Lawrence Journal-World 10-15-2016

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Despite big victory, Free State coach wants more. 1D

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Obama lifts restrictions on Cuban cigars, rum. 1B

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Saturday • October 15 • 2016

Man faces felony charge in dog shooting case Charles Branson said his office filed a summons for 65-year-old David Herren to appear in court regarding the charge, felony cruelty to animals. The criminal statute describes the crime as one committed “knowingly and maliciously” and “with specific intent to do

By Conrad Swanson cswanson@ljworld.com

A Douglas County man accused of killing a dog with a pellet gun in September now faces a single felony charge, the district attorney’s office said. On Friday, Douglas County District Attorney

a harmful act without a reasonable justification or excuse,” the release said. Herren has not been arrested regarding the charge. On Sept. 28, Jessica Graff said she found her family’s Brittany Spaniel, Arlo, dead right outside their home in the

1700 block of East 1318 Road. The home is just north of Lawrence and technically in Douglas County. Graff said she briefly left Arlo alone outside with her 3-year-old daughter around 10 a.m.

> DOG, 2A

Arlo

MUSIC WITH A MESSAGE

PUBLISHED SINCE 1891

City to decide on plan for HERE parking By Rochelle Valverde rvalverde@ljworld.com

At their meeting Tuesday, Lawrence city commissioners will decide whether a plan to resolve the HERE apartment complex’s parking shortage will become reality. The plan calls for demolishing two houses to expand an existing parking lot, and City Commissioner Matthew Herbert admitted

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Mike Yoder/Journal-World Photos

ABOVE: COUNTRY MUSICIAN BRAD PAISLEY, projected on a large screen video board at left, writes a message on an audience member’s phone during a free outdoor concert on the University of Kansas campus Friday. The Lawrence show is one of several stops on Paisley’s national tour of college campuses. LEFT: University of Kansas students and fans of Paisley watch from the front yards of houses along Mississippi Street and listen to the free outdoor concert taking place in the Memorial Stadium parking lot on campus.

Teachers share concerns of talking about ugly election season with kids By Joanna Hlavacek jhlavacek@ljworld.com

When it comes to politics, there are few topics that Chris Orlando, an eighth-grade social studies teacher at Lawrence’s Southwest Middle School, won’t broach with his students. As an educator, he encourages his students to stay informed and believes in frank discussion of the issues affecting today’s young people.

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VISITORS PASS BY NEW WINDOWS inside the Spencer Museum of Art as part of a tour for KU staff Oct. 5.

KU’s Spencer Museum of Art reopens today By Sara Shepherd sshepherd@ljworld.com

B

een missing the Spencer Museum of Art? Miss no longer. After being closed a year

and a half for an $8 million renovation, the museum reopens to the public today. The museum is lighter, sleeker and more open.

> SPENCER, 4A

Breezy

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VOL. 158 / NO. 289 / 26 PAGES

Mike Yoder/ Journal-World File Photo

CLASSIFIED.............. 3C-6C COMICS...........................6B

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OPINION..........................5A PUZZLES..........................5B

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your museum www.spen ncerart.ku.edu

Spencer Museum of Art Reopening Weekend October 15, 10am–7pm October 16, Noon–4pm > Free admission


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3 charged in alleged bomb plot targeting Somalis in Garden City By Eric Tucker and Roxana Hegeman Associated Press

Wichita — Three members of a Kansas militia group were charged Friday with plotting to bomb an apartment complex that’s home to Somali immigrants in the western Kansas meatpacking town of Garden City, a thwarted attack prosecutors say was planned for the day after the November election. The arrests were the culmination of an eightmonth FBI investigation that took agents “deep into a hidden culture of hatred and violence,” Acting U.S. Attorney Tom Beall said. A complaint unsealed Friday charges Curtis

Wayne Allen, 49; Patrick Eugene Stein, 47; and Gavin Wayne Wright, 49, with conspiring to use a weapon of mass destruction. Their first court appearance is Monday. Prosecutors said the men don’t yet have attorneys. The men are members of a small militia group that calls itself “the Crusaders,” and whose members espouse sovereign citizen, anti-government, anti-Muslim and anti-immigrant extremist beliefs, according to the complaint. The FBI began a domestic terrorism investigation of the group in February, and a confidential source attended its meetings in southwestern Kansas. In a June meeting, Stein

brought up the Orlando nightclub shooting, and proposed carrying out a similar attack against Muslim refugees in Garden City, according to the complaint. They ultimately decided to target the apartment complex because of the number of Somalis who lived there and the fact that one of the apartments was used as a mosque. The complex houses about 120 Somali residents, Beall said. The complaint said that Stein discussed the explosives used in the 1995 bombing of the federal building in Oklahoma City by Timothy McVeigh. The men, who were arrested in Liberal on Friday morning, performed

surveillance of the apartment building and prepared a manifesto, Beall said. In a profanity-laced conference call that law enforcement monitored, Stein said the only way “this country’s ever going to get turned around is it will be a bloodbath,” according to the complaint. If convicted, the men could be sentenced to up to life in federal prison without parole. Garden City is home to a Tyson Foods beef slaughterhouse that has drawn a diverse immigrant population to the area. Garden City Mayor Chris Law said in a statement that he was shocked by the planned attack, adding, “Today should also serve as a reminder that vigilance

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

Election CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A

But after news broke Oct. 7 of Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump’s now widely condemned 2005 admissions of kissing and groping women without their consent, Orlando found himself in a position not unique among teachers and parents across the country. “That was so far down the crazy train that it was almost like, ‘Can I even bring that up in class?’” Orlando recalled earlier this week. Ultimately, because of the graphic language used by Trump in the leaked “Access Hollywood” video, Orlando felt uncomfortable discussing the scandal with his students. It’s the first issue to come out of the 2016 election — a cycle, as many have pointed out, that has been unusually ugly and, at times, R-rated — that Orlando has shied away from in his classroom. “It’s just difficult because, how do I teach the election in a responsible way when a candidate makes incendiary remarks or insulting remarks or just plain false remarks?” Orlando said. “That’s my challenge as a teacher.” He’s not alone. Over the last week or so, there have been several articles and blogs published by national and local outlets alike ruminating on essentially the same question. As a school psychologist, Peggy Dey has worked with young children for more than 40 years. Currently, she rotates primarily between Woodlawn, Kennedy and Pinckney elementary schools. The teachers she’s worked with over the last four-plus decades have

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should be a common prac- 645 New Hampshire St. (News Center) Lawrence, KS 66044 tice by all citizens.” (785) 843-1000 • (800) 578-8748 Friday’s arrests and charges prompted the PUBLISHER Council on AmericanIslamic Relations to call Scott Stanford, 832-7277, sstanford@ljworld.com on state and federal law enforcement agencies EDITORS across the nation to inChad Lawhorn, editor crease protection for 832-6362, clawhorn@ljworld.com mosques and other IsKim Callahan, managing editor lamic institutions. The 832-7148, kcallahan@ljworld.com group also cited reports Tom Keegan, sports editor of threats against a Michi832-7147, tkeegan@ljworld.com gan center and anti-Muslim graffiti at a New Jer- Kathleen Johnson, advertising manager 832-7223, kjohnson@ljworld.com sey mosque. “We ask our nation’s OTHER CONTACTS political leaders, and Joan Insco: 832-7211 particularly political circulation manager candidates, to reject the growing Islamophobia Classified advertising: 832-2222 in our nation,” Nihad or www.ljworld.com/classifieds Awad, the group’s national executive direcCALL US tor, said in a statement. Let us know if you have a story idea.

Nick Krug/Journal-World Photo

FREE STATE HIGH SCHOOL SENIOR SITS FOR A CONFERENCE WITH TEACHER LAURIE FOLSOM on Thursday in Folsom’s journalism class at the high school. With regard for the highlycharged presidential race, Folsom explained that she has encouraged her students to avoid sensational topics and to consider opposing viewpoints when providing a balanced report. been adept at integrating elections into lesson plans that are both informative and age-appropriate, Dey said. But this election cycle, she speculates, might present more of a struggle for educators. And, in her opinion as a specialist in child psychology, justifiably so. Dey agrees with Orlando that words matter, especially in the case of young people whose moral compasses — what, for example, constitutes respectful behavior in a political setting or simply in everyday life — are heavily shaped by the messages they receive from authority figures such as the media, parents and teachers. “I think that what we as parents and teachers have to be mindful of is the fact that kids do hear what we say, and, depending on age, they may interpret things differently,” Dey said. As a journalism teacher at Free State High School, Laurie Folsom acknowledges that her students might possess a greater

HERE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A

he was not enthused about the plan, calling it the “least worst option.” “The ideal option would have been the developers to do exactly what they told us they were going to do several years ago,” Herbert said. “But at the point at which that becomes not an option, we have to find something because we do owe it to the neighborhood.” The $75 million luxury apartment complex at 1111 Indiana St. opened to residents in mid-August. The complex consists of 624 bedrooms and 13,500 square feet of commercial space. HERE is currently only allowed to fill about 550 of those bedrooms because the complex’s parking garage does not have enough spaces. Originally, the development was to have a robotic valet parking garage that would have had the capacity

political awareness than most kids their age. A recent study out of the University of Kansas backed up this claim, finding that students enrolled in high school journalism classes are more likely to vote later in life. She’s also had to steer her student journalists away from a tendency, she says, to at times gravitate toward sensationalism in their reporting of the election. “They’ve been struggling with this,” Folsom said. In the classroom, she tries to remind her students of the importance of journalistic objectivity, of acknowledging and understanding all perspectives, so that we “don’t have kids screaming at each other like the candidates are screaming at each other.” It’s a lesson she tries to impart to her own daughters as well. Her 13-year-old, Folsom said, mainly sees Trump as “mean.” But her 16-year-old is developing a keen understanding of the political arena

for the entire complex, but the company responsible for producing that robotic system went bankrupt earlier this year. The proposed project would get the HERE project back into compliance with the city’s parking requirements and allow all 624 apartments to be occupied. The proposed site for the parking lot currently consists of an existing parking lot and two multifamily properties at 1029 and 1031 Mississippi St. The homes and the existing lot would be demolished in order to construct a new 68-space lot at the corner of Mississippi Street and Fambrough Drive. As part of the project, Fambrough Drive would also be realigned to create a new four-way intersection with 11th and Mississippi Streets. Herbert said that aspect of the project was a plus. “By working with the university we’re able to get this developer to rebuild some infrastructure that has been badly needed to be rebuilt anyway, and we’re able to put

and her place in it as a soon-to-be woman. And her elder daughter, Folsom said, is frustrated by what she sees. That’s where Folsom’s training — as a teacher, and as a parent — comes in. “If we’re really teaching them, our conversation needs to be about, ‘What is your reasoning? Let’s talk about it on a deeper level instead of the emotional, reactionary level,’” she said. “As a teacher, we’ve got to be aware of what triggers us. As much as we try to be dispassionate when we’re talking about politics, there’s always going to be something that can trigger us when we’re talking about our own personal experiences.” It’s a conversation, Orlando agrees, that’s ultimately worth having. He’s alarmed by what he sees as a “coarsening of American culture” that he believes has influenced students’ ideas of what constitutes appropriate behavior. During the election, Orlando has heard students,

a lot of that on their dime,” Herbert said. The majority of the property is owned by the KU Endowment Association. HERE would lease the new 68-space lot from KU Endowment, and HERE tenants would have to vacate it about 10 days per year for KU home football games and other events. Herbert said that stipulation of the lease, and the potential for an alternative place for the tenants to park on those days, is a topic he needs to hear more about. “I think that discussion will take quite a bit of time on Tuesday night,” Herbert said. “Because for a lot of us on the commission, that’s going to be our opportunity to get to the bottom of a lot of this stuff that I don’t think has really been adequately discussed yet.” City commissioners will meet at 5:45 p.m. Tuesday at City Hall, 6 E. Sixth St. — City Hall reporter Rochelle Valverde can be reached at 832-6314. Follow her on Twitter: @RochelleVerde

for example, make “statements like, ‘If Trump can say that, why can’t I?’ or ‘If Hillary lost her emails, why can’t I lose an assignment?’” There’s also been an uptick in more aggressive assertions of opinions — and party alignment — among his students, Orlando said, echoing the divisive SUBSCRIPTIONS: 832-7199 tone that has dominated American politics in re- Didn’t receive your paper? For billcent years. ing, vacation or delivery questions, call Last Sunday, Orlando 832-7199. invited his students to Weekday: 6 a.m.-5:30 p.m. a watch party he’d orgaWeekends: 6 a.m.-10 a.m. nized at Southwest for In-town redelivery: 6 a.m.-10 a.m. that evening’s televised presidential debate. He Published daily by Ogden was heartened to see Newspapers of Kansas LLC 16 of his eighth-graders at 645 New Hampshire Street, Lawrence, KS 66044-0122. show up. Less encourag- Telephone: 843-1000; or toll-free ing was at least one stu- (800) 578-8748. dent’s suggestion that Send address Democrats sit on one POSTMASTER: changes to: side of the classroom Lawrence Journal-World, and Republicans on the P.O. Box 888, Lawrence, KS other, in the spirit akin 66044-0888 to sports fans from op- (USPS 306-520) Periodicals postposing teams gathering age paid at Lawrence, Kan. Member of Alliance on opposite ends of the for Audited Media stadium. Member of The Associated Only time will tell Press how this election’s ongoing ugliness influences children in the long haul, Orlando said. Still, Facebook.com/LJWorld crass language and quesTwitter.com/LJWorld tionable behavior aside, he said it’s important that his students stay informed throughout this election and for years to come. He encourPOWERBALL ages them to use media WEDNESDAY’S 16 30 34 37 44 (16) to their advantage, such as fact-checking news FRIDAY’S MEGA MILLIONS 7 27 60 64 74 (5) items on their districtWEDNESDAY’S issued iPads. HOT LOTTO SIZZLER “I think it’s very easy 26 27 34 35 45 (6) for some social studWEDNESDAY’S ies teachers to not allow SUPER KANSAS CASH anything of this (nature) 2 6 13 19 23 (01) in the classroom, to just FRIDAY’S KANSAS 2BY2 ignore it, but that would Red: 1 4; White: 19 21 be a disservice to our stuFRIDAY’S dents,” Orlando said. “I’d KANSAS PICK 3 (MIDDAY) 3 4 9 rather be a little messy and work through inforFRIDAY’S mation, work through KANSAS PICK 3 (EVENING) 8 1 1 things that aren’t true, with my students.”

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— K-12 education reporter Joanna Hlavacek can be reached at 832-6388. Follow her on Twitter: @HlavacekJoanna

Dog CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A

Douglas County Sheriff’s Office Sgt. Kristen Dymacek said Graff’s neighbor, now known to be Herren, told investigators he shot Arlo with a pellet gun because the dog had been on his property. However, Graff has said her family strongly disagrees with Herren’s statement. Arlo’s autopsy, completed by the Lawrence Humane Society, indicated that the dog had been shot in the heart and the lung, Graff said. This evidence shows that Arlo was found dead within a few feet of where he was shot. From where Arlo was found, it is at least 160 feet to Herren’s property, Graff said. That distance is too far for a dog to move after having been shot through the heart, she said. Graff wrote in an email on Friday that she and her family are “grateful to hear that the DA is pursuing this case. Arlo was a sweet and loving dog, and we miss him terribly.” Herren is ordered to appear in court at 3 p.m. Nov. 17. — Public safety reporter Conrad Swanson can be reached at 832-7284. Follow him on Twitter: @Conrad_Swanson

BIRTHS Katie and Jake Fisher, Lawrence, a girl, Tuesday. William and Kellian Kelly, Lecompton, a girl, Wednesday. Madison Curtis, Meriden, a girl, Wednesday. Billy and Katie Berry, Lawrence, a girl, Friday.

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


LAWRENCE • STATE

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Area Roundup

By Joanna Hlavacek jhlavacek@ljworld.com

Rochelle Valverde/Journal-World File Photo

ejones@ljworld.com

T

he Maple Leaf Festival banner hangs above High Street in downtown Baldwin City, tape marks off the sites of vendor booths on city streets and sidewalks, barricades have been placed on the ground at key intersections ready to be set up, and signs everywhere in the community’s old town warn of no parking. All of that preparations signals Baldwin City is ready for the third weekend in October and the influx of more than 30,000 visitors today and Sunday. More than 400 vendor booths will be open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. today and 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday. The festival’s parade starts at 11 a.m. today. With many old-town streets closed and parking banned on others, out-of-town visitors are encouraged to park in outlying parking lots and ride free buses to and from the festival. First Student is providing the buses this year and will have air-conditioned buses available.

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Longtime LMH Endowment leader resigns

Baldwin City set for Maple Leaf Festival

Elvyn Jones

Saturday, October 15, 2016

SOPHIA RAMIREZ AND HER COUSIN AARON TILLEY check out fossils on Science Saturday on Oct. 17, 2015, at the University of Kansas Natural History Museum, 1345 Jayhawk Blvd. The museum will be hosting a special Science Saturday event from 1 to 3 p.m. today in honor of National Fossil Day.

KU Natural History Museum celebrating National Fossil Day By Joanna Hlavacek jhlavacek@ljworld.com

If you’ve ever pondered the geological identity of that weird rock you dug up in your backyard, you may get some answers today. From 1 to 3 p.m., the University of Kansas Natural History Museum, 1345 Jayhawk Blvd., is hosting a special edition of its ongoing Science Saturday program. This time around, in honor of National Fossil Day (which actually took place Wednesday) and Earth Science Week, the museum is inviting visitors to stop by, have a look around,

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Our goal, really, is just to get people inspired by science and the natural world.”

— Kitty Steffens, KU Natural History Museum assistant director of community engagement

and perhaps finally get a diagnosis on that aforementioned mystery rock. “Our goal, really, is just to get people inspired by science and the natural world,” said Kitty Steffens, the museum’s assistant director of community engagement, on the event’s educational mission. This weekend’s festivities mark the fifth celebration of

National Fossil Day at the Natural History Museum, where science-loving kids and adults alike will have their pick of educational — but fun, Steffens maintains — activities. Among the options: the chance to cast your own fossil, excavate fossilized shark teeth and touch a 4-billion-year-old space rock.

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ELECTRONIC RECYCLING EVENT

Lawrence Memorial Hospital this week announced the departure of longtime LMH Endowment Association vice president and chief development officer Kathy Clausing-Willis. LMH spokeswoman Janice Early said Clausing-Willis resigned last week for “personal reasons.” Other details were not provided. According to a statement from Russ Johnson, the hospital’s president

and CEO, Clausing-Willis resigned last week after “investing nearly two decades of her professional career to building the LMH Endowment Association.” During her tenure, Endowment funds grew from approximately $2 million to $12 million, Johnson said in the statement. The Endowment Association, under Clausing-Willis’ leadership, transferred almost $30 million to the hospital in that time, including

> LMH, 4A

Charlie Rose to be honored with KU journalism citation Staff reports

The University of Kansas School of Journalism has announced the 2017 William Allen White Foundation National Citation Rose winner: television journalist Charlie Rose.

Rose is scheduled to visit campus to accept the award on William Allen White Day, April 20. Details for William Allen White Day have yet to be announced. Rose is anchor and

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breathe easy

— Rain or Shine — The City of Lawrence invites residents & small businesses to recycle unused or obsolete electronic equipment.

anniversaries • births • weddings • engagements

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

Make an informed decision

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.

At Marks Jewelers, we believe in educating you, not insulting your intelligence with misleading discounts.

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We sell and service jewelry for what it is truly worth. We provide this service in a friendly, pressure-free environment.

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This may not be how other jewelers do business, but for 136 years it has turned customers into friends.

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Thank you Eudora and Lawrence for tobacco-free parks!

Items Accepted: Computers, Printers, Copiers, Scanners, Fax Machines, Hand Held Devices, Televisions & Small Appliances (Microwaves).

PUBLIC WORKS

For further information call 832-3030 or visit www.LawrenceRecycles.org

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Learn more at www.ldchealth.org/tobaccoprevention

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Funding drive takes edge off KPR cuts By Sara Shepherd sshepherd@ljworld.com

Kansas Public Radio just wrapped up what the station is describing as its most successful fall fund drive to date — though not successful enough to nullify a $100,000 budget cut. The drive, launched Sept. 20, raised $288,000, KPR announced this week. A typical fall fund drive raises $250,000 for the station. “Going into the drive, we knew that it had to surpass previous fall drives by a considerable amount in order to ensure the health of the station,” Feloniz Lovato-Winston, KPR development director, said in a statement. “Fortunately, our listeners came out in

‘‘

Fortunately, our listeners came out in droves to contribute.”

— Feloniz Lovato-Winston, KPR development director

droves to contribute.” The fall drive began soon after the University of Kansas-based public radio station learned KU would cut its budget for fiscal year 2017 by $100,000, following state cuts to higher education. Last year the station’s total projected operating budget was $1.3 million, according to KU’s fiscal year 2016 budget. “KPR is dealing with the budget cuts though a combination of internal

budget cuts, not filling open positions, tapping into some reserve funds and increased fundraising,” KPR director Dan Skinner said. Skinner said the station did not fill its open communications position or the administrative position in charge of the reception desk. News of the budget cut, and a fall fund drive goal set by KPR for 1,000 new and upgrading members, inspired thousands of dollars in new donations and increased donations from existing members, according to KPR. The drive garnered 396 new pledges, and 382 existing members increased their gifts. For the second year, the station will again have

a short two-day fundraising drive in December, in addition to the regular week-long drives in the spring and fall, LovatoWinston said. The KU-based AudioReader Network, a radio reading service for the blind and visually impaired, also incurred a $100,000 budget cut this year. KPR broadcasts on 91.5 FM and 96.1 FM in Lawrence, other frequencies in several other Kansas cities and online at kpr. ku.edu. KPR also operates KPR2, a news-talk programming stream, available via HD receiver or on KPR’s website.

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— KU and higher ed reporter Sara Shepherd can be reached at 832-7187. Follow her on Twitter: @saramarieshep

BRIEFLY Study links record quake to injections Wichita (ap) — A recent study from the U.S. Geological Survey says the largest recorded earthquake in Kansas history was likely the result of waste water injected into the ground by one or two nearby wells. The Wichita Eagle reports that the 4.9

LMH CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A

$8.1 million raised in the community toward LMH’s $55 million expansion in 2008, the statement read. Clausing-Willis, who joined LMH in 1998, worked successfully in her efforts to engage the community with its local hospital, Johnson said, including the creation of “the framework and infrastructure” that expanded the LMH donor

Fossil CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A

Another perk of this kind of programming, at least for the museum, is the outreach potential, Steffens said. There’s a lot of research taking place within the overarching department of the KU Biodiversity Institute, she said, that

Rose CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A

executive editor of “Charlie Rose,” a nightly one-hour program featuring oneon-one conversations and round-table discussions, and the newly launched “Charlie Rose: The Week,” highlighting top stories and interviews of the past seven days. He also co-anchors “CBS This Morning” and is a contributing

magnitude earthquake happened in November 2014 about 40 miles southwest of Wichita. The report, which will be published in Seismological Research Letters, shows scientists believe the earthquake was caused by waste-water injection for several reasons, including that there hadn’t previously been similar quakes in the area and the quake activity

An effort by a Lawrence resident to win a little fame by being a co-host on a popular national television talk show has fallen short. Lawrence resident

base to more than 10,000 donors. Clausing-Willis also contributed to several “signature” LMH Endowment Association fundraising events, among them Hearts of Gold, Penny Jones Golf Tournament, Summer Spray 5K runs and Rock the Block — Kick Cancer. Her leadership also extended to the hospital’s volunteer services, which oversees more than 900 LMH volunteers, as well as her work to institutionalize “organizational policies and financial accountability” for the

LMH gift shop and volunteer auxiliary, Johnson said. “Through these efforts, LMH has developed a broad coalition of community members who believe in our mission and purpose enough to give their time and resources,” Johnson wrote in his statement. “That is a great testimony to Kathy’s work, and more importantly her personal commitment to LMH and the patients and communities we serve.” Johnson, who joined LMH as CEO and

started after the amount of water injected in the wells increased.

Resident eliminated from ‘Kelly’ contest

the public at large may not be aware of. For instance, she noted the fossilized T. rex bones excavated and brought back to the university by KU paleontologist David Burnham and his team of students and volunteers after a crowd-funded dig in Montana last summer. The university now is in possession of roughly 25 percent of the full T. rex skeleton, with much of it currently on display

at the KU Natural History Museum’s third floor. “We are hoping to go back (to Montana) until we have that whole darn thing,” Steffens said. Burnham will be at the museum today to talk about his dig, as will scientists from the Kansas Geological Survey. They’re the ones who might be able to shine some light on those rocks, minerals and fossils you’ve been

correspondent to “60 Minutes.” Rose is highly decorated, with honors including the Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence in Journalism and a spot on Time’s 2014 list of the 100 Most Influential People in the world. He also won both Emmy and Peabody awards for his September 2013 interview with Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. Rose, a Duke University graduate, lives in New York City and Bellport, Long Island.

Spencer CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A

windows were added in the galleries, one overlooking Marvin Grove and the other facing Mississippi Street. Grand reopening events are planned from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. today and from noon to 4 p.m. Sunday at the museum, 1301 Mississippi St. A ribbon-cutting ceremony featuring the KU African Drum Ensemble will kick off festivities

Courtenay DeHoff was 1 of 10 finalists in a contest to be the co-host for a day on Kelly Ripa’s “Live! with Kelly” show. DeHoff — a Tonganoxie native who has worked in the area television industry — entered a video clip of her and her horse at her parents’ Tonganoxie farm. The show named its five finalists Friday, but DeHoff did not make the cut.

president in August, said he is working closely with the Endowment’s board in determining the hospital’s next steps in filling the vacancy. “Kathy built a strong team that is capable and committed to continuing the work of the Endowment Association, which gives us the ability to take the time needed to make a thoughtful decision about this important role for LMH,” Johnson said. — Reporter Joanna Hlavacek can be reached at 832-6388. Follow her on Twitter: @HlavacekJoanna

Festival

nominal fee. The Maple Leaf Festival Committee wondering about. leaves it to the groups to “This is an opportunity set the prices, but they CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A to talk about some things generally charge $5 or that we don’t always get $10 per day. Parking will be availto,” Steffens said of the Once visitors arrive National Fossil Day fes- able at two elemenat the downtown core of tary schools on Baldwin tivities. the festival, trams will “Everyone loves dino- City’s western edge be available to shuttle saurs,” she admits, “But — Baldwin Elementary shoppers to more distant it’s really interesting to School Primary Center booths or activity sites. talk about different min- at 500 Lawrence St., and Handicapped parkBaldwin Elementary erals and rocks as well.” ing will be available in School Intermediate the 600 and 700 blocks — Reporter Joanna Hlavacek can be Center at 100 Bullpup of Grove Street, which reached at 832-6388. Follow her on Drive. The Primary Cenis a block north of Twitter: @HlavacekJoanna ter is a short drive south High Street, and in the of U.S. Highway 56 on parking lot of Baldwin Lincoln Street. The Inter- First United Methodmediate Center is visible ist Church, in the 700 at 10 a.m. today. The KU from the highway at the block of Grove Street. A Department of Dance intersection with Bullpup very limited number of performs from 1 to 2 p.m., Drive. Signage will be handicapped spots will and a traveling concert posted directing motorbe reserved on the 700 across campus is planned ists to the park-and-ride block of Indiana Street from 4 to 7 p.m. locations. a block south of High Other activities include Another park-and-ride Street. face painting, hands-on art option, which would be Festival-goers should projects and gallery tours. more convenient to those also leave their canine Find a detailed schedule at arriving via County Road friends at home. Comspencerart.ku.edu/trans1055 or U.S. 56 from the panion pets are prohibformed. east, is the Baldwin High ited on Baldwin City After this weekend the School parking lot at 415 streets impacted by the museum returns to being Eisenhower St. Again, Maple Leaf Festival, and open Tuesday through signage will be posted violators are subject to Sunday, and admission is directing motorists to fines. still free. the lot. — This is an excerpt from Local community and Elvyn Jones’ Area Roundup col— KU and higher ed reporter Sara school groups work the umn, which appears regularly Shepherd can be reached at 832-7187. parking lots as fundraison LJWorld.com. Follow her on Twitter: @saramarieshep ers, so there will be a

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Opinion

Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com l Saturday, October 15, 2016 Lawrence City Commission Mike Amyx, mayor 2312 Free State Lane 66047 843-3089 (H) 842-9425 (W) mikeamyx515@hotmail.com Leslie Soden, vice mayor 715 Connecticut, 66044 (913) 890-3647 lsoden@lawrenceks.org Stuart Boley, 1812 W. 21st Terr., 66046, 979-6699 sboley@lawrenceks.org Matthew Herbert 523 Kasold Dr., 66049 550-2085 matthewjherbert@gmail.com Lisa Larsen, 1117 Avalon., 66044, 331-9162 llarsen@lawrenceks.org

Douglas County Commission Jim Flory, 540 North 711 Road, Lawrence 66047; 842-0054 jflory@douglas-county.com Mike Gaughan, 304 Stetson Circle, 66049; 856-1662; mgaughan@douglas-county.com Nancy Thellman, 1547 North 2000 Road 66046; 550-7754 nthellman@douglas-county.com

Lawrence School Board

Medicaid change starts with Legislature Kansas’s hardline opposition to Medicaid expansion has to change, if health care and health outcomes are going to grow in rural Kansas. Given the governor’s position, and a bill (HB 2552) passed in 2014, that change will have to begin in the Kansas Legislature. A change in the Republican moderateconservative power distribution coupled with some pickups in Democratic seats this November could provide the legislative majority required by HB 2552. A harbinger of that change is the serious challenge being given to Republican State Rep. Ron Highland of Wabaunsee County who is facing a young, well-funded, and skillfully organized challenge from Rossville, Democrat Adrienne Olejnik. Similar changes in Johnson County and other districts around the state also seem more likely come Nov. 8. The Medicaid problem got a pretty good airing through announcements made recently by Stormont-Vail, a big health care provider in northeast Kansas. StormontVail and its Cotton-O’Neil division announced the closing of two clinics open for

Mark Peterson

allenskid@gmail.com

The tea leaves do not foretell a veto-proof Legislature’s election. If that doesn’t happen then Kansas can continue to deny expanded Medicaid supported health care for 150,000 uncovered Kansans.”

less than 18 months. Stormont-Vail CEO Randy Peterson attributed the closings of the Cotton–O’Neil clinics in Alma (Wabaunsee County) and Lyndon (Osage County) to two things. First, the state’s recent decision to cut Medicaid reimbursements by 4 percent. Second, the unsparing determination of the governor, endorsed

by earlier legislative resolutions, not to accept additional Medicaid money to serve 150,000 Kansans who earn more than the state’s stingy 38 percent of poverty Medicaid benefit qualification, but less than $30,000 a year for a family of four. The reimbursement reduction alone cut $3 million from Stormont-Vail’s revenue, and the closings have negatively impacted 2700 clients in northeast Kansas. Not all of that now unserved clientele uses Medicaid. Many are simply average townspeople and farm families, or elderly residents who will now have to find alternatives. State action (and inaction) has made service for all by the health care provider economically impossible. Rep. Highland has been a supporter of the hardline antiMedicaid position. Since the purge of moderate Republican legislators began in earnest in 2012, the Legislature has gone on record several times to make clear its solidarity with the governor in opposing Medicaid. In 2014 the Legislature attempted to take away any existing or subsequent executive authority to expand

125

Kristie Adair, 840-7989 4924 Stoneback Place, 66047 kadair@usd497.org Jessica Beeson, 691-6678 1720 Mississippi St. 66044 jbeeson@usd497.org Jill Fincher, 865-5870 1700 Inverness Dr. 66047 jfincher@usd497.org Rick Ingram 864-9819 1510 Crescent Rd. 66044 ringram@usd497.org

— Reprinted with permission from local writer Sarah St. John. To see more, go online to www.facebook.com/ DailyLawrenceHistory.

Vanessa Sanburn, 856-1233 765 Ash St., 66044 vsanburn@usd497.org

Area legislators

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

— Mark Peterson teaches political science at the college level in Topeka.

From the Lawrence Gazette for Oct. 15, 1891: l “Some subyears ago scribers ask us IN 1891 to charge them only a dollar a year for back subscription, and a few have become very wrathy because we refused. We have announced plainly and repeatedly enough that in order to get The Gazette for a dollar it must be paid in advance. No one ought to expect us to break the rule. No one ought to ask for more than we give his neighbor.” l “Reedy Bros. have established a cider mill on Warren street.”

Shannon Kimball, vice president, 840-7722 257 Earhart Circle 66049 skimball@usd497.org

Rep. Tom Sloan (R-45th District) Room 149-S, State Capitol, Topeka 66612 Lawrence: 841-1526; Topeka: (785) 296-7654 tom.sloan@house.ks.gov

Medicaid by enacting HB 2552. The bill explicitly required a legislative enactment before any expansion of Medicaid beyond the current stingy limits can occur. HB 2552 passed the Kansas House 68 to 54 and the Senate 33 to 7. It was signed by the governor in the last days of the 2014 session. The tea leaves do not foretell a veto-proof Legislature’s election. If that doesn’t happen, then Kansas can continue to deny expanded Medicaid supported health care for 150,000 uncovered Kansans. Whether that proves to be the case or not, it should provide a valuable civics lesson to an electorate that may be turned off by the ugliness of the national electoral scene this year. It is important to remember that races like the Highland–Olejnik contest actually matter far more to the daily lives of Kansans. Do not forget that voting will determine government’s actions, which will affect the lives of real people in real ways.

OLD HOME TOWN

Marcel Harmon, president; 550-7749 753 Lauren Street, 66044 mharmon@usd497.org

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

5A

GOP must recover its moral compass Here’s what’s most troubling about the prominent Republicans who have deserted Donald Trump because of the video in which he made revolting remarks about women: Many of those same people stood by him for more than a year while he made almost daily statements demeaning Hispanics, as if that were OK. Something has gone fundamentally wrong with the Republican Party. From a practical standpoint, the party — which has been hijacked by right wing white nationalists fed with a constant stream of conspiracy theories by Fox News — has ignored one of the main lessons of its 2012 defeat. In a 100-page, 2012 election post-mortem by the Republican National Committee released in March 2013, the party concluded that it had lost in part because it had alienated Hispanic voters with its anti-immigration stands. The document recommended endorsing comprehensive immigration reform — a code word for the Obama-backed idea of giving most undocumented immigrants a path to legalization under certain conditions. The analysis warned that “if we do not, our party’s appeal will continue to shrink to its core constituencies only.” Indeed, the Republicans have been steadily losing Hispanic voters in recent years. George W. Bush, the last Republican to win the White House, obtained 40 percent of the Hispanic vote in 2004. Former Republican presidential candidate John McCain got 31 percent in 2008, Mitt

Andres Oppenheimer aoppenheimer@miamiherald.com

From a practical standpoint, the party — which has been hijacked by right wing white nationalists fed with a constant stream of conspiracy theories by Fox News — has ignored one of the main lessons of its 2012 defeat.”

Romney got 27 percent in 2012, and Trump — according to the latest Pew Research poll, conducted before the release of the video in which he boasts about sexually assaulting women — had 19 percent. But worse than all of that is the Republican Party’s abandonment of basic moral principles. Since Trump announced his run for the presidency in mid2015, he based much of his campaign on the premise that most Mexican immigrants are “rapists” and “criminals.” He has repeatedly insulted Muslims, as if all 1.6 billion of them were terrorists, and has publicly made

fun of the physically handicapped. And with some notable exceptions, Republicans looked the other way. Where were McCain, New Hampshire Sen. Kelly Ayotte, former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and dozens of other high-profile Republicans who didn’t break with Trump until the Oct. 7 release of Trump’s now infamous video? Most of them, like McCain, explained that they had made their difficult decision because “I have daughters.” Where were they when Trump demonized Hispanics? Don’t they have any Hispanic friends? Where were they when Trump said that Indiana-born federal Judge Gonzalo Curiel was not qualified to preside over a case involving the failed Trump University because of the judge’s Mexican heritage? Where were they when Trump was spreading the falsehood that Obama was not born in the United States, and that he may be a Muslim, until Trump finally admitted as late as Sept. 16 that the president was born in this country? African-Americans had been saying for years that Trump’s birther movement was a racist effort to de-legitimize the first black president of the United States. Where were those leading Republicans when Trump — who has never served in the military — belittled the Khans, the American Muslim parents whose son died in Iraq while trying to rescue fallen U.S. soldiers and was given a posthumous Gold Star for his act of heroism?

Where were they when Venezuelan-born former Miss Universe Alicia Machado told the world that Trump had called her “Miss Piggy” and “Miss Housekeeping” — an apparent reference to her being a Latina — after she had gained weight? And when Trump continued to demean her as recently as two weeks ago? My opinion: If Trump loses the election — as now seems likely — and America spares itself from having a banana republic-styled autocrat as president, the Republican Party must do much more than a critical self-examination. It must recover its moral compass. It should ban from its ranks any member who doesn’t abide by basic human decency principles that call for not demonizing others for their ethnicity, religion or gender. If it doesn’t do so, the Republican party may just as well declare itself dissolved. — Andres Oppenheimer is a Latin America correspondent for the Miami Herald.

LAWRENCE

Journal-World

®

Established 1891

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


6A

|

Saturday, October 15, 2016

LAWRENCE

.

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Repairs set to begin on troublesome stretch of path By Rochelle Valverde rvalverde@ljworld.com

Repairs are set to begin on a troublesome stretch of paved city path that has resulted in some bicycle accidents over the years. The path runs through the Clinton Lake spillway on the southwest edge of the city, including a portion that goes through a marsh area. Water that sometimes seeps over the path can lead to moss growth and slick conditions, said Ernie Shaw, interim director of the Lawrence Parks and Recreation Department. “When water sits there day after day at certain temperatures, then you get that mossy stuff on it that creates a slick spot and can have people on bikes hit it and potentially go down,” Shaw said.

Lawrence Loop trail network will soon be 80 percent complete Signs posted along those sections of the path warn that it becomes slick when wet, but there have been some cyclists who have still slid out over the years. Shaw said that the most recent accident was a few weeks ago. “We had a report of someone who hit it and went down,” Shaw said. When informed that the path has gotten slick, Shaw said Parks and Recreation Department staff add salt or calcium to combat the moss growth. Staff will also monitor the path during periods of wet and warm weather, he said. Those tactics, though, are on their way out, as a 175-foot section of the path will soon be completely removed and rebuilt.

The replacement of the path will cost about $16,000, Shaw said. After crews cut and remove the problematic portion of path, drainage tubes will be installed to allow water to flow across the area. Concrete for the new path will be poured over the tubes, and the new path will subsequently be 6 inches higher than it is now. Shaw said the hope is to have the spillway path repairs complete before winter, though he noted that work is largely dependent on the weather being dry enough to remove the path and warm enough to pour concrete. “We want to try to get it done immediately — it’s just

weather-related,” Shaw said. The spillway path is one of several multi-use paths that link the city’s inner trails to the Lawrence Loop, which once complete will provide a continuous 22-mile trail around the city. Shaw said a connector path linking Rock Chalk Park to Queens Road has just been finished, and new portions of the loop are also in construction in that area. Those portions should be ready by spring, making the loop about 80 percent complete. The results of a survey conducted by the department earlier this year indicated that finishing the loop and connector trails is one of the most important

Agenda highlights • 5:45 p.m. Tuesday • City Hall, Sixth and Massachusetts streets • WOW! Channel 25 • Meeting documents online at lawrenceks.org • Approve City Commission meeting minutes from 10/11/16 • Receive minutes from various boards and commissions • Approve all claims. • Authorize the Mayor to execute the City/ State Agreement with the Kansas Department of Transportation for traffic signal improvements at K-10 and 27th Street. • Approve Statement of Final Costs, Assessment Roll and Notice of Public Hearing. Establish November 15, 2016, at 5:45 p.m. for the purpose of hearing written and oral objections to the Pioneer Ridge Center and Pioneer Ridge Benefit District. • Receive request from Williams Management LLC to establish a 10-year, 85% Neighborhood Revitalization Area (NRA) for the property located at 826 Pennsylvania Street and for Industrial Revenue Bond (IRB) financing for the purpose of accessing a sales tax exemption on project construction materials and remodeling labor. • Receive request from Vermont LLC to establish a 10-year, 75% Neighborhood Revitalization Area (NRA) for the property located at approximately 800-815 Vermont Street and for Industrial Revenue Bond (IRB) financing for the purpose of accessing a sales tax exemption on project construction materials. • Approve reimbursement of $49,073.13 from Transient Guest Tax Funds to Kansas Athletics for hosting and sponsorship of the 2016 NCAA Division I Men’s and Women’s Outdoor Track and Field Event in May 2016. Receive public comment of a general nature

Regular agenda items

• Conduct public hearing and consider approving a sidewalk dining and hospitality license for Pita Pit, located at 1011 Massachusetts Street. • Receive staff implementation plan for Pedestrian-Bicycle Issues Task Force recommendations. Consider repealing Resolution No. 2033 (Traffic

Safety Commission), and Resolution No. 6874 (Lawrence - Douglas County Bicycle Advisory Committee and consider adopting Resolution No. 7172, establishing the Transportation Commission. • Consider supplemental agreement #3 to the existing professional services agreement for the Fire Station No. 1 Remodel Project to expand the scope to include the east wing/Senior Center of the City owned building at 745 Vermont St. Supplemental Agreement #3, and associated scope modifications the new estimated cost of construction for both portions of the building is $6,378,154, plus costs associated with temporary relocation. Consider authorizing the City Manager to enter into a cost sharing agreement with Douglas County for the project. • Consider the following items related to the SE corner of 31st and Michigan Streets: a) Consider annexing (A-16-00305) approximately 55 acres located at the SE corner of 31st and Michigan Streets. Consider adopting on first reading, Ordinance No. 9297, annexing (A-1600305) approximately 55 acres located at the SE corner of 31st and Michigan Streets. b) Consider rezoning (Z-16-00306) approximately 30 acres from County A (Agricultural) District to RM15 (Multi-Dwelling Residential) District, located at the SE corner of 31st and Michigan Streets. Consider adopting on first reading, Ordinance No. 9298, rezoning (Z-1600306) approximately 30 acres from County A (Agricultural) District to RM15 (Multi-Dwelling Residential) District, located at the SE corner of 31st and Michigan Streets. c) Consider rezoning (Z-16-00307) approximately 25.13 acres from County A (Agricultural) District to RM15-FP (Multi-Dwelling Residential with Floodplain Management Regulations Overlay) District, located at the SE corner of 31st and Michigan Streets. Consider adopting on first reading, Ordinance No. 9299, rezoning (Z-16-00307) approximately

25.13 acres from County A (Agricultural) District to RM15-FP (Multi-Dwelling Residential with Floodplain Management Regulations Overlay) District, located at the SE corner of 31st and Michigan Streets. • Consider the following items related to the HERE @ Kansas project: a) Consider approving Comprehensive Plan Amendment (CPA-16-00309) to Chapter 14 of Horizon 2020 to amend the Oread Neighborhood Plan Future Land Use Map. Consider adopting on first reading, Ordinance No. 9300, for Comprehensive Plan Amendment (CPA-16-00309) to Chapter 14 of Horizon 2020 to amend the Oread Neighborhood Plan Future Land Use Map. b) Consider rezoning (Z-16-00310) approximately .918 acres from RM32 (Multi-Dwelling Residential) District and U-KU (University of Kansas) District to RM32-PD (MultiDwelling Residential with Planned Development Overlay) District, located at 1029 and 1031 Mississippi Street and 0 Illinois Street for HERE @ Kansas. Submitted by Landplan Engineering PA on behalf of 1029 Mississippi LLC, STADPKG LLC, property owner of record. Consider adopting on first reading, Ordinance No. 9301, rezoning (Z-16-00310) approximately .918 acres from RM32 (Multi-Dwelling Residential) District and U-KU (University of Kansas) District to RM32-PD (MultiDwelling Residential with Planned Development Overlay) District, located at 1029 and 1031 Mississippi Street and 0 Illinois Street. c) Consider approving a Preliminary Development Plan (PDP-16-00311) for an accessory parking lot to serve the HERE @ Kansas mixed use project, located at 1029 Mississippi, 1031 Mississippi, and 0 Illinois Streets. Submitted by Landplan Engineering PA on behalf of 1029 Mississippi LLC, STADPKG LLC, property owner of record. • Receive recommendation for strategic planning consulting services. Materials for this item will be posted prior to the meeting.

— City Hall reporter Rochelle Valverde can be reached at 832-6314. Follow her on Twitter: @RochelleVerde

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LAWRENCE CITY COMMISSION

Consent Agenda:

parks and recreation items to the public. According to the department’s master plan, the goal is to add more connector paths to under-served areas of the city in coming years. Shaw said the hope is to have the Lawrence Loop complete in the next three to five years, which he said will likely take both city and grant funding. “We’ve been working on this for about 20 years now, off and on,” he said. “…Now there’s a lot of people on board with that and wanting to see it completed, which is good.”

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Saturday, October 15, 2016

Your Home Team 1510 E Glenn Dr

Full Service Agency

3624 W Timber Ct

SAT. 1:00-3:00

New to market! NW cul-de-sac lot backs to Fall Creek Farms w/treed green space view from deck. Brand new roof! Full masonry fireplace, spacious rooms, unique storage space, AHS warranty. Come see!

MLS 141073

MLS 141026

SCOT HOFFMAN 785-760-4356

319 Glenview Dr

SAT. 12:00-2:00

New Listing! 1st time open! Complete update with a huge 27,000 sq ft lot. Almost new everything and quiet street. 2 BR, and nice sized kitchen, new roof and paint. Cute, and great price. Stop by!

$119,900

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$219,000

2606 Orchard Ln

JAN BRIGHTON 785-423-1451

627 N Pennycress Dr

SAT. 1:00-3:00

SAT. 10:00-11:30

SAT. 1:30-3:00

Ready to Sell. 4 Bedroom, 3 Bath walkout rancher. Quiet street in terrific neighborhood near Sunset & West Schools and Hillcrest Shopping. Come see Saturday or call Don.

FIRST TIME OPEN! Fresh interior paint, new carpet, stainless appliances adorn this lovely 4 BR, 3 BA home. Covered deck & patio backing to undeveloped land. Unfinished walk-out basement. A must see!

MLS 139987

MLS 141085

$234,900

DON MINNIS, GRI 785-550-7306

$259,900

4312 Helianthus Dr

$121,900

5520 Bowersock Dr

SAT. 1:00-2:30

RANDY BARNES 785-760-2140

633 Brentwood Dr

UNDER CONTRACT • Contemporary home with open floor plan • Kitchen has large island w/lots of storage, open stainless steel shelving, butcher block island • Media room & concrete bar in basement

MLS 140631

MLS 139118

LEE BETH DEVER 785-691-6879

MLS 140772

TOLAND HIPPE, ABR 785-393-8342

Super sharp, one story open plan living, 4 BR/3 bath, 2997 sq ft, daylight basement, large master, nice kitchen opens to DR, family room. Well maintained, within walking distance to schools.

$299,000

Sharp Townhome! Main level living room, dining, kitchen & full bath. Upstairs has 2 bedrooms & full bath. New AC, furnace, windows & hard surface flooring on main level. Fenced yard & 1 car garage.

$484,900

2702 Rawhide Ln

JENNIFER MYERS 785-393-4579

1708 W 21st Terr

SAT. 12:00-1:30 New Listing - Spacious 4 BR, 3 BA, 3 car garage. South deck off the kitchen, walkout family room to the fenced corner lot. Deerfield Elementary. Come see Saturday, 12-1:30, or call Don. SUN. 1:00-2:30

SUN. 12:00-1:30

First Time Open!!! 4 BR, 2 BA home on a full partially finished basement. New paint inside and out, new carpet, updated light fixtures, new HVAC system, new hot water heater, detached 2 car garage.

PRICE REDUCED! Tremendous space for the money. 3 BR, 3 BA w/ 2 NC BRs in finished basement. Original hardwoods on main and new carpet in the basement. Excellent central location south of campus.

MLS 141064

MLS 140158

$154,900

LIBBY GRADY 785- 760-2530

2457 Missouri St

$169,900

$217,900

STEPHANIE A. HARRIS 785-979-5808

434 E 400 Rd, Overbrook

SUN. 1:00-2:30

4 BR, 2 BA rancher on 5 peaceful acres. 2 liv areas, formal din room, updated eat-in kitchen. Over 2100 sq ft plus an unfin basement. Hardwood & tiled flooring. 30x40 insulated shop. Baldwin schools.

MLS 140925

MLS 141099

IDA LEWIS 785-865-8699

DON MINNIS, GRI 785-550-7306

1117 Oak Tree Dr

SUN. 1:00-3:00

Newly listed 5BR, 3BA ranch home with finished walkout basement. Updated kitchen upstairs and downstairs, baths, & new carpet on main. Great neighborhood, close to grade school & middle school.

$173,000

MLS 141054

$220,000

2508 E 25th Pl

JOHN HUNTINGTON, JR., GRI 785-691-5565

842 Silver Rain Rd

SAT. 11:30-1:00

SUN. 12:30-2:30

SUN. 12:00-2:00

• OPEN AND ENERGY EFFICIENT ranch style home. • 3 BR, 2 BA, 3 car gar., custom cabinetry, granite c/tops • Fireplace, patio, and much more in 1496 Sq. Ft. • School, K-10, dining around the corner

Stunning 4 BR, 3 BA, 3 car ranch home. Gorgeous wood floors & open kitchen highlight main floor. East screened porch & incredible lower level. Terrific custom details throughout. This has it all!

MLS 140608

MLS 140202

$224,900

KARA PERRY 785-423-2702

$425,0000

10 Acres - 46th & Saratoga, McLouth

FIRST TIME OPEN! Stunning 5 BR, 4 BA, in Quail Run neighborhood. Gorgeous eat-in kitchen w/ granite counters and stainless appliances. Multiple living areas. Finished basement w/ bar. Don’t miss! MLS 141066

DON MINNIS, GRI 785-550-7306

$454,900

74 Acres - 46th & Saratoga, McLouth

Randy Russell 785-331-7954 10 Acres of Ozark-like Rolling Hills covered in timber with pond. Water meter is included and a driveway has been cut in to the hillside. Just 8 miles north of Lawrence in rural Jefferson county.

$59,900

MLS 137775

1800-1900 blk - E350 Rd, Lecompton Rural

TOLAND HIPPE, ABR 785-393-8342

841 N 875 Rd

Randy Russell 785-331-7954 74 acres of Beautiful Bluff views minutes north of Lawrence, about 50 acres of Mature hardwoods. Deer and Turkey are in abundance. Includes water meter. Check out the Drone Tour at www.stephensre.com

$249,000

MLS 138431

5754 Longleaf Dr

Randy Russell 785-331-7954 Price Reduction! Grand home with a soaring view, nestled on top of the hill surrounded by trees. 4400 sq ft, 4 bedroom, 5 bath, 3 car garage, inground salt pool + a sauna and much more, all on 18+ acres.

$645,000

MLS 139399

2701 Princeton Blvd

Randy Russell 785-331-7954

Ida Lewis 785-865-8699

Ida Lewis 785-865-8699

60 acres M/L which was formerly platted into 3- 20 acre tracts. Heavily timbered with views. Pond and stream on land. Check out the Drone Tour online at www.stephensre.com

Meticulously maintained 4BR, 4BA home with walkout basement overlooking wooded backyard & walking trail. Over 4100 sq ft living space. 3 car garage. Lifetime home in a beautiful setting.

Lovely home for entertaining. Spacious living room & family room with beautiful golf course views. 3+ BR, 4 BA, main level master & sunken sunroom. Full partially finished basement. One owner home.

$210,000

MLS 137713

Lawrence 2701 W. Sixth Street Lawrence, KS 66049

$519,900 Baldwin City 703 High Street Baldwin City, KS 66006

MLS 140926

$425,000

Lawrence: 785.841.4500 Baldwin City: 785.594.2320 www.stephensre.com

MLS 140764


8A

|

Saturday, October 15, 2016

XXX

.

52 Acres, N 400 Rd, Baldwin City

L awrence J ournal -W orld

3510 Republic Rd

414 N 750 Rd, Overbrook

Scot Hoffman 785-760-4356

Scot Hoffman 785-760-4356

52 Acres, water meter, homesites, new lake & dam, wetlands, wildlife, native grass, nature trails, running cross country trails, 100 year old barn, Wildlife Award Winner, beautiful country!

17 acres, Custom Built, heated 72x40 shop, 1100 ft of decks, screened porch, incredible views, open floor plan, large office, security system, 1 owner, immaculate home and property. Call now!

$475,000

$444,900

MLS 135199

5275 W 6th St

107 Santa Fe Dr, Baldwin City

Scot Hoffman 785-760-4356 Fantastic! 2.3 acres, beautiful grounds and oak trees surround this incredible property. Nice comfortable home and barn. 3 BR, 3 BA with a touch of the past. Views WOW! Call for showing!

$479,500

MLS 138872

Scot Hoffman 785-760-4356 New Listing! 6 BR, 4600 sq ft house and 47 incredible acres. Wood floors, granite, tile and lots of detail with high ceilings and incredible views. Pond, barn and perfect setting. Lawrence schools.

$640,000 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath, 1 Great Opportunity

YOUR HOUSE HERE

Chelsea Sheldon 785-218-4780 New listing! Well-loved one level home nestled in cul-de-sac, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, beautiful kitchen w/custom cabinets, full basement, screened porch, and many, many updates. Check it out!

MLS 139668

$164,900

MLS 141009

The market is hot right now & it’s a perfect time to sell! We can help! Give us a call: 785.841.4500

MLS 141046

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ENTER MY VIP CODE: A real estate service of Home Buyers Marketing II, Inc.

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4104 W. 6th Street, Ste. B, Lawrence, KS 66049 The Home Scouting Report® (HSR) is a free home finding service provided directly to you as a homebuyer by HBM2, a licensed real estate brokerage services company. The Loan Officer’s role is to assist in determining a comfortable home price range for HBM2 to use when it is searching for property listings within your search criteria. The Loan Officer is neither an employee of HBM2, nor the provider of the HSR. This is not an offer to enter into an agreement. Not all customers will qualify. Copyright©2016 Home Buyers Marketing II, Inc. (HBM2). Copyright©2016 Fairway Independent Mortgage Corporation NMLS ID#2289. 4801 S. Biltmore Lane, Madison, WI 53718, 1-877-699-0353. All rights reserved. This is not an offer to enter into an agreement. Not all customers will qualify. Information, rates and programs are subject to change without notice. All products are subject to credit and property approval. Other restrictions and limitations may apply. Equal Housing Lender. Kansas-Licensed Mortgage Company. KS license #MC.0001375.


SECTION B

USA TODAY — L awrence J ournal -W orld

IN MONEY

IN LIFE

Probe widens as earnings fall 3%

Affleck, Kendrick bond over movies, football

10.15.16 FREDERIC J. BROWN, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

ROBERT DEUTSCH, USA TODAY

Many risky inmates not tested for Zika Few transfers from Florida, Puerto Rico checked Kevin Johnson USA TODAY

Federal prison authorities are not testing all arriving inmates for the Zika virus, including hundreds who are regularly shuttled into the U.S. from Puerto Rico, where thousands have been infected, according to Federal Bureau of Prisons documents and staffers. While federal officials said high-risk, pregnant inmates are tested if they have histories of potential exposure, other arriving inmates in Puerto Rico and Florida are not routinely tested. The bureau recently authorized the purchase of repellent for distribution to staffers who work outWASHINGTON

side and for some inmates assigned to outside details, yet other inmates must purchase their own supplies from prison commissaries. The conditions have raised serious concerns among some prison workers, especially in Florida, citing the risk posed by the continued transfer of untested inmates from the prison bureau’s detention center in Guaynabo, Puerto Rico. Meanwhile, Rep. David Jolly, R-Fla., who has pressed the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to provide the state with additional Zika protection funding, described the continued transfer of untested inmates as “a real threat.” “The current BOP clinical guidance fails to adequately ad-

U.S. Rep. David Jolly, R-Fla., described the continued transfer of untested inmates as “a real threat.” dress detection and prevention of Zika among the general prison populations,” Jolly said in a letter this week to Thomas Kane, the prison bureau’s acting director. “It is imperative that the BOP assess all prison populations in

WILFREDO LEE, AP

These are larvae of the Aedes Aegypti mosquito, which transmits the Zika virus.

areas where there is local transmission of the Zika virus and notify its prisons of any positive cases before transferring prison-

ers to a new facility.” Rep. Carlos Curbelo, R-Fla., also has raised questions, saying in August that none of the 550 inmates who had been transferred to Miami’s Federal Correctional Institute had been tested. “It’s necessary that when these prisoners are transferred to FCI Miami or any other prison, that they be screened for Zika in order to ensure the safety of the guards and other prisoners,” Curbelo said. According to CDC data compiled this week, more than 25,000 Zika cases have been reported in Puerto Rico, with all but 75 acquired locally. In the U.S., meanwhile, there have been 3,936 cases. At least 3,800 were associated with travel in known Zika risk zones, while 128 were acv STORY CONTINUES ON 2B

NEWSLINE

IN NEWS

Airstrikes hit ISIS

Iraqi ground troops get support ahead of offensive to retake Mosul.

SARA D. DAVIS, GETTY IMAGES

Trump takes aim at Clinton, media

GOP nominee says they’re working together to ‘fix’ election. PHOTOS BY DESMOND BOYLAN, RAMON ESPINOSA, AP

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.

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

The only restriction on Cuban rum and cigars, according to the U.S. Treasury: “Normal limits on duty and tax exemptions will apply.”

LIKE CUBAN CIGARS? RUM? OBAMA LIFTS RESTRICTIONS

Americans traveling abroad can bring home all Thomas confirmed they want, but ordering online still forbidden USA SNAPSHOTS©

25

years

ago today, Clarence Thomas was confirmed to the Supreme Court by the U.S. Senate.

SOURCE The History Place MICHAEL B. SMITH AND PAUL TRAP, USA TODAY

Alan Gomez

@alangomez USA TODAY

MIAMI Attention U.S. travelers going abroad: You now can bring home all the Cuban rum and cigars you want. The Obama administration announced Friday a new round of executive actions designed to increase trade and travel with the communist island. And this is the one many Americans have been waiting for.

Under the new rules, which go into effect Monday, travelers can purchase unlimited quantities of Cuban rum and cigars in any country where they are sold so long as they are for personal consumption. Sorry American couch potatoes: You can’t order Cuban rum and cigars online and have them shipped to your home. The regulations issued by the U.S. departments of Commerce and Treasury will make it easier for U.S. companies to import Cuban-made pharmaceuticals, U.S. agricultural companies to sell

PABLO MARTINEZ MONSIVAIS, AP

President Obama speaks in Havana on March 21.

their products to the island and Cubans to purchase U.S.-made goods online. The changes follow a series of steps taken since President Obama and Cuban President Raúl Castro announced Dec. 17, 2014, that the Cold War foes would normalize relations after more than a half century of enmity. Friday, Obama added to the regulatory changes with a presidential policy directive that outlines his Cuba strategy thus far and lays out the future course. It includes a call for Congress to rescind a 50-year-old economic embargo on the island, something v STORY CONTINUES ON 2B

Obama grants clemency to inmate — but inmate declines Commutation came with unwanted strings Gregory Korte @gregorykorte USA TODAY

When President Obama announced a program to grant executive clemency to drug offenders given long mandatory sentences, Arnold Ray Jones did what more than 29,000 federal inmates have done: He asked for a presidential commutation. And then, after it arrived on WASHINGTON

Aug. 3, he refused to accept it. Jones’ turnabout highlights the strings that come attached to an increasing number of Obama’s commutations: In this case, enrollment in a residential drug treatment program — which has been a condition of 92 of Obama commutation grants. Jones is the first to refuse that condition. If Jones had agreed to complete the program, he would be out in two years. He still has six years left on his original 2002 sentence for drug trafficking, but Jones may be counting on getting time off for good behavior, which would have him released in April 2019 —

LUBBOCK COUNTY DETENTION CENTER

The booking photo for Arnold Ray Jones, sentenced for drug trafficking in 2002.

eight months longer than if he had accepted the commutation. He is in a low-security federal prison in Beaumont, Texas. The unusual rejection came to

light last week, when Obama commuted the sentences of 102 more federal inmates. With the 673 previous commutations granted, the total should have been 775 — but the White House accounting had only 774. At about the same time, the Department of Justice updated its online record of Obama’s commutations and updated Jones’ entry with the notation: “condition declined, commutation not effectuated.” The White House and the Justice Department declined to talk about specifics of the case. But inmate records Jones submitted as part of his court case show he

used crack cocaine weekly in the year before his arrest and drug treatment programs he completed in the past were unsuccessful. Unlike pardons, which represent a full legal forgiveness for a crime, commutations can shorten a prison sentence while leaving other consequences intact. But it’s extremely rare for a recipient to reject clemency outright once it’s granted. P.S. Ruckman Jr., a political scientist who has cataloged 30,642 presidential clemency actions dating to President George Washington, has found just 16 clemency warrants returned to the president unaccepted.


2B

L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY SATURDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2016

Airstrikes against Islamic State increase Iraqi ground troops get support ahead of battle for Mosul Doug Stanglin @dstanglin USA TODAY

The U.S.-led coalition fighting the Islamic State extremist group is stepping up airstrikes in and around the militant-held city of Mosul as thousands of Iraqi ground troops move into position for a push to retake Iraq’s secondlargest city, officials said. The coalition said in a statement Friday that its planes conducted more than 50 airstrikes in the past two weeks around Mosul, which has shrunk from 2.5 million people to around 600,000 since falling under extremist control two years ago.

MAHMOUD AL-SAMARRAI, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

Pro-government forces clear the area in preparation for the push to retake the northern Iraqi city of Mosul.

It is the last major Iraqi city still in the hands of the Islamic State, also known as ISIL or ISIS. The strikes were conducted as part of Operation Inherent Resolve, which is aimed at eliminating the Islamic State terrorist group from Iraq and Syria. “We have been intensifying our efforts in and around Mosul,” said Col. John Dorrian, a spokesman for the U.S.-led coalition. The plan to wrest control of the city, located 250 miles north of Baghdad, involves some 30,000 troops in one of the most complex operations yet for Iraq’s military. The ground troops are moving in to the south and east of Mosul, the Associated Press reported. “All the troop movements now are related to the Mosul operation,” said Iraqi army Brig. Gen.

Firas Bashar, who is stationed at an Iraqi army base in Makhmour, according to the AP. Dorrian said earlier this week that the Mosul operation is on the “order of magnitude larger than the liberation battles in cities such as Ramadi, Fallujah and Sharqat.” Iraqi Prime Minister Haider alAbadi informed Mosul residents of the pending operation and asked them to cooperate with security forces, Dorrian said. He said the Iraqi government is working with the United Nations and other non-governmental organizations to help people who are expected to flee Mosul when fighting begins. He said Iraq is directing 20 campsites for displaced people and is working with other groups to pre-position resources to take care of them.

How do I get my hands on Cuban cigars and rum? Here’s everything you need to know, including the latest on U.S. airline flights to the island Alan Gomez and Mary Bowerman USA TODAY

Let the good times roll! The Obama administration lifted restrictions on Cuban rum and cigars Friday, allowing Americans traveling abroad to bring home all the Cuban rum and cigars they want. The new round of executive actions are meant to increase trade and travel with Cuba. The orders also successfully end restrictions on the island’s famed rum and cigars. Here’s everything you need to know about getting Cuban cigars and rum:

Q

IS THIS THE FIRST TIME PEOPLE ARE ALLOWED TO BRING BACK CUBAN CIGARS AND RUM?

No. The Obama administration had partially lifted a five-decade ban on Cuban cigars and rum already by allowing Americans traveling directly to Cuba to return home with up to $100 in rum and cigars in their carry-on luggage. But now, the $100 limit is gone, and Americans can purchase Cuban cigars and rum from anywhere they find the products abroad. That means all those Cuban bottles and boxes at duty free shops in foreign airports are fair game. The only restriction, according to Treasury: “Normal limits on duty and tax exemptions will apply.”

Q

IT’S FRIDAY, WHERE CAN I GET CUBAN CIGARS AND

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.

PRESIDENT AND PUBLISHER

John Zidich

EDITOR IN CHIEF

Patty Michalski CHIEF REVENUE OFFICER

Kevin Gentzel

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RUM AROUND HERE?

If you assumed the lifted restrictions meant you could walk into a CVS and pick up a Cuban cigar, you were wrong. Under the new rules, travelers can purchase unlimited quantities of Cuban rum and cigars in any country where they are sold so long as they are for personal consumption.

Q No. You can’t order Cuban rum WAIT, SO I CAN’T GET THEM ONLINE?

and cigars on Amazon and have them delivered to your door. We’re betting Amazon hopes that’ll change. If you want to purchase Cuban cigars and rum, you have to get yourself to Cuba.

Q Southwest Airlines announced I WANT CUBAN CIGARS. HOW DO I GET TO CUBA?

Thursday it would begin scheduled flights to Cuba on Nov. 13, following competitors to serve the Caribbean island after a 50year hiatus from the U.S. JetBlue was first when it launched a route from Fort Lauderdale to Santa Clara, Cuba, on Aug. 31. Others joined suit, including Silver Airways on Sept. 1 with turboprop service and American Airlines, which flew first to Cienfuegos and Holguin on Sept. 8. Prior to JetBlue’s launch, U.S. flights to Cuba operated as charters that could be sold only through tour operators approved by the federal government. Tickets were typically expensive and booking cumbersome.

Contributing: Bart Jansen

Angel Caballer Cuza puffs on a cigar while listening to President Obama speak on March 23 in Old Havana.

JACK GRUBER, USA TODAY

GOAL OF OBAMA’S POLICY IS TO MAKE IT ‘IRREVERSIBLE’ v CONTINUED FROM 1B

lawmakers have been unwilling to do so long as the Castro regime suppresses political and other freedoms. The goal of the new regulations and policy directive are to make Obama’s Cuba policy “irreversible” by establishing so many relationships that a future administration wanting to scale back those ties would face widespread opposition from U.S. businesses and citizens. “Challenges remain — and very real differences between our governments persist on issues of democracy and human rights — but I believe engagement is the best way to address those differences and make progress on behalf of our interests and values,” Obama said. The most noticeable — and likely most welcome — change for most Americans is the removal of the five-decade ban on Cuban rum and cigars. The Obama administration partially

lifted that ban in January 2015, allowing Americans traveling directly to Cuba to return home with up to $100 in rum and cigars in their carry-on luggage. Now, that monetary restriction is removed and U.S. citizens can purchase as much Cuban tobacco and alcohol as

uCargo ships can visit U.S. ports immediately after departing Cuba. Vessels previously were barred from loading or unloading freight at a U.S. port for 180 days after docking in Cuba. uAmericans can award more grants in larger amounts to Cubans.

“The progress of the last two years, bolstered by today’s action, should remind the world of what’s possible when we look to the future together.” President Obama on relations with Cuba

they want from anywhere they find the products abroad. The only restriction, according to Treasury: “Normal limits on duty and tax exemptions will apply.” Other changes: uCuban pharmaceuticals can receive approval from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and be marketed, sold and distributed in the U.S. American scientists will be allowed to work on joint medical research with their Cuban counterparts.

uU.S. businesses can work in Cuba to develop the country’s civil aviation security system. U.S. airlines recently began regularly-scheduled commercial flights to Cuba, which has raised concerns among some in Congress that Cuba’s airports are not equipped to secure U.S.bound flights. uCubans can purchase U.S.made goods online, although the Cuban government tightly restricts Internet access.

Transfers are a health hazard, union says v CONTINUED FROM 1B

quired in Florida. (Justin Long, a spokesman with the prison bureau, said the agency does not track the number of pregnant inmates screened for Zika symptoms, but none that have been screened have tested positive for the virus.) The large number of travel-related cases in the U.S., Jolly and others said, highlights the potential risk posed by inmates who are shuttled to the U.S. mainland from Puerto Rico. The prison bureau was unable to immediately provide the number of such movements each month. But Jorge Fermin, a corrections officer at the Guaynabo detention center and local president of the prison workers’ union, said that up to 240 inmates each month are moved from the Puerto Rican facility to the U.S., for various reasons. “We are at ground zero here,” Fermin said, referring to the Zika threat in Puerto Rico. “We worry that they (the inmates) might be carrying the virus even though they are not showing the symptoms. Everybody’s concern here is that every inmate taken in should be tested. But they (prison officials) won’t do it, unless the CDC mandates it.” The bureau has issued a num-

KELLY JORDAN, USA TODAY SPORTS

Angel Crespo empties a container of standing water in Coamo, Puerto Rico, as volunteers and officials fight the virus.

“Everybody’s concern here is that every inmate taken in should be tested.” Jorge Fermin, a corrections of ficer at the Guaynabo detention center

ber of Zika-related memos in the past year, each urging staffers to follow the CDC’s latest guidance, especially as it relates to pregnant inmates. In August, prison officials announced provisions for the purchase of mosquito repel-

lent to be distributed to staff and some inmates in high risk zones. The most recent directive, issued Sept. 6, singled out Guaynabo inmates for additional attention in advance of their transfer from the facility to the U.S. mainland. Short of actual testing, BOP Medical Director Jeffery Allen “recommended” that departing inmates apply repellent and continue the applications daily for at least three weeks after their transfers to guard against transmission. “Prior to departing Guaynabo, it is recommended that all in-

mates be provided the opportunity to self-apply mosquito repellent to exposed skin surfaces” to reduce the potential for exposure during transport, Allen wrote in last month’s Zika update. Eric Young, national president of the federal prison employees union known as the Council of Prison Locals, said Zika has been “very much a concern for me,” adding that the union lobbied hard for the acquisition of repellent, especially for staffers. Within “weeks” of raising the issue, Young said prison officials committed to authorizing the purchase and distribution of repellent. “It was the best I was able to do,” Young said. Joe Rojas, local president of union staffers at Florida’s Coleman Federal Correctional Complex near Orlando, said he and others have lodged complaints with the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, alleging the transfers represent a health hazard. “Employees are at risk for occupationally acquired Zika virus infection from mosquito bites or contraband sharps (knives and shanks) contaminated by body fluids of infected individuals,” according to one complaint. “The fact that not everyone is screened is really a public safety issue,” Rojas said.


USA TODAY - L J SATURDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2016 6B

3B

USA TODAY SATURDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2016

awrence ournal -W orld

AMERICA’S MARKETS What to watch Paul Davidson USA TODAY

Waiting for inflation to accelerate has been like watching grass grow — it just seems even more interminable. Consumer prices, though, have edged up the past year, and Federal Reserve officials hope the pace picks up enough to give them some ammunition to raise interest rates by December. On the surface, low prices seem to be good for consumers. And they are, of course, at least for their wallets. But they also signal a sluggish economy and muted wage gains. And persistently low inflation can lull shoppers into putting off purchases, crimping economic growth. That’s why the Fed wants to see a pickup. Low oil prices and a strong dollar that cuts import costs have held down inflation since 2014.

But since early this year, oil and gasoline prices have gradually climbed, pushing up overall inflation modestly. Meanwhile, rising restaurant prices have partly offset tame grocery bills. Also, a weaker greenback has nudged up both headline inflation and a core measure that excludes volatile food and energy. Other categories have been mixed. Rent hikes, which had been dramatic, have eased. But airline fares probably rose last month as the impact from lower fuel costs waned, Nomura economist Lewis Alexander says. All told, economists expect the Labor Department on Tuesday to report a solid increase in inflation in September, pushing the annual gain in the consumer price index to 1.5% from 1.1%. The core measure is expected to record a modest uptick, keeping the annual increase unchanged at 2.3%.

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

DOW JONES

LESS THAN $100,000

+39.44

+.43

INDUSTRIAL AVERAGE

CHANGE: +.2% YTD: +713.35 YTD % CHG: +4.1%

CLOSE: 18,138.38 PREV. CLOSE: 18,098.94 RANGE: 18,138.38-18,261.11

NASDAQ

COMP

+.83

-3.34

COMPOSITE

CHANGE: unch. YTD: +206.75 YTD % CHG: +4.1%

CLOSE: 5,214.16 PREV. CLOSE: 5,213.33 RANGE: 5,213.37-5,258.88

STORY STOCKS Microsoft

CLOSE: 2,132.98 PREV. CLOSE: 2,132.55 RANGE: 2,132.98-2,148.97

CLOSE: 1,212.41 PREV. CLOSE: 1,215.75 RANGE: 1,212.25-1,226.00

S&P 500’S BIGGEST GAINERS/LOSERS GAINERS

Company (ticker symbol)

Salesforce.com (CRM) Pulls out of bidding for Twitter, jumps.

Price

74.27 +3.64

YTD % Chg % Chg

+5.2

-5.3

WestRock (WRK) 46.71 Optimistic industry, reverses gain on pricing worries.

+1.66

+3.7 +23.2

Level 3 Communications (LVLT) 46.15 Stock rating upgraded to overweight at JPMorgan.

+1.06

+2.4

Analog Devices (ADI) Gets buy rating, gaps up early.

62.06

+1.35

International Paper (IP) Average hold, rebounds from near month’s low.

46.73

+.91

First Solar (FSLR) Jumps early as it announces new leadership.

39.47

Goldman Sachs Group (GS) Britain’s high court throws out $1 billion lawsuit.

+2.2

-15.1 +12.2

+2.0 +24.0 +2.0

+.13

+2.0 +45.8

+3.10

+1.9

-5.4

Nielsen Holdings (NLSN) 53.53 Climbs as company announces leadership retirement.

+.98

+1.9

+14.9

Company (ticker symbol)

Hershey

271.29 +4.73

+1.8

+5.9

YTD % Chg % Chg

Price

$ Chg

Southwestern Energy (SWN) Negative industry note, hits October’s low.

12.90

-.74

-5.4

HP (HPQ) Plans to cut more jobs.

14.48

-.67

-4.4 +22.3

EQT (EQT) Dips asit drops its assets to partnership.

67.46

-2.91

-4.1

+29.4

United Rentals (URI) Stock rating downgraded to sell at UBS.

75.27

-2.94

-3.8

+3.8

Mylan (MYL) Negative industry note, shares slide.

36.49

-1.39

-3.7

-32.5

Range Resources (RRC) Negative note, weak peer reports expected.

37.98

-1.43

-3.6 +54.3

Macy’s (M) 35.57 Department stores’ composite estimates lowered.

-1.23

-3.3

+1.7

+81.4

22.28

-.76

-3.3

-45.4

Kohl’s (KSS) Negative composite estimates note, dips.

43.68

-1.44

-3.2

-8.3

Royal Caribbean Cruises (RCL) Falls on negative industry environment note.

69.98

-2.09

-2.9

-30.9

SOURCE: BLOOMBERG AND THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Oct. 14

4-WEEK TREND

$96.43 Oct. 14

4-WEEK TREND

Twitter

Salesforce.com’s CEO said he had $25 ruled out bidding for the social networking company. The decision raised questions about Twitter’s $15 future and pushed shares down to Sept. 16 October’s low.

Price: $16.88 Chg: -$0.91 % chg: -5.1% Day’s high/low: $18.05/$16.28 Fund, ranked by size Vanguard 500Adml Vanguard TotStIAdm Vanguard InstIdxI Vanguard TotStIdx Vanguard InstPlus Vanguard TotIntl Fidelity Contra American Funds GrthAmA m American Funds IncAmerA m Vanguard TotStIIns

$16.88

Oct. 14

MARKET PERFORMANCE BY SECTOR

NAV 197.11 53.23 195.03 53.21 195.04 14.83 100.53 43.32 21.19 53.24

Chg. +0.04 -0.02 +0.04 -0.02 +0.04 +0.02 +0.11 unch. +0.01 -0.02

4wk 1 +0.5% +0.4% +0.5% +0.4% +0.5% +0.3% +0.6% +1.1% +0.3% +0.4%

YTD 1 +6.1% +6.3% +6.1% +6.2% +6.2% +4.5% +2.4% +4.9% +7.3% +6.3%

SECTOR

PERFORMANCE DAILY YTD

Energy

-0.6%

15.7%

Technology

0.4%

10.6%

Utilities

-0.6%

10.3%

Industrials

0.2%

8.0%

Materials

0.3%

6.7%

Telecom

0.3%

3.8%

1 – CAPITAL GAINS AND DIVIDENDS REINVESTED

ETF, ranked by volume SPDR S&P500 ETF Tr SPDR Financial VanE Vect Gld Miners iShs Emerg Mkts US Oil Fund LP ProShs Ultra VIX ST Barc iPath Vix ST Dir Dly Gold Bull3x Dirx Jr GoldMin Bull CS VS InvVix STerm

Ticker SPY XLF GDX EEM USO UVXY VXX NUGT JNUG XIV

Close 213.12 19.42 22.99 36.88 11.44 17.58 35.06 11.83 10.35 36.24

Chg. +0.11 +0.09 -0.50 +0.06 -0.05 -0.39 -0.35 -0.74 -0.86 +0.34

% Chg %YTD +0.1% +4.5% +0.5% +0.4% -2.1% +67.6% +0.2% +14.6% -0.4% +4.0% -2.2% unch. -1.0% unch. -5.9% unch. -7.7% unch. +0.9% +40.5%

INTEREST RATES

MORTGAGE RATES

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

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

Close 6 mo ago 3.50% 3.50% 0.41% 0.37% 0.29% 0.22% 1.28% 1.25% 1.80% 1.79%

Close 6 mo ago 3.47% 3.62% 2.70% 2.79% 2.76% 2.72% 2.99% 2.90%

SOURCE: BANKRATE.COM

COMMODITIES

CF Industries (CF) Might be cut to junk at Moody’s.

$57.42

The maker of Oreo cookies and other chocolates announced its $100 Price: $96.43 president and CEO will retire but Chg: $0.78 continue as chairman of the board. % chg: 0.8% The company has appointed a Day’s high/low: committee to look for a new CEO. $80 Sept. 16 $97.18/$95.94

-40.2

170.52

Intercontinental Exchange (ICE) Price target increased, reaches month’s high.

4-WEEK TREND

TOP 10 MUTUAL FUNDS

+.79

POWERED BY SIGFIG

The technology company gapped up premarket as investors were $60 Price: $57.42 pleased with economic reports Chg: $0.50 from the U.S. and China. The firm % chg: 0.9% also is seeking European Union Day’s high/low: approval for its LinkedIn purchase. $50 Sept. 16 $57.74/$57.12

TOP 10 EXCHANGE TRADED FUNDS

Chesapeake Energy (CHK) 6.56 Positive note, remains winner as oil loses momentum.

LOSERS

$ Chg

-0.11 6.01 AAPL KO WFC

More than half a million investors nationwide with total assets of $200 billion manage their investment portfolios online with SigFig investment tracking service. Data on this page are based on SigFig analysis.

RUSSELL 2000 INDEX

CHANGE: -.3% YTD: +76.52 YTD % CHG: +6.7%

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

-0.02 6.89 AAPL KO AAPL

NOTE: INFORMATION PROVIDED BY SIGFIG IS STATISTICAL IN NATURE AND DOES NOT CONSTITUTE A RECOMMENDATION OF ANY STRATEGY OR SECURITY. VISIT SIGFIG.USATODAY.COM/DISCLOSE FOR ADDITIONAL DISCLOSURES AND INFORMATION.

POWERED BY SIGFIG

0.04 7.64 AAPL KO AAPL

MORE THAN $1 MILLION

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

McDonald’s (MCD) was the most-bought stock across all SigFig investor segments in late September.

RUSSELL

RUT

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

-0.12 7.26 AAPL KO AAPL

$250,001$1 MILLION

STANDARD & POOR'S

CHANGE: unch. YTD: +89.04 YTD % CHG: +4.4%

$100,001$250,000

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

S&P 500

SPX

USA’s portfolio allocation by wealth

Here’s how America’s individual investors are performing based on data from SigFig online investment tracking service:

MAJOR INDEXES DJIA

How we’re performing

DID YOU KNOW?

Economists expect solid increase in inflation

ALL THE MARKET ACTION IN REAL TIME. AMERICASMARKETS.USATODAY.COM

Commodities Close Prev. Cattle (lb.) .96 .94 Corn (bushel) 3.54 3.50 Gold (troy oz.) 1,253.10 1,255.00 Hogs, lean (lb.) .53 .53 Natural Gas (Btu.) 3.29 3.34 Oil, heating (gal.) 1.57 1.58 Oil, lt. swt. crude (bar.) 50.35 50.44 Silver (troy oz.) 17.39 17.41 Soybeans (bushel) 9.63 9.56 Wheat (bushel) 4.21 4.16

Chg. +0.02 +0.04 -1.90 unch. -0.05 -0.01 -0.09 -0.02 +0.07 +0.05

% Chg. +1.5% +1.4% -0.2% unch. -1.7% -0.8% -0.2% -0.1% +0.7% +1.2%

% YTD -29.4% -1.3% +18.2% -12.0% +40.6% +42.4% +35.9% +26.3% +10.5% -10.4%

Close .8206 1.3125 6.7284 .9105 104.18 18.9918

Prev. .8161 1.3191 6.7257 .9047 103.60 18.9069

Close 10,580.38 23,233.31 16,856.37 7,013.55 47,701.45

Consumer discret. -0.1%

0.9%

Health care

-0.7%

-3.3%

Financials

0.5%

-18.5%

CBOE VOLATILITY INDEX Measures expected market volatility based on S&P 500 index options pricing:

16.11

20 30

10

6 mo. ago .7064 1.2851 6.4825 .8876 109.28 17.4167

Yr. ago .6459 1.2932 6.3437 .8712 118.86 16.4933

Prev. Change 10,414.07 +166.31 23,031.30 +202.01 16,774.24 +82.13 6,977.74 +35.81 47,741.54 -40.09

15 7.5

%Chg. YTD % +1.6% -1.5% +0.9% +6.0% +0.5% -11.4% +0.5% +12.4% -0.1% +11.0%

SOURCES: MORNINGSTAR, DOW JONES INDEXES, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

IN-DEPTH MARKETS COVERAGE USATODAY.COM/MONEY

-0.56 (-3.4%)

40

S&P 500 P/E RATIO The price-to-earnings ratio, based on trailing 12-month “operating” earnings:

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

3.7%

0

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

Consumer staples unch.

21.73 22.5

0 SOURCE BLOOMBERG

+0.01 (unch.)

30

Salesforce says it no longer has interest in Twitter Cloud software firm says it will walk away from struggling social network Jessica Guynn USA TODAY

FRANCISCO Salesforce.com has ditched Twitter at the altar and the jilted company’s shares are plunging — again. The cloud software company was the last remaining suitor but has decided not to go forward with a takeover bid, Salesforce SAN

said Friday. Salesforce spokeswoman Chi Hea Cho declined further comment. “In this case, we’ve walked away. It wasn’t the right fit for us,” Marc Benioff, chief executive of Salesforce, told the Financial Times. Twitter declined comment. Twitter could explore a buyout from private investors or an activist could try to force the board to negotiate a sale, but neither scenario looks likely now. Now pressure will crank up again on Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey to reignite growth at the com-

GETTY IMAGES FOR TECHCRUNCH

RICHARD DREW, AP

Salesforce.com CEO Marc Benioff, left, said Twitter wasn’t the right fit, putting more pressure on Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey.

pany. Salesforce had come under pressure of its own from investors who did not want the company to buy Twitter. “It’s not the right fit for us for many different reasons,” Benioff told the Financial Times. Asked if price was the deciding factor, he said: “You’re going to look at price, you’re going to look at culture, you’re going to look at everything.” Speculation Twitter would be sold drove the stock price up, but shares have given up those gains this week. They fell another 6% Friday. Salesforce shares rose 6%.


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USA TODAY SATURDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2016

LIFELINE

SPORTS LIFE AUTOS Ben Affleck, Anna Kendrick TRAVEL bond over Patriots, ‘Pitch’

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L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY SATURDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2016

MOVIES

CAUGHT IN THE ACT Prince William and Duchess Kate went to Manchester, England, on Friday on typical royal duties, visiting a museum and hospice and laying a memorial wreath. But Kate, decked out in an Erdem checked coat, seemed delighted to greet young fans wearing Will and Kate masks.

‘Accountant’ co-stars are in tune taking on bad guys in thriller Brian Truitt @briantruitt USA TODAY

CHRIS JACKSON, GETTY IMAGES

STYLE STAR Posed next to a picture of herself as Jackie Kennedy, Natalie Portman, pregnant with her second child, was chic in a flowing navy scoop-neck cocktail dress and glittery, green beaded earrings at the ‘Jackie’ premiere Thursday at the New York Film Festival. INVISION/AP

HOW WAS YOUR DAY? GOOD DAY MADONNA She’ll get the ‘Billboard’ 2016 Woman of the Year Award at the 11th annual Women in Music event Dec. 9 in New York, the magazine announced Friday.

KIRSTY WIGGLESWORTH, AP

GOOD DAY J.K. ROWLING FANS They saw the first 10 minutes of the Harry Potter prequel ‘Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them’ on Thursday. The film, starring Eddie Redmayne, is the first of five and opens Nov. 18.

NEW YORK It’s all fun and games with Ben Affleck and Anna Kendrick until Affleck starts singing her Pitch Perfect top 40 hit Cups. “When I’m gone,” Affleck warbles before Kendrick stops him. “I will end your life,” she deadpans to her co-star in The Accountant (now showing). It’s Affleck who’s the deadly force in their new thriller. He plays seemingly ordinary CPA Christian Wolff, who’s hunted by the U.S. Treasury for his dealings with criminal organizations. A man of action with high-functioning autism, Chris meets junior accountant Dana Cummings in his new gig at a robotics company, and when she’s marked for death, he comes to her rescue. Anybody who saw Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice, with Affleck as the Dark Knight, knows he can hold his own in a fight scene. Kendrick was on the Accountant set the day Affleck put a stuntman through a bathroom sink, and the actress even got to tussle a little. “I spent most of the day running from bad guys, but I did get in one smack with a toilet lid. That was my moment,” says Kendrick, 31. They didn’t know each other well before filming but “became fast friends,” Accountant director Gavin O’Connor recalls. “And it translated in a really potent way.” One thing they bonded over was Affleck’s beloved New England Patriots. Kendrick roots for them regularly, but she was in full fanatic mode the night before filming started in 2015, when the Patriots and Seattle Seahawks were battling in Super Bowl XLIX. “I was screaming in the hotel bar.” The actor is surprised by the news he appears in Kendrick’s book Scrappy Little Nobody (Nov. 15). Among the collection of essays is her revisiting “many absurdist moments” during the 2015 Academy Awards and having to hop on a plane to Atlanta for filming the next morning. “There are a lot of logistical problems for Ben, I’m sure, but as

ROBERT DEUTSCH, USA TODAY

CHUCK ZLOTNICK

Chris (Ben Affleck) and Dana (Anna Kendrick) uncook the books in The Accountant.

a lady there’s a lot of ‘Dress! Hair! Jewelry!’ How do I get it back to the people so I’m not responsible for all this?” Kendrick says. “They wanted their hair back,” Affleck jokes. With Affleck directing an upcoming solo Batman film and Kendrick filming Pitch Perfect 3 early next year, this dynamic duo is already making plans to work together again. “We’ll swapsies!” Kendrick exclaims. “All right, deal,” Affleck replies. “You do Batman, I’ll do Pitch. Sold.” Kendrick is ambitious in picking her character (“I want to be Batman”), but Affleck hasn’t given up on his vocal dreams. “I can be one of the singers,” he figures. “This time we can do it with the Patriots instead of the Packers.”

MOVIES FACUNDO ARRIZABALAGA, EPA

THEY SAID WHAT? THE STARS’ BEST QUOTES “If you listen to his music, it’s a road map to teach us how to love one another. He was a gentle soul and he was a vessel … put here to teach us how to JIM MONE, AP love and respect each other.” — Shelby J, of Prince’s New Power Generation band, to USA TODAY on the late singer’s legacy during a tribute concert held Thursday in St. Paul, Minn. Compiled by Maria Puente

USA SNAPSHOTS©

Fall-ing down on sunscreen While 86% protect their skin with sunscreen in summer,

40%

of Americans “never” do in autumn.

SOURCE Melanoma Foundation of New England survey of 1,016 U.S. adults TERRY BYRNE AND KARL GELLES, USA TODAY

Is it sweaty? A real mascot answers our questions The answer is yes — it’s ‘part of the job’ Bryan Alexander @BryAlexand USA TODAY

Just how competitive, dangerous and sweaty is the real world of sports mascots? Judging from director Christopher Guest’s new Netflix comedy, Mascots (in iPic theaters and streaming), the world is filled with comic rivalries and one-upmanship. “In costume, I came to life,” says Kevin Vanderkolk, 38, who worked as Big Red for the Arizona Cardinals NFL team for one season and was the high-flying (and dunking) Bango for the NBA’s Milwaukee Bucks for 131⁄2 seasons. “You’re energetic and crazy and excited,” says Vanderkolk, who starred in Hulu’s series Behind the Mask before retiring in 2014. “It becomes another personality. You kind of turn it on.” The man dubbed “the LeBron James of mascots” for daring feats such as his ladder dunk answers our questions about what it’s really like inside the suit.

Q

How much are sweat and lack of vision a factor in those outfits?

A

Sweat is part of the job. You get used to it. The worst time for heat was with the Cardinals when the temperature was like 125 on the field. I was climbing up a fence and blacked out. It was like, ‘My God, what just happened?’ You hydrate like crazy. I’d drink 10 to 20 bottles of water during a game. You sweat it all out. Maybe I would take a bathroom break at halftime. That outfit was bigger. Even as Bango, I couldn’t see below me, or my feet. You have limited left and right vision. You work with it.

Q A

Were there mascot battles?

Q A

So you were never even irked?

Q A

What was your worst moment?

I was doing a routine 360degree dunk but twisted too early off the trampoline and lost air awareness. I ended up missing the mats and landed over by the oppos-

All the mascots get along really well in the NBA — it’s a great community. We get together once a year and brainstorm. They are some of my best friends in the country. There are team rivalries. But as far as the people behind the costumes, there’s no ill will. I was never involved with a mascot fight.

I never said that. But I’m not going to throw dirt on these guys. You get together with 25 mascots, there are strong personalities.

ing team’s huddle flat on my back. It knocked the wind out of me. But I also had another minute and a half to kill. So I ran back, did two more dunks and got out of there.

Q A

How bad were the injuries?

Injuries are ultimately why I retired. I tore my ACL twice, went through two reconstructions, had numerous ankle sprains. You’re jumping on trampolines and flying anywhere from 15 to 20 feet in the air and landing on crash mats on your face and back. You do that for 10-15 years, it eventually takes a toll. My theory was to keep pushing the envelope. Go bigger, harder. ... If I didn’t get out, I was going to end up dead. It was either all in or I couldn’t do it. I didn’t want to rebrand my character and go to funny shtick-type stuff. But I poured my life and heart into that job, and I did a ton of cool stuff. It was a really great gig. JASON RIKER, HULU

GETTY IMAGES FOR HULU

Kevin Vanderkolk, aka Milwaukee’s Bango the Buck.


L awrence J ournal -W orld

Saturday, October 15, 2016

Dear Annie: I need help figuring out how to address a touchy subject. Over the past few years, my lovely wife “Deb” has gradually gained some weight. I’ve tried to pinpoint when exactly it started, and I think it was some time around when our youngest left for college, three years ago. Deb was (and still is) sad about the empty nest, and ice cream became her nightly comfort food. She also snacks on potato chips when we watch TV, and she always orders dessert when we go out to eat. I can be bad about snacking, too, but I’ve always had a good metabolism, and it’s been easy for me to stay thin. Deb has noticed that some of her clothes don’t quite fit anymore but says she must have shrunk them in the dry-

Dear Annie

Annie Lane

dearannie@creators.com

er. She has mentioned wanting to be more active but never actually follows through on exercising. It’s as if she’s kind of aware of her weight gain but she would rather just sweep it under the rug and not think about it. She’s beautiful, and I love her no matter what, but I worry about her long-term health, especially if she keeps gaining weight. — Holding My Tongue

‘Southwest’ revisits a ‘94 rape trial Irrational witch-hunts are hardly a thing of the past. That is the point of the powerful and acclaimed 2016 documentary “Southwest of Salem: The Story of the San Antonio Four” (7 p.m., ID). If you think the recent spate of “scary clown” sightings seems weird, think back to the late 1980s and 1990s, when a series of sensational trials unfolded featuring wild, often unsubstantiated testimony of sexual abuse and satanic rituals. As in the Salem witch trials of the 1690s, the eyewitness testimony often came from children. “Southwest” recalls the case of four women caught up in such an ordeal who were convicted of gang rape and molestation of two children. The film suggests that a relative of one of the witnesses harbored a crush on one of the accused, and it makes a strong case that these women were demonized for their homosexuality by prosecutors who eagerly fanned the flames of crude superstition and religious bigotry. The case occurred in 1994 and one of the child witnesses has since recanted her testimony. The forensic evidence against the women has been debunked. But the four still seek exoneration from a justice system that fell back all too easily, and enthusiastically, into the Dark Ages. O The 2016 drama “Surviving Compton: Dre, Suge and Michel’le” (7 p.m., Lifetime) recalls the early days of the West Coast rap scene through the eyes of an R&B singer (Rhyon Nicole Brown). Saturday’s highlights O College football action includes Stanford at Notre Dame (6:30 p.m., NBC) and Ohio State at Wisconsin (7 p.m., ABC). O A rivalry between pastry chefs leads to love in the 2016 romance “Pumpkin Pie Wars” (8 p.m., Hallmark). O Jealousy consumes Louis on “Versailles” (9 p.m., Ovation, TV-MA). O Emily Blunt hosts “Saturday Night Live” (10:30 p.m., NBC, TV-14), featuring musical guest Bruno Mars. Cult choice O A prim governess (Deborah Kerr) fears two children have been possessed by evil spirits in “The Innocents” (7 p.m., TCM), the chilling 1961 adaptation of “The Turn of the Screw” by Henry James. Saturday series O A murder hits close to home on “Hawaii Five-0” (7 p.m., CBS, r, TV-14). O Buddy cops bond on “Lethal Weapon” (7 p.m. and 8 p.m., Fox, r, TV-14). Copyright 2014 United Feature Syndicate, distributed by Universal Uclick.

Dear Holding: Spouses hold a lot of sway over each other’s exercise routine. Start working out and there’s a good chance your wife will, too. Perhaps you could even suggest an activity you two can do together, such as tennis or bike riding. Check in with her about how she’s feeling emotionally and mentally. It’s important that she stay active, spend time with friends and embrace this new chapter in her life instead of mourning the empty nest. Dear Annie: I couldn’t help responding to the mother of the schoolchildren who bestow end-ofthe-school-year gifts on their teachers. She was upset that the instructors don’t send thank-you notes to her children for their thankyou gifts. It seems to me

JACQUELINE BIGAR’S STARS

For Saturday, Oct. 15: This year you often waffle between two conflicting ideas. If you are single, you will meet someone whom you find to be enticing and exciting. If you are attached, your significant other often acts in unanticipated ways. 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) ++++ A friend tries to calm the waters and help others gain a fresh perspective. Listen to this person. Tonight: Go for what you want. Taurus (April 20-May 20) +++ You could be overwhelmed by everything that is happening. You even might experience a sudden insight. Tonight: Not to be found. Gemini (May 21-June 20) +++++ You will want to bring people together for a fun event, but you have a lot to do. Tonight: Love where you are. Cancer (June 21-July 22) +++ You are able to accomplish a lot with frenetic energy upon you. Movement relaxes you when you feel tense. Tonight: Time to celebrate! Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) ++++ Reach out to someone at a distance. You might be baffled by this person’s strong reaction. Tonight: Off to the movies.

that would be a “thank you” for a “thank you,” and that is unnecessary. Her gifts might well be a genuine expression of sincere gratitude, but other parents may then one-up her for the sole purpose of trying to impress. The best way to show appreciation to teachers is to make sure homework is completed and turned in on time, pay your school lunch bill, send your children to school with their supplies, wellrested and clean, and support the rules of the district and classrooms. I’m certain the teachers gave her children hugs and big verbal thank-yous when they received the gifts. — A Wyoming Teacher — Send your questions for Annie Lane to dearannie@ creators.com.

jacquelinebigar.com

Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) ++++ You could notice a frantic type of energy around this person and a personal matter. Tonight: Opt for togetherness. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ++++ A friend or partner seems to be unusually demanding. Tonight: Go along with someone else’s desires if you want to keep the peace. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) +++++ How you say “no” to someone could define the quality of your interactions with this person for a while. Tonight: Happily let go of some stress. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) ++++ In many ways, you return at least for now to the person everyone loves and desires. Tonight: Let the fun begin. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) +++ Often you have to juggle far more than what most people can handle. Tonight: Expect a jolt. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) +++++ Consider insulating yourself from all the calls and requests that head your way. Tonight: Swap jokes with friends. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) +++ Remember that spontaneity can be good as well as bad. Your energy levels build as you view a changeable situation. Tonight: Count your change. — The astrological forecast should be read for entertainment only.

UNIVERSAL CROSSWORD Universal Crossword Edited by Timothy Parker October 15, 2016

ACROSS 1 South Pacific island group 6 Chases away, as a pest 11 Ambulance letters 14 Not fitting for a purpose 15 Loose fiber for caulking 16 “That feels good!” 17 Some ceramic pottery 19 Biochemistry abbr. 20 Lean 21 Communist leader, once 23 Abolitionists wanted to end it 27 Cal Ripken’s record was about one 28 Musk-secreting cats 29 Charitable organizations, often 31 Make reparations, e.g. 32 Three-toed animal with a snout 33 Shortening used in recipes? 36 Type of tape 37 Short choral composition 38 Catch ___ (begin to get) 39 Posh health resort 40 Murmured affectionately

41 Floorboard sound 42 Lives 44 Ship area, to a bo’s’n 45 On a train 47 Some patterned fabrics 48 Small woods 49 Your aunt’s little girl 51 Trash bag accessory 52 Use 58 Shuttle letters 59 Dreadlocked one, often 60 Like cheap red meat 61 One ___ person 62 “See you later, amigo” 63 Bowling scoring unit DOWN 1 Bring legal action 2 “Santa” trailer, geographically 3 Vandalize 4 Decide 5 Olympics VIP 6 Vito Corleone’s eldest 7 Atlanta hoopster 8 “All right” 9 Sharers’ word 10 Metal factory 11 Seriousmindedness 12 Craze 13 Meat cut

18 This puzzle’s theme 22 Long introduction of yore? 23 Quite a few 24 Showed sudden joy 25 Guacamole source, often 26 Blow off steam 27 Agitated state 29 Some are blind 30 Newspaper opinion piece 32 It helps to get the job done 34 Celery unit 35 Jabs 37 Indication of spoiled food 38 Dangerous whale 40 Where great ideas come from

41 Give an impression 43 Is no longer 44 Almanac tidbit 45 Behave badly 46 Capital of Idaho 47 “After the Bath” painter Edgar 49 Not yet final, at law 50 “What’s gotten ___ you?” 53 Cool, old-school 54 Place to drink up 55 In-flight info 56 Cash dispenser 57 Type of whiskey

PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER

10/14

© 2016 Universal Uclick www.upuzzles.com

LISTEN IN By Timothy E. Parker

10/15

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

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

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

JEYON FELUEY

ROVYAS

Yesterday’s

Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app

Exercise with wife who mourns the empty nest

| 5B

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

(Answers Monday) Jumbles: CURLY TOPAZ SANDAL COPPER Answer: To get to the summit of Mount Everest, climbers have to — PAY TOP DOLLAR

BECKER ON BRIDGE


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NON sEQUItUr

COMICS

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PLUGGErs

GArY BrOOKINs

fAMILY CIrCUs

PICKLEs hI AND LOIs

sCOtt ADAMs

ChrIs CAssAtt & GArY BrOOKINs

JErrY sCOtt & JIM BOrGMAN

PAtrICK MCDONNELL

ChrIs BrOwNE BABY BLUEs

DOONEsBUrY

ChArLEs M. sChULZ

DEAN YOUNG/JOhN MArshALL

MUtts

hAGAr thE hOrrIBLE

ChIP sANsOM/Art sANsOM

J.P. tOOMEY

ZIts

BLONDIE

BrIAN CrANE

stEPhAN PAstIs

shOE

shErMAN’s LAGOON

MArK PArIsI

JIM DAVIs

DILBErt

PEArLs BEfOrE swINE

Off thE MArK

MOrt, GrEG & BrIAN wALKEr

PEANUts GArfIELD

BIL KEANE

GrEG BrOwNE/ChANCE wALKEr

BOrN LOsEr BEEtLE BAILEY

L awrence J ournal -W orld

GArrY trUDEAU

GEt fUZZY

JErrY sCOtt/rICK KIrKMAN

DArBY CONLEY


INSIDE: CLASSIFIED ADS, 3C-6C.

Home & Garden

C

Lawrence Journal-World l Homes.Lawrence.com l Saturday, October 15, 2016

KERNELS THAT

POP Shutterstock Photo

Ornamental corn varieties are more than a pretty face Garden Variety

Jennifer Smith

E

very fall display needs a few dried corn stalks or a few ears of brightly colored, dried corn. The ears available now range from deep red to blue to white, or come with a range of colors on the same ear. Did you know the corn available for fall decorations is more than just a pretty face? There are many types of corn grown for consumption across the world, and so-called ornamental corn may fall into any

of the many categories of corn. Corn is most often grouped into five major groups: dent, flint, flour, popcorn and sweet corn. There are many varieties within each of the major groups. Dent corn is the most widely grown corn in the U.S. and is named for the dent or dimple that forms on the outer flat portion of each kernel. It is hard and starchy at harvest, and the bulk of it is used for livestock feed, ethanol production and for processing. A small portion goes into cereal, corn starch, corn

meal, oil and syrup. Dent corn is also called field corn and the kernels are typically golden. Flint corn, flour corn and popcorn are all also referred to as Indian corn and were all cultivated by Native Americans prior to European settlement. Popcorn is thought to be the oldest, and remnants of popcorn have been dated as far back as 3600 B.C. Flint corn is named for the hardness of the kernel when it is dry and comes in a wide range of colors that make it the most

popular choice for fall decorating. Flint corn is starchy but lacks the dent and has a longer shelf life than dent corn. For consumption, most varieties of flint corn are suited for making into hominy, grinding into flour or using as animal feed. Flour corn is softer than flint corn but also lacks the dent. It grinds uniformly, making it the best choice for flour and cornmeal. A few varieties can be eaten fresh like sweet corn.

> CORN, 2C

Showcase Homes OPEN SUNDAY 12:00 - 2:00 PM

OPEN SUNDAY 1:00 - 3:00 PM

232 Earhart Cir. Westwood Hills

5714 Villa Drive

Custom home w/special upgrades thru out. Extra featured rooms a library with french doors and the sunroom off the master bed. with fireplace. Beautiful entryway with wide staircase that leads up to an open loft, sitting area, 2 stylish bedrooms, full bath with dble sinks plus an unfin. bonus room off the butler staircase. Open floor plan with built-in speakers thru out. Upgrade lighting, custom shutters, Teak wd flrs and slate tile on the mn fl. Great kitchen! Master bath is a must see. Basement has wet bar. The garage could be converted to a 3 car tandem. $699,900

Offered by: MARY BETH TITUS 785-375-0742 PLATINUM REALTY mbtitus@realtor.com

Great opportunity for one level living at The Villas at Alvamar! Wonderful open concept with walk-in wet bar with wine refrigerator makes entertaining a breeze. All kitchen appliances remain. Cozy sun room off living room. Handicap accessible, storm shelter in master bedroom closet. Terrific neighborhood and private club house. Home is being sold “as is� but encourage inspections: pass/fail only. HOA dues paid quarterly.

Offered by:

Connie Friesen 766-3870


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HOME & GARDEN

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Saturday, October 15, 2016

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Connect electrical wires properly, safely W

hen it comes to electrical installations or repairs, properly connecting wires is one of the most important steps of the project. Choosing the best connector for the job and using it properly will ensure a successful and safe outcome. l Choose the right connector size. Every type of wire connector comes in a variety of sizes based on the size of the wires and the number of wires that are to be connected. The connector packaging will typically list the total number of wires of each wire gauge that the connector is designed to hold. l Strip the right amount of insulation from the end of the wires to be connected. Stripping too little wire will

Fix-It Chick

Linda Cottin create a faulty connection. Stripping too much can cause electrical arcing between the wires. The wire size and connector type will determine how much exposed wire is needed. Typically, half an inch of exposed wire is ideal. Strip enough insulation from the end of each wire to allow the wire to be fully inserted into the connector, but not

so much that bare wire is still exposed once the installation is complete. l Twist-on wire nuts work well for most installations. They come in a variety of sizes that work with single and multiple wires. Silicon-filled twist-on wire nuts are ideal for damp or wet locations. To use a twist-on wire nut, align the stripped tips of the wires and twist the wires together before twisting the wire nut into place over them. Wrap the entire assembly with electrical tape to ensure a safe and secure connection. l Choose crimp-on or solderless connectors to connect smaller-gauge, identically sized wires. Butt connectors are the most common type of crimp-on connector. Common butt connectors are used to con-

Popcorn is hard and starchy like flint corn, but its kernels explode when heated to become delicious, fluffy snacks. Commercial varieties of popcorn are white and yellow, but there are blue, red and multi-colored popcorns used for decoration that are still good for popping. One of the most popular varieties of corn used in fall decoration is a popcorn called Glass Gem. It has multicolored kernels that glisten like glass beads and pop into small dense flakes if heated. Sweet corn is the type of corn most commonly eaten by people and is a different species than the other described corns. It is available by the ear at farmers markets and grocery stores in midsummer in Kansas. Sweet corn is harvested before the sugar in the kernels turns to starch.

— Have a home improvement question for Fix-It Chick? Email it to Linda Cottin at hardware@ sunflower.com.

— Jennifer Smith is a former horticulture extension agent for K-State Research and Extension and horticulturist for Lawrence Parks and Recreation. She is the host of “The Garden Show.

LOAN TYPE Conv. FHA/VA Jumbo

2.625% + 0 (2.783%) Call For Rates Call For Rates

20 Yr. Fixed 10 Yr. Fixed Investment Loans Cashout Refinance Contruction Loans

2.750% + 0 (2.845%) APR Estimated monthly payment of $678.62 for 180 months

APR = Annual Percentage Rate

Capital City Bank

Capitol Federal® Savings

Visit Lawrence Mortgage Rates online onlineatathometownlawrence.com Homes.Lawrence.com

OTHER LOANS 3.375% + 0 (3.464%) Call For Rates Call For Rates

Conv. 3.500% + 0 (3.553%) APR Loan Amount $100,000 Estimated monthly payment (value of $125,000) of $449.04 for 360 months Real estate taxes and homeowners insurance may increase the monthly payment

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C

nect two wires together. There are connectors that work with three- and fourwire applications also. To use a butt connector, slip the stripped wire tips into opposite ends of the connector. Use a crimping tool or pliers to crimp the connector onto the wires. l Push-on block connectors are one of the simplest and safest wire connectors available. These square plastic connectors work easily with multiple size wires. Choose a block connector with two or more holes. Push one stripped wire tip into each hole for a safe and secure connection.

Lawrence Mortgage Rates LENDERLENDER AS OF 10/14/16

Corn

3.125% + 0 (3.248%) 2.500% + 0 (2.730%) Call For Rates Call For Rates Call For Rates

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION 330-1200 www.capcitybank.com 740 New Hampshire 4505A West 6th St 749-9050 capfed.com 1026 Westdale

Conv. FHA/VA

3.625% + 0 (3.695%) 2.875% + 0 (2.909%) 3.250% + 0 (4.758%/3.446%)

Rates for refinances may be higher

Conv. FHA/VA Jumbo

3.500% + 0 (3.569%) 3.375% + 0 (4.451%) 3.375% + 0 (3.464%)

2.875% + 0 (3.033%) 2.750% + 0 (3.545%) 2.750% + 0 (2.908%)

20 Yr. Fixed 10 Yr. Fixed

Conv. Jumbo FHA VA Jumbo

3.625% + 0 (3.742%) 4.000% + 0 (4.059%) 3.250% + 0 (4.121%) 3.250% + 0 (4.121%)

3.000% + 0 (3.200%)

Conv. Jumbo

Call For Rates Call For Rates

Call For Rates Call For Rates

Conv. FHA/VA Jumbo

3.375% + 0 (3.482%)

2.625% + 0 (2.682%)

Conv. FHA/VA Jumbo

3.500% + 0 (3.685%)

2.75% + 0 (3.079%) Please Call Please Call

5/1 ARM 10 & 20 Yr. HELC USDA

Please Call Please Call Please Call Please Call

Conv. Jumbo

3.500% + 0 (3.554%) Call for Rates

2.875% + 0 (2.971%) Call for Rates

20 Yr. Fixed 10 Yr. Fixed

3.375% + 0 (3.451%) 2.750% + 0 (2.890%)

Conv. FHA/ VA Jumbo

3.375% + 0 (3.412%) 2.625% + 0 (2.691%) 3.25%/3.25% + 0 (4.340%/3.559%) 3.875% + 0 (3.891%)

Conv. Jumbo

3.625 + 0 (4.116% APR) Please call 856-7878 ext 5037

3.125 + 0 (3.321% APR) Please call 856-7878 ext 5037

Please call 856-7878 ext 5037

97% Advantage Program: Please call for rates (credit score 660) 20 year: please call 15/30 Pricing options available

Conv.

3.250% + 0 (3.340%)

2.750% + 0 (2.912%)

20 Year Fixed Construction

3.000% + 0 (3.126%) 4.5%

Conv. Jumbo

3.625% + 0 (4.087%)

2.875% + 0 (3.265%)

FHA/VA/USDA

3.250% + 0 (4.568%/3.915%/4.332%) 3.375% + 0 (3.945%) 4.125% + 0 (4.532%)

Conv. FHA/VA Jumbo

3.375% + 0 (3.421%) 3.250% + 0 (4.104%) 3.375% + 0 (3.421%)

2.625% + 0 (2.706%)

Conv.

3.381% + 0 (3.426% APR)

2.613% + 0 (2.694% APR)

838-1882 www.centralnational.com

Central National Bank 3.375% + 0 (3.500%) 2.750% + 0 (2.979%)

865-4721 865-4721 www.commercebank.com www.commercebank.com 1500 Wakarusa Dr

Commerce Bank

Central Bank of the Midwest

865-1000 www.centralbankmidwest.net 300 W 9th St

3.375 + 0 (3.470%) FHA USDA/Rural Development

Call For Rates Call For Rates

Fairway Mortgage Corp. 3.125% + 0 (3.395%) Call

856-LOAN (5626) www.firstassuredmortgage.com 4830 Bob Billings Pkwy. Ste. 100A

Call Call

First Assured Mortgage Please Call Please Call

First State Bank & Trust

Great American Bank

Meritrust Credit Union

Mid America Bank Call

20 YR 30 YR

Pulaski Bank 2.625% + 0 (2.706%)

Truity Credit Union

University National Bank

312-6810 www.firststateks.com 3901 W. 6th St. 838-9704 www.greatambank.com 3500 Clinton Parkway

841-7152 841-6677 www.brian.banklandmark.com www.landmarkbank.com 2710 2710Iowa Iowa St St

Landmark National Landmark Bank Bank

3.625% + 0 (3.695%)

841-4434 www.fairwayindependentmc.com 4104 W. 6th St., Ste. B

10 Yr. Fixed 20 Yr. Fixed HELOC 97% 30 Yr Fixed Home Possible 30 Yr Fixed Rental

2.625% + 0 (2.706%) 3.250% + 0 (3.314%) 4.000% 3.750% + 0 (4.256%)

15 YR Investment 30 YR Investment 10 YR FIXED 20 YR FIXED VA 30, 15 YR

3.549% - APR 3.632% 4.172% - APR 4.22% 2.641% - APR 2.759% 3.028% - APR 3.091% Call For Rates

4.000% + 0 (4.012%)

856-7878 www.meritrustcu.org 650 Congressional Dr 841-8055 www.mid-americabank.com 4114 W 6th St. 856-1450 www.pulaskibank.com 3210 Mesa Way, Ste B 749-6804 www.truitycu.org 3400 W. 6th 841-1988 www.unbank.com 1400 Kasold Dr


L awrence J ournal -W orld

Saturday, October 15, 2016

| 3C

Home & Garden

SERVICES DIRECTORY

Call 832-2222

Classifieds@ljworld.com See your ad here for as little as $25 per week!

to Advertise!

We’re Your Residential & Commercial Roofing Experts

Service You Can Trust

FOR A CLEANER & HEALTHIER HOME

Over 30 years of experience within the roofing industry

1628 US 40, Lawrence, KS

1-800-STEEMER 785-841-8666

785-749-0462

Kastl Plumbing,

INC.

BUSINESS HOURS Mon-Fri: 8am - 5pm

4920 Legends Dr. Lawrence, KS 66049

3000 Iowa Street, Lawrence, KS 785-841-3838 FloorTraderLawrence.com

We Keep Lawrence Flowing

WITH OVER 66 YEARS’

EXPERIENCE

repairing and installing all major brands and styles of windows, Kennedy Glass is the undisputed local best.

AFTER HOURS Mon-Fri: 5pm - 7pm Sat: 8am - 12pm

(785) 841-2112

CARPET & FLOORS

730 New Jersey St. Lawrence, KS 66044

(785) 843-4416

VITO’S PLUMBING 785-865-0008 645 Locust Street, Lawrence, KS

1

It all begins with a Master Plan... Our Mission Is To Be The Best, Not The Biggest Nothing transforms your backyard like your very own swimming pool. Our expert staff can assist you in designing the perfect Swimming Pool and Landscape options to fit your yard, your style, and your budget.

810 Pennsylvania St. Lawrence, KS 913.645.3135

strangercreekpools.com

TRANSFORM YOUR

HOME

FOR EVERY SEASON!

Christmas Open House Friday, Saturday, Sunday

#

Store Hours: Mon - Fri: 10am - 6pm, Sat: 10am - 5:30pm, Sunday 12pm - 4pm (785) 856-2426 • 4931 W 6th St., Suite 120, Lawrence, Kansas

Time to Start thinking ABOUT WINTER!

Moving, Delivery, Storage for Lawrence, KS & the surrounding area

801 E 9th St, Lawrence, KS 785-312-0351 pdslawrence@yahoo.com www.pdsmoving.com

Hours: Mon-Sat 8am-7pm, Sun 8am-2pm

785-843-9211 • 913-712-0757

quality-electric.net • 1011 E 31st St • Lawrence, KS

McGrew is one of the few remaining major real estate firms in Kansas that is both locally owned and independent (not part of a national franchise). Decisions are made locally and quickly.

785.843.2055 We install the best and repair the rest!

WITH

CLEAN

Carpet cleaning Furniture Cleaning and Repairing, Wood Floor Care Tile and Grout Cleaning CARPET CARE Pet Treatment Locally-owned family business with Service GUARANTEES

BASIC

785-979-6851 to Request an Estimate

PROMPT SUPERIOR SERVICE

Having a properly installed, quality roof can save you tons on energy costs.

3514 Clinton Pkwy #426A Lawrence, KS 785-764-9582

MALLARD HOMES, INC.

Your Local Garage Door Experts You can trust Kansas’ best garage door experts and installers with your next door or repair.

3931 Sweetclover Contact Us Today: 785-842-1524 mallardhomeslawrence.com

Royal Cleaning

We Give Your Home A

Sewer Repair & Replacement

Sink Replacement & New Installation

Toilet Repair & Replacement

Shower & Bathtub Replacements

Sump Pump Replacements

And much more! SERVICE & REPAIR WATER HEATERS REMODELING

801 Comet Ln. Suite D Lawrence, KS 66049 actionplumbinglawrence.com

mallardhomeslawrence.com

Comprehensive Cleaning Solutions With help from our certified technicians, your carpets and upholstery will be thoroughly cleaned and refreshed.

Lawrence, KS | 785-842-3311 Topeka, KS | 785-266-1133 kansascarpetcare.com

Call for Greener, Healthier Cleaning

(785) 842-6264

Because Brighter is Better.

Heating & Air Conditioning Locally and Family Owned Since 1970

When You Need Us, We’re There! CALL TODAY 785-842-2258 www.cloudhvac.com

Clean Plumbers for your

Dirty Work!

• Garage Doors & Parts • Garage Door Openers • Service & Repairs

1100 E. 11th St., Suite B • Lawrence 785-842-5203 • www.FreestateDoors.com

Blue Duck Plumbing Call (785) 856-1152 anytime

Doing the job right the first time • Mini-splits

• Air Conditioners

• Ice Machines

• Furnaces

• Boilers

• Humidifiers

• Geothermal

• Heat Pumps

71 years experience in the heating and cooling business

Residential and Commercial Water Heater Installation & Repair

516 N. Blazing Star Contact Us Today: 785-842-1524

Refresh Your Home

CALL 785.841.COOL (2665)

The McGrew Difference

MALLARD HOMES, INC.

When you need the area's best electrical work, call on Quality Electric Inc.

There are a lot of options available when it comes to replacing an old furnace. Call us and we can show you what options are available for your system.

VISIT US ON FACEBOOK https://www.facebook.com/ rivercityheatingandcooling

785-749-4391

PDS - PROFESSIONAL DELIVERY SERVICES

CARPETS

October 21,22 & 23

785.843.5670

in the Region for Electrical Work

Serving Lawrence, KS and the surrounding areas

785.843.2244 1815 Bullene Avenue Lawrence, KS 66044 www.scott-temperature.com

provides a complete range of services for residential, small commercial, remodel, and new construction projects. (785) 423-4464 • kbpaintingllc.com

JASON TANKING CONSTRUCTION Construction with a new frame of mind

CONTACT JASON TODAY FOR YOUR FREE ESTIMATE! 785.749.0244

Our Mission

Hawk Wash Window Cleaning Inc. will contribute to a cleaner, more pleasant home or work environment by providing prompt, professional service at a fair price. We will consistently exceed customer Window Cleaning Inc. expectations through attention to detail on pleasant, courteous and trouble-free hawkwash.com service visits.

Hawk Wash

785.760.4066

jason@jasontankingconstruction.com jasontankingconstruction.com

Seasonal Business? See your ad here! Only $45 per week for 4 weeks! 785.832.2222 classifieds@ljworld.com

See YOUR Business Here for As Little As $25 Per Week! Call Nell 785.832.7265 Or Steve 785.832.7126


Saturday, October 15, 2016

jobs.lawrence.com

CLASSIFIEDS

PLACE YOUR AD:

785.832.2222

classifieds@ljworld.com

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

SERVICES TO PLACE AN AD: Antique/Estate Liquidation

785.832.2222

Decks & Fences Pro Deck & Design

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

Come in & Apply 645 New Hampshire, or call or email Joan: 816-805-6780, jinsco@ljworld.com

prodeckanddesign@gmail.com

Construction Frame Carpenters needed: Good Pay, Steady Work. Call Scott Jackson at

785- 331-6561

General Live-In Companion Free Room + Board, and $250 per week, to be an assistant and a companion to an elderly lady. House on a farm 3-4 miles from Eudora, with space for your own garden and animals. Call 785-746-8853 or 785-922-6715

New Warehouse/ Distribution Center Hiring in Gardner, KS All Shifts Available! $12.75 - $14.00 Get in on the ground floor and grow with the company! Requirements: • High School Diploma/GED • 1+ Year Warehousing/ Forklift Experience • PC-Computer Experience (Warehouse Management Software) • Ability to lift up to 50lbs throughout a shift • RF Scan Gun experience • Ability to work Flexible Schedule when needed

ARE YOU LOOKING FOR A STABLE WORK ENVIRONMENT? Lansing Correctional Facility is hiring in our Maintenance Department.

HIRING IMMEDIATELY!

Benefits include: Paid holidays, Paid vacation & sick leave, State supplemented health insurance, life insurance, and retirement plan. Starting Annual Salary is $38,513.00 which includes 10% pay differential and $0.30 per hour of trades differential. Lansing Correctional Facility, an adult male correctional facility, is hiring Facility Maintenance Supervisors who will supervise and train inmate workers in the care, maintenance and repair needs within a 125 acre physical plant. Also assigns tasks and inspects progress for timely completion of projects. Facilities Maintenance Supervisors needed in PLUMBING, ELECTRICAL, and GENERAL CONSTRUCTION

Drive for Lawrence Transit System, KU on Wheels & Saferide/ Safebus! Day & Night shifts. Flexible full & part-time schedules, 80% company paid employee health insurance for full time. Career opportunities. $11.50/hr after paid training. Age 21+ w. gooddriving record.

Contact: Carmen Maguire, LCF Recruiter 913-727-3235, Ext: 57022 P.O. Box 2, Lansing, KS 66043 EOE/VPE

Interview TIP #6

Be Smart JUST DON’T Bring pets Eat in our office Bring children Swear Lie Get angry Try to bribe us Be a pain (We’ve seen it all!)

The City of Eudora, KS seeks applicants for a full time Police Officer. Candidate must pass drug & physical screening, background check & psychological test. Valid DL & HS degree or GED req. Law Enforcement Certificate preferred. Salary $18.50/hr certified or $17.50/hr if not. Submit app or resume to City of Eudora, Attn: Pam, PO Box 650, Eudora, KS 66025, email to Pam Schmeck at pschmeck@cityofeudoraks.gov or www.cityofeudoraks.gov

THE RESALE LADY

Rich Black Top Soil No Chemicals Machine Pulverized Pickup or Delivery Serving KC over 40 years

Trade Skills

Carpentry

Foundation Repair Foundation & Masonry

Specialist

Commercial Electricians Oliver Electric is accepting applications for experienced Journeyman & Apprentice, for work in the Lawrence & surrounding area. Top wages/benefits.

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

Cleaning

For details please call:

(785) 748-0777 EOE.

Water Prevention Systems for Basements, Sump Pumps, Foundation Supports & Repair & more. Call 785-221-3568

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

785-312-1917

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

Insurance

FOUNDATION REPAIR Mudjacking, Waterproofing. We specialize in Basement Repair & Pressure Grouting. Level & Straighten Walls & Bracing on wall. BBB. Free Estimates Since 1962 Wagner’s 785-749-1696 www.foundationrepairks.com

Decisions Determine Destiny

NOTICES

New York Housekeeping Accepting clients for weekly, bi-weekly, seasonal or special occasion cleaning. Excellent References. Beth - 785-766-6762 STARTING or BUILDING a Business?

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

Guttering Services

785.832.2222

classifieds@ljworld.com

Providing top quality service and solutions for all your insurance needs.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Special Notices 66th Annual

Special Notices

Pancake & Sausage Supper

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

FIND IT HERE.

1724 N 692 RD Baldwin City, KS 66006 Serving 7 am - 10:30 am. Free will donation.

Lone Star Church of the Brethren 883 E. 800 Rd

Monday, October 17

5:00-8:00 PM

Whole hog sausage available for purchase in 1# packages. Info & questions: 785-865-7211

Family Tradition Interior & Exterior Painting Carpentry/Wood Rot Senior Citizen Discount Ask for Ray 785-330-3459 Interior/Exterior Painting Quality Work Over 30 yrs. exp.

Call Lyndsey 913-422-7002

STARTING or BUILDING a Business?

785-832-2222 classifieds@ljworld.com

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

Professional Organizing

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

Roofing

Seamless aluminum guttering.

785-842-0094

jayhawkguttering.com

Home Improvements

BHI Roofing Company

Mike McCain’s Handyman Service Complete Lawn Care, Rototilling, Hauling, Yard Clean-up, Apt. Clean outs, Misc odd jobs.

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

Call 785-248-6410

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

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

KansasTreeCare.com

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

albeil@aol.com

YARDBIRDS LANDSCAPING Tractor and Mowing Services. Yard to fields. Rototilling Call 785-766-1280

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

Craig Construction Co

Saturday, October 15 Vinland United Methodist Church

Call Al 785-331-6994

JAYHAWK GUTTERING

Family Owned & Operated 20 Yrs

MAPLE LEAF BREAKFAST Biscuits & Gravy

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

Landscaping

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

A.B. PAINTING & REPAIR

Plumbing

Lawn, Garden & Nursery

785-832-2222 classifieds@ljworld.com

Painting

Advertising that works for you!

Medicare Home Auto Business

Find Jobs & More Jobs.Lawrence.com

DO!

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

913-488-7320

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

Lawn, Garden & Nursery

Fully Insured 22 yrs. experience

Call Today 785-841-9538

Follow directions Be polite Turn off phone

YOUR NEXT APARTMENT IS READY.

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

Dirt-Manure-Mulch

FULL TIME POLICE OFFICER

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

Stacked Deck

913-962-0798 Fast Service

Government

Funny ‘bout Work

TO PLACE AN AD:

785-764-2323

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

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

ESTATE SERVICES • Estate sales • Organizing • Interior Stylist Debbie King

Home Improvements

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

Submit application and tax clearance on-line at www.jobs.ks.gov prior to close date.

We are an equal opportunity employer and all qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, national origin, disability status, protected veteran status, or any other characteristic protected by law.

Apply Mon.-Fri. 9:00 am - 3:00 pm 10651 Lackman Rd. Lenexa, KS 66219

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

Required: Five years experience in the mechanical or building trades. Education may be substituted for experience as determined relevant by the agency. Work hours: Monday - Friday 7:00 a.m.-3:00 p.m.

Apply online: lawrencetransit.org/ employment Or come to: MV Transportation, Inc. 1260 Timberedge Road Lawrence, KS

Temp-to-Hire positions: Warehouse Clerks, Material Handlers, and Forklift Operators $12-$14.00 Gardner, KS

Apply online at: prologistix.com Call 913-599-2626

Maintenance Supervisors

General

classifieds@ljworld.com

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)

Wednesday

O C T

October 26, 2016 11:30 AM - 2:30 PM P R E S E N T E D BY S H AW N E E J O B O P E N I N G S .C O M

Shawnee Civic Centre 13817 Johnson Dr.


L awrence J ournal -W orld

Saturday, October 15, 2016

MERCHANDISE PETS TO PLACE AN AD: AUCTIONS Auction Calendar ESTATE AUCTION 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!!

PUBLIC AUCTION SATURDAY, OCT. 22 10 AM 3.4m N of Globe, KS, on E 550 Rd. (643 E 550 Rd. Lawrence, KS. OR 8.5m E of Overbrook, KS. OR 7m W of Hwy Jct. 56 & 59 then North on E550.) JOHN, EVELYN & CHERYL MUSICK ESTATE EDGECOMB AUCTIONS785-594-3507 Les’s cell 785-766-6074 Kansasauctions.net/ Edgecomb edgecombauctions.com

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

MERCHANDISE Antiques 1800’s Welsh Cupboard Dark Tiger Oak (Used as a media cabinet) $ 500.00 Old Large Iron Sideboard with stone top $ 400.00

Call 785-979-8050

Appliances 1 Electric Clothes Dryers

Kenmore 220 V large capacity. $75 785-865-8059

1 Electric Clothes Dryers

Whirlpool 220 V large capacity. $75 785-865-8059

17 Cu. Ft Whirlpool Upright Freezer For Sale Like New $ 350 Call 785-842-3808 After 5 pm Apartment Size Refrigerator 785-865-8059

Bicycles-Mopeds Pet Mate Dog Crate 28” Long, 20” Wide. Cream color, Never used $ 25.00 Call 785-842-0214

SPECIAL!

10 LINES & PHOTO

7 Days $19.95 | 28 Days $49.95

classifieds@ljworld.com

Collectibles

Lawrence

Lawrence

Lawrence

Lawrence

Large Collection of HUMMEL FIGURINES Some old. $20 -any size. Also plates, books & calendars. 785-842-0293

BENEFIT SALE for the LAWRENCE COMMUNITY SHELTER

Garage Sale 610 N Pennycress Dr. Lawrence Friday, 10/14 • 4-7 pm Saturday, 10/15 8am-6pm

MASSIVE SALE HUGE MULTI-FAMILY *ROUND 3* As well as down sizing & moving sale after 43 years of marriage.

Multi-Family Garage Sale

Wizard of Oz memorabilia, couch, exercise bike, book shelves, books, few clothes, miscellaneous kitchen and home goods.

1821 E 1500th Rd (go to TeePee junction, 1st left is 1500 Rd, 1st house on left. Sale will be inside garage and huge shop) Fri. Oct 14th 8 AM - 5 PM Sat. Oct 15th 8AM - 5 PM Tools of all sorts, New motor oil, Galvanized nails, flower pots, nice kitchen pots & pans, dishes, tons of clothes All sizes both boys & girls, shoes baby to adult, more fishing items, Bikes, houseware and cooking wear, photo frames. Many antiques- including Desk, sewing machine and more. Yard tools. Much more cleaned out.

Friday 10/14 • 8-5 Saturday 10/15 • 8-12 The Eagles Lodge 1803 W. 6th

Food & Produce AMERICAN CHESTNUTS FOR SALE

(Buy a burger and beverage lunch from the Eagles on Friday!)

No spray, GMO free, $5 per lb. Pick up at downtown KC Farmers Market Saturdays, or at our farm. www.mychestnutsroasting onanopenfire.com 816-596-3936

100 Good Women is hosting this fundraiser sale with donated items from a recently closed resale boutique and other locally donated goods. • Quality baby - junior clothes • Men’s & Women’s clothes: size small to plus size • Baby equipment & toys • Collectibles • Household items & furniture • Kitchen goods and much more!

Furniture Couch dark green corduroy $50; Camel leather couch/great condition $350; free mauve fabric swivel rocker. Call for pictures. 785-840-5505 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

DOWNSIZING & REDECORATING SALE!!! 4608 TURNBERRY Lawrence FRIDAY EVENING OCT 14th 5 TO 7 P.M. SATURDAY MORNING -

Patio Table & 4 Chairs Very beautiful, sturdy, comfortable ~ ( reason is downsizing ) Was $ 350 ~ asking $ 60 ~ ( It was used 4 years ) Must see ~ $60 785-550-4142

OCT 15th 8:30 TO 10:30 A.M. Several great 6 X 9 rugs, small tables, pair night stands, chandelier, lamps, bed linens, office / art / crafting supplies, card table with 4 chairs, Lawnboy self propelled mower, mirrors, pictures, old posts, lots of miscellaneous. Several items from Ethan Allen, Nell Hill’s, Arhaus. Cash only.

Household Misc. For Sale: Computer Desk Metal 5’ X 30” Good Condition $5 Call 785-542-1147

Lawn, Garden & Nursery

DOWNSIZING 1409 Anthony Michael Dr. Lawrence Saturday October 15th @ 8:00

2010 Craftsman 21 hp Riding Lawn Tractor 46” Cut. Very good condition. $900 obo 785-424-3784

Medical Equipment FREE! Snug lid, bedliner, upper and lower billet grills for 2003+ Toyota Tacoma. You pick up and haul. Call 843-0689

Miscellaneous 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 For Sale: Canning Jars 3-Pints & 2-Quarts $4.00 per dozen Call 785-542-1147 Nora Roberts Readers 30 Books $ 7 Call 785-542-1147 Sponge Bob Halloween costume New Sponge Bob Square Pants toddler size 2-4 costume, retail $40. and Sponge Bob trick-or-treat bag, retail $8. $25 for all 785-615-9587

Music-Stereo

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

785-832-9906

GARAGE SALES

$25 Washer & Dryer (electric), Kenmore & Roper, good condition. $100. 785-764-4804

785.832.2222

Lawrence 3030 Riverview Road Lawrence Saturday, Oct 15 8 AM - 2 PM Antique sewing rockers, file cabinet, small safe, books, stuff. W of Lawrence Ave, N from Trail.

Building Materials Estate Sale in Topeka The Resale Lady Off Site Location 5602 SW Topeka Blvd Saturday, October 15 10-4pm Sunday, October 16 10-3pm

I

have ladies clothing, home decor, jewelry, books, florals, furniture, lamps, large mirror, games, everything in great condition just downsizing. Driveway Sale 3209 Yellowstone Dr (Off Kasold) Fri. Oct 14th 3 to 6 pm Sat Oct 15th 9 am to 1 pm Some Nice furniture, yard furniture, hand tools & junk. Different types of exercise equipment. Everything Goes !!!

Garage Sale 1408 E 27th ST Fri Oct 14th 12 pm to ?? Sat. Oct 15th 12 pm to ?? Weather permitting Cancel if raining. Oak table, patio tables, tools, chairs, metal computer desk, Survey Tripod, New Halloween costumes (adults and children’s) lots of knick knacks. Ping pong table, tool boxes, New fishing poles, New shop vac, Taylor Tot metal baby stroller, and lots of misc items. Garage Sale 2544 Scottsdale Sat. Oct. 15th 8 am to ?? No early birds !! Some baby clothes, toys, movies, misc, holiday, home decor, dolls, sleds and more. Garage Sale 4716 McCormick St Sat. Oct 15th 8 am to 2 pm Collectable ceramic roosters, beanie babies, electric heater, floor lamps, housewares, National Geographics, car magazines, games, R.C. cars, books, puzzles, 2 compound bows, 2 tree stands ( 1 single , 1 double), safety harnesses, metal twin bed, maps, old post cards, bee keeping suit and smoker, bag lawn chairs, 2 skill saws, collectable g lass insulators, adjustable post jacks, misc items. No early callers, Please.

GARAGE SALE SAT 10/15 8 AM NOON 4609 Roundabout Circle Portiable golf carrier, dresser, executive desk, glass computer desk, video games, baseball cards 1990 & 1991 complete sets, household items and decorations

Garage/Yard Sale 2914 Harper St. Lawrence 10/14 & 10/15 Fri 3pm-6pm & Sat 8am-??? There’s holiday décor, pictures, kitchen stuff, glassware, dishes, vacuum cleaners, New life jackets, fold-up outdoor chairs, ice chest, watches, jewelry & lots of knick-knacks. Some items new & in box. Everything is priced to sell …

Huge Garage/ Estate Sale 1951 N. 1100Rd Lawrence October 14th-16th 2016 8:00AM- 4:00PM

More families involved. Unlistable amount of misc. All Indoors! So rain or shine, No problem.

Multi-Family Sale 400 Settlers Dr Sat. Oct 15th 8 am to 1 pm Furniture, dressers, youth bed, toddler car seats, preemie infant girls clothing, 2T-3T boys clothing, boys youth medium -large Addidas/ Niki/ clothing/ shoes. Holiday items, household items, vintage linens, infant equipment, Antique Welsh Cupboard (used for a media cabinet).2003 Mercury Sable.

1705 E 30th St (Prairie Park) Sat. Oct. 15th 8 am - 1 pm Lots of Fall clothing Lots of Women’s shoes Lots of purses Coffee table ( new all wood rusted style) Very old end table from San Francisco (Mersma Brothers All Mahogany wood) Steven Madden black leather slip on size 8 blanket full size Cuisinart popcorn popper Blinds, fall decor New down pillows Memory foam cal king pillows Memory foam kitchen rugs Lots of garden stuffbird feeders bird houses Dishes with deep bowls (high end for low price) Chi flat iron-nearly new Newer coffee table, Vacuum Wooden high chair Antique ironing board (with original label) Ladies Home Journal pictures Large picture frames Dishes Modern lamps (New) AND LOTS MORE !!!!!!

Lawrence

One More Time! Multi-Generational Sale 2643 Arkansas St Lawrence Saturday, October 15 8:00-?? Unique and unusual items. Glassware, kitchen & decorative household items, furniture, golf clubs and more. All priced to sell! All day event.

Baldwin City GARAGE SALE 2001 College St Friday 10/14 & Saturday 10/15 8 am - 4 pm (go through the gate, last house on the hill) Leather coats, leather pants, new clothing, everything you need! Suitcases, a lot of misc, brush hog mower and more!

Linwood GARAGE SALE 312 Park St. Linwood Friday, Saturday, Sunday 8 AM - ?? Craftsman Power Washer, motor crane, table & chairs and much, much more!

Huge Garage Sale 13350 200th Street Linwood Thur & Fri 9 am-4pm Sat 9-noon

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

Pictures can be seen on our Facebook The Resale Lady Estate Sales

Perry ANNUAL CHURCH SALE 1255 Oak St Perry Oct 13,14,15 8 to 7 & Sat 8 - 12 CROSSROADS COWBOY CHURCH - Hwy 24 E of Perry (Williamstown). 2007 Honda Motorcycle, Joe Rocket jacket, Tourmaster saddlebags, Scorpion EXO helmet, Scalia Q2 Pro Intercom with bluetooth. Refridgerator, furniture. Fentonware, automatic Dog Feeders, Exercise Equipment. like new Western clothes, lots of nice clothing all genders & sizes, toys, household items.

PETS Pets Jack Russell cross Puppies: 8 weeks, 3 M & 2 Females. Weened, shots, and dewormed. Call for picture & price: 785-424-0915 or 913-886-3812 BORDER COLLIE PUPPIES Black & White $400 Up on Vaccinations & Rabies - Won’t need shots for 1 Yr! Two Males. 15 Wks old Call or text 785-843-3477- Gary Jennix2@msn.com

Kids toys and car seats Misc tools Furniture

Yard Sale 1508 E 21st Terr Lawrence Saturday Only! 10/15/2016 7 am to 2 pm

Overbrook MODA FABRIC SALE as low as $6-$7 per yard! Pre cuts also on sale

October 15-16

Yard Sale House and Barn full of 10 am - 4 pm furniture, jewelry, 25308 Chieftain Rd Deco plates, wmns clothes (Maple Leaf weekend) and collectaclothes, 1x/2x, men’s lrg sizes, Lawrence New releases available for bles! Halloween and weight bench, end table. Fri 10/14 Sat 10/15 $8.50 per yard Christmas decor, 4 sewsm fridge w/freezer, sm 7am till 2pm 414 E 700 Rd Overbrook,KS ing machines, sewing acdresser, Much more. Located 5 1/2 miles west cessories, embroidery & Antiques, mason jars and Yard Sale of Hwy 59/56 Junction on crafts. Vintage clothes: lids, Dish set, glassware, 1945 Vermont St. kids clothes, linens, Hwy 56 turn north on E700 hats, wigs, belts and Sat. Oct 15th books, artwork, bricks, Rd north 1 1/8 purses, and jewelry 8:30 am to 3 pm media cabinet, miles—Watch for signs. boxes. Lots of antiques: couch, If unable to attend feel porcelain figurines, col- Dining Table, Lamps, end Exercise bike, furniture, and much dishes, wheel chair, free to contact Carol at lectable plates, vases, ta- table, tools much more. Worth the books, magazines, lots of 785-633-2919 or ble linen & glassware. short drive. misc. items. Cash Only ! jwbrune@embarqmail.com Nice selection of crocks, oil lamps, wicker baskets and canning supplies. Old trunks, cameras, photo enlarger, cigar boxes, advertising items, posters, paintings, bottles, musical instrument cases, toys, games, sleds, kids antique tractor, wagons, wash tubs, primitives. Washer/dryer set, 3 refrigerators good for shop. Old tools, hardware & garGMC SUVs Nissan SUVs Chevrolet Cars dening tools, cast iron caldron, exercise equipment, tons of stuff under 2015 CHEVROLET a buck! Something for CAMARO 2SS everyone! Don’t miss this sale! High performance package, RS Package, Due to road closures / 2SS. 12k miles. Perfect construction, best route condition. 450HP. Yellow is south out of Lawrence with Black Stripes. Full on 59 Hwy or Haskell Ave warranty for 6 years / to N 1100 Rd then east to Nissan 2009 Murano SL, 100,000 miles. $39,000. Sale. Watch for signs. one owner, power 785-218-0685 equipment, power seat, erik@efritzler.com HUGE SALE OF Bose premium sound, WOMEN’S DESIGNER alloy wheels, all-wheel Pontiac 2009 Vibe drive CLOTHING one owner, fwd, Stk#316801 Friday & Saturday automatic, power equipment, cruise 9 am - 4 pm Only $9,855 control, fantastic 1552 N 1000 Road commuter car with Chicos, Lauren, Calvin Klein. Dale Willey 785-843-5200 great gas mileage! Sportswear, shoes, bookts, www.dalewilleyauto.com Stk#389951 purses, scarves & belts. Only $8,949.00 Some brand new - great

Maltese ACA Puppies 9 weeks old. These sweet little girls are waiting to meet you. Parents on premises. Vaccinated & wormed. 2 Females. $575 each Call or text 785-448-8440

Need an apartment? Place your ad at apartments.lawrence.com or email classifieds@ljworld.com

CARS

TO PLACE AN AD:

prices! 785-842-0293

Lots O’stuff! 2606 Jordan Lane Lawrence Saturday, 10/15 8 AM - 2 PM

Chevrolet 2003 Impala

V6, fwd, power equipment, cruise control alloy wheels, very affordable at $4250.00!

stk#13812A Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

(Rain date - 10/22) wrought iron cafe table w/2 chairs, 2-shelf wood bk case, holiday decor/wreaths, home office, costume jewelry, misc kitchen/bath, linens, toys

Subscribe Today for the latest news, sports and events from around Lawrence and KU.

Chevrolet Trucks

785.832.2222

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

classifieds@ljworld.com

4wd, power equipment, alloy wheels, steering wheel controls, low miles, stk#300922 Only $16,415.00 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Dodge Vans

Toyota 2007 Avalon Limited heated & cooled leather seats, sunroof, power equipment, JBL sound system, navigation, alloy wheels and more! Stk#537861 Only $11,415.00 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Toyota Trucks

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

Mercury Cars 2009 PONTIAC G8 BASE One owner locally owned car! Leather heated seats, alloy wheels, Blaupunkt stereo, very sharp and well taken care of, all service work performed here!! Stk#373891

Only $13,855

Honda 2011 CRV SE

Toyota SUVs

Pontiac Cars

Mercury 2008 Grand Marquis GS power equipment, great room, very comfortable and affordable. Stk#45490A1

Only $7,877 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Nissan Cars

1979 Toyota Pickup SR5 One Owner - 145,500 miles - 20R Engine - Mint conditioned cab - New Battery Camper Top - Tailgate Included - Typical Rust Damage. $1500. 785-342-1448

Volkswagen Cars

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

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

Toyota Cars

2nd floor will now be open. Antique non electric pinball games, 200+ salt & pepper shakers, array of antique to vintage dolls including Shirley Temple, Cabbage Patches (in box & out of box), women’s clothing, Halloween decor, costumes & accessories, tools antique decor, collectible baseball cards, kitchen & household items, mid-century furniture and more

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Buick 2007 Lucerne CXL leather power seats, alloy wheels, On Star, steering wheel controls, all of the luxury that you expect from Buick and only $7,250.00 stk#149301 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Ford 2004 Explorer XLT

LJWorld.com/Subscribe or call 785-843-1000

4wd, running boards, tow package, alloy wheels, power equipment, stk#122401 only $7,855.00 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Nissan 2011 Sentra SR Fwd, power equipment, alloy wheels, spoiler, low miles Stk#101931

Only $10,455 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Ford 2002 Thunderbird Convertible leather, alloy wheels, power equipment, and lots of fun!! Stk#351433 Only $12,877.00 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

SELLING A MOTORCYCLE? 7 Days - $19.95 28 Days - $49.95 Doesn’t sell in 28 days? + FREE RENEWAL!

CALL TODAY!

785-832-2222


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Saturday, October 15, 2016

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L awrence J ournal -W orld

RENTALS REAL ESTATE TO PLACE AN AD:

Duplexes

Townhomes

2BR in a 4-plex

3 BR w/2 or 2.5 BA

New carpet, vinyl, cabinets, countertop. W/D is included.

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

RENTALS Apartments Unfurnished

classifieds@ljworld.com

785.832.2222

grandmanagement.net Equal Housing Opportunity.

DOWNTOWN LOFT Studio Apartments 825 sq. ft., $880/mo. 600 sq. ft., $710/mo. No pets allowed Call Today 785-841-6565

785-865-2505

785-865-2505

Townhomes

grandmanagement.net

Baldwin City

advanco@sunflower.com



LAUREL GLEN APTS

Some with W/D, Water & Trash Paid, Small Pet

2BR, 2 bath, fireplace, CA, W/D hookups, 2 car with opener. Easy access to I-70. Includes paid cable. Pet under 20 lbs. allowed

EOH

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All Electric

2 Bedroom Units Available Now!

785-838-9559 

3+ BR, 2 BA, House, 1001 Bluestem, Baldwin City, KS, 12 months lease, Single family ranch style home on a partially finished basement w/ a poss 4th br. Fully remodeled in 2013. W/D hook-ups. No smoking or pets. $1200.00, 785-615-1552.

Lawrence

CODY PLAZA APTS Spacious 1 BR Apartment $600 / month, All Utilities Pd, Off Street Parking, On Site Laundry, Seniors Welcome, On the River In Historic Downtown Leavenworth, Under New Ownership 913-651-2423 OR 816-550-4546

an order and decree of the Court that they be permitted and authorized to adopt D.U. be made and entered by the Court; and that they have all other proper relief; THEREFORE, you are notified that any objections shall be filed on or before the 28th day of November, 2016 at 4:30 p.m., at which time and place the cause will be heard in the Division VI Courtroom of the Judicial & Law Enforcement Center, 111 East 11th Street, Lawrence, Kansas. Should you fail to file any objections or appear in opposition thereto, judgment and decree will be entered in due course upon said Petition.

Office Space DOWNTOWN OFFICE 1,695 Flexible Sq Ft Conference Room Access Customer Parking 2 Reserved Parking Spots $1,400 Monthly Rent 211 E 8th Charlton - Monley Bldg 785- 865-8311 Downtown Office Space Single offices, elevator & conference room, $725. Call Donna or Lisa

785-841-6565

785.832.2222

legals@ljworld.com

Lawrence

Lawrence

Lawrence

Lawrence

(First published in the Lawrence Daily JournalWorld, October 15, 2016)

heirs, executors, administrators, devisees, trustees, creditors, and assigns of any deceased defendants; the unknown spouses of any defendants; the unknown officers, successors, trustees, creditors, and assigns of any defendants which are existing, dissolved, or dormant corporations; the unknown executors, administrators, devisees, trustees, creditors, successors, and assigns of any defendants who are or were partners or in partnership; the unknown guardians, conservators, and trustees of any defendants who are minors or are under any legal disability; and the unknown heirs, executors, administrators, devisees, trustees, creditors, and assigns of any person alleged to be deceased. Defendant

And all personal property, equipment and fixtures located upon any of the above described tract of real property and used or usable in connection with the oil and gas operations thereon.

YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that a Petition has been filed in the above-named Court by Darren Jay Flory and Jennifer Lou Flory, praying for an order and decree of the Court that they be permitted and authorized to adopt S.U. be made and entered by the Court; and that they have all other proper relief; THEREFORE, you are notified that any objections shall be filed on or before the 28th day of November, 2016 at 4:30 p.m., at which time and place the cause will be heard in the Division VI Courtroom of the Judicial & Law Enforcement Center, 111 East 11th Street, Lawrence, Kansas. Should you fail to file any objections or appear in opposition thereto, judgment and decree will be entered in due course upon said Petition.

VEHICLE AUCTION Unclaimed Vehicle Auction Open to the Public Pursuant to K.S.A. 8/1102 and K.S.A. 58-211 the following vehicle will be sold at public auction on Saturday, October 29, 2016 8 AM unless claimed by the owner and all tow and storage charges are paid in full. Vehicles can be inspected at: DIY Auto Repair 11509 Strang Line Rd, Olathe, KS 66062.

Terms of Auction: All sales are final. No refunds. All sales are “as is” and there are no guarantees or warranties expressed or implied. The paperwork to obtain a new title will cost $80.00 per vehicle. Case No. 16 CV 000396 There is no guarantee paPursuant to K.S.A. perwork will obtain a new Chapter 60 title for you in your state. TITLE TO REAL Please check with the DeESTATE INVOLVED partment of Motor Vehicles in your state for deNOTICE OF SUIT tails. You must agree to all state disclosures. Nationwide Transportation THE STATE OF KANSAS TO of vehicles can be ar- THE ABOVE-NAMED DEranged. FENDANTS, AND ALL OTHER PERSONS WHO ARE OR 2008 Dodge Magnum SW MAY BE CONCERNED: 2D4FV37V28H160180 Kristopher Aaron Riley & You are hereby notified Strategic Finance LLC that a Petition has been filed in the District Court of ________ Douglas County, Kansas, (First published in The by Midstates Energy InLawrence Daily Journal- vestments V, LLC, praying World October 1, 2016) for an order quieting the title to the following deIN THE DISTRICT COURT OF scribed real property, and DOUGLAS COUNTY, oil and gas leases and also KANSAS the personal property located thereon: Midstates Energy Oil and gas lease dated Investments V, LLC, July 19, 1983 and recorded Plaintiff, in Book 364, Page 1023 from Wiseman Farms, et vs. al. as lessor to Kansas Land Investments, Inc. as Kansas Land Investments, lessee, covering the folInc., Brown Bear Energy, lowing described real Inc., E. Griffy III & M. Jane property: Insofar as said Griffy, Stanley and Barbara lease covers the following Schwartz, Dan D. Hays and described land in Douglas Cheryl J. Hays, Dave J. County, Kansas: Parcel 3 Schwartz, Meyer Schwartz, in the Southeast Quarter Hugh B. Preston, Helmut (SE/4) of Section Ten (10), Stern, Seymour Gussack, Township Fourteen (14) James Ike Bennett, Bernie South, Range Twenty (20) Shepley, Ira O. Pollock, East of the 6th P.M. as M.D., Inc., M&M Trust, Inc., shown in Plat of Survey Virginia D. Pollock, Sharon dated April 17, 2006 reF. Bennet, Madeline corded at Book 1005, Page Schwartz Irrevocable 1272, containing 72.51 acTrust, Mietchen Children’s res, more or less Trust and the unknown

The Petition further seeks an order holding the plaintiff, Midstates Energy Investments V, LLC, to be the owner of the all of the working interest in and to the oil and gas lease described above, free of all right, title and interest of the above-named defendants, and all other persons who are or may be concerned, and that they and each of them have abandoned the oil and gas leases and they are forever barred and foreclosed of and from all right, title, interest, lien, estate or equity of redemption in or to the above described oil and gas leases, or any part thereof. __________________ Jennifer Flory, You are hereby required to Adoptive Mother plead to said Petition on or before November 14, 2016, Prepared by: in said Court, Douglas Thomas Law, LLC County, Kansas. Should you fail therein, judgment By: __________________ and decree will be entered Jennifer A. Thomas in due course upon said No. 25634 Petition. 708 W. 9th Street, Suite 107 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 /s/Midstates Energy (785) 856-5151 Investments V, LLC jenniferthomas.law@gmail. Keith A. Brock, com #24130 ATTORNEY FOR ADOPTIVE ANDERSON & BYRD, LLP PARENTS 216 S. Hickory, P. O. Box 17 ________ Ottawa, Kansas 66067 (First published in the (785) 242-1234, telephone Lawrence Daily Journal(785) 242-1279, facsimile World October 15, 2016) kbrock@andersonbyrd .com IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF Attorneys for Plaintiff DOUGLAS COUNTY, _______ KANSAS (First published in the Lawrence Daily JournalIn the Matter of World October 15, 2016) the Adoption of D.U. IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF A Minor Child DOUGLAS COUNTY, D.O.B. 07/29/2003 KANSAS PURSUANT TO CHAPTER 60 In the Matter of the Adoption of S.U. A Minor Child D.O.B. 01/06/2000 PURSUANT TO CHAPTER 60 Case No. 2001-AD-24 Division: VI NOTICE OF SUIT AND HEARING THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL PARTIES CONCERNED:

785.832.2222 Lawrence

__________________ Jennifer Flory, Adoptive Mother Prepared by: Thomas Law, LLC By: __________________ Jennifer A. Thomas No. 25634 708 W. 9th Street, Suite 107 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 (785) 856-5151 jenniferthomas.law@gmail. com ATTORNEY FOR ADOPTIVE PARENTS ________

Arthur A. Fink, Carrie A. Nash, Jane Doe, and John Doe, et al., Defendants Case No. 16CV387 Court No. 19 Title to Real Estate Involved Pursuant to K.S.A. §60 NOTICE OF SUIT STATE OF KANSAS to the above named Defendants and The Unknown Heirs, executors, devisees, trustees, creditors, and assigns of any deceased defendants; the unknown spouses of any defendants; the unknown officers, successors, trustees, creditors and assigns of any defendants that are existing, dissolved or dormant corporations; the unknown executors, administrators, devisees, trustees, creditors, successors and assigns of any defendants that are or were partners or in partnership; and the un-

Lawrence

Lawrence

NOTICE OF SUIT known guardians, conserJudicial & Law EnforceAND HEARING vators and trustees of any ment Center, 111 East 11th defendants that are Street, Lawrence, Kansas. minors or are under any THE STATE OF KANSAS TO Should you fail to file any legal disability and all ALL PARTIES CONCERNED: objections or appear in opother person who are or position thereto, judgment YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI- and decree will be entered may be concerned: FIED that a Petition has in due course upon said filed in the Petition. YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED been Court by __________________ that a Petition for Mort- above-named gage Foreclosure has Darren Jay Flory and Jenni- Jennifer Flory, been filed in the District fer Lou Flory, praying for Adoptive Mother Court of Douglas County, an order and decree of the Kansas by Federal Na- Court that they be permit- Prepared by: tional Mortgage Associa- ted and authorized to Thomas Law, LLC tion (“Fannie Mae”), pray- adopt N.U. be made and ing for foreclosure of cer- entered by the Court; and By: __________________ tain real property legally that they have all other Jennifer A. Thomas No. 25634 proper relief; described as follows: THEREFORE, you are noti- 708 W. 9th Street, Suite 107 THE SOUTH 25 FEET OF THE fied that any objections Lawrence, Kansas 66044 EAST 165 FEET OF LOT 4, shall be filed on or before (785) 856-5151 LESS THE EAST 40 FEET the 28th day of November, jenniferthomas.law@gmail. THEREOF; AND THE 2016 at 4:30 p.m., at which com NORTH 25 FEET OF THE time and place the cause ATTORNEY FOR ADOPTIVE EAST 165 FEET OF LOT 5; will be heard in the Divi- PARENTS ________ LESS THE EAST 40 FEET sion VI Courtroom of the THEREOF; IN BLOCK 3, IN SOUTH LAWRENCE, AN (First published in the Lawrence Daily Journal-World ADDITION TO THE CITY OF October 15, 2016) LAWRENCE, DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS. Tax ID IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF JACKSON COUNTY, No.: U03421-01 Commonly KANSAS known as 1925 Kentucky St., Lawrence, KS 66046 IN THE INTEREST OF: (“the Property”) Name Kyle Sides Case No. 2016-JC-000035 MS176893 DOB xx /xx / 2013 A male

for a judgment against defendants and any other interested parties and, unless otherwise served by personal or mail service of summons, the time (First published in the in which you have to Lawrence Daily Journal- plead to the Petition for World on October 1, 2016) Foreclosure in the District Court of Douglas County IN THE DISTRICT COURT Kansas will expire on NoOF DOUGLAS COUNTY, vember 14, 2016. If you KANSAS fail to plead, judgment and decree will be enCIVIL DEPARTMENT tered in due course upon the request of plaintiff. Federal National Mortgage Association MILLSAP & SINGER, (“Fannie Mae”) LLC Plaintiff, By: vs.

legals@ljworld.com

and Name Kaydence Sides DOB xx /xx /2011 A female

Case No. 2016-JC-000036

NOTICE OF HEARING-Publication Pursuant to K.S.A. 38-2237 TO: James Klesath 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). A hearing on the petition is scheduled for the Thursday, November 3, 2016, at 9:30 AM. At the hearing the Court _____________________ may issue orders relating to the care, custody and conChad R. Doornink, #23536 trol of the child(ren). The hearing will determine if the cdoornink@msfirm.com parents should be deprived of their parental rights and 8900 Indian Creek Parkthe right to custody of the child(ren). way, Suite 180 The parent(s), and any other person having legal cusOverland Park, KS 66210 tody are required to appear before this Court on the (913) 339-9132 date and time shown, or to file your written response to (913) 339-9045 (fax) the petition with the Clerk of the District Court prior to that time. Failure to respond or to appear before the By: Court at the time shown will not prevent the Court from _____________________ entering judgment as requested in the petition, finding Garrett M. Gasper, #25628 that the child is a Child in Need of Care, removing the ggasper@msfirm.com child from the custody of parent, parents or any other Aaron M. Schuckman, present legal custodian until further order of the Court, #22251 or finding the parents unfit, and entering an order peraschuckman@msfirm.com manently terminating the parents’ parental rights. 612 Spirit Dr. An attorney has been appointed as guardian ad litem St. Louis, MO 63005 for the child: Christopher T. Etzel, Attorney at Law, P.O. (636) 537-0110 Box 23, Onaga, KS 66521; Telephone: 785-889-4192. (636) 537-0067 (fax) You have the right to appear before the Court and be ATTORNEYS FOR PLAINTIFF heard personally, either with or without an attorney. ________ The Court will appoint an attorney for any parent who desires an attorney but is financially unable to hire one. (First published in the The Court may order one or both parents to pay child Lawrence Daily Journalsupport. An attorney has been appointed for you: Call World October 15, 2016) the Jackson County District Court, Holton, Kansas, at 785-364-2191, and an attorney will be appointed for you. IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, Date and time of hearing: Thursday, November 3, 2016, KANSAS at 9:30 AM In the Matter of the Adoption of N.U. A Minor Child D.O.B. 09/10/2000 PURSUANT TO CHAPTER 60 Case No. 2002-AD-58 Division VI

Place of hearing: Jackson County District Court, Courthouse, 3rd floor, Holton, KS 66436 —————————————————— Clerk/Judge of the District Court ________

Lawrence Humane Society

ADOPT-A-PET

lawrencehumane.org • facebook.com/lawrencehumane 1805 E. 19th St • Lawrence, KS 66046 • 785.843.6835

Case No. 2006-AD-33 Division: VI NOTICE OF SUIT AND HEARING THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL PARTIES CONCERNED: YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that a Petition has been filed in the above-named Court by Darren Jay Flory and Jennifer Lou Flory, praying for

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Religious Directory

AFRICAN METHODIST EPISCOPAL

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

ASSEMBLY OF GOD

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

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

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

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

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

BAHA’I FAITH Baha’i Faith

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

BAPTIST

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

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

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

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

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

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

BAPTIST - INDEPENDENT Heritage Baptist Church

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

BAPTIST - SOUTHERN

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

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

First Southern Baptist Church

BIBLE

CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER-DAY SAINTS

Lawrence Bible Chapel

Lawrence University Ward (Student)

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

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

BUDDHIST

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints

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

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

CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE

CATHOLIC

Lawrence First Church of the Nazarene

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

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

Corpus Christi Catholic Church

Lawrence Community of Christ

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

EVANGELICAL FREE CHURCH OF AMERICA Christ Community Church

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

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

Islamic Center Of Lawrence

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

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

CHURCH OF THE BRETHREN

JEHOVAH’S WITNESSES

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

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

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

Good Shepherd Lutheran Church

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

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

Trinity Lutheran Church

1245 New Hampshire St. 785-843-4150 The Rev. Brian Elster, Lead Pastor Sunday 8:30 & 11:00 am www.tlclawrence.org

CHURCH OF GOD

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

Immanuel Lutheran Church

2104 Bob Billings Pkwy (785) 843-0620 Pastor Randy Weinkauf Worship w/ Holy Communion 8:30 (ASL sign.) & 11:00am ASL Signing lesson 9:35 am Sun. School & Christian Ed 9:45am Nursery Available & Wheelchair Accessible Ministry to Blind Outreach 3 Thur. 5:30pm www.immanuellawrence.org

Calvary Church Of God In Christ

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

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

Victory Bible Church

Praise Temple Church of God in Christ

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

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

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

Redeemer Lutheran Church

2150 Haskell Ave

ACADEMY CARS

Brian D Robb Phone: 785-843-3953

1527 W. 6th Street Lawrence, KS 66044

2815 West 6th

843-1878

2084 N 1300th RD, Eudora KS 66025 785-542-3200 | eudoraumc@gmail.com Sunday Contemporary Praise Worship 9AM Classic Traditional Worship 10:45AM Christian Ed/Sunday School Classes 10AM Childcare for children 4 and under during worship. www.eudoraumc.com

First United Methodist Church

704 8th Street, Baldwin Rev. Paul Babcock Sunday School each Sunday 9:30 am Traditional Worship 8:30 am Contemporary Worship 10:45 am Combined Worship 10:45 last Sunday month

First United Methodist Church

Ives Chapel United Methodist

785-841-0102 For The People is a registered trademark of Scend, LLC

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when you bring us your bulletin! OPEN 24 hours

Marks Jewelers. 817 Mass. 843-4266

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

Stull United Methodist Church

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

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

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

West Side Presbyterian Church

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

PRESBYTERIAN-EVANGELICAL

Lawrence Life Fellowship

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

Morning Star Church

RELIGIOUS SOCIETY OF FRIENDS

911 Massachusetts Basement below Kinkos 785-838-9093 Gabriel Alvarado Worship 10:30 am AWANA, Wednesday, 6:00 998 N 1771 Rd. 785-749-0023 Pastor John McDermott Worship 9:00 am & 11:00 am www.msclawrence.com

Mustard Seed Church

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

New Life In Christ Church

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

New Hope Fellowship

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

The Salvation Army

946 New Hampshire St. 785-843-4188 Lts. Matt & Marisa McCluer Sun. School 9:30 am, Worship 10:45 am lawrence.salvationarmy.us

United Light Church 1515 West Main Street Lawrence, KS 66044 785-393-3539

Hesper Friends Church

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

Oread Meeting

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

Tonganoxie Evangelical Friends Church

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

SPIRIT-FILLED Faith, Hope, & Love

2004 E. 23rd St. Lawrence, KS Pastor Hugh & Mary Ellen Wentz Sunday Worship 10:30 am

UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST Congregation of Lawrence

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

UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST - UCC

Plymouth Congregational Church, UCC

Velocity Church

fresh. modern. relevant. 940 New Hampshire, Lawrence, KS Meeting at Lawrence Arts Center Sundays 9:00 am,10:15 am & 11:30 am www.findvelocity.org

Vintage Church

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

ORTHODOX - EASTERN

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

REFORMED-PRESBYTERIAN

Christ Covenant Reformed Presbyterian Church

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

PRESBYTERIAN - USA

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

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

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

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

UNITY

Unity Church of Lawrence

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

WESLEYAN

Lawrence Wesleyan Church 3705 Clinton Parkway 785-841-5446 Pastor Nate Rovenstine Worship 9:30am, 11:00am lawrencewesleyan.com

RETURN WITH LOVE

Called to Greatness Ministries P.O. Box 550 Lawrence KS 66044 785-749-2100 info@calledtogreatness.com www.calledtogreatness.com

Christ International Church

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

Sunday Worship - 10:30 AM Friday Fellowship - 7:00 PM 2211 Silicon Ave Lawrence, KS 66046 www.lcec.org

City Church Lawrence 2518 Ridge Ct #207 (785) 840-8568 citychurchlawrence.org Pastor, Shaun LePage

Country Community Church

878 Locust St Lawrence 913-205-8304 Pastor, John Hart Sun. School 9 am, Fellowship 10 am, Worship 10:30 am 1387 N. 1300 Rd. Lawrence, KS 66046 785-393-6791 www.eaglerocklawrence.com Sundays at 10:00 am

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A Plus Automotive

Westside 66 & Car Wash

297 E. 2200 Rd. Eudora 785-883-2130 Rev. Kathy Symes Worship 9:00am Sunday School 10:30am

Eagle Rock Church

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

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

Clearfield United Methodist Church

Lawrence Christian Center

First Presbyterian Church

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

Lawrence Chinese Evangelical Church

LUTHERAN - MISSOURI SYNOD

CHURCH OF GOD IN CHRIST

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

Family Church Of Lawrence

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

NON-DENOMINATIONAL

LUTHERAN - ELCA

Southside Church of Christ

Centenary United Methodist Church

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

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

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

96 Highway 40 * 785-887-6823 Lou Davies, Pastor Worship 9:30 AM Sunday School 10:45 AM Contemporary call for information www.bigspringsumc.org

Worden United Methodist Church

K U Hillel House

Church Of Christ of Baldwin City

Big Springs United Methodist Church

Lecompton United Methodist Church

Lawrence Jewish Community Congregation

Church Of Christ

METHODIST - UNITED

River Heights Congregation

Chabad Center for Jewish Life

CHURCH OF CHRIST

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

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

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

1000 Kentucky Street 785-843-0679 www.fcclawrence.org Sr. Pastor Dr. David Pendergrass Sunday 9am & 11am

Lawrence Indian Methodist Church

Southern Hills Congregation

JEWISH

First Christian Church

Lawrence Free Methodist Church

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

1018 Miami St Baldwin City (785) 594-6555 Pastor Jeni Anderson Sunday Worship 11:00 am Church School 9:45 am

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

CHRISTIAN CHURCH DISCIPLES OF CHRIST

METHODIST

Downtown 946 Vermont St. Rev. Dr. Tom Brady Pastor Traditional 10:30 am Contemporary 9:30 am West Campus 867 Highway 40 9:00 am & 11:00 am www.fumclawrence.org

ISLAMIC

Perry Christian Church

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

Eudora United Methodist Church

Trinity Episcopal Church

CHRISTIAN

Peace Mennonite Church

1501 Massachusetts St 785-843-7066 Pastor Piet Knetsch Sun. School 9:30am * Worship 10:45am www.centralumclawrence.org

St. Margaret’s Episcopal Church

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

MENNONITE

Central United Methodist Church

EPISCOPAL

St. John Evangelist Catholic Church

Contact: scooper@ljworld.com 785-832-7261 before 5:00pm Thursday

open daily

609 Massachusetts (785) 843-8593

Photograph: Chanwit Ohm©

Why did a G-d who hates evil create a world where evil can take charge of a human being? Only so that this human being would be driven yet higher than could ever be reached without sin. Return from fear, and the sin has not accomplished its goal. It is a wasted sin. Return from love, and the night has found its day. It has driven you higher. ~ Likutei Sichot vol. 17, pg. 190 Daily Thought: www.chabad.org

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841-4722

PO Box 460, Eudora David G. Miller, CLU

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Carpet Cleaning 785-841-8666

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Dale & Ron’s Auto Service 630 Connecticut

785-842-2108

Keith Napier Financial Advisor

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Action Plumbing P.O. Box 1051

(785) 843-5111 3200 Iowa St • 785-749-5082 Ace Steering & Brake Since 1963

ALIGNMENTS COMPLETE BRAKE SERVICE SUSPENSION SPECIALISTS Danny Easum Andy Easum 541 Minnesota Street Lawrence, KS acesteering.com 785-843-1300

Kastl Plumbing Inc. 841-2112

KASTL

1115 Massachusetts www.fuzzystacoshop.com

- 843-5670


8C

|

WEATHER

.

Saturday, October 15, 2016

L awrence J ournal -W orld

DATEBOOK

Family Owned.

TODAY

SUNDAY

MONDAY

TUESDAY

WEDNESDAY

Clouds breaking and breezy

Warm with lots of sun

Mostly sunny and breezy

Sunny and not as warm

Mostly sunny

High 78° Low 65° POP: 5%

High 83° Low 68° POP: 10%

High 88° Low 58° POP: 5%

High 76° Low 49° POP: 10%

High 69° Low 49° POP: 15%

Wind SSW 10-20 mph

Wind S 10-20 mph

Wind SSW 12-25 mph

Wind NNW 8-16 mph

Wind NE 6-12 mph

POP: Probability of Precipitation

McCook 86/45 Oberlin 86/46

Clarinda 76/60

Lincoln 78/52

Grand Island 80/50

Kearney 83/50

Beatrice 79/56

Centerville 74/63

St. Joseph 80/63 Chillicothe 78/66

Sabetha 77/61

Concordia 82/57

Kansas City Marshall Manhattan 78/67 80/68 Salina 82/60 Oakley Kansas City Topeka 86/61 86/48 81/65 Lawrence 80/66 Sedalia 78/65 Emporia Great Bend 82/68 82/64 88/54 Nevada Dodge City Chanute 81/67 90/52 Hutchinson 82/67 Garden City 85/62 90/45 Springfield Wichita Pratt Liberal Coffeyville Joplin 81/65 84/65 84/58 92/49 81/67 83/66 Hays Russell 83/50 84/53

Goodland 86/44

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

LAWRENCE ALMANAC

Through 8 p.m. Friday.

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

70°/50° 68°/46° 88° in 1950 31° in 2011

Precipitation in inches 24 hours through 8 p.m. yest. 0.00 Month to date 1.52 Normal month to date 1.66 Year to date 31.31 Normal year to date 34.45

Today Sun. Today Sun. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W 78 63 pc 85 69 s Atchison 78 63 pc 83 68 pc Holton Belton 77 65 pc 81 66 pc Independence 79 67 pc 83 69 pc Olathe 78 65 pc 83 67 s Burlington 79 66 pc 83 67 s Osage Beach 80 67 pc 85 67 pc Coffeyville 83 66 pc 87 68 s Osage City 80 66 pc 85 69 s Concordia 82 57 pc 86 61 s Ottawa 78 66 pc 82 68 s Dodge City 90 52 s 94 57 s Wichita 84 65 pc 88 66 s Fort Riley 82 62 pc 86 69 s Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.

NATIONAL FORECAST

Today 7:31 a.m. 6:42 p.m. 6:44 p.m. 6:40 a.m.

Full

Last

New

First

Oct 15

Oct 22

Oct 30

Nov 7

OPEN HOUSES

1560 Fountain Dr.

One of the best lots in the Villas at Alvamar. Beautiful views from the hill with a relaxing east facing all season sunroom. Main level bedroom modified at construction as a master closet - amazing! Master bathroom has all the great features. Multiple sitting areas w/ a covered patio right outside the walkout slider. HOA does great job of maintaining the needs of the community residents including the clubhouse.

Sun. 7:32 a.m. 6:40 p.m. 7:26 p.m. 7:52 a.m.

$439,000

LARRY NORTHROP 785-842-3535

OPEN SUNDAY 1:00 – 3:00 PM

Lake

Level (ft)

Clinton Perry Pomona

Discharge (cfs)

877.34 893.77 976.52

7 200 15

Fronts Cold

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

Today Hi Lo W 90 78 t 59 49 r 75 60 s 97 64 s 90 78 t 68 56 sh 54 47 pc 60 49 r 71 62 r 86 67 pc 48 35 pc 56 47 sh 62 45 s 88 78 s 81 60 pc 81 46 s 62 51 sh 66 43 s 75 50 pc 63 46 pc 42 32 c 96 68 pc 37 32 c 63 48 s 87 75 s 72 57 t 76 58 pc 89 77 pc 45 38 c 76 61 s 71 60 s 67 62 pc 56 50 r 62 50 r 46 38 r 58 33 pc

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Warm Stationary Showers T-storms

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Today Sun. Today Sun. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Memphis 85 65 pc 87 68 s Albuquerque 82 51 s 82 51 s 87 76 sh 85 75 t Anchorage 43 28 pc 39 29 pc Miami 70 62 c 70 63 sh Atlanta 78 62 pc 81 61 pc Milwaukee 72 50 sh 72 61 c Austin 90 67 pc 90 67 pc Minneapolis 85 62 pc 85 62 s Baltimore 66 49 s 73 58 pc Nashville New Orleans 88 74 pc 88 74 t Birmingham 85 64 s 86 63 s New York 64 52 s 70 60 s Boise 61 47 c 62 48 r Omaha 77 56 c 80 61 pc Boston 58 47 s 70 56 s Orlando 85 72 pc 84 70 t Buffalo 70 60 s 71 59 r Philadelphia 66 48 s 73 57 s Cheyenne 74 44 s 73 43 s Phoenix 95 67 s 93 66 s Chicago 72 63 pc 72 65 r 73 57 s 76 60 c Cincinnati 79 63 pc 80 63 pc Pittsburgh Portland, ME 56 40 s 65 53 s Cleveland 77 63 s 78 63 r Portland, OR 60 52 r 61 52 r Dallas 89 71 s 90 71 s Reno 66 52 sh 63 46 c Denver 81 52 s 82 48 s Richmond 68 49 pc 74 58 pc Des Moines 78 61 t 80 66 c Sacramento 71 59 r 66 52 sh Detroit 71 63 s 73 63 r St. Louis 81 68 pc 85 70 pc El Paso 89 60 s 90 59 s Fairbanks 32 16 s 30 18 pc Salt Lake City 75 54 pc 61 47 c 75 67 pc 74 65 pc Honolulu 86 74 pc 85 74 pc San Diego Houston 89 71 pc 90 72 pc San Francisco 71 62 r 69 58 r 58 51 r 59 50 r Indianapolis 75 63 sh 80 65 pc Seattle 56 43 r 55 44 sh Kansas City 80 66 pc 84 69 pc Spokane Tucson 95 61 s 94 60 s Las Vegas 90 69 s 85 67 s Tulsa 85 70 pc 89 71 s Little Rock 84 63 pc 86 65 s 68 53 s 73 61 pc Los Angeles 74 63 pc 73 63 pc Wash., DC National extremes yesterday for the 48 contiguous states High: Imperial, CA 99° Low: Doe Lake, MI 20°

WEATHER HISTORY

WEATHER TRIVIA™

Q:

Hurricane Hazel hit near Myrtle Beach, S.C., on Oct. 15, 1954, with 150-mph wind gusts.

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MOVIES 8 PM

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4 Lethal Weapon “Pilot; Surf N’ Turf”

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10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30

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FOX 4 at 9 PM (N)

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48 Hours (N) h

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NCIS: New Orleans

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Hell’s Kitchen Chiefs

Blue Bloods Austin City Limits

KSNT

Doc Martin

Father Brown

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48 Hours (N) h

41 eCollege Football Stanford at Notre Dame. (N) (Live) h 38 Mother Mother Last Man Last Man Mike Mike

29 Castle h

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13 News Blue Bloods

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Saturday Night Live (N)

Broke

Broke

Fam Guy Fam Guy

Mod Fam Big Bang Mod Fam Big Bang Anger

Law & Order: SVU

Law & Order: SVU

Law & Order: SVU

Cable Channels WOW!6 6 WGN-A

Tower Cam/Weather Information 307 239 Cops

THIS TV 19 CITY

25

USD497 26

Cops

Cops

››‡ Fatso (1980) Dom DeLuise.

Cops

››‡ Austin Powers in Goldmember Mother ›››‡ Heaven Can Wait (1978) Warren Beatty.

City Bulletin Board, Commission Meetings

Mother Danger

City Bulletin Board

School Board Information

School Board Information

ESPN 33 206 140 eCollege Football Mississippi at Arkansas. Scores

eCollege Football Teams TBA. (N) (Live)

ESPN2 34 209 144 eCollege Football Tulsa at Houston. (N)

eCollege Football Teams TBA. (N) (Live) kNHL Hockey New York Rangers at St. Louis Blues. Blues Blues Fame Bull Riding NBCSN 38 603 151 NASCAR hNASCAR Racing DRIVE Nitro Post Onward Match of the Day FSM

36 672

FNC

39 360 205 Stossel

CNBC 40 355 208 American Greed MSNBC 41 356 209 Dateline Extra CNN

Justice Judge

Greg Gutfeld

Red Eye-Shillue

Justice Judge

American Greed

American Greed

American Greed

American Greed

Dateline Extra

Dateline Extra

Dateline Extra

Lockup: Tampa

Anthony Bourd.

Anthony Bourd.

44 202 200 CNN Special Report Anthony Bourd.

Anthony Bourd.

TNT

45 245 138 ›› Divergent (2014) Shailene Woodley. (DVS)

››› Twister (1996, Action) Helen Hunt.

USA

46 242 105 NCIS (DVS)

NCIS (DVS)

NCIS “Shiva”

Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam

A&E

47 265 118 The First 48

The First 48

The First 48

The First 48

The First 48

Carbon

Carbon

Snack

Carbon

TRUTV 48 246 204 Carbon

2250 Lake Pointe Dr. #702

$260,000

DEBBIE HEINRICH 785-766-8621

4112 Harvard Rd.

Here’s a great opportunity to do a little work and be in the Quail Run neighborhood. Lots of space in this 2 story floor plan. Price includes a $16,000 bid for siding/ paint. House next door is $265,500 and currently Under Contract. Seller wishes to sell “as is”.

$208,000 LARRY NORTHROP 785-842-3535

3213 W 22nd Terr, Lawrence. $212,000, 4BR, 3BA. Vaulted living room with a brick fireplace and an open kitchen. Lots of recent remodeling: granite tops, new tile backsplash, newly finished basement with 5 spacious rooms and a storage room. Fenced backyard has a storage building and stone patio. 924 Christie Ct, Lawrence. $139,900, 3 BR, 2 BA. Completely updated in June 2016 with granite countertops, new flooring, new light fixtures, remodeled bathrooms and fresh paint throughout. Walkout basement, living rooms upstairs and downstairs, deck off the master and a great front patio. 1083 E 1200 Rd, Lawrence. $500,000, 4BR, 4BA. This recently constructed custom home is handicap accessible on BOTH levels. Hickory wood used for the flooring and kitchen cabinets. Geothermal heating system. Beautiful gourmet kitchen with center island, stainless hood vent and black granite counters. Only minutes from south Iowa shopping & restaurants. 783 N 976 Rd, Lawrence. $525,000, 5BR, 6BA. 5 acre country estate with an elevated SE view across the Wakarusa Valley. Hot tub, gazebo and purple wisteria covered pergola. Plenty of finished space in the basement and a 30’ x 60’ Morton outbuilding. 25’ x 50’ fenced dog run & suite. Children’s playhouse w/ loft, electricity & bridge. 00000 198th St, Linwood. $200,000. 69.6 acres of land backing to the Kansas River with access off of 198th St (which is Main Street in Linwood, KS) going south. 2 parcels with heavy timber along the back, across the river from Prairie Star Farm.

Call Debbie Heinrich, buyer’s agent, at 785-766-8621. www.northrop-team.com 1420 Wakarusa, Ste 203 785-856-8484

BEST BETS WOW DTV DISH 7 PM

SPORTS 7:30

8 PM

8:30

October 15, 2016 9 PM

9:30

10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30

Cable Channels cont’d

3

8

OPEN SUNDAY 2:30 – 4:00 PM

Enjoy the lifestyle of Lake View Villas! Lawn care, exterior maintenance and building insurance taken care of. Granite counters, Hunter Douglas plantation shutters, walk in master closet in the master suite and beautiful landscaping all over. All is high quality. 2 Kitchens, 2 Living Areas, and an all season sun room. Clubhouse on site for family and neighborhood gatherings.

Most raindrops initially start out as what?

Network Channels

M

$269,900

LARRY NORTHROP 785-842-3535

Ice

-10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s National Summary: Showers and thunderstorms may skirt across the Upper Midwest and Florida Peninsula today. A major storm will unleash hurricaneforce winds, flooding rain and pounding surf in the Northwest.

SATURDAY Prime Time WOW DTV DISH 7 PM

1905 Camelback Dr.

Alvamar Estates home on a spacious lot with an open floor plan. Kitchen features a large center island great for entertaining with plenty of cabinets and stainless appliances. Family room walks out to the backyard with another deck off the oversized upper deck. Neighborhood is wonderful. 3 houses from the golf course. Gorgeous inside.

Precipitation

Snowflakes.

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016

OPEN SUNDAY 12:30 – 2:00 PM

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

A:

LAKE LEVELS

As of 7 a.m. Friday

p.m., Lied Center, 1600 Stewart Drive. Platform Film Screening: “The Best Man,” 2-4 p.m., Lawrence Arts Center, 940 New Hampshire St. Writing Out: A Memoir-Crafting Workshop, 2-4 p.m., Watkins Museum of History, 1047 Massachusetts St. Lawrence Oktoberfest, 2-8 p.m., Lawrence City Library Plaza, 707 Vermont St. University of Kansas Chamber Singers and Concert Choir, 4-7 p.m., Spencer Museum of Art, 1301 Mississippi St. American Legion Bingo, doors open 4:30 p.m., first games 6:45 p.m., snack bar 5-8 p.m., American Legion Post No. 14, 3408 W. Sixth St.

SATURDAY & SUNDAY

OPEN SATURDAY 1:00 – 3:00 PM

REGIONAL CITIES

SUN & MOON Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset

East Lot, Clinton Parkway and Crestline Drive. Red Dog’s Fun Run, Saturday Seminar: Fire 7:30 a.m., city lot, Ninth the Umpires? Kansas and Vermont streets. Supreme Court Justices John Jervis, classiand the Upcoming Vote cal and Spanish guitar, on Their Retention, coffee 8-11 a.m., Panera, 520 W. at 9:30 a.m., talk at 10 a.m., 23rd St. Lawrence Arts Center, 940 Lawrence Farmers New Hampshire St. Market, 8 a.m.-noon, 824 Spencer Museum of New Hampshire St. Art Reopening, 10 a.m.-7 League of Women p.m., Spencer Museum of Voters, voter registraArt, 1301 Mississippi St. tion and information, Multicultural Story8 a.m.-noon, Lawrence time in French, 10:30-11 Farmers Market, 824 New a.m., Readers’ Theater, Hampshire St. Lawrence Public Library, Lawrence Jayhawk 707 Vermont St. Kennel Club Dog Show, A Science Saturday 8:30 a.m.-3 p.m., Douglas Event: National Fossil County 4-H Fairgrounds, Day/Earth Science Week, 2120 Harper St. 1-3 p.m., KU Natural Fall Electronic ReHistory Museum, 1345 cycling Event, 9 a.m.-1 Jayhawk Blvd. p.m., KU Park and Ride Midwest Fall Fest, 1-5

15 TODAY

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

Carbon

AMC

50 254 130 ›› Child’s Play 2

HIST

54 269 120 American Pickers

Carbon

Carbon

Carbon

›‡ Bride of Chucky (1998, Horror) TBS 51 247 139 Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Full ›› Get Smart (2008, Comedy) BRAVO 52 237 129 Wed ››› Pretty Woman (1990) Richard Gere. ››› Pretty Woman (1990) Richard Gere. SYFY 55 244 122 Stake Land (2010)

›‡ Child’s Play 3 (1991) Justin Whalin.

Snack

American Pickers

American Pickers

Stake Land 2 (2016) Connor Paolo.

American Pickers

American Pickers

Timeless “Pilot”

Timeless

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

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HBO 401 MAX 411 SHOW 421 STZENC 440 STRZ 451

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››› 22 Jump Street (2014)

››› 22 Jump Street (2014) Jonah Hill. Mike Mike Love My Wife Kevin Hart Amy Schumer Dane Cook: Troub. Kyle Kinane: Loose Frnds-Benefits ››› Friends With Benefits (2011), Mila Kunis He’s Just Not That Into You ››‡ Overboard (1987) Goldie Hawn. ›› What to Expect When You’re Expecting Cops All-star Halloween Big- RV Big- RV Big- RV Big- RV Big- RV Big- RV All-star Halloween ››› Friday (1995, Comedy) Ice Cube, Chris Tucker. ››› Friday (1995, Comedy) Ice Cube, Chris Tucker. ›› The Break-Up (2006) ›› She’s Out of My League (2010) Jay Baruchel. ›› The Break-Up Ghost Adventures Ghost Adventures Ghost Adventures The Dead Files Ghost Adventures Stories of the ER Stories of the ER Sex Sent Me Stories of the ER Sex Sent Me Surviving Compton: Dre, Suge Headlines: Michel’le Streets of Compton Surviving Com His Secret Family (2015) Haylie Duff. Love Thy Neighbor (2005) His Secret Family Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Property Brothers Property Brothers House Hunters Hunters Hunt Intl Property Brothers Thunder School Haunted Nicky Full H’se Full H’se Friends Friends Friends Friends Spid. Rebels Gravity Gravity Spid. Marvel’s Guardi Rebels Walk the Walk the ›››‡ Toy Story 3 (2010), Tim Allen Lab Rats K.C. Best Fr. Vampire Liv-Mad. Austin Regular Regular Burgers Burgers American American Fam Guy Fam Guy Dragon JoJo’s Last Frontier Last Frontier Last Frontier Last Frontier Last Frontier Harry Potter ››› Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince (2009) Daniel Radcliffe. FeltonDrugs, Inc. Drugs, Inc. Drugs, Inc. Drugs, Inc. Drugs, Inc. Autumn in Vine Pumpkin Pie Wars (2016) Premiere. Golden Golden Golden Golden Dr. Dee: Alaska Vet Life at Vet U Life at Vet U (N) Life at Vet U Life at Vet U Reba Reba Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond King King King King In Touch Hour of Power Graham Pathway ››› The First of May (1998) Dan Byrd. Pope John Paul II (Part 1 of 2) Rosary Living Right Web of Faith 2.0 John Paul/ Great Taste Taste Safari Second Stanley Stanley Taste Taste Safari Second Book TV After Words Book TV Book TV 1984 Pres. Debate 1988 Pres. Debate 2008 Presidential Debate Hearings Southwest of Salem: The Story On the Case, Zahn Southwest of Salem: The Story Myth Hunters The Aztec Warriors Ancient Assassins Myth Hunters The Aztec Warriors Iyanla, Fix My Life Iyanla, Fix My Life Oprah: Where Now? Iyanla, Fix My Life Iyanla, Fix My Life Why Planes Crash Storm Wranglers Storm Wranglers Extreme Weather Extreme Weather ›››› The Innocents (1961, Horror) ››› The Chalk Garden (1964) Premiere. Eye of the Devil ››‡ Joy (2015) Jennifer Lawrence.

Insecure Westworld ››‡ Joy (2015) The Longest Ride Quarry ›› Term Life (2016) Quarry Kill ›‡ Paranoia (2013) Liam Hemsworth. ›› Rambo (2008) Shameless Sex Me, Myself ›››‡ Sleepless in Seattle (1993) ››› Far and Away (1992) Tom Cruise. Pirates-Worlds ››‡ Risen (2016) Joseph Fiennes. Ash Blunt ››‡ U-571 (2000)


FREE STATE’S CHEN, DODD ADVANCE IN DOUBLES AT STATE TENNIS. 3D

Sports

D

Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com/sports l Saturday, October 15, 2016

HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL

Tom Keegan tkeegan@ljworld.com

Big, fast Bears like to run, run, run Coming off a strong performance in a 24-23 loss to TCU, the Kansas football team’s defense started its preparation for Baylor with a quickie quiz from defensive coordinator Clint Bowen. “Raise your hands if you think Baylor is a pass team,” Bowen said. And? “It’s amazing how many of them their UP NEXT raised hands,” Who: Kansas Bowen said. (1-4 overall, “In reality, 0-2 Big 12) they’re not.” The No. 11 vs. Baylor Bears (5-0) (5-0, 2-0) rank fifth in When: 2:30 the nation p.m. today with 290.2 Where: rushing yards Waco, Texas per game and 11th with 5.78 TV: FS1 yards per (WOW! carry, which channels puts them 150, 227) atop the Big Game Day 12 in both on page 4D categories. Baylor has all the modern trappings of a prototypical national powerhouse: McLane Stadium, a shiny, charming gem on the north bank of the Brazos River built in 2014; creative uniform uses of its green-and-gold color scheme; a spread offense brimming with speedy playmakers. But in one very important sense, Baylor plays classic old-school football: It sets up big passing plays by hammering away with runs. It’s easy to see why even players perceive Baylor as a pass-first program because highlights show touchdowns, the longer the play the more prominently it’s featured. And although Baylor ranks first in the Big 12 in rushing yards, it’s no better than tied for sixth with 12 scoring runs. Conversely, the Bears rank seventh in the Big 12 with 278.2 passing yards per game (one yard behind Kansas) and second with 15 touchdown receptions. “They are a knock-youoff-the-ball, run-it-rightdown-your-throat team until you stop it,” Bowen said. “They’ve been in some games, if you don’t stop the run, they ain’t gonna put it in the air.” In one such game last Saturday in Ames, Baylor overcame a 14-point deficit in the final 11:40 to score a 45-42 victory against Iowa State. The Cyclones took a 42-28 lead with 4:31 left in the third quarter. Time for Baylor to air it out? Wrong. The rest of the way, the Bears ran 41 plays from scrimmage and attempted just nine passes. They didn’t take their first lead until time expired as Chris Callahan’s 19-yard field goal whistled through the uprights. Bowen said that Baylor runs the ball 62 percent of the time on third down with between 7 and 10 yards to go. In those situations, according to Bowen, every other Kansas opponent to

> KEEGAN, 4D

FIREPOWER

Kevin Anderson/Special to the Journal-World

FREE STATE’S ZION BOWLIN (3) CUTS INSIDE AS HE MAKES HIS WAY TO THE END ZONE for a touchdown against Olathe East on Friday night in Olathe.

Free State turns back Olathe East, 28-14 By Chris Duderstadt cduderstadt@ljworld.com

Olathe — With the City Showdown against Lawrence High only a week away, Free State football coach Bob Lisher expected a better performance from his team Friday against Olathe East, despite the Firebirds coming away with a 28-14 victory at the Olathe District Activity Center. “I don’t think we played

our best game by far. I don’t know if we got better from last week. We can’t continue to do that, obviously,” Lisher said. “We’ve got to refocus. We’ve got to do a better job of coaching. We’ve got to get our guys in better position to score some points and hold some teams down when we need to.” After a scoreless first quarter, the Firebirds fell in a 7-0 hole two minutes into the second quarter when Olathe

East quarterback Will Scofield scored on a 1-yard quarterback sneak. The Firebirds were able to answer, though, when Zion Bowlin found pay dirt on a 61-yard run. “I had Jay (Dineen) pull around and get the linebacker for me, and then I just had to out-run the safeties,” Bowlin said. Bowlin was primarily a one-man show in the Free State backfield with sophomore Jax Dineen being side-

lined with a knee injury. While the Firebirds expect to have Bowlin’s backfield mate back for the City Showdown, the Free State senior believed he should have been able to handle the load more efficiently. Bowlin ended the night with 152 yards and the touchdown on 26 carries. “I think I could have ran harder because my line was blocking for me,” Bowlin

> FIREBIRDS, 2D

Lions can’t keep up with SME in 48-26 loss By Bobby Nightengale bnightengale@ljworld.com

John Young/Journal-World Photo

AFTER GETTING BEHIND THE SHAWNEE MISSION EAST secondary, Lawrence High receiver Ekow Boye-Doe (12) hauls in a long pass for a touchdown Friday night at LHS.

Facing the top-scoring offense in the state, Lawrence High’s football team learned how fast things can spin out of control against Shawnee Mission East on Friday. The Lancers scored on four straight drives in the first half — including two quick scores in the last three minutes — on their way to a 48-26 victory at LHS, which wasn’t as close as the final score indicated. Trailing by nine points, 21-12, after LHS junior fullback Angel Garcia scored on a one-yard plunge over the goal line, the Lions were hoping to take that momentum

into halftime. Sophomore receiver Clarence King hauled in a 4th-and-18 pass for a 32yard catch to set up Garcia’s touchdown. But the third-ranked Lancers (6-1) had different plans. SM East senior Nigil Houston, a transfer from SM West, scored on the next play from scrimmage — an 80-yard run where he was barely touched as he sprinted past the secondary. After an LHS turnover on downs at the 39-yard line, the Lancers traveled 61 yards in 44 seconds for a 35-12 lead heading into halftime after a 17-yard touchdown pass to senior Trevor Thompson.

> LIONS, 2D

Jackson could fit at four different positions

Matt Tait mtait@ljworld.com

Freshman forward Josh Jackson during Thursday’s media day told reporters that he expected to play four different positions at times during what is likely to be his lone season of college basketball. As much as that sounds like a heavy workload, it actually is a step in the other

direction for the 6-8 guard who spent part of his high school career playing all five positions on the floor at one time or another. While the prospect of Jackson playing as the Jayhawks’ center or lone big man on the floor during the upcoming season — remember KU coach Bill Self does

not necessarily look at it as point guard, shooting guard, small forward, etc., but rather looks at guards and bigs — certainly is unlikely, envisioning a scenario in which he plays the one through four positions at some point is not that difficult.

> JACKSON, 3D Jackson


Sports 2

2D | LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD | SATURDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2016

AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE

TWO-DAY

EAST

NORTH SPORTS CALENDAR

KANSAS

TODAY • Football at Baylor, 2:30 p.m. • Cross country at Indiana State Invitational, 10 a.m. • Volleyball at TCU, 5 p.m. • Tennis at ITA Regionals, at Stillwater, Okla. SUNDAY NORTH • Tennis at ITA Regionals, at Stillwater, Okla.

AREA HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL ROUNDUP

Tonganoxie wins overtime thriller AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE EAST

Perry-Lecompton 14 13 14 3 — 44 Baldwin 60, Ward 0 Royal Valley 0 0 8 0 — 8 P — Cole Kellum 20 run (Toby Meyer kick Kansas City, Kan. — After losing by multiple touchdowns good) Tonganoxie 22, P — Jordan Spreer 3 run (Meyer kick good) in every game this season, Atchison 16, OT P — Spreer 8 run (Meyer kick no good) P — Cole Kellum 5 run (Meyer kick good) Tonganoxie — Tonganoxie Baldwin was on the other side SOUTH P — Michael Kellum 1 run (Meyer kick good) High football players erased of the blowout Friday night in R — Garret Rodeworld 19 run (run succeeded) a 60-0 road win over Bishop a 16-point first half deficit in AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE P — Nick Quinlan 2 run (Meyer kick good) their final regular-season home Ward. P — Meyer 23 field goal game, beating previously unBaldwin 22 25 7 6 — 60 EAST beaten Atchison in a 22-16 vic- Bishop Ward AMERICAN CONFERENCE 0 0 0 0 —FOOTBALL 0 Ottawa 38, tory on Senior Night. Paola 7 Perry-Lecompton 44, OttawaEAST — Ottawa High’s Atchison 10 6 0 0 0— 16 AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE Tonganoxie 0 0 16 0 6— 22 Royal Valley 8 football team jumped out to A — Dylon Leblue 60 run. Austin Bonnel kick Perry — Behind 186 rush- a 21-0 lead in the first quarter (AHS 7, THS 0) ing yards and two touchdowns EASTand never ceased it, sealing a A — Bonnel 24 kick. (AHS 10, THS 0) A — Fred Simpson 45 fumble return. Bonnel from Cole Kellum, SOUTH Perry- 38-7 victory over Paola. kick no good. (AHS 16, THS 0) Lecompton cruised to a 44-8 T — Jordan Brown 6 run. Mac Thompson win over Royal Valley. Perry- Paola 0 0 7 0 — 7 successful run. (AHS 16, THS 8) 21 0 7 AL 10EAST — 38 T — Conner Brown 5 run. Conner Brown suc- Lecompton racked up 351 rush- Ottawa cessful run. (AHS 16, THS 16) O — Devion Bethea 1 run. Andrew Soph kick. T — Jordan Brown 2 run. Pass failed. (AHS ing yards as a team and 397 O — Cooper Diel 33 pass from Isaac 16, THS 22) McCullough. Soph kick. yards of total offense.

J-W Staff Report

O — Bethea 35 run. Soph kick. P — Andrew Phillips 33 pass from Bryce Huber. Kick good. O — Bethea 3 run. Soph kick. O — Bethea 1 run. Soph kick. O — Soph 28 kick.

FREE STATE HIGH TODAY WEST

Miege 51, Eudora 0 Eudora — Eudora lost its AL EAST fourth consecutive game in a 51-0 home loss to Bishop Miege on Friday night. BOSTON RED SOX

BALTIMORE ORIOLES

• Volleyball at Emporia tournament, 8:30 a.m. • Cross country at Sunflower NORTH League meet, at Rim Rock Farm, 9 a.m. • Girls tennis at state, at Topeka, NORTH 9 a.m.

NEW YORK YANKEES

Eudora AL CENTRAL

0 0 0 0— 0 Bishop Miege 28 20 3 0 — 51 B — Jafar Armstrong 52 pass from Carter Putz (kick blocked) B — Brison Cobbins 1 run (Landry Weber run) DETROIT TIGERS CHICAGO WHITE SOX CLEVELAND INDIANS B — Armstrong 34 run (Jake Heyen kick) AL WEST B — Armstrong 23 pass from Graham Mertz (heyen kick) B — Putz 8 run (Heyen kick) B — Weber 10 pass from Mertz (Heyen) B ANGELES — Joseph Gleason 2OAKLAND pass from Putz (kickSEATTLE MARINERS LOS ANGELS ATHLETICS OF ANAHEIM failed) B — Heyen 29 field goal MLB AL LOGOS 032712: 2012 American BOSTON SOXstand-alone; various League teamRED logos;

BALTIMORE ORIOLES

TAMPA BAY RAYS

NORTH HIGH LAWRENCE WEST TODAY KANSAS CITY ROYALS

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1D

said. “They run for me, they block for me — I should be running harder.” The Free State defense followed up Bowlin’s touchdown run by forcing a turnover on the ensuing drive. Jay Dineen, Noah Kema and Gage Foster swarmed to Scofield — knocking him down and forcing a fumble, which was recovered by Drew Wise at the Olathe East 19-yard line. Scofield remained down on the field for 20 minutes before being taking to an area hospital, but he did have feelings in his extremities prior to being carted off. Lisher and the Firebirds did not comment on the nature of the injury due to the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act. The Firebirds (5-2) were able to turn the fumble into points

Lions CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1D

“We haven’t played a team that good,” said LHS junior Ekow Boye-Doe, who had two catches for 68 yards. Lawrence (5-2) junior quarterback Dante Jackson exited with an injury on the two-point conversion attempt following Garcia’s touchdown. He had a walking boot on his left foot and was walking with crutches afterward, which LHS coach Dirk Wedd described as a highankle sprain. Jackson, who threw a 60yard touchdown pass to BoyeDoe on the last play of the first quarter, was drilled on nearly every pass attempt. The quick and shifty Jackson completed six of his eight passes for 114 yards while trying to run away from SM East’s powerful defensive line.

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VERITAS CHRISTIAN when play resumed with a Ka- throughout the game to open Free State 0 10 10 8 — 28 TODAY meron Lake 31-yard field, and up the offense. Crittenden re- Olathe East 0 7 0 7 — 14 • Volleyball at Osawatomie the 10-7 lead stoodSOUTH going into bounded from a slow start to Individual statistics WEST WEST SOUTH tournament, 8 a.m. the break. complete 10 of 21 for 164 AL yards, Rushing WEST FS: Zion Bowlin 26-152 TD; Gage Foster 4-16; Scofield’s fumble marked and threw a 36-yard touchdown Dallas Crittenden 5-42 TD. EAST less one of three times that the pass to Daniel Bryant AL with OE: Will Scofield 4-17 TD; Jack Mason 4-18; HASKELL AL EAST Trevon Kearney 8-34; Dwan Washington 17-62; Hawks coughed the ball up, but than two minutes remaining. Ben Waldron 2-3; Hunter Thomas 8-53; Ray TODAY they recovered the other two. The Free State quarterback Lewis 1-7. SOUTH • Volleyball vs. Graceland, 2 p.m. David Johnson capped off the also rushed for 42 yards and a Passing WEST FS: Dallas Crittenden 10-21 164 TD 2-point AFC an TEAM LOGOS 081312: Helmet and team logostotes. forAL the AFC teams; various sizes; stand-alone; staff; ETA 5 p.m. first half with interception touchdown on five CENTRAL conversion.AL CENTRAL to put an end to the Hawks fiOE: Will Scofield 1-3 6; Hunter Thomas 2-9 64. Crittenden’s leading receivCHIEFS AL EAST nal drive of the first half. er was senior Zack Sanders, Receiving FS: Zack Sanders 5-99 2-point conversion; SUNDAY Free State nearly shut out who hauled in five catches for Daniel Bryant 2-42 TD; Bo Miller 1-11; Zion • at Oakland, 3:05 p.m. the Hawks in the second half, 99 yards, including a 2-point Bowlin 0-0; Gage Foster 0-0; Noah Kema 1-9; Drew 1-3. AL WEST AL WEST but Hawks backup quarterback conversion. OE: TyJuan Lewis 2-35; Ray Lewis 0-0; Daniel AL CENTRAL Reed 1-35; Trevon Kearney 0-0. Hunter Thomas found Daniel “Him (Crittenden) being SPORTING KC HOW THEY SCORED Reed for a 14-yard touchdown able to read the reads and pull Second quarter SUNDAY pass with 21 seconds remain- the ball from me and get some 10:08 — Will Scofield 1 run. Clayton Augustyn (Olathe East 7, Free State 0.) ing. • at Real Salt Lake, 4 p.m. yards from that is pretty good,” kick. 7:18 — Zion Bowlin 61 run. Cameron Lake “The secondary took a step Bowlin said. “It opens up him kick. (Free State 7, Olathe East 7.) AL WEST AFC TEAM LOGOS 081312: Helmet and team logos for — theKameron AFC teams; staff; ETA 5 p.m. 5:05 Lakevarious 31 fieldsizes; goal. stand-alone; (Free back today,” Bowlin said. “If being able to run and opens it 10,sizes; Olathe stand-alone; East 7.) LOGOS 081312: Helmet and team logos for the AFC teams; various staff; ETA 5 p.m. LATEST LINE we do AFC thatTEAM against LHS, we’re up for me, too. With Zack, just State Third quarter 8:08 — Dallas Crittenden 7 run. Lake kick. probably going to get beat pret- throw the ball up, and he’ll go (Free State 17, Olathe East 7.) NFL ty bad.” get it.” 4:22 — Lake 40 field goal. (Free State 20, Favorite ............. Points (O/U).......... Underdog While Bowlin was frustrated Olathe East 7.) Sunday Fourth quarter FS OE with his personal performance Week 6 1:36 — Daniel Bryant 36 pass from Crittenden. First downs 9 13 on offense and defense, he081312: AFC TEAM LOGOS Helmet logos for44-194 the AFCZack teams; various sizes; staff; ETA 5 p.m. ...........8 1/2 (47.5)................. Cincinnati NEW ENGLAND Sanders pass from stand-alone; Crittenden. (Free Rushes-yards and team35-208 State 28, Olathe East 7.) 164 70 credited Free State quarter- Passing yards NY GIANTS ..................3 1/2 (44.5).................. Baltimore 0:21 — Daniel Reed 14 pass from Hunter Carolina .......................2 1/2 (53.5)......... NEW ORLEANS offense 372 264 back Dallas Crittenden for im- Total Thomas. Augustyn kick. (Free State 28, Olathe Fumbles-lost 0-0 3-1 Pittsburgh ..................7 1/2 (48.5)......................... MIAMI East 14.) 4-35 2-20 proving his decision making Penalties-yards Score by quarters

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“When you’re playing a quarterback that is as dynamic as (Jackson) is, you want to tackle him as much as you possibly can,” SM East coach Dustin Delaney said. “Our defensive line did a nice job of getting to him and our linebackers did as well.” Without Jackson, the Lions stalled on offense with backup quarterback Garrett Romero. In the third quarter, they had two drives that ended with three-and-out punts. Five plays into the third quarter, the speedy 5-foot-7, 160-pound Houston broke a few tackles on his way to a 68yard touchdown run and a 4112 advantage. Houston ran for 180 yards and two scores on six carries. Facing a quick-paced, flexbone offense, the Lions struggled to put SM East into long third-down situations. The Lancers punted once in the first quarter, but otherwise

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CHICAGO ...........................1 (46).................. Jacksonville BUFFALO ...........................9 (44).............. San Francisco DETROIT ..........................3 (43.5)................. Los Angeles TENNESSEE ....................7 (43.5)...................... Cleveland 6-17, Andy Maddox 1-3. converted eight of their nine Boschen LHS: Trey Moore 22-217 2 TD, Dante Jackson Philadelphia ...............2 1/2 (44.5)........... WASHINGTON third downs before backups 10-22, Angel Garcia 2-1 TD, Garrett Romero Kansas City . ..........2 (46.5)............. OAKLAND 6, Team 1-negative 8. SEATTLE . ........................6 (45.5)........................... Atlanta stepped on the field for most of 3-negative Passing GREEN BAY ......................4 (47)............................... Dallas the second half. SME: Kaiser 5-9–147 2 TD, Maddox 1-1–19. HOUSTON .........................3 (48).................. Indianapolis LHS: Jackson 6-8–114. “It was hard for us to get off Monday blocks,” Wedd said. “There’s Receiving SME: Trevor Thompson 3-79 2 TD, Sky Tate ARIZONA .........................7 (46.5).......................... NY Jets no secrets. You know that 1-37, Houston 1-31, Michael Perry 1-19. Bye Week: Minnesota, Tampa Bay. LHS: Jalen Dudley 2-10, Clarence King 2-36, COLLEGE FOOTBALL they are going to run that fullEkow Boye-Doe 2-68 TD. Favorite ............. Points (O/U).......... Underdog back and he’s hard to tackle. Western Michigan ........12 (73)............................. AKRON It’s even harder to turn his hat HOW THEY SCORED OHIO .................................7 (56.5)................... E. Michigan quarter around. He falls forward and First 8:08 — Eli Kurlbaum 1 run. Parker Willis kick. TOLEDO ......................... 31 1/2 (71).......... Bowling Green we could never get the chains (SME 7, LHS 0.) Ball St ........................... 10 1/2 (50).................... BUFFALO 2:17 — Trevor Thompson 49 pass from Luke SOUTH FLORIDA ..........20 (52.5)................ Connecticut in our favor.” Kaiser. Willis kick. (SME 14, LHS 0.) LHS senior running back 0:00 — Ekow Boye-Doe 60 pass from Dante Louisiana Tech ..........14 1/2 (63).... MASSACHUSETTS Trey Moore scored twice in Jackson. Cade Burghart pass failed. (SME 14, Virginia Tech ..............19 1/2 (68)................. SYRACUSE CENTRAL FLORIDA . .......3 (53)............................. Temple 6.) the fourth quarter against SM LHS Second quarter Iowa ............................. 11 1/2 (50.5)..................... PURDUE East’s backup defense. 7:54 — Kurlbaum 3 run. Willis kick. (SME MARYLAND . ................. 6 1/2 (49).................. Minnesota 21, LHS 6.) SME LHS 3:02 — Angel Garcia 1 run. Jackson pass Illinois . .........................6 1/2 (52.5)................... RUTGERS First downs 20 11 TEXAS .....................14 (69).................. Iowa St failed. (SME 21, LHS 12.) Rushes-yards 57-397 38-226 2:50 — Nigil Houston 80 run. Willis kick MIAMI-FLORIDA ............7 (64.5)................... N. Carolina Passing yards 166 114 failed. (SME 27, LHS 12.) CLEMSON .........................18 (62)......................... NC State Total offense 563 340 0:05 — Thompson 17 pass from Kaiser. MICHIGAN ST ...................7 (42)............... Northwestern Fumbles-lost 0-0 1-1 Milton Braasch run. (SME 35, LHS 12.) Penalties-yards 3-35 4-30 OKLAHOMA ..........13 1/2 (59)........... Kansas St Third quarter Nebraska ........................3 (56.5)......................... INDIANA 9:49 — Houston 68 run. Willis kick failed. Score by quarters FLORIDA ...........................13 (49)......................... Missouri SM East 14 21 6 7 — 48 (SME 41, LHS 12.) LSU ................................25 1/2 (58).......... Southern Miss Lawrence 6 6 0 14 — 26 Fourth quarter 9:00 — Kurlbaum 5 run. Willis kick. (SME 48, Pittsburgh ................... 3 1/2 (62)...................... VIRGINIA LHS 12.) Individual statistics West Virginia .........2 (84.5)......... TEXAS TECH 7:54 — Trey Moore 35 run. Cole Brungardt Rushing x-Air Force . .................. 14 (56.5)................ New Mexico SME: Milton Braasch 12-78, Nigil Houston kick. (SME 48, LHS 19.) 0:01 — Moore 87 run. Brungardt kick. (SME HOUSTON .......................21 (71.5)............................... Tulsa 6-180 2 TD, Luke Kaiser 3-12, Eli Kurlbaum 25-97 3 TD, Carl Young 3-10, Jake Randa 1-0, Garrett 48, LHS 26.) MARSHALL ...................11 1/2 (63)............... FLA Atlantic GA TECH . ......................10 1/2 (47)......... Georgia South TROY ............................... 17 (57.5)................... Georgia St ARKANSAS ST ............4 1/2 (53.5)............... S. Alabama Utsa . .............................. 3 1/2 (57).............................. RICE Central Michigan . ..... 2 1/2 (65).................. N. ILLINOIS y-Kent St ......................OFF (OFF)................ MIAMI-OHIO Time Net Cable Alabama ..........................13 (57).................... TENNESSEE Prem. League, teams TBA 8:55 a.m. OLN 38, 238 Auto Racing Mississippi ....................7 1/2 (67).................. ARKANSAS Augsburg V. Schalke 04 8:30 a.m. FSPLUS 148 Sprint Cup, Kansas City 1 p.m. NBC 14, 214 GEORGIA ........................ 14 (42.5)................... Vanderbilt Frankfurt v. B. Munich 8:30 a.m. FS1 150, 227 NHRA, Texas 1 p.m. FS1 150,227 COLORADO .......................12 (61)..................... Arizona St BAYLOR ................. 35 (67).................. Kansas Gladbach v. Hamburg 8:30 a.m. FS2 153 Time Net Cable FLORIDA ST .....................21 (53)................. Wake Forest W. Bremen v. Bayer Lever. 11:30 a.m. FOX 4, 204 Soccer Florida Intl ................... 5 1/2 (55)................ CHARLOTTE MIDDLE TENN ST ........ 2 1/2 (76)............... W. Kentucky Wolfsburg v. Leipzig 10:20a.m. FS2 153 Pro Hockey Time Net Cable Montreal v. Toronto 2 p.m. ESPN 33,233 UL-MONROE .....................7 (66).......................... Texas St NOTRE DAME ...................3 (55).......................... Stanford N.Y. Rangers v. St. Louis 7 p.m. FSN 36, 236 Portland v. Colorado 4:15 p.m. ESPN 33,233 Ohio St ..............................11 (44).................... WISCONSIN Salt Lake v. KC 4:30p.m. KMCI 15, 215 IDAHO ............................ 4 1/2 (68).......... New Mexico St WASHINGTON ST ............8 (53)................................... Ucla College Hockey Time Net Cable Southern Cal . ............9 1/2 (64.5).................... ARIZONA College Soccer Time Net Cable BOISE ST ......................... 28 (58).................. Colorado St Ohio St. v. Miami (Ohio) 7 p.m. FCSA 144 Louisville v. Va. Tech noon FSN 36,236 Utah ...................................8 (40).................... OREGON ST SAN JOSE ST ............... 2 1/2 (55)........................ Nevada SUNDAY HAWAII .........................8 1/2 (54.5)............................ Unlv College Volleyball Time Net Cable x-at Cotton Bowl Stadium-Dallas y-Miami-Ohio QB B. Bahl is questionable. 1 p.m. ESPNU 35,235 Pro Football Time Net Cable S. Carolina v. LSU MLB PLAYOFFS KU v. TCU replay 11 a.m. FCS 146 Phila. v. Washington noon FOX 4, 204 Favorite .............. Odds (O/U)........... Underdog National League Championship Series Dallas v. Green Bay 3 p.m. FOX 4, 204 Time Net Cable Best of Seven Series-Game One K.C. v. Oakland 3 p.m. CBS 5, 13, College Hockey CHICAGO CUBS ......6 1/2-7 1/2 (7.5).......... LA Dodgers 3 p.m. ESPNU 205,213 Boston Coll. v. Wisconsin American League Championship Series Indianapolis v. Houston 7:20p.m. NBC 14, 214 35, 235 Best of Seven Series Game Two Time Net Cable CLEVELAND . ................OFF (OFF)....................... Toronto Baseball Time Net Cable College Football CFL Dodgers v. Cubs 7 p.m. FS1 150,227 KU v. Baylor replay 4 p.m. FCSA 144 Favorite ............. Points (O/U).......... Underdog TORONTO ...........................1 (51)............... Saskatchewan Time Net Cable CALGARY .........................15 (52)........................ Montreal Golf Time Net Cable WNBA Basketball Home Team in CAPS British Masters 3:30a.m. Golf 156,289 Minn. v. L.A. 7:30p.m. ESPN 33,233 (c) TRIBUNE CONTENT AGENCY, LLC

SPORTS ON TV TODAY College Football Time Net Cable Cent. Meth. v. Mo. Valley 11 a.. KSMO 3, 2903 N.C. St. v. Clemson 11 a.m. ABC 9, 209 Kansas St. v. Okla. 11 a.m. ESPN 33, 233 Iowa v. Purdue 11 a.m. ESPN2 34, 234 Minnesota v. Maryland 11 a.m. ESPNU 35, 235 Illinois v. Rutgers 11 a.m. ESPNN 140, 231 Albany v. Maine 11 a.m. FCSA 144 W.Va. v. Texas Tech 11 a.m. FS1 150, 227 Vanderbilt v. Georgia 11 a.m. SEC 157 USC v. Arizona 2:30 p.m. FOX 4, 204 Alabama v. Tennessee 2:30 p.m. CBS 5, 13, 205,213 Nebraska v. Indiana 2:30 p.m. ABC 9, 209 Wake Forest v. Fla. St. 2:30 p.m. ESPN 33, 233 N. Carolina v. Miami 2:30 p.m. ESPN2 34, 234 New Mexico v. Air Force 2:30 p.m. ESPNN 140, 231 N’western v. Mich. St. 2:30 p.m. BTN 147, 237 Kansas v. Baylor 2:30 p.m. FS1 150, 227 Va. Tech v. Syracuse 2:45 p.m. ESPNU 35, 235 Missouri v. Florida 3 p.m. SEC 157 Mississippi v. Arkansas 6 p.m. ESPN 33, 233 Tulsa v. Houston 6 p.m. ESPN2 34, 234 Stanford v. Notre Dame 6:30 p.m. NBC 14, 214 Temple v. Cent. Fla. 6:30 p.m. ESPNU 35, 235 S. Miss. v. LSU 6:30 p.m. SEC 157

HIGH SCHOOLS HUB:

Ohio St. v. Wisconsin 7 p.m. ABC 9, 209 Colorado St. v. Boise St. 9:15 p.m. ESPN2 34, 234 UCLA v. Wash. St. 9:30 p.m. ESPN 33, 233 Kansas v. Baylor replay 11 p.m. FSN+ 172 Baseball

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156, 289 156, 289 156, 289

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Kansas v. TCU 5 p.m. FCSC 145 FSN+ 172 Rutgers v. Purdue 7:30 p.m. BTN 147, 237 Soccer

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HIGH SCHOOL TENNIS

Free State’s Dodd, Chen advance in state doubles By Evan Riggs eriggs@ljworld.com

Topeka — It wasn’t the first time at the Class 6A girls tennis state tournament for Free State junior Ali Dodd and senior Andrea Chen. However, it was their first time qualifying together as a doubles team. The duo leaned on their past experiences Friday at the Topeka Kossover-Tennis Center, disposing of Lauren Robben and Olivia Belin, of Manhattan, 6-1, 6-0, and Megan Powers and Sally Dinkel, of Garden City, by the same score to clinch a spot in the second day of the tournament. “We just came out and we knew what we had to do,” Dodd said. “We competed hard, and I’m super proud with the way we played in all of our matches today.” Dodd and Chen’s momentum was quickly halted against Blue Valley North’s Evelyn Chang and Karen Yan in a 6-0, 6-0 loss. By advancing to the state quarterfinals, Dodd and Chen secured a medal and top-12 finish. “I saw their willingness and desire to win,” Free

Jackson

Evan Riggs/Journal-World Photo

FREE STATE’S ALI DODD, LEFT, and Andrea Chen celebrate after winning a point against Garden City during a doubles match at the state girls tennis tournament Friday in Topeka. State interim coach Michael Trujillo said. “It’s easy in this situation to get consumed by the moment and lose that competitive edge. But they stayed in it.” Free State’s doubles team of sophomore Gabby Gorman and freshman Anna Peard, along with sophomore singles player Kate Piper, came up short of qualifying for the second day of the tournament. Piper and the second doubles team all started with a 2-1 record Friday, but lost trying to advance to the consolation quarterfinals. Piper lost to Derby senior Ashley Sherrow, 9-5, to end her

the 2 as a secondary ball handler and Svi or Vick sliding into that 3 spot to provide a third ball-hanCONTINUED FROM PAGE 1D dler, another shooter and At 6-foot-8, 213 pounds another athlete. Because Bragg can run, this is a (and growing), Jackson fast team, but it’s by no adds good size to great athleticism and therefore means KU’s fastest team. The Jayhawks can only can offer a variety of be at their fastest with luxuries to this team on both offense and defense. Graham and Mason on the floor together. Here’s how it could look: Jackson at the 3 1 – Frank Mason Jackson at the 1 2 – Devonté Graham 1 – Josh Jackson 3 – Josh Jackson 2 – Sviatoslav Mykhail4 – Carlton Bragg iuk 5 – Landen Lucas 3 – Lagerald Vick Analysis: As you all 4 – Carlton Bragg surely know, this is 5 – Landen Lucas KU’s projected starting Analysis: This lineup lineup and the group certainly would be one of KU’s weaker ball-han- that figures to log the dling lineups, but Jackson most minutes together this season. It puts said he has worked in practice as the guy bring- Jackson in a dream role as a third ball-handler ing the ball up the floor and play maker and and one assistant coach also puts two guards told me the Jayhawks on the floor who can would have in their arcreate space and make senal plenty of sets that plays for Jackson, as go 1-4 flat, with Jackson well. Beyond that you’ve at the top with the ball got two 6-10 forwards in his hands. Can he do in the game who, with it? Absolutely. Will the Jayhawks want to do this Jackson’s help, should for long periods of time? be able to hit the glass No. It’s likely to show up and defend the paint with their strength and only in the case of foul trouble for Frank Mason length, and five unselfish III and Devonté Graham players, four of which and on those nights when are offensive threats almost anywhere on the the ball is sticking and floor. The fact that this the offense is not flowgroup will get pushed in ing the way Self would practice by lineups that like. It’s hard to imagine long stretches — or even include some of the other names on these lists (Svi short stretches — when and Vick, along with at least one of KU’s two lead guards is not on the Udoka Azubuike, Dwight Coleby, Mitch Lightfoot floor. Again, though, in and transfer Malik Newthe case of injuries or man) only reinforces the foul trouble, this is an fact that this group is option. going to be battle tested and strong together. Jackson at the 2 1 – Devonté Graham Jackson at the 4 (or Frank Mason) 1 – Frank Mason 2 – Josh Jackson 2 – Devonté Graham 3 – Sviatoslav Mykhail3 – Sviatoslav Mykhailiuk iuk (or Lagerald Vick) 4 – Carlton Bragg 4 – Josh Jackson 5 – Landen Lucas 5 – Landen Lucas (or Analysis: This is a lineup I think you’ll see a Carlton Bragg) Analysis: This is that lot this season, especially much-talked-about fourduring the middle porguard lineup that Self tion of each half. Mason and Graham no doubt are has hinted at playing, and it’s a thing of beauty. going to play together a With Mason, Graham, lot of the time this seaJackson and either Svi son (and almost always together, with Jackson, in or Vick on the floor at the same time, these crunch time), but they’ll guys are going to be able also both need breathto fly. I think you’ll see ers. When that happens, one will stay on the floor Lucas in there a lot with this group because of with Jackson moving to

season with a 20-13 record in singles. “She was playing some of the smartest tennis she’s played all year,” Trujillo said. “Unfortunately, she was unable to pull it out against Derby.” In their elimination match, Gorman and Peard built up a 7-5 lead over Olathe East’s Daya Chimakadze and Elise Byers. However, East rattled off the last four games to win the match, 9-7, and end Gorman and Peard’s season with a 16-13 record in doubles. “I hope this gets them excited and hungry to go out and play more and compete more in the offseason,” Trujillo said. “So

Saturday, October 15, 2016

SCOREBOARD 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 Today’s Games Kansas at Baylor, 2:30 p.m. (FS1) West Virginia at Texas Tech, 11 a.m. (FS1) Kansas State at Oklahoma, 11 a.m. (ESPN) Iowa State at Texas, 6 p.m. (LNN, Cyclones.tv)

when they come back next season, they’re more prepared.” Free State will get another shot at Chimakadze and Byers, as Dodd and Chen are slated to play them in their first match College when play resumes at SOUTH Louisville 24, Duke 14 9:00 a.m today. “We want to do well in High School Abilene 50, Wamego 14 the first match to get some Andover Central 7, Rose Hill 0 revenge for our No. 2 douAnthony-Harper-Chaparral 27, Cheney 6 bles team,” Chen said. “But Arkansas City 56, Newton 35 to make it into the topAttica/Argonia 50, Kiowa County 0 eight is the biggest goal for Baldwin 60, KC Bishop Ward 0 Basehor-Linwood 48, KC Piper 34 us. Neither one of us has Bishop Miege 51, Eudora 0 done that before.” Blue Valley 42, BV Northwest 7 Blue Valley Southwest 30, St. Trujillo, who said he’s Thomas Aquinas 27 watched and scouted evBuhler 28, Andale 21 Burlingame 54, Valley Falls 0 ery doubles team remainBV North 52, Mill Valley 23 ing in the tournament, BV Randolph 50, Wetmore 44 BV West 20, Gardner-Edgerton 7 has little doubt his douCaney Valley 49, Eureka 0 bles team can accomplish Cedar Vale/Dexter 58, Oxford 42 Central Burden 56, Flinthills 6 that goal, and perhaps Central Plains 60, Ellinwood 12 even more. Chase 64, Bucklin 16 “If Ali and Andrea are Chase County 14, Olpe 7 Cheylin 35, Natoma 18 on,” Trujillo said, “they Christ Preparatory Academy 34, can beat any of them.” Medicine Lodge 30 Class 6A state tournament Friday at Kossover Center FSHS Results Singles Kate Piper def. Leah Stein, DC, 6-3, 6-4, def. by Sarah Wilcox, SME, 6-0, 6-0, def. Ally McKenzie, JC, 9-6, def. by Ashley Sherrow, Derby, 9-5 Doubles Andrea Chen/Ali Dodd def. Robben/ Belin, Man, 6-1, 6-0, def. Powers/ Dinkel, GC, 6-1, 6-0, def. by Chang/ Yan, BVN, 6-0, 6-0 Gabby Gorman/Anna Peard def. Johnson/Steward, WE, 6-4, 6-2, def. by Freirich/McLiney, SME, 6-0, 6-1, def. Foster/Ollenberger, Hutch, 9-3, def. by Chimakadze/Byers, OE, 9-7

Indians victorious in ALCS opener

his superior defense and rebounding ability, but if Self goes this route strictly for offense, then you could easily see Bragg in there at the 5, particularly against smaller teams or if Lucas is in foul trouble. Shooters at four spots — five if Bragg’s out there — and four guys who can handle the ball, this lineup will be a Cleveland (ap) — Frannightmare match-up for cisco Lindor hit a two-run most teams. homer and Corey Kluber silenced Toronto’s One thing that jumps out at me after doing this booming bats, giving the exercise is just how simi- Cleveland Indians a 2-0 lar these lineups actually win over the Blue Jays in Game 1 of the AL Chamare. The Jayhawks have pionship Series on Friday some serious internight. changeable parts this Lindor connected in season — which is often the sixth inning off Marco the goal but not always reality for Self’s teams — Estrada and raced around and that should give Self the bases like a track star as the bend-but-don’tthe luxury of handling any number of calamities break Indians won their fourth straight playoff that could hit this team, game in this most unexfrom foul trouble and off nights to injuries and pected season. Kluber, Cleveland’s ineffective play. solid and stoic ace, The frontcourt cerpitched 6 1/3 spotless intainly is thinner than nings before manager the backcourt, but, as Terry Francona turned Self mentioned Thursthings over to the Indiday at KU’s Media Day, ans’ best weapon — their that’s exactly why he’s bullpen. Andrew Miller planning to play some struck out five of the six four-guard lineups this batters he faced and Cody season. Jackson and Svi, at 6-foot-8, allow Kansas Allen got the save with a to get away with playing perfect ninth. Toronto slugger Jose small for short stretches Bautista struck out three because their size at times and Edwin Enleast gives the Jayhawks carnacion lost his cool a chance to hold their own on defense and their when he was fanned in skill set creates match-up the eighth, jawing at plate umpire Laz Diaz. problems for opponents After getting their first on the other end. ALCS win since 2007, the Regardless of how Indians will try to take a these things play out, — 2-0 lead today with Josh and let’s face it, you can Tomlin facing Toronto’s never fully prepare for the ups and downs you’ll 20-game winner, J.A. Happ. get during an entire season — this much is clear one week into KU’s practice: Mason, Graham, BOX SCORE Jackson, Svi and Vick Indians 2, Blue Jays 0 are the five guards in Toronto Cleveland ab r h bi ab r h bi the rotation and Lucas, Carrera lf 3 0 0 0 C.Sntna dh 4 0 1 0 Bragg and Azubuike M.Upton ph-lf 1 0 0 0 Kipnis 2b 3 1 0 0 Dnldson 3b 4 0 2 0 Lindor ss 4 1 2 2 are the three bigs in the Encrncn 1b 4 0 2 0 Napoli 1b 3 0 0 0 Butista rf 3 0 0 0 Jose.Rm 3b 3 0 0 0 rotation, with Coleby Ru.Mrtn c 4 0 0 0 Chsnhll rf 3 0 3 0 and Lightfoot battling Tlwtzki ss 4 0 1 0 Crisp lf 1 0 0 0 Sunders dh 4 0 2 0 Ra.Dvis lf 0 0 0 0 for that fourth forward Pillar cf 3 0 0 0 Naquin cf 3 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 M.Mrtnz cf 0 0 0 0 spot, should Self need or Travis 2b Goins 2b 0 0 0 0 R.Perez c 3 0 0 0 want it. Barney ph-2b 1 0 0 0 Totals 33 0 7 0 Totals 27 2 6 2 It’s been a long time Toronto 000 000 000—0 since KU’s rotation has 002 00x—2 Cleveland 000 DP-Toronto 1, Cleveland 1. LOB-Toronto 8, been so crystal clear so Cleveland 4. 2B-Encarnacion (1). HR-Lindor (2). S-Crisp 2 (3). early in the season. And IP H R ER BB SO the versatility of the guys Toronto Estrada L,1-1 8 6 2 2 1 6 on his roster is a big rea- Cleveland Kluber W,2-0 6 1/3 6 0 0 2 6 son Self has that luxury Miller H,2 1 2/3 1 0 0 0 5 heading into the 2016-17 Allen S,3-3 1 0 0 0 0 1 T-2:44. A-37,727 (38,000). season.

| 3D

Cimarron 36, Lakin 14 Clay Center 47, Chapman 0 Clifton-Clyde 51, Centre 20 Coffeyville 21, Chanute 13 Columbus 42, Baxter Springs 14 Conway Springs 21, Garden Plain 20 Council Grove 25, St. Mary’s 0 Crest 50, Marais des Cygnes Valley 20 Derby 56, Salina South 7 DeSoto 14, Spring Hill 13 Dighton/Healy 36, Otis-Bison 30 Douglass 28, Belle Plaine 20 El Dorado 49, Circle 24 Elkhart 64, Sublette 0 Fowler 68, Deerfield 6 Fredonia 26, Neodesha 19 Frontenac 55, Parsons 14 Galena 40, Cherryvale 0 Garden City 36, Dodge City 13 Girard 55, Anderson County 14 Goddard 49, Valley Center 7 Goddard-Eisenhower 34, Andover 31 Goessel 56, St. John 6 Goodland 22, Concordia 8 Great Bend 49, Liberal 7 Halstead 46, Haven 0 Hanover 54, Frankfort 8 Hartford 56, Caldwell 42 Herington 36, Rural Vista 28 Hesston 49, Hillsboro 20 Hiawatha 27, Riverside 14 Hill City 68, Oberlin-Decatur 36 Hoisington 39, Ellsworth 20 Holcomb 28, Kingman 0 Holton 47, Jefferson West 6 Hoxie 28, Trego 12 Humboldt 16, Erie 8 Hutchinson 49, Wichita Campus 14 Hutchinson Central Christian 92, South Haven 12 Independence 28, Labette County 12 Iola 33, Burlington 12 Jayhawk Linn 44, Northeast-Arma 0 Jefferson North 22, Doniphan West 7 Junction City 43, Gateway, Mo. 14 KC Washington 30, KC Harmon 3 KC Wyandotte 35, KC Sumner 6 Kinsley 6, Wichita County 4 LaCrosse 44, Ellis 12 Lakeside 70, Thunder Ridge 32 Lansing 14, KC Turner 7 Larned 49, Lyons 0 Lawrence Free State 28, Olathe East 14 Lebo 56, Altoona-Midway 0 Little River 54, Canton-Galva 8 Logan/Palco 50, Lincoln 0 Louisburg 35, Fort Scott 6 Lyndon 40, Northern Heights 0 Macksville 38, Pratt Skyline 16 Madison/Hamilton 50, Southern Coffey 26 Maize 42, Salina Central 28 Maize South 21, Augusta 14 Manhattan 48, Emporia 0 Maranatha/Immaculata (FB) 60, Atchison County 44 Marysville 42, Beloit 16 Maur Hill - Mount Academy 28, Pleasant Ridge 24 McLouth 37, Horton 6 McPherson 48, Hays 14 Meade 67, Johnson-Stanton County 0 Minneola 46, Moscow 0

Mulvane 28, Ulysses 14 Nemaha Central 20, Sabetha 14 Ness City 62, South Gray 14 Nickerson 30, Wichita Trinity 0 Northern Valley 68, Sylvan-Lucas 44 Norton 48, Russell 14 Olathe North 17, Olathe Northwest 14 Osawatomie 21, Prairie View 0 Osborne 54, Victoria 8 Oswego 32, Uniontown 6 Ottawa 38, Paola 7 Peabody-Burns 52, Udall 6 Perry-Lecompton 44, Royal Valley 8 Phillipsburg 58, Hays-TMP-Marian 18 Pike Valley 50, Tescott 0 Pittsburg 35, Bonner Springs 14 Pittsburg Colgan 55, Yates Center 0 Plainville 51, Oakley 0 Pleasanton 42, Chetopa 32 Pratt 31, Hugoton 28 Pretty Prairie 52, Ashland 6 Rawlins County 48, Quinter 0 Remington 58, Inman 35 Republic County 42, Ell-Saline 12 Riley County 64, Minneapolis 0 Riverton 42, Southeast 0 Rock Hills 56, Linn 6 Rossville 49, Mission Valley 27 Scott City 42, Colby 12 Sedgwick 24, Moundridge 20 Shawnee Heights 18, Highland Park 6 Silver Lake 49, Oskaloosa 0 SM East 48, Lawrence 26 SM North 61, SM Northwest 38 SM West 42, SM South 14 Smith Center 33, Salina Sacred Heart 0 Smoky Valley 36, Rock Creek 29 Solomon 68, Bennington 26 South Barber 50, Stafford 0 South Central 60, Fairfield 14 Southeast Saline 48, Marion 6 Southwestern Hts. 22, Syracuse 12 Spearville 72, Satanta 24 St. James Academy 28, Kapaun Mount Carmel 17 St. Mary’s Academy 45, St. John’s Military 0 St. Paul 56, Marmaton Valley 8 Sterling 39, Hutchinson Trinity 8 Stockton 54, Wilson 28 Tonganoxie 22, Atchison 16 Topeka 62, Topeka West 7 Topeka Hayden 27, Santa Fe Trail 6 Topeka Seaman 34, Washburn Rural 27 Triplains-Brewster 50, Greeley County 0 Troy 20, Washington County 6 Valley Heights 26, Jackson Heights 22 Veritas Christian 60, Cair Paravel 16 Wabaunsee 36, Centralia 16 Wakefield 54, Axtell 6 Wallace County 48, Hodgeman County 28 Waverly 62, Onaga 40 Wellsville 48, Osage City 10 West Elk 46, Sedan 24 West Franklin 35, Central Heights 0 Wichita Bishop Carroll 42, Wichita Heights 41 Wichita Collegiate 27, Clearwater 6 Wichita Independent 44, Bluestem 0 Wichita Northwest 73, Wichita North 13 Wichita South 60, Wichita East 23 Wichita West 51, Wichita Southeast 19 Winfield 21, Wellington 20, OT

Sprint Cup Hollywood Casino 400 Lineup

Friday’s qualifying; race Sunday At Kansas Speedway Kansas City, Kan. (Car numbers in parentheses) 1. (20) Matt Kenseth, Toyota, 192.089 mph. 2. (18) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 192.082. 3. (19) Carl Edwards, Toyota, 191.015. 4. (78) Martin Truex Jr., Toyota, 190.786. 5. (88) Alex Bowman, Chevrolet, 190.315. 6. (22) Joey Logano, Ford, 190.221. 7. (11) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 190.188. 8. (2) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 190.087. 9. (31) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 189.927. 10. (47) AJ Allmendinger, Chevrolet, 189.840.

Postseason

LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) American League Cleveland 1, Toronto 0 Friday, Oct. 14: Cleveland 2, Toronto 0 Today: Toronto (Happ 20-4) at Cleveland (Tomlin 13-9), 3:08 p.m. National League Chicago vs. Los Angeles Today: Los Angeles (Maeda 16-11) at Chicago (Lester 19-5), 7:08 p.m.

Veritas cruises, 60-16 J-W Staff Report

Topeka — Michael Rask led the way for Veritas Christian with 280 rushing yards and five touchdowns in a 60-16 road over Cair Paravel on Friday night. As a team, Veritas had 423 rushing yards on 43 carries. Veritas led 28-8 at halftime.

Veritas Christian 14 14 24 8 — 60 Cair Paravel 0 8 8 0 — 16 V — Michael Rask 7 run (Rask run succeeded) V — Trey Huslig 5 run (pass failed) V — Quinton Donohoe 41 pass from Huslig (Rask run) V — Rask 1 run (run failed) C — Freemann Greene 30 run (Green run) V — Rask 34 run (Huslig run) V — Donohoe 29 pass from Huslig (Rask run) C — Greene 22 run (Brock Butel pass from Matthew Will) V — Rask 37 yard run (Hayden Pine run)

BRIEFLY Seabury soccer stumbles, 3-0 Bishop Seabury Academy boys soccer was kept off the scoreboard for the third time this season in a 3-0 loss to Christ Prep. Prior to Friday’s loss, the Seahawks had won its previous two matches to move one game below the .500 mark on the season.

KU tennis rolls at regionals Minneapolis — Three

different Kansas tennis players went unbeaten on Friday and pushed their way to the Round of 16 at the ITA Central Regionals. Senior Tess BernardFeigenbaum, sophomore Janet Koch and sophomore Anastasia Rychagova each posted 3-0 records. All three players cruised through the Round of 64 and Round of 32 on the singles side, while also notching a victory in doubles. As a team, the Jayhawks went 11-4 on the day in singles and doubles. Kansas is now 17-4 for the event.


4D

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Saturday, October 15, 2016

date has thrown at least 95 percent of the time. Amazing. Shock Linwood averages 6.8 and Terence Williams 5.8 yards per carry. “Shock is a — he is a problem for me,” Kansas head coach David Beaty said. “We’ve got to find a way to contain that guy, and those guys up front have a lot to say about that because they can knock you off the ball.” Baylor’s five starting offensive linemen weigh an average of 313 pounds. “They’re giant up front and then they use two tight ends who are basically extra O-linemen,” Bowen said. “It’s not the Baylor that people think. It’s not the four wides, wing it all over the field anymore. A lot of times, it’s a lot of big people on the field and they’re running you over.” Under first-year coach Jim Grobe, Baylor has run the ball 60 percent of the time. The Bears generally ran the ball the majority of the time under former coach Art Briles, especially last season. Counting backward from 2015 to Briles’ first season in Waco, 2008, the percentage of running plays: 65, 54, 58, 56, 58, 50, 45, 62. Kansas defends the pass better than the run, one of the factors that makes this and the Oklahoma game the toughest on the schedule. The Jayhawks limited TCU’s potent offense to a season-low 366 yards last Saturday, but this week’s challenge is a steeper, trickier one. “It’s funny how everyone kind of groups the Big 12 offenses as being the same,” Bowen said. “In reality, they are each week drastically different. There is no similarity between TCU and Baylor.” The matchup nightmare applies on the other side of the ball as well. The Jayhawks are a better passing team than running and Baylor defends the pass better than the run. The Bears rank first in the Big 12 in pass-defense efficiency and sixth in the nation. Even if it gets out of hand early and stays that way, that won’t nullify the strides KU made in last week’s near miss. If Kansas makes a game of it, take it as a really good sign of things to come.

KANSAS SCHEDULE Sept. 3 — Rhode Island, W 55-6 (1-0) Sept. 10 — Ohio, L 37-21 (1-1) Sept. 17 — at Memphis, L 43-7 (1-2) Sept. 29 — at Texas Tech, L 55-19 (1-3) Oct. 8 — TCU, L 24-23 (1-4) Today — at Baylor, 2:30 p.m. Oct. 22 — Oklahoma State, 11 a.m. Oct. 29 — at Oklahoma, TBA Nov. 5 — at West Virginia, TBA Nov. 12 — Iowa State, TBA Nov. 19 — Texas, TBA Nov. 26 — at Kansas State, TBA

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Kansas (1-4 overall, 0-2 Big 12) at Baylor (5-0, 2-0)

Keegan CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1D

KANSAS FOOTBALL

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2:30 p.m., McLane Stadium, Waco, Texas • TV: FOX Sports (cable channels 150, 227) Game-time forecast: 87 degrees, partly sunny, 0 percent chance of rain • Log on to KUsports.com for our live game blog and follow our coverage team on Twitter: @KUSports, @BentonASmith, @TomKeeganLJW, @mctait and @nightengalejr

1 2 3 THREE KEYS FOR KANSAS

More progress for Willis

Make Russell uncomfortable

No retreat from KU O-line

It’s going to take exceptional performances from every player in a Kansas uniform for the Jayhawks to have a shot at upsetting a highranked Baylor team on the road. That starts with quarterback Ryan Willis and the offense. The Bears average 42.6 points a game and have put up at least 35 points in all five of their wins. KU’s offense improved last week against TCU in sophomore Willis’s first start of the season. But head coach David Beaty wouldn’t call what he saw out of his quarterback (31for-45 passing, 348 yards, zero touchdowns, three interceptions) anything but average. In order for KU to maintain pace with Baylor, Willis will have to make the “big jump” Beaty said he soon expects to see out of the QB. And Willis will have to do so against a BU squad that ranks sixth in the nation in pass efficiency defense (92.27) and 13th in passing yards allowed (166.2 a game).

Last week against TCU, Clint Bowen’s KU defense limited quarterback Kenny Hill to season-lows in completions (17), completion percentage (53.1) and passing yards (206) while also harassing the QB into a season-high three interceptions. The Jayhawks accomplished all of that without starting defensive tackle Daniel Wise and starting linebacker Marcquis Roberts, both of whom are expected back from injuries against the Bears. Most likely, KU will need all the help it can get to break through Baylor’s massive offensive line. Still, the defense seems to improve and show off more depth by the week (see: the emergence of sophomore linebacker Keith Loneker Jr. and senior defensive end Cameron Rosser). Baylor’s Seth Russell is a perfect 13-0 as the Bears’ starting QB, and so far this season has passed for 1,326 yards and 14 touchdowns, while completing 59.4 percent of his passes, with four interceptions in 155 throws. The Bears have a run-first offense, for sure, but Kansas will have to pressure Russell heavily when he drops back to throw.

Kansas offensive line coach Zach Yenser finally has what he considers his best combination of starting linemen in place: freshman left tackle Hakeem Adeniji, junior left guard Jayson Rhodes, junior center Joe Gibson, redshirt freshman right guard Mesa Ribordy and senior right tackle D’Andre Banks. KU’s O-line looked better than it had all season last week versus TCU. Now it’s up to the group to avoid a letdown at Baylor. The line has to give Willis time in the pocket to get the ball out to his top play-makers, such as sophomore receiver Steven Sims Jr. and junior wideout LaQuvionte Gonzalez. Perhaps even more importantly, the O-line has to open more holes for the Jayhawks’ running attack, so that senior back Ke’aun Kinner, sophomore Taylor Martin and true freshman Khalil Herbert have better opportunities to show off their skill sets. — Benton Smith

MEGA MATCHUP

TALE OF THE TAPE

Baylor rushing attack vs. KU defensive front

Baylor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Kansas

This is a case of strength versus strength. Baylor loves pounding away on drives with its running game and KU’s defensive front has routinely made impact plays. Bowen, no doubt, spent all week challenging the manhood of his defensive linemen and linebackers in preparation for taking on a BU O-line whose smallest starting member is 6-foot-4, 310-pound left guard Ishmael Wilson. The Bears basically have two starting running backs in Shock Linwood and Terence Williams. Linwood, a senior, has rushed for 454 yards and a touchdown, while Williams, a sophomore, brings 410 yards and six scores with him into the weekend. Between the two of them, they average 172.8 rushing yards a game, which is more than the five least successful rushing attacks in the Big 12 (TCU, Iowa State, Oklahoma State, Texas Tech and Kansas) average as a team. Led by the likes of KU defensive linemen Wise and Dorance Armstrong Jr. and linebackers Roberts and Courtney Arnick, KU’s defense is in for its toughest test to date.

4 4 4

Baylor run D vs. KU run game Baylor pass D vs. KU pass game Baylor run game vs. KU run D Baylor pass game vs. KU pass D

4

4

Special teams

— Benton Smith

JAYHAWK PULSE No, Kansas didn’t upset TCU last week. But the four-touchdown underdog Jayhawks came much closer to doing so than the college football nation expected in a 24-23 loss. Neither Beaty nor his players took joy in defeat, either, which is a great sign moving forward. The positive vibes surrounding

the program can only grow as both the offense and defense had reasons to feel better about the state of their affairs entering the team’s first game against a ranked opponent this season. Kansas football hasn’t won away from Memorial Stadium in 40 games, and a win this week at BU would have to be considered

a monumental upset. But as long as the Jayhawks avoid self-inflicted setbacks this week, they might be able to continue to head in the right direction — even in defeat. — Benton Smith

FIVE QUESTIONS WITH … WR SHAKIEM BARBEL

1

Last year you had 15 catches on the season. Last week versus TCU it seemed like you were going to surpass that in one game (career-highs with nine catches and 94 receiving yards). What was the key to your breakout performance? “It was kind of how the game unfolded. Willis did a great job of making reads back there and our line was blockin’ their tails off, giving him time to make those great reads. It was kind of just routine plays we’ve been making the past couple weeks. I was playing a new position, but it doesn’t matter who’s in the game. As long as Willis does a great job of making his reads back there, someone should be able to make the catch.”

2

With Willis taking over as the starter last week, did the offense have more rhythm because you weren’t switching back and

forth between quarterbacks?

confidence for me, personally, catching so many balls in one game. It’s kind of reassuring that “I definitely feel the hard work I’ve been putting in as though it’s nice in practice is paying off. And I also to roll with the feel as though it builds confidence same quarterback for Willis, and mine and Quiv’s and and build chemSims’ chemistry. So he knows that istry throughout he doesn’t just have to look one Barbel the game, not way, that he has multiple targets switch as much. out there who he can trust throwBut as far as who’s playing quaring the ball to.” terback, I feel as though no matter who’s in there Coach Beaty and The offense obviously (offensive analyst Garrett) Riley wasn’t perfect against do a good job of preparing them TCU but it did seem to all equally. I trust whoever’s back show a lot of progress. How there’s gonna make great reads close do you all feel like you and put us in a situation to win the are to taking another step and ball game.” keeping the offense competitive week after week in the Big You and Willis had a 12? pretty good thing going last week. Do you think “Definitely we had a lot of it’s something that can be rep- missed opportunities last week, licated going forward? but I feel like it’s a glimpse of what our offense could be, if that “Definitely. I feel as though it’s makes sense. It’s kind of like a

4

3

confidence-boost that shows the team what we’re capable of doing. I definitely think it’s a step in the right direction.”

5

Last year, you scored one touchdown and it was on a recovered fumble at Texas. Is it safe to say you have a legit TD in your future? Do you feel like it’s coming? “I definitely do. Honestly, I felt like it was coming last year, but the way things unfolded it just didn’t happen. But building confidence in your quarterback and your quarterback building confidence in you puts you in position to make those plays. As long as we keep grinding and all the receivers, we keep opening up the field for the running backs to open it up for us, the line’s blocking their tails off, the opportunity will present itself.” — Benton Smith

Tackles for loss a sign of Jayhawks’ progress By Benton Smith basmith@ljworld.com

By the time a winless 2015 came to a close for the University of Kansas football team, the program had plenty to address in the offseason. Defensively, coordinator Clint Bowen seemed to have as immense a reclamation project to take on as anyone after KU surrendered 46.1 points and 560.8 yards per game. Looking back at it now, Bowen’s boss, head coach David Beaty, says his defensive leader — like every member of the staff — took the team’s underwhelming performance personally.

“You can’t run from them,” Beaty said of the team’s obvious shortcomings entering his second year in Lawrence. “That’s who you are. Statistically your production lies in the stats, and I know from (Bowen’s) standpoint, he was extremely motivated, because, man, he puts better teams out there than that routinely. But they were young. There was a lot of things. But that doesn’t bother a coach. We don’t care how old they are. We expect them to do it the way we want them to do it.” Entering today’s game at No. 11 Baylor (2:30 p.m. kickoff, FOX Sports 1), the KU defense has

shown significant growth in numerous categories, including the most obvious ones — 33 points and 419.2 total yards allowed per game. Beaty credits Bowen for driving the turnaround, noting the coordinator “talks to everyone in the country,” in a search of improving the defense in any way imaginable. New linebackers coach Todd Bradford, cornerbacks coach Kenny Perry, new defensive line coach Michael Slater and even first-year special teams coordinator Joe DeForest have helped Kansas put a much improved defense on the field this season.

By far, the most impressive result of the defensive overhaul has been the Jayhawks’ newfound ability to create tackles for loss. KU (1-4 overall, 0-2 Big 12) ranks fourth in the nation with 9.6 a game (48 total). A nine TFL showing last week versus TCU ended a three-game stretch of double-digit totals in that category. According to Bowen, Slater has the defensive line playing at a higher level, as they make better use of their hands, play lower to the ground and are generally more explosive than a season ago. “We’ve created some things schematically that allow us to move some

guys a little more efficiently with our defensive package,” Bowen said. “As has been seen out there, we’re able to go from a three-man front to a four-man front with the same people in the game on back-to-back plays. It creates a little bit of disruption or confusion. It allows us to move and just be a little bit more aggressive with our front seven.” Only Miami (10.8), Michigan (10.0) and Texas A&M (9.7) average more tackles for loss a game than Kansas. Beaty said such production wouldn’t be possible without defensive linemen creating problems

up front. Sophomore end Dorance Armstrong Jr. and senior end/linebacker Cameron Rosser each lead KU with 7.0 tackles for loss this season as the Jayhawks prepare to face the Bears (5-0, 2-0). “There’s a common denominator there,” Beaty said of the unit’s success coinciding with the arrival of Slater. “They have been playing like that since he got here, pretty much the same dudes now (from last season). He does a really good job. There’s a reason why his guys at Rice are playing in the NFL and nobody knew who they were. They’re good players. He does a good job.”


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