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Sunday • October 9 • 2016
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Decontaminating former gun range will cost city thousands By Rochelle Valverde rvalverde@ljworld.com
There is a room in the Lawrence Community Building that is closed off to the public — not even a ventilation system runs between it and the
Lead levels in Community Building room well in excess of federal guidelines rest of the structure. Before the door is ever opened, a level of cleanup akin to that for asbestos and methamphetamine labs is needed.
“The door is locked and nobody’s going in until we get it cleaned, so I think we’re safe and should be doing what we’re supposed to be doing,”
said Ernie Shaw, interim direc- housed a gun range that has left tor of the Lawrence Parks and behind high levels of lead conRecreation Department. tamination. For decades, the approxi> RANGE, 5A mately 1,400-square-foot space
TRIAL BY
FIRE
Civilians get hands-on first responder training By Rochelle Valverde rvalverde@ljworld.com
Jade Darling/Contributed Photos
CITY COMMISSIONER STUART BOLEY, LAWRENCE-DOUGLAS COUNTY FIRE MEDICAL FIREFIGHTER SEAMUS ALBRITTON, Douglas County Commission candidate Michelle Derusseau and Lawrence City Manager Tom Markus participate in the Fire Ops 101 training on Oct. 1. See a video from the training session at ljworld.com/firefightertraining2016.
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here’s a specific reason I left the firefighter training last weekend with the song “Girls Just Want to Have Fun” stuck in my head. News to me, I can get a little claustrophobic, at least when it comes to putting a plastic mask over my face, suctioned tight with a rubber seal. Basically, they are like
goggles, but extending from hairline to chin. What began as a somewhat pleasant Darth Vader inhale-exhale as oxygen was pulled from the canister on my back did not last long. Once I was crawling around in a dark room (that we were only pretending was on fire) and looking for a dummy to save, it lost its easy pace. The 15 people participating
in the firefighter training, Fire Ops 101, were broken into four teams, each led by a firefighter. The training was organized by the Lawrence Professional Firefighters, the local firefighters union, and was meant to show city and county leaders what the duty of firefighters and first responders is like. On my team were City Commissioner Matthew Herbert and Eudora
City Manager Barack Matite. Once the dummy rescue was underway, the firefighter accompanying my team, Ben Dennis, must have noticed my breathing, too. He said to keep his breathing steady with the oxygen mask on, it helped him to hum a song. He suggested a string of artists, but only Cyndi Lauper stood out to me. And so it was. I would try to hum
one of her songs, and try to have fun busting my knees to save this dummy. It didn’t really work the first try, but within a couple minutes we pulled the dummy out, its reflective firefighter jacket askew, showing off its plastic midriff, and its pants coming down, but intact nonetheless. Rescued.
> TRAINING, 6A
LEFT: LAWRENCE-DOUGLAS COUNTY FIRE MEDICAL FIREFIGHTER JASON RAY monitors a fire being used as part of the Fire Ops 101 training. CENTER: Lawrence-Douglas County Fire Medical firefighter Jen Persons gives direction to Douglas County Administrator Craig Weinaug. RIGHT: City Commissioner Matthew Herbert uses a vehicle extraction tool.
Brownback standing by Trump despite obscene comments presidential candidate Donald Trump made in Tape fallout roils a 2005 taped conversaTrump camp. 1B tion, but he is not withdrawing his support. “The passage of time does not change the unacceptable language a statement emailed his statements reused by Donald Trump,” to reporters. “While main demeaning, Brownback said in he has apologized, inappropriate and
By Peter Hancock phancock@ljworld.com
Republican Gov. Sam Brownback issued a statement Saturday condemning vulgar remarks about women that GOP
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unacceptable.” Nevertheless, Brownback’s press secretary Eileen Hawley said in a follow-up email that Brownback has not withdrawn his support for Trump.
> TRUMP, 2A
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LAWRENCE • STATE
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L awrence J ournal -W orld
WSU to convert old facility to makerspace
DEATHS
Wichita (ap) — Wichita State University plans to renovate the second-oldest building on campus to include an arts-themed makerspace that will provide tools and space for entrepreneurs and innovators from the school and the wider Wichita area. The $8 million renovation of the roughly 40,000-square-foot Henrion Hall, which is used by the School of Art, Design and Creative Industries, is part of a $250 million “Shock the World” campaign that university president John Bardo announced Wednesday. The Wichita State University Foundation will raise $3.2 million from the private sector for the project to pay for the areas available in the makerspace, such as the audio studio, video production lab and pottery wheels, The Wichita Eagle reported. The university will provide the rest of the $8 million and will address the building’s infrastructure, update the plumbing and wiring and make the building compliant with the Americans with Disabilities Act. People who pay to be members of the makerspace will get access to tools such as an audio studio, power tools, a 3-D printer, video production and multimedia labs, pottery wheels, and labs for metalworking, woodworking, ceramics and printmaking. “It gives you a place where you can go, you can tinker, you can ask questions, you can get support,” said Rodney Miller, dean of Wichita State’s College of Fine Arts.
RITA ANN LEONARD 58, of Perry, died 10/07/2016 at her home. Mass of Christian burial is 10AM Wed at St. Theresa's Catholic Church in Perry, www.barnettfamilyfh.com for full obit.
ROADWORK Lawrence: l A block party will close the 2200 block of Vermont Street from 5 to 7 p.m. today. l The westbound lane of 19th Street is closed between Haskell Avenue and Maple Lane from 7 a.m.-6 p.m. to replace a water main. The lane will be reopened during evening hours and weekends. l Northbound and southbound East 1900 Road south of the K-10 intersection will be fully closed for roadway shoulder embankment repair work through the end of the month. A marked detour will be provided. Traffic will detour via East 2200 Road to North 1000 Road to access East 1900 Road.
DALE TREMAIN Dale died on October 6, 2016, surrounded by his family and friends during his last days. A Celebration of Life will be held in the Twin Cities at a date to be determined,
with a service in Lawrence, KS, in the near future. Full notice to follow. Please sign this guestbook at Obituaries. LJWorld.com.
PROFESSOR GEORGE J. WORTH George J. Worth, 87, Lawrence, passed away on Oct. 7, 2016. His services are pending and will be announced at a later date by RumseyYost Funeral Home. rumseyyost.com
Trump CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A
Trump’s 2005 comments were recorded on video as he was preparing to do a guest appearance on a daytime soap opera while simultaneously being interviewed by the TV show “Access Hollywood.” The video was obtained by the Washington Post and published on its website Friday.
Every life is worth celebrating
In the conversation, Trump uses vulgar and sometimes obscene language as he boasts of having made advances on a married woman and says, “when you’re a star you can do anything,” including grabbing women inappropriately. Brownback initially endorsed Florida Sen. Marco Rubio in the GOP primaries, but threw his support behind Trump after the New York billionaire won the nomination. He has since served as an adviser
to the Trump campaign on Catholic issues. Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach was an early supporter of Trump’s and has served as a surrogate on the campaign trail to talk on national news programs about immigration issues. Kobach was not immediately available Saturday to comment on the uproar over Trump’s remarks.
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CALL US Let us know if you have a story idea. Email news@ljworld.com or contact one of the following: Arts and entertainment: .................832-6353 City government: ..............................832-6314 County government: .......................832-7166 Courts and crime: ..............................832-7284 Datebook: .............................................832-7112 Lawrence schools: ..........................832-6388 Letters to the editor: .....................832-6362 Local news: .........................................832-7154 Obituaries: ...........................................832-7151 Photo reprints: ..................................832-6353 Society: .................................................832-7151 Sports: ..................................................832-7147 University of Kansas: .........................832-7187 SUBSCRIPTIONS: 832-7199 Didn’t receive your paper? For billing, vacation or delivery questions, call 832-7199. Weekday: 6 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Weekends: 6 a.m.-10 a.m. In-town redelivery: 6 a.m.-10 a.m. Published daily by Ogden Newspapers of Kansas LLC at 645 New Hampshire Street, Lawrence, KS 66044-0122. Telephone: 843-1000; or toll-free (800) 578-8748.
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LOTTERY SATURDAY’S POWERBALL 3 54 61 64 68 (9) FRIDAY’S MEGA MILLIONS 24 37 42 50 65 (14) SATURDAY’S HOT LOTTO SIZZLER 18 26 30 32 44 (13) SATURDAY’S SUPER KANSAS CASH 5 8 13 15 22 (10) SATURDAY’S KANSAS 2BY2 Red: 15 20; White: 11 12 SATURDAY’S KANSAS PICK 3 (MIDDAY) 7 4 8 SATURDAY’S KANSAS PICK 3 (EVENING) 3 8 1
BIRTHS Fei Wu and Anpeng He, Lawrence, a boy, Saturday. Erin Grant, Lawrence, a boy, Thursday.
CORRECTIONS
The Journal-World’s policy is to correct all significant errors that are brought to the editors’ attention, usually in this space. If you believe we — Statehouse reporter Peter Hancock have made such an error, can be reached at 354-4222. Follow call 785-832-7154, or email him on Twitter: @LJWpqhancock news@ljworld.com.
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Sunday, October 9, 2016
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Westar looks to emissions-free energy sources Associated Press
Contributed Photo
FRIENDS WILL HONOR GIL PHILIPS AT AN EVENT WEDNESDAY at the Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. Philips, who died Sept. 24, was the longtime manager of African Adorned and a fixture of the downtown Lawrence scene.
Topeka — After years of adding wind power to its generating resources, Westar Energy will get half the power it sells from zero-emission sources by next year, a company official said. Westar is on track to get 33 percent of its power from wind and 17 percent from the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant near Burlington, said company vice president Jeff Beasley. With just short of 700,000 customers,
Westar is the dominant electric company in Kansas, according to The Wichita Eagle. Last week, shareholders approved the sale of Westar to Great Plains Energy, the parent company of Kansas City Power & Light. If regulators approve the sale and the merger takes place next year, the combined company will get about 45 percent of its power from zero-emission sources, Great Plains CEO Terry Bassham said in a statement.
> WESTAR, 4A
Friends recall downtown personality School board to vote By Elvyn Jones ejones@ljworld.com
When friends gather Wednesday to remember Gil Philips, they will celebrate the life of a man of the world who found little reason to leave downtown Lawrence. Philips died Sept. 24 from complications from a stroke. There will be a celebration of his life from 7:30 to 9 p.m. Wednesday at the Lawrence Public Library Auditorium. Elizabeth Kurata, who hired Philips 28 years ago to manage her African Adorned, said Philips was a perfect employee
‘‘
(Gil Philips) had an encyclopedic knowledge of cultures and religions. That is what customers loved about him.”
— Elizabeth Kurata, who hired Gil Philips 28 years ago to manage African Adorned
for the store that sells imported jewelry and artifacts. His knowledge of the world was reflected in his ability to speak French, German, Russian, Urdu and Amharic, which he learned while stationed in Ethiopia while in the Army. “He was extremely knowledgeable,” Kurata said. “He had an encyclopedic knowledge of
cultures and religions. That is what customers loved about him. I bought items from all over the world — India, Tibet, Africa, South America. He could tell customers about the cultures the items came from.” Kurata and her daughter, Alia Sachedina, who now owns the shop at 5 E. Seventh St., renamed Adorned Boutique, said
Philips was the face of the store. He managed the store while Kurata traveled extensively to buy merchandise, and then again when Sachedina took time away to be with her young family. “Most people thought he owned the store,” Kurata said. There was another thing that made Philips a natural for the position, Kurata and Sachedina said. “He loved downtown Lawrence,” Sachedina said. “He very seldom left downtown. He didn’t own a car.”
on annual goals list
By Joanna Hlavacek jhlavacek@ljworld.com
The Lawrence school board will vote Monday to approve its yearly goals, a list that first debuted at a special goalsetting session nearly two months ago. The roster, which has since undergone a handful of revisions, calls for investigations into topics such as school food services’ disposable containers and multi-section trays, as well as more
concrete actions to implement initiatives such as suicide-prevention training for all staff. Developed over two work sessions in August and September, the district-drafted document includes five broad areas of improvement, under which there are several “action steps,” i.e. specific measures the district plans to take in order to reach each goal.
> BOARD, 4A
> PHILIPS, 6A
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Stay healthy. Stay close.
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As with last year’s goals, the school board’s priorities include a heavy emphasis on the use of technology in classrooms. This fall saw the much-anticipated rollout of the district’s 1:1 device program, which is currently being piloted (with the district’s recently purchased 5,000 iPads and 500 laptops) in select classes at Free State High School and Lawrence High School. Middle school students are also being issued iPads this year as part of the program. Proposed plans to measure its success include school visits, focus groups comprising students and staff, data collection from third-party partners and regular reports to the school board. Here’s a brief outline of this year’s goals: l “Develop and align district expectations for curriculum, instruction,
Westar CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A
“We will have one of the largest wind generation portfolios in the United States,” Bassham said. “This helps us maintain reliable, low cost energy for all of the residential and business customers we serve.” In a news conference, Gov. Sam Brownback praised what he called the “amazing growth of wind energy in this state.” It began in earnest in 2007 when then-Gov. Kathleen Sebelius set the goal of Kansas getting 10 percent of its energy from wind by 2010 and 20
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LAWRENCE • STATE
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and assessment to raise the achievement of all students.” Steps included in this goal include the aforementioned implementation of the 1:1 program as well as efforts to ensure “equitable access” to WiFi (the district received a $39,000 grant earlier this fall from the Lawrence Schools Foundation for the purchase of 200 portable hot spot devices) and the alignment of core curriculum and resources with state college-and-career-readiness standards. l “Enhance programming and supports to meet the varied academic, social, emotional, and behavioral needs of each student.” Among the district’s steps in this area: implementation and institutionalization of the district’s three-tired Ci3T discipline system in all schools, plus the creation of a plan and timeline for implementing various LGBTQ support services that includes a district advisory and leadership team.
l “Create a personalized professional learning plan to support students and staff.” The biggest step here might be the district’s ongoing equity work, which includes the expansion of Beyond Diversity training for all certified and classified staff as well as non-employee groups such as site councils and school resource officers. l “Expand communication and community connections through increased engagement.” Among other things, the school board plans to examine survey data collected over the last year and develop a strategy to improve workplace climate and culture for its staff, continually seeking feedback from employees, students, parents and community partners. l “Allocate capital and human resources to deliver quality educational programs and services in adaptable, high-performance facilities.” Steps here primarily deal with resource allocation and facilities planning.
Among the proposed actions are the creation of a plan to eliminate deficit spending and balance the district budget, the completion of the remaining construction projects from the district’s 2013 bond issue and the beginning stages of the implementation of transition plan for the district’s new facilities and operations building at 711 E. 23rd Street. In other business, the board will: l Hear a report from Anna Stubblefield, the district’s assistant superintendent of educational support, on district efforts to recruit, hire and retain more staff of color. l Hear a report from Kirsten Wondra, the district’s assistant director of curriculum, instruction and assessment, on the evolution of professional learning for teachers. The school board will meet at 7 p.m. Monday at the district offices, 110 McDonald Drive.
percent by 2020. Wind expansion continued through the Mark Parkinson and Brownback administrations and has already exceeded Sebelius’ original goal. Overall, Brownback said, the state is now getting about 30 percent of its energy from wind and he hopes to get that up to 50 percent by the time he leaves office in early 2019. While nuclear power is not usually considered a “renewable” energy source like wind and solar, it doesn’t give off carbon emissions and is immune to federal regulations aimed at reducing carbon dioxide gas, a byproduct of burning fossil fuels that scientists say is responsible for harmful
global climate change. Beasley participated in an energy round-table discussion hosted in Wichita by Kansas Sen. Jerry Moran to hear from oil, gas and utility interests. At that event, Beasley said the company has spent heavily to ensure that its coal- and gas-fired power plants meet federal emissions standards, but the company doesn’t get enough credit from federal regulators for that and all the wind energy it’s added to the mix. He told Moran and Sen. John Barrasso, R-Wyoming, who also participated in the event, that the problem is that air-quality standards are constantly shifting and are inconsistent from state to state.
Complaints about regulations got a sympathetic ear from Barrasso, who hails from an energy-producing state where he said the motto is “oil and gas is our bread and butter.” While wind and solar have made strides, there continues to be “a huge gap between renewable and reliable energy,” he said. Barrasso, the secondranking Republican on the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee, said President Barack Obama is “putting us at a unilateral disadvantage” against countries like China and India that get their energy from burning fuel. “We’re a world energy power and we have to start acting like it,” he said.
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— K-12 education reporter Joanna Hlavacek can be reached at 832-6388. Follow her on Twitter: @HlavacekJoanna
Stand By Me An Event to Benefit
Kansas Advocates for Better Care Please join us in honoring
Kathy Greenlee 2016 KABC Caring Award Sunday, October 23, 2 - 5 pm Maceli’s
1031 New Hampshire, Lawrence KS Live & Silent Auctions
Music
Food
Beverage
RSVP required by October 14 Call: 785-842-3088 or email: info@kabc.org Visit Kansas Advocates for Better Care on Facebook for details & auction preview
Thank you to our major sponsors
Champions - Stevens & Brand LLP William Dann
Protector - Center for Practical Bioethics Guardians - Betty Bowen, Chuck & Linda Carlsen, Earl Nehring Patrons - Barbara & Mick Braa, Barbara J. Sabol Janet Buttery & Alan Williger, Miles Schnaer/Crown Auto Advocates - AgeWise Advocacy & Consulting, Andy & Peggy Beal
Jo Bryant, Dee Bisel/Minuteman Press, Ken & Norma Buchwach Bob & Evie Curtis, Central Bank of the Midwest, Lee Ketzel Margaret Farley, Mitzi McFatrich, Century Business Technologies George & Mary Edwards, Phil & Clara Hemphill, Emily Hill & Burke Briggs Graham Kreicker, Cathy Reinhardt, Emily Russell The Fabulous Torque’s, The Trust Company, Facebook Friends
FOR THOSE WHO HAVE MADE THE ULTIMATE SACRIFICE FOR THE LOVE OF THEIR COMMUNITY.
Lawrence-Douglas County Fire Medical Department and the City of Lawrence remember all fire and emergency personnel who have made the ultimate sacrifice in service to their community and pay respect to the survivors of our fallen heroes. IN MEMORY OF: George Robson - November 4, 1936 Mark Blair - July 17, 1986 Robert Smith - March 20, 2011
L awrence J ournal -W orld
Range CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A
LAWRENCE micrograms per square foot. One of the reasons units for lead tests are so small is because even low levels of lead are toxic if ingested. Lead is especially harmful for infants and children, and even low levels of lead in blood have been shown to affect IQ, ability to pay attention and academic achievement, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The effects of lead exposure cannot be corrected. However, when the building was renovated — updates that included the installation of a central heating and cooling system — the shooting range was not included. For that reason, Shaw said it kept the contamination mostly localized. “It’s not connected to any ventilation systems or heating systems or anything like that — it just stands alone,” Shaw said. “So the recommendation was to shut it off, and before you start using it again it basically needs to be cleaned, probably professionally, since it has fairly high lead levels in it.”
As patrons fired their weapons over the years, bits of lead from those bullets built up. A test found that the presence of lead in some areas was 17,000 times greater than what is considered safe by the U.S. Department of Housing & Urban Development, according to a report provided to the Journal-World by the Parks and Recreation Department. The Community Building was constructed in 1940, and was originally designed to be an armory. Shaw said that, as far as he knew, the space in the basement had always been a shooting range. The Douglas County Rifle & Pistol Club leased the space from the city and operated the gun range. In February, the club was ordered to cease operations after city leaders realized its location violated the federal Gun Free School Zones Act, enacted in 1990. Since then, the primarily concrete room in the basement of the Community Building, 115 W. 11th St., Lead hazard in public areas has been locked up. The lowest result — Testing for lead conwhich was still 10 times tamination the limit — came from As the owner of the the one public area in the building, the city subse- building that tested above quently tested the area the hazard level. The for lead contamination. stairway to the basement The results of those tests where the gun range was showed that each of the located was found to have four samples taken from about 400 micrograms the room — and one from of lead per square foot, the public stairway lead- which is about 10 times ing down to it — had ex- the limit of 40 microcessive levels of lead con- grams of lead per square foot. tamination. Shaw hypothesized HUD guidelines state that lead levels above 40 that most of that contammicrograms per square ination could have hapfoot are hazardous, and pened after those with the five wipe samples the club were told to vataken from the floor cate the space, and subwithin and right outside sequently used the stairs the room ranged from when taking their equipabout 400 to 681,000 ment out of the building.
However, Shaw said that a similar level of lead was likely to have regularly left the room while the range was in operation. “When they’re shooting and down there and they’re coming and going, there has probably been for 40 years people tracking a little lead out into the hallways and stuff,” Shaw said. “There’s no doubt that that has been happening with that (level of) concentration.” After the Parks and Recreation Department received the results of the lead test, officials were advised to do another test on the rest of the building, Shaw said. The results of that test came back this week and showed that samples taken from 11 areas throughout the building — including the community room, elevator, art room and gym — are all below the HUD hazard levels. All areas resulted in less than 10 micrograms per square foot. “Unless it’s tracked out or actually gets in an air ventilation system, it usually doesn’t go very far,” Shaw said.
Cleanup The Parks and Recreation Department is currently accepting bids for decontamination services to clean the room, and Shaw said he expects it to cost thousands of dollars. He noted that all porous surfaces, including a sand pit and foam padding, will also need to be removed. Tests of the sand found it to contain as much as 310,000 micrograms per square foot. The HUD limit for soil or sand samples is 400 parts per million. Shaw said that Community Building staff were never in charge of cleaning the room. And Shaw, whose office was in the building for several years, wasn’t sure what level of cleaning was done by the club, but that he understood that some
The Dole Institute of Politics presents
A Tribute to Veterans USO-Style
Sunday, October 9, 2016
| 5A
who frequented the range monitored the lead levels in their blood. The number previously listed for the gun range is no longer in service. Titan Environmental Services conducted the testing. The company’s website focuses on testing and removal of leadbased paint, as well toxins such as asbestos and radon and those found in meth labs. Kyle Gunion, a project manager for TES, said that although a firing range isn’t a contamination area they commonly work with, it was expected that some level of lead contamination would be present. Gunion said that once the space is decontaminated, they will retest to ensure it is safe. “It’ll be cleaned to where either the contaminants discovered are below an acceptable threshold or cleaned up entirely,” Gunion said. “We’ll know more when the clearance testing is done.” Money to decontaminate the room wasn’t a budgeted expense, but Shaw said it will have to be accounted for this year. “When things like this happen that you don’t plan for, you figure out what isn’t going to get done in order to do that this year,” Shaw said. “So that’s what we’ll have to do, depending on what the bid comes in at.” Shaw said once the room is decontaminated, the Parks and Recreation Department plans to use the space, perhaps for an archery range, golf range or spin room for stationary bikes. But until test results confirm is has been decontaminated, the basement room is remaining sealed. “We’ll see, once we get it cleaned up, what we want to use it for,” Shaw said. — City Hall reporter Rochelle Valverde can be reached at 832-6314. Follow her on Twitter: @RochelleVerde
40
• 785-842-3159
Celebrating
years of service
across Douglas County
During our 2 nd decade… Expanded services to include adults with physical disabilities and older adults so they can stay independent and in their homes! Known at that time as Trinity Community Services. 40 years strong, thanks to YOUR support!
www.tihc.org
ELECTRONIC RECYCLING EVENT — Rain or Shine — The City of Lawrence invites residents & small businesses to recycle unused or obsolete electronic equipment. A $10 recycling fee applies per CRT computer monitor, $20 recycling fee applies per CRT television 26 inches and under, and a $40 fee per CRT television 27 inches and over. All rear projection and console televisions will be $50. Cash or check only. No charge for other electronics. Items Accepted: Computers, Printers, Copiers, Scanners, Fax Machines, Hand Held Devices, Televisions & Small Appliances (Microwaves).
SATURDAY OCT. 15, 2016
9:00AM TO 1:00PM KU Park & Ride East Parking Lot (Clinton Pkwy & Crestline Dr)
PUBLIC WORKS
For further information call 832-3030 or visit www.LawrenceRecycles.org
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Date: Sunday, Nov. 13, 2016 Time: 6 p.m. - Salute to Veterans 6:30-8:30 p.m. - Music and Dancing RSVP DEADLINE: Friday, Nov. 4 Call (785) 864-4900 Email doleinstitute@ku.edu A Salute to Veterans from KU ROTC and An Evening with the Moonlight Serenade Orchestra for your listening and dancing pleasure
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Come honor our Veterans and their families. Enjoy WWII-era music, light hors d’oeuvres and beverages Admission is free - Space is limited
Reservations are required. UPCOMING at the Dole Institute DIRECTOR’S SERIES: NICK SAMBALUK KU graduate and Purdue University professor Nick Sambaluk returns to discuss the early U.S. space program and its influence on - and from - the Cold War. Thursday, Oct. 13 - 3 p.m.
DoleInstitute.org | 2350 Petefish Dr., Lawrence, KS
Call 800.209.BANK (2265), visit a local branch, or go to usbank.com/dreambig *1.50% Introductory Annual Percentage Rate (APR) is available on Home Equity Lines of Credit with an 80% loan-to-value (LTV) or less. The Introductory Interest Rate will be fixed at 1.50% during the 6-month Introductory Period. A higher introductory rate will apply for an LTV above 80%. Offer is available for new applications submitted from September 11 – November 11, 2016. After the 6-month introductory period: the APR is variable and is based upon an index plus a margin. The APR will vary with Prime Rate (the index) as published in the Wall Street Journal. As of September 11, 2016, the variable rate for Home Equity Lines of Credit ranged from 2.62% APR to 7.20% APR. Higher rates may apply due to an increase in the Prime Rate, a credit limit below $100,000, an LTV above 70%, and/or a credit score less than 730. A U.S. Bank Consumer Silver, Gold, or Platinum Checking Package account is required to receive the lowest rate, but is not required for loan approval. The rate will not vary above 18% APR, or applicable state law, or below 2.12% APR – 2.55% APR, depending on market. Choosing an interest-only repayment may cause your monthly payment to increase, possibly substantially, once your credit line transitions into the repayment period. Repayment options may vary based on credit qualifications. Interest only repayment may be unavailable. Loans are subject to credit approval and program guidelines. Not all loan programs are available in all states for all loan amounts. Interest rates and program terms are subject to change without notice. Property insurance is required. U.S. Bank and its representatives do not provide tax or legal advice. Your tax and financial situation is unique. You should consult your tax and/ or legal advisor for advice and information concerning your particular situation. Other restrictions may apply. Mortgage and Home Equity products offered by U.S. Bank National Association. Deposit Products are offered through U.S. Bank National Association. Customer pays no closing costs, except escrow-related funding costs. An annual fee of up to $90 may apply after the first year and is waived with a U.S. Bank personal Platinum Checking Package. The Consumer Pricing Information brochure lists terms and conditions that apply to U.S. Bank Consumer Checking Package accounts and can be obtained by calling 800.872.2657. Member FDIC. ©2016 U.S. Bank. 160494 8/16 “World’s Most Ethical Companies” and “Ethisphere” names and marks are registered trademarks of Ethisphere LLC.
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Training
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a passerby, the tower can look like an odd feature of the nearby park at the corner of 19th Street CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A and Haskell Avenue. But on closer inspection, its In reality, the space door and window frames was just a blacked-out are blackened with soot. shop in the Haskell The tower is part of the Square strip mall. You Lawrence-Douglas Counmay have known the ty Fire Medical training space as the former center, 1941 Haskell Ave. home of Miracle Video. The real fire — with But instead of customers, real smoke — would the next few hours would be the test of whether see me and the other a song could help me trainees crawling around breathe a little easier the room with our left with the mask on. hands to the wall as we My teammates and I searched for the dummy. went in crouched, then They called this a “left got to our knees as we hand search”, which was opened the door to one of many firefighter the room with the fire. terms that were thrown The firefighter suits around, but maybe the are bulky, and moving only one I’ll remember. around made me feel It’s probably lucky like an astronaut, though I had that experience without the benefit of before my team met the weightlessness. real fire. Or as real as a We crawled along the fire can be that is intenfloor, going from contionally set on a pile of crete flooring to brick, pallet boards, which is neither of which offer pretty real. Smoke and the best comfort for your flames and all. knees. The first room For that exercise, a had been filled with artifire truck was parked ficial smoke, but once we outside a metal tower opened the door to the designed specifically for room with the fire, it was this type of training. To the real thing.
I didn’t actually hum the song, but sung it to myself in my head, which distracted me enough from trying (and failing) to measure my own breath. With the assistance of actual firefighters, my teammates and I lugged the fire hose until it was in front of the flames. Not long after the release of the nozzle, the fire was out. In between the dummy rescue and the fire tower we used the Jaws of Life, shattering the windows of a salvaged Dodge Voyager minivan with a metal pick and using what looked like an enormous metal lobster claw to cut through the vehicle’s exterior. Firefighters told us about the “golden hour” — the 60 minutes within which trauma patients should be treated, after which the survival rate drops. Eventually, the minivan my team imagined we were saving people from looked like a sardine can with the lid peeled back. Rescued. The rescucitation exercise we did ended up being the easiest, as
Philips
was until she overheard him tell a customer, “I’m the same age as Mick Jagger and a better dancer.” “I went home and did an internet search on Mick Jagger,” she said. “That’s how I learned he was born in 1943.” She learned the second part of that line was true from a comment Philips’ sister made while he was in the hospital in his final days. “She said while he was growing up in Wichita, he was known for being a great dancer,” Kurata said. “He was telling the truth to that customer. He really was a great dancer.”
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Philips lived in an apartment above a downtown Massachusetts Street storefront about two blocks from the store. Through the years, he started every morning at a downtown coffee shop, said longtime friend Janet FitzGerald. “That’s how I met him,” she said. “We had coffee every morning. He was a very intelligent and interesting man, who was so much fun to be around.” Philips was a knitter, crossword puzzle devotee, avid reader, accomplished
pianist and practitioner of aikido, who was greatly interested in the cultural events of downtown Lawrence, FitzGerald said. Philips’ previous job was also well-suited from him, his three friends said. After arriving in Lawrence from Manhattan, Philips worked for a number of years at Hilltop Child Development Center. “He loved children, and children adored him,” FitzGerald said. “Many knew Gil through their children, as he often doted on babies and children while getting to know their parents.” In other ways, Philips could be a private man, Kurata said. He would never tell her how old he
— County reporter Elvyn Jones can be reached at 832-7166. Follow him on Twitter: @ElvynJ
far as imagined rescuing goes. The dummy was in cardiac arrest, and my teammates and I took turns pumping its plastic chest, squeezing a plastic bubble mask to give it air and administering intravenous drugs. Once our dummy had a pulse, which was just accomplished by someone declaring that it did, we loaded it onto an ambulance. Rescued. After the five-hour training was complete, we certainly had learned something. I think most would agree that even pretending to rescue people is no easy task, so that must say something for the real thing. And after all was done, I have to admit — as Cyndi Lauper would say — it was a little fun. — City Hall reporter Rochelle Valverde can be reached at 832-6314. Follow her on Twitter: @RochelleVerde
Yom Kippur No tickets required. Donations gratefully accepted.
Tues. Oct. 11 7:30pm Kol Nidre Sermon: Rabbi Mark Levin Cantor Benjamin Matis Wed. Oct. 12 9:30am Yom Kippur Services Cantor Benjamin Matis Jack Winerock 1:00pm Yiskor Memorial Service 5:30pm Afternoon Services, Neilah Lawrence Jewish Community Congregation 917 Highland Drive Lawrence, KS 66044 785-841-7636, ljcc@sunflower.com www.LawrenceJCC.org
Reopening Weekend October 15 &16 spencerart.ku.edu
THANK YOU for representing Douglas County, KS in the National Bike Challenge!
Total miles logged = 60,775 National rank: 16th Local riders who logged miles: 90 Data as of Oct. 3 Local challenge hosted by:
In partnership with:
Congrats to the Top 20 participants! 1. Bill Roy 11. Jason Holbert 12. Samuel Schimek 2. David Hamby 3. Jared Gab 13. Monica Farrell 4. Don Varnau 14. Chuck Wehner 5. Jim MacMurray 15. Lawrence Dreyfus 6. Cindy Bracker 16. Susan Twombly 7. Bill Anderson 17. Lisa Hallberg 8. Karrey Britt 18. Craig Weinaug 9. Chris Tilden 19. Adam Weigel 10. Brian Shephard 20. Rod Hernandez Other participants: Ann Wilhelm, Dylan Medlock, Craig MyersArenth, Roger Williams, Gary Calton, Kim Booth, Peter Williams, Greg Windholz, Andrew Lewis, Andy Booth, Ashley Myers, Dave Hull, Michael Gordon, Jenny Clark, Andrew Clayton, Mary Miller, Marianne Melling, Dustin Meyer, Steve Clark, Ethan Fincham, David Ruhlen, Ben Gulick, Sonya Bellinder, Charlie Bryan, Erick Ogwangi, Becky Pepper, John Mack, Leigh Stearns, Michael Showalter, Jason Downs, Laura Ross, Nicole Herrera, Micah Seybold, Jon King, Jenica Nelson, Jill Shephard, Juda Lewis, Lindsey Fincham, Sam Coleman, Michele Berendsen, Jane Huesemann, Meagan White, Stephen Mason, Wendy Shoemaker, Bella Bryan, Matt Schwartz, Jeffery Dutton, Wayne Cook, Courtney Shanks, Aaron Carver, Susie Wilson, Lori Lange, Joshua Spence, Angie Allen, Becky Bridson, Gayle Sigurdson, Alison Dudley, Monica Shafii, Jessica Mortinger, Janell Parmelee, Ze Ander, Meredith McCarter, Kait Perry, Ann Armstrong, Heather Cosman, Kelly Smith, Angela Nasewytewa, Jeff Bone, Vanessa Williams, Blaine Gambrel
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Empower those with chronic illnesses Agency: Lawrence Douglas County Health Department Contact: Michael Showalter at mshowalter@ldchealth.org or at 843-3060 The Lawrence-Douglas County Health Department needs group leaders for its Tools for Better Health Workshop — a free program designed to empower those with chronic diseases to improve their health and quality of life. This interactive program helps people with different chronic health problems through a workshop offered once a week for six weeks. Volunteers wanting to be group leaders must commit to a four-day training on Oct. 17, 18, 24 and 25, as well as to leading the workshops. To apply to volunteer, please visit the Lawrence-Douglas County Health Department, 200 Maine St., or contact Michael Showalter at 843-3060.
hygiene tools to the children of Eudora Elementary through the Healthy Halloween Snack Pack event. Volunteers are needed to fill snack packs with toothbrushes and toothpaste, at 9 a.m., Oct. 22, at Eudora Elementary, located at 801 E. 10th St. Please contact Sarah Pierrelee at 843-6626 ext. 375 or at vista@unitedwaydgco.org.
Feed your neighbors Community food bank Harvesters provides a mobile food pantry that provides nutritious, perishable food in a timely manner to feed insecure families. Volunteers will be outside helping with traffic flow, sign-in sheets, loading people’s cars (must be able to lift 5 to 20 lbs. repetitively) and completing a bit of clean-up. Volunteers are needed from 9 a.m. through 11 a.m. on Oct. 18 at the Eudora United Methodist Church, 2084 North Protect kids’ smiles 1300 Road, Eudora. VolThe United Way is unteers age 12 to 15 are providing essential dental welcome with adult su-
are available both days. Sign up to volunteer at volunteerdouglascounty. org or contact Shelly at volunteer@unitedwaydgco.org or at 865-5030, pervision. If you are in- ext. 301. terested, register online at harvesters.org/GiveProvide temporary Time/Volunteer-Sign-Up home for pets or contact Community The Lawrence HuEngagement at 816-7750 mane Society needs volor fighthunger@harunteers to assist with vesters.org. their Adoption Ambassador program. AdopHelp kids explore tion Ambassadors care careers for an animal in their USD No. 497, in partown home and receive nership with United Way, training on strategies Peaslee Tech, and Lawand resources to prorence Schools Foundamote the animal for tion, is holding a Career adoption and process Exploration Fair for all the adoption on behalf of district seventh graders Lawrence Humane Soon Nov. 10 and 11. Volunciety. Ambassadors are teers from a wide variety matched with animals of fields are needed to share their career path with students. Volunteers will also model and teach the valuable skill of networking and give students the opportunity to practice these skills while learning about options for their futures. Morning shifts from 8 to 11:40 and afternoon shifts from 12:40 to 2:40
of their preferences. For more information on the Adoption Ambassador program, please contact Tia Ezell at 843-6835 or by emailing foster@lawrencehumane.org.
— For more volunteer opportunities, please contact Shelly Hornbaker at the United Way Roger Hill Volunteer Center at 865-5030, ext. 301 or at volunteer@unitedwaydgco.org or go to volunteerdouglascounty.org.
Yesterday, Today & Tomorrow For 136 years, Marks Jewelers has meant quality, service and dependability.
Marks Jewelers. Since 1880. 817 Mass. 843-4266
Welcomes Adam Goodyear, MD, and Jennifer Waterman, DO New orthopedic surgeons in Lawrence
To expand your options in Lawrence for orthopedic excellence, Lawrence Memorial Hospital welcomes Adam Goodyear, MD, and Jennifer Waterman, DO, of OrthoKansas to the LMH Medical Staff. With advanced medical training, Drs. Goodyear and Waterman provide prompt, effective orthopedic care and treatment to get you up and moving again.
Welcome, Stephen Hinton, M.D.
Meet the physicians
A native of Kansas, Dr. Goodyear grew up outside of Topeka. After earning his medical degree at the University of Texas Medical School at Houston, he returned to Kansas to complete his residency in orthopedic surgery at the University of Kansas School of Medicine. He recently completed a fellowship in adult reconstructive surgery at the University of Colorado Hospital and Denver Health Medical Center. Dr. Goodyear specializes in reconstructive surgery, including knee and hip replacement.
The staff at Genstler Eye Center would like to welcome Stephen Hinton, M.D. to the team. Dr. Hinton’s kno owledge, expertise and surgical skill in ophthalmology o allows him to provide comprehensive services such as: catarac ct surgery, glaucoma treatment, diab betic eye care and dry eye treatment. Dr. Hinton’s personable style and patien nt-centered approach makes him an excellent e addition to the team of doc ctors at Genstler Eye Center.
Dr.Waterman attended Edward Via College of Osteopathic Medicine (VCOM) in Virginia before completing her residency in orthopedic surgery at Holston Valley Medical Center in Tennessee. She recently completed a Foot and Ankle fellowship at the Cleveland Clinic Foundation in Ohio, and previously served as Chief Resident of the Wellmont Orthopedic Residency program and as a flight surgeon for the United States Airforce. Dr.Waterman specializes in foot and ankle treatment.
Call to make yo our appointment with w Dr. Hinton toda ay. 3630 SW Fairlaw wn Road Topeka, KS 785.273.8080 g-eye.com
Learn more at orthokansasllc.com For appointments, call 785-843-9125
Adam Goodyear, MD
Jennifer Waterman, DO
1112 W. Sixth St., Suite 124 • Lawrence, KS • 785-843-9125
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901 Kentucky Street Suite 206 Lawrence, KS 66044 Hope Heller, Clinical Director
Opinion
Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com l Sunday, October 9, 2016
EDITORIALS
Spencer praise The newly renovated Spencer Museum of Art is a credit to KU and the whole Lawrence community.
T
he recently completed $8 million renovation of the Spencer Museum of Art at the University of Kansas is a boost for the university and the community of Lawrence. Last week, university employees and museum partners got a preview of the museum, which has been closed for the renovations for the past year and a half. The museum officially reopens to the public on Oct. 15. Museum Director Saralyn Reece Hardy said the renovations, the first major renovations since the museum was built nearly 40 years ago, make the Spencer a better and more welcoming environment for the university and the community to come together and explore art. “We were in this beautiful place on campus and wanted to highlight the beauty of the works of art but also revel in the beauty of the outside,” she said. The renovation included adding large windows offering views of Marvin Grove and the World War II Memorial Campanile. The museum’s facade has all-glass entry doors and a large gallery window overlooking Mississippi Street and the Kansas Union. The museum’s revamped teaching gallery and print room are bigger and brighter. The Goddard Study Center has been expanded. It can be reserved by KU classes or community groups to view and discuss art, and it’s open to walk-ins on Fridays. Other new features include a central open staircase and elevator to the galleries upstairs, added balcony views from upper-level galleries into the Central Court below, a “sprung floor” that provides shock absorption to make it better for dance performances, an audio-looping system in the Central Court for visitors with reduced hearing and charging stations in the entryway, with counter space and stools for students or visitors to sit and work. Private money funded the project — more than 180 individuals and foundations contributed to the $8 million, 30,000-square-foot renovation. The grand reopening of the museum is at 10 a.m. Oct. 15. Events are scheduled from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Oct. 15 and from noon to 4 p.m. Oct. 16 at the museum, 1301 Mississippi St. Here’s hoping the community turns out to see the museum’s new look. It’s a renovation worth celebrating.
TODAY IN HISTORY On Oct. 9, 1936, the first generator at Boulder (later Hoover) Dam began transmitting electricity to Los Angeles. l In 1514, Mary Tudor, the 18-year-old sister of Henry VIII, became Queen consort of France upon her marriage to 52-yearold King Louis XII, who died less than three months later. l In 1776, a group of Spanish missionaries settled in present-day San Francisco. l In 1888, the public was first admitted to the Washington Monument. l In 1958, Pope Pius XII died at age 82, ending a 19-year papacy. (He was succeeded by Pope John XXIII.) l In 1966, the Baltimore Orioles won their first World Series as they swept the Los Angeles Dodgers in four games with a 1-0 victory at Memorial Stadium. l In 1975, Soviet scientist Andrei Sakharov was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. l In 2009, President Barack Obama was named the recipient of the 2009 Nobel Peace Prize for what the Norwegian Nobel Committee called “his extraordinary efforts to strengthen international diplomacy and cooperation between peoples.”
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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
Scott Stanford, Publisher Chad Lawhorn, Editor Kim Callahan, Managing Editor Kathleen Johnson, Advertising Manager Joan Insco, Circulation Manager Allie Sebelius, Marketing Director
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Where will Trump’s believers go? I used to love “The XFiles.” Like millions of Americans, I unfailingly followed FBI agents Mulder and Scully’s search for the truth in a labyrinth of conspiracy. But a few years on, after one too many red herrings and blind alleys of plot, it began to be obvious to me the conspiracy would never be
Leonard Pitts Jr.
“
lpitts@miamiherald.com
Any sigh of relief if Clinton is sworn in as president would be mistaken and premature.” unraveled — could never be unraveled — because unraveling it was not the point of the show. No, the conspiracy itself was the point, the need to maintain a sense of unsettlement and unease, of our heroes buffeted by malevolent, unseen forces. What was once television has now become politics. Or has no one else noticed how the Republican candidate for president, his surrogates and his voters, have put forth a series of interlocking conspiracy theories so Byzantine and confused as to make “The X-Files” seem like “Scooby-Doo” by comparison? Combined and distilled, these theories go something like this: President Obama is a gay Kenyan Muslim who, with the transvestite Michelle and two kidnapped children masquerading as his family, usurped the White House and now plans
to hand it off to the corrupt and murderous liar Hillary Clinton, who plotted with the Commission on Presidential Debates to schedule two of their face-offs against NFL games and who has rigged next month’s election to defeat Donald Trump and keep him from making America great again, even as his taxes are being audited because he’s a “strong Christian” and the lying media continue to treat him with unfair meanness. There’s more, but you get the gist. The common denominators: unsettlement and unease; our hero — and, by extension, the people he represents — buffeted by malevolent, unseen forces. Conspiracies are not exactly unheard of in politics. Consider the meeting of GOP leaders to plot a policy of obstructionism against President Obama, or the Democratic National Committee scheming against Bernie Sanders. But what we are seeing in Trump is something else
entirely — an utterly amoral willingness to feed and exploit a frightened paranoia unhinged from anything resembling reality. That’s why ultimately the biggest object of concern here is not Trump, but his believers. Conspiracy theories are very often the way frightened people organize their fears, rationalize the fact that things are not going for them as they feel they should. So, say, Trump loses next month. He retires to one of his trophy houses with his trophy wife, his considerable ego banged up, but otherwise none the worse for wear. Why not? After all, for him, this crazy talk was never more than a way to work the refs, game the system, diminish his rivals. For him — as for the folks at “XFiles,” — the conspiracy was both means and end. But what about the people who believed this garbage, the ones for whom it was a lifeline in a world they no longer recognize or under-
stand? What about the ones for whom it explained their anger and ennobled their resentment at a culture that has changed without their permission, a nation to which they feel less connected — and in which they feel less relevant — with every sunrise? Where do they go and what do they do when Donald Trump implodes? Any hope of American cohesion requires the urgent search for a constructive answer to that question. If current polling trends hold, the forces of paranoia and disordered thinking Trump has ridden to political relevance will be defeated next month. But defeat is not disappearance. And any sigh of relief if Clinton is sworn in as president would be mistaken and premature. Because that’s when the hard part begins. — Leonard Pitts Jr., winner of the 2004 Pulitzer Prize for commentary, is a columnist for the Miami Herald.
Vladimir Putin is bringing back the 1930s Washington — Vladimir Putin’s serial humiliations of America’s bewildered secretary of state regarding Syria indicate Putin’s determination to destabilize the world. Here is an even more ominous indication of events moving his way: On just one day last week, Italian ships plucked 6,055 migrants from the Mediterranean. What has this to do with Putin? It portends fulfillment of his aspiration for Europe’s political, social and moral disorientation. The Financial Times reports that of the 138,000 migrants who have come by sea to Italy this year, few are from Syria. The “vast majority” are from Africa, with the largest number from Nigeria. The U.N.’s World Population Prospects says that only 10 percent of global population is in Europe, which is projected to have fewer people in 2050 than today. Just 16 percent of the world’s population is in Africa but “more than half of global population growth between now and 2050 is expected to occur” there. It will have the world’s highest growth rate, and 41 percent of its people currently are under 15. Of the nine countries expected to experience half the world’s population growth by 2050, five are in Africa (Nigeria, Congo, Ethiopia, Tanzania, Uganda). Nigeria’s population, currently the world’s seventh largest, is the most rapidly growing. Even without what is likely — population pressures producing some failed African states — a portion of Africa’s multitudes, perhaps scores of millions of migrants, might cross the Mediterranean to Europe. There,
George Will
georgewill@washpost.com
“
Undermining the West’s confident sense of itself is important to Putin’s implementation of his ideology of Eurasianism.”
24 percent of the people are 60 and over, and no country has a birth rate sufficient to maintain current population sizes. Who but immigrants can work and fund Europe’s welfare states for its graying publics? Europe has recently been politically destabilized and socially convulsed by the arrival of a million Syrian migrants seeking asylum. Future migrations from Africa, with a large Muslim component, could pose the greatest threat to the social cohesion of Europe since 1945, or even since invading Arab forces were halted at Poitiers in 732. Undermining the West’s confident sense of itself is important to Putin’s implementation of his ideology of Eurasianism. It holds that Russia’s security and greatness depend on what Ben Judah calls a “geographically ordained empire” that “looks east to Tashkent, not west to Paris.” Writing in the British journal Standpoint, Judah reports that Russian televi-
sion relentlessly presents “a dangerous, angry wonderland”: “Russia is special, Russia is under attack, Russia swarms with traitors, Russia was betrayed in 1991, Russia was glorious under Stalin’s steady hand.” This justifies gigantic military, intelligence and police establishments steeped in Eurasianist tracts published by the Russian General Staff. Putin’s Russia, writes Owen Matthews in The Spectator, is developing a “state-sponsored culture of prudery” to make it a “moral fortress” against Western decadence. The Russian Orthodox Church benefits from a 2013 law that criminalizes “offending the feelings of religious believers.” Twenty-one percent of Russians want homosexuals “liquidated” and another 37 percent favor “separating them from society.” In a new collection of essays, “Authoritarianism Goes Global” (Johns Hopkins), the Brookings Institution’s Lilia Shevtsova says Putin is simultaneously imposing a domestic revolution of cultural conservatism, converting Russia into a revanchist power and “forging an anti-Western International.” She warns: “Ever since Stalinism’s relentless assault on all ‘horizontal’ ties (even those of family), Russians have been tragically at the mercy of the state and its claims: Individuals are invited to compensate for their helplessness by looking for meaning in collective national ‘successes’ that promise to bring them together and restore their pride.” Such as the annexation of Crimea. In the same volume, Peter Pomerantsev, a student
of 21st-century propaganda, says “the underlying goal” of Putin’s domestic disinformation is less to persuade than “to engender cynicism”: “When people stop trusting any institutions or having any firmly held values, they can easily accept a conspiratorial vision of the world.” Putin’s Kremlin is weaving a web of incongruous but useful strands. Its conservative nationalism is congruent with that of rising European factions on the right. Its anti-Western, especially antiAmerican, message resonates with the European left. It funds European green groups whose opposition to fracking serves Putin’s agenda of keeping Europe dependent on Russian gas. In many worrisome ways, the 1930s are being reprised. In Europe, Russia is playing the role of Germany in fomenting anti-democratic factions. In inward-turning, distracted America, the role of Charles Lindbergh is played by a presidential candidate smitten by Putin and too ignorant to know the pedigree of his slogan “America First.” — George Will is a columnist for Washington Post Writers Group.
Letters to the editor
l Letters should be 250 words or fewer. l Letters should avoid name-calling and be free of libelous language. l Letters can be submitted via mail to P.O. Box 888, Lawrence KS 66044 or via email at letters@ljworld.com.
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$8,000 fridge is super cool
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Sex talk fallout roils Trump camp
While GOP nominee prepares for Sunday’s debate, some supporters suggest he should withdraw from the campaign David M. Jackson @djusatoday USA TODAY
Donald Trump planned to hole up in his Manhattan tower for debate prep on Saturday, even as a parade of Republicans denounced his sexually aggressive comments about women on a leaked video tape — and some
TODAY ON TV
even called on him to step aside as presidential nominee. “I’ve never said I’m a perfect person, nor pretended to be someone I’m not,” Trump said in a video statement and Facebook posting addressing the incident. “I’ve said and done things I regret, and the words released (Friday) on this more than a decade-old video are one of them.”
He added: “I said it, it was wrong, and I apologize.” That 2005 tape — in which Trump talks about being able to “do anything” to women because he is famous and says he often kisses and grabs them without warning — set off what may be an existential crisis for his campaign. “I am sickened by what I heard today,” said House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis. “Women are to be
ROBYN BECK, AFP/GETTY IMAGES
Donald Trump’s banter about women and sex, recorded in 2005, has raised a barrage of criticism, even by supporters.
championed and revered, not objectified.” Ryan announced that Trump was “no longer attending” a planned campaign event in Wisconsin. Trump said running mate Mike Pence would replace him in Wisconsin, and that he would engage in debate preparation in New York with supporters — including Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus, who issued a terse statev STORY CONTINUES ON 2B
DEADLY HURRICANE MATTHEW
CHIP SOMODEVILLA, GETTY IMAGES
Reince Priebus at first debate
uABC’s This Week: Reince Priebus, Republican National Committee chairman; Donna Brazile, interim head of the Democratic National Committee uNBC’s Meet the Press: Rep. Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif.; Kellyanne Conway, campaign manager for Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump uCBS’ Face the Nation: Priebus; Robby Mook, campaign manager for Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton uCNN’s State of the Union: Democratic vice presidential candidate Tim Kaine; Gov. Chris Christie, R-N.J. uFox News Sunday: Conway
This is an edition of USA TODAY provided for your local newspaper. An expanded version of USA TODAY is available at newsstands or by subscription, and at usatoday.com.
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USA SNAPSHOTS
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Health plan pains
25%
of Americans would rather file their income taxes than select a health plan.
SOURCE UnitedHealthcare survey of 1,009 adults MICHAEL B. SMITH AND VERONICA BRAVO, USA TODAY
HEIDI HEILBRUNN, THE GREENVILLE (S.C.) NEWS
A car drives through flooded Market Street as rain and winds pound from Hurricane Matthew in downtown Charleston, S.C., on Saturday. The storm weakened to a Category 1 hurricane but still had many coastal residents inundated with worry if not water.
Storm lashes Charleston, S.C., may pack more havoc ahead Hurricane weakens but surge and floods still threaten coast
Doug Stanglin and Tim Smith USA TODAY Network
CHARLESTON, S . C. Hurricane Matthew weakened to a Category 1 storm on Saturday, but packed a strong enough punch to down trees and deliver a 6-foot storm surge and severe flooding to historic downtown Charleston.
The deadly hurricane, which roared out of the Caribbean, killing hundreds in Haiti and at least nine in the U.S., officially made landfall Saturday morning 40 miles northeast of the South Carolina port city. After hugging the coastline for two days as it swept northward from southeastern Florida, Matthew finally touched land over the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge near McClellanville, S.C., the first hurricane to make landfall in the state since Hurricane Gaston in 2004.
“Every boat we have in the city is working water rescue right now, and we have calls pending.”
Michael Martin, director of Fayetteville, N.C., emergency management office
As of 5 p.m. ET, Hurricane Matthew had winds of 75 mph and was located about 15 miles west-southwest of Cape Fear, N.C. It was moving to the east-northeast at 13 mph. The main threat from Matthew: heavy rain over the Carolinas and Virginia. Torrential rainfall from the hurricane was swamping eastern North Carolina, leading to “life-threatening” flash floods. At least 3 people had died in v STORY CONTINUES ON 2B
Man and dog log 82,000 miles on motorcycle for charity Pair collects $250K for military veterans Lindsay C VanAsdalan
The (Hanover, Pa.) Evening Sun GETTYSBURG, PA .
Adam Sandoval and his Chihuahua, Scooter, have traveled 82,000 miles on a motorcycle over two years, crisscrossing the nation six times to support the Wounded Warriors Project and the American Legion Legacy Scholarship Fund. Along the way, the duo has grown a fan base. Last weekend, Sandoval, with
Scooter tucked in his jacket, arrived to great fanfare for a meetand-greet inside the Gettysburg Battlefield Harley-Davidson dealership with bikers who had traveled to see them. A large crowd surrounded them, struggling to make it to the front as they held up their phones for pictures. Scooter stared at his admirers, wagging his tail as he was placed on the bike seat, while Sandoval addressed his countrywide fans on his Facebook livestream. “I’m kind of at a loss for words for the first time in a long time right now,” he said. Sandoval and Scooter have raised more than $250,000, hit-
CLARE BECKER, THE (HANOVER, PA.) EVENING SUN
Adam Sandoval and Scooter, who has ridden with his master since he was a pup, have spent two years giving back.
ting every Harley-Davidson dealership in the contiguous 48 states. This was their last one. Their Facebook page, “Scootin America,” tracked their journey. Sandoval began his trip in November 2014, departing from Florida with Scooter as a way to give back to the military, for which he always had admiration. He said that after making poor choices in his 20s, he regretted not having joined. He chose the motorcycle trip as a way to give back because he was passionate about riding and wanted to use what he loved to make a difference. In the beginning, Sandoval
spent many nights camping next to his bike behind gas stations, in church parking lots, in fields and between buildings. “It was a very lonely, long road for a long time,” he said. But he always had the company of Scooter — now 8 — who has been riding with Sandoval since he was a pup. “He loves to ride more than I do,” Sandoval said. Among the duo’s challenges: Sandoval broke his leg two months ago, and Tooter, a woman from Minnesota who was traveling with him, was recently hit by a semi truck. She is currently on the road to recovery.
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L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY SUNDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2016
IN BRIEF
DEADLY HURRICANE MATTHEW
Storm kills at least 9 in U.S.
SAUDI-LED COALITION STRIKE HITS FUNERAL, KILLS 82
An airstrike by a Saudi-led coalition Saturday targeted a funeral hall packed with mourners in Yemen’s capital, Sanaa, killing at least 82 people and turning the site into a “lake of blood,” according to a senior Health Ministry official. Nasser al-Argaly, the Health Ministry’s undersecretary, told a news conference that the strike also left 534 people wounded. The casualty figures were not final, he said. Yemeni security and medical officials said the dead and wounded include military and security officials from the ranks of the Shiite Houthi rebels fighting the internationally recognized government of President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi as well as their allies, loyalists of President Ali Abdullah Saleh. Among those killed was Maj.Gen. Abdul-Qader Hilal, head of the capital’s local council, according to the officials. Saturday’s funeral was held for Sheikh Ali al-Rawishan, father of Galal alRawishan, the interior minister in the rebel-led government. Galal al-Rawishan was seriously wounded in the attack. MANHUNT UNDERWAY AFTER 2 OFFICERS KILLED IN CALIF.
Two police officers are dead and one wounded after a shooting in Palm Springs on Saturday, according to a source familiar with the incident. Dozens of law enforcement officers are involved in a search for the shooter or shooters in the area of Cypress and Del Lago roads in Palm Springs. Police are encouraging residents in the area to stay indoors while they conduct an investigation. At 3:15 p.m., multiple officers in tactical gear were maintaining defensive positions behind a 4foot concrete wall as if a shooter were still on the scene. Several other officers stood close by a parked armored vehicle nearby. Witnesses said they heard between 10 and 20 gunshots from what sounded like machine guns. Over a dozen patrol cars, three fire engines and a SWAT truck were at the scene of the 2 p.m. incident. EGYPTIAN HELD AFTER FAILED ATTACK ON U.S. TROOPS
An Egyptian driving a garbage truck loaded with explosives and Islamic State papers rammed into a truck carrying five U.S. soldiers in Kuwait on Saturday, injuring only himself in the attack, authorities said. The attempted attack is the first by the Islamic State group to target American troops in the tiny, oil-rich emirate that’s a stalwart U.S. ally. It came as authorities had already increased security ahead of a major Shiite commemoration in the coming days. Compiled from staff and wire reports
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.
v CONTINUED FROM 1B
NICOLAS GARCIA AFP/GETTY IMAGES
Areas of Jeremie, Haiti, shown Saturday, were destroyed by Hurricane Matthew. The full scale of the devastation was still becoming evident, but how many people died may never be known.
4 days later, Haiti struggles to recover Remote areas of the island are slowly becoming accessible from latest crisis Susan Miller @susmiller USA TODAY
Four days after a monster hurricane ripped through Haiti, a grim trail of destruction and death on the Caribbean island continued to come to light. A United Nations report listed 271 deaths as a result of Hurricane Matthew, while other outlets such as Reuters news agency reported Saturday that the toll was approaching 900. Fridnel Kedler, coordinator for the Civil Protection Agency in GrandAnse, told the Associated Press at least 470 were dead in the hardhit southwestern corner of the country. Christy Delafield, a senior spokeswoman with global relief agency Mercy Corps, told USA TODAY on Saturday the real death toll may never be known. “We may never really understand the toll fully,” Delafield said. Haitians in remote villages have already begun burying their dead, she said. The United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said 750,000 people in Haiti, the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere, are in need of humanitarian assistance. Of the 10.3 million people in Haiti, 1.3 million have been impacted by the storm, OCHA says. Among the most alarming fallout of the storm was word on new cases of cholera, an infectious and often fatal bacterial disease of the
small intestine usually transmitted by tainted water supplies. Haiti has been struggling to recover from a massive earthquake in 2010 and an ensuing cholera epidemic, which killed more than 7,000 people. Delafield says she is aware of four new cases of cholera. Reuters reported 17 cases were detected in Chardonnieres on the southern coast. It has been a struggle for relief agencies to access those in need in remote sections of the island. Matthew slammed the western tip of Haiti on Tuesday with 145mph winds in an area of rural countryside that soon became cut off from the rest of the nation when a bridge gave out, complicating relief efforts. Humanitarian agency World Vision said Saturday that access to some areas was starting to improve. Cell service was returning and government officials were starting to hear from the mayors of outlying cities. The group delivered relief supplies to 1,000 households on Friday and was gearing up for more relief over the weekend. People keep asking, “When is this going to stop? When are we going to get a break from crisis after crisis?” said John Hasse, national director of World Vision in Port-au-Prince. “They’re tired and discouraged.” World Vision’s Guy Vital-Herne said clean water is a growing concern. “In some towns, water sources have been contaminated,” he said.
Nancy O’Dell breaks silence on Donald Trump recording @jaymedeerwester USA TODAY
John Zidich
EDITOR IN CHIEF
Patty Michalski CHIEF REVENUE OFFICER
Kevin Gentzel
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The economic cost of Hurricane Matthew will be at least in the $4 billion to $6 billion range, according to CoreLogic, a research and consulting firm. An analysis from the firm “found that insured property losses for residential and commercial properties from Hurricane Matthew are estimated to be between $4 billion and $6 billion from wind and storm surge damage,” said a statement to USA TODAY. This does not include insured losses related to additional flooding, business interruption or contents, CoreLogic said. “Of this $4-6 billion, 90% of the insurance claims are expected to be related to wind and 10% to storm surge,” the CoreLogic statement said. In hurricanes dating to 1989, about two-thirds of economic losses can be traced to property damage while a third is due to lost economic output, said Mark Zandi of Moody’s Analytics. So far this year, the U.S. has endured 12 weather disasters that each surpassed $1 billion in damage, NOAA reported. That’s the second-highest number for any single year. Only 2011, with 16, had more. Doyle Rice
Contributing: Doyle Rice. Smith reported from Charleston, S.C.
Trump admits being wrong, apologizes Jayme Deerwester
PRESIDENT AND PUBLISHER
Matthew’s economic damage nears $6B
North Carolina from the floods, according to the governor’s office. More than a foot of rain had been recorded in Fayetteville, where much of the city was underwater. “We’ve got people stuck in houses everywhere,” Michael Martin, the city’s emergency management director, told The Fayetteville Observer. “Every boat we have in the city is working water rescue right now and we have calls pending.” Forty percent of the state’s counties were under a flash flood warning, the National Weather Service said. The water level at one river gauge in Wilmington broke a record high set during Hurricane Hazel in 1954, the weather service said. “Please stay home,” the weather service in Wilmington tweeted. “Do not put yourself or your loved ones at risk!” South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley said Saturday that 437,000 people were without power in the state. She also pleaded with residents driven out of their homes not to rush back in immediately. “The one thing I do want to say is that now is when the frustration comes,” Haley said at a briefing at the state’s Emergency Operations Center in West Columbia. “Most injuries, most fatalities occur after a storm because people attempt to move in too soon. ... It is not going to be safe for you to go in between downed power lines and trees and just unsafe structures, bridges, all of those things.” Haley also warned of a “cyber situation” in which hackers send bogus emails offering to provide updates on power outages to get access to private computers. At least four people died in Florida and more than 1.1 million people were without power. An elderly St. Lucie County couple died from carbon monoxide fumes while running a generator in their garage, and two women were killed in separate events when trees fell on a home and a camper. As of 3 p.m. ET, 7% of the state’s residents were without power. In North Carolina, Gov. Pat McCrory reported three deaths, telling a news conference that “this is a very, very serious and deadly storm.” In Georgia, Bulloch County deputy coroner Richard Pylant said two people died north of Savannah. Media reports said both were from falling trees, one onto a car and the other onto a mobile home. In Savannah, Ga., a historic town of moss-draped squares and antebellum mansions, a stretch of President Street was submerged by several feet of water.
Entertainment journalist Nancy O’Dell is finally speaking her mind about being objectified in the leaked 2005 recorded conversation between Donald Trump and Billy Bush, her “Access Hollywood” colleague at that time. In its Friday broadcast, the show identified her as the Nancy that Trump said he’d attempted to sleep with. On Saturday, O’Dell issued a statement via the website for her current show, “Entertainment Tonight.” “Politics aside, I’m saddened that these comments still exist in our society at all,” she wrote. “When I heard the comments yesterday, it was disappointing to hear such objectification of women. The conversation needs to change because no female, no person, should be the subject of such crass comments, whether or not cameras are rolling. Everyone deserves respect no matter the setting or gender. ... I must speak out with the hope that as a society we will always strive to be better.” O’Dell and Bush co-hosted
ALBERTO E. RODRIGUEZ, GETTY IMAGES
Access Hollywood says exanchor Nancy O’Dell is the woman being discussed by Donald Trump on tape.
the entertainment news magazine together for five years until she left in 2009. Current “Access” co-host Natalie Morales said the tape was not a conversation between two men who forgot their mikes were still hot. “There were seven other people on the bus with Mr. Trump and Billy Bush at the time,” Morales said. Trump was a newlywed at the time of the recording, having married third wife Melania Krauss, who was pregnant with Trump’s youngest son, Barron.
v CONTINUED FROM 1B
ment condemning Trump’s comments. “No woman should ever be described in these terms or talked about in this manner,” Priebus said. “Ever.” Pence ended up dropping plans to stand in at the event for Trump. In a statement released through Twitter on Saturday, Pence said he was “offended by the words and actions” of his running mate in the released tape. Former Utah governor Jon Huntsman, who endorsed Trump only recently, called for him to step aside, telling The Salt Lake Tribune that “the time has come for Governor Pence to lead the ticket.” While most other Republicans condemned Trump’s comments, a throng of voters remained adamantly loyal to the candidate, demonstrating in the rain outside Trump Tower in New York City. At around 5 p.m. ET., a waving Trump emerged to great enthusiasm from the crowd. Trump indicated he has no plans to withdraw from the race. He and Democratic rival Hillary Clinton were still scheduled to meet for a second debate Sunday night in St. Louis. The Washington Post reported that Trump made his comments during a chat with Billy Bush, then a host of Access Hollywood,
before taping a segment for the program in 2005. “You know, I’m automatically attracted to beautiful (women) — I just start kissing them,” Trump said. “It’s like a magnet. Just kiss. I don’t even wait. ... And when you’re a star, they let you do it.” On the tape, Trump also talked about “moving on” a married woman — a colleague of Bush’s — but being rebuffed. He makes reference to the woman’s “fake” breasts, but uses a different term. Bush, who now works with NBC’s Today show, issued a statement apologizing for his sexual bantering with Trump. Bush is the nephew of former president George H.W. Bush and a cousin of ex-president George W. Bush. Critics called Trump’s comments vulgar at best, and some, such as Vice President Biden, said the comment about grabbing women amounted to promotion of sexual assault. Jeb Bush, who lost to Trump in the Republican primaries , said in a tweet: “As the grandfather of two precious girls, I find that no apology can excuse away Donald Trump’s reprehensible comments degrading women.” In his statement, Trump said that campaigning across the nation has “changed” him, and he pledged to be a “better man” because of it. He also called the flap “a distraction” from the important issues.
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USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld SUNDAY, OCTOBER OCTOBER9,9,2016 2016
HURRICANE MATTHEW CARVED A PATH OF DESTRUCTION Hurricane Matthew left behind a trail of death and destruction through the Caribbean and the eastern U.S., with hundreds of people killed and billions of dollars of property ruined.
PA. OHIO NOAA-NASA GOES PROJECT
Matthew unleashed torrential rains and howling winds as it roared up the southeastern coast Friday and Saturday after a blast through the Caribbean that reportedly left hundreds dead in Haiti.
PROJECTED PATH
DEVASTATION FROM CARIBBEAN TO THE U.S.
Matthew is forecast to weaken to a tropical storm and then dissipate over the Atlantic Ocean by Monday. Hurricane locations shown below are as of 11 a.m. each day, unless otherwise noted.
Nearly 900 people are dead in Haiti alone, a country that will face a monumental humanitarian crisis in the months ahead. In the U.S., nine people have died and damage costs are estimated at $4 to $6 billion, a figure that will likely rise.
North Carolina
N.C.
Homes at risk for storm surge damage:
152,0702
Wilmington S.C. Myrtle Beach
South Carolina Charleston
Evacuated:
310,000
1
GA.
Homes at risk for Savannah storm surge damage:
205,038
Oct. 8
Oct. 9 (8 a.m.)
2
Oct. 10 (8 a.m.)
Jacksonville
Georgia Evacuated:
500,000
Oct. 7
1
Homes at risk for storm surge damage:
LOGAN ABASSI, AFP/GETTY IMAGES
Atlantic Ocean
The city of Jeremie, on the western tip of Haiti, suffered the full force of the Category 4 storm on Tuesday, leaving tens of thousands stranded.
Cape Canaveral
103,6912 Florida
FLA. West Palm Beach
Evacuated:
1.5 million1
Miami
BAHAMAS
Homes at risk for storm surge damage:
663,0002
Oct. 6
CUBA
JOE RAEDLE, GETTY IMAGES
Rob Birch checks on his car after Hurricane Matthew passes through St. Augustine, Fla., on Friday.
Oct. 5
WHAT IS STORM SURGE? Storm surge is the massive mound of water that builds up and comes ashore as a hurricane moves over the ocean or Gulf of Mexico. It is the single-biggest killer in hurricanes.
HAITI
Oct. 4
JOE RAEDLE, GETTY IMAGES
DOMINICAN REPUBLIC
JAMAICA
Justin Dossett walks through a flooded street as Hurricane Matthew passes through St. Augustine, Fla., on Friday.
PUERTO RICO
Oct. 3 Caribbean Sea
Normal sea level
Oct. 2
Oct. 1
Winds shove water toward coast NICARAGUA
DEATH TOLL Storm surge inundates coast 1 – Approximate estimates by state officials. 2 – As a result of exposure to a Category 3 hurricane.
Deaths associated with hurricane Matthew as of Saturday afternoon:
Sept. 29
Sept. 30 ST. VINCENT AND THE GRENADINES
1
COLOMBIA
COLOMBIA
SOURCES National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration; NASA; National Huricane Center; AccuWeather; U.S. Coast Guard; Reuters; CoreLogic; USA TODAY research FRANK POMPA, VERONICA BRAVO, JACQUIE LEE AND DOYLE RICE, USA TODAY
1
Sept. 28
DOMINICAN REPUBLIC
4
VENEZUELA
HAITI
877
UNITED STATES
9
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USA TODAY SUNDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2016
L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY SUNDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2016
PERSONAL FINANCE
Free ways to hack back at ID thieves ISTOCKPHOTO
M
Nicholas Clements l Special for USA TODAY
ore than 17 million Americans are victims of identity theft each year. This summer, the Democratic National Committee’s computer network was hacked, and last month Yahoo disclosed that hackers stole information from at least 500 million accounts. But should you worry? And how can you protect yourself? WHAT ARE THE ODDS?
According to government data, approximately 7% of people were victims of identity theft in 2014. Although the term “identity theft” is used broadly, there are two different types of theft, and the impact is very different. Eighty-six percent of theft is account takeover, which relates to the fraudulent use of existing account information. For example, a bartender might have stolen your credit card information and began making purchases. A hacker could have installed malware on your mobile phone, logged into your banking app and transferred money. The good news is that the most common form of identity theft is also the easiest to detect and typically costs you nothing. Visa has a Zero Liability Policy, and MasterCard has a similar one. So long as you report account takeover quickly, resolution should be easy, often in a day or less. The scarier type of fraud is identity takeover, which happens when a thief steals your Social Security number and uses your data to open new accounts.
Although this type of fraud doesn’t happen as often, it can be very painful when it does. So you shouldn’t worry, but you should prepare, and if worse comes to worst, turn to a pro. Most resolution services will assign a case worker and require a power of attorney to be signed. Your dedicated caseworker would manage the process from beginning to end. Companies that offer three-bureau monitoring, such as Prosper Daily, typically include resolution services in the package. If you don’t want to pay for monitoring but would just like to get help when identity takeover occurs, consider Zander. For $6.75 a month, you will get resolution assistance and an insurance policy along with it. Finally, you might want to consider a start-up called Civic. It provides credit monitoring, insurance and resolution services for free. The company plans on making its money by charging banks for fraud-protection services. If this model is successful, it could revolutionize credit monitoring. But even if it isn’t, you will get free services while it tries.
One type of ID theft, account takeover, is pretty easy to fix, often in day or less. The other, identity takeover, is another story. You may need a pro’s help.
Clements is the co-founder of MagnifyMoney .com.
PROTECT YOURSELF FROM ACCOUNT TAKEOVER Account takeover can happen easily. Your objective is to know as soon as it happens and to report it as soon as you become aware. Here are three ways to minimize the risk and cost of account takeover:
WHERE AVAILABLE, SIGN UP FOR “SECOND-FACTOR AUTHENTICATION”
With second-factor authentication, a second device is required to authorize transactions. For example, Bank of America offers SafePass. When enrolled, you will receive a six-digit code sent via text message to your mobile phone. If a fraudster managed to hack into your account, he wouldn’t be able to send money without the code. And he couldn’t get the code without your phone. SIGN UP FOR TEXT MESSAGE OR EMAIL ALERTS WITH YOUR BANK
You can set the frequency, but ideally, you would be alerted after every transaction. Most banks offer this feature. PROTECT YOUR TECH WITH SOFTWARE
Ensure you install anti-malware and anti-virus protection on your computer and mobile phone.
PROTECT YOURSELF FROM IDENTITY TAKEOVER Create a strategy that detects fraud as soon as possible. Resolution can be challenging, and you might want to pay for help. In some extreme cases, dealing with courts, creditors and collection agencies can take months.
CHECK YOUR CREDIT REPORT
At a minimum, obtain a free copy of your credit report from all three credit bureaus once a year via AnnualCreditReport.com. CONSIDER FREE CREDIT MONITORING
Get free daily credit monitoring from CreditKarma, which uses TransUnion data. MONITOR ALL CREDIT BUREAUS
Consider monitoring all three credit bureaus daily. You would need to pay for this service. Shop online, but one of the cheapest is Prosper Daily, an app that costs $9.99 a month. REPORT IT AND GET FREE HELP
If you are the victim of identity takeover, there are free resources to help. IdentityTheft.gov is the first place you should go to report the theft and create a recovery plan.
RETIREMENT
For your retirement plan, count on living to 95 The good news is you’ll probably live longer than you think, but it’s bad news if you don’t plan on it
ANNA RAPPAPORT CONSULTING
“Many people do not understand longevity well, and those people who plan often do not plan for long enough.” Anna Rappaport, Society of Actuaries
Robert Powell
Special for USA TODAY
WE’RE LIVING LONGER How many more years a person who is 65 can expect to live, based on when they were born1.
If you knew your date of death, retirement planning would be a breeze. Unfortunately — or maybe fortunately? — you don’t. And that can make planning for retirement extremely difficult. Does your nest egg need to last 20 years? 30 years? 40 years? And what about couples? How should couples go about planning for the likelihood that one spouse — usually the husband — predeceases the other? Well, if you’re like most people, you’re guessing at this, and guessing quite wrong. “Many people do not understand longevity well, and those people who plan often do not plan for long enough,” says Anna Rappaport, president of a retirement consulting firm bearing her name and chair of the Society of Actuaries (SOA) Committee on PostRetirement Needs and Risks. Becoming familiar with current life-expectancy statistics is the first order of business. “There are two aspects to addressing longevity,” says Noel Abkemeier, the founder of Abkemeier Actuarial and chair of the American Academy of Actuaries Lifetime Income Task Force. “First, understanding it, and then planning an income that will last throughout life.” YOU MIGHT LIVE MUCH LONGER THAN YOU THINK
“There have been significant improvements in how long people survive in retirement, especially for wealthier Americans,” says David Blanchett, head of retirement research at Morningstar Investment Management. Consider: Someone born in 1950 was expected to live to age 68.2. By contrast, someone born
Female
Male
20.5
20
15.0
18.0
CONSIDER THE PROBABILITIES
15
12.8 10
1950
for women. In 1950, a 65-year-old woman could expect to live another 15 years. By 2014, a 65-year-old woman could expect to live another 20.5 years. Financial advisers are starting to change assumptions about how long clients will live to make sure they don’t outlive their own savings, according to a survey by InvestmentNews. Advisers are basing retirementincome plans on an average life span of 91 for men and 94 for women, according to the survey.
2014
1— Increments of years vary from 1950-2014 SOURCE U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention RAMON PADILLA, USA TODAY
CALCULATE YOUR LIFE EXPECTANCY
u The Actuaries Longevity Illustrator (at www.longevity illustrator.org) can give you a good sense of how long you might live. u Another resource is the Living to 100 life expectancy calculator (at www.living to100.com).
in 2014 was expected to live to age 78.8, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In other words, someone born today would need to fund an extra 10 years of retirement vs. someone born 66 years ago. What’s more, life expectancy for those alive at age 65 has increased dramatically. In 1950, a 65-year-old male could expect to live another 12.8 years. In 2014, a 65-year-old male could expect to live an average of 18 more years. The same is true
One drawback with using life expectancy to plan for retirement is that it’s just an average. One-half will die before life expectancy, and the other half after. So, the better way to approach the problem is to consider the probability of living to certain ages. Consider: There’s a 25% chance that a 65-year-old man will live to 93; a 25% chance that a 65-yearold woman will live to 96; and for a couple 65 years old, there’s a 25% chance that the surviving spouse lives to 98, according to SOA projections. All that said, Blanchett still thinks it makes more sense for people (and planners) to use a fixed-time horizon, such as planning to age 95. COUPLES SHOULD CONSIDER THEIR COMBINED TIMELINE
For couples who are 65 today, there’s a 45% chance that a wife outlives her husband by five years and a 20% chance by 15 years, according to the SOA. “Don’t forget that assets need to last until the second to die for couples,” Rappaport says.
CONSIDER YOUR GENES AND BEHAVIOR
“Some factors that influence how long you live may be beyond your control,” according to the SOA. “Others depend upon the choices you make every day. A successful retirement plan will address both.”
Half of retirees will live longer than life expectancy, so plan for an extra five or more years. Noel Abkemeier, American Academy of Actuaries
HOW WILL YOU MANAGE LONGEVITY RISK?
There are some time-honored ways to deal with the risk of outliving your assets. Those include the use of annuities, a sound asset-drawdown plan, delaying Social Security to age 70 for the higher wage earner and a reverse mortgage. Remember, Abkemeier says, half of retirees will live longer (than life expectancy) and, to build in a cushion, individuals should plan for an additional five or more years when considering lifetime income.
Powell is editor of Retirement Weekly, contributes regularly to USA TODAY, The Wall Street Journal and MarketWatch. Got questions about money? Email: rpowell@ allthingsretirement.com.
GETTY IMAGES/ ISTOCKPHOTO
L awrence J ournal -W orld
Sunday, October 9, 2016
Don’t interrupt or rush friend with speech issue Dear Annie: Do you know of any etiquette guidelines for speaking with someone who has a stutter or another speech impediment? I recently befriended a man from the neighborhood who has a stutter. I have a bad habit of finishing other people’s sentences in general, and I find myself wanting to jump in and help him complete his thought when he pauses. I’m assuming that is considered rude. — Wondering Dear Wondering: The etiquette for talking to someone who stutters is the same as the etiquette for talking to someone who doesn’t. Listen; be patient; make eye contact; and ask for clarification if you missed something. Don’t interrupt, finish his sentences or rush him to get to the
Dear Annie
Annie Lane
dearannie@creators.com
point. The only difference is that it’s more important to observe that decorum when talking to someone who stutters, lest you come off as patronizing. Dear Annie: I have been friends with a group of women since our high-school days. Since then, some of us have moved out of town, but once a year, we all get together. My problem is that my friends are all heavy drinkers. Because I
2 takes on pressure to marry The documentary “35 and Single” (6 p.m., Pivot, TV-MA) examines feelings about marriage and commitment among 30-something women and the social messages and peer pressure to “settle.” l Singleness and the pressures to marry loom large in the new comedy “Insecure” (9:30 p.m. HBO, TV-MA), as well. “Insecure” manages to explore issues of class and social expectations within and without the black community while at the same time showcasing wholly realistic characters filled with flaws, doubts and obvious self-delusions. l Stories about divorce designed as “entertainment” often feature at least one sympathetic character. The new HBO series “Divorce” (9 p.m. TV-MA) offers no such hope. It’s a tale of misery about characters who are very difficult to like. And that’s putting it mildly. l Candidates Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump meet in a live presidential debate (8 p.m. ABC, CBS, Fox, PBS, Univision, Bloomberg, CNBC, CNN, CSPAN, Fox News, MSNBC). Writing last month in The Atlantic, Alex Wagner raised the interesting issue of Donald Trump’s sense of humor, or its absence. The ability to laugh at oneself, or at a situation, served Reagan well in 1980 and worked to Hillary Clinton’s advantage in the first debate when she often simply smiled and allowed her opponent to rattle on. It remains to be seen if Donald Trump can add wit or self-deprecation to his rhetorical arsenal. Without them, 90 minutes of sustained television exposure can seem like a very long time. It’s reality TV at its most unforgiving. Tonight’s other highlights l “Frontline” (6 p.m., PBS, check local listings, TV-14) repeats “The Choice 2016,” a biography of candidates Clinton and Trump. l Scheduled on “60 Minutes” (6:30 p.m., CBS): employing artificial intelligence against cancer; a profile of actor Bryan Cranston. l A brash programmer suggests a new “narrative” on “Westworld” (8 p.m., HBO, TV-MA). l In search of the Master’s “voice” on “The Strain” (9 p.m., FX, TV-MA). Sunday Series l Bilious in Beantown on “The Simpsons” (7 p.m., Fox, TV-PG) l Ashley has scores to settle on “Once Upon a Time” (7 p.m., ABC, TV-PG) l A hero in the suburbs on “Son of Zorn” (7:30 p.m., Fox, r, TV-14). Copyright 2014 United Feature Syndicate, distributed by Universal Uclick.
am the only one who doesn’t enjoy drinking, I have always been the designated driver. I didn’t like that role in my teens and 20s, but I really resent it now that we’re in our 60s. After dinner, my friends insist on going to pubs to continue their “partying” until the wee hours. This year, I would like to break with tradition and head home after dinner. If I were to leave them after dinner and they were to stay out drinking, they would be angry at having to take costly taxis they can’t afford. On the other hand, if they were to leave with me after dinner, they would be livid at my cutting their evening short and being “the party pooper.” Because of their peer pressure, I now dread
our annual get-togethers. Any advice? — Designated Dear Designated: If these women grow furious with you for wanting to go home after dinner, they’re not friends; they’re bullies. It sounds as if you’re an obliging, sweet person, and this sweetness has spoiled these women over the years. In advance of your next get-together, let them know you won’t be the designated driver this year and they should arrange for a cab or use another ride-hailing service. Let them throw their hissy fits; they’ll get over it. If they want to keep you as a friend, then they should treat you less like a chauffeur.
JACQUELINE BIGAR’S STARS
For Sunday, Oct. 9: Inspirational ideas just seem to come to you. If you are single, you could meet someone whom you immediately want to draw in closer. If you are attached, the two of you often plan on spending time together at home. 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) HHH Caring exists between you and a friend; it would be wise not to be so reactive to this person’s every action. Tonight: Who cares about tomorrow? Taurus (April 20-May 20) HHHHH Reach out to someone who can help you gain a better understanding of what is going on. Tonight: Detach in order to find a solution. Gemini (May 21-June 20) HHHH Freedom of choice proves to be more important to you than the path you head down. Tonight: Hang out with a pal. Cancer (June 21-July 22) HHHH Hiding your insecurities from the majority of people might work, but not with those to whom you are closest. Tonight: Out late. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) HHH You have had many aspirations for your weekend. Express your caring. Tonight: Pace yourself. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHHH Allow your
— Send your questions for Annie Lane to dearannie@ creators.com.
jacquelinebigar.com
imagination to lead the way. Make sure that others are on the same page as you. Tonight: Be more fluid. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHHH A family matter dominates the day, which is likely to add confusion. Tonight: Brace yourself for the unexpected. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHHH Pick up the phone and call a friend whom you adore but rarely make time to chat with. Tonight: Visit with several loved ones. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHH Be aware of the cost of making a certain choice. You could cause yourself significant angst if you don’t rein in your spending. Tonight: Make it your treat. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHHH Be a kid again, and enjoy the moment. You care enormously about a close loved one. Be more open with this person. Tonight: Paint the town red. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHH Throwing yourself into a community matter will take your mind off of a difficult situation. Tonight: Get some extra R and R. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHH You might upset the apple cart by being self-indulgent. Consider taking a step back for now. Tonight: Accept a friend’s invitation.
Universal UNIVERSAL CROSSWORD
| 5B
Crossword
Edited by Timothy Parker October 9, 2016
ACROSS 1 Cassettes, e.g. 6 Cain’s brother 10 Plants a butt 14 As a whole 15 ___ Scotia 16 Insanity, in a courtroom 17 35 ... 20 Matronly address 21 Some abdominal exercises 22 Bedazzle 24 Minor fight 27 Examine a patient again 28 Shower alternatives 31 Close to identical 33 “To ___ is human ...” 34 Involve 36 Santa ___ (California track) 38 10 ... 42 Passed crookedly, as a check 43 Big name in hogs 45 ___ Sec. 48 Harvest wool 50 Dusty chasers 51 Land for development 53 Many have gray underneath 10/9
55 “... for what ___ worth” 56 Imprisoned, e.g. 58 King topper 61 100 ... 66 Fall lead-in? 67 Miscellaneous mix 68 Prophetic deck 69 “Auld Lang ___” 70 Bread from a tandoor 71 Kind of house or glasses DOWN 1 Singer McGraw 2 “The Phantom Menace” boy, briefly 3 South Carolina’s state tree 4 “Enchanted” girl in a 2004 film 5 Was an aggressive baserunner 6 Lack of vigor 7 Automaton, briefly 8 The day before 9 “___ and the Real Girl” (2007 film) 10 Deliberately annoy 11 Mistreat 12 Type of tantrum 13 Backtalker
18 Thing to get pinned on 19 Arson’s easy target 22 Mr. Lincoln, briefly 23 Magician’s prop 25 June 14 U.S. celebration 26 Fish appendages 29 It preys overhead 30 Ominous 32 ___ and kin (friends and relatives) 35 “Mono” attachment 37 Start for “dynamic” 39 Require 40 Town in “Hamlet” 41 Word with “road” or “hearing”
44 “Affirmative” 45 Trees no more 46 Cantankerous 47 Longsleeved garment 49 Judge to be probable 52 Home of the Minotaur’s labyrinth 54 Jrs.’ elders 57 Black, in verse 59 “The Iron Chancellor” Bismarck 60 End of a film shooting 62 Pie ___ mode 63 Spy agcy. 64 Split Asian peninsula (Abbr.) 65 Posting at JFK
PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER
10/8
© 2016 Universal Uclick www.upuzzles.com
FAMOUS NUMBERS By Timothy E. Parker
— The astrological forecast should be read for entertainment only.
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CA LL TODAY TO ENHAN CE YOU R BUSI N E SS ( 78 5 ) 8 3 2 -7223
|
6B
TODAY
WEATHER
.
Sunday, October 9, 2016
MONDAY
TUESDAY
L awrence J ournal -W orld
DATEBOOK
THURSDAY
WEDNESDAY
Affordable Housing Advisory Board, 11 a.m.Experience Haskell: noon, City Commission “Native Lawrence — Room, Lawrence City Sharing Our Past, BuildHall, 6 E. Sixth St. ing Our Future,” noon-3 Scrabble Club: Open p.m., Haskell Indian Play, 1-4 p.m., Lawrence Nations University, 155 E. Senior Center, 745 VerIndian Ave. mont St. League of Women Indigenous People’s Voters, voter registraDay celebration, 1:30tion and information, 6:30 p.m., South Park, 1:30-4:30 p.m., Lawrence 1141 Massachusetts St. Public Library, 707 VerHorizon 2020 Steermont St. ing Committee, 3-6 p.m., American Legion City Commission Room, Bingo, doors open at Lawrence City Hall, 6 E. 2 p.m., first games at 3 Sixth St. p.m., American Legion Take Off Pounds Post 14, 3408 W. Sixth St. Sensibly (TOPS), 5:30 Monarch Tag and Rep.m., 2712 Pebble Lane. lease, 4 p.m., Pendleton’s 842-1516 for info. Country Market, 1446 Citizen Advisory Board East 1850 Road. for Fair and Impartial Irish Traditional Music Policing, 6:30 p.m., City Session, 5:30-9 p.m., upHall, 6 E. Sixth St. stairs Henry’s on Eighth, Lawrence school 11 E. Eighth St. board meeting, 7 p.m., Returning to Etzanoa, district offices, 110 Mc6-7:30 p.m., Lawrence Donald Drive. Public Library, AuditoEudora City Commisrium, 707 Vermont St. sion meeting, 7 p.m., Luke Sweeney, 10 Eudora City Hall, 4 E. p.m., Replay Lounge, 946 Seventh St. Massachusetts St. County Commission Candidate Forum, 7 10 MONDAY p.m., Peace Mennonite Compost and WoodChurch, 615 Lincoln St. chip Sale Event, 8 a.m.-3 Argentine Tango p.m., Wood Recovery and Práctica, 8-10 p.m., Composting Facility, 1420 Signs of Life Bookstore E. 11th St. Cash only. and Art Gallery, 722
9 TODAY
Partly sunny and nice Clouds and sun with a A strong p.m. t-storm t-storm in spots
Mostly cloudy, a shower; cooler
An afternoon shower in places
High 71° Low 52° POP: 5%
High 72° Low 54° POP: 55%
High 76° Low 55° POP: 40%
High 62° Low 37° POP: 45%
High 60° Low 45° POP: 50%
Wind SSW 4-8 mph
Wind S 8-16 mph
Wind S 8-16 mph
Wind N 8-16 mph
Wind E 6-12 mph
POP: Probability of Precipitation
Kearney 74/51
McCook 75/50 Oberlin 75/56
Clarinda 73/54
Lincoln 73/53
Grand Island 72/51
Beatrice 73/54
St. Joseph 73/52 Chillicothe 73/52
Sabetha 72/53
Concordia 72/52
Centerville 72/51
Kansas City Marshall Manhattan 72/55 73/52 Salina 73/52 Oakley Kansas City Topeka 71/53 75/57 72/51 Lawrence 70/53 Sedalia 71/52 Emporia Great Bend 73/53 70/51 72/51 Nevada Dodge City Chanute 72/53 72/51 Hutchinson 71/51 Garden City 71/51 72/53 Springfield Wichita Pratt Liberal Coffeyville Joplin 74/50 72/52 68/51 74/55 73/51 73/49 Hays Russell 71/50 72/52
Goodland 74/47
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
LAWRENCE ALMANAC
Through 7 p.m. Saturday.
Temperature High/low Normal high/low today Record high today Record low today
71°/36° 70°/48° 92° in 1980 29° in 2000
Precipitation in inches 24 hours through 7 p.m. yest. 0.00 Month to date 1.45 Normal month to date 1.02 Year to date 31.24 Normal year to date 33.81
REGIONAL CITIES
Today Mon. Today Mon. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Holton 72 52 pc 73 55 c Atchison 72 52 pc 73 54 t Independence 72 55 pc 72 56 t Belton 71 53 pc 71 55 t Olathe 69 52 pc 70 53 t Burlington 69 52 pc 71 54 t Coffeyville 73 49 pc 76 53 pc Osage Beach 74 48 s 74 50 pc Osage City 70 53 pc 72 55 t Concordia 72 52 pc 73 52 c 71 52 pc 72 55 t Dodge City 72 51 c 82 52 pc Ottawa Wichita 72 52 pc 73 54 pc Fort Riley 73 53 pc 74 56 c Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
NATIONAL FORECAST
Last
Oct 15
New
Oct 22
First
Oct 30
LAKE LEVELS Level (ft)
Clinton Perry Pomona
Discharge (cfs)
877.34 894.17 976.45
Brighton Trunk Show
7 5000 15
Shown are today’s noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for today.
Fronts Cold
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016
INTERNATIONAL CITIES
Today Cities Hi Lo W Acapulco 89 79 t Amsterdam 55 42 sh Athens 77 63 s Baghdad 101 64 s Bangkok 90 77 t Beijing 64 40 s Berlin 51 37 sh Brussels 56 40 pc Buenos Aires 74 50 pc Cairo 94 71 s Calgary 39 23 c Dublin 57 43 pc Geneva 56 38 sh Hong Kong 83 76 c Jerusalem 79 61 s Kabul 77 42 s London 59 42 pc Madrid 79 49 s Mexico City 64 53 pc Montreal 56 35 pc Moscow 48 33 c New Delhi 98 76 s Oslo 47 43 r Paris 59 38 pc Rio de Janeiro 80 70 pc Rome 73 55 pc Seoul 62 44 s Singapore 88 77 c Stockholm 50 40 c Sydney 75 63 pc Tokyo 79 62 r Toronto 56 36 pc Vancouver 57 42 pc Vienna 54 38 sh Warsaw 51 41 c Winnipeg 55 44 c
Hi 91 56 74 100 92 65 52 54 69 89 34 54 54 82 77 77 56 77 69 54 42 95 47 58 75 70 65 89 48 89 68 55 56 53 49 55
Mon. Lo W 79 t 42 sh 66 pc 66 s 78 t 45 s 41 pc 38 sh 55 pc 69 pc 19 sn 46 pc 39 pc 74 t 59 s 42 s 44 sh 48 pc 53 t 36 s 32 pc 73 s 33 pc 40 pc 67 c 51 t 47 pc 76 c 40 c 53 pc 60 c 40 s 41 pc 39 pc 41 r 38 c
WOW DTV DISH 7 PM
7:30
Network Channels Æ
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9:30
38 Pawn
29
29 Castle “Cool Boys”
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Insider
On
Face the Nation
Medicare
News
News
News
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
KCTV5
the
Chiefs Rewind
Presidential Debate (N) (Live) h
Leverage
Pawn
Pawn
Scandal h Leverage
KIDS
10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30
Scott & Bailey
eNFL Football New York Giants at Green Bay Packers. (N) News 9 9 Once Upon a Time Presidential Debate (N) (Live) h Frontline h Presidential Debate (N) (Live) h Dakota Once Upon a Time Presidential Debate (N) (Live) h News 60 Minutes (N) Presidential Debate (N) (Live) h News 41 41 Football eNFL Football New York Giants at Green Bay Packers. (N) 38
Ice
What is sea smoke?
Football
C I 14 KMCI 15 L KCWE 17
Edition
News
Two Men Big Bang
CSI
Dakota’s Invisible Man Castle “XX” The
Bones
Rizzoli & Isles
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Sound
Broke
Spotlight Nichols
Bensin
Mike
Mike
News
Two Men Big Bang Mod Fam Mod Fam Rizzoli
Leverage
Broke
Frontline h
KSNT
Leverage
Leverage
Cable Channels WOW!6 6 WGN-A
Tower Cam/Weather Information 307 239 Blue Bloods
THIS TV 19 CITY
25
USD497 26
News
Blue Bloods “Pilot”
››‡ Let’s Make It Legal (1951)
Blue Bloods
The
Bones
››› The Wackiest Ship in the Army (1961)
City Bulletin Board, Commission Meetings
Tower Cam Bones “Pilot” How To
City Bulletin Board
School Board Information
School Board Information
ESPN 33 206 140 SportCtr 2016 World Series of Poker
World/Poker
SportsCenter (N) (Live)
ESPN2 34 209 144 CrossFit Games
CrossFit Games
CrossFit Games
CrossFit Games
Baseball Who’s In
World Poker Tour
Bull Riding
Snyder
World Poker Tour
FSM
36 672
World Poker Tour
UFC
NBCSN 38 603 151 hFormula 1 Racing Mecum Auto Auctions Auto auction from Chicago, Ill. (N) FNC
39 360 205 The O’Reilly Factor Presidential Debate (N) (Live) h
CNBC 40 355 208 The
The
MSNBC 41 356 209 MSNBC Debate CNN
44 202 200 Debate Night
The Kelly File (N)
Presidential Debate (N) (Live)
American Greed
Presidential Debate (N)
Live Post Live Post Debate
Presidential Debate (N) (Live)
Mecum
SportCtr
Mecum
Hannity (N) (Live)
American Greed
Greed
Live Post Debate
Debate Night in America (N) (Live)
TNT
45 245 138 ››› Enemy of the State (1998) Will Smith.
USA
46 242 105 Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
A&E
47 265 118 Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Jokers
Those
Jokers
Jokers
Jokers
Jokes
Jokes
Jokers
Jokers
TRUTV 48 246 204 Jokers AMC TBS
50 254 130 ›››‡ Carrie (1976) Sissy Spacek.
HIST
Arrow “The Climb”
Arrow “Left Behind”
Arrow
›› Thinner (1996) Robert John Burke. ›‡ Dreamcatcher 51 247 139 aMLB Baseball Texas Rangers at Toronto Blue Jays. (N) (Live) MLB ››‡ Red 2 (2013, Action)
BRAVO 52 237 129 Housewives/NJ 54 269 120 American Pickers
SYFY 55 244 122 ››‡ Blade (1998)
Manzo’d Housewives/NJ American Pickers
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MARCI knows how important it is to read to our
children and to support our public schools and libraries.
She votes to fund education. She votes for our kids.
Let’s keep Marci in the Senate, working for us. Paid for by Marci for Senate, Rita Spradlin, Treasurer
BEST BETS WOW DTV DISH 7 PM
SPORTS 7:30
8 PM
8:30
October 9, 2016 9 PM
9:30
10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30
Cable Channels cont’d
4 Simpson Son-Zorn Presidential Debate (N) 19 Penn Station
The X-Files h
9 PM
62 The X-Files h
5
Q:
MOVIES
4 19
Snow
WEATHER TRIVIA™
On Oct. 9, 1804, a hurricane in New England caused massive damage; 2-3 feet of snow fell in the Green Mountains.
62
7
Flurries
Today Mon. Today Mon. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Memphis 79 56 s 80 54 pc Albuquerque 70 52 c 77 54 s 90 74 pc 86 73 sh Anchorage 47 36 pc 50 36 pc Miami Milwaukee 61 52 s 69 57 pc Atlanta 80 51 s 77 51 s Minneapolis 60 50 s 71 55 s Austin 82 47 s 84 51 s Nashville 74 48 s 75 48 s Baltimore 65 45 s 62 43 s New Orleans 84 68 s 86 68 s Birmingham 83 53 s 82 53 s 60 47 r 61 46 s Boise 80 54 s 70 45 pc New York Omaha 72 55 pc 73 56 pc Boston 60 46 r 58 47 s Orlando 86 64 s 82 66 pc Buffalo 57 39 pc 57 38 s Philadelphia 62 46 r 64 45 s Cheyenne 73 46 s 74 46 s 97 72 s 97 69 pc Chicago 64 48 s 70 53 pc Phoenix Pittsburgh 60 39 s 60 39 s Cincinnati 65 43 s 67 45 s Portland, ME 61 42 pc 61 38 s Cleveland 60 45 s 61 45 s Portland, OR 63 45 r 63 42 pc Dallas 77 55 pc 82 58 s Reno 81 48 s 78 44 pc Denver 77 47 pc 80 48 s 63 48 s 63 45 s Des Moines 72 52 s 73 57 pc Richmond Sacramento 89 53 s 83 49 pc Detroit 60 42 s 61 47 s 76 55 s 75 55 pc El Paso 78 59 pc 84 60 pc St. Louis Fairbanks 40 21 s 43 24 pc Salt Lake City 76 55 s 79 56 pc San Diego 83 66 s 79 64 pc Honolulu 86 72 s 86 73 s San Francisco 76 55 s 71 53 pc Houston 84 55 s 85 59 s 59 46 c 58 44 pc Indianapolis 67 46 s 68 48 pc Seattle Spokane 58 41 r 55 33 pc Kansas City 70 53 pc 71 54 t 92 65 s 94 62 pc Las Vegas 90 68 s 91 69 pc Tucson 75 53 s 78 56 pc Little Rock 78 53 s 79 51 pc Tulsa 64 50 s 65 48 s Los Angeles 87 61 s 83 58 pc Wash., DC National extremes yesterday for the 48 contiguous states High: Death Valley, CA 100° Low: Walden, CO 12°
4 5
Rain
-10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s National Summary: Heavy rain associated with Matthew will taper off today along the coasts of North Carolina and southeastern Virginia, but flooding should persist. The Midwest will be dry and comfortable.
3
8
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Precipitation
SUNDAY Prime Time M
11 TUESDAY
Fast, friendly service!
5pm-9pm Handbags, shoes, accessories and more!
Nov 7
As of 7 a.m. Saturday Lake
Massachusetts St. Free; no partner necessary.
Please join us October 13th
Steam fog that occurs when cold air crosses warmer ocean waters.
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SUN & MOON Today 7:25 a.m. 6:51 p.m. 2:46 p.m. 12:15 a.m.
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Tardy
American Pickers
›‡ House at the End of the Street
Happens Housewives/NJ American Pickers
Manzo’d
American Pickers
›› Resident Evil: Apocalypse (2004)
FX 56 COM 58 E! 59 CMT 60 GAC 61 BET 64 VH1 66 TRV 67 TLC 68 LIFE 69 LMN 70 FOOD 72 HGTV 73 NICK 76 DISNXD 77 DISN 78 TOON 79 DSC 81 FREE 82 NGC 83 HALL 84 ANML 85 TVL 86 TBN 90 EWTN 91 RLTV 93 CSPAN2 95 CSPAN 96 ID 101 AHC 102 OWN 103 WEA 116 TCM 162
248 249 236 327 326 329 335 277 280 252 253 231 229 299 292 290 296 278 311 276 312 282 304 372 370
136 107 114 166 165 124 162 215 183 108 109 110 112 170 174 172 176 182 180 186 185 184 106 260 261
351 350 285 287 279 362 256
211 210 192 195 189 214 132
HBO 401 MAX 411 SHOW 421 STZENC 440 STRZ 451
501 515 545 535 527
300 310 318 340 350
››‡ The Equalizer (2014, Action) The Strain (N) The Strain We’re the Millers ›› We’re the Millers (2013) Jennifer Aniston. K. Hart
The Strain Lewis Black Rob & Chyna Rob & Chyna (N) WAGS: Miami (N) Rob & Chyna WAGS: Miami ››‡ Liar Liar I Love Cheerleaders ›› Encino Man (1992) Sean Astin. Cops Flea Flea Flea Flea Flea Flea Flea Flea Flea Flea Are-There Yet? ›‡ Are We Done Yet? (2007) Ice Cube, Nia Long. Browns Abun Paid Bask. Wives LA Bask. Wives LA Love & Hip Hop Love & Hip Hop Bask. Wives LA Food Paradise Big- RV Big- RV Extreme RVs Big- RV Big- RV Big- RV Big- RV 90 Day Fiancé “I Can See the Cracks” 90 Day Fiancé 90 Day Fiancé “I Can See the Cracks” Break-Up Night Unwanted Guest (2016) Kate Mansi. Break-Up Nightmare (2016, Drama) The Watcher (2016) Erin Cahill. The Inherited (2016) Jenn Liu. The Watcher Guy’s Games Halloween Wars (N) Worst Bakers Halloween Baking Halloween Wars Hawaii Hawaii Carib Carib Island Island Hunters Hunt Intl Carib Carib Nicky Nicky Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Friends Friends Friends Friends Lego Lego Milo Gravity Spid. Marvel’s Guardi Rebels Walk the Walk the Ghost Patrol (N) Walk the Stuck Bizaard Best Fr. Liv-Mad. Vampire Austin Jessie Regular Regular Burgers American Fam Guy Fam Guy Rick Face Mike Ty. Burgers Last Frontier Last Frontier Alaska Last Frontier Last Frontier Pitch ›››‡ The Blind Side (2009, Drama) Sandra Bullock. Young Osteen Jeremiah ›› Won’t Back Down (2012) Maggie Gyllenhaal. ›› Won’t Back Down (2012) Maggie Gyllenhaal. Harvest Moon Chesapeake Shores Golden Golden Golden Golden Golden Golden Treehouse Masters: Branched Out (N) Treehouse Masters Redwood Kings “Redwood Renaissance” Reba Reba Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond King King King King Osteen K. Shook Copeland Creflo D. Names ›››‡ Exodus (1960) Paul Newman. Sunday Night Prime Catholics Rosary With Cardinal Dolan Mother Angelica Sunday Mass Taste Taste Safari Second Paid Paid Taste Taste Safari Second Wolf Boys After Words Book TV His Final Battle After Words Preview-Debate Presidential Debate (N) (Live) Presidential Debate 48 Hours on ID 48 Hours on ID (N) On the Case, Zahn 48 Hours on ID 48 Hours on ID Bible’s-Secrets Bible’s-Secrets Bible’s-Secrets Bible’s-Secrets Bible’s-Secrets Undercover Boss Undercover Boss Undercover Boss Undercover Boss Undercover Boss Storm Wranglers Storm Wranglers Dangerous Day Storm Wranglers Storm Wranglers Ghost-Frnknstn Frankenstein ››› House of Frankenstein Dr. Jekyll-Hyde
›› Ride Along 2 Westworld (N) ››› Magic Mike (2012) Channing Tatum.
Divorce
Insecure Last
Insecure Presumed Inn. Shameless Shameless (N) Masters of Sex (N) Shameless Masters of Sex ›‡ Wild Hogs (2007) ››› School Ties (1992) Brendan Fraser. ››‡ EDtv (1999) Ash Blunt Ash Blunt Ash Blunt Black Sails “XX.” Cutthroat Island
››‡ Magic Mike XXL (2015)
Westworld
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Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com/sports l Sunday, October 9, 2016
TCU 24, KANSAS 23
OH SO CLOSE
Nick Krug/Journal-World Photos
KANSAS QUARTERBACK RYAN WILLIS (13) WALKS THROUGH THE TUNNEL TO THE LOCKER ROOM following the Jayhawks’ 24-23 loss to TCU on Saturday at Memorial Stadium. For more photos, please visit: www.kusports.com/kufball10816
Kansas’ defense creating hope
Missed kick caps heartbreaking loss By Benton Smith basmith@ljworld.com
A 54-yard field goal hung in the air Saturday afternoon at Memorial Stadium as the Kansas football team’s head coach said a prayer and its starting quarterback looked away, too nervous to watch. The collective gasp from the 23,946 in attendance signaled the result before the officials positioned in the south end zone waved their arms, making the miss and the Jayhawks’ fourth consecutive loss all but official, with just two ticks left on the game clock. In the minutes following a 24-23 defeat at the hands of TCU, secondyear KU head coach David Beaty, who just watched his team’s defense spearhead a wouldbe upset that nearly ended the program’s 14-game Big 12 losing streak, had to dial down his patented positivity to make it clear
moral victories shouldn’t be the endgame. “Fighting tooth and nail is not the goal. The goal is to go win the game,” Beaty said after senior kicker Matt Wyman’s would-be winner missed to the right. “Fighting tooth and nail, that’s the minimum expectation — that’s the price of admission. That team (TCU) fought tooth and nail, as well. You’re gonna get that week in and week out in the Big 12.” It took a wild final series from KU’s offense just to get in position for the kick, attempted on third-and-two from the left hash with six seconds left in the fourth quarter. Horned Frogs senior defensive end Josh Carraway sacked the Jayhawks’ new starting quarterback, Ryan Willis, on back-to-back plays in the final minute, eventually leading to a fourth-and-22 from KU’s KANSAS KICKER MATT WYMAN (7) UNSNAPS his helmet in frustration after missing what could have been a game> KANSAS, 4C winning 54-yard field goal Saturday at Memorial Stadium.
Three missed fourthquarter field goals. Four first-half turnovers. On the wrong end of a play that started so well, slipped into a bizarre intermission, and ended so badly. Once the fog clears from those and other disappointments and legitimate nitpicks from Saturday’s 24-23 loss to TCU in Memorial Stadium, the reappearance of a long-missing emotion ruled the day: Hope. For the second week in a row, Kansas took a noticeable step forward and this time the step was twice as long and loud because the Jayhawks went from competing nose-to-nose for two quarters to doing it for four. In the process, Kansas proved it has a legitimate Big 12 defense that knows how to drag extremely successful quarterbacks out of their comfort zones and onto the turf.
Tom Keegan tkeegan@ljworld.com
A week after harassing Texas Tech’s Patrick Mahomes II and forcing him out of the game with an injury, Kansas intercepted TCU’s Kenny Hill three times and limited him to 206 passing yards and one touchdown through the air. Hill was coming off a 449-yard passing day with five TD passes and one interception in a 5246 loss to Oklahoma. And the Kansas defense made it happen with four starters unavailable because of injuries. Daniel Wise, the
> KEEGAN, 4C
Playing for ‘Scooter’, KU volleyball sweeps Texas Tech By Tom Keegan tkeegan@ljworld.com
Junior middle blocker Kayla Cheadle played Saturday with “Scooter” written on her left wrist with a silver Sharpie, and with the man behind the nickname in her heart, thoughts and prayers. And she never played better.
Starting in place of injured middle blocker Zoe Hill, Cheadle had key blocks and four of her eight kills in the first set, starting the Jayhawks toward a sweep of Texas Tech, 25-8, 2518, 25-18. Scott “Scooter” Ward’s title is associate athletics director/academic and career counseling, but his role with KU’s volley-
ball and men’s basketball players runs much deeper than that. Ward suffered a tear in his aorta Friday morning and underwent surgery after being flown from Lawrence Memorial Hospital to University of Kansas Hospital. “He’s fighting for his life and this team thinks the world of him and the things he’s done for us,
our program, not only on an academic level, but a personal level, and he’s a dear friend of mine,” Kansas coach Ray Bechard said.” All the energy and effort you saw today is a direct reflection of how we feel about him.” Kelsie Payne (12 kills, .526 hitting percentage) attributed some of the
Kyle Babson/Special to the Journal-World
KANSAS FRESHMAN JADA BURSE, RIGHT, goes for a block > VOLLEYBALL, 3C against Texas Tech on Saturday night at Horejsi Center.
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AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE SPORTS
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EAST
NORTH
COLLEGE FOOTBALL ROUNDUP
Close win for Oklahoma AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE EAST
AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE
The Associated Press
No. 20 Oklahoma 45, Texas 40 Dallas — Dede Westbrook had three touchdown catches longer than 40 yards while setting an Oklahoma single-game record with 232 yards receiving, and the Sooners held on for a victory over Texas in the Red River rivalry. Samaje Perine added 214 yards and two touchdowns rushing on 35 carries for the Sooners (3-2, 2-0 Big 12), who rolled up 672 total yards against Longhorn coach Charlie Strong’s beleaguered defense. Texas (2-3, 0-2) led after two long TD passes by freshman quarterback Shane Buechele in the first 4 1/2 minutes after halftime. But Oklahoma went ahead for good when Baker Mayfield’s 4-yard TD run, right after his 51-yard completion to Dahu Green, made it 28-27. “It’s special to me, very special,” said Mayfield, who grew up in the Austin area. “I’ve been waiting a long time to actually come away with a win against these guys.” Mayfield was 22-of-31 passing for 390 yards and easily made up for two early interceptions with the three TDs to Westbrook . The game ended after a wild play, with the Longhorns completing several laterals and going forward at least 20 yards before eventually losing 9 — after a final declined penalty for an illegal forward pass. Oklahoma Texas
7 7 21 10 — 45 3 10 14 13 — 40
Iowa State 31 Oklahoma State 38 Stillwater, Okla. — James Washington caught eight passes for 152 yards and two touchdowns, and Oklahoma State overcame a 17-point secondhalf deficit to beat Iowa State. Washington put the Cowboys ahead for good when he caught a 3-yard touchdown pass from Mason Rudolph with 3:40 remaining. “It was a good win for us,” Oklahoma State coach Mike Gundy said. “Guys learned how to fight back.” Rudolph passed for 351 yards and four touchdowns for Oklahoma State (4-2, 2-1 Big 12). Though the Cowboys gained 459 total yards, Gundy was disappointed in the team’s offensive production. The Cowboys were held to 108 yards rushing, and most of that was gained in the final 20 minutes. Iowa St. Oklahoma St.
3 7
14 14 0 — 31 7 7 17 — 38
Texas Tech 38 Kansas State 44 Manhattan— Kansas State scored touchdowns on defense and special teams, shut down high-flying Texas Tech in the second half and held on for a victory over the Red Raiders. Jesse Ertz scored on the ground and through the air, Charles Jones ran for 128 yards and another touchdown, and Matt McCrane hit three field goals as the Wildcats (3-2, 1-1 Big 12) beat the Red Raiders (32, 1-1) for the fifth time in their last six meetings. Patrick Mahomes, despite an ailing shoulder, still threw for 504 yards and two touchdowns while running for three more scores. But the Red Raiders’ junior quarterback also threw a pick that was returned for seven and failed to convert three fourth downs in the second half. The Wildcats’ Byron Pringle returned a kickoff 99 yards for a score with 1:31 remaining in the half, giving Kansas State a 31-28 advantage. Texas Tech Kansas State
14 14 3 7 — 38 14 17 0 13 — 44
Top 25 No. 1 Alabama 49 No. 16 Arkansas 30 Fayetteville, Ark. — Jalen Hurts accounted for four touchdowns and Minkah Fitzpatrick had three interceptions as No. 1 Alabama extended its nation-best winning streak to 18 games with a ictory over No. 16 Arkansas. The win is the 10th straight
SPORTS CALENDAR
KANSAS NORTH
TODAY • Soccer vs. Oklahoma State, 1 p.m. NORTH MONDAY • Men’s golf at Bayou City collegiate, Pearland, Texas
No. 10 Miami No. 23 Florida State Miami Gardens, Fla. — DeMarcus Walker blocked Miami kicker Michael Badgley’s point-after attempt with 1:38 FREE STATE HIGH remaining, and No. 23 Florida SOUTH MONDAYWEST State escaped with a victory • Girls golf, regional at Junction over the 10th-ranked Hurricanes. City, 9 a.m. AL EAST The Hurricanes were in po • Boys soccer vs. Lawrence High, sition to tie it after Brad Kaaya 6:30 p.m. connected with Stacy Coley on an 11-yard touchdown pass. AL CENTRAL LAWRENCE HIGH Badgley had made 72 conSOUTH WEST MONDAY secutive extra points, but the • Girls golf, regional at Junction 6-foot-3 Walker got his arm AL EAST City, 9 a.m. outstretched just enough to AL WEST • Boys soccer at Free State, 6:30 knock away what would have SOUTH WEST been the tying point. p.m. And just like that, in a AL CENTRAL series decided so many times AL EAST HASKELL LM Otero/AP Photo over the years by Florida State MONDAY field goals in critical moments OKLAHOMA RUNNING BACK JOE MIXON (25) is knocked off his fee by sailing wide right and wide staff; ETA 5 p.m. • Men’s golf at Avila tournament, AFC TEAM LOGOS 081312: Helmet and team logos for the AFC teams; various sizes; stand-alone; Texas safety Dylan Haines on Saturday in Dallas. left, there’s now a block to add 9 a.m. AL WEST AL CENTRAL to the lore. for the Crimson Tide (6-0, a 12-game losing streak against Dalvin Cook and Kermit SPORTS ON TV 3-0 Southeastern Conference) Oregon with a victory. Whitfield had touchdown Myles Gaskin ran for 197 catches in the third quarter to over the Razorbacks, and FitzTODAY for the help the Seminoles beat Miami patrick’s 100-yard interception yards and a touchdown AL WEST Baseball Time Net Cable return for a touchdown was undefeated Huskies, who have for the seventh straight time. Dodgers at Nationals noon FS1 150, 227 AFC TEAM LOGOS 081312: Helmet and team logos for the AFC teams; various sizes; stand-alone; staff; ETA 5 p.m. Alabama’s 10th non-offensive won nine straight games going 3 10 0 6 — 19 Indians at Red Sox 3 p.m. TBS 51, 251 back to last season. Dante Pet- Miami score of the season. Florida State 0 3 14 3 — 20 Rangers at Blue Jays 6:30 p.m. TBS 51, 251 Hurts finished 13-of-17 pass- tis caught eight passes for 134 ing for 253 yards with two yards and two touchdowns, No. 17 North Carolina 3 touchdowns. He ran for two while John Ross had nine Pro Football Time Net Cable No. 25 Virginia Tech 34 catches for logos 94 yards more TDs. AFC TEAM LOGOS 081312: Helmet and team for theand AFCthree teams; various sizes; H stand-alone; 5 p.m. Jets at Steelers noon CBS 5, 13, Chapel ill, N.C. staff; — ETA Jerod Damien Harris added 122 scores. 205, 213 Evans threw for two scores Freshman Justin Herbert yards rushing on 13 carries for 3 p.m. FOX 4, 204 and ran for another to help No. Falcons at Broncos the Crimson Tide, which fin- made his first college start and 3:25 p.m. CBS 5, 13, 25 Virginia Tech beat No. 17 Chargers at Raider ished with 517 yards of total of- threw for 179 yards and two 205, 213 North Carolina in heavy rain fense and averaged 10.1 yards touchdowns for the Ducks, and wind from Hurricane Mat- Giants at Packers 7:20 p.m. NBC 14, 214 who continued their dramatic per play. thew. Austin Allen completed slide with a fourth straight loss. Sam Rogers and Chris Cun- Auto Racing Time Net Cable 25 of 48 passes for 400 yards Oregon (2-4, 0-3 Pac-12) hasn’t ningham had scoring catches FIA Formula E Champ. 2:30 a.m. FS1 150, 227 and three touchdowns for Ar- lost four straight since the 2006 and the Hokies (4-1, 2-0 Atlankansas (4-2, 0-2), also throw- season. tic Coast Conference) domi- Soccer Time Net Cable Herbert was intercepted ing three interceptions as the nated the reigning Coastal Razorbacks finished with five on his first pass of the game, Scottish Challenge Cup 6:55 a.m. FSPLUS 148 Division champion Tar Heels turnovers overall. Arkansas and Washington went on to 11 a.m. FS2 153 (4-2, 2-1) in a surprising romp. Ukraine v. Kosovo finished with 473 yards of total score on the ensuing series on 1:30 p.m. ESPN 33, 233 “We’re tired of hearing Iceland v. Turkey offense, but it gained only 73 Browning’s 1-yard touchdown 1:30 p.m. FS2 153 about everybody else,” Evans Macedonia v. Italy yards on the ground on 36 car- run. 4 p.m. FS1 150, 227 said. “We’re tired of hearing Wash. v. West. NY ries. Washington 21 14 21 14 — 70 about UNC, Miami, Clemson, 0 7 14 0 — 21 Louisville, etc. Those are great Golf Time Net Cable Alabama 14 21 7 7 — 49 Oregon Arkansas 7 10 7 6 — 30 teams, don’t get me wrong. ... Alfred Dunhill Links Champ. 6:30 a.m. Golf 156, 289 No. 6 Houston 40 But at the same time, we feel Web.com Tour Champ. 2 p.m. Golf 156, 289 No. 2 Ohio State 38 Navy 46 like we should be mentioned Champ. Tour 5 p.m. Golf 156, 289 Indiana 17 Annapolis, Md. — Navy in those categories with those Columbus, Ohio — J.T. Barstunned No. 6 Houston, romp- guys. So every week we have a Women’s Volleyball Time Net Cable rett ran for 137 yards and a ing a victory that seriously statement we want to make.” touchdown and passed for an11 a.m. SECN 157 damaged Houston’s playoff The Hokies had their share Florida at S. Carolina other score and Ohio State beat noon ESPN2 34, 234 hopes. of weather-related troubles, Ohio St. at Michigan Indiana. Miami at N. Carolina noon FSN 36, 236 Will Worth ran for 115 yards including seven fumbles, mulSecond-ranked Ohio State and threw for two touchdowns tiple bobbled snaps and a sea- Tennessee at Kentucky 1 p.m. SECN 157 was forced to rely mostly on its Purdue at Neb. 2 p.m. ESPN2 34, 234 to help the Midshipmen (4-1, son-low 264 yards. ground game, which accounted 3-0 American Athletic ConferBut Bud Foster’s defense Texas A&M at Mississippi 3 p.m. SECN 157 for 290 yards, and some tough ence) pull off the upset. Navy locked down on the Tar Heels play by its defense — including Time Net Cable hadn’t defeated a Top 10 team and Mitch Trubisky, who en- Women’s Soccer a critical fourth-quarter stop on since 1984, when it topped No. tered as one of the nation’s top OSU at Kansas 1 p.m. FSN 37, 226 its own 4 yard line following a 2 South Carolina in Annapolis. passers. UNC finished with 131 Nebraska at Minnesota 2 p.m. BTN 147, 237 Barrett inception — to fend off When it was over, streams of yards, with Trubisky throw- Florida at Mississippi 5 p.m. SECN 157 the Hoosiers, who had upset the Navy Brigade stormed the ing his first two interceptions Michigan State last weekend. field to surround the players, of the year, while the Hokies WNBA Time Net Cable Ohio State’s defense held most of them jumping for joy. scored 20 points off four turnwhen it had to, also forcing InLA at Minn. (Finals Game 1) ABC 9, 209 Navy pulled off the win overs. diana to turn the ball over on with a precise triple-option atUNC, playing without indowns on the Hoosiers’ own 33 Time Net Cable tack that shredded the nation’s jured top tailback Elijah Hood, Horse Racing with 5:22 left and the Buckeyes 4 p.m. NBC 14, 214 top-ranked rushing defense. failed to score a touchdown for From Keeneland leading 31-17. Five plays later, The Midshipmen came in as a the first time under fifth-year Barrett hit Dontre Wilson with 17-point underdog. coach Larry Fedora. a 37-yard touchdown pass to MONDAY Houston’s sloppiest perfor“I’m not going to blame it put the game out of reach. mance of the season came in a on the weather,” Fedora said. Pro Football Time Net Cable Safety Malik Hooker sealed driving rain. The Cougars (5-1, “They played in it, too. They the win by picking off Richard 2-1) committed three turnovers seemed to handle the weather. Tampa Bay at Carolina 7:15 p.m. ESPN 33, 233 Lagow on Indiana’s next series. and gave up more points than We did a poor job all the way Barrett was 9-of-23 for 93 Soccer Time Net Cable in their previous four games around.” yards. He carried the ball 26 Andorra v. Switzerland 1:30 p.m. FSPLUS 148 combined. times. Tech 6 7 14 7 —34 Netherlands v. France 1:30 p.m. FS1 150, 227 Navy finished with 306 yards Virginia North Carolina 0 3 0 0 — 3 rushing, many of them on pitchSweden v. Bulgaria 1:30 p.m. FS2 153 Indiana 3 7 7 0 — 17 Ohio St. 3 21 7 7 — 38 es from Worth as he sprinted No. 21 Colorado 17 laterally along the line. HousBaseball Time Net Cable No. 4 Michigan 78 Southern Cal 21 ton was allowing only 42 yards 7 p.m. TBS 51, 251 Rutgers 0 Los Angeles — Tyler Petite Playoff TBA on the ground per game. Piscataway, N.J. — Jabrill caught his second touchdown Peppers ran for a career-high Houston 10 10 7 13 — 40 pass from Sam Darnold with 10 10 2 15 — 46 8:28 to play, and Southern two touchdowns and set up Navy LATEST LINE another score with a 63-yard California overcame four turnNo. 8 Texas A&M 45 scamper in his return to his overs to earn a victory over No. NFL No. 9 Tennessee 38 native New Jersey and No. 4 21 Colorado. Favorite.............. Points (O/U)........... Underdog College Station, Texas — Week 5 Michigan routed Rutgers in Daniel Imatorbhebhe also Trevor Knight had a 1-yard a game in which the Scarlet caught a TD pass from Dar- MINNESOTA.....................7 (40.5)..........................Houston touchdown run in the second Knights were limited to 22 nold, who passed for 358 yards MIAMI............................... 3 1/2 (43)...................Tennessee overtime and Texas withstood New England................10 1/2 (47).................CLEVELAND yards total yards and two first and three scores along with two PITTSBURGH. ................. 7 1/2 (48).........................NY Jets another late Tennessee rally to downs. fumbles and an interception. BALTIMORE........................4 (45)....................Washington beat Texas. After Knight bulled Peppers had scoring runs of USC (3-3, 2-2 Pac-12) shredded Philadelphia.................. 3 1/2 (46)........................DETROIT in for the touchdown, Armani 7 and 4 yards after taking direct one of the nation’s top defenses INDIANAPOLIS..................4 (48)............................Chicago Watts intercepted Joshua snaps, and his career-long run for 539 yards, but Colorado’s DENVER........................... 4 1/2 (46)..........................Atlanta Dobbs’ pass on the next play for midway through the first quartakeaways kept an otherwise Buffalo................................ 1 (39)..................LOS ANGELES Tennessee’s seventh turnover OAKLAND......................3 1/2 (51.5)................... San Diego ter paved the way to a 4-yard one-sided game close. to end the game. The teams exCincinnati........................2 (45.5)........................... DALLAS touchdown run by Ty Isaac for In the Buffaloes’ first game GREEN BAY........................7 (48).........................NY Giants changed field goals in the first the first score of the game. as a ranked team since Nov. Monday overtime. Knight threw for 239 It could have been a bet7, 2005, receiver Bryce Bobo CAROLINA........................4 (44.5)....................Tampa Bay yards and two touchdowns ter day for the junior who has threw a 67-yard touchdown Bye Week: Jacksonville, Kansas City, New and ran for 110 yards and three played 12 positions for Michipass in the third quarter and Orleans, Seattle. more scores. COLLEGE FOOTBALL gan (6-0, 3-0 Big Ten) this caught a tying TD pass with The Volunteers (5-1, 2-1 Favorite.............. Points (O/U)........... Underdog season. He had a 44-yard punt 10:20 to play. Southeastern Conference) had ATLANTIC.....13 1/2 (62)......................Charlotte return for a first-quarter touchColorado (4-2, 2-1) kicked a FLORIDA Georgia............................... 7 (41)..........SOUTH CAROLINA rallied from double-digit defidown nullified by an illegal field goal with 4:49 left after MLB PLAYOFFS cits to win four of their last five block. Petite’s tiebreaking score , but Favorite............... Odds (O/U)............ Underdog games, including last week’s the Trojans coolly ran out the National League Divisional Series Michigan 14 29 14 21 — 78 last-play victory over Georgia. clock. Best of Five Series Rutgers 0 0 0 0 — 0 They trailed by 21 points in the Dodgers lead series 1-0 Justin Davis rushed for 83 third quarter thanks to six turnNo. 5 Washington 70 yards before leaving with an LA Dodgers.................Even-6 (7.5)...........WASHINGTON overs before tying it on Alvin American League Divisional Series Oregon 21 ankle injury early in the second Best of Five Series Kamara’s 18-yard touchdown Eugene, Ore. — Jake Brownhalf for USC. Clevelander leads series 2-0 reception with 41 seconds left. ing threw for 304 yards and a Colorado 0 0 7 10 — 17 BOSTON........................... 6-7 (9.5)......................Cleveland Southern Cal 7 7 0 7 — 21 Toronto leads series...............................2-0 school-record six touchdowns TORONTO...................8 1/2-9 1/2 (9).........................Texas and ran for two more scores Texas A&M 21 0 7 7 3 7 — 45 Home Team in CAPS 7 0 7 21 3 0 — 38 and No. 5 Washington snapped Tennessee
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NBA exhibition an ’08 KU reunion By Bobby Nightengale bnightengale@ljworld.com
Kansas City, Mo. — Nearly a decade after winning an NCAA title in 2008, several former Kansas basketball players held an unofficial reunion Saturday at the Sprint Center. With three Jayhawks playing in an exhibition game for the Minnesota
Timberwolves — Cole Aldrich, Brandon Rush and Andrew Wiggins — many of their old teammates were more than happy to watch. That included Brennan Bechard, Jeremy Case, Mario Chalmers, Brady Morningstar and Conner Teahen. Chalmers and Morningstar watched courtside, directly across from the Timberwolves’
bench. Wayne Simien was also in attendance, drawing a cheer when he was announced on the video board. “Heckling them a little bit from the sideline,” Aldrich joked. “But it was great to see those guys.” The Timberwolves, with major contributions from their Kansas players, beat the Miami Heat, 109-100.
Free State qualifies five for state tennis tourney By Evan Riggs eriggs@ljworld.com
Olathe — Without playing Blue Valley Northwest before regionals, Free State junior Ali Dodd said the girls tennis team went into Saturday not knowing what to expect. Led by Dodd and senior Andrea Chen’s third place finish in doubles, the Firebirds qualified five of their six players for the state tournament and walked away with a regional runner-up plaque. Sophomore Gabby Gorman and freshman Anna Peard placed sixth in doubles while sophomore Kate Piper placed fifth in singles. “To have five of our six players qualify (for state) is great,” FSHS interim coach Michael Trujillo said. “To get runner-up at regionals makes me very proud to be their coach.” After winning their first two matches, Dodd and Chen lost to the Kylee White and Alisa Peinzrux, the No. 1 seed from Blue Valley Northwest, 6-0, 6-0 to set up a third-place match against Olathe East. Dodd and Chen won the first set easily at 6-3, but had their serve broken in the first game of the second set. But they turned it around in a hurry, and made quick work of Olathe East by winning six consecutive games to close the match. “We just told each other ‘We have to buckle down,’” Chen said. “It’s been such a long day, we didn’t want to play a tiebreak so we just got our energy right back up and played well.” Gorman and Peard
Evan Riggs/Journal-World Photo
FREE STATE’S ALI DODD HITS A FOREHAND during regional tennis Saturday in Olathe. also lost to Blue Valley Northwest, 6-0, 6-1, which set up an elimination match against senior Natalie Cote and junior Chloe Thornton, of Lawrence High, in the third round. The young Free State duo won the match 6-0, 6-2 to clinch a spot in the state tournament before losing their next match. “They were really excited to qualify,” Trujillo said. “To see them fight through adversity and qualify was awesome to see. It showed a lot of maturity for a couple of young players.” However, Free State wasn’t able to qualify its whole team because its singles players — Piper and Andie Veeder — played in an elimination match. Piper ultimately came out on top 6-1, 6-0 to end Veeder’s season. After three hard-fought matches, Piper won her last match on a walkover to claim fifth place. “I’m super proud of the way we played individually and the way our team played,” Dodd said. “We
played really hard and had a good day.” The five Free State qualifiers will have a week of practice before the Class 6A state tournament, which begins Friday at 11:30 a.m. at the Kossover Tennis Center in Topeka.
LHS season over Cote and Thornton’s loss to Free State ended Lawrence’s season. Coach Chris Marshall felt his team missed some opportunities to make the match closer. “A lot of those games went to deuce and Free State won those crucial points,” Marshall said. “The serving percentage wasn’t where it needed to be. If we get a few more serves in, I think the match would have been closer.” Nobody else for the Lions made it out of the opening round, with Nina Givotovski and Caitlynn Kliem losing in the opening round of the singles bracket, and Chisato Kimura and Mia Waters doing the same in doubles.
In one sequence during the second quarter, Aldrich blocked a shot on the defensive end, dribbled up the court and fired a pass to Rush, who drilled a three-pointer from the wing. Both of them have bounced around NBA teams throughout their professional careers, but it reminded the crowd of old times, drawing a wild
cheer from the crowd of 13,042. “It was like a home game for them,” Minnesota coach Tom Thibodeau said. Wiggins scored 19 points on 3-of-11 shooting, earning 16 trips to the free-throw line in 28 minutes. The No. 1 pick in the 2014 NBA draft, Wiggins said the return to Kansas
Volleyball
Doctors pleased by status of Ward, Marchiony says
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Jayhawks’ strong play to channeling Ward. “He’s a big motivation for all of us,” Payne said. “He’s helped us academically and also if we ever need to talk, he’s always willing to talk to us. So when we heard about his situation, we were all really heartbroken, but we played today for him and kind of put his spirit into our game.” Ward’s positive spirit has not been dented by a tough break in life. He suffered paralysis and has been confined to wheelchair since a slipand-slide accident during his freshman year at Hutchinson Community College. “Scooter’s my biggest supporter, so I wrote his name on my wrist to get me going,” Cheadle said. Asked what Ward has done for her, Cheadle almost didn’t know where to start. “So much,” she said. “If I need to talk, I go straight to his office. Obviously, academically too. He’s just a huge part of my life and helps me with everything.”
City “brought back memories.” Rush scored 11 points in 22 minutes with three rebounds, shooting 3-of5 from behind the threepoint line. Aldrich added four points, six boards and two blocks in 21 minutes. Up in a suite, all of the Kansas basketball players watched the preseason game.
Kansas associate athletic director Jim Marchiony provided the Journal-World with an update on Scott “Scooter” Ward’s condition on Saturday night. Marchiony, who was with Ward until nearly 11 p.m. Friday at University of Kansas Hospital in Kansas City, Mo., said Ward “had his eyes open some (Saturday) for little bits.” Marchiony said Ward, who had not regained consciousness as of Saturday morning, had “some infections but nothing they’re particularly worried about,” and added that “doctors are very pleased with the way things are going.” Marchiony said the Given the struggles of a young Texas Tech (10-10 overall, 0-5 in the Big 12) squad, Kansas (15-2, 4-1) was at risk of coming out flat, but just the opposite happened. “Cheadle was tremendous today,” Bechard
KU volleyball team made a video for Ward before their match against Texas Tech on Saturday and his wife, Robin, played it for him in his room. Friday night, as many as 35 people — most members of Ward’s KU family — were with Robin in the waiting room at one time. That included Ward’s mother who arrived from California around 10:30 p.m. Friday. Marchiony said doctors informed them that the initial surgery to repair the tear in Ward’s aorta was expected to take in the five-hour range but only took two. — Matt Tait said. “Ten swings, eight kills, no errors. And Payne was very good.” ESPNU will televise KU’s next match, 6 p.m. Wednesday in sold-outfor-the-season Horejsi vs. Kansas State (14-4, 3-2).
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in the heart of Downtown Lawrence
Lions fifth, Firebirds seventh at league gymnastics meet By Shane Jackson sjackson@ljworld.com
During the week leading up to the Sunflower League meet Saturday, both of the Lawrence High and Free State gymnastics teams knew they had to step up their game if they were going to compete with top teams. And they did just that. Facing tougher competition in a 11-team meet at LHS, gymnasts from both schools responded by posting higher scores with new additions to their already sound routines. “I think we did a good job,” LHS and FSHS coach Brooke Santee said. “We started adding stuff in this week. A lot of girls added stuff in that made their scores go up, so that’s good. We still have some cleaning up to do.” The results may not have completely shown on the scoreboard as both teams posted their lowest finishes of the season. The Lions finished fifth after not finishing lower
than third prior to that event. Meanwhile, the Firebirds’ seventh-place finish was just the second time this season the team hadn’t finished in the toptwo. Still, several athletes were pleased after posting personal bests. “I’m really happy with my performance,” Free State senior Landon Prideaux said after notching a 5.8 on bars. “I haven’t really been doing bars but my coach pushed me to get back into it. So the last meet was the first time I had done it in a year.” Though Prideaux wasn’t able to place, a few different athletes from the two teams cracked the leaderboard in league play. Free State freshman Grace Mayhew posted the highest finish between the two teams with a score of 8.475 to notch fourth in bars. As a team, Free State bars’ score of 23.075 was the sixth-best mark. Mayhew was then unable to perform her floor
routine after tweaking her ankle in warmups. As a result, the Firebirds scored a 25.75 in the floors portion of the meet. “I would rather take her out of this meet and have her ready for state,” Santee said. FSHS freshman Liliana King-Wilson was able to contribute in Mayhew’s absence, posting a 9.125 to finish fifth on the floor. However, Lawrence’s Josie Hickerson was not too far behind King-Wilson. The LHS sophomore placed sixth with a mark of 9.0. Hickerson was the lone Lion to medal on Saturday. Afterward, she credited her best mark to the additions she made in her routine. “That was my highest score on floor and we had worked all week on adding stuff into my floor routine so I could get over nine,” Hickerson said. “So I was really happy about that.” The two teams will travel to the Shawnee Mission South Invitational at 6 p.m. Tuesday.
OCTOBER 23 • 1 - 6 P.M. 700 block of Vermont
Raising money for the Lawrence Public Schools Farm to School Program We believe that all children should have access to fresh produce, the knowledge to make healthy choices, and the right to know where their food comes from. With this festival we will take a large step as a community towards that, so these wonderful programs will continue.
Food available from all of our local Lawrence food trucks and some favorite downtown restaurants. Local craft beer from 23rd Street Brewery and Free State Brewing Company.
Music by Thunderkat, Sky Smeed, and Ashes to Immortality Featuring a kids area - all included in the ticket price: Face painting, balloon animals, bounce house, craft table, obstacle course and more
Buy tickets at: http://savorfest.org
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Sunday, October 9, 2016
TCU 24, KANSAS 23
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2-MINUTE DRILL TCU Kansas
24 23
TCU LEADERS Rushing: Hicks 18-104, Hill 11-36, T. Johnson 2-17. Passing: Hill 17-32-206. Receiving: Allen 3-48, Diarse 4-45, Porter 2-43. KANSAS LEADERS Rushing: Taylor Martin 18-62, Ke’aun Kinner 7-36, Ryan Willis 16-17, Khalil Herbert 1-3, Denzell Evans 1-3. Passing: Ryan Willis 31-45-348. Receiving: LaQuvionte Gonzalez 8-131, Steven Sims 9-101, Shakiem Barbel 9-94, Bobby Hartzog 1-15. TALE OF THE TAPE TCU.............................................................................................. Kansas 18....................................................first downs.............................................4 23 34 4.................................................. rushes.......................................................44 160 4..........................................rushing yards.............................................. 122 17-32-3............................. passing (comp.-att.-int.).......................4 31-45-3 206.............................................. passing yards........................................4 348 66.......................................... total offensive plays....................................4 89 366........................................total offensive yards................................. 4 470 36...................................................return yards............................................4 60 6-258 4.......................................... punting.................................................4-173 3-1 4............................................fumbles-lost................................................ 2-1 7-79 4......................................penalties-yards............................................5-61 24:53 ......................................time of possession...............................4 35:07 SCORE BY QUARTERS TCU 0 Kansas 7
14 3
0 13
10 — 24 0 — 23
SCORING SUMMARY FIRST QUARTER 6:02 — Taylor Martin 1 -yard run. Matt Wyman kick. Nine-play drive for 44 yards in 2:34. (KU 7, TCU 0.) SECOND QUARTER 9:59 — Kyle Hicks 3-yard run. Brandon Hatfield kick. One-play drive for 3 yards, in 0:05. (KU 7, TCU 7.) 3:48 — Wyman 50-yard field goal. Six-play drive for 19 yards, in 2:31. (KU 10, TCU 7.) 1:31 — Kenny Hill 18-yard run. Hatfield kick. Six-play drive for 64 yards, in 2:10. (TCU 14, KU 10.) THIRD QUARTER 10:02 — Wyman 29-yard field goal. Six-play drive for 36 yards, in 2:16. (TCU 14, KU 13.) 5:01 — Wyman 21-yard field goal. Seven-play drive for 69 yards, in 3:17. (KU 16, TCU 14.) :29 — Ryan Willis 21-yard run. Two-play drive for 25 yards, in 0:44. (KU 23, TCU 14.) FOURTH QUARTER 13:54 — Jaelan Austin 25-yard pass from Hill. Hatfield kick. Six-play drive for 75 yards, in 1:35. (KU 23, TCU 21.) 1:21 — Hatfield 34-yard field goal. Eight-play drive for 59 yards, in 2:24. (TCU 24, KU 23.)
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Kansas CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C
31-yard line. Incredibly, Willis hit sophomore receiver Steven Sims Jr., who lateraled to junior Bobby Hartzog Jr. In total, a 24-yard completion kept hope alive. And even though Sims next got flagged for offensive pass interference, pushing KU backward, Willis found one of his most talented targets again on first-and-25 near the Frogs’ sideline, and Sims’ ninth reception of the game got Kansas to TCU’s 37-yard line, the spot of Wyman’s final kick. “My heart was racing. I didn’t even watch that last kick,” said Willis, adding Wyman, who made a 50-yarder in the second quarter and three of six tries overall, kept KU (1-4 overall, 0-2 Big 12) in the game. Beaty said he took some pride in seeing his offense somewhat successfully navigate the field against TCU (4-2, 2-1) with a two-minute drill in crunch time. “Man, we got down there and we gave ourselves a chance. For that I’m elated,” Beaty began. “I’m so fired up that we’re starting to grow as a team. We gave ourselves a chance to win. But, man, I am burning inside with the fact that we weren’t able to get the win, because I feel like we gave it away in a lot of ways. So we have to go back to the drawing board and not just let some self-inflicted things keep costing you.” Any number of examples existed in the category of “what cost KU this week?” Willis (31-for-45 passing, 348 yards), in his first start of the season, threw three interceptions and lost a fumble. TCU sacked the quarterback five times. KU’s five penalties for 61 yards seemed to come at inopportune times. Wyman missed field goals from 37 and 41 yards in the fourth quarter. But in Beaty’s mind one third-quarter sequence proved as costly as anything for Kansas. After quickly advancing the ball up the field with the help of a 67-yard catch-jukeand-sprint sequence from junior receiver LaQuvionte Gonzalez (eight receptions, 131 yards), the Jayhawks had first-andgoal at TCU’s two-yardline and came away with just a field goal. Neither sophomore running back Taylor Martin (18 carries, 66 yards, one touchdown) nor senior Ke’aun Kinner (seven rushes, 36 yards) could punch the ball across the goal line when Beaty called three straight run plays, and the Jayhawks had to settle for a 21-yard Wyman field goal — giving KU a 16-14 lead late in the third quarter. “I think the thing that’s probably gonna be keeping me up tonight is not putting the ball in the end
Nick Krug/Journal-World Photo
KANSAS QUARTERBACK RYAN WILLIS (13) IS BROUGHT DOWN by TCU defensive tackle Aaron Curry (95) and other Horned Frog defenders on the Jayhawks’ final drive Saturday at Memorial Stadium. zone from the one-inch line,” Beaty said, adding KU would have gone for it on fourth down had Martin not been tackled for a loss on third down, pushing Kansas back to the four. “That’s a big deal. We had the ball down there and that play that knocked us back where we had to kick the field goal, we’ve just gotta be more disciplined as a group.” Kansas actually extended its lead to nine entering the fourth. After settling for Wyman field goals twice in the third, the KU offense finished the quarter in style, when Willis dropped back to pass, couldn’t find an open receiver and decided to take off for a 21-yard touchdown run, completing it at the goal line by spinning off a charging defender. However, Willis understood his four firsthalf turnovers made it all the more difficult for his four-TD underdog team. The outcome could have been different with a cleaner game. Kansas out-gained the Frogs, 470-366 in total offense. “Just execution,” Willis said of where things broke down for KU on the turnovers. “We saw what they were doing. We just didn’t execute. We made bonehead mistakes. But they’re there — the shots are there. We can make plays. This team doesn’t know how good we can be. Once we get out of
our own way we’re gonna be pretty dang good.” Week after week this season, Kansas coaches and players alike have lamented the team’s slow starts, but the Jayhawks finally began a game with some positive plays on both sides of the ball against TCU. The offense appeared as ineffective as ever on its first series, when Horned Frogs defensive back Nick Orr picked off Willis on a third-and-13 throw. As it has grown accustom to doing, though, the Kansas defense quickly made the miscue a little less disastrous. Two plays into TCU’s first possession, KU senior corner Brandon Stewart intercepted Kenny Hill’s first pass of the game. Though it took the offense a little while to get warmed up and the unit went three-and-out on its second possession, TCU’s offense couldn’t make the home team pay for it. On a first-down pass play, Dorance Armstrong Jr. sacked Hill and stripped him of the ball. Another KU defensive end, Damani Mosby, recovered the ball. Nine plays later, Martin rushed for a one-yard score and Kansas took its first lead since the season opener, against Rhode Island. The rare fast start allowed KU’s defense, which held Hill to 17-for32 passing and 206 yards, with three interceptions
and one TD, to keep the game close. A couple hours later, the vibe on the Kansas bench reached a new height, according to Stewart, who also picked off a pass in the third quarter, and finished with five total tackles. “It was actually cool this week,” Stewart shared of watching the offense try and drive for a lastsecond victory. “There was a sense of belief on the sideline rather than others in the past, you felt like, ‘Ah, we might lose.’ But I felt like we came together and it was just a different feel out there, so I feel like we’re coming together. I think we are establishing an identity — slowly but surely. It’s good to be out there with those guys, man.” Reluctantly, following the narrow defeat, Beaty admitted Kansas actually took a step in the right direction during the loss. “The pride in me wants to say that it shouldn’t be, but you know what, we’re developing,” Beaty said. “I love our team, like I said before. They’re showing improvement in different things. If we continue to do that, I think we’ll continue to play competitive football and give our fans something they can be proud of. We’re gonna stay the course.” Kansas travels next week to Waco, Texas, to face undefeated Baylor (5-0, 2-0).
tackles behind the line of scrimmage. The defensive game plan worked so well that CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C the Horned Frogs didn’t score until five minutes team’s best defensive CANDIDATES FOR GAME BALLS into the second quarter. tackle, linebackers Joe “You hope young guys Dineen and Marcquis n Sophomore wide receiver Steven Sims delivered by the time you get to Roberts and safety his third 100-yard receiving game of the season, finthe fifth or sixth game, Tyrone Miller watched ishing with 101 yards on nine receptions. you’re going to make their backups make big some progress, and they plays. n Shakiem Barbel was a pass-catching machine did,” Kansas second-year At linebacker, sophoearly and often. The senior wideout finished the game head coach David Beaty more Keith Loneker with 94 yards on nine receptions and helped new said. made his first career start starting quarterback Ryan Willis get into a rhythm KU made the Horned a memorable one. Senior Frogs turn it over four early. Courtney Arnick, whose times and held them to mother Carla, a breastCANDIDATES FOR GASSERS 366 total yards, nearly cancer survivor who rep- 200 yards under their resented the team at the n On one drive early in the first half, wideout season average. TCU LaQuvionte Gonzalez twice showed why KU’s horizon- coin flip on breast-cancer converted just 4 of 13 awareness day, honored tal passing game struggles so much when he missed third-down plays. blocks and allowed TCU to blow up the play and force her with a big day. Speedy defensive end Former walk-on the KU receivers to stretch their path to the sideline. Dorance Armstrong had Cameron Rosser, playanother strong perforn A holding penalty by KU lineman De’Andre Banks ne- ing the hybrid defensive mance, spending a lot of gated a long touchdown pass from Ryan Willis to Taylor end/linebacker spot and time with Rosser in the Martin early in the third quarter. spying Hill, made four backfield.
“Rosser is a guy we don’t talk about a lot, but man, we couldn’t block him in fall camp,” Beaty said. “I figured it might be just a matter of time before he gets to the backfield and makes some TFL’s and sacks.” Cornerback Brandon Stewart contributed two interceptions and safety Greg Allen returned his pick 20 yards, patiently weaving through heavy traffic. “He’s starting to get healthy,” head coach David Beaty said of Stewart. “He looked like a real guy out there today.” The defense, coordinated by Clint Bowen with Michael Slater instructing the defensive linemen, Todd Bradford the linebackers and Kenny Perry the cornerbacks, looked
well-coached, smart and hungry. “I thought we were going to win it,” defensive end Josh Ehambe said. “We went into the game coming off a great week of practice. I had no doubt in my mind we were going to win it. For the past two years we’ve always matched up well with TCU. Always.” The trick now becomes bringing that same competitiveness and playing close games against other Big 12 foes. And, of course, learning to win the close ones would be the next step. All in due time. Saturday’s steps were the first loud ones in the right direction, the loudest one coming in TCU’s backfield by a defense that believes in itself and is justified in doing so.
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING (CARRIES-YARDS) TCU: Hicks 18-104, Hill 11-36, T. Johnson 2-17, Green 2-7. Kansas: Taylor Martin 18-62, Ke’aun Kinner 7-36, Ryan Willis 16-17, Khalil Herbert 1-3, Denzell Evans 1-3, Maciah Long 1-1. PASSING (COM.-ATT.-YARDS) TCU: Hill 17-32-206. Kansas: Ryan Willis 31-45-348. RECEIVING (NO.-YARDS) TCU: Allen 3-48, Diarse 4-45, Porter 2-43, Williams 1-18, Slanina 3-17, Thomas 1-14, White 1-9, Gray 1-6, Hicks 1-6. Kansas: LaQuvionte Gonzalez 8-131, Steven Sims 9-101, Shakiem Barbel 9-94, Bobby Hartzog 1-15, Keegan Brewer 2-7, Taylor Martin 2-0. PUNTING (NO.-AVERAGE) TCU: Nunez 6-43.0. Kansas: Cole Moos 4-43.2. TACKLING LEADERS: TCU: Howard 15, Summers 12, D. Johnson 11, Small 8, Carraway 8, Gladney 7, Orr 5, Curry 4, Boesen 2, Downing 2, Galeai 2, Broadnax 2, Bradley 2, Collier 2, Porter 1, Thomas 1, Texada 1, Douglas 1, Whitmill 1. Kansas: Courtney Arnick 9, Mike Lee 7, Keith Loneker Jr. 7, Fish Smithson 6, Dorance Armstrong 5, Brandon Stewart 5, Cameron Rosser 4, Davis Deelsaac 4, Marnez Ogletree 3, Tevin Shaw 3, Greg Allen 1, Tyler Patrick 1, Shaquille Richmond 1, Sims 1, Willis 1, Chevy Graham 1, Josh Ehambe 1, Kinner 1, Zunica 1 Officials: Referee: Scott Campbell, Umpire: Jole Bellinger, Linesman: Doug Moore, Line judge: Keith Garmond, Back judge: Joel Wetzel, Field judge: Randy Smith, Side judge: Corey Luxner Attendance: 23,946 Time of game: 3:37
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GAME BALLS GASSERS
Keegan
TCU 24, KANSAS 23
L awrence J ournal -W orld
Sunday, October 9, 2016
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Nick Krug/Journal-World Photos
TCU KICKER BRANDON HATFIELD (27) PUTS A FIELD GOAL OVER THE KANSAS DEFENSE and through the uprights to give the Horned Frogs the lead late in the fourth quarter on Saturday at Memorial Stadium.
NOTEBOOK
Loneker solid in first start for KU By Benton Smith basmith@ljworld.com
Starting at linebacker for the first time in his Kansas football career, homegrown Keith Loneker Jr. didn’t disappoint. The 6-foot-2 Lawrence native who starred at Free State High during his prep days recorded a career-high seven tackles in the Jayhawks’ 24-23 loss to TCU Saturday at Memorial Stadium. The sophomore linebacker also broke up two passes for a KU defense that held the Horned Frogs (4-2 overall, 2-1 Big 12) to 366 yards of total offense. “Just watching Loneker run around out there again, man, I love that kid’s attitude,” KU head coach David Beaty said. “That’s something we saw right here when he was a local player. It’s great to see a local kid playing that well. He’s kind of taken Joe’s place while Joe (Dineen) was out and really kind of left us with not much of a void there, so it’s been fun to watch him play.” Loneker and Dineen played together at Free State. A junior linebacker, Dineen missed his second straight game due to injury.
Hook-and-ladder Kansas (1-4, 0-2) gave itself a chance to win in the final seconds against TCU thanks to an unlikely conversion on fourthand-22 at its own 31-yard line on the final drive. Beaty, who doubles as
KANSAS WIDE RECEIVER SHAKIEM BARBEL avoids a tackle after making a catch.
KANSAS DEFENDERS FISH SMITHSON (9), GREG ALLEN and Keith Loneker Jr. (33) bring down TCU running back Kyle Hicks (21) during the fourth quarter of KU’s 24-23 loss Saturday at Memorial Stadium. KU’s offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach, called for one of the oldest trick plays in the proverbial book, the hook-and-lateral. With TCU’s defenders playing a bit behind the Jayhawks’ receivers, sophomore Steven Sims Jr. (nine receptions, 101 yards) was able to haul in a pass from quarterback Ryan Willis, then quickly toss the ball to junior Bobby Hartzog Jr. in stride for a gain of 24 yards and a game-extending first down. “We’ve had it here for — I mean, it dates back to my Rice days,” Beaty said. “It’s been in for a while. We were about to get free on that thing.” Willis, now in his sec-
ond season with the program, said the offense has practiced the desperation play “every Thursday” since he arrived on campus. The quarterback said Sims and Hartzog aren’t the only receivers capable of making it work. “It’s just making something happen. They know their job,” Willis said. “They’ve gotta execute and they executed today. But we still fell short.”
Busy day for Wyman Although senior kicker Matt Wyman missed a potential game-winning field goal from 54 yards in the final seconds, he made three field goals to keep Kansas competitive early in the loss to TCU.
Wyman’s first field goal of the game came with 3:48 left in the second quarter, and he drilled it from 50 yards out, giving KU a 10-7 lead. Only 19 FBS kickers have connected from 50 or more yards this season. The senior kicker from Palos Park, Ill., also made 29- and 21-yard field goals for Kansas versus TCU. Wyman finished the game three-for-six, with fourth-quarter misfires of 37, 41 and 54 yards. Beaty said afterward the kicker’s teammates supported him in a difficult situation. “I’ve said a long time, for a long time now, I like this team,” Beaty said, “and I like these kids. Just watching how they han-
dled Matt Wyman was improve. He got a lot of pretty cool. Pretty cool. experience today.” Those guys are united and they believe in one This and that… Kansas hadn’t led in a another.” Big 12 game since 2014 No more rotating QBs (also a loss to TCU) beAlthough Willis threw fore sophomore running three interceptions and back Taylor Martin scored lost a fumble in the first a first-quarter touchdown half, Beaty said he didn’t in his first college start. think about taking the … KU increased its winsophomore out and re- less streak in conference placing him. The loss to play to 14 games, with its TCU marked the first last win coming on Nov. time this season Kansas 8, 2014 against Iowa State, departed from rotating 34-14. … Senior wide requarterbacks, utilizing ceiver Shakiem Barbel Willis and former starter found some rhythm with Montell Cozart, a fourth- Willis and set new career year junior. highs with nine catches “There was no point and 94 receiving yards. … where we talked about Kansas shut TCU out in changing quarterbacks, the first quarter, marking because like that run the first time the Frogs he made for the touch- failed to put up points in down,” Beaty said, refer- the first 15 minutes since ring to Willis’ 21-yard 2013, at Kansas State. … score late in the third The KU defense’s streak quarter, “that cat was go- of games with at least 10 ing to get to the end zone. tackles for loss ended, He was very determined. as the Jayhawks fell one I love his spirit. I said it short, with nine. Cameron last year, I love his spirit. Rosser led the team, with He’s going to continue to four tackles for loss.
TCU’s Patterson: Kansas has always played us well By Matt Tait mtait@ljworld.com
When TCU joined the Big 12 prior to the 2012 season, it probably figured to field stiff challenges from football programs other than Kansas. However, after Saturday’s heartbreaking, 2423 loss to TCU at Memorial Stadium, it’s safe to say people are starting to recognize this whole Kansas-plays-TCU-close phenomenon as a true trend. In five meetings with the Jayhawks as members
of the Big 12 Conference, TCU has yet to blow the Jayhawks out and has won those five games by an average score of just 26-19. Don’t count TCU coach Gary Patterson among those surprised by the fact that the Jayhawks (1-4 overall, 0-2 Big 12) nearly knocked off the Horned Frogs (4-2, 1-1) on Saturday and played them tight for the fifth consecutive season. “The bottom line is Kansas has always played us well,” Patterson said after his team used a field
goal inside the final two minutes to survive a serious scare from Kansas. “On defense, I thought coach (Clint) Bowen and the defensive crew did a great job, for the past three years he has done a great job. On offense they did what they needed to do to win. Credit to Coach (David) Beaty this is a much improved team this year compared to a year ago.” Patterson, a native Kansas himself, said KU defensive backs coach Kenny Perry’s familiarity with the TCU program
— Perry worked for Patterson from 2013-14 — caused some problems for the Frogs on Saturday and forced him to adjust. “You could tell when I blitzed they ran man route beaters,” Patterson said. “The long play to the two yard line (by LaQuvionte Gonzalez), they knew I was going to blitz. After that long pass I changed my signals and (our defense) got better.” The Jayhawks, who played terrific defense all day and outgained TCU 470-366 in total offense but also turned the ball
over four times, certainly had their chances to win this one, but watched Matthew Wyman miss three fourth-quarter field goals, including a 54-yarder in the final seconds. On that final drive, KU quarterback Ryan Willis and the Kansas offense flashed moments of mastery and misery, leading up to the frantic final kick. “I was exhausted,” said TCU defensive end Josh Carraway. “But it was the last plays so you have to leave it all on the field.
As one of the leaders and one of the captains they’re looking at me to make a play so I try to go out there and do that to the best of my ability.” The Frogs did just enough and leave Lawrence with plenty to work on, according to their head coach. “We are two to four plays away from being 6-0,” Patterson said. “Offensively, you can’t play when you’re behind the sticks. Defensively, you’ve got to make plays and we didn’t in the first half.”
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Sunday, October 9, 2016
SPORTS
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SCOREBOARD
MLB PLAYOFFS
Cubs take 2-0 lead over Giants The Associated Press
Cubs 5, Giants 2 Chicago — Travis Wood took over when starter Kyle Hendricks got hurt and became the first relief pitcher since 1924 to hit a postseason home run, helping the Chicago Cubs beat San Francisco Saturday night for 2-0 NL Division Series lead. Ben Zobrist put Chicago ahead in the first with a run-scoring single off former Cubs pitcher Jeff Samardzija, and Hendricks hit a two-run single in a three-run second. Hendricks left with a 4-2 lead in the fourth when he was hit on the right forearm by Angel Pagan’s line drive. Wood struck out Conor Gillaspie to strand Pagan, then sent a oneout drive into the leftfield bleachers in the bottom half. The only other reliever to homer was the New York Giants’ Rosy Ryan in Game 3 of the 1924 World Series. Madison Bumgarner, coming off a four-hit shutout of the New York Mets in the NL wild card game, tries to save the Giants’ season when the series resumes Monday in San Francisco. The Cubs, who start reigning NL Cy Young Award winner Jake Arrieta, are one win from advancing to a National League Championship Series matchup against the Los Angeles Dodgers or Washington Nationals.
San Francisco Chicago ab r h bi ab r h bi Span cf 4 0 0 0 Fowler cf 4 1 1 0 Belt 1b 3 0 1 1 Bryant 3b 4 0 1 1 Posey c 4 0 0 0 Rizzo 1b 4 0 0 0 Pence rf 4 0 1 0 Zobrist lf 4 0 1 1 Crwford ss 4 0 1 0 Russell ss 4 0 0 0 Pagan lf 3 0 1 0 Heyward rf 4 1 1 0 Gllspie 3b 2 0 0 0 J.Baez 2b 3 1 1 0 Tmlnson ph-3b 2 0 0 0 Cntrras c 3 1 2 0 Panik 2b 3 1 1 0 Hndrcks p 1 0 1 2 Smrdzja p 0 0 0 0 T.Wood p 1 1 1 1 G.Blnco ph 1 1 1 1 Edwards p 0 0 0 0 Kontos p 0 0 0 0 M.Mntro ph 1 0 0 0 Bmgrner ph 1 0 0 0 Mntgmry p 0 0 0 0 Blach p 0 0 0 0 H.Rndon p 0 0 0 0 Casilla p 0 0 0 0 A.Chpmn p 0 0 0 0 E.Nunez ph 1 0 0 0 Law p 0 0 0 0 Ja.Lpez p 0 0 0 0 Strckln p 0 0 0 0 Totals 32 2 6 2 Totals 33 5 9 5 San Francisco 002 000 000—2 Chicago 130 100 00x—5 E-Bryant 2 (2), Contreras (1), Panik (1). DP-Chicago 1. LOB-San Francisco 5, Chicago 5. 2B-Panik (1), G.Blanco (1), Fowler (1), Heyward (1). HR-T.Wood (1). SF-Belt (1). IP H R ER BB SO San Francisco Samardzija L,0-1 2 6 4 4 1 1 Kontos 2 1 1 1 0 1 Blach 1 1/3 0 0 0 0 2 Casilla 2/3 2 0 0 0 0 Law 1/3 0 0 0 0 1 Lopez 2/3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 Strickland 1 Chicago Hendricks 3 2/3 4 2 2 0 0 Wood W,1-0 1 1/3 0 0 0 0 2 Edwards H,1 1 1 0 0 0 0 Montgomery H,1 1 1/3 1 0 0 0 1 Rondon H,1 2/3 0 0 0 0 1 Chapman S,2-2 1 0 0 0 0 2 T-3:03. A-42,392 (41,072).
With four runners inside of the top five, Free State High’s girls cross country team won the Haskell Invitational on Saturday. Free State seniors Emily Venters, Kiran Cordes and Abigail Zenger posted a 1-2-3 finish, with Venters running a personal-best 17:53 in her victory. Sophomore Julia Larkin finished fifth. For the FSHS boys cross country team, which placed second, junior Avant Edwards led in second place in 16:46.25. He was followed by junior Jared Hicks in fifth and sophomore Landon Sloan in sixth. The Firebirds will run
MLB Postseason Schedule
WILD CARD Tuesday: Toronto 5, Baltimore 2, 11 innings Wednesday: San Francisco 3, N.Y. Mets 0 DIVISION SERIES (Best-of-5; x-if necessary) American League Toronto 2, Texas 0 Thursday: Toronto 10, Texas 1 Friday: Toronto 5, Texas 3 Today: Texas (Lewis 6-5) at Toronto (Sanchez 15-2), 6:38 p.m. (TBS) x-Monday: Texas (Perez 10-11) at Toronto (Stroman 9-10), 1:08 or 5:08 p.m. (TBS) x-Wednesday: Toronto at Texas, 7:08 or 8:38 p.m. (TBS) Cleveland 2, Boston 0 Thursday: Cleveland 5, Boston 4 Friday: Cleveland 6, Boston 0 Today: Cleveland (Tomlin 13-9) at Boston (Buchholz 8-10), 3:08 p.m. (TBS) x-Monday: Cleveland at Boston (Rodriguez 3-7), 7:08 p.m. (TBS) x-Wednesday: Boston at Cleveland, 5:08 or 7:08 p.m. (TBS) National League Chicago 2, San Francisco 0 Friday: Chicago 1, San Francisco 0 Saturday: Chicago 5, San Francisco 2 Monday: Chicago (Arrieta 18-8) at San Francisco, 8:38 p.m. (FS1) x-Tuesday: Chicago (Lackey 11-8) at San Francisco, 7:08 or 7:40 p.m. (FS1) x-Thursday: San Francisco at Chicago, 7:08 or 7:40 p.m. (FS1) Los Angeles 1, Washington 0 Friday: Los Angeles 4, Washington 3 Saturday: Los Angeles at Washington, ppd., rain Today: Los Angeles (Hill 12-5) at Washington (Roark 16-10), 12:08 p.m. (FS1) Monday: Washington (Gonzalez 11-11) at Los Angeles (Maeda 16-10), 3:08 or 5:08 p.m. (MLB) x-Tuesday: Washington at Los Angeles, 4:05 or 7:08 p.m. (FS1) x-Thursday: Los Angeles at Washington, 4:05 or 7:08 p.m. (FS1)
N. Dakota St. 27, Missouri St. 3 Ohio 30, Bowling Green 24 Ohio St. 38, Indiana 17 Purdue 34, Illinois 31, OT S. Dakota St. 45, S. Illinois 39 Sam Houston St. 63, Incarnate Word 48 South Dakota 28, N. Iowa 25 Toledo 35, E. Michigan 20 W. Illinois 36, Indiana St. 35 W. Michigan 45, N. Illinois 30 Youngstown St. 20, Illinois St. 6 SOUTHWEST Alabama 49, Arkansas 30 FIU 35, UTEP 21 Lamar 38, Abilene Christian 10 North Texas 38, Marshall 21 Prairie View 24, Alabama St. 17 Texas A&M 45, Tennessee 38, 2OT UTSA 55, Southern Miss. 32 FAR WEST E. Washington 49, N. Colorado 31 Hawaii 34, San Jose St. 17 Montana 67, MVSU 7 N. Arizona 20, Montana St. 14 Nevada 27, Fresno St. 22 San Diego 52, Davidson 3 Southern Cal 21, Colorado 17 Washington 70, Oregon 21 Weber St. 14, Portland St. 10 Wyoming 35, Air Force 26
Big 12
League Overall Baylor 2-0 5-0 Oklahoma 2-0 3-2 West Virginia 1-0 4-0 Oklahoma State 2-1 4-2 TCU 2-1 4-2 Kansas State 1-1 3-2 Texas Tech 1-1 3-2 Texas 0-2 2-3 Kansas 0-2 1-4 Iowa State 0-3 1-5 Saturday’s Games TCU 24, Kansas 23 Oklahoma 45, Texas 40 Oklahoma State 38, Iowa State 31 Kansas State 44, Texas Tech 38 Saturday, Oct. 15 Kansas at Baylor, 2:30 p.m. (FS1) West Virginia at Texas Tech, 11 a.m. (FS1) Kansas State at Oklahoma (ABC, ESPN or ESPN2) Iowa State at Texas, 6 p.m. (LNN, Cyclones.tv)
in the Sunflower League meet at 9 a.m. Saturday at Rim Rock Farm.
Prescott leads Lions at SMW Overland Park — Lawrence High senior runner Garrett Prescott took fifth place at the Shawnee Mission West Invitational on Saturday, leading the LHS boys cross country team. Prescott, who finished in 17:05, was followed by Carson Jumping Eagle in 16th (17:42), Bryce Hadl in 33rd (18:18) and Cole Shupert in 36th (18:24). LHS sophomore Morgan Jones led the girls’ team in 12th (20:54), while Anna DeWitt took 18th (21:15) and Kiikto Thomas finished 24th (21:38).
Tufts 41, Bowdoin 21 UConn 20, Cincinnati 9 Villanova 35, Rhode Island 0 Washington & Jefferson 55, Carnegie-Mellon 52, 2OT Washington & Lee 23, Catholic 22 Waynesburg 10, Geneva 9 Wesleyan (Conn.) 37, Colby 6 West Chester 35, Shippensburg 15 Westminster (Pa.) 37, St. Vincent 22 Widener 34, Lebanon Valley 6 Yale 21, Dartmouth 13 SOUTH Alcorn St. 42, Alabama A&M 19 Auburn 38, Mississippi St. 14 Chattanooga 52, Mercer 31 Duke 13, Army 6 E. Kentucky 31, SE Missouri 16 Gardner-Webb 24, Presbyterian 3 Georgia St. 41, Texas St. 21 Hampton 27, Delaware St. 17 Idaho 34, Louisiana-Monroe 31 Kennesaw St. 49, Missouri S&T 16 Kentucky 20, Vanderbilt 13 Monmouth (NJ) 59, Howard 27 NC Central 17, Florida A&M 13 NC State 10, Notre Dame 3 Nicholls 35, Stephen F. Austin 28, 2OT SE Louisiana 31, McNeese St. 24 Samford 38, Furman 21 South Florida 38, East Carolina 22 UT Martin 45, Austin Peay 31 VMI 37, ETSU 7 Virginia Tech 34, North Carolina 3 Wake Forest 28, Syracuse 9 Wofford 31, W. Carolina 19 MIDWEST Akron 35, Miami (Ohio) 13 BYU 31, Michigan St. 14 Cent. Michigan 24, Ball St. 21 Dayton 51, Morehead St. 27 Drake 35, Valparaiso 21 E. Illinois 35, Tennessee St. 34 Iowa 14, Minnesota 7 Marist 30, Butler 21
Kearney 16 Missouri Western 37, Lindenwood 29 Northwest Missouri State 56, Central Oklahoma 10 Fort Hays State 54, Pittsburg State 41 Emporia State 47, Northeastern State 27 Washburn 45, Missouri Southern 13
Kansas City Chiefs
Sept. 11 — vs. San Diego, W 33-27 OT (1-0) Sept. 18 — at Houston, L 19-12 (1-1) Sept. 25 — N.Y. Jets, W 24-3 (2-1) Oct. 2 — at Pittsburgh, L 43-14 (2-2) Oct. 9 — Bye week Oct. 16 — at Oakland, 3:05 p.m. Oct. 23 — vs. New Orleans, noon Oct. 30 — at Indianapolis, noon Nov. 6 — vs. Jacksonville, noon Nov. 13 — at Carolina, noon Nov. 20 — vs. Tampa Bay, noon Nov. 27 — at Denver, 3:25 p.m. Dec. 4 — at Atlanta, noon Dec. 8 — vs. Denver, 7:25 p.m. Dec. 18 — vs. Tennessee, noon Dec. 25 — vs. Denver, 7:30 p.m. Jan. 1 — at San Diego, 3:25 p.m.
NFL
AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T New England 3 1 0 Buffalo 2 2 0 N.Y. Jets 1 3 0 Miami 1 3 0 South W L T Houston 3 1 0 Jacksonville 1 3 0 Indianapolis 1 3 0 Tennessee 1 3 0
North W L T Pct PF PA Pittsburgh 3 1 0 .750 108 80 Baltimore 3 1 0 .750 84 72 Cincinnati 2 2 0 .500 78 82 Cleveland 0 4 0 .000 74 115 West W L T Pct PF PA Denver 4 0 0 1.000 111 64 Oakland 3 1 0 .750 108 106 Kansas City 2 2 0 .500 83 92 San Diego 1 3 0 .250 121 108 NATIONAL CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA Philadelphia 3 0 0 1.000 92 27 Dallas 3 1 0 .750 101 77 Washington 2 2 0 .500 99 112 N.Y. Giants 2 2 0 .500 73 85 South W L T Pct PF PA Atlanta 3 1 0 .750 152 124 Tampa Bay 1 3 0 .250 77 128 Carolina 1 3 0 .250 109 118 New Orleans 1 3 0 .250 114 130 North W L T Pct PF PA Minnesota 4 0 0 1.000 88 50 Green Bay 2 1 0 .667 75 67 Chicago 1 3 0 .250 62 97 Detroit 1 3 0 .250 95 102 West W L T Pct PF PA Los Angeles 3 1 0 .750 63 76 Seattle 3 1 0 .750 79 54 Arizona 2 3 0 .400 125 101 San Francisco 1 4 0 .200 111 140 Today’s Games N.Y. Jets at Pittsburgh, Noon New England at Cleveland, Noon Tennessee at Miami, Noon Houston at Minnesota, Noon Washington at Baltimore, Noon Chicago at Indianapolis, Noon Philadelphia at Detroit, Noon Atlanta at Denver, 3:05 p.m. Cincinnati at Dallas, 3:25 p.m. San Diego at Oakland, 3:25 p.m. Buffalo at Los Angeles, 3:25 p.m. N.Y. Giants at Green Bay, 7:30 p.m. Open: Jacksonville, Seattle, Kansas City, New Orleans Monday’s Games Tampa Bay at Carolina, 7:30 p.m.
High School
Kansas schedule
Sept. 3 — Rhode Island, W 55-6 (1-0) Dodgers, Nationals College Sept. 10 — Ohio, L 37-21 (1-1) Saturday’s Scores postponed Sept. 17 — at Memphis, L 43-7 (1-2) Sept. 29 — at Texas Tech, L 55-19 Washington — Game 2 EAST Brockport 35, Utica 28 (1-3) of the NL Division Series Bucknell 21, Holy Cross 20 Oct. 8 — TCU, L 24-23 (1-4) Buffalo St. 39, Cortland St. 21 between the Los Angeles Oct. 15 — at Baylor, 2:30 p.m. Castleton 26, Mount Ida 14 Oct. 22 — Oklahoma State, TBA Dodgers and WashingColumbia 15, Wagner 13 Oct. 29 — at Oklahoma, TBA FDU-Florham 24, Lycoming 21 ton Nationals has been Nov. 5 — at West Virginia, TBA Fordham 58, Lafayette 34 Nov. 12 — Iowa State, TBA rained out. Framingham St. 30, Westfield St. 28 Nov. 19 — Texas, TBA Frostburg St. 23, William Paterson 0 Commissioner Rob Nov. 26 — at Kansas State, TBA Harvard 29, Cornell 13 Manfred announced the Husson 50, Gallaudet 16 Baker schedule Kent St. 44, Buffalo 20 postponement about an Aug. 27 — Grand View, W 36-13 (1-0) King’s (Pa.) 42, Misericordia 35 hour before gametime Sept. 3 — Culver-Stockton, W 89-27 Lehigh 45, Colgate 31 (2-0) Saturday. Maine 28, Delaware 21 Sept. 10 — at William Penn, W 41-7 Michigan 78, Rutgers 0 The Dodgers and Na(3-0) Middlebury 27, Amherst 26 tionals will play Game 2 Sept. 17 — at Graceland, W 44-15 Montclair St. 17, S. Virginia 0 (4-0) NY Maritime 22, Anna Maria 0 at 12:08 p.m. Sunday. Los Sept. 24 — Benedictine, W 60-7 (5-0) Navy 46, Houston 40 Angeles leads the bestOct. 1 — at Peru State, 42-21 (6-0) Norwich 22, Becker 13 Oct. 15 — Avila, 6 p.m. Penn 28, CCSU 16 of-five series 1-0 after Oct. 22 — at MidAmerica Nazarene, Penn St. 38, Maryland 14 defeating Washington, 2 p.m. Pittsburgh 37, Georgia Tech 34 Oct. 29 — at Central Methodist, 1 Princeton 31, Georgetown 17 4-3, Friday. p.m. RPI 21, Hobart 17 Rain that intensified Nov. 5 — Missouri Valley, 1 p.m. Richmond 36, Albany (NY) 30, OT Nov. 12 — Evangel, 11 a.m. as Hurricane Matthew Rowan 34, Salisbury 30 Springfield 17, Union (NY) 3 moved up the coast had St. Francis (Pa.) 24, Robert Morris 10 MIAA already washed out onStetson 31, Brown 21 Saturday’s Games Stony Brook 27, Towson 20 field batting practice. Central Missouri 36, Nebraska-
BRIEFLY FSHS runners win at Haskell
L awrence J ournal -W orld
Pct .750 .500 .250 .250
PF 81 87 79 71
PA 61 68 105 89
Pct PF PA .750 69 73 .250 84 111 .250 108 125 .250 62 84
Shawnee Mission West Invitational Saturday at Johnson County Community College LHS boys results: 5. Garrett Prescott, 17:05; 16. Carson Jumping Eagle, 17:42; 33. Bryce Hadl, 18:18; 36. Cole Shupert, 18:24; 46. Ben Otte, 18:37; 51. Jackson Hoy, 18:50; 54. Sebastian Lepage, 18:54; 55. Cameron Stussie, 18:56; 57. Anton Grundstrom, 19:09; 62. Darius Hart, 19:36. LHS girls results: 12. Morgan Jones, 20:54; 18. Anna DeWitt, 21:15; 24. Kiikto Thomas, 21:38; 33. Leslie Ostronic, 22:01; 42. Layne Prescott, 23:03; 43. Olivia Lemus, 23:03; 48. Mikayla Herschell, 23:38; 51. Eleanor Matheis, 23:58; 54. Lacey Greenfield, 26:46. Haskell Invitational Saturday at Haskell Boys Varsity team scores — 1. Shawnee Mission East, 29; 2. Free State, 34; 3. Olathe South, 77; 4. Olathe East, 103; 5. Little Wound, 158. Free State results — 2. Avant Edwards, 16:46.25; 5. Jared Hicks, 17:22.35; 6. Landon Sloan, 17:22.46; 11. William Benkelman, 17:46.45; 12. Grant Holmes, 17:53.48; 13. Aidan Goertz, 17:55.09; 23. Zach Venters, 18:12.83. Girls Varsity team scores — 1. Free State, 25; 2. Olathe East, 46; 3. Shawnee Mission East, 58; 4. Olathe South, 119; Little Wound, 160. Free State results — 1. Emily Venters, 17:53.00; 2. Kiran Cordes, 19:38.54; 3. Abigail Zenger, 19:58.12; 5. Julia Larkin, 20:18.05; 14. Emma Hertig, 21:29.61; 15. Erin Fagan, 21:30.87; 18. Erin Liston, 21:41.38. Boys JV team scores — 1. Free State, 15; 2. Olathe South, 68; 3. Manhattan, 77; 4. Shawnee Mission East, 102; 5. Olathe East, 127. Free State JV/C-team results — 7. Elijah Jost, 20:03.33; 11. Lamont Sampson, 20:09.39; 12. Cooper Simon, 20:10.70; 13. Trey Melvin, 20:13.61; 14. Quinton Westphal, 20:14.13; 15. Finnegan Huerter, 20:16.42; 16. Jack Kelsey, 20:17.18; 18. Derek Hale, 20:18.52; 22. Henry Hurst, 20:34.91; 23. Ethan Lincoln, 20:37.99; 28. John Burrichter, 20:52.16; 29. Camaron Edgecomb, 20:36.40; 36. Nathan Robbins, 21:08.77; 37. Jake Viscomi, 21:12.10; 39. Daniel Fasching, 21:14.59; 45. Will Shultz, 21:22.17; 49. Cameron Edens, 21:24.76; 50. Alain Marquez, 21:24.91; 56. Tyler Winsor, 21:38.72; 57. Alexander Pettit, 21:39.36; 58. Carlos Fernandez-Pascual, 21:41.56; 60. Christopher Wilkus, 21:44.56; 61. John Baska, 21:50.15; 62. Micah Burman, 21:56.83; 64. Ryan Flakus, 22:00.12; 70. Gabriel Kennard, 22:17.67; 71. Evan Schoenen, 22:23.98; 73. Robert Ward, 22:27.10; 74. Spencer YostWolff, 22:27.23; 80. Eliden Heffernan, 22:40.93; 82. Dylan Goldstein, 22:52.01; 86. Benjamin Hill, 23:01.03; 87. Lincoln Edgecomb, 23:02.24; 88. Dylan Sommer, 23:04.52; 89. William Berns, 23:08.62; 90. Milo Schoenen, 23:09.96; 93. Ian Haas, 23:16.65; 101. Isaiah Lumpkins, 24:01.32; 104. Kyler Ruby, 24:33.18; 109. Walker Koberlein, 25:05.22; 110. Timothy Byers, 25:06.12; 111. Andrew Riggs, 25:08.99; 117. Elijah Crane, 26:46.95; 118. Connor Dow, 27:35.50; 121. Luke Wichester, 29:25.31; 122. Bowen Boyack, 34:48.80.
Girls JV team scores — 1. Free State, 37; 2. Olathe East, 44; 3. Manhattan, 49; 4. Shawnee Mission East, 58; 5. Olathe South, 119. Free State JV/C-team results — 1. Bella Stull, 22:50.48; 2. Keara Schaefer, 23:08.17; 3. Maddie Day, 23:56.00; 5. Corinne Scales, 24:55.09; 7. Isabel Carey, 24:59.40; 8. Maisy Struve, 25:00.04; 16. Caitlin McAndrewBeckman, 26:22.01; 17. AnaPaula Padilla-Macias, 26:23.40; 19. Katenna Vallejo-Cooper, 26:26.24; 25. Kahler Wiebe, 26:56.23; 27. Ashley Giago, 27:15.66; 30. Emily Low, 27:51.48; 31. Ruby Morris, 27:55.04; 34. Rachel Burrichter, 28:14.25; 37. Jillian Breyne, 28:34.41; 41. Abigail Meier, 29:15.74; 44. Lydia Storm, 29:29.63; 46. AnneSofie Moertz, 29:59.93; 48. Katherin Herndon, 30:43.52; 53. Gretchen Boxberger, 31:31.63; 55. Michaela Reed, 32:40.16; 57. Sejal Thapa, 34:13.50.
College
Haskell Invitational Saturday at Haskell Haskell men — fifth place. Haskell men’s results (8,000 meters) — 13. Cameron Riley, 27:41.33; 25. Darrin Cly, 28:33.29; 33. Derrick Sleeper, 29:16.98; 39. Josh Garcia, 29:55.80; 50. Dakota Hulse, 30:55.66; 61. Ryan Moore, 35:33.19. Haskell women’s results (5,000 meters) — 43. Joylyn Rowland, 22:49.42; 52. Cherica Eckiwaudah, 23:52.97.
High School
Sunflower League meet Saturday at Lawrence High Team scores — 1. Olathe East, 106.075; 2. Shawnee Mission West, 101.075; 3. Shawnee Mission East, 100.025; 4. Shawnee Mission Northwest, 99.875; 5. Lawrence High, 99.725; 6. Olathe Northwest, 99.6; 7. Free State, 97.85; 8. Shawnee Mission South, 96.075; 9. Olathe South, 92.575; 10. Shawnee Mission North, 63.425; 11. Olathe North, 51.7. Lawrence High/Free State results All around — 11. Eden Kingery, LHS, 33.4; 14. Josie Hickerson, LHS, 33.025; 15. Liliana King-Wilson, FS, 32.875; 19. Jordyn Leon, LHS, 32.15; 21. Eliana Seidner, LHS, 31.55; 22. Monica Kimmel, FS, 31.4; 26. Kenzie Rorabaugh, FS, 30.375; 35. Klara Hinson, LHS, 25.625; 36. Grace Mayhew, FS, 25.075. Vault — T-11. Liliana King-Wilson, FS, 8.45; 13. Jordyn Leon, LHS, 8.425; T-14. Eliana Seidner, LHS, 8.4; 18. Josie Hickerson, LHS, 8.3; T-26. Eden Kingery, LHS, 8.05; T-26. Kenzie Rorabaugh, FS, 8.05; 31. Grace Mayhew, 7.95; T-33. Monica Kimmel, FS, 7.9; T-42. Lily Thompson, FS, 7.55. Bars — 4. Grace Mayhew, FS, 8.475; 13. Eden Kingery, LHS, 7.9; 15. Jordyn Leon, LHS, 7.75; 21. Liliana King-Wilson, FS, 7.425; 27. Kenzie Rorabaugh, FS, 7.175; T-29. Josie Hickerson, LHS, 7.025; T-29. Monica Kimmel, FS, 7.025; 31. Eliana Seidner, LHS, 6.65; 36. Landon Prideaux, FS, 5.8; 41. Klara Hinson, LHS, 4.925. Beam — 9. Josie Hickerson, LHS, 8.7; T-11. Eden Kingery, LHS, 8.65; T-11. Grace Mayhew, FS, 8.65; 17. Eliana Seidner, LHS, 8.2; T-19. Monica Kimmel, FS, 8.05; T-22. Liliana KingWilson, FS, 7.875; 28. Landon Prideaux, FS, 7.475; 30. Jordyn Leon, LHS, 7.4; 36. Kenzie Rorabaugh, FS, 6.95; 45. Klara Hinson, LHS, 5.8. Floor — 5. Liliana King-Wilson, FS, 9.125; 6. Josie Hickerson, LHS, 9.0; 9. Eden Kingery, LHS, 8.8; T-14. Jordyn Leon, LHS, 8.55; 18. Monica Kimmel, FS, 8.425; 22. Eliana Seidner, LHS, 8.3; 25. Kenzie Rorabaugh, FS, 8.2; 37. Klara Hinson, LHS, 7.4; 42. Jessica Rohe, FS, 7.15.
High School
Class 6A regional Saturday at College Boulevard Activity Center Team scores: Blue Valley Northwest 20, Free State 11, Olathe East 10, Olathe South 10, Olathe North 4, Olathe Northwest 1, Lawrence 1, Gardner-Edgerton 0. LHS results Singles Caitlynn Kliem lost to Cady Lynn, OS, 6-0, 6-0. Nina Givotovski lost to Kate Piper, FSHS, 6-0, 6-1 Doubles Chisato Kimura/Mia Waters lost to Brown/Moore, ONW, 7-5, 6-3. Natalie Cote/Chloe Thornton def. Loo/G 6-1, 6-3, lost to OE, 6-0, 6-0; lost to Gorman/Pead, FSHS, 6-0, 6-2. Free State results Singles Kate Piper def. Nina Givotovski 6-0, 6-1, lost to M. Megee 7-6, 6-2, def. Andie Veeder, FSHS, 6-1, 6-0, def. Kelly Parrisl, BVNW, in walkover. Andie Veeder def. Nicky Horrey, ONW, 6-3, 6-3, lost to Kate Piper, FSHS, 6-1, 6-0. Doubles Ali Dodd/Andrea Chen def. M/N, ONW 6-0, 6-0, def M/A, 6-0, 6-4, lost to Wite/Peinuzrux, BVNW, 6-0, 6-0, def. C/B, OE, 6-3, 6-1. Gorman and Peard def. B/E, OS, 6-0, 6-1, lost to Bail/Hurley 6-0, 6-1, def. Cote/Thornton, LHS, 6-0, 6-2, lost to M/A, OS, 7-5, 6-0.
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October 9, 2016
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MAPLE LEAF FESTIVAL PREVIEW — SEE SCHEDULE INSIDE, 2D
A&E Lawrence Journal-World
LJWorld.com
D
ARTS ENTERTAINMENT LIFESTYLE PEOPLE Sunday, October 9, 2016
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hat started as an idea to promote Baldwin City 59 years ago by drawing several hundred people to the community has grown steadily to an event attracting 30,000 to 40,000 people annually. The Maple Leaf Festival has accomplished more than its founders — Ivan Boyd, Charles Doudna, C.R. Whitley and Bill Horn — envisioned. In fact, it has done better than anyone could have dreamed back in 1957 when the Commercial Club put on the first-ever festival. But why is the festival always the third full weekend in October? There’s a reason — the many maple trees lining the community’s streets. Ivan Boyd’s son, Roger Boyd, recalls that his father recorded when trees would turn color, and in the 1950s that was pretty consistently the third weekend. There were always early or late trees in full splendor even if the festival missed the peak. You can take in all the fall fun when the festival returns to Baldwin City’s streets starting Oct. 15.
Your guide to Baldwin City’s
MAPLE LEAF
FESTIVAL OCTO
BER
15-16
Journal-World File Photos Sylas May/Journal-World Photo Illustration
More than 400 vendors to set up shop at craft fair By Elvyn Jones
T
ejones@ljworld.com
he Maple Leaf Festival is a lot of things. It’s a parade, a carnival, an occasion for local family and Baker University reunions. But at its heart the festival is one of the area’s largest annual arts and crafts shows. There will be no shortage of merchandise or variety at the 59th annual Maple Leaf Festival. Festival visitors to Baldwin
‘‘
We look to see if (a prospective vendor is) something we need. Jewelry goes out because we have so many vendors offering jewelry. If it’s something totally unique, we go ahead and put it in.”
— Donna Curran, chairperson of the Maple Leaf Festival’s vendor booth committee
City will find 432 vendors selling everything from homemade fudge to pottery. Donna Curran, chairperson of the Maple Leaf Festival’s vendor booth committee, said this year’s vendor total included 361 booths the MLF committee accepted and
another 71 from the concurrent Baldwin City Business & Professional Women arts and crafts fair. Of the Maple Leaf Festival’s booths, 25 are food booths, including such festival staples as Baker University Kappa Sigma Fraternity’s turkey legs,
the Baker baseball team’s Polish sausages, Annunciation Parish’s hamburgers and the Baldwin City Lions Club’s funnel cakes. One thing that makes organizing a big arts and crafts show easier is that many of the vendors are so successful that they sign up for next year’s show before leaving the current year’s festival. “When crafters sign up early, that’s great,” Curran said. “Probably 75 to 80 percent of them do re-commit before leaving.” The festival fills its remaining space long before
October. The demand is great enough that Curran and her committee have a waiting list to choose from when adding new booths to the festival. It’s not a first-come, first-served decision. Success comes to those patient enough to re-apply, and to the innovative. “We look to see if it’s something we need,” she said. “Jewelry goes out because we have so many vendors offering jewelry. If it’s something totally unique, we go ahead and put it in.”
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L A E V L I T U
Vendors
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Kevin Anderson/Journal-World File Photo
14 FRIDAY
Seventh and High streets Black Jack Battlefield tours, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., Black Jack Toby’s Carnival, 6 to 10 p.m., Battlefield, 3 miles east of Bald800 block of High Street win City on U.S. Highway 56 Toby’s Carnival, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., 800 block of High Street Midland Railway “Great Train Robbery” rides, 10 a.m. Maple Leaf Walk/Run, 8 and hourly until 4 p.m., Santa Fe a.m., Baldwin City Municipal Golf Station, 1515 High St. Course, 1500 South St. Kids parade, 10:45 a.m., Maple Leaf Quilt Guild quilt assembles at Seventh and High show, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., Baldwin streets Elementary School Intermediate Parade, 11 a.m. Center, 100 Bullpup Drive Country music, noon to 6 Maple Leaf Festival arts and p.m., tent in the 700 block of High crafts fair, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Street Kids zone, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.,
15 SATURDAY
Santa Fe Trail Historical Society historic tours, 1 p.m., 2:30 to 3 p.m. and 4 p.m., Antiques on the Prairie, 520 High St.
Baldwin City on U.S. Highway 56 Toby’s Carnival, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., 800 block of High Street Midland Railway “Great Train Robbery” rides, 10 a.m. and hourly until 4 p.m., Santa Fe Station, 1515 High St. Volkswalk, 10 a.m. to 4:30 Maple Leaf Quilt Guild quilt p.m., Baldwin High School, 415 show, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Baldwin Eisenhower St. Elementary School Intermediate Gospel music, 11:30 a.m., tent Center, 100 Bullpup Drive Maple Leaf Festival arts and in 700 block of High Street Country music, noon to 5 p.m. crafts fair, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. tent in 700 block of High Street Kids zone, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Santa Fe Trail Historical Seventh and High streets Society historic tours, 1 p.m., Black Jack Battlefield 2:30 p.m. and 4 p.m., Antiques on tours, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., Black the Prairie, 520 High St. Jack Battlefield, 3 miles east of
16 SUNDAY
The committee votes on what new vendors to accept, Curran said. She invites Baldwin City residents to volunteer for the committee, which is always looking for more volunteers. If you’re wondering what will be popular at this year’s festival, try to remember what was new and unusual a year ago. “There might be something new one year, and the next year 10 or more vendors have the same thing,” Curran said. Stephanie Thomas, Maple Leaf Festival chairwoman for the Baldwin City Business & Professional Women, said the group would have 71 booths this year. They will be strung along the 600 block of Chapel Street and along the 400 block of Eighth Street. Mums, honey and root beer will be among the items for sale at the Business & Professional Women part of the fair. In addition, a young teen entrepreneur will be selling her homemade hair bands, ribbons and other items made from recycled men’s ties, Thomas said. The Business & Professional Women will offer a tent on the vacant lot on the southeast corner of Eighth and Chapel streets where festival visitors can relax for a meal and enjoy the entertainers performing on the nearby stage, Thomas said. Celebrity’s Cheese Steaks of Gardner and Drake’s Fruitcake of Lawrence, an Indian taco vendor and Polish sausage provider will be among the food vendors near the tent, she said. — County reporter Elvyn Jones can be reached at 832-7166. Follow him on Twitter: @ElvynJ
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L awrence J ournal -W orld
HIGH
STREET SPECTACLE
Saturday’s parade is official kickoff for festival fun
Sunday, October 9, 2016
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ABOVE: SPECTATORS LINE HIGH STREET AS ANTIQUE TRACTORS PASS BY during 2011’s parade. BELOW: From left, Layna and Landree Rose and Gabby Camis, all of Ottawa, watch as a marching band passes. By Elvyn Jones
T
ejones@ljworld.com
he theme of this year’s Maple Leaf Festival Parade and the festival is “A Salute to Kansas.” The parade, which will go along the maple tree-lined streets of Baldwin City, will start at 11 a..m on Saturday and will serve as the official kickoff for the 59th annual festival. Expect floats, marching bands, horseback riders, fire trucks, and — it being less than a month before the election— a good number of politicians to be in the parade, which starts at Third and High streets, heads to Sixth and High streets, and continues north on Sixth Street. There is no charge to enter the parade. “It’s always a long parade in election years,” said Jeremy Rodrock, Maple Leaf Festival Committee parade chairman. Rodrock said he
‘‘
It’s always a long parade in election years.”
— Jeremy Rodrock, Maple Leaf Festival Committee parade chairman
expects about 120 entries in the parade. That represents a lot of people. Rodrock said he figures there are an average of 22 people for each parade entry. The parade’s official deadline has passed, but entries are welcome the
Third Street south of High Street near Oakwood Cemetery. Marching bands are to assemble at the Baker University stadium parking lot between Second and Third streets north of High Street. This year’s grand marshals are Calvin Crossley and his late wife Sheri, both longtime Maple Leaf Festival committee members. Maple Leaf Journal-World File Photos Committee Chairman Mike Curran said the committee had selected day of the parade. Those the couple as grand late entries won’t be marshals before Sheri’s announced as they move recent death and would by the viewing stand at honor both with the Sixth and High streets. designation. No parade entrants, A much smaller and even those previously less formal parade for registered, will be acchildren will start at cepted if they arrive at 10:45 a.m. on Saturday the staging areas after and complete a square10:30 a.m. block march downtown. Entrants traditionally Those wanting to parstart gathering for the ticipate in that parade parade at 9 a.m. The pashould gather at the rade’s floats and vehicles festival’s kids entertainwill line up on Hillside ment site in front of Drive off U.S. Highway the Baldwin City Public 56, while horseback ridLibrary at Seventh and ers are to assemble on High streets.
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COME
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JOIN US 54th Annual Baldwin City Business & Professional Women
Journal-World File Photo
FESTIVALGOERS RIDE A TRAM along Eighth Street on Oct. 16, 2010.
Don’t miss any of the festivities Baldwin City Golf Course, 1500 South St., in Baldwin City. The event, which will Midland Railway is benefit the Baldwin High planning special excurSchool wrestling team, will sion rides the weekend of include a 5K adult run and the Maple Leaf Festival. kids run and 1-mile walk. On Saturday and Sunday, Medals in adult events will the railway will once again be given for top male and offer its Maple Leaf train female finishers overall robberies. The trips will and in seven age groups. take riders to “Nowhere,” Trophies will be awarded a piece of property the to the top two boys and nonprofit historical railroad girls overall finishers and in owns about a 20-minute three different age groups. ride south of Baldwin City. The cost is $20. RegisThere, the Wild Women trations can be mailed to of the Frontier, an all-womKit Harris, 301 Blaze Blvd., an troupe of six gun-toting, Baldwin City, KS, 66006. For horse-riding Western remore information, contact enactors, will stop the train Harris at (785) 221-8025 or and relieve passengers of kharris@usd348.com. coins and valuables handed Registration for the event out as the train departs from will be from 7 to 7:45 am., the Baldwin City station. and events will start at 8 a.m. Trains will leave from Baldwin City’s historic Santa Quilt show back at Fe Depot, 1515 High St., hourly from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. elementary school Tickets are $10. Advance Of the Maple Leaf Festitickets can be purchased val’s many activities, few online at midlandrailway.org. are as long-standing as the Maple Leaf Quilt Guild’s Start Saturday with annual quilt show. The show will return Maple Leaf Run this year from 9 a.m. to 6 The Maple Leaf Run p.m. Saturday and 10 a.m. returns to the Maple Leaf to 5 p.m. Sunday at the Festival on Saturday at the Baldwin Elementary School
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
&
by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek Intermediate Center, 100 Unscramble these six Jumbles, Bullpup Drive. one letter to each square, Sharon Vesecky, to form six ordinary words. owner of Quilters’ Paradise in RANDOW downtown Baldwin City, said people are welcome ©2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC to up on the day of All show Rights Reserved. the show with quilts. For DOENUF that reason, the quilt guild doesn’t know how many quilts will be on display but CARPIY there are usually about 100 to view, she said. Cathy Miles, Maple LeafSUVALI Quilt Guild president, said there also would be vendors of quilting-related items at the show. QINUUE Quilts for display can be left at Quilters’ Paradise, 713TRAREH High St., from 10 a.m. to arrange the circled letters 5 p.m. Thursday and from Now to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon. 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Friday, as The BPW well as at theYOUR school after IN THE CIRCLES PRINT ANSWER BELOWhas sponsored the Arts 4 p.m. Friday, They may be and Craft Fair since 1963 & we picked up when the show look forward to another great year! ends Sunday or after noon on Monday at Quilters’ Proceeds from the craft fair go Paradise. Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app
Special excursions at Midland Railway
arts crafts FA I R
during the Maple Leaf festival, located at 8th and Chapel St.
Shop over 75 vendors, visit our Food Pavilion and Entertainment area where you'll enjoy great food, picnic corners and local performers.
Answer : UNIQUE ONWARD PIRACY VISUAL RATHER FONDUE The models walked down the runway in an —
ORDERLY FASHION
towards our Women's Scholarship Fund, initiatives that support and promote women's health, sponsorship of the Baldwin City Community Garden, and support back into the annual festival. OCTOBER 9, 2016
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RECIPE FOR
SUCCESS Sauerkraut vendors carry on family tradition Kevin Anderson/Journal-World Photo
FAMILY AND FRIENDS OF RAY AND SUSAN ROME WORK TO PREPARE THE FAMILY’S HOGANVILLE SAUERKRAUT at the commercial kitchen of Antiques on the Prairie, 520 High St., in Baldwin City. The family will market the sauerkraut at a Maple Leaf Festival booth. By Elvyn Jones
M
Twitter: @ElvynJ
indy Brenner greeted the recent arrival of milder temperatures with mixed feelings. “It’s good to see the cool weather, but it’s the calm before the storm,” she said. “We’ll be busy until Thanksgiving. Thanksgiving is the reward.” Many of Brenner’s fall weekends and those of her parents, Ray and Susan Rome, her three siblings and various other family members will be filled with the six fall festivals they attend to market the family’s Hoganville Sauerkraut. The sauerkraut is made from a recipe Ray Rome’s greatgrandfather brought from Germany around 1890 and named for a town in Graham County in which the Bavarian immigrant settled. It doesn’t appear on maps today, because it disappeared with
‘‘
We get people who tell us they don’t even like sauerkraut, but when they try it say ‘Wow, that’s really good.’”
— Mindy Brenner, sauerkraut vendor
the settlement of nearby St. Peters. For the past four years, the Maple Leaf Festival has been on the family’s fall festival circuit. It’s a bit of a homecoming for the jars of sauerkraut the family vends from its booth on Eighth Street near the Baker University campus. The sauerkraut was prepared in the commercial kitchen at Baldwin City’s Antiques on the Prairie, about six blocks from the booth on High Street. That October production process adds to the fall schedule as the family, their friends and sometimes a few Baker students produce sauerkraut from as much as 50,000 pounds of raw
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cabbage, Brenner said. It’s a multi-week process that starts with the delivery of cabbage to the Baldwin City commercial kitchen from the same farm in Brighton, Colo., that has supplied the family since the 1980s. Family members and friends then core and shred the cabbage heads before dumping the slaw in stainless steel vats to ferment into sauerkraut. The final processing involves filling between 8,000 and 9,000 jars with ripe sauerkraut, and giving them a hot bath in another vat to complete the canning process. They are then wrapped up for shipment, with only the labels yet to be applied.
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many loyal customers year after year and tempts or coaxes others to buy the product. “We get people who tell us they don’t even like sauerkraut, but when they try it say ‘Wow, that’s really good,’” she said. “Customers always turn to us at festivals because we’re so unique. Nobody else does this.” It helps that the fall festival circuit coincides with the sauerkraut season of Oktoberfest, Brenner said. It’s a natural complement to brats while barbecuing or tailgating, she said. Brenner grew up on the sauerkraut and doesn’t need any coaxing or special occasion to consume it, but she said the family recipe converted her husband from his allegiance to another brand. It’s already popular with a young family member, she said. “My 2 1/2-year-old daughter and I were eating it for breakfast yesterday,” she said. “When we were done, she said ‘More, more.’ It warmed my heart.”
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It’s a pretty industrial process, one refined from when Brenner’s father and an uncle made from 3,000 to 4,000 pounds of sauerkraut a year in 20-pound crocks for personal use and to give away to friends. Now the jars of Hoganville Sauerkraut sit on the shelves of grocery and specialty stores as well as festival tables, Brenner said. “It’s tough work, but it’s rewarding,” she said. “It’s really rewarding to see someone go home at a festival with jars of our sauerkraut, to see them on a store shelf, and who better to spend your time than with your family.” There may be secrets from her great-great-granddad’s recipe involved in the process, but it’s not in the ingredients. “I’m a label reader,” Brenner said. “All that’s in our jars is cabbage, salt and water.” The Maple Leaf Festival has been very good to the family, Brenner said. Their booth sees
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Data Specialist Part-time Position The Data Specialist Part-time position is an important part of the Washburn University Foundation Information Management, Analysis & Reporting team. This position will provide support for handling day-to-day details related to data entry, gift entry, information management and data output needs of the organization in the Raiser’s Edge database. Duties include recording daily gifts, gift acknowledgement, retrieving and storing data, and other special projects. Qualifications: • High School diploma or GED is required; two years of college coursework or Associate’s Degree or equivalent experience preferred; • Intermediate level skills required in Microsoft Office software; • Relational database experience preferred; • Proficient in English, grammar, spelling, punctuation and above average math; • Creative, strategic, and problem solving abilities; • Strong attention to detail and follow through on projects. For a complete job description: Go to givetowashburn.org To apply: Please go to Creative Business Solutions at www.cbsks.com and click on “Apply Now!” under “Jobs” to submit your resume, cover letter and three professional references. EEO Employer
Accounting Specialists
The University of Kansas seeks Accounting Specialists to serve with the Shared Service Centers Administration.
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KU is an EO/AAE, full policy http://policy.ku.edu/IOA/nondiscrimination. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex (including pregnancy), age, national origin, disability, genetic information or protected Veteran status.
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Will aid the Metropolitan Planning Organization with updating transportation plan, Transportation 2040. Apprx 20-30 hrs wkly. Bachelor’s degree required; graduate level preferred. Must hv strong communication skills and MS Office proficiency. $12.00hr Submit application, cvr ltr & resume online by 10/26/16 to: www.LawrenceKS.org/jobs EOE M/F/D
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Manufacturing & Assembly SHOP TECHNICIAN The Reuter Organ Company is accepting applications for individuals with woodworking, metalworking, wiring, and finishing experience, and will train the right candidates. Some out of town travel is required; also must be able to lift 75 lbs., and climb ladders. For more information, visit: http://reuterorgan.com/employ ment.html or call Jeff Noll at 785-843-2622. Online forms must be submitted in person at 1220 Timberedge Road, Lawrence, Kansas, 66049.
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The University of Kansas is committed to providing our employees with an enriching and dynamic work environment that encourages innovation, research, creativity and equal opportunity for learning, development and professional growth. KU strives to recruit, develop, retain and reward a dynamic workforce that shares our mission and core strategic values in research, teaching and service. Learn more at http:// provost.ku.edu/strategic-plan.
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(First published in the The School of Education at Lawrence Daily Journal- Baker University is hosting an accreditation visit by World October 9, 2016) the Council for the AccredNOTICE TO BIDDERS itation of Educator Preparation (CAEP) on April 2-5, Interested parties Sealed proposals will be 2017. invited to submit received by the City of are Lawrence, Kansas, in the third-party comments to Office of the City Clerk, 6 the visiting team. Please East Sixth Street until 2:00 note that comments must p.m., Tuesday, October 18, address substantive matters related to the quality 2016 for the following: of professional education BID #B1635 – Master programs offered, and Street Tree Program Tree should specify the party’s Planting relationship to the EPP (i.e., graduate, present or Copies of the Notice to former faculty member, Contractors and specifica- employer of graduates). tions may be obtained at We invite you to submit testimony to: the Finance Department at written CAEP-Site Visitors; 1140 the above address. 19th Street NW, Suite 400; The City Commission re- Washington, DC 20036 OR e-mail to: serves the right to reject by any or all bids and to callforcomments@caepnet. org waive informalities. City of Lawrence, Kansas Sherri Riedemann City Clerk ________
Letters of comment should be received no later than March 1, 2017. No anonymous testimony will be considered. (First published in the ________ Lawrence Daily JournalWorld October 2, 2016)
legals@ljworld.com
DOB xx/xx/2013 A female
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NOTICE OF HEARING-Publication Pursuant to K.S.A. 38-2237 TO: Austin Fuller, father and all other persons who are or may be concerned You are hereby notified that a petition has been filed in this court alleging that the child(ren) named above is a Child in Need of Care. The Court may find that the parents are unfit by reason or conduct or condition which renders the parents unable to care properly for a child, the conduct or condition is unlikely to change in the foreseeable future, the parental rights of the parent should be terminated, and a permanent custodian should be appointed for the child(ren). An Adjudication Hearing on the petition is scheduled for the Thursday, November 17, 2016 at 09:30 AM. At the hearing the Court may issue orders relating to the care, custody and control of the child(ren). The hearing will determine if the parents should be deprived of their parental rights and the right to custody of the child(ren). The parent(s), and any other person having legal custody are required to appear before this Court on the date and time shown, or to file your written response to the petition with the Clerk of the District Court prior to that time. Failure to respond or to appear before the Court at the time shown will not prevent the Court from entering judgment as requested in the petition, finding that the child is a Child in Need of Care, removing the child from the custody of parent, parents or any other present legal custodian until further order of the Court, or finding the parents unfit, and entering an order permanently terminating the parents’ parental rights.
(First published in the Lawrence Daily Journal-World An attorney has been appointed as guardian ad litem for the child: Alexandria S. Morrissey, Attorney at Law, October 9, 2016) P.O. Box 166, Holton, KS 66436; Telephone: 785-364-0158. You have the right to appear before the Court and be IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF heard personally either with or without an attorney. JACKSON COUNTY, KANSAS The Court will appoint an attorney for any parent who desires an attorney but is financially unable to hire one. IN THE INTEREST OF: The Court may order one or both parents to pay child Name Elayne Jane Fuller support. An attorney has been appointed for you: SaCase No. 2016-JC-000030 mantha Harrington, Attorney at Law, 2708 NW Topeka DOB xx/xx/2012 A female Blvd, Topeka, KS 66617; Telephone: 785-234-0600 and Date and time of hearing: Thursday, November 17, 2016, at 09:30 AM. Name Olivia Grace Fuller Case No. 2016-JC-000031 Place of hearing: Jackson County District Court, DOB xx/xx/2008 A female Courthouse, 3rd floor, Holton, KS 66436 and ________________ Clerk/Judge of the District Court Name Paisley Marie Fuller ________ Case No. 2016-JC-000032
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KansasTreeCare.com
Mike - 785-766-6760 mdcraig@sbcglobal.net HOME BUILDERS Repair & Remodel. When you want it done right the first time. Home repairs, deck repairs, painting & more. 785-766-9883
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)
NOTICES TO PLACE AN AD:
ANNOUNCEMENTS
785.832.2222 Special Notices
classifieds@ljworld.com Special Notices
Special Notices North Lawrence Neighborhood Clean UP Tuesday, October 11th
MAPLE LEAF BREAKFAST Biscuits & Gravy
Have items for pickup at regular trash pick up site by 7 AM. They will pick up tires. No yard chemicals or paint. Bring tree limbs to parking lot behind Centenary Methodist Church 4th & Elm, west side of parking lot, no vines, brush or yard waste. Have nails removed from lumber. Metal items will also be picked up.
(AKA The Bird)
For Information: Call 785-842-7232
ARE YOU CUTE ?
North Lawrence Improvement Association
CAN YOU WAIT TABLES ?
County Commission Candidate Forum 2nd & 3rd Districts Monday, October 10 7 PM
All Welcome VIEW PHOTOS
RETIRED MASTER PLUMBER & Handyman needs small work. Bill Morgan 816-523-5703
YARDBIRDS LANDSCAPING Tractor and Mowing Services. Yard to fields. Rototilling Call 785-766-1280
JAYHAWK GUTTERING
Peace Mennonite Church 615 Lincoln St
SEARCH AMENITIES
STARTING or BUILDING a Business?
Professional Organizing
Landscaping
Lawn, Garden & Nursery
Stamped & Reg. Concrete, Patios, Walks, Driveways, Acid Staining & Overlays, Tear-Out & Replacement Jayhawk Concrete Inc. 785-979-5261
Call Lyndsey 913-422-7002
Plumbing
Family Owned & Operated 20 Yrs
PUBLIC NOTICES
Quality Work Over 30 yrs. exp.
Advertising that works for you!
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
Concrete Driveways, Parking lots, Pavement repair, Sidewalks, Garage Floors Foundation walls, Remove & Replacement Specialists Call 843-2700 or Text 393-9924
Interior/Exterior Painting
785-832-2222 classifieds@ljworld.com
FOUNDATION REPAIR
Quality Office Cleaning
Concrete
Stk#521462
Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
New York Housekeeping Accepting clients for weekly, bi-weekly, seasonal or special occasion cleaning. Excellent References. Beth - 785-766-6762
Family Tradition Interior & Exterior Painting Carpentry/Wood Rot Senior Citizen Discount Ask for Ray 785-330-3459
Retired Carpenter, Deck Repairs, Home Repairs, Interior Wall Repair & House Painting, Doors, Wood Rot, Power wash and Tree Services. 785-766-5285
Foundation Repair
Call Today 785-841-9538
leather heated seats, alloy wheels, power equipment, cruise control, great gas mileage
Fwd, power equipment, alloy wheels, spoiler, low miles
785-312-1917
Specialist
Cleaning
Int/ext. Drywall, Siding, 30 plus yrs. Locally owned & operated. albeil@aol.com
Interior/exterior painting, roofing, roof repairs, fence work, deck work, lawn care, siding, windows & doors. For 11+ years serving Douglas County & surrounding areas. Insured.
Water Prevention Systems for Basements, Sump Pumps, Foundation Supports & Repair & more. Call 785-221-3568
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
A.B. PAINTING & REPAIR
913-488-7320
Foundation & Masonry
Volkswagen Cars
Stk#373891
Nissan Cars
crew cab, 4wd, V8, power equipment, Bose sound, tow package leather heated seats
Dodge 2012 Grand Caravan SXT
Carpentry
Serving KC over 40 years
913-962-0798 Fast Service
2009 PONTIAC G8 BASE
Stk#45490A1
Dodge Vans
Estate Sale Services In home & Off site options to suit your tag sale needs. 785.260.5458
Painting
Fully Insured 22 yrs. experience
Decks • Gazebos Siding • Fences • Additions Remodel • Weatherproofing Insured • 25 yrs exp. 785-550-5592
Rich Black Top Soil No Chemicals Machine Pulverized Pickup or Delivery
Golden Rule Lawncare Mowing & lawn cleanup Snow Removal Family owned & operated Call for Free Est. Insured. Eugene Yoder 785-224-9436
Call Al 785-331-6994
Higgins Handyman
Only $7,877
Chevrolet 2005 Silverado LT Z71
Stacked Deck
Pontiac Cars
Only $6,415
Chevrolet Trucks
Deck Drywall Siding Replacement Gutters Privacy Fencing Doors & Trim Commercial Build-out Build-to-suit services
Dirt-Manure-Mulch
Stk#17308
Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
Full Remodels & Odd Jobs, Interior/Exterior Painting, Installation & Repair of:
ESTATE SERVICES
785-764-2323
Lawn, Garden & Nursery
AAA Home Improvements Int/Ext Repairs, Painting, Tree work & more- we do it all! 20 Yrs. Exp., Ins. & local Ref. Will beat all estimates! Call 785-917-9168
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
• Estate sales • Organizing • Interior Stylist Debbie King
classifieds@ljworld.com
Home Improvements
Pro Deck & Design
prodeckanddesign@gmail.com
Stk#50616A1
Chevrolet 2010 Cobalt XFE fwd
Decks & Fences Specializing in the complete and expert installation of decks and porches. Over 30 yrs exp, licensed & insured. 913-209-4055
Chevrolet Cars
High performance package, RS Package, 2SS. 12k miles. Perfect condition. 450HP. Yellow with Black Stripes. Full warranty for 6 years / 100,000 miles. $39,000. 785-218-0685 erik@efritzler.com
785.832.2222
For Info Call 785-842-7232
Saturday, October 15 Vinland United Methodist Church
Flamingo Club
LET’S DO THIS ! NOW SEEKING WAITRESSES AND BARTENDERS apply online or in person at: info@thefamous flamingoclub.com 140 N. 9th St. Lawrence, KS 785-843-9800
1724 N 692 RD Baldwin City, KS 66006 Serving 7 am - 10:30 am. Free will donation.
LOST & FOUND Lost Item LOST RING. Pandora crown ring. In or around TJ MAXX or Bath & Body Works - Mon, Oct 3. Reward. Please call: 785-312-1376 Need an apartment? Place your ad at apartments.lawrence.com
L awrence J ournal -W orld
Sunday, October 9, 2016
SPECIAL!
MERCHANDISE PETS PLACE YOUR AD: AUCTIONS
Auctions
Auctions
Auctions
ESTATE AUCTION
w/bracket & reflector & Brunswick Funnel (RARE!); oil lamps; Liberty Memorial High pennant; other pennants; LHS/KU/Royals items; 1960-Current Lawrence Phone books; LJW paperweight; LLadro bell ornaments & Rockwell bells; Jewel Tea teapot; Brown Francoma; green depression cracker jar & other; amber glass; glass rolling pins; pink juicer; Republican / Democrat Francoma; Lutted’s SP Cough Drop pink candy dish; Duck candy dishes; Germany / Bavaria plates; Law KS plates: (1909 National Bank/1915 Watkins Bank / Peoples Bank / Central High School) cup / saucers; miniature collection; thimbles; cast-iron bookends; school bells; advertising Lard cans; enamel ware; red/green handle primitives; steam irons / sad irons; miniature irons; Lawrence KS glass cream pitchers; linens & dollies; large braided rugs; dolls; Vintage Furniture/Pictures 2-Section Lawyers Bookcase; Child’s cedar chest; small & medium claw foot Parlor tables; Oak round dining table w/large pedestal 5 legged w/2 leaves; 6 oak cane matching chairs; library tables; spice cabinet; telephone table; oak sewing rocker; oak coffee table; Singer Sewing machine / cabinet; Maple square dining table w / matching chairs; Mid-Century SAGA by Broyhill Premier bedroom suite (dresser / armoire chest / headboard); whicker patio; iron-grate table; 1921 Lawrence Steam Laundry Jack / Jill calendar picture; AFTER & BEFORE Marriage Pictures; 1909 Dick Brothers Druggist Law. KS picture; MANY MANY Vintage Pictures / Frames!!! Needle Point Pictures! Tools / Misc. Craftsman
125 psi 12 gallon upright air compressor (Like New!); Sears vise; Wright 3/4 socket set; end wrenches; had / power tools; work benches; furniture dollies; Homelite blower / vac. (New); concret yard art: flagmen / frogs / grape flower box; Large Red Rock pile; 2-wheel garden cart; different sizes of glass & dimensional lumber(molding/trim/oak/wal nut/pine); Bob Sweep vacuum; kitchen de´cor; Darlene was avid puzzle person!! (many framed puzzles / stamps / birds / etc.); bird books; house plants; numerous items too many to mention!
Auction Calendar
Sat, October 15th, 2016 9:30 A.M. 5275 West 6th
ESTATE AUCTION
(Just West of 6th Wakarusa)
Sat, October 15th, 2016 9:30 A.M. 5275 West 6th (Just West of 6th Wakarusa)
Lawrence, KS
Seller: Mrs. (William) Darlene Naff Auctioneers: Mark Elston & Jason Flory Elston Auctions (785-594-0505) (785-218-7851) “Serving Your Auction Needs Since 1994” Please visit us online at www.KansasAuctions .net/elston for 100 pictures!!
FARM AUCTION Sat, October 22 9:00 AM 325 East 1250 Rd Baldwin City Seller: C.T. Taul Auctioneers: Mark Elston & Jason Flory Elston Auctions (785-594-0505) (785-218-7851) “Serving Your Auction Needs Since 1994” Please visit us online at www.KansasAuctions.net/ elston & www.FloryAndAssociates .com for pictures!!
REAL ESTATE AUCTION 120 Oak Street Downtown Bonner Springs, KS October 21, 11 A.M. 21,000 Sq Ft Mall! www.billfair.com BILL FAIR & COMPANY 800-887-6929 FREE 2 Week AUCTION CALENDAR LISTING when you place your Auction or Estate Sale ad with us! Call our Classified Advertising Department for details! 785.832.2222 classifieds@ljworld.com
785.832.2222
Lawrence, KS
Darlene is selling her & her late husband’s Bill lifetime collection of collectibles! The Naff’s were avid Auction enthusiasts and collected the Unusual & Rare Items! Collectibles: 1895 pat. A.B.LM Ericson Stockholm Sweden Wall Phone; Iron Rotating Clothes Rack; Sear Roebuck #11 child’s cast iron stove; Salesman Sample Cider Press; Spinning Loom; J & P Combs Best Six Cords crock thread holder; Roffie & Douweg Egberts Koffie Mill Grinders; Game Junior burner; Dazey Nutcracker; Cherry Seeder 20B; Apple Peeler; Barteldes/ Jenny Wren / Bowersock Mills items; KeenKutter meat grinders; 3-legged pitter / seeder(Rare!); glass washboards; 2-glass butter molds(one cow); several styles of rare wooden butter molds; wooden dough bowl; Banjo Sessions Mayflower clock; Seth Thomas Ornate mantel clock; Walnut mantel clock w/thermometer & level;; wooden square butter churn(Rare!); wooden Eskimo sled; Collection: Watkins beater jar, laundry soap boxes, wooden box, spice cans/bottles, cookbooks & many other Watkins items!; Unbelievable Presidential Collection: from George Washington to current! Pictures, plates, postcards, buttons, coins (many one of kind items!); World WW I Power / Leaders picture; US Postal collection: cast iron banks, Truner scales, stamps; curling irons/razors; store vintage mannequin; rug beaters; IH gallon can; David Bradley model 241 well pump jack; oil lamp
Auctioneers: Mark Elston & Jason Flory Elston Auctions (785-594-0505) (785-218-7851) “Serving Your Auction Needs Since 1994” Please visit us online at www.KansasAuctions .net/elston for 100 pictures!!
Appliances Gibson Heavy-Duty Commercial Chest Freezer. 9.5 cubic feet. Clean. Works Great! $50.00 785-393-6274
7 DAYS $19.95 28 DAYS $49.95
Appliances
Health & Beauty
Electric free standing range G.E. brand ~ self-cleaning ~ smooth ceramic top ~ hardly used ~ ( downsizing ) was $670.oo ~ asking $ 340.oo ~ $$ 340.oo 785-550-4142
Bathroom scales: Health-o-meter Model 160, excellent working condition, $20. Call 785-830-8304 anytime.
Building Materials
Household Misc. 10 Norman Rockwell Figurines $ 99 for all 10 Call for more Info 316-992-5678
Medical Equipment Free !!!! Hospital Bed You Haul Call 843-0689
Miscellaneous
Just like new! 36”x80” Factory-finished White Premium Steel Door JeldWen pre-hung RH inswing door. All components required for quick & easy installation, including brand new Schlage bright brass finish lockset, dead bolt and keyed entry. Located in Baldwin City. $129.95 complete. Call to set up an appointment to view. (312) 316-7722
Clothing Red Newsboy Hat $5 842-1760
Furniture
MERCHANDISE
10 LINES & PHOTO
classifieds@ljworld.com
Seller: Mrs. (William) Darlene Naff Auction Note: Very Large Auction DO NOT MISS THIS ONE! This is a once in Lifetime Opportunity to buy some items that are one of kind & RARE & The Condition is Outstanding! Outbuildings in case of inclement weather!! Concessions: Crimson Blue BBQ
| 9D
Desk, 47” wide X 24” deep X 52” high. Roll out shelf for keyboard, raised shelf for screen, attached hutch w/book cases & storage space. Great condition. In Lawrence. $20 785-691-6667
East 5th Avenue, Red Low heel Size 8 1/2 Gianni Bini, Beaded Black high heel Size 8 1/2 Jessica Simpson -Still in box, Black heels 8/38 Delicious Shoes, Off White wedge shoe lace Size 8 $ 20 each or all for $60 785-841-3332
Music-Stereo
PIANOS • H.L. Phillips upright $650 • Cable Nelson Spinet $500 • Gulbranson Spinet - $450 Prices include delivery & tuning
785-832-9906
Yamaha Musical Keyboard PSR-66 $ 95 842-1760
Got Stuff To Sell? Merchandise Ad 1 Week - $19.95 Call 785.832.2222
White Leather Overstuffed Chair 4’3” W X 2’11” H X 3’1” D $ 100.00 Call 785-749-0089- Leave message
Topeka
GARAGE SALES Lawrence 14th Annual Garage Sale Our Largest Ever 2349 Ohio
Estate Sale Santa Fe Railroad, Pen Delfin, Antiques and Collectibles 3438 SW Belle Topeka
Fri Oct 7th 7:30 am to 4:00 pm Sat Oct 8th 7:30 am - 4:00 pm Sun Oct 9th 10 am - 4 pm Half price (2-4 Brown bag $5.00) Jewelry, Clothes- Men’s (Size M XXXL), Women’s clothes Size 6-14, Children’s clothes, SeasonalChristmas, Fall, Easter, Christmas trees, wreaths, snowing tree, ornaments #100+, 2 Children’s chairs, children’s books, toys, comic books/magazines, adult books, cook books, paper goods, scarves, Lg Jim Shore Nativity, punch bowl, many punch cups, lots of house decor, small refrigerator, picture frames, paintings, pictures, china, glassware, linens, comforter sets, shoes, ties, purses, 2 TV stands, rocker, microwave, electric heaters, tools, recliner, 2 curio cabinets.
Sat, October 8th 10:00AM-3:00PM Sunday, October 9th 12:00PM-3:00PM Great sale with a very nice collection of Santa Fe Railroad items including Steam Punk Train Sculptures, Memorabilia, Railroad Depot Clock, Lionel Trains and More. Complete household with furniture, antiques and collectibles. Church stained glass windows, tandem bicycle and a very large collection of Pen Delfin Rabbits. For a complete list and photos. Please see www.kansasestatesales.c om
PETS
Garage Sale 1011 Highland Dr Friday Oct 7th 8 am to 3 pm Pets Saturday Oct 8th 8 am to 3 pm Sunday Oct 9th Jack Russell cross Puppies: 8 am to 3 pm 8 weeks, 3 M & 2 Females. PS2 w/ games, Electronics, Weened, shots, and dewormed. DVD’s, clothes, books, Call for picture & price: house decorations and 785-424-0915 or 913-886-3812 lots more. BORDER COLLIE PUPPIES Garden and Lawn Sale Black & White 1005 N 1116 Rd $400 ( Next to Wakarusa Valley Up on Vaccinations & school ) Rabies - Won’t need Lawrence shots for 1 Yr! Sunday Oct. 9th Males. 15 Wks old Two 1 pm to 5 pm 2 electric chain saws, electric rototiller, fertilizer spreader, hoses, garden tools, etc. 785-842-8847
Call or text 785-843-3477- Gary Jennix2@msn.com
O C T
Get Here, Get Noticed
Tuesday, Oct. 4th, 11:30-2:30 O O C 15th Street • Lawrence C East Lawrence Rec. Center • 1245 East T T Meet, mingle & connect with local employers! For more information or to reserve a booth for your business, contact Peter at psteimle@ljworld.com
Wednesday, October Wednesday, October 26, FEATURING THESE EMPLOYERS &11:30 MORE - 2:30
O Shawnee Civic Centre • 13817 J Shawnee Civic Centre • 13817 Johnson Dr. • Shawnee C O T Hundreds of C Special Presenta Presentation: “WhatEVENT Employers 11:30-12:30 Want” EVENT 11:30-12:30 Special openings available! T Visit with local e SCHEDULE 12:30-2:30 Visit with local employers & learn about 12:30-2:30 their openings SCHEDULE
Wednesday, October 26, 11:30 - 2:30 Wednesday, October 26, 11:30 - 2:30 Shawnee Civic Centre • 13817 Johnson Dr. • Shawnee
reserve a booth for your company, contact Pe To reserve a booth for your company, contact PeterTo Steimle: psteimle@shawneedispatch.com psteimle@shawneedispatch.com
Shawnee Civic Centre • 13817 Johnson Dr. • Shawnee
EVENT SCHEDULE EVENT SCHEDULE
11:30-12:30 Special Presentation: “What Employers Want”
12:30-2:30 Visit with local employers & learn about their openings 11:30-12:30 Special Presentation: “What Employers Want”
12:30-2:30 Visit with local employers & learn about their openings To reserve a booth for your company, contact Peter Steimle: psteimle@shawneedispatch.com To reserve a booth for your company, contact Peter Steimle: psteimle@shawneedispatch.com
Hundreds of jobs available! NEW employers still signing up!
10D
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Sunday, October 9, 2016
PUZZLES
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L awrence J ournal -W orld
THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD Paper Jam By Zhouqin Burnikel Puzzles Edited by Will Shortz ACROSS 1 Waste generator? 6 Bookkeeper’s stamp 10 Talks a big game 16 Time-capsule ceremony 17 Lawn game that’s in the Special Olympics 18 Director of the “Hostel” films 20 First Amendment guarantee 22 Digital technology that provides higherquality sound 23 Big name in chips 24 Like most 23-Across chips 25 Bad-mouth 26 In need of an ice bath, say 27 Dropbox competitor 30 Not just imply 31 Send into space 34 It’s not used in miniature golf 35 French topper 37 Miss in court? 38 Pulls a yard prank on, briefly 41 Duluth-to-St. Paul dir. 42 “Vous ____ ici” 43 Last shot, often 44 Give it a go 45 “Yee-____!” 46 How Chinese brides are often dressed 48 Hodgepodge 50 It may be full of bugs 51 Business reply encl. 53 “Gigi” author, 1944 55 D.D.E.’s two-time
presidential rival 56 App image 57 Biblical landing site 59 “Yeah, right!” 60 Now and then 61 Alternatives to Twinkies 62 Give for a bit 63 Pinch-hit (for) 65 Totaled 66 Beatles girl who “made a fool of everyone” 67 International commerce assn. 68 Fontana di Trevi locale 69 Aleve shelfmate 70 Entr’____ 71 Tuna variety 72 Attach, as a seat belt 74 Surfboard stabilizer 75 Physicist who said, “Anyone who is not shocked by quantum theory has not understood it” 76 What may go to your head around Christmas? 78 Tribe under attack in “Hotel Rwanda” 80 Fruity drink 81 Islet in the Thames 82 Tip of Cambodia? 83 West Coast gas brand 84 Line part: Abbr. 87 Extends, in a way 88 Black mark uncovered in a background check 90 Trees used for making furniture 91 Agreement preceding a kiss 92 Flat need? 93 Little batteries
94 Rhimes who created “Grey’s Anatomy” and “Scandal” 96 Hit 1990s computer game 100 U.P.S. delivery: Abbr. 101 “Sure thing!” 104 Elec., e.g. 105 She betrayed Samson 107 Like a simple-majority voting system 110 Con 111 Two-time N.L. batting champ Willie 112 Banks that are too important to fail? 113 “What are the chances of seeing you here?!” 114 “The ____ the limit!” 115 It’ll never reach its destination DOWN 1 Hit band heard on the soundtrack of “Back to the Future” 2 “Am not!” rebuttal 3 PBS’s “____ the Science Kid” 4 The so-called “path of virtue” 5 Trees associated with the underworld in Celtic myth 6 ____-mouthed 7 Throb 8 Summertime coffee order 9 Weigh down 10 Like flip phones, now 11 Things to settle 12 Word before strike or ball 13 Mmes., to Don Juan
14 Commotion 15 Commotion 16 Orthodontist’s recommendation 17 Key next to A 19 Plot turner 20 Darts about 21 Rest spots for camels 25 Amount ____ 28 It’ll give you a lift 29 Big name in medical scales 32 Con 33 “Hold on there!” 36 Start over 37 “To be clear …” 38 Classic lie 39 Rear end 40 Final performance 43 Grilling site 47 Like Comic-Con attendees vis-à-vis the general public 48 Bow-tie topper 49 Short rest 50 Much organic matter 51 Topping station at a Mexican restaurant 52 Three before seven? 54 Part of LIFO, to an accountant 58 Took courses 60 Target 61 Solo in space 64 Golf resort known for its Blue Monster course 65 Canadian hockey team 67 Shocked cry 71 “If memory serves …” 72 Dancer’s boss 73 Another, in Aragón 77 Ending with Jumbo 79 Comedy Central host Daniel
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81 Suitable 83 One writing about “hare loss”? 85 Water whirls 86 Upright 89 ____ Diego 90 French pastry
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93 Basilica recesses 95 No longer in the closet 96 OB/GYNs, e.g. 97 Trees used for making wands 98 Like some chances 99 Weymouth of Talking Heads
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102 Rowdy revelry 103 Like Sir Ben Kingsley 106 “Bad” cholesterol, for short 107 Most music radio stations 108 “Understand?” 109 Rural power org.
UNITED FEATURE SUNDAY CROSSWORD 80 Deduces ACROSS 83 Knickknack stand 1 Clothing 85 Boutonniere’s place 5 By itself 88 Madrid art gallery 10 Orange boxes 89 Dentists inspire it 16 Civvies 90 Exam smudge 21 Linen shade 93 Investigating 22 Send elsewhere 95 Luigi’s farewell 23 Epoch of mammals 97 Groundhog mo. 24 From Bangkok 98 -- Vanilli 25 -- dunk 100 Racket 26 Piano exercise 101 A tossup (2 wds.) 27 Jot down 106 Dusting powder 28 On the up-and-up 108 Readies, as a pool 29 Night spots cue 31 Survey choice 110 Metamorphic rock 33 Laurel wreath sub 112 Bad habit 35 Primate 113 Not neatniks 36 “Be still!” (2 wds.) 115 Large cay 37 Weather info 116 “-- No Sunshine” 40 Johnny -117 Tarantula toxin 41 Persia, now 118 NATO turf 42 “Cheers” bar owner 45 Surf music duo -- and 120 Freight rider 122 Ground up Dean 123 Romantic sight 46 Hectic place 124 Gray-brown bird 48 Mouths, in biology 128 Ares’ main interest 50 Pure carbon 129 Math subj. 52 Like some elders 130 Once and for -54 Fearsome cape 131 Poultry buy 55 Digestive juice 132 Robins’ beaks 57 Friendly advice 133 -- Mineo of films 58 De Mille or 135 Pitt of filmdom Moorehead 137 Vibrant 59 Phyllis Diller’s hus139 Always, to Byron band 140 Female vampire 60 Antony the Roman 142 Canine command 62 Boxer’s measure 144 Teacher’s base 66 Subatomic particle 148 Good smell 67 Obdurate 150 Classic 1740 novel 69 Leave behind 153 Iowa commune 71 Frog’s pad 155 Ready to eat 72 Draft horse 156 Deadly reptile 74 “-- to Billie Joe” 157 Shut 76 Internet hookup 158 Palm off 78 Tour guide? 159 Lamb’s alias 79 Give the raspberry
160 Papyrus, for one 161 Netflix series “-- a Murderer” 162 Shetland’s neighbor 163 Did a salon job DOWN 1 Fam. tree sprig 2 Westwood’s Bruins 3 Like khaki 4 Tannin source 5 Weapons stockpile 6 Jelly thickener 7 Pull -- -- one 8 Aunt or bro. 9 Deuce successor 10 Swing a thurible 11 Milne marsupial 12 Circus routine 13 Pair of oxen 14 ATM key 15 Removed the pits 16 Browser’s delight 17 Do something with 18 Opera barber 19 Clavell novel (hyph.) 20 Plan to 30 Punjab royalty 32 Bond’s alma mater 34 Somewhat (2 wds.) 38 Crush of people 39 Excellent, in slang 41 Strong-arm 42 Philately item 43 Bicker 44 Not as important 46 Urban concern 47 AAA and BBB 49 Sirens and bells 51 Oxygen source 53 Park fixtures 54 Moon phenom 56 Hence 59 Pelts 61 Yield, as territory 63 Filmdom’s Anouk --
64 Bow of the silents 65 Over-publicized 67 “Bonjour, -- amis!” 68 Souped-up cars (2 wds.) 69 Catering for 70 Lunar New Year 73 Scar on a bean 75 Abu -77 Sir’s opposite 81 Loan abbr. 82 Prez after Jimmy 84 LP features 85 Boxing jabs 86 You’re -- -- pal! 87 Picasso or Casals 91 Rocker -- Ocasek 92 Post-kindergarten 93 Sleeper’s need 94 Turning right 95 -- la vie! 96 Connections 99 Mascara target 102 Wall climber 103 Beethoven symphony 104 Quebec school 105 Gulf nation 107 They have handles 109 Shish -111 Workbench item 114 California’s Big -117 Trombone slide 119 Diva -- Ponselle 121 Bobby of ice hockey 122 Wash out 123 It’s cold in the North 124 Skulks about 125 Canada’s Trudeau 126 In Europe, say 127 Bead money 130 Maria Conchita -134 Rain-forest growth 136 “Not with -- -- but ...” 137 By -- -- (barely) 138 Blew it
UNIVERSAL SUDOKU
See both puzzle SOLUTIONS in Monday’s paper. 140 After midnight 141 On a rampage 143 Iron hook 145 Too glib
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek
Unscramble these six Jumbles, one letter to each square, to form six ordinary words.
146 Sheriff Taylor’s kid 147 Honey wine 149 Soviet plane 151 Prefix for center
152 Writer -- Deighton 154 Ostrich look-alike
HIDATO
See answer next Sunday
©2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.
DOENUF CARPIY SUVALI
Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app
RANDOW
QINUUE TRAREH
Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.
PRINT YOUR ANSWER IN THE CIRCLES BELOW
Solution and tips at sudoku.com.
Last week’s solution
See the JUMBLE answer on page 4D. Answer :
UNIQUE ONWARD PIRACY VISUAL RATHER FONDUE The models walked down the runway in an —
ORDERLY FASHION
OCTOBER 9, 2016
Last week’s solution