Lawrence Journal-World 1-15-2017

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Sunday • January 15 • 2017

PUBLISHED SINCE 1891

LAWRENCE STRATEGIC PLAN

Leaders ask: What are core services? By Rochelle Valverde rvalverde@ljworld.com Nick Krug/Journal-World Photos

ROBERT GOLDSTEIN, KU DISTINGUISHED PROFESSOR OF GEOLOGY and associate dean for natural sciences and mathematics, goes over some of the details around the exterior of the Earth, Energy and Environment Center on Monday.

COVERING NEW GROUND —

GET TO KNOW

Earth, Energy and Environment Center takes shape at KU

THE HALLS KU distinguished professor of geology and associate dean for natural sciences and mathematics Robert Goldstein pointed out some of the features of the center’s two halls to the Journal-World.

By Sara Shepherd lll

T

sshepherd@ljworld.com

he outside of the buildings going up at 15th Street and Naismith Drive on the University of Kansas campus will hold clues about what is being studied inside. Large boulders will be planted throughout the landscaping. Native Kansas limestone, quarried from Cowley County, will cover the building’s base. Terra cotta paneling will be tinted, textured and arranged in patterns inspired by the layers of rock found beneath the surface of the state. The buildings make up the Earth, Energy and Environment Center, which will be the new home of KU’s geology department, in KU’s College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, as well as part of the chemical and petroleum engineering department, part of KU’s School of Engineering. Construction on the $78.5 million, 141,000-square-foot project has passed the halfway point. Work began in August 2015 and is scheduled to be completed in November 2017, with the first classes to be held in spring 2018. The Journal-World recently took a hardhat tour of the construction site. The complex is envisioned as an interdisciplinary research center to stimulate and support energy and environment research with opportunities for partnership with industry. “Geology has changed,” said Robert Goldstein, KU distinguished professor of geology and associate dean for natural sciences and mathematics.

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> CORE, 2A

SLAWSON HALL Features include: l A virtual reality cave. The space will allow 3-D simulations of scenarios such as searching rock layers for oil and gas. l Beren Petroleum Center, a 232-seat auditorium envisioned for lectures and small conferences. l “Floating” meeting rooms, enclosed in glass and situated on bridges inside the atrium. l Multiple large labs, faculty offices and outreach offices. l Additional conference rooms and collaborative nooks — with views of Allen Fieldhouse and KU’s Central District.

ABOVE: THE EXTERIOR OF SLAWSON HALL IS VISIBLE. Work began on the center, which includes Slawson Hall and Ritchie Hall, in August 2015 and is scheduled to be completed in November of this year.

Proposed settlement sale worries children’s advocates By Peter Hancock phancock@ljworld.com

ABOVE: A bridge, which will be encased in glass, connects Slawson Hall with Ritchie Hall. BELOW: Senior project manager Joshua Jones of Turner Construction Co. points out some of the features being built. See more photos online at ljworld.com/eeec011517.

RITCHIE HALL Features include:

l A 162-seat engaged learning,

or “flipped,” auditorium. Seating is at large round tables with built-in computers for student collaboration during class. l Two 65-seat engaged learning classrooms. l Smaller labs, offices and collaborative spaces.

> CENTER, 2A

L A W R E NC E

As part of the city’s first strategic planning process, the question of how much city government should provide beyond the basics — infrastructure, police, water and fire services — to address issues not traditionally handled by municipalities wasn’t CITY COMMISSION easily answered. With city commissioners and department heads all in the same room, the breadth of the city’s public responsibility was written and rewritten as local leaders tried to come up with a vision statement for Lawrence. “Cities have to be big tents; they have to provide an array of services,” City Manager Tom Markus told attendees of the meeting Saturday. “…I think you have to look at those in context of what the ask is, that you just can’t be a core service community. You have to be way more than that.”

Ice, then rain A&E.......................... 1D-2D CLASSIFIED..............3D-5D

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DEATHS...........................6B EVENTS...........................6B

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T opeka — For the past week or so, visitors coming into the Kansas Statehouse through the public entrance are greeted with a poster display stretched out along the main corridor, touting the benefits of a program called the Children’s Initiative Fund. But those posters were not put there by any state agency connected to the fund. Instead, they are the work of Kansas Action for Children, a group that lobbies for early childhood education and children’s health and welfare programs.

Forecast, 8A

HOROSCOPE....................5B OPINION......................... 7A

PUZZLES................. 5B, 6D SPORTS.....................1C-5C

> SETTLEMENT, 6A


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Sunday, January 15, 2017

BRIEFLY Expect freezing rain early today Lawrence survived the Saturday portion of this weekend’s ice storm relatively unscathed, but forecasters say what’s to come today will be more significant. The National Weather Service’s Topeka office is forecasting a 90 percent chance of freezing rain before 3 p.m. today, then a mix of freezing rain and rain between 8 p.m. and 9 p.m., with the precipitation largely turning to rain after 9 p.m. In all, the weather service is estimating another 0.1 to 0.3 inches of ice will form in the Lawrence area today. Despite some slick roadways, motorists on Saturday were not involved in many accidents. When contacted by the Journal-World on Saturday, law enforcement officials did not report an unusually high number of vehicle accidents or emergency calls related to other weather-related accidents. Look for rain to continue into Monday. The daytime high for Monday is expected to be 51 degrees.

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Center CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A

He said that in addition to a science it’s also an important industry for the Kansas economy. What was once a pretty simple field has evolved to require a lot of equipment, technology, labs and collaboration with other disciplines, he said. The department of geology’s work includes studying groundwater, natural resources, environmental cleanup, the impact of climate change, plus oil, gas and geothermal energy. The EEEC will bring geology labs and classrooms currently spread across Lindley, Nichols and Moore halls and the Multidisciplinary Research Building together at one facility, Goldstein said. Joining them will be related chemical and petroleum engineering spaces, namely those related to the oil and gas industry. The EEEC’s design features lots of glass, atriums and collaboration

LAWRENCE spaces envisioned for students, faculty and industry professionals to come together. “The idea is to invite the outside world into our campus,” Goldstein said. “Everything is visible.” Private donations funded about half the center’s cost, with KU funding the other half, Goldstein said. The two buildings that make up the center are named for KU alumni with ties to the oil and gas industry whose families were major donors to the project. The EEEC’s south building, Slawson Hall, is named for the late Don Slawson, of Wichita, a 1955 KU graduate who, at 24, founded an oil and gas exploration firm that became one of the most active oil drilling operations in the United States, according to KU Endowment. Slawson died in 2014, and his family donated $16 million for the EEEC. The smaller north building, Ritchie Hall, is named for 1954 KU graduates Scott and Carol Ritchie, of Wichita,

who donated $10 million for the EEEC, according to KU Endowment. In addition to other ranching and business work, Scott Ritchie founded Ritchie Exploration Inc., an oil and gas exploration company, in 1963.

A challenging site The small and oddshaped construction site — which also has a 50-foot drop in elevation — did pose design challenges, said senior project manager Joshua Jones of Turner Construction Co. “It’s less than a 2-acre site, so it’s hard to get this many square feet,” he said. The buildings’ unusual shapes and configuration are in response to that challenge. Both resemble elongated rectangles, but Slawson Hall has six sides and Ritchie Hall has five. Jones said Slawson’s layout is angled so its columns align with buildings on Sunnyside Avenue to the southeast, and Ritchie’s columns align with the engineering complex to the west. An enclosed

L awrence J ournal -W orld pedestrian bridge and an underground tunnel link the buildings to one another. Enclosed pedestrian bridges also link the EEEC to Lindley Hall on the east and Learned Hall on the west — that bridge spans Naismith Drive. The project was designed by Gould Evans of Lawrence. The EEEC is planted in the middle of what used to be parking lots and a popular passthrough for students walking from Jayhawk Boulevard to Allen Fieldhouse or other Central District spots. It still will be, Goldstein said. He said existing outdoor staircases, plus the tunnel under Naismith Drive, will be torn out and replaced. The site will segue into Jayhawk Trail, a pedestrian path and greenbelt planned to traverse the adjacent Central District, where a new science building and other facilities are under construction as well. — KU and higher ed reporter Sara Shepherd can be reached at 832-7187. Follow her on Twitter: @saramarieshep

Core

Quality of life As part of the retreat, statistics about the city were presented in a document called an environmental scan, which relied on federal census and labor data. Some of the figures cited were that 26 percent of the city’s residents have a college degree and about 4 percent are unemployed, but the individual poverty rate is 21 percent. As the meeting went on, the subject of core services and quality of life services continued to emerge. Commissioner Mike Amyx, whose political career with the city began in the 1980s, said addressing poverty in Lawrence is part of the city’s development. “We talk about development over time and we talk about spending people’s money wisely,” Amyx said, adding that he’s seen the city’s budget grow over the decades, but he doesn’t know whether poverty rates have improved over the years. “What are we missing? What are we doing wrong?” Other aspects affecting quality of life, including quality jobs, availability

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Some of the additions brought up were the city’s efforts toward increasing affordable housing and providing better mental health services, which have both been goals recently set by the commission. Vice Mayor Stuart Boley agreed that what constitutes Lawrence’s core services shouldn’t be limited to the services that cities have traditionally been responsible for. Boley gave the example of the city deciding in the 1960s to begin operating a municipal pool, and said goals such as affordable housing could likewise be added. “That’s what we need to be doing today, is saying, ‘What is our core?’” Boley said. “Given what’s going on in Topeka and what’s happening in our community, we need to say, ‘Do we need to shift resources? Do we need to take care of the core but also take care of some of these problems that are affecting our community?’” The lack of affordable housing has been designated through national health rankings as a “severe” problem in Douglas County. Other negative statistics, such as poverty rates, were also cited as commissioners and staff discussed what community needs should be central to the city’s future vision.

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CITY COMMISSIONERS AND STAFF WORK ON A VISION STATEMENT as part of the city’s first strategic planning process on Saturday. From left, City Manager Tom Markus, Commissioner Lisa Larsen, Mayor Leslie Soden, Commissioner Mike Amyx, Lawrence Police Chief Tarik Khatib and Commissioner Matthew Herbert. and affordability of childcare, public transportation, the public library, and arts and culture, were also mentioned as discussion continued.

Standing commitments The issue of how existing commitments fit into the city’s vision also came up, and Commissioner Matthew Herbert argued that part of that consideration is answered by what the city has already committed to by building facilities. “Are the arts part of your core? Well, I don’t know, but when you build an arts center, then I think you make a commitment to maintain it,” Herbert said. “Is a library part of your infrastructure? I don’t know, but when you build a library, I think you make a core commitment to maintain it.” Herbert said that building facilities without a plan to maintain them is one of the main failures of governance. “I think that asset management, in my very biased opinion, is probably the most important two words that appear on that glass up there, as it revolves around every single category,” Herbert said. “Because a fundamental flaw that makes governments not effective is when you build things but have no plan in place to manage that asset.” The city has debt obligations for all those buildings, and discussions are ongoing about partnering with the county to build a mental health facility. Markus said that the strategic plan would help commissioners prioritize how the city’s resources should be spent, and in essence, would help define the city’s core ser-

vices. “I think part of this discussion is just to heighten the awareness of the competition for resources,” Markus said. “…I think it’s just to make sure that everybody is evaluating how we spend our money, and that ultimately comes down to a prioritization of the elected officials in terms of their governance.”

A vision emerges After several revisions, the first ideas about what will characterize the future of Lawrence went up on crate paper in front of the group. The working vision statement is as follows: “The City of Lawrence, supporting an unmistakably vibrant community with innovative, equitable, transparent and responsible local government.” In order to further develop the vision statement, commissioners and staff identified seven individual factors necessary to accomplish it. Those factors, which are still in draft form, include accessible public transportation, affordable housing, and “health, safety and welfare needs.” The “critical success” factors developed by city leaders and officials Saturday, as well as working definitions of them, are as follows: l “Commitment to core services: Core municipal services reflect legal mandates and the city’s commitment to meet health, safety and welfare needs and maintain assets while adopting service levels to meet evolving community expectations.” • “Safe, healthy and welcoming neighborhoods: All people in Lawrence live in neighborhoods that

provide opportunities to lead a healthy lifestyle through good neighborhood design with access to safe and affordable housing and other services that help them meet their basic needs. The diverse and unique features of our neighborhoods are celebrated, creating a strong community as a whole.” l “Economic growth and security: The city fosters an environment that provides both individuals and business the opportunity for economic security and empowers people’s ability to thrive. Our community succeeds because of individual prosperity and a vibrant, sustainable local economy.” l “Collaborative solutions: The city actively seeks opportunities to leverage partnerships in order to enhance service delivery and quality of life in the most fiscally sound and responsible manner.” l “Effective governance and professional administration: The city effectively and collaboratively plans and prioritizes in a transparent manner to efficiently move the community forward. We clearly communicate and boldly and professionally implement using sound leadership and relevant best practices.” l “Innovative infrastructure and asset management: The city has well maintained, functional and efficient infrastructure, facilities and assets, and supports accessible, sustainable transportation options. We are innovative and forward thinking to meet community needs while preserving our natural and historic resources.” l “Sound fiscal stewardship: The city provides easy access to relevant,

accurate data for budgeting and decision-making. Decisions are made by prioritizing across all government services, considering needs balanced with available resources, using fiscal policies based on industry best practices to ensure decisions reflect the current and long-term impact.”

Getting specific At the next strategic planning session, commissioners and staff will develop specific and measurable objectives that will help them accomplish the broad goals already laid out. As part of comments made at the conclusion of Saturday’s nearly six-hour meeting, Mayor Leslie Soden said she was ready to get more specific. “These all still kind of come across as vague, so I’m looking forward to next time when we’ll drill down further,” Soden said. Once compete, the strategic plan will serve as an umbrella for other local planning documents, including the comprehensive plan, the five-year capital improvement plan and the master plans of various city departments. The strategic plan, which will initially be reviewed by the commission every two years, will be used to help determine spending priorities during the city’s budget deliberations. The draft of the vision statement and seven factors will be presented to the community for feedback and possible revision during two public meetings, which will be held before the city’s next strategic planning retreat on Feb. 20. The dates of those meetings have yet to be set.

LOTTERY SATURDAY’S POWERBALL 23 55 59 64 69 (13) FRIDAY’S MEGA MILLIONS 10 44 58 74 75 (11) SATURDAY’S HOT LOTTO SIZZLER 1 8 17 25 38 (8) THURSDAY’S LUCKY FOR LIFE 6 7 10 35 42 (9) SATURDAY’S SUPER KANSAS CASH 4 18 22 24 28 (12) SATURDAY’S KANSAS 2BY2 Red: 5 17; White: 8 23 SATURDAY’S KANSAS PICK 3 (MIDDAY) 8 2 3 SATURDAY’S KANSAS PICK 3 (EVENING) 9 0 3

BIRTHS Maria and Martin deBoer, Lawrence, a boy, Saturday. Hillary Stephenson and Ryan Cook, Lawrence, a boy, Saturday. Jascynne Brown and Phillip Martinez, Lawrence, a girl, Saturday.

CORRECTIONS The Journal-World’s policy is to correct all significant errors that are brought to the editors’ attention, usually in this space. If you believe we have made such an error, call 785-832-7154, or email news@ljworld.com.


LAWRENCE • STATE

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Sunday, January 15, 2017

| 3A

District attorney satisfied with diversion numbers overall By Elvyn Jones ejones@ljworld.com

Office now aims to extend program to more female inmates

With 310 diversions offered ing to make diverin 2016 to those facing criminal sions more availcharges, Douglas County Disable to the county’s trict Attorney Charles Branson fast-growing fethinks his office’s overall diver- Branson male inmate popusion numbers are about where lation. Of the 310 they should be. diversions in 2016, Nonetheless, Branson is look- 124 were offered to women, an in-

BRIEFLY Prof’s first lecture on Army and race At her inaugural distinguished professor lecture, a University of Kansas scholar will talk about how the U.S. Army has contributed to social change in America. Foundation Distinguished Professor of History Beth Bailey will deliver Bailey the lecture, “The U.S. Army and the ‘Problem of Race,’” at 5:30 p.m. Jan. 25 in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. The lecture is open to the public. According to a KU announcement, Bailey’s talk draws from her current book project, which examines how the Army as an institution responded to demands for social justice and tried to manage what it understood as the pressing “problem of race” during the Vietnam War era and the decade that followed. Bailey joined KU in fall 2015 and is founding director of the university’s Center for Military, War, and Society Studies.

crease from the 72 offered in 2015. Diversion is a procedure that gives an individual charged with a criminal offense the chance to avoid a court conviction and the adverse consequences that can have on future employment and other areas, Branson said.

Crowd too loud?

“It’s a pretrial, pre-conviction tool,” the district attorney said. “It allows us to, after we’ve charged people, to put them on a process similar to probation or court services, which allows them to take classes, get counseling, keep their nose clean,

jhlavacek@ljworld.com

Nick Krug/Journal-World Photo

> DIVERSION, 4A

Psychologist, author dissects apologies in newest book By Joanna Hlavacek

FORMER KANSAS PLAYER AND SURVIVOR CONTESTANT SCOT POLLARD watches Saturday’s game against Oklahoma State with his son Icean at Allen Fieldhouse. Kansas won, 87-80. See game coverage in Sports, 1C.

do community service work and do other things we deem appropriate. At the end of that cycle, if they have completed all that is required, we’ll dismiss the charges against them.”

Lawrence-based psychologist — and New York Times bestselling author — Harriet Lerner has spent more than two decades studying apologies. In her newest book, “Why Won’t You Apologize?”, the relationship expert explores that very subject, examining both the healing power of a heartfelt apology as well as damage inflicted when we fail to say “I’m sorry” and truly mean it. On Thursday, she’ll share what Lerner she’s learned in her “Apologize?” research, taking a break from a national media blitz in the process, during an appearance at the Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. The event, slated for 7 to 8:30 p.m., is free, and the Raven Book Store will be on hand selling copies of Lerner’s book for signings. In the meantime, here’s a condensed and edited version of the Journal-World’s chat with Lerner on her motivations behind studying apologies, how gender plays a role in how we approach them and the role “sorry” plays in our relationships, good and bad.

made you decide to Q: What write this book? Well, we’re all imperfect A: and error-prone human beings, so the need to offer and

receive apologies is with us until our very last breath. While a good apology is deeply healing, the absent or bad apology can compromise or even end a relationship. So, the courage to offer a heartfelt apology, and the wisdom to apologize wisely and well, is really an essential challenge for all of us.

you have a specific Q: Did reader in mind? I had every reader in A: mind. That’s not often the case, but I had every reader

in mind, because we all unwittingly hurt others just as we are hurt by them. Apologies are important for all of us. There’s no one who’s really outside of this subject.

Your work has taken you Q: across the country on book tours and speaking appear-

ances, including a recent TED Talk. What have you learned about people — and specifically how they view apology, perhaps — during your travels?

> AUTHOR, 4A

As Pioneer Ridge Independent Living gets ready to open, we’re setting our sights on finding caring, positive staff that will provide excellent customer service to residents in our upscale community. This will be a great opportunity to join our team of high-energy professionals and work at Lawrence’s newest senior living building. Positions we will be interviewing for (full and part-time): Maintenance Housekeeping Cook Baker Dietary Aide Servers Night & Weekend Concierge Staff CHAMPIONS

Administrative/Concierge Representative

LEADERS

Call Steve Cardwell at 785-749-6785 for more information.

PARTNERS


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Diversion CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A

Diversions are allowed by a Kansas statute, which also establishes certain standards for their use. Branson said diversions can’t be offered to people accused of homicide, rape, kidnapping, sex crimes, crimes against children or other serious felonies. The state has also set other limitations. “We can offer diversions for first-time DUIs but not for a second DUI,” Branson said. “We can offer diversions for first-time domestic battery charges but not for a second.” The statute does give local prosecutors a good deal of flexibility about how they use diversions. “You will find great variety from county to county,” Branson said. “There are counties that don’t allow diversion because they view it as buying your way out of trouble. Some counties will divert just about everything and set their diversion fees based on the severity of the offense. I

Author CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A

This is my A: book, and certainly learned

12th I’ve that relationships are difficult for all of us, and that we’re all hard-wired for defensiveness and blaming. No one is immune. In terms of the subject of this book, it’s very challenging to give a good apology. It’s very challenging to care enough about the relationship, to have enough maturity to accept responsibility without a hint of evasion,

LAWRENCE

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By the numbers Of the 310 diversions the Douglas County District Attorney’s office offered to people facing criminal charges in 2016: l 186 of the participants were male. l 124 of the participants were female. l 291 of the participants were charges with misdemeanors. l 19 of the participants were charged with felonies. — Source: Douglas County District Attorney’s Office

have never been too fond of that. Tagging the nature of the offense to the cost of diversion is dicey to me.” There is more uniformity among the state’s larger counties, and Branson said his office’s guidelines are very similar to those of Johnson, Sedgwick and Shawnee counties. His office typically offers people charged with

excuse-making or blaming — even when the other person’s feelings seem exaggerated. I’ve really learned how difficult this topic is and how important it is, because in our relationships, one apology at a time shows others that we will listen, that we can reflect on our own behavior, that we’ll do our best to empathize and that we will set things right. And this is what the world needs more of in 2017. So, I just learn over and over, as well as in my own personal experience, how challenging it is to do the right thing rather than to wait for the other person

L awrence J ournal -W orld

low-level, first-time offenses the opportunity to apply for diversion, Branson said. Diversions require a fee, and participants are still required to pay court costs. A waiting period of six to 18 months is required before charges are dismissed to ensure that the participant demonstrates good behavior. The district attorney’s office also reviews cases to ensure the applicant has cooperated with law enforcement officers and not created any barriers to an investigation, he said. Applicants are also screened for substance abuse and criminal history. When the alleged crime involves a victim, that person is given a chance to voice their opinion about the diversion agreement. When applicable, restitution is required. As part of the process, applicants are asked to submit a written statement explaining why they are a good candidates for the program, Branson said. One critical thing his office is looking for in the statements is admissions of guilt, he said. “They have to say in their own words what they

did, which builds accountability on their part,” he said; “A lot of diversions are rejected when they first come in because they make statements like, ‘I didn’t do this.’ If that’s the case, then they are not appropriate for diversions. They may be appropriate for dismissals, and they may need to come into court to say they didn’t do this.” There is some novel experimentation nationally with diversions, Branson said. His conclusion from attending a national seminar on the subject in fall 2016 was that Kansas and Douglas County are ahead of the curve on diversions, but have not innovated as much as some programs in other states, such as a Philadelphia program that is offering diversions to people accused of selling cocaine. “What they were finding was they were having people who were going to prisons for a year or two, coming back and doing the same thing all over again,” Branson said. “Instead of sending them straight to prison, they tried to figure out ways to keep them out of prison and change their behav-

ior. I think it’s been in operation a year or two. They are having moderate success with it.” The Philadelphia program was developed to address a local innercity need, Branson said. While he said he doesn’t want to do something that novel, he does want to address the growing need in Douglas County to reduce the number of female inmates. “One of the things I’ve noticed as we pulled together our numbers is a lot of those in the female population are women who have some kind of substance-abuse problem coupled with mental health issues,” he said. “They usually are not involved in violent crimes, but financial crimes or theft-type issues that are associated with their substance abuse. We see a lot of shoplifting, theft, forgery, and use of stolen bank cards.” It’s still a preliminary review, and his office is still trying to classify the kinds of crimes with which women are most frequently charged, Branson said. The goal is to create a diversion program that gets to the

roots of female offenders’ problems. “We would probably be looking at those we could divert out of the jail and into some kind of early diversion process,” he said. “That would have some of the types of services that are offered through the (jail’s) re-entry program and then some sort of substance abuse or treatment program or dependency treatment program, which would be a little more intensive than classes.” The big task before the district attorney’s office in putting together the program is identifying the availability of needed services, the providers of the services and funding, Branson said. “It’s not going to be a population covered by any type of insurance, and most insurances don’t cover any of the treatments we would be looking at,” he said. “So we are really looking at service problems. Those service providers are going to have to be compensated somehow.”

to change first. And of course, that’s a recipe for relationship failure. If you want a recipe for relationship failure, just wait for the other person to change first.

It is useful to be able to reach for the other person’s competence and to expect more from them. But that’s very different than thinking that we can change someone and making that our project. I often tell young women who are dating or thinking about choosing a life partner that you can’t count on the power of your love or your nagging to change someone or to bring about a quality or a trait that wasn’t there to begin with. So, it’s never a good project to try to change someone, but it is a good project to learn to expect people to be a better self.

It’s interesting that Q: you brought up women, because I know

themselves like an old, familiar blanket. But then, if we move on from the realization that women are more vulnerable to over-apologizing and men to under-apologizing, I would say that humans are more alike than different. Listening is not a very sexy subject. Both men and women are not very motivated to enhance their listening skills. We’re much more motivated to work on our talking skills, because we want to get through. We want the other person to really get it.

Is it possible to Q: change people? Is that even a good idea, to expect change in another person without them initiating it? I’ve been in the process of change for a very long time. I’m certainly an expert in change. And I have never been able to change a person who doesn’t want to change. However, it is useful to expect change.

A:

that you’ve been called an expert on women’s psychology. How do men and women approach apology differently? That’s a really interesting question. I would say that one risk for being prone to under-apologizing is being raised male, and one risk for being prone to overapologizing is being raised female. Women of my generation were taught to feel apologetic for taking up the valuable oxygen in the room, and women have been raised to wrap guilt and inadequacy around

A:

— County reporter Elvyn Jones can be reached at 832-7166. Follow him on Twitter: @ElvynJ

> APOLOGIES, 8A


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L awrence J ournal -W orld

Sunday, January 15, 2017

Thank you, Kansas. You make us Thank you to the growing number of individuals and organizations that have endorsed the KCP&L and Westar merger and testified before the Kansas Corporation Commission or wrote letters expressing support. These individuals and organizations recognize the benefit of keeping local ownership for two local utilities that have served customers in Kansas for more than 100 years. Together, we will create nearly $2 billion in savings over the first 10 years for our customers and continue to support our communities, growing jobs and local economies.

Testimony: Mayor of Topeka, Larry Wolgast Mayor of Wichita, Jeff Longwell Former CEO, Westar, Jim Haines City Administrator, City of Edgerton, Beth Linn Greater Kansas City Chamber of Commerce Kansas City Area Development Council Topeka Chamber of Commerce/GO Topeka Topeka Public Schools Wichita Chamber of Commerce Bridging The Gap Catholic Charities of Northeast Kansas Facility Solutions Group Graybar Electric Company, Inc. Junior Achievement of Kansas Leavenworth Economic Development Corporation Pittsburg State University The Nature Conservancy – KS Chapter

Letters of Support: Kansas Governor, Sam Brownback Kansas Senate President, Susan Wagle Kansas Senator, Chairman Senate Utilities Committee, Rob Olson Kansas Senator, Member Senate Utilities Committee, Jeff Longbine Kansas Speaker of the House, Ray Merrick Kansas Farm Bureau Mayor of Oskaloosa, Eric Hull Abilene Area Chamber of Commerce Butler County Community Development De Soto Economic Development Council El Dorado Chamber of Commerce Regional Development Association of East Central Kansas (Emporia) Emporia Chamber of Commerce City of Fort Scott Economic Development Harvey County Economic Development Council Junction City Area Chamber of Commerce Leavenworth County Development Corporation KBS Constructors City of Parsons Economic Development Pittsburg Area Chamber of Commerce Shawnee County Commissioners Wyandotte Economic Development Council

For more information and to read letters of support, visit: kcpl.com/westar

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What many visitors may not know, and might even find ironic, is that the fund in question is actually money the state receives from tobacco companies. And the reason why the posters are there is to drum up opposition to Gov. Sam Brownback’s proposal to sell off the state’s interest in future tobacco payments in exchange for a lump sum that can be used to plug holes in the state budget for the next two years. “It is disappointing that Governor Brownback is doubling down on his efforts to dismantle the Children’s Initiatives Fund, yet he’s still completely unwilling to consider fixing the cause of our fiscal problems.... which is failed tax policy,” KAC said in a statement in response to the Brownback administration’s budget proposal. “Kansas kids didn’t create this budget crisis, and they shouldn’t be forced to pay for it.” In point of fact, though, using tobacco payments as a dedicated source of funding for children’s programs was a controversial move when lawmakers decided to do it in 1999. But because that program has been in place so long, today there are few lawmakers still around who remember why it was done.

Multi-state lawsuit In the 1990s, Kansas and most other states joined in a lawsuit against the tobacco industry, claiming that the marketing of tobacco products, and cigarettes in particular, had cost them billions of dollars in health care costs over the years, mainly in the form of Medicaid costs for low-income people with smoking-related illnesses. The lawsuit dragged on for a number of years and was finally settled in 1998 with the signing of what was called the Master Settlement Agreement. In that agreement, the major tobacco companies agreed to change their marketing practices by, among other things, halting the use of cartoon characters like “Joe Camel” that targeted children,

.

‘‘

STATE

Kansas kids didn’t create this budget crisis, and they shouldn’t be forced to pay for it.”

— Release from Kansas Action for Children

and to stop advertising on outdoor billboards and signs on buses and subway cars. But the key to the settlement was an agreement to pay the states roughly $10 billion a year for an indefinite length of time to compensate states for their tobaccorelated health care costs. The money is distributed among the states based on a formula using several factors such as population and smoking rates. As of June 2016, according to Attorney General Derek Schmidt’s office, Kansas had collected just over $1 billion in settlement payments. In recent years, they have averaged around $60 million a year. But despite the fact that the legal reason for the payments was to compensate states for smoking-related health care costs, few states have used the settlement money for that purpose, and Kansas was no exception. In 1999, Kansas lawmakers decided to earmark the vast majority of the money for children’s programs. “Bill Graves (a Republican) was governor at the time, and I think there was just a general consensus that we needed to do better in terms of early childhood education,” said Senate Democratic Leader Anthony Hensley of Topeka, one of the few remaining lawmakers who was in office at that time. “I know at that time the House Minority Leader was Jim Garner (D-Coffeyville), and he was a real champion of that cause, and that’s what we did. That’s the decision we made,” Hensley said. Public health and antismoking groups, however, were harshly critical of the decision in Kansas and elsewhere to steer the tobacco money away from health programs and anti-tobacco campaigns. According to the national Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, states are expected to receive $26.6 billion in tobacco

payments this year, but only 1.8 percent of that — less than half a billion dollars — will be used for smoking cessation and prevention programs. That’s a small fraction of the $9.1 billion that tobacco companies spend each year marketing their products, the organization said. In Kansas, the group said, smoking prevention and cessation programs get less than $1 million in funding, which ranks the state 41st in the nation in that category. That compares to the $77.7 million that tobacco companies spend on marketing in Kansas. “It’s about 2 percent of what the (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) recommends for effective tobacco prevention and control,” said Hillary Gee, who lobbies in Kansas for the American Cancer Society’s Cancer Action Network.

Brownback budget plan In his budget plan, Gov. Brownback is proposing to sell off the state’s future payments for a lump sum, estimated at about $530 million. Half of that would go into the budget for the fiscal year that begins July 1; the other half would be used the year after that. To accomplish that, Budget Director Shawn Sullivan told lawmakers, the state would issue 30year bonds that would be backed by its future tobacco payments. He estimated the cost of repaying those bonds at about $45 million a year. That would effectively put an end to the Children’s Initiatives Fund, but the administration says programs currently funded through the CIF would instead be funded through the state general fund. That idea has many advocates worried because it would mean children’s programs now receiving dedicated CIF money would suddenly have to compete for funding with all the other programs funded with general tax dollars, including K-12 and higher education, public safety, and other social service programs, including Medicaid. Officials at Kansas Action for Children did not respond to requests for additional comment beyond their press statement Wednesday. Gee said the American

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L awrence J ournal -W orld Cancer Society opposes selling off the tobacco payments, despite the fact that very little of it is used for smoking cessation and prevention. But her group does support one of Brownback’s other proposals, raising cigarette taxes. “A much smarter solution to part of the state’s budget situation would be a significant increase in the tax on cigarettes and other tobacco products,” she said. “Not only does it bring in revenue, but it also has substantial health benefits.” Brownback has proposed raising cigarette taxes by $1 per pack. The American Cancer Society, Gee said, would like to go even further, to $1.50 per-pack in additional cigarette taxes. — Statehouse reporter Peter Hancock can be reached at 354-4222. Follow him on Twitter: @LJWpqhancock

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Opinion

Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com l Sunday, January 15, 2017

Godspeed, Mr. President

EDITORIALS

PAY-Go helps fiscal discipline House Republicans made the responsible call in retaining rule to keep spending in check.

K

ansas Republicans were right last week to push back on Democrats’ efforts to eliminate the “pay as you go” requirement in the state’s House of Representatives. PAY-Go, as the Pay As You Go rule is called, was the wrong issue to test the bipartisan sentiment of the House’s new membership. The measure failed on an almost straight party-line vote. That’s as it should be. Facing a budget shortfall of nearly $1 billion in the next 18 months, the last thing the House needs to do is ease the fiscal discipline that PAY-Go requires. “We’re broke, and there’s no possibility of finding another pot of money to add anything to a budget right now,” Rep. Don Hineman, R-Dighton, who is the new House majority leader, said in standing to oppose the measure. The PAY-Go rule was adopted in 2011. It requires that, when a spending bill comes to the floor of the House, no amendment can be made to increase spending in one area unless it’s accompanied by a cut of equal or greater size in some other area of the bill. Members of both parties have been frustrated by the rule, arguing that it gives lawmakers on the Appropriations Committee too much power, because the Appropriations Committee determines the upper limit of the state’s budget. Rep. Henry Helgerson, D-Wichita, offered Thursday’s amendment to end PAY-Go. He said the PAY-Go rule prevents lawmakers who are not on the Appropriations Committee from fully representing the interests of their constituents. “PAY-Go was put in as a way of controlling the discussion on the floor,” Helgerson said. “We always balanced budgets before this, and we actually did a better job than what’s gone on in the last few years.” PAY-Go supporters argue that the rule prevents political “gotcha” votes in which members offer amendments to add funding for politically popular programs, even though no funds are available, effectively daring the other side to vote no and provide political fodder for the next election. Suspending PAY-Go is not the right way to start a legislative session in which the top priority is fixing the state’s badly broken budget. Hopefully Thursday’s party-line vote won’t be a harbinger of things to come and Republicans and Democrats can find common ground on other issues. Hineman sounded optimistic that they could, and that’s a good sign. “The more important question is, will leadership allow full and open debate, and the bringing of amendments within the framework of PAY-Go, and that hasn’t always been the case in the past,” he said. “I think it will be this time.”

OLD HOME TOWN

100

From the Lawrence Daily Journal-World for Jan. 15, 1917: l “All roads will lead to Lawrence the week of Monday, years ago January 22 to Saturday, JanuIN 1917 ary 27, inclusive. The proposition of the Lawrence merchants to pay fares of out-of-town shoppers in Lawrence during that week has caused a large amount of favorable comment in territory surrounding the city in every direction, and indications are that the crowds here on those days will be record-breaking.” — Reprinted with permission from local writer Sarah St. John. To see more, go online to www.facebook.com/DailyLawrenceHistory.

LAWRENCE

Journal-World

®

Established 1891

Scott Stanford, Publisher Chad Lawhorn, Editor Kim Callahan, Managing Editor Kathleen Johnson, Advertising Manager Joan Insco, Circulation Manager Allie Sebelius, Marketing Director

7A

Dear Mr. President: “Barack Obama is not Jesus.” Those were the first words of the first column I ever wrote about you — a poke in the eye to Democrats who were singing rhapsodic hosannas about a certain highly regarded young senator. “Yes,” I griped, “he has great potential. But is it asking too much that people wait until he actually does something before they start chasing his name with a hallelujah chorus?”

Leonard Pitts Jr.

lpitts@miamiherald.com

It is telling that the folks who grasped at every untruth and exaggeration to make you out as an America-hating Other now watch in feckless silence as Donald Trump plants sloppy kisses on the autocratic thug Vladimir Putin.” Two years later, you were elected president. Shows what I know. Now the time has come to say goodbye. Which means it’s also time for people like me to furrow our brows in summation. I will leave it to others to analyze your legacy with regard to the economy, health care, foreign policy, privacy rights and war. As you head for the door, I find myself simply wanting to address you as one African-American man to another about the singular mark you made on Ameri-

can history: first black president. To be a first black anything significant has often been a thankless task. Jackie Robinson learned this when he crashed Major League Baseball in 1947. Your experience proves that it remains true 70 years later. You got it from all sides, didn’t you, Mr. President? Certain opinion leaders on the left held that you failed to speak — and act — boldly enough on issues of concern to African Americans. It’s an argument that did not take political reality into account — would the same drain clog of a Congress that couldn’t agree to routine measures to raise the debt ceiling really have passed some huge program to ameliorate AfricanAmerican woes? I also think you get too little credit for quietly dismantling much of the ruinous War on Drugs and working to reform racist policing. Meantime, the political right thought you the love child of Louis Farrakhan and Nat Turner. By simply existing, by acting as if win-

ning two elections actually entitled you to be president, you drove them crazy. You made them reveal — even revel in — the ugliness, hatred and fear that have always undergirded so-called conservatism where race is concerned. It is telling that the folks who grasped at every untruth and exaggeration to make you out as an America-hating Other now watch in feckless silence as Donald Trump plants sloppy kisses on the autocratic thug Vladimir Putin. For myself, Mr. President, I was frustrated by your naivete. You were surely the last person in America to recognize the degree to which racial resentment drove the rigid resistance and shrill hysteria you faced. You seemed to think you could win over your most hateful critics by being conspicuously even-handed, even-tempered and good. But it doesn’t work that way. Most any black person could have told you that. That said, let me also say this: A defining truth about

black life in America is that each of us carries all of us wherever we go. The incompetence of a black man in Dallas will keep a black man in Miami from getting a job. The dishonesty of a black woman in Oakland will get a black woman in Baltimore arrested. Each one of us is every one of us. Which places an inordinate weight on the one of us who is called to perform on a high public stage. You have performed on the highest, most public stage there is, sir, faced headwinds unprecedented in American politics and nonstop disrespect from the GOP. But you did so with unflappable dignity, unshakable class ... and urbane cool. No stench of personal scandal wafts after you as you leave office, and the country is better for your service. So allow me to say, as one African-American man to another: Godspeed, brother. You did us proud. — Leonard Pitts is a Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist for The Miami Herald.

The trademark office’s assault on free speech Washington — In 1929, Chief Justice William Howard Taft convinced Congress to finance construction of “a building of dignity and importance” for the Supreme Court. He could not have imagined what the court will ponder during oral arguments this Wednesday. The case concerns the name of an Asian-American rock band: The Slants. And surely Taft never read a friend-of-thecourt brief as amusing as one filed in this case. It is titled “Brief of the Cato Institute and a Basket of Deplorable People and Organizations.” The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office is empowered, by the so-called “disparagement clause” of a 1946 law, to protect American sensitivities by denying trademark protection to “immoral, deceptive or scandalous” trademarks. These have included those that a substantial portion of a particular group perceive as disparaging that group — an ethnic, religious, national or other cohort. The PTO has canceled the trademark registrations of entities named Mormon Whiskey, Abort the Republicans, Democrats Shouldn’t Breed, Marriage Is For (expletive), and many more. The Cato/Deplorables brief urges compassionate libertarianism: “This Court should make the jobs of the employees at the ... [PTO] much easier and put an end to the disparagement clause.” Government officials cannot be trusted to “neutrally” identify speech that disparages. Besides, “disparaging speech has

George Will

georgewill@washpost.com

When the government registers a trademark, it is not endorsing or subsidizing a product. It should not be allowed to use its power to deny registration in order to discourage or punish the adoption of controversial expressions.”

been central to political debate, cultural discourse, and personal identity” throughout American history. The brief notes that a donkey became the Democratic Party’s symbol because someone called Andrew Jackson a “jackass” and he, whose default mode was defiance, put the creature on campaign posters. Entire American professions — e.g., newspaper columnists — exist in part to disparage. Many rock bands pick names obviously intended to disparage or shock: Dead Kennedys, Dying Fetus, Sex Pistols, etc. Does the title of the best-selling book “Hillbilly Elegy” disparage a group? The Cato/Deplora-

bles brief says: “One of this brief’s authors is a cracker (as distinct from a hillbilly) who grew up near Atlanta, but he wrote this sentence, so we can get away with saying that.” Then comes a footnote: “But he only moved to Atlanta when he was 10 and doesn’t have a Southern accent — and modern Atlanta isn’t really part of the South — so maybe we can’t.” Furthermore, the lead counsel on the brief “is a RussianJewish emigre who’s now a dual U.S.-Canadian citizen. Can he make borscht-belt jokes about Canuck frostbacks even though the first time he went to shul was while clerking in Jackson, Mississippi?” When the government registers a trademark, it is not endorsing or subsidizing a product. It should not be allowed to use its power to deny registration in order to discourage or punish the adoption of controversial expressions. By registering trademarks, government confers a benefit — a legal right — on those who hold them. Trademarks are speech. The disparagement clause empowers the PTO to deny a benefit because of the viewpoint of the speech. This is unconstitutional. Trademarks are not commercial speech — essentially, advertising — which is accorded less robust protection than that given to other speech. Eugene Volokh, a UCLA law professor and one of The Slants’ lawyers, correctly says the band’s name is expressive speech. The Asian-Americans of The Slants agree. They say they adopted this name “to take on these stereotypes

that people have about us, like the slanted eyes, and own them.” The PTO applies the disparagement clause by assessing “what message the referenced group takes from the applicant’s [trade]mark in the context of the applicant’s use” and denies registration “only if the message received is a negative one.” The PTO, which has denied trademark protection for The Slants, has given it to a band named N.W.A. which stands for (a version of the N-word) Wit Attitudes. The PTO’s decisions are unpredictable because they depend on the agency speculating about what might be the feelings of others in hypothetical circumstances. This vague and arbitrarily enforced law, if such it can be called, chills speech by encouraging blandness. The PTO last earned the nation’s attention, if not its approbation, in 2014, when it denied protection to the name of the Washington Redskins, in spite of polls showing that 90 percent of Native Americans were not offended by the name and only 18 percent of “nonwhite football fans” favored changing it. Now the PTO sees a national problem in provocative, naughty, childish or tasteless band names. By doing this the PTO encourages something of which there already is an annoying surfeit — the belief that speech should be regulated hither and yon in order to preserve the serenity of those Americans who are most easily upset. — George Will is a columnist for Washington Post Writers Group.


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TODAY

WEATHER

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Sunday, January 15, 2017

MONDAY

TUESDAY

THURSDAY

WEDNESDAY

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Apologies CONTINUED FROM PAGE 4A

An icy mix changing to rain

Milder with a shower or two

Periods of clouds and Mostly sunny and not Mostly sunny and mild sunshine as cool

High 33° Low 31° POP: 70%

High 49° Low 30° POP: 60%

High 42° Low 27° POP: 5%

High 52° Low 32° POP: 0%

High 54° Low 40° POP: 10%

Wind E 6-12 mph

Wind SE 6-12 mph

Wind W 7-14 mph

Wind SSW 6-12 mph

Wind SSW 7-14 mph

POP: Probability of Precipitation

McCook 32/22

Kearney 30/23

Oberlin 31/26

Clarinda 30/28

Lincoln 31/25

Grand Island 29/23

Beatrice 30/27

Concordia 31/26

Centerville 31/29

St. Joseph 32/29 Chillicothe 31/29

Sabetha 30/28

Kansas City Marshall Manhattan 33/32 36/33 Salina 34/28 Oakley Kansas City Topeka 34/29 31/28 34/30 Lawrence 33/32 Sedalia 33/31 Emporia Great Bend 36/32 38/29 33/25 Nevada Dodge City Chanute 39/37 31/24 Hutchinson 44/33 Garden City 38/30 31/22 Springfield Wichita Pratt Liberal Coffeyville Joplin 43/40 39/32 33/28 35/27 47/43 45/37 Hays Russell 32/25 32/25

Goodland 31/22

Especially when someone’s really mad at us and they’re blasting us, it’s so difficult to put our defensiveness aside. If only our desire to understand the other person were as great as our desire to be understood, wouldn’t that be something? We would have a different world. Speaking of deQ: fensiveness, many times in situations where

someone has said or done something offensive, that person might offer what could be described as a non-apology apology: “It was just a joke” or “Don’t be so sensitive.” What do you make of that? That’s a very good example of the

A:

ways we slip out of taking responsibility for hurting someone. And the listening part is so important because it’s not the words “I’m sorry” that heals the injury. The hurt party wants us to “really get it,” to validate and care about their feelings and to carry some of the pain that we’ve caused them to feel, and this requires wholehearted listening. Obviously, there’s the question of what you’re apologizing for, because it’s one thing to spill red wine on your friend’s carpet. I mean, you immediately apologize and offer to pay the cleaning bill and tell her how sorry you are, and that’s a very easy kind of apology. But some of the injuries we inflict are not simple, and then we may really have to sit in the hot seat and listen to what the hurt party has to tell us.

One of the reasons that the heartfelt apology is one of the greatest gifts that we can give to another person is that it can allow the hurt party to feel safe and soothed in the relationship knowing that we care about their feelings, that we’re capable of taking responsibility of what we’ve said or done. It’s a great gift to the other person, and it’s also a gift to our own self, because our level of maturity and integrity and self-respect rests squarely on our ability to see ourselves objectively and to take a clear-eyed look at the ways our behavior affects others and to assume unequivocal responsibility when we act at another person’s expense. — K-12 education reporter Joanna Hlavacek can be reached at 832-6388. Follow her on Twitter: @HlavacekJoanna

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

LAWRENCE ALMANAC

Through 7 p.m. Saturday.

Temperature High/low 37°/26° Normal high/low today 38°/18° Record high today 65° in 2012 Record low today -11° in 1927

Precipitation in inches 24 hours through 7 p.m. yest. Month to date Normal month to date Year to date Normal year to date

0.01 0.18 0.44 0.18 0.44

REGIONAL CITIES

Today Mon. Today Mon. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W 33 31 i 44 28 r Atchison 32 31 i 44 30 sh Holton Belton 33 31 i 50 30 sh Independence 33 32 i 50 32 sh Olathe 33 31 i 51 29 sh Burlington 37 33 i 53 30 c Osage Beach 38 36 r 56 37 r Coffeyville 45 37 sh 59 33 c Osage City 33 32 i 49 30 c Concordia 31 26 i 35 24 r 33 32 i 52 31 c Dodge City 31 24 i 35 22 sf Ottawa Wichita 39 32 i 47 27 c Fort Riley 33 30 i 42 27 r Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.

NATIONAL FORECAST

SUN & MOON

Today Mon. 7:38 a.m. 7:38 a.m. 5:23 p.m. 5:24 p.m. 9:12 p.m. 10:13 p.m. 9:43 a.m. 10:18 a.m.

New

First

Full

Jan 19

Jan 27

Feb 3

Feb 10

LAKE LEVELS

As of 7 a.m. Saturday Lake

Clinton Perry Pomona

Level (ft)

874.37 889.16 974.28

Discharge (cfs)

50 25 100

Fronts Cold

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2017

INTERNATIONAL CITIES

Today Cities Hi Lo W Acapulco 86 72 pc Amsterdam 41 29 pc Athens 56 44 sh Baghdad 54 40 c Bangkok 90 72 pc Beijing 33 19 c Berlin 33 25 sn Brussels 37 29 r Buenos Aires 78 65 pc Cairo 65 50 c Calgary 36 21 pc Dublin 51 44 sh Geneva 31 17 sf Hong Kong 63 56 r Jerusalem 53 41 pc Kabul 32 18 sn London 49 38 r Madrid 50 35 pc Mexico City 73 45 pc Montreal 18 9 s Moscow 33 22 sn New Delhi 69 51 c Oslo 26 15 s Paris 38 32 r Rio de Janeiro 89 79 pc Rome 47 35 sh Seoul 33 17 s Singapore 88 77 pc Stockholm 27 20 pc Sydney 79 69 sh Tokyo 41 36 s Toronto 32 20 s Vancouver 39 28 s Vienna 35 22 pc Warsaw 33 21 sf Winnipeg 21 9 s

Mon. Hi Lo W 86 73 pc 37 24 s 54 48 sh 60 40 s 89 77 pc 35 22 pc 30 20 sf 33 23 s 81 65 s 68 52 pc 40 32 c 50 42 pc 29 18 sn 65 63 c 57 44 pc 38 22 c 44 36 c 55 39 pc 74 45 pc 33 22 s 27 18 c 68 45 pc 24 17 pc 36 23 pc 91 79 c 48 36 pc 35 18 s 86 77 c 29 18 sf 83 71 s 48 37 s 37 26 pc 41 36 r 31 20 pc 30 20 pc 18 7 pc

Three NEW Senior Living options — and they’re all part of Monterey Village.

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

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: An ice storm threatens to cause more power outages and dangerous travel in the central Plains today. Snow will blanket the central High Plains as severe thunderstorms erupt in western Texas. Today Mon. Today Mon. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W 58 52 c 67 61 sh Albuquerque 45 35 sh 47 32 sh Memphis 79 68 pc 80 69 pc Anchorage 12 8 sn 14 -5 sn Miami Milwaukee 32 23 c 39 36 i Atlanta 72 53 pc 70 54 c Minneapolis 26 14 c 32 28 i Austin 76 58 r 74 54 r Nashville 54 48 c 68 59 pc Baltimore 46 26 pc 44 34 c Birmingham 73 54 pc 73 60 pc New Orleans 73 60 pc 75 62 pc New York 42 29 s 44 34 pc Boise 18 5 c 23 6 s Omaha 31 27 i 37 24 i Boston 36 23 s 40 29 s 78 57 pc 78 57 pc Buffalo 32 23 pc 37 28 pc Orlando 44 27 s 45 35 pc Cheyenne 39 22 pc 35 21 sn Philadelphia Phoenix 60 49 pc 63 46 s Chicago 36 27 c 38 35 i Pittsburgh 38 23 pc 43 37 c Cincinnati 40 33 sh 48 45 c Portland, ME 31 12 s 36 20 s Cleveland 35 24 pc 41 36 c Portland, OR 33 23 pc 35 32 pc Dallas 65 54 r 69 40 c 35 16 s 36 18 s Denver 33 27 sn 37 20 sn Reno Richmond 49 33 c 44 37 c Des Moines 32 27 i 40 29 r Sacramento 54 33 pc 54 34 s Detroit 34 22 pc 37 32 r 34 33 i 53 43 sh El Paso 50 42 sh 56 36 pc St. Louis Fairbanks -19 -23 pc -12 -26 sn Salt Lake City 30 15 s 26 13 pc San Diego 64 51 pc 64 48 s Honolulu 82 67 s 82 67 s Houston 75 65 c 77 65 sh San Francisco 55 42 pc 57 42 s 41 33 s 43 41 r Indianapolis 38 29 i 47 42 sh Seattle 19 11 c 26 21 pc Kansas City 33 32 i 48 28 sh Spokane Tucson 55 44 c 59 40 s Las Vegas 60 41 s 59 36 s Tulsa 51 48 sh 61 32 c Little Rock 53 47 c 65 47 r Wash., DC 48 32 pc 45 39 c Los Angeles 65 48 pc 66 46 s National extremes yesterday for the 48 contiguous states High: Alice, TX 83° Low: Stanley, ID -31°

WEATHER HISTORY On Jan. 15, 1780, ice in the New York Harbor was thick enough to allow the transport of heavy cannons.

Monterey Village, senior living by Americare, is opening its doors in Lawrence. Featuring a wellness gym, movie theater, beauty shop, outdoor living spaces and walking trails – all are nestled on our intimate campus. And our all-inclusive monthly rates with no buy-in mean financial peace of mind for you.

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Be among the first to explore Monterey Village. Call today to learn more about exceptional senior living with Americare.

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WEATHER TRIVIA™

inch of rain is equivalent to how much snow? Q: One 10 inches if the temperature is between 25 F and 30 F

Last

A:

Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset

Monterey Village

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senior living by Americare

SHOWS:

January 20, 21, 22 and January 26, 27, 28, 29 Thursday - Saturday: 7:30 pm Sunday Matinees: 2:30 785-843-7469 www.theatrelawrence.com

Co-Produced by


USA TODAY — L awrence J ournal -W orld

SECTION B

USA TODAY —

IN MONEY

01.15.17

IN LIFE

IN MONEY

IN LI

01.15.17 How we can crush fake news

Michael Keaton’s How we can career soars — and crush he’s fake lovin’ news it

GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOTO

Mic soa

GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOTO MARC ROYCE FOR USA TODAY

BEIJING BLASTS TRUMP REMARK

President-elect: Jury’s out on Russia, China Doug Stanglin and David Jackson USA TODAY

DAVID CARSON, AP

President-elect Donald Trump, in a fresh peek at his foreign policy views, says he is open to lifting sanctions against Russia and is not committed to a long-standing agreement with China over Taiwan. Beijing swiftly responded to the latter remark, calling any revision of the “One China” policy “non-negotiable.”

DAVID CAR

Mary Zinser scrapes ice off her windshield, in Arnold, Mary Zinser Mo. Parts scrapes of the ice state off her were windshield, glazed in more in Arnold, than aMo. quarter-inch Parts of the ofstate ice. were glazed in more than a quarter-inch of ice NEWSLINE

IN NEWS

A VP with clout?

Mike Pence could wield great power, but much depends on his mercurial boss.

Deadly iceDeadly storm ice storm keeps tightkeeps grip on tight grip on nation’s midsection nation’s midsection NEWSLINE

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A VP with clout?

Mike Pence could wield great power, but much depends on his mercurial boss.

Freezing rain eyes swath fromFreezing Texas Panhandle rain eyes to swath Plains from Texas Panhandle to Plai Trump indicates he’s open EVAN VUCCI, AP

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USA SNAPSHOTS©

Expecting a promotion

1 in 3

employees believe they should get a promotion every year.

SOURCE Ultimate Software Workplace Survey of 1,000+ adults MICHAEL B. SMITH AND JANET LOEHRKE, USA TODAY

This is an edition of USA TODAY

Doug Stanglin provided for your local newspaper.

Doug Stanglin

With KansasForand Missouri the latest national sports in the bull’s-eye, a go winter coverage, to sports.usatoday.com storm descended on the nation’s midsection Saturday, bringing thick ice, dangerous driving conditions and power outages as it stretched its tentacles as farUSA east as the © SNAPSHOTS Mid-Atlantic. There was little chance of a letup from theExpecting icy onslaught as another rounda ofpromotion freezing rain was forecast for Sunday morning, keeping ice warnings in place for the two states, as well as Oklahoma. Winter storm watches forecast up to three-quarters of an inch of ice and as much as 3 inches of snow across the central Plains and parts of Iowa, Illinois and Nebraska. The National Weather Seremployees believe vice said freezing rain would should get a continue acrossthey a wide swath promotion every year. of north-central Oklahoma, potentially bringing an addiSOURCE Ultimate Software Workplace Survey

With Kansas and Missouri in the bull’s-eye, a winter storm descended on the nation’s midsection Saturday, bringing thick ice, dangerous driving conditions and power outages as it stretched its tentacles as far east as the Mid-Atlantic. There was little chance of a letup from the icy onslaught as another round of freezing rain was forecast for Sunday morning, keeping ice warnings in place for the two states, as well as Oklahoma. Winter storm watches forecast up to three-quarters of an inch of ice and as much as 3 inches of snow across the central Plains and parts of Iowa, Illinois and Nebraska. The National Weather Service said freezing rain would continue across a wide swath of north-central Oklahoma, potentially bringing an addi-

MICHAEL B.ON SMITH AND JANET LOEHRKE, USA TODAY v STORY CONTINUES 2B

v STORY CONTINUES ON 2B

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JESSIE WARDARSKI, TULSA WORLD, VIA AP

Icicles hang from street signs in downtown Tulsa on Saturday. Freezing rain was forecast to continue across a wide area of northcentral Oklahoma.

There was little chance of a letup from the icy onslaught as another round of freezing rain was forecast for Sunday.

to lifting Russian sanctions.Icicles ha from stre in Trump lashes outsigns downtown at Rep. Lewis Tulsa on S Congressman said the urday. Fre president-elect is not ing rain w “legitimate” U.S. leader, 2B forecast t continue Trump’s remarks came in across a w an hour-long interview with area of no The Wall Street Journal on Fricentral O day in which he said he will homa. keep the sanctions on Russia in place “for a period of time” but is open to lifting them if Moscow cooperates on issues There of mutual interest. was litt While several sanctions on chance Russia were imposed in 2014 over its annexation of Crimea, a letup the latest measures, as well as from the expulsion of 35 Russian the icy diplomats, were imposed by the Obama administration last onslaug month in response to evidence as Russia hacked Democratic anothe Party officials during the round o presidential election. freezin Trump’s comments come days after CNN’s report rerain wa garding classified documents forecas presented to Obama and v STORY CONTINUES ON 2B

JESSIE WARDARSKI, TULSA WORLD, VIA AP

for Sunday

Cuban AmericansCuban at odds Americans over ‘wetat foot, odds dry over foot’ ‘wet repeal foot, dr Even beneficiaries have mixed feelings Alan Gomez @alangomez USA TODAY

President Obama’s surprise decision to end the “wet foot, dry foot” policy that has allowed tens of thousands of Cubans to enter the U.S. has roiled the Cuban-American community, leaving even those who benefited directly with mixed emotions. The policy first was enacted by MIAMI

President Clinton in 1995beneficiaries to stop U.S. citizen due President to the preferenCarlos Curbelo, R-Fla., have Clinton in 1995 to stop U.S. citizen due to Rep. the preferenEven tried to change Cuban immigraCubans. a growing wave of Cuban rafters tial treatment afforded a growing wave of Cuban rafters tial treatment afforded Cubans. have mixed tion for from years. They say many Even though he benefited from flooding into South Florida. Un- feelings flooding into South Florida. UnEven though he benefited the Havana der the new directive, Cubans “wet foot, dry foot,” der the new directive, Cubans “wet foot, dry foot,”newcomers the Havanaare economic mihad passed. who return to Cuba as had passed. who reached U.S. soil would be al- native said its time who reached U.S. soil would be al- native said its timegrants Cubans soon as they receive their green arrived, lowed to stay in Alan the country to Cubans stay in the country and He said when he arrived, Gomez and He said when helowed become legal permanent resi- were fleeing political persecution cards in the U.S. On Thursday, persecution become legal permanent @alangomez resi- were fleeing political after one year. Those and the horrors inflicted the both by members of Congress inflicted by the dents after one USA year. TODAY Those and the horrorsdents caught at seaBut were returned to communist Cuban agreed regime. But were needed. changes regime. caught at sea were returned to communist Cuban Cuba. are taking now, he said Cubans “Although are takingour country’s imminow, he said Cubans Cuba. MIAMI President advantage Obama’s surprogrampolicy and toward Cuba has of the Alberto programVilches and was paddling advantage of the gration Alberto Vilches was paddling decision theonly “wet north with five friends through coming only for economic grantedgains. many of the dictatorcoming for economic gains. north with five prise friends throughto end foot, foot” policy that al- people the Florida ship’s “So many people whovictims have refuge, it has also “So has many who Straits have on a boat they the Florida Straits on dry a boat they been grossly lowed when, tens ofunthousands Cu- lastmade out ofcome Styrofoam when, un- come in these last few years comeabused and exploitcome inofthese few years made out of Styrofoam Vilch-Clinton made his for different reasons,” ed said by Vilchmany Cuban nationals, bans to made enterhis the U.S. has roiledreasons,” knownsaid to them, for different known to them, Clinton ALAN GOMEZ, USA TODAY es,community, 68, a retiredannouncement. factory worker. while worker. also inadvertently bolster- ALAN GOMEZ es, 68, a retired factory announcement. the Cuban-American Alberto Vilches,“They foreground, Alberto Curbelo Vilches, foregro “They come with a different menfinally ing the Cuban On Friday, Vilches finally comleaving evencomthose who benefited come with a different men- regime,” On Friday, Vilches takesswearing the oath of allegiance takes the oath pleted his long journey, said. “A change to the policy wasof allegia now.” directly swearing with mixed tality emotions. pleted his long journey, tality now.” to become a U.S. citizen. to become a U.S. citizen. his oath of allegiance topolicy become a wasSen. inevitable.” Marco R-Fla., and his oath of allegiance to become a The first enacted by Rubio, Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., and


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Trump plays wait and see with Moscow v CONTINUED FROM 1B

JACK GRUBER, USA TODAY

Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga., says Donald Trump’s inauguration Friday will be the first he has missed while in office.

Trump targets Lewis in new war of words President-elect condemned for tweets attacking civil rights icon Doug Stanglin, Eliza Collins and Donovan Slack USA TODAY

President-elect Donald Trump, in a Twitter outburst Saturday morning over Rep. John Lewis’ comment that he does not see Trump as a legitimate president, said the Georgia Democrat should spend more time trying to fix his “horrible” and “crime-infested” district than complaining about the election results. The reaction was swift. Democrats, celebrities and even some Republicans weighed in. “John Lewis and his ‘talk’ have changed the world,” Sen. Ben Sasse, R.-Neb., tweeted with a link to a photo of Lewis in 1965, when he was badly beaten during a voting rights march at the Selma, Ala., bridge. Rep. Kevin Yoder, R-Kan., said he disagrees with Lewis’ questioning of the presidential election but said Lewis is a “hero & icon.” “He deserves all of our respect,” Yoder said in a tweet. “He’s earned it.” On Friday, Lewis said he would skip Trump’s inauguration next week as an act of protest. Lewis told moderator Chuck Todd of NBC’s Meet the Press in an interview set to air Sunday that he does not see Trump as a “legitiCorrections & 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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mate president.” “I think the Russians participated in helping this man get elected. And they helped destroy the candidacy of Hillary Clinton,” Lewis said. “I don’t plan to attend the inauguration.” Trump punched back with two tweets criticizing Lewis’ representation of Georgia’s 5th Congressional District, which includes most of Atlanta. He tweeted: “Congressman John Lewis should spend more time on fixing and helping his district, which is in horrible shape and falling apart (not to mention crime infested) rather than falsely complaining about the election results. All talk, talk, talk - no action or results. Sad!” Former Republican National Committee chairman Michael Steele had some concise advice for Trump. “No. 1, don’t tweet that. No. 2, don’t go there,” he said on MSNBC, adding that the attacks were “unnecessary” and “unfortunate.” In his interview, Lewis, who has been in Congress for 30 years, said Friday’s inauguration will be the first he has missed as a congressman. Rep. Raúl Grijalva, D-Ariz., also

Rep. Raúl Grijalva, D-Ariz., also plans to boycott the inauguration and says he will be spending the time with constitutents who feel left out.

“John Lewis should spend more time on fixing and helping his district, which is in horrible shape... ” President-elect Donald Trump

will skip the inauguration. “My absence is not motivated by disrespect for the office or motivated by disrespect for the government that we have in this great democracy,” Grijalva said during a speech on the House floor Friday. “An individual act, yes, of defiance at the disrespect shown to millions and millions of Americans by this incoming administration and by the actions we’re taking in this Congress.” Grijalava said he’ll be in Arizona meeting with constituents, including senior citizens, environmental and climate change activists, immigrants and health care providers. He said those groups would be the first to feel the impact of Trump’s actions. “So it’s good to be in the community talking about these things on Inauguration Day,” he told USA TODAY. “Knowing that this is the reality and me being at the inauguration when I think that my time ... is better spent being with the constituents who keep me in office and help me.” He said he wasn’t questioning the peaceful transition of power, but respecting the people unhappy with the situation. “I’m not second-guessing, I’m not whining. What I’m saying is respect is a two-way street and I want to respect the constituents that feel left out right now,” Grijalva said. California Democratic Rep. Barbara Lee said that while she would attend Trump’s State of the Union Address in the future, she would not be at the inauguration. Lee said the inauguration is a celebratory event and “I cannot celebrate and applaud” Trump over the things he has said. At least four other House members, all Democrats, have said they won’t attend.

“If you

Trump during a recent intelliget along gence briefing that contained unsubstantiated and poten- and if tially compromising informa- Russia is tion about the president-elect. really “If you get along and if Rushelping sia is really helping us, why would anybody have sanctions us, why if somebody’s doing some real- would ly great things?” Trump told anybody the Journal. He added, howevhave er, he would keep the latest sanctions in place “at least for sanctions a period of time.” if someTrump acknowledged last body’s week that he accepts Russia doing was behind the hacking. But he questioned whether offi- some cials were leaking information really about meetings with him, great warning that would be a “blot” things?” on their record. The president-elect also Donald Trump The Wall Street told the Journal he is willing to to Journal meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin after he takes office this week. “I understand that they would like to meet, and that’s absolutely fine with me,” Trump added. Regarding China, Trump was specifically asked whether he supports the U.S. “One China” policy on Taiwan, which declares the province as part of China. Trump’s response: “Everything is under negotiation, including One China.” The remarks come weeks after Trump’s unprecedented phone conversation with Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen shortly after the November election. There has been no communication between the leaders of the United States and Taiwan since 1979. The latest comMARVIN RECINOS, AFP/GETTY IMAGES ments brought a swift and pointed response Trump had from China. In a statement an unpreceSaturday, Lu Kang, spokesman dented phone for the Chinese foreign minis- conversation try, called the One China poli- with Taiwancy “non-negotiable” and the ese President “political foundation” of Chi- Tsai Ing-wen na-U.S. relations. shortly after “To avoid disruption to the the Novemsound and steady develop- ber election. ment of the China-U.S. relations and bilateral cooperation in key areas, we urge relevant parties in the U.S. to fully recognize the high sensitivity of the Taiwan question, approach Taiwan-related issues with prudence and honor the commitment made by all previous U.S. administrations of both parties on adhering to the oneChina policy,” Kang said. Trump’s latest comments appear to represent a departure from remarks by his advisers in December that the phone call did not signify any formal shift in long-standing U.S. ties with Taiwan or China. In mid-December, An Fengshan, a spokesman for China’s policy-making Taiwan Affairs Office, warned of more serious consequences if U.S. shifts positions on the Taiwan issue. Contributing: The Associated Press

Thousands of homes lose power v CONTINUED FROM 1B

tional 1.5 inches of ice accumulation to cities like Enid and Ponca City, west and northwest of Oklahoma City. By early afternoon, Aldrich, Mo., reported 0.75 inches of ice; Bartlesville, Okla., registered 0.28 inches; and Mayestown, Ill., had received 0.37 inches, according to weatherbug.com. Parts of Springfield, Mo., experienced a round of “thunder ice” following lightning strikes amid a buildup of more than a quarter-inch of ice on trees, fences and parked cars, the Springfield News-Leader reported. The relatively rare phenomenon, which occurs only in especially turbulent winter weather, was also reported as freezing rain fell in Joplin, Mo., the Associated Press reported.

Ice storm warnings were in effect from the Texas Panhandle to southern Illinois, with freezing rain advisories across parts of the Ohio Valley and the central Appalachians, the National Weather Service said. It warned that ice in excess of a half-inch “is enough to cause severe travel disruptions and power outages.” Colorful weather service maps showing the hardest-hit areas put Dodge City, Kan., in the deep-purple center, with heavy precipitation expected Saturday night into Sunday and ice accumulations up to an inch. At least three road deaths were blamed on the storm, including two in separate accidents in Missouri and one involving a tractor-trailer outside Weatherford, Okla. In western Oklahoma, Interstate 40 was closed in two places because

ANDREW JANSEN, SPRINGFIELD (MO.) NEWS-LEADER

William Blankenship cuts tree limbs coated in ice away from power lines in Springfield, Mo., on Friday.

of accidents, according to the highway patrol. The governors of Oklahoma and Missouri declared states of emergency, and the National Guard was mobilized in Missouri and Kansas, where some 200 Guardsmen patrolled key roads and helped stranded motorists. Nearly 4,300 homes were without power by midmorning in Missouri and Illinois as heavy ice accumulation brought down power lines, KSDK-TV reported. In Kansas City, the NFL moved the AFC divisional playoff game between the Pittsburgh Steelers and Kansas City Chiefs from noon to Sunday evening to allow more time to treat roads. Missouri Department of Transportation crews were working 12-hour shifts. Contributing: The Associated Press


NEWS MONEY SPORTS CAN THE FAKE NEWSLIFE TREND BE IRONED OUT? AUTOS TRAVEL USA TODAY - L J 6B SUNDAY, JANUARY 15, 2017

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It’s up to journalists and consumers to serve as watchdogs in ‘post-truth era’

vironment, the news ecosystem right now is it is so polluted and so contaminated with falsity that @mikesnider Trump supporters can with jusUSA TODAY tice point to the unreliability of this ecosystem to deliver straight Journalists and news consum- and verifiable news,” Wasserers, along with tech companies man said. such as Facebook, can take steps But some wonder to temper the fake news whether Trump may phenomenon. be seeking to gain an But how much progress can be advantage from the situmade should the country’s head ation — turning fake news newsmaker himself continue to on its head — to sow confube among those fueling the fake sion among the citizenry. By news fire? attacking the mainstream At his first public press confer- media as incapable of truthence in nearly six months, Presi- saying, the president-elect addent-elect Donald Trump called vances the notion of a post-truth CNN a purveyor of “fake news” era. because the TV network had The CNN declaration is only produced a story reporting that Trump’s latest attack on the the U.S. intelligence media. After the reofficials had precent Golden Globes sented Trump and Awards speech by President Obama Meryl Streep, in with allegations which the threethat Russian operatime Oscar winner tives claimed to encouraged the suphave unverified, but port of media, potentially comproTrump on Twitter mising personal and called her “over-ratfinancial informaed” and cited the tion on the “dishonest media.” president-elect. During the waning Media observers, days of the election GETTY IMAGES as well as journalcampaign, Trump ists at competing President-elect Don- called the media outlets — including ald Trump communi- “dishonest” for Fox News’ Shep cates unfiltered. burying stories Smith — agreed that about the FBI’s onCNN’s manner of covering the going investigation into Hillary story met with journalistic Clinton. Trump supporters and altstandards. CNN and other news organi- right news outlets have helped zations noted that the allega- go viral false stories including tions were unverified, but the those that Pope Francis had ensituation itself amounts to a dorsed Trump and that Clinton news story, says Ed Wasserman, & Co. were running a child sex dean of the graduate school of ring from a Washington, D.C., journalism at the University of pizzeria. California-Berkeley, because The Pope Francis story was “what matters is that our intelli- the most read and shared story gence community believes Rus- on Facebook during the final sia is sufficiently adversarial three months of the campaign, toward us that they would make according to a BuzzFeed analysis. an effort (to) ... compile this.” Fake news is rampant on social The situation cranks up the media with about one-third pressure on an-already volatile (32%) of Americans saying they atmosphere caused by months of often see made-up political news hyper-politicized activity online stories there, according to the — and in the physical world — Pew Research Center. during the election cycle and Even more, 63%, say that fake subsequent post-campaign envi- news creates “great confusion” ronment. Mainstream journal- among the public about current ists feel as if they are under events, the survey fire, while their readers and found. An additionviewers get defensive. At al 24% said fake the same time, Trump news causes supporters feel not only some confusion. vilified, but validated. Why could this And Trump is not be so imporwrong when he points tant? Because out that the U.S. intelliabout half (47%) gence community is not of all Americans infallible. “The problem get some news with our informational enfrom Facebook, Pew Mike Snider

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Only in America: Breaking-news T-shirts Eli Blumenthal @eliblumenthal USA TODAY

News site BuzzFeed is apparently so pleased about having been called a “failing pile of garbage” by President-elect Donald Trump that many will be wearing the phrase as a badge of honor — on T-shirts. While dismissing reports this week from BuzzFeed and CNN that the Russians had collected damaging intelligence on him, Trump inadvertently gave a big boost to the T-shirt business. Besides labeling BuzzFeed with the “failing pile” label, he went after CNN as the “fake news” network. The slogans are now on shirts. BuzzFeed’s sells for $30, while bumper stickers go for $5 and even trash cans sport the slogan for $49.

found in an earlier study. “Now that anyone — including our president-elect — is a publisher via social media, newsrooms are competing with non-newsrooms,” said Jessica Pucci, professor of ethics and excellence in journalism at the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism & Mass Communication at Arizona State University. “Trump certainly uses this to his advantage — he can reach audiences directly rather than using the media as a conduit.”

‘Out of office’

1 in 3 employees are willing to respond to work emails when traveling for leisure. SOURCE American Express “Spending & Saving Tracker” of 1,540 U.S. adults JAE YANG AND VERONICA BRAVO, USA TODAY

The advantage is that “our nation’s leadership has never been more raw and accessible,” she said, but added “it’s troubling that the president-elect calls ‘fake news’ in one breath, and in the next breath shares unverified or unverifiable information in the next, such as saying the Affordable Care Act will ‘soon be history.’ To my knowledge, it’s impossible to verify the future.” Even more concerning is the propaganda potential for Trump and supporters to lead to action.

In the case of “pizzagate,” an armed man showed up to investigate and fired his gun inside. Facebook says it is taking steps to tackle fake news and will build better working relationships with established media to improve the user experience. Media consumers can do their part, too. “Going forward people have to think for themselves,” said Nsenga Burton, digital editor for Grady Newsource and an instructor at the University of Georgia.

EPA can’t Trump-proof fuel-savings goal Brent Snavely and Chris Woodyard USA TODAY Network

SOURCES USA TODAY RESEARCH, MARKETWATCH.COM

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Within 12 hours all of BuzzFeed’s items had sold out — raising $25,000 for the pressfreedom organization that was touted by Meryl Streep during the Golden Globes Awards last Sunday. Trump has shown a knack for inspiring political merchandise. Besides his now-famous “Make America Great Again” golf caps, supporters wore “bad hombre” and “nasty woman” T-shirts during the campaign. CNN isn’t being left behind. There are T-shirts reading “CNN/ the fake news network.” BUZZFEED Sarah Chrzanowski, a mother of The BuzzFeed shirts sold out three from Southern California, in 12 hours, raising $25,000. is behind those shirts, capitalizing quickly on memes. Her hits BuzzFeed told USA TODAY include “Obama played the race in a statement it would be “do- card/ Clinton played the womnating 100% of the proceeds” an card/ Americans played their from purchases of the limited- Trump card” — which, she says, edition items “to the Commit- was a hot seller over the tee to Protect Journalists.” holidays.

The Environmental Protection Agency left stricter automotive fuel economy regulations in place for 2022 to 2025, drawing criticism from the automotive industry and praise from environmental groups. The real test may come when the incoming Trump administration decides whether to reduce the standards in keeping with its pledge to reduce government regulation. Trump’s nominee for EPA administrator, Scott Pruitt, is the attorney general in the oil-rich state of Oklahoma who has stood up to the EPA in the past. The EPA has been accused of moving too fast in an effort to get the current regulations

2011 PHOTO BY JESSICA HILL, AP

The automotive industry has proven its ability to adapt to gas-saving technologies.

locked into place before President Obama leaves office Friday. The EPA said last Friday that it is leaving its standards in place because no change is necessary. The automotive industry, which is deep into electrification and other gas-saving technologies, has demonstrated its ability to adapt. The decision drew opposition

from one powerful automotive industry trade group, saying it fears that tougher standards will force automakers to raise prices on new cars. “The EPA decision is disappointing. Our fundamental priority remains striking the right balance to continue fuel economy gains and carbon reduction without compromising consumer affordability and vital auto-sector jobs,” said Gloria Bergquist, spokeswoman for the Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers, an industry trade group. Industry groups began signaling Friday that they hope a new EPA administrator will rescind the decision and resume the evaluation process while environmental groups praised the EPA’s actions and vowed to aggressively fight any possible changes. “The Obama administration today just made new cars and trucks thousands of dollars more expensive for America’s working

men and women,” the National Automobile Dealers Association said in a statement. “We urge the incoming Trump administration to withdraw today’s action.” But the agency’s decision, just days before President Obama leaves office, makes it difficult, but not impossible, for the incoming administration to make changes. “We believe a whole new rulemaking process would need to occur in order to overrule this decision,” a process that could easily take two years, said Andrew Linhardt, associate director for federal policy for the Sierra Club. Both the government and automakers agreed to take another look at automotive regulations in 2012 when initially adopted. The goal was to assess how well automakers were adapting to the first phase of the standards and to decide whether or not future standards needed to be adjusted.


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PERSONAL FINANCE ISTOCKPHOTO

your banker and attorney. “They can help to detect changes in your financial activity that may signal exploitation and be available to advise you if you are being pressured to act,” she said. Mauterstock also noted that each state has a protective services department. “Financial advisers or family members can call in to protective services anonymously and report a problem,” he said. “Protective services will often then follow up with the family.” Elders can hire a bookkeeper to pay their bills and manage their bank accounts, said Mauterstock, who noted there’s a bill before Congress called the Senior$afe Act of 2015, which would protect financial advisers who report an abuse. Among other things, those involved in watching over your affairs — be it a banker, CPA, attorney or lawyer — should look for red flags such as unusually high guardian fees or excessive vehicle or dining expenses, according to the GAO.

Robert Powell

Special for USA TODAY

1

KNOW THE RISK FACTORS

Social isolation and cognitive impairment are among the known risk factors for elder abuse. “Stay socially active and engaged,” said Martin. “Social isolation increases the risk of becoming a victim. If someone is isolating you from your friends, family or others in your community, seek help.”

2

DON’T SUCCUMB TO PRESSURE

Don’t let anyone rush or pressure you into signing a document, purchasing something or giving away your money or property. “Take your time,” said Martin. “Consult with others. If you feel rushed or pressured to act, don’t act. Instead, talk to others including trusted friends and family members, your banker or attorney, or other professionals such as clergy members or social workers.”

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Don’t set up joint accounts as a method of planning for incapacity or getting help with paying your bills. “Both parties are equal owners and have equal access,” said Martin. “Instead, talk to your banker about your options for getting assistance with your finances.”

WAYS TO PROTECT YOURSELF FROM FINANCIAL ABUSE 5 WAYS TO HELP YOUR LOVED ONES uPlan ahead to protect your assets and ensure that your wishes are followed. uConsult with a qualified financial professional or attorney before signing complex agreements or anything you don’t understand. uBuild relationships with professionals who are involved with your finances — they can assist in monitoring for suspicious activity. uLimit your use of cash — using checks and credit cards leaves a paper trail. uTrust your instincts and feel free to say “no” — remember, it’s your money. SOURCE: ALLIANZ LIFE

8

EXECUTE A DURABLE POWER OF ATTORNEY

Consider a revocable trust with a corporate trustee. “There is no better protection for a (senior),” said Mauterstock. “Corporate trustees are the most regulated financial entities in our industry; they’re regulated by the OCC, the FDIC and the state banking commission.”

KEEP YOUR HOME

Don’t give your home away to someone in exchange for a promise to care for you or allow you to live there as long as you live. “These kinds of promises are broken every day and you could find yourself without a home or the help you need,” said Martin.

lder abuse is a growing problem in the U.S. Or at least so say experts who testified before a Senate Special Committee on Aging hearing in November. In fact, one in 10 seniors age 60 and older who live at home experience abuse, neglect or exploitation, according to one expert, Jaye Martin, executive director of Maine Legal Services for the Elderly. And financial abuse — perpetrated mainly by family members, many of whom are guardians — is one of the most common types of elder abuse, according to a Government Accountability Office (GAO) report released for the hearing. According to GAO, a guardianship may be necessary as an older adult becomes incapable of making informed decisions. The GAO wrote in its report: “While many guardians act in the best interest of persons under guardianship, some have been reported to engage in the abuse of older adults.” So, what can you do to avoid financial abuse by family members, guardians and others in power?

7

SET UP A REVOCABLE TRUST

According to the Allianz Life study, a large percentage of elders who have suffered financial abuse were victimized by people close to them — either a family member, friend or another professional caregiver.

AVOID JOINT ACCOUNTS

4

6

BE WARY OF FAMILY MEMBERS

A durable power of attorney is an important estate-planning tool, said Mauterstock. In essence, it’s a legal document that gives someone you choose the power to act in your place should you become mentally incapacitated. Note, however, the person with the durable power has unlimited access to your finances. So make sure the person with the durable power sends copies of all transactions, as well as duplicate banking, investment and credit card statements, to your financial team each month. Martin said powers of attorney are useful and important tools but can be misused. “Only execute a power of attorney after consulting with an attorney and only appoint someone you trust completely,” she said. “Beware of gifting clauses in power of attorney documents. You can and often should limit the power you give your agent. Grant no more authority than is needed.”

INVOLVE YOUR FINANCIAL TEAM IN YOUR AFFAIRS

“The most important thing elders can do to address elder financial abuse is to involve multiple parties in helping them manage their financial affairs,” said Walter White, president and chief executive officer of Allianz Life Insurance Company of North America. “Having a third party involved can provide an additional layer of oversight, providing the necessary checks and balances that can help identify potential problems before they happen.” Read Allianz Life’s 2016 Safeguarding Our Seniors Study. Others agree. “Financial advisers can be very helpful,” said Robert Mauterstock, author of Passing the Torch, Critical Conversations With Your Adult Children. “They often can notice if money is being withdrawn from client’s accounts surreptitiously.” For her part, Martin also recommends building relationships with the professionals who advise you or handle your money, such as

Got questions about money? Email Bob at rpowell@allthingsretirement.com.

Lack of young home buyers fuels wealth gap Housing values soar, but renters haven’t shared in the windfall Jeff Reeves

Special for USA TODAY

It’s a tale that has been told over and over — Millennials just aren’t buying homes and instead are sticking to renting. The absence of Millennial home buyers is a big story for the economy, because housing sales and construction are big drivers of jobs. But it’s also an equally big story for the personal finances of Millennials, who are missing out on the real estate wealth that bolstered the balance sheets of previous generations. “The most impactful contributor to consumer wealth since the great financial crisis has been growth in home equity,” said Brad Friedlander, managing partner at Angel Oak Capital Advisors. “Similarly, there has been a growing wealth gap between homeowners and renters, largely due to home equity.” According to the Federal Reserve, U.S. owners held more than $12.7 billion in home equity at the end of the second quarter of 2016. That’s the highest since the end of 2006, before the housing bubble burst, and more than dou-

TO RENT OR NOT TO RENT Costs associated with both renting and homeownership have been soaring since the 1980s. Ownership became 10% more expensive than renting, compared with their relative costs in 1982. They are now even, indicating high demand for rental properties. Consumer Price Index for:

Owner equivalent rent of primary residence Rent of primary residence

300

282.5

$13.4 trillion Q1 2006

$15.0

$13.0 trillion Q3 2016

$12.0 $9.0

250

282.1

200 150

OWNERS’ EQUITY IN REAL ESTATE U.S. owners held more than $13.0 trillion in home equity in the third quarter of 2016. That’s the highest level since the start of 2006, before the housing bubble burst. Equity in trillions1:

$6.0 $3.0

100.6

100

$0 ’00 ’01 ’02 ’03 ’04 ’05 ’06 ’07 ’08 ’09 ’10 ’11 ’12 ’13 ’14 ’15 ’16

50 98.0

’83 ’85

’90

’95

’00

’05

’10

’15

NOTE 1983 index number as of Jan. 1; 2015 as of Feb. 1 SOURCE Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

GEORGE PETRAS, USA TODAY ble the crisis-era low of just under $6 billion in home equity. In other words, housing values have soared, but renters haven’t shared in the wealth. Worse still, consider that as the economy recovered around 2010, rents have climbed steadily. The typical renter is now paying about 20% more than in September 2010. This trend comes at a time when median household incomes remain below 2007 levels, which means the dip in homeownership rates couldn’t have been timed

worse for Millennial finances. And without home equity to bolster their balance sheets, these younger Americans are significantly behind older generations — in homeownership and its associated financial security. HOPE FOR YOUNG HOME BUYERS

However, it doesn’t have to stay that way. Millennials still have the opportunity to tap into the housing market’s potential. While underwriting standards are indeed stricter than prior years,

1 — Quarterly amounts, not seasonally adjusted SOURCE Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis GEORGE PETRAS, USA TODAY

“some people could qualify for a mortgage who don’t even try,” said Lawrence Yun, chief economist at the National Association of Realtors. Yun points to FHA mortgage products that require only 3.5% down, just $8,750 payment toward a $250,000 mortgage, as well as interest rates near historic lows that reduce the cost of borrowing significantly. If young home buyers embrace the idea of a “starter home” as previous generations have instead of simply lamenting how

their dream home is out of reach, they often will have ample opportunity to enter the market, Yun said. “Maybe they need to lower their expectations of what that first home should be or settle for a smaller home in a different neighborhood,” he said. If they do, these young home buyers can build equity over time. “The last few years have been an opportunity to make equity and grow wealth, but it’s not too late for Millennials,” Friedlander said.


L awrence J ournal -W orld

Sunday, January 15, 2017

Man bitter over ex-wife’s betrayal needs to let go Dear Annie: My wife and I were married 17 years ago, and although we did divorce, we still remained on friendly terms. Recently, however, she made the mistake of accidentally letting me know she had called her ex-husband (whom she married before me) for advice on something. Then she admitted that through all these years, she has remained in contact with her ex-husband — calling him and, when visitin g her daughter’s home, meeting up with him. She said she maintains this for the sake of her kids (the youngest is in his early 30s) and she doesn’t see the big deal of it or why it should bother me. If I don’t like it, too bad. She saw him again this Christmas, and once again, I got to spend it alone. It bothers me that

Dear Annie

Annie Lane

dearannie@creators.com

she betrayed me, keeping their relationship a total secret all these years and then telling me it was none of my business, even when we were married. She has always done what she wants and gotten whatever she wants, and I have had to accept it because I loved her so. Am I wrong to feel the way I do? Should I just ignore the pain I feel inside and go on as if nothing happened? I’m ready to wash my hands of her

Jude Law stars as the Pope Are HBO viewers ready for “The Young Pope” (8 p.m., TVMA)? This 10-part limited series stars Jude Law in the title role. He’s Pope Pius XIII, both young and American to boot, a mystery to the College of Cardinals who just elected him and to just about everybody else. Diane Keaton stars as American nun Sister Mary, the woman who raised the new pope and his brother, now a cardinal, from childhood. Their mysterious parents left them with Mary and her order after leaving a hippie commune for Venice. ‘ ‘ T h e Y o u n g Pope’’ is directed by Paolo Sorrentino, whose 2013 film ‘‘The Great Beauty’’ was highly anticipated, rapturously reviewed and won the Oscar for best foreign film. I found it beautiful, but more like a painting than a film — easier to look at than watch and frequently dull. Not unlike ‘‘The Young Pope.’’ The series ekes some humor out of the confusion and consternation of the international College of Cardinals, who don’t know what to make of the mysterious and increasingly arrogant American. But its sly subtlety may be lost on those seeking entertainment. Law makes the most of his difficult character. But that doesn’t make him any easier to endure. Things move rather slowly in Vatican City and on ‘‘The Young Pope.’’ We see Pius giving his inaugural address in the opening moments. But then, we are assured, that this is only a fantasy. Not to give too much away, but he doesn’t give the real speech until the end of the second episode (seen Monday night). I’m not sure many will stick around to hear it. The makers of ‘‘The Young Pope’’ have forgotten that watching paint dry does not make for compelling television — even when that paint is on the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel. Tonight’s other highlights O Scheduled on “60 Minutes” (6 p.m., CBS): an hourlong retrospective on the Obama administration. O Secrets emerge on the season finale of ‘‘Sherlock’’ on “Masterpiece” (6 p.m., PBS, TV-14, check local listings). O Mr. Burns takes on a musical mogul on the first one-hour episode of “The Simpsons” (7 p.m., Fox, TV-PG). O “The Real Mad Men of Advertising” (8 p.m., Smithsonian) recalls the 1960s. O “The Rolling Stones — Ole, Ole, Ole! A Trip Across Latin America” (8 p.m., Starz) captures the band playing a 2016 concert in Havana, Cuba. O Africa becomes the center of competing Chinese-American diplomacy on “Madam Secretary” (8 p.m., CBS, TV-14). O “First Family of Hip Hop” (8 p.m., Bravo, TV-14) recalls the founders of Sugarhill Records. Copyright 2017 United Feature Syndicate, distributed by Universal Uclick.

entirely. Please, I need some type of answer. — Betrayal Dear Betrayal: There’s no use crying over spilled milk, especially if it’s milk that’s long been sour. Why torture yourself thinking about things your ex-wife may have done? Yes, there should be no secrets between spouses, and she should have disclosed her contact with her previous husband to you back then. I’ll grant you that. But she is your exwife now, and clinging to anger at her is about as useful as shooting yourself in the foot. You’re holding yourself hostage to bitterness and pain. Set yourself free. Dear Annie: You were right to urge ‘‘Krissy Kringle’’ to go to her new boyfriend’s office party even though his

JACQUELINE BIGAR’S STARS

For Sunday, Jan. 15: This year you open up to many new ideas, and you also see an increase in your awareness. In fact, you become more intuitive than in the recent past. You seem to know what is going to happen before it takes place. If you are single, you could meet someone who seems too good to be true. If you are attached, the two of you connect on both a mental and an emotional level, where you don’t even need to use words. 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) +++ Listen carefully to feedback, but also make sure you pace yourself. Tonight: In the limelight. Taurus (April 20-May 20) +++++ Your creativity will surge to great heights, as long as you don’t hold back. Tonight: Let go of concerns, and have more fun. Gemini (May 21-June 20) +++ A family matter could become the focal point of your plans. Tonight: Out to dinner. Cancer (June 21-July 22) ++++ Remember that you need to relax and have fun once in a while. Tonight: Speak your mind. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) ++++ You smile, and others can’t help but catch some of your positive energy. Tonight: Treat a friend.

lawyer colleagues are ‘‘serious, rude and unpleasant.’’ You might have suggested that she think about some topics of conversation in advance. Her boyfriend could have given her some basic information about the people who were going to be there. Nothing creepily private — just some basics. By cheerfully saying some simple things, she could have mildly flattered them and opened avenues of conversation. For example, ‘‘Oh, you are one of the firm’s founders? What was it like in the beginning?’’ ‘‘Oh, you and your wife are from Minnesota? My father’s family is from there.’’ — Friendly Lawyer in Idaho — Send your questions for Annie Lane to dearannie@ creators.com.

jacquelinebigar.com

Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) ++++ You have a style that draws many people toward you, especially right now. Tonight: Your call. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ++++ You might need some time to reflect on a goal to see whether it is still viable for you. Tonight: Avoid a difficult friend. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) ++++ You could see a personal matter very differently from how your friends see it. Tonight: Where crowds can be found. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) +++ You’ll need to bend when dealing with an authority figure. It really is this person’s way or the highway. Tonight: Bring others together for dinner. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) +++++ Make calls to those you care about who don’t live close to you. Tonight: Off to a concert. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) +++++ One-on-one relating draws many different people toward you. Tonight: Keep conversations on a one-on-one level. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) ++++ You will try to express certain thoughts, but others might not be hearing you clearly. Tonight: Go along with someone else’s plans.

| 5B

UNIVERSAL CROSSWORD Universal Crossword Edited by Timothy Parker January 15, 2017 ACROSS 1 Brown with a tinge of red 6 Broccoli portion 11 Make lacework 14 Express one’s viewpoint 15 Raymond’s mom on TV 16 Wish some things undone 17 Things checked by HR departments 19 “We ___ the Champions” 20 June bug, for one 21 Type of nut 23 Country wholly within another 26 Animal with bars or business? 27 Business tycoons 28 Large, in a fancy coffee shop 30 Go ___ great length 31 People of action 32 Tank for those about to dye 35 It finishes Fond du in Wisconsin 36 King Arthur’s cup 38 Tokyo’s old capital 39 Make an inquiry 40 Joe Flacco at work 41 Oft-quoted mysterious author 42 Word derived from someone’s name

1/15

44 Radiant beauty, to the Queen of England 46 It gives you an out 48 Exploits or abuses 49 Some members of Indian royalty 50 Reptile that resembles a crocodile 52 They go down the tubes 53 Certain beer mixture 58 Min. fraction 59 Home with an incredible view? 60 Put an end to 61 Deer’s cousin 62 Wind instruments 63 Go off, as a volcano DOWN 1 Boo-hoo activity 2 Smog measurers 3 Little photo? 4 Smear tactic in psychology? 5 Crete’s sea 6 Clunked upside the head, biblically 7 Newman of Hollywood 8 Graceful sea eagle 9 Assistance 10 An automatic “You’re welcome,” for one 11 Dashes and vaults, among others 12 Personal, invisible emanations

13 “Weeny” go-with 18 Shows off an engine’s power 22 Decide not to continue 23 Severe, dreaded virus 24 Some informal grandmothers 25 First-rate or top-of-the-line 26 Chagall or Maron 28 Artificial human of Jewish folklore 29 Thing gripped by a jockey 31 Guy in a band with Micky, Peter and Michael 33 Love very, very, very much 34 Musical sound qualities 36 What an NFL kicker needs to kick over

37 Brinker, the dude with the silver skates 41 Break into parts or pieces, with “tear” 43 It’s a green tail on a chick? 44 Bean appreciated in Peru? 45 Income from wealth 46 Gnawed around the edges 47 Attentiongetter in court 48 Rock concert musts 50 It can get intensive in a hospital 51 The red of litmus tests 54 Superhero creator Stan 55 Greek “T” 56 Type of snake that killed Cleopatra 57 It can capture a monarch

PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER

1/14 © 2017 Andrews McMeel Syndication www.upuzzles.com

ACK ATTACK By Timothy E. Parker

— The astrological forecast should be read for entertainment only.

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6B

|

Sunday, January 15, 2017

LAWRENCE

.

DEATHS GEORGE ARTHUR CAMPBELL Memorial services for George Campbell will be at 2 pm Friday at First United Methodist Church Downtown. A visitation will follow the service. A full obituary may be seen at rumsey­yost.com

Housing Authority seeks desk worker Agency: LawrenceDouglas County Housing Authority Contact: Haleigh E. Koca at hkoca@ldcha.org or at 832-1692 The Lawrence-Douglas County Housing Authority is responsible for the operations and management of public housing units in the Lawrence area. One of the housing units, Babcock Place, is looking for a volunteer to work at its front desk and answer questions or chat with the seniors who live there. The front desk area is always staffed by several workers, so the volunteer will not be alone. Help is needed between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. Call 832-1692 or stop by 1700 Massachusetts St. to learn more.

CECILE ORALEE JACOBS Services for Cecile, 69, Lawrence will be held at 2 p.m. Sat., Jan. 21st at Warren­McElwain Mortuary. She died Jan. 9th in Lawrence. For Cecile's full obituary go to warrenmcelain.com.

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Assist with chores Community Village of Lawrence helps neighbors remain in their homes as they age by creating a network of support to make aging at home a long-term, affordable option. Community Village Lawrence is looking for volunteers to assist members with simple household tasks, includ-

ing laundry, housekeeping, organizing and basic handyman services. Volunteers can set their own schedules and respond to requests on an as-needed basis. Contact Heather Cook at info@communityvillagelawrence.org or call 505-0187.

Cooking class manager Just Food and its partners fight hunger by increasing the availability of a variety of foods while reducing waste from discarded food. Just Food is looking for a volunteer to serve as its Just Cook Program Manager to help coordinate a volunteer-staffed learning program that delivers hands-on cooking and nutrition education to low-income community members in the Douglas County area, including Lawrence, Baldwin City, Eudora and Lecompton. The program manager will support the implementation of Just Cook programming in the Douglas County area under the direction

of the program director. They will manage the classroom, secure needed class materials and support other volunteers and class participants, and will also track program activities through interviews, photographs and videos for quarterly program reports. For more information, contact Aundrea Shafer at programs@justfoodks. org.

Be a STEM mentor The Boys & Girls Club of Lawrence provides before- and after-school programming to over 1,500 children at 15 sites across Lawrence. The Boys & Girls Club is looking for volunteers to serve as science, technology, engineering and math mentors. STEM mentors help plan, implement and promote STEM activities, events and programs after school for children and youth. Contact volunteer@ bgclk.org or 243-8781 for more information. Help Visiting Nurses Visiting Nurses Association provides hospice care, home health care, rehabilitation care and

private duty care. The agency is looking for volunteers for a variety of tasks. Patient companions are needed to work directly with patients and families by providing companionship for patients and/or respite for their primary caregivers in home settings or care facilities once a week. Help is needed with CareCuts, which provides simple haircuts to hospice patients unable to leave their homes. Massage therapists are needed to provide simple, light massage (no massage table or chair needed) to hospice patients. Musical volunteers can share their talents with clients at care facilities one-on-one or as a group activity. No medical knowledge is required, and mandatory hospice training will be provided. Contact Sarah Rooney at sarahro@kansasvna.org or 843-3738. — For more volunteer opportunities, go to volunteerdouglascounty.org or contact Shelly Hornbaker at the United Way Roger Hill Volunteer Center at 785-8655030, ext. 301, or at volunteer@unitedwaydgco.org.

DATEBOOK

workout, 6 a.m., Community Building, 115 W. LAWRENCE CITY COMMISSION Hydraulic Fracturing 11th St. and Seismic Activity Agenda highlights • 5:45 p.m. Tuesday • City Hall, Lawrence Breakfast with Rex Buchanan, Sixth and Massachusetts streets • WOW! Channel Optimists, 7-8 a.m., Don’t be shy — we retired director of Kan25 • Meeting documents online at lawrenceks.org Brandon Woods Smith want to publish your sas Geological Society, Center, 4730 Brandon event. Submit your 9:40-10:45 a.m., First Woods Terrace. Street and adopt on first item for our calendar Consent Agenda: Presbyterian Church, reading, Ordinance Number Kaw Valley Quilters • Approve City by emailing date2415 Clinton Parkway. 9326 establishing a multiGuild Meeting, 9:30 a.m., Commission meeting minbook@ljworld.com at Marla Quilts lecture: way stop at the intersection Plymouth Congregational utes from 01/09/17. of 21st Street and Tennessee Marla Rogers Martin and least 48 hours before • Approve all claims. Church, 925 Vermont St. Street. your event. the Haskell Connection, • Approve licenses as Tech Drop-in, 11 a.m.d) To deny the request to 1 p.m., Lawrence Public recommended by the City establish no right turn 7-9 am To become a noon, Lawrence Public Clerk’s Office. Library, 707 Vermont St. and 3-6 pm Monday-Friday Weekend Kickoff Library Meeting Room C, • Bid and purchase items: Lawrence Bead on westbound 15th Street Datebook Sponsor 707 Vermont St. a) Set bid date of Society, 2-5 p.m. Lawat Elmwood Street, Summit February 28 for Phase 2 of and to boost your Prairie Acres Garden Street, Prospect Avenue, rence Public Library, 707 the Lawrence Solid Waste events further, email Club: Sunrise Project, 1 Prairie Avenue, Brook Street Vermont St. Facility at 2215 Kresge Road. datebook@ljworld. p.m., Deal Six Auditorium, and Maple Lane b) Set a bid openThe Lawrence Motet e) To establish a 20mph com for cost-saving Douglas County Fairing date of February 7 for Singers and Saxophonia speed limit on East Glenn multimedia Dategrounds, 1501 Learned hourly rate and unit priced Saxophone Ensemble, Drive between Harper Street contractual services for book campaigns. Ave. and Maple Lane and adopt 5-6:30 p.m., First United the Parks and Recreation Parkinson’s Support on first reading, Ordinance Find more inforMethodist Church, 946 Department. Group, 2-3:30 p.m., First Number 9327 establishing a c) Approve the purmation about these Vermont St. 20mph speed limit on East Presbyterian Church, chase of two (2) skid steer events, and more Old Time Fiddle Glenn Drive between Harper 2415 Clinton Parkway. loaders, combination buckevent listings, at Tunes Potluck and Jam, Street and Maple Lane. Douglas County ets, and mill attachments f) To deny the request ljworld.com/ 6-9 p.m., Americana utilizing the Kansas State Heritage Conservation for no parking along one events. Music Academy, 1419 contract 39908, from Clark Council Natural & Culside of Kensington Road Massachusetts St. Equipment Company DBA between 25th Terrace and tural Grant Info Session, Bobcat Company, in the Gospel Music Cel27th Street 3:30 p.m., Lawrence Public amount of $127.806.25. ebration, 6:30 p.m., Free • Receive public comLibrary Meeting Room A, d) Authorize the City ment Lawrence Senior Center, Methodist Church, 3001 Manager to execute an 707 Vermont St. 745 Vermont St. Lawrence Ave. Engineering Services Regular agenda: Spring 2017 ConvocaMartin Luther King, Dad and Me Open Agreement, in the amount • Conduct a public heartion Keynote Speaker: of $236,056 with George Gymnastics, 7-8:30 p.m., Jr. Candlelight Vigil, ing to consider a vacation Mr. Bart Stevens, 4 Butler Associated, Inc. 4:30 p.m. University of Lawrence Gymnastic request submitted by Grob p.m., Haskell Auditorium, (GBA) for Project UT1703 Engineering Services, LLC, Academy, 4930 Legends Kansas, Strong Hall, 1450 City of Lawrence 2017 Flow Haskell Indian Nations for Sheng C. Cheng and Xian Dr. Jayhawk Blvd., proceed Monitoring Program. University, 155 Indian Y. Chi to vacate the east on foot to Kansas Union 6. Adopt on first read10 feet of Colorado Street Ave. ing, Ordinance No. 9328, Ballroom, 1301 Jayhawk right-of-way adjacent to 16 MONDAY Lawrence City Comamending the Building Code Blvd. Lots 16, 17, 18, 19, 20 and 21, In observance of Martin mission meeting, 5:45 to require storm shelters Olmstead Subdivision of the Take Off Pounds Senfor new K-12 educational Luther King Jr. Day: p.m., City Hall, 6 E. Sixth east half of Block 47, aka sibly (TOPS), 5:30 p.m., and new critical emergency City offices will be St. 530 Colorado Street. 2712 Pebble Lane. operations facilities, and • City Auditor will presclosed. Books & Babies, Run for the HILL of Ordinance No. 9329, to ent the report “Clear Goals Parking meters in 6-6:30 p.m., Lawrence amend the Existing Building it: A women’s running and Plans for Data Collection downtown Lawrence will Public Library Readers’ code to require storm shelCould Strengthen Law group, 6 p.m., Ad Astra be free. Theater, 707 Vermont St. ters for significantly expand- Enforcement Responses to Running, 734 Massachued K-12 educational facilities. People with Mental Illness. The Lawrence TranMaker Meet-Up, 6:30 setts St. 7. Adopt Resolution No. • City Auditor will pressit System T and TLift p.m., Lawrence Creates Kaw Valley Quilters 7185 and Resolution No. ent the audit recommendabuses will operate regular Makerspace, 512 E. Ninth 7188, resolutions of support Guild Meeting, 7 p.m., tion follow-up memo. schedules. St. for low income housing tax Plymouth Congregational • Consider motion to Huntington’s Disease credit applications for the recess into executive session Church, 925 Vermont St. Penn Lofts project, located at for a total of 75 minutes; the Civil Rights Activism Support Group, 7 p.m., Film: Fast Break with 800 Pennsylvania Street and Art Showcase, 9 a.m.- 6 Conference Room D purposes of the executive Kevin Willmott, 7-8:30 the Delaware Coop project, session are (1) to consult for p.m. daily through Jan. South, Lawrence Memolocated at 716 E. 9th Street. p.m., Lawrence Public approximately 55 minutes 22, Kansas Union Gallery, rial Hospital, 325 Maine 8. Concur with the folLibrary Auditorium, 707 with attorneys for the City 1301 Jayhawk Blvd. St. lowing recommendations about matters deemed priviVermont St. from the Traffic Safety Ongoing: Lynn Poets Celebrate Willeged in the attorney-client Argentine Tango Commission: Metzger Oil Paintings, liam Stafford and his relationship in order to keep Práctica, 8-10 p.m., a) To deny the request attorney-client matters consecond floor, Douglas Words, 7-9 p.m., Main for traffic calming on Signs of Life Bookstore fidential; and (2) to discuss County Courthouse, 1100 Auditorium, Lawrence Arkansas Street between and Art Gallery, 722 Masfor approximately 20 minutes Massachusetts St. Public Library, 707 Ver24th Street and 27th Street non-elected personnel matsachusetts St. Free; no John Svoboda: Clasmont St. b) To establish trafters in order to protect the partner necessary. fic calming on 3rd Street sical Guitarist, noon-1 privacy of the non-elected between Lyon Street and personnel involved. At the p.m., Z’s Devine Expres18 WEDNESDAY North Street. end of the executive session, so, 10 E. Ninth St. c) To establish a multiRed Dog’s Dog Days the City Commission will 17 TUESDAY Caregiver Supway stop at the intersection resume its regular meeting in workout, 6 a.m., Rock Red Dog’s Dog Days port Group, 2:15 p.m., of 21st Street and Tennessee the City Commission Room.

15 TODAY

Every life is worth celebrating

SUBMIT YOUR STUFF

843-1120

Chalk Sports Pavilion, 100 Rock Chalk Lane. Books & Babies, 9:30-10 a.m. and 10:3011 a.m., Lawrence Public Library Readers’ Theater, 707 Vermont St. Teen Zone Expanded (grades 6-12), 2-5 p.m., Lawrence Public Library Teen Zone, 707 Vermont St. Douglas County Kansas Heritage Consesrvation Council Natural & Cultural Grant Info Session, 3:30 p.m., Lawrence Public Library, meeting room A, 707 Vermont St. Douglas County Commission meeting, 4 p.m., Douglas County Courthouse, 1100 Massachusetts St. American Legion Bingo, doors open 4:30 p.m., first games 6:45 p.m., American Legion Post No. 14, 3408 W. Sixth St. Green Drinks Lawrence: Environmenal Network, 5-7 p.m., Merchant’s Pub & Plate, 746 Massachusetts St. Yoga at Your Library, 5:30-6:30 p.m., Lawrence Public Library Auditorium, 707 Vermont St. National Alliance on Mental Illness-Douglas County support group, 6-7 p.m., Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St. INSIGHT ArtTalk: Richard Gwin and Mike Yoder, 7 p.m., Lawrence Arts Center, 940 New Hampshire St.

19 THURSDAY

Red Dog’s Dog Days workout, 6 a.m., Community Building, 115 W. 11th St. Toddler Storytime, 9:30-10 a.m. and 10:3011 a.m., Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St.

DON’T MISS ON SATURDAY: Boot Camp for New Dads, 9 a.m.-noon Saturday, Lawrence Memorial Hospital, 325 Maine St.

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PATRIOTS, FALCONS WIN IN NFL PLAYOFFS. 3C

Sports

C

Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com/sports l Sunday, January 15, 2017

KANSAS 87, OKLAHOMA STATE 80

PAST THE ’POKES

Kansas survives OSU’s upset bid

By Matt Tait mtait@ljworld.com

Fans, critics and analysts alike, have been saying all season that the time would come when the Kansas men’s basketball team would not shoot the ball well from the outside and would not be able to rely on the 3-point shot to bury an opponent. That game arrived on Saturday afternoon at Allen Fieldhouse, but the result remained He is so the same. competiDepsite s h o o t i n g tive and just 5-of- he just 20 from 3 - p o i n t seems range, the to make Jayhawks plays.” prevailed, 8 7 - 8 0 , over a — KU coach Bill s c r a p p y Self, on Frank O k l a h o - Mason III ma State squad. And senior point guard Frank Mason III, as has come to be expected, was a big reason for it. But it wasn’t Mason’s smooth stroke or eyepopping 3-point percentage that led Kansas to a 16th-consecutive victory and the brink of becoming the No. 1-ranked team in the nation. Instead, it was his heart. “I thought Frank was really good defensively today, but, offensively, that’s about as average as he’s been because he didn’t make shots,” said KU coach Bill Self of his point guard who finished 6-of-16 from the floor, but still tallied a team-high 22 points. “Usually, if he gets four good looks he makes three. We get pretty spoiled. And today he made just one. But he gets the ball where it needs to go. “I can get onto him and he can frustrate me and all this stuff, but I’m not gonna take him for granted.... He is so competitive and he just seems to make plays. I thought today he was average, but he competed hard.” And it took every ounce of sweat, each defensive

Nick Krug/Journal-World Photo

KANSAS GUARD FRANK MASON III (0) GETS PAST OKLAHOMA STATE FORWARD Mitchell Solomon (41) for a bucket during the second half of the Jayhawks’ 87-80 victory Saturday in Allen Fieldhouse. For more photos, please visit: www.kusports.com.

OSU coach likes KU’s toughness In preparation for his first trip to Allen Fieldhouse as a head coach, Oklahoma State’s Brad Underwood got right to the essence of what makes Kansas such a tough team when he wrote one word next to Josh Jackson’s name on the scouting report: “Dog.” After the final buzzer sounded on the Jayhawks’ 87-80 victory that pushed their Allen Fieldhouse winning streak to 49 games Saturday, Underwood told Frank Mason III more than congratulations. He told him, “If it ended today he’d be the national player of the year. He refuses to let

Tom Keegan tkeegan@ljworld.com

them lose. It’s both ends of the court.” Again, Underwood went canine, the ultimate compliment from basketball coaches, in describing Mason. “I’ve watched Frank for four years and with that bulldog mentality, he’s getting that thing

Nick Krug/Journal-World Photo

KANSAS GUARD JOSH JACKSON (11) TOSSES UP A SHOT after losing his footing. At left in > KEEGAN, 4C Oklahoma State guard Davon Dillard.

> JAYHAWKS, 4C

Chiefs aim to get even against Steelers By Dave Skretta AP Sports Writer

Kansas City, Mo. — Alex Smith endured watching film of the Kansas City Chiefs’ meltdown in Pittsburgh earlier this season “a bunch of times” this week, still trying to figure out where everything went wrong. As if he hasn’t relived it enough in his nightmares. Ben Roethlisberger

threw five touchdown passes. Le’Veon Bell starred in his return from a three-game suspension. The Steelers scored 22 first-quarter points, led 36-0 before the Chiefs finally scored and they proceeded to defeat the eventual AFC West champions 43-14 that October night. “It’s been a long time,” Smith said, “so they’ve changed. Over the course

of the season, they’ve progressed and gone a certain direction. There’s a lot they change weekto-week as well.” But the Chiefs (12-4) are a different team, too. Wide receiver Tyreek Hill has made a name for himself as one of the NFL’s most dynamic rookies, going from special-teams standout to offensive difference-maker. Top pass rusher Justin

Houston is also expected to be available after missing the first meeting while recovering from knee surgery. Oh, and this matchup with the Steelers (12-5) will be at loud Arrowhead Stadium rather than Heinz Field, and a spot in the AFC title game awaits the winner. “We got embarrassed in the first meeting,” Chiefs center Mitch

Morse said, “and we had to come back and kind of take a step back and realize, ‘We’re a good football team.’ We had to understand where we were. We learned a lot from that game and we were able to take the next step.” Indeed, the Chiefs ripped off five straight wins after that loss in Pittsburgh, a stretch that turned around their season.

They wound up overtaking Oakland for the division title on the final day of the regular season, earning a first-round bye and a home playoff game. The Steelers basically had a bye, too: They routed Miami last weekend to advance. “I think a postseason challenge on the road is one thing,” Steelers coach

> CHIEFS, 3C


Sports 2

2C | LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD | SUNDAY, JANUARY 15, 2017

AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE

TWO-DAY

SPORTS CALENDAR NORTH

EAST

KANSAS

TODAY • Women’s basketball vs. Baylor, 1 p.m. MONDAY • Men’s basketball at Iowa State, 8 p.m.

College Basketball Roundup The Associated Press

Big 12 No. 1 Baylor 77, No. 25 Kansas State 68 Manhattan — Manu Lecomte scored 26 points after battling early foul trouble, Ish Wainright and Al Freeman had key baskets down the stretch and topranked Baylor outlasted No. 25 Kansas State on Saturday. BAYLOR (16-1) Motley 3-8 1-2 7, Lual-Acuil 3-10 0-0 6, Freeman 4-6 5-7 15, Lecomte 8-13 6-7 26, Wainright 6-10 0-0 15, Omot 0-1 0-0 0, Maston 2-2 2-3 6, Lindsey 1-5 0-0 2, McClure 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 27-56 14-19 77. KANSAS ST. (13-4) Iwundu 1-9 3-6 6, Wade 2-5 0-0 5, Johnson 9-13 2-3 20, Stokes 2-8 4-4 10, Brown 3-7 5-6 13, Sneed 4-7 2-2 12, Maurice 1-2 0-0 2, Ervin 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 22-51 16-21 68. Halftime-Baylor 31-30. 3-Point Goals-Baylor 9-20 (Lecomte 4-6, Wainright 3-7, Freeman 2-3, Omot 0-1, Motley 0-1, Lindsey 0-1, McClure 0-1), Kansas St. 8-23 (Sneed 2-3, Brown 2-6, Stokes 2-7, Wade 1-2, Iwundu 1-4, Maurice 0-1). Fouled Out-Motley. Rebounds-Baylor 31 (Lual-Acuil 12), Kansas St. 23 (Brown, Iwundu, Maurice 5). Assists-Baylor 14 (Freeman 5), Kansas St. 19 (Iwundu 6). Total Fouls-Baylor 21, Kansas St. 19.

No. 10 West Virginia 74, Texas 72 Austin, Texas — Teyvon Myers scored 16 points and West Virginia avoided one of the bigger upsets of the Big 12 season so far with a close win against short-handed Texas. WEST VIRGINIA (15-2) Ahmad 0-2 4-6 4, Watkins 1-2 0-0 2, Adrian 2-3 3-4 8, Carter 5-9 5-6 15, Miles 3-11 1-1 7, Konate 1-2 1-2 3, Macon 0-0 0-0 0, Bender 1-2 0-0 2, West 1-2 0-0 3, Myers 4-9 7-10 16, Phillip 6-10 1-3 14. Totals 24-52 22-32 74. TEXAS (7-10) Cleare 6-9 0-0 12, Allen 6-7 7-8 19, Roach 3-8 4-7 11, Young 2-6 2-2 8, Davis 1-4 2-2 5, Banks 0-0 0-0 0, Jones 5-13 3-4 17, Isom 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 23-48 18-23 72. Halftime-West Virginia 39-34. 3-Point GoalsWest Virginia 4-18 (Adrian 1-1, West 1-2, Myers 1-3, Phillip 1-3, Carter 0-3, Miles 0-6), Texas 8-22 (Jones 4-9, Young 2-4, Roach 1-4, Davis 1-4, Isom 0-1). Fouled Out-Jones. ReboundsWest Virginia 28 (Adrian 6), Texas 25 (Allen 7). Assists-West Virginia 6 (Carter 3), Texas 12 (Roach 5). Total Fouls-West Virginia 21, Texas 23.

2-9 5-6 10, Odomes 9-14 6-7 24, Woodard 6-13 14-14 27, Cole 0-0 0-0 0, Doolittle 2-6 3-6 8, Freeman 0-0 0-0 0, McNeace 0-0 1-2 1, StrongMoore 1-2 0-0 3, James 0-2 1-2 1. Totals 25-56 30-37 84. Halftime-Oklahoma 41-35. 3-Point GoalsTexas Tech 6-25 (Livingston 3-9, Evans 2-3, Smith 1-2, Stevenson 0-1, Brandsma 0-1, Temple 0-1, Thomas 0-3, Ross 0-5), Oklahoma 4-14 (Doolittle 1-1, Strong-Moore 1-2, McGusty 1-3, Woodard 1-5, Odomes 0-1, James 0-2). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-Texas Tech 27 (Smith 8), Oklahoma 37 (Odomes 8). AssistsTexas Tech 12 (Thomas 4), Oklahoma 11 (Odomes 4). Total Fouls-Texas Tech 24, Oklahoma 17.

Top 25

No. 3 Villanova 70, No. 8 Creighton 101, St. John’s 57 Truman State 69 New York — Redshirt freshOmaha, Neb. — Marcus Fosman Dante DiVincenzo had a ter scored 21 points. season-high 19 points.

No. 19 Virginia 77, Clemson 73 Clemson, S.C. — London Perrantes scored a season-high 25 points. VIRGINIA (13-3) Wilkins 4-7 0-0 8, Salt 1-1 0-2 2, Perrantes 8-15 5-5 25, Shayok 8-14 0-0 17, Hall 2-3 3-4 9, Reuter 0-1 0-0 0, Diakite 0-0 1-2 1, Guy 2-4 0-0 6, Thompson 3-4 0-0 7, Jerome 1-1 0-0 2. Totals 29-50 9-13 77. CLEMSON (11-6) Blossomgame AL EAST10-14 2-3 22, Grantham 1-5 0-0 3, Djitte 0-0 0-0 0, Mitchell 3-5 0-1 7, Holmes 4-6 5-6 15, Thomas 4-8 1-4 9, DeVoe 6-13 0-0 15, Reed 0-3 2-2 2, Hudson 0-2 0-0 0. Totals 28-56 10-16 73. BOSTON RED SOX BALTIMORE ORIOLES Halftime-36-36. 3-Point Goals-Virginia 10-18 CENTRAL (PerrantesAL 4-8, Hall 2-2, Guy 2-3, Thompson 1-2, Shayok 1-3), Clemson 7-19 (DeVoe 3-8, Holmes 2-3, Mitchell 1-2, Grantham 1-4, Blossomgame 0-1, Reed 0-1). Fouled Out-Salt. Rebounds-Virginia 29 (Wilkins 13), Clemson CHICAGO WHITE SOX CLEVELAND INDIANS 23 (DeVoe, Blossomgame 6). Assists-Virginia AL WEST 9 (Thompson, Perrantes, Wilkins, Shayok 2), Clemson 13 (DeVoe 5). Total Fouls-Virginia 17, Clemson 13. A-9,000 (10,000).

and six rebounds.

UCLA (18-1) Leaf 5-11 1-2 12, Welsh 6-7 4-4 16, Ball 7-12 0-0 17, Alford 6-12 0-1 15, Hamilton 3-10 0-2 7, Goloman 0-0 0-0 0, Anigbogu 1-3 0-0 2, Holiday 5-13 3-4 14. Totals 33-68 8-13 83. UTAH (12-5) Kuzma 7-14 0-0 15, Collette 4-7 3-5 11, Daniels 7-13 0-0 15, Zamora 2-5 0-0 5, Bonam 9-14 0-0 19, Rawson 0-2 0-0 0, Johnson 2-2 0-0 4, Van Dyke 0-0 0-0 0, Barefield 5-10 0-1 13. Totals 36-67 3-6 82. Halftime-UCLA 42-40. 3-Point Goals-UCLA 9-29 (Ball 3-7, Alford 3-7, Leaf 1-2, Holiday 1-6, Hamilton 1-7), Utah 7-22 (Barefield 3-5, Daniels 1-3, Zamora 1-3, Kuzma 1-4, Bonam 1-5, Rawson 0-2). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-UCLA 32 (Leaf 10), Utah 34 (Kuzma 11). Assists-UCLA 16 (Ball 7), Utah 18 (Kuzma 6). Total Fouls-UCLA 13, Utah 13. A-15,027 (15,000).

AUBURN (11-6) Wiley 3-4 0-0 6, Heron 4-11 2-6 11, Dunans 10-20 1-2 23, Lang 3-5 0-2 9, Harper 3-7 1-2 8, McLemore 1-2 0-0 2, Smith 0-0 0-0 0, Spencer 2-3 0-0 4, Johnson 1-4 1-3 3, Brown 2-6 0-0 6. Totals 29-62 5-15 72. KENTUCKY (15-2) Gabriel 2-8 0-4 6, Adebayo 4-5 7-11 15, Monk 8-14 4-4 24, Fox 6-11 0-2 13, Briscoe 4-6 0-4 10, Willis 1-3 0-0 2, Humphries 2-2 0-0 4, Hawkins 2-2 1-2 6, Mulder 3-5 5-5 12. Totals 32-56 17-32 92. Halftime-Kentucky 51-39. 3-Point GoalsAuburn 9-16 (Lang 3-4, Dunans 2-3, Brown 2-4, Heron 1-2, Harper 1-3), Kentucky 11-19 (Monk 4-8, Briscoe 2-2, Gabriel 2-3, Hawkins 1-1, Fox 1-2, Mulder 1-3). Fouled Out-Fox, Wiley. Rebounds-Auburn 23 (Spencer 4), Kentucky 37 (Gabriel 16). Assists-Auburn 8 (Johnson 3), Kentucky 19 (Monk 6). Total Fouls-Auburn 31, Kentucky 18.

Oklahoma 84, Texas Tech 75 Norman, Okla. — Jordan Woodard had 27 points and Rashard Odomes scored a career-high 24 as Oklahoma No. 14 Louisville 78, broke a seven-game losing No. 7 Duke 69 streak. Louisville, Ky. — Anas TEXAS TECH (13-4) Mahmoud had 17 points and 11 Smith 7-10 1-1 16, Livingston 4-13 3-3 14, Gray 2-4 0-0 4, Thomas 6-10 0-0 12, Evans 4-8 6-8 16, rebounds, Donovan Mitchell Brandsma 0-1 0-0 0, Ross 4-10 0-0 8, Temple 0-1 added 15 points and Louisville 0-0 0, Stevenson 1-3 0-0 2, Millinghaus 1-1 1-2 3. shot 59 percent in the second Totals 29-61 11-14 75. half. OKLAHOMA (7-9) Buford 0-2 0-0 0, Lattin 5-8 0-0 10, McGusty

No. 11 North Carolina 96, No. 9 Florida State 83 Chapel Hill, N.C. — Joel Berry II scored 26 points. FLORIDA ST. (16-2) Isaac 6-11 3-4 17, Ojo 2-4 0-0 4, Bacon 7-16 1-1 18, Rathan-Mayes 2-6 1-4 6, Mann 4-7 2-4 10, Smith 3-3 1-2 7, Cofer 1-3 0-0 2, Koumadje 0-0 0-0 0, Walker 2-8 1-3 6, Forrest 0-1 3-4 3, Savoy 4-6 0-2 10, Angola-Rodas 0-2 0-2 0. Totals 31-67 12-26 83. NORTH CAROLINA (16-3) Meeks 3-7 0-0 6, Hicks 5-7 12-14 22, Jackson 9-17 1-2 22, Berry 8-19 7-8 26, Williams 1-7 1-4 4, Rohlman 0-0 0-0 0, Maye 1-6 0-0 2, Rush 0-0 0-0 0, Pinson 3-5 5-6 12, Coker 0-0 0-0 0, Britt 1-2 0-0 2, Woods 0-2 0-1 0, White 0-0 0-0 0, Robinson 0-1 0-2 0. Totals 31-73 26-37 96. Halftime-North Carolina 50-41. 3-Point Goals-Florida St. 9-28 (Bacon 3-8, Savoy 2-4, Isaac 2-5, Walker 1-4, Rathan-Mayes 1-4, Forrest 0-1, Angola-Rodas 0-1, Mann 0-1), North Carolina 8-18 (Jackson 3-5, Berry 3-6, Pinson 1-2, Williams 1-4, Maye 0-1). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-Florida St. 34 (Isaac 12), North Carolina 51 (Maye 15). Assists-Florida St. 15 (Rathan-Mayes 6), North Carolina 12 (Hicks, Pinson 3). Total Fouls-Florida St. 27, North Carolina 22.

Tech 5-18 (Allen 3-6, Robinson 2-6, Z.LeDay 0-1, Hill 0-2, Bibbs 0-3). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-Notre Dame 30 (Colson 12), Virginia Tech 28 (Clarke 9). Assists-Notre Dame 14 (Farrell 5), Virginia Tech 12 (Clarke 5). Total Fouls-Notre Dame 16, Virginia Tech 18.

Clippers 113, Lakers 97 Los Angeles — DeAndre Jordan scored 24 points on 12-of-13 shooting, and the Los Angeles Clippers shot 52 percent to cruise past the Lakers on Saturday and improve to 6-0 in 2017. L.A. LAKERS (97) Young 4-9 1-2 11, Randle 2-7 0-0 4, Mozgov 4-6 0-1 8, Russell 1-7 3-5 5, Williams 4-12 3-4 13, World Peace 0-2 0-0 0, Ingram 4-8 4-6 14, Robinson 1-4 0-2 2, Black 3-4 2-3 8, Zubac 1-1 0-0 2, Huertas 2-4 0-2 4, Calderon 2-3 0-0 5, Clarkson 8-14 2-2 21. Totals 36-81 15-27 97. L.A. CLIPPERS (113) Mbah a Moute 3-6 2-2 8, Jordan 12-13 0-1 24, Paul 7-15 4-4 20, Rivers 7-14 0-0 15, Redick 4-12 0-0 10, W.Johnson 1-2 0-0 3, Anderson 1-3 0-0 3, Bass 2-3 0-0 4, Speights 3-4 1-1 9, Felton 7-11 0-0 15, Crawford 1-9 0-0 2. Totals 48-92 7-8 113. L.A. Lakers 15 24 29 29— 97 L.A. Clippers 26 32 26 29—113 3-Point Goals-L.A. Lakers 10-21 (Clarkson 3-4, Ingram 2-2, Williams 2-5, Young 2-5, Calderon 1-2, Russell 0-1, World Peace 0-2), L.A. Clippers 10-28 (Speights 2-3, Paul 2-6, Redick 2-7, W.Johnson 1-1, Felton 1-2, Anderson 1-3, Rivers 1-5, Crawford 0-1). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-L.A. Lakers 41 (Randle 8), L.A. Clippers 42 (Jordan 21). Assists-L.A. Lakers 21 (Ingram, Russell 5), L.A. Clippers 28 (Paul 13). Total Fouls-L.A. Lakers 20, L.A. Clippers 24. Technicals-Lakers team, Mozgov, Clippers defensive three second, Clippers team.

Bulls 107, Pelicans 99 Chicago — Jimmy scored 28 points in his from flu, and Dwyane had 17 of his 22 points

GEORGIA (11-6) Ogbeide 2-5 2-2 6, Maten 5-6 5-6 15, Frazier 10-22 2-3 25, Parker 6-13 4-4 17, Harris 3-10 2-2 8, Kessler 0-0 0-0 0, Wilridge 2-2 0-2 4, Diatta 0-0 1-2 1, Geno 0-0 0-0 0, Edwards 0-0 0-0 0, Jackson 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 28-58 16-21 76. FLORIDA (14-3) Leon 1-5 0-0 2, Robinson 1-5 2-2 5, Hayes 1-2 0-0 2, Allen 3-8 3-3 9, Hill 2-8 7-10 11, Stone 5-6 4-5 17, Egbunu 1-4 3-7 5, Rimmer 0-1 0-0 0, Barry 7-13 8-8 27, Chiozza 1-3 0-0 2, Hester 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 22-55 27-35 80. Halftime-Georgia 33-32. End Of RegulationTied 67. 3-Point Goals-Georgia 4-16 (Frazier 3-10, Parker 1-4, Harris 0-2), Florida 9-23 (Barry 5-8, Stone 3-4, Robinson 1-3, Chiozza 0-1, Leon 0-2, Hill 0-2, Allen 0-3). Fouled Out-Harris, Maten. Rebounds-Georgia 36 (Ogbeide 10), Florida 30 (Egbunu 11). Assists-Georgia 15 (Frazier 5), Florida 13 (Chiozza, Hill 4). Total Fouls-Georgia 27, Florida 22. Technicals-Diatta, Egbunu. A-10,376 (11,548).

No. 12 Butler 83, No. 15 Xavier 78 Indianapolis — Freshman Kamar Baldwin scored all 21 of Penn St. 52, his points in the second half and No. 24 Minnesota 50 State College, Pa. — Tony No. 12 Butler took down anothCarr made two free throws with er Top 25 team. 5 seconds left to lift Penn State XAVIER (13-4) Gaston 3-3 2-4 8, Macura 6-11 0-1 16, Bernard to the win. 3-5 3-4 10, Sumner 5-9 12-13 22, Bluiett 2-10 6-9 10, Gates 1-3 0-0 3, Jones 0-0 0-0 0, O’Mara 2-3 2-4 6, Davis 0-1 2-2 2, Goodin 0-0 1-2 1. Totals 22-45 28-39 78. BUTLER (15-3) Chrabascz 4-8 8-10 16, Fowler 1-2 2-2 4, Baldwin 6-11 8-8 21, Lewis 0-1 5-6 5, Woodson 2-10 0-0 6, Martin 4-8 4-4 13, Wideman 3-3 2-4 8, Savage 3-7 4-4 10, Baddley 0-0 0-0 0, McDermott 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 23-50 33-38 83. Halftime-Xavier 31-25. 3-Point Goals-Xavier 6-19 (Macura 4-8, Bernard 1-2, Gates 1-3, Davis 0-1, Sumner 0-1, Bluiett 0-4), Butler 4-19 (Woodson 2-10, Baldwin 1-2, Martin 1-3, Lewis 0-1, Chrabascz 0-1, Savage 0-2). Fouled OutSavage, Macura, Bluiett. Rebounds-Xavier 26 (Bernard 8), Butler 27 (Baldwin 9). AssistsXavier 6 (Sumner 3), Butler 6 (Chrabascz 2). Total Fouls-Xavier 27, Butler 29.

Cunningham 3-7 0-0 7, Motiejunas 1-2 0-0 2, Galloway 1-2 0-0 2, Evans 6-15 2-3 14, Moore 6-9 0-0 16. Totals 39-84 14-21 99. CHICAGO (107) Gibson 7-14 1-4 15, Lopez 3-12 0-0 6, CarterWilliams 5-12 1-2 11, Butler 9-16 7-10 28, Wade 9-24 3-5 22, McDermott 3-9 0-0 8, Portis 1-3 0-0 2, Felicio 4-4 1-2 9, Rondo 2-7 0-0 6, Valentine 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 43-101 13-23 107. New Orleans 22 23 26 28— 99 Chicago 21 34 22 30—107 3-Point Goals-New Orleans 7-23 (Moore 4-5, Hill 2-6, Cunningham 1-4, Hield 0-1, Evans 0-3, Holiday 0-4), Chicago 8-21 (Butler 3-5, Rondo 2-3, McDermott 2-6, Wade 1-4, Carter-Williams 0-1, Gibson 0-2). Fouled Out-None. ReboundsNew Orleans 42 (Davis 14), Chicago 63 (Gibson 16). Assists-New Orleans 27 (Holiday 12), Chicago 22 (Butler 6). Total Fouls-New Orleans 19, Chicago 20. Technicals-Cunningham, Butler. A-21,916 (20,917).

How former Jayhawks fared Tarik Black, L.A. Lakers Min: 21. Pts: 8. Reb: 6. Ast: 0. Cheick Diallo, New Orleans Did not play (Coach’s decision). Joel Embiid, Philadelphia Did not play (Rest). Markieff Morris, Washington Min: 30. Pts: 14. Reb: 9. Ast: 1.

Suns 108, Spurs 105 Mexico City — Devin Booker scored a career-high 39 points for the second straight game in Mexico City and Phoenix beat San Antonio in the fifth regularseason game in the country.

Kelly Oubre Jr., Washington Min: 27. Pts: 6. Reb: 2. Ast: 0. Paul Pierce, L.A. Clippers Did not play (Coach’s decision). Thomas Robinson, L.A. Lakers Min: 9. Pts: 2. Reb: 3. Ast: 0. Jeff Withey, Utah Late game.

fourth quarter in Chicago’s vicButler tory over New Orleans. return NEW ORLEANS (99) Wade Hill 3-8 2-4 10, Jones 4-6 1-2 9, Davis 14-23 in the 8-10 36, Holiday 0-7 1-2 1, Hield 1-5 0-0 2,

HIGH SCHOOLS HUB:

MONDAY • Boys basketball vs. Cair Paravel at McLouth tournament, 7:30 p.m.

WEST

VERITAS CHRISTIAN MONDAY • Girls basketball vs. Cair Paravel at McLouth tournament, 6 p.m. NEW YORK YANKEES

TAMPA BAY RAYS

MINNESOTA (15-4) Murphy 3-5 1-2 7, Lynch 5-9 2-2 12, Coffey 2-4 2-2 6, Mason 3-13 1-2 7, McBrayer 2-8 0-0 5, Curry 2-5 1-2 5, Hurt 0-0 0-0 0, Konate 1-1 1-1 3, Springs 2-8 0-0 5. Totals 20-53 8-11 50. PENN ST. (11-7) Moore 2-3 0-0 4, Stevens 1-9 2-2 4, Reaves 2-11 5-8 9, Garner 2-7 2-2 6, Carr 0-6 2-2 2, Banks 3-8 2-3 10, Watkins 6-9 3-3 15, Bostick 0-0 0-0 0, Samuel 1-3 0-0 2. Totals 17-56 16-20 52. Halftime-Minnesota 32-22. 3-Point GoalsMinnesota 2-7 (McBrayer 1-1, Springs 1-4, Coffey 0-1, Mason 0-1), Penn St. 2-14 (Banks 2-7, Samuel 0-1, Carr 0-1, Reaves 0-2, Garner 0-3). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-Minnesota 31 (Coffey 7), Penn St. 37 (Watkins 15). AssistsMinnesota 8 (Mason 4), Penn St. 8 (Reaves 3). Total Fouls-Minnesota 15, Penn St. 11. A-11,759 (15,261).

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

SAN ANTONIO (105) Leonard 12-20 12-14 38, Aldridge 6-14 0-0 13, Gasol 1-4 1-6 3, Parker 5-10 2-4 14, Green 3-7 0-0 6, Bertans 0-1 0-0 0, Anderson 1-1 0-0 3, Lee 1-1 0-0 2, Dedmon 1-1 0-0 2, Forbes 1-1 0-0 2, Simmons 2-4 1-2 6, Ginobili 3-7 8-8 16. Totals 36-71 24-34 105. PHOENIX (108) Warren 6-10 0-0 12, Chriss 2-6 0-0 5, Chandler 4-7 0-0 8, Bledsoe 5-17 6-8 17, Booker 12-22 12-12 39, Tucker 2-7 2-2 7, Bender 2-4 0-0 6, Len 1-2 2-2 4, Ulis 4-6 0-0 8, Barbosa 1-4 0-0 2. Totals 39-85 22-24 108. San Antonio 25 33 27 20—105 Phoenix 25 26 29 28—108 3-Point Goals-San Antonio 9-20 (Parker

2-3, Ginobili 2-4, Leonard 2-5, Simmons 1-1, Aldridge 1-1, Anderson 1-1, Bertans 0-1, Green 0-4), Phoenix 8-21 (Booker 3-5, Bender 2-3, Bledsoe 1-3, Chriss 1-4, Tucker 1-5, Len 0-1). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-San Antonio 33 (Gasol 10), Phoenix 45 (Chandler 15). AssistsSan Antonio 15 (Leonard, Ginobili 3), Phoenix 18 (Bledsoe 10). Total Fouls-San Antonio 18, Phoenix 30. A-20,532 (22,300).

Wizards 109, 76ers 93 Washington — John Wall had 25 points, seven rebounds and seven assists, and Washington used a second-half spurt to beat Philadelphia. PHILADELPHIA (93) Covington 2-6 2-2 7, Ilyasova 7-13 1-2 18, Okafor 10-16 6-11 26, McConnell 2-8 0-0 4, Stauskas 1-9 0-0 2, Noel 3-7 0-0 6, Saric 3-7 1-2 9, Rodriguez 1-6 0-0 3, Randle 1-1 0-0 3, Luwawu-Cabarrot 5-10 0-2 12, Henderson 1-4 1-2 3. Totals 36-87 11-21 93. WASHINGTON (109) Porter 4-12 2-4 10, Morris 6-10 0-0 14, Gortat 6-9 0-1 12, Wall 9-17 4-5 25, Beal 8-15 2-2 20, Oubre 3-6 0-0 6, Nicholson 2-5 0-0 4, Smith 3-6 0-0 7, Ochefu 1-1 0-0 2, Burke 2-5 0-0 4, McClellan 0-2 1-2 1, Satoransky 0-3 4-4 4. Totals 44-91 13-18 109. Philadelphia 30 26 15 22— 93 Washington 21 35 30 23—109 3-Point Goals-Philadelphia 10-31 (Ilyasova 3-5, Luwawu-Cabarrot 2-3, Saric 2-5, Randle 1-1, Rodriguez 1-3, Covington 1-4, McConnell 0-1, Henderson 0-2, Stauskas 0-7), Washington 8-17 (Wall 3-4, Morris 2-2, Beal 2-3, Smith 1-1, McClellan 0-1, Porter 0-2, Oubre 0-2, Burke 0-2). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-Philadelphia 49 (Noel 12), Washington 50 (Gortat 10). AssistsPhiladelphia 20 (McConnell 6), Washington 18 (Wall 7). Total Fouls-Philadelphia 19, Washington 18. Technicals-Philadelphia defensive three second 2, Philadelphia team 2. A-17,880 (20,356).

TORONTO BLUE JAYS

CHIEFS TODAY • vs. Pittsburgh, 7:20 p.m.

DETROIT TIGERS

MINNESOTA TWINS

KANSAS CITY ROYALS

SPORTS ON TV

Dayton v. St. Louis Miami v. Louisville Iowa St. at TCU Baylor at Kansas Midd. Tenn. at W.Ky. Georgia at Kentucky Ohio St. at Purdue Minn. at Mich.

Cable 4, 404 14, 214 Cable 37, 227 37, 227 147,237 38, 238 35, 235 38, 238 35, 235 147,237 35, 235 Cable 35, 235 34, 234 36, 236 35, 235 144 157 34, 234 147, 237

11 a.m. 12:30p.m. noon 1 p.m. 2 p.m. 2 p.m. 2:30p.m. 3:30p.m.

ESPNU ESPN2 FSN ESPNU FCSA SEC ESPN2 BTN

Time 5 p.m.

Net Cable Golf 156,289

Tennis Australian Open

Time 6 p.m.

Net Cable ESPN2 34, 234

Pro Hockey Wild at Blackhawks Blues at Ducks

Time 6 p.m. 8 p.m.

Net Cable NBCSN 38, 238 FSN 36, 236

Soccer Everton v. Man. City Man. United v. Liverpool

Time Net Cable 7:25a.m. NBCSN 38, 238 10a.m. NBCSN 38, 238

College Wrestling Michigan at Nebraska Iowa at Okla. St.

Time Net Cable 1:15 p.m. BTN 147, 237 2 p.m. FCS 146

Gymnastics UCLA at Oklahoma

Time 4 p.m.

No. 23 Florida 80, Georgia 76, OT Gainesville, Fla. — Canyon Golf Barry scored 27 points, includ- Sony Open ing four in overtime.

NBA Roundup The Associated Press

SEABURY ACADEMY

TRUMAN STATE (0-1) VILLANOVA (17-1) Erickson 4-8 2-2 10, Myers 2-5 1-2 6, Velky Jenkins 1-10 7-9 10, Reynolds 0-1 1-2 1, 2-6 0-0 6, Sistrunk 2-5 0-0 4, Messer 1-7 1-2 3, Brunson 4-6 0-2 8, Hart 4-13 1-2 11, Bridges 4-7 Daniel 3-7 0-0 6, Lusso 2-6 3-3 7, Fischer 1-3 0-0 LOS ANGELES ANGELS OAKLAND ATHLETICS SEATTLE MARINERS TEXAS RANGERS 3-3 12, Paschall 4-6 1-1 9, DiVincenzo 7-10 2-2 3, Green 3-5 0-2 8, Socha 1-4 0-0 2, Hughes 3-5 No. 20 Notre OF ANAHEIM Dame 76, TODAY 19. Totals 24-53 15-21 70. 0-0 8, Kanaskie 1-1 0-0 2, Pesic 2-6 0-0 4. Totals Virginia Tech 71 ST. JOHN’S (8-11) 27-68 7-11 69. These logos are provided to you for use in an editorial news context only. AL LOGOS 032712: 2012 American NFL Playoffs Time Net Other uses, including as a linking device on a Web site, or in an League team stand-alone; various Blacksburg, MLB V a.logos;— Steve Yakwe 2-2 1-2 5, Ellison 4-7 2-3 10, Ponds 5-11 CREIGHTON (17-1) advertising or promotional piece, may violate this entity’s trademark or sizes; staff; ETA 4 p.m. at Cowboys 3:30p.. AFC TEAM LOGOS Helmet team logos for the AFC teams; various sizes; stand-alone; staff; ETA otherPackers intellectual property rights, and 5 mayp.m. violate your agreement withFOX AP. 1-2 13, LoVett 4-12 2-2 12, Ahmed 3-11 3-4 11, Huff 4-6 0-0 10,081312: Patton 6-10 2-4 and 14, Foster Vasturia scored 20 points and Williams 0-1 0-0 0, Owens 0-1 0-0 0, Alibegovic 9-11 1-2 21, Thomas 0-6 2-2 2, Watson 4-7 1-2 9, Steelers at Chiefs 7 p.m. NBC 0-0 0-0 0, Mussini 2-5 0-0 6. Totals 20-50 9-13 57. Hegner 3-5 0-0 7, Krampelj 3-7 1-3 7, Mintz 2-4 No. 20 Notre Dame rebounded Halftime-Villanova 35-29. 3-Point Goals- 4-4 9, Paras 2-7 0-0 5, Zierden 1-6 0-0 3, Scurry after blowing all of a 19-point College Basketball Time Net Villanova 7-21 (DiVincenzo 3-5, Hart 2-6, 1-3 0-0 2, Harrell 4-6 0-0 9, Clement 1-1 0-0 3. lead to beat Virginia Tech. Bridges 1-2, Jenkins 1-7, Brunson 0-1), St. Totals 40-79 11-17 101. KU v. OSU replay 3 a.m. TWCSC John’s 8-25 (Mussini 2-4, Ponds 2-6, LoVett Halftime-Creighton 45-34. 3-Point GoalsKU v. OSU replay 6 a.m. TWCSC 2-6, Ahmed 2-8, Ellison 0-1). Fouled Out-None. Truman State 8-25 (Green 2-3, Hughes 2-3, NOTRE DAME (16-2) Colson 4-7 6-9 14, Geben 0-0 0-0 0, Beachem Rutgers at Indiana 11 a.m. BTN Rebounds-Villanova 35 (Reynolds 8), St. John’s Velky 2-5, Fischer 1-2, Myers 1-4, Daniel 0-1, 1:30p.m. NBCSN 20 (Owens 7). Assists-Villanova 9 (Brunson 4), Socha 0-2, Pesic 0-2, Messer 0-3), Creighton 2-8 0-0 4, Farrell 5-11 3-5 14, Vasturia 8-14 1-2 UMass at Rhode Island St. John’s 14 (LoVett 4). Total Fouls-Villanova 10-28 (Foster 2-3, Huff 2-4, Hegner 1-1, 20, Torres 2-2 0-0 4, Ryan 0-0 0-0 0, Gibbs 5-7 Mo. St. at Loyola 3 p.m. ESPNU 2-2 13, Pflueger 2-5 1-2 7. Totals 28-54 13-20 76. 14, St. John’s 20. Technicals-St. John’s coach Harrell 1-1, Clement 1-1, Mintz 1-2, Paras G. Wash. at La Salle 3:30p.m. NBCSN VIRGINIA TECH (13-4) Chris Mullin. A-17,309 (19,812). 1-3, Zierden 1-6, Patton 0-1, Krampelj 0-1, 5:30p.m. ESPNU Z.LeDay 5-10 0-0 10, Hill 1-5 0-0 2, Bibbs 2-8 Ga. Tech at N.C. St. Watson 0-1, Scurry 0-2, Thomas 0-2). Fouled 0-1 4, Robinson 5-9 2-2 14, Clarke 7-11 7-12 21, Iowa at N’western 6:30p.m. BTN Out-None. Rebounds-Truman State 23 (Lusso Sy 2-3 0-0 4, Allen 6-10 1-3 16, Outlaw 0-0 0-0 0. No. 4 UCLA 83, Utah 82 USC at Colorado 7:30p.m. ESPNU 4), Creighton 54 (Patton 10). Assists-Truman Totals 28-56 10-18 71. Salt Lake City — Lorenzo State 16 (Sistrunk 5), Creighton 18 (Watson Halftime-Notre Dame 39-31. 3-Point GoalsTotal Fouls-Truman State 13, Creighton 14. Notre Dame 7-18 (Vasturia 3-4, Pflueger 2-4, Women’s Basketball Time Net Ball had 17 points, eight assists 6). A-17,466 (18,320). Gibbs 1-2, Farrell 1-4, Beachem 0-4), Virginia

TCU 84, Iowa State 77 Fort Worth, Texas — Vladimir Brodziansky had 25 points No. 6 Kentucky 92, and 14 rebounds, Brandon ParAuburn 72 rish scored 15 points. Lexington, Ky. — Malik IOWA ST. (11-5) Monk scored 24 points, powerBowie 3-5 2-2 8, Thomas 4-7 0-0 10, Morris 4-14 1-1 9, Burton 1-10 3-4 5, Mitrou-Long 7-12 ing Kentucky to its fifth straight 2-2 19, Young 0-0 0-0 0, Weiler-Babb 5-7 0-0 10, win. Jackson 6-10 0-0 16. Totals 30-65 8-9 77. TCU (14-3) Miller 0-2 0-0 0, Brodziansky 11-14 2-3 25, Fisher 4-7 0-1 9, K.Williams 6-9 0-1 13, Robinson 2-10 0-0 4, Shepherd 3-3 0-0 6, Bane 5-8 0-0 12, B.Parrish 6-12 0-0 15. Totals 37-65 2-5 84. Halftime-TCU 44-41. 3-Point Goals-Iowa St. 9-22 (Jackson 4-5, Mitrou-Long 3-5, Thomas 2-5, Bowie 0-1, Weiler-Babb 0-1, Morris 0-2, Burton 0-3), TCU 8-24 (B.Parrish 3-8, Bane 2-3, Brodziansky 1-1, Fisher 1-3, K.Williams 1-3, Miller 0-1, Robinson 0-5). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-Iowa St. 21 (Thomas, Burton 5), TCU 34 (Brodziansky 14). Assists-Iowa St. 16 (Morris 8), TCU 27 (Fisher 11). Total Fouls-Iowa St. 13, TCU 12. A-6,564 (7,201).

DUKE (14-4) Giles 3-5 1-4 7, Tatum 3-11 5-6 11, Allen 6-11 9-12 23, Kennard 6-10 4-4 17, Jones 3-5 1-1 8, DeLaurier 0-0 0-0 0, Jeter 0-0 0-1 0, Bolden 0-0 0-0 0, Jackson 1-5 0-0 3. Totals 22-47 20-28 69. LOUISVILLE (15-3) Mahmoud 6-9 5-7 17, Adel 2-7 2-3 6, Spalding 3-4 5-7 11, Snider 5-14 0-0 13, Mitchell 6-12 0-1 15, King 2-5 2-2 7, Johnson 0-3 0-0 0, Mathiang 3-3 1-2 7, Hicks 1-2 0-0 2, Levitch 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 28-59 15-22 78. Halftime-Louisville 34-30. 3-Point GoalsDuke 5-12 SOUTH (Allen 2-3, Jones 1-2, Jackson 1-3, Kennard 1-3, Tatum 0-1), Louisville 7-19 (Mitchell 3-5, Snider 3-8, King 1-4, Adel 0-2). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-Duke 30 (Allen 9), Louisville 31 (Mahmoud 11). Assists-Duke 8 (Allen, Kennard 3), Louisville 16 (Snider 6). Total Fouls-Duke 23, Louisville 24. A-22,686 (22,090).

Net Cable FCSC 145

MONDAY College Basketball Creighton at Xavier Tex-Arl. at S. Alabama DePaul at St. John’s Seton Hall at Villanova Syracuse at N. Carolina N.C. Cent. at Hampton Kansas at Iowa St. Jackson St. at Tex. So. Providence at G’town

Time 1 p.m. 2 p.m. 3:30p.m. 5:30p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. 8 p.m. 8 p.m. 8 p.m.

Net FS1 ESPN2 FS1 FS1 ESPN ESPNU ESPN ESPNU FS1

Cable 150,227 34, 234 150,227 150,227 33, 233 35, 235 33, 233 35, 235 150,227

Pro Basketball Cavaliers at Warriors Thunder at Clippers

Time Net C able 7 p.m. TNT 45, 245 9:30p.m. TNT 45, 245

Women’s Basketball Time Notre Dame at Tenn. 6 p.m. Wis. at Penn. St. 6 p.m.

Net Cable ESPN2 34, 234 BTN 147,237

Tennis Australian Open Australian Open

Time 2 a.m. 8 p.m.

Net Cable ESPN2 34, 234 ESPN2 34, 234

Pro Hockey Capitals at Penguins

Tiem 6 p.m.

Net Cable NBCSN 38, 238

LATEST LINE NFL Favorite ............. Points (O/U).......... Underdog Divisional Playoffs KANSAS CITY ......... 1 (44.5)............ Pittsburgh DALLAS ......................... 5 1/2 (52)................... Green Bay NBA Favorite ............. Points (O/U).......... Underdog TORONTO ......................9 1/2 (218)................... New York ATLANTA .......................3 (207.5)................... Milwaukee a-DALLAS .....................OFF (OFF).................. Minnesota Houston ..................... 12 1/2 (231.5)............... BROOKLYN b-MEMPHIS ..................OFF (OFF)....................... Chicago Oklahoma City ........... 1 1/2 (212)............ SACRAMENTO Detroit . ........................1 1/2 (214.5)................ LA LAKERS a-Minnesota Guard Z. LaVine is questionable. b-Chicago Guard D. Wade is doubtful. COLLEGE BASKETBALL Favorite .................. Points............... Underdog OHIO ST ................................. 2........................ Michigan St RHODE ISLAND ................... 11................. Massachusetts Cincinnati . ...........................15............... EAST CAROLINA LOYOLA CHICAGO .............. 5......................... Missouri St NORTHERN IOWA ............6 1/2................................. Drake LA SALLE ...........................6 1/2..... George Washington INDIANA ................................16............................... Rutgers Smu .................................... 16 1/2............................ TULANE NORTH CAROLINA ST ....... 9..................... Georgia Tech NORTHWESTERN ................ 6...................................... Iowa COLORADO ........................... 3..................... Southern Cal RIDER ..................................3 1/2........................ St. Peter’s FAIRFIELD ..........................2 1/2................................. Siena NHL Favorite .............. Goals (O/U).......... Underdog WASHINGTON ...............1-1 1/2 (5)............... Philadelphia VANCOUVER ..............Even-1/2 (5).............. New Jersey CHICAGO ...................Even-1/2 (5.5).............. Minnesota ANAHEIM ..................Even-1/2 (5.5).................. St. Louis Home Team in CAPS (c) TRIBUNE CONTENT AGENCY, LLC

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SPORTS

L awrence J ournal -W orld

The Associated Press

Falcons 36, Seahawks 20 Atlanta — Matt Ryan looked very much like an MVP, and the Atlanta Falcons are headed to the NFC championship game. Ryan threw for 338 yards and three touchdowns, leading the Falcons to a victory over Seattle in the divisional round Saturday. Atlanta will face either the Dallas Cowboys or the Green Bay Packers, who meet today in the NFC’s other divisional game. After the Seahawks zipped down the field for a touchdown on the opening possession, Atlanta’s young defense largely shut down Russell Wilson & Co. the rest of the way. Ryan and the high-scoring Falcons took it from there — getting a huge boost from a holding penalty that wiped out an 80yard punt return by Devin Hester. Ryan hooked up with Julio Jones on a 7-yard touchdown and Tevin Coleman for a 14-yard score before finishing off the Seahawks with a 3-yard toss to Mohamed Sanu in the corner of the end zone with just under 4 minutes remaining, sparking a raucous chant of “MVP! MVP! MVP!” from a Georgia Dome crowd that stood most of the game, giving the Falcons the sort of home-field advantage that Seattle is used to having at the Link. Before a foot injury limited him in the second half, Jones made life miserable for Seattle cornerback Richard Sherman, who got away with an apparent pass interference penalty on Atlanta’s star receiver when the teams met during the regular season, preserving a 26-24 victory for the Seahawks. Jones was targeted eight times, coming up with six receptions for 67 yards to set a tone that Atlanta would not be intimidate by the Legion of Boom. But, as usual, Ryan

spread the ball around to everyone. Speedy Taylor Gabriel had a 37-yard reception. Running back Devonta Freeman slipped out of the backfield to haul in a 53-yard pass, putting a dazzling fake on replacement free safety Steven Terrell right in the middle of the field. In all, eight players caught passes for Atlanta. For only the fourth time in their 51-year history, the Falcons (12-5) will be playing for the conference title and a spot in the Super Bowl. They made their only Super Bowl appearance during the 1998 season, falling to Denver in John Elway’s final game, and lost in the NFC title game during the 2004 and 2012 seasons. Seattle 7 3 3 7— 20 Atlanta 0 19 7 10—36 First Quarter Sea-Graham 7 pass from Wilson (Hauschka kick), 6:26. Second Quarter Atl-J.Jones 7 pass from M.Ryan (Bryant kick), 14:14. Sea-FG Hauschka 33, 11:20. Atl-safety, 9:22. Atl-FG Bryant 35, 6:06. Atl-Coleman 14 pass from M.Ryan (Bryant kick), :53. Third Quarter Atl-Freeman 1 run (Bryant kick), 9:12. Sea-FG Hauschka 26, 3:03. Fourth Quarter Atl-FG Bryant 31, 14:57. Atl-Sanu 3 pass from M.Ryan (Bryant kick), 3:40. Sea-Baldwin 31 pass from Wilson (Hauschka kick), 3:21. A-71,155. INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Seattle, Wilson 6-49, Rawls 11-34, A.Collins 2-14, McKissic 1-3, Baldwin 1-1. Atlanta, Coleman 11-57, Freeman 14-45, Hardy 1-0, M.Ryan 3-(minus 3). PASSING-Seattle, Wilson 17-30-2225. Atlanta, M.Ryan 26-37-0-338. RECEIVING-Seattle, Baldwin 5-80, Richardson 4-83, Graham 3-22, A.Collins 2-17, Reece 1-10, Kearse 1-8, McKissic 1-5. Atlanta, J.Jones 6-67, Freeman 4-80, Gabriel 4-71, Sanu 4-44, Coleman 3-22, Toilolo 2-26, Hardy 2-18, Hooper 1-10.

Patriots 34, Texans 16 Foxborough, Mass. — The New England Patriots are headed back to a familiar spot: the AFC championship game. Dion Lewis had a 13yard touchdown reception , a 98-yard kickoff return for a score, and a late 1-yard touchdown to help the Patriots hold off the Houston Texans 34-16

the 36-hole scoring record Friday. This time, his second shot into the par-5 18th clipped a palm frond and came up well short in the fairway. He poured in the birdie putt for a 5-under 65 and stretched his lead to seven over Zach Johnson, who kept pace with a 65. Former Kansas golfer

Houston 3 10 0 3 — 16 New England 14 3 7 10 — 34 First Quarter NE-Lewis 13 pass from Brady (Gostkowski kick), 9:27. Hou-FG Novak 33, 1:15. NE-Lewis 98 kickoff return (Gostkowski kick), 1:00. Second Quarter Hou-FG Novak 27, 11:36. Hou-Fiedorowicz 10 pass from Osweiler (Novak kick), 10:49. NE-FG Gostkowski 19, :07. Third Quarter NE-White 19 pass from Brady (Gostkowski kick), 9:09. Fourth Quarter Hou-FG Novak 46, 14:51. NE-Lewis 1 run (Gostkowski kick), 12:16. NE-FG Gostkowski 43, 6:37. A-66,829. INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Houston, Miller 19-73, Osweiler 1-18, Grimes 2-11, Blue 1-2. New England, Lewis 13-41, Blount 8-31, Amendola 1-15, Edelman 1-12, Brady 4-(minus 1). PASSING-Houston, Osweiler 23-40-3198. New England, Brady 18-38-2-287. RECEIVING-Houston, Hopkins 6-65, Grimes 4-43, Miller 4-16, Fiedorowicz 3-36, Fuller 3-16, Hunt 2-15, Mumphery 1-7. New England, Edelman 8-137, Hogan 4-95, Lewis 2-23, White 1-19, Floyd 1-9, Bennett 1-4, Develin 1-0. MISSED FIELD GOALS-None.

Gary Woodland and Justin Rose are tied for third at 14-under. Woodland carded four birdies and two bogeys en route to shooting 2-under in the third round. Waialae has been so vulnerable with no wind that Kevin Kisner missed a 9-foot eagle putt that would have given him 59.

KU-BAYLOR WOMEN’S BASKETBALL When: 1 p.m. today Where: Allen Fieldhouse Series: Baylor leads 26-8

Big 12 woes Kansas is all alone at the bottom of the Big 12 standing through the early part of conference season, sitting at 0-5. However, four of the five losses have come against teams ranked in the top-25. It doesn’t get any easier with No. 2 Baylor, which has lost just once this year. Second-year coach Brandon Schneider, who is still seeking his first Big 12 victory in the regular season, has to face six nationally opponents in the first seven contests to begin conference slate. Pressure defense Despite sitting at the bottom of the conference standings, the Jayhawks actually pace the Big 12 in turnovers created. With its athletic backcourt, Kansas is forcing

19.5 turnovers per contest, including 9.5 steals. The steals lead to easy buckets on the offensive end as KU is averaging 15.8 points per game off their oppositions’ mistakes. Sophomore wing Kylee Kopatich anchors the defense with a team-high 26 thefts.

NFL Postseason

Wild-card Playoffs Saturday, Jan. 7 Houston 27, Oakland 14 Seattle 26, Detroit 6 Sunday, Jan. 8 Pittsburgh 30, Miami 12 Green Bay 38, N.Y. Giants 13 Divisional Playoffs Saturday, Jan. 14 Atlanta 36, Seattle 20 New England 34, Houston 16 Today Green Bay at Dallas, 3:40 p.m. (FOX) Pittsburgh at Kansas City, 7:20 p.m. (NBC) Conference Championships Sunday, Jan. 22 NFC Atlanta vs. Green Bay-Dallas winner, 2:05 p.m. AFC Pittsburgh-Kansas City winner vs. New England, 5:40 p.m. Pro Bowl Sunday, Jan. 29 At Orlando, Fla. AFC vs. NFC, 7 p.m. (ESPN) Super Bowl Sunday, Feb. 5 At Houston TBD, 5:30 p.m. (FOX)

N. Illinois 69, Bowling Green 52 Nebraska-Omaha 86, W. Illinois 72 S. Illinois 73, Evansville 61 Valparaiso 78, Cleveland St. 67 SOUTHWEST Arkansas 92, Missouri 73 IUPUI 91, Oral Roberts 85 Oklahoma 84, Texas Tech 75 Stephen F. Austin 80, Nicholls 60 TCU 84, Iowa St. 77 West Virginia 74, Texas 72 FAR WEST California 58, Washington St. 54 Fresno St. 89, Boise St. 80 Nevada 89, Wyoming 74 New Mexico 84, Colorado St. 71 San Jose St. 89, Air Force 85 Santa Clara 75, Pepperdine 61 Stanford 76, Washington 69 UC Irvine 87, Cal St.-Fullerton 67 UCLA 83, Utah 82

L.A. Clippers 28 14 .667 7 Sacramento 16 23 .410 17½ L.A. Lakers 15 29 .341 21 Phoenix 13 27 .325 21 Saturday’s Games L.A. Clippers 113, L.A. Lakers 97 Chicago 107, New Orleans 99 Phoenix 108, San Antonio 105 Washington 109, Philadelphia 93 Orlando at Utah, (n) Today’s Games Minnesota at Dallas, 1 p.m. Milwaukee at Atlanta, 2 p.m. New York at Toronto, 2 p.m. Houston at Brooklyn, 5 p.m. Chicago at Memphis, 8 p.m. Oklahoma City at Sacramento, 8 p.m. Detroit at L.A. Lakers, 8:30 p.m. Monday’s Games Atlanta at New York, Noon Portland at Washington, 1 p.m. Philadelphia at Milwaukee, 2:30 p.m. New Orleans at Indiana, 3 p.m. Orlando at Denver, 4 p.m. Charlotte at Boston, 5:30 p.m. Cleveland at Golden State, 7 p.m. Utah at Phoenix, 8 p.m. Oklahoma City at L.A. Clippers, 9:30 p.m.

Boise St. 67, Fresno St. 66 Cal St.-Fullerton 64, UC Irvine 53 Colorado St. 78, New Mexico 63 E. Washington 99, Weber St. 85 Gonzaga 79, Saint Mary’s (Cal) 75 Grand Canyon 60, Rio Grande 59 Idaho St. 67, Idaho 60 Long Beach St. 83, Cal Poly 80 Loyola Marymount 69, Portland 54 N. Colorado 66, Montana St. 58 New Mexico St. 64, CS Bakersfield 55 Pacific 63, San Francisco 60 Portland St. 81, S. Utah 74 Sacramento St. 82, N. Arizona 76 San Jose St. 86, Air Force 74 Santa Clara 61, Pepperdine 40 UC Davis 81, CS Northridge 65 UC Santa Barbara 58, UC Riverside 54 Utah St. 53, San Diego St. 47 Wyoming 72, Nevada 59

Mackenzie Hughes Cameron Smith Kelly Kraft Daniel Berger Satoshi Kodaira Michael Kim Pat Perez Seamus Power Sean O’Hair Robert Streb James Hahn Bryson DeChambeau Andres Gonzales Rory Sabbatini Vaughn Taylor Richy Werenski Chez Reavie Y.E. Yang Scott Piercy William McGirt Kyle Stanley David Lingmerth Peter Malnati Stewart Cink Miguel Tabuena Jared Sawada Rod Pampling Vijay Singh Michael Thompson Bryce Molder Billy Horschel Brian Stuard Trey Mullinax Gonzalo Fdez-Castano Fabian Gomez J.T. Poston Jon Curran Ken Duke Zac Blair John Huh Scott Brown

on Saturday night and advance to an NFL-record sixth straight conference title game. Lewis became the fifth Patriots player to score three touchdowns in a playoff game. He’s also the first player in the SuCollege Women EAST per Bowl era to score on Creighton 58, Providence 51 a rush, a catch and a kick Richmond 58, Rhode Island 53 Rutgers 62, Michigan St. 58 return in a postseason Saint Joseph’s 75, La Salle 55 game. Texas 73, West Virginia 63 SOUTH The Patriots (15-2) surCharlotte 78, Southern Miss. 61 vived a gritty effort by the Cincinnati 66, Memphis 59 Texans’ top-ranked deMarshall 61, UAB 58 Old Dominion 69, Louisiana Tech 64 fense, which intercepted Sony Open South Florida 79, East Carolina 48 Saturday Brady twice. Houston’s MIDWEST At Waialae Country Club Austin Peay 69, E. Illinois 59 special teams also forced Honolulu Ball St. 80, Akron 70 Purse: $6 million a third turnover. Buffalo 68, Miami (Ohio) 51 Big 12 Men Cent. Michigan 76, Bowling Green 65 Yardage: 7,044; Par 70 But the Texans (10-8) League Overall Third Round Cleveland St. 77, Ill.-Chicago 59 5-0 16-1 couldn’t find enough trac- Kansas Justin Thomas 59-64-65—188 IUPUI 71, Denver 49 Baylor 4-1 16-1 Zach Johnson 69-61-65—195 Indiana St. 48, Loyola of Chicago 38 tion on offense to take full West Virginia 4-1 15-2 Justin Rose 66-64-66—196 Kent St. 68, Ohio 65 3-2 14-3 advantage of the Patriots’ TCU Gary Woodland 64-64-68—196 Maryland 98, Iowa 82 Iowa State 3-2 11-5 Hudson Swafford 62-68-66—196 N. Illinois 77, Toledo 73 mistakes, settling for field Texas Tech 2-3 13-4 Jamie Lovemark 64-68-65—197 North Dakota 73, Montana 63 2-3 13-4 goals on both of Brady’s Kansas State Russell Knox 64-67-66—197 Northwestern 80, Indiana 67 Texas 1-4 7-10 Kevin Kisner 70-67-60—197 Seattle 64, Chicago St. 51 picks. Oklahoma 1-4 7-9 Jordan Spieth 65-67-66—198 South Dakota 60, Nebraska-Omaha 10-7 New England led just Oklahoma State 0-5 Ollie Schniederjans 66-67-66—199 52 Saturday’s Games Brian Harman 66-67-66—199 UMKC 66, Utah Valley 63 17-13 at the half, but Kansas 87, Oklahoma State 80 Hideto Tanihara 67-65-67—199 W. Illinois 110, N. Dakota St. 81 West Virginia 74, Texas 72 pushed its lead to 24-13 Russell Henley 64-67-68—199 W. Michigan 76, E. Michigan 67 Baylor 77, Kansas State 68 Tony Finau 64-67-68—199 early in the third quarter Youngstown St. 76, Valparaiso 70 TCU 84, Iowa State 77 Charles Howell III 65-66-68—199 SOUTHWEST Oklahoma 84, Texas Tech 75 on a 19-yard touchdown Daniel Summerhays 66-68-66—200 Abilene Christian 77, Lamar 59 Jan. 16 Marc Leishman 68-66-66—200 pass from Brady to James Monday, Cent. Arkansas 49, Texas A&M-CC Kansas at Iowa State, 8 p.m. Branden Grace 67-68-65—200 41 White. Tuesday, Jan. 17 66-67-67—200 Houston Baptist 68, Incarnate Word Jim Herman Texas at Baylor, 6 p.m. Bill Haas 67-66-67—200 Houston’s Brock Os- Wednesday, 51 Jan. 18 Brian Gay 69-64-67—200 Kansas St. 63, Oklahoma St. 43 weiler was intercepted Oklahoma at West Virginia, 6 p.m. Hideki Matsuyama 66-67-67—200 Oklahoma 66, Texas Tech 45 TCU at Texas Tech, 6:30 p.m. three times after that, Henrik Norlander 67-65-68—200 Prairie View 73, Jackson St. 63 Kansas State at Oklahoma State, Ryan Brehm 68-68-64—200 Rice 51, North Texas 49 and the Texans managed 8 p.m. Billy Hurley III 64-68-68—200 S. Dakota St. 78, Oral Roberts 57 only a field goal the rest Luke List 67-64-69—200 Stephen F. Austin 80, Nicholls 55 Webb Simpson 66-65-69—200 Temple 58, Tulsa 49 of game. Big 12 Women Tim Wilkinson 67-67-67—201 Texas Southern 69, Grambling St. 61 League Overall Brady finished 18 of Texas Shawn Stefani 64-70-67—201 UALR 73, Arkansas St. 59 6-0 12-4 Kevin Na 67-67-67—201 UConn 88, SMU 48 38 for 287 yards and two Baylor 5-0 16-1 Jason Bohn 66-68-67—201 FAR WEST Oklahoma 5-1 14-4 touchdowns. Ben Martin 66-68-67—201 BYU 81, San Diego 63 Kansas State 4-2 14-4

Thomas builds lead at Sony Open; KU product Woodland tied for 3rd Honolulu (ap) — Justin Thomas made a 15-foot birdie putt on his final hole to tie the 54-hole record on the PGA Tour and build a seven-shot lead Saturday at the Sony Open. Thomas got into the record with an eagle on his last hole in each of the previous two rounds — a 59 on Thursday, and

| 3C

SCOREBOARD

NFL PLAYOFFS

Falcons stop Seahawks; Patriots pound Texans

Sunday, January 15, 2017

four shots she took, including three from long range. Calvert has just one double-digit performance over her last four games. Calvert started the season with four straight outings of 17-or-more points.

Probable starters KANSAS (6-10 overall, 0-5 Big 12) G — Jessica Washington, 5-8, jr. G — McKenzie Calvert, 5-9, so. G — Kylee Kopatich, 5-10, so. G — Chayla Cheadle, 6-0, jr. F — Sydney Umeri, 6-0, sr.

Streaking The team’s best player, junior Jessica Washington, has done her part to give her squad a chance to win. Washington scored a career-high 31 points in the most recent loss to Kansas State. She knocked down seven triples, which was the most by a Jayhawk BAYLOR (16-1, 5-0) in a single game this season. G — Alexis Jones, 5-9, sr. Washington as been the gameG — Kristy Wallace, 5-11, jr. high scorer in four of the last G — Alexis Prince, 6-2, sr. five outings. F — Nina Davis, 5-11, sr. C — Kalani Brown, 6-7, so. Slumping Sophomore guard McKenzie — Shane Jackson Calvert was held scoreless against the Wildcats in 14 minutes of action. She missed all

Texas Tech 3-3 11-6 West Virginia 2-4 14-4 Oklahoma State 2-4 12-5 Iowa State 1-4 10-6 TCU 0-5 8-8 Kansas 0-5 6-10 Saturday’s Games Oklahoma 66, Texas Tech 45 Texas 73, West Virginia 63 Kansas State 63, Oklahoma State 43 Today’s Games Baylor at Kansas, 1 p.m. Iowa State at TCU, noon

College Men

EAST Army 53, American U. 49 Ball St. 92, Buffalo 77 Dayton 76, Duquesne 57 Georgetown 72, UConn 69 Miami 72, Pittsburgh 46 Monmouth (NJ) 90, Niagara 83 Navy 88, Lafayette 51 Penn St. 52, Minnesota 50 Providence 65, Seton Hall 61 Richmond 70, Saint Joseph’s 66 St. Bonaventure 73, Fordham 53 Syracuse 76, Boston College 53 Tulsa 70, Temple 68 Villanova 70, St. John’s 57 SOUTH Alabama 81, LSU 66 Belmont 72, E. Kentucky 59 Charlotte 82, Southern Miss. 66 Chattanooga 70, Mercer 68 Davidson 69, VCU 63 Florida 80, Georgia 76 Florida Gulf Coast 84, Lipscomb 80 Kentucky 92, Auburn 72 Louisiana Tech 75, Old Dominion 63 Louisville 78, Duke 69 Memphis 62, South Florida 56 Mississippi St. 67, Texas A&M 59 North Carolina 96, Florida St. 83 Notre Dame 76, Virginia Tech 71 Saint Louis 63, George Mason 56 South Carolina 67, Mississippi 56 Tennessee 87, Vanderbilt 75 UAB 94, Marshall 78 UCF 77, Houston 70 Virginia 77, Clemson 73 MIDWEST Akron 74, Miami (Ohio) 70 Baylor 77, Kansas St. 68 Butler 83, Xavier 78 Creighton 101, Truman State 69 Illinois St. 76, Wichita St. 62 Indiana St. 81, Bradley 71 Kansas 87, Oklahoma St. 80 Marquette 83, DePaul 58 Maryland 62, Illinois 56 Michigan 91, Nebraska 85 Murray St. 67, SIU-Edwardsville 59

Chiefs CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C

Mike Tomlin said, “but at a legendary venue like that is something else. We’re excited about it. We respect it.” But they aren’t going to be intimidated by it. The Steelers have been in enough big games over the years that it takes more than a trip to Kansas City, where the Chiefs have not won a playoff game since the 1993 season, to leave them quaking in their cleats. Besides, they already beat the Chiefs in a laugher once this season. “If you need the ‘revenge factor’ in the playoffs to help you win, something is wrong with you,” Roethlisberger said. “You’re in the playoffs, so you need to throw everything out, whether you played them before or didn’t play them before, personnel or whatever it is. You need to start fresh.”

NBA

EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W L Toronto 26 13 Boston 25 15 New York 18 22 Philadelphia 12 26 Brooklyn 8 31 Southeast Division W L Atlanta 22 17 Washington 20 19 Charlotte 20 20 Orlando 17 24 Miami 11 30 Central Division W L Cleveland 29 10 Milwaukee 20 18 Indiana 20 19 Chicago 20 21 Detroit 18 24 WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division W L San Antonio 31 9 Houston 31 11 Memphis 25 17 New Orleans 16 25 Dallas 12 27 Northwest Division W L Utah 25 16 Oklahoma City 24 17 Portland 18 24 Denver 15 23 Minnesota 14 26 Pacific Division W L Golden State 34 6

Pct GB .667 — .625 1½ .450 8½ .316 13½ .205 18 Pct .564 .513 .500 .415 .268

GB — 2 2½ 6 12

Pct GB .744 — .526 8½ .513 9 .488 10 .429 12½ Pct GB .775 — .738 1 .595 7 .390 15½ .308 18½ Pct GB .610 — .585 1 .429 7½ .395 8½ .350 10½ Pct GB .850 —

As the Chiefs and Steelers prepare to meet again tonight, here are some keys to the game: Lace up your skates: The U.S. figuring skating championships are in Kansas City this weekend, and Arrowhead Stadium might make a mighty fine rink. Forecasts for today call for a near-100 percent chance of freezing rain that could leave the turf, re-sodded just this week, with a thick glaze. The game was supposed to kick off at 12:05 p.m. Central time, but was moved to 7:20 p.m. so stadium and road crews along with local and state authorities could ensure roads and parking lots were safe. “No weather is a part of our ball,” Tomlin said. “We don’t overanalyze that.” Bye bye bye: Chiefs coach Andy Reid has compiled a 16-2 record in the regular season after a week off, including a road win over Oakland this season. He was also perfect in three division-

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NHL

Saturday’s Games Boston 6, Philadelphia 3 Nashville 3, Colorado 2 Detroit 6, Pittsburgh 3 Montreal 5, N.Y. Rangers 4 Florida 4, Columbus 3 Carolina 7, N.Y. Islanders 4 Toronto 4, Ottawa 2 Anaheim 3, Arizona 0 Minnesota 5, Dallas 4 Calgary at Edmonton, (n) Winnipeg at Los Angeles, (n) St. Louis at San Jose, (n) Today’s Games Philadelphia at Washington, Noon Minnesota at Chicago, 6 p.m. New Jersey at Vancouver, 6 p.m. St. Louis at Anaheim, 8 p.m.

al playoff games in Philadelphia when his teams earned a first-round bye, including one season that ended in the Super Bowl. “I don’t know if there’s a secret,” he insisted. “I think everybody does it the same way.” Over the hill: By the end of the regular season, Hill had returned two punts and a kickoff for touchdowns, and scored six times through the air and three times on the ground. But he also had a 78-yard punt return touchdown against the Steelers brought back by a penalty. Tomlin called him “a weapon to be reckoned with,” but Steelers kicker Chris Boswell said dealing with Hill’s speed is more difficult than simply kicking away from him. “One return man, you have to put the ball in play,” Boswell said. “It also depends on weather. He is going to return. It’s just a matter of covering and tackling.”


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KANSAS 87, OKLAHOMA STATE 80

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Nick Krug/Journal-World Photo

KANSAS GUARD FRANK MASON III (0) GETS IN THE FACE OF OKLAHOMA STATE GUARD Jawun Evans (1) on a shot in the second half Saturday in Allen Fieldhouse.

Jayhawks CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C

Nick Krug/Journal-World Photo

KANSAS GUARD JOSH JACKSON (11) reaches high for a ball as he vies for a loose ball from the floor with Oklahoma State guard Jeffrey Carroll.

Keegan

he would lay down on the job. Now it means a fearless competitor who never backs up, goes for CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C the throat, doesn’t wait for the world to come to to the rim, he’s going to make the stop, he’s going him. Mason, Jackson and to sit down and guard, he’s going to do whatev- Devonté Graham give KU a pack of junkyard er it takes for that team to win,” Underwood said. dogs who perform at their best when the heat “There are not many rises. people who have that.” “Josh’s stuff is legMason sometimes endary,” Underwood has been described as a bulldog, sometimes a pit said. “He stood out on the AAU circuit, and bull. Regardless of the it’s probably a shame specific classification, because of our culture all would agree that he’s today, but he stood out of the junkyard variety. because he played hard. Once upon a time, sayHe’s talented, but he ing a player had a lot of plays hard. He’s motored dog in him meant that

up. We just wrote ‘Dog,’ next to his name because that’s what he is. I appreciate that. And Devonté, I don’t know where he is in leadership, but he falls right along.” Graham leads the pack when that’s what’s needed. He facilitates when that’s the missing piece of the puzzle. The talented, relentless trio never lets a defense rest. A team that uses seven players and so far has had only one effective big man in Landen Lucas can’t go 16-1 without knowing how to compete and that trait is what Underwood, the former Kansas State assistant

slide and all of the friendly bounces, timely plays and clutch moments Mason and his teammates could provide to will Kansas (16-1 overall, 5-0 Big 12) past an Oklahoma State that smelled upset for 39 minutes. Led by its own terrific trio of Jawun Evans (15 points, six assists), Phil Forte III (10 points, six rebounds) and Jeffrey Carroll (23 points, seven rebounds), the Cowboys raced out to an 11-point lead in the first half by giving maximum effort on every play and hitting a scorching 70 percent of their shots to open the game. That trio combined to score OSU’s first 17 points, a feat that went completely against what Kansas wanted to do defensively. “That was our whole game plan, making sure those guys didn’t have big nights,” Self said. “For them to only end up with 48 (points) after the way they started, we obviously were better after that.” The Jayhawks never led in the first half and trailed for 19:09 during that stretch, tying the game on three separate occasions but only for a matter of seconds each time. OSU’s ability to answer every punch KU threw its way, including a 12-2 run that pulled the Jayhawks within one with 7:55 to play in the first half, played a huge role in the way the first half played out. The Jayhawks had one quality opportunity to claim the lead but a corner 3-pointer from Svia-

and Stephen F. Austin head coach, admires most about the team gunning for the school’s 13thconsecutive Big 12 title. “There’s a refuse-tolose mentality that they have,” Underwood said. “We don’t have that yet. Yet. Yet. Put that in all caps: YET, because, by God, we’re going to get it at some point.” Nothing about the way the Cowboys (10-7, 0-5) competed Saturday suggested they were anything but a tough out and in Jawun Evans, they too have a standout point guard. In Mason and Graham, Kansas starts two point

toslav Mykhailiuk rattled in-and-out and the Cowboys answered on the very next trip down the floor with a 3-pointer of their own to turn a 3534 lead into a four-point cushion. The Cowboys (10-7, 0-5) took that lead into the locker room and did not surrender control until Devonté Graham’s driving layup with 14:10 to play put Kansas ahead, 51-50. All three of Graham’s 3-pointers came in the second half, two during the Jayhawks’ climb to claim the lead, while Mason and Mykhailiuk

only made one apiece, in 10 combined attempts, to account for all of KU’s outside shooting Saturday. After quickly building a five-point lead following Graham’s go-ahead bucket, OSU tied things with a ferocious rally of their own with 11:22 to play. The teams remained separated by just a possession or two into the final two minutes and Kansas did not claim its largest lead of the day until Graham swished a pair of free throws with 21 seconds to play. “Their pace early in the game made us play faster than we wanted to,” Self said. “And I thought we took some bad (shots), off balance. The second half, we drove it downhill a lot more and got to the free throw line. That was our best offense tonight.” After making 12 of its first 14 shots from the free throw line, KU connected on 30 of 45 for the game, compared to just 11-of-14 free throw shooting for Oklahoma State. Those freebies, along with KU’s second-half performance on the glass — outrebounding OSU 27-15 after being outworked by three in the first half — helped KU hold off the strong challenge from the Cowboys. KU trailed at halftime for the second game in a row and fourth time this season, but moved to 4-0 in those games thanks to another challenge from Self. “It’s an emphasis every game,” Graham said of winning the rebounding war. “We were getting out-rebounded at halftime and, once again, coach called us out and we just responded to the challenge in attacking the boards.”

guards and it’s possible that will be the position where Jackson will spend most of what figures to be a long NBA career. “This league, this year, has elite point guards all the way up and down the conference, elite point guards,” Underwood said. “More importantly, most of them are veteran point guards. I’ve used the term it’s like having Tom Brady at quarterback. There’s nothing you can throw at them that they have not seen.” That certainly applies to Mason and Graham. Jackson’s so smart that after he sees something for the first time, the

next time he sees it his brain fools him into thinking he’s seen it since he learned how to walk, which presumably came several years before he learned how to fly. For a variety of reasons, this team doesn’t defend up to coach Bill Self’s typical standards and certainly doesn’t have typical depth, but three junkyard dogs are so hard to guard, and know how to guard effectively, that the Jayhawks will take the court against Iowa State in Ames on Monday night riding a 16-game winning streak and likely ranked No. 1 in the nation.

BOX SCORE OKLAHOMA STATE (80) MIN FG FT REB PF TP m-a m-a o-t L. Hammonds 9 0-1 0-0 0-0 4 0 Jeffrey Carroll 33 9-14 2-2 0-7 2 23 Mitchell Solomon 21 6-6 4-6 3-4 5 16 Jawun Evans 34 6-22 3-3 0-1 4 15 Phil Forte 34 3-10 2-2 1-6 2 10 B. Averette 15 1-2 0-0 1-4 3 2 Cameron McGriff 4 0-1 0-0 0-0 2 0 L. N’Guessan 12 0-1 0-0 0-1 3 0 Lindy Waters 18 3-4 0-0 0-0 2 8 Davon Dillard 20 3-7 0-1 3-8 3 6 team 2-5 Totals 31-68 11-14 10-36 30 80 Three-point goals: 7-19 (Carroll 3-3, Waters 2-3, Forte 2-8, Hammonds 0-1, McGriff 0-1, Dillard 0-1, Evans 0-2). Assists: 16 (Evans 6, Carroll 3, Dillard 3, Solomon 1, Forte 1, N’Guessan 1, Waters 1). Turnovers: 11 (Evans 4, Waters 3, Carroll 1, Forte 1, Dillard 1, team 1). Blocked shots: 3 (Hammonds 1, Solomon 1, Evans 1). Steals: 8 (Solomon 3, Evans 2, Hammonds 1, Forte 1, Dillard 1). KANSAS (87) MIN FG FT REB PF TP m-a m-a o-t Landen Lucas 30 2-2 3-4 4-12 3 7 Frank Mason III 39 6-16 9-12 1-5 3 22 Devonté Graham 36 8-14 2-4 1-3 0 21 Svi Mykhailiuk 32 5-10 3-4 1-4 4 14 Josh Jackson 34 5-13 10-17 3-11 3 20 Lagerald Vick 20 0-3 2-2 3-5 1 2 Carlton Bragg Jr. 9 0-1 1-2 1-2 0 1 team 2-3 Totals 26-59 30-45 16-45 14 87 Three-point goals: 5-20 (Graham 3-7, Mason 1-4, Mykhailium 1-6, Jackson 0-1, Vick 0-2). Assists: 11 (Mason 4, Graham 4, Lucas 1, Mykhailiuk 1, Jackson 1). Turnovers: 10 (Vick 3, Mason 2, Jackson 2, Lucas 1, Graham 1, Mykhailiuk 1). Blocked shots: 5 (Jackson 2, Lucas 1, Graham 1, Mykhailiuk 1). Steals: 8 (Jackson 4, Graham 2, Mason 1, Mykhailiuk 1). Oklahoma State 40 40 — 80 Kansas 36 51 — 87 Officials: Mike Stuart, Keith Kimble, Tony Padilla. Attendance: 16,300.


L awrence J ournal -W orld

KANSAS 87, OKLAHOMA STATE 80

Sunday, January 15, 2017

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Nick Krug/Journal-World Photo

KANSAS GUARD JOSH JACKSON (11) TANGLES WITH OKLAHOMA STATE GUARD DAVON DILLARD (24) and OSU guard Jawun Evans during the Jayhawks’ 87-80 victory Saturday in Allen Fieldhouse.

NOTEBOOK

Jackson wants to keep composure By Matt Tait mtait@ljworld.com

With his team in a dogfight and crunch time quickly approaching, Kansas freshman Josh Jackson was whistled for a charging foul on a bucket that, had it stood, would have given the Jayhawks their first lead of the game. After hearing the whistle and confirming the call, Jackson, who three times already this year had been hit with technical fouls for reacting to plays in the heat of the moment, raced to the other end of the floor with a pained look on his face and disagreement dripping from his body language. Asked after KU’s 87-80 victory over Oklahoma State how he was able to keep his composure after such a tough play, Jackson showed the kind of growth that Kansas coach Bill Self has been expecting. “I don’t really think that I kept my cool,” Jackson admitted. “I think I could’ve handled it better than I did, actually. Sometimes I just don’t agree with the call and it gets to me a little bit. I’m just

glad I didn’t get a technical this time.” Self, who actually argued the charge call with officials after the whistle, said he did not think Jackson did anything wrong on the play or in the moments after it. But he would like to see Jackson take another step toward controlling those small outbursts. “Part of competing is being able to think next play and not put your team at all in jeopardy more,” Self said. “We drill him and talk to him and do those things. He’s an emotional guy, which I would much rather him be emotional than not emotional, but I think he can probably handle some situations, from a body language standpoint, better when things don’t go his way.” Hearing that Jackson agreed and called himself out for his reaction proved to be an encouraging sign in Self’s eyes. “I didn’t bring it up with him,” he said. “I just told him keep his mouth shut. And, of course, his reply was, ‘I didn’t do anything,’ which, I’ve never known a player that does do anything wrong. But I think he’s one of those

season. I guess you get a pat on the back for being No. 1, but we want to play our best ball moving forward.”

Nick Krug/Journal-World Photo

KANSAS GUARD DEVONTÉ GRAHAM (4) spots up for a 3-pointer against OSU’s Lindy Waters.

Happy homecoming Oklahoma State coach Brad Underwood, a native of McPherson who played at Kansas State and also worked as an assistant coach there from 2006-12, said being back in the Sunflower State was almost perfect. “It’s great, other than coming here,” Underwood joked after Saturday’s game. “Sheesh. I just told the team I’m 0-9 in this building. Let’s hurry up and get the heck out of here.” “This is such a special state,” Underwood continued. “You have three universities that produce top-level basketball. You have top community colleges and Division II basketball. This place is special. Kansas is always going to be home and I’m always going to be proud to be a part of this state and everything that transpires here.”

guys that after something the potential move up happens and after he can following Saturday’s vicdigest it, he’s very ratio- tory. “I don’t think that we nal in his thoughts.” were overly impressive We’re No. 1? today,” Self said. “But I KU’s win Saturday, think we’ve been pretty combined with No. 1 Bay- consistent for 16 straight lor’s loss on Tuesday at games. I feel like we’ve West Virginia, clears the done more than we had way for the Jayhawks (16- done two weeks ago, but 1 overall, 5-0 Big 12) to who knows if that means climb into the top spot in anything. It’s really not a the polls when the updat- big deal.” KU senior Frank Maed versions are released son agreed: “It’s good to Monday. Such news remained be ranked No. 1, but we Nothing like a day game KU senior Frank Mafairly insignificant to Self want to be ranked No. 1 and the Jayhawks, who when it matters the most, son III, who led the Jayhardly were celebrating and that’s later in the hawks with 22 points and

pushed his Big 12-leading scoring average to 20.5 points per game, said Saturday that he loved playing early games at Allen Fieldhouse, which have become fewer and far between with television networks jumping at the opportunity to put the Jayhawks in prime time. “Nothing is better than an afternoon game here in Allen Fieldhouse,” Mason said. “The fans are great and it just gives us time to kind of hang out with our family for the rest of the day and gives us time to relax instead of going straight to bed.”

This and that... Kansas now leads the all-time series with Oklahoma State 112-57, including a 47-9 mark inside Allen Fieldhouse.... Arizona State transfer Sam Cunliffe was at Allen Fieldhouse on Saturday, wearing street clothes and sitting on the Kansas bench. Cunliffe, a freshman, will sit out the next two semesters and become eligible to play for KU next December.... Frank Mason III passed Brandon Rush for 23rd place on KU’s all-time scoring list, with 1,481 points.

Nick Krug/Journal-World Photo

KANSAS FORWARD LANDEN LUCAS (33) BATTLES OKLAHOMA STATE GUARD JEFFREY CARROLL (30) on Saturday in Allen Fieldhouse.


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NEW BOOKS OFFER A GLIMPSE INTO ‘HIDDEN LIVES OF TREES.’ SHELF LIFE, PAGE 2D

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ARTS ENTERTAINMENT LIFESTYLE PEOPLE Sunday, January 15, 2017

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Nick Krug/Journal-World Photo

PHOTOGRAPHER MIKE YODER, RIGHT, LOOKS THROUGH PRINTS OF CONTACT SHEETS with Lawrence Arts Center exhibition program director Ben Ahlvers on Monday in the front gallery at the Lawrence Arts Center.

SHOWING THEIR WORK Photojournalism exhibit sheds light on a hidden process By Nick Krug lll

nkrug@ljworld.com

T

he term “painting with light” is often used when describing photography in the artistic sense. But unlike studying a painting, when you look at a single photograph, you don’t see the accumulation of all those thousands of little brush strokes and there aren’t any hints of the initial sketch lying underneath. The work building toward the photograph is largely invisible. All you have is the image. A current exhibit at the Lawrence Arts Center, featuring works by Mike Yoder and Richard Gwin, two photographers with well over a halfcentury’s worth of combined years at the Lawrence JournalWorld, aims to bring forth the hidden process. By presenting prints of contact sheets while on assignment, and photos selected after being pushed through the various channels of editing, “the work” is made visible. “For a place like this that’s heavy on education, it’s good to have exhibitions like this where students can see the guts behind the curtain,” said Ben Ahlvers, exhibition program director, who has worked with Yoder and Gwin in going through some of their archives. Several of Yoder’s contact sheets from a late-’90s dance at the Lawrence Senior Center, show whimsical scenes of local seniors. In the opening sheet, the saxophonist/ clarinet player warms up while a woman seemingly dances across the floor, albeit with a

contact sheet kind of shows a little bit of the path,” explained Yoder, who leads photography workshops and provides visual consultations for photographers. “It’s almost like the (viewer) can walk alongside the photographer and watch what we’re doing.” An idea and a walk with a camera was responsible for leading to what Yoder describes as one of his favorite photographs from a birdwatching adventure. Yoder explains that he began photographing a group of girls as they suited up in fur coats and binoculars while indoors at the Prairie Park Nature Center. “It was one of those kind of things where you get the image in your head (beforehand),” Yoder explained. “All of a sudden, you realize something is going to develop here and I see this image I want to get. When they’re THIS CONTACT SHEET BY MIKE YODER shows a dance at the Lawrence Senior Center in the late ’90s. See inside Prairie Park Nature more photos online at ljworld.com/exhibit011517 Center and they’re putting on the fur coats… there’s no clean background.” gins his series showing StodAs the group moves outside, dart wielding a swing lure with Yoder’s vision begins to take the raptor in flight, swooping shape. The light is soft and across an open field. In the final five frames of the contact muted. The bird-watchers, waist-high in prairie grass, are sheet, the falcon is watching each holding their binoculars, — Mike Yoder, photographer Stoddart while perched on a with the tree line as a backleather glove on his left hand. drop. Over several frames the two “That ends up being the last dust mop in preparation for make eye contact before the photographing them from the frame, but it’s a frame that’s the event. waist down as their feet dance falcon appears to give out a in your head that you go out With the dance well on shriek of excitement. through window light cast on to get,” says Yoder. “It’s not its way, for 10 frames Yoder In two other sets of conthe floor. rocket science, but it is about sets his attention on a couple He closes with several shots tact sheets, Gwin illustrates paying attention to intuition twirling apart and coming a bit of the unsavory side of of a pool player standing and being spontaneous in the back together, hand in hand photojournalism, with reportalone, juxtaposed by the full moment and reacting to what in front of a two-piece band age from two separate fires. dance floor of couples paradon the stage behind. As the While hoses and ladder trucks we see around us.” ing in the next room. Yoder’s and Gwin’s phodancers move to the right of extend, meander and lead One of Richard Gwin’s catography exhibition opened the frame and then left again, the viewer through multiple reer trademarks has been the Friday evening and will show they pass in front of the kick ability to sniff out the obscure frames, another set of four drum, which wears an approv- talents and hobbies of local frames shows a haunting scene through February 25. ing smile on its front. For the residents, such as falconer Jack of a figure observing the fire’s — Staff photojournalist Nick Krug can be reached next four frames, Yoder has damage within a shaft of light. Stoddart. In a digital contact at 832-6353. Follow him on Twitter: @nickkrug turned to two other couples, “This method of showing a sheet presentation, Gwin be-

“It’s almost like the (viewer) can walk alongside the photographer and watch what we’re doing.”


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THAT SCRAM

L awrence J ournal -W orld

by David

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

SHELF LIFE

ROALCM

HERWNC

W

hen you go for a walk, do you aim for a certain place, or do you saunter until something piques your curiosity? A fuller appreciation of most anything surely benefits from both approaches, and the authors of two wonderful new books about trees prove this to be true. Peter Wohlleben is a forester who has written a small but dense book called “The Hidden Life of Trees.” His agenda is not to wander too much, but to look long and hard at the trees of “his” woods, a municipal forest in western Germany full of beeches, spruce, and oaks. I normally don’t much go for anthropomorphic and mechanical analogies when

talking about natural systems, but Wohlleben makes it work. In this book, trees hear and smell and feel. They talk and even yell. Their symbiotic subterranean network of mycorrhizal fungi, the “Wood Wide Web,” is all-important, and underappreciated. Though the book explores an entirely different ecosystem than ours and is by no means a field guide, I’d suggest it’s worth reading a few chapters and then going for a slow walk in the woods. For additional local inspiration and information, maybe also read the “Old Growth” chapter in George Frazier’s fine book “The Last Wild Places of Kansas” and consult the maps and woodland discussions

SUNDAY Prime Time WOW DTV DISH 7 PM

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in Ken Lassman’s “Wild Douglas County.” Then reach out to some neighboring oak and hackberry and Osage orange trees. Now is a good time, with the leaves and ticks and oak leaf itch mites out of the way, with nests visible and tree forms much more apparent. But having done your homework, you’ve deduced that we humans have affected whatever it is you might find. What are we to make of it? To offer some possible guidelines, eminent paleontologist and author Richard Fortey has been kicking around his woods in England and has just released “The Wood for the Trees,” a comprehensive stroll which incorporates not only tree stories, but also tales of deep time and

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››› Bye Bye Birdie (1963) Dick Van Dyke.

Blue Bloods

The

Bones

Tower Cam Bones

››› Daddy Long Legs (1955) Fred Astaire.

City Bulletin Board, Commission Meetings

City Bulletin Board

School Board Information

School Board Information

ESPN 33 206 140 NFL PrimeTime (N)

dNBA Basketball Chicago Bulls at Memphis Grizzlies. SportsCenter (N) (Live)

ESPN2 34 209 144 E2017 Australian Open Tennis First Round. From Melbourne, Australia. (N) (Live) FSM

36 672

Focused Blues

kNHL Hockey St. Louis Blues at Anaheim Ducks. (N) Blues

NBCSN 38 603 151 kNHL Hockey FNC

39 360 205 Special Report

CNBC 40 355 208 Undercover Boss MSNBC 41 356 209 Lockup Corcoran

NHL Overtime (N)

NHL Sun. Dakar

Sports

Fox Reporting

World Poker Tour Sports

Premier

Watters’ World

Greg Gutfeld

Fox Report

Undercover Boss

Undercover Boss

Undercover Boss

Undercover Boss

Lockup: Raw

Lockup

Lockup: Wichita-

Lockup: Raw

Anthony Bourd.

Anthony Bourd.

CNN

44 202 200 Anthony Bourd.

Anthony Bourd.

45 245 138 The Librarians (N)

›››‡ Gravity (2013) Sandra Bullock.

Anthony Bourd.

TNT

The Librarians

Librarian: King

USA

46 242 105 Law & Order: SVU

Law & Order: SVU

Law & Order: SVU

Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam

A&E

47 265 118 Leah Remini

Hoarders (N)

Hoarders Overload

First 48

First 48

Leah Remini

Jokers

Jokers

Jokers

Jokers

Jokers

TRUTV 48 246 204 Jokers AMC TBS

Jokers

Jokers

50 254 130 ›› Predators (2010) Adrien Brody.

Jokers

Jokers

››‡ John Carter (2012) Taylor Kitsch. 51 247 139 ›› Horrible Bosses 2 (2014) Jason Bateman. ›› Horrible Bosses 2 (2014) Jason Bateman.

BRAVO 52 237 129 Housewives/Atl. HIST

BEST BETS WOW DTV DISH 7 PM

But above all that, Fortey loves his wood and the plants and animals in it. The scientist in him enthusiastically appears at frequent intervals, examining the beeches and elms and cherries and hollies, while looking at nearly everything else as well. Lichens, mushrooms, beetles, dormice, bats, moths, ghost orchids, and muntjacs — all are investigated. “Not so much an inventory,” he says, “as a catalogue leading to compelling and interlocking stories.” Speaking of interlocking stories — a few weeks ago, a patron at the library asked me to help him find a book he had waiting on the hold shelves. It turned out to be Wohlleben’s “Hidden Life of Trees,” so we got to talking. I

SPORTS 7:30

8 PM

8:30

toldTUPEYD him of my previous life as an arborist and my great appreciation for the book, and he told me that WIHELA he has been working on a fictional book on trees for many years. The longer NEDALT he works on it, he said, the more scientists discover, and the less fictional it AHDORI Now arrange seems. to form the s Wait until he reads suggested by these books. PRINT YOUR ANSWER IN THE CIRCL — Jake Vail is an information services assistant at the Lawrence Public Library.

Answer : DENTAL CLAMOR DEPUTY HAIRDO WRENCH AWHILE The mountain climber started sneezing and coughing at the summit, and —

CAME DOWN WITH A COLD January 15, 2017

9 PM

9:30

10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30

Cable Channels cont’d

Network Channels

M

human associations. If Wohlleben’s book is the “how” of trees, Fortey’s is more of the “what.” As the author says, it’s “both romantic and forensic.” So he writes of making beech leaf liqueur, firing clay ceramics from his forest soils, making glass from the flint of the area, crafting fine cabinetry from felled cherry trees, making walking sticks and charcoal, and exploring the local history of bodgers and turners (chair- and bowl-makers). He also digs deep into the human history of his area — sometimes a bit too far afield from his woodland forays — which lends a certain bioregional air to the tale. After all, he can easily work back a couple thousand years to when Romans occupied his turf.

Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app

2 new books delve into the world of trees ©2017 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.

First Family of

Housewives/Atl.

54 269 120 Transition of Power The 44th President: In His Own Words

SYFY 55 244 122 Resident Evil

›› Resident Evil: Extinction (2007)

Watch

Housewives/Atl.

American Pickers

Family

American Pickers

››› Drag Me to Hell (2009, Horror)

››› Lucy (2014) Scarlett Johansson. ››› Lucy (2014) Scarlett Johansson. ›› Taken 2 (2012) ›› Beerfest (2006) ›› Super Troopers (2001, Comedy) Roast Btl The Comedy Central Roast

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

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

Mariah’s World Mariah’s World (N) The Royals (N) Mariah’s World Mariah’s World Nashville Still King Still King Steve Austin’s ››› Smokey and the Bandit (1977) Flea Flea Flea Flea Flea Flea Flea Flea Flea Flea Tyler Perry’s Temptation: Marriage Counselor Being Mary Jane Suffering Paid Get Rich ››› 8 Mile (2002) Eminem, Kim Basinger. Love & Hip Hop Love & Hip Hop Food Paradise (N) Wat Wat Secret Beaches Wat Wat Wat Wat Sister Wives (N) Long Lost Family Married by Sister Wives If Looks Could Kill Open Marriage (2017) Tilky Jones. If Looks Could Kill (2016) Gary Sievers. The Rachels (2016) Caitlin Carver. A Mother’s Nightmare (2012) The Rachels Guy’s Games Worst Cooks Cooks vs. Cons Cooks vs. Cons Worst Cooks Beach Beach Carib Carib Island Island Hunters Hunt Intl Carib Carib Crash Jagger Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Friends Friends Friends Friends MECH-X4 Rebels Spy Kids: All the Time in the World Lab Rats Lab Rats Lab Rats Lab Rats K.C. Bizaard ›››› Finding Nemo (2003) K.C. Bizaard Girl Best Fr. Brak Birdman Rick Rick American Fam Guy Fam Guy Venture Super Titan Alaska Last Frontier Everest Rescue (N) The Wheel Last Frontier Hungr ››› The Hunger Games: Catching Fire (2013) Jennifer Lawrence. Osteen Jeremiah Obama: The Price of Hope (N) Obama: The Price of Hope Sea Of Hope Unleashing Mr Love by Chance (2016) Ben Ayers. Golden Golden Golden Golden Finding Bigfoot Finding Bigfoot “Hawaii’s Little Foot” (N) Finding Bigfoot Finding Bigfoot Reba Reba Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond King King King King Osteen K. Shook Copeland Creflo D. You Are Joseph Sunday Night Prime Catholics Rosary Theo. Roundtable Mother Angelica Sunday Mass In Laws In Laws In-Laws In-Laws Femme (2013, Documentary) Second Second Book TV After Words Book TV After Words Q&A Prime Public Affairs Events Q&A Prime Public Dateline on ID (N) Is O.J. Innocent? Is O.J. Innocent? Murder Calls (N) Is O.J. Innocent? America’s Civil War America’s Civil War America’s Civil War America’s Civil War America’s Civil War ›‡ Alex Cross (2012, Action) Tyler Perry. ›‡ Alex Cross (2012, Action) Tyler Perry. Strangest Weather That’s Amazing (N) Dead of Winter: The Donner Party That’s Amazing ››› Sweet Smell of Success (1957) ›››› The Ladykillers (1955) Water Bangville

HBO 401 MAX 411 SHOW 421 STZENC 440 STRZ 451

501 515 545 535 527

300 310 318 340 350

Now You See 2 The Young Pope (N) The Young Pope The Young Pope ›› Criminal (2016) ›››‡ Insomnia (2002) Al Pacino. ›››› Dog Day Afternoon (1975) Bourne Ulti. Homeland Homeland (N) The Affair “308” (N) Homeland The Affair “308” The Game Plan ››› The Abyss (1989) Ed Harris. ››‡ Blade II (2002) Black Sails “VIII.” Rolling Stones ››‡ Money Monster (2016) Déjà Vu

WED. FEB. 1ST

East Lawrence Rec. Center (1245 E 15th St) 11:30 - Free lunch & training for job seekers. 12:30-2:30 - Meet Employers & APPLY!

F E B

Employers: Contact Peter at psteimle@ljworld.com

F E AT U R I N G FiveStar

Senior livingtm

More employers are signing up and will be shown here next week! J O B C AT E G O R I E S Customer Service • Drivers • Health Care • Landscaping • Maintenance • Personal Care • Professional • Warehouse & More!

JAN


Sunday, January 15, 2017

jobs.lawrence.com

CLASSIFIEDS

PLACE YOUR AD:

785.832.2222

classifieds@ljworld.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

Student Activities Coordinator

Facilities and Administrative Financial Analyst Intermediate

KU Applied English Center seeks a Student Activities Coordinator to join their team.

The Office of the Comptroller is recruiting for a Facilities and Administrative Financial Analyst Intermediate.

Information & Application at:

Information & Application at:

http://employment.ku.edu/staff/7769BR Application deadline is February 5, 2017.

Research Programs Director The Life Span Institute is hiring a Research Programs Director.

Information & Application at:

https://employment.ku.edu/staff/7212BR Application review begins 1/20/17.

http://employment.ku.edu/staff/7816BR First review of applications is 1/23/17. For complete job descriptions & more information, visit:

employment.ku.edu

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

LABORERS

ICL Performance Products, one of the world’s leading fertilizer and specialty chemicals companies is now accepting applications for Laborer positions at our facility in Lawrence, KS. Laborers perform a variety of duties including super sacking, stenciling and labeling, cleaning, and operating forklifts to load trucks and transport product in the plant. Laborers will have the opportunity to progress into chemical operator positions. Minimum requirements for the Laborer position include high school diploma or equivalent, current driver’s license, the ability to work rotating shifts, and able to lift 50lbs. STARTING PAY

STARTING PAY

PER $ HOUR plus shift premiums

$

17.95

24.61

PER HOUR after training in chemical operator positions

Employees are eligible for most benefits the first of the month following hire. Benefits include health, dental, and vision insurance, short term and long term disability, 401k, life insurance, flexible spending accounts, paid holidays and vacation after one year of service.

To view the complete job description and requirements and to

Submit your resume online, please visit: ICLCAREERS.SILKROAD.COM In order to be considered for these positions, resumes must be received by 2/3/17.

ICL recognizes that our greatest assets are our people. We are committed to recruiting and retaining versatile, highly motivated individuals who can contribute to our success. We have a team-oriented culture that encourages creativity, decision-making and entrepreneurial spirit. EEO/AA EMPLOYER/Veterans/Disabled

We offer opportunities for new experiences and advancement. Positive attitude a must! We are Five Star!

• LICENSED NURSE FT or PT Days and Eve. RN or LPN, Charge Nurse

• CNA/CMA FT or PT Days and Eve.

APPLY IN PERSON

and ask about our sign on bonus. or APPLY ONLINE: careers.fivestarseniorliving.com EOE • Drug Free Workplace

New Year, New Career! Start the new year off with a full time job that offers competitive pay and an excellent benefits package!

Job Opportunities Available on Multiple Shifts! Production Wages Starting at $10.25/hr! 2nd & 3rd Shifts offer a 50¢ Shift differential! General Plant Labor, Packagers, Mixers, Rollers, Sanitation, Machine Operators, Utility, Warehouse & Distribution Associates, Industrial Maintenance Techs, Electrician & Sanitation Supervisor!

Apply at www.resers.com or in person today! 3167 SE 10th St., Topeka, KS 66607 (785) 817-0251

A Culture of Food, Family, Fun, Giving and Growing! Come join our family today!

Knowledge of a Windows and Mac environment with proficiency in MS Windows Servers, IIS, Watchguard Firewalls, MAC OS, Barracuda Spam filter, switches and routers a must. VMWare is preferable but not required.

Send Resumé via E-mail to: tswietek@ogdenpubs.com. Or mail to: Ogden Publications: 1503 SW 42nd St., Topeka, KS 66609. Attention Tim Swietek. An equal opportunity employer

NOW HIRING SMILES (: Full & Part-Time!

$10.25 TO START and benefits!

Are you positive and outgoing? Then we need you at our store on the Kansas Turnpike (I-70), just east of Lawrence!

Apply Today! ezgostores.com/our-team C1-540071

We offer competitive wages and excellent benefits. Shift differential for nursing, health, dental and vision insurance, an excellent orientation program, paid time off, premium pay on holidays, and save in the 401(k) plan with profit sharing. Direct deposit, tuition reimbursement, an employee assistance program and corporate discounts are special services Brandon Woods’ Team Members enjoy.

Ogden Publications, a growing multi-media company specializing in national magazine and internet publishing, is seeking a take charge person to lead our Network Team. This is creative and challenging work in a fast paced environment. The Network Manager position will report directly to the Director of Information Technology. The position will oversee the network support team with direct management and technical leadership as it pertains to details and prioritization of all network efforts related to projects, tasks, and goals.

We Are Five Star! 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 who want to make a difference in the lives of those we serve.

NETWORK MANAGER


4D

|

Sunday, January 15, 2017

.

L awrence J ournal -W orld

F E B P R E S E N T E D B Y J O B S . L AW R E N C E . C O M

Wednesday • February 1 11:30 AM - 2:30 PM East Lawrence Rec. Center 1245 East 15th Street

PLACE YOUR AD:

785.832.2222

Business Operations Manager Watkins Health Services at the University of Kansas Lawrence campus has an immediate opening for a Business Operations Manager. This position is for a full time permanent employee to manage the Business Office operations, which includes staff supervision and all accounting, billing, and insurance claims functions for patients treated at a dynamic ambulatory university health center. For more information, a complete position description with required qualifications, and to apply, please visit: http://employment.ku.edu/staff/7753BR Application deadline is 1/17/17

classifieds@ljworld.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

Advanced Practice Registered Nurse The University of Kansas Watkins Health Services has an immediate opening for an Advanced Practice Registered Nurse to provide medical care on a contemporary, culturally oriented college campus of about 25,000 students. This unclassified professional staff position will work full time during the 9 month academic year and is responsible for providing primary care in the health center’s stimulating academic environment with an emphasis on patient education. Requires graduation from an accredited Nurse Practitioner program; licensed or eligible with the State of Kansas; Board certified or eligible in Adult/Family Practice; DEA registration; and current ACLS certification. For additional information & to apply, go to: http://employment.ku.edu/staff/7754BR

Application deadline is 1-17-17

KU is an EO/AAE. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, national origin, disability or protected Veteran status.

KU is an EO/AAE. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, national origin, disability or protected Veteran status.

Night Owls!

Communities In Schools of Mid-America, Inc. (CISMidAm) seeks AmeriCorps VISTA members to serve full time for one year, building

HUMAN RESOURCES GENERALIST The HR Generalist will conduct day-to-day generalist functions in support of the HR Department. This position will assist with recruitment; conduct New Employee Orientation; process benefit paperwork; and prepare and submit various changes to payroll including changes to staff benefits, pay and position changes. Other key duties include overseeing and maintaining personnel, medical files, spreadsheets, administering FMLA, and ensuring I-9 forms are completed and maintained accurately as required by law. The ideal candidate will have a Bachelor’s degree in HR or a closely related field, w/ at least 3 years of previous HR experience. To review full bulletin and apply please go to:

www.bertnash.org

Saferide Now Age 19! Do you have customer service skills? Drive the Lawrence T, KU on Wheels, & Saferide/ Safebus. • NO experience necessary! • Day & Night shifts. • Age 19+ for non-CDL SafeRide positions • 21+ for CDL positions • $11.50/hr after paid training. • Full-time benefits! • Part-time flexibilty • Genuine Career opportunities! Apply online: lawrencetransit.org/employment Or come to: MV Transportation, Inc. 1260 Timberedge Road Lawrence, KS We are an equal opportunity employer and all qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, national origin, disability status, protected veteran status, or any other characteristic protected by law.

AdministrativeProfessional

AgricultureFarming

the organization’s capacity to bring communities and individuals out of poverty. Positions available: Data Collection & Analysis Specialist, Program Development Specialist, Business Operations Specialist and Communications & Marketing Specialist. Members would serve from the CISMidAm Office in Lawrence, KS. Bachelor’s degree or demonstrated relevant equivalent experience in social work, education, communications, business, marketing or related field is required. AmeriCorps VISTA is open to all US Citizens, nationals, or lawful permanent resident aliens age 18 and older. Members receive a modest living allowance. Members who serve for a year also receive limited health benefit options, childcare, if needed, and other benefits. After successful completion of a term of service, members can choose to receive a Segal AmeriCorps Education Award or post-service stipend. For complete VISTA Assignment Description see www.cismidamerica.org Applicants should submit a cover letter, resume and three references to: cis@cismidamerica.org

Construction

Shawnee + Topeka

DriversTransportation TRUCK DRIVER

Admin Support II Full-time position in the Utilities Dept to provide responsible administrative / clerical support. Requires 1-3 yrs general office exp, MS Office expertise & ability to type 40WPM. Great attention to detail and the ability to wk in a fast-paced environment is a must. $14.62 per hr. Must pass background ck, physical and drg screen. Apply by 1/23/17. To Apply Go To: www.lawrenceks.org/jobs EOE M/F/D

ADMINISTRATIVE SPECIALIST KANSAS BOARD OF REGENTS The Kansas Board of Regents invites nominations and applications for an Administrative Specialist. A complete position description and instructions on how to apply for this position is available on: http://www.kansas regents.org/about/board_ office/employment_ opportunities EOE

Follow Us On Twitter!

@JobsLawrenceKS

Find the latest openings at the best companies in Northeast Kansas!

EXTENSION AGENT 4-H opportunity in Johnson County, office in Olathe, Kansas. See www.ksre.ksu.edu/jobs for responsibilities, qualifications, and application procedure. Application deadline: 2/2/17.

Lowboy truck driver needed to move heavy equipment. Must have previous experience. Benefits include company paid health, vacation, 401k. Pay based on experience. Apply at Hamm 609 Perry Place Perry, KS Equal Opportunity Employer Need an apartment? Place your ad at apartments.lawrence.com or email classifieds@ljworld.com

K-State Research and Extension is an EOE of individuals with disabilities and protected veterans. Background check required.

EngineersTechnical

JOB SEEKER TIP #11

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY

Suffering can make you

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

Computer-Software Principal Software Engineer ARRIS Technology Inc. and/or its subsidiaries sks Principal Software Engr in Lawrence, KS – Coordinate development and support of products, software architecture and design. Job ID – BS+6 (16001920). Degree Electrcl Engrg, Comp Sci or rltd. 50% dom/int’l travel required. To apply go to http://www.arris.com & search for Job ID. For’gn equiv deg accptd. EOE/Affirm Actn Emplyr.

EngineersTechnical INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY

Immediate openings for experienced laborers, wall form setters, flatwork form setters, finishers, ironworkers, and foreman positions. Apply in person at 3160 SE 21st Street Topeka, KS Mon-Fri 8am to 4pm or email resume to Georgeh@concrete unlimited.net

Applications Developer II, Sprint Corporation, Kansas City, MO. Develop costeffective information technology solutions. Apply at www.sprint.jobs, Req. # 211763BR. Sprint is a background screening, drug screening, and E-Verify participating employer and considers qualified candidates regardless of previous criminal history. EOE Minorities/Females/ Protected Veterans/Disabled. INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY Applications Developer II, Sprint Corporation, Kansas City, MO. Develop cost-effective information technology solutions by creating new, and modifying existing, software applications. Apply at www.sprint.jobs, Req. #211803BR. Sprint is a background screening, drug screening, and E-Verify participating employer and considers qualified candidates regardless of previous criminal history. EOE Minorities/Females/ Protected Veterans/Disabled.

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

Applications Developer III, Sprint Corporation, Overland Park, KS. Develop cost-effective information technology solutions by creating new, and modifying existing, software applications. Apply at www.sprint.jobs, Req. #211786BR. Sprint is a background screening, drug screening, and E-Verify participating employer and considers qualified candidates regardless of previous criminal history. EOE Minorities/Females/ Protected Veterans/Disabled.

Deliver Newspapers! Choose: Lawrence or ...Lawrence!! It’s Fun, part-time work Be an independent contractor. Deliver every day, between 2-6 a.m., so your days are free! Reliable vehicle, driver’s license, insurance in your own name, and a phone required.

Come in & Apply — Journal-World Media 645 New Hampshire, or call/email Joan: 785-832-7211, jinsco@ljworld.com

SERVICES TO PLACE AN AD: Antique/Estate Liquidation

785.832.2222

Decks & Fences Pro Deck & Design

Specializing in the complete and expert installation of decks and porches. Over 30 yrs exp, licensed & insured. 913-209-4055

prodeckanddesign@gmail.com

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

DeSoto Drivers & Servers Management Trainees Production pays $8/hr. Drivers per delivery reimbursement. Background check. Apply in person 34080 Commerce Dr De Soto, KS

Estate Sale Services In home & Off site options to suit your tag sale needs. 785.260.5458

Carpentry

Citizens’ Utility Ratepayer Board

Attorney Applicants must be a member of the Kansas Bar and be able to work with minimal supervision. Litigation experience is a plus. For position details, please view the job posting on the agency website: http://curb.kansas.gov or the State of Kansas website at http://admin.ks.gov EOE

Need More Hours?

APPLY for 2 or 3 job openings and it could change your life! Decisions Determine Destiny

Serving KC over 40 years

Foundation Repair

The Wood Doctor - Wood rot repair, fences, decks, doors & windows - built, repaired, or replaced & more! Bath/kitchen remodeled. Basement finished. 785-542-3633 • 816-591-6234

Cleaning Quality Office Cleaning We are here to serve you, No job too big or small. Major CC excepted Info. & Appointments M-F, 9-5 Call 785-330-3869

Concrete Concrete Driveways, Parking lots, Pavement repair, Sidewalks, Garage Floors Foundation walls, Remove & Replacement Specialists Call 843-2700 or Text 393-9924

Foundation Repair Limestone wall bracing, floor straitening, sinking or bulging issues foundation water-proofing, repair and replacement Call 843-2700 or text 393-9924

Craig Construction Co

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

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

Seamless aluminum guttering.

Plumbing

Professional Organizing

Attic, Basement, Garage, Any Space ORGANIZED! Items sorted, boxed, donated/recycled + Downsizing help. Call TILLAR 913-375-9115

Insurance

Roofing BHI Roofing Company Up to $1500.00 off full roofs UP to 40% off roof repairs 15 Yr labor warranty Licensed & Insured. Free Est. 913-548-7585

Providing top quality service and solutions for all your insurance needs. Medicare Home Auto Business

Call Today 785-841-9538

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

A.B. PAINTING & REPAIR

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

Int/ext. Drywall, Siding, 30 plus yrs. Locally owned & operated.

jayhawkguttering.com

albeil@aol.com

785-842-0094

Call Lyndsey 913-422-7002

785-312-1917

Painting JAYHAWK GUTTERING

Quality Work Over 30 yrs. exp.

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

FOUNDATION REPAIR

Guttering Services

Interior/Exterior Painting

& Handyman needs small work. Bill Morgan 816-523-5703

785-832-2222 classifieds@ljworld.com

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

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

RETIRED MASTER PLUMBER

STARTING or BUILDING a Business?

Family Owned & Operated 20 Yrs

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

913-488-7320

Higgins Handyman

913-962-0798 Fast Service

Legal - Paralegal

Fully Insured 22 yrs. experience

Dirt-Manure-Mulch

Rich Black Top Soil No Chemicals Machine Pulverized Pickup or Delivery

Painting

AAA Home Improvements Int/Ext Repairs, Painting, Tree work & more- we do it all! 20 Yrs. Exp., Ins. & local Ref. Will beat all estimates! Call 785-917-9168

Deck Drywall Siding Replacement Gutters Privacy Fencing Doors & Trim Commercial Build-out Build-to-suit services

Stacked Deck

THE RESALE LADY

Home Improvements

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

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

General

classifieds@ljworld.com

Call Al 785-331-6994

Tree/Stump Removal ARBOR-TECH Licensed and Insured tree climber - trimming, removal, stump removal, storm damage, rigging. Free estimates Dave 785-312-1690

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)


L awrence J ournal -W orld

Sunday, January 15, 2017

MERCHANDISE PETS

NOTICES

TO PLACE AN AD:

TO PLACE AN AD:

785.832.2222

classifieds@ljworld.com Estate Sales

Miscellaneous

ESTATE SALE 3413 Tam O’ Shanter Dr. Sat., January 21 9:00a.m.-5:-00p.m. Apple computer, HP printer, original paintings, Samsonite sofa, 2 Danish mod. sofas, collection of Danish modern chairs, 2 large modern dining tables w/ chairs, very nice queen bed, pr. twin beds, studio piano, coffee tables, hanging swing chair, buffet, modern serving cart, love seat, small tables, modern lamps, quality cookware, upholstered desk chair, 2 rooms of books, area carpet, stacks of fabric, ornamental windmill, large variety of modern dishes and serving pcs., glassware, pottery, Craftsman table saw, shop vacs, tools, snow shovels, music books, sheet music, book shelves, jewelry, patio set, Maytag washer and dryer, 2 small freezers, Amana fridge w/ bottom freezer, clothes, misc.

AUCTIONS Auction Calendar FARM TOY AUCTION SAT, JAN 21 @ 9:30 AM WISCHROPP AUCTIONS OSAGE CITY, KS

AUCTION PREVIEW: FRI. JAN 20th 4:30-7:30 PM

Mrs. Dale ‘Judy’ Fowler View Pictures Online at: www.wischroppauctions.com Wischropp Auctions (785) 828-4212

Auction Calendar PUBLIC AUCTION Saturday, Jan 28th 9:30 A.M. 3408 West 6th American Legion Lawrence, KS Sellers: Farm Toys: Jerry & Kim Neis Coins: Paul Fellers Auctioneers: Elston Auctions (785-594-0505) (785-218-7851) “Serving Your Auction Needs Since 1994” Please visit us online at www.KansasAuctions.net/ elston for pictures!!

LAND AUCTION Tuesday, Jan 24, 2017 Beginning at 6: 30 PM Ottawa, KS

Auctions

Celebration Hall, 220 W. 17th, Ottawa, KS

FARM TOY AUCTION

L.A. ‘Art” Witham, Jr. Estate, Seller Howard Witham, Admin Miller & Midyett Real Estate - Osage County Branch Office Wayne Wischropp, Realtor / Auctioneer Michelle Loeffler, Realtor View Pictures Online at: www.wischroppauctions.com Wischropp Auctions (785) 828-4212

ESTATE AUCTION Sunday, Jan 15th 9:30 A.M. 2110 Harper Bldg. 21 Dg. Fairgrounds Lawrence, KS Seller: Jane W. Malin Estate Auctioneers: Elston Auctions (785-594-0505) (785-218-7851) “Serving Your Auction Needs Since 1994” Please visit us online at www.KansasAuctions.net/ elston for pictures!!

Sale by Elvira

SAT, JAN 21 @ 9:30 AM WISCHROPP AUCTIONS OSAGE CITY, KS

Due to the death of my husband the following selling; 250+ 1/16 Ertl & scale model IH & CIH Toy Tractors; 20 IH 1/16 Ontario Toy Show Models; plus partial Dale Earnhardt Collection; plus Hallmark Lionel Train Ornament Collection & shop tools. Shop Tools - Will sell in second ring @ approx. 11 am. AUCTION PREVIEW: FRI. JAN 20th 4:30-7:30 PM

MERCHANDISE Computer-Camera

Artisan Made Stool Purchased from an Art Gallery 18”H x 21”L x 12”W Bamboo $25 785-865-4215 KU Hand Puppets Original- Antique $ 50.00 ea Call 785-979-4937

Music-Stereo Entertainment Center - Sander Audio Cabinet. RCA stereo receiver, RCA MTR 225 dual auto reverse cassette deck, RCA Compact disk player, RCA linear tracking turntable, 2 Bose model 141 speakers. Can be controlled from master remote control. All owners manuals included. Everything like new. $100. Call 785-749-0291 Original Songs of KU Records - Antiques $ 100.00 Call 785-979-4937

PIANOS • H.L. Phillips upright $650 • Cable Nelson Spinet $500 • Gulbranson Spinet - $450 • Sturn Spinet - $400 Prices include delivery & tuning

785-832-9906

Firewood-Stoves

Furniture

Ag Equipment & Farm Tools / Supplies

Round Glass Top Table 30” Round $ 50.00 Call 785-979-4937

Often featured by our local Auctioneers! Check our Auction Calendar for upcoming auctions and the

BIGGEST SALES!

Used Italian Leather Couch and ChairOx Blood Color $ 100.00 for set Call 785-979-4937

Household Misc.

CNA DAY CLASSES Jan 31-Feb 16 M-Th 8.30-2.30 Feb 27-March 16 8.30a-2p Apr 3 -April 20 8.30a-2p

PRINCETON STEINWAY STUDIO Piano-Voice Lessons $10-$20 • All Ages treblesue@yahoo.com Superior Ratings

CNA EVENING CLASSES LAWRENCE KS Feb 21-Mar 17 T/Th/F 5p- 9p Apr 4 -May 5 T/Th/F 5p- 9p CMA EVE CLASSES LAWRENCE Mar 22-April 28 5p-9p

Need to sell your car? Place your ad at classifieds.lawrence.com

SUMMER CLASSES: May 15 - May 26 M-F 8a-5p Jun 5 - Jun 16 M-F 8a-5p Jun 19 - Jun 30 M-F 8a-5p

LOST & FOUND

CNA 10 hr REFRESHER LAWRENCE KS CMA 10 hr UPDATE LAWRENCE KS Jan 27/28 Feb 17/18 March 17/18 April 28/29 May 12/13 Classes begin 8.30am

Love Auctions?

Found Pet/Animal FOUND: Black cat — four white paws, white chest; face is all black. Found near intersection of Riviera Dr. and Cherry Hills Dr. First seen about January 8. Friendly, nice to our small dog, meows very insistently at times. Says the word “meow” VERY clearly almost like a human. Call 785-841-3736.

HOME HEALTH AIDE:TBA

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

There will be no classes Spring Break May 20-May 26

BIGGEST SALES!

CALL NOW- 785.331.2025 trinitycareerinstitute.com

classifieds@ljworld.com

RENTALS REAL ESTATE TO PLACE AN AD:

For Sale by Owner

Get ready for summer in your newly remodeled town home. New open floor plan. Mud room with W/D. Lot backs to green space. Newer roof. New paint in-side & out. Brand new kitchen w/ SS appliances. Nice dining area. New light fixtures. Large fenced yard. Completely re-insulated. 785-766-9999

• 28 Days - $280 Call 785-832-2222 to schedule your ad!

classifieds@ljworld.com

785.832.2222

REAL ESTATE

TV-Video

FREON R12 WANTED: Certified buyer will pickup nationwide and pay CA$H for cylinders and cases of cans. (312)291-9169

Business Announcements

NEW !!!!!!!: Special Discount for High School Students !

CNA - Start January 17th, 2017, Tuesday/ Thursday evenings in Chanute, Ottawa and Lawrence. Day class offered Wednesdays in Ottawa. CMA - Classes offered in Chanute, Ottawa and Hybrid (online) in January. EMT - Class starts January 17, 2017, Tues & Thurs evening on Ottawa campus. Contact: trhine@neosho.edu or call 620-431-2820 ext 262

• 1 Day - $50 • 2 Days - $75

Want To Buy Tablet Desk Solid wood, Firm H- 32” D- 25” W- 22” Seat 17” x 16.25” $20. Cash payment $20 785-865-4215

TRINITY CAREER INSTITUTE

Open House Special!

Zenith VCR 421 VHS tape player and recorder with remote, user’s guide. Works fine, $30, (785) 843-5566.

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

CNA, CMA, EMT Classes

classifieds@ljworld.com

TELEVISION — FREE! 19 inch older model Sharp T.V. Works good. Excellent picture. FREE Call 331-4642

Mrs. Dale ‘Judy’ Fowler View Pictures Online at: www.wischroppauctions.com Wischropp Auctions (785) 828-4212

Special Notices

3211 Rainier Dr - Lawrence 3 BR, 1.5 BA - $124,000

hardsplit. $85.

classifieds@ljworld.com

Special Notices

NEW YOGA MAT CARRIER by Izara Arts, never used. Linen exterior & fully lined, very nice! End pocket. L 27” W 9.5” $18. Cash 785-865-4215

PC with OS Win XP, svc pack 3, 2.17 GHz, 1.0 GB of RAM, 2 CD/DVD read/write drives, 15” monitor, HP Photosmart C4480 (all in one; needs cartridges) printer, external drive and all cords. Manual. Much software. Everything works. Only $75 for the bundle. Call to see, or for more details, 785/843-5566.

Firewood: Mixed woods, mostly Stacked/delivered. James 785-241-9828

785.832.2222

| 5D

Duplexes

RENTALS Apartments Unfurnished DOWNTOWN LOFT

1st MONTH FREE!! 2BR in a 4-plex New carpet, vinyl, cabinets, countertop. W/D is included.

grandmanagement.net Equal Housing Opportunity. 785-865-2505

Studio Apartments 600 sq. ft., $725/mo. No pets allowed Call Today 785-841-6565 advanco@sunflower.com



FREE MONTH OF RENT SIGN BY MARCH 1

Townhomes

Call 785-842-2575 www.princeton-place.com

3 BR w/2 or 2.5 BA

All Electric

Available Now!

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

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

LAUREL GLEN APTS 2 BR & 3 BR/2BA Units

Townhomes

785-865-2505 grandmanagement.net

Rooms ROOM FOR RENT IN HOME Furnished BR Quiet, near KU, on bus route. $375/mo. Utils paid. 785-979-4317

Water & Trash Paid Small Dog

785-838-9559 EOH

SEARCH AMENITIES



VIEW PHOTOS

GET MAPS

CARS TO PLACE AN AD: Chevrolet Cars

785.832.2222

Chevrolet Trucks

classifieds@ljworld.com Ford SUVs

Pontiac Cars

2010 Ford Edge Limited

convertible, get a jump on spring in this one of a kind car! Only 1900 miles, one owner, leather, alloy wheels, power equipment and more fun than you probably deserve!! stk#406532

PUBLIC NOTICES TO PLACE AN AD: Lawrence

785.832.2222 Lawrence

legals@ljworld.com Lawrence

(First published in the Copies of the Notice to (First published in the Lawrence Daily Journal- Contractors and specifica- Lawrence Daily JournalWorld on January 15, 2017) tions may be obtained at World on January 15, 2017) the Finance Department at NOTICE TO BIDDERS NOTICE TO BIDDERS the above address. Sealed proposals will be received by the City of Lawrence, Kansas, in the Office of the City Clerk, 6 East Sixth Street until 2:00 p.m., Tuesday, January 31, 2017, for the following: BID #1706 - One (1) Current Production HD Truck

Sealed proposals will be The City Commission re- received by the City of serves the right to reject Lawrence, Kansas, in the any or all bids and to Office of the City Clerk, 6 waive informalities. East Sixth Street until 2:00 p.m., Tuesday, January 31, City of Lawrence, Kansas 2017, for the following: Sherri Riedemann City Clerk _______

BID #1705 Two (2) Current Production Passenger Vans

Lawrence

2010 Chevrolet Camaro SS V8

Copies of the Notice to Contractors and specifications may be obtained at the Finance Department at the above address.

V8 loaded with leather heated seats, sunroof, remote start, 20” alloy wheels, Boston sound, power to spare and more! Stk#32211A2

The City Commission reserves the right to reject any or all bids and to waive informalities.

20 LINES: 1 DAY $50 • 2 DAYS $75 + FREE PHOTO!

RENTALS & REAL ESTATE 10 LINES: 2 DAYS $50 • 7 DAYS $80 • 28 DAYS $280 + FREE PHOTO!

SERVICE DIRECTORY 6 LINES: 1 MONTH $118.95 • 6 MONTHS $91.95/MO • 12 MONTHS $64.95/MO + FREE LOGO!

4wd Ext cab, running boards, bed liner, tow package, remote start, power equipment, stk#327561

Only $18,500 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

heated leather seats, alloy wheels, power equipment, cruise control, SYNC, home link stk#36358A1

Only $10,814 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Ford Trucks

City of Lawrence, Kansas

GARAGE SALES UNLIMITED LINES: UP TO 3 DAYS, ONLY $24.95 + FREE GARAGE SALE KIT!

CARS

2015 Chevrolet Spark LT automatic, power equipment, alloy wheels, more room and gas mileage than you would expect! Stk#15413

Only $9,974 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Chevrolet Trucks

Chevrolet 2013 Silverado 4wd Z71 LT ext cab, tow package, power equipment, alloy wheels, great finance terms are available. Stk#33169B1

Only $26,755 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Chrysler Vans

2011 FORD F150 XLT Super Crew - Can Seat 6. 49K Mi, Tow Pkg, 5.8 V8, 2 WD, Roll Up Cover, Sirius Ready, Never Wrecked or Needed Repair. Beautiful blue with grey interior. Call 785-842-4515 or 785-979-7719

Hyundai Crossovers

Call 785.832.2222 or email classifieds@ljworld.com

Toyota 2006 Highlander V6, power equipment, alloy wheels, traction control, 3rd row seating stk#473112

Only $9,736 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

MERCHANDISE & PETS

ADVERTISE TODAY!

DALE WILLEY

Toyota SUVs

10 LINES & PHOTO: 7 DAYS $19.95 • 28 DAYS $49.95 DOESN’T SELL IN 28 DAYS? + FREE RENEWAL!

10 LINES & PHOTO: 7 DAYS $19.95 • 28 DAYS $49.95 DOESN’T SELL IN 28 DAYS? + FREE RENEWAL!

Only $12,814 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

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

Sherri Riedemann City Clerk _______

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING SPECIALS OPEN HOUSES

Only $19,814 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

2007 Chevrolet Silverado

2006 Pontiac Solstice

2003 Chevrolet Silverado 2500 LS crew cab, tow package, alloy wheels, dual power seats, Bose sound, stk#124861

Only $11,555 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Chrysler 2008 Town & Country Limited, alloy wheels, leather heated seats, power equipment, DVD, navigation and more! Stk#160681

Only $9855 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

2008 Hyundai Veracruz Limited

Autos Wanted

BUYING JUNK VEHICLES

Limited leather heated seats, sunroof, power equipment, 3rd row seating, room for the family and leaves room in your wallet! Stk#346331

CASH PAID & FREE PICK UP. All makes & models.

Only $10,814

Call OR Text for quote.

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

785-633-7556


6D

|

Sunday, January 15, 2017

PUZZLES

.

L awrence J ournal -W orld

THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD THE DOWNSIZING OF NATHANIEL AMES By Peter Broda and Erik Agard Puzzles Edited by Will Shortz ACROSS 1 Loops in, in a way 5 Goddess with a throne headdress 9 Tempo 13 Figs. on drivers’ licenses 16 When repeated, a Pacific tourist destination 17 Fish whose name is a celebrity’s name minus an R 18 Old bandleader with an Egyptian-inspired name 19 Outrigger projections 20 Things smoked by singer Courtney? 23 Scandalmaker in 2002 news 24 Speed demon 25 Headwear the N.B.A. banned in 2005 26 Game involving sharp projectiles and alcohol 28 Parrot’s cry 29 1950s prez 31 “Charlie Hustle is my name/I am banned from Hall of Fame,” e.g.? 33 Fist bump 34 “Yes, ____!” 36 Put a coat on 37 “Eureka!” moments 40 Press 42 Cloth colorist 43 Feature of Africa 44 ____ oil 46 Televangelist Joel

48 Alternative to “News” and “Maps” in a Google search 50 Road restriction 51 Pugnacious Olympian 53 Relative of a ferret 54 Cold and wet 55 F.B.I.’s div. 56 Hoopster Steph not playing at home? 60 Riffraff 62 Japanese watchmaker 64 Like Granny Smith apples 65 Endless chore 66 Dickens’s Uriah 68 Sega Genesis competitor, in brief 69 Radiant 71 Intersect 73 The sport of boxing in the 1960s and ’70s, essentially? 75 “Nothing to write home about” 76 Groups with co-pays, briefly 78 Jockey strap 80 “Star Trek: T.N.G.” role 81 Installment 83 Personalized gifts for music lovers 85 Valet in P. G. Wodehouse stories 89 Contemporary hybrid music genre 90 Sots’ sounds 91 Nickname for Louise 93 Feast 94 Sail support 95 In unison 97 Echo effect 99 El operator in the Windy City, briefly

100 Hat for pop singer Corey? 103 Anthem contraction 104 “Uhh …” 105 Show what you know, say 107 “In all probability” 109 Regular 111 Obstinate one, astrologically 112 Two-time Best Actor winner arriving early? 115 Four-star rank: Abbr. 116 Monopoly purchase 117 Singer/songwriter Laura 118 Little foxes 119 Slump 120 ____ cosa (something else: Sp.) 121 Wanders (about) 122 They begin in juin DOWN 1 Original airer of “The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy” 2 Pop competition 3 Something smoked by comic Chris? 4 Hang on to 5 Org. against doping 6 Spindly limbed 7 Shakespeare villain 8 Photo of Canada’s former prime minister Stephen? 9 “Stay ____” 10 Aardvarks, by another name 11 Enter surreptitiously 12 Press lightly, as the brakes 13 He was buried in 1915 and died in 1926 14 Dressage gait

15 Invoice figs. 18 ____ lily 19 Fulminating 21 Dwarf planet more massive than Pluto 22 Atypical 23 Summer hrs. in Phila. 27 Literary device used to address plot inconsistencies 30 Nephrologists study them 32 Spies, informally 35 M.L.K.’s title: Abbr. 38 “Today” personality 39 Shark’s home 41 Close by 43 Egg producer 45 Arctic fliers 47 Blow it 49 Like a handyman’s projects, for short 50 “Anything! Anything at all!” 52 Shade of pink 54 Sword fight, e.g. 56 Filament sites, in botany 57 Imprisoned 58 Underhanded use of someone else’s domain name 59 Troubles 61 Cherry for talk show host Chelsea? 63 Glimpsed 67 Forswear 70 Genius 72 Arm muscle, informally 73 ____ drop 74 Miney follower 77 “Idomeneo” composer 79 “All My ____ Live in Texas”

1

2

3

4

5

16

6

7

8

9

17

20

34

40

41

46

31

57

58

44

49 53

70

60

75

76

81

72

77

78

82

94

95

105

62 67

73

91

85 93 98

102

106

86

92

97

101

68

80 84

96

99

103

107

104

108

109

113

110

111

112

115

116

117

118

119

120

121

122

82 U.N.C. student 83 Figure at the center of a maze 84 Tahoe, for one 86 Entourage of a 1990s white rapper? 87 Musical intermission 88 Continuous

88

63

74

79

90

100

61

83

89

87

55

66 71

45

54

65

69

39

50

59

64

37

43

52

38

27

36

42

51

15

32

35

48

14

23 26

30

47

56

13 19

25

33

12

22

24 29

11

18

21

28

10

114

90 Flamboyantly successful sort 92 Trampolinist’s wear 96 Start to -scope 97 Cincinnati squad 98 Dude, in British lingo 101 Smallish batteries 102 Long spear

105 Makes “it” 106 Zone 108 “Dark Sky Island” singer 110 Drink sometimes served hot 113 “Snowden” org. 114 ____, cuatro, seis, ocho …

UNITED FEATURE SUNDAY CROSSWORD ACROSS 1 It may turn on you 6 “-- I Lie to You?” 11 It might be down 16 Factions 21 Copier need 22 -- circle or tube 23 Delon of cinema 24 Pond sound 25 Foreheads 26 Front of an LP (2 wds.) 27 Dropped-egg sound 28 Variety show 29 Catch cold 30 Lake near Reno 32 Sherlock portrayer 34 WNW opposite 36 Prefix for center 37 Powder base 39 Class 41 Panasonic rival 43 Expedite 45 Split -- (nitpick) 47 Feudal lord 49 Point the finger at 51 Treats sea water 54 Curriculum -(resume) 55 Mumble 56 Oven shelf 60 -- the Hun 61 Gem surface 62 Moon stages 64 Yang complement 65 Jungle charger 66 Zenith opposite 67 Dry goods 68 Mr. Moto portrayer 70 Lamprey 71 Cauliflower bud 73 Roundup’s purpose 74 Nero’s tutor 75 Tijuana Ms. 77 Nonsense writer

78 Frankie of “Mule Train” 79 Smiled upon 80 Heat to boiling 82 Foamy 83 Declaim 84 Mini-chickens 87 Hone a razor 88 Santa’s season 89 Recipe meas. 93 Tiny life form 94 Court statements 95 Luminous 97 Durocher or Tolstoy 98 Dupe 99 Per diem 100 Tours de force 101 They turn litmus red 103 United 104 Wig 106 Shelley and Pickford 107 -- cake or bath 108 Crash scene org. 110 Preside at tea 111 Cheers 112 Turned turtle 113 -- apso 115 Ocean, in Mongolian 116 Toughen up 117 Lake cabin, often 120 Dorothy, to Em 122 Auto-safety advocate 124 Lean-to 128 Caviar, actually 129 Can. neighbor 131 Dark yellow 133 Large antelope 135 1051, to Terence 136 Hyrax 138 “Be quiet!” (2 wds.) 140 Organic compound 142 Ring-shaped reef 144 Dexterous 145 “Forget” a letter

146 -- & Young 147 Sheet of plywood 148 Wren residences 149 Minced 150 Reluctant 151 Gives autographs DOWN 1 Ready to swing (2 wds.) 2 Water wheel 3 Hillock 4 Archer of whodunits 5 Formerly, old-style 6 “First star I see tonight” folk 7 Pizza topping 8 Not over 9 Gypsy Rose -10 Far from colorful 11 Cruise ship fare 12 Skiing event 13 Come back to win 14 Korean auto 15 Feed the kitty 16 Groupie welcome 17 Sooner than 18 Feel envious about 19 Gray-brown 20 Flock of geese 31 Tummy trouble 33 What a moviegoer takes (2 wds.) 35 Pass around 38 Mountain range 40 Draw forth 42 Not quite spherical 44 Sun. homily 46 Sinatra’s “-- -- Me” 48 Centurion’s route 50 Verdant 51 Risks it 52 Outer space 53 Clown’s prop 54 Obi-Wan’s foe 55 Push

57 Dr. Kildare player 58 Mythical siren 59 Make some dough 61 Electrical unit 62 Roman naturalist 63 Ice pellets 66 Christmas tunes 67 Not soft or wilted 69 Commencement 72 Pack animal 73 Wainscots 74 Wield a sword 76 Late summer flower 78 Virginia caverns 79 Talks big 81 Explorer of 1497 82 Archaeology find 83 Fails to include 84 -- von Richthofen 85 Catkin 86 Uh-uhs 87 More wily 88 ER pictures (hyph.) 90 Like some alleys 91 Papyrus, for one 92 Sat for a camera 94 New Guinea native 95 “Cabaret” setting 96 Slack off 99 Twosomes 100 “Deck the Halls” phrase (hyph.) 102 Volcanic formations 105 Aussie minerals 106 Brawl 107 Reject 109 Diner sandwich 111 Cruised in style 112 Finally find 114 Does ghost work? 115 Make the call 116 Least occupied 117 Godzilla foe 118 Dodge 119 Monikers

UNIVERSAL SUDOKU

See both puzzle SOLUTIONS in Monday’s paper. 121 Doric’s cousin 123 Prudential rival 125 Many Vietnamese 126 Ms. Barkin of films

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.

127 Sour pickles 130 Got an A 132 Fishing gear 134 Skips stones

137 Promising 139 “The Greatest” 141 Old B’way posting 143 -- chi ch’uan

HIDATO

See answer next Sunday

©2017 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.

HERWNC TUPEYD WIHELA

Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app

ROALCM

NEDALT AHDORI

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 2D. Answer :

DENTAL CLAMOR DEPUTY HAIRDO WRENCH AWHILE The mountain climber started sneezing and coughing at the summit, and —

CAME DOWN WITH A COLD

JANUARY 15, 2017

Last week’s solution


January 15, 2017

MARKETPLACE

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