of said. “I know it was a little swing and good glove. the state, Topeka Sea- Pacific. windy in that first game, A little short for a first man. He just wishes his LHS senior shortstop but we were kind of sur- baseman, but she does a squad could’ve made it Sophie Taylor, a North- prised with our defense. great job over there for tougher on the Vikings. ern Colorado signee, hit But they hit the crud out us.” Scottsdale, Ariz. (ap) BOX SCORE The Lions were swept a leadoff triple into the of the ball.” It was a disappointing — Johnny Cueto pitched and held scoreless in right-field gap in the first The Lions cleaned up start to the season for the six innings and singled Giants 8, Royals 5 their season opener on inning, but couldn’t ad- their defense in the night- Lions, but they are still City San Francisco against his former team, Kansas ab r h bi ab r h bi Friday, losing 16-0 in the vance when Reed struck cap with a few strong confident in their future. Mondesi ss 5 0 0 0 Span cf 4 0 1 2 and Brandon Belt hit a H.Arteaga ss 0 0 0 0 B.Bednar ss 1 0 1 1 first game and 12-0 in the out two and forced a pop stops at third base by “We’re content right three-run homer as the Infante 2b 4 2 3 0 Panik 2b 3 0 0 0 nightcap, paying the price out on a bunt. senior Audrina Hidalgo now because we feel the 2b 1 0 0 0 Hinojosa 2b 0 0 0 0 San Francisco Giants beat C.Colon L.Cain cf 3 0 1 0 Pagan lf 3 1 0 0 for every error and runThe Lions only had and a double play turned athletic ability we’ve got, 2 0 0 0 R.Jebavy cf 1 0 0 0 the Kansas City Royals, L.Moon cf ner left on base. two more base-runners by Taylor, junior Annie we can build on it,” TarHosmer 1b 3 0 1 0 Belt 1b 4 1 1 3 8-5, on Friday. C.Decker 1b 2 1 1 2 Parker rf 3 1 1 0 In last year’s season for the rest of the game — Grammer and senior Am- button said. rf 4 0 1 1 J.Fargas rf 0 0 0 0 Conor Gillaspie also Orlando A.Franco 3b 1 0 0 0 T.Brown c 3 0 1 1 opener against Seaman, a single by Taylor in the ber Flummerfelt. The Lions will play homered, Denard Span Fuentes lf 4 1 1 0 Olivo c 1 0 0 0 the Lions were outscored third inning, and junior The problem was a host to Leavenworth at Gore lf 0 0 0 0 Gillaspie 3b 2 2 1 1 drove in a pair of runs, Snider dh 4 1 2 2 R.Jones 3b 1 0 0 0 by 26 runs in the double- Sydney O’Brien reached couple of long rallies 5:30 p.m. Tuesday. and catching prospect Barmes 3b 2 0 1 0 Adrianza ss 3 1 2 0 header. on an error in the fourth. from the Seaman lineup, rf 1 0 1 0 J.Arenado 1b 1 0 0 0 Trevor Brown added a W.Merrifield T.Cruz c 4 0 0 0 Kottaras dh 2 1 1 0 Topeka Seaman 16-12, “Seaman is 5A, but I’d Reed, who has a 32-5 re- giving up seven runs in Hernandez lf 2 1 2 0 run-scoring double. Totals 40 5 12 5 Totals 34 8 11 8 put them in the top three, cord in her career, struck the third inning and five Lawrence 0-0 Travis Snider and Cory Kansas City 020 010 200—5 Game 1 easy, in 5A and 6A,” Tar- out 11 in six innings. runs in the fifth. San Francisco (ss) 014 002 01x—8 Seaman 323 017 — 16 14 1 Decker each hit a twoE-Panik (1). DP-San Francisco 1. LOB-Kansas City 000 000 — 0 2 6 button said. “We knew Meanwhile, LawAt the plate, the Lions Lawrence W — Hailey Reed. L — Amber Flummerfelt (0-1). run homer, and Paulo Or- 9, San Francisco 7. 2B-Infante 2 (4), T.Brown (2), G.Hernandez (3). 3B-Fuentes (1). HR-C.Decker (3), they were going to be rence’s defense made an had seven hits in the 2B — Lauren Mills (2), Reed, Lexi Price, TS. 3B — lando drove in a run for Snider (2), Belt (5), Gillaspie (2). SB-Adrianza (1). Taylor, LHS. HR — Mills, TS. tough. We wanted to ob- uncharacteristic six er- second game and left Sophie IP H R ER BB SO LHS highlights — Taylor, 2-for-3, stolen base; the Royals. Omar Infante Kansas City viously not be that bad. rors, extending innings eight runners on base. Sydney O’Brien, 2 IP, 0 H, 1 R, 3 BB, 1 K. 4 6 5 5 2 6 went 3-for-4 and scored Kennedy L,0-2 We wanted to stay in the for a powerful lineup. Freshman Kampbell W.Davis 1 0 0 0 1 2 twice. Game 2 Soria 1 3 2 2 1 0 game, and we wanted to The Vikings (2-0) Kilburn went 3-for-3, Seaman 007 05 — 12 13 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 Ian Kennedy allowed Hochevar 000 00 — 0 7 1 Duensing 1 2 1 1 1 0 get some better swings scored seven runs in the including a double, and Lawrence W — Erin Boyd. L — Zoe Brewer (0-1). five runs on six hits in his San Francisco in.” sixth inning, highlighted freshman right fielder 2B — Kampbell Kilburn, LHS; Boyd, Mills, TS. Cueto W,1-2 6 8 3 3 0 6 four innings. He walked a Kontos LHS highlights — Kilburn, 3-for-3, stolen base; 1 2 2 2 0 1 Both games were by Lauren Mills, who hit Chloe Taylor hit an in- Morgan Husman, 1-for-3; Audrina Hidalgo, 1-for-2; pair and struck out six. D.Law 1 2 0 0 0 2 Chloe Taylor, 1-for-2. shortened by the mercy a solo home run in the field single. Romo S,1-1 1 0 0 0 0 3 Giants reliever Sergio HBP-by Cueto (Barmes). WP-Kennedy 2. Umpires-Home, Jim Reynolds; First, Stu Romo struck out the side Scheurwater; Second, Mike Winters; Third, Chris in the ninth. Gonzalez.

LHS softball has long day

Cueto hurts Royals with arm and bat

T-2:51. A-11,217 (12,000).

BRIEFLY

FSHS baseball blanks Ozark

Richard Gwin/Journal-World Photos

FREE STATE’S CAITLIN MCANDREW-BECKMAN clears a hurdle in the 100-yard hurdles during a track and field meet Friday at FSHS.

Ozark, Mo. — Free State High senior pitcher Trevor Munsch struck out six and gave up only two hits in six innings, propelling his baseball team to a 5-0 victory against Ozark on Friday. The Firebirds (3-0) only had four singles, but gave Munsch plenty of run support. Junior Dale Miller hit a two-run single in the fourth inning, and senior Bradley Collicott had an RBI single in the fifth. “We didn’t get a lot of hits, but we got timely hits,” FSHS coach Mike Hill said. “I thought our pitching was fantastic. Only two hits.” Junior Aaron Funk tossed a hitless seventh inning, striking out one. The Firebirds will play at Branson (Mo.) at 10 a.m. today. Free State 000 230 0 — 5 4 1 Ozark 000 000 x — 0 2 1 W — Trevor Munsch (1-0). L — Forrest Barnes. FSHS highlights — Munsch, 6 IP, 2 H, 0 R, 1 BB, 6 K; Mikey Corbett, 1-for-1, run, 2 walks, HBP; Bradley Collicott, 1-for-2, run, RBI; Zion Bowlin, 0-for-1, run, 2 walks; Dale Miller, 1-for-3, 2 RBI; Kyle Abrahamson, 1-for-3, run. FSHS record: 3-0. Next for FSHS: 10 a.m. today at Branson (Mo.).

LHS baseball falls to Seaman

LAWRENCE HIGH’S CAROLINE DYKES makes her first attempt in the girls high jump during the Free State Invitational.

Topeka — Facing one of the top pitchers in the state, Lawrence High’s baseball team only had two hits in a 7-0 loss against Topeka Seaman on Friday. Seaman senior righthander Ryan Zeferjahn,

who has signed to play at Kansas University, struck out 11 in a complete game. LHS sophomores Reese Carmona and Devin Lauts each hit a single for the Lions, and sophomore pitcher Ethan Taylor struck out two in 11⁄3 innings pitched. Lawrence High 000 000 — 0 2 3 Topeka Seaman 301 030 — 7 8 0 W — Ryan Zeferjahn (1-0). L — Daonte Lowery (0-1). Lawrence record: 0-3. Next for Lawrence: Thursday at Shawnee Mission South.

Tulsa topples KU tennis, 4-2 Tulsa, Okla. — Kansas University’s Anastasiya Rychagova won at No. 1 singles, but KU’s women’s tennis team fell to Tulsa, 4-2, on Friday in its final nonconference match of the season. KU also won the doubles point, with Maria Jose Cardona teaming with Summer Collins for a victory at No. 2, and Smith Hinton combining with Rychagova for a win at No. 3. KU fell to 12-3, and Tulsa improved to 16-2. “Today was a tough match between two solid teams,” KU coach Todd Chapman said. “I thought we just got outplayed down the stretch by a good team. We started slow in the doubles, and then raised our levels at the end. In the singles, I feel like it was the opposite.” The Jayhawks will play at TCU on Friday and at Texas Tech on April 3.

Starting time Royals: Kennedy said the biggest takeaway of the day was getting his pitch count up. “I fell behind a lot of hitters,” he said. “I was hoping to go deeper into the game, get up and down a couple more times, but I threw so many pitches early on. Even the innings I wasn’t giving up runs, I was throwing a lot of pitches.” Kennedy said his fastball command was not that far off and his changeup was pretty good. “I was barely missing and I was missing down,” Kennedy said. “With Belt, I didn’t get it quite as high as I wanted. I tried elevating that pitch, but it didn’t happen. It’s about getting ready for the season rather than focus on results.” With George Kottaras in the original lineup as designated hitter, Kennedy was surprised when Cueto came to bat in the third.

“I heard his name and turned around and saw him,” he said. “I was prepared to face Kottaras.” Giants: Cueto said he’s ready to start the regular season after throwing over 90 pitches, using everything in his repertoire. “Everything was working and I felt comfortable,” Cueto said. “My objective was to get my work done and try to throw to the inside when I want and to the outside when I want.” Cueto led off the third inning with a single to right field and had to hustle to beat a throw by Paulo Orlando. They exchanged a few lighthearted words afterward. “I had to run hard or get thrown out,” he said. “I don’t like hitting that much, but I do like moving the runner up.” Cueto said he enjoyed going up against his old teammates, too.

J-Hawk Special!

Celebrate the run in the tourney with this 2016 J-Hawk Blue Corvette for only $59,130!

MORE BUICK • CHEVROLET

888-346-5416

785-346-5417

Monday - Friday 8 am - 6 pm • Saturdays 8 am - Noon

1114 W. Hwy 24 • OSBORNE, KANSAS


KANSAS BASKETBALL

M A R C H 24

KU 79 - 63 UM FIN A L

VINTAGE 34 “All I’m trying to do is leave it all on the floor. It’s the same mindset as always. I just want to attack.” Perry Ellis on scoring 27 against Maryland

SENIOR KANSAS FORWARD PERRY ELLIS put on an offensive show against Maryland’s highly touted front line, scoring 27 points to lead the Jayhawks to a 79-63 Sweet 16 win over the Terrapins and a date with Villanova in the Elite Eight.

NICK KRUG/JOURNAL-WORLD PHOTO

“He has a chance to leave KU with a legacy that would allow him to be a hero there for a lifetime. When we got Perry, we knew he would be good. He’s done some things that have allowed him to be great. It’s so good to see kids who spent time in the program

“Perry was Perry. As he’s been playing lately ... he’s been so hot. Just being aggressive, getting fouls, knocking down shots. Getting in the lane. I feel like there wasn’t too much he couldn’t do this game.”

and (have) gone through ups and downs experience some success this time of year.”

Bill Self on Perry Ellis

Jamari Traylor on Perry Ellis vs. Maryland


6D

|

Saturday, March 26, 2016

.

VILLANOVA VS. KANSAS

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Nick Krug/Journal-World Photos

KANSAS FORWARD PERRY ELLIS, SECOND FROM RIGHT, LAUGHS AS KANSAS COACH BILL SELF, RIGHT, TALKS about what it was like recruiting Ellis during a news conference Friday in Louisville, Ky. The rest of the Jayhawks are, from far left, Devonté Graham, Frank Mason III, Wayne Selden Jr. and Landen Lucas.

Keegan CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1D

has space. If he comes up on him, he’s driving by him. Kris does the same thing.” This might be a nice time to share that the lack of self-importance on the stages from which the coaches conducted their news conferences was quite refreshing. Listen to Wright and KU’s Bill Self field questions and it’s easy to determine why they rank among the most successful coaches in college basketball. They communicate masterfully, com-

mand the attention of a room, make everyone on hand feel as if they are being treated to a one-on-one conversation. They take their answers a level or two beyond the obvious. For example, when Wright was asked what led to Jenkins’ recent torrid stretch, his answer was as counter-intuitive as it was thought-provoking. “He had always played as an overweight player, out-of-shape player,” Wright said. “And last year he cut weight, but he still didn’t know how to play like a finely conditioned player. About halfway through this year, he found his stam-

ina. He found his stride. And he played defense consistently, rebounded consistently.” Consequently, his minutes went up and so did his scoring average. Jenkins averaged 10.9 points in Villanova’s first 26 games, 19.6 points in the past 11, shooting 50 percent from three down the stretch. Jenkins said he lugged 280 pounds with him to Villanova and has shed about 40 pounds. “Both of them are going to have to chase each other, and both of them can post up,” Wright said of the matchup. “Now, Perry can post up deeper and use his size on Kris. Kris

has got like a mid-range post-up game. I think Kris might have a little bit better range that would extend Perry. I think Perry’s better driving off the dribble.” Self also called it “a key matchup. I do think they’ll guard each other a good portion of the time when they’re in there together.” Stars guarding each other isn’t that common in college basketball, but both teams have so many scorers that it makes sense just to match up based on position and size. “One of the challenges for us would be Perry getting to shooters,” Self said. “Even

though he can guard a perimeter player, he’s not used to guarding somebody that has the freedom and the ability to make hard, distant threes.” Ellis has scored at least 20 points in seven of eight games. No other remaining player in the tournament can say the same. So far, opposing coaches haven’t used junk defenses to try to slow him down, and Wright did a nice job of explaining why. “Perry Ellis, for his position, one on one, is an outstanding player,” Wright said. “But it’s not like there’s a large amount of distance between him and his team-

mates for their positions. So you just can’t do it. You’ve got to try to play him straight up. “And if you give him too much attention, they have a way of getting (Wayne) Selden going. (Devonté) Graham gets going. I mean, Graham was the MVP of the Big 12 tournament, right? So if you give (Ellis) too much attention, these guys, every one of these guys can kill you.” The same can be said of the other four Wildcats should KU attempt to pay special attention to Jenkins. The better two-way power forward tonight has a very good shot at playing in his first Final Four.

Villanova vs. Kansas Tale of the Tape Villanova Kansas 32-5....................................Record................................... 33-4 77.9............................ Average points........................... 81.9 63.8................ Opponent average points................67.7 14.1......................................Margin.................................... 14.2 .478............................FG percentage.......................... .496 .404................ Opponent FG percentage................ .397 .356.............. Three-point FG percentage.............. .422 .339....Opponent three-point FG percentage... .323 8.8....................Three-pointers per game....................8.1 7.1..........Opponent three-pointers per game........ 6.2 .779................... Free-throw percentage.................. .714 2.1..............................Rebound margin............................ 5.5 2.7........................Turnover differential.......................0.6 6.9.............................. Average steals.............................. 6.7 3.4..............................Average blocks............................. 4.2

Probable Starters

KANSAS GUARD FRANK MASON III LISTENS TO A QUESTION during a breakout interview with media members Friday.

Elite CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1D

only had official meetings with the coaches to discuss opponents’ personnel and strategy, but also regularly meet among themselves. For example, the guards on the late January trip to Iowa decided to get together as a group about a half hour before an official scouting-report meeting with coach Bill Self and his aides. “We call it ‘Guard Talk,’” sophomore Devonté Graham said of meetings that include the guards, plus forward Jamari Traylor simply because he’s roommate of guard Wayne Selden Jr., who hosts the sessions. “We get scouting reports, so we go over personnel, see what these guys like to do, make sure guys are quizzing each other on if this guy likes to go right more or left more, what’s his favorite move or things like that,” Graham added. You can bet the Jayhawks will be discussing players such as ’Nova guards Arcidiacono, Jalen Brunson and All-Big East player Josh Hart, who have led the Wildcats to three NCAA Tourney blowouts over UNC

VILLANOVA COACH JAY WRIGHT MEETS THE PRESS Friday at KFC Yum! Center. Asheville, Iowa and Miami. Villanova has made 97 of 162 shots for 59.9 percent and has 61 assists on those field goals. ’Nova has converted 33 of 62 threes for 53.2 percent. Arcidiacono is averaging 17.0 ppg off 65.4 percent shooting in the tourney. “It was Frank’s idea,” Selden said. “We do scouting report every night as a team, but the guards meet before. We do it to key in on stuff and focus even more and get more in-

depth and have everybody on the same page.” As far as Traylor’s role, Selden said: “It’s helpful for him, too, because there are times he can be guarding guards, because we’ll switch.” It’s mind-challenging work, Traylor said, indicating the only thing going on besides discussing strategy might be munching on snacks. “But it’s pretty much serious business,” he assured.

The leader of the pack, Mason, explained his role in organizing the guard meetings. “I know how important it is with it being one game at a time,” Mason said. “I decided to get the guards together an extra 15, 20 minutes before we head down to scouting report with the coaches, really go over everything and question ’em and make sure they know everything on the scouting report because they really need to know it during the game. “I wanted to make sure we know what to do so we can execute better and give ourselves the best chance to win. It’s worked for us.” There might be a slight chance Mason mentions something besides strategy during the pre-Villanova guard meeting. And also at official team meetings. Freshman Carlton Bragg Jr. said Mason and Selden have been quite vocal, especially of late. “They did get the last win,” Mason said of Villanova’s win over KU at Atlantis resort. KU leads the all-time series 3-2, including a 72-57 win in the 2008 Sweet 16 in Detroit. “I think our guys take pride in winning games. We want to come out more focused and give us every chance to win the game.”

VILLANOVA (32-5) F — Kris Jenkins (6-6, Jr.) F — Daniel Ochefu (6-11, Sr.) G — Josh Hart (6-5, Jr.) G — Ryan Arcidiacono (6-3, Sr.) G — Jalen Brunson (6-2, Fr.)

KANSAS (33-4) F — Perry Ellis (6-8, Sr.) F — Landen Lucas (610, Jr.) G — Frank Mason III (5-11, Jr.) G — Wayne Selden Jr. (6-5, Jr.) G — Devonté Graham (6-2, Soph.)

Tipoff: Approximately 7:49 p.m. today, KFC Yum! Center, Louisville, Ky. TV: CBS (WOW! Cable channels 5, 13, 205, 213)

Rosters VILLANOVA 0 — Henry Lowe, 5-11, 185, Sr., G, New York. 1 — Jalen Brunson, 6-2, 199, Fr., G, Lincolnshire, Ill. 2 — Kris Jenkins, 6-6, 240, Jr., F, Upper Marlboro, Md. 3 — Josh Hart, 6-5, 205, Jr., G, Silver Spring, Md. 4 — Eric Paschall, 6-7, 260, Fr., F, Dobbs Ferry, N.Y. 5 — Phil Booth, 6-3, 185, Soph., G, Baltimore. 10 — Donte DiVincenzo, 6-5, 200, Fr., G, Wilmington, Del. 15 — Ryan Arcidiacono, 6-3, 195, Sr., G, Langhorne, Pa. 20 — Patrick Farrell, 6-5, 200, Sr., F, Rockville Centre, N.Y. 23 — Daniel Ochefu, 6-11, 245, Sr., F, Baltimore. 25 — Mikal Bridges, 6-7, 191, Fr., G/F, Malvern, Pa. 34 — Tim Delaney, 6-8, 230, Fr., F, Mullica Hill, N.J. 45 — Darryl Reynolds, 6-8, 225, Jr., F, Philadelphia. 52 — Kevin Rafferty, 6-8, 215, Sr., F, Malvern, Pa. Head coach: Jay Wright. Assistants: Baker Dunleavy, Ashley Howard, Kyle Neptune.

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


VILLANOVA VS. KANSAS

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Saturday, March 26, 2016

| 7D

Nick Krug/Journal-World Photos

THE VILLANOVA STARTERS, FROM LEFT, JALEN BRUNSON, KRIS JENKINS, JOSH HART, Daniel Ochefu and Ryan Arcidiacono, sit with coach Jay Wright as they wait for questions Friday in Louisville, Ky. ’Nova will meet Kansas University in an Elite Eight game at 7:49 tonight.

Three matchup: efficiency vs. volume By Matt Tait mtait@ljworld.com

Louisville, Ky. — Even with second-seeded Villanova shooting a red-hot 53 percent in this year’s NCAA Tournament — including a 10-of-15 clip in Thursday’s Sweet 16 victory over Miami — topseeded Kansas University enters tonight’s Elite Eight showdown with significantly better threepoint statistics. The Jayhawks, after rolling to a 33-4 record and their first trip to the Elite Eight since 2012, enter tonight’s game shooting .422 from three-point range and are on the verge of breaking KU’s single-season record for three-point attempts. KU, which has hit 298 of 706 shots from threepoint range this season, needs to hoist just five three-pointers against Villanova — 7:49 p.m. tipoff on CBS — to top the record of 710 attempts set by the 2010-11 team. The 298 makes, which ranks 29th nationally, already are 27 more threes than

any KU team has made in a season. Those numbers, while important by Kansas standards, merely represent a cute little story through the eyes of a Villanova team that has attempted a school-record-shattering 909 threes (10th nationally) — but made just 26 more than Kansas for a .356 percentage — heading into tonight’s do-ordie game against the Jayhawks (33-4). A big reason the Wildcats (32-5) have spent the season launching more three-pointers than ever before is coach Jay Wright’s philosophy on the three-point shot. “We have a saying, ‘Shoot ’em up and sleep in the streets,’” began Wright of a phrase from an old NBA sharpshooter that he once read in a book. “The concept is, to be a great shooter, you have to be willing to keep shooting, even on a night, when, if you don’t make them, no one’s going to let you come into their house. They’re going to make you sleep in

the streets, you were so bad. If you’re going to be a great shooter, you can’t fear sleeping in the streets. We talk about that all the time.” This season, five Villanova players shot at least 118 three-pointers, and that fivesome’s 297 makes were just one fewer than the entire Kansas team. Few three-point shots represent a bad look in the eyes of the Wildcats, even those that come from 35 feet and touch nothing but net — like the shot junior forward Kris Jenkins drilled against Miami on Thursday night, one of his five three-point makes in six attempts in the Wildcats’ most recent victory. “Whether I shoot bad or whether I have a great shooting game, I always believe the next one’s going in,” Jenkins said. That is the idea, according to Wright. “I want our players to have the confidence,” he said. “If you’re going to have a game where you shoot 8-for-11, you can’t be afraid to have that game

where you shoot 1-for-11. If your coach doesn’t let you do it, you’re never going to have that 8-for-11 game. That’s our theory.” Kansas coach Bill Self has a much different approach to the three-point shot, even if this year’s numbers indicate at least a temporary warming to the idea of more bombs. “Making jump shots all the time and not playing through the post some or driving the ball can be fool’s gold,” Self reiterated. “… that can’t be all you rely on.” Kansas certainly has not leaned too heavily on the three-point shot during its current tournament run. KU has attempted just 41 threes in three games — compared to 62 for Villanova — and took just nine in Thursday’s win over Maryland. So it’ll be high efficiency versus high volume behind the arc when the Jayhawks and Wildcats meet tonight. As for which team stands a better chance of slowing down the hot

shooters that will fill the floor, the numbers show Kansas with a slight edge. The Jayhawks rank 63rd in three-point defense (.323), and Villanova ranks 139th (.339). Those numbers, though, are the accumulation of a 37-game season, which Villanova guard Josh Hart said is not what matters tonight. “That’s the thing about the tournament,” Hart began. “A lot of times it’s who’s hot. And we’re hot right now... I think we can sustain it and make a little bit further of a run.”

Ali-Frazier As a loud and proud Philadelphia guy coaching in the hometown of Muhammad Ali, Wright was asked Friday for his preference in the classic bouts between legendary boxers Ali and Phily’s Joe Frazier. “Wow,” Wright said. “I was hoping no one would ever ask me that here. I’m a Phily guy. I was always Joe Frazier, with great respect for Muhammad Ali and everything he’s done

outside of boxing. We’ve quoted him. But in Phily, Smokin’ Joe is the man. The underdog. The fighter. The Rocky. We love Smokin’ Joe.”

Recovering respect In the tumultuous days of conference realignment, few conferences took as big of a blow as the Big East, which lost several core schools and had to move forward reinventing itself in the shadows of its once dominant days. Wright was asked if getting Villanova to the Final Four would be a huge lift for the new-look Big East. “My first responsibility is to these guys,” Wright said of his current players. “I really would love to see these guys play in the Final Four. As far as the Big East is concerned, that would be a by-product of watching these guys be really successful. We’re a new league. So if we can do that for the league, I do think it would help our respect level. And if we can be a part of that, I’d be really proud to do that.”

NOTEBOOK

KU’s Graham says he’s over cramps monitor to make sure the shot counted. Mason said he didn’t mean to commit an unsportsmanlike act. “I thought the game was over. I just threw it up there,” Mason said. Some thought Mason actually could have been called for traveling before flipping up the final shot with his left hand.

By Gary Bedore gbedore@ljworld.com

Louisville, Ky. — Kansas University sophomore guard Devonté Graham thinks he’s over the bout of the cramps that affected him in the second half of Thursday’s Sweet 16 victory over Maryland. “This morning they monitored what I was eating, making sure I got a lot of carbs and calories in me,” said Graham, who, for some reason, “kind of didn’t have an appetite (Thursday),” thus didn’t eat much prior to the 7963 victory over the Terps. “I’ve been drinking little shakes. I took some pills this morning and last night to relax my muscles so I wouldn’t be too sore,” Graham added. Graham dispelled the notion he had the flu. “I wasn’t feeling under the weather or anything,” he said. “I was feeling good the first half. Second half, when we warmed up, I was feeling good. Two minutes in, I started cramping bad in my legs and back.” He scored two points in 37 minutes. “I was trying to fight through the cramps,” Graham said. “The whole second half was kind of rough. I tried to keep fighting. I got to the hotel last night and didn’t realize how tired I was. I don’t even remember falling asleep. I was kind of worn out from it.” l

Green doubtful: KU junior Brannen Greene

l

KANSAS GUARD SVI MYKHAILIUK, TOP, LEANS IN as forward Jamari Traylor shows him some music on his iPhone in the team locker room Friday at KFC Yum! Center in Louisville, Ky. izes KU faces a hot team in No. 2-seed and No. 6-ranked (AP poll) Villanova, which has made 59.9 percent of its shots and 53.2 percent of its threes in three NCAA Tournament wins. “Preparation is so short. We’re talking about a 45-minute practice today and scouts. So there will probably be more time prepping for ’Nova off the court as far as film work or getting guys to understand scouting reports than there probably will be on the court,” Self said. “They’re probably playing as well as anybody that we’ve gone against in recent memory. They’re on fire right now. It’s one thing to shoot l a high percentage, but ’Nova on fire: Self real- to shoot that high a per-

likely won’t play today because of stiffness and pain in his back. “I’ve suspected that he wouldn’t be very effective for a while. We put him in Des Moines (first and second round), and every time he turned, he winced,” KU coach Bill Self said. “There was a play in Des Moines where there was a shot, and a rebound came to his man, and he just reached out and grabbed him. Just reached out and grabbed him with the ball intentionally. I said, ‘What are you doing?’ He said, ‘Coach, I had to. I can’t move.’ So we’ll check him out again, but I don’t think that he’ll be available to us.”

centage with the volume of threes they’ve been shooting makes it even more impressive. Everybody’s making them. It’s not like you can just key on one guy. “So they’re a red-hot team right now. But, honestly, we’ve been playing pretty well ourselves. So we won’t want to change how we’re playing, but we certainly need to emphasize on how to get to their shooters and, certainly, still guard the ball and keep it out of the paint.” l

What was that?: Frank Mason III tossed in a meaningless shot before the buzzer sounded in KU’s 79-63 win over the Terps. Game officials conferred and checked the

Past adventures: KU beat Villanova, 72-57, in the 2008 Sweet 16 in Detroit. The Jayhawks lost to ’Nova, 63-59, in the 2013 Battle For Atlantis tourney in Bahamas. “ In ’08, we played really, really well the first half. I don’t remember exactly how it played out, but we played very, very well the first half. That team was on a roll at that time, and we were able to hang on,” Self said. KU went on to beat Davidson in the Elite Eight. “Then in Atlantis, ’Nova kept us from playing with any rhythm at all. I mean, Wiggs (Andrew Wiggins) and Joel (Embiid) were freshmen, and they had young guys playing, too, but they out-scrapped us. And certainly their pressure and their press bothered us at times. But we had a one-point lead with out of bounds under Villanova’s basket, and Ryan (Arcidiacono) makes a three to win the game,” Self noted. “So, certainly, not a good memory but one that I think that we certainly grew from. But I think that the teams his-

torically, at least in the times we’ve played, have been pretty evenly match and we got the best of one and they got the best of one.” KU leads the all-time series, 3-2. l

He’s good: ’Nova point guard Arcidiacono averages 12.3 ppg with 163 assists, 55 turnovers. “I think every team would love to have Ryan as their point guard or as one of their lead guards. We would too. We’d love to have Ryan. I don’t know if there’s a college program in the country that wouldn’t love to have him,” Self said. “The things that he does well, he’s a great leader. He’s tough, probably as much as anything else. He does such a good job of playing at different speeds and getting guys off balance. “He gets inside of people because he’s so good with the ball, shot fakes or he’s got great feet. But he’s a winner. I think I heard Jay (Wright, ’Nova coach) say that he can basically coach his team because he’s heard his voice so many times and he knows exactly what Jay wants. And there’s times that he can actually run things. Maybe I misheard the quote, but I thought Jay said something like that. So I think that Frank and Devonté are totally different in their approach in how they lead, but I certainly think that Ryan is one of the best leaders and one of the best guards in the country.


8D

|

Saturday, March 26, 2016

SPORTS

.

L awrence J ournal -W orld

SCOREBOARD NCAA Tournament

Charles Rex Arbogast/AP Photo

IOWA STATE’S GEORGES NIANG (31) DRIVES against Virginia’s Anthony Gill (13) and Isaiah Wilkins during the first half of Virginia’s 84-71 victory in a Midwest Regional semifinal of the NCAA Tournament on Friday in Chicago.

NCAA TOURNAMENT

Virginia eliminates Iowa State, 84-71 The Associated Press

Midwest Regional Virginia 84, Iowa State 71 Chicago — Anthony Gill finished with a season-high 23 points, Mike Tobey came off the bench to score 18, and top-seeded Virginia beat Iowa State in the Midwest Region semifinals on Friday night. The Cavaliers (29-7) withstood a second-half push by the fourth-seeded Cyclones (23-12) after grabbing a big lead in the early going and advanced to their first regional final since 1995. Virginia will face Syracuse on Sunday. A win would send the Cavaliers to their first Final Four since 1984, when coach Tony Bennett was a teenager. Georges Niang had another big game for Iowa State, finishing with 30 points after scoring 28 against both Iona and Arkansas-Little Rock in the first two rounds. With a chance to go farther than they ever did under predecessor Fred Hoiberg, the Cyclones never could recover from a flat start in the arena where “The Mayor” now coaches the Chicago Bulls. They got outscored 5236 in the paint, with Gill finishing two points shy of a career high and Tobey missing his personal best by one. Gill had eight rebounds while Tobey grabbed seven. IOWA ST. (23-12) McKay 2-2 0-0 4, Nader 1-5 1-2 4, Morris 5-12 0-2 10, Thomas 4-8 2-2 12, Niang 11-20 5-7 30, Carter 0-0 0-0 0, Cooke 0-0 0-0 0, Burton 4-5 2-2 11. Totals 27-52 10-15 71. VIRGINIA (29-7) Gill 8-10 7-10 23, Wilkins 6-9 0-3 12, Hall 1-3 2-2 5, Brogdon 4-13 4-4 12, Perrantes 2-5 0-0 6, Tobey 8-12 2-3 18, Nolte 0-0 0-0 0, Kirven 0-0 0-0 0, Reuter 0-0 0-0 0, Salt 0-0 0-0 0, Jones 0-0 0-0 0, Shayok 2-4 1-2 5, Thompson 1-1 0-0 3. Totals 32-57 16-24 84. Halftime-Virginia 45-31. ThreePoint Goals-Iowa St. 7-18 (Niang 3-7, Thomas 2-5, Burton 1-1, Nader 1-2, Morris 0-3), Virginia 4-11 (Perrantes 2-4, Thompson 1-1, Hall 1-2, Tobey 0-1, Shayok 0-1, Brogdon 0-2). ReboundsIowa St. 24 (Niang 8), Virginia 33 (Gill 8). Assists-Iowa St. 16 (Morris 8), Virginia 26 (Perrantes 9). Total FoulsIowa St. 19, Virginia 13. A-NA.

North Carolina 101, Indiana 86 Philadelphia — Marcus Paige scored 21 points, and North Carolina continued its offensive prowess, moving to the Elite Eight for the 20th time since 1975 with a victory over Indiana. The top-seeded Tar Heels (31-6) will meet sixth-seeded Notre Dame on Sunday, determining one of two guaranteed Atlantic Coast Conference spots in the Final Four. The Fighting Irish beat Wisconsin 61-56 on Friday. It will be the same case in the Midwest Regional, where top-seeded Virginia will face 10th-seeded Syracuse, meaning at least half the Final Four will be from the ACC. Brice Johnson had 20 points and 10 rebounds for the Tar Heels, who are in the regional final for the seventh time in coach Roy Williams’ 12 years. INDIANA (27-8) Williams 6-14 4-5 21, Hartman 3-6 0-0 7, Bryant 4-8 4-5 12, Zeisloft 0-3 0-0 0, Ferrell 6-14 9-10 25, Bielfeldt 5-10 2-2 15, Anunoby 1-4 0-0 2, Burton 0-0 0-0 0, Morgan 0-2 4-4 4, Niego 0-0 0-0 0, Tharp 0-0 0-0 0, Priller 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 25-61 23-26 86. NORTH CAROLINA (31-6) Meeks 5-9 5-7 15, Johnson 5-11 10-12 20, Jackson 3-9 6-8 14, Berry II 5-8 2-2 14, Paige 7-12 1-2 21, Britt 3-5 0-0 7, Pinson 2-4 0-0 4, Hicks 1-3 2-2 4, Coker 0-0 0-0 0, Williams 0-0 0-0 0, White 0-0 0-0 0, Coleman 0-0 0-0 0, Maye 0-0 0-0 0, James 1-1 0-0 2, Dalton 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 32-62 26-33 101. Halftime-North Carolina 52-41. ThreePoint Goals-Indiana 13-31 (Williams 5-8, Ferrell 4-9, Bielfeldt 3-5, Hartman 1-4, Morgan 0-1, Bryant 0-1, Zeisloft 0-3), North Carolina 11-20 (Paige 6-9, Berry II 2-3, Jackson 2-5, Britt 1-2, Pinson 0-1). Fouled Out-Hartman, Hicks. ReboundsIndiana 32 (Bryant 8), North Carolina 37 (Johnson 10). Assists-Indiana 13 (Ferrell 4), North Carolina 20 (Paige 6). Total Fouls-Indiana 27, North Carolina 22. A-20,686.

East Regional Notre Dame 61, Wisconsin 56 Philadelphia — Demetrius Jackson stripped the ball and scored the goahead layup with 14.7 seconds left, and Notre Dame advanced to the brink of its first Final Four in 38 years with a win over Wisconsin.

Jackson sealed the win with a pair of free throws to send the Irish (24-11) into a regional final for the second straight season. Notre Dame lost to Kentucky a year ago. This year, the Irish will get a shot at top-seeded North Carolina on Sunday. WISCONSIN (22-13) Hayes 4-12 1-2 11, Happ 6-12 2-2 14, Brown 3-8 0-0 8, Showalter 5-10 0-0 11, Koenig 3-12 1-2 8, Hill 1-2 0-0 2, Thomas 0-0 0-0 0, Iverson 1-1 0-0 2, Illikainen 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 23-57 4-6 56. NOTRE DAME (24-11) Beachem 7-11 2-2 19, Auguste 4-9 5-6 13, Farrell 3-5 0-0 7, Jackson 6-18 4-4 16, Vasturia 1-6 0-0 2, Pflueger 0-0 0-0 0, Ryan 0-1 0-0 0, Colson 1-5 2-2 4. Totals 22-55 13-14 61. Halftime-Wisconsin 23-19. ThreePoint Goals-Wisconsin 6-20 (Hayes 2-4, Brown 2-6, Showalter 1-4, Koenig 1-6), Notre Dame 4-13 (Beachem 3-5, Farrell 1-2, Ryan 0-1, Jackson 0-2, Vasturia 0-3). Fouled Out-Happ. ReboundsWisconsin 36 (Happ 12), Notre Dame 32 (Auguste 12). Assists-Wisconsin 11 (Brown, Hayes, Showalter 3), Notre Dame 13 (Jackson 6). Total FoulsWisconsin 15, Notre Dame 9. A-NA.

Syracuse 63, Gonzaga 60 Chicago — Michael Gbinije made a go-ahead layup with 22 seconds left, sending Syracuse to a victory over Gonzaga and a spot in the Elite Eight. Tyler Lydon sealed the win with a block on Josh Perkins’ runner in the final seconds. Lydon then grabbed the ball and made two foul shots before Domantas Sabonis’ desperate fling was well off at the buzzer. Gbinije scored 20 points, and Trevor Cooney had 15 as Syracuse (22-13) advanced to the regional final for the first time since 2013. GONZAGA (28-8) Sabonis 8-12 3-4 19, Wiltjer 9-17 1-1 23, Perkins 3-8 0-0 8, McClellan 2-7 0-0 5, Dranginis 1-4 0-0 3, Melson 1-7 0-0 2. Totals 24-55 4-5 60. SYRACUSE (22-13) Gbinije 8-23 3-4 20, Roberson 3-6 3-4 9, Coleman 0-0 0-0 0, Cooney 5-9 4-4 15, Richardson 3-14 2-2 10, Howard 2-4 0-0 5, Lydon 1-5 2-2 4. Totals 22-61 14-16 63. Halftime-Gonzaga 29-28. ThreePoint Goals-Gonzaga 8-21 (Wiltjer 4-7, Perkins 2-5, Dranginis 1-3, McClellan 1-3, Melson 0-3), Syracuse 5-15 (Richardson 2-6, Howard 1-1, Cooney 1-2, Gbinije 1-5, Lydon 0-1). ReboundsGonzaga 37 (Sabonis 17), Syracuse 33 (Roberson 12). Assists-Gonzaga 18 (Perkins 6), Syracuse 9 (Gbinije, Howard 3). Total Fouls-Gonzaga 14, Syracuse 12. A-21,490.

NCAA WOMEN’S TOURNAMENT quarter before coming back to stun a Gamecocks Sioux Falls team that looked destined to make another appearRegional ance in the Final Four. Syracuse 80, South Carolina got into S. Carolina 72 early foul trouble and Sioux Falls, S.D. — never could finish off the Brianna Butler scored Orange. 10 of her 18 points in the fourth quarter, includ- Tennessee 78, ing the go-ahead three- Ohio St. 62 Sioux Falls, S.D. — pointer with 3:01 left, and Syracuse upset No. Mercedes Russell scored 1 seed South Carolina in a career-high 25 points the Sioux Falls Regional and grabbed 15 rebounds, of the women’s NCAA and Tennessee continued Tournament Friday night. its surprising run in the Syracuse trailed by as women’s NCAA Tournamany as 13 late in the first ment with a victory over half and was still down 11 Ohio State in a Sioux Falls in the middle of the third Regional semifinal. The Associated Press

Lexington Regional

Stanford 90, Notre Dame 84 Lexington, Ky. — Erica McCall scored a careerhigh 27 points, and No. 4 seed Stanford stunned No. 1 seed Notre Dame, ending the Fighting Irish’s bid for a sixth straight Final Four appearance. Washington 85, Kentucky 72 Lexington, Ky. — Talia Walton scored 30 points, Chantel Osahor had 19 points, and seventhseeded Washington beat third-seeded Kentucky.

First Four At UD Arena Dayton, Ohio Tuesday, March 15 Florida Gulf Coast 96, Fairleigh Dickinson 65 Wichita State 70, Vanderbilt 50 Wednesday, March 16 Holy Cross 59, Southern 55 Michigan 67, Tulsa 62 EAST REGIONAL First Round Thursday, March 17 At PNC Arena Raleigh, N.C. N. Carolina 83, Florida Gulf Coast 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, W. Virginia 56 Notre Dame 70, Michigan 63 At Scottrade Center St. Louis Wisconsin 47, Pittsburgh 43 Xavier 71, Weber State 53 Second Round 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 Notre Dame 61, Wisconsin 56 North Carolina 101, Indiana 86 Regional Championship Sunday, March 27 Notre Dame (24-11) vs. North Carolina (31-6), 7:49 p.m. SOUTH REGIONAL First Round 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 Second Round 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 92, Miami 69 Kansas 79, Maryland 63 Regional Championship Today Villanova (32-5) vs. Kansas (33-4), 7:49 p.m. MIDWEST REGIONAL First Round 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 Second Round Saturday, March 19 At PNC Arena 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 84, Iowa State 71 Syracuse 63, Gonzaga 60 Regional Championship Sunday, March 27 Virginia (29-7) vs. Syracuse (22-13), 5:09 p.m. WEST REGIONAL First Round 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 St. 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 Second Round 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 77, Texas A&M 63 Oregon 82, Duke 68 Regional Championship Today Oklahoma (28-7) vs. Oregon (31-6), 5:09 p.m. 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’s Tournament

BRIDGEPORT REGIONAL First Round Friday, March 18 At Starkville, Miss. Michigan State 74, Belmont 60 Mississippi State 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 UCLA 72, South Florida 67 At Austin, Texas Texas 73, Missouri 55 Regional Semifinals At Bridgeport, Conn. Today UConn (34-0) vs. Mississippi State (28-7), 10:30 a.m. UCLA (26-8) vs. Texas (30-4), 1 p.m. Regional Championship Monday, March 28 Semifinal winners, TBA DALLAS REGIONAL First Round Friday, March 18 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 Today At Dallas Baylor (35-1) vs. Florida State (257), 3 p.m. DePaul (27-8) vs. Oregon State (304), 5:30 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. Syracuse 80, South Carolina 72 Tennessee 78, Ohio State 62 Regional Championship Sunday, March 27 Syracuse (28-7) vs. Tennessee (2213), 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. Washington 85, Kentucky 72 Stanford 90, Notre Dame 84 Regional Championship Sunday, March 27 Washington (25-10) vs. Stanford (277), TBA FINAL FOUR At Indianapolis National Semifinals Sunday, April 3 Bridgeport champion vs. Dallas champion, 6 or 8:30 p.m. Sioux Falls champion vs. Lexington champion, 6 or 8:30 p.m. National Championship Tuesday, April 5 Semifinals winners, 8:30 p.m.

WGC Match Play

At Austin Country Club Austin, Texas Yardage: 7,703. Par: 71 Third round Friday (Seedings in parentheses) Branden Grace (11), South Africa, def. Russell Knox (32), Scotland, 5 and 4. Chris Kirk (54), United States, def. David Lingmerth (38), 3 and 2. Bill Haas (30), United States, def. Adam Scott (6), Australia, 1 up. Thomas Pieters (55), Belgium, def. Chris Wood (41), England, 3 and 2. Zach Johnson (14), United States, def. Shane Lowry (24), Ireland, 4 and 3. Martin Kaymer (44), Germany, def. Marcus Fraser (60), Australia, 4 and 3. Rory McIlroy (3), Northern Ireland, halved with Kevin Na (26), United States. Thorbjorn Olesen (64), Denmark, def. Smylie Kaufman (46), United States, 2 and 1.

Danny Willett (10), England, def. Brooks Koepka (18), United States, 4 and 3. Jaco Van Zyl (50), South Africa, def. Billy Horschel (40), United States, 2 and 1. Matt Kuchar (28), United States, def. Justin Rose (7), England, 3 and 2. Anirban Lahiri (48), India, def. Fabian Gomez (57), Argentina, 4 and 2. Brandt Snedeker (15), United States, def. Charl Schwartzel (19), South Africa, 5 and 3. Charley Hoffman (56), United States, def. Danny Lee (34), New Zealand, 4 and 2. Jason Day (2), Australia, def. Paul Casey (23), England, 6 holes (retired). Thongchai Jaidee (36), Thailand, halved with Graeme McDowell (62), Northern Ireland. Hideki Matsuyama (12), Japan, def. Kevin Kisner (20), United States, 3 and 2. Soren Kjeldsen (43), Denmark, halved with. Rafa Cabrera-Bello (52), Spain. Rickie Fowler (5) halved with Byeong-Hun An (27), South Korea. Scott Piercy (47), United States, def. Jason Dufner (58), United States, 1 up. Sergio Garcia (13), Spain, def. Marc Leishman (25), Australia, 5 and 4. Ryan Moore (45), United States, def. Lee Westwood (59), England, 3 and 1.. J.B. Holmes (21), United States, def. Bubba Watson (4), United States, 1 up. Patton Kizzire (63), United States, def. Emiliano Grillo (33), Argentina, 2 up. Patrick Reed (9), United States, def. Phil Mickelson (17), United States, 5 and 4. Matthew Fitzpatrick (42), England, def. Daniel Berger (53), United States. (forfeit) Dustin Johnson (8), United States, def. Jimmy Walker (22), United States, 2 and 1. Kiradech Aphibarnrat (37), Thailand, def. Robert Streb (49), United States, 1 up. Louis Oosthuizen (16), South Africa, def. Andy Sullivan (29), England, 4 and 2. Bernd Wiesberger (35), Austria, halved with Matt Jones (61), Australia. Jordan Spieth (1), United States, def. Justin Thomas (31), United States, 3 and 2. Jamie Donaldson (51), Wales, vs. Victor Dubuisson (39), France, 1 up.

College Women

Tulsa 4, Kansas 2 Friday at Tulsa Doubles No. 1 — Laskutova/Kuricova (Tulsa) def. Nina Khmelnitckaia/Janet Koch (KU) 6-2 No. 2 — Maria Jose Cardona/Summer Collins (KU) def. Leenabanchong/ Matoula (Tulsa) 6-4 No. 3 — Smith Hinton/Anastasiya Rychagova (KU) def. Saarteinen/ Dadireddy (Tulsa) 7-5 Singles No. 1 — Anastasiya Rychagova (KU) def. Saana Saarteinen (Tulsa) 6-0, 7-5 No. 2 — Ksenia Laskutova (Tulsa) def. Smith Hinton (KU) 6-3, 6-3 No. 3 — Janet Koch (KU) vs. Rongrong Leenabanchong (Tulsa) 7-6, 6-7, 2-1 unfinished No. 4 — Marcelina Cichon (Tulsa) def. Nina Khmelnitckaia (KU) 2-6, 6-3, 6-3 No. 5 — Renata Kuricova (Tulsa) def. Summer Collins (KU) 6-7, 7-5, 6-3 No. 6 — Martha Matoula (Tulsa) def. Maria Jose Cardona (KU) 3-6, 6-4, 6-2

Spring Training

Friday’s Games Baltimore 11, N.Y. Yankees 10, 10 innings Atlanta (ss) 1, Houston 1, tie, 7 innings Minnesota 6, Tampa Bay 1 Atlanta (ss) vs. Detroit at Lakeland, Fla., ccd., Rain N.Y. Mets 5, St. Louis 5, tie San Francisco (ss) 8, Kansas City 5 Colorado 7, Cincinnati 6 L.A. Angels 11, Oakland 3 Milwaukee 5, Chicago Cubs 4 Arizona 7, Cleveland 5 Seattle 5, Chicago White Sox 4, 10 innings Boston 6, Pittsburgh 3 Philadelphia 4, Toronto 4, tie Washington vs. Miami at Jupiter, Fla., ccd., rain Texas 12, San Diego 11 San Francisco (ss) vs. L.A. Dodgers at Glendale, Ariz., (n) Saturday’s Games Detroit vs. Philadelphia at Clearwater, Fla., 12:05 p.m. Pittsburgh (ss) vs. Minnesota at Fort Myers, Fla., 12:05 p.m. Washington vs. St. Louis at Jupiter, Fla., 12:05 p.m. Boston vs. Baltimore at Sarasota, Fla., 12:05 p.m. N.Y. Mets vs. Atlanta at Kissimmee, Fla., 12:05 p.m. N.Y. Yankees vs. Toronto at Dunedin, Fla., 12:07 p.m. Cincinnati (ss) vs. Chicago White Sox (ss) at Glendale, Ariz., 2:05 p.m. Cleveland vs. Cincinnati (ss) at Goodyear, Ariz., 3:05 p.m. San Francisco vs. Chicago Cubs at Mesa, Ariz., 3:05 p.m. Arizona vs. Milwaukee at Phoenix, 3:05 p.m. Oakland vs. Kansas City at Surprise, Ariz., 3:05 p.m. L.A. Dodgers (ss) vs. Seattle at Peoria, Ariz., 3:10 p.m. Texas vs. Colorado at Scottsdale, Ariz., 3:10 p.m. San Diego (ss) vs. L.A. Angels at Tempe, Ariz., 3:10 p.m. Tampa Bay vs. Pittsburgh (ss) at Bradenton, Fla., 5:05 p.m. Miami vs. Houston (ss) at Kissimmee, Fla., 5:05 p.m. Houston (ss) vs. San Diego (ss) at Mexico City, 8 p.m. Chicago White Sox (ss) vs. L.A. Dodgers (ss) at Glendale, Ariz., 9:05 p.m.

BASEBALL Major League Baseball OFFICE OF THE COMMISSIONER OF BASEBALL — Suspended Cincinnati minor league RHP Jose Veras (DSL) 72 games following a positive test for metabolites of Stanozolol and free agent minor league RHP Tanner Kiest 50 games after a second positive test for a drug of abuse. American League CLEVELAND INDIANS — Optioned INF Jesus Aguilar to Columbus (IL). HOUSTON ASTROS — Optioned LHP Kevin Chapman and RHP Jandel Gustave to Fresno (PCL). Granted LHP Neal Cotts his unconditional release. TEXAS RANGERS — Optioned RHP Chi Chi Gonzalez to Round Rock (PCL). Assigned RHP Nick Tepesch and 1B/C Brett Nicholas to minor league camp. National League CHICAGO CUBS — Assigned RHPs Brandon Gomes, Jean Machi and Ryan Williams; INFs Jesus Guzman and Kris Negron; and OFs Albert Almora, John Andreoli, Matt Murton and Juan Perez to their minor league camp.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.