Lawrence Journal-World 09-06-15

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USA TODAY

Clintons paid state department staffer for email server work. 1B

JAYHAWKS STUMBLE

RECAP IN SPORTS, 1C

Passing game, defense come up short in opening day bummer as David Beaty era begins.

L A W R E NC E

Journal-World ®

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SUNDAY • SEPTEMBER 6 • 2015

LJWorld.com

School safety concerns prompted resignation By Karen Dillon Twitter: @karensdillon

Cut corners led New York Elementary construction supervisor to quit “

Last November, Scott Besler said the gates were Besler, who was the consupposed to be installed struction supervisor of a no later than January, the major remodeling projmonth he quit his job in part ect at New York Elemenbecause of his concerns over tary School, was watchsafety violations. ing when four heavy SCHOOLS But the gates weren’t gates weighing 350 pounds installed, and in August one each were delivered. of the gates, which were lean-

ing unsecured against a brick structure, fell on an 8-year-old boy who had wandered into the construction site, breaking bones and collapsing the top part of his lungs. “We were behind the eightball from day one on New York,” Besler, 52, told the Jour-

nal-World in an exclusive interview. “There is a lot of stuff that didn’t get done in a timely manner. There were safety violations. I would go home and be stressed out as if I physically pounded a nail all day.”

Please see SAFETY, page 5A

Different spokes for different folks

They literally said, ‘(Expletive) off, we are done for the day.’”

— Scott Besler, former construction supervisor of New York Elementary project, on workers at site

Kansas town once held 4,000 enemy combatants

Scary Larry polo club brings ‘chill’ to East Lawrence park

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History of Camp Concordia offers contrast to today By Peter Hancock Twitter: @LJWpqhancock

Concordia — As political leaders in Kansas are speaking out against the possibility of moving enemy combatants being held in Guantanamo Bay to the military prison at Fort Leavenworth, another Kansas town is celebrating its history of housing prisoners of war. Only a few buildings remain of Camp Concordia, which was located about 3 miles outside of Built: In 90 days the town of ConCost: $1.8 million cordia and once Opened: July 1943 held more than Closed: 4,000 German November 1945 POWs during Buildings: 304, World War II. But including a 177-bed community leadhospital ers there have restored what’s left and turned the former prison into a tourist attraction celebrating that time in the city’s history. Lowell May, who has written a book about the camp’s history and is a member of the POW Camp Concordia Preservation Society, said people of the town initially had many of the same concerns being expressed today about the danger of housing enemy prisoners. But he said they soon got over that fear as the camp became an integral part of the community. “One woman told me, we didn’t know if we were going to be murdered in our beds at night. But after a few months, those fears started dying down,” he said. “You have to remember, though, the Germans were members of an organized army that had been captured in combat,” he said. “They operated by rules. So once they were put in a camp, they accepted that and pretty much went along and rode out the rest of the war.” Paul Rimovsky, who also volunteers for the preservation society, said few people

Camp Concordia

Nick Krug/Journal-World Photos

THE PLAYER REACHES BACK TO SWING as a defender blocks the net during a bike polo game Aug. 13 at Edgewood Park in East Lawrence. Members of the Scary Larry club say they have been well-received by the neighborhood and by those who feel safer in the park at night with regular activity going on. TOP: A close-up view of one of the polo bikes.

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f you don’t have the small fortune it requires to play polo but do have the urge to compete, then you’re in luck. But leave the horse tied up in the barn and don’t forget your bike if you want to play this sport of kings. Since 2009, members of the Scary Larry Kansas Bike Polo club have been running their thoroughbreds, which often come in the form of free-wheel bicycles, in a hybrid version of one of the world’s oldest games popularized

Hot, humid

Look

Nick Krug nkrug@ljworld.com

and played by the wealthy elite, then adapted by Seattle bike messengers in the late 1990s. Please see POLO, page 6A

THE RESPECTIVE POLO MALLETS of six different players lie together to be shuffled randomly and tossed with three on either side of the court to determine the teams before a game.

INSIDE Arts&Entertainment 1D-6D Horoscope Classified 1E-8E Movies Deaths 2A Opinion Events listings 2C, 6D Puzzles

High: 94

Low: 74

Today’s forecast, page 8C

4D Sports 2D Television 9A USA Today 4D, 5D

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

1C-8C 2C, 6D 1B-8B

Please see TOWN, page 2A

Judges sue Four judges, including one from Douglas County, have filed a new lawsuit against the state’s judicial budget provision. Page 3A

Vol.157/No.249 48 pages


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Sunday, September 6, 2015

LAWRENCE • STATE

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DEATHS

Tax Good Samaritan saves classic car

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.

Miriana ivanka Jerkovich Services for Miriana I. Jerkovich, 88, Wichita, KS, are pending and will be announced by Rumsey-Yost Funeral Home. She died Saturday. rumsey-yost.com

Virginia B. Morrill Virginia B. Morrill, 94, Lawrence, died Friday, Sept. 4, 2015. Memorial services will be 10 am Monday at Mustard Seed Church. Obituary at rumsey-yost.com.

Janet G. Oest 72, of Bonner, died Fri., Sept. 4, Funeral 10 am, Wed. Sept. 9, Visitation 6-8 pm, Tue., Sept. 8 at AldenHarrington Funeral Home burial Bonner Cem.

Louise irma Jambor WICHITA, KS Jambor, Louise Irma Hintermann 94, died Sunday, August 30, 2015. Memorial Service will be Wednesday, September 9, 2015 at 1:00 P.M. at St. Stephens Episcopal Church, Wichita, KS. Born in San Francisco to European immigrants, Louise excelled as a youth at swimming & tennis. She trained as a medical lab technician at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore where she met her future husband, a medical student, James J. Jambor. After getting their three children all into primary school, Louise went back to work as her husband’s assistant in his medical practice. Later in life, Louise went back to school earning a degree in public relations & communications using her skills at both The Dodge City Legend & local community college. Always active in civic life, Louise was a member of the Dodge City Chamber of Commerce, United Way, Women’s Chamber of Commerce, Dodge City Area Arts Council,

Community Concert Board, & many other boards & organizations including St. Cornelius’ Episcopal Church. She was preceded in death by her husband, James J. Jambor, MD; & her grandson, James P. Jambor. She is survived by her son, The Rev. Christopher (Patricia) Jambor; granddaughter, Ann Louise (Nathan Schneidewent) Jambor; grandchildren, Christopher Patrick Jambor, Sean Schneidewent, & Marc Schneidewent; daughter, Ann (Jamie Keil) Jambor; son, Jonathan Jambor; grandson, Isaac A. Jambor; granddaughter, Calista J. Jambor. May her soul & the souls of the departed rest in peace, & may light perpetual shine upon them. In lieu of flowers, a memorial has been established with Manna House, 1012 1st Ave, Dodge City, KS 67801. Downing & Lahey Mortuary East. Share tributes online at: www. dlwichita.com Please sign this guestbook at Obituaries. LJWorld.com.

Town

a 177-bed hospital, a fire department, warehouses, cold storage, an officers club, barracks, mess halls and administrative buildings for both the prisoners and American soldiers. Today, only four structures remain, including a restored guard tower. May said there were two other large POW camps in Kansas, one at Fort Riley and another called Camp Phillips near Salina, along with 13 smaller “branch” camps, including one in Lawrence. The Lawrence camp stood near 11th Street and Haskell Avenue. The remaining buildings of that camp were destroyed by fire in 1987. After the war, May said, some of the barracks buildings were taken by town residents and moved into the city where they were converted to houses. Others were taken by area farmers and turned into barns or storage sheds.

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thought at the time that housing POWs might make them a target for German sabotage or terrorism. “I don’t think that entered their minds at the time,” he said. “But World War II was probably the last time everyone in this country was united. They considered what was going on was part of the war effort.”

Common sites in WWII During World War II, May said, nearly every state in the nation had at least one POW camp. An estimated 360,000 POWs were held on U.S. territory during the war. Camp Concordia was the largest of 16 camps in Kansas. It mainly housed German prisoners who’d been captured in battles in North Africa. The camp was built in just 90 days, at a cost of $1.8 million, and opened in July 1943. It operated for about a year and a half, until it officially closed after the war in November 1945. At the time, according to its website, it had 304 buildings including

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Life as a POW in Kansas Rimovsky said it was common at all the camps for enlisted prisoners to work jobs, usually in farms or factories, and those men were paid for their labor.

Hutchinson (ap) — A 78-year-old Hutchinson woman who planned to sell her beloved 1955 Ford Fairlane to pay back property taxes received a helping hand from a stranger who paid the bill for her. Dorce Stapleton told The Hutchinson News she was stunned Tuesday when a man showed up in her driveway offering to pay her back property taxes. “He walked right up this rickety road and said he wanted to help me,” Stapleton said. Stapleton’s predicament was described in

the newspaper earlier. She said she was selling the old car to pay two and a half years of back property taxes. After telling Stapleton of his plans, he went to the courthouse and paid the $2,100 in back taxes and returned with the receipts. Stapleton said the gift lifted a burden from her shoulders. “It’s all paid clear up to the bell,” Stapleton said. “Can you believe this?” The donor asked to remain anonymous and said he had a good life and just wanted to help. Then he left.

Other strangers also came to show their concern. Stapleton found a bouquet of roses and Gerber daisies on her porch without a card. Someone else gave her an envelope with money to pay her back taxes and told her to keep it when he learned the bill had been paid. Stapleton plans to put the money toward her 2015 taxes. And buy a battery for the Ford. “I didn’t use to cry, but I have been blubbering all morning,” Stapleton said. “What a blessing. Aren’t there good people in this world?”

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LAWRENCE CITY COMMISSION Agenda highlights • 5:45 p.m. Tuesday • City Hall, Sixth and Massachusetts streets • WOW! Channel 25

Special assessments could pay for signals BOTTOM LINE Lawrence city commissioners have a light agenda this week, with only one action item: levying special assessments to pay for new traffic signals at Sixth Street and Champion Lane.

BACKGROUND City officials say that as the Bauer Farms neighborhood continues to develop, it's necessary to signalize the intersection for safety and access to both Bauer Farms and Westgate Development. The total cost is estimated at $400,000, which will be levied as a special assessment on all properties north and south of Sixth Street that have access to the intersection between Folks Road and Wakarusa Drive.

OTHER BUSINESS Consent agenda • Receive minutes from various boards and commissions. • Approve all claims. The list of claims will be posted by the Finance Department on Monday prior to the meeting. If Monday is a holiday, the claims will be posted as soon as possible the next business day. • Approve licenses as recommended by the City Clerk’s Office. • Bid and purchase items: a) Approve purchase of Veeam Backup Essentials Enterprise (digital media storage, backup software, and support) for the Police Department from SHI for $5,160, utilizing the State of Kansas Contract, and the purchase of an Imation Nexsan E48VT from Eagle, Inc., as a sole source purchase, for $40,256. • Approve rezoning, Z-1500329, approximately 4.87 acres from CN2 (Neighborhood

“Enlisted men could go out and work on farms,” he said. “Most of them did because they got paid for that. And they could spend their money. They had canteens for them where they could buy pop, candy, cigarettes and even beer. Enlisted men were the only ones who worked. It was run by the rules of the Geneva Conventions, but officers could work as supervisors.” “(Kansas University) set up classes for the officers,” he said. “They had a regular university with over 300 courses available. And when they went back to Germany, they got certificates from KU saying what courses they’d taken that they could apply toward college degrees.” In Lawrence, many prisoners worked at a local cannery. Some worked on the campus of Kansas University doing landscaping and cleanup work, and a few who were trained as stone masons contributed to building Danforth Chapel. According to May, there were few incidents of violence at Camp Concordia, and those that did occur typically involved the prisoners themselves. “The only violence was against other prison-

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Commercial Center) District to CS (Commercial Strip) District, located at 2100 W. 25th St. and 2435 Iowa St. Submitted by Landplan Engineering, for Holiday Lawrence LLC and 2435 Iowa Partners LLC, property owners of record. • Approve rezoning, Z-1500330, approximately 7.26 acres from CN2 (Neighborhood Commercial Center) District to CS (Commercial Strip) District, located at 2525 Iowa St. Submitted by Landplan Engineering, for 2525 Iowa LLC, property owner of record. • Approve rezoning, Z-1500332, approximately 2.66 acres from IG (General Industrial) District to IL (Limited Industrial) District, located at 808 E. 28th St. Submitted by Allen Belot Architect, for Glenn E Bohmann Trustees, property owner of record. • Approve Special Event Permits, SE-15-00439, SE-15-

00441 and SE-15-00442, for two concerts and a Zombie Walk Watch Party at The Granada, located at 1040 Massachusetts St. Submitted by Mike Logan, for Allen Press Inc., property owner of record. • Authorize the Interim City Manager to sign an Agreement for Capital and Operating Assistance Funds from the State of Kansas for capital and operating expenses for the Lawrence Transit System. • Set the interest rate on the renovation loan to Peaslee Tech at a rate of 2.035 percent.

ers, where the hardcore Nazis, before they were separated from the others, would take their rap out on the other prisoners,” he said. “One captain kept a diary in which he was critical of Hitler and the German army,” May said. “They found it and held a kangaroo court. They sentenced him to death, gave him a rope, and told him to do the proper thing or his family would suffer after the war. So he hanged himself.” May said it was also standard policy for the prisoners to receive communiques from the German army through Switzerland, and those messages gave prisoners the official German account of how the war was going. “Nazis in the camp would have a meeting at night to put out the German word about how the war was going,” he said. “People were scheduled to attend, and if they didn’t attend, they would suffer the consequences.”

of restoring what was left of the prison began in 1995, during the 50th HOSPITAL anniversary observances Births for the camp. Jessica and Jacob Larsen, “We contacted guards, a girl, Friday. and some of the prison- Lawrence, Rami Aljohan and ers,” he said. “Fourteen Kholood Alhejori, Lawrence, of the prisoners came a girl, Thursday. back for a celebration. After that was over, we had a great time with those prisoners that came back. They were CORRECTIONS very, very nice people. The Journal-World’s And we got to thinking, policy is to correct all maybe we ought to save significant errors that are some of that stuff out brought to the editors’ there.” Today, the camp is attention, usually in this free and open to the pub- space. If you believe we lic daily, and tours are have made such an error, available by appointment call (785) 832-7154, or through the Concordia email news@ljworld.com. Convention and Visitors SOUND OFF Bureau. If you have a question, call 832-7297 or send — Peter Hancock can be reached email to soundoff@ at 354-4222 or phancock@ljworld.com. ljworld.com.

Remembering history The restored Camp Concordia officially opened this summer, almost exactly 70 years after it closed. Rimovsky said the idea

Regular agenda

• Conduct public hearing. Consider adopting on first reading, Ordinance No. 9159, levying the maximum assessments for the construction of public improvements, including signalization of the intersection at Sixth Street and Champion Lane.

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Lawrence&State

Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com/local l Sunday, September 6, 2015 l 3A

Almost too cool to be school Judges join in

new lawsuit ——

Kansas judicial budget still in the air as 2014 law is disputed By Peter Hancock Twitter: @LJWpqhancock

Richard Gwin/Journal-World Photo

Topeka — Four district court judges in Kansas, including one from Douglas County, have joined in a new lawsuit challenging a provision of this year’s state budget that threatens to defund the entire judicial branch of state government. Judge Robert Fairchild is among the plaintiffs in the lawsuit filed late Friday in Shawnee County District Court. The new lawsuit comes on the heels of a decision last week in which the Shaw-

nee County court struck down a 2014 law that changes the way chief judges in district courts are selected. The others are Judges Larry T. Solomon of Kingman County; Jeff Jack of Labette County; and Meryl D. Wilson of Riley County. Kansas lawmakers inserted a provision — known as a “nonseverability� clause — into this year’s judicial funding bill that says if courts overturn a law enacted in 2014 changing the way district Please see LAWSUIT, page 4A

PRESCHOOLERS AT PRAIRIE MOON WALDORF SCHOOL, 1853 E. 1600 Road, pause for an afternoon treat of tomatoes on Friday with their teacher, Natalie Cunningham.

Prairie Moon employs artistic teaching methods Local firefighters open By Rochelle Valverde Twitter: @RochelleVerde

The classroom, its walls painted in a gradient of blue and green, is sparsely decorated. Driftwood hangs above the window, there are potted plants in the corners, and an oak piano stands against one wall. Inside the students’ desks, there are no textbooks, no workbooks. Instead, in each desk is a recorder in a hand-crocheted case and a slotted

canvas pouch filled with stick and block beeswax crayons. Right now, the pouches are rolled open across desktops, as the class of fourth- and fifth-grade students at Prairie Moon Waldorf School illustrate the Norse myth of Thor they just finished discussing. On their sketchpads, students draw serpents and lightning bolts with crayons. The beginning of this school year marks 10 years for Prairie Moon, 1853 E. 1600 Road, a few

miles northeast of Lawrence. Enrollment at the school has increased each year, growing from about a dozen students initially to more than 80 today, said Melissa Watson, the school’s administrator. Watson said students have come to Prairie Moon for different reasons, but they get a lot of parents whose children have burnt out or lost interest at public school. “Instead of putting more academics in and removing movement and art, we’re finding ways in

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which they can enjoy their work more by making it more artistic,� she said. As the school year goes on, the blank sheets of students’ sketchpads will fill page-by-page with illustrations and notes from lessons. Students have sketchpads for each subject, and by year’s end they become self-made textbooks, Watson explained. The use of drawing in the classroom is one element of the Waldorf teaching method, Please see SCHOOL, page 4A

home for celebration

By Conrad Swanson Twitter: @Conrad_Swanson

“We learn something new every time we come up,� Gayle Morrow said. “Today I found out that the guy that drives the fire truck doesn’t do the sirens,� Dick Morrow said. “The guy next to him does the sirens and the bells with foot pedals.� Saturday afternoon, the couple and more of

Gayle and Dick Morrow have been to many of Lawrence’s fire stations. Their son, Chris Morrow, is a captain for Lawrence-Douglas County Fire Medical. Through all the holiday and weekend visits over the years, the couple said, they’ve never Please see FIREHOUSE, page 4A stopped learning.

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LAWRENCE • STATE

L awrence J ournal -W orld

School CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A

Richard Gwin/Journal-World Photo

FROM LEFT, FIREFIGHTERS TALIB MUWWAKKIL AND CHRIS MORROW polish up an old 1955 American LaFrance firetruck, restored as part of an open house and centennial celebration at Fire Station No. 3 on Saturday.

Firehouse CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A

their family visited Chris Morrow at Lawrence’s Fire Station No. 3, 3708 W. Sixth Street, for an open house as a part of Lawrence’s 100-year anniversary celebration. Typically, the department only holds an open house when a new fire station is opened, Chris Morrow said. Saturday’s event was something special. “We were worried nobody was going to show up, but we’ve been very happy with the turnout,” he said. “I couldn’t tell you how many people came out, but it’s been pretty constant, very busy.” Throughout the open house, participants were able to take a closer look into the life of a firefighter. Open-house activities

Lawsuit CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A

court chief judges are selected, then all funding for the entire state’s judicial branch must also be overturned. Pedro Irigonegaray, the Topeka lawyer representing the judges, called that law a form of “extortion.” “If the Legislature believed (the 2014 law) was constitutional, if they truly believe it was benign as they claim it to be, why did they find it necessary to threaten anyone who ruled against them with the destruction of the Kansas judiciary?” Irigonegaray asked during a phone interview Saturday. “Why the need for that kind of extortion? And that’s what it is, a method of extortion.” Prior to the enactment of last year’s law, chief judges in district courts were selected by the Kansas Supreme Court. That was based on a provision in the Kansas Constitution that gives the Supreme Court “general administrative author-

ranged from touring old and new fire trucks, viewing the facilities, grabbing a bite with first responders and peeking inside their educational trailer. One of the most popular attractions was the fire hose, which was set up out back for participants to spray away, Morrow said. “They’re getting a chance to see where we live, where we eat, where we sleep and do laundry,” Chris Morrow said. “This is our home, and they’re getting a chance to be a part of it.” Dave Burke, who was visiting family in Lawrence, brought two of his young grandchildren, Gabby and Brett, to the open house to take a look around. As Burke inspected one of the department’s fire engines, Brett and Gabby climbed up the vehicle’s side with their aunt Dani-

elle D’Souza. As Brett sat on D’Souza’s lap in the engine’s front-passenger seat, he lightly pulled a cord, ringing one of the vehicle’s front bells. “They were scared to get in at first, but they’re not any more,” D’Souza said, laughing. “They’re learning a lot and having fun.” While his grandchildren were learning, so was Burke. He said he was surprised to hear a fire engine can hold up to 500 gallons of fuel. “They said the cost of a fire truck is like $1 million,” he said. “And it’s all specialized equipment. You understand why it costs so much, and why it takes so much to operate. It’s all equipment to keep people safe.”

ity over all courts in this state.” In January, Judge Solomon, chief judge of the 30th Judicial District in Kingman County, filed a suit challenging the new process, which says chief judges are to be elected by the other judges in the district. The suit was filed in Shawnee County, which has original jurisdiction in most civil cases against the state. On Wednesday, Shawnee County judge Larry D. Hendricks ruled in favor of Solomon, saying the 2014 law violated the separation of powers doctrine in the Kansas Constitution. But Hendricks did not address the other issue — this year’s law that cuts off funding for the court system if Solomon were to win his suit — saying that issue was not part of the lawsuit before him. The next day, Hendricks granted an emergency stay, requested by Attorney General Derek Schmidt’s office, pending appeal of that decision. And so on Friday, Irigonegaray filed a new lawsuit on behalf of four district court judges challenging this year’s budget

proviso that threatens to cut off funding for the court system if, as has happened, Solomon wins his lawsuit. Speaking to reporters Friday, Republican Gov. Sam Brownback, who signed both the 2014 and 2015 judicial budget bills into law, defended the nonseverability clauses that tied funding for the court system to the outcome of Judge Solomon’s lawsuit. “The process of selecting judges is a legislative and executive function,” Brownback said. “The judiciary does not select itself, in the system of governance that we have. So I think that’s a fully appropriate thing. I thought it was a fully appropriate thing when I signed it.”

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

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

Thursday – Saturday, Sept. 10, 11, 12 8 am to 3 pm

• Rain or shine. • City will load trucks and trailers. • Bring tarp to secure load. • No ladder racks. • $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

— Reporter Conrad Swanson can be reached at cswanson@ljworld.com or 832-7144.

ROADWORK Country Club Ct. waterline replaced Lawrence: l Between 7 a.m. and 6 p.m. on weekdays, city workers may establish some parking restrictions while they replace a waterline on Country Club Court. The project is expected to be finished Sept. 17. l Temporary noparking zones may be established on Cedarwood Avenue between 25th and 26th streets while crews replace a water main. The project should be completed by Sept. 13. — Staff Reports

Brownback also said that “nonseverability” clauses, such as the one employed in this year’s budget bill, are common practice in state legislatures. But Irigonegary said he believes Brownback is wrong about that. “While it’s true that nonseverability is often employed by legislatures, the manner in which it was employed here was intended to create a constitutional crisis that was totally unnecessary,” he said. The Shawnee County District Court has not yet set a date for a hearing on the new lawsuit. — Peter Hancock can be reached at 354-4222 or phancock@ljworld.com.

which integrates art, music and activities into each subject. “They are learning all the different things you see in other schools, but they learn them through activities,” Watson said, noting students learn math by constructing a shelter or methods of measurement by canning vegetables from the school’s garden. “It’s good for kinesthetic learners; it creates an attachment to the material that helps students remember.” When it opened in 2005, Prairie Moon consisted of one mixed-age classroom of preschool through kindergarten, Watson said. It has added grade levels over the years, and now has six classrooms serving students from preschool through seventh grade. Another key element of Waldorf teaching is keeping movement in lessons. Watson said students have movement class twice per week, in which they play non-competitive, cooperation based games. Each class also has at least an hour of outdoor play per day, Watson said. “I don’t know any adult who loves to sit at a desk the entire day without getting up and moving around, and I don’t know why we would expect our children to do that,” she said. Not long after the class of fourth- and fifth-grade students finish their drawings of Thor and the serpent, their teacher, Bret Schacht, brings them outside for recess on the school’s grounds. Schacht has been teaching at the school for 10 years and has had these students for the past five. Next year, when they are fifth- and sixth-

graders, he will continue as their teacher. Part of the Waldorf method is that the teacher moves with the students through the grades. Schacht said he thinks that element allows the students and teachers to build a strong relationship. “The positive expectations I have for the children, that can really guide their development,” Schacht said, adding that the class becomes like a family over the years. Cami Kennedy’s 8-yearold daughter Zana has attended Prairie Moon since preschool. Kennedy said she enrolled Zana at Prairie Moon partly because she wanted her to stay active and enjoy school. “It’s just a basic function of being a child — being outside and having physical activity,” Kennedy said, adding it’s similar to what school was like 50 years ago. “It’s childfocused and not production-focused.” In the middle school classroom, sixth- and seventh-grade students are working on perspective drawings. Students sketch cityscapes or landscapes with protractors and rulers. The drawings use geometry the students learned in their math lesson, said middle school teacher Molly Mackinnon. “This is like an extension of those lessons into something in the real world,” Mackinnon said. Prairie Moon will add eighth grade next year, which will make Mackinnon’s class the first to attend through middle school. In the future, Watson said, the hope is to have three separate buildings for preschool, elementary and middle school. “We’re looking at the next 10 years,” she said. — Reporter Rochelle Valverde can be reached at rvalverde@ljworld.com or 832-6314.

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Safety

Discover the

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A

Bryant D. Combes, owner of Combes Construction, a Bucyrus company that is the contractor for the New York school site, did not return requests for an interview over several weeks. The federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration, after learning about the problems at the site last week, was planning to send an inspector to the school to conduct its own review of worker safety issues, Tam Le, an OSHA safety engineer, told the Journal-World recently. The results of that visit have not yet been released. In an odd turn last year, the city gave the school district an exemption from city inspections and permitted the district to hire a third-party reviewer to do the building inspections for the district’s $92 million bond project, which was approved in 2013. The district had asked the city to do the inspections for free, but the city, which had estimated the cost for permits and inspections at $280,000, said there was no way for it to recoup its costs. The district then contracted with Douglas County, which offered its services for free, to have the county’s chief building officer, Jim Sherman, handle plumbing, electrical and mechanical inspections. The district also contracted with a Kansas City company to conduct structural inspections for a fee. The district did not require any inspections for construction site safety that would have ensured proper fencing, for example. Instead, the district’s contracts with its construction companies required the companies to police themselves. School district officials have not yet explained why they structured the contract in a way that didn’t require inspections related to construction site safety. But Julie Boyle, district spokeswoman, said the district’s goal continues to be student safety. “There is nothing more important to us than the safety of students and staff,� Boyle said. “The processes we have in place are in keeping with that priority.�

The accident The school district is nearing the end of a major construction project on 20 schools, as well as the construction of the new College and Career Center. On Aug. 13, Max McGill, 8, had wandered into the construction site at New York school while he was being supervised by a babysitter. Because the school at 936 New York St. is in the middle of a residential neighborhood, it wasn’t unusual for children and adults to wander around the construction site in the spring and summer evenings and on weekends, several neighbors, including David Herrod, who lives across the street from the school, said. At the time of the accident, there was no fencing to keep anyone out. Combes ended its contract with Kansas Fencing at the end of June, and the fencing was taken down, the fencing company told the Journal-World Thursday. Boyle, while maintaining that site safety is the responsibility of only Combes Construction, said that during the school year, parents and children were educated about the dangers of walking into construction sites and warned to stay out. In June 2014, Besler said he got a call from Combes Construction to come work at New York Elementary as the construction supervisor. As a superintendent, Besler was in charge of the field work and the workers. Besler said he was an experienced construction manager who had worked for Ferrell Construction, a well-respected Topeka company, until the owner retired recently. One of the first things

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THIS AERIAL VIEW shows the construction site at New York Elementary School on Aug. 18. he noticed was that the site plan required fencing around the perimeter of the construction site. City and county code require that the fencing be 8 feet tall in order to keep people out. The fencing was supposed to surround the perimeter of the block from Ninth and 10th streets and New York and New Jersey streets. But the contractor wanted to save money, Besler said, and ordered that no metal fencing be used along New Jersey Street, which borders the back of the school. Instead Besler was told to use the orange “snow-drift� plastic fencing that is only about 4 feet high. At Home Depot, the cost of the orange fencing is about $23 for 50 feet. Metal fencing, by contrast, will cost several thousand dollars to rent — about $25 for 12 feet the first month and about half after that, according to one website — during the project, which was expected to be completed in August this year. “The problem with the orange fence is it is hard to maintain,� Besler said. “It gets knocked down. Every night you are looking at tying it back up.� It also doesn’t really keep anyone out, Besler said. The site plan also requested that erosion controls be set up, but Besler said there was little erosion control.

Money vs. safety Besler said the project manager with Combes said several times that the budget was tight for certain expenditures. In November, Besler said the big gates that would be used to enclose the dumpster pads arrived. The plan called for the dumpster pads to be enclosed with brick and the gates. Workers leaned the gates up against a wall in the dumpster area. “I said, ‘Hey, lay them down flat. Don’t lean them over against that dumpster thing,’� Besler said. “I had to get a forklift to set them on the ground.� Workers were belligerent and wouldn’t follow orders, he said. He said he would ask workers at the end of the day to check the fences and to put safety caps on the top of the metal rebar, which held up the orange fence and also was used to stabilize newly poured concrete, but they often ignored him. “They literally said (expletive) off, we are done for the day,� Besler said. “It’s like brushing your teeth. You pour concrete and you have rebar sticking up. One of the workers grabs the (rebar caps) and starts capping it. It takes 15 minutes.� But if you don’t, Besler said, “That rebar will cut you faster than anything. These guys just don’t get it.� He also said workers refused to wear safety equipment. “I would tell them to wear hard hats,� he said. “‘No, we ain’t wearin’ hardhats. You wear them.’� He said he talked to Bryant Combes, the owner, and the project manager, about their attitudes. “I said these guys have the worst attitudes in the world; I don’t want them on my job,� Besler said. But he said the men, who mainly were from the Bucyrus area, had worked for the company for many years and Combes said he

struction projects around needed them. Besler said he also talked the country. to school officials, includwww.keysofjoystudio.com ing the principal and the su— Enterprise reporter Karen Dillon perintendent, and all were can be reached at aware of his concerns. 1540 Wakarusa Drive, Suite SE • Lawrence, KS kdillon@ljworld.com or 382-7162. Boyle with the district, however, said that “no safety concerns were reported to district administration.â€? Because of organization problems and delays in receiving materials and equipment, work backed up. When cold set in, Besler said he told the project manager they needed to buy heaters, propane and tarps to help speed up drying of paint and sheetrock mud. The project manager told him there was no money in the budget for that, Besler said. “I said, ‘What do you mean?’â€? Besler said. “You knew we were going to be working on this in winter.â€? Because work was behind schedule, during the Christmas holidays, Besler had to work long hours every day, including Christmas and New Year’s Day, to try to meet deadlines. In January he quit. “I told them I just can’t Sponsored by do this,â€? Besler said. “Your lack of planning in the office comes down to the work in the field. They said, “This is the way it is.’ It was such a cluster, it just wasn’t worth it.â€? In late June, the fencing came down. After the accident on Aug. 13, Combes put metal fencing back up, but on New Jersey, it only put WORKSHOP up the plastic orange fencing, even though a city SPONSORED BY TENANTS TO HOMEOWNERS, INC. codes official — Scott McCullough, director of the city’s Planning and DevelUnited Way Center opment Department — has 2518 Ridge Court said the entire construction area should have been fenced. 9:30 AM - 1:30 PM The company also apNO RESERVATIONS pears to still be slipping REQUIRED past the code. A reporter documented several pieces LEARN ABOUT of rebar without caps last • Home ownership week. On Friday, Gregory Her• Lenders and Realtors roles in the process rod, who lives across the • The Lawrence Community Housing Trust Program street from the project, sent photos to the Lawrence and other Lawrence resources City Commission and staff and the Journal-World pur• Qualifying for a mortgage and pre-approval porting to show a violation • Credit issues and budgeting WO R K involving concrete pouring. SHOP! He wondered who was en• Inspection and home maintenance forcing code now. “Is the city going to be For more information call: responsible for maintaining TENANTS TO this work?â€? asked Herrod, HOMEOWNERS, INC. who has a degree in archiwww.lawrenceks.org 785-842-5494 www.tenants-to-homeowners.org tecture and works on con-

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Sunday, September 6, 2015

LAWRENCE

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L awrence J ournal -W orld

Polo

PLAYERS CIRCLE in front of a goal Aug. 13 at Edgewood Park in East Lawrence.

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A

Nick Krug/Journal-World Photo

The speed of bike polo, which is played threeon-three, can alternate from a slow, calculated passing game to a tenacious all-out sprint in a hurry. In a blink of an eye, a mallet is raised and a line-drive shot is sent screaming toward the opposing team’s goal, or possibly the tender spot on the back of an unlucky teammate’s thigh. “In a competitive arena it’s full contact. Out here, we’re really chill,� said Malakai Edison, one of the Scary Larry founders who displays his commitment to the sport with a tattoo of two intersecting polo mallets on his left cheek. The vast majority of people know how to ride a bike and most could swing a mallet. So when the action is moving directionally, the sport looks doable to a first-timer. However, unlike most other sports, the slower the game, the trickier it can be for someone without sharp cycling skills when you consider that one of the foremost rules of bike polo is that competitors are not allowed to have their feet touch the ground. The balancing act can take a physical toll the same as all the hard pedaling. But don’t let this discourage you from giving it a try. Members of the group, which tries to play three nights a week with attendance ranging from six to 10 competitors, applaud the sport for its inclusiveness and say that they are always looking for new people. “We have a 12-yearold that plays. He’d been watching us play for three years. He was always asking us to play, and I told him he had to get bigger,� Edison said of Tyler Crain, who is among the youngest of the regulars. “It’s an alternative sport where you can be just as competitive, but it’s not like being on the football team. Then at the same time, we have guys that used to play football and they’re getting older and they’re like, ‘This is cool, I’m going to play too.� Another founding member, Peter Lewis, who is a mathematics doctoral candidate at Kansas University, welcomes the game as an outlet for unwinding each week. “I was here day one for polo,� Lewis said. “I love and hate what I do as a math Ph.D. student. Sometimes it’s really fulfilling to just be in my office and figure something out, but coming out here, it’s great because you can just unwind, work out, play (and) have fun.� On one Thursday night in August, husband and wife Spencer and Ali Sward take turns playing while the other watches over their 18-month-

More bike polo online See the photo gallery at LJWorld.com/ bikepolo2015 and the video of players in action at LJWorld. com/bikepolovid

What is ‘Look’? “Look� is a monthly feature by JournalWorld photographer Nick Krug that looks in depth at topics of interest — particularly visual interest — in our community.

Quality Fine jewelry repair old son, Desmond, who toddles around the nearby bleachers hoisting polo mallets in both hands. The couple met playing bike polo in 2010, got married on the court and even played bike polo at their wedding, according to Ali. “I spent about $1,000 on a new bike and then found out I was pregnant with (Desmond),� said Ali with a laugh. Originally, longtime polo players say that their games were cobbled together in local parking garages and for a brief stint on the tennis and basketball courts at Veterans Park, 19th and Louisiana streets. In 2010, after some tennis players raised concerns, Scary Larry members say they were contacted by city officials and asked to play elsewhere. “We started looking at ‘forgotten’ parks, and they showed us a few parks and they happened to show us Edgewood,� Edison said. Edgewood Park, which is at the intersection of Maple Lane and Miller Drive in the Brook Creek neighborhood of East Lawrence, is 16 acres of largely open field, minus the basketball court and jungle gym area, and is on the darker side as far as park lighting is concerned. Around the exterior

group through its webof the basketball court at Edgewood, which the site at scarylarrykbp.org. Scary Larry folks have been using for bike — Photographer Nick Krug polo, are 31 waste-high, can be reached at 832-6353 or large concrete barrinkrug@ljworld.com. ers that city workers delivered at a cost to the group to form the exterior of the rink in order to keep the ball in play. “They actually brought us out some picnic tables and they brought out these bleachers for us,� said Edison, who speaks highly of the city’s willingness to work with the group. “They put [in] a grill for us and they put up the barriers and really left it up to us to do everything else.� “The city benefited from moving us out of where people wanted to be and having us put the lights on, be a positive activity going on in (Edgewood),� Edison said. As for being welcomed by the Brook Creek neighborhood? “The neighborhood loves us here,� Lewis said. “You know, this isn’t the safest of parks at night, but if we’re here at night, we have the lights on. There have been people who have told us that they feel safer walking through this park at night when we’re here.� Anyone interested in playing can contact the

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Sunday, September 6, 2015

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FAMILY AND FRIENDS GATHERED for Arnold Weiss’s 100th birthday celebration Aug. 16. Weiss, right, taught Spanish at Kansas University for 30 years and has stayed active in both the Lawrence and KU communities. He is shown here with Chancellor Bernadette GrayLittle. Send us your photos: Got a fun pic of friends or family? Someone in your community you’d like to recognize? We’ll even publish your pets. Email your photos to friends@ ljworld.com or mail them to Friends & Neighbors, P.O. Box 888, Lawrence, KS 66044.

This Week at the Dole Institute

commemorateADA 25 with Marca Bristo & David Morrissey 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 10 Contributed Photo

PUBLIC NOTICE Lawrence City Commission Vacancy Applications are being taken to fill a vacancy on the Lawrence City Commission.The following criteria will be used for selecting a candidate: An extended history of involvement in community affairs;

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A desire to serve the Lawrence community and voters; A history of sound decision-making;

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The ability to devote the amount of time required for this position; A demonstrated understanding and knowledge of the workings of the City of Lawrence; A diverse perspective and ability to make decisions that balance quality of life with a healthy, growing economy; Three letters of recommendation from Lawrence residents. More information, including the application, all required materials, and a timeline of the process for filling this vacancy can be found online at www.lawrenceks.org/vacancy. Paper copies available at City Hall or Lawrence Public Library.

Robert J. Dole Institute of Politics 2350 Petefish Drive, Lawrence, KS 785-864-4900

All application materials are due to the City Clerk's Office by 5:00 p.m. on Wednesday, September 9, 2015.

www.DoleInstitute.org


Opinion

Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com l Sunday, September 6, 2015

EDITORIALS

Judicial mess A legislative challenge to the powers of the Kansas Supreme Court threatens to trigger a constitutional crisis for the state.

T

he Kansas Legislature and governor shouldn’t have been surprised by last week’s ruling that threatens to close down the state court system. Their tampering with the authority of the judicial branch to manage state courts already was the topic of a court challenge when lawmakers recklessly decided to tie this year’s court budget to the outcome of that case. To avoid an immediate crisis, Shawnee County District Judge Larry Hendricks agreed to stay his ruling, which means that state courts will remain open, at least for now, but this issue is far from closed. Wednesday’s ruling addresses a 2014 law that requires judges in each of the state’s 31 judicial districts to pick their own chief judge. That power previously had been held by the Kansas Supreme Court. Because the law was seen as an attack on the authority granted to the Supreme Court in the Kansas Constitution, a district judge in Kingman County challenged the law’s constitutionality. While that case still was pending, Kansas lawmakers tied the outcome of that case to the entire judicial budget for the current fiscal year. Instead of including the judicial budget in the overall state budget, they put it in a separate bill that included the altered system for selecting chief judges. And they added a “nonseverability” clause so that if any part of the bill was declared invalid, the entire bill would be null and void. In other words, if Judge Hendricks ruled that the change in choosing chief judges was unconstitutional, the entire judicial budget would be thrown out. Despite the Legislature’s coercive tactics, Hendricks ruled on Wednesday that taking away the Supreme Court’s power to appoint chief judges violated the separation of powers doctrine, as well as the Kansas Constitution, which says, “The supreme court shall have general administrative authority over all courts in the state.” As noted at the outset, the governor and Legislature probably were not surprised by this outcome. The highly unusual act of tying the outcome of this case to the judicial budget was intended to challenge the powers of the state court. That is a politically popular idea among conservative Republicans and even if the state lost the case, legislators who supported the power play would win points for trying to rein in the court. Never mind that, in this case, it is the governor and Legislature, not the courts, that are trying to exceed their constitutional powers. The next step in this drama is expected to be another court action seeking to have the nonseverability clause struck down. If that action is successful, the judicial branch’s budget probably would be reinstated and the courts would continue to operate. If that doesn’t happen, however, the Legislature might have to step in and fix the mess it created — a situation that might even require a special session at taxpayer expense. Separation of powers is a core principle of democratic government. The judicial branch was intended to be shielded from the shifts in the political majority that governs the legislative and executive branches. That’s an important separation that needs to be protected.

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‘Religious liberty’ looks like intolerance “To me,” she said in a statement, “this has never been a gay or lesbian issue. It is about marriage and God’s word. It is a matter of religious liberty.” It’s telling that Kim Davis chose those words to defend herself last week. Davis, the clerk of Rowan County, a rural, impoverished and previously obscure patch of northeastern Kentucky, made international headlines for her refusal to issue marriage licenses to samesex couples. She had, should it need saying, not a legal leg to stand on, the Supreme Court having ruled in June that states may not bar such couples from marrying. On Thursday, Davis was jailed for contempt. The thricedivorced clerk had said she was acting upon “God’s authority” and fighting for “religious liberty.” The political right has long had a genius for wrapping noxious notions in code that sounds benign and even noble. The “Patriot Act,” “family values,” and “right to work.” are fruits of that genius. “Religious liberty” is poised to become their latest masterpiece, the “states’ rights” of the battle for a more homophobic America. A few months ago, you will recall, “religious liberty” was claimed as the

Leonard Pitts Jr. lpitts@miamiherald.com

Taken to its logical conclusion, it is not just gay men and lesbians who are threatened by the ‘religious liberty’ movement, but all of us.” rationale for failed laws in Indiana and Arkansas that would have empowered businesses to refuse service to gay people. The Atlanta Journal Constitution reports that Georgia lawmakers will introduce a new “religious liberty” bill there next year. Last week, Mike Huckabee praised Davis for “standing strong for religious liberty.” Chris Christie, while conceding the need to obey the law, spoke of the need to “protect religious liberty,” As if religious liberty were seriously in danger in one of

the most religiously tolerant nations on Earth. Of course, like all good code, this one hides its true meaning in the banality of its words. Most of us would likely support the right of Native Americans to ingest peyote in their religious rituals, or Jewish or Muslim inmates to grow beards. Some of us even believe no religious order can be required to ordain a woman, admit a congregant of a proscribed race or, yes, perform a same-sex marriage. We understand a core American principle that, within certain broad parameters, one’s right to practice one’s faith as one pleases is inviolable. But “religious liberty” as defined by Davis and her supporters is about what happens in the wide world beyond those parameters, about whether there exists a right to deny ordinary, customary service and claim a religious basis for doing so. And there does not. Davis is wrong for the same reasons Muslim cabbies in Minneapolis-St. Paul were wrong some years ago when they claimed a right not to carry passengers who had alcohol on them and Christian pharmacists were wrong when they claimed a right not to fill birth control

prescriptions. You have a right to your religious conscience. You do not have a right to impose your conscience upon other people. And if conscience impinges that heavily upon your business or your job, the solution is simple: Sell the business or quit the job. Otherwise, serve your customers and keep your conscience out of their affairs. Taken to its logical conclusion, it is not just gay men and lesbians who are threatened by the “religious liberty” movement, but all of us. Is it too much of a stretch to suggest that most of us probably run afoul of somebody’s reading of their religion in some way or another? Who would welcome a future where you couldn’t just enter a place and expect service but, rather, must read the signs to determine if it caters to people of your sexual orientation, marital status, religion or race? We tried something like that once. It didn’t work. Sadly, if people like Kim Davis have their way, we may be required to try it again. They call it “religious liberty.” It looks like intolerance from here. — Leonard Pitts Jr. is a columnist for the Miami Herald.

OLD HOME TOWN

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Candidates lack stature, ideas Donald Trump is right when he says this country is in trouble. It certainly will be if any of the candidates now running for president actually gets elected. They seem so wan, so much smaller than life, except for the windbag Trump, who’s like Popeye’s Blutto — a “towering brute” with a “colossal ego.” One puff of hot air from Trump is enough to scatter the rest of Republicans across the stage, crying out in helium-filled falsettos, wondering what hit them. Are none of them capable of brushing aside Trump’s strident inanities and standing on their own two feet? Trump calls Jeb Bush “low energy” and instead of laughing it off, Bush whimpers, “Trump isn’t a true conservative, but I am.” Heavens, who cares what label Bush is entitled to? What does he bring to the table to get this country moving forward again? On the other hand we have Hillary Clinton, whom most Americans say they don’t “trust.” Are they kidding? Whoever heard of a trustworthy politician? Clinton’s problem is that she has no ideas to offer but the standard ploy: Pander to interest groups in exchange for votes. Yes. America seems to be stuck in the mud. We’ve had two mediocre, divi-

George Gurley

How about a candidate stepping forward and exhorting us to come together and transcend our rabid, irrational animosities?”

cally impossible.” Maybe we need to find a way to govern without impossible politics. How about a candidate stepping forward and exhorting us to come together and transcend our rabid, irrational animosities? How about one with the courage to criticize his own party’s extremism and failed policies rather than demonizing and insulting the other party? Wouldn’t it be refreshing if Hillary Clinton asked the teachers’ unions to start running schools for students rather than the unions or if Donald Trump politely asked the National Rifle Association to practice a little moderation in its promotion of firearms? Where is the leader who asks “What works?” rather than “Who’s to blame?” Where is a little common sense, a little good will? Footnote: People say they prize Trump’s “authenticity.” But Trump has a combover. A comb-over signifies a man who hasn’t the courage to accept the truth. It takes courage and a bit of self-knowledge to admit that you’re bald and instruct your barber to cut the comb-over off. A man with a comb-over is not “authentic.” Believe me, I know.

sive presidents in a row. Congress is held in universal contempt. Foreign policy is incoherent and destructive. Incompetent, unelected bureaucracies spawn incomprehensible regulations. The Supreme Court has become an ossified, politicized institution. Public schools are failures. Cities are awash in firearms. Prisons burst at the seams. Yet none of the candidates can be bothered to address these problems in constructive ways. None of the candidates has much to say about the role government has played in the — George Gurley, a resident of many problems that face us. Politicians keep telling rural Baldwin City, writes a regular column for the Journal-World. us that reforms are “politi-

From the Lawrence Daily Journal-World for Sept. 6, 1915: years “With the openago ing of the UniverIN 1915 sity only one week away and much yet to be done, workmen are rushing repairs on the buildings of the big school to completion this week. The new approaches on the west side of Fraser Hall have been completed and workmen are painting the interior of the building at present.... The new home of the School of Education will be completed by the opening of the school year next Monday and is going to add to the beauty of the campus. ‘Some people were inclined to believe that the new building would be an eyesore,’ Chancellor Frank Strong said today, ‘but now that it is nearly completed I am confident that they will all change their minds.’... Rooming houses, fraternities and sororities are undergoing their final brushings and polishings before the arrival of the students, the advance contingents of which are already in.... Many new courses will be offered at the big school this fall and the enrollment will be larger than ever before in the history of the institution, according to an announcement made by Registrar George O. Foster several days ago. It is believed that the student body for the year 191516 will run well past 3,000.” “In a raid on the house at 837 Pennsylvania street Saturday night, the police took four quarts of Monogram whisky and seventeen quarts of beer. The owners of the liquor, however, were not at home and are still at large.” “Labor Day bids fair to pass in Lawrence much like any other day. The banks and the county offices at the court house are closed but there is apparently no other observation of the day. Many Kansas towns, including Topeka and Columbus, are having big celebrations.” — Compiled by Sarah St. John

Read more Old Home Town at LJWorld.com/news/lawrence/ history/old_home_town.

Letters Policy

The Journal-World welcomes letters to the Public Forum. Letters should be 250 words or less, be of public interest and avoid namecalling and libelous language. The JournalWorld 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.


®

this is a story you helped write, but haven’t yet read.

Olivia was a 4th grader. She loved to read, but didn’t have any books at home. So if she was given a book in class, she would read it cover to cover, again and again, until she had to give it back. One day Mrs. Kolish, her teacher, handed out brand-new copies of Charlotte’s Web. As usual, Olivia read it cover to cover, again and again. She reluctantly went to give it back, but this time was different. Mrs. Kolish wouldn’t accept the book because Charlotte’s Web was Olivia’s to keep. You see, Olivia didn’t know that every time you shopped at Target, you were giving to education. And each time you did, you helped raise one billion dollars for supplies and books for students like Olivia. So when Olivia said thanks a billion to Mrs. Kolish for the first book she could call her own, she was saying thanks a billion to you, too.

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School safety concerns prompted resignation By Karen Dillon

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ConCordia — As political leaders in Kansas are speaking out against the possibility of moving enemy combatants being held in Guantanamo Bay to the military prison at Fort Leavenworth, another Kansas town is celebrating its history of housing prisoners of war. Only a few buildings remain of Camp Concordia, which was located about 3 miles outside of Built: In 90 days the town of ConCost: $1.8 million cordia and once Opened: July 1943 held more than Closed: 4,000 German November 1945 POWs during Buildings: 304, World War II. But including a 177-bed community leadhospital ers there have restored what’s left and turned the former prison into a tourist attraction celebrating that time in the city’s history. Lowell May, who has written a book about the camp’s history and is a member of the POW Camp Concordia Preservation Society, said people of the town initially had many of the same concerns being expressed today about the danger of housing enemy prisoners. But he said they soon got over that fear as the camp became an integral part of the community. “One woman told me, we didn’t know if we were going to be murdered in our beds at night. But after a few months, those fears started dying down,” he said. “You have to remember, though, the Germans were members of an organized army that had been captured in combat,” he said. “They operated by rules. So once they were put in a camp, they accepted that and pretty much went along and rode out the rest of the war.” Paul Rimovsky, who also volunteers for the preservation society, said few people

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IN MONEY

IN LIFE

Brady’s lawyer targets soccer

Adele, others expected to drop new albums this fall

09.06.15 ANDREW BURTON, GETTY IMAGES

WHAT’S HAPPENING

ONLINE

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DS

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uCalifornia wine country: Tours, trails and tastings for 15 regions uAll the action from the Round of 16 at U.S. Open tennis in NYC

TODAY ON TV uABC This Week: Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff; Republican presidential candidates John Kasich and Mike Huckabee uNBC Meet the Press: Former Secretary of State Colin Powell uCBS Face the Nation: Republican presidential candidate Carly Fiorina; former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, R-Ga. uCNN State of the Union: Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, D-Fla.; former Gov. Sarah Palin, R-Alaska. uFox News Sunday: Former Vice President Dick Cheney and his daughter Liz. To find these items, go to onlinetoday.usatoday.com

MIGRANT CRISIS IN EUROPE

Jubilation as Austria, Germany open borders

Stalemate eases as thousands leave Hungary

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

USA SNAPSHOTS©

Most diverse religion in USA Seventh-day Adventists boast the highest racial/ ethnic mix of worshipers, with a diversity score of

9.1 out of 10

Note The Herfindahl-Hirschman index diversity score of all U.S. adults is 6.6 Source Pew Research Center’s 2014 “Religious Landscape Study” TERRY BYRNE AND KARL GELLES, USA TODAY

Special for USA TODAY

ugee camps or crossing the Balkans after landing in Greece. Hundreds of thousands have fled war, persecution and economic hardship this year alone. In jubilant scenes on the border, hundreds walked off buses and into Austria, where volunteers at a roadside Red Cross shelter offered hot tea and handshakes of welcome. They had the option of traveling onward to Germany, which announced it would take them in. German police said they expected to receive 10,000 migrants from Hungary on Saturday, Reuters reported.

IDOMENI , GREECE Clutching his son as he trudged through a field of sunflowers toward Greece’s border with Macedonia, Aladdin Shoumali’s eyes glistened with tears in the dim moonlight as he described why he fled his native Syria. “My daughter dead, my father and brother dead, our home destroyed — we lost everyone, everything in this terrible war,” said Shoumali, 34, wincing as the toddler let out another piercing cry. “My son is sick and we have not slept in days, but there is nothing to do except keep walking.” So they pressed on, part of an unrelenting tide of desperate people fleeing war-torn homelands to find refuge and better opportunities in Europe. More than 340,000 people have entered Europe this year — surpassing 100,000 in July alone — in what authorities describe as the worst refugee crisis since World War II. With unprecedented numbers of migrants making the perilous journey to

Contributing: Jessica Estepa

v STORY CONTINUES ON 2B

@dstanglin USA TODAY

Thousands of migrants arrived in Austria and many more were heading there on foot Saturday as European countries broke a stalemate and began finding ways to take in the masses of humanity. Hungary, which had spent days stopping migrants from leaving by train, provided buses to take them into Austria. The government relented under international pressure and after desperate refugees who had camped out at the Budapest train station simply began walking toward the border. Austria opened the floodgates by announcing that “every refugee in Austria can apply for asylum.” By early afternoon Saturday, about 6,500 migrants had crossed into the country, Austrian Interior Minister Johanna Mikl-Leitner said. “Given the challenges facing our German friends as well, all of Europe needs to wake up. (The time for) reverie is over,” she said,

MIGRANTS PRESS ON, DESPERATE FOR HAVEN Lucy Kafanov

Doug Stanglin

BALAZS MOHAI, EPA

Migrants cross into Nickelsdorf, Austria, on Saturday.

“(The time for) reverie is over.” Johanna Mikl-Leitner, Austrian Interior Minister

according to Reuters. “Now the continent of Europe is challenged. In this great challenge the entire continent has to give a unified answer. Whoever still thinks that withdrawal from the EU or a barbed wire fence around Austria will solve the problem is wrong.” The migrants are mainly from Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan and have endured hardships for months, often traveling over land after lengthy stays in Turkish ref-

Trevor Hughes @TrevorHughes USA TODAY

B

BLACK ROCK CITY, NEV.

This is an edition of USA TODAY provided for your local newspaper. An expanded version of USA TODAY is available at newsstands or by subscription, and at usatoday.com.

KEVIN WINTER, GETTY IMAGES

urning Man is where cellphones go to die, and some of the nation’s most tech savvy folks say that’s just the way they like it. No data service means no Facebooking, Instagramming, Snapchatting or Tweeting. Texting works only sporadically. And making calls? Service is spotty and the fine dust, poison to electronics, is everywhere. “This week is a carte blanche excuse to tell people that I have no service and I can’t be reached,” said Mike MacHenry, a software engineer from Massachusetts. Like many Burning Man participants, MacHenry is young, highly educated and happy to set aside technology for the week. At his camp, visitors are given postcards so they can mail themselves handwritten notes to be delivered in six months. It’s a way of helping people remind themselves of what they were thinking at the moment, no Timehop necessary. “I’m totally addicted to my phone, except at Burning Man,” said Presley Pizzo, a software env STORY CONTINUES ON 2B

With most everybody off the grid, participants actually participate

BURNING MAN: Where cellphones go to die Katya Leder of London said she thought it would be ironic to take a selfie at Burning Man.

TREVOR HUGHES, USA TODAY

State Department IT staffer also paid by Clinton family Pagliano maintained private email server Mary Troyan @orndorfftroyan USA TODAY

A State Department worker refusing to testify about former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s private email arrangement was paid by the Clinton family to maintain the outside computer network while she was in office, The Washington Post reported Saturday. The arrangement allowed WASHINGTON

Clinton to have control over her personal and official email communications but, according to an unnamed official with the Clinton presidential campaign, also made sure taxpayer dollars were not used to maintain the Clinton family server, the newspaper reported. The staffer, Bryan Pagliano, was the IT director on Clinton’s 2008 presidential campaign and continued to be paid by the Clinton family even after taking a job at the State Department in 2009, the Post reported, citing the campaign official and another unnamed source. A spokesman for the Clinton

Presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton says “there are answers to all these (email) questions.”

KELSEY KREMER, THE DES MOINES REGISTER

campaign on Saturday confirmed the account about the family’s computer system at their home in Chappaqua, N.Y. “Bryan was hired by the Clinton family as a consultant in order to help out periodically with the management of the system in Chappaqua that hosted the family’s emails,” Nick Merrill said on Twitter. Clinton’s use of a private email system while she was Secretary of State has become part of the latest congressional investigation into the 2012 terrorist attacks in Benghazi, Libya. And the FBI is reviewing the security of the private email ar-

rangement because of concerns it involved classified information. Pagliano earlier informed the House Select Committee on Benghazi that he would invoke his Fifth Amendment rights and not answer questions. As a State Department employee, Pagliano did not list the outside income on his personal financial disclosures, according to the Post. In an interview last week, Clinton said she was sorry that the email arrangement “has been confusing to people and has raised a lot of questions, but there are answers to all these questions.”


2B

L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 2015

MIGRANT CRISIS IN EUROPE

Gulf states idle as crisis roils Europe Gregg Zoroya USA TODAY

A Syrian boy waits for authorities to open the illegal border crossing from Macedonia into Greece.

LUCY KAFANOV

REFUGEES DREAM OF HOMES ON A CONTINENT STRIVING TO COPE v CONTINUED FROM 1B

reach European Union borders, countries are struggling to cope. “This is the first time in history that the European Union is facing such a massive influx of refugees from outside the region, and Europe is very poorly prepared for that,” said Alexander Betts, a professor and director of the Refugee Studies Center at Oxford University. “What we are seeing is an absence of international cooperation and responsibility sharing.” Three weeks ago, Shoumali slipped through Syria’s border into Turkey with his wife and son, where he said they paid a smuggler $2,400 to cross the choppy seas to the Greek island of Kos in a crowded rubber dinghy. They spent nearly a week sleeping in the open as they waited for paperwork enabling them to travel to mainland Europe. They reached the Greek port city of Thessaloniki and from there made the 48-mile journey on foot to the border with Macedonia. “God willing, we will go to Germany or maybe Belgium,” Shoumali said. “I don’t know what life is waiting for us in Europe, but where we come from, there is only death.” There is death along the journey, too. In August, authorities discovered the decomposing bodies of 71 refugees, including four children, inside a truck abandoned on a highway in Austria, while an estimated 200 people were feared drowned off Libya when two overloaded boats capsized. The International Office of

Ukraine

Germany

0

Austria

N

200

Miles

Hungary Romania Italy Macedonia

Black Sea

Idomeni Turkey

Greece

Athens Kos Mediterranean Sea

Syria

Source ESRI KARL GELLES, USA TODAY

Migration has recorded more than 2,600 deaths linked to Mediterranean crossings this year. The refugee influx has overwhelmed front-line countries like Greece, Italy and increasingly Hungary, as well as wealthier nations like Germany and Sweden, which have taken in a disproportionate number of asylum-seekers. Britain has an exemption from EU rules on border issues, along with Ireland and Denmark. “While Europe squabbles, people die,” Betts said. “Dividing some 300,000 people among the 28 EU member states would be manageable, but that is not our reality. I think Europe is slowly starting to come to the conclusion that the status quo is leading only to tragedy and chaos.” In a widely hailed move, the

German government announced that it would allow Syrian refugees, who normally would be sent back to where they first entered the European Union, to stay and apply for asylum. As many as 800,000 people are expected to seek asylum there this year, a fourfold increase from 2014. Germany, Great Britain and France have called for a meeting Sept. 14 in Brussels to “strengthen the European response” to the escalating crisis. Proposals laid out by officials include the creation of reception centers in Greece and Italy to house, screen and feed new arrivals. “This is a highly political issue that needs to be dealt at the European level, instead of depending on the willingness of one or two countries,” said Giorgos Tsar-

bopoulos, head of the United Nations refugee agency in Greece. While aid groups are stepping in to fill the gaps, help is limited as migrants make their way north through impoverished Balkan countries. On a recent afternoon, several hundred refugees sat in a makeshift transit camp near the Macedonian border town of Gevgelija, sweating in the August sun after crossing the border from Greece. There is no place to purchase food or supplies, and the only drinking water comes from a truck. Nearby, bulldozers were expanding the site as the U.N.’s refugee agency scrambled to make space for what it said were as many as 3,000 arrivals each day. Following clashes earlier in August between migrants and baton-wielding policemen, Macedonian officials seem to have given up on attempting to halt the flow of people, adding extra trains and buses to take the migrants north to Serbia. After people waited hours in the sweltering heat, a battered blue train pulled up to the makeshift platform for the five-hour journey to the Serbian border. As the train began to move, Mohammed Hassan, 25, took out his cellphone to study a map of Serbia, planning his route into Hungary. His mother remained in Iraq’s volatile Diyala province, where his father was killed three months earlier. “I will go to whichever country will take me, whichever place has the best situation,” Hassan said. “My life is in God’s hands now.”

No Internet, but tech is never far away v CONTINUED FROM 1B

gineer who just got her Ph.D. in linguistics. At least she thinks she just got her Ph.D. — the email telling her she qualified came out after she entered the encampment, and she doesn’t actually know yet for sure. “I love being connected, but this is such a great vacation from that,” she added. While most Burning Man participants are off the grid, technology and the people who are at its epicenter are intertwined with the event. Tech titans have long had a major presence here. Tesla and SpaceX founder Elon Musk, a regular at Burning Man, gave a TED talk in the desert earlier in the week. Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg, and Sergey Brin and Larry Page of Google have shown up over the years. Technology underlies major portions of the event itself. Every entry ticket gets scanned, and vehicles leaving and returning during the week are tracked via QR codes. Event organizers organizers have a microwave link linking their computer systems to the Internet, although most communi-

Man is Firechat, which uses phones’ Wi-Fi and Bluetooth capabilities to create a network without Internet access. Users can share photos and messages with each other, even if they’re on different sides of the camp, because the app hopscotches the information between their phones via anyone else using the app. First-time attendee Jen Billock, CEO of Couchsurfing, says she’s impressed by how many of her colleagues have chosen to stay disconnected. Billock has a young daughter, so she brought a PHOTOS BY TREVOR HUGHES, USA TODAY satellite phone to stay in A Burning Man attendee checks an event map, which participants touch, although only use instead of GPS on their smartphones. two other people have cations are done either from camp to camp, takthe number. Couchsurfface-to-face or via radio. ing was inspired by ing classes in knife The crowd here is the kind ac- throwing and meditation, Burning Man’s culture customed to always-on Internet and learning how to of gifting, and Billock access, and based on their demo- make medallions from said she’s enjoying the graphics (70% have at least a smelted beer cans. Whi- CouchSurfing CEO Jen Billock chance to experience bachelors degree and 90% are teboards are how you this community without aged 19-60), this is probably one leave messages, and paper maps distractions from electronics. of the densest clusterings of replace GPS for the week. “It’s an alternate universe and For those willing to pull their it really allows you to disconnect iPhones on the planet. With phones off, participants, phones out in the near-constant in a way you sometimes can’t on well, participate. Strangers eat dust, one app that is working for vacation. It’s nice to see people communal dinners and wander communication within Burning come out of their habitual selves.”

The richest Arab nations in the Gulf region aren’t taking in Syrian refugees, the largest population of migrants overwhelming neighboring Middle Eastern countries and flooding into Europe. Persian Gulf countries such as Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar and Kuwait have pledged or donated hundreds of millions of dollars, but won’t resettle those fleeing the Syrian civil war that has been raging for more than four years. Nearly half of Syria’s prewar population of more than 20 million people have been displaced within Syria or have fled the country, according to the United Nations. The neighboring nations of Turkey, Lebanon, Jordan, Egypt and Iraq have taken in more than 3.5 million Syrians combined. But tens of thousands more have embarked on perilous journeys this year across the Mediterranean to Europe. “The bottom line is that in terms of resettlement, the Gulf states have not stepped up in accepting refugees,” said Geoffrey Mock, the Syria specialist for Amnesty International USA. “They have offered zero resettlement places ... and this is shameful.”

“They have offered zero resettlement places ... and this is shameful.” Geoffrey Mock, Amnesty International USA

Amnesty International singled out Qatar, United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Oman and Bahrain for failing to take in Syrians. The countries have a history of allowing in migrant workers from other Arab nations. Kuwait, in a gesture over the recent crisis, granted long-term residency to 120,000 Syrians already living there. Nabil Othman, acting regional representative to the Gulf region at the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, told Bloomberg that 500,000 Syrian migrants already live in Saudi Arabia. They are referred to as “Arab brothers and sisters in distress,” he said. Luay Al Khatteeb, a nonresident fellow at the Brookings Institution, said the issue may be that the Gulf states fear destabilization from a major influx of migrants. “When they enter any country, they will bring with them all the reasons of why they left Syria,” Khatteeb said. Meanwhile, the Associated Press reported Saturday that Israeli opposition leader Isaac Hezog called on his nation to take in Syrian asylum-seekers. Corrections & Clarifications USA TODAY is committed to accuracy. To reach us, contact Standards Editor Brent Jones at 800-8727073 or e-mail accuracy@usatoday.com. Please indicate whether you’re responding to content online or in the newspaper.

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USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 2015

NATION/WORLD ON POLITICS Cooper Allen USA TODAY

Paul goes west to revive campaign GOP hopeful’s team still confident despite sinking in polls Tom Loftus

The (Louisville) Courier-Journal

Donald Trump agreed to sign a GOP loyalty pledge, and Ben Carson continued his rise in GOP polls. More news from the world of politics:

FREDERICK M. BROWN, GETTY IMAGES

Stephen Colbert debuts Tuesday.

2016 COMES TO LATE NIGHT Stephen Colbert will make his CBS “Late Show” debut this week, and the presidential campaign figures to be a major focus. Colbert previously announced GOP presidential candidate Jeb Bush would join him on the Sept. 8 premiere. Colbert announced Tuesday that Vice President Biden, still considering a presidential bid, would be a guest Sept. 10. Not to be outdone, NBC announced Tuesday that GOP front-runner Donald Trump would appear on “The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon” on Sept. 11.

FRANKFORT, KY. Near the end of a summer that saw him plunge in national polls among Republican voters, Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul found himself in the East Gold Room of the Westmark Hotel in Fairbanks, Alaska. It was part of a five-day western swing that also took Paul’s campaign to Washington, Idaho, Montana and Wyoming. They are states, Paul’s campaign says, that other candidates ignore. Paul’s campaign, straining to remind Republicans he’s the man Time magazine called “the most interesting man in politics” less than a year ago, is hoping to regain traction with an appeal to liberty-loving westerners who supported the 2008 and 2012 presidential campaigns of his father, former Texas congressman Ron Paul. “We are going to states where the senator will be favored, or

heavily competitive,” Chip Englander, Paul’s campaign manager, said last week. “While it’s not sexy because they are not among the first four states that vote, they all come shortly thereafter, and they’re states we’ll do really well in.” “He’s decided to go west like his father did,” said Larry Sabato, director of the University of Virginia Center for Politics. “He’s working on the small-turnout caucuses in states in the western half of the United States to make a showing.” Yet Paul continues a slide in national opinion polls. The RealClearPolitics website, which aggregates results of recent polls, shows Paul has dropped from fourth place, with about 10% support in early May, to 10th place with about 3% by the end of August. Englander says he is not discouraged by the polls and notes Paul’s standing is still enough to qualify him to participate in the upcoming Sept. 16 CNN debate at the Ronald Reagan Library in Simi Valley, Calif. “Early polls are meaningless. The reality is 15 of the 17 candidates are in single digits,” he said.

SCOTT OLSON, GETTY IMAGES

Sen. Rand Paul hopes to regain traction by appealing to those who supported his father’s campaigns.

He added that Paul “realizes that winning campaigns are the ones that plan the work and work the plan over time.” That plan called for the unusual western tour, he said, but with emphasis on early-voting states. Paul was in New Hampshire, Vermont and Maine last week. This week, back to Iowa. Donald Trump currently reigns as the anti-Washington favorite among Republican voters — a position in the field Paul hopes to stake out for himself — so the plan also calls for continuing to challenge Trump, a strate-

Key House Democrat thinks Mississippi will change flag Clyburn hopes state follows example set by South Carolina Deborah Barfield Berry @dberrygannett USA TODAY

ADAM BETTCHER, GETTY IMAGES

Martin O’Malley blasts DNC.

O’MALLEY CONTINUES PUSH FOR MORE DEBATES Former Maryland governor Martin O’Malley is pressing the Democratic National Committee to schedule more debates, and this past week he used the release of the latest batch of Hillary Clinton’s emails to make his case. In a fundraising email to supporters, O’Malley cited an April 2010 email Clinton sent to Maryland Sen. Barbara Mikulski in which the then-secretary of State offered praise for O’Malley, saying he should be “re-elected by acclamation for steering the ship of state so well.” O’Malley would go on to win a second term later that year. In his message to supporters, O’Malley wrote that he “didn’t win in Maryland by acclamation” but “because we fought for progressive change.” He then argues that the Democratic National Committee needs to schedule more debates “to get our positions on the issues in front of voters.” There are currently six debates scheduled.

gy that began in the first debate on Fox News in August. “Republicans, at least temporarily, are expressing their frustrations with the party and with Congress by picking people who couldn’t find their way around Washington without a street map,” Sabato said. “The odd thing is that Paul and (Texas Sen. Ted) Cruz are about as anti-Washington as you can get. But they happen to be in public office.” Paul, for his part, is hoping to chip away at Trump’s appeal by questioning his conservative bona fides. “There’s a lot of bluster and anger on Trump’s part, but really a lot of his solutions have been big government solutions,” he said in an interview last week on Boston Herald Radio. “I think eventually people are going to come to their senses and say, ‘Oh my goodness, I like this angry vitriol, but you know what? I didn’t realize he was for gun control, and for Obamacare, for increased taxes and for taking private property.’ ” Jennifer Duffy, senior editor for The Cook Political Report, said how long Paul and others down in polls can survive depends on whether Trump’s support holds.

WASHINGTON One of the topranking Democrats in Congress predicts Mississippi will remove the Confederate battle emblem from the state flag. “I really believe that the state of Mississippi is going to change its flag,’’ Assistant Democratic Leader James Clyburn of South Carolina said last month. That would follow the example set by South Carolina, where state lawmakers, supported by Republican Gov. Nikki Haley, voted in July to remove the Confederate flag from the statehouse grounds. Mississippi’s situation is somewhat different because the Confederate battle emblem is part of its flag. Lawmakers, celebrities and others have called for the state to remove the emblem. Clyburn and other members of the Congressional Black Caucus will discuss that issue — as well as efforts to remove Mississippi’s flag from the House side of the U.S. Capitol — at their annual conference in Washington beginning Sept. 16. Mississippi Gov. Phil Bryant, a Republican, hasn’t publicly expressed a personal opinion on the issue, but he has noted that state residents voted in 2001 to leave the flag as it is. Republican state House Speaker Philip Gunn sup-

ALEX WONG, GETTY IMAGES

“There’s nothing historical about that (Confederate) flag but defiance,” says Rep. James Clyburn, left. ports changing the flag. Bryant’s office did not return repeated calls for comment. Clyburn recently told reporters he thinks Bryant, who is up for re-election this year, eventually will support changing the flag. Clyburn believes Haley saw her state’s action on the Confederate flag as part of her legacy as governor, and he said Bryant will feel the same way. National debate over the flag renewed in June after a gunman shot nine black churchgoers in

Charleston, S.C. The accused gunman, Dylann Roof, who is white, used the flag to promote racist views. Stephen Rozman, a political scientist at Tougaloo College, said change in Mississippi won’t come easy. “You’ve got to understand Mississippi. There’s a victim mentality,’’ he said. “The more Mississippi is singled out and ridiculed nationally, as it is, the more you get a lot of white Mississippians who get their dander up.’’ South Forward, a Columbia,

S.C., group that backs Democratic Party and progressive principles in the South, recently launched an email campaign urging Bryant to support changing the flag. “Phil Byrant is probably not going to budge on that issue at all — at least not now,’’ said Jay Parmley, the group’s executive director. “What we do know is that he should at least hear from people both inside Mississippi and outside of Mississippi.” Bryant has said he doesn’t plan to call a special session over the issue. The legislature convenes in January. A Clarion-Ledger survey found 64 state lawmakers supported changing the flag, 24 opposed it, nine were undecided and 96 either didn’t respond or declined to give an opinion. Most Democrats who weighed in said they supported changing the flag. Most Republicans opposed it. Supporters of keeping the Confederate battle emblem on the flag say it’s part of a rich heritage in the South. Clyburn, a civil rights veteran, said the emblem symbolizes resistance to desegregation. “There’s nothing historical about that flag but defiance,’’ he said. In Congress, Rep. Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., and Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., have proposed resolutions to remove from the U.S. House any items — including the Mississippi state flag — featuring the Confederate emblem. Contributing: Jerry Mitchell, The (Jackson, Miss.) Clarion-Ledger

IN BRIEF BILL COSBY LOSES LEGAL SKIRMISH OVER DEPOSITION

CHIP SOMODEVILLA, GETTY IMAGES

Carly Fiorina is moving up the polls.

FIORINA GETS BOOST FROM RULE CHANGE GOP candidate Carly Fiorina received some good news Tuesday. CNN, host of the Sept. 16 GOP debate at the Ronald Reagan Library in Simi Valley, Calif., announced it would change rules for participation in the main prime time forum so that candidates who are polling in the top 10 nationally since the first debate Aug. 6 would also be invited. Previously, the network’s rules included polls taken before the debate as well. Fiorina widely was considered the winner of the so-called undercard debate in Cleveland, and since then has risen in the polls. She’d protested CNN’s original rules, but now figures to qualify for the upcoming debate. Contributing: Gregory Korte

Bill Cosby’s legal advisers are spending the Labor Day weekend licking their wounds after a judge denied their request to see documents that may explain how his 2005 sexual battery case deposition was leaked to the New York Times. According to filings obtained by TheWrap.com, Cosby’s attorneys filed a discovery motion in July, operating under the theory that accuser Andrea Constand and her attorney, Dolores Troiani, facilitated the leak, which, if true, violated a June court order. On Friday, Judge John R. Radova ruled that the contents of the deposition are actually subject to the 2006 settlement agreement between Cosby and Constand rather than that court order. —Jayme Deerwester 30 CADETS INJURED IN BLOODY PILLOW FIGHT

A pillow fight between freshman cadets at the United States

CELEBRATING A SAINT IN WAITING

Lt. Col. Christopher Kasker, a spokesman for the academy, said all of the cadets have returned to duty, the Times reported. —Mary Bowerman BIDEN, LYNCH TO SPEAK ON UNTESTED RAPE KITS

ARMEND NIMANI AFP/GETTY IMAGES

Catholics touch a portrait of Mother Teresa during a feast celebration Saturday in Pristina, Kosovo. Mother Teresa (Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhiu) was born in what is now Skopje, Macedonia. Military Academy took a violent turn when cadets swung pillowcases packed with hard objects at each other. Thirty cadets were injured, including 24 that suffered concussions, the New York Times

reported. The brawl took place Aug. 20, and was part of an annual pillow fight among freshman cadets. The Times reported that West Point did not confirm the fight until Thursday.

Vice President Joe Biden, Attorney General Loretta Lynch and Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance plan to gather in New York City this week to address the nation’s backlog of untested sexual assault kits, according to public advisories issued Friday. An announcement regarding the sexual assault kit backlog is scheduled to take place Thursday at the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner, according to a news advisory from Vance’s office on Friday. At least 70,000 rape test kits collected by more than 1,000 law enforcement agencies have not been sent to crime labs for testing, a USA TODAY Media Network investigation published in July found. —Steve Reilly


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WORLD

‘Joke with the pope’ before his visit to U.S. Emily McFarlan Miller Religion News Service

“The California drought is so bad, people in Napa are asking the pope to change the wine into water.” That joke, from late-night TV host Conan O’Brien, is the warmup to a new “Joke with the Pope” digital campaign, encouraging people to “donate” a joke to support one of three causes ahead of Pope Francis’ historic U.S. visit. The campaign, which begins Tuesday, is being launched by the Pontifical Mission Societies in the United States and precedes the release of its new mobile app, Missio. The mission societies work to spread the Catholic faith overseas, especially in poor and remote areas. Actor and comedian Bill Murray has been named honorary adviser for pontifical comedy by the society. “Everyone’s very excited fundamentally about the message and meaning of the Holy Father and the fact that he’s coming to the United States, and we want to prepare well and do something meaningful to take advantage of this moment to reach out and make significant change in the world,” said the Rev. Andrew Small, the U.S. mission’s national director. Through Oct. 2, anyone, not just Catholics, can submit a written joke or video of themselves telling a joke on the campaign website, jokewiththepope.org. Submitters can choose a cause their joke will support: helping children in need in Argentina, housing the homeless in Ethiopia or feeding the hungry in Kenya. The organization will announce the funniest joke Oct. 5, bestowing the title of “honorary comedic adviser to the pope” on the winner and donating $10,000 to the winner’s chosen cause. Murray likely will have a hand in choosing the winner, according to Small. “I think he will be something of the go-to man on what is and is not funny,” Small said. “We can only hope the Holy Father makes his own contribution.” The Pontifical Mission Societies said in a statement that it hopes Joke with the Pope will help spread the joyful spirit of Francis as he visits New York City, Washington, D.C., and Philadelphia from Sept. 22-27. This is, after all, the pontiff who wrote an apostolic exhortation titled “Evangelii Gaudium,” or “The Joy of the Gospel.” “In that joy, we’re able to then lift our own hearts up and reach out to one another,” Small said. “Even if that’s all we can share

Roman Catholic group offers opportunity to help the needy, perhaps gain some fame

PONTIFF: GOSSIP IS SURELY NO LAUGHING MATTER Rosie Scammell

Religion News Service

Pope Francis on Friday likened a person who gossips to “a terrorist who throws a bomb,” telling his followers that sowing divisions is a sickness within the Catholic Church. Speaking during his homily at his Santa Marta residence, Francis criticized people who think gossip is harmless. “Gossiping is like terrorism because the person who gossips is like a terrorist who throws a bomb and runs away, destroying,” he said. “With their tongue they are destroying and not making peace.”

VATICAN CITY

“With their tongue they are destroying and not making peace.” Pope Francis, on gossips

FILIPPO MONTEFORTE AFP/GETTY IMAGES

“It’s a new way of connecting. It’s not just a new piece of technology.” The Rev. Andrew Small, national director, Pontifical Mission Societies in the United States, on a new app available this week

with one another — a smile, a laugh or, you know, like the pope, sort of the touch of compassion — I think that helps us to change the world one laugh at a time.” The organization also hopes the campaign will raise awareness for the new Missio app, available Thursday in the App Store and Google Play. An initial version of the app, mostly a news aggregator sharing how the church is engaged around the world, was launched in 2013. The new app will connect users with hundreds of projects, creating what Small calls “a compassionate commons.” All the projects will be part of

the societies’ work in Africa, Asia and Latin America, but Small said he envisions other religious organizations becoming involved. Users will be able to support those projects by offering money or just friendship. They can let leaders know they are praying for them, light a “digital” candle or write to elected officials about a cause. They also can connect with others who share their interest in causes or their location. A “Tinder for do-gooders” is how Small described the app. “It’s a new way of connecting. It’s not just a new piece of technology,” he said.

Pope Francis will visit New York City, Philadelphia and Washington, D.C., from Sept. 22-27. The “Joke with the Pope” campaign runs through Oct. 2.

The pontiff went further in his description of the “cunning” gossiper, who is “not a suicide bomber” because he takes good care of himself. Francis called on his followers to question whether they sow peace when they speak, telling them to bite their tongues if they feel the urge to spread divisions among people. He also took a critical view of those who have a “serpent’s tongue” and spread gossip within the Catholic Church: “That person is always doing what the serpent did with Adam and Eve, namely destroying peace. And this is an evil, this is a sickness within our church: sowing divisions, sowing hatred, not sowing peace.” This is not the first time Francis has taken aim at those who spread rumors at the Holy See. In a scathing attack just days before Christmas last year, the pope described the “terrorism of gossip” that plagued the Vatican administration — known as the Roman Curia.

American ideals draw U.S. citizens to West Bank Today’s immigrants lean more toward being older, married, more religious

Israel’s overall citizenry, making them “strikingly over-representSpecial for USA TODAY ed” within the settler population, according to data released last EFRAT, WEST BANK When Morweek in Jerusalem by Oxford Unidechai Reich moved to this Jewish versity historian Sara Yael settlement 7 miles south of Jeru- Hirschhorn. salem in 1994, he wanted Hirschhorn’s research to study in a yeshiva, or profiling American setseminary. tlers here shows 60,000 He stayed in Efrat, of Israel’s 200,000 to once part of the biblical 300,000 U.S. citizens live land of Israel, because he in the West Bank. felt he could make a The territory remains difference. at the heart of a four-dec“For me, Israel is a ade dispute over competyoung country where ining claims to the land MICHELE CHABIN dividual contributions between Palestinians and add up to create signifi- Mordechai Israelis. Many Israeli setcant change,” said Reich, Reich, an tlers have moved into a psychologist who immi- Americancertain areas, despite the grated here from New Israeli, government’s opposition. York. “In that sense it is a moved to the Many American immiland of opportunity, just West Bank grants who moved to the as America is. We inte- because he West Bank settlements grate Israeli culture and felt he could say it was their upbringAmerican culture, and make a differ- ing in the United States the result is a strong cul- ence. that drew them here. ture.” While “many people Today, Efrat is a suburban com- consider settlements a violation of munity with 10,000 residents, Palestinian rights of sovereignty,” many of them Americans who Hirschhorn said, American sethave lived here for decades. tlers “believe Jews should have U.S. citizens make up roughly the right to live wherever they 15% of the Jewish population in want in the Holy Land and certhe West Bank, but only 2-3% of tainly anywhere under Israel sovMichele Chabin

MICHELE CHABIN

Efrat, a Jewish settlement 7 miles outside Jerusalem, was cofounded by American Jewish immigrants to Israel. ereignty. To them, this is a deeply American vision.” The Americans who immigrated to Israel, including those who moved to the West Bank after the 1967 Six-Day War, “were mostly young, single, highly educated, upwardly mobile, traditional but not necessarily Orthodox in religious practice,” the historian said. “They were people involved and sympathetic to leftist social movements, such as the U.S. civil rights struggle.” Today’s American immigrants tend to be older, married and more religious, she said. Hirschhorn noted that some

American settlers have carried out “egregious acts of terror,” such as Brooklyn-born Baruch Goldstein, who shot to death 29 Muslim worshipers in a Hebron mosque in 1994. But others are spearheading Israeli-Palestinian dialogue groups. “It cuts both ways. If my research has shown me anything it is that stereotypes are an unhelpful way of understanding the settler project, regardless of whether you are sympathetic or opposed to it,” Hirschhorn said. Shlomo Fischer, an expert on Jewish extremism at the Jewish People Policy Institute, dispelled

the view that American settlers may be the ringleaders behind many Jewish attacks against Palestinians and non-Jewish institutions in recent years. “My impression is that Americans are not disproportionately represented within the extremist population,” Fischer said. “In the past there have been some in the leadership with an American background but, in fact, most Americans who live on the West Bank, especially in places like Efrat, aren’t extremists. They live their lives according to American values.” Oded Revivi, the mayor of Efrat, where English is the preferred language in many homes and synagogues, said his city’s American immigrants often volunteer to act as spokespersons and goodwill ambassadors. “They host foreign groups and explain the reality we’re living in,” Revivi said. They have also helped imbue Efrat, which was co-founded by American-born Rabbi Shlomo Riskin, with an American ethos. “Ours is definitely a community where democratic processes and transparency are a priority and where there is a strong sense of civic responsibility and activism,” the mayor said. “Within our group of volunteers there are large numbers of Americans who lead and initiate projects.”


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USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 2015

NABBING A 3-D VIEW OF EXPLOSIONS IN SPACE The $1.1 billion Magnetospheric Multiscale (MMS) mission will give experts the first three-dimensional view of explosions in space that release energy and fast-moving particles, a process called magnetic reconnection. The two-year mission will involve four spacecraft traveling in two different elliptical orbits of Earth to gather data as they pass through reconnection regions at each end of the magnetosphere. SHOCK 1 ABOW bow shock is a supersonic wave created as a result of solar wind coming in contact with the Earth’s magnetic field.

SUN

2 MAGNETOSHEATH In this region, between the bow

SOLAR WIND

shock and the magnetosphere, most solar wind particles are heated, slowed down and detoured around the Earth.

PHASE 1 MMS will pass through the dayside reconnection region, about 47,500 miles away, where Earth’s magnetic field meets up with those from the sun.

MAGNETOPAUSE 3 This is the magnetic boundary or shield between the Earth’s magnetic field and solar wind. The magnetopause changes shape as a response to solar wind.

EARTH Orbit

JOURNEY TO SPACE In March, the MMS spacecraft were launched aboard an Atlas V 421 rocket. Once in space, they were inserted sequentially into orbit. A look at the launch sequence and the Top spacecraft:

4 MAGNETOSPHERE This region is filled with Earth’s magnetic field and is shaped as a direct result of being blasted by solar wind. The sunward side is compressed, while the nightside, known as the magnetotail, is elongated.

11 feet

5

1 1⁄2 hours into launch, MMS begins to deploy.

4

Payload cover jettisons, exposing MMS crafts.

3

Next, the Atlas booster engine separates from the Centaur main engine.

Side

4 feet

Instruments Each spacecraft includes 11 instruments with 25 highspeed sensors that capture data on plasma, charged particles, electrons and ions. They also assist in maintaining attitude and in making orbit adjustments.

Orbit

PHASE 2 The MMS orbit will gradually be increased until it can pass through the reconnection region of Earth’s magnetic tail 99,000 miles away, roughly halfway to the moon.

Propulsion system Includes 12 thrusters for mobility in space and four propellant tanks in the core of the spacecraft.

Solar panels Eight solar panels provide power with secondary battery storage for use during four-hour eclipses.

2

After 4 minutes, solid rocket boosters jettison, and the Atlas booster engine shuts off.

1

Atlas V 421 series rocket launches

Wire booms When fully deployed, electricfield sensors extend 369 feet out from the craft center. A group effort On July 9, the four spacecraft began flying in a pyramid formation for the first time. The tetrahedron shape will allow scientists to observe conditions from a three-dimensional aspect. The term “multiscale” refers to the ability to adjust the orbit of each craft for study on a variety of different spatial scales.

Axial booms Electric field sensors extend a total of 94 feet vertically above and below the craft.

Individual orbits Teams of scientists will manage each spacecraft orbit around Earth. During the first phase, spacing between each craft will go from 100 miles to 6 miles.

Source NASA; United Launch Alliance FRANK POMPA, USA TODAY

BEN SMEGELSKY, NASA

The Magnetospheric Multiscale spacecraft are prepared for launch.

OBJECTIVES Position information Orbits higher than GPS satellites require an extremely sensitive GPS receiver to rely on weaker signals, particularly from satellites on the far side of Earth.

Spin rate Each craft is spin-stabilized, with a rate of three revolutions per minute.

The mission will help answer the following:

1

What conditions determine when reconnection initiates/ceases?

2

What determines the rate at which reconnection occurs?

3

What is the structure of the reconnection region?

4

How does plasma become demagnetized in the reconnection region?

5

What is the role of turbulence in the reconnection process?

6

How does reconnection accelerate particles to high energies?


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NEWS MONEY SPORTS Brady’s lawyer takes aim LIFE at U.S. soccer ‘monopoly’ AUTOS Kessler accuses USSF, MLS of violating antitrust laws TRAVEL

L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 2015

SPORTS IN COURT

MONEYLINE

Beth Belton @bethbelton USA TODAY

BUSINESS SURVEILLANCE CHINA PLEDGES TO BE GOOD uIn a nutshell: The Group of 20 biggest industrialized and developing economies, including China, were set Saturday to renew their pledge to avoid depreciating their currencies in order to gain a competititive trading advantage, according to a report in The Wall Street Journal. uThe focal point: China’s abrupt decision in August to devalue its currency had sparked concerns that Beijing was doing an instant replay of its past policies and would use a devalued yuan to help spur growth in its slowing economy. And Japan had hinted it might depreciate the yen, fueling worries that China’s move would spark a perilous round of depreciations around the world. uThe prize: At least part of the reason China seems willing to forgo its past devaluing tendencies is because it wants the International Monetary Fund to include the yuan in the currencies the IMF uses for lending reserves. The move would further raise China’s standing in the international financial community.

WU HONG, EPA

IN THE DRIVER’S SEAT FROM SHUTTLE TO STARLINER Chris Ferguson, the commander of the last shuttle flight, was on hand at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center on Friday to debut the name of Boeing’s future space fleet, dubbed the Starliner. Its first launch with a crew to the International Space Station is set for 2017. Boeing is one of two U.S. companies contracted by NASA to transport space station astronauts from Cape Canaveral. The other company, SpaceX, is working on a souped-up version of its cargo-carrying Dragon capsule — a super Dragon — at its headquarters in Hawthorne, Calif.

NASA VIA EPA

ON THE FRONT BURNER MCGRAW-HILL FILES FOR IPO Educational content publisher McGraw-Hill Education filed initial public offering documents with the Securities and Exchange Commission late Friday. It filed for an IPO that was valued at up to $100 million, and the stock would trade under the ticker MHED, according to an Associated Press report. The New Yorkbased firm says its content is used by 250,000 college professors and in 13,000 kindergarten to 12th-grade school districts. It also makes products for libraries and hospitals.

USA SNAPSHOTS©

Not even you, Mom!

39%

claim they never share their passwords, even with relatives

Source Password Boss survey of 2,030 adults JAE YANG AND RAMON PADILLA, USA TODAY

Attorney Jeffrey Kessler says he hopes talks with the U.S. Soccer Federation will keep them out of court.

that means getting promoted by USSF to a Division I league, on par @kajawhitehouse with MLS, from a Division II USA TODAY league. As the popularity of soccer Fresh off his win for New Eng- grows in the U.S., so does its monland Patriots quarterback Tom ey-making potential. This was unBrady against the National derscored in March when MLS Football League, attorney scored an eight-year teleJeffrey Kessler is seekvision deal, worth an ing to shake up anestimated value of with other sports entity: $90 million, Fox, ESPN and Unithe governing body vision. of professional socAs a Division I cer in the U.S. league, MLS atKessler is in talks tracts the bulk of with the United the best deals. It can States Soccer Federaalso attract celebrity tion (USSF) to amend names such as David practices he claims are SPENCER PLATT, Beckham, a former sochurting the North AmeriGETTY IMAGES cer superstar who, tocan Soccer League Patriots (NASL), the nation’s sec- quarterback gether with Simon Fuller, creator of the American ond-largest professional Tom Brady soccer league by atten- had his four- Idol reality show, plans to dance. If USSF fails to game suspen- launch an MLS team in comply, they risk fighting sion vacated. Miami. it out in court — just like NASL, whose teams Brady did with the NFL, Kessler include the New York Cosmos and told USA TODAY in an interview. the Minnesota United, applied for “Like in the Brady situation, the Division I status in May but quick(NFL) would have been wise to ly hit a hurdle — thanks have avoided the whole situation to proposed new reby operating their discipline in a quirements USSF isway that was going to comply with sued in June. Under the legal requirements. And then the proposed new we wouldn’t have to go to court,” rules, a league would Kessler said from his Winston & need 16 teams to Strawn office in midtown Manhat- graduate to Division I, tan. “The USSF is in that same up from the current requirement of 12, among juncture right now.” Kessler is the chair of the anti- other changes. NASL currently has 11 trust practice at Winston & Stawn and has been a go-to name for teams with plans to expand to 13 some of the most contentious le- by next year. gal battles in sports, including an The timing of the proposed new antitrust case that led to the end rules — one month after NASL apof the NFL’s 2011 player “lockout,” plied for Division I status — a controversial work stoppage im- prompted Kessler to accuse USSF posed by the owners. of purposefully raising the bar in Kessler spoke to USA TODAY an effort to protect MLS from about his efforts to shake up pro- competition. Kessler did this in a fessional soccer one day after a letter peppered with words and U.S. federal court overturned Bra- phrases such as “monopoly,” “andy’s four-game suspension for his ti-competitive,” “unlawful protecalleged role in deflating balls to tions” and “clear violations of U.S. gain a competitive advantage — a anti-trust laws.” Kessler said USSF has finanscandal widely known as “Deflatecial incentive to keep MLS on gate.” USSF declined to comment, top, including deals that earned USSF millions, according to its spokesman Neil Buethe said. Kessler’s dispute with USSF audited financial statements. centers on NASL’s desire to com“There’s a lot of reasons why pete with Major League Soccer USSF benefits from having just (MLS), the nation’s largest and one league,” Kessler said. “Evoldest professional soccer league, ery time we get close to scorfor advertisers and other money- ing, they move the field back. making deals. According to NASL, It’s not right. “It’s not legal.” Kaja Whitehouse

ANDREW BURTON, GETTY IMAGES

Former England star David Beckham reportedly earned upward of $255 million playing for Major League Soccer’s Los Angeles Galaxy. URI SCHANKER, WIREIMAGE

Use caution if wading back in to emerging markets China’s woes continue to shake markets Sanjoy Ghosh

Special for USA TODAY

China’s economic slowdown, stock market swoon and currency devaluation have sent ripples across the global economy. Emerging markets bear the brunt of the pain. Many of these developing economies in Asia and Latin America are big trading partners with China, particularly in the commodities sector. The China slump has triggered a sharp downturn in the price of raw materials. The Bloomberg Commodity Index of 22 raw materials recently hit its lowest point since August 1999. No surprise then the benchmark MSCI Emerging Markets Index, down nearly 30% from its September 2014 high, is in the grips of a nasty bear market. After such a vicious slide, should investors steer clear of emerging market exchange-traded funds? Covestor portfolio manager Charles Sizemore, founder and chief investment officer of Sizemore Capital Management, suggests looking at emerging market plays on a case-by-case basis. “Some of the more developed

EMERGING MARKETS CARNAGE As bad as it looks for U.S. stocks, it is far worse for emerging markets. The MSCI Emerging Markets ETF is deep in bear market territory, down almost 30% from its record close a year ago.

0

Sept. 2, 2014

April 20, 2015 -4%

-6% -12% -18%

Aug. 31, 2015 -28%

-24% -30% Source Yahoo Finance; USA TODAY research

emerging markets like South Korea and Taiwan are already cheap, and I would say that the effects of a Chinese slowdown have already been largely priced in,” Sizemore says. “India might also be a market to buy on dips.” Sizemore says investors should steer clear of Brazil, where President Dilma Rousseff faces possible impeachment related to corruption and public anger over inflation and a decelerating econ-

KRIS KINKADE, USA TODAY

omy. Russia also is problematic for investors. “Russia has been blasted by sanctions and by a collapsing crude oil price,” he says. The Chinese economic slump from double-digit growth rates to about 7% is keenly felt among trading partners in the region. Taiwan, South Korea, Malaysia and Vietnam, whose own currencies are weakening, rely on exports to China for a sizable chunk of their total economic output.

That said, few analysts see a repeat of the Asian financial crisis in the late 1990s. Asian economies have stronger current account balances, fiscal positions and foreign exchange reserves that provide some protection against the downturn in China. The rout in emerging market stocks does have one upside. According to an analysis by Capital Economics, the MSCI Emerging Markets Index’s 11% retreat in August pushed its 12-month forward price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio to 9.4. That’s a tad below its five-year average of 10, according to Capital Economics. The valuation gap between MSCI World Index, which tracks 23 developed markets and has a P/E ratio of 13.9, is at its widest point since before the global financial crisis. Intrepid investors have any number of options for exposure to this part of the world. For those seeking a diversified approach, there are the Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets Stocks Index (VWO), the iShares MSCI Emerging Markets (EEM) and WisdomTree Emerging Markets Equity Income (DEM) funds. Investing in the developing world is not for faint of heart. Yet there are companies whose valuations could be interesting to a discerning investor with a long time frame. Good hunting.


7B

USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 2015

RETIREMENT Average American is all wrong about importance of Social Security Education is good. Saving is good. Combine them, and you set yourself up to live a comfortable retirement.

Brian Stoffel The Motley Fool

S

ince I was a teenager, my father has told me to save for retirement and assume Social Security won’t be around when I hit my 60s. All things being equal, this wasn’t terrible advice: It motivated me to focus on saving and investing, and it has helped put my family in a stable financial position. It turns out that this mantra isn’t unique to my family. A recent survey by T. Rowe Price had a surprising finding. Respondents were asked if they agreed with the following statement: “I’m more likely to win the lottery than receive any money from Social Security.” u64% of Millennials agreed with this statement. u49% of Generation X members agreed with the statement. This is just plain wrong — and by a large margin. Here’s why. SIMPLE MATH

While respondents might have been a little hyperbolic, let’s dis-

sect their response. Let’s take, say, the country’s largest lottery: Powerball. According to the lottery’s website, odds of winning the grand prize are 1 in 175 million. In other words, if we are to believe T. Rowe’s respondents, only about two individual Americans out of roughly 320 million should expect to receive even $0.01 of Social Security money. Hopefully, I don’t have to point out how out of touch this is. We are bombarded on a regular basis with messages about a shortfall in Social Security and its looming ramifications. While its true that the Social Security Old Age and Survivors Insurance, or OASI, Trust Fund is expected to run out of money in 2033, that doesn’t mean the program will disappear. That’s because, for decades, there has been more money going into the trust fund — in the form of payroll taxes — than coming out of the fund — in the form of OASI payments. When the fund runs out in 2033, assuming the program functions the way it does now, it won’t disappear — it will simply use the

REDUCED BUT STILL SUBSTANTIAL

OLGA LANGEROVA, GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOTO

Amount the average Millennial can expect annually from Social Security, in 2015 dollars, with yearly salary of: $25K

$50K

Age 62

$75K

$100K

$7,300 $11,500 $14,500 $16,500 $9,100 $14,300 $18,000 $20,600

Age 65

Age 67

$10,500 $16,700 $20,800 $23,700 $13,100 $20,700 $25,900 $29,500

Age 70

Note: Figures rounded to nearest $100. Assumes 23% reduction in benefits. Totals calculated using Social Security Administration’s Quick Calculator. Source: Motley Fool GEORGE PETRAS, USA TODAY

payroll tax revenues to immediately reimburse retirees. The situation is akin to someone who exhausts their savings account and now must live paycheck to paycheck to cover their costs. The difference is that there’s no risk of losing the “monthly income.” As long as Congress keeps Social Security payroll taxes in place, people will be paying into the fund. IT’LL BE A BIG DEAL, EVEN IF CUTS ARE IN PLACE

However, because the number of retirees is expected to grow faster than the number of working Americans, experts predict OASI benefits would have to be reduced by 23% once the trust fund is depleted. It helps to put this in perspective. Let’s say you were born in 1980 and will average an inflation-adjusted salary of $50,000 per year during your working career. Using the Social Security Administration’s Quick Calculator, we can see that if you retire at age 63, you’ll get a monthly check of $1,333 in today’s dollars. That’s equivalent to $16,000 — a substantial chunk of change when you consider that most aren’t expecting anything from Social Security. Even if benefits are reduced by 23%, you’re still looking at $12,320 in automatic income. And if you retire later than 63, you’re looking at even more money. HOW MUCH ARE WE TALKING?

Assuming Congress does nothing to remedy the Trust Fund shortfall, and reducing your benefits accordingly, the graphic at left shows how much the average Millennial can expect to get annually from Social Security in today’s dollars, depending on their average salary and the year they retire. Is this enough for most American retirees to live on? Probably not. But is it a significant chunk of change nonetheless? Absolutely. In the end, the upshot of these wildly inaccurate views is that most Millennials and Gen Xers should be going above and beyond to make sure they can fund their own retirement — Social Security or not. The drawback is that while candidates will have their own ideas about how to change the legacy program, our nation’s voters are largely illiterate when it comes to how Social Security will affect their own lives.

Strategies to make most of Social Security survivors benefits

My friend’s wife died 12 years ago. He is now 61 and Q not remarried. Because he had so many expenses during his wife’s illness, he is not looking to retire anytime

soon. However, I had read that it is possible for a spouse to take their deceased spouse’s Social Security benefits at age 62 and continue to work. Is this true? Does it in any way affect the amount of Social Security my friend will receive when he ultimately retires, presumably at age 69? — Eileen Justino, Mount Vernon, N.Y. Robert Powell

Special for USA TODAY

So here are the facts about A your question, according to William “BJ” Jarrett, a public af-

fairs specialist with the Social Security Administration in Baltimore. Eligibility for Social Security survivors benefits begins: uAs early as age 60 (reduced). uAge 50 if you are disabled and the disability started before or within seven years of the worker’s death. uAny age if you take care of the deceased worker’s child who is under age 16 or is disabled and receives benefits on the worker’s record. If you remarry after you reach age 60 (age 50 if disabled), your remarriage will not affect your eligibility for survivors benefits. In many cases, a widow or widower can begin receiving one benefit at a reduced rate and then, at full retirement age

(FRA), switch to the other benefit at an unreduced rate. However, the person would still be subject to the earnings limit if he/she hasn’t reached full retirement age. Here are some online resources that may help: uSurvivors Planner: Protection You And Your Family Can Count On (http://www.ssa.gov/planners/survivors/). uSurvivors Benefits (www.ssa.gov/pubs/EN-0510084.pdf ). All that said, what you really need to consider is what your friend needs to know to help him plan the rest of his life, says Kurt Czarnowski, a principal with Czarnowski Consulting in Norfolk, Mass. Here’s what Czarnowski says you should discuss with your friend: “While you are under your full retirement age of 66, you are limited in the amount you can earn before it begins to impact your ability to collect monthly Social Security benefits. But, once you reach FRA, this earnings limitation goes away, and you can work and earn as much

The good news is that widows and widowers have some options

So, if your friend is going to keep working, Kurt Czarnowski says a possible strategy for him to consider is to begin collecting a full widower’s benefit at full retirement age, and then, at a later date, say 69 or 70, switch over to his own retirement benefit.

POPA RTIC, GET

TY IM AGES /ISTO CKPH OTO

as you would like and receive full Social Security benefits at the same time.” At your FRA, if you opt not to collect your own retirement benefit, you will begin to earn Delayed Retirement Credits (DRCs) and your payment amount will be increased by 2%-3% per month (8% per year) for as long as you don’t collect, but no later than age 70, Czarnowski says. However, there is no equivalent increase in a widower’s ben-

efit if you defer collecting it past FRA. So, if your friend is going to keep working, Czarnowski says a possible strategy for him to consider is to begin collecting a full widower’s benefit at FRA, and then at a later date, say 69 or 70, switch over to his own retirement benefit. If he waits until age 70 to switch, his own benefit will have been growing at 8% per year because he wasn’t collecting it, and his payment amount at age 70 will be 32% higher than it would have been had he started at FRA. And, he would have been collecting a monthly widower’s benefit in the meantime, Czarnowski says. “Of course, this is simply what he can do,” Czarnowski says. “What he should do is ultimately his choice and will certainly be driven by the actual benefit amounts.” FYI: Your friend can get a benefit estimate on his own account by going to www.socialsecurity.gov/estimator, but he will need to contact his local Social Security office to obtain a benefit estimate as a widower. The good news for your friend, Czarnowski says, is that he does have some options, but as long as he intends to continue working, they may not present themselves fully until he reaches his FRA. Powell is editor of Retirement Weekly, contributes regularly to USA TODAY, ‘The Wall Street Journal’ and MarketWatch. Got questions about money? Email rpowell@allthingsretirement.com.


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NOTRE DAME LOWERS BOOM ON TEXAS, 38-3. 7C

Sports

C

Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com/sports l Sunday, September 6, 2015

SOUTH DAKOTA STATE 41, KANSAS 38

Bottoming out

Nick Krug/Journal-World Photos

KANSAS UNIVERSITY OFFENSIVE LINEMAN BRYAN PETERS (76) WALKS AWAY IN DISBELIEF as South Dakota State players Drew Kreutzfeldt (26) and J.R. Plote (91) celebrate the Jackrabbits’ 41-38 victory over the Jayhawks on Saturday at Memorial Stadium.

Jayhawks’ rally too little, too late

KU went down, not without fight

By Matt Tait

The often sloppy, never dull season-opener revealed enough to draw three conclusions about David Beaty’s first Kansas University football game as head coach. First, it might not win a game. Second, it won’t ever quit trying, no matter how discouraging the scoreboard. Third, Beaty isn’t going to peer out from under his baseball cap looking for someone to blame. Even on the final play, Montell Cozart’s fumbled snap that was compounded by Cozart spiking the ball after he already was down, Beaty took the blame, saying he should have drilled the team more on the proper way to respond to a

mtait@ljworld.com

They say sometimes you have to hit rock bottom before you can start to climb back up. And even by Kansas University football standards, Saturday’s 41-38 loss to South Dakota State in front of a crowd of 30,144 fans at Memorial Stadium was a stop at the bottom floor. Down 31-7 with 12:38 still to play in the first half, the Jayhawks battled and positioned themselves for what looked like a golden opportunity to trot junior kicker Matthew Wyman onto the field for an attempt at tying the game. But after hitting sophomore Derrick Neal for a

MORE PHOTOS n For more photos from Saturday’s game, please go to kusports.com/kusdsufb090515/

20-yard gain to put the Jayhawks at the South Dakota State 33-yard line with seven seconds remaining, quarterback Montell Cozart fumbled the ensuing snap with five seconds to play and then attempted to spike it to stop the clock while lying on the turf. The referee, who was right on the spot watching the unusual play unfold, ruled Cozart down on first down, and the junior’s attempt to line back up and DEJECTED KU QUARTERBACK MONTELL COZART MAKES HIS WAY to the locker room following Please see KANSAS, page 4C the Jayhawks’ loss to SDSU.

WHITE SOX 6, ROYALS 1

Bad pitch dooms Duffy Kansas City, Mo. (ap) — Danny Duffy would like back just one of the 103 pitches he threw Saturday night. That one isn’t coming back, though, as Alexei Ramirez drove it over the fence for a three-run homer as the Chicago White Sox beat the Kansas City Royals 6-1. “He made one mistake that cost him a three-run homer to Ramirez,” Yost said. “He had a 1-2 count and had all kinds of lead room to execute a pitch. He was try-

ing to go a back-door slider and just left it down the middle.” Duffy (7-7), who had not pitched more than six innings in his previous five starts, lasted seven innings, allowing four runs on seven hits while striking out seven and walking two. Ramirez homered for his eighth hit in nine at-bats in the fourth inning with Jose Abreu and Avisail Garcia aboard. “I just didn’t execute on that slider,” Duffy said. “I’m happy with the way

Tom Keegan tkeegan@ljworld.com

fumbled snap to have a shot at another play. “That’s a situation, you don’t think about it very much, but I promise you I’ll be thinking about it moving forward,” Beaty said. “I’ve got to get better for those guys than I was today.” Beaty was quick to tell Cozart that without him the team never would have Please see KEEGAN, page 5C

STILL UNDEFEATED

I competed tonight, but I’m not happy with the result.” Geovany Soto hit a solo homer in the seventh, his fifth home run in 21 games. Jose Quintana (8-10) pitched seven scoreless innings to defeat K.C. for the first time in 17 career starts after losing his first six decisions. Quintana is 4-1 in nine starts since July 24 and yielded five doubles — including two to Kendrys MoJohn Young/Journal-World Photo rales. He struck out four and KANSAS UNIVERSITY VOLLEYBALL PLAYERS, FROM LEFT, CASSIE WAIT, TIANA walked none. DOCKERY, Ainise Havili, Madison Rigdon and Kelsie Payne leave the court after Please see ROYALS, page 3C improving to 6-0 with a victory Saturday over UMKC. Story on page 3C.


Sports 2

2C | LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD | SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 2015

Tebow finished in Philly

COMING MONDAY • The aftermath of Kansas football’s loss to South Dakota State • Cover of KU’s soccer match with Oregon State

TODAY • Soccer vs. Oregon State, 7 p.m. MONDAY • Women’s golf at Marilynn Smith WEST Sunflower Invitational at Manhattan

| SPORTS WRAP | SOUTH

SOUTH

AL EAST

HASKELL WEST

BALTIMORE ORIOLES AL EAST AL CENTRAL

BOSTON RED SOX

TODAY • Men’s golf at Bethel • Volleyball vs. SW Christian (2:30 p.m.), Bethany (5 p.m.) at Kansas Wesleyan tournament

NEW YORK YANKEES

BOSTON RED SOX

BALTIMORE ORIOLES

AL CENTRAL CHICAGO WHITE SOX

TAMPA BAY RAYS

NEW YORK YANKEES

CHICAGO WHITE SOX

OAKLAND ATHLETICS

MLB AL LOGOS 032712: 2012 American League team logos; stand-alone; various

TORONTO BLUE JAYS

ROYALS

KANSAS CITY ROYALS

MINNESOTA TWINS

TODAY • vs. Chicago White Sox, 1:10 p.m. MONDAY • vs. Minnesota, 7:10 p.m.

DETROIT TIGERS

CLEVELAND INDIANS

LOS ANGELES ANGELS AL WEST OF ANAHEIM

TORONTO BLUE JAYS

TAMPA BAY RAYS

DETROIT TIGERS

CLEVELAND INDIANS

AL WEST

AP Pro Football Writer

HIGH SCHOOLS HUB:

SPORTS CALENDAR

KANSAS UNIVERSITY

By Rob Maaddi

Tebow’s time is up in Philadelphia. The Eagles released Tim Tebow on Saturday along with 21 other players before the NFL’s roster deadline at 4 p.m. Tebow had seemingly won the No. 3 quarterback job when Philadelphia traded Matt Barkley to Arizona on Friday. But coach Chip Kelly cut Tebow following his best preseason performance at the New York Jets on Thursday night. “We felt Tim has progressed, but we didn’t feel he was good enough to be the (No.) 3 right now,” Kelly said. The 2007 Heisman Trophy winner was trying to return to the NFL after missing two seasons. The Eagles currently have only two quarterbacks on the roster: Sam Bradford and Mark Sanchez. Bradford looked sharp in limited preseason action, but he had surgery to repair a torn left ACL twice since he last played in a regular-season game in October 2013. “He really improved his throwing motion from when he was throwing a couple of years ago,” Kelly said. “He worked extremely hard on it and deserves a lot of credit for that. I talked to him a little earlier (Saturday) when we released him. “He just needs to get more playing time. Get out there and get actual reps. Because he has done a ton on his own from an individual basis, but it is about taking that next step and playing (in) the game.” It’s possible Tebow returns to the Eagles if either Bradford or Sanchez get hurt. He also can come back after the season opener and his contract won’t be guaranteed. For now, the Eagles are going forward without him. “We are not done,” Kelly said. “There could be a third quarterback. We’ll see what happens with the waiver wire. Whether we add a quarterback to the active roster or the practice squad, we’ll see.” Tebow was 11-for-17 for 189 yards, two touchdowns and one interception against the Jets. He showed his accuracy has improved since his first stint in the NFL. Tebow finished the preseason 21-of-36 for 286 yards, two TDs and one interception. He also ran for 82 yards and one TD. Tebow last played in a regular-season game with the Jets in 2012. He was cut by New England in training camp in 2013. He worked as a college football analyst on the SEC Network last year, but got another chance to play in the NFL when the Eagles signed him in the offseason. Tebow led Florida to the national championship his junior season and was a first-round pick by Denver in 2010. He started 16 games during two seasons with the Broncos, including a playoff victory over Pittsburgh in January 2012. Tebow was traded to the Jets after Denver signed Peyton Manning. In addition to Tebow, among those also released were 2014 draft picks cornerback Jaylen Watkins (fourth round) and safety Ed Reynolds (fifth round) and 2015 draft picks cornerback Randall Evans (sixth round) and Brian Mihalik (seventh round). Also released were wide receivers Rasheed Bailey, Jeff Maehl, Freddie Martino and Quron Pratt, veteran offensive linemen John Moffitt and Julian Vandervelde, rookie offensive linemen Brett Boyko and Malcolm Bunche; running back Raheem Mostert and tight ends Eric Tomlinson and Andrew Geichert. As of Saturday, the Eagles’ roster was at 52, one under the league limit.

TWO-DAY

MINNESOTA TWINS

KANSAS CITY ROYALS

SEATTLE MARINERS

TEXAS RANGERS

These logos are provided to you for use in an editorial news context only. Other uses, including as a linking device on a Web site, or in an advertising or promotional piece, may violate this entity’s trademark or

SPORTS ON TV

sizes; staff; ETA 4 p.m. AFC TEAM LOGOS 081312: Helmet and team logos for the AFC teams; various sizes; stand-alone; staff; ETA other intellectual property rights, and 5 mayp.m. violate your agreement with AP. LOS ANGELES ANGELS OF ANAHEIM

OAKLAND ATHLETICS

SEATTLE MARINERS

TEXAS RANGERS

TODAY

Baseball AFC TEAM LOGOS 081312: Helmet and team logos for the AFC teams; various sizes; stand-alone; staff; ETA 5 p.m. K.C. v. White Sox MLB AL LOGOS 032712: 2012 American League team logos; stand-alone; various sizes; staff; ETA 4 p.m.

These logos are provided to you for use in an editorial news context only. Other uses, including as a linking device on a Web site, or in an advertising or promotional piece, may violate this entity’s trademark or other intellectual property rights, and may violate your agreement with AP.

Stewe Milne/AP Photo

CHARLEY HOFFMAN WATCHES HIS TEE SHOT ON THE 16TH HOLE during the second round of the Deutsche Bank Championship on Saturday in Norton, Massachusetts. Hoffman leads at 12-under.

Spieth misses cut, Woodland eight shots back Norton, Mass. — Jordan Spieth has missed the cut in consecutive events for the first time in his career. The Masters and U.S. Open champion reeled off three bogeys in a five-hole stretch on the back nine Saturday at the Deutsche Bank Championship. He didn’t make a birdie until the final hole, but by then it was too late. He shot a 74 and missed the cut by three shots. Charley Hoffman had another low round at the TPC Boston with nine birdies for a 63. That gave him a three-shot lead over Brendon de Jonge. Even though he missed another cut, Spieth still could return to No. 1 in the world after this event. Hoffman was at 12-under 130 in pristine scoring conditions. De Jonge, of Zimbabwe, had a 68 and kept alive his last-minute hope to make the Presidents Cup team. He was at 133. Rickie Fowler (67) and British Open champion Zach Johnson (65) were four behind. Hoffman already has won this season in Mexico, and unlike the last time he won at TPC Boston, his season is not on the verge of being over. He is No. 17 in the FedEx Cup standings. So the score was similar, even though the circumstances were not. He still knows how to take it low. Starting with a tap-in birdie on the par-3 11th hole — among the most difficult par 3s on the course — Hoffman went on a tear by making a four birdie putts in the 12-foot range and three more from inside five feet. His lone mistake was missing the green on the par-3 eighth hole late in his round, only to bounce back with a 12-foot birdie putt. “It was a little different five years ago,” Hoffman said. “I came from a decent back, so I didn’t have to deal with the lead. Anytime you are in the lead you put a lot of pressure on yourself. And obviously I’ve got to deal with that tonight. ... Just try to keep doing what I’m doing, making a lot of putts and hitting a decent amount of fairways for me, which is a nice combo.” Former Kansas University golfer Gary Woodland followed up his opening 68 with a 70 and is tied for 18th at 4-under. NFL

Fans injured at Colts game Indianapolis — Crews are inspecting the roof of the Lucas Oil Stadium in downtown Indianapolis after three people were injured by a bolt that fell during Thursday night’s Colts game against the Bengals. Capital Improvement Board executive director Barney Levengood says two minutes before halftime a bolt was sheared off by the retractable roof as it was being opened. The bolt fell into a seating area, striking two men and a woman. All three suffered minor injuries. Colts fan Robert Fickle says the fallen bolt was the size of a half-roll of quarters. Levengood tells The Indianapolis Star that once the roof inspection is complete, more information would be released. The next gathering on the stadium’s schedule is a Sept. 12 event for about 220 people with a financial-planning firm.

NFL concussion doc resigns New York — An NFL spokesman says the doctor who reversed course on Redskins quarterback Robert Griffin III’s post-concussion playing status has resigned and been replaced as the team’s independent neurological consultant. The NFL’s Brian McCarthy told the Associated Press on Saturday that Robert Kurtzke left the consultant program operated jointly by the league and the players’ union. McCarthy says Kurtzke will still monitor Griffin’s status and determine when he can be cleared to play. He says Abraham Kader is the new NFLNFLPA independent neurological consultant assigned to the Redskins. A message left by the AP at Kurtzke’s office Saturday was not immediately returned.

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1 p.m. FSN 36, 236 Pittsburgh v. St. Louis 7 p.m. ESPN 33, 233

The Washington Post first reported on Kurtzke’s resignation and continued involvement with Griffin’s case.

Aussie makes 49ers’ roster Santa Clara, Calif. — Former Australian rugby league star Jarryd Hayne says on Twitter he has made the cut with the San Francisco 49ers, earning a spot on their 53-man roster Saturday as coach Jim Tomsula finalized his team heading into the regular season. The 27-year-old rookie return man made good on his goal nearly a year after leaving his old sport to chase a new NFL dream across the world. The roster was to be announced Saturday. “IT ALWAYS WORKS OUT! I thank GOD for WHAT HE has done and going to do on this incredible journey!! I’m on the 53 MAN ROSTER FOR THE #49ers,” Hayne wrote on Twitter. His quest captivated a country more than 7,000 miles away. Tomsula said last weekend following the third exhibition game at Denver that he had seen all he needed from Hayne, including all those countless hours of tape he watched of him as a rugby player. He left the National Rugby League last fall, then signed a three-year contract with San Francisco in March as an undrafted free agent in a deal he said included $100,000 in guaranteed money. Hayne spent the previous nine years — from 2006-14 — with the Parramatta Eels. COLLEGE FOOTBALL

Guards tackle fan on field Nashville, Tenn. — Lightning in the area of Nissan Stadium delayed the game between No. 25 Tennessee and Bowling Green with 8:30 left in the third quarter, leaving fans to keep themselves busy. Some chose playing with beach balls, hitting the concessions stands or simply staying in their seats. One fan made the wrong decision by going onto the field. He ran across the painted “T’’ at midfield and reached the 36 before a security guard took him down. He was quickly hustled off the field. NASCAR

Hamlin wins Xfinity race Darlington, S.C. — Denny Hamlin has won the Xfinity Series race at Darlington Raceway, where he denied Joe Gibbs Racing teammate Daniel Suarez his first career victory. Suarez inherited the lead when most of the field made their final pit stops and he tried to stretch his fuel to the end. But Hamlin had fresher tires and chased Suarez down. He passed him with three laps remaining Saturday for his third Xfinity Series win of the season. All three of Hamlin’s victories have come from the pole. JGR driver Kyle Busch passed Suarez for second, and Suarez finished third as the fleet of Toyotas swept the top three spots. Kevin Harvick finished fourth in a Chevrolet and was followed by series points leader Chris Buescher in a Ford. U.S. OPEN TENNIS

Federer to face Isner Monday New York — Roger Federer might not be so keen to try out his old-dog-new-trick, rushthe-net “SABR” — “sneak attack by Roger” — return strategy against his next opponent at the U.S. Open. “I don’t think so,” Federer said. “I can always try. But it’s probably not the right guy to do it against.” Probably not. That’s because the second-seeded Federer, who advanced Saturday by beating 29thseeded Philipp Kohlschreiber of Germany 6-3, 6-4, 6-4, will have to deal with 6-foot-10 American John Isner and his massive serve in the fourth round. “The idea is not to use it very much against a player like that,” Federer said.

College Football

Time

Net Cable

S.D. St. v. Kansas replay 6 a.m. FSN 36, 236 Ark.-P.B. v. S.C. St. 2:30p.m. ESPN 33, 233 Purdue v. Marshall 2 p.m. FS1 150,227 Golf

Time

Net Cable

Russian Open 6 a.m. Golf 156,289 Deutsche Bank Champ. noon Golf 156,289 Deutsche Bank Champ. 2 p.m. NBC 14, 214 Tennis

Time

U.S. Open U.S. Open

10 a.m. ESPN2 34, 234 4 p.m. ESPN2 34, 234

Net Cable

Soccer

Time

Wales v. Israel B.-H. v. Andorra

10:45a.m. FS2 1:30p.m. FS2

Net Cable

College Soccer

Time

153 153

Net Cable

ORU v. TCU 1 p.m. KU v. S. Clara replay 5 p.m. KU v. Oregon St. 7 p.m. KU v. Oregon St. replay 9 p.m.

FCSA MS MS MS

Auto Racing

Net Cable

Time

146 37, 226 37, 226 37, 226

Sprint Cup, Darlington 6:30p.m. NBC 14, 214

MONDAY Baseball

Time

Net Cable

Baltimore v. Yankees TBA K.C. v. Minnesota TBA

noon 3 p.m. 7 p.m. 8 p.m.

ESPN MLB FSN MLB

College Football

Time

Net Cable

33, 233 155,242 36, 236 155,242

S.D. St. v. Kansas replay 8 a.m. FCSP 146 Ohio St. v. Va. Tech 7 p.m. ESPN 33, 233 Golf

Time

Net Cable

Deutsche Bank Champ. 10:30a.m. Golf 156,289 Deutsche Bank Champ. 12:30p.m. NBC 14, 214 Tennis

Time

U.S. Open U.S. Open

10 a.m. ESPN2 34, 234 4 p.m. ESPN2 34, 234

Net Cable

College Soccer

Time

Net Cable

KU v. Oregon St. replay 1 a.m. MS KU v. Oregon St. replay 11 a.m. MS Soccer

Time

37, 226 37, 226

Net Cable

Armenia v. Denmark 11 a.m. FS1 Scotland v. Germany 1:30p.m. FS1

150,227 150,227

LATEST LINE NFL Favorite.............. Points (O/U)...........Underdog Thursday, Sept 10th. Week 1 NEW ENGLAND.................. 7 (51)......................Pittsburgh Sunday, Sept 13th. Green Bay....................... 61⁄2 (50).......................CHICAGO HOUSTON................ 11⁄2 (41).......... Kansas City NY JETS..............................3 (40).......................Cleveland Indianapolis......................3 (46)......................... BUFFALO Miami................................31⁄2 (43)..............WASHINGTON Carolina............................31⁄2 (41)............JACKSONVILLE Seattle................................4 (41).........................ST. LOUIS ARIZONA...........................21⁄2 (47)...............New Orleans SAN DIEGO.......................21⁄2 (46).......................... Detroit TAMPA BAY.......................3 (42)......................Tennessee Cincinnati......................31⁄2 (43.5).....................OAKLAND DENVER...........................41⁄2 (48.5)...................Baltimore DALLAS........................... 51⁄2 (51.5)....................NY Giants Monday, Sept 14th. Philadelphia..................21⁄2 (55.5)..................... ATLANTA Minnesota...................... 21⁄2 (41.5)........SAN FRANCISCO COLLEGE FOOTBALL Favorite.............. Points (O/U)...........Underdog MARSHALL.........................7 (62).............................Purdue Monday, Sept 7th. Ohio St...............................14 (53)............. VIRGINIA TECH MLB Favorite.................... Odds.................Underdog National League NY Mets.............................Even-6...............................MIAMI Milwaukee........................Even-6....................CINCINNATI WASHINGTON.................101⁄2-111⁄2.........................Atlanta ST. LOUIS...........................Even-6.....................Pittsburgh CHICAGO CUBS................... 7-8..............................Arizona San Francisco.................... 8-9........................COLORADO LA Dodgers......................Even-6.....................SAN DIEGO American League DETROIT................................ 6-7..........................Cleveland Tampa Bay......................51⁄2-61⁄2................NY YANKEES TORONTO.........................71⁄2-81⁄2.....................Baltimore KANSAS CITY..........81⁄2-91⁄2. .....Chi White Sox HOUSTON........................101⁄2-111⁄2...................Minnesota LA ANGELS.......................51⁄2-61⁄2.............................Texas Seattle.................................. 6-7...........................OAKLAND Interleague BOSTON............................81⁄2-91⁄2................Philadelphia Home Team in CAPS (c) TRIBUNE CONTENT AGENCY, LLC

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LOCAL

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Sunday, September 6, 2015

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Chiefs trade McCray, trim roster to 53 Kansas City, Mo. (ap) — Andy Reid was confident this would be the first time in three years coaching the Kansas City Chiefs that a number of players who failed to make his team would catch on elsewhere. It didn’t take long for him to be proven correct. With a glut of talent in the defensive backfield, the Chiefs traded Kelcie McCray to the Seattle Seahawks for an undisclosed draft pick Saturday as they trimmed to the 53-man limit. The Chiefs also released former draft pick Eric

Kush, who began training camp as the starting center, and defensive end Mike Catapano, who overcame an illness to work his way into the mix. “That’s the worst part of your job, letting guys go that have been out here,” Reid said. “It’s different now, too, in that you have all of these days in the offseason so you get to know them even more than what it used to be. I think as we go, a lot of these guys are going to have opportunities with other teams, whether it’s a practice-squad position or making the team.”

That was hardly the case when Reid took over the team. The Chiefs were coming off a 2-14 season that led to the ouster of general manager Scott Pioli and coach Romeo Crennel and were so desperate for talent that they signed seven players off waivers. Now, the Chiefs are one of the teams putting players on the market for other teams. “We’re at a level all across the roster where guys can compete,” current GM John Dorsey said. Other notable cuts Sat-

urday included linebacker veteran James-Michael Johnson; massive defensive linemen David Irving and Hebron Fangupo; wide receivers Da’Ron Brown and Fred Williams; defensive backs Kevin Short and Deji Olatoye; and tight end Ryan Taylor. Top cornerback Sean Smith was placed on the reserve-suspended list after a drunken-driving arrest last year resulted in a three-game suspension, while veteran tight end Richard Gordon was placed on injured reserve after missing most of camp.

The Chiefs did not keep an undrafted free agent this year, ending a streak of 11 straight with at least one on the roster. The best possibility for continuing that run, linebacker Justin March, was placed on injured reserve after hurting his knee in a preseason game. Kansas City wound up keeping six wide receivers, with Frankie Hammond beating out Williams based largely on his special teams play in one of the tightest competitions of camp. The Chiefs also kept

BRIEFLY

Royals

KU volleyball stops UMKC

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C

Kansas University’s volleyball team earned its fifth sweep after defeating UMKC, 25-17, 25-23, 25-16, Saturday in Horseji Family Athletics Center to round out the Kansas Invitational. The Jayhawks (6-0) made quick work of the Kangaroos thanks to the defensive play of libero Cassie Wait. Wait tallied 23 digs to pace KU, and Madison Rigdon and Ainise Havili recorded 14 and 11, respectively. Havili also dished out 44 assists, with a combined 27 of them leading to kills by Tiana Dockery and Kelsie Payne. KU will hit the road again as it begins Pistol Pete’s Showdown with matches against Northern Colorado and Wyoming on Friday in Laramie, Wyoming.

Baker clobbers Culver-Stockton

John Young/Journal-World Photos

KANSAS UNIVERSITY SOPHOMORE KELSIE PAYNE SPIKES THE BALL over a pair of UMKC blockers. The Jayhawks won, 25-17, 25-23, 25-16, on Saturday at Horejsi Center.

Canton, Mo. — Nick Marra threw six touchdown passes, and Baker blanked Culver-Stockton in Heart of America Athletic Conference football on Saturday. Marra tossed TD passes of 34 and 25 yards to Cornell Brown, 27 yards to Ladai Shawn Boose, 14 yards to Quanzee Johnson, 58 yards to Clarence Clark and 55 yards to Damon Nolan. The Wildcats also scored on runs of 21 yards by Adonis Powell and 29 yards by Logan Brettell and a 25-yard field goal by KANSAS UNIVERSITY’S CASSIE WAIT, LEFT, POINTS TO teammate Ainise Havili after Havili scored a kill against UMKC. Clark. Marra completed 13 of 22 passes for 318 yards. Christina Cho, 25:15; 51. Katie Ahern, in their classes, Avant Juniors: 8. Calvin Yost-Wolf, 14:20; 9. 25:36; 52. Laura Prescott, 25:46; Eli Jost, 14:35; 11. Josh Waisner, 14:37; Baker improved to 2-0, 55. Olivia Lemus, 26.10; 59. Lacey Edwards was third in the 12. Zach Lockwood, 14:53; 13. Alain while Culver-Stockton Greenfield, 26:10. Marzquez, 14:54; 19. Benjamin Hill, sophomore boys division, LHS varsity boys: 33. Garrett 15:39; 20. Seth Allen, 15:41; 21. Declan dropped to 0-2. The WildPrescott, 19:07; Nathan Pederson, and Calvin Yost-Wolf Forth, 15:49; 22. Ryan Haq, 16:00; 25. cats will host William Penn 19:18; 37. Carson Jumping Eagle, 19:18; Cam Edgecomb, 16:10; 26. Alex Pettit, took eighth in the junior at 6 p.m. Saturday. 39. Carter Shook, 19:21; 48. Jackson 16:21; 29. Noah Gold, 16:51; 31. Tyler Hoy, 19:43; 51. Kai Blosser, 19:55; 64. boys division. Winsor, 17:16; 32. Ilya Schaeffer, 17:18; Bryce Hadl, 22:06. 33. Evan Stewart, 17:24; 34. Gabe In addition to Venters, Baker 14 27 17 0 — 58 Boys junior varsity: Manhattan 18, Lewis, 17:25; 36. Nathan Roberts, Culver-Stockton 0 0 0 0 — 0 freshman Sarah Walpole 17:34; 37. Skylar Eklund, 17:35; 38. B — Ladai Shawn Boose 27 pass Topeka Seaman 78, Topeka West (third), sophomore Alvena Lawrence 110, Junction City 110, Daniel Faching, 17:36; 45. Tre Byers, from Nick Marra (Clarence Clark kick) 113, Wamego 146, Leavenworth 183, 19:51; 46. Luke Winchester, 20:14; 47. B — Quanzee Johnson 14 pass from Walpole (fourth) and seTopeka high 207, Shawnee Heights Andy Riggs, 20:47. Marra (Clark kick) nior Marcella Ellebracht Seniors: 2. Ethan Donley, 12:30; B — Clarence Clark 58 pass from 216. LHS JV boys: 14. Calvin DeWitt, 4. Tanner Hockenbury, 12:33; 12. (11th) led the FSHS girls. Marra (Clark kick) 20:08.1; 21. Sebastian Lepage, 20:29.4; Alejandro Cabrera, 13:47; 20. Josh B — Cornell Brown 34 pass from Marra (Clark kick) B — Damon Nolan 55 pass from Marra (kick failed) B — Brown 25 pass from Marra (Clark kick) B — Clark 25 field goal B — Adonis Powell 21 run (Clark,Clarence kick) B — Logan Brettell 29 run (Clark,Clarence kick)

LHS runnners place 6th, 7th Manhattan — Lawrence High’s girls placed sixth and the LHS boys took seventh Saturday at the Manhattan cross country invitational. Morgan Jones led the LHS girls, finishing ninth in a time of 21:35.9, and Garrett Prescott took 33rd for the LHS boys in 19:07. Manhattan won the girls team title with 25 points and the boys crown with 36 points. Girls team scores: Manhattan 25, Seaman 76, Leavenworth 106, Emporia 136, Newton 154, Lawrence 155, Wamego 163, Topeka 166, Shawnee Heights 175. Boys team scores: Manhattan 36, Leavenworth 58, Seaman 81, Newton 86, Wamego 129, Junction City 165, Lawrence 187, Emporia 214, Salina Central 221, Topeka 246. LHS varsity girls: 9. Morgan Jones, 21:35; 32. Anna DeWitt, 24:02; 46.

eight offensive linemen, a mild surprise given that left tackle Eric Fisher has been out due to a sprained ankle and right guard Jeff Allen because of a sprained knee. Reid expressed optimism that Fisher would be available for the season-opener Sunday at Houston, but he sounded less enthusiastic that Allen would be back anytime soon. “I think Allen’s is worse than his, so I can’t tell you about Allen,” Reid said after the Chiefs’ preseason finale in St. Louis, “but I think (Fisher) will be back.”

24. Cole Shupert, 20:47.5; 25. Ben Otte, 20:48.1; 30. Ray Faith, 21:08.2; 33. Noah Mercer, 21:14.2; 36. Cameron Stussie, 21:29.7; 37. Buster White, 21:31.0; 53. Gary Schmidt, 22:18.0; 64. Darius Hart, 23:35.6. Boys C team: Manhattan 72, Junction City 78, Topeka Seaman 81, Lawrence 90, Shawnee Heights 123, Newton 145, Emporia 164, Wamego 170. LHS C-team boys: 3. Graham Edmonds, 16:48.5; 8. Logan Grose, 17:20.0; 19. Jordan Schoepf, 17:55.0; 20. Keifer Smith, 18:01.8; 46. Spencer Emerson, 19:36.1; 57. KJ Lashley, 20:30.6; 60. Christian Spoula, 20:40.1; 76. Treyton Trujillo, 22:07.5; 84. Aaron Reed, 23:17.8; 92. Patrick Oblon, 26:00.5; 95. James Lynch, 32:08.5. Junior varsity girls: Manhattan 41, Shawnee Heights 66, Topeka Seaman 86, Newton 89, Wamego 105, Lawrence 159, Emporia 196, Junction City 201, Topeka High 270. LHS JV girls: 8. Vera Petrovic, 20:12.8; 31. Kim Myers, 21:54.2; 40. Aimee Neilsen, 22:28.2; 59. Leslie Grey, 23:53.6; 64. Isabella Hedges, 24:17.2; 66. Kiaitlen White, 24:28.1; 68. Shaye White, 24:44.8; 70. Hannah Reed, 25:20.4; 74. Leah Marett, 25:41.5; 96. April Hodges, 30:03.5.

Venters leads FSHS runners Olathe — Free State High junior Emily Venters placed first in her class Thursday at the Olathe East Class Classic cross country meet. FSHS senior Ethan Donley and freshman Grant Holmes placed second

OLATHE EAST CLASS CLASSIC FSHS Results GIRLS Freshmen: 3. Sarah Walpole, 15:34; 5. Julia Larkin, 15:55; 6. Emma Hertig, 16:33; 7. Joy Bradshaw, 17:25; 12. Bekah Keys, 18:20; 13. Erin Liston, 18:31; 20. Brinna Day, 19:46; 21. Corrine Scales, 19:54; 26. Ashley Giago, 20:20; 32. Caitlin McAndrew, 20:51. Sophomores: 4. Alvena Walpole, 15:44; 7. Kate Odgers, 16:26; 10. Reagan Sullivan, 17:35; 12. Leah Wethington, 17:53; 15. Madelyn Johnson, 18:26; 16. Isabel Carey, 18:28; 24. Abigail Meier, 20:26; 29. Ruby Morris, 22:13. Juniors: 1. Emily Venters, 14:04; 3. Kiran Cordes, 15:03; 9. Abby Zenger, 17:04; 11. Eyerusalem Zicker, 17:25; 15. Taylor Mosher, 20:08; 17. Kahler Weibe, 21:12; 18. Gretchen Boxberger, 21:29; 19. Molly Reed, 22:20; 20. Carolyne Muriu, 22:43; 21. Jessica Ellebracht, 24:36. Seniors: 11. Marcela Ellebracht, 17:25; 12. Sydney Zavala, 17:26; 13. Christina Craig, 17:26; 15. Grace Bradshaw, 17:44; 25. Sydney Zimmerman, 19:50; 27. Haley Boden, 20:16; 41. Laura Crabtree, 22:14; 42. Sarah Kelly, 22:34. BOYS Freshmen: 2. Grant Holmes, 14:09; 11. Shane Friedrichsen, 16:05; 12. Cooper Simon, 16:07; 14. Dash Spears, 16:29; 15. Chris Wilkus, 16:41; 16. Trey Melvin, 16:43; 20. Robert Ward, 16:54; 25. Dylan Goldstein, 17:28; 27. Jeremiah Seibel, 18:06; 28. Quinton Westphal, 18:07; 29. Ryan Flakus, 18:08; 30. Jake Viscomi, 18:14; 31. Gabriel Kennard, 18:14; 32. Spencer Yost-Wolf, 18:15; 37. Dylan Sommer, 18:24; 43. Liam Berns, 19:09; 44. Lincoln Edgecomb, 19:41; 46. Thomas All, 19:40; 47. Eli Heffernan, 19:43. Sophomores: 3. Avant Edwards, 13:11; 4. Jared Hicks, 13:55; 14. Evan Eskilson, 16:00; 19. Finn Huerter, 16:34; 21. Mich Burman, 16:56; 25. Hunter Rea, 17:21; 27. Milo Schoenen, 18:08; 31. Kyler Ruby, 19:41; 32. Elijah Denmark, 20:08; 34. John Baska, 20:55.

Kallenbach, 14:53; 25. John Walpole, 15:22; 34. Brett Carey, 17:03; 36. Chris Blevins, 17:14; 37. Tom Riggs, 17:16; 43. Bryan Wilber, 17:52; 47. Matthew Meseke, 18:45.

Edmonds leads Seabury boys Topeka — Bishop Seabury Academy junior Jack Edmonds led the Seahawks with a 19thplace finish at the Topeka Hayden cross country invitational on Saturday. The Seahawks finished last in the boys’ team standings, fifth, but Edmonds earned a medal with a time of 20:29 in the 5K. Seabury’s girls also finished last, taking sixth place. Sophomore Peggie Zeng posted the top time for Seabury’s girls (26:51) and took 31st. Seabury will compete in the Wamego Invitational at 10 a.m. Saturday. Topeka Hayden Invitational Boys 5K Team scores: Maranatha Academy 35, Topeka Hayden 40, KC Christian 72, Paola 85, Seabury 143. Seabury results: 19. Edmonds, 20:29.0; 54. Sabol, 27:31.3; 55. Blonigen, 29:03.1; 56. Paradise, 29:45.6; 57. Baldwin, 30:41.5; 58. Zhang, 31:45.6.

Girls 5K Team scores: Maranatha Academy 38, Paola 49, Olpe 71, Topeka Hayden 79, KC Christian 148, Seabury 155. Seabury results: 31. Zeng, 26:51.6; 33. Padgett, 26:54.9; 39. Ohlmacher, 27:41.9; 45. McCabe, 29:09.6; 49. Mathis, 29:49.4; 57. Scarbrough, 32.21.3; 58. Im, 33:29.6.

Seabury v-ball third at McLouth McLouth — Seabury Academy went 4-2 and took third place Saturday in the McLouth volleyball tournament. The Seahawks defeated Perry-Lecompton, 25-19, 25-23; Atchison County, 26-24, 25-16; KC Christian, 25-8, 25-12; and Maur Hill, 23-25, 25-17, 25-20; and fell to Maur Hill, 25-13, 18-25, 25-16; and Heritage Christian, 25-19, 25-21. Seabury’s loss to Heritage came in the semifinals, and the Seahawks defeated Maur Hill in the third-place match. Among the leaders for Seabury were Taylor Hodge with 37 kills, 14 aces, 33 digs and two blocks; Ellen Almanza with 40 kills, eight aces, 20 digs and one block; Regan Zaremba with two kills, six aces, 82 assists, 22 digs and one block; Lindsey Hornberger with 32 kills, four aces, 34 digs and four blocks; Vivian Aubel with 26 kills, 10 aces, 35 digs and nine blocks, and Celia Taylor-Puckett with four kills, seven aces, 25 digs and three blocks. The Seahawks (7-2) will play Tuesday at Burlingame (Lebo).

Veritas v-ball fifth at McLouth McLouth — Veritas Christian Academy posted a 4-2 record for a fifthplace finish Saturday in the McLouth Volleyball Tournament. Chloe Holland and Allie Swisher recorded 41 and 27 kills respectively, while chipping in seven aces apiece. Emma Wilson got the offense going with 56 assists. VCA (7-2) will play again Tuesday against Marais des Cygnes Valley.

The White Sox padded their lead with two outs in the ninth when Adam Eaton and Melky Cabrera delivered run-producing singles off rookie lefthander Scott Alexander. The Royals, who scored 27 runs in beating Detroit Wednesday and Thursday, have scored two runs in two games against the White Sox. The Royals went 2 for 14 with runners in scoring position. They used three infield singles in the eighth off relievers Jake Petricka and Zach Duke for their lone run. Alex Gordon was 3-for-4 and got Lorenzo Cain home with a slow roller to third baseman Tyler Saladino. “We had chances, but we couldn’t capitalize on them for sure,” Yost said. “Quintana does a good job of changing speeds with his curveball, locating his fastball and keeping you off balance.”

Double the fun Omar Infante’s seventh-inning double was the 250th of this career. Morales’ two doubles brought his total to 38, the second highest total of his career. Trainer’s room Royals: 3B Mike Moustakas (strained hamstring) will likely return to the lineup Sunday. He has not started the past five games, but did pinch hit in the eighth and grounded into a double play. “That ball was scorched,” Yost said. Up next Royals: RHP Johnny Cueto, who has allowed 17 runs in 17 innings in losing his past three starts, will start the series finale.

BOX SCORE White Sox 6, Royals 1 Chicago AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Eaton cf 5 0 1 1 0 3 .274 Me.Cabrera dh 5 0 1 1 0 1 .272 Abreu 1b 3 1 1 0 2 1 .293 Av.Garcia rf 4 1 2 0 0 0 .265 Tr.Thompson lf 4 0 0 0 0 2 .366 Al.Ramirez ss 4 1 2 3 0 1 .253 Ge.Soto c 4 1 1 1 0 0 .236 Saladino 3b 3 1 1 0 1 0 .240 G.Beckham 2b 4 1 2 0 0 1 .209 Totals 36 6 11 6 3 9 Kansas City AB R H BI BB SO Avg. A.Escobar ss 4 0 1 0 0 0 .262 L.Cain cf 4 1 1 0 0 1 .312 Hosmer 1b 4 0 1 0 0 0 .311 K.Morales dh 4 0 2 0 0 0 .293 A.Gordon lf 4 0 3 1 0 1 .288 1-J.Dyson pr-lf 0 0 0 0 0 0 .251 Cuthbert 3b 3 0 0 0 0 0 .270 b-Moustakas 3b 1 0 0 0 0 0 .281 Orlando rf 4 0 1 0 0 0 .250 Infante 2b 4 0 1 0 0 1 .218 Butera c 2 0 0 0 0 1 .211 a-J.Gomes ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .273 F.Pena c 1 0 0 0 0 1 .000 Totals 36 1 10 1 0 6 Chicago 000 300 102—6 11 0 Kansas City 000 000 010—1 10 0 a-struck out for Butera in the 7th. b-grounded into a double play for Cuthbert in the 8th. 1-ran for A.Gordon in the 8th. LOB-Chicago 6, Kansas City 8. 2B-Av.Garcia (16), A.Escobar (18), K.Morales 2 (38), A.Gordon (15), Infante (22). HR-Al.Ramirez (9), off D.Duffy; Ge.Soto (9), off D.Duffy. RBIs-Eaton (42), Me.Cabrera (63), Al.Ramirez 3 (54), Ge.Soto (21), A.Gordon (42). SB-Saladino (6). Runners left in scoring position-Chicago 4 (Eaton, Tr.Thompson, Abreu 2); Kansas City 7 (Infante, Hosmer, Orlando, A.Gordon, A.Escobar 2, Moustakas). RISP-Chicago 3 for 8; Kansas City 2 for 14. Runners moved up-Tr.Thompson, L.Cain, K.Morales, Orlando. GIDP-Av.Garcia, Ge.Soto, Moustakas. DP-Chicago 1 (Al.Ramirez, Abreu); Kansas City 2 (A.Escobar, Infante, Hosmer), (A.Escobar, Infante, Hosmer). Chicago IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Quintana W, 8-10 7 7 0 0 0 5 106 3.60 Petricka 0 1 1 1 0 0 4 3.86 1⁄3 2 0 0 0 0 9 3.57 Duke N.Jones H, 5 2⁄3 0 0 0 0 0 2 2.13 Dav.Robertson 1 0 0 0 0 1 11 2.50 Kansas City IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA D.Duffy L, 7-7 7 7 4 4 2 7 103 4.17 F.Morales 1 1 0 0 0 1 14 2.09 Alexander 1 3 2 2 1 1 25 9.00 Petricka pitched to 1 batter in the 8th. Inherited runners-scored-Duke 1-1, N.Jones 2-0. WP-Alexander. Umpires-Home, Vic Carapazza; First, Ron Kulpa; Second, Larry Vanover; Third, Brian Knight. T-2:52. A-37,827 (37,903).


4C

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Sunday, September 6, 2015

SDSU 41, KANSAS 38

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2-MINUTE DRILL SDSU 41 Kansas 38 BRIEFLY South Dakota State scored on its first five possessions — a field goal and four touchdowns — and only allowed one KU score in that stretch, a 91-yard kickoff-return touchdown, in bolting to a 31-7 lead in the second quarter. But the Jayhawks fought back, stringing together three consecutive touchdown drives to make it a three-point game at 31-28 with 9:12 left in the third. … The teams traded scores — a field goal and touchdown apiece — the rest of the way. … Kansas actually outrushed (285 yards to 170) and outgained (576 total yards to 463) the Jackrabbits, held the edge in time of possession and only had to punt twice. SOUTH DAKOTA STATE LEADERS Rushing: Isaac Wallace 24-118 (TD), Brady Mengarelli 10-69 (TD). Passing: Zach Lujan 17-for-33 for 293 yards, 3 TDs, 0 INT. Receiving: Jake Wieneke 8-160 (2 TDs), Dallas Goedert 2-49. KANSAS LEADERS Rushing: Ke’aun Kinner 27-157 (2 TDs), Montell Cozart 18-94. Passing: Cozart 25-for-38 for291 yards, 1 TD, 1 INT. Receiving: Tre’ Parmalee 3-82, Darious Crawley 2-64, Kent Taylor 2-25 (TD).

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Jacks relish first FBS win By Gary Bedore gbedore@ljworld.com

After several close calls, FCS program South Dakota State has finally defeated a bigger Football Bowl Subdivision school. The Jackrabbits, who lost to Minnesota by three points in 2009, Nebraska and Kansas by 14 points in 2010 and 2012, and Missouri by 20 last season, improved to 1-7 all-time against the FBS by outlasting KU, 41-38, on Saturday at steamy Memorial Stadium. “I think it’s a feather in South Dakota State football’s hat. It’s a first,” 19thyear Jackrabbits coach John Stiegelmeier said after S.D. State’s first win against a Big 12 team in eight tries. “There’s more to come. I’m not taking anything away from Kansas at all. I’d feel the

same way had we beaten Nebraska four or five years ago. It’s a big win, but we have lofty goals, and our players have lofty goals. That’s to go 1-0 every week. For these guys, this moment, it’s a really special feeling, and it should be,” Stiegelmeier added. Stiegelmeier’s squad raced to a 31-7 lead, then had enough left in the tank to survive on a day several Jackrabbits needed IV fluids because of cramps and dehydration. “They (Jayhawks) really turned it around in the second half and put some pressure on us,” Stiegelmeier said. “That sounds kind of funny as an FCS school, but it wasn’t like that the first half. We did rise up. We handled the pressure well. We were worn out. We were spent. It was a team win, definitely.”

Quarterback Zach Lujan completed 17 of 33 passes for 293 yards and three touchdowns with no interceptions. Receiver Jake Wieneke had eight catches for 160 yards and two touchdowns. Running back Isaac Wallace gained 118 yards off 24 carries with one TD. “It means a lot — first FBS win in school history. I think that says a lot about our program, how far we’ve come,” Lujan, a 6-foot-2 junior from Anchorage, Alaska, said. “Individually, I’m ecstatic. My grandmother passed away about a week ago. This one’s for her.” South Dakota State scored on its first five possessions. “The offensive line was doing a great job. We were running the ball, passing the ball. It seemed like we did pretty much everything we wanted to do,” said

Wieneke, a 6-4 sophomore from Maple Grove, Minnesota. “It’s what we were definitely expecting and hoping for.” The Jackrabbits were outgained by KU 576 yards to 463, but had just three penalties to KU’s seven and no turnovers to KU’s two. He was gracious in victory. “It was so neat to meet coach Beaty (David, KU first-year coach). He’s a special guy,” Stiegelmeier said. “I’m certain to whatever degree you can take Kansas football, I believe, (in) visiting with him, he will take them there. Everybody has some hurdles. He seems like a guy that will battle through them. I look forward to getting to know him better and visiting with him about his program and what he’s learned. That was a treat for me to visit with him.”

TALE OF THE TAPE South Dakota State............................................. Kansas 25....................................... first downs................................4 29 39............................................rushes......................................4 51 170...................................rushing yards............................4 285 17-33-0.................passing (comp.-att.-int.).......... 4 25-40-1 293 4............................passing yards..................................291 72...............................total offensive plays.........................4 91 463........................... total offensive yards.....................4 576 55 4................................ return yards.....................................25 5-41.6....................................punting.............................4 2-43.5 0-0 4..............................fumbles-lost....................................2-1 3-25 4......................... penalties-yards.............................. 7-75 29:56..........................time of possession...................4 30:04 SCORE BY QUARTERS South Dakota St. 17 14 Kansas 7 7

3 7 — 41 14 10 — 38

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING (CARRIES-YARDS) SDSU: Isaac Wallace 24-118, Brady Mengarelli 10-69, team 1-(minus-6), Zach Lujan 4-(minus-11). Kansas: Ke’aun Kinner 27-157, Montell Cozart 18-94, Tre’ Parmalee 1-19, De’Andre Mann 4-13, Ryan Schadler 1-2. Nick Krug/Journal-World Photos

PASSING (COM.-ATT.-YARDS) SDSU: Lujan 17-33-293, 3 TDs, 0 INTs. Kansas: Cozart 25-38-291, 1 TD, 1 INT; Ryan Willis 0-2-0. RECEIVING (NO.-YARDS) SDSU: Jake Wieneke 8-160, Dallas Goedert 2-49, Trevor Wesley 2-33, Isaac Wallace 2-8, Mengarelli 1-29, Connor Landberg 1-7, Cam Jones 1-7. Kansas: Mann 4-15, Parmalee 3-82, Bobby Hartzog 3-24, Steven Sims 3-15, Ben Johnson 3-12, Darious Crawley 2-64, Kent Taylor 2-25, Joshua Stanford 2-19, Shakiem Barbel 2-15, D. Derrick Neal 1-20. PUNTING (NO.-AVERAGE) SDSU: Brady Hale 5-41.6. Kansas: Eric Kahn 2-43.5. TACKLING LEADERS: SDSU: Jesse Bobbit 10, T.J. Lally 8, Je Ryan Butler 6, Nick Farina 6, Jimmie Forsythe 6, Nick Mears 6. Kansas: Tyrone Miller 8, Marcquis Roberts 7, Greg Allen 6, Fish Smithson 5, Tevin Shaw 5, Daniel Wise 5, Courtney Arnick 4, Schyler Miles 4. Officials: Kevin Mar (referee), Matt Sales (umpire), John Braun (linesman), Darren Deckard (line judge), Corey Luxner (back judge), Kirk Wisnewski (field judge), T. Salaam (side judge). Attendance: 30,144. Time of game: 3:35.

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GAME BALLS GASSERS CANDIDATES FOR GAME BALLS n Junior running back Ke’aun Kinner rushed for 157 yards and two touchdowns on 27 carries. n Tre’ Parmalee scored a touchdown on a 19-yard reverse, returned two punts for 25 yards and caught three passes for 82 yards. CANDIDATES FOR GASSERS n Junior quarterback Montell Cozart had a strong day throwing (291 yards) and running the football (94 yards), but mishandled the final snap, which kept him from spiking the ball and kept kicker Matthew Wyman from attempting a 50-yard field goal. n Defensive tackle Daniel Wise was whistled for two 15-yard penalties.

KU SCHEDULE Sept. 5 — South Dakota State, L 38-41 (0-1) Sept. 12 — Memphis, 6 p.m. (JAYHAWK TV) Sept. 26 — at Rutgers, TBA Oct. 3 — at Iowa State, TBA Oct. 10 — Baylor, TBA Oct. 17 — Texas Tech, TBA Oct. 24 — at Oklahoma State, TBA Oct. 31 (homecoming) — Oklahoma, TBA Nov. 7 — at Texas, TBA Nov. 14 — at TCU, TBA Nov. 21 — West Virginia, TBA Nov. 28 — Kansas State, TBA

KANSAS UNIVERSITY’S RYAN SCHADLER (33) RUNS BACK A 91-YARD TOUCHDOWN after a kickoff during the first quarter of the Jayhawks’ 41-38 loss to South Dakota State on Saturday at Memorial Stadium.

HOW THEY SCORED

Kansas CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C

snap it to kill the clock on second down came up one second short. The official waved his arms to signify the end of the game. The Jackrabbits’ sideline exploded onto the field in celebration. And Cozart chucked the ball, underhanded, toward the Kansas sideline in disgust. “I feel like I got too lax, and when the ball hit me, I just never really got a good grasp on it, and I fumbled it,” Cozart said after the crazy ending. “You never think about stuff like that until it happens to you, and it felt like someone just uppercut me right in the gut.” KU coach David Beaty, who now has the distinction of being the eighth Kansas coach in the past 10 hires to lose his debut (only Charlie Weis and Terry Allen came away winners), said he had never been part of an ending quite like that and added that he felt horrible for Cozart and his entire team. “It’s obviously unbelievably disappointing right now,” Beaty said. “That was a very tough locker room to look into for my first day as a head football coach in Div. I football.” The fact the Jayhawks (01) were even in position to tie was a testament to the career day turned in by their junior quarterback. Looking more poised than in past seasons, Cozart was accurate and effective with his arm and decisive and dangerous with his legs. He finished 25-of-38 passing for 291 yards and a touchdown and added another 94 yards on 17 carries on the ground while leading the Jayhawks to 576 yards of total offense. Cozart finished with career bests in completions (25), attempts (38), passing yards (291) and rushing yards (94). All of that after being responsible for two early turnovers — an intercep-

KANSAS COACH DAVID BEATY LEAVES THE FIELD after shaking hands with South Dakota State head coach John Stiegelmeier. tion on KU’s first series and a fumble on its third — that helped the visitors from South Dakota build an improbable 24-point lead. “Getting those early turnovers just settled me down,” Cozart said. “I took a deep breath on the sideline and said, ‘Here we go. It’s time to play ball.’” Added Beaty: “Without Montell Cozart, we wouldn’t have been in that game. ... I was proud of that guy coming back and being resilient. He came back and continued to help us move the ball down the field with his arm, which is not something I’m sure we knew he could do going into it.” The Jayhawks responded to the Mount Rushmoresized hole by ripping off 21 straight points from the end of the second quarter to the beginning of the third. Senior receiver Tre’ Parmalee (three catches for 82 yards) scored on a 19-yard run off of a reverse to make the score 31-14 with 7:14 to play in the first half. And junior running back Ke’aun Kinner (157 yards and two TDs on 27 carries) scored back-toback touchdowns to kick off the second half. As it turned out, though, a costly decision late in the first half nearly had as much of an impact on Kansas losing the game as anything. Facing a fourth-and-three from the SDSU 25 with 1:20 to play in the second quarter, Beaty elected to go for it instead of attempting a 42yard field goal. “Pretty hard,” Beaty said

when asked how strongly he considered trying the field goal in that spot. “I was thinking about it, but we were a ways away, and I wasn’t sure that we didn’t need that momentum going into halftime. “Do I wish I had it back now? Absolutely. Rearview mirror, you look back at it, and you’re, like, ‘I’d love that opportunity.’ But you know what? I’d love that opportunity that happened at the very end, too, but you don’t get to guess like that.” Despite all of the positive statistics and small steps forward that came during the first game of the Beaty era, Saturday’s loss undoubtedly always will be remembered for the wild ending and “hard-to-swallow” loss to yet another FCS school from the Dakotas. In 2010, then-head coach Turner Gill lost his debut, 6-3, to North Dakota State in the same stadium. That loss was marked by futility on offense. This one was more on the defense, which continually missed tackles and gave up far too many big plays early. “We did just enough to stay close, and we didn’t do enough to win the game,” Beaty said. “I think everybody in the stands, at least on our side, would have loved to have seen what happened (at the end of the game). But we’ve got to earn that, and we didn’t earn it by taking care of the details.” Kansas will host Memphis at 6 p.m. Saturday.

FIRST QUARTER 12:44 — Jay Carlson 28 field goal. A 60-yard pitch and catch from Zach Lujan to Jake Wieneke set up the Jacks’ first score of the game on a drive that stalled in the red zone. Six plays, 64 yards, 2:16. (SDSU 3, KU 0). 8:09 — Brady Mengarelli 25 run. Carlson kick. An interception by SDSU linebacker Dallas Brown, who stepped right in front of a Montell Cozart pass to the left hash, set up Mengarelli’s rumbling, stumbling touchdown plunge. (SDSU 10, KU 0). 7:57 — Ryan Schadler 91 kickoff return. Nick Bartolotta kick. The Jayhawks got a huge lift from a walk-on and former track star from Wichita State, who took the ball on the left side, raced around the right wall and outran the kicker to the end zone. (SDSU 10, KU 7). 4:33 — Wieneke 29 pass from Lujan. Anderson kick. The Jackrabbits answered KU’s momentum play with a slow and methodical eight-play, 75-yard drive that spanned 3:24. (SDSU 17, KU 7). SECOND QUARTER 13:39 — Wieneke 16 pass from Lujan. Carlson kick. On the third play of the second quarter, the 6-foot-5 Wieneke went up in the back right corner of the north end zone and plucked a well thrown ball out of the air with Brandon Stewart in tight coverage. (SDSU 24, KU 7). 12:38 — Mengarelli 29 pass from Lujan. Carlson kick. A Cozart fumble gave the Jackrabbits possession deep in KU territory, and two plays later a harmlesslooking swing pass to the flat wound up in the end zone. (SDSU 31, KU 7). 7:14 — Tre’ Parmalee 19 run. Bartolotta kick. The Jayhawks responded with a 16-play, 75-yard drive that took 5:24 and featured a reverse from Parmalee to cross the goal line. Ryan Willis took a couple of snaps on the drive for Cozart, who was banged up. (SDSU 31, KU 14). THIRD QUARTER 12:31 — Ke’aun Kinner 3 run. Bartolotta kick. Kansas broke out of the locker room with a strong drive to start the second half. Cozart completed six of seven passes, including the first two of the day thrown toward Virginia Tech transfer Joshua Stanford, and found Darious Crawley for a 28-yard gain to set up Kinner’s run. (SDSU 31, KU 21). 9:12 — Ke’aun Kinner 26 run. Bartolotta kick. After another stop by Kansas near midfield, Cozart marched the Jayhawks 85 yards in six plays and 1:15 to pull KU within a field goal. Cozart hit Crawley with a 39-yard pass and also ran for a 20-yard gain to set up Kinner’s score. (SDSU 31, KU 28). 1:04 — Carlson 24 field goal. The drive covered 15 plays, 53 yards and 6:20 and also featured a monster hit from KU sophomore Joe Dineen, who rocked Lujan so hard that his helmet when flying off after an incomplete pass. (SDSU 34, KU 28). FOURTH QUARTER 11:18 — Bartolotta 23 field goal. The Jayhawks answered SDSU’s lengthy drive with one of their own. Cozart and Kinner helped march Kansas inside the SDSU five, where they had three cracks at scoring the go-ahead touchdown, but the Jackrabbits held. (SDSU 34, KU 31). 6:18 — Isaac Wallace 3 run. Carlson kick. Thanks to a huge fourth-down conversion on a pass from Lujan to Dallas Goedert, the Jackrabbits were able to reclaim a two-score lead late in the fourth quarter. (SDSU 41, KU 31). 2:18 — Kent Taylor 10 pass from Montell Cozart. Bartolotta kick. With the offense needing to deliver to keep KU’s hopes alive, Cozart came through. His deep pass to Parmalee for 35 yards jump-started the drive, and a few plays later, Cozart found Taylor open in the left corner of the north end zone with a smooth and easy fade pass. The drive covered 74 yards in 10 plays and 3:56. (SDSU 41, KU 38).


SDSU 41, KANSAS 38

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Sunday, September 6, 2015

| 5C

Nick Krug/Journal-World Photos

KANSAS UNIVERSITY RUNNING BACK KE’AUN KINNER (22) POPS UP OFF THE TURF after being hit by South Dakota State defensive back Nick Farina late in the fourth quarter. Kinner was ruled down on the spot. He ended up rushing 27 times for 157 yards and two touchdowns in his KU debut, a 41-38 loss Saturday at Memorial Stadium.

NOTEBOOK

Kinner has stellar debut for KU By Matt Tait mtait@ljworld.com

Add junior Ke’aun Kinner’s name to the list of recent Kansas University running backs who turned in one heck of a game in their Jayhawk debuts. Kinner, a 5-foot-9, 180-pound transfer from Navarro College, started at tailback for the Jayhawks during Saturday’s 41-38 loss to South Dakota State at Memorial Stadium and rumbled his way to 157 yards and two touchdowns on 27 carries, making him the fourth Jayhawk to eclipse the 100-yard mark in a debut in the past six seasons, joining De’Andre Mann (2014), Corey Avery (2014) and James Sims (2010). “I’m not really that into my personal stats,” Kinner said after the loss. “I just try to do as much as I can to help my team get the win, and I didn’t do enough.” KU coach David Beaty thought otherwise. “Going into the game, the one thing I wasn’t really quite sure of was his top-end speed,” Beaty said. “But he showed some things today that I thought were pretty good. We’re going to continue working with

Keegan CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C

been in the game at the end. Players respond well to that sort of treatment. “A lot of things that we talk about all the time that we did not do, we did not take care of,” Beaty said. “Being the smartest team in the country, we weren’t that today. We’ve got to get better at that, and that’s me and my coaches’ job.” Such as? “I think the big thing is that we’ve talked about the things that we wanted to focus on to get better, faster was turnover margin, which we did not win today,” Beaty said of losing the turnover-margin battle, 2-0. “We gave the ball away twice, and it turned into, I believe, 14 points. We did not play a clean game. And we’ve talked all week about making sure that we were playing penalty-free, and we had some penalties that cost us throughout the night that made a difference in the end of the

for the Jayhawks, which Beaty said was an indication that the Bishop Miege High grad had played his way into that spot during the week of preparation. “This week, at least,” Beaty clarified of Willis, who finished 0-of-2 passing. “He’s still going to have to continue to earn it. Man, I would have loved to have seen him step up and make those throws and get those completions in there. Because he made the right reads, he’s just got to be able to put them in. He’s a talented guy, and I think that was really good for KANSAS QUARTERBACK MONTELL COZART FUMBLES A SNAP behind Kansas offensive him. I think he’ll learn a lineman Keyon Haughton (70) with seven seconds remaining. The error cost the Jayhawks lot from it.” an attempt at a game-tying field goal. Cozart returned to the huddle following Willis’ I’m not sure we thought two incompletions and him on trying to just keep Well, hello Twenty-two Jayhawks were going to get in the played the rest of the them shoulders squared and get going and trust made their Kansas debuts game that actually got in game. his speed a little bit Saturday, by far the big- there and were able to Special-teams lift gest number of first-time contribute.” more.” Freshman walk-on Asked if the heavy players to take the field Ryan Schadler and senior workload was right about for the Jayhawks in a sea- QB update With junior starter Tre’ Parmalee gave Kanwhat he expected to put son opener in years. Of that group, 11 were Montell Cozart knocked sas a boost in the return on Kinner’s shoulders throughout the season, first-time starters, and 15 out of the game for two game. Schadler, a former Beaty was non-commit- players with one start or plays in the first half afless in their KU careers ter getting smoked while Wichita State sprinter, tal. “Honestly, I don’t know graced the starting lineup fumbling, Beaty had a forever will be the answer chance to reveal a little to the question: Who if I know the answer to on offense and defense. “We used a lot of guys more of his depth chart scored the first touchthat,” he said. “We feel like he’s got to touch it. today,” Beaty said. “We that was not released un- down of the 2015 season? I’m not sure we’re going were in and out, in and til a few hours before Sat- With his team trailing 10-0 midway through the to put a number on it, but out, in and out on both urday’s kickoff. True freshman Ryan first quarter, Schadler rewe feel he has to touch it sides of the ball, which because he’s a talented was somewhat by design. Willis was the first quar- turned a kickoff 91 yards But there were some guys terback off the bench for a touchdown. guy.”

game. We’ve got to keep learning from that.” Kansas was penalized seven times for 75 yards, South Dakota State three times for 25 yards. Turnovers and penalties indicate how buttoned-up a football team is, and, for starters, Beaty’s team gets a poor grade in that regard. KU’s tackling was sloppy overall and downright abysmal early. On the plus side, and also a reflection of coaching, KU’s players never wore the body language of losers. Their energy and resolve stayed strong. The quitters that were in the program already quit, leaving KU with frightening numbers, but also with a strong will. The players also looked well conditioned as they rallied from a 31-7 deficit 17:22 into the game to come within three points twice, including by a 31-28 score with 9:12 left in the third quarter. KU’s preferred fast tempo appeared to dent the Jacks’ stamina, and from Beaty’s vantage point the tempo wasn’t nearly fast enough on a consistent basis.

Even when the play looked sloppy and the scoreboard screamed obscenities at the Jayhawks, the head coach’s body language signaled confidence to the players. “I slept great,” Beaty said of his Friday night. “I hate to say it, and I don’t hate to say it, I’m not a nervous guy by nature. I think, I mean, I’m not into that.” After the loss, Beaty looked disappointed, but didn’t have the air of someone nervous about how his debut would be perceived. He has too much rebuilding ahead of him to waste time and energy worrying about perceptions. “I’m a big believer in, you get them prepared, and what you prepared them for, they will do well,” he said. “What you haven’t done well at preparing them for, that’s your fault. You didn’t get them prepared well enough. Today, unfortunately, I didn’t get them prepared well enough to win the game.” He and his staff prepared the players’ confidence and spirit well enough to close the gap 21 points in a stretch

“Very impressed, but not surprised,” Beaty said when asked about Schadler’s day. “The guy has been like that since the day we got here. He’s a sprinter. He can run. I knew when he got the in the open field there (was) no way that guy’s going to tackle him. That really energized our team. That was a big deal.” Later, with KU needing a field goal to tie in the final minute, Parmalee ripped off a 26-yard punt return to set up the Kansas offense at its own 41.

Bowlsby in the house Big 12 Commissioner Bob Bowlsby was in attendance. Bowlsby typically makes his way to a home game for all 10 Big 12 programs and might have been looking to get to Kansas for its most winnable game. This and that ... Freshman Tyrone Miller Jr. led KU’s defense with eight tackles and two pass break-ups, while Ben Goodman, Dorance Armstrong and Daniel Wise each recorded a sack. ... KU’s 38 points were the most scored by the Jayhawks since scoring 45 in a 2011 victory over Northern Illinois. KU never topped 34 points during the Charlie Weis era.

of 15 minutes and seven seconds of game clock. It wasn’t enough to prevent South Dakota State from defeating a Football Bowl Subdivision opponent for the first time in eight tries, but it was enough to suggest that Beaty’s staff has the fire to make players believe that long odds don’t mean it’s time to douse the fire and fold the tent. The unsightly final play understandably made spectators head for the parking lot in a foul mood and denied us all the dramatic moment of watching a kicker in a make-or-break moment. Matthew Wyman, who two seasons ago defeated Louisiana Tech on a 52-yard field goal, would have had a breeze at his back in attempting a 50-yarder to force overtime. What are the chances he would have made it? “I would say at least 50-50,” Wyman said. Much better than the one-in-a-thousand chance of failing to spike the football. At the end, Kansas was one disappointed football SOUTH DAKOTA STATE TIGHT END DALLAS GOEDERT (86) PULLS IN A DEEP PASS over Kansas safety Greg Allen to put team, but not a discourthe Jackrabbits in scoring position late in the fourth quarter. aged one.


Lawrence Journal-World

Baseball

6C

LEAGUE STANDINGS AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division Toronto New York Tampa Bay Baltimore Boston

W 77 75 67 65 63

L 58 59 68 70 72

Pct .570 .560 .496 .481 .467

GB — 11⁄2 10 12 14

WCGB L10 — 7-3 — 6-4 41⁄2 5-5 61⁄2 3-7 81⁄2 6-4

Str Home Away W-1 46-25 31-33 L-1 38-27 37-32 W-1 33-35 34-33 L-1 38-27 27-43 W-2 36-34 27-38

W 82 70 65 64 62

L 53 65 69 70 73

Pct .607 .519 .485 .478 .459

GB WCGB L10 — — 5-5 12 11⁄2 6-4 161⁄2 6 7-3 171⁄2 7 5-5 20 91⁄2 3-7

Str Home Away L-2 47-24 35-29 W-1 42-26 28-39 L-1 29-34 36-35 W-3 33-32 31-38 W-1 31-36 31-37

W 74 71 68 65 58

L 62 63 67 71 78

Pct .544 .530 .504 .478 .426

GB WCGB L10 — — 5-5 2 — 7-3 51⁄2 31⁄2 4-6 9 7 7-3 16 14 3-7

Str Home Away L-1 47-24 27-38 W-1 32-32 39-31 L-1 40-28 28-39 W-4 29-36 36-35 L-4 31-40 27-38

Central Division Kansas City Minnesota Cleveland Chicago Detroit

West Division Houston Texas Los Angeles Seattle Oakland

NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division New York Washington Miami Atlanta Philadelphia

W 75 70 56 54 53

L 60 65 80 82 83

Pct .556 .519 .412 .397 .390

GB WCGB L10 — — 6-4 5 71⁄2 7-3 191⁄2 22 5-5 211⁄2 24 0-10 221⁄2 25 3-7

Str Home Away W-1 45-24 30-36 W-4 40-26 30-39 L-1 31-37 25-43 L-11 33-32 21-50 L-3 30-35 23-48

W 87 80 77 60 55

L 48 54 57 75 79

Pct .644 .597 .575 .444 .410

GB WCGB L10 — — 7-3 61⁄2 — 5-5 91⁄2 — 4-6 27 171⁄2 7-3 311⁄2 22 3-7

Str Home Away W-1 49-21 38-27 L-1 46-21 34-33 W-2 42-28 35-29 W-6 33-39 27-36 L-2 29-37 26-42

W 77 70 65 65 56

L 58 66 71 71 79

Pct .570 .515 .478 .478 .415

GB WCGB L10 — — 8-2 71⁄2 8 3-7 121⁄2 13 3-7 121⁄2 13 3-7 21 211⁄2 5-5

Str Home Away W-2 47-21 30-37 W-1 38-27 32-39 L-3 31-35 34-36 L-2 33-34 32-37 L-1 31-39 25-40

Central Division St. Louis Pittsburgh Chicago Milwaukee Cincinnati

West Division Los Angeles San Francisco Arizona San Diego Colorado

SCOREBOARD AMERICAN LEAGUE Tampa Bay 3, N.Y. Yankees 2 Toronto 5, Baltimore 1 Detroit 6, Cleveland 0 Chicago White Sox 6, Kansas City 1 Minnesota 3, Houston 2 Seattle 8, Oakland 3 Texas 2, L.A. Angels 1 INTERLEAGUE Boston 9, Philadelphia 2

NATIONAL LEAGUE Milwaukee 8, Cincinnati 6, 1st game Chicago Cubs 2, Arizona 0 St. Louis 4, Pittsburgh 1 Milwaukee 7, Cincinnati 3, 2nd game Washington 8, Atlanta 2 N.Y. Mets 7, Miami 0 San Francisco 7, Colorado 3 L.A. Dodgers 2, San Diego 0

UPCOMING American League

TODAY’S GAMES Tampa Bay (Archer 12-10) at N.Y. Yankees (Nova 5-7), 12:05 p.m. Baltimore (Tillman 9-10) at Toronto (Estrada 11-8), 12:07 p.m. Cleveland (Co.Anderson 2-3) at Detroit (Verlander 3-6), 12:08 p.m. Chicago White Sox (E.Johnson 0-0) at Kansas City (Cueto 2-4), 1:10 p.m. Minnesota (Duffey 2-1) at Houston (Keuchel 16-6), 1:10 p.m. Texas (Lewis 14-7) at L.A. Angels (Santiago 7-9), 2:35 p.m. Seattle (Iwakuma 6-3) at Oakland (Nolin 0-0), 3:05 p.m. MONDAY’S GAMES Baltimore at N.Y. Yankees, 12:05 p.m. Tampa Bay at Detroit, 12:08 p.m. Toronto at Boston, 12:35 p.m. Cleveland at Chicago White Sox, 1:10 p.m. Houston at Oakland, 3:05 p.m. Texas at Seattle, 5:40 p.m. Minnesota at Kansas City, 7:10 p.m.

National League

TODAY’S GAMES Milwaukee (Nelson 11-10) at Cincinnati (Lorenzen 3-8), 12:10 p.m. N.Y. Mets (Matz 2-0) at Miami (Cosart 1-4), 12:10 p.m. Atlanta (Banuelos 1-3) at Washington (J.Ross 5-5), 12:35 p.m. Arizona (R.De La Rosa 12-6) at Chicago Cubs (Hendricks 6-6), 1:20 p.m. L.A. Dodgers (B.Anderson 8-8) at San Diego (Cashner 5-13), 3:10 p.m. San Francisco (Bumgarner 16-7) at Colorado (Flande 3-1), 3:10 p.m. Pittsburgh (G.Cole 15-8) at St. Louis (Lackey 11-8), 7:05 p.m. MONDAY’S GAMES N.Y. Mets at Washington, 12:05 p.m. Milwaukee at Miami, 12:10 p.m. Pittsburgh at Cincinnati, 12:10 p.m. Chicago Cubs at St. Louis, 1:15 p.m. Colorado at San Diego, 3:10 p.m. San Francisco at Arizona, 3:10 p.m. Atlanta at Philadelphia, 6:05 p.m.

Interleague

TODAY’S GAME Philadelphia (Eickhoff 1-2) at Boston (E.Rodriguez 8-5), 12:35 p.m. MONDAY’S GAME L.A. Dodgers at L.A. Angels, 8:05 p.m.

LEAGUE LEADERS AMERICAN LEAGUE BATTING-MiCabrera, Detroit, .357; Brantley, Cleveland, .321; Bogaerts, Boston, .320; Fielder, Texas, .316; LCain, Kansas City, .312; Altuve, Houston, .312; Kipnis, Cleveland, .311; Hosmer, Kansas City, .311. RBI-Donaldson, Toronto, 112; CDavis, Baltimore, 100; KMorales, Kansas City, 99; Encarnacion, Toronto, 92; Bautista, Toronto, 91. HOME RUNS-CDavis, Baltimore, 40; NCruz, Seattle, 39; Donaldson, Toronto, 36; JMartinez, Detroit, 35; Pujols, Los Angeles, 35; Trout, Los Angeles, 33; Bautista, Toronto, 32.

NATIONAL LEAGUE BATTING-Harper, Washington, .337; DGordon, Miami, .325; Posey, San Francisco, .324; Goldschmidt, Arizona, .324; LeMahieu, Colorado, .319; Votto, Cincinnati, .317; Pollock, Arizona, .317. RBI-Arenado, Colorado, 103; Goldschmidt, Arizona, 97; Kemp, San Diego, 89; Bryant, Chicago, 85; CaGonzalez, Colorado, 85; McCutchen, Pittsburgh, 85; Rizzo, Chicago, 83. HOME RUNS-CaGonzalez, Colorado, 36; Arenado, Colorado, 35; Harper, Washington, 33; Frazier, Cincinnati, 30; Rizzo, Chicago, 28; Goldschmidt, Arizona, 27; Stanton, Miami, 27.

Sunday, September 6, 2015

MAJOR LEAGUE ROUNDUP

Tampa Bay beats Eovaldi The Associated Press

National League

American League Rays 3, Yankees 2 New York — Didi Gregorius lined out with the bases loaded to end the eighth inning and whipped his bat toward the dugout, a telling sign of frustration for the Yankees during a costly loss. Asdrubal Cabrera hit a two-run single and Kevin Kiermaier had an RBI single as Tampa Bay handed Nathan Eovaldi (14-3) his first loss since mid-June, snapping the right-hander’s nine-game winning streak. Rays third baseman Evan Longoria left the game with a bruised right forearm, three innings after he was hit by a pitch. New York, which leads the AL wild-card race, fell 11⁄2 games behind firstplace Toronto in the AL East. Xavier Cedeno (4-1) struck out four in 12⁄3 hitless innings, and Brad Boxberger got three quick outs for his AL-high 34th save in 39 chances. Tampa Bay New York ab r h bi ab r h bi Jaso dh 3 0 2 0 Gardnr cf-lf 5 0 0 1 JButler ph-dh 1 0 0 0 CYoung lf 2 0 0 0 Nava rf 4 1 0 0 Ellsury ph-cf 2 0 0 0 Mahtok rf 0 0 0 0 ARdrgz dh 3 0 0 0 Longori 3b 1 1 0 0 Beltran rf 4 0 1 0 Shaffer 3b 0 0 0 0 Headly 3b 4 0 2 0 Sizemr lf 2 0 0 0 Bird 1b 4 0 1 0 Guyer ph-lf 2 0 0 0 JMrphy c 0 1 0 0 Forsyth 2b 4 1 1 0 BMcCn ph-c 0 0 0 0 ACarer ss 3 0 1 2 Gregrs ss 4 1 1 1 Loney 1b 4 0 0 0 B.Ryan 2b 2 0 0 0 Kiermr cf 4 0 2 1 Pirela ph 1 0 0 0 Maile c 3 0 0 0 Drew 2b 1 0 0 0 Rivera c 1 0 0 0 Totals 32 3 6 3 Totals 32 2 5 2 Tampa Bay 012 000 000—3 New York 000 020 000—2 DP-New York 1. LOB-Tampa Bay 10, New York 9. 2B-Forsythe (28), Gregorius (18). IP H R ER BB SO Tampa Bay M.Moore 42⁄3 3 2 2 2 3 1⁄3 B.Gomes 0 0 0 1 0 Cedeno W,4-1 H,16 12⁄3 0 0 0 1 4 Colome H,6 11⁄3 2 0 0 1 1 Boxberger S,34-39 1 0 0 0 0 0 New York Eovaldi L,14-3 51⁄3 5 3 3 4 7 Shreve 1 0 0 0 2 1 2⁄3 Warren 0 0 0 0 1 Rumbelow 1 1 0 0 0 0 2⁄3 Pazos 0 0 0 0 1 1⁄3 A.Bailey 0 0 0 1 0 HBP-by M.Moore (J.Murphy), by Eovaldi (Longoria). WP-Rumbelow. PB-J.Murphy. T-3:35. A-35,030 (49,638).

Blue Jays 5, Orioles 1 Toronto — David Price earned his 100th career victory, Jose Bautista hit his 32nd home run of the season and Toronto beat Baltimore. The AL East-leading Blue Jays bounced back from a 10-2 loss to Baltimore on Friday night. Toronto hasn’t dropped two in a row since Aug. 14-15 against the Yankees. Baltimore Toronto ab r h bi ab r h bi MMchd 3b 3 0 1 0 Revere lf 4 0 1 1 GParra rf 4 0 0 0 Dnldsn 3b 3 0 0 0 A.Jones cf 3 0 0 0 Bautist rf 4 1 2 2 C.Davis dh 3 1 1 0 Encrnc dh 3 0 0 0 Pearce 1b 4 0 0 0 Tlwtzk ss 4 1 1 0 Schoop 2b 3 0 0 0 Smoak 1b 4 1 2 0 Joseph c 3 0 1 1 RuMrtn c 4 0 0 1 Lake lf 3 0 1 0 Goins 2b 4 1 2 1 Janish ss 3 0 0 0 Pillar cf 4 1 2 0 Totals 29 1 4 1 Totals 34 5 10 5 Baltimore 000 000 100—1 Toronto 101 120 00x—5 DP-Toronto 2. LOB-Baltimore 5, Toronto 7. 2B-Lake (3), Bautista (24), Smoak 2 (13), Goins 2 (14). HR-Bautista (32). IP H R ER BB SO Baltimore M.Wright L,2-4 4 7 3 3 1 4 Jas.Garcia 1 3 2 2 0 2 J.Rondon 2 0 0 0 0 1 McFarland 1 0 0 0 0 2 Toronto Price W,14-5 7 3 1 1 4 8 Aa.Sanchez 1 1 0 0 0 0 Cecil 1 0 0 0 0 1 HBP-by M.Wright (Encarnacion). WP-M.Wright. T-2:42. A-46,373 (49,282).

Brewers 8-7, Reds 6-3 Cincinnati — Elian Herrera hit a tiebreaking home run on reliever J.J. Hoover’s first pitch of the eighth inning of Game 1.

Bill Kostroun/AP Photo

NEW YORK’S JOHN RYAN MURPHY (66) SCORES on a double by Didi Gregorius ahead of the tag by Tampa Bay Rays catcher Luke Maile during the Rays’ 3-2 win Saturday at Yankee Stadium in New York. Twins 3, Astros 2 Houston — Eddie Rosario hit a tiebreaking tworun triple in the ninth inning and Minnesota held on to beat Houston. Ervin Santana (4-4) gave up just one run and six hits over eight innings to help the Twins bounce back after an 8-0 loss in the series opener the previous night. Minnesota Houston ab r h bi ab r h bi A.Hicks rf 4 0 1 0 Springr rf 4 0 0 0 Dozier 2b 4 1 1 0 Altuve 2b 5 0 0 0 Mauer 1b 3 0 0 0 Correa ss 4 0 3 0 Sano dh 4 0 0 0 Gattis dh 4 0 1 0 Plouffe 3b 2 1 0 0 Lowrie 3b 3 1 1 1 ERosar lf 4 0 2 2 CGomz cf 4 0 0 0 EdEscr ss 4 0 0 0 MGnzlz 1b 4 1 2 0 KSuzuk c 3 0 0 0 Villar pr 0 0 0 0 Buxton cf 3 1 1 0 Tucker lf 3 0 1 1 Mrsnck lf 0 0 0 0 ClRsms ph 0 0 0 0 Conger c 3 0 0 0 Totals 31 3 5 2 Totals 34 2 8 2 Minnesota 000 001 002—3 Houston 000 010 001—2 DP-Minnesota 1, Houston 1. LOB-Minnesota 4, Houston 9. 2B-E.Rosario (16), Buxton (5), Tucker (18). 3B-E.Rosario (11). HR-Lowrie (7). SB-Villar (5). IP H R ER BB SO Minnesota E.Santana W,4-4 8 6 1 1 2 11 Jepsen S,11-15 1 2 1 1 2 1 Houston McCullers 7 3 1 1 2 8 W.Harris 1 0 0 0 0 1 Gregerson L,7-3 1 2 2 2 0 1 HBP-by Gregerson (Plouffe). T-2:45. A-27,643 (41,574).

First Game Milwaukee Cincinnati ab r h bi ab r h bi Segura ss 4 0 2 2 Bourgs cf 5 0 0 0 Lucroy c 5 0 0 0 Bruce rf 4 2 1 0 Braun rf 4 1 2 0 Votto 1b 3 2 2 0 KDavis lf 3 0 0 0 Phillips 2b 4 1 4 1 Jeffrss p 0 0 0 0 Frazier 3b 4 0 1 1 WSmith p 0 0 0 0 Schmkr lf 5 1 1 0 SPetrsn ph 1 0 0 0 Suarez ss 4 0 3 2 FrRdrg p 0 0 0 0 Brnhrt c 4 0 0 0 JRogrs 1b 5 2 3 0 JoLam p 2 0 0 0 DoSntn cf-lf 3 1 2 2 LeCure p 0 0 0 0 HPerez 3b 3 1 1 0 Duvall ph 1 0 0 0 Gennett ph-2b 2 0 1 0 Badnhp p 0 0 0 0 EHerrr 2b-3b 5 2 2 2 Hoover p 0 0 0 0 Garza p 2 0 0 0 DJssJr ph 1 0 0 0 Goforth p 0 0 0 0 Balestr p 0 0 0 0 Lind ph 1 1 1 2 CJimnz p 0 0 0 0 Totals 38 8 14 8 Totals 37 6 12 4 Milwaukee 000 015 011—8 Cincinnati 021 020 100—6 E-Segura (16), Schumaker (3). DP-Milwaukee 1, Cincinnati 1. LOB-Milwaukee 9, Cincinnati 9. 2B-Braun (24), E.Herrera (15), Lind (29), Suarez (16). 3B-J.Rogers (2). HR-E.Herrera (6). SB-Braun 2 (22), K.Davis (4). SF-Do.Santana, Frazier. IP H R ER BB SO Milwaukee Garza 42⁄3 7 5 4 4 2 1⁄3 Goforth 0 0 0 0 1 C.Jimenez H,3 1 0 0 0 0 2 Jeffress W,5-0 BS,3-3 1 3 1 1 0 0 W.Smith H,17 1 0 0 0 0 1 Fr.Rodriguez S,34-35 1 2 0 0 0 1 Cincinnati Jo.Lamb 52⁄3 9 6 6 2 4 1⁄3 LeCure 1 0 0 0 0 Badenhop 1 1 0 0 1 0 Hoover L,7-1 1 1 1 1 1 0 Balester 1 2 1 1 0 2 HBP-by Hoover (L.Schafer). WP-Goforth. T-3:27. A-28,632 (42,319). Second Game Milwaukee Cincinnati ab r h bi ab r h bi Gennett 2b 5 1 2 0 Bourgs rf 4 0 1 0 EHerrr 3b 5 2 2 3 DJssJr 3b 4 0 1 0 Lind 1b 3 1 0 0 Votto 1b 4 0 1 0 DoSntn rf 5 1 2 1 Phillips 2b 4 0 0 0 SPetrsn lf 3 1 2 2 Suarez ss 3 1 0 0 Segura ss 4 0 0 1 B.Pena c 4 0 2 0 LSchfr cf 4 0 1 0 Duvall lf 2 2 1 1 Maldnd c 4 0 0 0 Sampsn p 1 0 0 0 WPerlt p 1 0 0 0 Villarrl p 1 0 1 2 A.Pena p 1 0 0 0 Bruce ph 1 0 0 0 JRogrs ph 1 0 1 0 Contrrs p 0 0 0 0 Lohse p 0 0 0 0 Ju.Diaz p 0 0 0 0 CJimnz p 0 0 0 0 Schmkr ph 1 0 0 0 Knebel p 0 0 0 0 LaMarr cf 3 0 0 0 KDavis ph 1 1 1 0 RCarer ph 1 0 0 0 Thrnrg p 0 0 0 0 Totals 37 7 11 7 Totals 33 3 7 3 Milwaukee 003 001 003—7 Cincinnati 000 200 001—3 DP-Milwaukee 1. LOB-Milwaukee 6, Cincinnati 7. 2B-Bourgeois (3), De Jesus Jr. (7), B.Pena (15), Villarreal (1). HR-E.Herrera (7), S.Peterson (1), Duvall (2). CS-Gennett (2). IP H R ER BB SO Milwaukee W.Peralta 2 2 0 0 1 0 A.Pena W,1-0 3 2 2 2 1 2 Lohse H,1 12⁄3 2 0 0 0 1 1⁄3 C.Jimenez H,4 0 0 0 0 0 Knebel H,3 1 0 0 0 0 0 Thornburg 1 1 1 1 0 1 Cincinnati Sampson L,2-3 3 5 3 3 3 3 Villarreal 3 3 1 1 0 2 Contreras 2 0 0 0 0 1 Ju.Diaz 1 3 3 3 0 0 HBP-by W.Peralta (Bourgeois), by A.Pena (Suarez). WP-Sampson. PB-Maldonado. T-3:11 (Delay: 1:33). A-29,842 (42,319).

Cubs 2, D’backs 0 Chicago — Jake Arrieta Mariners 8, A’s 3 pitched eight innings of Oakland, Calif. — Fe- four-hit ball . lix Hernandez pitched Arizona Chicago ab r h bi ab r h bi eight strong innings, Rob- rf 4 0 1 0 Fowler cf 3 1 1 1 inson Cano drove in two Inciart Pollock cf 4 0 0 0 AJcksn rf 2 0 0 0 1b 4 0 2 0 Bryant lf-3b 4 0 0 0 runs, and Seattle won its Gldsch DPerlt lf 4 0 1 0 Rizzo 1b 4 1 1 0 fourth straight. Sltlmch c 3 0 1 0 J.Baez 3b-2b 3 0 0 0 Seattle Oakland ab r h bi ab r h bi KMarte ss 3 1 2 0 Burns cf 4 0 0 0 KSeagr 3b 4 1 2 1 Canha 1b 4 1 1 1 Cano 2b 5 1 1 1 Reddck rf 1 0 0 0 SRomr lf 0 0 0 0 Pridie rf 2 0 0 0 S.Smith rf 4 2 3 0 Ldndrf ph 1 0 1 0 Morrsn 1b 5 1 1 3 Valenci 3b 4 0 0 0 Trumo dh 4 0 1 1 Vogt c 4 1 2 0 BMiller cf-2b 4 0 2 1 Lawrie 2b 3 1 1 0 Sucre c 5 0 0 0 BButler dh 3 0 2 2 OMally lf-cf 2 2 2 1 Smlnsk lf 3 0 0 0 Semien ss 3 0 0 0 Totals 36 8 14 8 Totals 32 3 7 3 Seattle 302 110 010—8 Oakland 000 300 000—3 DP-Seattle 2, Oakland 2. LOB-Seattle 9, Oakland 2. 2B-K.Seager (31), Cano (32), S.Smith 2 (29), O’Malley (1), Lawrie (25). HR-Morrison (16), O’Malley (1), Canha (12). S-K.Marte. IP H R ER BB SO Seattle F.Hernandez W,16-8 8 6 3 3 0 9 Beimel 1 1 0 0 0 0 Oakland Chavez L,7-14 2 6 5 5 5 2 A.Leon 3 3 2 2 1 0 Venditte 2 1 0 0 0 2 R.Alvarez 1 2 1 1 1 1 Mujica 1 2 0 0 0 0 Chavez pitched to 3 batters in the 3rd. WP-F.Hernandez, R.Alvarez. T-2:57. A-27,387 (35,067).

Tigers 6, Indians 0 Detroit — Alfredo Simon pitched seven strong innings and J.D. Martinez homered as slumping Detroit beat Cleveland.

Rangers 2, Angels 1 Anaheim, Calif. — Derek Holland allowed three hits over eight innings and Rougned Odor hit a tiebreaking sacrifice fly in the eighth to lead Texas. Holland (3-1) struck out five and walked two.

Cleveland Detroit ab r h bi ab r h bi Kipnis 2b 3 0 0 0 RDavis cf 5 1 1 1 Lindor ss 3 0 0 0 Kinsler 2b 4 0 2 1 Brantly lf 4 0 1 0 MiCarr 1b 3 1 0 0 CSantn dh 2 0 0 0 JMrtnz rf 3 1 1 2 Chsnhll rf 4 0 0 0 VMrtnz dh 4 0 2 0 Sands 1b 4 0 1 0 Cstllns 3b 4 1 1 0 AAlmnt cf 3 0 0 0 TyCllns lf 4 1 2 1 RPerez c 3 0 0 0 JMcCn c 4 0 2 1 Urshela 3b 2 0 0 0 AnRmn ss 3 1 0 0 Mrtnz ph-3b 1 0 1 0 Totals 29 0 3 0 Totals 34 6 11 6 Cleveland 000 000 000—0 Detroit 012 300 00x—6 E-R.Perez (4), Kipnis (6), Kinsler (11). DP-Cleveland 1, Detroit 2. LOB-Cleveland 6, Detroit 7. 2B-Brantley (42). 3B-R.Davis (9). HR-J.Martinez (35), Ty.Collins (3). SB-Lindor (7). CS-Kinsler (6). IP H R ER BB SO Cleveland Salazar L,12-8 32⁄3 8 6 6 1 1 Manship 1 2 0 0 0 2 1⁄3 Gi.Soto 0 0 0 0 0 Armstrong 1 0 0 0 0 1 Floyd 2 1 0 0 1 0 Detroit Simon W,12-9 7 2 0 0 4 5 A.Wilson 1 1 0 0 0 1 B.Rondon 1 0 0 0 0 1 HBP-by Floyd (J.Martinez). T-2:53. A-28,949 (41,574).

Texas Los Angeles ab r h bi ab r h bi DShlds cf 5 0 0 0 Calhon rf 4 0 1 0 Choo rf 3 1 1 0 Trout cf 4 1 1 0 Stubbs pr-lf 0 0 0 0 Pujols dh 3 0 0 0 Fielder dh 4 0 0 0 Cron 1b 4 0 0 1 Beltre 3b 4 0 1 1 Aybar ss 3 0 0 0 Morlnd 1b 3 0 2 0 Freese 3b 3 0 0 0 Strsrgr pr 0 1 0 0 Cowgill lf 3 0 0 0 Napoli 1b 0 0 0 0 Iannett c 2 0 1 0 Andrus ss 4 0 2 0 Fthrstn 2b 2 0 0 0 Odor 2b 3 0 0 1 Victorn ph 1 0 0 0 Venale lf-rf 2 0 0 0 RJcksn 2b 0 0 0 0 BWilsn c 4 0 0 0 Totals 32 2 6 2 Totals 29 1 3 1 Texas 100 000 010—2 Los Angeles 100 000 000—1 LOB-Texas 10, Los Angeles 3. 2B-Andrus (25). 3B-Trout (5). SB-Choo (4), Andrus (17). CS-Iannetta (1). SF-Odor. IP H R ER BB SO Texas D.Holland W,3-1 8 3 1 1 2 5 Sh.Tolleson S,29-31 1 0 0 0 0 2 Los Angeles Weaver 6 4 1 1 3 3 Salas 1 0 0 0 0 1 J.Smith L,4-5 1 2 1 1 0 2 2⁄3 Morin 0 0 0 1 1 1⁄3 J.Alvarez 0 0 0 0 0 HBP-by Weaver (Moreland, Venable). T-2:45. A-39,889 (45,957).

JaLam 3b 3 0 1 0 StCastr 2b 3 0 2 0 Drury 2b 3 0 0 0 Denorfi lf 0 0 0 0 Owings ss 3 0 0 0 D.Ross c 2 0 0 1 Ray p 1 0 0 0 Arrieta p 3 0 0 0 Tomas ph 1 0 0 0 HRndn p 0 0 0 0 Delgad p 0 0 0 0 ARussll ss 3 0 0 0 DHrndz p 0 0 0 0 Gosseln ph 1 0 0 0 DHdsn p 0 0 0 0 Totals 31 0 6 0 Totals 27 2 4 2 Arizona 000 000 000—0 Chicago 000 110 00x—2 DP-Arizona 1, Chicago 2. LOB-Arizona 4, Chicago 6. 2B-Saltalamacchia (11). HR-Fowler (16). SB-D. Peralta (6). IP H R ER BB SO Arizona Ray L,3-11 5 4 2 2 3 8 Delgado 1 0 0 0 0 0 D.Hernandez 1 0 0 0 1 2 D.Hudson 1 0 0 0 0 1 Chicago Arrieta W,18-6 8 4 0 0 0 7 H.Rondon S,26-30 1 2 0 0 0 0 HBP-by Ray (A.Jackson). T-2:34. A-40,690 (40,929).

Cardinals 4, Pirates 1 St. Louis — Jaime Garcia pitched seven scoreless innings. Pittsburgh St. Louis ab r h bi ab r h bi JHrrsn 2b 4 0 0 0 MCrpnt 3b 3 1 2 2 Mercer ss 4 0 0 0 Pisctty lf 4 0 1 1 GPolnc ph 1 0 0 0 Heywrd rf 4 0 0 0 McCtch cf 4 0 1 0 JhPerlt ss 4 0 1 0 Kang 3b 3 0 0 0 Moss 1b 4 0 1 0 SMarte lf 3 0 0 0 Molina c 4 0 0 0 Morse 1b 4 0 0 0 Wong 2b 2 1 1 0 SRdrgz rf 4 0 3 0 Jay cf 2 1 0 0 Stewart c 3 0 0 0 Siegrist p 0 0 0 0 NWalkr ph 1 1 1 0 MrRynl ph 0 0 0 0 Morton p 2 0 0 0 Rosnthl p 0 0 0 0 ArRmr ph 0 0 0 0 JaiGrc p 1 0 0 0 Flormn pr 0 0 0 0 GGarci ph 0 0 0 0 Caminr p 0 0 0 0 Bourjos pr-cf 1 1 0 0 Blanton p 0 0 0 0 PAlvrz ph 1 0 1 1 Totals 34 1 6 1 Totals 29 4 6 3 Pittsburgh 000 000 001—1 St. Louis 020 000 20x—4 E-J.Harrison (13), Wong (15). LOB-Pittsburgh 10, St. Louis 8. 2B-S.Rodriguez (9). HR-M.Carpenter (21). SB-Wong (15). S-Jai.Garcia. IP H R ER BB SO Pittsburgh Morton L,8-7 6 4 2 1 3 3 Caminero 1 1 2 2 1 0 Blanton 1 1 0 0 1 1 St. Louis Jai.Garcia W,8-4 7 4 0 0 1 9 Siegrist 1 0 0 0 1 2 Rosenthal 1 2 1 1 1 3 HBP-by Morton (Jay), by Jai.Garcia (S.Marte). WP-Blanton, Jai.Garcia, Rosenthal. T-2:56. A-45,139 (45,399).

Giants 7, Rockies 3 Denver — Jake Peavy doubled twice and pitched into the sixth inning, and San Francisco snapped a seven-game losing streak.

San Francisco Colorado ab r h bi ab r h bi Pagan cf 5 1 2 1 Blckmn cf 4 0 0 0 GBlanc rf 4 2 2 1 Reyes ss 4 1 2 1 MDuffy 3b 5 0 3 2 CGnzlz rf 3 0 0 0 De Aza lf 5 1 2 0 Arenad 3b 4 1 1 2 BCrwfr ss 5 0 1 0 Mornea 1b 4 0 0 0 Tmlnsn 2b 4 0 0 0 LeMahi 2b 3 0 0 0 HSnchz c 1 1 1 0 Paulsn lf 4 0 1 0 Posey c 2 0 1 0 Garnea c 3 0 0 0 Noonan 1b 4 1 1 2 Bettis p 1 1 1 0 Peavy p 3 1 2 1 Brothrs p 0 0 0 0 Lopez p 0 0 0 0 Ynoa ph 1 0 0 0 Byrd ph 1 0 0 0 Descals ph 1 0 0 0 Totals 39 7 15 7 Totals 32 3 5 3 San Francisco 011 021 200—7 Colorado 001 002 000—3 E-G.Blanco (3), LeMahieu (8). DP-Colorado 3. LOB-San Francisco 10, Colorado 4. 2B-Pagan (15), M.Duffy (24), H.Sanchez (4), Noonan (1), Peavy 2 (2), Paulsen (19). 3B-Reyes (2). HR-Pagan (1), G.Blanco (4), Arenado (36). S-H.Sanchez. IP H R ER BB SO San Francisco Peavy W,5-6 52⁄3 4 3 3 1 5 1⁄3 Lopez H,14 0 0 0 0 0 Strickland 1 1 0 0 0 0 Osich 1 0 0 0 0 0 Casilla 1 0 0 0 1 0 Colorado Bettis L,6-5 41⁄3 8 4 4 1 1 2⁄3 Brothers 0 0 0 0 0 Si.Castro 1 2 1 1 0 0 1⁄3 Gurka 3 2 2 0 0 2⁄3 Oberg 0 0 0 2 2 Germen 1 2 0 0 0 0 M.Castro 1 0 0 0 1 0 T-3:08. A-37,672 (50,398).

Mets 7, Marlins 0 Miami — Bartolo Colon pitched a nine-hitter. New York Miami ab r h bi ab r h bi Lagars cf 5 1 2 2 DGordn 2b 4 0 1 0 DWrght 3b 4 1 2 0 Yelich cf 4 0 1 0 Cespds lf 4 2 1 0 Prado 3b 4 0 1 0 Uribe 2b 3 0 0 0 Bour 1b 4 0 2 0 Tejada ss 0 0 0 0 Dietrch lf 4 0 1 0 dArnad c 4 1 2 4 ISuzuki rf 4 0 0 0 WFlors ss-2b 4 1 1 1 Realmt c 3 0 2 0 Campll 1b 3 0 1 0 Rojas ss 3 0 1 0 YongJr rf 3 1 0 0 B.Hand p 0 0 0 0 B.Colon p 3 0 0 0 Rienzo p 1 0 0 0 Gillespi ph 1 0 0 0 McGeh ph 1 0 0 0 Totals 33 7 9 7 Totals 33 0 9 0 New York 430 000 000—7 Miami 000 000 000—0 DP-New York 3. LOB-New York 6, Miami 6. 2B-Realmuto (17). HR-Lagares (6), d’Arnaud (10), W.Flores (15). CS-Campbell (3). S-B.Colon. IP H R ER BB SO New York B.Colon W,13-11 9 9 0 0 0 2 Miami B.Hand L,4-5 12⁄3 6 7 7 2 2 Rienzo 31⁄3 2 0 0 1 0 Cordier 2 1 0 0 1 0 Lazo 1 0 0 0 0 1 Urena 1 0 0 0 0 0 T-2:30. A-23,135 (37,442).

Nationals 8, Braves 2 Washington — Bryce Harper had three hits, including his 33rd home run,. Atlanta Washington ab r h bi ab r h bi Markks rf 4 1 1 0 Werth rf 3 1 1 0 Ciriaco 2b 4 0 0 0 dnDkkr rf 1 0 0 0 FFrmn 1b 3 1 1 0 Rendon 2b-3b 4 2 2 1 Swisher lf 4 0 2 1 Harper cf 4 2 3 2 Maybin cf 2 0 0 0 Zmrmn 1b 4 0 1 2 Bourn cf 0 0 0 1 CRonsn lf 2 0 0 0 ASmns ss 3 0 0 0 YEscor 3b 4 1 0 0 Olivera 3b 4 0 1 0 TTurnr 2b 0 0 0 0 Bthncrt c 4 0 0 0 Dsmnd ss 4 2 3 0 SMiller p 2 0 0 0 WRams c 4 0 0 1 Burawa p 0 0 0 0 GGnzlz p 1 0 0 0 DCastr ph 1 0 0 0 Uggla ph 1 0 0 0 Detwilr p 0 0 0 0 Janssn p 0 0 0 0 R.Kelly p 0 0 0 0 Grace p 0 0 0 0 JPetrsn ph 1 0 0 0 Treinen p 1 0 0 0 Totals 32 2 5 2 Totals 33 8 10 6 Atlanta 000 000 020—2 Washington 004 210 10x—8 E-Bethancourt (5), T.Turner (1). LOB-Atlanta 9, Washington 5. 2B-Swisher (3), Werth (12), Harper 2 (33), Desmond 2 (25). HR-Harper (33). S-G.Gonzalez. SF-Bourn. IP H R ER BB SO Atlanta S.Miller L,5-13 41⁄3 7 7 7 3 4 Burawa 12⁄3 0 0 0 0 1 2⁄3 Detwiler 2 1 1 0 1 R.Kelly 11⁄3 1 0 0 0 2 Washington G.Gonzalez W,10-7 6 2 0 0 4 10 Janssen 1 0 0 0 0 1 2⁄3 Grace 2 2 0 0 0 Treinen 11⁄3 1 0 0 1 1 T-3:07. A-28,646 (41,341).

Dodgers 2, Padres 0 San Diego — Alex Wood pitched seven strong innings. Los Angeles San Diego ab r h bi ab r h bi JRollns ss 5 0 0 0 Solarte 3b 4 0 1 0 Utley 2b 5 0 2 0 Gyorko 2b 4 0 0 0 AGnzlz 1b 3 0 0 0 Kemp rf 4 0 2 0 JuTrnr 3b 5 0 0 0 Upton lf 3 0 0 0 Ethier rf 4 2 3 0 DeNrrs 1b 4 0 0 0 Crwfrd lf 4 0 2 1 Myers cf 2 0 0 0 Grandl c 3 0 0 0 Hedges c 2 0 0 0 Pedrsn cf 2 0 1 1 Spngnr ph 1 0 0 0 A.Wood p 3 0 0 0 Barmes ss 3 0 0 0 CSeagr ph 1 0 0 0 T.Ross p 1 0 0 0 Totals 35 2 8 2 Totals 28 0 3 0 Los Angeles 000 100 010—2 San Diego 000 000 000—0 LOB-Los Angeles 12, San Diego 7. 2B-Utley (17), Ethier 2 (17), C.Crawford (8). S-Hedges. IP H R ER BB SO Los Angeles A.Wood W,10-9 7 3 0 0 4 4 Hatcher H,9 1 0 0 0 0 1 Jansen S,29-31 1 0 0 0 0 1 San Diego T.Ross L,10-10 6 5 1 1 2 3 Quackenbush 1 1 0 0 1 3 Benoit 1 2 1 1 1 0 B.Norris 1 0 0 0 1 2 HBP-by A.Wood (T.Ross), by T.Ross (Grandal). WP-T.Ross. T-3:04. A-43,536 (41,164).

Interleague Red Sox 9, Phillies 2 Boston — David Ortiz hit his 496th career home run. Philadelphia Boston ab r h bi ab r h bi OHerrr cf 4 0 1 0 Betts cf 4 1 3 0 CHrndz 2b 4 0 1 0 B.Holt 3b 3 1 1 0 Altherr rf 4 0 0 0 Bogarts ss 5 1 1 4 Francr dh 4 1 1 0 Ortiz dh 5 2 2 1 Sweeny lf 4 1 1 0 T.Shaw 1b 4 0 0 0 ABlanc 3b 3 0 0 0 RCastll lf 4 1 1 0 Ruf 1b 3 0 0 0 Swihart c 4 1 2 1 Ruiz c 3 0 1 2 Rutledg 2b 4 0 2 0 Galvis ss 3 0 0 0 BrdlyJr rf 4 2 2 2 Totals 32 2 5 2 Totals 37 9 14 8 Philadelphia 000 020 000—2 Boston 000 800 01x—9 E-C.Hernandez (8). DP-Philadelphia 1. LOBPhiladelphia 3, Boston 7. 2B-O.Herrera (26), Sweeney (2), Betts (34), B.Holt (22), Bogaerts (27), Swihart (16), Bradley Jr. (12). HR-Ortiz (30). SB-B. Holt (8). IP H R ER BB SO Philadelphia Asher L,0-2 32⁄3 8 7 7 2 2 J.Williams 31⁄3 4 1 1 0 1 1⁄3 Loewen 2 1 1 1 0 2⁄3 Giles 0 0 0 0 0 Boston Miley W,11-10 9 5 2 2 0 8 Balk-Asher 2. T-2:24. A-36,534 (37,221).


COLLEGE FOOTBALL

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Sunday, September 6, 2015

| 7C

BIG 12/TOP 25 ROUNDUP

Notre Dame too tough for Texas West Virginia 44, Georgia Southern 0 Morgantown, W.Va. Big 12 — Skyler Howard threw No. 11 Notre Dame 38, two touchdown passes in Texas 3 his first home start, and South Bend, Ind. — Karl Joseph had three inMalik Zaire passed for terceptions. 313 yards in his first home start, and Notre Dame Georgia Southern 0 0 0 0 — 0 held Texas to 163 yards West Virginia 10 6 14 14 — 44 Quarter of total offense Saturday First WVU-Durante 41 pass from S.Howard (Lambert kick), 10:54. night. WVU-FG Lambert 26, 8:05. Fuller had two touch- Second Quarter WVU-FG Lambert 32, 14:08. down catches, Chris Nam Y. Huh/AP Photo WVU-FG Lambert 22, 3:04. Brown had one scoring Third Quarter catch, and freshman Josh WVU-Shell 6 run (Lambert kick), NOTRE DAME LINEBACKER JAYLON SMITH, right, tackles Texas quarterback Tyrone Swoopes on Saturday night in Adams ran for a pair of 9:12. WVU-Gibson 26 pass from S.Howard South Bend, Indiana. The Irish won, 38-3. TDs, including 14-yard (Lambert kick), 4:19. score on his first career Fourth Quarter WVU-Smallwood 19 run (Lambert carry. Wisconsin 0 7 3 7 — 17 No. 9 Georgia 51, kick), 13:23. 7 7 14 7 — 35 WVU-Crest Jr. 2 run (Lambert kick), Alabama Louisiana Monroe 14 First Quarter Texas 0 0 3 0 — 3 2:26. Ala-Henry 37 run (Griffith kick), 5:54. A-55,182. Notre Dame 14 3 14 7 — 38 Athens, Ga. — With Second Quarter INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS First Quarter lightning in the area, Wis-Erickson 6 pass from Stave RUSHING-Georgia Southern, Breida ND-Fuller 16 pass from Zaire (Yoon 17-70, Upshaw 16-64, Ramsby 10-28, (Gaglianone kick), 11:06. Georgia defeated Louisikick), 6:29. Ala-Ro.Foster 17 pass from Coker W.Fields 9-17, Thornton 1-7, T.Banks ND-Adams 14 run (Yoon kick), 1:02. ana-Monroe in a one-sid2-5, Harley 2-4. West Virginia, (Griffith kick), 6:39. Second Quarter ed game that was called Smallwood 11-96, Shell 8-42, Crest Jr. Third Quarter ND-FG Yoon 38, 7:53. Ala-Henry 56 run (Griffith kick), 4-24, Thomas-Williams 7-19, S.Howard Third Quarter off with just under 10 11:42. 9-7, Team 1-(minus 3). Tex-FG Rose 41, 8:36. minutes left. Ala-Henry 2 run (Griffith kick), 5:17. PASSING-Georgia Southern, Upshaw ND-Fuller 66 pass from Zaire (Yoon The Associated Press

kick), 5:50. ND-Adams 25 run (Yoon kick), 2:00. Fourth Quarter ND-Brown 6 pass from Zaire (Yoon kick), 11:46. A-80,795. INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Texas, J.Gray 8-40, Swoopes 10-17, D.Foreman 3-5, D.Johnson 2-4, Warren III 3-4, A.Foreman 1-2, Heard 2-(minus 12). Notre Dame, Prosise 20-98, Adams 5-49, D.Williams 7-24, Folston 3-19, Zaire 9-16, Kizer 2-10, Hunter Jr. 1-2, Anderson 2-0, Carlisle 1-(minus 1), Team 2-(minus 3). PASSING-Texas, Swoopes 7-22-093, Heard 1-1-0-10. Notre Dame, Zaire 19-22-0-313, Kizer 0-1-0-0. RECEIVING-Texas, D.Johnson 6-45, Burt 1-48, Beck 1-10. Notre Dame, Fuller 7-142, Carlisle 3-55, Brown 3-38, Robinson 2-35, Hunter Jr. 2-31, Prosise 1-6, Smythe 1-6.

No. 19 Oklahoma 41, Akron 3 Norman, Okla. — Baker Mayfield passed for 388 yards and three touchdowns, and Joe Mixon had 142 yards from scrimmage to help Oklahoma defeat Akron. Akron 0 3 0 0 — 3 Oklahoma 3 14 21 3 — 41 First Quarter Okl-FG Seibert 35, 3:58. Second Quarter Okl-Perine 2 run (Seibert kick), 5:32. Okl-Westbrook 29 pass from Mayfield (Seibert kick), 2:21. Akr-FG Stein 26, :06. Third Quarter Okl-Mixon 76 pass from Mayfield (Seibert kick), 11:56. Okl-Mead 11 pass from Mayfield (Seibert kick), 7:11. Okl-Mayfield 2 run (Seibert kick), 2:36. Fourth Quarter Okl-FG Seibert 41, 10:29. A-85,370. INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Akron, T.Chapman 14-48, Hundley 8-36, Woodson 3-30, Alexander 7-16, Lawrence 6-11, Davis 1-4, Edwards, Jr. 1-4, Cooper 1-0, Means Jr. 1-(minus 4), Pohl 2-(minus 7). Oklahoma, Perine 11-33, Mixon 5-27, Ross 3-20, Brooks 4-11, Mayfield 6-8, T.Knight 1-6, Anderson 1-5. PASSING-Akron, Pohl 6-17-0-88, T.Chapman 0-8-0-0, Woodson 0-1-00. Oklahoma, Mayfield 23-33-0-388, T.Knight 5-9-1-51. RECEIVING-Akron, Lane 3-57, Means Jr. 1-13, N.Williams 1-12, Davis 1-6. Oklahoma, Baxter 5-51, Neal 4-65, Andrews 4-50, Mixon 3-115, Shepard 3-68, Westbrook 3-40, Mead 2-31, Perine 2-9, Brooks 1-6, Flowers 1-4.

Kansas State 34, South Dakota 0 Manhattan — Winston Dimel punched in two touchdowns to lead Kansas State. Kansas State overwhelmed its FCS opponent from the first play of the game, when Morgan Burns returned the opening kickoff 100 yards for a touchdown. But the Wildcats lost starting quarterback Jesse Ertz on their first offensive series of the game, when Ertz came up limping after only two snaps. He was replaced by Joe Hubener, who completed nine of 18 attempts for 147 yards and a touchdown. South Dakota 0 0 0 0 — 0 Kansas St. 7 17 3 7 — 34 First Quarter KSt-Burns 100 kickoff return (McCrane kick), 14:48. Second Quarter KSt-FG McCrane 23, 13:30. KSt-Dimel 2 run (McCrane kick), 9:18. KSt-Burton 24 pass from Hubener (McCrane kick), 5:45. Third Quarter KSt-FG McCrane 28, 3:08. Fourth Quarter KSt-Dimel 1 run (McCrane kick), 7:28. A-53,297. INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-South Dakota, Fredrick 8-19, Bouma 9-17, Saeger 12-15, Gunn 6-11, Jackson 1-(minus 1). Kansas St., Silmon 6-51, C.Jones 9-39, Hubener 9-38, Dimel 8-29, Gronkowski 2-16, Delton 3-10, Ertz 1-5. PASSING-South Dakota, Saeger 18-30-0-205. Kansas St., Hubener 9-180-147. RECEIVING-South Dakota, Shufford 6-79, Van Roekel 4-56, Potter 2-15, Fenchel 1-23, Kramer 1-11, Bouma 1-7, Donovan 1-5, Ramsey 1-5, Hale 1-4. Kansas St., D.Heath 3-54, Cook 2-41, Burton 2-35, Klein 2-17.

2-13-4-29. West Virginia, S.Howard 16-25-0-359, Crest Jr. 0-1-0-0. RECEIVING-Georgia Southern, Keaton 1-17, B.Johnson 1-12. West Virginia, Smallwood 4-23, Gibson 3-130, Durante 3-121, Shorts Jr. 3-55, Thompson 3-30.

Iowa St. 31, Northern Iowa 7 Ames, Iowa — Sam Richardson threw two touchdown passes, and Iowa State got rolling in the second half. The Cyclones also ended a two-game losing streak to FCS teams. N. Iowa 0 7 0 0 — 7 Iowa St. 0 10 14 7 — 31 Second Quarter NI-Huggins 19 pass from Bailey (Schmadeke kick), 11:57. ISU-Jo.Thomas 1 run (Netten kick), 7:44. ISU-FG Netten 24, 2:40. Third Quarter ISU-Daley 36 pass from Sam B.Richardson (Netten kick), 10:05. ISU-Al.Lazard 13 pass from Sam B.Richardson (Netten kick), 1:03. Fourth Quarter ISU-Ryen 81 punt return (Netten kick), 3:00. A-61,500. INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-N. Iowa, Bailey 22-85, T.Smith 7-37, Malloy 1-5, Miller 2-3, Huggins 5-1, Dunne 3-(minus 2), Brown 1-(minus 3). Iowa St., Brown 11-68, Warren 6-19, Jo.Thomas 6-11, Lanning 1-0, Team 1-(minus 3). PASSING-N. Iowa, Bailey 11-19-1-114, Kollmorgen 5-8-0-24, Dunne 4-7-0-38. Iowa St., Sam B.Richardson 21-29-0-233. RECEIVING-N. Iowa, Miller 5-58, Brown 3-19, Malloy 2-21, Rohr 2-21, Cunningham 2-20, T.Smith 2-10, Huggins 1-19, Lehman 1-9, R.Hall 1-2, Fountain 1-(minus 3). Iowa St., Bundrage 5-53, Daley 4-70, Al.Lazard 4-43, Montgomery 3-20, Warren 2-23, Brown 2-17, Epps 1-7.

Texas Tech 59, Sam Houston St. 45 Lubbock, Texas — Patrick Mahomes threw for 425 yards and four touchdowns, two each to Ian Sadler and Devin Lauderdale, to lead Texas Tech. Sam Houston St. 14 17 0 14 — 45 Texas Tech 14 28 17 0 — 59 First Quarter TT-Grant 3 run (Barden kick), 11:54. SamH-Frank 14 run (Swimberghe kick), 8:51. TT-Lauderdale 64 pass from Mahomes II (Barden kick), 3:54. SamH-D.Williams 1 run (Swimberghe kick), :53. Second Quarter TT-Sadler 8 pass from Mahomes II (Barden kick), 13:24. SamH-FG Swimberghe 48, 7:30. TT-Grant 94 kickoff return (Barden kick), 7:13. SamH-D.Williams 2 run (Swimberghe kick), 3:44. TT-Sadler 53 pass from Mahomes II (Barden kick), 2:23. SamH-D.Davis 29 pass from Briscoe (Swimberghe kick), :52. TT-Lauderdale 29 pass from Mahomes II (Barden kick), :14. Third Quarter TT-Gaines 47 interception return (Barden kick), 14:14. TT-FG Barden 27, 9:59. TT-Stockton 4 run (Hatfield kick), 1:09. Fourth Quarter SamH-D.Williams 4 run (Swimberghe kick), 10:06. SamH-D.Williams 1 run (Swimberghe kick), 1:53. A-60,073. INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Sam Houston St., D.Williams 12-99, Overstreet 7-89, Avery 7-69, Ja.Johnson 13-66, Briscoe 4-16, Frank 1-14, Bulmer 1-1, Team 1-(minus 3). Texas Tech, D.Washington 13-74, Mahomes II 5-48, Stockton 7-25, Q.White 4-21, Felton 1-3, Grant 1-3. PASSING-Sam Houston St., Ja.Johnson 18-28-1-144, Briscoe 18-241-176. Texas Tech, Mahomes II 33-531-425, Webb 1-4-0-12. RECEIVING-Sam Houston St., D.Davis 12-103, L.Brown 7-80, D.Edwards 5-60, Louis 3-11, Reynolds 2-32, Finney 2-13, Avery 2-10, Rison 1-12, Bulmer 1-1, D.Williams 1-(minus 2). Texas Tech, Lauderdale 8-150, Grant 6-71, Sadler 5-73, High 3-54, Batson 3-20, Davis 2-33, D.Washington 2-14, Giles 2-12, Stockton 2-8, Q.White 1-2.

Top 25 No. 3 Alabama 35, No. 20 Wisconsin 17 Arlington, Texas — Derrick Henry rushed for 147 yards with three touchdowns, and Alabama defeated Wisconsin.

Wis-FG Gaglianone 43, 1:05. Fourth Quarter Ala-Drake 43 run (Griffith kick), 8:02. Wis-Wheelwright 3 pass from Stave (Gaglianone kick), 4:42. A-64,279. INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Wisconsin, Erickson 1-25, Clement 8-16, Deal 6-14, Ogunbowale 3-9, Stave 3-(minus 24). Alabama, Henry 13-147, Drake 10-77, D.Harris 9-23, Bateman 2-4, Coker 3-(minus 13). PASSING-Wisconsin, Stave 26-391-228. Alabama, Coker 15-21-0-213, Bateman 7-8-0-51. RECEIVING-Wisconsin, Erickson 6-73, Ogunbowale 6-39, D.Watt 5-22, Traylor 3-39, Clement 2-19, Wheelwright 2-18, Peavy 1-14, Deal 1-4. Alabama, Ro.Foster 4-50, Stewart 4-44, Howard 3-37, Ridley 3-22, Drake 2-48, Mullaney 2-38, Henry 2-12, FlournoySmith 1-17, D.Harris 1-(minus 4).

No. 6 Auburn 31, Louisville 24 Atlanta — Will Muschamp’s defense made a couple of huge plays early for Auburn to offset three interceptions by Jeremy Johnson, and the Tigers held off Louisville and surprise quarterback Lamar Jackson. Louisville 0 0 10 14 — 24 Auburn 7 10 7 7 — 31 First Quarter Aub-Je.Johnson 1 run (Carlson kick), 12:49. Second Quarter Aub-Garrett 82 fumble return (Carlson kick), 6:54. Aub-FG Carlson 56, :34. Third Quarter Aub-Louis 33 pass from Je.Johnson (Carlson kick), 11:21. Lou-FG Wallace 43, 7:07. Lou-Jackson 10 run (Wallace kick), 1:21. Fourth Quarter Aub-Louis 8 run (Carlson kick), 10:04. Lou-Radcliff 2 run (Wallace kick), 6:21. Lou-Radcliff 2 run (Wallace kick), 2:59. A-73,927. INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Louisville, Jackson 16-106, Radcliff 17-76, Samuel 1-21, Je.Smith 5-20, Bonnafon 8-14, Scott 1-1. Auburn, Barber 24-115, R.Thomas 6-27, Louis 4-21, Robinson 2-16, Je.Johnson 5-11. PASSING-Louisville, Jackson 9-201-100, Bonnafon 8-13-0-67. Auburn, Je.Johnson 11-21-3-137. RECEIVING-Louisville, Quick 4-28, Peete 3-60, Ja.Smith 3-34, Samuel 2-22, Crum 2-19, Standberry 1-6, Savage 1-2, Radcliff 1-(minus 4). Auburn, Louis 3-54, D’.Williams 3-40, Ray 2-19, Barber 1-15, J.Smith 1-7, M.Davis 1-2.

No. 7 Oregon 61, E. Washington 42 Eugene, Ore. — Vernon Adams threw for two touchdowns but left his much-anticipated debut after a scary fourth-quarter hit, and Oregon beat his former team. E. Washington 7 14 14 7 — 42 Oregon 20 17 17 7 — 61 First Quarter Ore-Benoit 8 run (pass failed), 12:43. Ore-Addison 6 pass from Adams Jr. (Schneider kick), 7:32. EWas-Hill 12 pass from West (McNannay kick), 5:21. Ore-Freeman 1 run (Schneider kick), 4:23. Second Quarter Ore-Brooks-James 12 run (Schneider kick), 14:22. EWas-Bourne 2 pass from West (McNannay kick), 12:15. Ore-Freeman 3 run (Schneider kick), 10:37. EWas-C.Kupp 16 pass from West (McNannay kick), 6:11. Ore-FG Schneider 38, :00. Third Quarter Ore-Freeman 1 run (Schneider kick), 10:29. EWas-C.Kupp 1 pass from Hennessey (McNannay kick), 5:35. Ore-Marshall 24 pass from Adams Jr. (Schneider kick), 4:31. EWas-Wilson 3 run (McNannay kick), 2:13. Ore-FG Schneider 30, :00. Fourth Quarter Ore-Brooks-James 15 run (Schneider kick), 7:47. EWas-C.Kupp 7 pass from Hennessey (Bangsund kick), 2:35. A-58,128. INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-E. Washington, Wilson 10-43, Williams Jr. 7-37, Hennessey 3-20, Moore 5-7, McPherson 2-3, West 3-1, S.Webster 1-0. Oregon, Freeman 21-180, Adams Jr. 14-94, Benoit 11-83, Brooks-James 6-63, Ta.Griffin 3-60, Addison 1-7, Team 1-(minus 2). PASSING-E. Washington, West 23-34-1-293, Hennessey 14-21-1-145. Oregon, Adams Jr. 19-25-0-246. RECEIVING-E. Washington, C.Kupp 15-246, Bourne 5-60, Hill 4-49, Sblendorio 3-20, Moore 3-3, Grady 2-27, S.Webster 2-8, Wimberly 1-13, Williams Jr. 1-6, Wilson 1-6. Oregon, Marshall 4-69, Stanford 3-90.

La.-Monroe 0 7 7 0 — 14 Georgia 14 21 9 7 — 51 First Quarter Geo-Chubb 14 run (Morgan kick), 10:45. Geo-Blazevich 15 pass from Lambert (Morgan kick), 10:25. Second Quarter Geo-Marshall 3 run (Morgan kick), 12:41. Geo-Chubb 23 run (Morgan kick), 7:01. Geo-Michel 31 pass from Ramsey (Morgan kick), 2:06. ULM-Ceaser 22 pass from Smith (C.Ford kick), :20. Third Quarter ULM-Ceaser 29 pass from Smith (C.Ford kick), 11:02. Geo-Safety, 8:06. Geo-Mitchell 28 pass from Lambert (Morgan kick), 6:40. Fourth Quarter Geo-Marshall 2 run (Morgan kick), 10:58. A-92,746. INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Louisiana-Monroe, Smith 13-26, Watson 5-11, McNeal 7-6, Ceaser 1-2. Georgia, Chubb 16-120, Marshall 10-73, Michel 6-41, Douglas 3-17, Lambert 1-(minus 1), Team 1-(minus 1), Ramsey 1-(minus 6). PASSING-Louisiana-Monroe, Smith 23-29-1-206. Georgia, Lambert 8-12-0141, Ramsey 2-2-0-51. RECEIVING-Louisiana-Monroe, Ceaser 13-153, Holley 3-8, Perrier 2-10, Watson 2-6, Turner 1-17, Scioneaux 1-7, McNeal 1-5. Georgia, Mitchell 3-52, Godwin 3-31, Michel 2-79, Blazevich 1-15, Hicks 1-15.

No. 10 Florida St. 59, Texas St. 16 Tallahassee, Fla. — Everett Golson threw four touchdown passes in his Florida State debut. The graduate transfer from Notre Dame was 19for-25 for 302 yards. He matched his career high for touchdown passes set last year in Notre Dame’s victory over Syracuse. No. 12 Clemson 49, Wofford 10 Clemson, S.C. — Deshaun Watson threw for 194 yards and two touchdowns in less than a half, and Clemson moved to 30-0 against FCS opponents. Wofford 0 7 3 0 — 10 Clemson 14 21 7 7 — 49 First Quarter Clem-M.Williams 4 pass from Watson (Huegel kick), 11:07. Clem-Gallman 2 run (Huegel kick), 6:15. Second Quarter Clem-A.Scott 35 pass from Watson (Huegel kick), 13:49. Clem-Dye 1 run (Huegel kick), 9:58. Clem-Brooks 25 run (Huegel kick), 5:16. Wof-C.Nelson 1 run (Marvin kick), :00. Third Quarter Wof-FG Marvin 37, 11:33. Clem-Gallman 1 run (Huegel kick), 9:23. Fourth Quarter Clem-Dye 1 run (Al.Spence kick), 7:46. A-81,345. INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Wofford, Colvin 7-31, Butler 5-28, Jacks 7-21, Gay 12-17, C.Nelson 4-14, Windham 2-7, Stoddard 2-4, Long 4-2, Goodson 1-1, Irwin 1-(minus 2). Clemson, Gallman 14-92, Brooks 7-52, Fuller 7-26, Davidson 5-25, Watson 2-22, K.Bryant 2-15, Dye 4-15, Schuessler 2-(minus 25). PASSING-Wofford, Jacks 3-8-042, Butler 1-4-0-(minus 1), Goodson 1-4-0-8, Irwin 1-1-0-41, Team 0-10-0. Clemson, Watson 18-22-0-194, Schuessler 9-11-0-98, K.Bryant 3-4-019. RECEIVING-Wofford, Gay 2-49, Muller 2-28, Colvin 1-14, Francis 1-(minus 1). Clemson, McCloud 8-80, A.Scott 6-75, Cain 3-36, Renfrow 2-29, Hopper 2-27, M.Williams 2-20, Peake 2-12, Leggett 1-11, Ryan 1-10, Dunn 1-5, Thompson 1-4, Gallman 1-2.

No. 13 UCLA, Virginia 16 Pasadena, Calif. — Heralded freshman Josh Rosen passed for 351 yards and three touchdowns in a stellar debut for UCLA. Virginia 3 6 0 7 — 16 UCLA 7 10 14 3 — 34 First Quarter UVa-FG Frye 42, 9:14. UCLA-Fuller 4 pass from Rosen (Fairbairn kick), 2:43. Second Quarter UVa-FG Frye 31, 9:43.

UCLA-Duarte 30 pass from Rosen (Fairbairn kick), 7:37. UVa-FG Frye 19, 1:37. UCLA-FG Fairbairn 26, :02. Third Quarter UCLA-Jack 1 run (Fairbairn kick), 7:37. UCLA-K.Clark 3 pass from Rosen (Fairbairn kick), 3:40. Fourth Quarter UCLA-FG Fairbairn 21, 7:05. UVa-Mizzell 19 pass from M.Johns (Frye kick), 3:29. A-68,615. INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Virginia, Mizzell 16-45, Reid 12-31, M.Johns 3-11, Croce 1-7, Conte 1-6, Team 1-(minus 2). UCLA, Jamabo 9-79, Perkins 14-59, Olorunfunmi 5-30, Jack 2-7. PASSING-Virginia, M.Johns 21-35-1238. UCLA, Rosen 28-35-0-351. RECEIVING-Virginia, Mizzell 8-100, Severin 5-58, Butts 2-42, Levrone 2-16, Hopkins 1-8, Croce 1-6, Reid 1-5, Zaccheaus 1-3. UCLA, Fuller 6-44, Perkins 5-58, Payton 3-54, Duarte 2-46, Iese 2-43, Walker 2-40, Massington 2-31, Sweet 2-21.

Fourth Quarter Ark-FG Hedlund 27, 6:30. A-67,708. INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-UTEP, Aa.Jones 15-70, Golden 2-8, Johnson 9-7, White 1-4, J.Laufasa 3-1, Hughes 2-(minus 5), Team 2-(minus 27). Arkansas, A.Collins 12-127, Williams III 16-45, Walker 5-11, B.Allen 1-(minus 1). PASSING-UTEP, Leftwich 9-14-1120, Metz 3-3-0-19, Johnson 2-2-0-7. Arkansas, B.Allen 14-18-0-308, A.Allen 0-2-0-0. RECEIVING-UTEP, Aa.Jones 6-83, D.Laufasa 2-17, Plinke 1-13, Redix 1-9, Golden 1-7, J.Laufasa 1-6, White 1-6, Walker 1-5. Arkansas, Hatcher 6-106, Cornelius 2-75, Sprinkle 2-60, Henry 2-42, Morgan 1-26, Williams III 1-(minus 1).

Northwestern 16, No. 21 Stanford 6 Evanston, Ill. — Freshman Clayton Thorson ran 42 yards for a touchdown while playing turnoverTexas A&M 38, free ball at quarterback, No. 15 Arizona St. 17 Houston — Kyle Allen Justin Jackson added 134 threw for a score early yards rushing, and Northand sealed the game by western beat Stanford. running for a touchdown Stanford 3 0 0 3 — 6 and throwing for another Northwestern 3 7 0 6 — 16 First Quarter in the fourth quarter after Stan-FG Ukropina 29, 8:33. NU-FG Mitchell 31, :52. being benched in favor of Quarter freshman Kyler Murray, Second NU-Thorson 42 run (Mitchell kick), and Texas A&M beat Ari- 6:18. Fourth Quarter zona State. NU-FG Mitchell 19, 12:21.

Arizona St. 0 7 7 3 — 17 Texas A&M 7 7 3 21 — 38 First Quarter TAM-Carson 9 pass from Allen (Bertolet kick), :20. Second Quarter TAM-Kirk 79 punt return (Bertolet kick), 12:51. ASU-Kohl 4 pass from Bercovici (Gonzalez kick), 9:56. Third Quarter TAM-FG Bertolet 19, 5:19. ASU-Bercovici 19 run (Gonzalez kick), 2:37. Fourth Quarter TAM-Allen 12 run (Bertolet kick), 8:32. ASU-FG Gonzalez 23, 4:16. TAM-Kirk 66 pass from Allen (Bertolet kick), 3:45. TAM-Carson 10 run (Bertolet kick), 1:38. INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Arizona St., Richard 16-73, Foster 3-13, Hayes 7-6, Bercovici 15-0. Texas A&M, Carson 29-96, Murray 6-69, White 2-12, Allen 7-3, Team 1-(minus 2). PASSING-Arizona St., Bercovici 25-41-0-199. Texas A&M, Allen 15-26-1198, Murray 4-9-1-49. RECEIVING-Arizona St., Foster 6-48, Hayes 6-13, Jefferson 4-69, Richard 4-27, Lucien 2-25, Kohl 2-8, Chambers 1-9. Texas A&M, Kirk 6-106, SealsJones 6-29, Reynolds 4-78, Noil 1-15, Ratley 1-10, Carson 1-9.

No. 17 Mississippi 76, UT Martin 3 Oxford, Miss. — Chad Kelly threw for 211 yards and two touchdowns and also ran for a 20-yard touchdown to lead Mississippi. UT-Martin 0 0 3 0 — 3 Mississippi 27 14 14 21 — 76 First Quarter Miss-Walton 60 run (run failed), 11:06. Miss-Walton 4 run (Wunderlich kick), 6:42. Miss-Pack 56 pass from Kelly (Wunderlich kick), 5:28. Miss-Adeboyejo 15 pass from Buchanan (Wunderlich kick), 1:06. Second Quarter Miss-R.Nkemdiche 31 pass from Buchanan (Wunderlich kick), 12:35. Miss-Core 57 pass from Kelly (Wunderlich kick), 3:15. Third Quarter Miss-Elston 93 interception return (Wunderlich kick), 9:09. Miss-Kelly 20 run (Wunderlich kick), 4:56. UTM-FG Redditt 29, 2:26. Fourth Quarter Miss-Lodge 12 pass from Kincade (Wunderlich kick), 10:27. Miss-Brazley 70 run (Pappanastos kick), 7:34. Miss-Buford 20 run (Pappanastos kick), 1:44. A-60,186. INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-UT-Martin, Garland 8-36, Baker 7-31, Higgason 1-23, Bowe 8-22, Neal 6-17, Ray 4-12, Fair 3-1, Tanner 1-(minus 8), Team 1-(minus 18). Mississippi, Brazley 6-88, Buford 4-68, Walton 3-65, Judd 11-50, Wilkins 6-41, Kincade 3-24, Kelly 1-20, M.Johnson 1-3, Team 1-(minus 21). PASSING-UT-Martin, Neal 13-241-139, Cook 3-5-0-35. Mississippi, Kelly 9-15-1-211, Kincade 6-7-0-55, Buchanan 4-6-0-58. RECEIVING-UT-Martin, Axline 3-20, Weathers 2-27, Wright 2-22, Fair 2-9, Ray 1-64, Eddings 1-13, Garland 1-9, Tanner 1-5, Kerrick 1-4, Thompson 1-4, Bowe 1-(minus 3). Mississippi, Treadwell 4-44, Adeboyejo 3-33, Core 2-80, Pack 2-63, Stringfellow 2-36, R.Nkemdiche 1-31, Lodge 1-12, Walton 1-12, Engram 1-5, Zettergren 1-5, Co.Moore 1-3.

No. 18 Arkansas 48, UTEP 13 Fayetteville, Ark. — Brandon Allen threw for a career-high 308 yards and matched his best with four touchdown passes. UTEP 0 10 3 0 — 13 Arkansas 14 14 17 3 — 48 First Quarter Ark-Morgan 26 pass from B.Allen (Hedlund kick), 11:35. Ark-Hatcher 20 pass from B.Allen (Hedlund kick), 4:11. Second Quarter UTEP-FG Mattox 38, 12:51. Ark-Cornelius 58 pass from B.Allen (Hedlund kick), 11:17. UTEP-Golden 10 run (Mattox kick), 8:56. Ark-Hatcher 38 pass from B.Allen (Hedlund kick), 5:17. Third Quarter Ark-A.Collins 7 run (Hedlund kick), 14:42. Ark-Walker 3 run (Hedlund kick), 12:57. Ark-FG Hedlund 19, 8:38. UTEP-FG Mattox 44, 3:01.

Stan-FG Ukropina 37, 7:26. NU-FG Mitchell 49, 3:38. A-36,024. INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Stanford, McCaffrey 12-66, Wright 5-20, Sanders 2-9, Owusu 1-1, Love 1-(minus 2), Hogan 6-(minus 9). Northwestern, Jackson 28-134, Thorson 8-68, Vault 6-25, Long 7-21, Je.Roberts 2-(minus 11), Team 3-(minus 12). PASSING-Stanford, Hogan 20-35-1155. Northwestern, Thorson 12-24-0105, Scanlan 0-1-0-0. RECEIVING-Stanford, Hooper 5-45, McCaffrey 5-23, Cajuste 4-39, Stallworth 2-17, Rector 1-10, Wright 1-10, Schultz 1-6, Owusu 1-5. Northwestern, C.Jones 5-52, Shuler 2-33, Jackson 2-12, G.Dickerson 1-5, D.Vitale 1-2, McHugh 1-1.

No. 24 Missouri 34, SE Missouri 3 Columbia, Mo. — Kentrell Brothers had a career-best 16 tackles and blocked a punt that was returned for a touchdown for Missouri. Aarion Penton caught the blocked punt in the air for a 41-yard return late in the third quarter that made it 27-3. SE Missouri 0 3 0 0 — 3 Missouri 14 3 10 7 — 34 First Quarter Mo-J’.Moore 27 pass from Mauk (Baggett kick), 11:28. Mo-Brown 23 pass from Mauk (Baggett kick), 4:49. Second Quarter Mo-FG Baggett 39, 9:54. SEMo-FG McCrum 35, 2:19. Third Quarter Mo-FG Baggett 23, 10:55. Mo-Penton 41 punt return (Baggett kick), :22. Fourth Quarter Mo-Hunt 78 pass from Lock (Baggett kick), 5:13. A-64,670. INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-SE Missouri, Bender 14-69, Jackson 18-57, McCullough 4-18, Lloyd 1-7, Young 1-(minus 3), Stewart 4-(minus 3). Missouri, Witter 13-33, Hansbrough 2-23, Hunt 5-20, Steward 5-14, Mauk 6-8, Abbington 1-5, Lock 1-(minus 5). PASSING-SE Missouri, Bender 12-220-56. Missouri, Mauk 12-22-1-181, Lock 6-10-0-138. RECEIVING-SE Missouri, McRoberts 4-40, Jackson 3-3, McCullough 2-6, Davis 1-5, Washington 1-2, DardenBox 1-0. Missouri, J’.Moore 3-74, Brown 3-69, Culkin 3-29, Dilosa 3-25, Hunt 1-78, Blair 1-21, E.Hall 1-9, Reese 1-5, Witter 1-5, Richard 1-4.

No. 25 Tennessee 59, Bowling Green 30 Nashville, Tenn. — Tennessee earned its first victory as a ranked team since 2007. Bowling Green 10 10 10 0 — 30 Tennessee 21 14 14 10 — 59 First Quarter BG-FG Tate 40, 12:43. Tenn-Hurd 8 run (Medley kick), 8:59. Tenn-Kamara 10 run (Medley kick), 7:18. Tenn-Hurd 1 run (Medley kick), 5:07. BG-Folkertsma 11 pass from M.Johnson (Tate kick), 2:47. Second Quarter BG-G.Dieter 31 pass from M.Johnson (Tate kick), 11:00. BG-FG Tate 37, 5:31. Tenn-Hurd 13 run (Medley kick), 1:52. Tenn-Et.Wolf 11 pass from Dobbs (Medley kick), :24. Third Quarter BG-Burbrink 7 run (Tate kick), 11:33. Tenn-Et.Wolf 18 pass from Dobbs (Medley kick), 11:17. BG-FG Tate 25, 4:26. Tenn-Kamara 56 run (Medley kick), :03. Fourth Quarter Tenn-Dobbs 18 run (Medley kick), 10:02. Tenn-FG Medley 26, 3:08. A-61,323. INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Bowling Green, Coppet 12-63, Tra.Greene 9-34, M.Johnson 10-22, Burbrink 1-7, Moore 1-(minus 1), Wilson 1-(minus 1). Tennessee, Kamara 15-144, Hurd 23-123, Dobbs 12-89, J.Kelly 8-29, Dormady 3-10, Jennings 2-3, Pearson 1-1. PASSING-Bowling Green, M.Johnson 27-49-0-424, Knapke 2-20-9. Tennessee, Dobbs 15-22-0-205, Dormady 0-1-0-0. RECEIVING-Bowling Green, G.Dieter 7-133, Moore 5-95, Burbrink 4-70, Gallon 3-45, Lewis 2-49, Redding 2-12, Tra. Greene 2-3, Folkertsma 1-11, Coppet 1-8, Lee 1-5, Wilson 1-2. Tennessee, Jennings 3-56, Malone 3-40, Et.Wolf 3-35, Pearson 2-48, Jo.Johnson 2-27, Kamara 2-(minus 1).


|

8C

WEATHER/SPORTS

.

Sunday, September 6, 2015

TODAY

MONDAY

TUESDAY

WEDNESDAY

THURSDAY

Partly sunny, hot and humid

Clouds breaking, a thunderstorm

A shower and thunderstorm around

A thunderstorm possible

Partly sunny, t-storms possible

High 94° Low 74° POP: 25%

High 92° Low 73° POP: 55%

High 87° Low 63° POP: 60%

High 80° Low 60° POP: 30%

High 78° Low 56° POP: 35%

Wind S 8-16 mph

Wind S 6-12 mph

Wind SW 7-14 mph

Wind ENE 4-8 mph

Wind NE 6-12 mph

POP: Probability of Precipitation

Kearney 87/62

McCook 90/59 Oberlin 92/62

Clarinda 91/71

Lincoln 93/70

Grand Island 88/63

Beatrice 93/70

Concordia 95/70

Centerville 92/72

St. Joseph 92/73 Chillicothe 94/75

Sabetha 95/73

Kansas City Marshall Manhattan 94/78 95/75 Goodland Salina 98/73 Oakley Kansas City Topeka 91/58 98/73 93/65 94/75 Lawrence 93/75 Sedalia 94/74 Emporia Great Bend 94/74 93/74 99/72 Nevada Dodge City Chanute 92/75 98/68 Hutchinson 91/73 Garden City 97/73 95/66 Springfield Wichita Pratt Liberal Coffeyville Joplin 91/73 96/75 98/71 99/69 91/74 92/73 Hays Russell 100/67 98/70

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

LAWRENCE ALMANAC

Through 7 p.m. Saturday.

Temperature High/low 93°/70° Normal high/low today 83°/61° Record high today 106° in 1936 Record low today 41° in 2011

Precipitation in inches 24 hours through 7 p.m. yest. 0.00 Month to date 0.06 Normal month to date 0.64 Year to date 30.47 Normal year to date 29.18

REGIONAL CITIES

Today Mon. Today Mon. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Independence 93 75 s 93 75 t Atchison 95 75 pc 92 74 t Fort Riley 98 75 t 95 73 t Belton 92 75 pc 90 74 t Olathe 90 74 pc 90 73 t Burlington 94 75 s 93 75 t Osage Beach 93 73 s 91 73 c Coffeyville 92 73 s 92 74 t Osage City 95 76 pc 94 76 t Concordia 95 70 t 90 69 t 94 75 pc 93 74 t Dodge City 98 68 pc 97 67 pc Ottawa Wichita 96 75 pc 96 73 t Holton 96 76 t 94 75 t 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

First

Mon. 6:55 a.m. 7:43 p.m. 1:45 a.m. 4:14 p.m.

Full

Last

Sep 13 Sep 21 Sep 27

Oct 4

LAKE LEVELS

As of 7 a.m. Saturday Lake

Clinton Perry Pomona

Level (ft)

877.42 892.88 974.13

Discharge (cfs)

21 25 15

Fronts Cold

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. Š2015

INTERNATIONAL CITIES

Today Cities Hi Lo W Acapulco 89 79 t Amsterdam 61 55 sh Athens 99 80 s Baghdad 111 83 s Bangkok 95 80 pc Beijing 81 59 s Berlin 60 47 sh Brussels 60 51 sh Buenos Aires 66 54 s Cairo 94 73 s Calgary 51 38 sh Dublin 60 44 pc Geneva 66 45 pc Hong Kong 91 82 pc Jerusalem 87 67 s Kabul 83 53 s London 65 49 s Madrid 79 58 pc Mexico City 74 54 t Montreal 86 70 s Moscow 64 52 sh New Delhi 98 78 pc Oslo 55 46 c Paris 64 46 s Rio de Janeiro 76 68 sh Rome 78 59 pc Seoul 79 59 t Singapore 89 79 sh Stockholm 56 46 sh Sydney 64 50 pc Tokyo 76 71 r Toronto 85 69 t Vancouver 62 51 pc Vienna 63 50 c Warsaw 62 51 t Winnipeg 73 51 t

Hi 88 64 91 110 97 85 64 63 67 97 57 60 67 90 89 82 66 77 75 87 59 98 61 68 80 77 82 88 59 73 74 89 64 63 59 72

Mon. Lo W 78 t 53 sh 74 s 81 s 80 c 61 pc 46 pc 49 sh 53 sh 74 s 37 pc 45 pc 46 s 79 t 69 s 53 s 51 pc 56 t 54 t 70 pc 48 pc 78 pc 49 pc 51 c 70 c 61 pc 59 s 80 pc 46 pc 51 sh 71 r 69 t 55 r 49 c 48 t 48 sh

Precipitation

Warm Stationary Showers T-storms

Rain

Flurries

Snow

Ice

-10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s National Summary: Hot and humid air will be drawn from the western Gulf Coast to the Midwest today, setting the stage for severe thunderstorms to threaten the Upper Midwest. The Northwest will remain cool. Today Mon. Today Mon. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Memphis 96 75 pc 94 75 pc Albuquerque 84 64 t 87 63 t 90 76 t 90 78 t Anchorage 62 49 r 62 50 pc Miami Milwaukee 88 72 pc 84 68 t Atlanta 84 70 t 85 70 t Austin 97 72 s 97 72 pc Minneapolis 85 64 t 80 62 s Nashville 91 71 t 90 71 pc Baltimore 83 62 s 87 65 s New Orleans 89 76 t 88 75 t Birmingham 87 70 t 87 70 t New York 84 68 s 89 72 s Boise 72 48 pc 75 49 s Omaha 94 72 t 84 68 pc Boston 82 65 s 88 70 s Orlando 88 73 t 88 73 t Buffalo 86 70 s 86 71 s Philadelphia 86 66 s 90 70 s Cheyenne 79 50 pc 79 48 s Phoenix 100 81 t 102 81 s Chicago 91 72 pc 86 70 t Pittsburgh 87 65 s 88 67 s Cincinnati 90 67 s 92 68 s Portland, ME 82 62 s 88 67 s Cleveland 87 68 s 89 69 s Dallas 96 80 s 96 78 pc Portland, OR 70 54 sh 74 55 pc Reno 82 49 s 87 52 s Denver 85 56 t 85 54 s Richmond 84 66 sh 88 68 pc Des Moines 92 74 t 83 71 t Detroit 88 70 s 89 72 pc Sacramento 92 56 s 95 58 s St. Louis 96 77 s 95 78 pc El Paso 94 71 pc 93 71 t Salt Lake City 77 57 s 80 56 s Fairbanks 62 38 pc 59 45 c San Diego 80 69 pc 82 70 s Honolulu 90 77 sh 88 77 r San Francisco 79 57 s 81 58 s Houston 92 75 t 91 73 t 64 54 sh 70 56 pc Indianapolis 92 70 s 93 71 pc Seattle Spokane 60 45 pc 63 48 c Kansas City 93 75 pc 91 73 t Tucson 93 73 t 95 73 t Las Vegas 96 74 s 98 75 s 95 76 s 95 76 pc Little Rock 97 74 pc 97 73 pc Tulsa Wash., DC 86 68 pc 89 71 pc Los Angeles 85 64 s 86 64 s National extremes yesterday for the 48 contiguous states High: Death Valley, CA 106° Low: Boca Reservoir, CA 18°

WEATHER HISTORY A day after massive fires in Michigan, a yellow, smoky haze choked the New England sky on Sept. 6, 1881.

SCOREBOARD College

EAST Boston College 24, Maine 3 Navy 48, Colgate 10 Pittsburgh 45, Youngstown St. 37 Rutgers 63, Norfolk St. 13 Temple 27, Penn St. 10 West Virginia 44, Georgia Southern 0 SOUTH Alabama 35, Wisconsin 17 Appalachian St. 49, Howard 0 Auburn 31, Louisville 24 Clemson 49, Wofford 10 East Carolina 28, Towson 20 Florida 61, New Mexico St. 13 Georgia 51, Louisiana-Monroe 14 Kentucky 40, Louisiana-Lafayette 33 Maryland 50, Richmond 21 McNeese St. at LSU, ccd. Memphis 63, Missouri St. 7 Miami 45, Bethune-Cookman 0 Mississippi 76, UT Martin 3 NC State 49, Troy 21 South Florida 51, Florida A&M 3 Tennessee 59, Bowling Green 30 MIDWEST BYU 33, Nebraska 28 Baker 58, Culver-Stockton 0 Benedictine (Kan.) 44, Avila 28 Briar Cliff 27, St. Mary (Kan.) 13 Concordia 31, Southwestern 10 Dakota Wesleyan 23, Ottawa 22 Doane 54, McPherson 7 Evangel 25, Peru St. 20 Grand View 27, Cent. Methodist 8 Hastings 33, Bethel (Kan.) 29 Illinois 52, Kent St. 3 Indiana 48, S. Illinois 47 Iowa 31, Illinois St. 14 Iowa St. 31, N. Iowa 7 Kansas St. 34, South Dakota 0 Kansas Wesleyan 55, Midland 37 Miami (Ohio) 26, Presbyterian 7 Missouri 34, SE Missouri 3 Missouri Valley 35, Graceland 0 Morningside 77, Sterling 17 N. Illinois 38, UNLV 30 Nebraska Wesleyan 27, Friends 17 Northwestern 16, Stanford 6 Northwestern (Iowa) 9, Tabor 7 Notre Dame 38, Texas 3 S. Dakota St. 41, Kansas 38 William Penn 51, Mid-Am Nazarene 48, 3OT SOUTHWEST Arkansas 48, UTEP 13 Houston 52, Tennessee Tech 24 Oklahoma 41, Akron 3 Rice 56, Wagner 16 Texas A&M 38, Arizona St. 17 Texas Tech 59, Sam Houston St. 45 Tulsa 47, FAU 44, OT FAR WEST Air Force 63, Morgan St. 7 California 73, Grambling St. 14 Colorado St. 65, Savannah St. 13 New Mexico 66, MVSU 0 North Dakota 24, Wyoming 13 Oregon 61, E. Washington 42 Portland St. 24, Washington St. 17 San Diego St. 37, San Diego 3 UCLA 34, Virginia 16

Big 12 Standings

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

WEATHER TRIVIA™

Q:

In which East Coast states has a hurricane never made landfall? Maine, New Hampshire, Connecticut, Delaware, Maryland, Virginia

New

Today 6:54 a.m. 7:44 p.m. 12:53 a.m. 3:25 p.m.

A:

Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Big 12 Overall W L W L Baylor 0 0 1 0 Iowa State 0 0 1 0 Kansas State 0 0 1 0 Oklahoma 0 0 1 0 Oklahoma State 0 0 1 0 TCU 0 0 1 0 Texas Tech 0 0 1 0 West Virginia 0 0 1 0 Kansas 0 0 0 1 Texas 0 0 0 1 Saturday’s Games South Dakota State 41, Kansas 38 Texas Tech 59, Sam Houston St. 45 Oklahoma 41, Akron 3 Kansas State 34, South Dakota 0 Notre Dame 38, Texas 3 West Virginia 44, Georgia Southern 0 Iowa State 31, Northern Iowa 7 Saturday, Sept. 12 Kansas State at Texas-San Antonio, 11 a.m. (FS1) Liberty at West Virginia, 2 p.m. (ROOT Sports) UTEP at Texas Tech, 2 p.m. (FSN) Stephen F. Austin at TCU, 2:30 p.m. (FS1) Iowa at Iowa State, 3:30 p.m. (FOX) Oklahoma at Tennessee, 5 p.m. (ESPN) Memphis at Kansas, 6 p.m. (Jayhawk TV) Central Arkansas at Oklahoma State, 6:30 p.m. (FSN) Lamar at Baylor, 6:30 p.m. (FSN) Rice at Texas, 7 p.m. (LHN)

High School

ALL-CLASS Saturday at Free State SM WEST 22, FREE STATE 13 FSHS scoring: Jordan Preston 1 run (Creighton Cordova kick); Preston 2 run. FSHS highlights: Jalen Nash fumble recovery. FSHS record: 0-1. Next for FSHS: Saturday at Olathe North.

U.S. Open

Saturday at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center New York Purse: $42.3 million Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles Men Third Round Richard Gasquet (12), France, def. Bernard Tomic (24), Australia, 6-4, 6-3, 6-1.

Tomas Berdych (6), Czech Republic, def. Guillermo Garcia-Lopez (31), Spain, 6-7 (2), 7-6 (7), 6-3, 6-3. Roger Federer (2), Switzerland, def. Philipp Kohlschreiber (29), Germany, 6-3, 6-4, 6-4. John Isner (13), USA, def. Jiri Vesely, Czech Republic, 6-3, 6-4, retired. Donald Young, USA, def. Viktor Troicki (22), Serbia, 4-6, 0-6, 7-6 (3), 6-2, 6-4. Stan Wawrinka (5), Switzerland, def. Ruben Bemelmans, Belgium, 6-3, 7-6 (5), 6-4. Kevin Anderson (15), South Africa, def. Dominic Thiem (20), Austria, 6-3, 7-6 (3), 7-6 (3). Andy Murray (3), Britain, def. Thomaz Bellucci (30), Brazil, 6-3, 6-2, 7-5. Women Third Round Petra Kvitova (5), Czech Republic, def. Anna Karolina Schmiedlova (32), Slovakia, 6-2, 6-1. Johanna Konta, Britain, def. Andrea Petkovic (18), Germany, 7-6 (2), 6-3. Sam Stosur (22), Australia, def. Sara Errani (16), Italy, 7-5, 2-6, 6-1. Flavia Pennetta (26), Italy, def. Petra Cetkovska, Czech Republic, 1-6, 6-1, 6-4. Varvara Lepchenko, USA, def. Mona Barthel, Germany, 1-6, 6-3, 6-4. Victoria Azarenka (20), Belarus, def. Angelique Kerber (11), Germany, 7-5, 2-6, 6-4. Simona Halep (2), Romania, def. Shelby Rogers, USA, 6-2, 6-3. Sabine Lisicki (24), Germany, def. Barbora Strycova, Czech Republic, 6-4, 4-6, 7-5. Doubles Men Second Round Eric Butorac and Scott Lipsky, USA, def. Gilles Muller, Luxembourg, and Aisam-ul-Haq Qureshi, Pakistan, 6-4, 6-4. Marcel Granollers and Marc Lopez (7), Spain, def. Lucas Pouille, France, and Sergiy Stakhovsky, Ukraine, 6-4, 4-6, 6-2. Marcin Matkowski, Poland, and Nenad Zimonjic (4), Serbia, def. Marco Cecchinato and Andreas Seppi, Italy, 7-6 (5), 7-5. Colin Fleming, Britain, and Treat Huey, Philippines, def. Sam Groth and Lleyton Hewitt, Australia, 6-3, 6-4. Dominic Inglot, Britain, and Robert Lindstedt, Sweden, def. Aliaksandr Bury, Belarus, and Denis Istomin, Uzbekistan, 7-6 (5), 7-6 (3). Rohan Bopanna, India, and Florin Mergea (6), Romania, def. Mariusz Fyrstenberg, Poland, and Santiago Gonzalez, Mexico, 6-3, 7-6 (4). Daniel Nestor, Canada, and Edouard Roger-Vasselin (9), France, def. Jeremy Chardy, France, and Lukasz Kubot, Poland, 6-2, 7-5. Raven Klaasen, South Africa, and Rajeev Ram (15), USA, def. Adrian Mannarino and Fabrice Martin, France, 4-6, 7-6 (4), 6-1. Leonardo Mayer, Argentina, and Joao Sousa, Portugal, def. Federico Delbonis and Diego Schwartzman, Argentina, 6-4, 6-4. Jean-Julien Rojer, Netherlands, and Horia Tecau (3), Romania, def. Frantisek Cermak and Jiri Vesely, Czech Republic, walkover. Women Second Round Martina Hingis, Switzerland, and Sania Mirza (1), India, def. Timea Bacsinszky, Switzerland, and Chuang Chia-jung, Taiwan, 6-1, 6-1. Raquel Kops-Jones and Abigail Spears (6), USA, def. Eugenie Bouchard, Canada, and Elena Vesnina, Russia, walkover. Karin Knapp and Roberta Vinci (17), Italy, def. Margarita Gasparyan and Alexandra Panova, Russia, 7-5, 5-7, 6-3. Timea Babos, Hungary, and Kristina Mladenovic (3), France, def. Dominika Cibulkova and Magdalena Rybarikova, Slovakia, 6-4, 6-4. Sara Errani and Flavia Pennetta (11), Italy, def. Asia Muhammad and Maria Sanchez, USA, 7-6 (5), 6-1.

PGA Tour-Deutsche Bank Championship Saturday at TPC Boston Norton, Mass. Yardage: 7,242; Par 71 Second Round Charley Hoffman Brendon de Jonge Kevin Chappell Matt Jones Rickie Fowler Zach Johnson Sean O’Hair Russell Knox Henrik Stenson Danny Lee Jim Furyk Hideki Matsuyama Jason Day Daniel Berger Brendan Steele Jerry Kelly Keegan Bradley Hudson Swafford Gary Woodland Luke Donald Ian Poulter Daniel Summerhays Patrick Reed Sangmoon Bae Jason Dufner Zac Blair Louis Oosthuizen Kevin Na Dustin Johnson Alex Cejka

67-63—130 65-68—133 67-67—134 67-67—134 67-67—134 69-65—134 68-67—135 70-65—135 67-68—135 70-66—136 71-65—136 71-65—136 68-68—136 68-69—137 70-67—137 71-66—137 71-66—137 69-69—138 68-70—138 67-71—138 67-72—139 71-68—139 72-67—139 69-70—139 69-70—139 70-69—139 73-67—140 72-68—140 70-70—140 70-70—140

Brian Harman Charles Howell III Colt Knost Billy Horschel Harris English Ben Martin Cameron Tringale Troy Merritt Robert Streb Matt Kuchar Carlos Ortiz Justin Thomas Carl Pettersson Hunter Mahan Nick Watney Pat Perez Kevin Kisner Bubba Watson J.B. Holmes Paul Casey Scott Brown Kevin Streelman Webb Simpson Chris Kirk Morgan Hoffmann Phil Mickelson Rory Sabbatini William McGirt Shawn Stefani Brandt Snedeker Spencer Levin Davis Love III Kyle Reifers Camilo Villegas Brendon Todd Rory McIlroy Bill Haas Chesson Hadley Fabian Gomez Boo Weekley John Senden Johnson Wagner Ryan Palmer Scott Pinckney Mark Wilson Failed to make the cut Scott Piercy Jim Herman Russell Henley Justin Rose Chad Campbell James Hahn Jason Gore David Hearn Marc Leishman David Lingmerth Bryce Molder J.J. Henry George McNeill Jimmy Walker Jordan Spieth Jason Bohn Steven Bowditch Brooks Koepka Tony Finau Matt Every Jason Kokrak Ryan Moore Martin Laird

70-70—140 70-70—140 67-73—140 73-68—141 67-74—141 73-68—141 75-66—141 74-67—141 69-72—141 69-72—141 74-67—141 72-70—142 72-70—142 69-73—142 72-70—142 71-71—142 71-71—142 73-69—142 74-68—142 74-68—142 70-72—142 73-70—143 74-69—143 74-69—143 69-74—143 70-73—143 69-74—143 73-70—143 70-74—144 71-73—144 73-71—144 69-75—144 71-73—144 72-72—144 70-74—144 70-74—144 73-71—144 73-71—144 76-69—145 74-71—145 76-69—145 72-73—145 68-77—145 75-70—145 71-74—145 73-73—146 73-73—146 74-72—146 71-75—146 76-70—146 77-70—147 76-71—147 73-74—147 72-75—147 77-70—147 75-73—148 78-70—148 76-72—148 71-77—148 75-73—148 76-73—149 76-73—149 74-76—150 76-74—150 77-73—150 76-75—151 78-74—152 78-74—152

NASCAR XFINITY-VFW Sport Clips Help a Hero 200

Saturday at Darlington Raceway Darlington, S.C. Lap length: 1.366 miles (Start position in parentheses) 1. (1) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 147 laps. 2. (36) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 147. 3. (2) Daniel Suarez, Toyota, 147. 4. (9) Kevin Harvick, Chevy, 147. 5. (10) Chris Buescher, Ford, 147. 6. (4) Joey Logano, Ford, 147. 7. (3) Kyle Larson, Chevy, 147. 8. (19) Landon Cassill, Chevy, 147. 9. (8) Regan Smith, Chevy, 147. 10. (14) Ross Chastain, Chevy, 147. 11. (24) Elliott Sadler, Ford, 147. 12. (12) Brian Scott, Chevy, 146. 13. (6) Brendan Gaughan, Chevy, 146. 14. (15) Darrell Wallace Jr., Ford, 146. 15. (13) Ty Dillon, Chevy, 146. 16. (11) J.J. Yeley, Toyota, 146. 17. (18) Ryan Sieg, Chevy, 146. 18. (26) Dakoda Armstrong, Ford, 146. 19. (21) Cale Conley, Toyota, 146. 20. (16) Jeremy Clements, Chevy, 145. 21. (20) Parker Kligerman, Chevy, 145. 22. (25) David Starr, Toyota, 145. 23. (17) Ryan Reed, Ford, 145. 24. (7) Chase Elliott, Chevy, 144. 25. (5) Paul Menard, Chevy, 144. 26. (23) John Wes Townley, Chevy, 144. 27. (22) Blake Koch, Toyota, 143. 28. (33) Eric McClure, Toyota, 142. 29. (28) Todd Bodine, Chevy, 141. 30. (32) Joey Gase, Chevy, 141. 31. (31) B.J. McLeod, Chevy, 138. 32. (30) Derrike Cope, Chevy, 134. 33. (35) Harrison Rhodes, Chevy, vibration, 83. 34. (38) Mike Harmon, Dodge, suspension, 82. 35. (34) Morgan Shepherd, Chevy, brakes, 34. 36. (27) T.J. Bell, Toyota, clutch, 23. 37. (37) Carlos Contreras, Chevy, accident, 10. 38. (29) Jeff Green, Toyota, suspension, 6. 39. (39) Carl Long, Dodge, suspension, 4. 40. (40) Ryan Ellis, Ford, suspension, 1.

MLS

Saturday’s Games New England 3, Orlando City 0 Montreal 4, Chicago 3 Seattle 2, Toronto FC 1 Philadelphia 2, San Jose 1 Today’s Game FC Dallas at Columbus, 6 p.m.

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D

ARTS ENTERTAINMENT LIFESTYLE PEOPLE Sunday, September 6, 2015

Contributed Photo

DARK ART

Otto Dix, “Self-portrait,” 1914, © 2015 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn

Spencer Museum selects Otto Dix WWI self portrait as KU Common Work of Art

sions about these issues that are still so current,” says Celka Straughn, the Spencer Museum’s n 1910, a young Otto Dix had throughout the war in his diary director of academic programs. just entered his first year of and sketchbook — became the baWhether Dix produced “Selfstudy at the Dresden Academy sis for much of his artwork, includ- portrait” before or after the of Fine Arts. ing a 1914 self-portrait chosen by outbreak of World War I in 1914 By fall 1915, after enthusiastically the Spencer Museum of Art as the remains unclear, says Straughn. enlisting in the Germany army, Dix 2015-2016 Common Work of Art at But the painting still presents was serving as a machine gunner Kansas University. a number of complex topics — and platoon commander in the Dix’s “Self-portrait” has been including questions of personal battlefields of France, Flanders, selected in conjunction with the identity and the continued legRussia and Poland. 2015-16 Common Book, “A Farewell acy of World War I — that she Just three years later, Dix had to Arms” by Ernest Hemingway, hopes students will relate to. witnessed — and taken part in which was provided to all first-year After all, she points out, — some of World War I’s most students during KU orientation and Dix wasn’t much older than harrowing chapters, including a will be the subject of several activitoday’s KU students when he near-fatal wound to his neck that ties throughout the academic year. painted “Self-portrait.” At the ultimately led to his discharge “The goal is to have opportuniwar’s onset in summer 1914, from the army in 1918. ties for these kinds of intellectual, Dix was just 22. His experience as a solcommon-learning experiences Please see ART, page 3D dier — which he chronicled where students can have discus-

By Joanna Hlavacek • Twitter: @hlavacekjoanna

I

“A Farewell to Arms” by Ernest Hemingway is the 2015-16 KU Common Book


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A comedy of contradictions “S

he opens her mouth to speak and/ What comes out’s a mystery/ Thought about, not understood/ She’s achin’ to be.”

The Replacements song “Achin’ to Be” should be the theme song of Noah Baumbach’s tough and funny new movie “Mistress America,” now showing at Liberty Hall. For one, despite modern cars and phones that point to the contrary, this NYC-set comedy feels like it’s set a decade or two ago (the song was released in 1989). But mostly, the film is about the desperate yearning for inner strength and confidence that ‘Mats songwriter Paul Westerberg was so good at channeling. Normally, one would associate this theme with a young person’s comingof-age story, and that’s at least partially true here. For Barnard College freshman Tracy (Lola Kirke), her first semester is a big disappointment. She has few opportunities to be herself, be challenged or even find friends. Her literary ambitions seem to be going nowhere. But when she meets 30-year-old Brooke (Greta Gerwig, who co-wrote the screenplay with director Baumbach), all that changes. It’s also true that Brooke, well into her adult life, is still coming of age. If anything, her unfocused energy has provided inspiration for others who have gone on to success, while she continues to flail. (See also couple Gerwig and Baumbach’s 2012 collaboration “Frances Ha”). While Tracy is borderline giving up, Brooke is still bursting with vitality — and a bunch of unformed ideas about opening a restaurant. Brooke knows that the end result of her new business venture should be like a support group or community center — she wants to call it “Mom’s” — but she has no idea what’s on the menu, and thinks the restaurant should also double as a hair salon. The throwback feel partially comes from the clothes and the clip at which dialogue unfolds. That said, Baumbach has a firm grasp on the narcissism of today’s culture. He understands the modern contradictions of standing outside of yourself while you’re talking; of being both casual and over-excited at the same time. Brooke talks of her mother’s death in the same sentence as frozen yogurt, for crissakes. At the same time, she gathers clever quips for tweets that she may or may not ever use, because she wants to be the best expression of herself online. While New York film laureate Woody Allen’s new movies seem to be embalmed in some idealized version of the past, Baumbach finds a fresh approach to similarly W.A.S.P.-y, quasiintellectual material. Like Allen, there’s the semi-autobiographical angle (Tracy is a writer), but “Mistress America” brings up ’70s/’80s-era Woody — before his characters were too easily defined, with lots of value judgments placed upon them. What is further energizing about Baumbach’s film is that it seems to

SCENE STEALERS

ERIC MELIN

eric@scene-stealers.com defy any familiar pattern for a brisk hour or so before heading into straight-up screwball farce territory. The last 20 minutes bring many of the discordant themes home in the least preachy way possible: with all the characters facing their past and present, bouncing off each other in unlikely situations in a lavish New England house. The best films have you so wrapped up in what’s happening that you don’t fully have time to process them until later, and “Mistress America” is one such movie. It asks us to confront our messy lives and our constant fear of failure and to seriously examine the way we define ourselves. But only after you stop laughing and the credits begin to roll. “Mistress America” is 84 minutes and rated R for language including some sexual references.

An unflinching look at Steve Jobs Speaking of contradictions, Brooke has got nothing on Steve Jobs. In his new documentary, playing at the Tivoli Cinemas in Kansas City, Oscar-winning filmmaker Alex Gibney (“Taxi from the Darkside,” “Going Clear: Scientology and the Prison of Belief”) profiles one of the century’s most well-known and revered figures, and it ain’t pretty. “Steve Jobs: The Man in the Machine” begins with several video testaments to the late Apple CEO, from both young and old, that will ring familiar in their heroworshipping tone. But by the conclusion of its two-hour running time, Gibney (who narrates the film with personal reflections) lays out the clear costs of “changing the world.” Jobs was a pioneer who sought (and succeeded) to make computers and electronic handheld devices personal (even as they tend to isolate us). How’s that for contradictory? He also pushed his family — and co-workers — away with a singular focus and unrelenting managerial style. Put bluntly, the man’s personal values didn’t seem to match up with his clarity of vision. And his marketing strategy of using iconic gamechangers like Albert

Find Movie Listings at: lawrence.com/ movies/listings

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Greta Gerwig and Lola Kirke in “Mistress America” Einstein and Muhammad Ali to inspire people to “think different” didn’t jibe with his one-sided business practices. On the other hand, former head of engineering Bob Belleville, who lost his family because of pressure put on him

by Jobs while developing the Macintosh home computer, admits that his time at Apple was the most invigorating of his life. It simply isn’t that easy to write off the Jobs’ extraordinary drive to succeed at all costs.

The difference between Gibney’s documentary and other posthumous profiles of Jobs is that it doesn’t necessarily maintain a reverential tone toward its subject. “Steve Jobs: The Man in the Machine” is 127 minutes and is rated R for

some language. — Eric Melin is the editorin-chief of Scene-Stealers. He’s a member of the Broadcast Film Critics Association and vice president of the Kansas City Film Critics Circle. On the air-guitar circuit, he goes by the name Mean Melin and is a world champion of air guitar.


A&E

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Sunday, September 6, 2015

| 3D

BOOKS

KU School A rare fictional look at Katrina of Music Y season underway

ou’re 15. You’re smart. You’re poor, black, pregnant and in love, and Daddy says there’s a hurricane coming. Esch lives in Bois Sauvage, a dilapidated town on the Mississippi bayou, and she’s the powerful protagonist in Jesmyn Ward’s novel “Salvage the Bones.” Esch’s mama is dead, and she lives with her drunken daddy and three brothers who are each trying to figure out how to be men without having role models. Though her brothers love her fiercely, Esch gets most Ward of her attention and physical connection by offering her body to her brothers’ friends on the dark, marshy earth. Her only other solace is in the world of Greek mythology, whose women act as her compass: “(T)he trickster nymphs, the ruthless goddesses, the world-uprooting mothers. Io, who made a god’s heart hot with love; Artemis, who turned a man into a deer and had her dogs tear him cartilage from bone; Demeter, who made time stop when her daughter was stolen.” These goddesses become her mama, and she looks to them as she navigates unrequited love and mounting confusion over the treacherous world both in and outside of her body. In her head, Esch is Medea. Her love, her Jason, put a baby in her but doesn’t want it, and she’s learning how to exist while staring down a storm. “Salvage the Bones” takes place over the 12 days leading up to and just after Katrina hit. It intensely combines poetic phrasing and visceral imagery to deliver punch

Staff Reports

The 2015-2016 Kansas University School of Music concert season is now underway. The season, which kicked off last week in the newly remodeled Swarthout Recital Hall, includes more than 50 shows featuring students, faculty and visiting artists, with performances scheduled in Lawrence, Kansas City, Overland Park, Topeka and New York City. Upcoming highlights include a Sept. 13 performance by the faculty artists of the Kansas Virtuosi. Slated KANSAS for 7:30 p.m., UNIVERSITY the concert will be the first of the group’s 2015-2016 series in Swarthout Recital Hall, and is also free and open to the public. The 16th Annual Collage Concert, featuring performances from students and faculty, is slated for 7:30 p.m. Sept. 18 at the Lied Center. Admission for the Collage Concert is free for KU Students with a valid ID, $16 for adults and $11 for seniors and children. Those unable to attend can watch the concert via live streaming at lied. ku.edu. Tickets can be purchased at lied.ku.edu or by calling 864-2787. For more information on the 2015-2016, including a full schedule and ticket information, visit music.ku.edu.

David J. Phillip/AP File Photo

FLOODWATERS FROM HURRICANE KATRINA fill the streets near downtown New Orleans, La., on Aug. 30, 2005. provide a much-needed narrative, as very little fiction has been written about Katrina despite the devastation it wrought. Ward had been — and likely still is — “dissatisfied with the way (Hurricane Katrina) had receded from public consciousness.” “Salvage the Bones” won the 2011 Naafter gut punch. I came to tional Book Esch’s story this summer, Award for four years after its publi- fiction and cation, and could not put still sits it down. Jesmyn Ward as one of transported me into the the few eye of the storm and the fictional depth of the flood, much accounts like Zora Neale Hurof Katrina. ston’s “Their Eyes Were In 2010, New Orleans Watching God.” native Josh Levin stated: Ward lived through “Five years later, Katrina’s legacy seems less tangible the hurricane herself, a than I’d imagined it would storm that “had unmade be,” and perhaps the lack the world, tree by water by house by person.” She of representation in fiction could be partially to wrote Esch’s story to

SHELF LIFE

KATE GRAMLICH

blame. But why is there such a scarcity, especially compared with other American tragedies? Is it because natural disasters are less “glamorous” and politically charged than, say, a terrorist attack? Or because many of the victims in Katrina were poor people of color, who are often overlooked in fiction altogether? Or is there another explanation altogether? Regardless of the reason(s), in the now ten years since Katrina hit, some of us are forgetting, and authors like Jesmyn Ward and characters like Esch are crucial in preventing that from happening. Further suggested

reading after “Salvage the Bones”: l “A.D.: New Orleans After the Deluge” by Josh Neufeld (graphic novel) l “City of Refuge” by Tom Piazza (adult fiction) l “Ninth Ward” by Jewel Rhodes Parker (children’s fiction) l “Beneath a Meth Moon” by Jacqueline Woodson (YA fiction) l “Zeitoun” by Dave Eggers (literary nonfiction) l “Another Kind of Hurricane” by Tamara Ellis Smith (children’s fiction) — Kate Gramlich is a Readers’ Services Assistant at Lawrence Public Library and a member of LPL’s Book Squad. Kate enjoys literary fiction, feminist narratives, stories with diverse protagonists and funny memoirs. Books, cats and cheese are pretty much a three-way tie in her interests list.

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Art CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1D

Dix’s “Self-portrait” depicts about seven faces, though two figures stand out prominently among the darkness, their features illuminated by what looks like a glowing, red light. Only those two faces, located in “the crosshairs of the painting,” appear to be self-portraits, says Stephen Goddard, Spencer Museum associate director. “To me, it’s the likeness that seems to bring up both a powerful resolve and a sense that you can’t go back,” Goddard says. At discussions about “A Farewell to Arms” in the KU residence halls last month, Straughn says students asked what would motivate Hemingway’s protagonist — and by extension, Hemingway himself, who famously based the book on his own experiences serving in World War I — to enlist in the midst of such a brutal conflict. Goddard says Dix, like many young men at the time, may have been guided by a “miscalculated” sense of optimism.

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In Europe, there was a widespread conception that the war would be a short and simple resolution to the territorial, political and economic conflicts among the continent’s great powers that had plagued Europe for decade, he says. That, of course, wasn’t in the case. World War I lagged on until November 1918, and ultimately resulted in the deaths of more than 16 million soldiers and civilians. But the sheer terror of war is also what drew Dix to it, Goddard says. At least, that’s what the artist admitted years later in an interview when he said, “You have to have seen human beings in this unleashed state to know what human nature is.” “He felt this was an opportunity to see humanity at its lowest. As

an artist, he felt it was an opportunity he couldn’t miss,” Goddard says. “He wasn’t a proponent of the war in any way, but he knew it was happening and he couldn’t miss it.” In previous years, the museum has hosted discussions and other events built around the Common Work of Art. The chances of that happening this year, Straughn says, are slim, though she hasn’t ruled out the possibility yet. With the Spencer Museum’s galleries closed for renovations until a tentative mid-2016, Straughn hopes students will view the painting via Spencer’s website, which also offers access to several Dix works on paper as well as some Hemingway-related images. Dix’s painting, she and Goddard agree, is a link to our past that can help

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us understand our present and hopefully, create a more peaceful future. “I think it’s important to experience it from original material as much as possible, such as painting or writings from the time,” Goddard says of the war. “The conflicted attitudes and difficulties of being in that situation, I think for many — certainly in the second year of the war — seemed unclear why people were fighting. Those are lessons we probably can’t repeat often enough.” — Features reporter Joanna Hlavacek can be reached at jhlavacek@ljworld.com and 832-6388.

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4D

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Sunday, September 6, 2015

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L awrence J ournal -W orld

Emotional abuse takes many forms, all serious Dear Annie: What are the signs of emotional abuse? I think my friend, “Charlotte,” is in a relationship with a man who is emotionally abusive. When Charlotte and “Paul” started dating, he made lots of promises he has not kept. He said he’d teach her how to drive, but he hasn’t. Her mom was always in charge of her financial stuff (she’s on disability) and when she and Paul got engaged, her mom wanted to discuss the finances with him. But they were married last month and the talk never happened. Paul limits what Charlotte can spend her money on, saying they need to save for the new restaurant he’s opening. Then he goes out and spends his money on video games.

Annie’s Mailbox

Marcy Sugar and Kathy Mitchell

anniesmailbox@comcast.net

Also, Charlotte told me Paul restricts who she can see and how much time she can spend with them. He doesn’t like most of her family and will not let her see them, even when he’s not around. Last week, Charlotte and I went out for lunch and she forgot to tell him. He became angry because she didn’t inform him first. What should I do? I care about her and think she deserves bet-

New take on Doyle in ‘Masterpiece’ Based on real events, the new “Masterpiece Mystery!” (7 p.m., PBS) series “Arthur & George” requires viewers to adjust to major departures from some fictional characters. Adapted from a book of the same name by Julian Barnes, the “Arthur” in the title is Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (Martin Clunes). The three-part series also asks that viewers appreciate Clunes as a very different character than the dyspeptic perfectionist that so many have come to love on “Doc Martin.” Far from the frantic, slippery and nearly superhuman genius of Cumberbatch’s Sherlock, Doyle is seen here as a family man who loses his wife at an early age and then frets that he may have been unconsciously unfaithful to her by befriending another woman during the time of her illness. He rallies from his torpor when he hears of a case of official injustice concerning the wrongful imprisonment of a gentle Anglo-Indian solicitor, George Edalji (Arsher Ali), whose family had been subject to all manner of innuendo, vandalism, violence and mischief. A handsomely produced period piece, “Arthur & George” proceeds in curious fits and starts, then slows down to a crawl. The peculiar pacing is more jarring than distracting. Clunes is rather convincing as a thinking man of action, a desk-bound writer eager to depart the fictional realm of Baker Street and sink his teeth into a real case with profound societal and political ramifications.

Now in its second season, “Rugged Justice” (7 p.m., Animal Planet) scours the vast “precinct” of the Washington State Department of Fish and Wildlife. Every year, its agents receive more than 225,000 calls related to mishaps and misdemeanors both human and animal in nature. Home to great hunting, fishing, camping and rafting, Washington’s wilderness also offers refuge to criminals on the lam, drug cultivators, smugglers and traffickers, animal poachers and hunters who disregard laws against harvesting endangered species. Tonight’s other highlights

“Great Performances at the Met” (noon, PBS) presents opera’s most popular double bill, “Cavalleria Rusticana” and “Pagliacci.”

NASCAR action in the Bojangles’ Southern 500 (6:20 p.m., NBC), live from Darlington, S.C.

Somebody takes mentoring to an extreme in the 2015 shocker “A Teacher’s Obsession” (8 p.m., Lifetime).

A little romance for “The World’s Fattest Man” (9 p.m., TLC).

ter than this man, but I don’t think she will listen to me. — Charlotte’s Friend Dear Friend: According to the National Domestic Violence Hotline (thehotline. org), signs of emotional abuse include:

calling you names, insulting you or continually criticizing you;

refusing to trust you and acting jealous or possessive;

trying to isolate you from family or friends;

monitoring where you go, who you call and who you spend time with;

demanding to know where you are every minute;

punishing you by withholding affection;

threatening to hurt you;

blaming you for the abuse;

cheating;

attempting to control your appearance;

telling you that you will never find anyone better. Abuse also includes controlling money. We can see that Paul is isolating Charlotte, monitoring her whereabouts and controlling access to friends, family and money. Of course, as you pointed out, Charlotte may not listen to you. But please try to maintain a relationship with her and make sure she has the number of the Hotline at 1-800-799SAFE.

JACQUELINE BIGAR’S STARS

For Sunday, Sept. 6: This year could have a surprisingly positive tone. You might not even expect what heads down the path toward you, but you will not hesitate to leap right in. If you are single, you will move into a new realm of caring by expanding your circle of friends. If you are attached, the two of you feel more connected than you have in a while. The stars show the kind of day you’ll have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult Aries (March 21-April 19) Use the morning hours to visit with friends you don’t see often. Schedule a little downtime. Tonight: Help a friend accomplish a project. Taurus (April 20-May 20) Curb spending once more. Join a friend and hang out in the evening. Tonight: Romance and caring intensify. Gemini (May 21-June 20) Sometimes, you experience frustration from being unavailable for everyone you care about. Relax in the afternoon. Tonight: Let the celebration continue. Cancer (June 21-July 22) Take some much-needed personal time in the morning. By the afternoon, you might opt to join loved ones. Tonight: Near good music. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) Breeze right on out the door early, perhaps to join a family

accusing you of

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

jacquelinebigar.com

member or friend for breakfast. Tonight: Not to be found. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) A call from a friend adds tension to your day. Handle this matter. Tonight: Celebrate the moment. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) You might not have been as available as others might like you to be. Tonight: Wherever you are, your visibility soars. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) One-on-one relating will take you in a new direction. Avoid gossip. Tonight: Make sure music surrounds you. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Your laughter proves to be contagious, and others seem to respond in kind. Open up to a new idea. Tonight: Remain content. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) You have a unique vision that you tend to question. Get feedback more often. Tonight: All smiles. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) You have a way about you that attracts people. Your popularity continues to soar. Tonight: Let the good times be less hectic. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) Understand that others miss you. Allow a loved one to tease you. Tonight: Laughter surrounds you.

UNIVERSAL CROSSWORD Universal Crossword Edited by Timothy E. Parker September 6, 2015

ACROSS 1 Egyptian snakes 5 Some fly traps 9 Willy and Shamu, for two 14 Spelling in some TV credits 15 Part of a foot 16 Cosmetic application 17 Tempt fate 20 Corporal, e.g. 21 Mushroom caps 22 Barbaric 23 Newspaper column 25 Calculating sort, for short? 28 Mind reader’s claim, briefly 29 Gutter sites 31 Honeydew, e.g. 33 Less feral 34 By a small margin 35 Where people do a lot of fighting 37 Stayed away from 39 Go one better than 40 Encircles with a belt 41 One may be frequent 42 Put a strain on 45 Dinghy blade

46 College official with a list 47 Cream of the crop 49 Art class item 52 Faultfinder 53 Where people get grilled in London? 57 One in a class by himself? 58 Not once, poetically 59 Flip-a-coin test answer 60 Wine glass parts 61 Genesis garden 62 Congeals DOWN 1 Immediately 2 Deep sleeps 3 Plan for divorce? 4 Starting from 5 Sound of a slam 6 After dark, poetically 7 Place for pillows 8 Aspen attractions 9 Kind of testimony 10 Flower that’s also a name 11 “Dilbert” workplaces 12 “A long time ___ ...” 13 Questionnaire datum

18 Medieval weapons 19 Get __ of (discard) 23 Brownand-serve appliance 24 Vine-covered colonnade 26 Washington pro 27 Beginning of time? 30 At the hub of 31 Lathe spindles 32 “Cogito, ___ sum” 33 Broadway’s “Sweeney ___” 34 Mosquito’s attack 35 Hair ornament 36 Put the kibosh on 37 Freudian concern 38 By means of

41 Jaguar, e.g. 42 Sound characteristic 43 Partook at a restaurant 44 Persian king who captured Athens 46 Soft drink Mountain ___ 48 Hangs in there 50 “Excuse me!” 51 Keeps company with 52 Swiss capital 53 Genderless possessive 54 Hardshelled seed 55 Lou’s anchorman, in a sitcom 56 Word between two surnames

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PUZZLES

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Sunday, September 6, 2015

| 5D

THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD for short 54 Name on a toy truck 56 To the point 57 Empty-stomach sound 59 ____ limit (sign at the ACROSS edge of town) 1 Fake blood, e.g. 60 Sound 4 Many establishments 62 Crumbly cheeses on Paris’s Boulevard 64 Arctic lights Saint-Germain 66 Regimented resort 9 Enjoy thoroughly 68 See 73-Across 14 Ex-Mrs. Trump 69 Locale of the 19 Person behind a 15-Down Eyjafjallajökull strike? 70 Decked out 20 Cause of a 2014 71 Like pop-ups epidemic 73 Check for 68-Across 21 Word with light or 74 2006 Pixar film horse 75 Heavy drinker, in 22 Figure in Jewish slang folklore 77 Out of the barn, say 23 One time around 79 ESPNU covers it 24 “He who hesitates is 82 Celestial altar lost, but …” 83 Gladly, old-style 27 Beat around the 84 Steer closer to the bush? wind 29 Mathematician 85 It borders the Fibonacci N. Atl. 30 N.B.A. team once 86 Prison escape path, coached by Larry Bird maybe 31 DVR lineup 88 A sharp equivalent 33 Rich cake 89 Sing the praises of 34 Brown who wrote 91 Unused “The Diana Chronicles” 92 Give the right 35 Handles 94 Second chances for 37 Silliness 41 Half-and-half, maybe students 96 Head of an inn? 42 Park place 97 Caliban in “The 46 ____ game Tempest,” e.g. 49 Kind of arch 102 Pooh-bah 50 Frequent subject of 103 Get into fibbing 106 Part of a domina51 ____ Soetoro, stepfatrix’s outfit ther of Barack Obama 52 Longest river entirely 108 Babe in the woods 111 “You can’t judge a within Switzerland book by its cover, but …” 53 Group of Coyotes, CONFLICTING ADVICE By Lee Taylor Puzzles Edited by Will Shortz

114 “____ no idea” 115 Blazing stars 116 Pairs are seen in it 117 Emulate Isocrates 118 Birth-certificate datum 119 Paradises 120 Chemical ____ 121 Trig functions 122 Boom source DOWN 1 [Um, this can’t be good] 2 All-Star second baseman Infante 3 “Birds of a feather flock together, but …” 4 Solo features of six Bach suites 5 Blood-type system 6 “Great minds think alike, but …” 7 Actress Sommer 8 Clog 9 Till now 10 Left at sea 11 Like some salsa 12 Stackable dessert item 13 2004 musical biopic for which the star won Best Actor 14 Pet in the comic strip “FoxTrot” 15 See 69-Across 16 “Helm ____!” (captain’s cry) 17 Within view 18 Ratchets (up) 25 Ambient music innovator Brian 26 Put forward 28 “Huh?” 32 It’s a trap 34 “Slow and steady

wins the race, but …” 35 Shanghai nursemaid 36 Winter Olympics sport 38 “Knowledge is power, but …” 39 1943 conference site 40 Checked online reviews of, modern-style 43 Here/there connector 44 One on staff? 45 Sphere of civilian activity during war 46 Trifle 47 Cousin of Sven 48 Michael Sheen’s character in “Twilight” 55 Mystical Muslims 56 Broadcast 58 Ill-gotten gains 59 Port on the Panama Canal 61 D.C.’s ____ Constitution Hall 63 Personal quirk 65 “Born to Die” singer Lana Del ____ 66 Pretense 67 Galloping 71 Part of SEATO 72 Billet-____ 76 Gal ____ 78 More than once in a while 80 You may have a great one in your family 81 Part of M.F.A. 87 Like some mountain guides 88 Oh-so-bored 90 “Glee” star ____ Michele 91 It may mean “Pet me!” 93 Comedian Daniel and

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Housewives” 109 Holiday lead-ins 110 Emoji holder 112 Place for a “me day” 113 Gorged on

UNITED FEATURE SUNDAY CROSSWORD ACROSS 1 Tomato jelly 6 Ode penner 11 Bete -16 Dye process 21 Norse neighbor 22 View from Everest 23 Scallion 24 Ms. Verdugo 25 Reef maker 26 Flee to the JP 27 Physique 28 Running late 29 High dudgeon 30 Gets the picture 32 Water sources 34 Dregs 36 Estuary 37 Hammer home 39 Spiteful 40 Ground grain 41 Prominent nose 42 Web-footed bird 43 Lugged about 44 More jolly 46 Future fries 49 Kidded around 50 Thinks is groovy 51 Adult content (hyph.) 55 Catcher Tony -56 Promising rookie 57 MD’s magazine 58 Rhino, e.g. (2 wds.) 59 Early U-235 regulator 60 Bucket of song 61 Gridiron’s end -62 Anagram for rats 63 White wine aperitif 64 More stalwart 66 Funny Martha -67 Brewery tanks 68 Crawford’s ex 69 Shooting stars 70 Janitors’ tools 71 Windshield option

72 Check a suspect 73 Ski lodge instructor 74 Rendered powerless 76 -- Scala of film 77 Pocket change 80 Lap dog, slangily 81 Charged particles 82 Lull 86 Organic compound 87 Port near Kilauea 88 Goes on the stage 89 When you’re in a jam (2 wds.) 90 Novelty 91 Sir’s companion 92 Havens 93 Bedding plant 94 Prefix for cycle 95 By -- (alone) 97 Hot tub features 98 Beatnik drum 99 Bunyan’s ox 100 Zodiac twins 101 Fragrant trees 102 Fountain treats 103 Senor’s wherewithal 104 Thundering herd 106 Furry hoppers 107 Move after swerving 108 WWW addresses 111 -- it the truth! 112 Ants at a picnic 113 Purse items 117 Nectar gatherer 118 Course finale 119 Silly comedy 120 Mountain passes 121 -- Maria liqueur 122 Jellybean shapes 124 Consumer advocate 126 Survey findings 128 Metal eaters 130 Taxpayer’s dread 131 Theaters 132 Word on an invoice

133 Freighter hazards 134 Physicist Nikola -135 Please greatly 136 As -- -- (generally) 137 Not just some DOWN 1 Computer acronym 2 Avowed 3 Dijon dads 4 Wyo. neighbor 5 Temperature scale 6 Bow down 7 Lampreys 8 PFC’s mail drop 9 Plain drink (2 wds.) 10 Rained ice 11 Generously 12 Disagreeable task 13 A crowd, for Cato? 14 Waves 15 Win over 16 Poker stakes 17 Gulf st. 18 Earth, to Pierre 19 Krishna’s land 20 Type of canoe 31 Wapiti 33 Soho co. 35 Panaceas 38 Mock fanfare (hyph.) 39 Witches’ band 40 MHz part 41 Blow hard? 43 Oven accessory 44 Play charades 45 Joule fractions 46 Involuntary jerk 47 Calvin of golf 48 Full-length 49 Comic’s inventory 50 Guy like Hamlet 52 Sulu, on “Star Trek” 53 Qatar heads 54 “10” knockout

56 Egyptian capital 57 Pilots’ controls 58 Fiberglass bundle 60 Hounds’ trails 61 Shocks somebody 62 Astronaut’s ade 65 Fight off 66 Colosseum site 67 Monsieur’s wines 68 Visual aid 70 Dangerous shark 71 Large casks 72 Dubious 74 Steer 75 Composts 76 Mural base 77 Dashboard button 78 Absurd 79 Internet hookup 80 France’s “Little Sparrow” 82 Steps on a ladder 83 Jots 84 Race-car engine 85 Iroquois speakers 87 Nova Scotia city 88 Muses’ domain 89 Declaims violently 91 What’s cooking 92 Dynamic prefix 93 Warsaw citizens 96 Bro and sis 97 Forsake a lover 98 Trading post patron 99 Panhandles 101 Missive to Madonna, say (2 wds.) 102 Lash darkener 103 Cruise ship fare 105 Stag honoree 106 Any ship 107 Nothing 108 WWII craft (hyph.) 109 Ziegfeld offering 110 Clues

UNIVERSAL SUDOKU

See both puzzle SOLUTIONS in Monday’s paper. 112 Do Latin homework 113 Eat a little 114 Good for something 115 Fluffy quilt

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

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

116 Full of back talk 118 This, in Tijuana 119 Yard contents 120 Author -- Sheehy

123 Rapper -- Wayne 125 Spiral molecule 127 Grounded Aussie 129 Cleveland cager

HIDATO

See answer next Sunday

©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.

GUHENO TOCREK WINDOS

Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app

NUTUMA

FLAMEE CLUMES

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

PRINT YOUR ANSWER IN THE CIRCLES BELOW

Solution and tips at sudoku.com.

Last week’s solution

See the JUMBLE answer on page 6D. Answer :

FEMALE AUTUMN ROCKET MUSCLE ENOUGH DISOWN The retired clockmaker showed his family the clock he’d made —

FOR OLD TIMES’ SAKE

SEPTEMBER 6, 2015

Last week’s solution


6D

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Sunday, September 6, 2015

A&E

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L awrence J ournal -W orld

KANSAS CITY CONNECTION By Lucas Wetzel

9 events to kick off a busy September T

he start of September is a bustling time in Kansas City, and in honor of the ninth month of the year, here are nine standout festivals, concerts and weekend events to help you make the most of your week.

“Pops in the Park” at Shawnee Mission Park On Monday, The Kansas City Symphony presents its annual free concert at Shawnee Mission Park, saluting the end of summer with selections ranging from “Star Wars” to the “StarSpangled Banner.” Gates open at 5 p.m. for the free concert, which starts at 7. Before the main concert, enjoy a performance by the Youth Symphony of Kansas City as well as an instrument petting zoo. Visit kcsymphony.org for more details.

directly above cigar retailer Diebel’s Sportsmens Gallery at 426 Ward Parkway on the Country Club Plaza. General admission costs $136 and includes a dozen premium cigars, lunch, two beer tickets, liquor sampling and tickets to a charity raffle. A guest ticket without the cigars is $40. Register at kccigarfestival.com.

Ratatat at the Uptown This electro-pop duo from Brooklyn is hardly a household name, but if you’ve ever tuned in to NPR and heard upbeat synth tracks and hardhitting, syncopated percussion layered into the between-show segments, there’s a good chance you were listening to Ratatat. On Thursday, Ratatat visits the Uptown in support of their recent album “Magnifique.” Doors for this all-ages show open at 7 p.m. and the music begins at 8. Tickets are $25 at uptowntheater.com.

Crossroads Music Fest The Crossroads Music Festival began 10 years ago as a fundraiser for community radio station KKFI 90.1 and a showcase for dozens of Kansas City’s most popular local Johnson County Old Kansas City Cigar Festival/Contributed Photo bands. Settlers Festival The music begins KANSAS CITY CIGAR FESTIVAL will be from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday on the roof of From Thursday at 6 p.m. Saturday and Diebel’s Sportsmens Gallery on the Country Club Plaza. through Saturday, downwill last long into the town Olathe will pay night at seven different artwork, crafts and tribute to its historical Center into colorful music by the Hellenic stages and bars includroots with concerts, a jewelry from over 100 chalk canvases at this Five and pastries and ing The Brick, The carnival, auto show, ice artists from the region, weekend event, which dishes such as grilled Green Lady Lounge, cream socials, arts and also includes street with abundant options souvlaki, spanakopita, The Tank Room and an performers, food and crafts, horseshoe pitchfor food and drink on dolmathes and baklava outdoor stage at 1837 Itzhak Perlman and each block. activities. ing, funnel cakes, and sundaes. Grand Blvd. PerformEmanuel Ax at the The show runs from The Chalk and Walk flower shows. Greek Fest will be held ers include Mountain Kauffman Center 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. Friday, Main events include 6 to 10 p.m. Friday, noon runs from 11 a.m. to 7 Sprout, The Organ Jazz On Tuesday at Helz10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Saturp.m. Saturday and 11 Kansas’ Largest Parade to 10 p.m. Saturday and Trio, Katy Guillen & day and 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. berg Hall in the Kauffa.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday at at 10 a.m. Saturday, and noon to 6 p.m. Sunday The Girls, Spirit is the Sunday. man Center for the a concert Thursday at the big tent beside the Crown Center Square, Spirit, and more. See artwestport.net Performing Arts, the evening at 6:30 featuring church at 120th and Wor- 2450 Grand Blvd. A $15 ticket special is This alcohol-free event online at cmfkc.com or at to preview work from world famous duo of Christian artist Kerrie nall streets. Church tours is free to the public. Visit area Vinyl Renaissance participating artists. Israeli violinist Itzhak Roberts followed by the will be available as well. kcchalkandwalk.org for Perlman and Ukrainian Olathe North and Olathe More information is stores. South high school bands. Greek Fest more details. pianist Emanuel Ax will online at greekfoodfest. Visit johnsoncounFrom Friday through — Lucas Wetzel is a writer perform selections from org. and editor from Kansas City, Cigar Fest on the Sunday, the Annuntheir recent recordings of tyoldsettlers.com for a Mo. Know of an upcoming event “Chalk And Walk” at Country Club Plaza ciation Greek Orthodox sonatas by Gabriel Faure full schedule. in Kansas City you’d like to seeTHATbySCRAM This Saturday from 11 Church is hosting its 54th Crown Center and Richard Strauss. David featured in Kansas City ConDozens of professional a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Kanannual Greek Fest, which Tickets range from $25 Art Westport Unscramble these six Jumbles, Email us about it at Westport’s annual and amateur artists will sas City Cigar Festival includes traditional to $80 and are available one nection? letter to each square, to form six ordinary words. kcconnection@ljworld.com. art fair will present dance performances, live turn the bricks of Crown will host a rooftop party at hjseries.org.

DATEBOOK 6 TODAY

Lawrence Public Library closed today. Jazzhaus Big Band rehearsal, open to the public, 2-4 p.m., American Legion Post #14, 3408 W. Sixth St. Irish Traditional Music Session, 5:30-8 p.m., upstairs Henry’s on Eighth, 11 E. Eighth St. O.U.R.S. (Oldsters United for Responsible Service) dance, doors 5 p.m., potluck 7:15-7:45 p.m., dance 6-9 p.m., Eagles Lodge, 1803 W. Sixth St. Smackdown! trivia, 7 p.m., The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St.

7 MONDAY

Labor Day -- City and County offices closed; no yard waste collection; Lawrence Transit System closed; Law-

©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.

GUHENO rence Public Library closed; parking at downtown meters free. Concert: StoweGood, 7 p.m., Unity Church, 900 Madeline Lane.

8 TUESDAY

Red Dog’s Dog Days workout, 6 a.m., South Park, 12th and Massachusetts streets. Coalition on Homeless Concerns monthly meeting, 3-5 p.m., Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. Lawrence Farmers’ Market, 4-6 p.m., parking lot at 824 New Hampshire St. Big Brothers Big Sisters of Douglas County volunteer information, 5:15 p.m., United Way Building, 2518 Ridge Court. Lawrence City Commission meeting, 5:45

SUNDAY Prime Time WOW DTV DISH 7 PM

7:30

p.m., City Hall, 6 E. Sixth St. Red Dog’s Dog Days workout, 6 p.m., west side of South Park, 12th and Massachusetts streets. Lonnie Ray’s open jam session, 6-10 p.m., Slow Ride Roadhouse, 1350 N. Third St., no cover. Maker Meet-Up, 6:30 p.m., Lawrence Creates Makerspace, 512 E. Ninth St. Lecompton City Council meeting, 7 p.m., Lecompton City Hall, 327 Elmore St., Lecompton. Baldwin City Council meeting, 7 p.m., Baldwin Public Library, 800 Seventh St., Baldwin. Herbs study group, 7 p.m., Unitarian Fellowship, 1263 North 1100 Road. Gamer Night, 8 p.m., Burger Stand at the Casbah, 803 Massachusetts

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Raymond Raymond Face the Nation (N) On

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DCI Banks

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hNASCAR Racing Sprint Cup Series: Bojangles’ Southern 500. KSNT Monopoly Mil. Wife Castle h News News Two Men Big Bang KTWU 11 Masterpiece Masterpiece Mystery! h Vicious DCI Banks “Bad Boy” Pedal Bachelor in Paradise (N) h Castle h News Castle h Bones Q 12 Big Brother (N) Madam Secretary CSI: Cyber h News The Blue Bloods ` 13 Action News Sports Bensin I 14 41 41 hNASCAR Racing Sprint Cup Series: Bojangles’ Southern 500. KMCI 15 38 38 ›› Van Wilder (2002) Ryan Reynolds. King King Mike Mike Nichols q h KCWE 17 29 29 Castle h Scandal News Two Men Big Bang Mod Fam Anger Alien File KPXE 18 50 ››‡ Rocky V (1990) h Sylvester Stallone. ›› Rocky IV (1985) Sylvester Stallone. Rocky 9

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Cable Channels WOW!6 6 WGN-A CITY

Tower Cam/Weather Information

307 239 Elementary h

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››‡ Alfie (2004) Jude Law, Omar Epps.

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City Bulletin Board, Commission Meetings

City Bulletin Board

School Board Information

School Board Information

ESPN 33 206 140 aMLB Baseball Pittsburgh Pirates at St. Louis Cardinals. (N)

SportsCenter (N) (Live)

ESPN2 34 209 144 E2015 U.S. Open Tennis Round of 16. (N) (Live)

NHRA Drag Racing

FSM

36 672

World Poker Tour

NBCSN 38 603 151 Beach Volleyball FNC

39 360 205 Did You Know

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SportCtr

World Poker Tour

World Poker Tour

Snyder

Spartan Race

Spartan Race

Victory Lap

hFormula 1 Racing

World Poker Tour

Trump Camp.

Greg Gutfeld

Did You Know

Trump Camp.

CNBC 40 355 208 West Texas

West Texas

West Texas

West Texas

West Texas

MSNBC 41 356 209 Profiling Evil

Profiling Evil

Ted Bundy - Tapes

Lockup: Savannah

Lockup: Raw

The Seventies

The Seventies

CNN

44 202 200 The Seventies

The Seventies

The Seventies

TNT

45 245 138 Fast & Furious

The Last Ship (N)

The Last Ship

USA

46 242 105 Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Graceland

A&E

47 265 118 ››‡ We Are Marshall (2006) Matthew McConaughey.

TRUTV 48 246 204 Jokers AMC TBS

50 254 130 Walking

Jokers

Jokers

Jokers

Fear the Walking Dead “Pilot”

54 269 120 American Pickers

Behind Bars

We Are Marshall

Impractical Jokers

Jokers

Fear the Walking

Fear the Walking Dead “Pilot”

SYFY 55 244 122 Back-Future II

Married to Medicine Tardy American Pickers

››› War of the Worlds (2005)

Impractical Jokers

51 247 139 ››‡ Now You See Me (2013) Jesse Eisenberg.

BRAVO 52 237 129 Bravo First Looks HIST

WOW DTV DISH 7 PM

SPORTS 7:30

8 PM

8:30

Free swing dancing lessons and dance, 8-11 TOCREK p.m., Kansas Room in the Kansas Union, 1301 Jayhawk Blvd.

WINDOS

Submit your stuff: FLAMEE Don’t be shy — we want to publish your event. Submit your item for ourCLUMES calendar by emailingNow arrange datebook@ljworld.com to form the s at least 48 hours before suggested by PRINT YOUR your event. Find ANSWER more IN THE CIRCLE information about these events, and more event listings, at ljworld.com/ events.

Answer : FEMALE AUTUMN ROCKET MUSCLE ENOUGH DISOWN The retired clockmaker showed his family the clock he’d made —

FOR OLD TIMES’ SAKE September 6, 2015

9 PM

9:30

10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30

Cable Channels cont’d

3

8

BEST BETS

10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30

Network Channels

M

Steak/Salmon Night, 5-7:30 p.m., Eagles Lodge, 1803 W. Sixth St. 9 WEDNESDAY Douglas County Com1 Million Cups premission meeting, check sentation, 9-10 a.m., website at http://www. Cider Gallery, 810 Penndouglas-county.com for sylvania St. meeting time, Douglas Lawrence Public County Courthouse, 1100 Library Book Van, 9-10 Massachusetts St. a.m., Brandon Woods, American Legion 1501 Inverness Drive. Bingo, doors open 4:30 Lawrence Public p.m., first games 6:45 Library Book Van, 10:30- p.m., snack bar 5-8 p.m., 11:30 a.m., Arbor Court, American Legion Post 1510 St. Andrews Drive. #14, 3408 W. Sixth St. Big Brothers Big SisLawrence Pedestrian ters of Douglas County Coalition Meeting, 7 volunteer information, p.m., Carnegie Building, noon, United Way Build200 W. Ninth St. ing, 2518 Ridge Court. Trivia Night, 7 p.m., Lawrence Public Legends, 1540 Wakarusa Library Book Van, 1-2 Drive. p.m., Babcock Place, 940 Live: The Moun1700 Massachusetts St. tain Goats, 7:30 p.m., Clinton Parkway Lawrence Arts Center, Nursery Farmers’ 940 New Hampshire St. Market, 4:30-6:30 p.m., Conroy’s Trivia, 7:30 Clinton Parkway Nursery, p.m., Conroy’s Pub, 3115 4900 Clinton Parkway. W. Sixth St. St., free.

Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app

NUTUMA

Jokers Walking

››‡ Now You See Me (2013) Jesse Eisenberg.

Manzo’d Married to Medicine Housewives/OC

American Pickers

American Pickers

››› Back to the Future Part III (1990, Comedy)

Geeks

American Pickers Geeks

Geeks

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

401 411 421 440 451

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

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

351 350 285 287 279 362 256

211 210 192 195 189 214 132

501 515 545 535 527

300 310 318 340 350

››‡ Oblivion (2013) Tom Cruise. ››‡ Step Brothers (2008) Will Ferrell.

The Strain (N)

The Strain

The Strain

››‡ Step Brothers (2008) Will Ferrell.

I Am Cait (N) Stewarts-Ham. I Am Cait I Am Cait I Am Cait ››› Gremlins 2: The New Batch (1990) Premiere. Instant Jam Cops Cops Cops Flea Flea Flea Flea Flea Flea Flea Flea Flea Flea WhatsLv ›› Good Deeds (2012, Drama) Tyler Perry. Sunday Best P. Popoff Inspir. Bask. Wives LA Bask. Wives LA Bask. Wives LA Love, Hip Hop Black Ink Crew Big- RV Big- RV Bikinis-Board. Sturgis Raw Sturgis Raw Bikinis-Board. My 600-Lb. Life Fattest Man Fattest Man Fattest Man Fattest Man Stolen Daughter A Teacher’s Obsession (2015) Stolen Daughter (2015) Andrea Roth. ›› Crash Site (2011) Premiere. ››› Taken in Broad Daylight (2009) ›› Crash Site Guy’s Games Food Truck Race Cutthroat Kitchen Cutthroat Kitchen Food Truck Race Beach Beach Island Island Island Island Hunters Hunt Intl Island Island The Thundermans Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Friends Friends Friends Wander Wander Penn Penn Penn Ultimate Ultimate Ultimate Ultimate Rebels Descendants (2015) Dove Cameron. Girl I Didn’t Bunk’d Liv-Mad. Austin Good King/Hill Cleve Cleve American American Fam Guy Fam Guy Rick Aqua Pickles Naked and Afraid Naked and Afraid Naked and Afraid Naked and Afraid Naked and Afraid ›››‡ Finding Nemo (2003, Comedy) ››› Mulan (1998), Eddie Murphy Osteen Jeremiah Wicked Tuna Wicked Tuna Port Protection (N) Wicked Tuna Port Protection Taste Romance ››› Just Desserts (2004) Lauren Holly. Golden Golden Golden Golden Rugged Justice (N) North Woods Law Ice Lake Rebels (N) Rugged Justice North Woods Law Reba “Pilot” Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond King King King King Osteen K. Shook Copeland Creflo D. Left Behind Left Behind II Sunday Night Prime Symbo Rosary Fran. Life on the Rock Sunday Mass Taste Taste Second Second Polio Revisited Taste Taste Second Second The Quiet Man After Words Dollar Spy American Warlords In Depth Q&A House of Commons Road White House Q & A House of Commons Dateline on ID Dateline on ID (N) On the Case, Zahn Dateline on ID Dateline on ID Gunslingers Gunslingers Gunslingers Gunslingers Gunslingers Undercover Boss Undercover Boss Undercover Boss Undercover Boss Undercover Boss Weather Weather Weather Weather Weather Weather Weather Weather Weather Weather ››› Thrill of a Romance (1945) ››› Million Dollar Mermaid (1952) Cabinet-Caligri

›››› Titanic (1997) Leonardo DiCaprio, Billy Zane. Last Week To. Hard Knocks ››‡ Barbershop (2002) ››› Barbershop 2: Back in Business ››‡ Beauty Shop (2005) Ray Donovan Ray Donovan (N) Masters of Sex (N) Ray Donovan Masters of Sex Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest ›››‡ Edward Scissorhands (1990) Wild Survivors Survivors Survivors Blunt ›› Ghost Rider (2007) Nicolas Cage. Blunt Survivors

SEPTE


Sunday, September 6, 2015

E jobs.lawrence.com

CLASSIFIEDS

PLACE YOUR AD:

785.832.2222

classifieds@ljworld.com

A P P LY N O W

956 AREA JOB OPENINGS! Aerotek ............................................ 40

General Dynamics (GDIT) ................... 120

Miscellaneous ................................... 47

Ber t Nash ......................................... 10

Kmar t Distribution .............................. 20

MV Transpor tation .............................. 25

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

KU: Student Openings ...................... 169

STOUSE ..............................................5

Brandon Woods .................................. 10

KU: Faculty/Academic/Lecturers ........... 91

USA 800 ......................................... 150

Community Relations/DayCom .............. 14

KU: Staff Openings ............................. 60

Westaff ............................................ 25

Engineered Air .....................................8

Menards ......................................... 150

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

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

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

The Bert Nash Center Is Seeking to Fill the following positions:

Behavioral Health Consultant (Part-Time to Full-Time) Care Coordinator Adult Outpatient Therapist After Hours Screener CFS Therapist Case Manager IDDT Case Manager CFS Specialty Case Manager Attendant Care Provider Psychosocial Workers (Part-Time and Full-Time) Telemedicine Support Volunteer

The Nation’s LARGEST 100% Employee Owned Inbound Contact Center

Onsite Inter views

Positions are filling fast so come in for an interview ASAP. Last interviews will be 9/18.

1025 N. 3rd St., Lawrence, KS 66044

ALL POSITIONS NEEDED

Multiple schedules Opportunities for advancement Benefits, competitive pay, paid training and more! Entry-level positions earn up to $10.50/hr within 90 days. Pay differential for Bilingual (Spanish)

For best consideration apply online immediately at www.bertnash.org. You may also send a completed application to: careers@bertnash.org FAX: 785-830-1879

HIRING UP TO

300

PEOPLE 200 Maine Street, Suite A • www.BertNash.org EOE M/F/D • Must be at least 21yrs of age w/valid dr lic.

WWW.USA800.COM The University of Kansas is committed to providing our employees with an enriching and dynamic work environment that encourages innovation, research, creativity and equal opportunity for learning, development and professional growth. KU strives to recruit, develop, retain and reward a dynamic workforce that shares our mission and core strategic values in research, teaching and service. Learn more at http://provost.ku.edu/strategic-plan

Honors Admissions Representative

KU Honors Program seeks FT Honors Admissions Representative. APPLY AT: http://employment.ku.edu/staff/4367BR Initial review begins 9-14-2015.

Business Coordinator

KU Center for Environmentally Beneficial Catalysis seeks a Business Coordinator. APPLY AT: http://employment.ku.edu/staff/4325BR Application deadline 10/01/15.

Legal Administrator

KU General Counsel seeks a Legal Administrator to join their team. Annual salary $40,000 - $58,000, commensurate with education, training and experience. APPLY AT: http://employment.ku.edu/staff/4309BR Initial review of applications begins September 15, 2015.

Program Manager

The Audio-Reader Network is seeking a radio program coordinator to oversee broadcast functions. BA plus radio experience required. APPLY AT: https://employment.ku.edu/ staff/4368BR Application review begins 9/17/15.

For complete job descriptions & more information, visit:

employment.ku.edu

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


2E

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Sunday, September 6, 2015

.

PLACE YOUR AD:

L awrence J ournal -W orld

785.832.2222

classifieds@ljworld.com

PRAIRIE BAND POTAWATOMI NATION • MAYETTA, KS 66509 Police Officer

MANUFACTURING/PRODUCTION NOW STARTING AT $11.00 HR + UP! (DE SOTO KS)

Sergeant Maintains, preserves and protects the peace, welfare, liberty and safety of the Prairie Band Potawatomi (PBP) Reservation and its citizens. They shall supervise assigned personnel with professional diligence, responsibility and integrity.

Chief of Police

ENTRY LEVEL WELDERS

Establishes policies and procedures and directs operations and functions of the Tribal Police Department.

PRODUCTION ASSEMBLY

Tribal Attorney The Tribal Attorney provides the Prairie Band Potawatomi Nation with professional legal services for:

SHEET METAL FABRICATOR

[

Maintains, preserves and protects the peace, welfare, liberty and safety of the Prairie Band Potawatomi (PBP) Reservation and its citizens.

ELECTRICAL HARNESS ASSEMBLY

1st shift - 7:00 to 3:30

• Developing Tribal resources and infrastructure.

[

Overtime possible. Hourly Wages • Health Benefits Medical, Dental, Vision. Able to handle physical work, may include heavy lifting of at least 50 pounds

Apply in person

32050 W. 83rd Street., DeSoto, Kansas 66018

At 83rd and Kill Creek Rd. 913-583-3181

EOE • Se habla Español

• Defending and preserving Tribal Sovereignty through complex federal court litigation and other means. • Reaching Tribal self-sufficiency through the exercise of inherent sovereign rights. • Obtaining the full support from the federal government to fulfill its trust obligations. This position provides a broad variety of legal services in support of the goals of the Tribal Council and all of the Tribal departments. The Attorney is supervised and directed by the Tribal Council.

Please send application, resume, and proof of certifications/degrees/licenses to:

Prairie Band Potawatomi Nation c/o Human Resources 16281 Q Road – Mayetta, KS 66509 or Fax (785) 966-3062 or e-mail hr@pbpnation.org

Visit our website http://www.pbpindiantribe.com or call toll free 1-866-694-3937. Indian Preference Will Be Exercised

Imagine if... ... ... Im Yo made a salary of $45,000 per couple; You

You were provided with a three or four bedroom Yo du duplex- rent-free, in a great neighborhood with ex exce excellent schools; You were provided with a utilities allowance; You had the use of a company vehicle allo while whilile working; You are able to work alongside your spouse spou ouse while also including your children. Do you want ouse a grat gratif gr gratifying atifying at atifyi atif ififying ying lifestyle for yourself and your family where yi your ur inc iincome incom ncom ncom omee doesn’t have to be spent on monthly room and board bo d expe expenses? ex penses? pe pens nses nses? ns es?? Do you want to make a meaningful difference in es the th lives of individual who have special needs? Then stop imagining and get started wi a rewarding career at CLO. This could be the best with lifestyle and career choice you have ever made! lilife lifest

CLO is HIRING

CLO is currently hiring couples with or without children to provide teaching and support for three or four persons with intellectual/developmental disabilities who live in separate, but attached, duplexes in vibrant Lawrence & Lenexa, KS. Family Teachers not only provide direct support but also manage home operations and supervise their support teachers. Training and professional certification in the internationally known Family Teaching Model provided.

If you are interested in this opportunity, please contact us today!

Apply online at www.clokan.org. EOE

Make BIG Money With

JOIN OUR TEAM! Position Seasonal Customer Service Representative No sales, collections or telemarketing Starting Salary: $12.95 per hour

NOW HIRING!

Customer Service Representatives When: Wednesday, September 9th Location: Lawrence Workforce Center, 2920 Haskell Ave, Lawrence KS 66046 • 9 am - Noon AND When: Thursday, September 10th Location: GDIT 3833 Greenway Dr.,

• Full-time benefits • Various schedules available • 10% pay differential for: – Bilingual (Spanish) – Night Shift • Opportunity for advancement (promote from within) • Paid training (no subject matter expertise required) • Gain experience working for a large, trusted and respected U.S. company

Lawrence KS 66046 • 1 pm - 6 pm AND When: Friday, September 11th Location: Lawrence Workforce Center, 2920 Haskell Ave, Our NEW Lawrence location has a GREAT business opportunity for you to own & operate your own Flat Bed delivery service!

Lawrence KS 66046 • 9 am - noon AND When: Saturday, September 12th

BIG Income Potential with small startup costs. Be home EVERY night with your family! Work for YOURSELF, not someone else! Work with the #1 Home Improvement Center in the Midwest. For more information, visit our website at

http://www.menards.com/main/c-19223.htm Or contact us at: (715)-876-4000 dfedewa@menard-inc.com

jobs.lawrence.com

Location: GDIT 3833 Greenway Dr., Lawrence KS 66046 • 9 am - noon

APPLY ONLINE

Requirements • 6 months of customer service experience (contact center preferred) • Intermediate computer navigation skills • Ability to type 20 wpm • Must be able to pass background investigation • Proof of education (HS Diploma, GED or above)

www.gdit.com/csrjobs Job ID Number: 239444 Full Time Medicare 238906 Part Time Marketplace General Dynamics Information Technology is an equal opportunity/ affirmative action employer, supporting employment of qualified minorities, females, disabled individuals and protected veterans.

classifieds@ljworld.com


L awrence J ournal -W orld

Sunday, September 6, 2015

PLACE YOUR AD:

785.832.2222

| 3E

classifieds@ljworld.com It takes a special person to become a Home Instead CAREGiver,SM not a special degree. Working with seniors in their homes can be challenging but, at the same time, tremendously rewarding. Enjoy training, support, flexible shifts that fit your life, and a job that nurtures the soul.

Quiet introvert looking for someone who loves to read books really loud.

• No medical degree necessary • Training and support provided • Flexible shifts Want to join our growing team of amazing CAREGivers in Shawnee and/or Douglas County? How to apply locally:

NEWSPAPER DISTRIBUTION DRIVER

It is easy to apply online at: www.homeinstead. com/584 and then select “CAREERS” at the top of the page.

Part-time Opportunity

Lawrence Journal-World is hiring for a part-time driver to distribute newspapers to homes, machines and stores in Lawrence and surrounding communities. Candidates must be flexible and available to work 25-30 hours per week during the core hours of 2 am-7 am including weekends and holidays. Ideal candidates must have good organizational skills; can work with minimal supervision; reliable transportation, a valid driver’s license, proof of insurance and safe driving record; and ability to lift 50 lbs. We offer a competitive salary, employee discounts and more! Background check and pre-employment drug screen required. Apply online at jobs.the-worldco.com EOE

In as little as two weeks, you could be out Enhancing the lives of Aging Adults in our community! Each Home Instead Senior Care offers office is independently owned and operated 2013 Home Instead Inc.

Apply online at jobs.the-worldco.com Construction

EngineersTechnical

CONCRETE FOREMAN

Why Work Anyplace Else? Brandon Woods at Alvamar offers part and full-time positions in an environment focused on resident directed care. We are looking to add a few caring, qualified team members.

1800 NW Brickyard Rd Topeka, KS or www.bettisasphalt.com

• RN/ LPN Charge Nurse * NEW, INCREASED WAGE SCALE FOR LICENSED NURSES *

• RN/ LPN part time weekends, Assisted Living • Certified Medication Aide • Certified Nursing Assistant

Customer Service

Call Center

We offer competitive wages and benefits like shift differential, health, dental and vision insurance. Excellent orientation program, paid time off, premium pay on holidays, and save in the 401(k) plan with profit sharing. Benefits such as direct deposit, tuition reimbursement, and an employee assistance program are special services Brandon Woods’ Team Members enjoy.

New Shift Open $10 hr + bonuses 40 hrs/wk, Full time $$ Weekly Pay! $$

We are an upscale retirement community offering opportunities for new experiences and advancement. Positive attitude a must! Come see us at Brandon Woods! 1501 Inverness Drive TProchaska@5ssl.com

785-841-9999 DayCom

Equal Opportunity Employer ~ Drug Free Workplace

DriversTransportation

Your New in Lawrence, KS is

NOW HIRING for all positions!

We are looking for Hardworking, Helpful and Guest Friendly Team Members who want either a Part Time Job to Earn Extra Income or a Full Time Job with Great Career Opportunities.

JOIN OUR TEAM!

*We offer Excellent Pay & Benefits *No experience necessary! Come In and Let’s Talk!

1470 West 31st Street Monday to Saturday from 9 AM - 7 PM We are a Drug-Free Workplace!

Hiring Full Time and Part Time Team Members

Manufacturing/Production 1st Shift (De Soto KS)

Starting at $11.00 hr + up! Full-time Jobs!! (Not Temporary)

Welders - Entry Level Production Assembly Sheet Metal Fabricator Electrical Harness Assembly 1st shift - 7:00 to 3:30 Overtime possible. Health Benefits Medical, Dental, Vision. Able to handle physical work, may include heavy lifting of at least 50 pounds Apply in person. 32050 W. 83rd Street. DeSoto, Kansas 66018 At 83rd and Kill Creek Rd. EOE Se habla Espanol

Starting pay $10.25 an hour!

Childcare

We offer the best in benefits!

Accounting Clerk

PLACE TO WORK!

First Management, Inc., a local property management company, is looking for a qualified individual to fill an opening in their corporate accounting department. Responsibilities include accounts payable and other tasks as needed. Qualified applicants will have knowledge of accounting procedures, Quickbooks software and proficient in Excel and Word. Salary commensurate with experience. This is a full time position with benefits including health, dental, vision and 401(k). Please email resume with cover letter to jobs@ firstmanagementinc.com

Stepping Stones is hiring Teacher’s Aides for the infant, toddler and preschool classrooms. Shifts are 8 am-1 pm, 1-6 pm or 3-6 pm, Tuesdays & Thursdays. Apply at 1100 Wakarusa. EOE

Tuition Reimbursement Paid Vacation/Sick Leave Heath Care Coverage FREE Life Insurance 401k Plan Employee Asistance Program Upward mobility!

Apply online at ezgostores.com or in person. MP 209, Kansas Turnpike, Lawrence, KS 66044 For directions call: 785-843-2547

Call today!

Owner Operators

AccountingFinance

• • • • • • •

Bettis Asphalt & Construction, an EOE, is seeking individuals for the following position: Working Concrete Foreman for Bridge Rehab. Verifiable experience required. Applications obtained at:

Find Jobs & More Jobs.Lawrence.com

A FUN

Construction

CHS, Inc. Transportation Needs Owner Operators Excellent Mileage Pay Paying Fuel Surcharge Must have PTO, CDL with Haz-Mat, and Tanker Endorsements. Operate in the Kansas City Area. Please call during hours of 9AM - 3PM 1-800-658-2209 Ask for Daryl or Bill

Education & Training

EXTENSION AGENT Family and Consumer Sciences opportunity in Shawnee Co, Topeka. Deadline: 9/22/15. Details: www.ksre.ksu.edu/jobs K-State Research and Extension is an EOE of individuals with disabilities and protected veterans. Background check required.

Dave (913) 706-7173

Dental Assistant

Senior Meals Manager

Busy Pediatric dental office looking for a full time experienced Dental Assistant. Please send or bring resume to:

346 Maine St. Lawrence, KS 66044 lawrencepediatric dentistry@yahoo.com

MA or LPN

Healthcare Medical Assistant Full-Time Busy Family Practice in Lawrence, KS is seeking Experienced Medical Assistant to join our team. Duties include, but are not limited to: taking vitals & medical history, rooming patients, venipuncture, injections, obtaining insurance referrals, scheduling of exams, handling/directing telephone encounters. Ideal candidate will be energetic, accurate, self-motivated, professional, and proficient with technology. Submit both your resume and salary requirements to:

Full time MA or LPN needed for Lawrence’s newest family practice office, Family Centered Medicine. Duties include patient rooming, taking vitals, giving injections/ vaccines, and phlebotomy. We are interested in all levels of experience as long as applicant is enthusiastic, dependable, and a good communicator. Please send contact information and resume to: Danica Loftin, Practice Manager, at danica.loftin.fcm@gmail.com

Hotel-Restaurant Full & Part time waitstaff, bartenders & kitchen staff. Must be 21 to apply. Hours: 11-2 pm and 5-10 pm. Come to La Tropicana Mexican Restaurant. 434 Locust, North Lawrence.

firstmedmanager@ gmail.com

Maintenance

Douglas County Senior Services Manages the senior nutrion program including supervising five employees and over 60 volunteers. Complete job description & application info at: dgcoseniorservices.org Submit cover letter with availability and salary requirements no later than 9/11/2015

Sales-Marketing

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

Salon & Spa

Nurse, Full-Time Sales Associate

Maintenance Technician

Lawrence Dialysis is looking for an RN that is enthusiastic, has strong work ethic & looking for a challenging & rewarding nursing position. Candidate will be educated in providing dialysis in the acute & chronic setting. This nurse will work closely with the physician, hospital, & dialysis team. The facility is located at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, 330 Arkansas St, Suite 100. To set up a tour & interview, call the facility 785-843-2000 or fill out an application online at careers.davita.com

Full-Time, for apartment communities. HVAC Certified preferred. Must have a clean driving record and pass a criminal background check and pre-employment drug screen. Excellent benefits package with health, dental and 401K. Please submit resume to: jobs@firstmanage mentinc.com or PO Box 1797 Lawrence, KS 66044. EOE

Are you open, outgoing and upbeat? Detail oriented and a planner? Good communication skills? Setting goals and achieving those goals? Email resume to: clinic0718@gmail.com

Retail Goodwill is looking for managers at our Lawrence store. FT with benefits, 3 yrs. management experience, self-starter and leader. Please apply at : careers.mokangoodwill.org

NOTICES TO PLACE AN AD: Business Announcements Accent Tamer

www.AccentTamer.com

Full time experienced bricklayers needed. Competitive wages, overtime pay, average 40 to 46 hours per week, paychecks every week. Commercial brick, block, and stone masonry work. We E-Verify. Immediate openings. Call today!

Management

10 hour days, 4 days/ week. Daytime schedule. Completive Wages & Great Benefits

ACCENT problem? Here’s your solution:

Bricklayers / Stone Masons

Aeronautical Engineer (Lawrence, KS) Perform aircraft & windmill dsgn & analysis; conduct tech’l support for wind tunnel testing; provide s/ware tech’l support. Req. BS in Aerospace Engg; strong ability in CFD analysis, wind-tunnel testing & simulation; proficiency in using LabVIEW. Send resume to: DARcorporation 1440 Wakarusa Dr. Ste. 500 Lawrence, KS 66049 Ref. to job#KSYCC

Healthcare

Special Notices

785.832.2222

classifieds@ljworld.com

CNA/CMA CLASSES! Lawrence, KS MORNING CLASSES

CMA DAY CLASSES

Sept 7 - Sep 30 8.30a-3p, M-Th

Oct 5 -Nov 6 8.30a-2p, M/W/F

Oct 5 - Oct 28 8.30a-3p, M-Th

Dec 1 -Dec 23 8.30a-2p, M/W/F

Nov 2 - Nov 24 8.30a-3p, M-Th

CMA EVENING CLASSES

Nov 30 - Dec 22 8.30a-3p, M-Th

Sep 14 -Oct 23 5p-9p, M/W/F UPDATE REFRESHER

Special Notices Compassionate Senior Care Elderly Companion / Sitter Care Evenings or overnight. Debit or credit accepted. 40 Yrs Experience. Call Connie at

785-330-3869

Lost Item

CNA EVENING CLASSES Sept 7-Sep 30 5p-9p, T/Th/F

Aug 14/15, Sept 4/5, Sep 25/26 , Oct 9/10, Nov 6/7, Dec 4/5, Dec 18/19

Nov 2 -Nov 25 5p-9p, T/Th/F

Do you play D&D 3.5?? Sorcerer is in need of a game to join. I’m at 691-8106

CALL NOW- 785.331.2025 trinitycareerinstitute.com

LOST BLACK CAT: Near KU CAMPUS AT BEST WESTERN (23rd & Iowa) Black, short hair, 7 year old, neutered male.

$300 REWARD

**PLEASE CALL** 913-370-3289 | 909-682-2480


4E

|

Sunday, September 6, 2015

.

L AWRENCE J OURNAL -W ORLD

SPECIAL!

10 LINES & PHOTO 7 DAYS $19.95 28 DAYS $49.95

DOESN’T SELL IN 28 DAYS?

FREE RENEWAL!

PLACE YOUR AD: TRANSPORTATION

Chevrolet Cars

785.832.2222 Chevrolet Vans

classifieds@ljworld.com

USED CAR GIANT

Ford Cars

2008 VOLKSWAGEN RABBIT S

BMW

2008 FORD ESCAPE XLT

2008 Chevy Express

2014 Chevrolet Camaro SS 2SS 2006 BMW 3 Series 330Ci Stk#215T787C

$12,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

65,000 miles, excellent condition, Stabilitrak, 16 passenger van. New tires & brakes, A/C & Cruise. $11,500 OBO Call (785)423-5837 or (785) 841-8833

Dodge Trucks $33,986

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

2011 Dodge Ram 2500 Laramie

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

$9,494

UCG PRICE

2014 Ford Fusion SE

2008 Dodge Grand Caravan SXT Stk#PL2016

2012 Ford Escape Limited

$9,495

Stk#1PL1958

2011 Chevrolet Impala LT Stk#P1861A

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

Ford Trucks

$15,995

2012 Ford F-150 SVT Raptor

‘05 Dodge Grand Caravan. Silver, 154k miles, Fair condition. $3400-OBO. Call 785-418-1942

2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047 JackEllenaHonda.com

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

Chevrolet Cars

Only $7,450 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Stk#1PL1985

$46,995

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

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

Honda 2009 CRV EX 4wd, sunroof, power equipment, alloy wheels, steering wheel controls. Stk#503223 Only $13,675 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Honda SUVs

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Stk#115C582

$13,495 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

$9,495 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

2009 HONDA CR-V EX-L AWD

2012 HONDA ACCORD EX-L

Honda Certified Pre-Owned Vehicle, 7 Year / 100,00 Mile, Limited Powertrain Warranty. Stk# LF287A

Only $17,999

Fuel Efficient, Automatic, Awesome Condition, Well Maintained, Safe and Reliable. Stk# F238B

4x4, Leather, Moonroof, Loaded, Low Miles, Well Maintained, Immaculate Condition. Stk# F349A

Only $10,711

Only $18,588

Call Thomas at

Call Thomas at

888-631-6458

2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047

2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047

JackEllenaHonda.com

JackEllenaHonda.com

888-631-6458

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

2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047

Call Thomas at

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

2005 Ford Expedition Limited Chevrolet 2012 Silverado W/T, regular cab, topper, bed liner, cruise control, one owner, GM certified with 2 years of maintenance included. Stk # 12129A Only $17,486

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Only $22,992 Call Thomas at

JackEllenaHonda.com

Infiniti Crossovers

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

1998 HONDA ACCORD LX

Honda Crossovers

2012 HONDA PILOT EX-L NAVIGATION 4WD 2004 Infiniti FX35 $9,500 150,000 miles, maintenance paperwork, clean interior, heated seats. Great car. 785-727-8304

2014 Chevrolet Camaro Convertible

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

What a Value! Leather, Sunroof, Power Liftgate, 4WD, Local - One Owner, Priced Below Market! Stk# F341A

888-631-6458

Ford Cars

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 HONDA PILOT EX-L 4WD

Ford Trucks

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

Chevrolet Trucks

$23,994

$32,500

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2008 HONDA CIVIC LX

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Stk#PL1938

Stk#115C520A

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Ford SUVs

2014 Honda Pilot EX-L

Honda Cars

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

Stk#116T066

2014 Ford Focus SE

4wd LS, tow package, alloy wheels, sunroof, power equipment, very affordable. Stk# 324081

Honda SUVs

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2008 Ford Escape XLT

Chevrolet 2006 Trailblazer

Honda Crossovers

Ford

DVD Player, Loaded, Leather, Panoramic Sunroof, AWD Northstar V6, One of a Kind! Stk# F209A

888-631-6458

2009 Honda Accord LX-P

$10,752

Chevrolet SUVs

Call Thomas at

Honda Cars

Stk#115T876

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Only $11,995

$17,430

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

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

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

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

Stock #115L769A

Stk#PL1908

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2005 CADILLAC SR5 AWD

$10,995

UCG PRICE

23rd & Alabama, Lawrence www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

$8,995

2001 TOYOTA PRIUS FIVE

785-727-7151

Ford Crossovers

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Cadillac Crossovers

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

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

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

2007 MAZDA CX-7 GRAND TOURING

$9,495

Stock #116T066

$16,979

Stk#115C969

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

$6,995

UCG PRICE

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Dodge Vans

$76,995

Stock #114K242

Stock #115T815

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

2009 Chevrolet Impala LT

UCG PRICE

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Stk#115T970

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

BMW Cars

Stk#15T537A

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

$38,979

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2015 BMW 6 Series 650i Gran Coupe

Stk#1P1896

$8,993

Stk#1215T589A

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

2010 Ford Fusion SE

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

Stk#115T945

$8,995

2014 Ford F150 Platinum Stk#PL1912

$44,995

Automatic, Great Car for First Time Driver, Great Gas Mileage, Wonderful Safety Ratings. Stk# F361A

2009 Honda CR-V EX-L Stk#115L769B

$20,495

Only $5,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

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

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Call Thomas at

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

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

Infiniti SUVs Honda Certified Pre-Owned Vehicle, 7 Year / 100,000 Mile Limited Powertrain Warranty. Stk# F197A

Only $24,950 Call Thomas at

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

2005 Infiniti QX56 $9,000 170k miles. Clean leather interior, excellent condition. Loaded with lots of extras. 785-727-8304

Allison Wilson Automotive Advertising Specialist

CONTACT ALLISON TODAY TO ADVERTISE! 785.832.7248 | AWILSON@LJWORLD.COM


L AWRENCE J OURNAL -W ORLD

Sunday, September 6, 2015

CARS TO PLACE AN AD: Jeep

Lincoln SUVs

SPECIAL! 10 LINES & PHOTO 7 DAYS $19.95 | 28 DAYS $49.95 Doesn’t sell in 28 days? FREE RENEWAL!

785.832.2222 Mazda Crossovers

Mitsubishi SUVs

classiďŹ eds@ljworld.com Nissan Cars

Scion

2005 Lincoln Aviator Luxury

Stk#PL1935

$20,495 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

$9,449 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Mazda Cars

2007 Mazda CX-9 Stk#116L103

$11,988

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

Mercedes-Benz Cars

Kia Cars

2013 Mitsubishi Outlander Sport LE STP#PL1996

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

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

Toyota Cars

Toyota Cars

2006 Toyota Camry LE

Stk#115L778

2014 Jeep Cherokee Sport

| 5E

$18,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

2013 Nissan Maxima 3.5 SV Stk#214T498

$20,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

2007 Toyota Scion 2011 XB FWD, 4 cyl, automatic, power equipment, great gas mileage and room. Stk#473362 Only $12,836 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Stk#1PL1906

$8,995 What an Awesome Car?? Low Miles, Fuel Efficient, Immaculate Condition, Great School Car Stk# F027B

Only $9,495

Subaru Crossovers

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

Call Thomas at

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

888-631-6458

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

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

Volkswagen Cars

JackEllenaHonda.com

Nissan Cars

Pontiac Cars

2013 Mazda Mazda3 i Touring 2005 KIA SPECTRA Great Mileage, Well Maintained, Awesome Value, Fuel Efficient. Stk# F347B

Only $5,995 Call Thomas at

888-631-6458

Stk#PL2006

$15,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047 JackEllenaHonda.com

2007 Mercedes Benz CLK-Class CLK350 Base Stk#215T628

$13,695

Stk#PL2003

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

$16,497

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

Lexus Cars

2013 Nissan Altima 2.5 2 DR

Pontiac 2009 Vibe Fwd, 4 cyl, great gas mileage, alloy wheels, power equipment, cruise control. Stk#352451 Only $10,855

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

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

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

2007 Mazda CX-7 Grand Touring

Recent timing change, clean leather interior, power everything, heated seat. Around 200,000 mi. Maintence paperwork. 785-727-8304

Lincoln Crossovers

$29,989

$10,495

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

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

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Stk#114K242

$6,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

Toyota 2007 Toyota Camry

Motorcycle-ATV

Stk#1PL1929 Pontiac 2003 Grand Am

$7,995

GT, one owner, sunroof, spoiler, alloy wheels, power equipment, Stk#311522

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

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Stk#1PL1975

2008 Volkswagen Rabbit S

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

$10,995

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

Stk#1P1880

Dale Willey Automotive 2840 Iowa Street (785) 843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Stk#115T815

2003 Lexus ES 300 $5,500

2009 Toyota Camry

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Mercury SUVs

2014 Subaru Forester 2.0XT Touring

2006 NISSAN MAXIMA SL

2008 Mercury Mountaineer Base

Only $6,250 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Pontiac Crossovers

Stk#1PL2013

2008 Toyota Highlander Sport

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

2007 Honda Scooter

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

RED Reflex Scooter, 250cc. 8,676 mi., Clean & Cared for, good title. $3,499 CASH Call for appt: 1-785-856-0420 or if NA, call 1-562-216-3141

2011 Toyota Prius Five

2010 Kawasaki 1700 Voyager

Stk#115L769A

Stk#114T1075C

$17,430

$7,995

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

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

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

Stk#113L909

$15,995 $6,994

2008 Lincoln MKX Base

2012 Mazda Mazda3 i Touring Stk#115M848

Stk#115L907

$13,995

$11,995

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

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

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

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

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

REAL ESTATE

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Call Thomas at

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

Acreage-Lots

Farms-Acreage

› Absolute › Real Estate Auction Bank Owned Property 19.7 Acre Building Site 1635 E. 400 Rd. Lawrence, KS Sold Live on Location Saturday Sept. 12, 10 A.M.

Gorgeous wooded tract, large pond, easy access. Just off Stull Rd/45th Street at E. 400. TERMS: $5,000 day of sale, balance in 30 days. Seller guarantees clear title. Selling to the high bidder regardless of price! VIEWING: At will

785.832.2222 RENTALS Apartments Unfurnished Cedarwood Apts 2411 Cedarwood Ave.

147.22 Acres A HOP, SKIP, & JUMP to ROCK CHALK PARK! First intersection west of K-10 & 6th Street at 800 Road. Frontage on three sides, beautiful secluded five bedroom Griffin built brick home, income producing cattle operation & rent house. This property promises to flourish with Lawrence’s westward expansion. $1.6MM.

Bill Fair & Co. 1-800-887-6929

* Near campus, bus stop * Laundries on site * Near stores, restaurants * Water & trash paid ——————————————

CALL TODAY (Monday - Friday)

785-843-1116

Bill Fair & Co. 1-800-887-6929

SEARCH AMENITIES VIEW PHOTOS GET MAPS

Beautiful & Spacious 1 & 2 Bedrooms Start at $450/mo.

Fox Run Apartments Under new management. 1, 2 and 3 bedroom units with full sized W/D in each unit. Located adjacent to Free State High School with pool, clubhouse, exercise facility and garages. Starting at just $759. Call 785-843-4040 for details.

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

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

Only $10,995

RENTALS REAL ESTATE TO PLACE AN AD:

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

Low Miles, Local Owner, Great Condition, All the Goodies, Loaded, Well Maintained. Stk# F200A

Apartments Unfurnished ROHAN RIDGE APARTMENTS L $300 Deposit New Owner / Management Free TV with 12 month lease signed Move in Special U %F;DM<=K /L9;C9:D= washer/dryer U 9:D= %FL=JF=L H9A< U *=ODQ .=EG<=D=< Q Close to I-70, K-10, HWY 40 U 39DCAF? <AKL9F;= LG shopping centers & eateries U 5 miles from KU and Haskell Indian Nations University U ,=L "9EADQ "JA=F<DQ

Pontiac 2007 Torrent Fwd, low miles, V6, automatic, heated seats, remote start, alloy wheels, power equipment, great gas mileage! Stk #398251 Only $11,486 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

23rd & Alabama - 2829 Iowa

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

LairdNollerLawrence.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

SPECIAL! 10 LINES

2 Days $50 | 7 Days $80 | 28 Days $280 FREE PHOTO!

classiďŹ eds@ljworld.com Townhomes

Lawrence

Available Now! 3 BR w/2 or 2.5 BA

726 Illinois

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

785-865-2505 grandmanagement.net

FIRST MONTH FREE! 1 & 2 Bedroom Units Available Now! Cooperative townhomes start at $446-$490/mnth. Water, trash, sewer paid. Back patio, CA, hardwood floors, full bsmnt., stove, refrig., w/d hookup, garbage disposal, reserved 4641 W. 6th U 842.9199 parking. On-site management & maintenance. 24 hr. emergency mainteTownhomes nance. Membership & Equity fee required. 785-842-2545 2BR with loft, 2 bath, 1 car (Equal Housing Opportunity) garage, fenced yard, FP, pinetreetownhouses.com 3719 Westland Pl. $790/mo. Avail. Aug. 1. 785-550-3427

Lawrence

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

We Buy all Domestic cars, trucks, and suvs. Call Scott 785-727-7151

2 BR / 1 BA Duplex 3709 Pinnacle Ct Lawrence, KS, 66049 West side Lawrence location. 1 car garage, appliances furnished including washer/dryer. Flexible lease. $750/mnth.

785-231-8439

apartments. lawrence.com

3 bed, 2 BA, great locationnear KU & downtown. Hardwood throughout, all kitchen appliances + W&D, deck w/shaded yard, no pets, AVAILABLE NOW! $1080/mo + utilities 785-842-3486 Now Available 3 BR, 2 Bath house for rent. Close to shopping and KU Campus. $ 1200/ mo plus utilities. Call 785-842-3476

Tonganoxie

2 BR, 1 BA, House: Tonganoxie, KS, 66086, Conveniently Located Rural Rental Property. Non Smokers. References Required. $750 Security Deposit. $750.00/mo 913-980-7193 Need an apartment? Call 785-832-2222 or email classifieds@ljworld.com

Office Space Downtown Office Space Single offices, elevator & conference room, $500-$675. Call Donna or Lisa, 785-841-6565

PUBLIC NOTICES Lawrence

Lawrence

(First published in the any race, color, national Lawrence Daily Journal- and ethic origin to all the World September 1, 2015) rights, privileges, programs, and activities genUniversal Construction Co., erally accorded or made Inc. is seeking bids for available to students of Contract Work for the the school. The school McLouth USD #342, 2015 does not discriminate on Bond Plan, on behalf of the the basis of race, color, naMcLouth School District. tional and ethic origin in The work includes addi- the administration of it’s tions and renovations for student admissions polithe McLouth School Dis- cies, employment policies, trict. Bids are currently educational policies, and due no later than 1:00 pm, other school administered on 9/16/15, at Universal programs. Montessori Construction Co., Inc., Children’s House. Montes11200 W 79th St., Lenexa, sori Children’s House of KS 66214. For more infor- Lawrence is an exempt edmation, please contact ucational organization unGary Walker at der Section 501(c)(3) of the 913-342-1150 or email Internal Revenue Code. gwalker@universalconstruc _______ tion.net. ________ (Published in the Lawrence Daily Journal-World September 6, 2015) Nondiscriminatory Policy. Montessori Children’s House of Lawrence, Not for Profit Preprimary School, 785-843-7577. Montessori Children’s House of Lawrence admits students of

Thicker line? Bolder heading? Color background or Logo?

Ask how to get these features in your ad TODAY!! Call: 785-832-2222


6E

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Sunday, September 6, 2015

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L awrence J ournal -W orld

MERCHANDISE PETS PLACE YOUR AD:

785.832.2222 TAGGED ESTATE SALE 2115 Massachusetts St. LAWRENCE, KS. 66044 ESTATE OF WILBUR D. & SUE I. HESS LONG TIME PHOTOGRAPHER FOR LAWRENCE JOURNAL WORLD

Pawn Shop Auction

FRIDAY, SEPT. 11TH 9:00-5:00 SATURDAY, SEPT. 12TH 9:00-3:00

Saturday, Sept. 12, 6:00 pm (doors at noon for preview) Monticello Auction Center 4795 Frisbie Rd. Shawnee, KS 66226

Explore Cape Cod style cottage in South Lawrence with eclectic and traditional American products. China display cabinets, love seat, sofa, needle point chair, coffee and end tables, cloissone, collectibles, clocks, lamps, art work, antique high chair, rugs, display tables, Wurlitzer piano, books, dining room table w/ 6 chairs, glassware, antique marble top end table, kitchen ware, Frigidare refrigerator, and washer/dryer, dish sets, chests of drawers, linens, computor desk, book shelfs, easy up recliner, Coca Cola memorabilia, bedroom sets, armoires, electrolux, file cabinets, both wood and steel, framed and singular photos of historical Lawrence, Antique drop front desk, lockers, bird bath, extension ladder, Jazzy 1113 ATS Power Chair, antique sled, hand tools, gas Weed Eater blower. CAMERAS& EQUIPMENT, Nikon, Canon, Retina, Voighander, Zanzq Bronica, Exata, Rolliflex, Alfa Karat, lighting, enlargers, lens, tri pods, reflectors.

Troy Bilt TB42 riding mower (excellent used condition), Firearms, Hunting items, Tools, Coins, Jewelry, TV’s, DVR’s, Laptops, Game systems & much more. See pictures at: http://lindsayauctions.com/pawnshopauction.html For information regarding items that will be at the auction call

Metro Pawn 913.596.1200 - 5030 State Ave KCKS 66102 913.262.8833 - 2005 W. 43rd Ave KCKS 66103 Email: metropawn@aol.com

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

LINDSAY AUCTION & REALTY SVC INC. 913.441.1557 WWW.LINDSAYAUCTIONS.COM

AUCTIONS Auction Calendar Pawn Shop Auction Sat., Sept 12, 6:00 pm Monticello Auction Cntr 4795 Frisbie Rd Shawnee, KS Riding mower, Firearms, Hunting, Tools Coins, Jewelry, TVs, So much more! Lindsay Auction Svc 913-441-1557 www.lindsayauctions.com ESTATE AUCTION THURS EVE, 9/17, 4:00 PM 646 North 5th North Lawrence, KS 2005 Buick Century, Collectibles, Glassware, Many Household items, Equipment & Tools. MUCH MISC! Elston Auctions (785-594-0505) (785-218-7851) LIST & PICS ONLINE: www.KansasAuctions.net/elston

Need to sell your car? Place your ad at sunflowerclassifieds.com

Auction Calendar

Auction Calendar Absolute Real Estate Auction Bank Owned Property 19.7 Acre Building Site 1635 E. 400 Rd. Lawrence, KS Sold Live on Location Saturday, Sept. 12, 10:00 AM VIEWING: At will Fair & Co. Auctioneers 1-800-887-6929 AUCTION Sat, Sept. 19, 10:00 a.m. 5841 SE 45th, Tecumseh, KS Zero Turn Rider, Chainsaw, Hand & Shop Tools, Lots of Kitchen Items, Etc. Furniture, Collectibles. Pics & listing at: www.wischroppauctions.com

785-828-4212

FREE 2 Week AUCTION CALENDAR LISTING when you place your Auction or Estate Sale ad with us! Call our Classified Advertising Department for details! 785.832.2222 classifieds@ljworld.com

STR ICKERS AUCTION MONDAY, SEPT 14, 6 PM 801 NORTH CENTER GARDNER, KANSAS Ford Trucks, John Deere Mower, Generators, Tools, Grand Piano & Insturments, Vintage & Collectibles, New & Antique Furnitre. 4 Estates!

www.strickersauction.com JERRY (913)707.1047 RON (913)963.3800 BIG ANTIQUE AUCTION Sat, Sept 12 @10am VFW Hall 2806 N 155th St Basehor KS Antiques, Native American items, sports collectibles, 1000+ sports cards See full list & pics at kansasauctions.net/sebree Sebree Auction LLC 816-223-9235

PUBLIC AUCTION SAT., SEPT 12, @ 10 AM 310 W. 15th ST. OTTAWA, KS . LAWN MOWERS, HORSE DRAWN EQUIPMENT, TOYS, COLLECTIBLES, GUN, FURNITURE & HOUSEHOLD, TOOLS & MISC, COINS, STAMPS, See pics & list online: EDGECOMB AUTIONS 785-594-3507 or 785-766-6074 kansasauctions.net/edgecomb

ESTATE AUCTION Sunday, September 13th, 2015 at 9:30 A.M. 2110 Harper (Douglas Co. Fairgrounds), Lawrence, KS Jeep 1995 Cherokee Jeep Sport 4x4 auto, 4 door, newer tires Collectibles/Furniture Fritzel Jayhawk Dairy quart milk bottle; brass(OLD) Jayhawk paperweight; Jayhawk vintage stuffed animal; Ruckels chicken crock waterer; KS State dairy bottle; Parker #60 coffee grinder; Clownin pinball game; Prince Albert cans; crocks; cookbooks; Emporia & Baker paddles; yard sticks; cuckoo clock; 1985 KC Royals mug; Roseville #645 & 45-7 pieces; pink depression; granite/enamelware; 45 records w/case; many vintage advertising items; wooden ducks; vintage spring-horse; 12 piece Franciscan set; smoke stand; Secretary desk; oak washstand; matching large dining table 2/leafs/6 chairs & china hutch; round oak table w/4 bentwood chairs; Parlor table; granite top kitchen table; pine bookcase; claw-foot bookcase; Wurlitzer piano w/bench; end tables; Frigidaire washer/dryer; refrigerator; GE chest freezer; Lawn & Garden/Tools/Misc. Large amount lawn-garden/hand tools; sewing items; many kitchen items & décor; cups & saucers; Bushnell binoculars; canning jars; Wear-Ever items; yard art; Numerous items too many to mention! Seller: Lou & Cindy Parsons Estate Living Estate Gene & Cindy(Parsons) Chubb Auction Note: Very Large Auction With Many Unlisted Items!!! Auctioneers: Elston Auctions (785-594-0505) (785-218-7851) “Serving Your Auction Needs Since 1994” Please visit us online for pictures at: www.KansasAuctions.net/elston

Estate Sales ESTATE SALE

ESTATE AUCTION Sunday, Sept 13th, 9:30 A.M. 2110 Harper (Douglas Co. Fairgrounds) Lawrence, KS

Take 1000 Rd west off of Hwy.59, then immediately left (south) on 1269 (old Hwy. 59) and right on 935N to address.

Elston Auctions 785-594-0505|785-218-7851

Auctions BIG ANTIQUE AUCTION Sat, Sept 12 @10am  VFW Hall  2806 N 155th St Basehor KS Antique toys, pedal car & wagon, Lg asst. of ant. & coll. & Native American items. Tools. Misc sports collectibles, some autographed items, incl Trout, DiMaggio, Montana & Mantle. 1000+ sports cards, KU Basketball, 100’s of boxes still to be opened. See full list & pics at www.kansasauctions.net/sebree

Sebree Auction LLC 816-223-9235

Craftsman #5000 riding mower, Osaki message chair, chairs, sofa, chests, small tables, bookcases, GE washer and dryer, office desk, files, Dr’s scale, lamps, very nice cookware, water fountains, books, Cannon camera, binocular, Kindles, Garmin, hope chest, Sony TV, oak barley twist table, queen bed, treadmill T50, soccer goal, iron day bed, trumpet, baritone horn, guitar, ski boots, skis, Workmate 400, wheel barrow, shop vac, hoses and sprinklers, brass and glass serving cart, 2 camel saddles, beautiful silk clothing, , linens, china, pottery and lots of misc. Sale by Elvira

MERCHANDISE

SERVICES PLACE YOUR AD: Antique/Estate Liquidation

Carpentry

785.832.2222 Concrete

Baby & Children Items

Auction Calendar

www.KansasAuctions.net/elston

Decks & Fences

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 Needing to place an ad? 785-832-2222

CTi of Mid America Concrete Restoration & Resurfacing Driveways, Patios, Pool Decks & More CTiofMidAmerica.com 785-893-8110

Craig Construction Co Family Owned & Operated 20 Yrs

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

Cleaning

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

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

Driveways, Parking lots, Pavement Repair, Sidewalks, Garage Floors, Remove& Replacement Specialists Call 785-843-2700 or text 785-393-9924 Sr. & Veteran Discounts

Auctioneers

Linda’s Cleaning Done Right 30 yrs. exp. Ex. refs. Cleaning Supplies Provided Free Estimate 785-312-4264

BILL FAIR AND COMPANY REAL ESTATE AUCTIONS 785-887-6900 www.billfair.com

New York Housekeeping: Accepting clients for wkly, bi-wkly & seasonal or special occasion cleaning. Ex. Ref. Beth - 785-766-6762.

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

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

Foundation Repair

Decks • Gazebos Siding • Fences • Additions Remodel • Weatherproofing Insured • 25 yrs exp.

Sun Recumbent Trike + Sunlite Hitch Rack Sun recumbent trike (approx. 2yrs old) $700 Sunlite trailer hitch rack $200 Prefer together, but all negotiable 785-917-1121

Furniture

Solid Cherry Cabinet, Pennsylvania House traditional style entertainment cabinet. Adjustable shelf and top. Like new. 36x21x78. $350. Call 785-979-8969

785-550-5592

La-Z-Boy Rocker Recliner- $30 Queen Size Bed Frame- $20 China Cabinet- $15 TV Stand $6 Desk & Chair- $20 785.766.8457 or 766.0101 Loveseat Clean and in very good shape. Tan, with mauve, blue & green leaves. Blue stripes. Have to see it to appreciate! $50 785-856-0498

Full-Size Book Case/ Headboard & Frame- $25 785.766.8457 or 766.0101

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

Pets FREE KITTENS Various colors and ages, male and female. Cheryl 785-304-3148 shestimewellwasted@yahoo.com

Pets

Golden Retriever Pups 2 Golden Retriever pups, 1 male, 1 female. 7 weeks old, family raised, registered parents from 2 local homes. For Sale. $500. 785-423-3053 or 785-760-0863, leave message to arrange showing or contact docsalvage@aol.com

Care-ServicesSupplies

Fishtank - 180 gallon Top tank 24H x 24D x 72L Overflow filter with 2 x 60 gallon filter tanks. Stand is 30H x 26D x 76L. 1 6ft 2x3ft Coral Life Ballasts. Currently has salt water in it, with live rock and sand. 1 extra pump/heater. $400 obo ph# 530-413-8657

SPECIAL! 6 LINES

Home Improvements

Guttering Services

JAYHAWK GUTTERING Seamless aluminum guttering. Many colors to choose from. Install, repair, screen, clean-out. Locally owned. Insured. Free estimates.

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

Double D Furniture Repair Cane, Wicker & Rush seating. Buy. Sell. Credit cards accepted.785-418-9868 or doubledfurniturerepair @gmail.com

Garage Doors

Placing an ad...

IT’S

EASY!

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

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

Garage Doors • Openers • Service • Installation Call 785-842-5203 www.freestatedoors.com

785-832-2222 classifieds@ljworld.com

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

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

913-488-7320

STARTING or BUILDING a Business?

Painting

Landscaping

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

Dirt-Manure-Mulch

DECK BUILDER

PETS

For Sale: Beautiful Bar Table 41” Tall ,36” Diam, and 2 chairs 48” tall. All Wood Column shaped pedastal Solid & Heavy duty $ 85 OBO Call 785-841-5708

Couch Sleeper. Clean. $30. Solid Cherry Hutch / entertainment center $50. 785-764-3788

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

Foundation Repair

785-832-2222 classifieds@ljworld.com

2007 Men’s Specialized Crossroads Sport Bicycle, Shimano 21 spd, dark gray. LOW MILES Includes Trek chain lock. $250. 785-842-1017

Home Improvements

Stacked Deck

Serving KC over 40 years

Warehouse Shelving Republic, wedgelock warehouse shelving, 4ft x 8 ft, x 7ft, various sizes. shelving includes wood shelf $125.00 each. 913-449-6971

Cedar Chest Hand made cedar chest 45.00 Call 785-832-1200

785-842-0094

Rich Black Top Soil No Chemicals Machine Pulverized Pickup or Delivery

Office Equipment

Bicycles-Mopeds

jayhawkguttering.com

Decks & Fences

STARTING or BUILDING a Business?

Antique Wood Rocker High back oak rocker $75 785-832-1200

Sealy Queen Size Mattress& 2 Box Springs $100— 785.766.8457 or 766.0101

classifieds@ljworld.com

Furniture

913-962-0798 Fast Service

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

Graco Baby Stroller- $15 Infant Car Seat- $20.00 Both in Good Condition 785.766.8457 or 766.0101

Furniture

Furniture

1 Month $118.95 | 6 Months $91.95/mo. 12 Months $64.95/mo. + FREE LOGO!

Limestone wall bracing, floor straightening, foundation waterproofing, structural concrete repair and replacement Call 785-843-2700 or text 785-393-9924 Senior and Veteran Discounts Caring Transitions in the Heartland, A total solution for senior housing transitions: organizing/decluttering, move management, estate sales, online auctions, unpacking at the new home and more. Serving Wyandotte, Leavenworth, Douglas and Shawnee Counties. Ken France: 913-488-6397 kfrance@ caringtransitions.net

7 Days $19.95 | 28 Days $49.95

classifieds@ljworld.com

1277 - 935 N Rd. Lawrence, KS Sat., Sept. 12, 9:00-5:00

1995 Cherokee Jeep Sport, Collectibles & Furniture, Antiques, Appliances, Lawn/Garden, Tools, Misc.

SPECIAL! 10 LINES & PHOTO

Higgins Handyman

785-312-1917

Review these businesses and more @ Marketplace.Lawrence.com

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

Lawn, Garden & Nursery Golden Rule Lawncare Mowing & lawn cleanup Snow Removal Family owned & operated Call for Free Est. Insured. Eugene Yoder 785-224-9436 Mowing...like Clockwork! Honest & Dependable Mow~Trim~Sweep Steve 785-393-9152 Lawrence Only

Music Lessons

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

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

MUSIC CLUBHOUSE • Kindermusik classes for birth to age 5 • Piano Detective classes for beginners • Piano study for children and adults

(785) 865-0884 MusicClubhouse.com

Call Lyndsey 913-422-7002

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

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

KansasTreeCare.com 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)


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