Lawrence Journal-World 10-06-2015

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TUESDAY • OCTOBER 6 • 2015

Same-sex couples take their case to federal level

DECISION DAY

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Pairs seek to force state to issue birth certificates By Peter Hancock Twitter: @LJWpqhancock

Topeka — Two same-sex couples from Kansas are now asking a federal court to order the state to issue birth certificates listing them as parents of children they conceived through artificial insemination. Those couples, including one from Lawrence who filed a simiThis just lar action in Douglas County District Court shows that last week, argue that recognition the state is refusing to comply with a recent is not yet U.S. Supreme Court de- realized in cision that said states Kansas, which must give full recognition to same-sex mar- means, in our view, we need riages. “This just shows a permanent that recognition is not injunction.” yet realized in Kansas, which means, in our view, we need a perma- — Doug Bonney, nent injunction,” said legal director for the Doug Bonney, legal di- American Civil Liberties rector for the American Union of Kansas Civil Liberties Union of Kansas, which filed the lawsuit. Bonney was the attorney who filed a federal lawsuit last year seeking to strike down Kansas’ ban on same-sex marriage. That case was still pending in federal district court when the Supreme Court handed down its landmark decision in June.

Part of the discussion (in street reconstruction) needs to be, do we look at something different given whether or not it’s going to fit with the neighbors.”

We have a real downtown here, and I think that’s probably all this community needs. But there’s a lot of development that can happen that doesn’t challenge downtown.” — Lawrence City Commission applicant Scott Morgan

— Lawrence City Commission applicant Lisa Larsen

John Young/Journal-World File Photos

New commissioner will be elected, sworn in today By Nikki Wentling

Female commissioners

Twitter: @nikkiwentling

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he months-long search to fill the Lawrence City Commission vacancy ends today, when current commissioners will elect one of two final candidates. The new commissioner — either geologist Lisa Larsen or editor/publisher Scott Morgan — will start in the position immediately. Larsen or Morgan will add a fifth voice to a body that will soon be tasked with making decisions on a new police facility, the reconstruction of Kasold Drive and retail development near the South Lawrence Trafficway, among other items. Please see DECISION, page 2A

l Watch Larsen and Morgan’s public interviews

If commissioners elect Lisa Larsen today, it will be the first time in almost 20 years that two women hold Lawrence City Commission seats at the same time. According to city records, the last time this happened was the 1995-96 and 1996-97 terms, when Bonnie (Augustine) Lowe and F. Jolene Anderson were commissioners. Prior to that, Marci Francisco served as mayor and Nancy Shontz as vice mayor in 1982-83. Francisco was also mayor in the 1981-82 term, during which Shontz served as a commissioner.

at ljworld.com/2015commissionfinalists.

City tops record for most building projects in a year Town Talk I

Chad Lawhorn clawhorn@ljworld.com

t is now official: Lawrence’s construction industry has had a record-breaking year, and the city is on pace in 2015 to issue building permits for more than $200 million worth of construction for the first time in its history. The latest building report shows Lawrence City Hall has issued permits for $187.8 million worth of

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mark. That’s $3.25 million a month, and, thus far in 2015, every single month has produced that level of construction, and most of the time much more. So, absent a significant slowdown to close the year, Lawrence is going to reach a new stratosphere in the construction world. Please see BUILDING, page 6A

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Ex-astronaut, KU prof recalls Hubble’s finds at lecture By Mackenzie Clark Twitter: @mclark59

How old is the universe, and what is its ultimate fate? Do black holes really exist? Are there planets orbiting other stars? Since Steve Hawley graduated from Kansas University in 1973, many of the questions he asked as a student have been answered. The former NASA astronaut and current Kansas University professor discussed those answers and more Monday evening in Hawley a lecture entitled “Hubble Space Telescope at 25: How our understanding of the universe has changed (or, fun things you can do with an education in science, technology, math and engineering).” The lecture also celebrated KU’s first two students to be recognized by the Astronaut Scholarship Foundation. Please see HUBBLE, page 2A

INSIDE

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construction. That’s better than the old record of $171.9 million set in 2013. This latest report tracks building activity through August, so Lawrence still has four months to add to its record-setting total. My abacus tells me that Lawrence needs only about $13 million of additional construction to get to the $200 million

Please see COUPLES, page 2A

New job for provost? 1D-4D 6A, 2D 1B-8B 1C-2C, 4C

Kansas University Provost and Executive Vice Chancellor Jeff Vitter is a finalist for the chancellor position at the University of Arkansas. Page 3A

Vol.157/No.279 28 pages


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LAWRENCE • STATE

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DEATHS

LOTTERY

Ray E. MillER Service 10:30 AM, Friday at Barnett Family Funeral Home. Visitation 6-8 PM, Thursday at Funeral Home. Burial at Fowler Cemetery. www.barnettfamilyfh.com

Hubble CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A

KU Provost Jeff Vitter introduced Hawley, remarking on his “stellar career” — a comment that drew groans from the crowd of about 125. Hawley first discussed the creation of the foundation, which was intended to encourage students nationwide to “pursue scientific endeavors, with the goal specifically of keeping America at the forefront of science and technology.” He said candidates must be nominated by faculty and majoring in engineering, natural or applied science, with the intent to pursue research to advance their fields upon completion of their degree. “For the past several years we’ve been working at KU to get (Kansas) University included (in the scholarship program),” Hawley said. “… We were successful this year in getting accepted into the program.” That meant the foundation was able to offer the two $10,000 scholarships to KU students for the first time this year: Jennifer Stern, a senior from Lawrence, and Jessica van Loben Sels, a senior from Albuquerque, N.M. “We hope to be able to do that every year as long as we continue to nominate candidates as qualified as our recipients today,” he said. Hawley went on to discuss the Hubble’s shaky beginnings in 1990, when many in politics and the media — including former late night TV host David Letterman — mocked the telescope’s blurry, lowresolution images. “We quickly figured out the reason for that was that the mirrors were the wrong shape,” he said. “… That was a real crisis.” NASA fixed the problems in 1993, which enabled astronomers to start revolutionizing the

Decision CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A

Here’s what the candidates shared about a few upcoming issues during individual interviews with the Journal-World.

Police facility Both candidates said the Lawrence Police Department is in need of a facilities upgrade, but they don’t want it funded with a tax increase. The department requested a new headquarters last year and has reiterated that its current locations — a Joint Law Enforcement Center downtown and an Investigation and Training Center in west Lawrence — are too small and don’t meet its needs. Voters rejected in November a proposal to fund a $28 million facility with a sales tax increase. Commissioners have discussed other options, but haven’t taken action. The issue is listed under the City Commission’s “future agenda items.” Larsen, who said she

knowledge we have about the universe. Hawley went on to answer some of the questions he had posed as an astronomy student at KU. He said with help from the Hubble Space Telescope, scientists have determined that the universe is approximately 13.7 billion years old. Part of that discovery was rooted in a long-exposure photo — 342 separate exposures, spanning 10 days in December of 1995, to be exact — that revealed thousands of specks, a majority of which are individual galaxies. In 1997, Hawley said, scientists saw one of the “first definitive detections” proving the existence of black holes. Since then, much larger black holes have been discovered. Astronomers also used the Hubble to observe distant supernovae to refine their understanding of the expansion of the universe in the late 1990s. They discovered that it is expanding much more rapidly than they previously thought, Hawley said. “The universe somehow contains this thing which we call ‘dark energy.’ Astronomers are really good at naming stuff even when we don’t know what it is,” he joked. “And this dark energy works like a negative gravity, and it’s causing the universe not only to expand but to speed up.” Combining this knowledge with prior knowledge of dark matter, astronomers have determined 95 percent of what makes the universe what it is is “stuff we don’t know anything about,” Hawley said. “We now think we understand about 5 percent of the universe,” Hawley said. “But, on the other hand, it’s further down for all of you young researchers to tackle.”

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EDITORS

Couples

The one thing that we’ve been keeping our eyes open for is exactly this scenario — that the admin would go back on its word, and CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A that it would start treating same-sex couples In August, Judge Dan- as second-class citizens.”

iel Crabtree granted what’s called a “declaratory” judgment in favor of the plaintiffs, meaning he struck down the provision of the Kansas Constitution and all other state statutes that banned same-sex marriages. But he deferred issuing any kind of order or injunction compelling the state of Kansas to comply, saying he was hopeful that the state would comply on its own. He then gave all parties in the case until Sept. 15 to submit additional evidence showing that the state either was or wasn’t complying with the decision, and he gave the parties an additional 21 days beyond that, which was Monday, to respond to evidence presented by the other side. On Sept. 15, state officials submitted numerous affidavits and documents showing that county officials throughout Kansas were granting marriage licenses and certificates, and that the Kansas Department of Health and Environment’s Office of Vital Statistics was recording them. But on Monday, the ACLU filed affidavits from three women who said the state was still not granting their marriages full recognition because it would not issue birth certificates listing both women in their marriages as parents of the children conceived through artificial insemination. One of those affidavits came from Casey — Mackenzie Clark can be reached at Smith, of Lawrence, who mclark@ljworld.com or 832-7198. gave birth to a son in

supported “something for the Lawrence Police Department,” proposed more research to decide between building a new headquarters and upgrading existing structures. She said if elected, she would work with other commissioners to determine where the facility fell among the body’s current priorities. “The physical facilities — something has to be done with them,” Larsen said. “Whether consolidation or retrofitting or a combination, I don’t know yet.” Morgan said he’d support a new headquarters. He thinks commissioners should take into account the public’s opinion and adjust the department’s plan. He said he doesn’t have a timeline for when he’d want the issue taken up, rather, “I just know it’s important and something I would be supportive of pushing along. “I support it, and I think I could really help — with understanding Lawrence the way I do — help move it along,” Morgan said. “Not just repeat the same exact plan and

MONDAY’S SUPER KANSAS CASH 9 10 12 16 23 (23) MONDAY’S KANSAS 2BY2 Red: 9 10; White: 11 26 MONDAY’S KANSAS PICK 3 5 6 9

L awrence J ournal -W orld

think you’re going to get success, but take a step back, adjust it and come back with a Plan B.” Neither Larsen nor Morgan was in favor of a sales tax increase to fund upgrades. Neither had a clear idea of where the funding would come from, but both said they’d need to look further into the project’s feasibility.

Street reconfiguration Neither candidate said they’d support one of two options for the reconstruction of Kasold Drive — a project that has faced opposition throughout the past four months. Work is expected to start in 2016 or 2017 on the section of Kasold Drive from approximately Sixth Street to Bob Billings Parkway. One option, titled the “typical street option,” includes four lanes and a traffic signal at the intersection of Harvard Road and Kasold Drive. The other, dubbed the “complete street option,” is two lanes with a roundabout at the Harvard-Kasold intersection. “Complete street” refers to street planning

— Tom Witt, executive director of Equality Kansas

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

September. She and her wife, Jessica Smith, an assistant soccer coach at Kansas University, were married in California in 2013. The other affidavits came from Christa Gonser and her wife, Carrie Hunt, who live in the Kansas City area. They were married in Canada in 2007. Hunt gave birth Sept. 22 at Kansas University Hospital to twins who were conceived through artificial insemination. Both couples note that their children were conceived through artificial insemination using sperm from an anonymous donor and that the procedures were done with the knowledge and consent of both spouses. They also cite a 1968 Kansas law that says children born as a result of such a procedure, “shall be considered at law in all respects the same as a naturally conceived child of the husband and wife so requesting and consenting to the use of such technique.” Gonser stated in her affidavit that KU Hospital would not list both women as parents because its computer software only has an option for naming a mother and a father. She said she later contacted KDHE to request a birth certificate, but was told by an official in the Office of Vital Statistics that, “since I was in a samesex marriage, I could

not be listed as a parent on my children’s birth CALL US certificates.” Let us know if you have a story idea. “She told me that I Email news@ljworld.com or contact would have to obtain a one of the following: second parent adoption Arts and entertainment: .................832-7189 in order to be listed as a City government: ..............................832-6362 parent on my children’s County government: .......................832-7259 birth certificates,” Gon- Courts and crime: ..............................832-7144 Datebook: ............................................832-7190 ser stated. University: ............................832-7187 In their petition, Kansas Lawrence schools: ...........................832-7259 they argue that Kan- Letters to the editor: ........................832-7153 sas is treating female Local news: ..........................................832-7154 spouses of women who Obituaries: ............................................832-7151 conceive through arti- Photo reprints: ....................................832-7141 ..................................................832-7151 ficial insemination dif- Society: Soundoff: .............................................832-7297 ferently than it treats Sports: ...................................................832-7147 male spouses of such SUBSCRIPTIONS: 832-7199 women, which they say is illegal under the reDidn’t receive your paper? For billcent Supreme Court de- ing, vacation or delivery questions, call cision. 832-7199. Tom Witt, executive Weekday: 6 a.m.-5:30 p.m. director of the WichitaWeekends: 6 a.m.-10 a.m. based Equality Kansas, In-town redelivery: 6 a.m.-10 a.m. a gay rights advocacy group, said he knows of Published daily by The World at least two other cou- Company at Sixth and New streets, Lawrence, KS ples in Kansas who are Hampshire 66044-0122. Telephone: 843-1000; facing the same situa- or toll-free (800) 578-8748. tion. “The one thing that POSTMASTER: Send address to: we’ve been keeping our changes Lawrence Journal-World, eyes open for is exactly P.O. Box 888, Lawrence, KS this scenario — that the 66044-0888 admin would go back (USPS 306-520) Periodicals poston its word, and that age paid at Lawrence, Kan. Member of Alliance it would start treating for Audited Media same-sex couples as Member of The Associated second-class citizens,” Press Witt said, referring to statements by Republican Gov. Sam Brownback, who said the state HOSPITAL would comply with the Supreme Court decision. Births Ahmed and Alaofi “It’s intolerable.” a boy, Sunday. KDHE officials have so Alharbi, Miranda Wymer and far declined to comment Pedro Padilla, Osawkie, a on the cases. girl, Monday.

that considers all users, including pedestrians, bicyclists and transit riders. Morgan said his experience as a school board member made him “leery of prepackaged things with clever names.” He said he would want to hear from city engineers about how a transition to two traffic lanes would create a steady traffic flow, as proposed. “I go into it with a healthy amount of questioning, but I’m open to the idea,” Morgan said. “There’s a lot of unknowns yet for me, and I don’t just blindly accept it.” Larsen said she was “definitely for complete streets,” but that the input of those living along Kasold Drive needs to be considered. “I think complete streets is something we need to continue to look at within Lawrence,” Larsen said. “Part of the discussion needs to be, do we look at something different given whether or not it’s going to fit with the neighbors.”

“stay intact and healthy.” Morgan noted that the space proposed for the Southpoint shopping center has already been zoned by the city as commercial. He said he would be against the development of a “fake downtown,” such as the Zona Rosa development in Kansas City, Mo., or Legends Outlets in Kansas City, Kan. “We have a real downtown here, and I think that’s probably all this community needs,” he said. “But there’s a lot of development that can happen that doesn’t challenge downtown.” Morgan said he thought Lawrence could support more retail and commercial development. He doesn’t think Southpoint would “light the fuse on sprawl” because of the surrounding floodplain. After the election, the winner will be sworn in and seated immediately. The City Commission meeting starts at 5:45 p.m. at City Hall, 6 E. Sixth St.

Shilyn Carlson, Tonganoxie, a boy, Monday.

— Peter Hancock can be reached at 354-4222 or phancock@ljworld.com.

the South Lawrence Trafficway — specifically the proposed Southpoint shopping center — both Morgan and Larsen voiced concerns over pulling shoppers away from downtown. In August, the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission recommended for approval the proposal of the Southpoint shopping center, a 250,000-square-foot retail space located at the southeast corner of the SLT and Iowa Street interchange. The plan next heads to the City Commission. A significantly larger development project for the site was proposed last year but never won approval. Larsen said she did not have an opinion on that specific project. She does have concerns, however, with “overbuilding.” “I think we only have so much retail dollars to go around, and we have to make sure we do not overbuild to the point we have empty shopping areas just sitting there,” she said. Retail development She said the “No. 1 When asked about re- item” was that stores in tail development along downtown Lawrence

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Lawrence&State

Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com/local l Tuesday, October 6, 2015 l 3A

KU provost Vitter is finalist for job at U. of Arkansas

CHARACTERS LIKE US

By Sara Shepherd Twitter: @saramarieshep

Rochelle Valverde/Journal-World Photo

FREE STATE HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS POSE WITH AUTHOR BILL KONIGSBERG, BACK CENTER, his husband, Chuck Cahoy, and FSHS teacher Nancy Hopkins, front center. Konigsberg donated 50 books to the school library’s newly established LGBT section.

Author donates to LGBT section of school library By Rochelle Valverde Twitter: @RochelleVerde

After young adult literature author Bill Konigsberg finished speaking to more than 100 Free State High School students on Monday, about a dozen students lingered. After one student thanked him for his visit and asked if she could give him a hug, several more did the same. Konigsberg is the author of three books — “Out of the Pocket,� “Openly Straight� and “The Porcupine of Truth� — and visited the

school to donate those and 50 other books to the school library’s newly established LGBT section. As part of his visit, Konigsberg talked about his experience as a gay teenager of feeling confused, disconnected and withdrawn. He thought he had a shameful secret, and those feelings stemmed in part from not seeing LGBT people represented around him, he said. “When I was a teen, there were no books in my school library that reflected people like me,� Konigsberg said.

“Out of the Pocket� won the Lambda Literary Award in the LGBT Children’s/Young Adult category in 2009 and “Openly Straight� was on the American Library Association’s list of Best Fiction for Young Adults in 2014. Free State teacher Nancy Hopkins initiated the effort to gather books for the school library’s collection by emailing authors, and she said was surprised by the positive response, especially Konigsberg’s offer to not only donate his books, but to deliver them in person. Hopkins

said that she began sending emails to authors about a month ago, and now — including the 50 books from Konigsberg — the collection has about 250 books. “It’s important for all kids to have characters they can relate to,� she said. “I’ve had an absolutely stunning response.� Konigsberg, speaking candidly with students about his suicide attempt at 27, said that for LGBT youth, being able to see themselves represented can save lives. KonigsPlease see LIBRARY, page 4A

Kansas University Provost and Executive Vice Chancellor Jeff Vitter is one of three finalists for the position of chancellor at the University of Arkansas. The University of Arkansas named the finalists Vitter in a news release Monday, and all three are scheduled to visit the Fayetteville campus and give public presenta-

tions within the next two weeks. Vitter’s visit is scheduled for Oct. 14-15. Vitter, a New Orleans native, has been KU’s provost for five years and is credited with spearheading the university’s 2012-2017 strategic plan, Bold Aspirations. He said he was contacted by a search firm and conversations with Arkansas’ chancellor search committee followed. Please see VITTER, page 4A

KU scientist monitors shigella outbreak in KC Heard on the Hill

K

ansas University pharmaceutical chemistry professor Wendy Picking has been researching shigella for more than 20 years and is in the process of creating a vaccine for it. Her target audience is developing countries, where shigella — an infectious diarrheal disease caused by bacteria — is a leading cause of death in young sshepherd@ljworld.com children. But she’s watching Kansas City metropolitan with interest as an antiarea. biotic-resistant outbreak Please see SHIGELLA, page 4A of shigella unfolds in the

Sara Shepherd

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 � � � United Way of Douglas County

www.unitedwaydgco.org


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Tuesday, October 6, 2015

LAWRENCE • STATE

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Walk to school on Wednesday

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nternational Walk to School Day is on Wednesday, and for those who plan to leave the car at home, the safest walking or biking route has been mapped for each elementary and middle school in the district. The maps show students and parents the safest route to their neighborhood school and depict where there are crossing guards, all-way stops and traffic signals, as well as the status of the sidewalk. Sidewalks are labeled as either an improved crosswalk, existing sidewalk or missing sidewalk. The maps were made through the combined

ordinator for health and on Wednesday morning, wellness. as well as outside schools It’s also a chance for to greet students as they students to put recent arrive. lessons into practice. “Everybody is trying Over the summer, safety to embrace this health lessons for walkinitiative and ening to school courage students In Wellwere developed and families to Commons: for various age begin walking,” Walking to groups, and Johnson said. school has Rochelle Valverde physical educaThe maps many health rvalverde@ljworld.com tion teachers in with the safe benefits, all schools are routes are availtoo. 1C effort of the city of providing the able, along with Lawrence, the Lawrence- lessons to stusafety tips for Douglas County Health dents, Johnson said. The walking and biking, at Department and Lawlessons include informa- the Lawrence-Douglas rence Public Schools. tion about basic traffic County Heath Depart“What we’re encourag- rules and where to cross ment website. ing is that parents and streets. —This is an excerpt from Rofamilies use that route,” Teachers and school chelle Valverde’s First Bell blog, said Denise Johnson, the administrators will be district’s curriculum cowalking along the routes which appears on LJWorld.com.

First Bell

Culling Kansas voter records may take weeks Staff and Wire Reports

Topeka — Some Kansas counties expect to take at least several weeks to cancel incomplete voter registrations from residents who haven’t documented their U.S. citizenship, local election officials said Monday. Local officials also said even when they’re done culling the more than 31,000 records as required under a new rule from Secretary of State Kris Kobach, the canceled registrations still will be accessible in their voter registration databases. Kobach has directed counties to cancel incomplete registrations older than 90 days, with most from prospective voters who haven’t met the proof-ofcitizenship requirement. A 2013 state law requires new voters to produce a birth certificate,

passport or other citizenship papers when registering. Kansas is only one of four states with such a law, and its incomplete registrations ballooned to nearly 37,700 last week. In Sedgwick County, Election Commissioner Tabitha Lehman said her staff is first reviewing the records of 1,700 people who appear to have Kansas birth certificates on file with the state health department. The possible matches came from Kobach’s office, which checks incomplete registrations against birth records monthly. Lehman said the checking should take a week before her staff begins reviewing other incomplete registrations to see how many should be canceled. Sedgwick County had 8,400 incomplete registrations — the most of any county — and about 7,000 older than 90 days.

“This is not something that is going to quickly get done,” she said. Kobach faces a federal lawsuit challenging both the proof-of-citizenship law and his directive to counties to cull registration records. The secretary of state said he’s not surprised some of the state’s 105 counties need weeks to review and cancel incomplete registrations, particularly populous ones. He said his “reasonable time limit” keeps them from having to keep calling or sending notices by mail to people who have moved or have no interest in completing their registrations. Kobach said the fact that counties mark such records as canceled without deleting them permanently shows there’s no irreparable harm in the process. “The critics of our proof-of-citizenship system have completely

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Vitter CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A

Vitter said he remains committed to and focused on KU’s initiatives but called the chancellor’s job at Arkansas a “very special opportunity.” “It’s really an opportunity to make a huge impact on the future vitality of the state, as well as the nation, and higher education needs to play that leading role for the good of our society,” Vitter said. “Arkansas is a great upand-coming university. Having grown up in the Deep South, that’s a great attraction to me, as well.” Vitter noted that Arkansas is home to multiple Fortune 500 companies’ headquarters and that hundreds more have satellite presences in the state. He said the university is looking to implement a strategic plan, which he’s had experience crafting at KU and other universities. Vitter called Bold Aspirations a “game-changer” for KU. He said he was gratified by the progress so far — including in the areas of research, curriculum and student recruitment — and that the plan should have KU on a good trajectory for the future. One of the other three University of Arkansas chancellor finalists is K-State Provost and Senior Vice President April Mason, who will visit the University of Arkansas campus today and Wednesday, according to the University of Arkansas. The third finalist

overblown what’s happening,” he said. But Doug Bonney, legal director for the American Civil Liberties Union of Kansas, said he sees no problem with allowing registrations to remain incomplete, particularly when counties need weeks to finish canceling them anyway. Also, he said, some prospective voters’ constitutional right to equal protection under the law could be violated because counties are handling the incomplete registrations uniformly. “All of these people are citizens,” he said. “It’s just ridiculous.” Douglas County Clerk Jamie Shew said he won’t start purging the voting list just yet. Instead, Shew said last week, he will start a new 90-day clock, giving the roughly 1,400 would-be voters in Douglas County that much additional time CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A to complete registrations.

Library

Kansas judicial funding dispute moves to federal court in each of the state’s 31 judicial districts, transferring the power to the district judges instead. The Legislature sought earlier this year to preserve the change by enacting another law saying that if the first policy is invalidated, the judicial branch’s entire budget through June 2017 is “null and void.” Critics contend that both laws are an attack by the GOP-controlled Legislature and the state’s Republican governor on the judiciary’s independence, while supporters argue that they just want some key administrative decisions made locally.

Shawnee County District Judge Larry Hendricks struck down the 2014 law last month, calling it an unconstitutional interference. But he put his ruling on hold at the request of Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt. That temporarily ended the threat to the court system’s funding. In a separate lawsuit, the four judges are challenging the constitutionality of the measure that the Legislature passed and Gov. Sam Brownback signed this year, which ties state court funding to the ruling over the appointment of chief judges. They contend that it amounts to the extortion

of an independent branch of government. “It is unconscionable, it is unconstitutional and it is against every principle of law that is applicable under these circumstances and for that reason,” said Pedro Irigonegaray, the attorney representing the judges, on Monday. “I am confident a court — whether federal or state — will reach determination that this type of behavior cannot be tolerated in our democracy.” No decision has been made yet on whether to oppose the state’s removal last Friday of the case to federal court, Irigonegaray said.

Monday. (Note: Douglas County does not appear to be affected at this time. Three cases, all adults, CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A have been reported here this year, with the last beThe Kansas ing in July, accordCity, Mo., Health ing to Lawrence Department anDouglas-County nounced Sept. 25 Health Department it had investigated communications more than 143 cases coordinator Karrey of shigella this Britt.) year. In just more In normal years, than a week, that Kansas City may count jumped to have 10 cases of nearly 200 — with Picking shigella, but about 173 cases confirmed every five years as of Friday and more there’s a larger outbreak than 190 cases estimated like this, Snook said. He now, health department said other Kansas City spokesman Bill Snook said suburbs have reported

cases, too, primarily in day care children, younger elementary age children and caregivers. The disease is spread by fecal-oral contact, so handwashing after changing diapers or using the restroom and avoiding preparing food or drinks for others are important to prevent the spread. What’s unusual and concerning about this outbreak, Snook said, is that they’re seeing at least three antibiotic-resistant patterns. Specifically, cases are “sonnei,” one of four categories of shigella and the most commonly seen in the United States.

Picking said she was surprised by the antibiotic-resistive angle of the outbreak. Medical doctors and epidemiologists are the ones handling it from a disease management perspective, she said, but she hopes to learn more from health officials that could help inform her study. “Our interest in this lies purely from the basic science research that we could get out if it,” she said. “How are they capturing the antibioticresistant genes?” Picking said her shigella vaccine is planned for human clinical trials next fall,

the next step in a long and expensive process of getting it to the people whose lives it could save. She reiterated why she believes a vaccine is important for developing nations. In developed countries, including the United States, where water is clean and health care access is widespread, shigella does not carry the risk of death due to dehydration that it does elsewhere, Picking said. But when a child gets shigella in a poor country with tainted water, and a parent has no means of providing rehydration with anything that doesn’t

Associated Press

Wichita — A lawsuit stemming from the Legislature’s move to defund the Kansas judiciary’s budget over an administrative dispute has now landed in the federal courts. A court notice shows Kansas has moved the lawsuit filed by four state judges challenging the measure to U.S. District Court in Topeka. The case is now before U.S. District Judge Daniel Crabtree. The Republicancontrolled Legislature stripped the justices of their ability to appoint chief district court judges

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$

OFF

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— Bill Konigsberg, author Konigsberg, who previously worked as a sportswriter, also shared his personal experience of coming out to friends and family, and coming out publicly in 2001 with the publication of the piece “Sports world still a struggle for gays,” which he wrote while assistant editor for ESPN.com. Konigsberg’s donation of books, as well as the 200 others Hopkins has received, are currently being catalogued, and Hopkins said once that process is complete, they will be displayed at the front of the library and available for checkout. carry the pathogen, “there is just no way for them to survive,” Picking said. Picking recalled reading in a World Health Organization bulletin about a mother who took her child, sickened by shigella, to a hospital but couldn’t afford to buy the 25-cent rehydration packet. The mother took the child to the local healer instead, but the child didn’t make it. “That’s the sad world that we live in,” Picking said. — This is an excerpt from Sara Shepherd’s “Heard on the Hill” column, which appears on LJWorld.com.

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

I had no frame of reference (as a teenager) for a boy who liked sports and was berg is in Kansas as part gay.” of a tour for The Trevor Project, which provides crisis intervention and suicide prevention services to LGBT youth. Lesbian, gay or bisexual high school students are four times as likely to attempt suicide, according to a Center for Disease Control Youth Risk Behavior Survey. Konigsberg said Free State’s new library section is incredibly important, because books allow kids to reflect in a more powerful way than movies or TV shows allow. “I had no frame of reference for a boy who liked sports and was gay,” he said, noting reading about characters similar to himself is an experience he wishes he’d had as a teenager.

By Roxana Hegeman

is Joseph E. Steinmetz, executive vice president and provost at Ohio State University. The theme of each candidate’s public talk will be “Moving the Needle: Thoughts on Taking the University of Arkansas Into the Future.” The Arkansas Democrat-Gazette reported that neither Mason nor Vitter was included on a list of 15 applicants for the job released in August by the University of Arkansas, or in a response to a public disclosure request submitted Sept. 18. University of Arkansas System President Donald Bobbitt selected the finalists from a group of seven people interviewed Sept. 25 in Dallas by a search committee, the newspaper reported. The last University of Arkansas chancellor, David Gearhart, retired effective in July. Dan Ferritor is interim chancellor. At KU, Vitter’s academic appointment is as a professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences. Previously he was provost and executive vice president at Texas A&M University; and dean of the College of Science and professor of computer science at Purdue University, according to his curriculum vitae. He also was a professor at Duke University and Brown University. Vitter got his undergraduate degree from the University of Notre Dame, his doctorate from Stanford University and an MBA from Duke University.

1832 Massachusetts Street Lawrence, KS 66044 Phone: (785) 843-2981 Email: hardware@sunflower.com Website: http://cottinshardware.com

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Opinion

Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com l Tuesday, October 6, 2015

5A

Pact’s collapse raises Mideast risk

EDITORIALS

Full force The new Lawrence city commissioner appointed tonight will have to hit the ground running.

T

he only major business on tonight’s Lawrence City Commission agenda is the appointment and swearing in of a new commissioner to fill the seat left vacant by the resignation of former Mayor Jeremy Farmer. Last week, the commission narrowed the field to two people: Lisa Larsen and Scott Morgan. Barring any surprises, one of those two will be sworn into office tonight and hopefully will be ready to hit the ground running. In the nearly two months since Farmer left the commission, city business has been stacking up. Discussion of options to meet the Lawrence Police Department’s facility needs has been on hold, as have key decisions needed to allow a number of local development projects and other city projects to move forward. In some of those cases, issues may have been intentionally delayed until the commission was at full force. Even with four commissioners, a majority of three was required to pass any measure, meaning there was less room for dissent on any given issue. A tie on the four-member commission would leave a decision in limbo. The commission’s agenda for the last several weeks has been pretty much bare bones. Restoring the commission to full strength will allow it to get back to work on a number of key issues. Although the top item is the hiring of a new city manager, commissioners don’t need to fill that position before making decisions on a number of other projects and initiatives. Neither Morgan nor Larsen has previously served on the commission, and whichever one is appointed will face a steep learning curve. Hopefully, the appointee will be a quick study. The commission — and consequently the city’s business — has been in a bit of a holding pattern for the last several weeks, and it needs to get back to work.

On a bright, sunny day in September of 1993, I stood on the White House lawn watching Yitzhak Rabin and Yasser Arafat sign the Oslo peace accords in front of President Bill Clinton. At that moment, it was possible to suspend disbelief and imagine a two-state solution, with Israel and Palestine living side by side. Twenty years on, Rabin and Arafat are dead, and so is the Oslo peace process — although politicians from Israel and the West are loath to admit this. Last week at the United Nations, however, Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas said his government could no longer be bound by the Oslo pact, emphasizing Israeli settlement-building on the West Bank among his many grievances. Abbas warned that the Palestinian Authority would halt all cooperation with Israel, which would require Jerusalem to resume full occupation of the West Bank. His remarks are a warning of serious trouble ahead. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who was focused on denouncing the Iran nuclear deal, made only a pro forma reference to peace talks, along with a slap at Abbas. There was little sign that the Israeli leader recognized the high cost to his nation of allowing the Oslo process to come to a formal close.

Dangers closer to home Netanyahu’s worries about Iran are understandable given Iranian leaders’ frequent denunciation of “the Zionist state” and insistence that Israel will cease to exist in coming decades. But his obsession with the ayatollahs — who aren’t likely to ever attack the

Trudy Rubin

trubin@phillynews.com

Abbas warned that the Palestinian Authority would halt all cooperation with Israel, which would require Jerusalem to resume full occupation of the West Bank. His remarks are a warning of serious trouble ahead.” nuclear-armed Jewish state directly — seems to have blinded him to dangers closer to home. Foremost among them is long-term Israeli rule over millions of disenfranchised Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza. Rabin signed the Oslo accords because he recognized the risk of such rule. He warned in 1976 that it could lead to a form of apartheid. He also warned that Israeli settlements were “comparable to a cancer in the tissue of Israel’s democratic society.” A fanatic advocate of those settlements shot Rabin dead in 1995. With peace talks on hold, irrespective of who is to blame, the vast expansion of Jewish settlements convinces Palestinians — and the world — that Israel wants to keep the West Bank. The placement of settler towns and roads

splits the area into cantons connected mainly by tunnels and bridges. An even broader network of dozens of “illegal” settlements, built by radical youths and allegedly slated for dismantlement, is instead being gradually legalized by the Israeli government. They are filling in the territorial gaps among older settlements, further separating Palestinian towns and villages from each other and from their agricultural land.

Rising tensions Even if peace talks resume, the chaos in the Middle East would make any final deal impossible for years to come. But the settlements rule out any prospect of two states in the future. As a result, tensions are rising sharply on the West Bank. Last week, an Israeli settler couple were shot to death while driving in the West Bank with their four children. Meantime, radical settler youths have been harassing or attacking Palestinian civilians, recently burning a Palestinian family to death in their home. Abbas’ speech was a warning that the status quo can’t last. As part of the Oslo accords, Palestinian police and intelligence forces work with Israel to prevent violence on the West Bank. For the most part, they have been successful, keeping in check the West Bank’s radicals, including those who sympathize with Gaza’s Hamas extremists. Yet it becomes harder and harder for Abbas to continue that cooperation as settlements expand — and occupation promises to become permanent. Palestinians ac-

cuse his security forces of acting as collaborators.

Terrorism in West Bank If Abbas’ security cooperation lapses, Israel will have to formally reinstate military control of the West Bank. That would be bound to provoke a major resumption of terrorist attacks in Greater Israel, provoking Israeli countermeasures, which in turn would guarantee more terrorism, etc. Until now, Abbas’ forces have prevented jihadi groups from taking root in the West Bank. The scenario above would ensure that they emerge. Moreover, Abbas’ Palestinian Authority administers the West Bank, with heavy subsidies from international financial institutions and the European Union. Should his government, a product of the Oslo agreement, decide to stand down, Israel would have to formally resume running all the West Bank’s services. The restoration of overt occupation would be complete. So rather than ignore Abbas’ words, the Israeli government should start thinking seriously about how to prevent such an outcome. Yes, Abbas has threatened to dissolve the Palestinian Authority before and failed to follow through, but the death of the Oslo process may force his hand. It’s time for Netanyahu to pay attention. The best way to start would be to freeze the expansion of settlements that rule out any future agreement with the Palestinians. Otherwise, Israel will soon face a growing security threat from within. — Trudy Rubin is a columnist and editorial-board member for the Philadelphia Inquirer.

PUBLIC FORUM

Abusive headline

into escrow to be used as “seed money” when the calming lines are To the editor: reconverted back into four lanes in All right, we get it: This year’s the future. Kansas University football team Glen W. White, has issues, lots of issues. However, Lawrence I don’t think that gives this newspaper license to put out headlines like the one we saw on Sunday — “BONEHEADED” — after another To the editor: I am horrified, outraged, heartloss. While it’s one thing to report sick over the videos that have rewhen a coach publicly calls out cently surfaced showing the dishis players (good ones like Da- membered body parts of human vid Beaty don’t), it’s quite another babies being sold for profit. Make for reporters to do so. Describing no mistake; this is not fetal tissue the game is enough; assigning ad- being harvested but hearts, lungs, jectives like this one approaches brains. At just 21 days after concepabuse. What are we going to be tion, a preborn child’s heart begins treated to for the rest of the sea- to beat, and at one month, that heart son? LAMEBRAINED? NUMB- is pumping quantities of blood SKULLED? KNUCKLEHEADED? through the circulatory system. For crying out loud, these are It stands to reason that when a 19- and 20-year-old young men out heart stops beating, a person is conthere doing their best, represent- sidered to be dead. Therefore, does ing their university. They’ve got a it not stand to reason that when a big hill to climb and they know it. person’s heart starts beating that They don’t need to be singled out they should be considered alive? as a bunch of screw-ups. Enough is At week 12, the preborn child now enough, guys. Just give us the facts sleeps, is able to turn her head, curl and spare us the embellishments. her toes, open and close her mouth. Jeff Southard, This is when the majority of aborLawrence tions are performed. Every unborn child is a complete, living human, a unique individual, never to be repeated in all of human To the editor: history. I am inclined to agree with most I implore those of you who can of my fellow Lawrencians on the is- see the truth, who have a heart for sue of calming Kasold. I think the the innocent child in the womb to “road scholars” at City Hall have flood the offices of your congresgot it wrong. sional representatives with loud Currently, there are three main voices of protest. north-south arteries that move trafStand up and be a voice for those fic from Sixth Street to the south who have no voice! Lawrence community and Kansas Karyl Graves, University (Wakarusa, Kasold and Lawrence Iowa). Living near Free State High School, I note continuous development and greater traffic on Sixth Street, much of it spilling onto these north-south roadways. CurLetters Policy rently, Kasold has four lanes to help The Journal-World welcomes letters to the Public carry this traffic, which will conLetters should be 250 words or less, be of public tinue to increase. The money, en- Forum. interest and avoid name-calling and libelous language. The gineering and construction devoted Journal-World reserves the right to edit letters, as long as to building Kasold is now subject to viewpoints are not altered. By submitting letters, you grant reversal — to go back to a calmer the Journal-World a nonexclusive license to publish, copy and distribute your work, while acknowledging that you are two lanes for a several-block area. It is an ill-conceived plan. How- the author of the work. Letters must bear the name, address and telephone ever, if the “road scholars” get their number of the writer. Letters may be submitted by mail way, here is what I propose: that to Box 888, Lawrence, KS, 66044 or by email to: letters@ they set their entire 401(k) accounts ljworld.com.

Abortion protest

LAWRENCE

Journal-World

®

Established 1891

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

W.C. Simons (1871-1952); Publisher, 1891-1944 Dolph Simons Sr. (1904-1989) Publisher, 1944-1962; Editor, 1950-1979

Dolph C. Simons Jr., Editor Chad Lawhorn, Managing Editor Kathleen Johnson, Advertising

Ann Gardner, Editorial Page Editor Ed Ciambrone, Production and

Manager

Distribution Director

THE WORLD COMPANY

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

President, Digital Division

Scott Stanford, General Manager

OLD HOME TOWN

100

From the Lawrence Daily JournalWorld for Oct. 6, 1915: “For more than three hours Saturday night, the business section of Lawrence was given years over to students of the University ago in their annual nightshirt parade, to IN 1915 celebrate the opening of the football season and the victory over William Jewell. The parade was the biggest in the history of the school … Cheerleader Joe Gaitskill and his assistant were able to keep good order. Merchants gave away hundreds of dollars worth of apples, cigars, candy and soda water to the celebrating students.” “A freshman at the University was badly beaten twice this morning by two different crowds of students because he didn’t have on a freshman cap as required by the student council rules. The first beating was administered near the Administration building. The second was given when the student, on his way home, had reached the law building and was assailed by a group of law students. ... The student who was beaten was in Lawrence high school last year. He earned every cent of his way through school last year and is engaged in the same work at the University this year. It is believed that his failure to buy and wear a freshman cap was caused by an absolute inability to devote the required half-dollar to the purpose that would have meant conformity to student customs and immunity from harsh treatment.” — Compiled by Sarah St. John

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

Road scholars?


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6A

TODAY

WEATHER

.

Tuesday, October 6, 2015

WEDNESDAY

THURSDAY

L awrence J ournal -W orld

DATEBOOK

SATURDAY

FRIDAY

Tech Drop-In, 5-6 p.m., Meeting Room B, Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. Prostate Cancer Support Advocates meeting, 5:30 p.m., lower level meeting room, Lawrence Memorial Hospital, 325 Maine St. Lawrence City Commission meeting, 5:45 p.m., City Hall, 6 E. Sixth St. Red Dog’s Dog Days workout, 6 p.m., west side of South Park, 12th and Massachusetts streets. Maker Meet-Up, 6:30 p.m., Lawrence Creates Makerspace, 512 E. Ninth St. Auditions: The Little Mermaid, 6:30 p.m. youth, 7:30 p.m. adults, Theatre Lawrence, 4660 Bauer Farm Drive. Write Club, 7 p.m., Meeting Room B, Law-

rence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. Climate Change and Religion at the U.S. Department of State, 7-8:30 p.m., Lawrence Public Library Auditorium, 707 Vermont St. KU Wind Ensemble, 7:30 p.m., Lied Center, 1600 Stewart Drive. Tuesday Concert presents “Euphoria Stringband,” 7:30 p.m., Lawrence Arts Center, 940 New Hampshire St. KU Theater: “Detroit ’67,” 7:30 p.m., William Inge Memorial Theatre, Murphy Hall, 1530 Naismith Drive. Baker Jazz Ensemble and Symphonic Winds, 7:30 p.m., Rice Auditorium, Baker University, Baldwin. Gamer Night, 8 p.m., Burger Stand at the Casbah, 803 Massachusetts St.

age of 87 permits. Apartment construction also is having its best year in quite a while. CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A The city has issued permits for 467 living units In August, construcof apartments. That’s the tion of another retirehighest total since 2008. ment community helped A pair of apartment push the city over the projects indeed have mark. As we previously been the biggest differreported, Missouri-based ence makers in LawAmericare is building rence’s record-setting a new assisted living year. The Here @ Kansas facility at Peterson and project — the multistory Monterey Way. That apartment and retail construction is now building across from underway. The comKU’s Memorial Stadium pany pulled permits for — has been the largest $12.5 million worth of project of the year at $45 construction, includmillion. The multistory ing a 16-unit assisted apartment and office living center, a 30-unit building under construcmultifamily, indepention at the northeast dent living center, two corner of Ninth and New triplexes, four duplexes, Hampshire streets is No. eight carports and a club- 2 at $18.7 million. house. The Americare In total, the city has project was the largest had 14 projects that have new building project of come in at $1 million or the month. Americare more. Here’s a look: l Here @ Kansas officials previously have told us they hope to have apartment/retail building: $45 million the project open about l 100 E. Ninth St. this time next year. apartment/office buildSingle-family home ing: $18.7 million construction also has l Wakarusa River helped add to the party. wastewater treatment As we previously have plant: $13.3 million reported, home sales l Americare Assisted in Lawrence recently Living Campus: $12.5 experienced their sixth million straight month of inl Pioneer Ridge creases. Home builders Independent Living: $12 are responding by pickmillion ing up the pace of new l Wakarusa wasteconstruction, although water pump station: $7.5 new home construction million is still not what I would l Hutton Farms consider booming. But, the city issued 18 permits residential development: $6.2 million for single family homes l LMH fourth-floor and duplexes in August. renovation: $3.8 million That’s the best August l Single-family home total in at least six years. 116 N. Wilderness Way: Year-to-date single$2.7 million family and duplex conl Phi Delta Theta struction is having its best renovation: $2.6 million year in recent memory. l Phi Gamma Delta The city has issued 170 addition: $2 million permits through August. l Kansas River wasteThat’s up from 66 at this water treatment plant point last year. The 170 addition: $1.9 million permits are also well l Peaslee Technical above the five-year aver-

Career Center renovation: $1 million l Single-family home 3642 Buck Brush Court: $1 million The list is kind of interesting to analyze. It shows major activity on two fronts: construction geared toward the young and construction geared toward the old. As you may expect in a university town, construction geared toward the young — the Here project and the greek house expansions add up to about $50 million — is in the lead. But it is interesting to note that Lawrence has about $25 million worth of construction work underway related to senior living. One other thing to keep in mind is that the building permit totals don’t fully reflect all of the construction that has been going on in Lawrence. As we have noted, the millions of dollars worth of school district renovations have not received a building permit, and thus don’t show up in these construction totals. Future projects will, though. Plus, as has long been the case, KU projects also don’t show up in the totals. KU projects go through the state-approved building process. So, the millions of dollars in dormitory work and construction of the new business school building aren’t included. Roadwork also isn’t included in any totals, but the South Lawrence Trafficway construction is one of the largest construction projects ever undertaken in the city. That is approximately $130 million worth of construction.

6 TODAY

Warmer with partial sunshine

Warm with some sun

Some rain and a thunderstorm

Not as warm with clouds and sun

Partly sunny and nice

High 75° Low 55° POP: 25%

High 79° Low 62° POP: 20%

High 80° Low 53° POP: 55%

High 67° Low 43° POP: 10%

High 73° Low 55° POP: 15%

Wind VAR 3-6 mph

Wind SSE 4-8 mph

Wind WSW 8-16 mph

Wind N 6-12 mph

Wind SSW 6-12 mph

POP: Probability of Precipitation

McCook 77/55

Kearney 77/54

Oberlin 77/55

Clarinda 73/55

Lincoln 76/54

Grand Island 75/53

Beatrice 75/56

St. Joseph 74/52 Chillicothe 75/56

Sabetha 74/54

Concordia 79/54

Centerville 73/55

Kansas City Marshall Manhattan 76/58 74/56 Salina 78/55 Oakley Kansas City Topeka 80/58 76/56 75/53 Lawrence 74/54 Sedalia 75/55 Emporia Great Bend 74/57 78/54 79/58 Nevada Dodge City Chanute 75/57 78/54 Hutchinson 76/55 Garden City 80/57 79/54 Springfield Wichita Pratt Liberal Coffeyville Joplin 75/58 76/59 79/59 80/56 75/56 77/54 Hays Russell 81/58 79/58

Goodland 75/49

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

LAWRENCE ALMANAC

Through 8 p.m. Monday.

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

62°/52° 71°/49° 95° in 1963 30° in 2012

Precipitation in inches 24 hours through 8 p.m. yest. Month to date Normal month to date Year to date Normal year to date

trace trace 0.67 33.62 33.41

REGIONAL CITIES

Today Wed. Today Wed. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Atchison 75 55 pc 79 62 pc Independence 78 57 s 81 61 pc 78 57 pc 81 64 pc Belton 74 57 s 77 62 pc Fort Riley 73 54 pc 76 60 pc Burlington 77 56 s 81 61 pc Olathe Coffeyville 77 54 s 81 60 pc Osage Beach 75 56 pc 80 60 pc 76 55 pc 81 62 pc Concordia 79 54 pc 81 60 pc Osage City Ottawa 75 56 pc 80 62 pc Dodge City 78 54 s 77 56 t 79 59 s 83 61 pc Holton 76 55 pc 80 62 pc Wichita Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.

NATIONAL FORECAST

SUN & MOON

New

Oct 12

Wed. 7:22 a.m. 6:55 p.m. 2:26 a.m. 4:14 p.m.

First

Full

Last

Oct 20

Oct 27

Nov 3

LAKE LEVELS

As of 7 a.m. Monday Lake

Level (ft)

Clinton Perry Pomona

Discharge (cfs)

877.19 892.93 973.87

7 25 15

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

Fronts Cold

INTERNATIONAL CITIES

Today Cities Hi Lo W Acapulco 90 78 pc Amsterdam 66 54 t Athens 80 66 s Baghdad 104 79 c Bangkok 89 78 t Beijing 80 57 pc Berlin 66 53 c Brussels 67 54 t Buenos Aires 68 52 c Cairo 86 72 s Calgary 56 45 pc Dublin 61 44 sh Geneva 63 54 t Hong Kong 88 79 r Jerusalem 75 59 pc Kabul 75 50 s London 65 53 sh Madrid 71 51 pc Mexico City 77 51 pc Montreal 64 49 pc Moscow 46 31 pc New Delhi 96 74 s Oslo 49 43 c Paris 68 53 sh Rio de Janeiro 76 65 pc Rome 76 61 pc Seoul 76 55 s Singapore 89 79 t Stockholm 49 36 pc Sydney 91 62 s Tokyo 69 58 pc Toronto 66 50 c Vancouver 64 51 pc Vienna 67 55 c Warsaw 63 38 pc Winnipeg 56 34 s

Wed. Hi Lo W 89 79 pc 62 51 pc 79 66 pc 98 72 s 89 78 t 80 53 s 63 47 r 60 48 pc 64 45 sh 86 69 pc 59 40 pc 57 43 pc 58 47 pc 87 79 c 71 58 pc 79 51 s 59 44 pc 71 51 pc 78 53 pc 64 38 pc 42 30 pc 96 74 s 48 43 c 61 46 pc 83 68 s 73 55 pc 76 55 pc 88 78 t 50 36 pc 69 61 pc 69 60 s 67 42 pc 62 52 sh 63 53 r 52 34 pc 56 43 r

Warm Stationary Showers T-storms

7:30

Flurries

Snow

Ice

Today Wed. Today Wed. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Memphis 84 66 pc 84 66 s Albuquerque 73 53 t 68 51 c Miami 85 73 c 87 74 c Anchorage 48 39 c 46 40 r Milwaukee 68 52 pc 66 53 s Atlanta 76 61 pc 80 60 s 69 47 pc 67 55 pc Austin 89 61 s 91 66 pc Minneapolis 84 58 pc 82 58 s Baltimore 72 55 s 76 54 pc Nashville New Orleans 85 70 s 87 70 s Birmingham 82 63 pc 85 64 s 71 59 s 74 56 pc Boise 79 51 s 78 55 pc New York Omaha 75 56 pc 78 59 pc Boston 66 52 s 70 51 s 85 71 pc 84 71 pc Buffalo 65 52 c 65 44 pc Orlando 73 59 s 76 56 pc Cheyenne 62 46 t 70 44 pc Philadelphia Phoenix 79 65 t 84 67 s Chicago 70 55 pc 70 56 s 75 55 pc 72 48 pc Cincinnati 77 58 pc 76 54 pc Pittsburgh Cleveland 71 56 pc 69 51 pc Portland, ME 66 46 s 67 45 s Dallas 86 64 s 90 69 pc Portland, OR 74 56 pc 72 57 c Reno 78 49 s 81 52 s Denver 70 49 t 73 48 c 72 54 pc 79 59 s Des Moines 74 56 pc 76 62 pc Richmond Sacramento 83 55 s 85 55 s Detroit 72 54 pc 72 51 s St. Louis 77 60 pc 80 63 s El Paso 80 60 pc 73 55 t Fairbanks 43 28 pc 41 31 pc Salt Lake City 69 49 pc 72 51 pc 76 66 pc 78 67 s Honolulu 85 75 pc 86 74 pc San Diego Houston 88 66 s 90 68 pc San Francisco 72 56 pc 71 55 pc 69 56 pc 67 57 sh Indianapolis 76 54 pc 76 56 pc Seattle 73 50 pc 68 51 c Kansas City 74 54 pc 77 62 pc Spokane Tucson 77 58 t 77 58 t Las Vegas 75 63 t 85 67 s 79 57 s 83 62 pc Little Rock 85 65 pc 87 64 pc Tulsa Wash., DC 73 59 pc 78 59 pc Los Angeles 79 63 s 84 65 s National extremes yesterday for the 48 contiguous states High: McAllen, TX 93° Low: Wisdom, MT 19°

WEATHER HISTORY

WEATHER TRIVIA™

is lighter: moist air or dry air? Q: Which

The highest daily total rainfall ever for Canada measured 19.61 inches on Oct. 6, 1967, at Ucluelet Brynnor Mines.

TUESDAY Prime Time WOW DTV DISH 7 PM

Rain

-10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s National Summary: Rain will retreat and seas will ease along the Atlantic coast today. However, river flooding is forecast to continue in the Carolinas. Showers and storms will riddle areas from Wyoming to Arizona.

Air that is moist.

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015

Precipitation

MOVIES 8 PM

8:30

9 PM

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Jimmy Kimmel Live Nightline

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Two Men Mod Fam Mod Fam Tosh.0

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School Board Information

School Board Information

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36 672

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39 360 205 The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File (N)

CNBC 40 355 208 Shark Tank MSNBC 41 356 209 All In With Chris CNN

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44 202 200 Anderson Cooper

SportsCenter (N)

NFL Live (N)

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NBCSN 38 603 151 Spartan Race FNC

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Big 12 No-Huddle

Mother Brad

SportsCenter (N) Baseball NFL Live World Poker Tour

National Pro Grid League

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CNN Special Report

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CSI: NY

TNT

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USA

46 242 105 Law & Order: SVU

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50 254 130 The Walking Dead

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BEST BETS WOW DTV DISH 7 PM

SPORTS 7:30

8 PM

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— This is an excerpt from Chad Lawhorn’s Town Talk column, which appears each weekday at LJWorld.com.

October 6, 2015 9 PM

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Red Dog’s Dog Days workout, 6 a.m., South Park, 12th and Massachusetts streets. Life After Loss, 9-11 p.m., Visiting Nurses, Suite C, 200 Maine St. Fall Study Group: First in their Class - Authentic Women and the Originality That Got Them There, noon, Dole Institute, 2350 Petefish Drive. Brownbag Lecture: “The Pomaks in the Balkans — a Historical and Political Perspective,” noon-1 p.m., 318 Bailey Hall, 1440 Jayhawk Blvd. Lawrence Brain Injury Day Support Group, 1-2:30 p.m., First United Methodist Church West Campus, 867 West Highway 40. Lawrence Farmers’ Market, 4-6 p.m., 824 New Hampshire St.

The Walking Dead Below Deck (N)

The Walking Dead

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The People’s Couch Below Deck

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Conan

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54 269 120 Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars

SYFY 55 244 122 ›› Blade: Trinity

Face Off (N)

Face Off

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Monster Ark (2008)

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

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The Bastard Executioner (N) Bastard Exec. Bastard Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Drunk Daily Nightly At Mid. Tosh.0 Botched Botched (N) WAGS (N) C. Milian E! News (N) Botched Reba Reba Reba Reba ››‡ The Guardian (2006) Kevin Costner, Ashton Kutcher. Alaska Alaska Alaska Alaska Alaska Alaska Alaska Alaska Alaska Alaska ››‡ Just Wright The BET Life of (N) Hus Punk’d Hus Punk’d Wendy Williams Love & Hip Hop Love & Hip Hop Bask. Wives LA ›‡ B.A.P.S (1997, Comedy) Halle Berry. Bizarre Foods Hotel Impossible Hotel Impossible Big- RV Big- RV Hotel Impossible Cake Cake Cake Cake Our Little Family (N) Cake Cake Our Little Family Celeb.-Swap Celeb.-Swap The Jacksons: Next Celeb.-Swap Celeb.-Swap Intervention Intervention Intervention Intervention Intervention Chopped Chopped Chopped (N) Chopped Chopped Chopped Fixer Upper Fixer Upper Hunters Hunt Intl Flipping Virgins (N) Fixer Upper iCarly iCarly Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Friends Friends Friends Star-For. Wander Pickle Gravity Ultimate Rebels Gravity Gravity Guardi Wander Liv-Mad. K.C. Jessie Girl Liv-Mad. Austin Girl Dog Good Good King/Hill King/Hill Burgers Cleve American American Fam Guy Fam Guy Chicken Aqua Yukon Men Yukon Men (N) Rebel Gold (N) Yukon Men Rebel Gold Monica the Medium ›› The Perfect Man (2005) Hilary Duff. The 700 Club › Mr. Deeds (2002) Live Free or Die Live Free or Die (N) Dirty; Survival Live Free or Die Dirty; Survival The Waltons Middle Middle Middle Middle Golden Golden Golden Golden To Be Announced FactsLife Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond King King King King Trinity J. Meyer Prince S. Fur Praise the Lord (N) (Live) Bless the Lord Mother Angelica News Rosary Threshold of Hope Cate Women Daily Mass - Olam Money Matters Second Second Stanley Stanley Money Matters Second Second Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. Capitol Hill Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. Capitol Hill Homicide Hntr Evil Kin (N) Homicide Hntr Homicide Hntr Evil Kin America America America America America America America America America America Loving You Loving You Loving You Loving You Loving You Tornado Alley Prospectors Prospectors Prospectors Prospectors ››‡ Dance, Girl, Dance ›› Outrage (1950, Drama) ›››› The Heartbreak Kid (1972)

501 515 545 535 527

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USA TODAY — L awrence J ournal -W orld

IN MONEY

IN LIFE

Facebook avoids social media bust

Florence Welch is back on her feet, ready to tour

10.06.15 DAVID PAUL MORRIS, BLOOMBERG

WHAT’S HAPPENING

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GUS STEWART, WIREIMAGE

U.S. STRIKES MAJOR TRADE DEAL

Agreement with 11 Pacific nations will see fight in Congress

Biblical flooding becoming more common

David Jackson USA TODAY

JOE CAMPOREALE, USA TODAY SPORTS

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Will Brennan, Matt Talley and Tyler Bahnmuller take a canoe to investigate their homes after floods hit the Columbia, S.C., area. Hundreds of roads and bridges are closed. Story, IN NEWS

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gay men in their 20s today feel pressure by family to marry and start their own families. Source Logo TV’s “Gay Men Redefined” survey of 1,000 gay men 18-49 TERRY BYRNE AND VERONICA BRAVO, USA TODAY

Doyle Rice USA TODAY

The biblical flooding in South Carolina is at least the sixth socalled 1-in-1,000-year rain event in the U.S. since 2010, a trend that may be linked to factors ranging from the natural, such as a strong El Niño, to the man-made, namely climate change. So many 1-in-1,000-year rainfalls is unprecedented, said meteorologist Steve Bowen of Aon Benfield, a global reinsurance firm. “We have certainly had our fair share in the United States in recent years,” Bowen said. A “1-in-1,000-year event” means that there’s a 1 in 1,000 (or 0.1%) chance of it happening in any given year in a given location, the Na-

tional Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) said. In addition to the floods in South Carolina, the other 1in-1,000-year rain events include the Tennessee floods in May 2010, the Mid-Atlantic, Northeast and New England drenching during Hurricane Irene in 2011, the Colorado Springs floods in 2013, the deluge in Baltimore in August 2014, and the flooding earlier this year in Nebraska, according to Bowen. Scientists say there could be a connection between these floods and man-made climate change. Research has confirmed that our warming climate is making intense short-term rains even heavier in many parts of the U.S. and the world, as warmer temperatures allow more moisture to evaporate from oceans and flow into rain-making storm systems, Weather Underground meteorologist Bob Henson said. However, when speaking about

this specific event, “I am very lukewarm on a climate change linkage,” said University of Georgia meteorologist Marshall Shepherd in an email. He said there is scientific evidence that the worst heavy rain events are increasing, “but I am not sure you can conclusively link this event.” Bowen added that huge floods occurred long before man-made climate change was an issue. “Atmospheric river events in particular have led to unbelievable rains throughout our recorded history, most notably the 1861-62 floods in California that flooded the Central Valley,” he said. Given the vast size of the USA, it shouldn’t be that surprising for extreme flooding to occur somewhere, Weather Underground meteorologist Bob Henson said. “Even very rare events do happen on a very limited basis when you’re looking at a large area such as the United States,” he said.

Carson suggests more people should be armed with guns Ben Carson, the retired neurosurgeon who trails only Donald Trump at the top of the Republican presidential field, said the lesson of the nation’s latest mass shooting isn’t to enact more limits on guns but to consider whether gun-free zones actually may draw shooters. In a wide-ranging interview with Capital Download, Carson endorsed expanding efforts to NEW YORK

identify and treat the mentally ill before they commit acts of violence. He suggested it might make sense to arm kindergarten teachers, and he rejected as wrongheaded proposals to restore the ban on military-style assault weapons. “Would that have prevented this? No,” Carson told USA TODAY’s weekly newsmaker series. “Would it have prevented the one before? No. I’m for doing things that work, not for things that stroke the emotions.”

MICHAEL MONDAY FOR USA TODAY

v STORY CONTINUES ON 2B

The United States and 11 other Pacific Rim nations struck a tentative trade agreement Monday, a landmark deal that has the potential to transform the global economy, divide political parties in Congress and roil the U.S. presidential race. As President Obama and aides began selling the agreement to Congress and the public, critics denounced it as yet another freetrade deal that will help ship American jobs overseas. The Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) will “promote economic growth” and “support higher paying jobs,” U.S. Trade Representative Michael Froman said. The massive agreement — which faces months of debate in Congress — would tie together nearly 40% of the world’s economy, from Canada to Chile to Japan to Australia; it would be the largest regional trade agreement in history. Obama said, “Congress and the American people will have months to read every word” before he signs the deal. “If we can get this agreement to my desk, then we can help our businesses sell more Made in America goods and services around the world,” Obama said. Critics, including Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders, said employers will use the deal to move jobs to countries that have lower wages and fewer regulations. “In the Senate, I will do all that I can to defeat this agreement,” said Sanders, a Vermont senator. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnnell, R-Ky., the chamber’s top Republican, vowed “intense scrutiny” of the proposed agreement, noting that it “could shape our engagement and commerce with these nations for decades.” McConnell said the Senate wants to open trade “in a way that benefits American manufacturers, farmers and innovators,” but “serious concerns have been raised on a number of key issues.” Outgoing House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, said more trade means better jobs and pay, but the GOP-led Congress must ensure that the deal as proposed “meets the highest standards before moving forward.” Government officials across the Pacific Rim hailed the proposed agreement as an advance for the global economy. In Tokyo, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe called it “a major outcome ... for the future of the Asia-Pacific.” In addition to the U.S. and Japan, other TPP nations are Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore and Vietnam. Not included: China. Obama promoted the TPP as a way for the U.S. and its allies to counter China’s economic power in Asia.

Islamic State’s latest victim: Arch in ancient Syrian city Militants blow up ‘icon of Palmyra’ Jane Onyanga-Omara USA TODAY

The Islamic State has blown up the iconic Arch of Triumph in the ancient Syrian city of Palmyra, officials said Monday. Maamun Abdulkarim, the country’s head of antiquities, said he was told the “icon of Palmyra,” which stood at the entrance to the UNESCO world heritage site, was destroyed by the militants on Sunday, according to Agence

France-Presse. He called on the international community to “find a way to save Palmyra,” which was a center for art and commerce in Roman times, and warned that militants have laid explosives in other monuments. Abdulkarim told AFP that the extremists, also known as ISIL or ISIS, “booby-trapped” the arch, which is thought to be around 2,000 years old, “several weeks ago.” “We are living through a catastrophe. Since the capture of the city, it has been one shock after another,” he told the agency. In a statement on its official

FILE PHOTO BY YOUSSEF BADAWI, EPA

Tourists at the arch in the ancient city of Palmyra, Syria, in 2009.

Facebook page Monday, Syria’s presidency described Palmyra as an integral part of the history of human civilization and condemned the destruction of the arch. The Islamic State has embarked on a campaign to destroy monuments that predate Islam and artifacts the militant group says promote idolatry since it seized Palmyra in May. Last month, news reports surfaced that the Islamic radicals destroyed the city’s ancient tower tombs, which date from 100 A.D. In August, they beheaded archaeologist Khaled al-Asaad, a caretaker at the site, and in July, militants released a video appar-

ently showing a mass execution of soldiers within the ruins. The Islamic State has also destroyed the 2,000-year-old Temple of Bel — Palmyra’s main temple — the smaller Temple of Baal-Shamim, other ancient temples, modern day Islamic cemeteries and shrines. “This is a systematic destruction of the city. They want to raze it completely,” Abdulkarim told AFP. “They want to destroy the amphitheater, the colonnade. We now fear for the entire city.” Before the civil war began in Syria in 2011, Palmyra’s ruins were a major attraction, bringing in about 150,000 tourists a year.


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L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2015

VOICES

Training Afghan soldiers is just not working David J. Lynch

Special for USA TODAY

On an Afghan army base this spring, I got a glimpse of the security forces that are responsible for winning the war against the Taliban now that the U.S. has stepped back from an active combat role. I expected to see local recruits being schooled in how to fight. Instead, soldiers hefting wooden replica rifles were being drilled — not in battlefield skills — but in how to build dining halls. Perhaps they can challenge the Taliban to a bake-off. The scene would have been amusing if the stakes weren’t so high. Training others to fight battles the U.S. regards as important is at the heart of the Obama administration’s strategy in Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria. It’s not working. Last week, the Taliban seized control of Kunduz, a provincial capital of 300,000 people, marking the first time the extremists had taken control of a city in 14 years of near-constant warfare. As Afghan forces tried to retake it, U.S. warplanes — still available for emergency support — bombed a local hospital, killing 22 people, including patients and staff. The debacle in Afghanistan — which no doubt will be discussed Tuesday when Gen. John Campbell, the top U.S. officer there,

testifies on Capitol Hill — only mirrors what’s occurred elsewhere. In Iraq, U.S.-trained units melted amid the Islamic State’s 2014 onslaught, and in Syria, the training program thus far has turned out a mere handful of fighters. This is wishful thinking masquerading as foreign policy. And it has a long history. Almost 50 years ago, President Richard Nixon sought to withdraw GIs from Vietnam by “Vietnamizing” the war — shifting responsibility for ground combat to our South Vietnamese ally. Ultimately, local forces were not up to the task. More recently, the Pentagon identified training foreign fighters as a critical need in the 2006 Quadrennial Defense Review. Then-secretary of Defense Robert Gates wrote an oft-quoted Foreign Affairs article five years ago saying the military, which has historically promoted officers for just about any reason other than training acumen, needs to improve in that area. Such efforts aren’t inexpensive. The U.S. has spent more than $65 billion training and equipping its Afghan surrogates. It will spend an additional $4 billion this year. Yet problems persist. In Afghanistan, the U.S. training program often has been short of manpower and equipment. Many of the trainers have no experience before starting their work. Some of their pupils turn on them: At least 83 American or coalition personnel have been

JALIL REZAYEE, EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY

Afghan National Army soldiers attend their graduation ceremony in Herat, Afghanistan, on Monday. Afghan forces took over responsibility for the country’s security on Jan. 1. killed since the start of 2012 in so-called green-on-blue attacks. That may explain the wooden rifles I saw on the base outside of Mazar-e-Sharif, where rusting Soviet-era tanks and armored personnel carriers bear witness to Afghanistan’s nearly unbroken four-decade history of conflict. Yet the current training is aimed at bureaucrats more than warriors, revolving around administrative functions such as budgeting and planning rather than the best way to fire a rifle or mount an attack. The Afghan combat engineers I saw don’t

even learn critical battlefield skills such as erecting bridges under fire. And while progress has been made, the finish line is nowhere in sight. The president plans to withdraw almost all of the 9,800 U.S. troops in Afghanistan by the end of next year, counting on the Afghans to defend themselves. A German colonel who was among the NATO trainers I spoke with in May told me the allies could stay in Afghanistan for 30 years and not finish the job. Afghans are notoriously fierce warriors, but their will to

fight is only as strong as the government they defend. Feeble public institutions along with sectarian divides undermine military cohesion. When a few hundred Taliban are able to overrun several thousand government soldiers and police — as happened in Kunduz — it tells you one thing. Wooden rifles and dining halls won’t win this war. Lynch reported from more than 60 countries as a USA TODAY foreign correspondent between 1997 and 2005.

Carson: Gun-free zones may attract shooters v CONTINUED FROM 1B

Carson outlines how his political philosophy on gun control and other issues is grounded in the Constitution in a new book, A More Perfect Union, published Tuesday by Sentinel. One of the trio of outsiders who have shaken the GOP race this year, the renowned pediatric neurosurgeon combines a soft-spoken manner with strongly held and hardedged conservative views, particularly on social issues. “If I had a little kid in kindergarten somewhere I would feel much more comfortable if I knew on that campus there was a police officer or somebody who was trained with a weapon,” he said. Including the teacher? “If the teacher was trained in the use of that weapon and had access to it, I would be much more comfortable if they had one than if they didn’t.” He said the idea of declaring gun-free zones may be counterproductive. The gunmen “tend to pick places that are gun-free zones,” he said. “They aren’t likely to go into a place where they are likely to get shot.” He keeps a gun himself at a home he owns in a secluded area, “way out in the country, away from the police, away from anybody,” he said. “If someone is, you know, threatening your life or the life of your family and you don’t

DARREN MCCOLLESTER, GETTY IMAGES

SENTINEL

have ready access to the police, I would prefer to have a mechanism for protecting myself.” He’s never had to use it. The nation’s debate over gun control has been spotlighted by the shooting rampage last week at Umpqua Community College in Roseburg, Ore., that left nine victims dead before the shooter killed himself. Umpqua bans guns and other weapons, but state law allows people with concealed permits to carry guns on the campus. Carson once supported the idea of banning assault weapons and armor-piercing ammunition, but he said he changed his mind after he read more about the his-

Ben Carson speaks with people after a town hall event Wednesday in Exeter, N.H. Carson has risen in recent candidate polls.

“When you look at tyranny ... the pattern is so consistent: Get rid of the guns for the people first, so you can go in and dominate them.” Ben Carson

NOW SHOWING AT USATODAY.COM

Watch the full interview with candidate Ben Carson.

tory of tyranny, a subject explored in his 240-page book. “Reading people like Daniel Webster, who talked about tyranny in Europe and said it would never occur in America because the American people were armed,” he said. “When you look at tyranny and how it occurs, the pattern is so consistent: Get rid of the guns for the people first so you can go in and dominate them.” Asked whether many Americans worried less about the threat from the government and more about the threat of fellow citizens armed with assault rifles, Carson replied, “You need to be able to

IN BRIEF COAST GUARD SAYS CARGO SHIP SANK IN HURRICANE

The cargo ship that vanished five days ago near the Bahamas sank in the brutal seas and high winds of Hurricane Joaquin, but the search for survivors will continue, the Coast Guard said Monday. Coast Guard Capt. Mark Fedor said the 790-foot container ship El Faro, with 33 people aboard, sank last week. Twenty-eight of the crew were Americans. “We believe it sank in its last known position on Thursday,” Fedor said. “We are still looking for survivors or any signs of life.” Fedor said aircraft searched 70,000 square nautical miles Sunday, the first day that weather allowed an intensive search. The rescue efforts are targeting two debris fields, one about 300 square miles and another of about 70 square miles, he said. — John Bacon NATO: RUSSIA VIOLATED TURKISH AIRSPACE

International tensions over Syria ticked higher Monday as NATO warned Russia about vio-

parted the airspace, NATO said. Russia said the incursion was an accident. — Gregg Zoroya

FLEEING THE ANGRY CROWD

DHS REOPENS SECRET SERVICE INVESTIGATION

KENZO TRIBOUILLARD, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

Air France executive Pierre Plissonnier, his clothes torn by protesters Monday in Roissy-en-France, is escorted to safety. Hundreds of airline employees stormed a meeting that had just unveiled a restructuring plan calling for 2,900 job cuts. lating Turkey’s airspace, as happened over the weekend, and Moscow stepped up air attacks inside Syria. NATO said Monday that Russian aircraft flew over Turkey on Saturday and Sunday, “despite Turkish authorities’ clear, timely

and repeated warnings.” The alliance said Russian airstrikes in Syria have caused civilian casualties and are not targeting the Islamic State, also known as ISIL or ISIS. Turkish jets approached the Russian aircraft, which then de-

The Department of Homeland Security’s inspector general announced Monday he has reopened an investigation into allegations that Secret Service agents improperly accessed a more than decade-old job application of a congressman who has been a critic of the agency’s operations. In a statement, the inspector general’s office, which is headed by John Roth, announced the investigation of agents accessing the job application of Rep. Jason Chaffetz in 2003 was being reopened because Secret Service Director Joseph Clancy revised an account of when he first learned the Utah Republican had unsuccessfully applied for work at the service. Last week, Roth issued a report detailing how 45 agency employees had accessed Chaffetz’s file, even though only four of those had “an arguable legitimate need” to do it. — Aamer Madhani

protect yourself from both.” Carson, 64, admitted to being surprised by his political rise since his address to the National Prayer Breakfast in 2013 drew the attention of evangelical Christians and others who urged him to get into politics. In the RealClearPolitics average of recent national polls, Trump runs first in the GOP field at 23%, followed by Carson at 17% and Carly Fiorina at 11%. Among the more traditional contenders — that is, those who have held elective office — only Florida Sen. Marco Rubio breaks into double digits, at 10%. “It says that the people are actually starting to wake up and recognize that politics-as-usual is not taking us where we want to be,” Carson said of the strength of the outsider candidates. He rejected any parallel to the observation that a president should have experience in politics, just as most people wouldn’t choose a brain surgeon who had never been in an operating room before. “Neurosurgery is considerably more complicated than politics,” he scoffed. “You don’t need to know nearly as much to be able to maneuver in the political world as you do in the operating room inside of somebody’s brain. It’s not even close.” Corrections & Clarifications USA TODAY is committed to accuracy. To reach us, contact Standards Editor Brent Jones at 800-8727073 or e-mail accuracy@usatoday.com. Please indicate whether you’re responding to content online or in the newspaper.

A story Friday about the 25th anniversary of Germany’s reunification misspelled the last name of President Joachim Gauck.

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USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2015

STRIKE HASN’T DAMAGED U.S.-AFGHAN TIES Experts say both sides will continue to work together despite hospital tragedy

Jim Michaels USA TODAY

An apparent U.S. airstrike that killed 22 people in an international hospital in Kunduz, Afghanistan, has shown no sign of undermining the Afghan government's unwavering support for a continued presence of U.S. forces in the country. “I think the two sides can weather this tragedy,” said Lisa Curtis, an analyst at the Heritage Foundation. “There’s a lot of trust and confidence between the two governments.” The Pentagon pledged a full investigation into Saturday's attack on the hospital, which was run by the international aid organization Doctors Without Borders. The group, which withdrew from the city following the airstrike, said the bombing destroyed the hospital, killing 10 patients and 12 staff members.

Gun plan could be a boost to Clinton Heidi M Przybyla USA TODAY

Hillary Clinton’s pledge to take on gun manufacturers and unilaterally tighten background check laws sets up a contrast with Bernie Sanders on one of the few issues where she has a more liberal record. The Democratic front-runner’s proposal on gun control, which she rolled out the week after a mass shooting at an Oregon community college, could give her an issue that resonates with progressive voters backing the Vermont senator, a self-described socialist. Sanders, who represents a state with a large number of gun owners, has a history of gun control opposition, including his vote while a member of the House in 1993 against the Brady Bill, which established background checks for firearm purchases. “It’s got the potential to be a wedge issue,’’ particularly in the first Democratic primaries since 20 schoolchildren were gunned down in Newtown, Conn., in

On Monday, the Pentagon revised its account of the airstrike, saying it came at the request of Afghan forces and not to protect American advisers. “We have now learned that on Oct. 3, Afghan forces advised that they were taking fire from enemy positions and asked for air support from U.S. forces,” Army Gen. John Campbell, the top commander of the U.S.-led coalition in Afghanistan, said at a Pentagon briefing. “An airstrike was then called to eliminate the Taliban threat and several civilians were accidentally struck,” he said. “This is different from the initial reports, which indicated that U.S. forces were threatened and the airstrike was called on their behalf.” Afghan President Ashraf Ghani has been supportive of the presence of U.S. forces in his country, a sharp contrast to his predecessor. Hamid Karzai regularly assailed the U.S. military for errant

DOCTORS WITHOUT BORDERS VIA EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY

strikes on civilians and refused to sign an agreement to allow American forces to remain after the combat mission ended. After the Kunduz bombing, Ghani released a statement saying that he mourned the loss of lives but did not criticize the U.S. presence. “Both the government and population accept (the airstrike) not as a good thing but as a reality

Staffers at a hospital in Kunduz, Afghanistan, huddle together after a U.S. airstrike on Saturday. Ten patients and 12 staff members died.

DEATH TOLL RISES TO 12 IN SWAMPED CAROLINAS Hundreds rescued; roads, bridges closed; outages plentiful John Bacon @jmbacon USA TODAY

The death toll rose to 10 and millions of South Carolinians remained homebound Monday as state emergency officials grappled with massive flooding following days of historic rains. Authorities also reported two storm-related deaths in North Carolina. The rain was finally ending late Monday, and sunshine was forecast for Tuesday. But South Carolina remained bloated with floodwaters leaving devastation in their wake. Rainfall totaling 2 feet in some areas since a state of emergency was declared Thursday has forced

“We are stronger today than we were yesterday. Our angels in South Carolina continue to be our first responders.”

MLADEN ANTONOV, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

Above, flood-displaced residents rest at a temporary shelter at St. Andrews Middle School in Columbia, S.C., on Monday. Relentless rain left large areas of the Southeast under water. At left, the interior of a flooded car in Columbia shows the rain’s devastation. Hundreds of roads and bridges were closed.

Gov. Nikki Haley

DARREN MCCOLLESTER, GETTY IMAGES

Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton outlined her gun control plan at a town hall in New Hampshire.

2012, said Dante Scala, associate professor of political science at the University of New Hampshire. Both candidates now support expanding background checks, though Clinton is vowing to close loopholes through executive action if Congress doesn’t act and also to go after manufacturers. A gun debate in the wake of another mass shooting allows Clinton to “put some sunlight” between her and Sanders “without a personal attack and doesn’t make her appear to be playing catch-up on progressive issues,’’ said John Hudak, an expert on the politics of guns at the Brookings Institution. In the past, Sanders has cited a “cultural divide’’ between highcrime urban areas and rural areas including Vermont, where hunting is popular, in explaining his position. “He’s going to look very much like a politician on this issue,’’ said Hudak. “He’s going to have to do a gun control two-step in a way he hasn’t had to do on any other issue.’’ “There are very concrete steps we can take to lessen the number of tragedies and to make those that happen less lethal, including ideas supported by a majority of gun owners,’’ said Sanders, who plans to offer a more concrete plan on guns, in a statement.

of war and they want the U.S. to remain,” said Seth Jones, an analyst at RAND Corp. The value of continued U.S. support was evident in the Kunduz offensive. The U.S. military launched airstrikes around the city as Afghan government forces pushed the Taliban out over the past week. U.S. advisers, meanwhile, assisted Afghan commandos and other forces involved in the offensive. Most coalition advisers are distant from fighting units; the exception being U.S. special operations troops who accompany elite Afghan commando battalions. However, Campbell said coalition forces were not directly engaged in combat around Kunduz. U.S. airstrikes generally occur now only to protect remaining coalition forces in Afghanistan or to respond to a dire threat, such as the survival of the U.S.-backed government in Kabul.

hundreds of water rescues. Gov. Nikki Haley said 550 roads and bridges were closed. About 40,000 residences were without water, and many more were dealing with a boil order. “We are stronger today than we were yesterday,” Haley said at a news conference Monday, adding, “This is not over. Just because the rain stops does not mean that we are out of the woods.” The National Weather Service said rainfall totaling 6.87 inches Sunday in Columbia made it the city’s all-time wettest day on record. The two-day rainfall total of 10.44 inches also set a record. The Charleston area set records as well; one suburb (near Mt. Pleasant) had seen more than 2 feet of rain since Thursday. In Forest Acres, S.C., northeast

MLADEN ANTONOV. AFP/GETTY IMAGES

of Columbia, police on Monday afternoon said the Overcreek Bridge dam had been breached, The State reported. Lt. Curtis Wilson of the Richland County Sheriff’s Department said police were conducting mandatory evacuations downstream from the dam. “We are now worried about the Forest Lake dam breaking,” said State Sen. Joel Lourie, D-Richland. Steve Bowen, a meteorologist with the global insurance firm Aon Benfield, said economic losses to the state should “easily surpass $1 billion given the enormity of the damage.” “The cost to infrastructure alone could be that much,” Bowen said in an email to USA TO-

DAY. “Unfortunately, as is the case with flood events, much of the damage will not be covered by insurance since only a small percentage of homeowners in South Carolina are current National Flood Insurance Program policyholders.” Haley said Sunday that this type of rain event can be expected once in 1,000 years. Hundreds of rescues included a mother and her 15-month-old daughter, plucked from the roof of their home Sunday by a Coast Guard air crew in Huger, about 25 miles north of Charleston. Haley said President Obama called her Monday and offered additional assistance. Much of the East has been sat-

urated by rains that have lingered since Thursday. Coastal areas of North Carolina and Virginia saw flooding, and flood warnings and watches were in effect along much of the East Coast. But the hovering storm saved its worst abuse for South Carolina. Chris Morris is one of the lucky ones in his Charleston neighborhood. He said his home is on a raised slab and hasn’t been breached. He lives on a golf course, but you would not know that by looking at it. “We woke up ... to about 10 inches of water surrounding the house,” he told USA TODAY. “The golf course is completely under water.”

“The Gulf was flooded with oil and Gulf Coast way of life ... was hanging by a thread.”

The Deepwater Horizon oil spill stained more than 1,300 miles of the Gulf of Mexico’s coastline five years ago.

Contributing: Doyle Rice, Greg Toppo

BP to pay record $20B settlement in Gulf spill Kevin Johnson USA TODAY

WASHINGTON The Justice Department announced a record $20 billion settlement Monday with British energy giant BP on Monday, more than five years after the Deepwater Horizon oil spill stained more than 1,300 miles of the Gulf of Mexico’s coastline in the largest environmental disaster in U.S. history. Attorney General Loretta Lynch said the resolution, which finalizes a deal first disclosed in July, marks the largest settlement against a single entity in U.S. history. And it will finance an unprecedented project to restore plant and wildlife habitats that

were fouled by the spill of 3 million barrels of oil into the Gulf. “The Gulf was flooded with oil and Gulf Coast way of life, a uniquely American way of life, was hanging by a thread,” Lynch said. “By the time the torrent stopped, it had inflicted unprecedented damage.” As part of the agreement, BP will pay a $5.5 billion civil penalty, the largest such penalty in the history of environmental law, and $7.1 billion in damage claims under the Oil Pollution Act. BP spokesman Geoff Morell said the settlement filed Monday in federal court represents the same agreement announced this summer. In July, the parties announced an agreement valued at $18.7 billion. The new total,

2010 PHOTO BY U.S. COAST GUARD

Attorney General Loretta Lynch

$20.8 billion, represents money previously committed to the resolution, the company said. “This settlement resolves the largest litigation liabilities remaining from the tragic accident,” Morell said.


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L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2015

STATE-BY-STATE News from across the USA

HIGHLIGHT: VERMONT

Amtrak train derails near Montpelier Matthew Diebel USA TODAY

ALABAMA Birmingham: This is

the best city in the country for millennial entrepreneurs, according to a ranking from the Thumbtack website, cited by AL.com. ALASKA Juneau: A vehicle driving on Seater Street crashed into a light pole. Two people jumped out of the car, grabbed the front bumper that had fallen off, then put the bumper back in the car before driving off, choosing Evergreen Cemetery as a getaway route, the Empire reported. ARIZONA Phoenix: A baseball

game broke out into a rant about selfies. During a Diamondbacks game, announcers Steve Berthiaume and Bob Brenly got a bit irate over a group of college-aged women taking selfies, The Arizona Republic reported. ARKANSAS Highland: The Rev. Mike Stanley of Friendship Baptist Church was injured in the first accident of the 2015-16 deer season, ArkansasOnline reported CALIFORNIA Sacramento: Gov. Brown vetoed bills aimed at controlling the operation of drones. COLORADO Denver: A man was arrested after barricading himself inside the Aravda Police Department headquarters, KUSA-TV reported. CONNECTICUT Mystic: Mystic

Seaport will open its doors to visitors during the first six weeks of 2016 for the first time in four years. The Day reported the museum will be open each week from Thursday to Sunday beginning in January. DELAWARE Dover: Delaware State University recently won a $2.6 million grant from the U.S. Department of Education for its Access to Success program, which aims to create a system that helps students find the college or university that might be the best fit for them. The grant could give high school counselors new tools to help low-income, first-generation and other at-risk students attend college, The News Journal reported. DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA: A pa-

tient at the MedStar Washington Hospital Center died after an altercation with two security guards, WUSA-TV reported. The security officers involved have been placed on administrative leave. FLORIDA Cape Canaveral: A communications satellite that SpaceX is slated to launch later in the year from Cape Canaveral will help Facebook expand Internet access in sub-Saharan Africa, Florida Today reported. GEORGIA Gwinnett County: A

high school classroom was evacuated because pepper spray was released in the room, WXIA-TV reported. HAWAII Honolulu: KHON-TV

reported that several local restaurants suffered produce shortages caused by recent storms. IDAHO Idaho Falls: Local offi-

cials submitted a proposal to secure a national veterans cemetery here, the Post Register reported. ILLINOIS Batavia: Scientists at the Fermilab National Accelerator Laboratory here powered up a 17-ton electromagnet, which will be the centerpiece of an experiment on subatomic particles, The BeaconNews reported. INDIANA Indianapolis:

Rolls-Royce is investing nearly $600 million in operations and research here over the next five years, The Indianapolis Star reported. The

An Amtrak train derailed near the Vermont state capital, Montpelier, on Monday morning, leaving at least four injured, police and rail officials said. Witnesses said the train’s locomotive and two cars tumbled down an embankment and another car was left diagonally on the tracks. The Amtrak website said that the train, which was traveling south, reportedly hit a rock slide. A spokesperson for the Montpelier Fire Department told the Burlington Free Press that they had reports of four people injured. There have been no reported deaths, the spokesperson, Lt. Dana Huoppi, said. “Train derailment in VT this morning on my way to New Jersey. Im fine and as far as Ive heard only minor injuries. Everyone is shaken tho,” a passenger, Ian Trupin, wrote on his Instagram account around 11:30 a.m. According to Vermont State Police spokesman Scott Waterman and tweets from Neal Goswami, bureau chief of the Vermont Press Bureau, the train, the Vermonter, which travels from Washington, D.C., and the Canadian border, left aerospace and defense contractor will renovate and modernize factories that date back to World War II. IOWA Toledo: Jurors failed to

reach a unanimous decision last week on whether Dustin Jefferson committed first-degree murder by helping to kill his wife, Kerry O’Clair Jefferson, the Waterloo-Cedar Falls Courier reported.

KANSAS Salina: A family whose

12-year-old daughter died several months after being shocked while playing in a rainstorm plans to appeal a district judge’s ruling dismissing their lawsuit against the city, the Salina Journal reported. Jayden Hicks was 11 in May 2013 when she came into contact with the metal cover of an in-ground electrical junction box.

BRIAN BELL

A Twitter user took this photo Monday showing the scene after an Amtrak train derailed after reportedly hitting a rockslide near Montpelier. the tracks near Bull Run Road in Northfield, a town about 10 miles southwest of Montpelier. Central Vermont Medical Center spokesman Hjonis Hanson told local TV station WPTZ that 98 people were on board the train. Hanson said the injuries appeared to be minor. Waterman said state police responded to the scene along newly tilled vacant lot. The worms, if they do their job right, will burrow several feet into the ground, loosening up the soil and thus allowing rainwater to percolate down into the dirt instead of running off into nearby sewers. MINNESOTA Minneapolis: Signs around Lake Calhoun now include the lake’s Dakota name. Minnesota Public Radio News reported that the new signs include the name Bde Maka Ska. MISSISSIPPI Pascagoula: Air

monitoring in neighborhoods around the Chevron Pascagoula Refinery continued through last weekend following the failure of a floating lid on a nearly full tank, The Sun-Herald reported.

ployee at the Federal Medical Center prison took more than $22,000 in bribes to smuggle tobacco to inmates, a federal grand jury charged, the Lexington Herald-Leader reported.

MAINE Portland: Craig Collins,

a former United Nations adviser, will lead the Maine Center for Creativity. MARYLAND Salisbury: Great

beers and cold brews are coming together for the sixth annual Good Beer Festival on Oct. 10-11, the Daily Times reported. The festival offers more than 100 different American craft brews and features more than 50 breweries from the Delmarva region.

MASSACHUSETTS Boston: The

Massachusetts Alcoholic Beverages Control Commission is cracking down on underage drinking on college campuses. Operation Safe Campus involves monitoring of bars and liquor stores. MICHIGAN Detroit:

In its effort to revitalize, this city is putting even worms to work, the Detroit Free Press reported. On an east side lot last week, forestry workers with the non-profit Greening of Detroit scattered 85,000 worms onto a

SOUTH CAROLINA Anderson: Clemson University professor Armando Enrique Montilla Navarro died in a two-vehicle wreck last week. Montilla was assistant professor of Architecture, History and Theory and Criticism in the College of Architecture, Arts and Humanities, The Greenville News reported. SOUTH DAKOTA Rapid City: Mayor Steve Allender assembled a 17-member advisory committee to study the future of the Rushmore Plaza Civic Center after voters rejected a $180 million proposal to expand and upgrade the facility, the Rapid City Journal reported.

KENTUCKY Lexington: An em-

LOUISIANA New Orleans: The Times-Picayune showcased the annual Halloween display of the “pun-dead” in the front yard of a home on St. Charles Avenue. Skeletal characters, such as “Die Hard Saints Fan,” “TromBONE Shorty” and “Hair Brained Bonehead” (in a Donald Trump wig), tickle the funny bones of passersby.

rieur Elementary School in Pawtucket and Nayatt School in Barrington were named National Blue Ribbon Schools for 2015.

with local law enforcement. A Times Argus photographer said the train’s locomotive had tumbled over an embankment along with two passenger cars and was damaged and resting against some trees. A third passenger car was sitting diagonally across the track. Contributing: Bart Jansen

Pub in Sparta is closer to opening a craft brewery after the town council here approved an escrow account to cover town fees, the Daily Record reported. NEW MEXICO Roswell: The

Roswell Police Department is offering its headquarters as a safe place for people buying and selling things online to meet, the Roswell Daily Record reported. NEW YORK Rochester: Kathryn

Mikells, chief financial officer of Xerox Corp. since 2013, is leaving to take a job at another company, Xerox announced. Mikells has been named CFO of Diageo PLC, a Londonbased alcohol company whose brands include Johnnie Walker, Crown Royal, Tanqueray and Guinness, The Democrat and Chronicle reported. NORTH CAROLINA

Taylorsville: Paul Sink, pastor of Taylorsville Presbyterian Church, said the church will be restored after it was damaged by a falling tree, the Hickory Daily Record reported. The church was built in 1912 and has a hole in the roof. Sink said the largest loss is the bricks, which were handmade. MISSOURI Columbia: A stu-

dent-run recording studio is providing free access to production equipment to local students. The recording studio, called Darkroom Records, opened in March in the basement of Hickman High School, the Columbia Missourian reported.

MONTANA Great Falls: A bow-

hunter was wounded during an encounter with a lone grizzly bear, the Great Falls Tribune reported.

NEBRASKA Lincoln: The University of Nebraska-Lincoln’s Mueller Planetarium is hosting Halloween laser light shows this month. NEVADA Sparks: The late Laura Myers, a veteran journalist and humanitarian, was posthumously inducted into the Nevada Press Association’s Hall of Fame. NEW HAMPSHIRE Concord:

Trustees of the Community College System voted to freeze tuition at $200 per credit hour after about $90 million in state funding was budgeted. Community College tuition has not been raised since 2012, the New Hampshire Union Leader reported. NEW JERSEY Newton: The own-

er of Krogh’s Restaurant & Brew

NORTH DAKOTA Bismarck: The Bismarck-Mandan Community Food Co-op plans to open a retail grocery store on March 1, The Bismarck Tribune reported. OHIO Whitewater Township:

Kathy Huff, 42, a grandmother who was found unconscious with her infant grandson in a bathtub, is accused of using heroin while caring for the child, The Cincinnati Enquirer reported. The infant is in critical condition at Cincinnati Children’s Medical Center.

OKLAHOMA Tulsa: Cherokee County officials are contesting a judge’s ruling that jail video recordings that are the subject of an excessive-force civil rights lawsuit were improperly destroyed, the Tulsa World reported. OREGON Portland: No one was injured during an apparent gangrelated shooting in the Lloyd District, The Oregonian reported. PENNSYLVANIA Pittsburgh:

Education Management Corp. laid off 115 employees at its Art Institute schools across the USA, including 10 from its local location, the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reported.

RHODE ISLAND Providence: Archie R. Cole Middle School in East Greenwich, Francis J. Va-

TENNESSEE Nashville: If predictions of population and job growth for Middle Tennessee are accurate, the Regional Transit Authority of Middle Tennessee’s transportation network is lagging far behind the increasing demand for services, The Tennessean reported. The September report found that services aren’t suited for typical commuters, express buses aren’t fast enough and park-and-ride lots aren’t conveniently located. TEXAS Austin: After oil and gas

employment reached a record high of 305,000 in December, at least 28,300 jobs have been lost since due to declining oil prices. In August, Texas’ oil was worth 52% less than last year, the Longview News-Journal reported.

UTAH Orem: A woman was killed and her husband critically injured after both were hit by a car while riding their bicycles, the Deseret News reported. VERMONT Burlington: The

University of Vermont on Friday announced a gift to the university of $20 million, the largest “individual gift” to UVM in its 224year history. The money was given by Steven Grossman, a 1961 UVM alumni and former CEO of Southern Container Corp., Burlington Free Press reported. The university’s business school will be named for Grossman. VIRGINIA Richmond: The

Oreos.

Times-Dispatch calls October “the mother lode of fall festivals.” Hit up the pumpkin patch at the Hanover Vegetable Farm Fall Festival on Oct. 17 and enjoy the autumn atmosphere, a live band, BBQ, wine tastings and fried

WASHINGTON Seattle: City officials will take over and expand an underused bike share program, with the hope that broader coverage will make it more useful, The Seattle Times reported. WEST VIRGINIA Charleston: The Gazette-Mail cited findings released by the West Virginia University Bureau of Business and Economic Research that the state can expect continued population declines, employment and income growth levels below the national average, coal production below historic levels and unemployment rates above 7% throughout the near future. WISCONSIN Green Bay: CVS

has begun offering Narcan/Naloxone, a drug used to reverse opioid overdoses, to customers in Wisconsin without a prescription, Green Bay Press-Gazette reported. WYOMING Cheyenne: The four

Wyoming newspapers in the McCraken Newspaper Group have a new owner, the Wyoming Tribune Eagle reported. APG Media of the Rockies LLC purchased the newspapers, which include the Wyoming Tribune Eagle here, the Laramie Boomerang, the Rawlins Daily Times and the Rock Springs Rocket-Miner. APG is a subsidiary of the Minnesota-based Adams Publishing Group, which publishes community newspapers, digital products and magazines in several states.

Compiled by Tim Wendel, Nicole Gill and Jonathan Briggs, with Carolyn Cerbin, Linda Dono, Mike Gottschamer, Ben Sheffler and Nichelle Smith. Design by Mallory Redinger. Graphics by Alejandro Gonzalez.


USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2015

MONEYLINE STOCKS MAKE BOLD GAIN Stocks kicked off the week in rally mode with the Dow jumping 304 points Monday as investors view a Federal Reserve interest rate hike this year as less likely after Friday’s weak jobs report raised questions about the pace of U.S. growth. The Nasdaq composite jumped back into positive territory for the calendar year on its 1.6% gain, a climb of 73 points. Up 1.8% and posting its fifth straight winning day was the S&P 500.

2011 PHOTO BY JAY LAPRETE FOR USA TODAY

WENDY’S CEO EMIL BROLICK TO STEP DOWN NEXT YEAR Wendy’s, the hamburger chain with about 6,500 stores worldwide, said Monday that CEO Emil Brolick will step down next year. Brolick, 67, plans to retire in May and will be replaced by CFO Todd Penegor, the Dublin, Ohiobased company said. Brolick, the 17-year veteran who has led the company since 2011, will remain on the board of directors. Shares of Wendy’s edged up 0.5% to $8.75. SERVICE SECTOR GROWTH SLOWS AS ORDERS PLUNGE Growth in the U.S. services sector slowed in September as sales fell and new orders plunged, evidence that stock market volatility may have hit consumer confidence and limited spending. The Institute for Supply Management says its services index fell to 56.9 last month from 59 in August, which was the second-highest reading in a decade. Any reading above 50 signals expansion. DOW JONES INDUSTRIAL AVG. 16,800 16,750 4:00 p.m.

16,700

16,776

16,650 16,600 304.06

16,550 16,500 16,450

9:30 a.m.

16,472

NEWS MONEY SPORTS Facebook a big anomaly in social media bust LIFE AUTOS TRAVEL

5B

For the most part, expected windfall has been anything but Matt Krantz @mattkrantz USA TODAY

One of Twitter investors’ biggest concerns — the lack of a CEO — was solved Monday with cofounder Jack Dorsey officially taking that top slot. The stock rose 7% on that news, but overall the giant social media company has been a bust for investors. In fact, almost all the major social media stocks have been a disappointment for investors over the past couple of years. There’s one glaring exception in the form of industry heavyweight Facebook — yet other big social media companies are all down big-time

Nasdaq composite S&P 500 T- note, 10-year yield Oil, light sweet crude Euro (dollars per euro) Yen per dollar

CLOSE

CHG

4781.26 1987.05 2.06% $46.26 $1.1183 120.50

x 73.49 x 35.69 x 0.07 x 0.72 y 0.0046 x 0.63

SOURCES USA TODAY RESEARCH, MARKETWATCH.COM

USA SNAPSHOTS©

Average auto loan rates 4-year new auto Now

3.28%

6 months ago Year ago

3.28%

3.30%

5-year new auto Now

3.38%

6 months ago Year ago

3.39%

3.41%

4-year used auto Now

3.67%

6 months ago Year ago

3.60%

3.62%

Source Informa Research Services (www.informars.com/bestrates) JAE YANG AND VERONICA BRAVO, USA TODAY

SOCIAL MEDIA STOCKS

Social media stocks have mostly been a bust since Twitter’s first day as a public company on Nov. 7, 2013: % change Company from 11/7/13 YTD Yelp -63.3% -58.6% Angie’s List -60.7% -10.8% Twitter -37.3% -21.5% Zynga -31.2% -10.5% LinkedIn -8.0% -15.3% Facebook 97.7% 20.5% SOURCES: S&P CAPITAL IQ, USA TODAY

JACK DORSEY IS BACK IN CHARGE AT TWITTER

Jon Swartz comments on return, at money.usatoday.com

nearly 39% since. And that decline is eased by the stock’s bump Monday to $28.16 after the company finally named Dorsey CEO. But Twitter is far from the only

social media company that’s struggling. Take Yelp, which combines reviews and social networking. That site, which compiles and shares reviews by consumers about everything from restaurants to plumbers, has had its shares fall a crushing 70% the past two years. Since the closing price on the last day of trading Dec. 31, 2014, the shares are down 59% to $22.68. It’s not just traders sucking the air out of the room. Analysts are calling for Yelp’s adjusted profit to fall 35% this fiscal year to 43 cents a share. Facebook still is the social media stock to own. Shares are up 20% this year, making it a standout not just among social media but in the broad market. Facebook shares, which traded for $94.01 Monday, have nearly doubled in value since Twitter’s IPO. Adjusted profit is expected to jump 17% this year at Facebook.

TRADE DEAL MAY LIFT THE ECONOMY, CONSUMERS Trans-Pacific Partnership ‘levels the playing field’

MONDAY MARKETS INDEX

this year and have been losers since Twitter sold its shares to the public for the first time nearly two years ago. Such under performance probably comes as a surprise to investors who blindly piled into the sector years ago as social media mania was at its peak. Many assumed social media would give the companies a huge advantage in online marketing and further disrupt other traditional industries in the media space. And while the industry has spurred change in the business world, the stocks have been big losers. Twitter sold shares to the public with much fanfare with shares starting to trade Nov. 7, 2013; they closed at $44.90 apiece. Investors who jumped into the stock then thinking it was a ticket to cash in on the social media gold rush have been sorely disappointed as shares have dropped

CHINESE STEEL WORKERS BY GREG BAKER, AFP/GETTY IMAGES; CONFISCATED SUGAR BY MARK R. CRISTINO, EPA; YARN BOBBINS BY TY WRIGHT, BLOOMBERG; DYED SHOELACES BY TY WRIGHT, BLOOMBERG; TELEVISIONS BY YOSHIKAZU TSUNO, AFP/GETTY IMAGES; PAINTED STAND MIXER COMPONENTS BY LUKE SHARRETT, BLOOMBERG; TRADE PANEL BY ERIK S. LESSER, EPA

Paul Davidson USA TODAY

T

he sweeping trade deal between the U.S. and 11 Pacific Rim nations announced Monday should boost the U.S. economy and lower consumer prices on some imports, experts say. The Trans-Pacific Partnership, which still faces a long, tough battle in Congress, covers countries that make up 40% of the global economy. “This agreement is unlikely to be a game-changer for the U.S. economy in the short run,” says Eswar Prasad, a professor of trade policy at Cornell University. “But it could have significant net positive effects in the long run.” That’s because the U.S. currently imposes far fewer trade barriers, such as tariffs, than the other participating nations, providing the nation a bigger upside as those taxes are lowered or

Uphill battle in Congress

Legislative critics say deal would move more jobs overseas, 1B

eliminated, Prasad says. For example, the agreement does away with tariffs as high as 59% on U.S. machinery, up to 70% on automotive products and up to 40% on agricultural products such as poultry and fruit, according to the White House. And it would force the participating countries to comply with the same labor and environmental laws that bind the U.S., Prasad says, erasing a key cost advantage those nations currently enjoy. “It certainly levels the playing field.” The agreement also would lower regulatory barriers for U.S. services firms, such as financial and express delivery companies, says Fred Bergsten, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics. That’s a huge market in which the U.S. has a large trade surplus, in contrast

to its yawning deficit in traded goods. Consumers should gain as well. Reduced tariffs on imports should cut prices by 5% to 10% for some electronics, clothing and auto parts, Bergsten says. And an agreement to reduce the 12 years of U.S. patent protection for so-

The agreement would do away with tariffs as high as 59% on U.S. machinery, up to 70% on automotive products and up to 40% on agricultural products such as poultry and fruit. called biologic drugs will make cheaper generics available to consumers sooner. On the other side, the pact would cut or eliminate U.S. tariffs on products such as steel, sugar and textiles for the Pacific Rim countries, which include Japan,

Chile, Vietnam, Malaysia and New Zealand, Bergsten says. That would increase competition for domestic companies and could encourage more offshoring of U.S. jobs. And some U.S. automakers worry that Japan will be motivated to manipulate its currency to lower the costs of Japanese auto imports. But the U.S. stands to gain far more than it will lose, he says. In a decade, he estimates, the deal will increase the nation’s annual exports by $100 billion to $125 billion and its gross domestic product by about $75 billion, adding about half a percentage point to economic growth. Peterson economists estimate it would add about 650,000 jobs in export-related industries while cutting a similar number of positions in domestic industries that would face more competition from imports. Bergsten says it will result in a net addition of jobs, though he could not be more specific.

Supreme Court allows insider trading reversal to stand Kaja Whitehouse @kajawhitehouse USA TODAY

Wall Street just won a major victory over Uncle Sam. In a decision expected to undo some of the government’s massive insider-trading crackdown, the Supreme Court on Monday denied review of U.S. v. Newman, an insider trading case that has been closely watched by Wall Street, prosecutors and the FBI. The denial lets stand an earlier decision to overturn the convictions of Anthony Chiasson and Todd Newman, who were found guilty in 2012 of using inside in-

Several people convicted in an insider trading crackdown by Preet Bharara, left, have said they want their convictions overturned because of the appeals court decision. SPENCER PLATT, GETTY IMAGES

formation to make millions for their hedge funds. In December, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit reversed their convictions in a ruling that ad-

dressed long-held questions about how close someone needs to be to the source of an illegal tip to be culpable. Specifically, the 2nd Circuit ap-

peals court ruled that in order to be convicted of insider trading a person must have direct knowledge of the insider doling out the tips. The court said the government must prove the person being accused of illegal trading was aware that the tipper breached his fiduciary duty and received some sort of benefit, such as cash or a job, in exchange for the information provided. Newman and Chiasson traded on tips they received from their staff analysts, who were found guilty of scouring stock tips from a network of analysts and corporate insiders and then passing them on to their bosses. As a result, their bosses were shielded

from direct communication with the tippers, who provided illegal stock tips on companies such as Dell and Nvidia. The Supreme Court’s decision not to review the case at the request of the government lets the lower court’s decision overturning the conviction stand. It’s a blow to Manhattan U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara, who brought the case against the two men and who sought Supreme Court review. It also is expected to have much broader repercussions because it significantly narrows the definition of what is illegal insider trading, and could lead to a litany of other convictions being overturned.


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L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2015

AMERICA’S MARKETS What to watch Adam Shell @adamshell USA TODAY

The stock market passed its biggest test so far in its first corrective phase since its last 10% drop back in 2011. For weeks, Wall Street pros have been saying the Standard & Poor’s 500 stock index would have to go back down and retest the panic lows of Aug. 24 — the same day the Dow Jones industrials briefly plunged almost 1,100 points — before investors would feel comfortable that a shortterm market low was in. Well, stocks went down close to that August low a number of times last week, including Friday morning after stocks’ initial plunge after the weak September jobs report. But then stocks reversed course, finishing sharply

Facts about America’s investors who use SigFig tracking services:

higher Friday. The rally continued Monday, with the S&P 500 shooting up nearly 2%, and the Dow surging 304 points. The S&P 500 has now surged 3.3% on a closing basis the past two sessions, and that gain swells to nearly 5% if you calculate the rebound from Friday’s intraday low. The Dow has rallied 3.1% the past two sessions, and 763 points, or 4.8%, from Friday’s low. When you add up Friday’s big reversal and Monday’s followthrough rally, you get what looks like a short-term bottom. Whether it is “the” bottom remains to be seen. The low appears to have been put in Friday when the weak jobs number lowered the odds of a Federal Reserve rate hike this year. For now, bad news on the economy is good news for stocks, as a weaker economy means the Fed stays on hold, allowing stocks to benefit from 0% rates longer.

+304.06

DOW JONES

Apple (AAPL) was the most-traded stock among SigFig users following s iPhone announcement it’s in September.

+35.69

INDUSTRIAL AVERAGE

CHANGE: +1.8% YTD: -1,046.64 YTD % CHG: -5.9%

COMP

+73.49 CHANGE: +1.6% YTD: +45.21 YTD % CHG: +1.0%

CLOSE: 16,776.43 PREV. CLOSE: 16,472.37 RANGE: 16,502.10-16,798.37

NASDAQ COMPOSITE

CLOSE: 4,781.26 PREV. CLOSE: 4,707.77 RANGE: 4,740.24-4,785.91

+27.52

CLOSE: 1,987.05 PREV. CLOSE: 1,951.36 RANGE: 1,954.33-1,989.17

RUSSELL 2000 INDEX

CHANGE: +2.5% YTD: -63.06 YTD % CHG: -5.2%

CLOSE: 1,141.64 PREV. CLOSE: 1,114.12 RANGE: 1,115.81-1,142.17

S&P 500’S BIGGEST GAINERS/LOSERS Price

$ Chg

YTD % Chg % Chg

Micron Technology (MU) 17.57 Up again on better-than-expected earnings last week.

+1.66

+10.4 -49.8

Alcoa (AA) 10.41 Signs deal with Airbus for aerospace fastening system.

+.89

+9.3

-34.1

Consol Energy (CNX) Raised to hold vs. sell at Deutsche Bank.

10.74

+.89

+9.0

-68.2

Mattel (MAT) High tech “Hello Barbie” has potential.

21.62

+1.69

+8.5

-30.1

Marathon Oil (MRO) Stock gains on rallying oil prices.

18.05

+1.39

+8.3

-36.2

Transocean (RIG) Crude prices rise, shares follow.

14.69

+1.13

+8.3

-19.9

Company (ticker symbol)

GAINERS

-36.9

Ensco (ESV) Shares rise along with crude prices.

15.60

+1.03

+7.1

-47.9

OneOK (OKE) Positive buy note, up another day.

36.94 +2.34

+6.8

-25.8

FMC Technologies (FTI) Rating raised to buy at Seaport Global.

32.78 +2.05

+6.7

-30.0

YTD % Chg % Chg

Price

$ Chg

61.41

-4.46

-6.8

-38.0

67.28

-3.78

-5.3

-6.7

Edwards Lifesciences (EW) Loses momentum in uptrend nearing 2015 high.

149.37

-5.18

-3.4

+17.3

Allergan (AGN) Breaks winning streak since hitting 2015 low.

278.58

-9.42

-3.3

+8.2

Skyworks Solutions (SWKS) Erases October’s gain as insider sells.

81.87

-2.19

-2.6

+12.6

Avago Technologies (AVGO) Slips as it struggles to build new base.

121.22

-2.11

-1.7

+20.5

H&R Block (HRB) 35.94 Falls as it announces preliminary results of tender offer.

-.63

-1.7

+6.7

Alexion Pharmaceuticals (ALXN) 163.42 Slips as two rare disease drugs near FDA action.

-2.65

-1.6

-11.7

Biogen (BIIB) 286.55 Heads back to 2015 low as it announces investor day.

-3.80

-1.3

-15.6

Regeneron Pharmaceuticals (REGN) 473.14 -5.93 No added benefit at Germany’s Federal Joint Committee.

-1.2

+15.3

Mallinckrodt (MNK) Reverses gain on Therakos acquisition. Endo (ENDP) Dips ahead of Belbuca FDA action.

AGGRESSIVE 71% or more in equities

5-day avg.: 6 month avg.: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold:

5-day avg.: 6-month avg.: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold:

-0.88 -6.90 AAPL AAPL NFLX

-1.51 -7.67 MSFT AAPL AAPL

POWERED BY SIGFIG

4-WEEK TREND

The diversified maker of consumer products agreed to buy Elmer’s $50 Price: $41.59 Products for $600 million to inChg: $0.98 crease its presence in the writing % chg: 2.4% Day’s high/low: instruments business. Elmer’s $30 makes glue and X-Acto knives. Sept. 8 $41.76/$40.64

Twitter

Ending weeks of speculation, the micro-blogging giant’s board con- $30 firmed it named co-founder Jack Dorsey its permanent CEO, effective Sept. 30. Also, Adam Bain was $20 named chief operating officer. Sept. 8

Price: $28.15 Chg: $1.84 % chg: 7.0% Day’s high/low: $28.25/$26.33

Micron Technology

Fund, ranked by size Vanguard 500Adml Vanguard TotStIAdm Vanguard InstIdxI Vanguard TotStIdx Vanguard InstPlus Fidelity Contra Vanguard TotIntl American Funds GrthAmA m American Funds IncAmerA m American Funds CapIncBuA m

Chg. +3.30 +0.91 +3.26 +0.91 +3.26 +1.33 +0.29 +0.64 +0.31 +0.86

4wk 1 +3.6% +3.0% +3.6% +3.0% +3.6% +3.2% +3.6% +2.1% +2.9% +2.8%

YTD 1 -2.0% -2.2% -2.0% -2.3% -2.0% +3.2% -3.4% +1.3% -3.4% -2.8%

1 – CAPITAL GAINS AND DIVIDENDS REINVESTED

Close 198.47 15.12 34.57 22.64 11.94 113.27 23.18 105.50 37.67 59.64

Chg. +3.47 +0.63 +0.73 -1.39 +0.29 +2.64 +0.48 +1.49 +0.66 +1.16

% Chg +1.8% +4.3% +2.2% -5.8% +2.5% +2.4% +2.1% +1.4% +1.8% +2.0%

%YTD -3.4% -17.7% -12.0% -28.1% +6.2% -5.3% -6.3% +2.2% -9.5% -2.0%

INTEREST RATES

MORTGAGE RATES

Type Prime lending Federal funds 3 mo. T-bill 5 yr. T-note 10 yr. T-note

Type 30 yr. fixed 15 yr. fixed 1 yr. ARM 5/1 ARM

Close 6 mo ago 3.25% 3.25% 0.13% 0.12% 0.01% 0.01% 1.35% 1.35% 2.06% 1.91%

Close 6 mo ago 3.84% 3.75% 2.87% 2.94% 2.58% 2.68% 3.02% 3.03%

SOURCE: BANKRATE.COM

Commodities Close Prev. Cattle (lb.) 1.22 1.23 Corn (bushel) 3.94 3.89 Gold (troy oz.) 1,138.10 1,137.10 Hogs, lean (lb.) .73 .73 Natural Gas (Btu.) 2.45 2.45 Oil, heating (gal.) 1.55 1.52 Oil, lt. swt. crude (bar.) 46.26 45.54 Silver (troy oz.) 15.70 15.26 Soybeans (bushel) 8.84 8.74 Wheat (bushel) 5.16 5.13

Chg. -0.01 +0.05 +1.00 unch. unch. +0.03 +0.72 +0.44 +0.10 +0.03

% Chg. -0.8% +1.1% +0.1% unch. unch. +1.9% +1.6% +2.9% +1.1% +0.4%

% YTD -26.3% -0.9% -3.9% -10.1% -15.2% -16.2% -13.2% +0.9% -13.3% -12.6%

FOREIGN CURRENCIES Currency per dollar British pound Canadian dollar Chinese yuan Euro Japanese yen Mexican peso

Close .6598 1.3078 6.3445 .8943 120.50 16.7423

Prev. .6583 1.3189 6.3539 .8905 119.87 16.7906

6 mo. ago .6706 1.2478 6.1455 .9111 118.98 14.8114

Yr. ago .6263 1.1256 6.1390 .7993 109.84 13.4970

FOREIGN MARKETS Country Frankfurt Hong Kong Japan (Nikkei) London Mexico City

Close 9,814.79 21,854.50 18,005.49 6,298.92 43,566.32

Prev. Change 9,553.07 +261.72 21,506.09 +348.41 17,725.13 +280.36 6,129.98 +168.94 42,735.15 +831.17

%Chg. +2.7% +1.6% +1.6% +2.8% +1.9%

YTD % +0.1% -7.4% +3.2% -4.1% +1.0%

SOURCES: MORNINGSTAR, DOW JONES INDEXES, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

IN-DEPTH MARKETS COVERAGE USATODAY.COM/MONEY

@ganjansen USA TODAY

YOSHIKAZU TSUNO, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

An All Nippon Airways Boeing 787-9 aircraft, painted as the Star Wars droid character R2-D2, arrives Oct. 2 at Tokyo’s Haneda airport following a flight from the United States.

Oct. 5

$17.57

Oct. 5

General Electric not generating much enthusiasm Q: Should I buy GE stock, too? Matt Krantz

mkrantz@usatoday.com USA TODAY

A: Activist investor Nelson Peltz thinks General Electric should be worth much more. He’s buying the stock, causing other investors to wonder if there’s hidden value. GE is amid a painful restructuring, selling off its once massive finance business. These steps have caused the company’s revenue and net income to stagnate. GE at the same time is trying to regain focus on its core manufacturing businesses and has been made acquisitions to speed up things. Peltz long has said GE is worth more than the roughly $26 a share the stock has been hovering around the past year. Shares jumped 6% immediately on the news of Peltz’ $2.5 billion stake Monday. Wall Street analysts called GE stock a buy well before Peltz jumped in. GE shares are rated “outperform” on average with Wall Street analysts, S&P Capital IQ says. But it’s difficult to get overly enthusiastic until the company can regain its growth. The average 18-months price target is about 11% higher than Monday’s close. GE’s stock doesn’t look cheap using traditional valuation techniques due to its divestitures. The stock trades for a lofty 49.4 times diluted earnings the past 12 months. New Constructs, which compares stocks to their expected cash flow, says the stock is dangerous.

Trade deal is good for U.S. workers, Boeing CEO says Bart Jansen

$28.15

INVESTING ASK MATT

NAV 183.36 49.77 181.56 49.75 181.57 100.13 14.75 43.22 20.36 56.45

ETF, ranked by volume Ticker SPDR S&P500 ETF Tr SPY Mkt Vect Gold Miners GDX iShs Emerg Mkts EEM Barc iPath Vix ST VXX iShare Japan EWJ iShares Rus 2000 IWM SPDR Financial XLF PowerShs QQQ Trust QQQ iShs China Large Cap FXI iShares EAFE ETF EFA

Oct. 5

4-WEEK TREND

The semiconductor maker rallied $20 again after its better-than-expected earnings last week. The company late Thursday reported earnings per share of 37 cents when $10 Sept. 8 analysts expected 31 cents.

Price: $17.57 Chg: $1.66 % chg: 10.4% Day’s high/low: $17.84/$16.20

$41.59

4-WEEK TREND

COMMODITIES

SOURCE: BLOOMBERG AND THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Boeing Co.’s top executive applauded the Trans-Pacific Partnership deal announced Monday, saying it would help the company better compete in global markets. “Looking ahead, the global economy will be more important than ever to our future growth,” Boeing CEO Dennis Muilenburg said of the deal that supports exports such as aircraft in the world’s fastest-growing markets. “Free-trade agreements create

-1.25 -6.67 AAPL AAPL AAPL

MODERATE 51%-70% equities

TOP 10 EXCHANGE TRADED FUNDS +8.0

Company (ticker symbol)

5-day avg.: 6-month avg.: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold:

-0.35 -4.97 AAPL AAPL AAPL

TOP 10 MUTUAL FUNDS

United Rentals (URI) 64.41 +4.76 Upgraded to strong buy at Vetr; solid cash flow expected.

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5-day avg.: 6-month avg.: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold:

STORY STOCKS Newell Rubbermaid

RUSSELL

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CHANGE: +1.8% YTD: -71.85 YTD % CHG: -3.5%

CONSERVATIVE Less than 30% equities

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new opportunities for American companies and their workers.” Muilenburg said more than 70% of Boeing’s commercial airplane revenue last year came from customers outside the U.S., while more than 90% of the workforce and 80% of suppliers are domestic. The company projects Asia will be the region with the largest demand for its planes during the next 20 years: an estimated 13,460 planes worth $2 trillion — nearly twice as many planes as the company will sell in Europe. The proposed agreement — which still faces debate in Con-

gress — would be the largest regional trade agreement in history. It covers countries that make up 40% of the global economy. The biggest disputes in the trade pact involved biologics, agriculture and car manufacturing. But officials involved in the talks said manufacturing and exports generally would benefit from reduced tariffs and customs regulations. Michael Froman, the U.S. Trade Representative, said the deal represented 18,000 tax cuts through the removal of tariffs, which run as high as 50% on some machinery.


USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2015

LIFELINE HOW WAS YOUR DAY? GOOD DAY TRACY MORGAN The actor/ comedian will help salute Eddie Murphy when he receives the Mark Twain Prize at the Kennedy Center STEVE GRANITZ, in Washington WIREIMAGE on Oct. 18. Morgan, Brittany Howard and George Lopez were added to the lineup Monday. Previously announced performers include Arsenio Hall, Chris Rock, Kathy Griffin, Dave Chappelle, Trevor Noah and Whitney Cummings. The tribute show will be broadcast Nov. 23 on PBS.

SPORTS LIFE AUTOS FLORENCE TRAVEL

+ THE MACHINE HITS THE ROAD FOR U.S. TOUR

GOOD DAY SELENA GOMEZ FANS The singer has announced she will embark on her worldwide Revival Tour in 2016. The first leg of the tour will kick off May 6 in Las Vegas SAMIR HUSSEIN, and stops will WIREIMAGE include Brooklyn, Los Angeles, Chicago, Boston, Dallas, Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver. Tickets go on sale Oct. 17 via Ticketmaster.com.

STYLE STAR Salma Hayek looked chic at the Stella McCartney show on Monday in Paris. The actress chose a fitted navy dress with Falabella chain detail — by the designer herself, of course.

Patrick Ryan

@PatRyanWrites USA TODAY

Y

“It gave me a chance to go back to how it was when I first started.” PASCAL LE SEGRETAIN, GETTY IMAGES

7B

Florence Welch on performing while seated after breaking her foot

CAUGHT IN THE ACT Human rights attorney Amal Clooney — wife of George — participated in a press conference in London Monday as part of her ongoing efforts to free imprisoned former Maldivian president Mohamed Nasheed. A United Nations panel last week ruled that Nasheed’s jailing was illegal and called for his immediate release.

es, even rock stars need to eat their veggies. Two weeks after Dave Grohl broke his leg falling offstage this summer, Florence + the Machine filled in for him at the U.K.’s Glastonbury festival. E-mailing beforehand, “I just said, ‘If you’ve got a broken bone, you have to eat lots of broccoli because there’s iron in it,’ ” says frontwoman Florence Welch. “I was really nervous about Glastonbury and he said whenever he’s nervous, he watches Queen performing at Live Aid and that sorts him out. So that’s what I watched, too.” Of course, Welch, 29, knows about nursing injuries. The British siren fractured her foot in a freewheeling stage dive at Coachella in April, but was up and prancing across the Governors Ball stage in New York less than two months later, days after her How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful album release. As she revs up a three-week North American tour that kicks off Friday in Nashville, the pesky appendage is the least of her concerns. “It feels fine now,” she says. “It gives me a little trouble, occasionally, but I almost don’t remember that it happened. Sometimes, I’m like, ‘Wow, I broke a bone. That was a whole thing.’ ”

In fact, she’s glad it happened. Leading up to Beautiful’s launch in June, she performed a handful of gigs to intimate crowds in Los Angeles and New York. Sitting on a stool, she was backed by stripped-down arrangements which only underscored her powerful lilt. “That was kind of amazing,” Welch says. “It gave me a chance to go back to how it was when I first started performing,” as a singer/songwriter. “I didn’t realize how much I was using my physicality as almost another distraction and it was really interesting to have to be vulnerable in that way again.” The injury became a metaphor of sorts for her new music — the product of a near-breakdown fueled by relationship problems, heavy drinking (“I used to drink before every performance ... But I don’t anymore,” she told Billboard in May) and nearly four years of nonstop touring. Taking a year off from the road to record Beautiful, she channeled those frustrations into searing anthems such as Ship to Wreck and What Kind of Man, and now feels rejuvenated heading back out. “Having that year where I really had to face myself, I found a new approach to (touring), which is less extreme,” Welch says. “Having been so broken down by it, as it were, the album itself kind of got me back up again and I had to deal with a lot of things in my life. It’s a work in progress, but I’m managing to still do that while touring, which is really good.”

TOM BEARD

Florence Welch is on her feet and on the road.

ADAM IHSE, EPA

Welch, shown at the Way Out West festival in Sweden, played stripped-down gigs leading up to the June release of How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful. “It was really interesting to have to be vulnerable in that way again.”

MOVIES

‘Home Alone’: Still a scream after 25 years Kevin’s misadventures now a holiday classic for bingeing at home JUSTIN TALLIS, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

Compiled by Cindy Clark

USA SNAPSHOTS©

Cereal with a twist

1 in 5 college students admit mixing their cereal with orange juice.

Source Kellogg survey of 1,000 college students under age 24 TERRY BYRNE AND VERONICA BRAVO, USA TODAY

Bryan Alexander @BryAlexand USA TODAY

It has been 25 years since Home Alone reigned in theaters, but director Chris Columbus is frequently reminded of the movie’s most iconic moment. Nobody can forget Macaulay Culkin’s hands-on-face screen scream. “Literally, people come up to me on the street today and they do that scream pose,” Columbus laughs. “It’s like, ‘Seriously? Twenty-five years later, I’m getting this? This is my lot in life?’ ” But Columbus adds that it’s a pretty great fate for himself and the film produced and written by the late John Hughes. Home Alone propelled Culkin, then 10, to superstardom while topping the box office for 12 consecutive weeks. The comedy became the top-grossing film re-

20TH CENTURY FOX

Home Alone debuted in 1990.

leased in 1990 with $286 million, according to Rentrak. 20th Century Fox announced last month that it will re-release the holiday favorite in select theaters Nov. 8 and 11 to celebrate its 25th anniversary. A new DVD superset arrives Tuesday with all five Home Alone movies, plus Blu-ray and digital HD ver-

sions of the first two. Columbus says he knew he had something special going while shooting Culkin as Kevin McCallister, accidentally forgotten during his family’s crazed vacation departure. The scream, which occurs after McCallister applies bracing after-shave, was Culkininspired magic, the director says. “It was all in the way Mac performed it,” says Columbus. “He held that pose like Edvard Munch’s painting The Scream, and we had to stop ourselves from laughing and blowing that first take.” Joe Roth, head of Fox at the time, viewed the day’s footage and decreed that variations on the image would lead Home Alone’s posters, Columbus recalls. The scream, and the story (which concludes on Christmas Day), are now perennial seasonal favorites for a devoted following. “That scream is something that everyone remembers,” says film historian Leonard Maltin. “These things cannot be planned or engineered. Either they catch on and resonate with people, or they don’t. And this one did.”

Aside from the comedic performances, Columbus points out that the film’s stunt men, standing in for burglars played by Joe Pesci and Daniel Stern, deserve credit for the slapstick gold. “It wasn’t funny on the set, because, my God, those guys could have killed themselves doing flips on icy steps,” says Columbus. Home Alone‘s popularity has spun off urban legends, including that Elvis Presley (who died in 1977) appears in an airport scene. “If Elvis was on the set, I would have known,” says Columbus. He rewatched Home Alone in full last December for the first time since its release, when the San Francisco Symphony performed Williams’ score live. “I had tears rolling down my face,” says Columbus. “It’s not healthy to dwell on the past. But situations like this force you to and I was really moved by it.” He feels confident the comedy will continue to prosper long beyond its latest landmark. “We’ll still be talking about it at 50,” he says. “It’s like those Warner Bros. cartoons — they always feel fresh and timeless.”


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WellCommons.com

Lawrence Journal-World

Tuesday, October 6, 2015

Well Commons

1C

YOUR HEALTH YOUR COMMUNITY YOUR STORY

THE RIGHT FOOT

Double Take

Dr. Wes Crenshaw and Gabe Magee

College living situation sounds like bad idea Dear Dr. Wes and Gabe: My daughter is a junior at KU. She has a chance to move into a room in a large house at semester and live with six other girls from her sorority. Her father and I are against this and feel it puts her in an impossible living situation with no financial or social structure. What is your advice? Should we fund this? She read Double Take in middle and high school and might listen to your ideas.

Lawrence-Douglas County Health Department/Contributed Photo

STUDENTS AT WOODLAWN ELEMENTARY, 508 Elm St., will participate in International Walk to School Day on Wednesday.

Walk to School Day encourages kids to be more active By Michelle Tevis

S

Twitter: @WellCommons

everal agencies in Lawrence and Douglas County are encouraging students to put one foot in front of the other and walk to school on Wednesday. It isn’t a day someone plucked out of the blue: It’s International Walk to School Day. Local agencies have made it part of the Be Active Safe Routes initiative in the area that works toward reversing the increase in childhood inactivity. Marilyn Hull, who leads the city’s Pedestrian-Bicycle Issues task force, says one day of walking to school can spark

of doing things.” Karrey Britt, communications coordinator with the parents and children get an opLawrence-Douglas County portunity to bond and appreciate Health Department, said fire things they don’t notice while trucks and firefighters as well driving — listening to the sounds as Health Department staff of the neighborhood, seeing will be at Woodlawn, Prairie friends and neighbors and feeling Park, Langston Hughes, Sunconnected with their community. flower and Broken Arrow ell Fewer cars on the road ementary schools and South means less traffic and congestion Middle School on Wednesday and cleaner air. morning. — Lawrence-Douglas County Lawrence city commissionHealth Department ers Leslie Soden and Stuart Boley will be walking with students to Liberty Memorial great,” she said. “Some kids Central Middle School startaren’t even aware that this ing at 7:15 a.m. Wednesday. possibility exists. The first The commissioners’ route step in changing habits is just Please see WALK, page 2C contemplating a different way

BENEFITS OF WALKING TO SCHOOL Benefits of walking or biking include: l Students who walk or bike to school are healthier. l Research has shown exercise before school helps children arrive focused and ready to learn. l Students who walk and bike frequently when they are young are more likely to continue these activities into adulthood. l When walking or biking, a new interest in the experience. “It plants a seed in kids’ minds that walking or riding a bike to school is fun and feels

only about 40 percent of Americans do so in any given year. As in recent years, vaccination for all Americans age 6 months and older is recommended as the first and most important step in protecting yourself, Schrimsher advised. Other things you should do include washing your

Wes: She isn’t going to want to read Double Take this week because it is my duty to inform her of the worst thing any young adult can face — her parents are right. I’ve worked in this fine college community for 15 years. I’ve seen this arrangement attempted many times and I can count on one hand the number of times it’s turned out well. It doesn’t always crash and burn, but the outcome usually ranges from pretty bad to catastrophic, including lost friends, money, possessions and trust. First off, assuming your daughter needs a cosigner, you’re going to be jointly and severally liable for her portion of the rent and everyone else’s. So, if someone doesn’t pay, you and your credit rating could be on the hook. Even if she doesn’t need a cosigner, how will you refuse her if she ends up shorted by one of the six other young women living there? If her rental history goes south, you’ll be stuck cosigning in the future. Everyone may have

Please see FLU, page 2C

Please see DOUBLE, page 2C

It’s flu season — here’s how to protect yourself By Janice Early Lawrence Memorial Hospital

A year ago, two-thirds of Americans polled by The Washington Post were seriously concerned about a possible widespread Ebola epidemic in the United States — a slim possibility that never materialized. A much smaller number of Americans are con-

cerned about the flu epidemic of 2015-2016, even though it is certain to happen, as it does every year. It is known simply as the flu season. According to Dr. Jennifer Schrimsher, an in-

fectious disease specialist at The Internal Medicine Group in Lawrence, influenza is not as deadly as Ebola, but it is far more contagious. “Ebola is spread only through direct contact with the blood or bodily fluid of a person who is sick with Ebola,” Schrimsher said. “The flu virus is likely to be floating in the air in any public place you

visit during flu season.” Between 5 and 20 percent of the population are infected each year with influenza, and 20,000 to 50,000 die. “The best thing you can do to protect yourself is widely known,” Schrimsher said. “Get a flu shot.” It’s as simple, easy and important as fastening your seat belt when you get in a car. Yet

Survivor encourages women to do self-exams, ‘talk to your doctor’ By Karrey Britt Lawrence-Douglas County Health Department

Contributed Photo

Jennie Henault enjoys a Royals game with her family. From left: James, Jennie, Justin and her husband, Eddie.

When 12-year-old James Henault says his favorite color is pink, sometimes kids will start to make fun of him until he explains that his mom, Jennie, is a breast cancer survivor. Then, he becomes a little hero with a big heart. Pink also just happens to be the trendy color this month because of National Breast Cancer Awareness Month. Everyone, from football players to firefighters, is sporting pink. Jennie Henault, director of administrative services

at the Lawrence-Douglas County Health Department, was diagnosed with breast cancer when James was 6 years old and her other son, Justin, was 3. Jennie said Justin was too young to understand the cancer, but James had questions and concerns. She was glad that Lawrence Memorial Hospital offered a support group for kids, and James participated in it for about a year. “That was really good for him because he was trying to understand,” she said. Jennie’s experience began when she detected a lump on her breast, but she didn’t think — or maybe

want to believe — it was cancerous, even through her great-grandmother had a double mastectomy and a great-aunt had breast cancer. That’s because her cousin had a lump that ended up being a cyst. Jennie thought that’s probably what it is, but it kept getting bigger and bigger. Four months later at her annual wellness exam, she told her doctor about it, which led to a mammogram that didn’t detect the cancer. She then saw Dr. Mark Praeger, her surgeon, who has since retired. He used an ultrasound, which found the cancer right away. Then, Jennie had a biopsy

that confirmed it. She was diagnosed in March 2010 with Stage 2 cancer at age 38. The next week, she had a lumpectomy. That was followed by chemotherapy treatments from March until August, and then came the radiation treatments. She had those a couple times a week for about six weeks. During the treatments, she remembers being tired and sleeping a lot. She said radiation was difficult because it burned and her skin became really sensitive. She worked quite a bit Please see CANCER, page 4C


2C

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with. No, it’s not the same, but it’s certainly more stable than moving in on their own and paying rent CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C together. A close single apartment might also the best of intentions, but work, but it can’t offer the who can foresee how the same camaraderie that fortunes of six college moving in together might. girls and your daughter Whatever the solution, might play out over seven it’s important to make sure months living together? that her sorority sisters There are just too many Gabe: From your understand why you see points of failure. daughter’s perspective, this as a bad idea so they Unfortunately, your this seems like a fun idea. can act accordingly. Make daughter has her heart She and her sorority it clear to your daughter set on this plan and sisters will be going out that there are other ways only when her relationon their own, practicing to bond with her sisters ships are in ruin and her living in the real world. while still retaining finanfinances are at risk will If anything, this would cial stability, and support she be proven wrong. be a good experience, solutions that aren’t this Try offering to cover a right? But as Dr. Wes dangerous to her finances. small private apartment points out, this idea may It will go better if you close to this house so easily end in disaster. get her sisters’ support or she can hang with her It’s going to be hard at least take the fall yoursorority sisters and still for your daughter to see self if they aren’t supportclose the door behind her the bad parts of an idea ive and you and her father when she goes. that she thought up and have to be the bad guys. You could also try and loves. And who knows? — Wes Crenshaw, Ph.D., get the girls to switch to an This may end up going ABPP, is author of “I Always apartment complex that well. But then again, it Want to Be Where I’m Not: specializes in rental by the may go very badly for Successful Living with ADD room, but I doubt you’ll all the reasons Dr. Wes & ADHD.” Gabe Magee is get everyone on board. already detailed. a Bishop Seabury Academy That’s always the biggest If your daughter was senior. Send your confidential problem in these cases — already living in the soror200-word question to ask@drgetting seven young adults ity house on campus, she wes.com. Double Take opinions to agree on anything. could continue to live and advice are not a substitute In the end you may there with the sisters that for psychological services. simply have to say that she wanted to move in

Flu

Walk

rence school district are working on implementing classroom lessons and activities. l Woodlawn Elementary School fifth-graders did a walkability assessment of their neighborhood in September, then wrote letters to the City Commission explaining the needs of their neighborhood. l Other community events are being held to encourage students to bike and walk to school, such as Bike to School Day, the Lawrence Community Bike Ride and Bicycle Rodeos. To learn more, contact your neighborhood school or visit BeActiveSafeRoutes.com.

most sacred of all words: No. She’ll hate you for it now, but in six months when that house is in an uproar because someone ate someone’s favorite yogurt or slept with someone’s ex-boyfriend, your daughter will be safely in her own space and far from the drama.

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C

with students and parents will start at 11th and New York streets and go through East Lawrence to the school at 14th and Massachusetts streets. The radio station 105.9 KISS-FM will be broadcasting from the school, and Health Department staff members will be on hand to welcome students, Britt said. Hull said that daily walk can help students have a better day from start to finish. “Children who walk or ride a bike arrive at

school more alert and ready to learn,” she sad. “Kids who are active throughout the day tend to perform at their best.” It isn’t just students who benefit from the added activity, Hull said. Parents who get on board feel the effects, too. “It’s a reminder that the most expedient option for parents isn’t always the best thing for kids,” Hull said. “Parents who walk or ride with their kids get the same immediate benefits: a better mood, more alert, more focused. And they get some precious moments of quality time with their kids.” Denise Johnson, the health and wellness coordinator for students and

staff for the district, said that time spent walking can help develop a better relationship between parents and children. “The kind of information you can hear from your child is totally different than when they are with you in the car,” she said. The Be Active Safe Routes initiative is a collaboration among the Health Department, the city of Lawrence, Lawrence Public Schools, the Lawrence-Douglas County Metropolitan Planning Organization and LiveWell Lawrence. Other efforts of Be Active Safe Routes include: l Elementary and middle schools in the Law-

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hands frequently, steering clear of other sick people and staying home when you are sick so you don’t infect others. Those most at risk of getting severe effects of the flu are young children, older adults and people with medical conditions such as cancer or asthma. Last year, about 100 children died and more than 14,000 adults age 65 and over were hospitalized because of the flu. For these high-risk populations and for pregnant women who could pass the virus to their vulnerable infants, vaccination is crucial. “If you care for or visit high-risk persons, such as an elderly parent or grandparent or a pre-school child, you should get a flu shot, for their sake as well as yours,” Schrimsher said. She noted that last year’s vaccine was not very effective compared with those of previous years. “Each year, public health experts decide which viruses are

likely to be a threat based on monitoring of flu activity around the world, including recent infections during the southern hemisphere winter,” Schrimsher explained. “A vaccine is then developed to protect against three or four of the most prevalent strains.” The vaccine last year failed to protect against the predominant Switzerland A strain, which had mutated enough to make it resistant to the vaccine that was developed to combat it. By late summer last year, this H3N2 strain had become the primary illness-causing agent, and it continues to be dominant worldwide. This year, the trivalent vaccine is made to protect against this strain plus two others: an A strain that was in the previous vaccine and a new B strain. Quadrivalent vaccines (protecting against four rather than three viral strains) include an additional B virus strain. Schrimsher warns that no one can predict what the flu season will be like this year or how well the vaccine will match up with

viral strains that are circulating. But having a flu shot will lower the risk that you will transmit the disease to friends and family. And contrary to what many believe, immunization will not give you the flu. Flu season generally starts in October. A flu shot takes two weeks to become fully effective. When the flu strikes hard, it can and does kill. In the influenza pandemics of 1918, 1957 and 1968, millions of deaths worldwide were recorded. Public health experts acknowledge that flu epidemics every year will always be with us. Schrimsher said, “If two-thirds of the population were as concerned about stopping the flu as they were about protecting themselves from Ebola last year, the toll in terms of serious illness and death would be considerably lower.” — Janice Early, MBA, is Vice President of Marketing and Communications at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, which is a major sponsor of WellCommons. She can be reached at janice.early@lmh.org.

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L awrence J ournal -W orld

Tuesday, October 6, 2015

Marcy Sugar and Kathy Mitchell

anniesmailbox@comcast.net

still in this marriage is because of my kids. What should I do? — Stuck in San Francisco Dear Stuck: When someone marries, the spouse should always come before the parents, even though some parents don’t like that and may, in fact, encourage the grown child to put them first. This is unfair to the child, keeping them infantilized and dependent. Kate wasn’t mature enough to get married, but you

‘iZombie’ humor is hit-or-miss Food for thought, or just gross-out humor? “iZombie” (8 p.m., CW) returns for a second season, with Liv gobbling down a cranky old man’s gray matter in order to gain insights and clues about his demise. Folks familiar with this series know that Liv (Rose McIver), a nearsurvivor of a zombie attack, must snack occasionally on the brains of the deceased just to keep in the pink. Or the pallid, as the case may be. The preposterous plot comes from a c o m i c book, but “iZombie” also hearkens back to CW/WB/ UPN shows of old, most notably “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” and “Veronica Mars.” It’s one of the few shows on the CW with a sense of wit and whimsy, and one of the few zombie-themed shows that has any sense of humor about the gruesome genre. All the same, like microwaved cerebellums, a little “iZombie” goes a long way. O That equation goes double for the live variety showcase “Best Time Ever With Neil Patrick Harris” (9 p.m., NBC). This frantic effort never comes up for air and rarely gives its audience’s intelligence much respect. It’s time to give it the hook. NBC has shuttled it between 7 p.m. and 9 p.m., depending on when it wants to air “The Voice.” The fact is, “Best Time” is just not right for prime time. It has the kind of loud and frenetic “let’s treat our audience like kindergarteners” vibe that makes much of daytime TV so repellant. It says something that a reboot of “The Muppets” seems so sophisticated by comparison. O “Scream Queens” (8 p.m., Fox) enters Halloween season tonight. So far, its ratings have been more tricks than treats. It has come in fourth two weeks in a row. The return of the cheeky “iZombie” may nibble a bit at this show’s audience. For a show sold on its brittle wit and aspirations to hipness, it’s not a good sign when you attract fewer 18 to 49 viewers than “NCIS: New Orleans.” As the show’s sorority sisters know, you can survive being unlikable, but unpopularity is fatal. Tonight’s other highlights

O AMC unspools nine con-

secutive repeat episodes of “The Walking Dead” (5 p.m., AMC). O Blind audition highlights on “The Voice” (7 p.m., NBC). O Nick Offerman and Christina Applegate appear on “The Muppets” (7 p.m., ABC). O A retired FBI agent’s death appears gang-related on “Limitless” (9 p.m., CBS). O Family issues take precedence for Muldoon on “Public Morals” (9 p.m., TNT).

JACQUELINE BIGAR’S STARS

For Tuesday, Oct. 6: This year you walk into a new situation that could be very exciting and will be a source of happiness for you. Don’t allow anyone to undermine your self-confidence. If you are single, meeting people happens with ease. If you are attached, the two of you might have an issue from the past that needs clearing up. 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) ++++ Push away any hassles by maintaining a keen sense of humor. Your creativity surges. Tonight: Spontaneity provides an interesting scenario. Taurus (April 20-May 20) +++ You might need to get some feedback from a loved one about a decision. Remember to thank this person. Tonight: Home is your castle. Gemini (May 21-June 20) ++++ Your words tend to be quick and unexpected. Don’t allow pressure to build to the extent that it has recently. Tonight: Speak your mind. Cancer (June 21-July 22) +++++ You could discover that someone else sees a matter in a different light than you do. Tonight: Order in. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) ++++ Your personality sometimes works like a steamroller, which allows you to bypass a lot of problems. Tonight: In the limelight.

she still didn’t feel up to cooking for an army of children and grandchildren, so we did a potluck-style dinner. The sisters who keep kosher were in charge of cooking the turkey and other major dishes. My brother and I brought raw ingredients and cooked at Mom’s. Of course, we all cleaned up after. We estimated the cost of all the ingredients and divided it equally. Mom provided the location, plates, cups, etc. — Huntington, Mass. Dear Huntington: Thank you for pointing out how well things can turn out when everyone pitches in and no one expects Mom (or anyone else) to do all the work. — Send questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or Annie’s Mailbox, P.O. Box 118190 Chicago, IL 60611.

jacquelinebigar.com

Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) +++ Slow down. You might want to reconsider certain conversations. Tonight: Schedule more time for yourself. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ++++ Your sense of what could be occurring might be a lot different from reality. Eliminate your filtered vision. Tonight: Where the crowds are. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) +++ Pressure comes from others expecting so much from you. Infuse your life with some fun. Tonight: The party goes on and on. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) ++++ You might want to reconsider your plans. A last-minute invitation could be very exciting and different. Tonight: Try to be logical and steady. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ++++ Someone could make an enormous effort to reach out to you. You appreciate this person’s gestures. Tonight: Visit over dinner. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) +++ You have a desire to go along with a group of friends. Let them know. Tonight: Go along with someone else’s plans. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) ++++ You’ll be overanalyzing a situation and causing yourself a problem. Tonight: Pace yourself. — The astrological forecast should be read for entertainment only.

ACROSS 1 ___ Del Rey, Calif. 6 Clear a hurdle 10 Culinary luminary 14 Gentleman burglar Arsene 15 Spheroid hairdo 16 Critic’s laudation 17 Apocryphal George Washington quote 20 Bungle 21 Dungeons & Dragons beasts 22 European blackbirds 23 Alter, as a photograph 25 Nimble 26 “Who’s your daddy?” test 27 Foot covering 28 “Eureka!” relative 31 Type of committee 34 “Once ___ a time ...” 35 Q-Tip, for one 36 Big Brother’s motto? 39 “___ for the poor!” 40 Tidy 41 Easy to reach 42 Affirmative response 43 Ice cream thickener 44 Participate in an auction

45 Some noblemen 46 Streakers across the sky 50 Oceangoing force 53 Angler’s encouragement 54 Affirmative vote 55 “Who knows?” 58 “When all ____ fails ...” 59 “... happily ___ after” 60 Spooky 61 One with a crystal ball 62 Change the look of 63 Doesn’t work or play DOWN 1 One who works at a trade 2 Ill-gotten gains 3 Separated 4 ___ and yang 5 Herald 6 Basic security device 7 Semiaquatic salamanders 8 “The best things in life ___ free” 9 Agile equine 10 Plum loco 11 Alan of “Gilligan’s Island” 12 Severely wicked

13 Accountant’s income 18 Sea World favorite 19 Fishing item 24 Dumpster emanations 25 Heightimpaired 27 Primitive fishing tool 28 John Irving’s “A Prayer for ___ Meany” 29 Difficult 30 Comply with 31 Not in at the moment 32 Editor’s “take out” 33 Christmas meats 34 Eye layers 35 Sought-after thing in August 37 Wedding invitation printer, often 38 Bleach

43 Assistant coach, e.g. 44 ___ carotene 45 Better balanced? 46 Prefix with “surgery” or “transmitter” 47 Certain hearings 48 Took another match to 49 Important business department 50 “The ___ have it” 51 Auditoner’s goal 52 She’s an inspiration 53 Raised, as dogs 56 Eden occupant 57 ___ time (golfer’s starting point)

PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER

10/5

© 2015 Universal Uclick www.upuzzles.com

IT MATTERS TO US by Rob Lee

10/6

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

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

OGDDE ©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.

VEARB DURONA

CAINTT

Ans:

Yesterday’s

Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app

Annie’s Mailbox

expected her to change anyway. The fact that Kate phones her parents daily is not a big deal. But discussing personal marital issues with them allows them to be a bigger part of your marriage than they should be, and Kate refuses to change that. You need to determine which aspects of this are worth being upset about, and which are unimportant to the basic well-being of your children and your marriage. Please get counseling, with or without Kate, so you can work on this. Dear Annie: I read the letter from “Need Some Relief,” the couple in their 70s who were tired of hosting all the holiday dinners. When my mother got sick, my sisters chose to host the big twicea-year family dinners. When Mom recovered,

Edited by Timothy E. Parker October 6, 2015

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

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Dear Annie: My wife, “Kate,” and I are in our early 40s and have been married for 15 years. We have two children. Kate has a troubling dependence on her parents that shows no sign of changing. They wanted to come with us on our honeymoon, which I thought was a joke. It wasn’t. I flatly refused, and Kate became angry. Early in the marriage, I overlooked a lot of this overcloseness, because I thought she would grow out of it when she became a wife and mother. But it hasn’t happened. Kate calls her parents every day and discusses all of our personal issues with them. She has let me know they come before the rest of us. We’ve tried counseling, but she cannot or will not change and it leaves me frustrated. The only reason I’m

UNIVERSAL CROSSWORD Universal Crossword

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Once married, spouse should come first

| 3C

(Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: ARENA HITCH BOTTOM GRAVEL Answer: The play would be a disaster if the actors didn’t get their — ACT TOGETHER

BECKER ON BRIDGE


4C

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Tuesday, October 6, 2015

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Kids aren’t the only ones with questions

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addy, how do they make dirt? Why do numbers keep going and the alphabet stops? What’s tomorrow gonna be? How far is Cleveland? Why do some bug bites itch more? Can I have some popcorn? Were there more than 900 sunflowers in that field? Why is duct tape stronger than Scotch tape? Can we play outside? How do they make toothpicks? Does Mama have yoga tonight? Where does all the pee go in a diaper? Why do I have to put cream on a bug bite if it feels good to scratch it? Why didn’t I get a pink gumball? Will you read that one again? Do tadpoles have tongues? How long till we’ll be there? Why do Zia and I get different kinds of Happy Meal toys? Can we play in the basement? Why does permanent marker wash off your skin but not your clothes? Can I have more popcorn? Why did that branch fall off our tree? Can we do water balloons? Will you stop talking?

DVD from the library? Do I have to say “excuse me� if no one hears me burp? Can we play baseball? Will you try to tag me out? Remember when you spilled my chocolate milk? Why doesn’t Caillou have any hair? Why can’t I marry Zia when I grow up? Why did all our fish die? Can I have an underdog? If pee is number one and poop is number two, what is Special to the Journal-World number three? Why does Mama have Is that a rhetorical to wear a shirt but you question, Ray? Mind if I don’t? Will you dry off ask a few of my own? Do my swing? Do fish get you need to go number thirsty? Can I have a one or two right now? Band-Aid? What is the Does the dog look like name of this universe? he’s enjoying that? Why Will you help me find my do your mom and I have ball? Remember when I to take you to the dentist was so mad yesterday? if all your baby teeth are Why was I so mad? going to fall out anyway? Where did the toad Does having a swing on from the backyard go? the same oak tree branch Have you seen my for three years make it thumbtack collection? more likely to snap in a Why did they close the strong wind, or when a Jaybowl? Can Zia sleep in kid is swinging on it? Are my room tonight? Why you a lot like me, or not am I allowed to pee in like me at all? the backyard but not the How come when you front? How come you and Zia go to bed three don’t pee out here with hours late, you still wake me? Will you push me up at the same time? higher? Why does it have to be When will it be my before 7 a.m.? How can turn? Did you get a new you eat Popsicles in

Cancer

ic. She joked that she lost her ’80s hairdo. Jennie said she wore scarves for a while and then opted to sport a wig. “It wasn’t too bad, but you have to experiment because some fall off, especially if it’s windy,� she said, laughing. At first her sons were uncomfortable seeing her without a wig, but they eventually got used to it. Her youngest son even liked to weigh in on her wigs. “He would say, ‘I don’t like that wig’ or ‘I do like that one.’ He was brutally honest sometimes,� Jennie said, laughing. She stopped wearing wigs a couple of months ago because her

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C

during her treatments, but she said work helped keep her mind off the cancer. “I really do believe part of it is about your attitude, so if you’re kind of trying to keep yourself motivated and positive, that helps,� she said. During the chemotherapy treatments, Jennie said, her head started to hurt, and after visiting with a breast cancer survivor, she decided to shave her head before her hair started to fall out so it wouldn’t be so dramat-

Dan Coleman/Contributed Photo

Daddy Rules

DAN COLEMAN’S DAUGHTER, ZIA, may be contemplating some big questions behind those sunglasses. Her brother, Ray, has no shortage of questions about the world for his dad.

Dan Coleman

January? Will you please say “please� more often? Why does Zia get more mosquito bites than you? How can you like those weird-smelling turkey hotdogs but not even want to try funnel cake? Did I warp your musical

taste for life by exposing you to so much ’80s pop rock? What would I do if anything ever happened to you? What’s so great about Paw Patrol? I heard that, and can you say “excuse me�? Do you know

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hair is growing back. Jennie is taking a drug, Tamoxifen, which decreases her chances of developing the disease again. She urges everyone to do self-breast exams in addition to other preventive measures, and to communicate with their health care provider. “If there’s any doubt in your mind, talk to your doctor. I was lucky that I didn’t have to do anything beyond what I did.� — Karrey Britt is the communications coordinator for the Lawrence-Douglas County Health Department. She can be reached at kbritt@ldchealth.org or 856-7362.

where the garage door opener went? How can I wish you would stay this age forever, but also wish you would grow the heck up as soon as possible? Did I ask my own parents so many questions? How many more will Zia come up with, and how will they be different from yours? Did I think I had a lot of answers before you two were born? Is life really all about the questions? Did I learn that from you? Does that belong in the fish tank?

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KANSAS FOOTBALL

Tom Keegan tkeegan@ljworld.com

Kansas not the worst, but close

Eyeing a start

In the event Cheick Diallo is cleared to play basketball for Kansas University, the Jayhawks will become fashionable picks for the No. 1 spot in the nation and with good reason. Someone, somewhere will then connect the dots and claim that the school with the nation’s best basketball program also has the worst football team in the Football Bowl Subdivision. But is that a fair statement? Not quite. Not yet anyway. Worst in the so-called power-five power conferences? Absolutely. But 128 schools play football in the FBS, and New Mexico State is one of them. Nick Krug/Jounral-World Photo In fact, a case could be KANSAS UNIVERSITY QUARTERBACK RYAN WILLIS LOOKS OUT AS THE OFFENSE HUDDLES UP during a timeout in the first half against Iowa made that a conference State on Saturday at Jack Trice Stadium in Ames, Iowa. Willis is expected to start for the Jayhawks against Baylor this Saturday. could be formed choosing only from FBS schools that Kansas would be considered the favorite to win. The ground rules for conference membership: 1. Must be winless or have By Matt Tait The chance to play a big- pect will red-shirt this sea- But Holmes said talking the just one victory. 2. Must mtait@ljworld.com ger role officially came Mon- son. have a low enough standcompetitive fire that inspires day afternoon, when KU reing in the Sagarin computer As for Willis, he con- him to fight for every yard When Bishop Miege foot- vealed that Cozart, sidelined nected on a couple of deep out of Willis was going to be rankings. ball coach Jon Holmes saw indefinitely because of a balls against Iowa State and a tough task. Since the fictional conferhis former quarterback Ryan shoulder sprain, was out for showed the zip on his passes ence has 10 members, its The whole thing has a little Willis step onto the field dur- this week’s game, and junior that coaches and teammates déjà vu feel to it. Although name is the Little 12. Its ing the final few drives of last Deondre Ford, who started have talked about since he they never played on the members, listed in order of week’s Kansas University KU’s Week 3 loss at Rutgers, arrived on campus. He also same team, Willis replaced Sagarin ranking: loss to Iowa State, he recog- was out for the season due to showed his inexperience by Cozart as Miege’s starter in 134. Kansas nized just about everything. a thumb injury. 136. Florida Atlantic hanging in the pocket a little high school. And in his two Same demeanor. Same That left Willis alone atop too long at times, taking a years as the Stags’ varsity QB, 146. Texas State poise. Same arm. Heck, even the Jayhawks’ depth chart couple of hits in the pocket he lost just two games. He 158. Idaho some of the same throws. as the only KU quarterback and on the run and being a never flinched when asked 160. Eastern Michigan That’s why Holmes did with significant game experi- little slow with his reads, to replace Cozart, the Div. I 163. Miami (Ohio) not hesitate to answer when ence. Junior T.J. Millweard, which allowed the ISU de- signee, two-year starter and 173. North Texas asked by the Journal-World known primarily as KU’s fense to blow up KU’s play Gatorade Player of the Year. 174. Wyoming Instead, he went out and suron Monday night if Willis, holder, and red-shirt fresh- calls quickly. 177. Georgia State the KU freshman who is ex- man Keaton Perry, a walk-on, 178. New Mexico State All of that, however, is passed his numbers. “Ryan didn’t care,” Holmes pected to start Saturday’s 11 are listed as the second- and to be expected from a true Kansas wouldn’t fare as a.m. game against No. 3 Bay- third-stringers behind KU’s freshman. And Beaty said said. “That’s the type of kid well in another fictional lor at Memorial Stadium in new No. 1 young gun. conference, open only to he and Willis were aware of he is. He’s his own person place of injured starter Mon“Obviously, he’s the next it and already had discussed and wants to go out there traditional basketball powand show people what he can tell Cozart, was capable of man up, and his turn has it. erhouses. Since it has eight handling such a big moment. come,” KU coach David members, it’s called the “You learn the hard way do.” If that, in any way, is “I think he’s ready,” said Beaty said of Willis after the pretty quickly,” Beaty said Little Six: Holmes of Willis, who fin- Iowa State loss. 29. North Carolina after the ISU loss. “He got hit enough to inspire Beaty and ished last week’s game 8-ofThe depth-chart absence one good time, and he came company to keep Willis in 31. Duke 16 for 100 yards and has tak- of true freshman Carter Stan- to the sideline and said, ‘I the No. 1 QB spot even after 32. Louisville Cozart returns — if this truly en snaps in two of 0-4 KU’s ley, who has been in street know. I gotta get down.’” 61. Kentucky games so far this season. clothes for most of KU’s 64. Indiana That mentality is more is the beginning of the Ryan “One of the reasons why he games this season, seems like important than ever now, Willis era at KU — Holmes 65. Syracuse went to KU was to get this a clear indication that the given the lack of talent and 100. Connecticut Please see FOOTBALL, page 3D opportunity.” Vero Beach, Florida, pros- experience behind Willis. 134. Kansas Sagarin lumps all FBS and FCS schools into the same ranking. The FCS schools ranked ahead of Kansas: 59. North Dakota State; 75. Youngstown State; 78. Illinois State (the school from which KU athletic director Sheahon Zenger came); 85. South Dakota State; 94. Coastal Carolina (not kidding); 96. Jacksonvile By Gary Bedore 1998 Late Night With Roy State; 98. Northern Iowa; gbedore@ljworld.com Williams. 99. Chattanooga; 102. James n Aaron Miles, Michael Madison; 107. Harvard; There has been a lot of Lee, Jeff Hawkins and 108. Southern Illinois; 112. lip-synching and dancing, Wayne Simien serenaded Eastern Washington; 114. but very few instances of their mothers in a 2001 Late William & Mary (both of players actually perform- Night With Roy tune few them); 115. Sam Houston ing musically at the sea- heard because of a faulty State (him too); 119. Southson-opening Late Night sound system in KU’s tradiern Utah; 120. McNeese basketball celebrations at tion-rich building. State; 123. Montana; 124. n All fared a lot better Kansas University the last Dartmouth (if you’re scorthan Nick Collison, who, ac30 years. ing at home, that makes n Danny Manning and companied by electric-guitartwo Ivy League schools); Scooter Barry sang The playing Jeff Carey and Eric 128. Western Illinois (the Temptations’ song “My Chenowith, screamed out Leathernecks); 132. MonGirl” during the 1987 Late vocals to the Limp Bizkit song tana State; 133. Samford. Night With Larry Brown in “Faith” at the 1999 Late Night. Remaining schools on John Young/Jounral-World Photo Allen Fieldhouse. All this is mentioned beKU’s loaded schedule, in FREE STATE SENIOR ISRAEL LUMPKINS (11) SLIPS IN FRONT of Shawnee Heights’ n Luke Axtell strummed cause it appears there will order of Sagarin ranking: Kamron Jordon (9), goalkeeper Tyler Zenter and Blake Cheatham as he tries to guitar and belted out some Please see HOOPS, page 4D Please see KEEGAN, page 3D convert a corner kick during the Firebirds’ 2-1 victory Monday at FSHS. of his original tunes at the

With Cozart, Ford out, KU turns to Willis

CORNERED

Rare musical act on tap for Late Night


AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE

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EAST

2D | LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD | TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2015

NORTH

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NORTH • Women’s golf at Chip-N Club

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Invitational • Tennis at Hilton Head, S.C. WEDNESDAY • Volleyball at TexasNORTH Tech, 6 p.m. • Tennis at Hilton Head, S.C.

EAST

FREE STATE HIGH TODAY WEST

SOUTH AL EAST

BOSTON RED SOX

BALTIMORE ORIOLES

NEW YORK YANKEES

AL CENTRAL

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AL EAST

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TAMPA BAY RAYS

TORONTO BLUE JAYS

LOS ANGELES ANGELS OF ANAHEIM

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OAKLAND ATHLETICS

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• Boys soccer at Olathe South, 7 p.m. WEDNESDAY • Girls golf at Olathe East WEST Invitational, 1 p.m.

MINNESOTA TWINS

KANSAS CITY ROYALS

AL WEST

AL CENTRAL

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LAWRENCE HIGH WEST TODAY

SOUTH

SEATTLE MARINERS

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AL EAST NEW YORK YANKEES STARTING PITCHER CC SABATHIA GRABS HIS CAP as he leaves the mound SEABURY ACADEMY against the Red Sox in this photo081312: from Oct. 1 in New said in avarious statement AFC TEAM LOGOS Helmet and teamYork. logos Sabathia for the AFC teams; sizes; stand-alone; staff; ETA 5 p.m. TODAY released by the Yankees that he has checked himself into an alcohol-rehabilitation center. • Cross Country at Barstow MLB AL LOGOS 032712: 2012 American League team logos; stand-alone; various sizes; staff; ETA 4 p.m.

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At 1-3, Dolphins ax coach

BASEBALL

Miami — New Miami Dolphins coach Dan Campbell believes his underachieving team needs to show more aggressiveness that stops San Diego — Admitting his San Diego Pajust short of dirty play, and he looks forward to dres “didn’t have the right formula” this season, breaking up a few fights in practice. general manager A.J. Preller says he’s looking Joe Philbin he’s not — which was the mofor a manager who can get the underachieving tive for the Dolphins’ coaching change Monday. team to play at a high level. Owner Stephen Ross fired Philbin four games Preller fired interim manager Pat Murphy into his fourth season, and one day after a flop on on Sunday after the Padres finished 74-88 and an international stage helped seal his fate. fourth in the NL West, 18 games behind the Tight-ends coach Campbell was promoted to division champion Los Angeles Dodgers. interim coach. His only coaching experience is The Padres were a disappointment. Despite with the Dolphins, who hired him as an intern in the addition of stars such as Matt Kemp, 2010, but the former NFL tight end was poised Justin Upton and James Shields and a bump as well as passionate during a 25-minute introin payroll past the $100 million mark for the ductory news conference. first time, the Padres had their worst finish in “I’m not here just to finish the season up,” four years. Campbell said. “That’s not my plan. We’re comSan Diego has had five straight losing ing here to win games. It’s still early. We have seasons and has missed the playoffs for nine time to turn everything around. But we can’t straight years. wait.”

Padres fire skipper Murphy

LATEST LINE COLLEGE FOOTBALL Favorite................... Points................Underdog Thursday, Oct 8th. HOUSTON..............................25......................................Smu USC...........................................17........................Washington Friday, Oct 9th. MARSHALL............................. 6...................Southern Miss VIRGINIA TECH......................1...............................NC State Saturday, Oct 3rd. w-Oklahoma.................17.........................Texas Minnesota............................21⁄2. ........................... PURDUE Akron....................................81⁄2....EASTERN MICHIGIAN WEST VIRGINIA............ 7...............Oklahoma St x-PENN ST............................OFF...............................Indiana Duke........................................12....................................ARMY TEMPLE................................ 151⁄2...............................Tulane IOWA......................................111⁄2............................... Illinois OHIO ST.................................33............................Maryland BOSTON COLLEGE............... 8.......................Wake Forest OHIO.........................................16........................Miami-Ohio TOLEDO...................................16................................Kent St NORTHERN ILLINOIS........ 101⁄2................................Ball St Appalachian St....................16.......................GEORGIA ST PITTSBURGH........................81⁄2.............................Virginia WESTERN MICHIGAN......... 71⁄2. ......... Central Michigan ALABAMA............................ 161⁄2..........................Arkansas AIR FORCE.............................25............................Wyoming BOWLING GREEN..................13................. Massachusetts MISSISSIPPI ST..................301⁄2.................................. Troy MISSISSIPPI........................421⁄2..............New Mexico St BYU........................................ 71⁄2. .................East Carolina Baylor....................... 441⁄2..................KANSAS

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FLORIDA ATLANTIC...........31⁄2. ...................................Rice OREGON................................171⁄2............... Washington St Georgia................................... 3.........................TENNESSEE WESTERN KENTUCKY.......81⁄2...............Middle Tenn St TULSA......................................10........................ UL-Monroe NOTRE DAME.........................14.................................... Navy ARIZONA ST...........................15............................Colorado FLORIDA ST.........................91⁄2.................Miami-Florida MICHIGAN............................... 8....................Northwestern CLEMSON.............................. 71⁄2. .................Georgia Tech UL-LAFAYETTE..................... 4.............................. Texas St UTAH........................................ 7............................California CENTRAL FLORIDA...............1........................Connecticut FLORIDA INTL.................... 141⁄2...................................Utep Louisiana Tech..................111⁄2..................................UTSA Boise St..................................15...................COLORADO ST Florida.................................... 5............................ MISSOURI Lsu...........................................13.............SOUTH CAROLINA ARIZONA.................................10..........................Oregon St y-SOUTH FLORIDA.............OFF...........................Syracuse Tcu............................... 9................. KANSAS ST TEXAS TECH...............121⁄2.................... Iowa St Michigan St...........................16............................ RUTGERS NEBRASKA............................11⁄2......................... Wisconsin NEVADA.................................. 6........................New Mexico z-UNLV..................................OFF......................San Jose St Utah St...................................12..........................FRESNO ST HAWAII..................................21⁄2. ..................San Diego St w-at Cotton Bowl Stadium-Dallas, TX. x-Indiana QB N. Sudfeld is questionable. y-Syracuse QB E. Dungey is questionable. z-UNLV QB B. Decker is questionable.

NFL Favorite.............. Points (O/U)...........Underdog Thursday, Oct 8th. Week 5 a-Indianapolis...............OFF (XX).....................HOUSTON Sunday, Oct 11th. TAMPA BAY.....................3 (42.5)................ Jacksonville Buffalo................................3 (43).....................TENNESSEE BALTIMORE....................61⁄2 (43.5)....................Cleveland ATLANTA............................8 (48)...................Washington KANSAS CITY........91⁄2 (45.5).............. Chicago PHILADELPHIA............... 41⁄2 (49)...............New Orleans GREEN BAY....................91⁄2 (46.5)..................... St. Louis b-CINCINNATI.................OFF (XX)..........................Seattle Arizona...............................3 (45)...........................DETROIT New England..................8 (49.5)..........................DALLAS Denver..............................51⁄2 (43)..................... OAKLAND NY GIANTS.........................7 (43)...............San Francisco Monday, Oct 12th. SAN DIEGO.........................3 (45)......................Pittsburgh Bye Week: Carolina, Miami, Minnesota, NY Jets. a-Indianapolis QB A. Luck is questionable. b-Seattle RB M. Lynch is questionable. MLB Favorite.................... Odds.................Underdog American League Wildcard Game Houston............................Even-6................. NY YANKEES Wednesday, Oct 7th. National League Wildcard Game Chicago Cubs.................51⁄2-61⁄2................PITTSBURGH Home Team in CAPS (c) TRIBUNE CONTENT AGENCY, LLC

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New York — CC Sabathia walked into Preller’s aggressive offseason moves didn’t manager Joe Girardi’s office in Baltimore on pay off. He fired Bud Black as manager on June TODAY AL WEST Sunday and stunning admission: He team has logos 15, when the team 32-33. next day, heETA 5 p.m. AFCmade TEAMaLOGOS 081312: Helmet and for the AFC teams;was various sizes;The stand-alone; staff; Baseball Time Net Cable an alcohol problem. promoted Murphy from his job as manager of Houston v. NY Yankees 7 p.m. ESPN 33, 233 “The first thing he said is, ‘I need help,’” GiTriple-A El Paso. rardi said Monday during a workout at Yankee The Padres were 42-54 under Murphy, who WNBA Basketball Time Net Cable Stadium for the AL wild-card game. “I was had no big-league experience. Murphy was a shocked.” former head coach at Notre Dame and Arizona Finals 7 p.m. ESPN2 34, 234 Sabathia surprised AFC manyTEAM in the Yankees State. LOGOS 081312: Helmet and team logos for the AFC teams; various sizes; stand-alone; staff; ETA 5 p.m. organization by revealing his problem. And WEDNESDAY with the team’s help, the burly left-hander is Baseball Time Net Cable Nationals can Williams checking into a rehab center and will miss the Chi. Cubs v. Pittsburgh 7 p.m. TBS 51, 251 Washington — In describing what he will postseason, a setback to the pitching staff the look for in a manager to replace Matt Wilday before New York meets Houston in the AL Pro Hockey Time Net Cable liams, Washington Nationals GM Mike Rizzo wild-card game. might have been pointing out exactly what he The team issued a statement Monday from N.Y. Rangers v. Chicago 7 p.m. NBCSP 38, 238 the 2007 AL Cy Young Award winner, who said felt went wrong with the man he hired two San Jose v. L.A. 7 p.m. NBCSP 38, 238 years ago and fired Monday. he took the step to receive the care he needs “Leadership qualities, knowledge of the and become the kind of person “I can be proud College Volleyball Time Net Cable game, X’s and O’s are all important. Communiof.” Texas v. Baylor 6 p.m. ESPNU 35, 235 “I love baseball and I love my teammates like cation in the clubhouse, communication within Kansas v. Texas Tech 6 p.m. FSN 36, 236 the coaching staff, is vital,” Rizzo said during brothers, and I am also fully aware that I am Mich. St. v. Nebraska 7 p.m. BTN 147,237 leaving at a time when we should all be coming a telephone conference call. “Experience is alArkansas v. Kentucky 7 p.m. SEC 157 ways helpful. It always adds a layer of expertise together for one last push toward the World Tennessee v. LSU 8 p.m. ESPNU 35, 235 Series,” the 35-year-old Sabathia said. “It hurts to anybody’s resume. We feel that where we’re Oklahoma v. TCU 8 p.m. FSN 36, 236 me deeply to do this now, but I owe it to myself at in our timetable of winning a championship, we certainly would lean toward someone that and to my family to get myself right. I want to has some type of managerial experience, espetake control of my disease, and I want to be a Golf Time Net Cable cially at the major-league level.” better man, father and player.” Presidents Cup 9:30p.m. Golf 156,289 Williams, of course, did not, but he had a hisA leader in the clubhouse who helped the tory with Rizzo. And while Williams was voted Yankees to the 2009 World Series championNL Manager of the Year for his rookie season ship, Sabathia received the unconditional supin 2014, he is now out of a job because the Naport of his teammates. “We play for CC now,” Alex Rodriguez said. tionals failed to make the playoffs after enterCheck out ljworld.com and KUSports. ing the season with World Series aspirations. Sabathia is 214-129 in 15 major-league seacom for online-only content from the Rizzo delivered the news to Williams in the sons and was 6-10 with a 4.73 ERA this year, Journal-World staff. Nationals Park manager’s office the morning slowed by his surgically repaired right knee. ’Hawks in the NBA After returning from the disabled list and using after Washington finished the regular season http://www2.kusports.com/weblogs/ barely above .500 at 83-79, seven games bea tighter brace, the 300-pound-plus pitcher hawks_nba/ hind the New York Mets in the NL East. was 2-1 with a 2.17 ERA in his last five starts. A staff blog about former Jayhawks He got the win against Boston last week that at the next level clinched the Yankees’ return to the postseason NFL All Eyes on KU following a rare two-year absence.

SUMMARY Detroit 0 3 0 7—10 10 3 0—13 Seattle 0 Second Quarter Sea-Baldwin 24 pass from Wilson (Hauschka kick), 10:56. Det-FG Prater 41, 5:16. Sea-FG Hauschka 51, 1:00. Third Quarter Sea-FG Hauschka 52, 11:11. Fourth Quarter Det-Reid 27 fumble return (Prater kick), 8:32. A-69,005. Sea Det First downs 12 18 Total Net Yards 256 345 Rushes-yards 18-53 31-110 Passing 203 235 Punt Returns 3-29 5-42 Kickoff Returns 2-54 3-46 Interceptions Ret. 0-0 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 24-35-0 20-26-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 0-0 6-52 Punts 8-45.9 4-48.0 Fumbles-Lost 2-1 4-3 Penalties-Yards 4-37 5-30 Time of Possession 27:56 32:04 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Detroit, Abdullah 13-33, Zenner 2-9, Tate 1-6, Riddick 1-5, Burton 1-0. Seattle, Rawls 17-48, Wilson 10-40, F.Jackson 3-21, Lockett 1-1. PASSING-Detroit, Stafford 24-35-0-203. Seattle, Wilson 20-26-0-287. RECEIVING-Detroit, Johnson 7-56, Riddick 5-31, Tate 3-29, Ebron 2-22, Moore 2-21, Abdullah 2-11, T.Wright 1-26, Zenner 1-4, Burton 1-3. Seattle, Lockett 4-58, Graham 4-29, Baldwin 3-36, Kearse 2-84, F.Jackson 2-33, Willson 2-15, Matthews 1-21, Daniels 1-12, Rawls 1-(minus 1).

TODAY

EAST

Seattle escapes Detroit, 13-10 Seattle (ap) — With one big punch, Kam Chancellor showed his importance to the Seattle Seahawks. And once again, the Seahawks may have received another Monday night break from the officials in the same end zone where the infamous “Fail Mary” took place. Chancellor knocked the ball free from Detroit wide receiver Calvin Johnson at the oneyard line when it appeared the Lions were going to take the lead, and Seattle held on for a 13-10 win. With Detroit on the verge of capping a 91-yard drive with the go-ahead touchdown with less than two minutes remaining, Chancellor came from the side and punched the ball from Johnson’s arm as he was being tackled by Earl Thomas. The ball bounded into the end zone where it was guided over the back line by K.J. Wright for a touchback and Seattle’s ball at the 20. Wright could have been called for illegal touching for hitting the ball out of the end zone, which would have given the ball back to Detroit. But no flags were thrown and on the ensuing possession, Russell Wilson found Jermaine Kearse for 50 yards on third down. With Detroit out of timeouts, the Seahawks (2-2) ran off the final seconds of their second straight win. “We can’t change it now,” Seattle linebacker Bobby Wagner said. “It is what it is. We won and we’re going to move on.” Detroit fell to 0-4 for its worst start since 2010 when the Lions also started 0-4 on their way to a 6-10 season, and with a schedule that offers little relief going forward. It was an ugly performance by the home team, filled with offensive mistakes and two fourth-quarter fumbles by Wilson, the second returned 27 yards for a touchdown by Caraun Reid to pull Detroit to 13-10. But in the end, Seattle’s defense came through. Seattle has not allowed an offensive touchdown in the two games since Chancellor ended his holdout and has forced 18 punts during that stretch. “It was big time,” Wagner said of Chancellor’s return. “He just made us a whole defense.” Wilson was forced to be an escape artist as Seattle’s offensive line continued to struggle with protection. Wilson threw for 287 yards and rushed for another 40 yards.

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THE QUOTE “In other words, Posh Spice is doing better than Old Spice.” — NBC’s Jimmy Fallon, on a study claiming that David Beckham and his wife, Victoria Beckham, are richer than Queen Elizabeth

TODAY IN SPORTS 1956 — Oklahoma blanks Kansas 66-0 to set a modern college football winning streak of 32 straight. The Sooners had the previous record of 31 set 1948-50. The victory is also a conference record of 54 straight wins. 1973 — Washington’s Chris Rowland ties an NCAA record with four touchdown passes in the fourth quarter, but still loses to California, 54-49. 1993 — Michael Jordan announces his retirement after nine seasons in the NBA.

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MINNESOTA TW


LOCAL

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Tuesday, October 6, 2015

Local numbers crunch

BRIEFLY Firebirds’ soccer downs Heights

————

City golf teams field only three varsity players By Bobby Nightengale bnightengale@ljworld.com

At the beginning of the girls golf season, Free State High junior Anne Goebel was frustrated by her play. A month later, she’s hitting her stride. Goebel carded a 96 on Monday, tying for 27th place at the Free State Invitational at Lawrence Country Club. “It was better than expected,� Goebel said. “I definitely had some bad holes, but for the most part, I thought I did pretty well.� Goebel was Free State’s only varsity golfer at the beginning of the year, which she admitted was a little tough. The Firebirds added sophomore Tori Hoopingarner to the varsity lineup. She shot a 103 on Monday in only her second 18-hole varsity meet. Hoopingarner tied for 42nd place. “I’m happy for them because they’re happy,� FSHS coach Layne Meyer said. “I think Anne was frustrated with her first couple of tournaments. Today she played more up to her potential, so I’m really happy and proud of her that she was able to bounce back from some early frustrations. She’s worked hard, and today, her hard work paid off.� Goebel was strong with her driver, helping her shoot a 49 on the front

Football CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1D

said he would expect both former Miege QBs to handle the situation splendidly. “I think Montell’s gonna be great,� Holmes said. “He’ll probably be the first guy there on the sideline to give (Willis) a high-

Nick Krug/Jounral-World Photo

FREE STATE’S ANNE GOEBEL TEES OFF ON THE 18TH HOLE Monday during the Free State Invitational at Lawrence Country Club.

a lot more competitive than (junior varsity) and more serious. But I think I’ve adjusted well. Since I have Anne, it’s going pretty good.� Hoopingarner said she saved a few strokes at the end of her round with Free State Invitational at Lawrence Country Club strong putts. She carded a Monday Team scores: 1. Shawnee Mission 49 on the back nine and a East, 331; 2. Washburn Rural, 331; 3. Blue Valley West, 350; 4. St. Thomas 54 on the front. Aquinas, 364; 5. Mill Valley, 374; 6. “She’s just come along Blue Valley, 379; 7. Blue Valley so much since the begin- Northwest, 394; 8. Olathe Northwest, 9. Olathe South, 404; 10. Shawnee ning of the season,� Mey- 399; Mission South, 406; 11. Olathe East, er said. “She made it to 411; 12. Shawnee Mission Northwest, where we couldn’t keep 422. Medalists: 1. Alex Larson, BVW, 75; her on JV with the scores 2. Jessica Parker, SME, 77; 3. Abby WR, 80; 4. Tatum King, STA, she was posting. She’s Glynn, 80; 5. Megan Lucas, WR, 83; 6. Teagan just so coachable, and her Noblit, SME, 83; 7. Bella Hadden, 83; 8. Kendra Jellison, WR, 84; 9. attitude is so great, and MV, Candace Dawson, WR, 84; 10. Haley she’s improved so much Bell, SME, 85. Free State results: 27. Anne Goebel that she earned her spot 42. Tori Hoopingarner 103. on varsity as you can see 96;Lawrence High result: 76. Beatrice Lopez 118. by her scores.�

five to him when he does something good and the first guy to tell him to keep his head up when he does something bad. He wants KU to turn it around just as bad as the next guy.� As for where Willis’ mind was on Monday, Holmes said the new KU starter was as jacked as he could ever remember hearing him. “When there’s a billboard up on I-35 and

begin its weekly contest at 11 a.m. for the fourth consecutive week. The Big 12 announced Monday that KU’s home game against Texas Tech that day would begin at 11 a.m. and be televised on FOX Sports 1. The showdown with the Red Raiders will mark the Jayhawks’ fifth 11 a.m. kickoff of the 2015 KU-Tech set for 11 a.m. season and fourth in a Kansas on Oct. 17 will row.

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With regionals approaching next week at Alvamar, the Firebirds are thrilled they’ll get to play at their home practice course. “That’s definitely a big advantage because we play there, like, every other day, and I’m a member there, so I play there a lot during the summer,� Hoopingarner said. Meyer added: “Right now I think they’re both playing their best golf.� Lawrence High freshman Beatrice Lopez shot a 118 and finished in 76th place in her first varsity tournament. Lopez fired a 62 on the front nine and a 56 on the back. Both schools will compete in the Olathe East Invitational at 1 p.m. Wednesday at St. Andrews.

nine and 47 on the back. She had a few problems chipping the ball, but she bounced back with drives on the fairway. “Now that the season has gone on, she’s trusted herself a little more,� Meyer said. “I think she’s more committed to her shots, and she’s allowing her natural ability to come through in her play.� Hoopingarner didn’t need much time to get comfortable at the varsity level. She finished 49th at the Lawrence Invitational last week. “I’m not as nervous as I was at the beginning because I was freaking out about how the competition would be,� Hoopingarner said. “It’s

I-70, he wants his face to be on it,� Holmes said. “He’s fired-up, ready to take this challenge on. Playing a Top-5 school may scare some people, but Ryan, he’s looking at it like a challenge and wants to see the things he can do well and the things he still needs to work on.�

M IDWEST

Free State High’s boys soccer team extended its winning streak to five with a 2-1 victory over Shawnee Heights on Monday at FSHS. The Firebirds (7-3) will play host to Olathe East at 6:30 p.m. today.

Rigdon earns Big 12 honor After leading a balanced Kansas University offense with 11 kills on 15 error-less swings in a three-set victory over West Virginia, KU sophomore outside hitter Madison Rigdon was named Big 12 Offensive Player of the Week. The Pflugerville, Texas, native recorded a .733 hitting percentage against WVU, a career high and a team high this season. Rigdon’s attack percentage led the Big 12 for the week, while her 3.7 kills per set are tied for third. “Madison has been an efficient and consistent player for us all season,� Kansas head coach Ray Bechard

said. “She had great numbers last week, but she has also been someone we can count on night-in and nightout. As an outside hitter, for her to get no errors in a match against a Big 12-level team speaks to her ability to make adjustments on the fly.� No. 10 KU remains one of three undefeated teams in NCAA Division I. The Jayhawks (15-0, 3-0 Big 12) face Texas Tech (12-5, 1-2) at 6 p.m. Wednesday in Lubbock, Texas (WOW! Cable channels 36, 236).

Kawinpakorn tied for fourth Lincoln, Neb. — Four Kansas University golfers ended the first day of the Chip-N-Club Invitational at the Lincoln Country Club in the top 25, led by senior Yupaporn “Mook� Kawinpakorn’s two-round 144 (even), good for a tie for fourth. KU is in fifth place among 13 teams after the first two rounds after recording a 601 (25over). The Jayhawks trail fourth-place Missouri State by one stroke.

Keegan

David Beaty has the right attitude to keep heads from hanging, but it’s going to get tougher by the CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1D week in a season that will feel like two or three to 3. Baylor; 5. Oklahoma; 6. the players. TCU; 19. West Virginia; It’s worth keeping in 24. Oklahoma State; 25. mind that the players Kansas State; 43. Texas who remain on a rosTech; 72. Texas. ter so thin coming into The lowest-ranked the season are the guys power-five school, aside who stuck it out, juggled from Kansas, is Purdue at school and football well 92, 42 spots ahead of KU. enough to stay on course First-year head coach toward a degree.

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JONES MORGAN High

School: Lawrence Year: Freshman Sport: Cross country ent: Led the Lions to Week’s Accomplishm e Topeka Seaman d th a 15th-place finish an 8 :2 Invitational in 20 tti Favorite Food: Spaghe : Free State nt ne Most Talented Oppo . rs Foster (Biology) Smartest Teacher: M Natalie Coughlin, USA Favorite Pro Athlete: swimming ergalicious� (Fergie) Most Played Song: “F

SAM SKWHiAghRLO

School: Free State Year: Senior Sport: Football rds ent: Rushed for 172 ya Week’s Accomplishm a 32-20 victory at SM in and three touchdowns East le Favorite Food: Chipot nt: JD Woods, LHS ne po Most Talented Op ) r. Law (Social Studies Smartest Teacher: M h, Marshawn Lync Favorite Pro Athlete: Seahawks ney ything by Kenny Ches Most Played Song: An


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Tuesday, October 6, 2015

SPORTS

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L awrence J ournal -W orld

SCOREBOARD College Women Postseason Glance

Nick Krug/Journal-World File Photo

KANSAS UNIVERSITY GUARD FRANK MASON III FLIPS BEFORE THE ALLEN FIELDHOUSE CROWD in this photo from last year’s Late Night in the Phog on Oct. 10, 2014. This year’s Late Night will be Friday.

Late Night CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1D

be some sort of musical performance by a Jayhawk at the 31st-annual Late Night, set for 6:30 p.m., to approximately 9:30 p.m., Friday, in Allen. “I cannot wait for Late Night. I’m ready for dancing. I’m also going to be playing the piano,” freshman forward Carlton Bragg stated at last week’s Media Day. “Everybody’s going to be shocked at how good I can play,” Bragg added, smiling. The 6-foot-9 freshman from Cleveland wouldn’t provide other details, inviting fans to pack the building to see for themselves. Doors open for KU students at 4:30 p.m., and the general public at 5 p.m., Friday. “It’s going to be a little surprise for everyone,” Bragg said. “I cannot wait for Late Night. Coming in last year as a recruit, fans cheering you on, the atmosphere was crazy. Coming in now as a student-athlete, I can’t wait. I was blown away, shocked, amazed at the atmosphere. It was crazy. You’ve got to be there to experience it,” Bragg added. KU coach Bill Self stresses he’d welcome the usual Late Night sellout this year because “our players really love it” and also because it’s a good way to impress recruits who will be in town. Top senior players expected to attend Friday’s Late Night are: No. 2-ranked (by Rivals. com) Harry Giles, No. 5 De’Aaron Fox, No. 6 Malik Monk, No. 16 Marques Bolden and No. 34 Schnider Herard.

practice while continuing to recover from an ankle sprain, Self said Monday. Selden has been wearing a boot off the court as his ankle heals. “He has an ankle sprain. The only reason he is in a boot is to immobilize it when walking around,” Self said. “He has been practicing, yes. He’s not 100 percent, though. He sprained it three weeks ago. He’s about 60, 70 percent. We are hopeful by the end of the week he’ll be much closer to full speed. Doctors said we should work through it. We shouldn’t just give him total time off. He should be fine in a week or so.” Self said junior Brannen Greene has been practicing. He’s coming back from offseason hip surgery. “We’re bringing him back where he has limited reps,” Self said. “For the most part, he’s fine. He gets sore, even though that’s part of the rehab process of what doctors tell us. He looks good. All the strength tests, MRI confirm that. We’re hopeful by Nov. 1 he’ll be ready to go (full speed in games).” The Jayhawks have been practicing since Friday. “Practice is OK. The guys are trying hard,” Self said. “We are putting too much stuff in too fast. Right now we’re probably not doing anything very well because we’re trying to think and concentrate on what we’re supposed to do as opposed to reacting and playing. If you are thinking, you can’t react as quick. We’re going to still be a couple months away like most teams are before we have a good sense of who we are.” l

More on Diallo: Self is Tender ankle: KU ju- making the media rounds nior guard Wayne Selden this week to publicize Jr., has been taking part in upcoming Late Night. l

At 1-4, Texas shows dissent Austin, Texas (ap) — Texas coach Charlie Strong spent nearly a half-hour Monday insisting his team was unified and would rebound from a 1-4 start. Within minutes after he left the podium, Strong’s players put those promises to the test, publicly exposing a rift between some of the team’s veterans and a talented group of freshmen that have forced their way onto the depth chart with scant success on the field. “People need to grow up and take things more seriously. A lot of people aren’t preparing,” said junior safety Dylan Haines, a former walk-on who earned a scholarship last season. “They just want to go out and play the game on Saturday. They don’t want to put in the work on (the other days).”

Freshman defensive end Charles Omenihu apparently didn’t like this kind of chatter and swiftly responded on Twitter. “Lol,” said a tweet from Omenihu’s account, which seconds later added, “People get in front of the cameras and just talk they heads off. Always remember think before you speak.” A school spokesman confirmed the account belongs to Omenihu. The second tweet was quickly deleted, but not before the divide in the locker room had taken over the day from Strong’s message of unity ahead in Saturday’s showdown with No. 10 Oklahoma (40, 1-0 Big 12), a game that has taken on even more urgency with Texas off to its worst start in nearly 60 years.

Monday on 810 radio he was asked about the Cheick Diallo eligibility situation. Diallo can participate in the Late Night skits and scrimmage. Diallo, as everybody knows, was cleared to practice last Thursday by the NCAA. “He’s cleared to practice pending on what they decide throughout the information we will submit to them (Eligibility Center) whenever it is all together,” Self said. “A lot of people wonder ‘Why wouldn’t it (academic materials) all be together yet?’ There’s a lot of reasons why ... because they just told us recently some things they wanted. Instead of throwing it to them piece by piece, they requested we submit it all together. It may be a couple more weeks before we are able to submit everything. When you are talking about getting information from schools in Mali ... we hope within two weeks. It may be three weeks before we have a definite answer. Right now Cheick is like everybody else. He’s practicing. He needs the time. This is all new to him. The fact he could be out there with us now will not put him behind when hopefully we get good news on him in the future.” l

Lightfoot update: Mitch Lightfoot, a 6-7 senior forward from Gilbert (Arizona) Christian High school, visited St. John’s last weekend. He tells Zagsblog.com he expects to choose between KU, Utah, Stanford, St. John’s and Arizona shortly after his trip to Arizona this weekend. “Then I’m done and I’m going to take a couple of weeks to ponder over my schools and then I’ll decide,” he said. He’s ranked No. 117 in the Class of 2016 by Rivals.com.

K-State DB Moore arrested Manhattan (ap) — A Kansas State football player has been arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence. The Topeka CapitalJournal reports 20-yearold Cre Moore was arrested early Sunday after the pickup he was driving hit a light pole in Manhattan. Moore was uninjured. The Riley County Police Department says Moore, a sophomore back-up defensive back for the Wildcats, was charged with DUI and was found to be in possession of “several pills which were identified as depressants.” Moore, from Broken Arrow, Okla., was given a bond of $3,500 for the offenses of DUI and possession of a depressant. It was not immediately known if he has an attorney.

WILD CARD Today: Houston (Keuchel 20-8) at New York (Tanaka 12-7), 7:08 p.m. (ESPN) Wednesday, Oct. 7: Chicago (Arrieta 22-6) at Pittsburgh (Cole 19-8), 7:08 p.m. (TBS) DIVISION SERIES (Best-of-5; x-if necessary) American League Kansas City vs. New York-Houston winner Thursday, Oct. 8: New York-Houston winner at Kansas City, 6:37 or 7:07 p.m. (FS1) Friday, Oct. 9: New York-Houston winner at Kansas City, 2:45 p.m. (FS1) Sunday, Oct. 11: Kansas City at New York-Houston winner, 3:10 p.m. (MLBN) x-Monday, Oct. 12: Kansas City at New York-Houston winner, TBA (FOX or FS1) x-Wednesday, Oct. 14: New YorkHouston winner at Kansas City, TBA (FOX or FS1) Toronto vs. Texas Thursday, Oct. 8: Texas (Gallardo 13-11) at Toronto (Price 18-5), 2:37 or 3:07 p.m. (FS1) Friday, Oct. 9: Texas (Hamels 7-1) at Toronto, 11:45 a.m. (MLBN) Sunday, Oct. 11: Toronto at Texas, 7:10 p.m. (FS1) x-Monday, Oct. 12: Toronto at Texas (FOX or FS1) x-Wednesday, Oct. 14: Texas at Toronto (FOX or FS1) National League All games televised by TBS St. Louis vs. Pittsburgh-Chicago winner Friday, Oct. 9: Pittsburgh-Chicago winner at St. Louis, 5:45 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 10: PittsburghChicago winner at St. Louis, 4:37 p.m. Monday, Oct. 12: St. Louis at Pittsburgh-Chicago winner x-Tuesday, Oct. 13: St. Louis at Pittsburgh-Chicago winner x-Thursday, Oct. 15: PittsburghChicago winner at St. Louis Los Angeles vs. New York Friday, Oct. 9: New York (deGrom 14-8) at Los Angeles, 8:45 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 10: New York (Syndergaard 9-7) at Los Angeles, 8:07 p.m. Monday, Oct. 12: Los Angeles at New York (Harvey 13-8) x-Tuesday, Oct. 13: Los Angeles at New York x-Thursday, Oct. 15: New York at Los Angeles LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) American League Friday, Oct. 16: Texas-Toronto winner at Kansas City or New YorkHouston winner at Texas-Toronto winner (FOX or FS1) Saturday, Oct. 17: Texas-Toronto winner at Kansas City or New YorkHouston winner at Texas-Toronto winner (FOX or FS1) Monday, Oct. 19: Kansas City at Texas-Toronto winner or TexasToronto winner at New York-Houston winner (FOX or FS1) Tuesday, Oct. 20: Kansas City at Texas-Toronto winner or TexasToronto winner at New York-Houston winner (FOX or FS1) x-Wednesday, Oct. 21: Kansas City at Texas-Toronto winner or TexasToronto winner at New York-Houston winner (FOX or FS1) x-Friday, Oct. 23: Texas-Toronto winner at Kansas City or New YorkHouston winner at Texas-Toronto winner (FOX or FS1) x-Saturday, Oct. 24: Texas-Toronto winner at Kansas City or New YorkHouston winner at Texas-Toronto winner (FOX or FS1) National League All games televised by TBS Saturday, Oct. 17: Los Angeles-New York winner at St. Louis or ChicagoPittsburgh winner at Los AngelesNew York winner Sunday, Oct. 18: Los Angeles-New York winner at St. Louis or ChicagoPittsburgh winner at Los AngelesNew York winner Tuesday, Oct. 20: St. Louis at Los Angeles-New York winner or Los Angeles-New York winner at ChicagoPittsburgh winner winner Wednesday, Oct. 21: St. Louis at Los Angeles-New York winner or Los Angeles-New York winner at ChicagoPittsburgh winner winner x-Thursday, Oct. 22: St. Louis at Los Angeles-New York winner or Los Angeles-New York winner at ChicagoPittsburgh winner winner x-Saturday, Oct. 24: Los AngelesNew York winner at St. Louis or Chicago-Pittsburgh winner at Los Angeles-New York winner x-Sunday, Oct. 25: Los Angeles-New York winner at St. Louis or ChicagoPittsburgh winner at Los AngelesNew York winner WORLD SERIES (Best-of-7) All games televised by Fox Tuesday, Oct. 27: at American Wednesday, Oct. 28: at AL Friday, Oct. 30: at National League Saturday, Oct. 31: at NL x-Sunday, Nov. 1: at NL x-Tuesday, Nov. 3: at AL x-Wednesday, Nov. 4: at AL

World Ranking

Through Oct. 4 1. Jordan Spieth 2. Jason Day 3. Rory McIlroy 4. Bubba Watson 5. Rickie Fowler 6. Henrik Stenson 7. Justin Rose 8. Dustin Johnson 9. Jim Furyk 10. Zach Johnson 11. Sergio Garcia 12. Brooks Koepka 13. Louis Oosthuizen 14. Adam Scott 15. Hideki Matsuyama 16. Matt Kuchar 17. Jimmy Walker 18. J.B. Holmes 19. Patrick Reed 20. Martin Kaymer 21. Shane Lowry 22. Branden Grace 23. Paul Casey 24. Phil Mickelson 25. Danny Willett 26. Billy Horschel 27. Chris Kirk 28. Bernd Wiesberger 29. Bill Haas 30. Brandt Snedeker 31. Thongchai Jaidee 32. Kevin Na 33. Robert Streb 34. Kevin Kisner 35. Charley Hoffman 36. Danny Lee 37. Marc Leishman 38. Ryan Palmer 39. Anirban Lahiri 40. David Lingmerth 41. Gary Woodland 42. Ian Poulter 43. Scott Piercy 44. Lee Westwood 45. Daniel Berger 46. Hunter Mahan 47. Charl Schwartzel 48. Jamie Donaldson 49. Byeong-Hun An 50. Russell Henley

USA 12.69 AUS 12.63 NIR 11.31 USA 8.37 USA 7.96 SWE 7.54 ENG 7.19 USA 6.93 USA 6.89 USA 5.18 ESP 5.08 USA 4.54 SAF 4.47 AUS 4.38 JPN 4.33 USA 4.32 USA 4.13 USA 3.95 USA 3.88 GER 3.75 IRL 3.70 SAF 3.69 ENG 3.58 USA 3.48 ENG 3.44 USA 3.36 USA 3.22 AUT 3.21 USA 3.11 USA 3.10 THA 3.01 USA 3.00 USA 3.00 USA 2.94 USA 2.92 NZL 2.84 AUS 2.81 USA 2.76 IND 2.59 SWE 2.58 USA 2.58 ENG 2.55 USA 2.55 ENG 2.54 USA 2.53 USA 2.49 SAF 2.46 WAL 2.43 KOR 2.37 USA 2.37

Chip-N-Club Invitational. Monday at Lincoln, Neb. Lincoln Country Club Par 72, 5,105 yards Team scores 1. Notre Dame 2. Nebraska 3. South Dakota State 4. Missouri State 5. Kansas 6. UMKC 7. South Dakota 8. North Dakota State 9. Illinois State 10. Creighton 11. Bellevue 12. Nebraska-Omaha 13. Nebraska-Kearney Leaders Megan Minto, SDSU Isabella DiLisio, ND Kansas Scores T4. Yupaporn Kawinpakorn T17. Ariadna Fonseca Diaz T21. Pitsinee Winyarat T21. Victoria Chandra (ind.) T26. Kallie Gonzales (ind.) T32. Laine Evans T53. MacKenzie Sexe

Big 12 Standings

577 593 594 600 601 609 616 622 627 631 633 640 676 142 142 144 150 152 152 153 155 162

BASEBALL American League LOS ANGELES ANGELS — Named Billy Eppler general manager. OAKLAND ATHLETICS — Promoted Billy Beane to executive vice president of baseball operations and David Forst to general manager. National League ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS — Fired pitching coach Mike Harkey. MILWAUKEE BREWERS — Announced the contracts of first base coach Mike Guerrero, pitching coach Rick Kranitz, bench coach Jerry Narron, outfield coach John Shelby and bullpen coach Lee Tunnell will not be renewed. WASHINGTON NATIONALS — Fired manager Matt Williams, bench coach Randy Knorr, pitching coach Steve McCatty, hitting coach Rick Schu, third base coach Bobby Henley, first base coach Tony Tarasco, bullpen coach Matt LeCroy and defensive coordinator/advance coach Mark Weidemaier. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association MEMPHIS GRIZZLIES — Waived G Daniel Nwaelele. FOOTBALL National Football League CLEVELAND BROWNS — Signed OL Ronald Patrick to the practice squad. Released OL Andrew McDonald from the practice squad. DALLAS COWBOYS — Waived LB Keith Smith and DT Ken Bishop. INDIANAPOLIS COLTS — Released QB Josh Johnson. Signed CB Shaun Prater. JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS — Placed G Brandon Linder on injured reserve. MIAMI DOLPHINS — Fired coach Joe Philbin. Named Dan Campbell interim coach. NEW YORK JETS — Signed WR Kenbrell Thompkins to the practice squad. Released WR-KR Walter Powell from the practice squad. WASHINGTON REDSKINS — Signed DE Frank Kearse. Waived LB Terrance Plummer. Signed WR Issac Blakeney and LB Lynden Trail to the practice squad. Released LB Sage Harold from the practice squad. HOCKEY National Hockey League NHL — Suspended San Jose F Raffi Torres 41 games for interference and an illegal check to the head against Anaheim F Jakob Silfverberg during an Oct. 3 preseason game at Anaheim. Placed Montreal F Zack Kassian in Stage Two of the Substance Abuse and Behavioral Health Program (SABH) of the NHL and NHLPA. TENNIS Women’s Tennis Association WTA — Named Steven Simon CEO. COLLEGE BROWN — Named Jim Hayes assistant gymnastics coach. DENVER — Signed lacrosse coach Bill Tierney to a five-year contract extension through 2022. FAIRLEIGH DICKINSON — Named Justin McKay assistant baseball staff. NYU — Named Conor Smith men’s assistant basketball coach.

NFL

AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA New England 3 0 0 1.000 119 70 N.Y. Jets 3 1 0 .750 95 55 Buffalo 2 2 0 .500 110 92 Miami 1 3 0 .250 65 101 South W L T Pct PF PA Indianapolis 2 2 0 .500 72 93 Tennessee 1 2 0 .333 89 77 Houston 1 3 0 .250 77 108 Jacksonville 1 3 0 .250 62 107 North W L T Pct PF PA Cincinnati 4 0 0 1.000 121 77 Pittsburgh 2 2 0 .500 96 75 Baltimore 1 3 0 .250 93 104 Cleveland 1 3 0 .250 85 102 West W L T Pct PF PA Denver 4 0 0 1.000 97 69 Oakland 2 2 0 .500 97 108 San Diego 2 2 0 .500 96 110 Kansas City 1 3 0 .250 100 125 NATIONAL CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA Dallas 2 2 0 .500 95 101 N.Y. Giants 2 2 0 .500 102 82 Washington 2 2 0 .500 78 79 Philadelphia 1 3 0 .250 78 86 South W L T Pct PF PA Carolina 4 0 0 1.000 108 71 Atlanta 4 0 0 1.000 137 93 Tampa Bay 1 3 0 .250 72 117 New Orleans 1 3 0 .250 86 104 North W L T Pct PF PA Green Bay 4 0 0 1.000 113 71 Minnesota 2 2 0 .500 80 73 Chicago 1 3 0 .250 68 125 Detroit 0 4 0 .000 66 96 West W L T Pct PF PA Arizona 3 1 0 .750 148 73 St. Louis 2 2 0 .500 74 89 Seattle 2 2 0 .500 87 71 San Francisco 1 3 0 .250 48 110 Monday’s Game Seattle 13, Detroit 10 Thursday, Oct. 8 Indianapolis at Houston, 8:25 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 11 Chicago at Kansas City, noon St. Louis at Green Bay, noon Buffalo at Tennessee, noon Seattle at Cincinnati, noon Washington at Atlanta, noon Jacksonville at Tampa Bay, noon New Orleans at Philadelphia, noon Cleveland at Baltimore, noon Arizona at Detroit, 3:05 p.m. Denver at Oakland, 3:25 p.m. New England at Dallas, 3:25 p.m. San Francisco at N.Y. Giants, 7:30 p.m. Open: Carolina, Miami, Minnesota, N.Y. Jets Monday, Oct. 12 Pittsburgh at San Diego, 7:30 p.m.

Big 12 Overall W L W L Oklahoma State 2 0 5 0 TCU 2 0 5 0 Baylor 1 0 4 0 Oklahoma 1 0 4 0 Iowa State 1 0 2 2 Kansas State 0 1 3 1 West Virginia 0 1 3 1 Kansas 0 1 0 4 Texas Tech 0 2 3 2 Texas 0 2 1 4 Saturday, Oct. 10 Baylor at Kansas, 11 a.m. (FS1) Oklahoma at Texas (at Cotton Bowl – Dallas), 11 a.m. (ABC) Iowa State at Texas Tech, 2:30 p.m. TCU at Kansas State, 6:30 p.m. (FOX) Oklahoma State at West Virginia, 6 p.m. (ESPN2)

Kansas

Sept. 5 — South Dakota State, L 38-41 (0-1) Sept. 12 — Memphis, L 23-55 (0-2) Sept. 26 — at Rutgers, L 14-27 (0-3) Oct. 3 — at Iowa State, L 13-38 (0-4, 0-1) Oct. 10 — Baylor, 11 a.m. (FS1) Oct. 17 — Texas Tech, 11 a.m. Oct. 24 — at Oklahoma State, TBA Oct. 31 (homecoming) — Oklahoma, TBA Nov. 7 — at Texas, 7 p.m. (Jayhawk Net) Nov. 14 — at TCU, TBA Nov. 21 — West Virginia, TBA Nov. 28 — Kansas State, TBA

Sunflower League

League Overall W L W L Lawrence 4 0 5 0 Olathe North 4 0 5 0 SM West 4 1 4 1 Olathe Northwest 3 1 4 1 Olathe East 3 1 3 2 SM East 3 1 5 1 Free State 2 3 2 3 Olathe South 1 3 1 4 SM Northwest 1 3 1 4 SM North 1 4 1 4 Leavenworth 0 4 0 5 SM South 0 5 0 5 Thursday’s Game Olathe North at SM North Friday’s Games Olathe South at Lawrence SM West at Olathe East SM East at Leavenworth SM South at Free State Olathe Northwest at SM Northwest

Lawrence High

Sept. 4 — Blue Valley West, W 35-14 (1-0) Sept. 11 — at Leavenworth, W 41-14 (2-0) Sept. 18 — at Free State, W 14-12 (3-0) Sept. 24 — SM Northwest at North District Stadium, W 41-6 (4-0) Oct. 2 — SM South, W 42-6 (5-0) Oct. 9 — Olathe South, 7 p.m. Oct. 15 — Olathe Northwest at ODAC, 7 p.m. Oct. 23 — Olathe North, 7 p.m. Oct. 30 — Olathe East at CBAC, 7 p.m.

Free State

Sept. 4 — SM West, L 26-34 (0-1) Sept. 11 — Olathe North at ODAC, L 20-24 (0-2) Sept. 18 — Lawrence High, L 12-14 (0-3) Sept. 25 — at Leavenworth, W 43-7 (1-3) Oct. 2 — SM East at North District Stadium, W 32-20 (2-3) Oct. 9 — SM South, 7 p.m. Oct. 16 — at Washburn Rural, 7 p.m. Oct. 23 — Manhattan, 7 p.m. Oct. 30 — Topeka High, 7 p.m.

NAIA Poll

Through Oct. 4 Record Pts 1. Lindsey Wilson (13) 4-0 339 2. Southern Oregon (1) 3-1 321 3. Morningside (IA) (1) 4-1 314 4. Carroll (Mont.) 3-1 308 5. Saint Xavier (Ill.) 4-1 276 6. Baker (Kan.) 5-1 271 7. Grand View (Iowa) 5-1 262 8. Doane (Neb.) 5-0 245 9. Saint Francis (Ind.) 5-0 241 10. Faulkner (Ala.) 3-1 217 11. Robert Morris (Ill.) 4-1 206 12. Dakota Wes. (S.D.) 5-0 196 13. Reinhardt (Ga.) 5-0 182 14. Marian (Ind.) 3-2 174 15. Tabor (Kan.) 4-1 157 16. Montana Western 3-1 150 17. Montana Tech 3-1 136 18. William Penn (Iowa) 4-2 115 19. Kansas Wesleyan 5-0 110 20. Northwestern (Iowa) 3-2 86 21. Benedictine (Kan.) 4-2 77 22. St. Francis (Ill.) 4-1 59 23. St. Ambrose (Iowa) 4-0 54 24. Webber Int’l (Fla.) 2-2 36 25. Dickinson St. (N.D.) 5-1 25

Pvs 1 2 4 5 7 8 9 10 11 3 12 13 14 6 16 17 18 19 21 15 23 24 25 22 NR

Baker

Aug. 29 — at Grand View, W 20-15 (1-0, 1-0) Sept. 5 — at Culver-Stockton, W 58-0 (2-0, 2-0) Sept. 12 — William Penn, W 41-13 (3-0, 3-0) Sept. 19 — Graceland, W 52-21 (4-0, 4-0) Sept. 26 — at Benedictine, L 35-31 (4-1, 4-1) Oct. 3 — Peru State, W 35-10 (5-1, 5-1) Oct. 10 — Bye Oct. 17 — at Avila, 1 p.m. Oct. 24 — MidAmerica, 11 a.m. Oct. 31 — Central Methodist, 1 p.m. Nov. 7 — at Missouri Valley, 1:30 p.m. Nov. 14 — at Evangel, 1:30 p.m.

High School

JUNIOR VARSITY Monday Free State 22, SM East 0 Free State scoring: Gage Foster 2 TD runs; Gabe DelValle TD; Vani Martinez 2-point conversion; DeValle 2-point conversion. Next for Free State: Monday at SM South.

MLS

EASTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF x-New York 15 9 6 51 53 x-D.C. United 14 12 6 48 39 New England 13 11 8 47 45 Columbus 13 11 8 47 51 Toronto FC 14 13 4 46 55 Montreal 12 12 6 42 43 Orlando City 11 13 8 41 44 NYC FC 10 15 7 37 47 Philadelphia 9 16 7 34 40 Chicago 8 18 6 30 42 WESTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF x-Los Angeles 14 9 9 51 53 x-FC Dallas 15 10 5 50 47 Vancouver 15 12 4 49 42 Sporting KC 13 9 9 48 46 Seattle 14 13 5 47 40 San Jose 12 12 8 44 39 Portland 12 11 8 44 31 Houston 11 13 8 41 41 Real Salt Lake 11 12 8 41 37 Colorado 8 13 10 34 30 x- clinched playoff berth Wednesday, Oct. 7 Montreal at New York, 6:30 p.m. FC Dallas at Vancouver, 9 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 10 Montreal at Colorado, 8 p.m.

GA 38 40 45 53 53 41 54 53 51 52 GA 39 38 34 41 34 37 36 45 43 38


Tuesday, October 6, 2015

SPECIAL!

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

DOESN’T SELL IN 28 DAYS?

PLACE YOUR AD: RECREATION

Chevrolet Cars

FREE RENEWAL!

785.832.2222 Chevrolet SUVs

Ford Cars

Boats-Water Craft

1992 Class C RV, Toyota Winnebago, 42,500 mi. Asking $13k. 913-269-8580 or 913-262-9054

TRANSPORTATION BMW

2014 Chevrolet Camaro Convertible Stk#PL1938

$23,994 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

Chevrolet 2008 Trailblazer LT, power equipment, alloy wheels, sunroof, tow package. Stk#35514A1 Only $8,8750 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Dodge Trucks

Stk#PL1908

$16,979

$38,979

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

Stk#1215T589A

$33,986

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

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

BMW Cars

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

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

2012 Ford Escape Limited Stk#1PL1958

2001 TOYOTA PRIUS FIVE

$10,995

UCG PRICE

Stock #115L769A

785-727-7151

23rd & Alabama, Lawrence www.lairdnollerlawrence.com GMC SUVs

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

Honda Cars

Honda SUVs

Honda SUVs

2008 HONDA CIVIC LX

2009 HONDA CR-V EX-L AWD

2012 HONDA PILOT EX-L 4WD

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

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

Only $10,711

Only $18,588

Call Thomas at

Call Thomas at

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

GMC 2009 Acadia SLT

Ford SUVs

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

1 owner, leather heated seats, sunroof, room for 7, Bose sound. Stk#408801 Only $8,8750 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Honda Cars

Stk#PL2016

$9,495

Stk#15T537A

$76,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2009 Chevrolet Impala LT Stk#115C969

$9,494 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Cadillac Cars

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

Ford Cars

2008 Ford Escape XLT Stk#116T066

$9,495

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Stk#115T945

FREE ADS for merchandise

under $100

$8,995

CALL 785-832-2222

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

Ford Trucks

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

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

Only $17,999

Cadillac Crossovers

Need to sell your car? Call 785-832-2222 or email classifieds@ljworld.com

2005 CADILLAC SR5 AWD

Call Thomas at

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

Sport, Excellent condition, 38,000 miles, manual transmission, regular maintenance. $13000 785-331-8952

Hyundai 2007 Sonata Honda Certified Pre-Owned Vehicle, 7 Year / 100,000 Mile Limited Powertrain Warranty. Stk# F197A

JackEllenaHonda.com

2014 Ford F150 Platinum 2014 Ford Focus SE Stk#115C582

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

Stk#PL1912

$44,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

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

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

Call Thomas at

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

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

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

GLS, fwd, 4 cyl, great gas mileage, power equipment, sunroof, power seat, steering wheel controls. Stk#132402 Only $7,855 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Infiniti SUVs

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2014 Honda Pilot EX-L

Only $5,995 Call Thomas at

888-631-6458

Stk#115C520A

2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047

4wd, sunroof, power equipment, alloy wheels, steering wheel controls. Stk#503223

$8,993 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Stk#115T876

$46,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

170k miles. Clean leather interior, excellent condition. Loaded with lots of extras. 785-727-8304

Jeep

$32,500

JackEllenaHonda.com

2012 Ford F-150 SVT Raptor

2005 Infiniti QX56 $9,000

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

Honda 2009 CRV EX

Stk#1P1896

Only $5,875

2012 HONDA PILOT EX-L NAVIGATION 4WD

$20,495

2010 Ford Fusion SE

Fwd, 4 cyl, great gas mileage, power equipment, alloy wheels. Stk#181681

2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047

Honda Crossovers

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Chevrolet 2006 HR LT

Call Thomas at

888-631-6458 JackEllenaHonda.com

2011 Honda Fit

2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047

Chevrolet Crossovers

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

Only $11,995

JackEllenaHonda.com

888-631-6458

1998 HONDA ACCORD LX

$8,995

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

JackEllenaHonda.com

Only $22,992

Call Thomas at

Stk#P1861A

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047

Only $24,950

2011 Chevrolet Impala LT

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

888-631-6458

2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047

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

Hyundai

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Leather heated seats, remote start, alloy wheels, Bose sound, all the luxury without the price! Stk#114211 Only $9,777

888-631-6458

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

2005 Ford Expedition Limited

2012 HONDA ACCORD EX-L

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

Cadillac 2005 STS V8

$17,430

$15,995

2008 Dodge Grand Caravan SXT

2015 BMW 6 Series 650i Gran Coupe

$9,495

Stock #116T066

UCG PRICE

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Dodge Vans

$6,995

2007 MAZDA CX-7 GRAND TOURING

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

Ford Crossovers

Stk#115T970

2014 Chevrolet Camaro SS 2SS

Stock #114K242

UCG PRICE

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

2011 Dodge Ram 2500 Laramie

2006 BMW 3 Series 330Ci

UCG PRICE

Stock #115T815

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

2008 FORD ESCAPE XLT

2014 Ford Fusion SE

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Stk#215T787C

USED CAR GIANT 2008 VOLKSWAGEN RABBIT S

Flying Scot 19’ LONG SAILBOAT FOR SALE: 913-426-1030

RV

classifieds@ljworld.com

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

Only $13,675

2009 Honda Accord LX-P

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

SELLING A MOTORCYCLE? ~ SPECIAL PRICE ~

Stk#1PL1985

2014 Jeep Cherokee Sport Stk#PL1935

10 Lines of Text + Photo

$10,752 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

7 Days - $19.95

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

28 Days - $49.95 - Doesn’t sell in 28 days? + FREE RENEWAL!

Call Today!

785-832-2222

$20,495 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com


6D

|

Tuesday, October 6, 2015

.

L awrence J ournal -W orld

CARS TO PLACE AN AD: Kia Cars

Mazda Cars

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

785.832.2222 Mazda Crossovers

Nissan Cars

classifieds@ljworld.com Pontiac

Toyota Cars

Only $5,995 Call Thomas at

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

Lincoln Crossovers

Stk#1PL1929

2007 Mazda CX-9 2013 Mazda Mazda3 i Touring Stk#PL2006

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

FREE ADS

2013 Nissan Altima 2.5 2 DR

Stk#116L103 Stk#PL2003

$11,988 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

$16,497 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

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

Mercedes-Benz Cars

2008 Toyota Highlander Sport Stk#113L909

$15,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

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

Nissan Cars Pontiac 2003 Grand Am

Toyota Cars

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

CALL 785-832-2222

$7,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

2006 NISSAN MAXIMA SL

$13,995

2007 Mercedes Benz CLK-Class CLK350 Base

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

2007 Mazda CX-7 Grand Touring

Stk#215T628

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

Stk#115T815

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

$10,995

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

Thicker line? Bolder heading? Color background or Logo?

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Ask how to get these features in your ad TODAY!!

23rd & Alabama - 2829 Iowa

LairdNollerLawrence.com

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

Volkswagen Cars

Call 785-832-2222

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

$13,695 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Mitsubishi SUVs

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2008 Volkswagen Rabbit S

Toyota 2006 Avalon Limited V6, heated & cooled seats, leather, sunroof, alloy wheels, steering wheel controls & more. Stk#480141

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

Only $10,995 Call Thomas at

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

Only $11,500 Scion 2011 XB FWD, 4 cyl, automatic, power equipment, great gas mileage and room. Stk#473362

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

Toyota Cars

Only $12,836 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Stk#114K242

2009 Toyota Camry Stk#1PL1975

$10,495 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

Subaru Crossovers

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

Motorcycle-ATV

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2006 Toyota Camry LE

2010 Kawasaki 1700 Voyager

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

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

$17,430

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

$9,449

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Stk#115L769A

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Scion

Stk#115L778

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

2011 Toyota Prius Five

Only $5,500

Stk#115L907

2005 Lincoln Aviator Luxury

Fwd, 4 cyl, great gas mileage, alloy wheels, power equipment, cruise control. Stk#352451

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

under $100

Lincoln SUVs

Pontiac 2009 Vibe

Only $9,714

for merchandise

2008 Lincoln MKX Base

Toyota

2007 Toyota Camry

2005 KIA SPECTRA Great Mileage, Well Maintained, Awesome Value, Fuel Efficient. Stk# F347B

Toyota

Stk#114T1075C

$7,995

2012 Mazda Mazda3 i Touring

2013 Mitsubishi Outlander Sport LE

2013 Nissan Maxima 3.5 SV

Stk#115M848

STP#PL1996

Stk#214T498

2014 Subaru Forester 2.0XT Touring Stk#1P1880

$11,995

$18,995

$20,995

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

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

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

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

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

$29,989

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2007 Toyota Camry What an Awesome Car?? Low Miles, Fuel Efficient, Immaculate Condition, Great School Car Stk# F027B

Only $9,495 Call Thomas at

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

Stk#1PL1906

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

$8,995

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

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

Cars-Domestic

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

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

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

SERVICES TO PLACE AN AD: Antique/Estate Liquidation

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

Auctioneers

REAL ESTATE AUCTIONS 785-887-6900 www.billfair.com

785.832.2222 Cleaning

HOUSE CLEANER ADDING NEW CUSTOMERS Years of experience, references available, Insured. 785-748-9815 (local)

classifieds@ljworld.com

Decks & Fences

Foundation Repair

DECK BUILDER

Foundation and Masonry Specialist Water prevention systems for basements, Sump pumps, foundation supports & repair and more. Call 785-221-3568

Over 25 yrs. exp. Licensed & Insured. Decks, deck covers, pergolas, screened porches, & all types of repairs. Call 913-209-4055 for Free estimates or go to prodeckanddesign.com

Needing to place an ad? 785-832-2222

Garage Doors

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

Guttering Services

FOUNDATION REPAIR

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

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

Carpentry Concrete

Home Improvements

Painting

Full Remodels & Odd Jobs, Interior/Exterior Painting, Installation & Repair of: Deck Drywall Siding Replacement Gutters Privacy Fencing Doors & Trim Commercial Build-out Build-to-suit services Fully Insured 22 yrs. experience

913-488-7320 JAYHAWK GUTTERING

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

Pet Services

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

785-842-0094

jayhawkguttering.com

Stacked Deck Love Auctions? Check out the Sunday / Wednesday editions of Lawrence Journal-World Classifieds section for all the details and the

BIGGEST SALES!

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

SERVICE DIRECTORY 6 LINE SPECIAL! 1 MONTH $118.95/mo. 6 MONTHS $91.95/mo. 12 MONTHS $64.95/mo. + FREE LOGO CALL 785-832-2222

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

Craig Construction Co Family Owned & Operated 20 Yrs

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

Mike - 785-766-6760 mdcraig@sbcglobal.net Stamped & Reg. Concrete, Patios, Walks, Driveways, Acid Staining & Overlays, Tear-Out & Replacement Jayhawk Concrete Inc. 785-979-5261

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

Furniture

AAA Home Improvements Int/Ext Repairs, Painting, Tree work & more. We do it all! 20 Yrs. Exp. w/ Ins. and local ref. Will beat all est. Call 785-917-9168

Dirt-Manure-Mulch

Higgins Handyman

Rich Black Top Soil No Chemicals Machine Pulverized Pickup or Delivery

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

Serving KC over 40 years

913-962-0798 Fast Service

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

Home Improvements

785-312-1917

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

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

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

Painting D&R Painting interior/exterior • 30+ years • power washing • repairs (inside & out) • stain decks • wallpaper stripping • free estimates Call or Text 913-401-9304 Interior/Exterior Painting Quality Work Over 30 yrs. exp.

Call Lyndsey 913-422-7002

Personalized, professional, full-service pet grooming. Low prices. Self owned & operated. 785-842-7118 www.Platinum-Paws.com

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

KansasTreeCare.com Trimming, removal, & stump grinding by Lawrence locals Certified by Kansas Arborists Assoc. since 1997 “We specialize in preservation & restoration” Ins. & Lic. visit online 785-843-TREE (8733)


L awrence J ournal -W orld

Tuesday, October 6, 2015

PLACE YOUR AD:

785.832.2222

| 7D

classifieds@ljworld.com

A P P LY N O W

830 AREA JOB OPENINGS! BERT NASH ...................................... 10

ENGINEERED AIR .................................8

MISCELLANEOUS ............................... 62

BERRY PLASTICS ............................... 40

GENERAL DYNAMICS (GDIT) ............... 250

MV TRANSPORTATION ......................... 25

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

KMART DISTRIBUTION ........................ 20

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

BRANDON WOODS ............................. 10

KU: STUDENT OPENINGS ................. 120

USA 800 .......................................... 45

COMMUNITY RELATIONS/DAYCOM ........ 11

KU: FACULTY/ACADEMIC/LECTURERS .... 97

WESTAFF .......................................... 25

DST - BOSTON FINANCIAL ................... 34

KU: STAFF OPENINGS ......................... 56

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

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

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

Education & Training

EMPLOYMENT

Perry USD#343

AdministrativeProfessional

Choral Music Piano Accompanist Full-time/part-time available. Perry-Lecompton High School Starting @ 8.95/hr. Call or email Alayna Powell for more details @ 785-597-5124 ext.1023 or apowell@usd343.org

Reception/ Financial Assistant For busy chiropractic clinic. Full-Time, permanent position. Apply in person MWF 8-4 pm. Advanced Chiropractic Services 1605 Wakarusa Dr.

Environmental BiotechnologyPharmacy

Conservation Technician

Pharmacy Clerk Needed

Work outdoors visiting landowners, evaluating conservation practices, designing projects, overseeing construction checkout, and more. QUALIFICATIONS: High school diploma or GED, experience in conservation or agriculture (Two year degree with ag classes will substitute for experience), valid driver’s license, pass a security background check as required by the USDA. Salary $33,353 plus benefits. EOE APPLY at: Douglas County Conservation District 4920 Bob Billings Pkwy Suite A Lawrence, KS 66049 785-843-4260 x 1129

Professional Pharmacy needs counter clerk to work mornings. Mon.-Fri. (days are flexible). Call Marvin 785-843-4160.

Childcare

Assistant Director Support the staff, program and management of a non-profit child care center. Min. 1 year experience working in a child care center, BA in Early Childhood Education or related field & administrative experience preferred. Send cover letter & resume to:

General

Healthcare

APRN Advanced Practice Registered Nurse for Riley County Health Department The APRN is a professional registered nurse who holds a Kansas license as a professional nurse in an advance role who may provide primary and limited secondary health care to those seek reproductive health care services. At least one year experience as an APRN in reproductive health care. CPR certification will be required. Current Kansas RN license and Kansas APRN licensure in the category of Nurse Practitioner or Clinical Nurse Specialist. Full Time, exempt position with benefits. Annual salary hiring range $66,285 - $72,431. View full job details and apply online at www.rileycountyks.gov or at Riley County Clerk’s Office, 110 Courthouse Plaza, Manhattan, KS 66502. Pre-employment drug screening is required upon conditional offer of employment. Equal Employment Opportunity Employer

Phlebotomist/ X-ray Tech Needed for busy Family Practice office located in Lawrence, KS. Mon-Fri, Approx. 25-30 hrs/ week. Experience helpful. Please send resume to: fp.applicant.11@gmail.com

Healthcare

Stepping Stones

Sodexo @ Baker University Food Service Workers PT Evenings/Weekends $9.00 per hour FT Split Shifts $9.00 per hour

Smart-Hire Tip

Apply at Harter Union 615 Dearborn Baldwin City Kansas 66006 or www.Sodexo.Jobs

Online Job Boards Are you still posting job announcements online yourself ?

Sodexo is an EEO/AA/Minority/Female/ Disability/Veteran employer

We post job openings on a long list of websites, including industry niche job boards!

Healthcare

Ask Peter where your job will be posted by sending your zip code and the job title to: psteimle@ljworld.com .

Local Semi Driver Local deliveries Haz-Mat & CDL required.

Taylor Oil Inc. 504 Main Wellsville, KS 785-883-2072

Industrial Mechanic Lawrence, KS Requires 4 years of experience as a Senior Industrial Mechanic, welding & fabrication exper., driver’s license, diploma or GED. Pre-employment checks req’d. Send resume to careers@chemtradelogist ics.com and brobbins@chemtradelogi stics.com referencing job title and location.

Management

Signage Coordinator Freedom’s Frontier National Heritage Area seeks a Signage Coordinator responsible for implementing our signage plan. Full job description is available at: www.freedomsfrontier.or g. Send resume and statement of interest to jmcpike@freedoms frontier.org

Social Services Director Immediate position available for a Licensed Social Worker. Rewarding, team environment within long term care. Full time with benefits.

Apply online at www.lawrencepres byterianmanor.org or in person at: 1429 Kasold Drug Test is required.

Part-Time Caregivers

785.832.2222 Manufacturing/Production 1st Shift (De Soto KS)

Full-time Jobs!! (Not Temporary)

Ask how to get these features in your ad TODAY!!

Welders - Entry Level Production Assembly Sheet Metal Fabricator Electrical Harness Assembly

Part-Time

Enjoy sitting and visiting with nice elderly people in their homes! Experience helpful. Drivers license req’d. NO heavy lifting. Some evenings & weekends. Starts at $10 hr.

Starting at $11.00 hr + up!

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

ANNOUNCEMENTS Thicker line? Bolder heading?

Business Announcements Aspiring Entrepreneurs

Ask how to get these features in your ad TODAY!!

Looking for a reputable online business? Flexible hours, free training, great income, and incentives.

Call: 785-832-2222

eurekahealthyhome.com

FREE ADS

for merchandise under $100 classifieds.lawrence.com

785-331-5850 Or email us at: contact@lawrence helpers.com

RN, Full-Time 10 hour days, 4 days/ week. Daytime schedule. Competitive Wages & Great Benefits Lawrence Dialysis is looking for an RN that is enthusiastic, has a strong work ethic & looking for a challenging & rewarding nursing position. Candidate will be educated in providing dialysis in the acute & chronic setting. This nurse will work closely with the physician, hospital, & dialysis team. The facility is located at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, 330 Arkansas St, Suite 100. To set up a tour & interview, call the facility 785-843-2000 or fill out an application online at careers.davita.com

For More

PAY GO TO

HUMOR is good medicine. I used to install windows...That job was a real pane!

NOTICES

Thicker line? Bolder heading? Color background or Logo?

Call: 785-832-2222

1100 Wakarusa Dr. Lawrence, KS 66049 steppingstones@ sunflower.com Due 10/26/15 EOE

DriversTransportation

Installation-Repair

Decisions Determine Destiny

Driver/Janitor Part-time, Morning, 28 hrs per week. Must have good driving record and be able to lift 50 lbs. Start immediately. Matthew_mccluer@usc.sa lvation army.org

785-979-5445

Fiscal Manager Kansas Head Start Association Part-time 10-15 hrs/wk in Lawrence, KS. Code/pay bills, process payroll, process receivables, complete invoicing and financial reporting, oversee fiscal operations. Submit cover letter, resume, references (3) and a document rating yourself on a scale of 1 to 5 (high) in each of the following areas and explain each rating: a) Non-Profit grant experience, b) QuickBooks knowledge c) Organization, d) decision-making, and e) problem solving. Deadline: 10 am, Oct 16. Electronic submission: evaughn@ksheadstart.or g. View full position description at: http://bit.ly/1M1t7Yy

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING SPECIALS OPEN HOUSES 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!

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

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

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

ADVERTISE TODAY!

Call 785.832.2222 or email classifieds@ljworld.com


8D

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Tuesday, October 6, 2015

L awrence J ournal -W orld

MERCHANDISE PETS

RENTALS REAL ESTATE TO PLACE AN AD:

785.832.2222

REAL ESTATE Building Lots

classifieds@ljworld.com Townhomes

Acreage-Lots

TO PLACE AN AD:

Lawrence

GREAT FAMILY HOME

AUCTIONS Auction Calendar

3BR 2BA House

4 acres bldg site between Topeka and Lawrence Black top, trees and waterline. Repo. Assume owner financing with no down payment. $257/mo. Please call 785-554-9663 for more information.

For Sale. D-Field airstrip, hangar and home. 15 miles north of LWC. By owner Gerald Dunfield. Call 913-796-6650 or Mail to Box 208 McLouth, KS.

SUNRISE VILLAGE & PLACE

Now Leasing 2 BR’s Close to Campus & Downtown

Pool, On KU Bus Route, Spacious Floorplan,Patios/Decks. Great location: 837 Michigan $200 OFF First Month Rent

1203 W. 20th Ter Lawrence. Furnished, WD, DW, Fireplace, AC, WoodFloors, 2CarGarage, deck, LargeYard. Close to campus, Schools, $1550/mo (785) 979-1038 austinpaley@gmail.com

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

RENTALS Apartments Unfurnished LAUREL GLEN APTS All Electric

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

785-838-9559 EOH

Duplexes 2BR, in a 4-plex. New carpet, vinyl, cabinets, countertop. W/D is included. Equal Housing Opportunity. 785-865-2505

2 Great Auctions Saturday, Oct 10, 10 am 4795 Frisbie Rd, Shawnee, KS Vehicles, Golf Cart, Audio, Equip, Custodial items. Wed., Oct 14, 10 am 4325 Troost, KCMO LOTS of Vehicles, Trailers, Equipment, Tools. See web for more info: www.lindsayauctions.com 913.441.1557

Auction Calendar

Townhomes 3 and 4 Bedroom Townhouses and Single Family Homes Available Now $950-$1800 a month. Garber Property Management

785-842-2475

3 BR w/2 or 2.5 BA W/D hookups, Fireplace, Major Appliances. Lawn Care & Dbl Car Garage! Equal Housing Opportunity

785-865-2505

grandmanagement.net

apartments. lawrence.com

2BR, 2 bath, fireplace, CA, W/D hookups, 2 car with opener. Easy access to I-70. Includes paid cable. Pet under 20 lbs. allowed Call 785-842-2575 www.princeton-place.com FIRST MONTH FREE! 1 & 2 Bedroom Units Available Now! Cooperative townhomes start at $446-$490/mnth. Water, trash, sewer paid. Back patio, CA, hardwood floors, full bsmnt., stove, refrig., w/d hookup, garbage disposal, reserved parking. On-site management & maintenance. 24 hr. emergency maintenance. Membership & Equity fee required. 785-842-2545 (Equal Housing Opportunity) pinetreetownhouses.com

TUCKWAY APARTMENTS Tuckawayapartments.com HARPER SQUARE Harpersquareapartments.com TUCKAWAY AT BRIARWOOD

Tuckawayatbriarwood.com HUTTON FARMS Huttonfarms.com

Office Space OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE Call Garber Property Management at 785-842-2475 for more information.

Office Space Available January 15, 2016. 1119 S Park St. Lawrence. Call 785-424-0708

ESTATE AUCTION Sunday, Oct. 18, 9 am 2110 Harper Lawrence, KS Fly Wheel Engine, Hit Miss Engine & Acc., Railroad items, Truck, Trailer, Tools, Collectibles & Books, so much more! Seller: William (Bill) Pendleton ELSTON AUCTIONS (785-594-0505)(785-218-7851) www.kansasauctions.net/elston

for 75+ pictures and list! PUBLIC AUCTION Oct 10, 2015 ~ 9:30 am 693 E 1250 Rd, Lawrence, KS Cat skid loader, Dump truck, Tractors, Mowers, Trailers, Equip., lots of tools, & misc. See online for list & pics: FloryAndAssociates.com OR Jason Flory: 785-979-2183

FREE ADS for merchandise

under $100

785.832.2222

classifieds@ljworld.com

Auction Calendar

Furniture

PUBLIC AUCTION SAT., OCT. 10, 2015 @ 10 AM 1633 N 600 Rd, BALDWIN CITY REAL ESTATE SELLS AT 1 PM

Basic Trundle Bed. Asking $35. 785-393-0726

TRACTOR, PU, ATV, STOCK TRAILER, LAWN MOWER ,MACHINE & MISC, COLLECTIBLES, HOUSEHOLD. See pictures on the website EDGECOMB AUCTIONS www.kansasauctions.net/edgecomb

www.edgecombauctions.com 785-594-3507 or 785-766-6074 PUBLIC REAL ESTATE AUCTION

SAT., OCT 10, 10 AM 1633 N 600 Rd, BALDWIN CITY, KS. Nice 1924 sq ft. ranch style home on approx. 14 acres OPEN HOUSE: OCT. 1, 4:30-7 PM CONTACT LESTER at EDGECOMB AUCTIONS785-594-3507 or 785-766-6074 ART HANCOCK-BROKER913-207-4231 www.kansasauctions.net/edgecomb

Complete Bed-set —- Full sized bed-includes bookcase headboard, footboard, frame, mattress and box springs $75 785-843-5396

Sports-Fitness Equipment Gently Used 720T Merit Treadmill for sale. $100 OBO. 785-917-1702

Pets

King Mattress, Slat Frame, Dark Brown Contemporary leather headboard & footboard. No box springs- $100 (913)206-5839

Miscellaneous King Comforter, Drapes, Shams, & Sheets. Great condition. Rust, Gold, Brown Stripe $100 (913)206-5839

BLUE HEELER PUPS Males and Females out of working parents, 4 left. $25.00 Call 785-418-4524

Music-Stereo

www.edgecombauctions.com

MERCHANDISE

PIANOS • H.L. Phillips upright $650 •Baldwin Spinet - $550 • Cable Nelson or Kimball Spinet - $500 • Gulbranson Spinet - $450 Prices include tuning & delivery

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

785-832-9906

Maltese, AKC, shots, wormed, playful & friendly. 2M $425 ea. 2F $475 ea. 785-448-8440

Merchandise & Pets Special!

Computer-Camera Computer Speakers, Dell 21” Monitor, Mouse, Dell Keyboard all in excellent conduction all this for $75.00. Call 785-856-0858 anytime.

• 7 Days $19.95 • 28 Days $49.95 DOESN’T SELL IN 28 DAYS? + FREE RENEWAL!

Call 785-832-2222

Yorkie, ACA, shots, wormed, dewclaws removed, sweet and little. 1M $450. 785-448-8440

PUBLIC NOTICES TO PLACE AN AD: Kari D. Coultis, KS SC #21291 Coultis Estate & Elder Law, LLC 1999 N. Amidon, Suite 105 (First published in the Wichita, Kansas 67203 Lawrence Daily Journal- (316) 260-9650 World on September 29, Attorney for Petitioner 2015) (First published in the Lawrence Daily JournalIN THE SEVENTH World October 6, 2015) JUDICIAL DISTRICT DISTRICT COURT OF IN THE DISTRICT COURT DOUGLAS COUNTY, OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS CIVIL DIVISION KANSAS CIVIL DEPARTMENT A PETITION for NAME CHANGE OF Ocwen Loan Servicing, LLC EMILY MARIE RIECHERS,

PUBLIC NOTICES

a minor, by and through her legal parent, SHAYNA MARIE GROFF Case No. 15 CV 329 PURSUANT TO K.S.A. CHAPTER 60 NOTICE OF HEARING THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL PERSONS CONCERNED:

Plaintiff, vs. Michael W. Perkins and Jessica R. Perkins, et al. Defendants. Case No. 14CV341 Court Number:

Pursuant to K.S.A. You are notified that on Chapter 60 September 18, 2015, a Verified Petition for Change of Name was filed in this NOTICE OF SALE Court by Shayna Marie Groff to change the legal Under and by virtue of an name of Emily Marie Order of Sale issued to me Riechers, a minor child, to by the Clerk of the District Emily Marie Groff. Court of Douglas County, Kansas, the undersigned The purpose of the reSheriff of Douglas County, quested name change is Kansas, will offer for sale not to avoid any debts or at public auction and sell obligations, and it is for to the highest bidder for this reason you are being cash in hand, at the Lower notified of this hearing. Level of the Judicial and Should you have any obLaw Enforcement Center of jection to the requested the Courthouse at Lawname change, you are rerence, Douglas County, quired to file a responsive Kansas, on October 29, pleading or otherwise ob2015, at 10:00 AM, the folject to the requested name lowing real estate: change on or before NoLot 15, Northwood Estates vember 13, 2015, at 10:00 Subdivision, a replat of a.m. in the District Court of Tract A, Northwood AddiDouglas County, Kansas, at tion No. 2, an addition to which time and place the the City of Lawrence, cause will be heard. Douglas County, Kansas, Should you fail to plead, commonly known as 1625 judgment and decree will Kenwood Drive, Lawrence, be entered in due course KS 66044 (the “Property”) upon the Petition. to satisfy the judgment in the above-entitled case. SHAYNA MARIE GROFF The sale is to be made Petitioner without appraisement and

785.832.2222 subject to the redemption period as provided by law, and further subject to the approval of the Court. For more information, visit www.Southlaw.com

lowing real estate: A TRACT OF LAND LOCATED IN THE NORTHWEST QUARTER (NW 1/4) OF SECTION ONE (1), TOWNSHIP THIRTEEN (13) SOUTH, RANGE SEVENTEEN (17) Kenneth M. McGovern, EAST OF THE SIXTH PRINCISheriff Douglas County, PAL MERIDIAN, IN DOUGKansas LAS COUNTY, KANSAS, MORE PARTICULARLY DEPrepared By: SCRIBED AS FOLLOWS: SouthLaw, P.C. Kristen G. Stroehmann BEGINNING AT THE SOUTH(KS #10551) EAST CORNER OF THE 6363 College Blvd., NORTHWEST QUARTER Suite 100 (NW 1/4) OF SAID SECTION Overland Park, KS 66211 1: THENCE NORTH 89 DE(913) 663-7600 GREES, 13 MINUTES 35 SEC(913) 663-7899 (Fax) ONDS WEST ALONG THE Attorneys for Plaintiff SOUTH LINE OF THE (125545) NORTHWEST QUARTER A _______ DISTANCE OF 516.68 FEET; (First published in the THENCE NORTH 6 DEGREES, Lawrence Daily Journal- 15 MINUTES, 59 SECONDS WEST A DISTANCE OF World October 6, 2015) 282.00 FEET; THENCE NORTH 40 DEGREES 14 IN THE DISTRICT COURT MINUTES 42 SECONDS EAST OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, A DISTANCE OF 142.89 KANSAS FEET; THENCE SOUTH 89 CIVIL DEPARTMENT DEGREES 13 MINUTES 35 SECONDS EAST A DISThe Bank of New York TANCE OF 582.87 FEET TO Mellon FKA The Bank of THE EAST LINE OF THE New York, as Trustee NORTHWEST QUARTER (CWALT 2004-2CB) (NW 1/4) OF SAID SECTION Plaintiff, 1; THENCE SOUTH 00 DEGREES 18 MINUTES 47 SECvs. ONDS WEST ALONG THE EAST LINE OF THE NORTHKathy Arnold aka WEST QUARTER (NW 1/4) Kat Arnold, et al. OF SAID SECTION 1 A DISDefendants, TANCE OF 847.92 FEET TO THE POINT OF BEGINNING. Case No.14CV317 TAX ID No. Court No. 023-131-01-0-00-00-005.00-0, Commonly known as 1451 Title to Real Estate E. 150 Rd., Berryton, KS Involved 66409 (“the Property”) Pursuant to K.S.A. §60 MS158975 NOTICE OF SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that under and by virtue of an Order of Sale issued to me by the Clerk of the District Court of Douglas County, Kansas, the undersigned Sheriff of Douglas County, Kansas, will offer for sale at public auction and sell to the highest bidder for cash in hand at the South entrance of the Law Enforcement Building, Douglas County, Kansas, on October 29, 2015 at the time of 10:00 AM, the fol-

to satisfy the judgment in the above entitled case. The sale is to be made without appraisement and subject to the redemption period as provided by law, and further subject to the approval of the Court. Douglas County Sheriff MILLSAP & SINGER, LLC By: /s/ Chad R. Doornink Chad R. Doornink, #23536 cdoornink@msfirm.com Jason A. Orr, #22222 jorr@msfirm.com

classifieds@ljworld.com 8900 Indian Creek Parkway, Suite 180 Overland Park, KS 66210 (913) 339-9132 (913) 339-9045 (fax)

“Property”) to satisfy the judgment in the above-entitled case. The sale is to be made without appraisement and subject to the redemption ATTORNEYS FOR PLAINTIFF period as provided by law, and further subject to the MILLSAP & SINGER, LLC AS approval of the Court. For ATTORNEYS FOR THE BANK more information, visit OF NEW YORK MELLON FKA www.Southlaw.com THE BANK OF NEW YORK, M. McGovern, AS TRUSTEE (CWALT Kenneth 2004-2CB) IS ATTEMPTING Sheriff TO COLLECT A DEBT AND Douglas County, Kansas ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR Prepared By: SouthLaw, P.C. THAT PURPOSE. _______ Kristen G. Stroehmann (First published in the (KS #10551) Lawrence Daily Journal- 6363 College Blvd., Suite 100 World October 6, 2015) Overland Park, KS 66211 (913) 663-7600 IN THE DISTRICT COURT (913) 663-7899 (Fax) OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, Attorneys for Plaintiff KANSAS (173398) CIVIL DEPARTMENT ________ Bank of America, N.A. Plaintiff, vs. Steve Allen and Kristy Allen, et al. Defendants. Case No. 14CV439 Court Number: Pursuant to K.S.A. Chapter 60 NOTICE OF SALE Under and by virtue of an Order of Sale issued to me by the Clerk of the District Court of Douglas County, Kansas, the undersigned Sheriff of Douglas County, Kansas, will offer for sale at public auction and sell to the highest bidder for cash in hand, at the Lower Level of the Judicial and Law Enforcement Center of the Courthouse at Lawrence, Douglas County, Kansas, on October 29, 2015, at 10:00 AM, the following real estate: LOT D, TRACT 2, IN BLOCK B, IN MEADOW LEA ESTATES, AN ADDITION TO THE CITY OF LAWRENCE, DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS, commonly known as 1834 West 28th Street, Lawrence, KS 66046 (the

Kansas, will offer for sale at public auction and sell to the highest bidder for cash in hand, at the Lower Level of the Judicial and Law Enforcement Center of the Courthouse at Lawrence, Douglas County, Kansas, on October 29, 2015, at 10:00 AM, the following real estate: Lots 9 and 10, and the South 10.81 feet of Lot 8, in Block 20, in the City of Eudora, as shown by the recorded plat thereof, in Douglas County, Kansas, commonly known as 1336 Cherry Street, Eudora, KS 66025 (the “Property”) to satisfy the judgment in the above-entitled case. The sale is to be made without appraisement and subject to the redemption period as provided by law, and further subject to the approval of the Court. For information, visit (First published in the more Lawrence Daily Journal- www.Southlaw.com World October 6, 2015) Kenneth M. McGovern, Sheriff Douglas County, IN THE DISTRICT COURT Kansas OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS CIVIL DEPARTMENT Deutsche Bank National Trust Company, as Trustee for the Holders of Morgan Stanley ABS Capital I, Inc., Trust 2005-HE1, Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2005-HE1

NOTICE OF SALE Under and by virtue of an Order of Sale issued to me by the Clerk of the District Court of Douglas County, Kansas, the undersigned Sheriff of Douglas County, Kansas, will offer for sale at public auction and sell to the highest bidder for cash in hand, at the Lower Level of the Judicial and Law Enforcement Center of the Courthouse at Lawrence, Douglas County, Kansas, on October 29, 2015, at 10:00 AM, the following real estate: Lot 17, Block 4, in WAKARUSA VIEW ESTATES NO. 2, a subdivision in the City of LawCounty, rence, Douglas Kansas, commonly known as 2713 Blue Stem Drive, Lawrence, KS 66047 (the “Property”) to satisfy the judgment in the above-entitled case. The sale is to be made without appraisement and subject to the redemption period as provided by law, and further subject to the approval of the Court. For more information, visit www.Southlaw.com Kenneth M. McGovern, Sheriff Douglas County, Kansas

Prepared By: (First published in the SouthLaw, P.C. Lawrence Daily Journal- Kristen G. Stroehmann (KS #10551) World October 6, 2015) 6363 College Blvd., Suite 100 IN THE DISTRICT COURT Overland Park, KS 66211 OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, (913) 663-7600 KANSAS (913) 663-7899 (Fax) CIVIL DEPARTMENT Attorneys for Plaintiff (154426) Bank of America, N.A. ________ Plaintiff,

Plaintiff, vs. Alice E. Mundy and Terry J. Mundy, et al. Defendants. Case No. 15CV111 Court Number: 1 Pursuant to K.S.A. Chapter 60

vs.

NOTICE OF SALE

Unknown Heirs of Leon Garcia, Jr., deceased, et al.

Under and by virtue of an Order of Sale issued to me by the Clerk of the District Court of Douglas County, Kansas, the undersigned Sheriff of Douglas County,

• paws • claws • fins • feathers • scales • tails • shells • fur • paws • claws • fins • feathers • scales • tails • shells • fur • paws • claws • fins • feathers • scales • tails • shells • fur •

Prepared By: SouthLaw, P.C. Brian R. Hazel (KS #21804) 6363 College Blvd., Suite 100 Overland Park, KS 66211 (913) 663-7600 (913) 663-7899 (Fax) Attorneys for Plaintiff (61054) _______

Chapter 60

Defendants. Case No. 15CV180 Court Number:

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

Pursuant to K.S.A.

Calling all Pet Parents!

Love your furry, feathery, scaley little side-kick? We know you do!! Here is your chance to share with the world how lovable your little buddy is! just

$20

Submit a photo of your pet pal to be printed in a special section of the Journal-World on Wednesday, October 21. A portion of the proceeds will be donated to the Lawrence Humane Society.

paws • claws • fins • feathers • scales • tails • shells • fur • paws • claws • fins • feathers

CLASSIFIEDS

Email a photo of your pet to submissions@ ljworld.com along with your name and telephone number to be included.

Call 785-832-2222


L awrence J ournal -W orld

Tuesday, October 6, 2015

YANKEES-ASTROS AT A GLANCE A look at the American League wild-card game between the Houston Astros and New York Yankees: Schedule: 7:08 p.m. today, at New York (ESPN). Season Series: Astros won 4-3.

Playoffs await K.C., new ’pen

Kansas City, Mo. (ap) — By the time the Kansas City Royals had run Projected Lineups roughshod through the Astros: 2B Jose Altuve American League play(.313, 15, 66, 40 2Bs, 38 offs last year, everyone SBs, 200 hits), RF George in baseball knew exactly Springer (.276, 16, 41, 16 what H-D-H meant. SBs), SS Carlos Correa Herrera, Davis, Hol(.279, 22, 68, 22 2Bs), DH land. The big three reEvan Gattis (.246, 27, 88, lievers at the back of their 11 3Bs), LF Colby Rasmus bullpen. (.238, 25, 61, 23 2Bs), CF With the dominance Carlos Gomez (.255, 12 of Kelvin Herrera in the HRs, 56 RBIs, 29 2Bs, 17 seventh inning, Wade SBs with Brewers and Davis in the eighth and Astros) or Jake Marisnick Greg Holland closing out, Kathy Willens/AP Photo the (.236, 9, 36, 24 SBs), 3B Royals effectively Jed Lowrie (.222, 9, 30), 1B YANKEES DESIGNATED HITTER ALEX RODRIGUEZ SWINGS A WEIGHTED BAT Monday at turned every game into a Chris Carter (.199, 24, 64), Yankee Stadium. The Yankees will meet Houston in the AL Wild Card game tonight. six-inning sprint. If they C Jason Castro (.211, 11, 31). had the lead by then, they len bases, led by Altuve’s Yankees: LH Andrew Yankees: CF Jacoby were almost assured of Japanese star, scoring six Miller (3-2, 2.04, 36/38, Ellsbury(.257, 7, 33, 21 having it at the final out, runs in five innings of a 9-6 38, which also led the AL. Marisnick, who often SBs), LF Chris Young (.252, 100 Ks in 61 2-3 innings), and that was a big realoss at Minute Maid Park. comes in as a pinch runner son why they advanced RH Dellin Betances (6-4, 14, 42, .327 avg. against Carter, Correa and Altuve 1.50, 9/13, 131 Ks in 84 lefties), RF Carlos Beltran to Game 7 of the World all homered in the game. ... when not in the starting innings), RH Andrew (.276, 19, 67), DH Alex Series. The Yankees were 9-for-48 lineup, is second on the Bailey (0-1, 8.31, 10 games; (.188) with one extra base team with 24. But someRodriguez (.250, 33, 86, “We just knew,” first times their approach on 83 runs, .356 OBP), C Brian missed all last season baseman Eric Hosmer hit — a double — against McCann (.232, 26, 94), 3B after shoulder surgery); LH Keuchel this year. ... Young the basepaths doesn’t pay said, “that the game was off. Altuve also leads the Chasen Shreve (6-2, 3.09), should push All-Star Brett Chase Headley (.259, 11, over.” AL by being caught steal62, 23 errors), 1B Greg Bird LP Justin Wilson (5-0, There’s only one “H’’ Gardner to the bench ing 13 times and Marisnick in the bullpen these 3.10, 74 games), RP Adam because he is 6 for 20 (.261, 11, 31 in 157 ABs), is tied for third with nine. Warren (7-7, 3.29, 43 apSS Didi Gregorius (.265, days, now that Hol(.300) with two doubles n Top of the order. pearances — 17 starts), RH and a triple off Keuchel. ... 9, 56), 2B Rob Refsnyder land required Tommy During the first half of the Luis Severino (5-3, 2.89, 11 Young batted .327 (50 for (.302, 2, 5 in 43 at-bats). John surgery. But as the season Ellsbury, Gardner starts). Royals prepare to play 153) with a .397 on-base Starting Pitchers and A-Rod carried the ofthe Yankees or Astros percentage against lefties Astros: LH Dallas Matchups in the divisional round this season, boosted by an fense, along with Teixeira, The Astros won two of Keuchel (20-8, 2.48 ERA, on Thursday, their reearly tear. ... Switch-hitting who is out for the season. three in New York, includ216 Ks). Gardner made the All-Star vamped bullpen still may Beltran, a former Astros ing a 15-1 rout on Aug. 25. Yankees: RH Masahiro team and Rodriguez was be deeper and more dypostseason star, is 4 for ... Keuchel got two wins Tanaka (12-7, 3.51, 139 one of the biggest stories namic than a year ago. 9 (.444) with a homer vs. over the Yankees this Ks in 154 innings, 25 HRs in baseball. But Ellsbury has Ryan Madson has been Keuchel. ... The Yankees season and didn’t allow allowed). slumped to a .220 average a revelation after spendwere 7-5 with a .253 batting average with 14 hom- with five homers and 23 a run in either game. The ing time away from baseRelievers first one was a six-hitter on ers and 45 RBIs against RBIs since the July break. ball. Danny Duffy’s move Astros: RH Luke Grestarting pitchers they were Gardner has been even June 25. He allowed three from the rotation to the gerson (7-3, 3.10, 31/36 facing for a third time this hits in seven scoreless worse, hitting .206 with relief corps gives Kansas saves), RH Chad Qualls (3- innings in the 15-1 victory. season, STATS said. They six homers and 24 RBIs. City a power lefty. And 4, 4.04, 4 saves), LH Tony He struck out 21 combined will be facing Keuchel for The 40-year-old Rodriguez Luke Hochevar’s return Sipp (3-4, 1.99, 62 Ks in 54 in those two starts. ... The a third time. New York hit slugged his way into the No. from his own Tommy 1-3 innings), RH Will Harris Astros hit eight hom.251 overall this season. 3 spot in the order. HowJohn surgery means an(5-5, 1.90, 2 saves), LH ers against the Yankees ever, he’s only connected other capable arm in the Watch For Oliver Perez (2-4, 4.28 with this season, led by three once in his last 18 games middle innings. n Aggressive baseArizona and Houston) RH from Gattis. ... Houston and has hit .186 with nine Whereas the Royals’ running. The Astros Vince Velasquez (1-1, 4.37), teed off on Tanaka in its homers since Aug. 7, when relievers went 28-18 with topped the AL with 121 sto- his swoon began. RH Josh Fields (4-1, 3.55). one matchup against the a 3.30 ERA last season,

10th-best in all of baseball, they are 30-14 with a 2.72 ERA this season. That was second-only to Pittsburgh. “The key for us being able to do this, really, is the year Ryan Madson’s had and Danny Duffy and his development in the ‘pen,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. “So it just gives us another two strong guys that we didn’t have last year down there.” Veteran Jason Frasor and rookie Brandon Finnegan pitched well in the playoffs last year, but Hochevar, Duffy and Franklin Morales are widely considered upgrades. Madson has moved into the seventh-inning role, while Herrera has been handling the eighth and Davis the ninth. So instead of the catchy HD-H, get ready to hear about M-H-D this year. “Not having Greg is big,” Davis said. “He’s a great guy to have around in general.” With a starting rotation that gobbled up innings last year, the Royals only needed 464 out of their bullpen. That number climbed to nearly 540 innings this season, fifthmost in baseball. The Royals should be well-rested, though. They clinched their first division pennant since 1985 with two weeks left in the season and managed to rest many of their key pieces down the stretch. They nearly squandered home-field advantage throughout the playoffs by doing it, but locked that down with a win Sunday.

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