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We like the smalltown feel that Lawrence has, but we do have some big-city challenges. And one of them is manifested through higher crime rates, higher calls to service and higher service needs.”
Nick Krug/ JournalWorld Photo
CRIME DOWN IN NEARLY ALL CATEGORIES
— Lawrence Police Chief Tarik Khatib
——
But do Lawrence’s stats fit its small-town image?
Funding changes may shrink Free State Festival ———
Director says outdoor concert could be at risk By Rochelle Valverde rvalverde@ljworld.com
By Conrad Swanson l cswanson@ljworld.com
S
tatistically speaking, 2015 was a below-average year for crime in Lawrence, which is a good thing from the perspective of local law enforcement. Data collected by the Lawrence Police Department and organized by the Kansas Bureau of Investigation show that 10 of the 11 crime categories declined over the past decade. But the one crime category on the rise was rape, and the report also showed the amount of crime in Lawrence doesn’t necessarily match up with its small-town image. > CRIME, 8A
How Lawrence compares on violent crime Topeka
5.2
Violent 6 crimes per 1,000 5 residents
Lawrence
Lawrence
2.5
4 Source: 3 Kansas Bureau of 2 Investigation
’05
KEY Topeka
Manhattan
2.2
Manhattan Overland Park
OP
’06
’07
’08
’09
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’11
’12
’13
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1.5
From 2005 to 2015, the violent crime rate in Lawrence fell by 38 percent. Topeka, Manhattan and Overland Park saw decreases of 33, 39 and 41 percent, respectively. Sylas May/Journal-World Graphic
KU Homecoming festivities return this week
T
Heard on the Hill
he University of Kansas is celebrating Homecoming this week, culminating with the Jayhawks facing Oklahoma State on the football field. Festivities leading up to the game, however, last all week. Here’s what you need to know. The game: Kickoff is
Sara Shepherd sshepherd@ljworld.com
set for 11 a.m. Saturday at KU’s Memorial Stadium. For complete KU football coverage before, during and after the game, go to kusports.com. Homecoming theme: “Rock Chalk Super Hawk” Parade and pep rally: The parade takes place at 6 p.m. Friday on Massachusetts Street, starting
at South Park and heading north. The pep rally will follow, at 7 p.m. at the corner of Eighth and Massachusetts streets. The Marching Jayhawks, KU Spirit Squad and mascots will all be there.
This year’s Free State Festival brought performers ranging from country star Kris Kristofferson to comedian Maria Bamford to Lawrence, but organizers say recent changes to how the city funds events may cause the festival to scale back. A cap If the placed on funding doesn’t funding requests will happen, then amount to we have to at least a $60,000 de- figure out, do crease in city we cut other funding for programs in next year’s order to keep festival, said K i m b e r l y this one alive? W i l l i a m s , Do we shrink CEO of the the festival?” Lawrence Arts Center, — Kimberly Williams, which puts CEO of the Lawrence on the event. Arts Center “If the funding doesn’t happen, then we have to figure out, do we cut other programs in order to keep this one alive? Do we shrink the festival?” Williams said. Last year, the festival received $75,500 of city funding, all proceeds from the transient guest tax fund. That amount included $30,000 from the city’s budget, $30,000 from Lawrence’s convention and visitors bureau and $15,500 from the guest tax grant program.
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DEATHS Journal-World obituary policy: For information about running obituaries, call 832-7151. Obituaries run as submitted by funeral homes or the families of the deceased.
LINDEN KAREL MOSHER Our beloved son, Linden Karel Mosher, was born silent on October 6, 2016 at Children’s Mercy Hospital in Kansas City, Missouri. He is survived by his parents, Nicholas and Emily Mosher; his big sister, Nora Jane Mosher; his aunt, Kassia Mosher; and his grandparents, Edward and Donna Laut, and Paul and Kathy Mosher. He is also survived by many, many more friends and relatives who would have loved to play with him. It is a comfort to us, knowing how well our son was loved. We would welcome your presence at a memorial service for our child at 10:30 am, Saturday, October 22 at BridgePointe Community Church (New Life in Christ Church), 601 W 29th Terrace, Lawrence, KS 66046. Instead of flowers please consider a
donation in Linden’s honor to the Paglaum Learning Center, a preschool that provides nutrition and early childhood education to at risk children in the Philippines. Checks can be mailed to Kids International Ministries, P. O. Box 1360, Lawrence, KS 66044 or by selecting the Paglaum Learning Center in the "Ministry" dropdown menu at this web address:. https://goo.gl/Epv1pF Alternatively, please consider a gift to Alexandra’s House, a perinatal hospice program that helped prepare us for Linden’s death: http://www.alexandrasho use.com/ “As human beings, our job in life is to help people realize how rare and valuable each one of us really is.” –Fred Rogers Please sign this guestbook at Obituaries. LJWorld.com.
James R. Henry A memorial service for James R. Henry, (“Jim”), 82, Lawrence will be held at 10:00 a.m. Friday, October 21, 2016, at First United Methodist Church, 946 Vermont Street. He passed away Tuesday, October 11, 2016, at Neuvant House of Lawrence. Inurnment will follow with military honors in Pioneer Cemetery on the University of Kansas campus. Jim has been a resident of Lawrence since 1967, when he moved here to attend the University of Kansas after serving on active and reserve duty for a number of years as a Naval Aviator and as an Air Intelligence Officer. Captain Henry first enlisted in the U.S. Navy on June 4, 1952, at Minneapolis, Minnesota. He completed Recruit Training at the Naval Training Center, Great Lakes, Illinois, followed by completion of Airman Preparatory School at Norman, Oklahoma, and Naval Aviation Electronics School at Memphis, Tennessee. He then was assigned to the Naval Air Test Center, Patuxent River, Maryland, as an Aviation Electronics Technician. In August 1954, Captain Henry began the course of instruction in the Naval School of Preflight, Pensacola, Florida. As a Naval Aviation Cadet he completed all phases of flight training which included aircraft carrier landing qualification, and he was commissioned an Ensign and designated a Naval Aviator in April 1956, at Hutchison, Kansas. He then served in Utility Squadron Five at Atsugi, Japan; Jet Transitional Training Unit, Olathe, Kansas, All Weather Fighter Squadron Three and Heavy Attack Squadron 16, both at San Diego, California; and in Heavy Attack Training Unit Pacific at Whidbey Island, Washington. Shortly after, he was assigned to the new Naval Auxiliary Air Station,
GARY LEE MOULTON Services for Gary Lee Moulton, 78, Lawrence are pending and will be announced by Warren McElwain Mortuary. He died October 15, 2016 at Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
MARILYN JUNE NIEDERPUCKETT Passed away Saturday, October 15th, 2016, at Lawrence Memorial Hospital. Funeral arrangements to follow.
More obituaries on page 4A.
Every life is worth celebrating
Meridian, Mississippi, where he served as Personnel Officer. Subsequently, he completed the Armed Forces Air Intelligence Training Center course of instruction at Denver, Colorado, and was assigned as the Air Wing Intelligence Officer for Attack Carrier Air Wing 19, operating in the Western Pacific and Tonkin Gulf in the South China Sea, off Vietnam, aboard the U.S.S. Bon Homme Richard. He subsequently served in the same capacity aboard the U.S.S. Ticonderoga, and later, as Assistant Officer in Charge of the Fleet Air Intelligence Support Center at Lemoore, California. Upon leaving active duty in 1967, Jim enrolled at the University of Kansas where he completed the Bachelor of Science in Education degree, the Master of Science in Education degree, and the Doctor of Higher Education degree, which was awarded in 1976. During that time, he was also employed by the University as Assistant Registrar for the Office of Admissions and Records and later, as Director of the Office of Veterans Services. From 1967 to 1985, Captain Henry served as an Intelligence Officer in Naval Intelligence units in Olathe, Kansas; Memphis, Tennessee; St. Louis, Missouri; and in a Cruiser/Destroyer unit in Lincoln, Nebraska. He was recalled to active duty in 1973 to lead a debriefing team for Operation Homecoming, the return of Vietnam POW’s. He served as
Commanding Officer of a Defense Documents unit and a Naval Investigative Service unit, both in Kansas City, Missouri, and as Commanding Officer of an Intelligence Volunteers Training unit in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Following that, he served as the Reserve Intelligence Area Coordinator, Area 10, in Minneapolis, Minnesota, where he directed the Naval Reserve Intelligence Program for the Midwest United States. Captain Henry retired from the U.S. Navy on July 1, 1985, after serving the Navy and United States for more than 33 years. In 1979, Jim joined the University of Kansas Placement Center where he directed career placement programs for the Liberal Arts and Sciences and the Fine Arts colleges. While at the Placement Center, he assisted hundreds of students with their career and employment ambitions. He was selected by the 1992 Senior Class to receive the Citation for Leadership and Achievement in Student Services (CLASS) Award. He was also appointed to the Graduate Faculty as an Adjunct Assistant Professor in the Counseling Psychology department. Jim retired from the University of Kansas in 1997 and, in 1999, was elected to a four-year term on the Lawrence City Commission. He served as Mayor of Lawrence from 2000 to 2001, and retired from the City Commission on April 8, 2003. While Mayor, Jim was instrumental in bringing to the City in 2000, the Lawrence Transit bus system. Buses continue to serve the City today. Throughout his many years in Lawrence, Jim made service to the community a top priority. He was a member of the Jaycees and the Luncheon Optimists, worked on United Way campaigns and was a past president of Warm Hearts of Douglas County. He
also served on the Board of Directors of Health Care Access, was President of Lawrence Rotary Club where he was honored with the Paul Harris Fellowship Award, Rotary’s highest honor. He was also involved in Habitat for Humanity. Jim was very committed to service to First United Methodist Church of Lawrence, where he held many leadership positions and chaired a number of committees and fundraising efforts. He co-chaired ticket sales for Lawrence Memorial Hospital “Hearts of Gold” events. In addition, Jim founded the Santa Fe Trail Leavenworth chapter of The Military Officers of America Association (MOAA). He served as the president of that chapter and of the Jayhawk Lawrence chapter. Jim was president of the Missouri-Kansas Association of Naval Aviation and he served for two years as Kansas state president of MOAA. Jim and his wife, Kay, were married in Yokohama, Japan on October 5, 1957 and celebrated 59 years of marriage this October 5, 2016. Kay survives as do their two daughters, Barb Henry and Jennifer McWilliams. Also surviving are Jennifer’s husband, Kevin, and their sons Brogan and Ian. Jim’s two surviving sisters, Sally Gibb and Jane Mardison, reside in California. Memorials may be made in his name to First United Methodist Church of Lawrence, Kansas, or the Lawrence Memorial Hospital Endowment and may be sent in care of Warren-McElwain Mortuary. Online condolences may be sent to warrenmcelwain.com. Please sign this guestbook at Obituaries. LJWorld.com.
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| 3A
Maple Leaf Festival crowds swell with mild weather By Elvyn Jones ejones@ljworld.com
Baldwin City — Logan Lashbrook was enjoying a moment of relaxation Saturday at Kappa Sigma’s Maple Leaf Festival turkey leg stand as the clock on the bank across the street showed 10 minutes before noon. A junior, Lashbrook managed the Baker University fraternity’s stand a year ago and had experience with its popularity among those attending the festival. In a few minutes when the near hourlong festival parade wrapped up, the stand at the festival’s epicenter of Eighth and High streets would be a destination for many attendees. “We’ll have people lined up across the street,” Lashbrook said. “We’re trying to be better prepared than last year. We have a couple of coolers filled with legs.” Lashbrook, who is running the grill this year, knew the stored turkey legs wouldn’t keep ahead of the crowd and expected some of his younger fraternity brothers might know what was ahead of them. “They’ll catch on,” he
Elvyn Jones/Journal-World Photos
CLOCKWISE FROM TOP: THE MAPLE LEAF FESTIVAL CROWD fills Eighth Street in downtown Baldwin City; DAVID LASKOWSKI shares his tandem bike with a skeleton at Saturday’s parade; HANNAH HUTTON AND TIM CRAIG enjoy turkey legs from the Baker University Kappa Sigma food booth. said. “There’s like, 30,000 people at the festival every year. We have 80 boxes. That’s 1,500 to 1,600 legs.”
A half block south on Eighth Street, Hannah Hutton and Tim Craig sat on the sidewalk with backs against a wall
enjoying their turkey legs. Both had returned to their hometown from college for the festival, Hutton from Kansas State
enough festival experience to know they could avoid a long line if they got to the booth early. “I’ve been saving this craving for a month,” Hutton said. “He wants a funnel cake, and I want a caramel apple. I don’t know what else I’m going to get. I’ll have to look around.” As downtown filled up after the parade, Joanna Bonee, of Lawrence, had already finished the shopping list of her husband, Jason Bonee, and was shopping the craft booths for anything of interest. “I was told by my husband I had to get gooseberry jam,” she said. “He knows this is a good place to find it.” The festival appeared on track to draw its usual 30,000 to 40,000 visitors, said Donna Curran, Maple Leaf Festival Committee vendor chair. People started arriving at vendor booths soon after they opened at 9 a.m., she said. “The crowds look great,” she said. “I was in the parade and when we turned the corner at Sixth University and Craig from Street, I saw the crowd Pittsburg State Univeron High Street and went, sity. Kappa Sigma turkey ‘Wow.’” legs were on their festival > MAPLE, 5A checklists, and they had
Report predicts biggest jump in years for local home prices Town Talk
Chad Lawhorn clawhorn@ljworld.com
I
once was in the market for a beachfront home. I told the Realtor my price range. I was encouraged when she didn’t laugh. I was less encouraged when she showed me a blanket. Lawrence’s real estate market hasn’t reached that extreme, but realtors are seeing significant price increases. A new report is predicting even more in 2017.
Home prices in Lawrence are expected to finish 2016 up 5.1 percent, and are predicted to rise another 4.1 percent in 2017, according to a new report from the Wichita State University Center for Real Estate. Lawrence hasn’t seen that type of growth in home prices in quite some time. Since 2012, the average annual increase in Lawrence
home prices has been just 0.8 percent. Rising home prices are consistent with what local real estate agents have been reporting throughout 2016: homes are in short supply, thus prices are rising. The WSU report, which was delivered to the Lawrence Board of Realtors on Thursday, confirmed that trend. The
report called Lawrence’s supply of homes for sale “incredibly tight.” The trend of an undersupply of homes isn’t a new one for Lawrence. The report highlighted that the number of homes for sale in Lawrence has consistently trailed the national average since 2014.
> HOMES, 4A
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home prices do increase at the rates predicted by the WSU report, that would make it more CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A likely that homeowners will see higher assessed The spike in home values on their property prices will create several tax bills. questions. Perhaps the The Douglas County largest is whether LawAppraiser’s office is rence homebuilders will tasked with determinincrease their pace of ing what the fair market building. value of every home in Even as home sales the county is as of Jan. 1. have increased in LawThat work is underway. rence in recent years, the Property owners will number of new single receive change of value family homes under con- notices in March. For the struction has remained last several years, tax valpretty flat, or has fallen ues for most properties in some years. The report haven’t gone up much. predicts 2016 will finNow, tax bills have still increased in many cases ish relatively flat — 225 because several governnew housing starts in ments have increased Lawrence and Douglas their property tax rates, County compared to 221 in 2015. The report is pre- i.e. mill levies. Property owners from dicting a slight decline in the 1990s and early 2000s, 2017 to 220 single-family though, still remember housing starts. when tax values often did That’s in contrast to rise by 5 percent or more. what is happening in the If that happens, and mill Kansas City market. As home sales have increased levies continue to rise, that would be a double in the metro, so too has whammy for taxpayers. home construction. But I still think it is too Kansas City home starts early to predict that tax are estimated to rise by values actually will rise by 22 percent in 2016, and another 4 percent in 2017. 5 percent. The Douglas County The report wasn’t reAppraiser’s most recent ally clear on why Lawrence home construction report had mixed sigisn’t surging more, but in nals on that front. The report said the office had my talks with some real analyzed all the sales estate professionals, I made during the first hear a couple of factors. half of 2016. It compared Local homebuilders still the selling price of those remember the pain that the recession created and homes to the tax value that had been assigned to are being cautious. Plus, those homes. The selling Carl Cline, president of prices were, on average, the Lawrence Board of about 1.7 percent higher Realtors, said there is than the tax values. That probably an even more practical reason the num- would indicate some upward adjustment of tax bers haven’t surged. “We only have so many values may be warranted, but that’s quite a bit less builders, and so many builders can only build so than 5 percent. The appraiser’s report, many homes,” Cline said. though, did note that it “We lost a large number of builders in the financial also had evaluated the selling prices of some debacle.” homes through the end But I also hear that the of August. That analysis average price point of a new home in Lawrence is found the selling price making it tough on builders. For example, through August, the median selling price of a newly constructed home in Lawrence was $314,450. The median selling price for an existing home was $171,000. That’s a big gap, and I’ve had real estate agents tell me buyers may not be seeing enough value in new homes. That may change, though, if the price of existing homes rise but builders are able to keep the price of new homes relatively steady. It also will be interesting to see if builders undertake more projects outside of west Lawrence neighborhoods, which traditionally come with some pretty big price tags. New construction out near 23rd Street and O’Connell Road in eastern Lawrence, for example, won’t be producing many homes of more than $300,000. There is one other important reason to keep an eye on home prices. If
of an average threebedroom, two-bath home with 1,300 to 1,800 square feet was $184,987. That’s up 9.5 percent from the same time period a year ago. What the data shows in the next few months probably will be key in determining how much tax values rise. Other findings from the WSU report include: l Home sales in Lawrence and Douglas County are expected to finish 2016 at about 1,400 homes, up about 1 percent from 2015 totals. Home sales for 2017 are predicted to come in at 1,510 units, which would be about an 8 percent increase. l Mortgage rates are predicted to remain low through 2017, with rates for a 30-year mortgage predicted to remain below 4.5 percent. While 4.5 percent is historically
very low, that would represent an increase. Mortgage rates for 30year loans are closer to 3.5 percent nationally. The WSU report also provided projections for other Kansas communities. Those include: l Kansas City: Sales growth of 4.4 percent, and an increase of 4.2 percent in home prices in 2017. l Manhattan: Sales growth of 6 percent and an increase of 4.7 percent in home prices in 2017. l Topeka: Sales growth of 2 percent and an increase of 1.9 percent in home prices in 2017. l Wichita: Sales growth of 5 percent and an increase of 3.5 percent in home prices in 2017. — This is an excerpt from Chad Lawhorn’s Town Talk column, which appears each weekday on LJWorld.com.
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LAWRENCE
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Maple
RON JOHNSON, OF GRANDVIEW, MO., hands 12-yearold Nellie LaFountain, of Baldwin City, a mirror to check on the hair crown he styled for her at his K.C. Twist booth Saturday at the Maple Leaf Festival in Baldwin City.
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A
The weather was near perfect for the festival with temperatures in the low 70s and overcast skies, Curran said. The only concern was the wind. “We had a booth take flight last night,” she said. “She was able to get another tent and was open this morning.” At the intersection of Eighth and Indiana streets, Clemo Haddox wasn’t worried about the craft items in his family’s DC’s Juntiques booth taking flight. The superintendent of the South Coffeyville, Okla., school district said he and his family had returned to the festival for the 16th year with their wrought-iron yard art. As
KU CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A
Parade grand marshals: Bob Davis, former play-by-play voice of Kansas Jayhawk football and men’s basketball, and Kyle Clemons, former KU track star who earned an Olympic gold medal running the third leg in the semifinal heat of the men’s 4x400-meter relay this year in Rio de Janeiro. Light it up: An effort dubbed Glow KU will last all week long, starting at noon today. Jayhawk fans across Lawrence and the KU campus are encouraged to put up red and blue lights outside homes and businesses and leave them on all week.
Other events Here are some of the
| 5A
Elvyn Jones/JournalWorld Photo
‘‘
You see all that lined up behind the tent? That’s already been sold and waiting to be picked up. We’ve been busy since we opened this morning.”
— Clemo Haddox, vendor
the First Methodist Church with his day. bell tower rung out the “You see all that lined start of the noon hour, up behind the tent?” he Haddox was already happy asked. “That’s already
highlights. Check homecoming.ku.edu for a complete list, including school-specific tailgating parties. l Stuff the Bus — 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. today at Adams Alumni Center. Drop off nonperishable food items for Just Food of Douglas County. l The Awakening of Kings and Queens Homecoming Pageant — 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. today in Woodruff Auditorium at the Kansas Union. Presented by Black Student Union. Tickets are $10 at the door. l The Super Search — 8 p.m. today on Wescoe Beach. A scavenger hunt event across campus. Bring a team, post search pics online with the hashtags #KUHomecoming and #KUSuperSearch. l Sign Competition — 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday on the Strong Hall lawn. See student groups’ plywood signs interpreting
this year’s homecoming theme. l Homecoming Food Fest and Jayhawk Jingles show — 6 to 9 p.m. Wednesday at Adams Alumni Center. Free food, free entertainment in the form of Jayhawk Jingles skits. l Lawrence for Literacy Children’s Book Drive — 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Thursday at Adams Alumni Center. Bring books for programs to help ensure children achieve literacy goals outside the classroom. l Fantastic Flapjacks pancake feed — 9 to 11 p.m. Thursday in the Adams Alumni Center parking lot. Cost is $5 per person. l NPHC Fall Step Show — 8:30 p.m. Friday at Woodruff Auditorium. — This is an excerpt from Sara Shepherd’s Heard on the Hill column, which appears on LJWorld.com.
LMH Oncology Center Expands Cancer Care Team Introducing Jodie Barr, DO, and Jodi Palmer, MD
been sold and waiting to be picked up. We’ve been busy since we opened this morning.” The annual festival will continue from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. today. — County reporter Elvyn Jones can be reached at 832-7166. Follow him on Twitter: @ElvynJ
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Final Days!
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A new approach In contrast to that scattered approach, the city’s target is to channel all event funding requests through the grant program. City leaders say it will offer a fairer way to distribute money from the city’s transient guest tax fund, which is collected through a special sales tax charged on hotel rooms. “I think that that was part of the challenge, is that people were coming to the (City) Commission at different times for different events, and this allows us to put it all into a structure that’s fair for everybody,” said Porter Arneill, the arts and culture director for the city. New rules adopted for the program will also put a $15,000 cap on each request, which is 10 percent of the program’s overall pool of $150,000. In regards to the cap, City Commissioner Matthew Herbert said that the goal was two-fold: to increase the total number of events the program can fund, and to encourage the events to become self-sustaining over time. “The idea was by putting a cap on the amount
John Young/Journal-World File Photo
FLAVOR FLAV OF PUBLIC ENEMY PERFORMS during a free concert at the Free State Festival on June 25. The festival’s popular outdoor concerts may be threatened by changes to the amount of city funding the festival can receive.
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I think it’s a little bit unreasonable to request that a huge chunk of a year’s worth of funding be put towards one event that takes place over one week.”
— City Commissioner Matthew Herbert
you could ask for, it does put a little bit of pressure on the event to go get its own private donors, to get its own funding sources,” said Herbert, who also serves on the grant program’s advisory board. “That way we know that the transient guest tax fund is supplementing, but not being the lifeblood of, events.”
2016–2017
Funding decisions The Free State Festival began as a small independent film festival in 2011, but has since expanded to include panels, concerts, stage performances and art installations. It’s estimated that the 2016 festival attracted approximately 12,000 audience members and 850 hotel room stays. Although Williams said she supported the concept of funding a variety of events, she thinks multiple criteria should go into deciding how much each event receives. “I understand the allocation of $15,000, spreading it among a variety of groups,” Williams said. “But it’s sort of like in venture capital. If I have
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10 deals walk in the door, I’m not simply going to distribute it equitably. I’m really going to look at the projects that seem to have the greatest merit and the greatest sustainability.” This year, 24 events requested funding from the guest tax grant program. Eight of those requests went completely unfunded — including opera, reggae and bluegrass shows — while others received less money than requested. The Free State Festival was 1 of 4 events that received more than $15,000. Herbert said that he understood that the festival is a huge draw, but that a oneweek festival still needs to leave enough funding for a variety of events the rest of the year. “I think it’s a little bit unreasonable to request that a huge chunk of a year’s worth of funding be put towards one event that takes place over one week,” Herbert said. “It’s nice that we’re able to fill hotel rooms that one week, but we have 51 other weeks throughout the year that our hoteliers would really like to keep their rooms full.”
Festival cuts However, the limited city funding may mean the festival has to cut its programming by as much as half: from a six-day to a three- or four-day festival, according to festival director Sarah Bishop.
as an arts capital, it’s just not enough support. “It’s too meager to actually make a difference, and this community wants to make a difference in its expression in arts and culture,” Williams said. As far as the overall amount allocated toward the grant program, city leaders admitted that they would like to see it grow. Arneill said that economic impact calculations will be part of the analysis of the grant program going forward. He said he hoped that data will show that such events make substantial contributions to the city’s economy. “By creating a structure, identifying a certain amount of money, my hope would be that maybe that amount will increase in time,” Arneill said. “…That kind of information can help us articulate a stronger argument in the future for increasing this type of funding, growing possibly new programs and also enhancing existing programs.” The Transient Guest Tax Grant Program is currently accepting applications for 2017 events, and the deadline for submissions is Nov. 4. Recommendations from the program’s advisory The bigger picture board will be sent to the Williams also raised the City Commission for conquestion of whether the sideration in December. overall pool of $150,000 is adequate. She says for — City Hall reporter Rochelle Valverde can be reached at 832-6314. Follow a town that she thinks has her on Twitter: @RochelleVerde attempted to brand itself
“We’re certainly considering a number of ways of structuring the festival to save money,” Bishop said, noting that moving the festival’s date to one during the school year to increase ticket sales from college students was another option. The overall cost of the festival is about $310,000, and Bishop said in addition to money from existing sponsors, the festival is seeking outside grants. If enough money isn’t raised, Bishop said one thing that may end up having to go is the free outdoor concert. This year, the festival brought hip-hop artists Public Enemy to town, turning out a crowd of about 7,500. Bishop said that the total cost of that event — paying for the artists, event staff and vendors — was about $80,000. “The most expensive part of the festival and the thing that the city funds have really made possible in the past is the big outdoor free show,” Bishop said. “So our ability to do that is really pretty extensively hampered by (the) lack of funding from the city.”
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Opinion
Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com l Sunday, October 16, 2016
EDITORIALS
Grim future The state of Kansas must work to reverse current economic trends.
T
wo economists had a sobering message for Kansas and its leaders on Thursday — the state faces a grim economic future if current trends continue. Let that be another call to Gov. Sam Brownback and the Legislature to, once the 2016 elections are finished, go into the 2017 legislative session with a singular commitment to work together to do what’s necessary to get Kansas’s economy on pace with the rest of the nation, even if that means admitting that some of the fiscal policies enacted since 2010 aren’t working. Jeremy Hill, director of the Center for Economic and Business Research at Wichita State University, and Chris Courtwright, principal economist for the Kansas Legislative Research Department, were featured speakers at Thursday’s Kansas Economic Policy Conference at the University of Kansas. Hill, who studies demographics, said if current trends continue over the next 50 years, 80 percent of the state’s population will be concentrated in urban areas, and the rural population could shrink to 700,000 people. He said many young people who grow up in Kansas leave after graduating high school, and the state is not attracting enough people to make up the difference. He said by 2066, Kansas could have a retirement population that outnumbers working-age youth. The consequences of such trends are higher costs for delivering services such as health care and education to shrinking rural areas, costs that will have to be borne by the smaller working-age population. Courtwright, who analyzes tax policy for the Legislature, said the challenges that face Kansas are made more difficult by the state’s tax structure, including the income tax cuts that lawmakers approved in 2012 and 2013 lowering income tax rates and eliminating taxes altogether for certain kinds of business income. It was based on the trickle-down theory that reducing income taxes would put more money into people’s pockets, and that would stimulate the economy. But by 2014, Courtwright said, it was clear the Kansas economy was not responding the way taxcut advocates hoped. Kansas’ economy and personal income were growing slower than the national average. And little has changed in those trends in the nearly two years since. Had the Legislature left the tax code as it was in 2012, Courtwright said, Kansas would be taking in an estimated $920 million a year more than it is now. Imagine the investments in infrastructure, transportation and higher education that might have been made with such funds. Imagine how different the 2016 elections and the 2017 legislative session might look. When Brownback assumed the governorship, the state was coming out of the great recession. And it’s not the governor’s fault that the state’s most important industries — agriculture, aviation, and oil and gas — have struggled throughout his tenure. Perhaps, absent such issues, Kansas’s economy might have thrived under the tax cuts. But that’s not the reality today. Rather, as Hill and Courtwright point out, reality is a lagging state economy likely to fall further behind nationally unless the state’s leaders have the courage to make changes to policies that aren’t working. For the sake of future Kansans, let’s hope they do.
OLD HOME TOWN
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“A Saturday night raid by the police on a private house in Lawrence broke up one of the most comfortable social games the years officers had ever witnessed. Six ago men were taken along to the poIN 1916 lice station where all gave bond under what are believed to be fictitious names. One of them was the proprietor of the dwelling house where the little game was in progress. After the arrest of the men their trials were set for this afternoon at 1 o’clock.” “H. W. Chalkley, for twenty years a rooter for Kansas University football teams, has a kick against the way the cheerleaders ignore the famed ‘Rock Chalk, Jay Hawk, K. U.’ yell. According to Mr. Chalkley, it was not until near the end of the first half of the Normal game that this yell was given.” — Reprinted with permission from local writer Sarah St. John. To see more, go online to www.facebook.com/DailyLawrenceHistory.
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Scott Stanford, Publisher Chad Lawhorn, Editor Kim Callahan, Managing Editor Kathleen Johnson, Advertising Manager Joan Insco, Circulation Manager Allie Sebelius, Marketing Director
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America: most civilized of nations?
Meantime, back at Guantanamo … Chances are you haven’t thought of that American gulag — or, for that matter, of “extraordinary renditions,” CIA black sites and torture — for a long time. Not everyone has the luxury of forgetting. In the last few days, some compelling reportage has reminded us of that. In The Miami Herald, we met 48-year-old Mustafa al Hawsawi, a Gitmo detainee who was scheduled for rectal surgery to repair damage done when, his lawyer says, he was sodomized by his captors 10 years ago. As reporter Carol Rosenberg explains, this “sodomy” was, in fact, a “quasi-medical” process of “rectal rehydration” and “rectal re-feeding,” i.e., providing nourishment through a tube in the rectum. The lawyer says this was a means of punishment. It left Hawsawi with what’s called a rectal prolapse. He has to manually push tissue back up into his anus every time he defecates. He has bled from the injury for 10 years. Hawsawi, you should know, faces the death penalty for his alleged part in the Sept. 11 attacks that took nearly 3,000 lives. And maybe you will find that sufficient to insulate you from
Leonard Pitts Jr. lpitts@miamiherald.com
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When the history of this epoch is written, it will tell how our civilization, our righteousness, came under assault by an army of ragtag barbarians one sparkling September morning. It will tell how we swore to defend all that made us what we were. But these reports remind us how readily we gave it all away.” feeling, well … anything at his plight. One wonders what you would make, then, of two New York Times reports documenting how torture, both at Gitmo and at CIA black sites around the world, destroyed the mental health of numerous detainees, many
of whom turned out to be innocent of terrorism. Reporters James Risen, Matt Apuzzo and Sheri Fink introduce us to men who were slammed into walls and had foreign objects shoved into their rectums, who were beaten, kept awake, housed in never-ending darkness or light, forced into stress positions, subjected to nonstop music at ear-splitting levels, injected with drugs, menaced by dogs, locked in boxes the size of coffins and laid out shackled and nude on tarps as gallons of ice cold water were poured down on them to simulate drowning. One prisoner described being used as a human mop, dragged through his own urine. Now, former prisoner Suleiman Abdullah Salim struggles with depression and PTSD. He was released five years after he fell into U.S. custody when it was determined he posed no threat. Majid Mokhtar Sasy alMaghrebi will fly into a rage at the sound of music from a passing car. It takes him back to the prison where music was used to torture him. Hussein al-Marfadi has a permanent headache. Lutfi bin Ali has a recurrent nightmare of suffocating at the bottom of a well. Younous Chekkouri hates to go outside because people in
the crowd turn into guards from Gitmo. For at least one prisoner, what made all this worse is that it was America doing it to him. America, the world champion of human rights. America, the nation of laws. “It is very, very scary when you are tortured by someone who doesn’t believe in torture,” said Ahmed Errachidi. “You lose faith in everything.” He was released without charges after five years. Civilization is a word we use for the rules we impose upon ourselves to protect against our most brutish instincts. And America is fond of thinking itself the most civilized of nations, especially as compared with those countries that breathe terror like air. When the history of this epoch is written, it will tell how our civilization, our righteousness, came under assault by an army of ragtag barbarians one sparkling September morning. It will tell how we swore to defend all that made us what we were. But these reports remind us how readily we gave it all away. — Leonard Pitts Jr., winner of the 2004 Pulitzer Prize for commentary, is a columnist for the Miami Herald. Readers may email him at lpitts@miamiherald.com.
Letters to the editor The Journal-World welcomes letters to the editor. The newspaper believes letters to the editor aid in the democratic process. l Letters should be 250 words or fewer. l By submitting a letter, writers acknowledge that the JournalWorld reserves the right to edit letters, as long as viewpoints are not altered. l Letters can be submitted via mail to P.O. Box 888, Lawrence KS 66044 or via email at letters@ljworld.com.
A judicial slap to a careless Congress Washington — Another small step was taken last week on the steep and winding ascent back to constitutional norms. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, the nation’s second-most important court, did its judicial duty by reprimanding Congress for abandoning constitutional propriety. The court declared unconstitutional the unprecedented independence that Congress conferred on the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. This legal skirmish about one aspect of this one tentacle of the administrative state may seem recondite and trivial. It concerns, however, two momentous matters. One is the integrity of the federal government’s Madisonian architecture. The other is something that not even the prescient James Madison could have anticipated — Congress’ modern eagerness to diminish itself. The CFPB is empowered to “regulate the offering and provision of consumer financial products or services.” Being able to define financial products, it can regulate almost everything touching finance, from mortgages to financial advisers to retirement plans — even car loans, although expressly forbidden to do so. Acting like a freewheeling little legislature, it concocts laws as it improvises standards. It is authorized to “declare,” with scant congressional guidance, certain business practices “abusive,” “unfair,” “deceptive” or involving “discrimination.” It does so by whatever criteria it pleases, and imposes penalties it deems appropriate.
George Will
georgewill@washpost.com
Until the court’s decision last week, the CFPB, unlike any federal institution created since 1789, was uniquely sovereign: Its director was appointed by the president for a fiveyear term — longer than the president’s — and the director could be removed by the president only “for cause.” That is, only for “inefficiency, neglect of duty or malfeasance,” not for reasons of policy. The court held that the CFPB is “unconstitutionally structured” because of its “novel agency structure.” There are several agencies that are controlled by bipartisan commissioners who can only be removed for cause, and they are described as “independent” agencies as a result. But they all have five members, chosen from both parties. The court has just held, however, that as created by Congress in the 2010 slapdash Dodd-Frank legislation, the CFPB’s single director “enjoys more unilateral authority than any other officer in any of the three branches of the U.S. government, other than the president.” The court’s ruling makes the director subject to presidential control through dismissal. Another important challenge to the CFPB’s
operations, currently in a federal district court, concerns Congress’ voluntary abandonment of its power of the purse: Dodd-Frank, which was passed with the support of only three House Republicans and three Republican senators, says the CFPB’s funding shall be “determined by the director” and shall come not from congressional appropriations but from the Federal Reserve. Small wonder it spends lavishly on itself. Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., who while at Harvard Law School proposed the CFPB, insists it is “highly accountable” to Congress. The CFPB disagrees, having proclaimed that its funding from outside the appropriations process gives it “full independence” from Congress. When a member of the House Financial Services Committee asked CFPB Director Richard Cordray about his agency spending $215 million refurbishing a building with an assessed valuation of $150 million, he, oozing disdain, dismissed the question: “Why does that matter to you?” Perhaps he should be forgiven for assuming that CFPB spending government money is none of Congress’ business, given that Congress has effectively said exactly that. Although Madison assumed that the government’s rival institutions would jealously defend their powers, he worried that the legislative branch would threaten the equilibrium of the checks and balances by “drawing
all power into its impetuous vortex.” Today, however, Congress is centrifugal rather than centripetal, expelling rather than concentrating power. A peculiarity of today’s politics is the disproportion between Democrats’ fervent desires to serve in Congress and their lackadaisical willingness to cede its powers. Democratic candidates, both incumbents and challengers, are fighting ferociously to remain on, or get to, Capitol Hill. One wonders: Why? Their party is doctrinally devoted to marginalizing the legislative branch in order to expand the discretion of the administrative state as an instrument of executive power. And the next president certainly will be impatient with Madison’s separation of powers. President Hillary Clinton will be because progressives since Woodrow Wilson have considered this system an anachronistic impediment to energetic government powered by an unconstrained executive. President Donald Trump will be anti-Madisonian because the system of checks and balances will impede the sweep of his unmediated fabulousness. The CFPB’s progressive authoritarianism reflects, in the language of the Hudson Institute’s Christopher DeMuth, “regulatory insouciance” made possible by “legislative abnegation.” Both will continue until conservatism reappears. — George Will’s email address is georgewill@washpost.com.
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Help pack dental supplies for kids Agency: United Way of Douglas County Contact: Sarah Pierrelee at 843-6626 ext. 375 or at vista@ unitedwaydgco.org. The United Way of Douglas County brings community resources together to support a better life for residents by focusing on improvements in health, education and financial stability. The United Way is providing essential dental hygiene tools to the children of Eudora Elementary through the Healthy Halloween Snack Pack event. Volunteers are needed to fill snack packs with toothbrushes and toothpaste 9 a.m. Oct. 22 at Eudora Elementary, 801 E. 10th St. Please contact Sarah Pierrelee at 843-6626 ext. 375 or at vista@unitedwaydgco.org.
information about familiar career pathways while practicing networking skills. Morning shifts, 8-11:40, and afternoon shifts, 12:40-2:40, are available both days. Sign up to volunteer at volunteerdouglascounty.org or contact Shelly at volunteer@unitedwaydgco. org or at 865-5030, ext. 301.
Keep sidewalks safe in winter Douglas County Senior Services and the City of Lawrence need your help. The Safe Winter Walkways program needs volunteers to help elderly or disabled individuals clear public sidewalks during snowy weather. Able-bodied Lawrence residents with a passion for helping others and an enjoyment of winter weather are needed to volunteer to create safer and more accessible walkways by shoveling snow through the winter months. To register to volunteer, please go to lawrenceks.org/safe_winter_ walkways.
Career exploration event USD 497, in partnership with Peaslee Tech, the Lawrence Schools Foundation and the United Way, is holding a Career Exploration Fair for USD 497 seventh graders on Nov. 10 and 11. Many volunteers are needed to fill two roles. The first is to model and practice networking skills with small groups of stu- Lead a cooking class Are you interested in helping dents, and the second is to share
Crime CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A
Lawrence’s per-capita crime statistics align more closely with urbanized areas like Topeka and Wichita over other Kansas communities. “That is a concern for me,” said Lawrence Police Chief Tarik Khatib. “I think of where we’re at maybe geographically, in terms of people coming and going here from other communities. It’s a destination location, this metro area, as far as the college being here, it’s got a great night life, lots of events.” The Journal-World recently examined data published by the KBI for Lawrence, Manhattan, Olathe, Overland Park, Topeka and Wichita and discussed the results with Khatib. Overall, Khatib said he is “cautiously pleased” with the downward trend of local crime. The results are likely due to a combination of national trends mixed with more efficient local police work, he said. Each year Khatib said the Lawrence Police Department sends the KBI the numbers of crimes reported in certain categories including: Murder, rape, robbery, aggravated assault/battery, burglary, theft, motor vehicle theft and arson. The KBI then organizes those numbers and calculates the number of total crimes reported per 1,000 people in a given community, violent crimes per 1,000 people and property crimes per 1,000 people. This report is different than the department’s annual Benchmark Report, which further analyzes each year’s crime trends. The department’s Benchmark Report for 2015 is not yet finished, he said. Khatib said he believes the KBI’s analysis can be useful for police, but it’s not something to rely on exclusively. “It’s a snapshot,” he said. “But it doesn’t necessarily tell you the whole story.” lll
What the Lawrence Police Department turns over to the KBI is the total crimes reported, Khatib said. This number is not necessarily the same as the actual number of crimes occurring, he said. Those numbers could be
‘‘
You can have really low crime statistics because your community doesn’t trust you so they don’t report the crime to you. You can have overly high crime statistics because the community really trusts you and they report every little thing.”
— Lawrence Police Chief Tarik Khatib
either higher or lower. “You can have really low crime statistics because your community doesn’t trust you so they don’t report the crime to you,” he said. “You can have overly high crime statistics because the community really trusts you and they report every little thing. “Somewhere in the middle is where you’re aiming,” he added. Addressing the aboveaverage rape statistic for 2015, Khatib said there could be a number of reasons the numbers have risen steadily in that category since 2005. The data shows that 34 rapes were reported in 2005, compared to 60 reported in 2015. On average, approximately 48 rapes were reported each year during that time span. Although the town’s population may well contribute to the rising rape statistic, it’s not likely the increasing number of Lawrence residents is entirely to blame. Between 2005 and 2015, the data shows Lawrence’s population rose by about 11,500 people. “One potential could be that we have more rapes,” Khatib said. “A second one is that more people are willing to report it. And a third is that we do a better job investigating them and holding people accountable so they’re more willing to report it and feel like they’re being taken more seriously than they were 10 years ago.” Alongside reported rapes, murder can be a misleading statistic to grapple with, Khatib said. Since 2005, Lawrence has averaged about two murders a year, the data show. But for five years there were no murders in town, and the crime has spiked recently. Many of the murders were singular events and not something police would have been able to
others learn about healthy eating and cooking? Team up with one of United Way’s AmeriCorps members to co-lead a Harvesters Project Strength class and assist adults in creating healthy meals with limited resources. Become a co-facilitator by attending a “train the trainers” session at Harvesters or partner with us as an assistant during an eight week class — no training required. Each session covers the basics of food safety, nutrition and hands-on cooking. Harvesters provides the food, educational materials and the equipment for cooking. Community class times can be scheduled at a time that works for you. Please contact Daneka Vann at dvann@unitedwaydgco. org.
Help the elderly with chores Community Village of Lawrence helps neighbors remain in their homes as they age by creating a network of support to make aging at home a long-term, affordable option. Community Village of Lawrence is looking for volunteers willing to assist Community Village members with simple household tasks, which include laundry, light housekeeping, organizing and/or basic
prevent, Khatib said. “It’s not like these homicides are attributable to a certain gang who are now on our radar and this is a drug-related thing,” he said. lll
Between 2005 and 2015 the total number of crimes reported per 1,000 people in Lawrence dropped from 51.4 to 41.3, approximately 20 percent, the data show. That’s good, but some other communities have seen crime rates drop even more steeply. For comparison, Manhattan saw a decrease of 38 percent, Olathe 49 percent, Overland Park 41 percent, Topeka 31 percent and Wichita 5 percent. For a given community a decrease in the total crimes reported per 1,000 people doesn’t necessarily mean crime is down, Khatib said. “If we’re saying that 15 years ago we had a crime rate of four-something and today that particular category is twosomething, that may not mean there’s actually half as many crimes,” he said. “It may be the same number of crimes occurred, but your population went up. “That’s why you’ve got to be cautious not to overinterpret,” he said. The number of violent crimes per 1,000 people in Lawrence also decreased, the data show. In all the number dropped from 4 in 2005 to 2.5 in 2015, approximately 38 percent. Manhattan, Olathe, Overland Park and Topeka also saw decreases in the violent crimes category by 44, 50, 32 and 7 percent, respectively. Wichita’s violent crime rate rose approximately 9 percent between 2005 and 2015, the data show. Over the same time span, Lawrence’s reported property crimes per 1,000 people decreased from 47.5 to 38.8, approximately 18 percent. Manhattan, Olathe, Overland Park, Topeka and Wichita saw decreases of about 39, 49, 41, 33 and 7 percent, respectively, the data show. lll
Addressing the statistics, Khatib admitted Lawrence’s crime statistics are more similar to urban areas like Topeka and Wichita than communities like Manhattan, Olathe and Overland Park. And although many people might compare
handyman services. Volunteers can set their own schedule and respond to requests on an as-needed basis. Please contact Heather Cook at info@communityvillagelawrence.org or call 5050187.
Be a friendly face Douglas County Senior Services Inc. is committed to promoting and enhancing the quality of life for older citizens of Lawrence and Douglas County. Douglas County Senior Services is looking for a volunteer who can serve as a substitute receptionist during lunch breaks and days when the regular receptionist is gone. Duties include greeting members of the public, answering the telephone and taking messages, answering basic questions and referring customers to the appropriate staff members for specific assistance and supervision of the activities on the first floor and in the front lobby. Please contact Shari Millar at 842-0543. — For more volunteer opportunities, please contact Shelly Hornbaker at the United Way Roger Hill Volunteer Center at 865-5030, ext. 301 or at volunteer@ unitedwaydgco.org or go to volunteerdouglascounty.org.
Lawrence to another college city like Manhattan, Khatib said there are stark differences. Some crimes in Lawrence can be attributed to people from other cities visiting or passing through, Khatib said. For example, a recent string of robberies on Lawrence’s south side where a dog was shot and killed involved nonresidents. “Manhattan is its own island out there,” he said. “So people from big cities aren’t necessarily going to drive all the way out to Manhattan just to
ROADWORK Lawrence: l Southbound U.S. 59 Highway to eastbound U.S. 24 Highway turning movement at the U.S. 59/24/40 intersection at Tee Pee Junction will be closed for survey work between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. on Wednesday. l Jayhawk Jamboree by Ad Astra Running will impact traffic from 6 to 9 a.m. Oct. 23. Affected areas will range from Burcham Park to Shaw Park and Clinton Park. l Northbound and southbound East 1900 Road south of the Kansas Highway 10 intersection will be fully closed for roadway shoulder embankment repair work through the end of the month. A marked detour will be provided. Traffic will detour via East 2200 Road to North 1000 Road to access East 1900 Road. — Staff reports
numbers might indicate a decrease in crime, there are always things police and members of the community can do better, he said. “I think we’re a safe community,” he said. “Is (Lawrence) safer as far as crime statistics? It would appear so. But I still see behaviors and lll people doing things I Crime statistics, like wish we could be better those published by the about.” KBI, are one of many — Public safety reporter Conrad tools the Lawrence Police Department uses to Swanson can be reached at 832-7284. Follow him on Twitter: guide its efforts, Khatib @Conrad_Swanson said. And although the go to Manhattan. “We like the smalltown feel that Lawrence has, but we do have some big-city challenges,” Khatib said. “And one of them is manifested through higher crime rates, higher calls to service and higher service needs.”
SATURDAY & SUNDAY
OPEN HOUSES OPEN SATURDAY 1:00 – 3:00 PM
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.
LARRY NORTHROP 785-842-3535
$439,000
OPEN SUNDAY 1:00 – 3:00 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.
LARRY NORTHROP 785-842-3535
$269,900
OPEN SUNDAY 2:30 – 4:00 PM
2250 Lake Pointe Dr. #702
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.
DEBBIE HEINRICH 785-766-8621
OPEN SUNDAY 12:30 – 2:00 PM
$260,000
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
SECTION B
USA TODAY — L awrence J ournal -W orld
IN MONEY
IN LIFE
Homeless get a voice in tech zone
Revamping the timeless, campy ‘Rocky Horror’
10.16.16 TREVOR HUGHES, USA TODAY
LAVERNE COX BY STEVE WILKIE, FOX
Trump says media rigging the election He turns up the volume as reports of sexual misconduct continue David Jackson @djusatoday USA TODAY
Donald Trump kept up his unprecedentedly aggressive campaign rhetoric Saturday, saying opponent Hillary Clinton should be in jail and that the news media is trying to “rig” the election by reporting on numerous women who have accused him of unwanted sexual advances. “We can’t let them get away with this, folks,” Trump told a crowd in Portsmouth, N.H., echoing that this “looks like a rigged election.”
In the days since a parade of women began coming forward to claim Trump touched them inappropriately, the Republican presidential nominee has called them liars and even criticized their looks. At one point Saturday, Trump described one of his accusers as “this crazy woman on the airplane.” Trump also has amped up his allegations against Clinton over contributions to the Clinton Foundation and her private email system while in the State Department. “Hillary Clinton should have been prosecuted and gone to jail for what she did,” Trump said at a
MARY SCHWALM, AFP/GETTY IMAGES
Donald Trump steps up his calls to imprison Hillary Clinton. second rally Saturday in Bangor, Maine, again denouncing “a totally rigged election.” As in New Hampshire, Trump
followers cheered and chanted “lock her up!” Four days before his third and final debate against Clinton,
uABC’s This Week: Democratic vice presidential nominee Tim Kaine; former House speaker Newt Gingrich; former CIA director David Petraeus uNBC’s Meet the Press: Vice President Biden; Republican vice presidential nominee Mike Pence uCBS’ Face the Nation: Pence, Kaine uCNN’s State of the Union: Rep. Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif.; former New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani uFox News Sunday: Pence, Kaine
Aamer Madhani @AamerISmad USA TODAY
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Reproductive choice emerges
100
years
ago today, Margaret Sanger opened the USA’s first birth control clinic in Brooklyn, N.Y. PAUL BEATY, AP
MICHAEL B. SMITH AND PAUL TRAP, USA TODAY
v STORY CONTINUES ON 2B
Chicago’s Emanuel works on a comeback
TODAY ON TV
SOURCE The History Place
Trump again questioned his opponent’s health and suggested she may have taken drugs to get “pumped up” during last week’s faceoff in St. Louis. He proposed a drug test before Wednesday’s event in Las Vegas. Clinton supporters said that Trump’s talk about jail and rigged elections reflect a campaign that is imploding and that he is now promoting conspiracy theories ginned up by right-wing media outlets. “Is Trump running for President anymore or auditioning for a TV network post-election to monetize his cultivation of the alt-right movement?” tweeted Clinton campaign spokesman Brian Fallon. Trump’s conspiracy claims
Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel, arguably America’s most visible mayor, is scoring some political points despite violent crime skyrocketing in his city.
CHICAGO Nearly 11 months after hitting his political rock bottom, Rahm Emanuel is showing signs of life. The mayor’s standing with Chicago residents was battered after the court-ordered release last November of video of the police shooting death of 17-year-old Laquan McDonald. His bad situation was exacerbated by violent crime skyrocketing in the nation’s third-largest city, with Chicago recording more than 500 murders already this year — more than New York and Los Angeles combined. And it didn’t help that the city, with nearly $34 billion in unfunded liabilities to its various pension systems, has seen its financial situation erode as it holds one of the worst credit ratings of big municipalities in the country. But all of a sudden Emanuel is catching some breaks. Last week, Emanuel sealed a last-minute, four-year contract with the Chicago Teachers Union that helped him avert a strike. He got the union to agree that for future hires the city would end the longtime practice of contributing 7% of teachers’ salaries to their pension. The breakthrough with the union followed the Standard & Poor’s credit agency upgrading Chicago’s dismal financial out-
v STORY CONTINUES ON 2B
Brassknuckles politician is racking up some wins after a tough year
“Five years ago, Chicago was on the financial brink. Today, Chicago is back on solid ground.” Mayor Rahm Emanuel, in latest budget address
3 suspects in Kansas anti-Somali plot sought ‘bloodbath’ Attack was allegedly planned for Nov. 9 Doug Stanglin @dstanglin USA TODAY
An alleged plot to blow up a Kansas apartment complex filled with Somali immigrants one day after the November elections aimed to create a “bloodbath” to “wake up” the country politically, according to one of three members of a militia group charged with domestic terrorism, federal authorities say.
Authorities said Frirorism,” Eric Jackson, day that Curtis Allen FBI Kansas City special and Gavin Wright, both agent in charge, said in 49 and from Liberal, announcing the arrests Kan., and Patrick Euin Wichita. gene Stein, 47, of According to a federal Wright, Kan., were complaint released after members of a small, anthe arrests, Stein was ti-Muslim group called surreptitiously taped in PHOTOS BY SEDGWICK COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE VIA AP the Crusaders that esJune referring to the SoCurtis Allen poused sovereign-citi- Gavin Wright Patrick malis as “cockroaches” Eugene Stein zen, anti-government, and saying “the only (exanti-Muslim and antipletive) way this counimmigrant extremist beliefs. tors said the thwarted attack was try’s ever going to get turned They had allegedly plotted planned for the day after the No- around is it will be a bloodbath and it will be a nasty, messy since February to blow up the vember elections. “These individuals had the de- (expletive).” apartment complex and mosque “Unless a lot more people in in Garden City, a meatpacking sire, the means, the capability to town in western Kansas. Prosecu- carry out this act of domestic ter- this country wake up and smell
the (expletive) coffee and decide they want this country back ... we might be too late. If they do wake up ... I think we can get it done. But it ain’t going to be nothing nice about it,” Stein was recorded as saying, according to the federal affidavit. Acting U.S. Attorney Tom Beall said the investigation involved an FBI probe “deep into a hidden culture of hatred, violence.” Although authorities had been monitoring the group for months through a paid informant, police moved in Tuesday after Allen’s girlfriend called Liberal, Kan., police to report a domestic battery incident.
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L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY SUNDAY, OCTOBER 16, 2016
Syrian kids in Turkey pick work over school Education can be expensive, supplies limited for refugees Dominique Bonessi Special for USA TODAY
On a sunny Saturday afternoon in September, a group of Syrian children gathered with their mothers in a neighborhood park for a free program of games, songs and drawing. For parents who fled Syria’s civil war to give their youngsters a better education here, the sessions led by Syrian music teacher Maisa Alhafez are welcome because Turkey has been unable to provide enough spaces for all the school-age children. That creates a tough dilemma for the refugee parents: enroll their children in a school they can’t afford or send them out to work to help support the family. More than a half-million Syrian children in Turkey aren’t enISTANBUL
rolled in school, while many of the 330,000 who attend classes can barely afford the fees, according to UNICEF. Other children must work to help support their families, often in textile factories where girls are vulnerable to exploitation. One mother in the park, Fatima El-Helu, said it took three tries to find a school that was convenient and affordable. When the family arrived in Istanbul a year ago, El-Helu’s two children were placed in a Syrian school out of their area. “The kids left the house before sunrise to go to a school that is very far away,” El-Helu said. After a teacher slapped her son, who has a speech impediment, she moved her children to a Syrian school closer to home. But the hours — 4 to 10 p.m. — and the fees of $110 per year plus $32 per week for transportation proved too much. Now her children are in a Turkish school and seem to have settled in. Her daughter has made
CHRIS MCGRATH, GETTY IMAGES
Syrian refugees Reem, from left, Ronak, Zahra and Ronnie walk down Istanbul’s famed Istiklal shopping street. friends with a Palestinian girl, so she has someone to speak Arabic with at school. But money is still an issue. According to El-Helu, Turkish children get $10 a year for books and other supplies, while refugee students from neighboring Syria are told to share supplies or go without.
Turkey’s Ministry of Education, with funding from UNICEF and other aid groups, has set up more than 350 temporary Syrian schools in urban areas of the country, offering courses taught by Syrian instructors in Arabic. The government waived tuition fees for several schools, but par-
ents still must pay a $30 registration fee and transportation costs. Turkish law prohibits employing children under age 15, and those younger than 18 can work as long as it doesn’t interfere with their schooling, according to the Fair Wear Foundation in Turkey. There are no solid numbers on how many children are in the workforce in violation of the law, but Human Rights Watch says child labor is “rampant.” “Many children are working the informal sectors — washing dishes, carrying tea trays and selling tissues on the street,” said Daryl Grisgraber, a senior advocate at Refugees International. UNICEF urges the Turkish government to develop programs to protect Syrian children and ensure their right to go to school. The Turkish Ministry of Education declined to comment. El-Helu said she is not sure what she will do if she cannot afford the transportation cost. “I just hope we can return to Syria soon,” she said.
Some in GOP assail Trump’s attacks v CONTINUED FROM 1B
have been picked up by some of his allies. Jeff Sessions, a U.S. senator from Alabama, told the crowd in Portsmouth: “They are attempting to rig this election.” Citing that comment, Fallon said: “Every Republican must be asked whether they agree with Trump and Sessions on this. Starting with (House Speaker) Paul Ryan.” Some Republicans have long criticized Trump, and have stepped it up in recent days. Referring to the businessman’s request that supporters become poll watchers to guard against alleged voter fraud, Sen. Ben Sasse, R-Neb., tweeted Saturday that “freedom-loving Americans repudiate anybody who says they want to make lawful voters ‘a little bit nervous’ at polls.” Republican strategist Mike Murphy went after a Trump tweet that said Clinton should have been jailed and that the election is rigged. “Trump is now attacking our Democracy,” Murphy said on Twitter. “Any Elected R who doesn’t condemn this anti-American thug will carry a moral stain forever.” There is no modern example of a major-party nominee talking about throwing his opponent in jail, or accusing the political establishment of rigging the system against him. “Angry and desperate,” said Dante Scala, a political science professor at the University of New Hampshire. Either Trump “is so deluded at this point that he thinks this 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.
could work,” Scala said, or “he wants his followers to keep following him after this election is over.” Clinton campaign manager Robby Mook accused Trump of trying to suppress the vote, but predicted the effort would fail: “Participation in the system — and particularly voting — should be encouraged, not dismissed or undermined because a candidate is afraid he’s going to lose. This election will have record turnout because voters see through Donald Trump’s shameful attempts to undermine an election weeks before it happens.”
“Trump is now attacking our Democracy. Any Elected R who doesn’t condemn this anti-American thug will carry a moral stain forever.” GOP strategist Mike Murphy
After New Hampshire, Trump traveled to his second rally in Maine. The statewide winner there gets two electoral votes, while the candidate who gets the most votes in each congressional districts gets one vote per district. While Clinton leads statewide, Trump has led surveys in the congressional district that includes Bangor, where the nominee spoke Saturday. Dan Shea, professor of government at Maine’s Colby College, said he’d be surprised if Trump keeps visiting Maine in pursuit of a single electoral vote, given the slippage he has seen in big states such as Florida and North Carolina. “He’s got other fish to fry.”
TOM VANDEN BROOK, USA TODAY
Tourists pose for photos outside the White House in Washington on Saturday.
D.C. tourists tire of tawdry tales Tom Vanden Brook @tvandenbrook USA TODAY
Enough! Posing for selfies and group photos outside the north entrance to the White House on a bright, beautiful fall Saturday, visitors from across the country said they’d had their fill and more of the charges and denials of Donald Trump’s sexual misconduct. “It’s like a big joke,” said Pamela Allen of Memphis. “A bad one.” Tourists from Florida to California said they wanted the campaign to focus on issues and qualifications, not on boasts of groping or charges and denials of sexual assault. “We came here this weekend to get away from the B.S.,” said Robert Mills, 48, of San Francisco. Mills laughed at the notion that by visiting Washington weeks before the election he WASHINGTON
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After a few photos at the White House, Cole was ready to jump on a bus and head to Arlington National Cemetery. “We’ve had our fill,” he said. Pamela Allen, 36, a middle school counselor from Memphis, saw a “huge double standard” in the controversy surrounding Trump. Similar charges would have sunk the presidency of Barack Obama, she said. “If there had been pictures of Michelle Obama half-naked, they wouldn’t even be in the White House,” Allen said. No fan of Trump’s, Allen said the person who occupied the White House, the building gleaming in the sun just beyond the fence where she stood, should have governing experience, unlike Trump. Mills’ companion, Clifford Coley, can’t wait for Nov. 9, the day after the election. Coley, 40, spoke for many on Saturday. “Just get it over with,” he said.
Rahm Emanuel shows signs of a rebound “There’s been disinvestment in the neighborhoods that has and continues to drive the violence.”
v CONTINUED FROM 1B
PRESIDENT AND PUBLISHER
might actually have come to the epicenter of the manure. But seeing the majesty of the Capitol, the Lincoln Memorial and the White House helped squelch the cacophonous campaign for him. Mills said he wished that the campaign focused far less on Trump’s sex life, or Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton’s use of a private email server while she was secretary of State. “I don’t really care about his sex life or her emails,” Mills said. “There are bigger fish to fry, although I do think the leader of the free world should have some sort of moral compass.” Bill Cole, in Washington for a weekend of sightseeing from Fort Lauderdale, has tired of the accusations against Trump. They have become a sideshow diverting attention from Clinton’s failings, he said. “It’s not just her emails,” said Cole, 56. “It’s her secretiveness and deceptiveness.”
look. S&P raised its outlook from negative to stable after the city pushed through a 29.5% tax on water and sewer tax bills to help stabilize one of the four pensions. Hours after striking the deal with the teachers union last week, Emanuel unveiled a $9.8 billion budget that was free of any major tax hike and was praised as a “good-news budget for the city” by the head of the Civic Federation, the Chicago government watchdog. “Five years ago, Chicago was on the financial brink,” Emanuel declared in his budget address, which had hints of a politician eyeing a third term. “Today, Chicago is back on solid ground.” The signs of a political rebound for Emanuel, who declined requests for comment, comes as the city next month will mark the anniversary of the release of the chilling McDonald video, which set off weeks of protest in the city and spurred a Justice Department investigation, the firing of police superintendent Garry McCarthy and Cook County State’s Attorney Anita Alvarez being voted out of office. Emanuel, like McCarthy and
Jesus “Chuy” Garcia, a Cook County commissioner and former Emanuel rival
CHARLES REX ARBOGAST, AP
Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel has not announced any plans to run for a third term.
Alvarez, faced calls for his resignation as his popularity cratered, but he vowed to stay on to overhaul the department. After announcing plans late last month to bolster the city police department by 970 sworn officers and offering mentoring to more than 7,000 young men in the city’s most violent neighborhoods, Emanuel saw his approval rating surge to 44%, according to a poll conducted by the Chicagobased firm Victory Research.
Although he’s still under water with voters more than two years ahead of the next election — he has not yet said whether he’ll seek re-election in 2019 — the poll marks a significant shift in political fortune for the mayor who saw his approval rating sink to 18% in a poll conducted by the Chicago firm Ogden & Fry in December. Since the video’s release, the Emanuel administration has made it police department policy to release all police shooting videos within 60 to 90 days of an incident. Earlier this month, the administration proposed a new use of force policy for officers, and recently launched mandatory de-escalation training for cops as part of an effort to re-
duce incidents when deadly force is used. The City Council also approved an Emanuel-backed proposal to create an agency — the Civilian Office of Police Accountability — to replace the muchmaligned agency currently charged with investigating police shootings and allegations of major misconduct by cops. Some critics of the mayor say his standing in the African-American and Latino communities, which collectively account for about two-thirds of the city’s population, remains woefully low. “In spite of the strike being averted, in spite of the steps being taken toward reform in the police department, there’s been disinvestment in the neighborhoods that has and continues to drive the violence,” said Jesus “Chuy” Garcia, a Cook County commissioner who lost to Emanuel in a runoff election for mayor last year. “Until he’s addressed that issue meaningfully, he’s going to have problems in the African-American and Latino communities. “The city’s changed significantly. People’s mind-set and awareness have been heightened.”
USA TODAY - L J SUNDAY, OCTOBER 16, 2016 6B K1
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MONEYLINE GLOBAL PACT REACHED ON GREENHOUSE GASES Nearly 200 nations have reached a deal, announced Saturday after all-night negotiations, to limit the use of greenhouse gases far more powerful than carbon dioxide in a major effort to fight climate change. The talks in Rwanda on hydrofluorocarbons, or HFCs, were called the first test of global will since the historic Paris Agreement to cut carbon emissions was reached last year. HFCs are described as the world’s fastestgrowing climate pollutant and are used in air conditioners and refrigerators. The legally binding agreement caps and reduces the use of HFCs in a gradual process beginning by 2019 with action by developed countries including the United States, the world’s second-worst polluter.
NEWS MONEY SPORTS SILICON VALLEY’S LIFE ACUTE HOMELESS AUTOS PROBLEM IS ON TRAVEL THE BALLOT
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USA TODAY SUNDAY, OCTOBER 16, 2016
San Francisco, home to Airbnb, ranks 5th in U.S. homelessness Jon Swartz @jswartz USA TODAY
BRUCE SCHREINER, AP
HIGH DEMAND FOR JIM BEAM PROMPTS WORKERS’ STRIKE Instead of producing whiskey, union members are manning picket lines at two Jim Beam distilleries in Kentucky, where workers have gone on strike against the world’s largest bourbon producer. More than 200 workers walked off their jobs after rejecting the latest contract offer Friday. On Saturday, passing motorists honked in support of workers holding picket signs outside Beam’s plant in Clermont. Bill Ball, a 47-year Beam employee, hopes the dispute is settled quickly, but says striking workers are prepared to stay off their jobs “for the long haul” if necessary. Strikers say staffing shortages force them to work long hours of overtime to keep up with demand for Beam whiskey. The company said Friday contingency plans will keep operations running to maintain the flow of whiskey to distributors and consumers. USA SNAPSHOTS
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New chapter
11%
think they’ll start a new career or a business in their retirement.
SOURCE American Funds survey of 1,200 U.S. adults JAE YANG AND JANET LOEHRKE, USA TODAY
SAN FRANCISCO The images are startling: Homeless men, women and children huddled on the streets of the San Francisco Bay Area — often in the shadows of start-ups and high-tech behemoths generating billions of dollars in wealth. It’s a stark contrast that has gripped the region, and prompted four county measures on the Nov. 8 ballot to generate $3 billion over the next 25 years for affordable housing and services. Under the most-ambitious measure, San Francisco Mayor Ed Lee has proposed a 0.75% increase in the sales tax, to 9.5%, to raise $50 million a year. Propositions J and K would generate $1.2 billion for the next quarter-century via a simple majority. “There is clearly not enough affordable housing, or housing at any level,” says Kevin Zwick, CEO of Housing Trust Silicon Valley. It supports Measure A, which needs a two-thirds vote to invest $950 million in bond money into affordable housing in Santa Clara County, which is less dense than San Francisco but where homelessness has become more visible. County officials’ decision in late 2014 to shutter homeless encampments along the Guadalupe River, Los Gatos Creek and Coyote Creek in San Jose and Los Gatos, called “The Jungle,” flushed the destitute into suburbs and freeway off-ramps, not far from the campuses of Adobe Systems, eBay and Netflix. “This (measure) is a gamechanging opportunity,” Zwick says. “It would help us out of a huge hole we’ve dug into.” Meanwhile, a handful of investors, including Sequoia Capital Chairman Michael Moritz and angel investor Ron Conway, have donated to Proposition Q, a controversial measure that would rid San Francisco of homeless encampments. If passed, the city would give residents of tent encampments 24 hours’ notice to relocate to a shelter or accept a bus ticket out of town. Law enforcement would be permitted to seize tents and other belongings. The region’s homeless popula-
TREVOR HUGHES, USA TODAY
Tom is a native San Franciscan who spends his days standing outside the market inside Twitter headquarters asking young tech workers for spare change, holding out his rough-hewn hands.
JON SWARTZ, USA TODAY
Just 13% of San Francisco households can afford a medianpriced home there. You’d need to make at least $269,000 a year.
“This (measure) is a game-changing opportunity. It would help us out of a huge hole we’ve dug into.” Kevin Zwick, CEO of Housing Trust Silicon Valley
tion has been relatively flat for several years, though the severity of the problem is obvious to any visitor to San Francisco’s downtown. Between the aforementioned four counties, there are 19,000 homeless in what is one of the most-expensive metropolitan areas in the U.S. San Francisco, home to Twitter, Salesforce, Uber and Airbnb headquarters, ranks fifth nationally in its homeless-
ness rate, with 772 people without shelter for every 100,000, according to Census data. Just 13% of San Francisco households can afford a medianpriced home in the city, the report said. The news isn’t much better in the rest of the Bay Area: in San Mateo County, it’s 14%, and Marin County, 18%. In San Francisco, you need to make at least $269,000 annually to buy a median-priced home, three times the median household income of $84,160, according to Paragon Real Estate Group. Rents have skyrocketed, with steep increases in San Francisco creating a ripple effect in the area. In nearby Oakland, average rents are $2,270 for a one-bedroom apartment, according to
Zumper’s National Rent Report for October. San Francisco, Oakland and San Jose are three of the six most expensive U.S. cities to rent in, according to the report. “I’ve been ostracized, harassed by police, and had to figure out how to survive while going broke,” says Dan Gailey, who lost his home last year while trying to build his own artificial-intelligence company, Asteria, in San Francisco. Voters in San Mateo and Alameda counties will also decide on affordable housing measures. In San Mateo County, home to Facebook, Oracle and Electronic Arts, Measure K extends a halfcent sales tax for 20 years to raise $300 million. It requires a simple majority. A two-thirds vote for Alameda’s Affordable Housing Bond, or A1, would pump $580 million into affordable homes for low-income renters, down-payment assistance for first-time home buyers and an “innovation fund” for new solutions. Alameda, on the east side of the Bay Bridge from San Francisco, includes Oakland and Berkeley. All told, the measures could create more than 20,000 affordable apartments. Silicon Valley’s flourishing tech companies have largely been bystanders on the issues. Google and Twitter are among the few to donate money and resources.
Is Fed’s next rates call all about politics? Next decision is due just six days before presidential election Adam Shell @adamshell USA TODAY
When the Federal Reserve meets next month, the question of “Will they or won’t they hike interest rates?” will be clouded by the fog of presidential politics. The U.S. central bank’s Nov. 2 meeting is rife with juicy story lines, as the key question of whether they will boost borrowing costs for the first time in 2016 comes amid claims from Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump that the Janet Yellen-led Fed is playing politics with policy by keeping rates low to make President Obama look good and help rival Hillary Clinton win the election. Trump has said he will replace Yellen if he is elected. Yellen has defended the central bank’s independence, saying the
Fed doesn’t talk about politics at its meetings nor do politics play a role in its policy decisions. Yellen also fended off criticism from a Republican lawmaker that Fed governor Lael Brainard’s $2,700 gift to Clinton’s campaign represented a conflict of interest. Amid this backdrop, investors still have to handicap what the Fed will do. Paul Hickey, co-founder at Bespoke Investment Group, recently went through a “theoretical exercise” in which he argued that a Fed rate increase at its November meeting — just six days before the Nov. 8 presidential election — would help blunt criticism that the Fed is making policy with politics in mind. A November hike, Hickey theorized, would show “independence” and “reinforce (the Fed’s) apolitical framework.” But poltiics and appearances aside, a November hike is unlikely. Futures markets are now pricing in just a 10% chance of a rate increase next month. Most of Wall Street bets are placed on December, when the odds of a rate hike jump to roughly 60%, ac-
PABLO MARTINEZ MONSIVAIS, AP
Fed Chair Janet Yellen prepares to testify on Capitol Hill on Sept. 28 before the House Financial Services Committee. cording to CME Group. Boris Rjavinski, senior fixed income strategist at Wells Fargo Securities, says it’s extremely unlikely that the Fed would push rates higher simply to demonstrate its independence, adding that the next Fed rate increase will be more about the data and
nothing to do with politics. “I don’t think they would hike purely for political reasons,” Rjavinski told USA TODAY. “To move in November they will need to see much stronger-than-expected data. ... They would also need to prepare the markets for a November hike, as the market is
not prepared for one, and the Fed does not like to surprise the market with its moves.” In an interview Friday with CNBC Boston Fed President Eric Rosengren reiterated that interest rates should rise “slowly and gradually,” adding that the Fed has tended to change policy at meetings in which Yellen holds a press conference to explain the Fed’s thinking. The next Fed meeting when Yellen faces off with reporters is December. Rosengren says he is comfortable with the market’s current 2-in-3 odds of a hike at the Fed’s final meeting of the year on Dec. 14, warning that if the Fed waits too long to hike it “may mean a faster pace of increases down the road.” A surprise hike in November likely won’t happen, says Bill Hornbarger, chief investment strategist at Moneta Group. “I think, for the first move, it is better that it is well-communicated,” says Hornbarger. “Given that stock valuations aren’t cheap and markets appear complacent, I think the Fed is, and will be, sensitive to that.”
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L awrence J ournal -W orld
DATEBOOK 16 TODAY
Lawrence Jayhawk Kennel Club Dog Show, 8:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m., Douglas County 4-H Fairgrounds, 2120 Harper St. Dig Your Own Sweet Potatoes, 10 a.m.-6 p.m., Pendleton’s Country Market, 1446 East 1850 Road. “Stuff the Bus” food donation, 11 a.m.-3 p.m., Adams Alumni Center, 1266 Oread Ave. Free Pancake Brunch, noon-4 p.m., Spencer Museum of Art, Museum Central Court, 1301 Mississippi St. League of Woman Voters voter registration and information session, 1:30-4:30 p.m., Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. Pavilion Chamber Series: Zorá Quartet, 2 p.m., Lied Center, 1600 Stewart Drive. American Legion Bingo, doors open at 2 p.m., first games at 3 p.m., American Legion Post No. 14, 3408 W. Sixth St. Pulitzer Project in Kansas: History and Impact of U.S. Presidential Debates, 2-3:30 p.m., Lawrence Public Library Auditorium, 707 Vermont St. Voter Education Coalition Candidate Forums, Districts 42, 44, 45, 3-4:30 p.m., City Commission Chambers, Lawrence City Hall, 6 E. Sixth St. Voter Education Coalition Candidate Forums, Candidates for Kansas Senate Districts 2 and 3, 4:30-5:30 p.m., City Commission Chambers, Lawrence City Hall, 6 E. Sixth St. Irish Traditional Music Session, 5:30-9 p.m., upstairs Henry’s on Eighth, 11 E. Eighth St. Old Time Fiddle Tunes Potluck and Jam, all acoustic instruments welcome, 6-9 p.m., Americana Music Academy, 1419 Massachusetts St. KU Percussion Group with Sandbox Percussion, 7:30-9:30 p.m., Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall, 1530 Naismith Dr.
17 MONDAY
Dig Your Own Sweet Potatoes, 10 a.m.-6 p.m., Pendleton’s Country Market, 1446 East 1850 Road. Scrabble Club: Open Play, 1-4 p.m., Lawrence Senior Center, 745 Vermont St. Caregiver Support Group, 2:15 p.m., Douglas County Senior Services, 745 Vermont St. For more information, call 842-0543. 66th Annual PancakeSausage Supper, 5-8 p.m., Lone Star Church of the Brethren, 883 East
800 Road. Free will donation. Take Off Pounds Sensibly (TOPS), 5:30 p.m., 2712 Pebble Lane. 842-1516 for info. Lawrence—Douglas County Bicycle Advisory Committee meeting, 6-7 p.m., Community Room, Eudora Parks and Recreation Department, 1630 Elm St. To participate in bike ride, arrive at 4:45 p.m. at South Park, 1141 Massachusetts St., and bring a bike light. Guest speaker Karen Eckmeier at Kaw Valley Quilters Guild, 7 p.m., Plymouth Congregational Church 925 Vermont St. “American Umpire:” Film Screening and Q&A, 7 p.m., Dole Institute of Politics, 2350 Petefish Drive. Baldwin City Council meeting, 7 p.m., Baldwin Public Library, 800 Seventh St., Baldwin City. Lecompton City Council meeting, 7 p.m., Lecompton City Hall, 327 Elmore St. Voter Education Coalition Kansas State Board of Education and Douglas County Commission Candidate Forums, 7-8:30 p.m., Lawrence City Hall, 6 E. Sixth St. War Correspondent Scott Anderson presents “Lawrence in Arabia,” 7:30 p.m., Lied Center Pavilion, 1600 Stewart Drive. Argentine Tango Práctica, 8-10 p.m., Signs of Life Bookstore and Art Gallery, 722 Massachusetts St. Free; no partner necessary.
18 TUESDAY
Red Dog’s Dog Days workout, 6 a.m. and 6 p.m., South Park, 1141 Massachusetts St. Guest speaker Karen Eckmeier at Kaw Valley Quilter’s Guild, 9:30 a.m., Plymouth Congregational Church 925 Vermont. Skillbuilders, Stress: The Good, the Bad and the Inevitable, 10-11:30 a.m., Smith Center, 4730 Brandon Woods Terrace. League of Woman Voters voter registration and information session, 1:30-4:30 p.m., Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. Lawrence Parkinson’s Support Group, 2-3 p.m., First Presbyterian Church, 2415 Clinton Parkway. New Medicines/Therapies/Advances in Parkinson’s Disease Research. Toss Out the Playbook: Trump, Clinton and the Wacky Politics of 2016, 4 p.m., Dole Institute of Politics, 2350 Petefish Drive. Discussion group with Steve Kraske and guests. Friends of the Lawrence Public Library
SUBMIT YOUR STUFF Don’t be shy — we want to publish your event. Submit your item for our calendar by emailing datebook@ ljworld.com at least 48 hours before your event. Find more information about these events, and more event listings, at
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Pop-Up Book Sale, 4-6 p.m., Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. Enter on Kentucky Street side. Lawrence Farmers’ Market, 4-6 p.m., parking garage, 700 block of Kentucky Street, just south of the Library. Pottery Jam, 5:30-10 p.m., Lawrence Arts Center, 940 New Hampshire St. Attendees encouraged to bring snacks to share. Lawrence City Commission meeting, 5:45 p.m., City Hall, 6 E. Sixth St. Books & Babies, 6-6:30 p.m., Lawrence Public Library Readers’ Theater, 707 Vermont St. Open Jam with Lonnie Ray, 6-10 p.m., Slow Ride Roadhouse, 1350 N. Third St. Maker Meet-Up, 6:30 p.m., Lawrence Creates Makerspace, 512 E. Ninth St. League of Women Voters Hot Topic: Informed Voters, Fair Judges Project with Supreme Court Justices Marla Luckert and Carol Beier, 7 p.m., Carnegie Building, 200 W. Ninth St. Trivia night at Johnny’s Tavern, 7 p.m., Johnny’s West, 721 Wakarusa Drive. Lawrence Huntington’s Disease Support Group, 7-9 p.m., Conference Room D South, Lawrence Memorial Hospital, 325 Maine St. KU Undergraduate Honor Recital, 7:30 p.m., Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall, 1530 Naismith Drive.
19 WEDNESDAY
Karen Eckmeier workshop, 9 a.m.-3:30 p.m., Plymouth Congregational Church 925 Vermont. Books & Babies, 9:30-10 a.m. and 10:3011 a.m., Lawrence Public Library Readers’ Theater, 707 Vermont St. Public Incentives Review Committee meeting, 1:30 p.m., City Commission Room, Lawrence City Hall, 6 E. Sixth St. Teen Zone Expanded (grades 6-12), 2-5 p.m., Lawrence Public Library Teen Zone, 707 Vermont St.
L awrence J ournal -W orld
Sunday, October 16, 2016
Tell daughter fatherhood not always biological Dear Annie: When she was 21, our daughter became pregnant by a casual college boyfriend. Three months into her pregnancy, they broke up. Our daughter decided to let him go and has not ever found him. During the pregnancy, she began dating another young man, who wasn’t put off by the fact that she was pregnant with someone else’s baby. He loved our daughter and was committed to raising the baby as his own. They married soon after our granddaughter was born, and despite divorcing our daughter three years later, our former sonin-law has continued his commitment to being a loving father to our granddaughter. He has been the only father in her life. His parents
Dear Annie
Annie Lane
dearannie@creators.com
and family have always loved and included our granddaughter as their own. Our granddaughter is now 16. No one has ever told her the truth. Our daughter has done a great job raising her daughter but is terrified of the prospect of telling her daughter the truth. She is afraid her daughter will flip out and hate her when she is told the truth. She also fears her daughter will be angry with
‘Killing Reagan’ uninspiring “Killing Reagan” (6 p.m., National Geographic) is the fourth adaptation from the “Killing” series of books by Bill O’Reilly and Martin Dugard. Curiously, “Reagan” only follows the first part of O’Reilly’s book. That best-selling effort chronicled the Reagan presidency in the years following the Hinckley shootings and theorized that the medical trauma of 1981 may have exacerbated the president’s mental and physical decline, creating a leadership vacuum in the Oval Office that the first lady was more than willing to fill. That story would have been more difficult to film, but it has the potential to be more interesting than this rather uninspired take that pretty much wraps up in 1981. The made-forTV version of “Killing Reagan” settles for “Wounding Reagan.” O Nick Nolte stars in “Graves” (9 p.m., Epix, TVMA) as former President Richard Graves. Popularly derided as a terrible chief executive, even worse than James Buchanan, Graves has a marijuana-fueled epiphany and decides to spend the rest of his days atoning for his mistakes and compromises. O Also skating dangerously close to “cute,” “The Durrells in Corfu” debuts on “Masterpiece” (6 p.m., PBS, TV-PG, check local listings). The scenery is gorgeous, but the action, not to mention the characters, too often careen from eccentric to quirky. O Adapted from a Norwegian series, the 10-part anthology drama “Eyewitness” (9 p.m., USA, TV-14) examines grim crimes from the point of view of witnesses, often people who have secrets of their own. Tonight’s highlights O Scheduled on “60 Minutes” (6 p.m., CBS): the plight of Syrian refugees; the sons of executed “atomic spies” Julius and Ethel Rosenberg recall their traumatic upbringing. O Mr. Burns launches his own “Hunger Games” on the 27th “TreeHouse of Horror” episode of “The Simpsons” (6 p.m., Fox, TV-PG). O Diplomacy in the desert on “Madam Secretary” (8 p.m., CBS, TV-14). O Kate’s secrets continue to spill on “Secrets and Lies” (8 p.m., ABC, TV-14). O “Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown” (8 p.m., CNN) visits China’s Sichuan province. O A two-hour retrospective of “The Walking Dead” (8 p.m., AMC, TV-MA) reviews the series’ first six seasons. O A spy chases down a whistleblower with secrets that threaten the CIA in the new series “Berlin Station” (8 p.m., Epix, TV-MA). Copyright 2014 United Feature Syndicate, distributed by Universal Uclick.
everyone who knows the truth and has been “lying” to her all these years. Our family all agree that our daughter needs to tell her the truth soon. But our daughter is passive. She wishes someone else would take care of this for her, but we all agree she needs to be the one to tactfully tell her daughter the truth. Do you have any advice? —Concerned Grandma Dear Concerned: Even the best-intentioned secrets are still secrets, and they’re dangerous. It’s in your granddaughter’s best interest to know who her biological father is. However she processes it, it’s information she deserves to have, one of the more practical reasons being for the sake of her medical re-
cords. Help your daughter talk through her fears. She’s said she is afraid her daughter will flip out, so explore the worst-case scenarios there. She’s only 16; she can’t very well pack up and start a new life over this news. The man who tucked her in and read “Green Eggs and Ham,” taught her how to ride a bike, kissed her bruises when she fell, spent hours trying to grasp the concepts of geometry so he could help her study, dried her tears when the other kids left her out, dried his own tears on all her first days of school — he is her real father. And that will always be the whole truth.
JACQUELINE BIGAR’S STARS
For Sunday, Oct. 16: This year you have an opportunity to see many sides of an issue. If you are single, you meet potential sweeties with ease. If you are attached, the two of you often sit on opposite sides of a question. 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) +++ You might wake up feeling energetic, but as afternoon approaches you could feel as if you need to slow down. Tonight: Just don’t be alone. Taurus (April 20-May 20) ++++ You could stumble into quite the social scene. Enjoy every minute. Tonight: Ask and you shall receive. Gemini (May 21-June 20) +++++ You could be in the position of wanting a change of pace from your hectic and demanding social life. Tonight: Happiest at home. Cancer (June 21-July 22) ++++ You could be recuperating from the Full Moon. You might feel drained and pressured beyond your normal limits. Tonight: Back into the groove. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) ++++ You could be worn out by recent demands. You might feel as if you have to be in many places at once. Tonight: There is nothing you have to do.
— Send your questions for Annie Lane to dearannie@ creators.com.
jacquelinebigar.com
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) ++++ You’ll draw quite a few friends to you. One-on-one relating in the morning could be rather fulfilling. Tonight: Try a new spot. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) +++++ You’ll treasure special time with a friend. You both have a good time, no matter what your plans are. Tonight: Add some spice to your life. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) ++++ You could feel pushed to the max, and will want to make an impression on a special person. Tonight: With family and friends. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) ++++ The morning holds magic for you and a loved one. You could find that you both are playing a wild game. Tonight: Think “tomorrow.” Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ++++ You could be full of fun. You’ll want to make the most of your time at home. Tonight: Get to know this person better. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) ++++ You will speak your mind in the morning. Keep communication flowing. Tonight: As you like it. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) ++++ You might need to pull back and spend less. Listen to your sixth sense. Make plans with friends. Tonight: Live it up.
| 5B
UNIVERSAL CROSSWORD Universal Crossword Edited by Timothy Parker October 16, 2016
ACROSS 1 Opening for an anchor cable 6 Cheater’s sound at test time 10 Witchy crones 14 Enlightened Buddhist 15 Animal’s abode 16 Parting notice, briefly 17 Two light chasers 20 Settled on a sofa 21 Abominable Himalayan 22 Hair slickener 23 Ceremonial elegance 25 Jeweler’s collection 26 Diamond Head’s locale 28 Makes operable again 32 Type of salad or tragedy 34 Collection of miscellaneous pieces 35 Beatty of TV and film 38 Three light chasers 42 Suffix for extremists 43 Part of a sacrifice, sometimes 10/16
44 Swiss border lake 45 Less acute 48 ___-bodied 49 Amos or Spelling 51 Titled peer of the realm 53 Does an IRS job 55 Itty-bitty bit 56 Be remorseful 59 Three light chasers 62 Black, in poetry 63 Utilized a doorbell 64 Bit of color 65 “Stop!” 66 “Cut bait” alternative 67 War horse DOWN 1 Makes hesitant sounds 2 Length x width, for a rectangle 3 James Cagney film classic 4 Succumb to gravity 5 Alcohol type 6 River to the Mississippi 7 It’s wrapped in India 8 Be in session 9 Excursion 10 Classic literary detective 11 Crosswise, on a ship 12 Encircles or fortifies
13 Eyelid affliction 18 Eye drop 19 Act of political backscratching 24 Signaled an actor 26 Shrek, e.g. 27 “Iliad” warrior god 29 Coastal cities 30 In the manner of 31 Due east on a grandfather clock 33 Make unwanted comments (var.) 35 Whom all contenders are chasing 36 And others, for short 37 Fraction of a newton 39 Cashew, e.g.
40 African antelope 41 Distribute cards 45 Familiarize 46 Just the right amount 47 Campus military org. 49 Engine supercharger 50 Ancient Greek theater 52 Thai bills 53 Lying under covers 54 Bondman of old 55 Charged particles 57 Encourage 58 ___ out a living (just got by) 60 ___ chi (martial art) 61 Punster’s skill
PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER
10/15
© 2016 Universal Uclick www.upuzzles.com
LET THERE BE LIGHT By Timothy E. Parker
— The astrological forecast should be read for entertainment only.
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Sports
C
Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com/sports l Sunday, October 16, 2016
BAYLOR 49, KANSAS 7
EARLY DISMISSAL Baylor crushes Kansas with big first half By Benton Smith basmith@ljworld.com
Nick Krug/Journal-World Photo
BAYLOR QUARTERBACK SETH RUSSELL (17) BREAKS LOOSE FROM A TACKLE by Kansas safety Fish Smithson (9) and cornerback Marnez Ogletree (10) for the Bears’ third touchdown of the game Saturday in Waco, Texas. For more photos, please visit: www.kusports.com/kufball101516
Waco, Texas — By the time the second half began Saturday afternoon at McLane Stadium, Baylor starting quarterback Seth Russell didn’t even need to take the field. The first 30 minutes of the homecoming game provided his 11th-ranked Bears more than enough time to jettison Kansas in what inevitably turned into a 49-7 trouncing. “You don’t want to see that at all,” KU senior safety Fish Smithson admitted shortly after BU’s six-touchdown halftime lead inspired head coach Jim Grobe to rest Russell and many of the 47,598 in attendance to trickle out of the facility throughout the third quarter. After the Bears thoroughly sicced the Jayhawks in the first quarter to the tune of a 21-point advantage, their offense briefly slowed down in the second quarter — when BU junior kicker Chris Callahan missed a pair of field goals — before piling on in the final minutes to take a sixtouchdown lead into the break, all but deciding the
> KANSAS, 4C
Oh snap! He snapped the ball too soon Tom Keegan tkeegan@ljworld.com
Waco, Texas — Every laughable performance deserves a punch line and Kansas center Joe Gibson unwittingly supplied one Saturday in Baylor’s merciful 49-7 execution of the Jayhawks at McLane Stadium. Gibson, a fourth-year junior, mistook the
voice of a Baylor player calling out the snap count for that of quarterback Ryan Willis, according to head coach David Beaty. The snap came way before Willis expected it, Baylor recovered at the Kansas 4 and scored one play later, making it
35-0 on the way to a 42-0 halftime deficit. “It was inexcusable, first of all,” Beaty said. “Let me just say that. But what Joe said was that the nose tackle called out the snap count. Now, he didn’t call it out the whole day, but he called the snap count out on
that particular play. And, hey, sometimes they get it, sometimes they don’t. It got Joe on that play. Joe’s one of our smarter guys, so it doesn’t happen to that guy very often.” Had the request been passed on to Gibson, he would have shown
up, given me a string of quotes accepting blame and exonerating teammates and coaches. He would have shown what a stand-up guy he is and his quotes would have filled the remainder of this column.
> KEEGAN, 4C
KANSAS BASKETBALL
Identity of likely lineup puts KU in solid shape By Matt Tait mtait@ljworld.com
For the first time in four years, the Kansas men’s basketball program enters a season with the distinct possibility that its opening-night lineup could start nearly every game of the season. In back-to-back seasons from 2011-2013, Bill Self’s Jayhawks featured five players starting nearly every game, including four players who started all 37 contests during the 2012-13 season. Since then, stability has
remained a staple, with the Jayhawks getting four players to start an average Lucas of 86 percent of the games during the past three seasons. But nailing down a consistent fifth starter has been a tougher adventure. Even last season, when the Jayhawks ended the year with one of their most steady starting fives
in years, big man Landen L u c a s started just 19 of 38 games after Self spent the Mason first half of the season searching for the right chemistry in the starting lineup. This season, that quest seems to be already over. With Lucas, Frank Mason III and Devonté Graham returning from last year’s starting lineup, the
Jayhawks needed to find two players to plug into the spots vacated by Wayne Selden Jr. Graham and Perry Ellis. It didn’t take long. Sophomore Carlton Bragg Jr. became the obvious choice to take Ellis’ spot and top-ranked freshman Josh Jackson was recruited to fill Selden’s role. That group, in every way, makes sense for a
starting five for Kansas this season. And t h e r e isn’t a soul even pretendBragg ing that it should, or even could, be something different. The question then becomes, if identifying the starting five was finished as early as June, how far ahead does that put this team entering the season? “It may put you ahead
early in the season,” Self said. “But I’m not sure that k n o w ing who you’re Jackson going to start now helps you win games in February. Maybe it does. I don’t know. I think establishing roles early is positive. But sometimes you want there to be changes in your starting
> HOOPS, 2C
AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE
Sports 2 Ohio St. wins by 7 in OT EAST
2C | LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD | SUNDAY, OCTOBER 16, 2016
NORTH
TWO-DAY SPORTS CALENDAR
AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE
AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE
KANSAS NORTH TODAY
EAST
COLLEGE FOOTBALL ROUNDUP EAST
• Tennis at ITA Regionals, at NORTH Minneapolis MONDAY • Tennis at ITANORTH Regionals, at Minneapolis
AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE
EAST AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE
EAST SOUTH
Newby ran for one score and Tommy Armstrong Jr. hooked up with Stanley Morgan Jr. on a 72-yard touchdown pass with 9:57 left to play for Nebraska.
The Associated Press
Top 25
No. 2 Ohio St. 30, No. 8 Wisconsin 23 Madison, Wis. — J.T. Barrett Nebraska 17 0 0 10 — 27 7 7 — 22 threw a 7-yard touchdown pass Indiana 0 8 SOUTH to leaping receiver Noah Brown in overtime, and No. 2 Ohio No. 12 Mississippi 30, State finished off No. 8 Wiscon- No. 22 Arkansas 34 Fayetteville, Ark. — Jared sin with a sack on fourth-andCornelius scored on a 6-yard goal from the 4 for a win. touchdown run late in the Ohio St. 3 3 7 10 7 — 30 Wisconsin 10 6 0 7 0 — 23 fourth quarter and Arkansas outlasted Mississippi. No. 1 Alabama 49, No. 9 Tennessee 10 Knoxville, Tenn. — Jalen Hurts and Bo Scarbrough each ran for over 100 yards and Alabama again got points from its defense and special teams. It was the most lopsided victory by either team in the rivalry since a 51-0 Alabama victory in 1906. Alabama Tennessee
14 0
7 14 7 3
14 — 49 0 — 10
No. 3 Clemson 24, N.C. State 17 Clemson, S.C. — Deshaun Watson threw a 10-yard touchdown pass to Artavis Scott in overtime and Marcus Edmond followed with an interception to give Clemson a victory over North Carolina State. N.C. State 0 3 Clemson 3 7
7 7
7 0 — 17 0 7 — 24
No. 10 Nebraska 27, Indiana 22 Bloomington, Ind. — Terrell
of quarterback Brad Kaaya’s hand to snuff out the final Miami possession, and North Carolina moved into first place in the Atlantic Coast Conference’s Coastal Division. North Carolina 10 10 0
0 — 20
Miami
3 — 13
SOUTH31, Syracuse
0
3
7
NORTH FREE STATE HIGH MONDAYWEST
Akron, Ohio — Jarvion Franklin ran for a school-reAL EAST cord 281 yards and Zach Terrell threw for two scores and ran for two more for Western Michigan, ranked in the Top 25 AL CENTRAL for the first time. BOSTON RED SOX
BALTIMORE ORIOLES
• Girls golf, state at Leawood CC, 8:30 a.m. • Boys soccer vs. Mill Valley, 6:30 p.m.
NEW YORK YANKEES
CHICAGO WHITE SOX
• Girls golf, state at Leawood CC, WEST 8:30 a.m.
DETROIT TIGERS
CLEVELAND INDIANS
BOSTON RED SOX
BALTIMORE ORIOLES
NEW YORK YANKEES
LOS ANGELES ANGELS OF ANAHEIM
BALTIMORE ORIOLES
CHICAGO WHITE SOX
CHICAGO WHITE SOX
MLB AL LOGOS 032712: 2012 American League team logos; stand-alone; various sizes; staff; ETA 4 p.m.
LOS ANGELES ANGELS LOS ANGELES ANGELS OF ANAHEIM OF ANAHEIM
CHICAGO WHITE SOX
KANSAS CITY ROYALS
DETROIT TIGERS
KANSAS CITY ROYALS
TAMPA BAY RAYS
TEXAS RANGERS
MLB AL LOGOS 032712: 2012 American
MLB AL LOGOS 032712: 2012 American League team logos; stand-alone; various League logos; stand-alone; various sizes;team staff; ETA 4 p.m. sizes; staff; ETA 4 p.m.
OAKLAND ATHLETICS
DETROIT TIGERS
more TD passes to Crabtree on fourth down. The latest of those came when Carr threw a 21-yard pass on fourth-and-3 for the go-ahead score in a 3431 win against San Diego. “It’s just based on what I think is best for the football team to give us the best opportunity to win, Del Rio said. “Everything we do is about that.” One reason for Del Rio’s risk taking has been that his offense has significantly outplayed the defense, which is allowing 7.0 yards per play, which would be the worst mark in the NFL since the merger.
BRIEFLY Baker football blitzes Avila Baldwin City — Junior quarterback Logan Brettell completed 29 of 41 passes for 353 yards and four touchdowns to lead Baker University’s football team to a 52-7 victory over Avila on Saturday at Liston Stadium. Two of Brettell’s touchdown passes went to wideout Ladai Shawn Boose, who hauled in five receptions for 81 yards. Clarence Clark led the Baker receiving corps with 101 yards and a touchdown. Clark also booted a 36-yard field goal and connected on all seven PATs.
weekend, Busch led 150 of the 200 laps in a thoroughly dominant performance for his ninth series win of the season. It was also his third straight Xfinity win at Kansas, where he won in his Sprint Cup car for the first time this spring.
“There were a lot of things trying to work against us toward the end, but we just persevered,” said Busch, who at one point was a lap down. “We had great speed. I think we showed it all weekend. It was just a matter of putting it all together and
ending up in victory lane, where we deserved to be.” Sadler finished second and Suarez finished third to give the Chase contenders a nice start to the three-race round of eight, which now takes a twoweek break.
Hoops
That’s not to say anything is guaranteed at any of the five positions. Self emphasized as much at media day, but added that he likes how things have played out with this team thus far. “You’ve got to figure out who’s better coming off the bench, you’ve got to figure out whose ego allows you to do certain things,” he said. “But I’d say going in, when you’re having Indiana and Duke right off the bat, if we’re able to stay healthy, having those guys pretty much know what their
role will be is probably a positive.” Lucas agreed and said establishing those roles so early this season will help more than just the starting five. “Having three starters and a lot of people that contributed to a team that was right there with a chance to go to the Final Four (last year), I think we all have a lot of experience and confidence and are able to bring that to the other guys,” he said. “With the core that we have back and just the personality of
the younger guys like Carlton and Lagerald (Vick) and Svi (Mykhailiuk), we’ve got some guys, they don’t act as young as their age. And then you add that (to) the guys that are coming back and it really has a vibe in the locker that I don’t know if I’ve been to this level with before as far as the focus and the understanding of what needs to be done. I think the teams right before I came here kind of had that feeling, and I’m happy that we’ve got that culture back in the locker room and around the team.”
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lineup. Sometimes you want to make the young kid earn it, and then once he earns it and plays to his potential, you want him to actually outplay somebody.” It’s hard to envision that being the path for either Jackson or Bragg. And that trio of upperclassmen is as entrenched in the starting lineup as just about anybody during the past decade.
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TODAY IN SPORTS 1932 — After a 0-0 tie earlier in the season, the Green Bay Packers beat the Chicago Bears, 2-0. 1964 — Babe Parilli of the Boston Patriots passes for 422 yards and four touchdowns in a 43-43 tie with the Oakland Raiders. 1968 — Americans Tommie Smith and John Carlos give black power salutes during the medal ceremonies of the 200meter race and are later banned for life from all Olympic competition by the IOC. 1977 — The Denver Broncos intercept seven passes off Ken Stabler of the Oakland Raiders in a 30-7 victory.
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West, and seeking their first four-game winning streak in 14 years. “I’ve said this before, it just gives us confidence,” Carr said. “I don’t know if it makes us feel any certain type of way but it definitely gives us confidence that he trusts us in fourth-and-2, fourth-and-short, backed up, 2-point conversions. He trusts us to execute.” Carr has validated that trust often this season. He connected with Michael Crabtree on the game-winning 2-point conversion in the opener at New Orleans, and has thrown two
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Gambles help carry Raiders
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C
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Big No. 17 Virgina AL WEST 12 SOUTHTech 17 WEST Syracuse, N.Y. — Eric DungNo. 20 West Virginia 48, AL EAST ey accounted for 417 yards and SEABURY ACADEMY Texas Tech 17 AL EAST two touchdowns and Syracuse MONDAY AL CENTRAL Lubbock, Texas — The beat a ranked opponent for the • Volleyball, Seabury triangular, 5 Mountaineers (5-0, 2-0 Big 12) first time since 2012. SOUTH p.m. WEST held Texas Tech (3-3, 1-2) to Mississippi 6 14 0 10 — 30 AL CENTRAL its lowest offensive output this 081312: Helmet and logos8for the AFC teams; various sizes; stand-alone; staff; ETA 5 p.m. Arkansas 14 AFC 6 TEAM 7 7 —LOGOS 34 Virginia Tech 3 team 0 6 — 17 AL CENTRAL Syracuse 7 10 0 14 — 31 season, just 379 yards, and haAL WEST CHIEFS AL EAST rassed quarterback Patrick MaNo. 13 Houston 38, TODAY No. 18 Florida 40, homes most of the day. Tulsa 31 • at Oakland, 3:05 p.m. Missouri 14 AL AL WEST Houston — Emeke Egbule WEST Virginia 10 14 3 21 — 48 Gainesville, Fla. — Jalen West Texas Tech 7 0 3 7 — 17 returned a fumble 24 yards for AL CENTRAL Tabor and Quincy Wilson rea touchdown with 1:21 remainSPORTING KC turned interceptions for touchNo. 19 Oklahoma 38, ing to lift Houston past Tulsa. AFC TEAM LOGOS 081312: Helmet and team logos for the AFC teams; various sizes; stand-alone; staff; ETA 5 p.m. downs, helping Florida move TODAY Kansas St. 17 Tulsa 3 14 0 14 — 31 into first place in the South• at Real Salt Lake, 4 p.m. Norman, Okla. — Baker Houston 10 7 7 14 — 38 eastern Conference’s Eastern Mayfield was 25 of 31 for 346 AL WEST AFCDivision. TEAM LOGOS 081312: Helmet and team logos for the AFC teams; various sizes; stand-alone; staff; ETA 5 p.m. AFC TEAM LOGOS 081312: Helmet and team logos yards for the AFC sizes; stand-alone; staff; ETA 5 p.m. andteams; fourvarious touchdowns, No. 14 Florida State 17, and Dede Westbrook had nine SPORTS ON TV Florida 0 20 6 14 — 40 Wake Forest 6 Missouri 0 0 7 7 — 14 receptions for 184 yards and Tallahassee, Fla. — Travis TODAY three scores for Oklahoma. Rudolph had a career-high 13 No. 21 Utah 19, Pro Football Time Net Cable receptions for 238 yards and Kansas St. 0 10 0 7 — 17 Oregon State 14 Oklahoma 14 10 7 7 — 38 Phila. v. Washington noon FOX 4, 204 Florida State AFC overcame three TEAM LOGOS 081312: Helmet and for Wilthe AFC teams; various sizes; stand-alone; staff; ETA 5 p.m. Corvallis , Oteam re. logos — Joe turnovers to beat Wake Forest. Dallas v. Green Bay 3 p.m. FOX 4, 204 liams came out of retirement Texas 27, Iowa State 6 Rudolph had the fourth-best K.C. v. Oakland 3 p.m. CBS 5, 13, and ran for a 5-yard first-quarter Austin, Texas — Shane receiving game in Florida State 205,213 touchdown and Utah beat OreBuechele passed for 296 yards Indianapolis v. Houston 7:20p.m. NBC 14, 214 history. gon State in wet and windy conand two touchdowns and Texditions. Wake Forest 0 3 3 0 — 6 as got coach Charlie Strong a Baseball Florida St. 3 7 7 0 — 17 Time Net Cable Utah 9 3 0 7 — 19 desperately-needed win, snapDodgers v. Cubs 7 p.m. FS1 150,227 Oregon St. 0 0 7 7 — 14 ping a three-game losing streak North Carolina 20, with a win over Iowa State. No. 16 Miami 13 Golf Time Net Cable Miami Gardens, Fla. — Ma- No. 24 Western Michigan 41, Iowa State 6 0 0 0 — 6 4 p.m. Golf 156,289 Texas 0 3 21 3 —27 Safeway Open lik Carney knocked the ball out Akron 0 Auto Racing
Oakland, Calif. (ap) — Whether it’s going for the win with a late 2-point conversion instead of kicking the safer extra point or passing up easy field goals for fourth-down attempts, Oakland Raiders coach Jack Del Rio has been consistent so far this season. If he has a chance to put the game in quarterback Derek Carr and the offense’s hands, he will do it. So far, those bold moves have mostly paid off and are a big reason the Raiders (4-1) head into today’s game against Kansas City (22) in first place in the AFC
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Sunday, October 16, 2016
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Free State runners claim league crown By Shane Jackson sjackson@ljworld.com
Free State High’s girls cross country runners knew they had a tall task in front of them, as they went up against tougher competition in Saturday’s Sunflower League meet at Rim Rock Farm. But now that they have risen to the challenge — taking first as a team — the Firebirds are confident about what the postseason has in store. “I think it’s a huge accomplishment,” senior Emily Venters said. “We beat the top teams in the state. That gives us confidence going into state that we can win it. I think we are all just really excited.” Venters, a two-time Class 6A state champion, led FSHS on the day with a second-place time of 18:18.5. But Venters was more than 41 seconds behind league champion Molly
Born, of Shawnee Mission Northwest. “I was a little disappointed in my race,” Venters said. “I wish it would have gone better. It’s just race by race. You can’t have a good race every week. My legs just wouldn’t really go the last mile. Through two miles, I actually was on really good pace for a (personal record).” Venters set a personal best time of 17:53 at the Haskell Invitational two weeks ago and ran 18:07 at Rim Rock Farm in September. Not far behind Venters was senior Kiran Cordes, who took fourth with a time of 19:05.7. Even with the wind playing a factor, Cordes improved her time by 37 seconds from the last time she ran on the course. FSHS senior Abby Zenger also shaded 37 seconds off her time last month, placing sixth with a mark of 19:43.7. Sophomore Julia Larkin
Chris Duderstadt/Journal-World Photo
FREE STATE’S EMILY VENTERS, FRONT, hugs teammate Abigail Zenger as she accepts her medal for being the Sunflower League runner-up Saturday at Rim Rock Farm. notched 14th to help seal the gold for the Firebirds. On the boys side, Free State placed sixth out of 12 teams. Junior Avant
Firebird doubles pairing takes 7th at state tennis By Evan Riggs eriggs@ljworld.com
Topeka — Moments after walking off the court for the last time this season, junior Ali Dodd and senior Andrea Chen weren’t sure how to feel. The Free State girls tennis duo ended their season with a 9-7 victory over Kennedy Menke and Nicole Alfaro, of Olathe South, to place seventh in the Class 6A state tournament on Saturday at Kossover Tennis Center. “I don’t think it’s hit me yet,” Chen said. “It’s unbelievable really. I never would have thought we would be standing here seventh in the state. We’ve come so far since the beginning of the season.” After Day One of the state tournament Friday, Chen said their goal was to finish in the top-eight. With a 2-1 record on Saturday, they were able to do just that. As a team, Free State tied for eighth place. “They were able to play some good tennis when it mattered most, and that’s all you can really ask for,” interim coach Michael Trujillo said. Dodd and Chen’s seventh-place finish is the highest by a FSHS doubles pairing since Kelly Phipps and Alexis Czapinski placed sixth at state in 2010. In their last match, a comfortable 7-4 lead over Olathe South turned
Evan Riggs/Journal-World Photo
FREE STATE’S ALI DODD, left, congratulates her doubles partner, Andrea Chen, after a win at the Class 6A girls state tennis tournament Saturday in Topeka. into a 7-7 tie. Chen held serve in a service game that lasted more than five minutes and Free State closed out the match in the next game. “Both of them did well to step up their level to end the match,” Trujillo said. “When you lose a lead you can either cower and roll over or battle back and fight for the match. Our girls did a very good job coming up big when it mattered.” Dodd and Chen were frustrated with their sloppy play that allowed Olathe South back in the match, but they were able to keep each other calm. “That’s one of the best
things about us,” Dodd said. “I think we always encourage each other, and we are always telling each other to move on to the next point.” In the first match, Dodd and Chen fought through wind to beat Elise Byers and Daya Chimakadze, of Olathe East, 9-5 despite falling behind early in the match. Dodd and Chen came up short against Blue Valley North’s Bridget Brown and Sydnee Paisner, 9-3, but responded with a win in the seventhplace match. “I think that’s where our teamwork shines,” Chen said. “I thought we responded really well. We play every point and go after every ball.” Dodd will be back for one more season, but Chen played her last match for Free State. Chen said she’s satisfied with her high school career, especially with the way this season ended. Chen was the only FSHS senior in the varsity lineup and their coach was inexperienced as well. Trujillo, who was named interim coach a week before the season began, said he got comfortable with the job after a few weeks. “There’s definitely a steep learning curve going into any 6A high school at any head coaching position,” Trujillo said. “It turned out to be one of the most fun jobs I’ve ever had.”
Edwards posted a 10thplace finish, clocking a time of 16:59.2. Afterward, Edwards was disappointed with his result and felt he could
have done even better had it not been for the strong wind at the start of the race. “We didn’t really feel it when we walked the course,” Edwards said. “When we got out there, you could feel it. We weren’t really ready for it. On the first mile it was really windy.” Jared Hicks was able clinch a top-20 finish, with a time of 17:17.9 to place 16th. Meanwhile, Landon Sloan’s time of 17:26.5 was good enough to finish 21st. Both runners shaved several seconds off their course time. For Lawrence High, junior Carson Jumping Eagle ran a personalbest time for the second straight meet. Jumping Eagle clocked a 17:35.5 to place 27th. He was the highest LHS finisher on the boys’ side as no other runner placed higher than 35th. Jumping Eagle credited his preparation in
practice for his recent personal success. “I just try to improve at practice,” Jumping Eagle said. “I work with Garrett (Prescott) a lot. He helps me run faster. I’m just going to try my hardest and run my own race.” LHS sophomore Anna DeWitt notched a 21stplace finish with a time of 20:42.6 to lead the Lions. DeWitt was just three seconds shy of her personal-best time, which she set two weeks ago. DeWitt was not bothered by the wind. In fact, she admitted she runs better in the cold weather. “As a team we are improving a lot,” DeWitt said. “Our varsity has been taking spots and we are not getting last place at meets anymore. I think my junior and senior year we will definitely be (toward the) top.” Lawrence’s girls cross country team finished 10th and the boys were 11th.
BRIEFLY KU volleyball sweeps TCU Fort Worth, Texas — Junior right-side hitter Kelsie Payne recorded 16 kills, seven blocks and an ace to lead the Kansas volleyball team past TCU in straight sets (25-12, 25-19, 25-22) Saturday. Junior Ainise Havili paced the Jayhawks with 32 assists, and senior libero Cassie Wait led KU with 25 digs. The Jayhawks (17-2, 6-1) will play West Virginia at 6:30 p.m. Thursday at Horejsi Family Athletics Center.
FSHS volleyball wins at Emporia Emporia — Behind a strong offensive attack, Free State High’s volleyball team won the Emporia tournament on Saturday, only dropping two sets in six victories. It was the second time this season that the Firebirds (30-6, ranked No. 4 in Class 6A) have won a tournament. In pool play, the Firebirds beat Olathe Metro Academy (25-18, 25-12), Louisburg (25-22, 25-15), Washburn Rural (19-25, 25-17, 25-23) and Bonner Springs (25-12, 25-12). Then in bracket play, they defeated Lawrence High in the semifinals (25-22, 2519) and Washburn Rural in the championship (25-16, 23-25, 28-26). With strong passing from setters Mya Gleason (72 assists) and Jenalee Dickson (67 assists), the Firebirds rolled on offense. Naomi Hickman led with
finish at the Pre-National Invitational Saturday after taking 10th overall with a 6,000-meter time of 20:26.3. The KU men’s team earned a 21st-place finish.
45 kills, 21 blocks and 15 digs. Rachel Hickman had 44 kills and 14 blocks, Cameryn Thomas recorded 32 kills and 45 digs, Payton Gannaway added 28 kills and 20 assists, and Kaitlyn Hamilton had 23 kills. Defensively, Erin Cushing had 67 digs, Murphy O’Malley had 28 digs and Natalie Clark recorded seven blocks.
Veritas 4th at Osawatomie
Osawatomie — Veritas Christian’s volleyball team posted a 3-3 record and LHS volleyball took fourth place at the Osawatomie tournament 4th at Emporia Saturday. Emporia — Lawrence The Eagles beat UnionHigh’s volleyball team took town (25-9, 25-9), Kansas fourth place at the Emporia City (Kan.) Christian (25-9, tournament on Saturday 25-12) and Osawatomie with a 3-3 record. (25-19, 25-23), and sufThe Lions beat Maize fered losses to Girard (21(18-25, 25-20, 25-18), 25, 25-14, 25-20) and Erie Topeka Seaman (25-22, twice (25-14, 25-10; 28-30, 25-13) and Junction City 25-23, 25-12). (25-19, 15-25, 25-9), and Chloe Holland led the lost to Free State (25-22, Eagles’ offense with 55 25-19) and Emporia twice kills, followed by Emma (25-21, 25-17; 25-22, 25Wilson (13), Alyssa Krestan 17). (12), Jessie Swisher (10) Offensively, Amelia Dun- and Brienne Billings (9). lap (30 kills), Olivia Morgan (29), Brooke Wroten (26) Kansas tennis and Baylee Unruh (20) all advances four recorded at least 20 kills. Laurel Bird had 73 assists Minneapolis — The and 37 digs, while Laura Kansas tennis team sent Willoughby had 37 assists four players through to the and 26 digs. Lauren Maceli quarterfinal round of the added 74 digs, Unruh ITA Central Regionals on had 70 digs and Wroten Saturday. recorded 12 blocks. Tess Bernard-FeigenLawrence (12-24) will baum and Anastasia travel to Free State for the Rychagova moved on to City Showdown dual at 6 the quarterfinals in doubles p.m. Tuesday. and singles play after winning all three of their Lokedi leads respective matches. Bernard-Feigenbaum KU runners earned a three-set victory Terre Haute, Ind. — against Wichita State’s Sophomore Sharon Lokedi Tanaporn Thongsing (4-6, paced the Kansas Univer6-1, 6-4), and won two sity women’s cross coundoubles matches with Nina try team to a 13th-place Khmelnitckaia.
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75± ACRES DEVELOPMENT LAND FOR SALE: DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS. This development land is located near K-10, north of Hwy 40 on E 800 Road. 75 acres of designated “low density residential” land in close proximity to Rock Chalk Park on the NW side of the city. Gently rolling land with two existing ponds and road frontage ontoTrailrider Road.
FARM LAND WITH HOUSE FOR SALE: DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS.The property features one-half mile of frontage on the Farmer’s Turnpike from Kasold Drive to County Road 7 that leads to Lakeview Road. There is a nice mix of cropland, grass, and timber. An older 3-bedroom farmhouse, in very good condition, is located at the Southeast corner of the property.
79.3± ACRES OF AGRICULTURAL/ DEVELOPMENT LAND: JOHNSON COUNTY, KANSAS.This highly visible property consists of 79.3± acres of gently rolling pasture with 3,550± feet of frontage on K-10 Highway. The property has a small pond and light tree coverage. It is prominently situated at the NE corner of Evening Star Road and K-10 Highway.
Location: E 800 Road, Between Highway 40 and Farmers Turnpike Asking Price: $525,000 Size: 75± acres
Location: Northwest corner of Kasold Drive & North 1800 Road (Farmer’s Turnpike) Asking Price: $525,000 Size: 56± acres
Location: Property is located on the NE corner of K-10 and Evening Star Road Asking Price: $680,000 Size: 79.3± acres
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Sunday, October 16, 2016
BAYLOR 49, KANSAS 7
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L awrence J ournal -W orld
2-MINUTE DRILL Baylor 49 Kansas 7 BAYLOR LEADERS Rushing: Russell 7-68, Linwood 10-46, Schrepher 9-39. Passing: Russell 9-22-144. Receiving: Cannon 3-75, Stricklin 2-51, Hawthorne 2-42. KANSAS LEADERS Rushing: Ke’aun Kinner 15-49, Khalil Herbert 9-34, Taylor Martin 7-23. Passing: Ryan Willis 10-19-89. Receiving: Steven Sims 2-40, LaQuvionte Gonzalez 5-29, Jeremiah Booker 1-27. TALE OF THE TAPE Baylor......................................................................................... Kansas 20 4..............................................first downs.................................................. 15 49 4.................................................. rushes.......................................................48 246 4.........................................rushing yards................................................83 13-30-0 4....................... passing (comp.-att.-int.)............................ 13-27-4 207 4........................................ passing yards.............................................. 134 79 4..................................... total offensive plays......................................... 75 453 4..................................total offensive yards....................................... 217 45...................................................return yards............................................4 52 4-156 ................................................ punting......................................... 4 8-403 1-1 .................................................fumbles-lost..........................................4 2-1 4-35............................................penalties-yards.....................................4 6-38 26:53 ......................................time of possession...............................4 33:07 SCORE BY QUARTERS Baylor 21 Kansas 0
21 0
7 7
0 — 49 0 — 7
SCORING SUMMARY FIRST QUARTER 11:55 — Seth Russell 5-yard run. Chris Callahan kick. Eleven-play drive for 75 yards in 3:05. (Baylor 7, KU 0.) 8:40 — Ryan Reid 64-yard run. Callahan kick. (Baylor 14, KU 0.) 2:47 — Seth Russell 26-yard run. Callahan kick. Sixplay drive for 58 yards in 1:33. (BU 21, KU 0.) SECOND QUARTER 6:26 — KD Cannon 59-yard pass from Russell. Callahan kick. One-play drive for 59 yards, in 0:11. (BU 28, KU 0.) 5:49 — Shock Linwood 4-yard run. One-play drive for 4 yards, in 0:04. (BU 35, KU 0.) 1:45 — Ishmael Zamora 4-yard pass from Russell. Callahan kick. Ten-play drive for 73 yards, in 2:03. (BU 42, KU 0.) THIRD QUARTER 11:00 — Terrence Williams 7-yard run. Ten-play drive for 71 yards, in 3:04. (BU 49, KU 0.) 1:22 — Khalil Herbert 2-yard run. Twelve-play drive for 68 yards, in 4:49. (BU 49, KU 7.)
Nick Krug/Journal-World Photo
KANSAS CORNERBACK BRANDON STEWART (8), SAFETY GREG ALLEN (22) and the rest of the Jayhawks, coaches and personnel watch from the sidelines late in the fourth quarter Saturday in Waco, Texas.
Kansas CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C
game and extending KU’s losing streak away from Lawrence to an eye-popping 41 games. As if the rout already hadn’t been designated as on, the Bears’ foray resumed late in the second quarter when they opened a possession with a 59-yard KD Cannon reception and sprint for a touchdown. KU gifted the Bears an even easier crack at a one-play scoring drive on the ensuing series, when junior center Joe Gibson’s accidental shotgun snap took a bit of a pumpfake before bouncing off of him and onto the turf, INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS where BU sophomore RUSHING (CARRIES-YARDS) tackle Ira Lewis pounced Baylor: Russell 7-68, Linwood 10-46, Schrepher 9-39, on it. Hasty 6-34, T. Williams 8-33, Platt 1-8, Heard 1-5, HawThe third KU giveaway thorne 1-5, Lynch 1-4, Dwyer 2-4, Smith 3-0. of the first half, the lost Kansas: Ke’aun Kinner 15-49, Khalil Herbert 9-34, fumble set up a four-yard Taylor Martin 7-23, Denzell Evans 1-2, Maciah Long 1-0, touchdown run for seCarter Stanley 4-(minus 1), LaQuvionte Gonzalez 1-(minior Bears running back nus 7), Ryan Willis 9-(minus 14). Shock Linwood on firstand-goal. PASSING (COM.-ATT.-YARDS) Relatively speaking, Baylor: Russell 9-22-144, Smith 4-8-63. Baylor took its time scorKansas: Ryan Willis 10-19-89, Carter Stanley 3-8-45. ing its next touchdown, following Kansas junior RECEIVING (NO.-YARDS) Cole Moos’ fifth punt of Baylor: Cannon 3-75, Stricklin 2-51, Hawthorne 2-42, the first half. Russell finPlatt 2-17, Lynch 1-7, Feuerbacher 1-6, Atkinson 1-5, ished his brief afternoon Zamora 1-4. with an easy four-yard Kansas: Steven Sims 2-40, LaQuvionte Gonzalez 5-29, pass to sophomore reJeremiah Booker 1-27, Shakiem Barbel 2-17, Evan Fairs ceiver Ishmael Zamora 1-8, Bobby Hartzog 1-7, Chase Harrell 1-6. with less than two minutes to play in the secPUNTING (NO.-AVERAGE) ond quarter and Kansas Baylor: Smith 1-36.0, Heard 1-35.0, Galitz 2-42.5. trailed 42-0 before headKansas: Cole Moos 8-50.4. ing to the locker room for a much-needed respite. TACKLING LEADERS: “You always want the Baylor: Davis 15, Taylor 6, Jones Jr. 6, Houston 5, best shot from your opWilliams 5, Hall 4, Arnold 4, Edwards 3, Jones 3, Waz 2, ponent. You always want Roberts 2, Smith 2, Johnson 2, Lewis 2, Lynch 1, Wright that,” second-year KU 1, Miller 1, Levels 1, Stewart 1, Jacobs 1, Johnston 1, Blanchard 1, Hunt 1, Reid 1. Kansas: Mike Lee 8, Fish Smithson 8, Courtney Arnick 6, Marcquis Roberts 5, Tevin Shaw 5, Deelsaac Davis 5, Dorance Armstrong 4, Isaiah Bean 3, Greg Allen 3, Isi Holani 3, Damani Mosby 2, Jace Sternberger 2, Derrick Neal 2, Brandon Stewart 2, Marnez Ogletree 2, Anthony CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C Olobia 2, Shaquille Richmond 1, Stanley 1, Sims 1, Bryce Torneden 1, Willis 1, Chevy Graham 1, Denzel Feaster 1, Since the request was Daniel Wise 1. not passed along to him by media relations, and Officials: Referee: Eddy Shelton, Umpire: Rick PodraI still have to fill the rest za, Linesman: Rick Smith, Line judge: Scott Reilly, Back of this space, I guess judge: Terry White, Field judge: Nick Lave, Side judge: the best way to do it is Richard Corona to review how Beaty’s decision after last season Attendance: 47,598 to take control of coordiTime of game: 3:18 nating his version of the Air Raid offense, coaching quarterbacks and calling offensive plays has worked out, precisely halfway through the season. Kansas leads the naCANDIDATES FOR GAME BALLS tion with 22 turnovers, five coming Saturday. n Freshman Khalil Herbert continues to look sharp Quarterback Ryan Willis running the ball. He bounced his way to 34 yards and threw three interceptions a rushing touchdown. Saturday. As so often has been n Defensive end Dorance Armstrong had an eightthe case this season, yard sack among his four tackles. KU found itself in dire straits, boom, like that. CANDIDATES FOR GASSERS Willis stared down Steven Sims and Baylor n Center Joe Gibson was fooled by a Baylor defender calling out the snap count and snapped the ball cornerback Ryan Reid jumped the route and when Ryan Willis had no clue it was coming. Baylor rode Telegraph Road recovered at the Kansas 4. One play later, Baylor led, 64 yards down the right 35-0, with 5:49 left in the second quarter. sideline for a pick-six n Too often telegraphing his throws, Willis threw that made it 14-0 with three interceptions. 8:40 left in the first quar-
Keegan
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head coach David Beaty said regarding Grobe essentially declaring the game won by sitting Russell in the second half. “We don’t get to be disheartened. We just don’t. We have to deal with the here and now.” The Bears (6-0 overall, 3-0 Big 12) put the Jayhawks (1-5, 0-3) in their place early, winning the opening coin toss, electing to receive and traversing the 75 yards of turf in front of them in 3:05 to take the lead for good. Fittingly, quarterback Russell (212 total yards, two passing touchdowns, two rushing scores) finished the opening-statement possession with a five-yard run to the end zone. Baylor’s lead expanded with the aid of a Ryan Willis throw on the following possession. One play after a successful fourth-down conversion in BU territory via a Willis two-yard sneak, the sophomore QB looked to make a quick throw to the left sideline. However, Baylor senior corner Ryan Reid recognized the KU quarterback’s intentions instantly and picked off the throw on the run, continuing his way 64 more yards for a TD. “We game-planned for the outs,” Reid said, “and just certain routes that they run. It changed our whole game plan.” Willis (10-for-19 passing, 89 yards, three interceptions) thought at the time he made a good throw, but said after KU’s fifth consecutive defeat Reid made a better break on it.
“I mean, it’s a long throw. But we need to complete those. We need to be better as an offense,” the QB offered after the Bears out-gained KU 453-217 in total yards. “I need to be better.” BU didn’t score on its third offensive possession, when the KU defense came through with a three-and-out following a Moos personal-record punt of 82 yards (aided by the wind at his back and some gracious bounces) that pinned the Bears back on their own threeyard line. The Bears corrected that glitch, though, and built a 21-0 first-quarter lead on the next series, capped by a 26-yard Russell run, complete with a move to avoid defensive backs Smithson and Marnez Ogletree en route to the gold and green turf beyond the goal line. Behind its massive offensive line, Baylor put up 246 rushing yards. And though the Bears’ 207 passing yards didn’t exactly stand out, KU only managed one sack, by sophomore defensive end Dorance Armstrong in the third quarter. Senior linebacker Courtney Arnick said the Bears’ offense featured great athletes at every position. “Their O-line was very physical and they came out here and competed,” Arnick said. “Now we’ve just gotta get back in the lab and prepare for next week.” Backup BU quarterback Zach Smith led another Bears scoring drive before Kansas finally
erased the zero next to its name on the scoreboard. By then, Willis watched from the bench, with the game completely out of hand. Redshirt freshman QB Carter Stanley took over with 6:11 left in the third. But Beaty’s offense mostly relied on true freshman running back Khalil Herbert on the series. Stanley connected with sophomore receiver Steven Sims Jr. for a 34-yard pickup and only threw the ball on two other plays, both incompletions. Herbert, meanwhile, rushed for 27 yards on six carries, including a two-yard touchdown that made the score 49-7. “Baylor, their defense, they came prepared to play today,” Sims said. “They executed well all day long. That’s really all I can say.” KU finished the loss with only 134 passing yards and 83 rushing yards. Beaty said the Jayhawks have to improve offensively. “We made some strides last week and then today we took several steps back,” the coach said. “That’s my responsibility. I’m the one that has to manage that and make sure we’re productive on that side of the ball. And it didn’t happen today. Those kids, they’re gonna continue to listen and continue to learn, but we’ve gotta continue to provide them with great leadership and that’s my responsibility.” Kansas returns to Lawrence to face Oklahoma State at 11 a.m. Saturday at Memorial Stadium.
ter. The way Willis had been able to complete passes to the sideline before that, he had to be thinking, “Were they setting me up?” as he watched Reid punch any cornerback’s ticket to heaven. Reid picked off another and didn’t quite make it to the end zone, this time returning it 52 yards, as opposed to 64 yards for the TD. By the end of the first quarter, Kansas trailed, 21-0 and by halftime it was 42-0, even though the Kansas defense held Baylor scoreless on three consecutive possessions. “We game-planned for the outs and just certain routes that they run,” Reid said afterward. “It changed our whole game plan.” Play-by-play man Tim Brando, who has called a few games in his day, at one point during the telecast said something similar, something about Kansas not fooling anybody. Willis isn’t the first quarterback to lock in on a receiver, thereby giving the defender an advantage. He has a
problem with telegraphing throws, but it’s not always all his fault. Too often, the pocket already has collapsed by the time he can look at more than one receiver. It’s not an easy offense for a quarterback to run or a coach to coordinate, in part because the offensive line lacks game experience and ample years in the weight room to compete against Big 12 behemoths. Those factors were easy to see, but Beaty didn’t read it that way, so he demoted offensive coordinator Rob Likens to walk-around guy and took over the offense, believing he could fix what ailed it during an 0-12 season in 2015. That was as bad a misread on Beaty’s part as any committed by Willis on Saturday. So far, not so good for the Beaty-coordinated offense. Other than the 55 points Kansas scored on Rhode Island (1-6, outscored a combined 48-3 in the past two weeks by Villanova and Stony Brook), the Jayhawks have averaged 15.4 points.
Even if you want to cut Beaty slack for not having much to work with on offense, you can’t acquit him for not realizing that he had so little with which to work. Beaty inherited quite the rebuilding job from athletic director Sheahon Zenger’s first hire, Charlie Weis, a challenge that would require any first-year head coach’s full-time attention. Beaty compounded matters by adding OC to his duties. When the offeseason arrives, Beaty and Zenger must put their heads together to figure out how to silence the echoes of the Beaty-to-OC decision. Give the job back to Likens, who has one year remaining on a three-year, $1.05 million guaranteed deal? Promote wide receivers coach Jason Phillips to offensive coordinator and put Likens in charge of the receivers? Hire a new OC from outside the program? Leave it alone, sit back and enjoy the basketball team travel a road it hopes leads to Phoenix?
BAYLOR 49, KANSAS 7
L awrence J ournal -W orld
Sunday, October 16, 2016
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Nick Krug/Journal-World Photos
KANSAS QUARTERBACK CARTER STANLEY (9) HEAVES A PASS OUT OF THE END ZONE during the fourth quarter of the Jayhawks’ 49-7 loss to Baylor on Saturday in Waco, Texas.
NOTEBOOK
KU leads nation in turnovers By Benton Smith basmith@ljworld.com
Waco, Texas — More times than he’d like to recall, Kansas football coach David Beaty has discussed following a Jayhawks loss how costly his team’s turnovers were against a particular opponent. Saturday at No. 11 Baylor proved no different, and the trending KU post-game topic only became hotter following a 49-7 road loss featuring three Ryan Willis interceptions, one pick of backup quarterback Carter Stanley and a botched Joe Gibson snap snatched by the Bears. The five miscues this week brought KU’s season total in lost turnovers to 22 — the worst mark among all 128 FBS teams by the end of the Jayhawks’ fifth consecutive loss. “When you turn the ball over that much, you usually lose and you usually lose big. We got lucky last week,” Beaty said, referring to KU only losing by one point at home to TCU while giving the ball away four times. “… This is the Big 12. And that’s Baylor. I looked over at the side of their wall and it says Big 12 champions the last two years. Those guys are stinkin’ good. You can’t give ’em anything.” On KU’s first drive of the game, already operating in a seven-point deficit, Willis threw an interception to senior Baylor corner Ryan Reid (the first of two picks for the defensive back) and Reid took off in the other direction for another six points. “That mistake that we made with that first interception hurt, but you can’t let that bleed into another one. You just can’t. There’s no excuse for it. You don’t get to let one play turn into another one,” Beaty said. “We talk about that all the time. It shouldn’t have been a problem.” Regarding his further misfires, Willis said they weren’t all the result of locking in on a receiver. Baylor also fooled him with coverages at times and rolled defenders in
KANSAS QUARTERBACK RYAN WILLIS (13) IS HIT BY BAYLOR LINEBACKER RAAQUAN DAVIS (19) as he slides across the turf during the first quarter on Saturday at McLane Stadium in Waco, Texas.
KANSAS HEAD COACH DAVID BEATY YELLS at the offense on Saturday. ways he hadn’t anticipated. “They brought the heat at times. We need to be better with the pressure,” Willis added after only throwing for 89 yards
and suffering three sacks. “We had them scouted out pretty well. We should’ve been a lot better as an offense. I take blame for that. We can be a lot better.”
This and that … l KU’s lone takeaway of the blowout came in the fourth quarter. Senior safety Fish Smithson forced the second fumble of his career. Senior defensive end Damani Mosby came away with the ball, giving him three fumble recoveries on the season. l Junior Cole Moos’ first-quarter punt of 82 yards (a career best) tied for the fifth-longest punt in program history. No KU punt had traveled that far since Curtis Ansel kicked one 82 yards at UNLV in 2002. On his eight punts at Baylor (6-0 overall, 3-0 Big 12), Moos, a junior from Broken Arrow, Okla., averaged 50.4 yards. The last Jayhawks punter to average at least 50 yards in a game was Trevor Pardula (51.8), in 2014 at Duke. l True freshman receiver Evan Fairs made the first reception of his career early in the first quarter, picking up eight yards. l Kansas (1-5, 0-3) lost its 15th consecutive conference game. The Jayhawks haven’t defeated a Big 12 foe since Nov. 8, 2014, against Iowa State, when Clint Bowen KANSAS QUARTERBACK RYAN WILLIS tosses his helmet in served as interim head frustration after throwing his second interception of the game during the second quarter Saturday in Waco, Texas. coach.
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Sunday, October 16, 2016
SPORTS
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SCOREBOARD
MLB PLAYOFFS
Cubs slam Dodgers; Tribe clips Blue Jays Associated Press
American League
National League Cubs 8, Dodgers 4 Chicago — Miguel Montero snapped an eighth-inning tie with the third pinch-hit grand slam in postseason history, and the Chicago Cubs beat the Los Angeles Dodgers in their NL Championship Series opener Saturday night. Pinch-hitter Chris Coghlan was intentionally walked with two outs in the eighth, loading the bases and bringing up closer Aroldis Chapman’s spot in the batting order. Cubs manager Joe Maddon sent up Montero, who drove an 0-2 slider from Joe Blanton into the right-field bleachers for his first hit of the playoffs. Los Angeles Chicago ab r h bi ab r h bi Kndrick lf 3 0 0 0 Fowler cf 5 2 2 1 Utley ph-2b 1 1 0 0 Bryant 3b 4 0 2 1 Ju.Trnr 3b 4 0 1 0 Rizzo 1b 5 0 0 0 C.Sager ss 4 0 1 0 Zobrist lf 3 1 1 0 Puig rf 4 0 0 0 Russell ss 4 0 0 0 Blanton p 0 0 0 0 Heyward rf 3 2 1 0 Dayton p 0 0 0 0 J.Baez 2b 4 1 2 1 Ad.Gnzl 1b 4 0 2 2 D.Ross c 3 0 0 0 C.Ruiz c 2 0 0 0 Coghlan ph 0 1 0 0 Grandal ph-c 2 0 0 0 Cntrras c 0 0 0 0 E.Hrnnd 2b-rf 2 0 0 0 Lester p 0 0 0 0 Pderson cf 4 1 1 0 Soler ph 1 0 0 0 Maeda p 1 0 1 0 T.Wood p 0 0 0 0 Ethier ph 1 1 1 1 Edwards p 0 0 0 0 P.Baez p 0 0 0 0 Mntgmry p 0 0 0 0 Strplng p 0 0 0 0 Strop p 0 0 0 0 Toles ph-lf 2 1 2 1 A.Chpmn p 0 0 0 0 M.Mntro ph 1 1 1 4 H.Rndon p 0 0 0 0 Totals 34 4 9 4 Totals 33 8 9 7 Los Angeles 000 010 021—4 Chicago 120 000 05x—8 DP-Chicago 1. LOB-Los Angeles 6, Chicago 7. 2B-Toles (1), Bryant 2 (4), Zobrist (3), J.Baez 2 (2). 3B-Heyward (1). HR-Ethier (1), Fowler (1), M.Montero (1). SB-Ad.Gonzalez (1), J.Baez (1). IP H R ER BB SO Los Angeles Maeda 4 4 3 3 3 2 Baez 2 1 0 0 1 3 Stripling 1 0 0 0 0 0 Blanton L,1-1 2/3 4 5 5 2 0 Dayton 1/3 0 0 0 0 0 Chicago Lester 6 4 1 1 1 3 Wood H,2 1/3 0 0 0 0 0 Edwards H,2 1/3 0 0 0 1 1 Montgomery H,2 1/3 1 1 1 0 1 Strop 0 1 1 1 1 0 Chapman W,1-0 BS,2 1 1 0 0 0 2 Rondon 1 2 1 1 0 0 Montgomery pitched to 1 batter in the 8th Strop pitched to 2 batters in the 8th T-3:37. A-42,376 (41,072).
Indians 2, Blue Jays 1 Cleveland — Josh Tomlin baffled Blue Jays batters for nearly six innings and Andrew Miller blew them away as Cleveland edged Toronto to take 2-0 lead in the AL Championship Series. Carlos Santana homered off 20-game winner J.A. Happ and Francisco Lindor had an RBI single for the Indians, who have won five straight postseason games for the first time in their 116-year history. An afterthought in August, Tomlin has emerged as an unlikely October star for the Indians. He allowed one run and three hits in 5 2/3 innings before Cleveland manager Terry Francona called on his bullpen led by the magnificent Miller, who is making the Blue Jays look like Little Leaguers. The lanky left-hander struck out the side in the seventh, two more in the eighth and has 10 strikeouts in 3 2/3 innings in the series. Toronto Cleveland ab r h bi ab r h bi Carrera lf 4 0 0 0 Ra.Dvis cf 4 1 0 0 Dnldson 3b 4 0 1 1 Kipnis 2b 4 0 0 0 Encrncn 1b 3 0 0 0 Lindor ss 4 0 2 1 Butista rf 3 0 0 0 Napoli 1b 3 0 0 0 Tlwtzki ss 4 0 0 0 C.Sntna dh 2 1 1 1 Ru.Mrtn c 3 0 1 0 Jose.Rm 3b 3 0 0 0 Sunders dh 2 0 0 0 Guyer lf 3 0 0 0 M.Upton ph-dh 1 0 0 0 Chsnhll rf 3 0 1 0 Pillar cf 3 0 0 0 R.Perez c 2 0 0 0 Barney 2b 3 1 1 0 Totals 30 1 3 1 Totals 28 2 4 2 Toronto 001 000 000—1 Cleveland 011 000 00x—2 E-Happ (1). LOB-Toronto 4, Cleveland 4. 2B-Donaldson (6). HR-C.Santana (1). SB-Ra.Davis (1). IP H R ER BB SO Toronto Happ L,1-1 5 4 2 2 1 4 Biagini 2 0 0 0 1 2 Osuna 1 0 0 0 0 0 Cleveland Tomlin W,2-0 5 2/3 3 1 1 2 6 Shaw H,3 1/3 0 0 0 0 0 Miller H,3 2 0 0 0 0 5 Allen S,4-4 1 0 0 0 0 2 T-2:44. A-37,870 (38,000).
L awrence J ournal -W orld
College
Saturday’s Scores EAST Army 62, Lafayette 7 Ball St. 31, Buffalo 21 Illinois 24, Rutgers 7 North Carolina 20, Miami 13 Pittsburgh 45, Virginia 31 Syracuse 31, Virginia Tech 17 SOUTH Alabama 49, Tennessee 10 Clemson 24, NC State 17, OT Florida 40, Missouri 14 Florida St. 17, Wake Forest 6 Georgia Tech 35, Georgia Southern 24 LSU 45, Southern Miss. 10 Louisiana Tech 56, UMass 28 Marshall 27, FAU 21 Minnesota 31, Maryland 10 South Florida 42, UConn 20 Temple 26, UCF 25 Troy 31, Georgia St. 21 Valparaiso 21, Stetson 18 Vanderbilt 17, Georgia 16 MIDWEST Cent. Michigan 34, N. Illinois 28, 3OT E. Michigan 27, Ohio 20 Iowa 49, Purdue 35 Lake Forest 35, Macalester 14 Miami (Ohio) 18, Kent St. 14 Nebraska 27, Indiana 22 Northwestern 54, Michigan St. 40 Ohio St. 30, Wisconsin 23, OT San Diego 38, Drake 7 Stanford 17, Notre Dame 10 Toledo 42, Bowling Green 35 W. Illinois 38, Missouri St. 35 W. Michigan 41, Akron 0 Webber 28, Point (Ga.) 14 William Penn 13, Peru St. 9 Wis.-Oshkosh 13, Wis.-Stevens Pt. 3 Youngstown St. 14, N. Iowa 10 SOUTHWEST Arkansas 34, Mississippi 30 Arkansas St. 17, South Alabama 7 Baylor 49, Kansas 7 Houston 38, Tulsa 31 Lamar 32, Northwestern St. 31 Nicholls 33, Houston Baptist 30, 2OT Oklahoma 38, Kansas St. 17 SE Louisiana 58, Stephen F. Austin 34 Sam Houston St. 48, Abilene Christian 21 Texas 27, Iowa St. 6 UTSA 14, Rice 13 West Virginia 48, Texas Tech 17 FAR WEST Cal Poly 55, Portland St. 35 Colorado 40, Arizona St. 16 Idaho 55, New Mexico St. 23 Montana 68, Sacramento St. 7 N. Arizona 52, Idaho St. 7 New Mexico 45, Air Force 40 Southern Cal 48, Arizona 14 UC Davis 34, N. Colorado 21 Utah 19, Oregon St. 14 Weber St. 45, Montana St. 27
Big 12
League Overall Baylor 3-0 6-0 Oklahoma 3-0 4-2 West Virginia 2-0 5-0 Oklahoma State 2-1 4-2 TCU 2-1 4-2 Kansas State 1-2 3-3 Texas Tech 1-2 3-3 Texas 1-2 3-3 Kansas 0-3 1-5 Iowa State 0-4 1-6 Saturday’s Games Baylor 49, Kansas 7 West Virginia 48, Texas Tech 17 Oklahoma 38, Kansas State 17 Texas 27, Iowa State 6
Saturday, Oct. 22 Oklahoma State at Kansas, 11 (FS1) Texas at Kansas State, 11 (ABC/ESPN or ESPN2) TCU at West Virginia, 2:30 (ABC/ESPN2) Oklahoma at Texas Tech, 7 (FOX)
Thomas, 22:29.7; 75. Leslie Ostronic, 22:56.3; 76. Olivia Lemus, 22:57.3; 87. Layne Prescott, 23:33.7; 88. Mikayla Herschel, 23.35.4; 90. Eleanor Matheis, 24:05.3; 93. Julia Beracat, 25:40.4. Boys 5K Varsity team scores: Olathe East 42, Olathe South 106, Olathe North 120, SM Northwest 123, SM East 134, Lawrence-Free State 137, SM North 158, Leavenworth 164, SM South 220, Olathe Northwest 243, Lawrence 275, SM West 283. FSHS results: 10. Avant Edwards, 16:59.2; 16. Jared Hicks, 17:17.9; 21. Landon Sloan, 17:26.5; 42. Aiden Goertz, 18:00.2; 48. Grant Holmes, 18:07.6; 49. Charlie Johnson, 18:07.7; 73. William Benkelma, 18:45.1; LHS results: 27. Carson Jumping Eagle, 17:35.5; 35. Garrett Prescott, 17:49.8; 67. Bryce Hadl, 18:35.2; 71. Cole Shupert, 18:40.4; 77. Sebastian Lepage, 18:55.1; 79. Jackson Hoy, 18:57.1; 85. Ben Otte, 19:31.9; 88. Braden Augustine, 19:36.5; 90. Cameron Stussie, 19:51.4; 91. Anton Grundstro, 19:53.1.
Thursday’s Game San Diego 21, Denver 13 Today’s Games Cincinnati at New England, noon Pittsburgh at Miami, noon Philadelphia at Washington, noon Baltimore at N.Y. Giants, noon Jacksonville at Chicago, noon Carolina at New Orleans, noon Los Angeles at Detroit, noon San Francisco at Buffalo, noon Cleveland at Tennessee, noon Kansas City at Oakland, 3:05 p.m. Atlanta at Seattle, 3:25 p.m. Dallas at Green Bay, 3:25 p.m. Indianapolis at Houston, 7:30 p.m. Open: Tampa Bay, Minnesota Monday’s Game N.Y. Jets at Arizona, 7:30 p.m.
a.m. a.m. p.m. p.m.
MIAA
Saturday’s Scores Washburn 30, Fort Hays St. 24 Northwest Missouri St. 74, Northeastern St. 29 Pitt. St. 55, Missouri Western 47 Emporia St. 35, Lindenwood 28 Nebraska Kearney 47, Central Oklahoma 32 Central Missouri 56, Missouri Southern 7
MLB Postseason Schedule
Sunflower League standings
LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) American League All Games on TBS Cleveland 2, Toronto 0 Friday: Cleveland 2, Toronto 0 Saturday: Cleveland 2, Toronto 1 Monday: Cleveland (Bauer 12-8) at Toronto (Stroman 9-10), 7:08 p.m. Tuesday: Cleveland (Clevinger 3-3) at Toronto (Sanchez 15-2), 7:08 p.m. x-Wednesday: Cleveland at Toronto, 3:08 p.m. x-Friday: Toronto at Cleveland, 7:08 p.m. x-Saturday: Toronto at Cleveland, TBA National League Chicago 1, Los Angeles 0 Saturday: Chicago 8, Los Angeles 4 Today: Los Angeles (Kershaw 12-4) at Chicago (Hendricks 16-8) (FS1), 7:08 p.m. Tuesday: Chicago (Arrieta 18-8) at Los Angeles (Hill 3-2) (FS1), 7:08 p.m. Wednesday: Chicago (Lackey 11-8) at Los Angeles (FS1), 7:08 p.m. x-Thursday: Chicago at Los Angeles (FS1), 7:08 p.m. x-Saturday: Los Angeles at Chicago (Fox or FS1), TBA x-Sunday: Los Angeles at Chicago (Fox or FS1), TBA WORLD SERIES (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) All games televised by Fox Tuesday, Oct. 25: NL at AL Wednesday, Oct. 26: NL at AL Friday, Oct. 28: AL at NL Saturday, Oct. 29: AL at NL x-Sunday, Oct. 30: AL at NL x-Tuesday, Nov. 1: NL at AL x-Wednesday, Nov. 2: NL at AL
League Overall Shawnee Mission East 5-0 6-1 Free State 5-0 5-2 Lawrence High 4-1 5-2 SM West 4-1 5-2 SM North 2-3 4-3 Olathe East 2-3 2-5 Olathe Northwest 2-3 2-5 Olathe North 2-3 2-5 Olathe South 2-3 2-5 Leavenworth 1-4 1-6 SM Northwest 1-4 1-6 SM South 0-5 0-7
NFL
AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA New England 4 1 0 .800 114 74 Buffalo 3 2 0 .600 117 87 N.Y. Jets 1 4 0 .200 92 136 Miami 1 4 0 .200 88 119 South W L T Pct PF PA Houston 3 2 0 .600 82 104 Tennessee 2 3 0 .400 92 101 Indianapolis 2 3 0 .400 137 148 Jacksonville 1 3 0 .250 84 111 North W L T Pct PF PA Pittsburgh 4 1 0 .800 139 93 Baltimore 3 2 0 .600 94 88 Cincinnati 2 3 0 .400 92 110 Cleveland 0 5 0 .000 87 148 West W L T Pct PF PA Oakland 4 1 0 .800 142 137 Denver 4 2 0 .667 140 108 Kansas City 2 2 0 .500 83 92 San Diego 2 4 0 .333 173 155 NATIONAL CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA Dallas 4 1 0 .800 129 91 Philadelphia 3 1 0 .750 115 51 Washington 3 2 0 .600 115 122 N.Y. Giants 2 3 0 .400 89 108 South W L T Pct PF PA Atlanta 4 1 0 .800 175 140 Tampa Bay 2 3 0 .400 94 142 New Orleans 1 3 0 .250 114 130 Carolina 1 4 0 .200 123 135 North W L T Pct PF PA Minnesota 5 0 0 1.000 119 63 Green Bay 3 1 0 .750 98 83 Detroit 2 3 0 .400 119 125 Chicago 1 4 0 .200 85 126 West W L T Pct PF PA Seattle 3 1 0 .750 79 54 Los Angeles 3 2 0 .600 82 106 Arizona 2 3 0 .400 125 101 San Francisco 1 4 0 .200 111 140
College
NCAA Pre-Nationals Saturday at Terre Haute, Ind. Men’s team scores — 1. Oregon, 85; 2. Arkansas, 110; 3. Colorado, 124; 4. Michigan, 201; 5. Indiana, 257; 21. Kansas, 616. Kansas results (8K) — 63. Chris Melgares, 25:00.4; 77. Dylan Hodgson, 25:07.6; 112. Michael Melgares, 25:22.0; 125. James Hampton, 25:26.2; 239. Ben Burchstead, 26:37.2; 253. Bryce Richards, 26:58.4. Women’s team scores — 1. Colorado, 93; 2. Oregon, 154; 3. Michigan, 179; 4. Portland, 196; 5. Arkansas, 225; 13. Kansas, 492. Kansas results (6K) — 10. Sharon Lokedi, 20:26.4; 58. Hannah Richardson, 21:05.5; 86. Malika Baker, 21:19.8; 165. Hannah Dimmick, 21:55.5; 173. Nashia Baker, 21:59.0; 210. Jennifer Angles, 22:18.8; 216. Lydia Saggau, 22:25.1.
College Women
ITA Central Regionals Saturday at Minneapolis Day 3 Kansas Results Round of 16 Singles Anastasia Rychagova (KU) def. Brianna Lashway (MU) - 6-0, 6-1 Tess Bernard-Feigenbaum (KU) def. Tanaporn Thongsing (WSU) - 4-6, 6-1, 6-4 #72 Lily Miyazaki (OU) def. Janet Koch (KU) - 6-7 (5), 7-5, 6-3 Consolation Singles Tatiana Nikolaeva (KU) def. Victoria Roberts (ASU) - 6-0, 6-0 Maria Toran Ribes (KU) def. Iasmin Rosa (SDSU) - 6-4, 7-5 Claire Reifeis (UN) def. Nina Khmelnitckaia (KU) - 6-4, 7-5 Doubles Koch/Rychagova (KU) def. Herder/ Williams (DU) - 8-4 Koch/Rychagova (KU) def. GarciaNavas/Stretton (KSU) - 8-3 Bernard-Feigenbaum/ Khmelnitckaia (KU) def. Haakenstad/ Reifeis (UN) - 8-0 Bernard-Feigenbaum/ Khmelnitckaia (KU) def. Frei/Ryba (UM) - 8-4 Consolation Doubles Nikolaeva/Toran Ribes (KU) def. Stroobant/Wolfe (UNI) - 8-3
High School
Sunflower League Meet Saturday at Rim Rock Farm Girls 5K Varsity team scores: Lawrence-Free State 50, SM Northwest 61, OlatheNorth 91, SM North 99, SM East 138, SM West 164, Olathe-East 169, SM South 186, Olathe Northwest 193, Lawrence 266, Leavenworth 283, Olathe-South 353. FSHS results: 2. Emily Venters, 18:18.5; 4. Kiran Cordes, 19:05.7; 6. Abigail Zenger, 19:43.7; 14. Julia Larkin, 20.33.1; 24. Emma Hertig, 20:49.1; 35. Erin Fagan, 21:23.5; 45. Erin Liston, 21:44.9; LHS results: 21. Anna DeWitt, 20:42.6; 39. Morgan Jones, 21:33.9; 63. Kiikto
Torched Goodness and Fine Thyme Food are proud to present
SAVOR
in the heart of Downtown Lawrence
Many thanks to everyone involved in the 35th Annual Penny Jones Open Golf Tournament!
TOGETHER,WE RAISED OVER $130,000 TO ADVANCE HEALTH AND WELLNESS AT LAWRENCE MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
TOURNAMENT SPONSOR
Commerce Bank
TEE PRIZE SPONSORS
HOLE SPONSORS
P1 Group, Inc. Willis
SPECIAL EVENTS SPONSOR Benson Wedd, LCC
COURSE SPONSOR
Kansas Counselors, Inc. Medline
GOLFER GIFT BAG SPONSORS Truity Credit Union
CHECKPOINT SPONSORS Credit Management Laser and Cosmetic Center Medtrak Services Prairie Band Casino & Resort TreanorHL
LUNCHEON SPONSOR
Blue Cross Blue Shield of Kansas Hog Wild Pit BBQ
SCORECARD SPONSOR JE Dunn Construction RD Johnson Excavating
AWARDS CEREMONY SPONSORS J. Lynn Bridal Overland Park Regional Medical Center
OCTOBER 23 • 1 - 6 P.M. 700 block of Vermont
Raising money for the Lawrence Public Schools Farm to School Program We believe that all children should have access to fresh produce, the knowledge to make healthy choices, and the right to know where their food comes from. With this festival we will take a large step as a community towards that, so these wonderful programs will continue.
Food available from all of our local Lawrence food trucks and some favorite downtown restaurants. Local craft beer from 23rd Street Brewery and Free State Brewing Company.
Music by Thunderkat, Sky Smeed, and Ashes to Immortality Featuring a kids area - all included in the ticket price: Face painting, balloon animals, bounce house, craft table, obstacle course and more
GOLF CART SPONSORS Edmonds Duncan Advisors NIC
Aquinas Home Health ACI Boland Architects Bill and Marlene Penny BKD, LLP Black Hills Energy Capital City Bank Cassling Diagnostic Imaging CEK Insurance Cerner Criticare Home Health Gene Fritzel Construction Growing Smiles Henderson Engineers, Inc. INTRUST Bank Johnson Controls Kansas Athletics Lawrence Anaesthesia, PA Lawrence Hospitalist Physicians Lawrence Emergency Medicine Associates Lockton Companies Mid America Bank Radiologic Professional Services Sandra Gautt-in memory of Prentice Gautt Scott Rice Office Works Summers, Spencer & Company
REFRESHMENT SPONSORS Cutler Repaving Gilmore & Bell University National Bank
GREENS SPONSORS Rumsey Yost Voya Financial
SPLASH FOR CASH SPONSORS Meritrust Credit Union Riordan, Fincher, Munson & Sinclair
REFRESHMENT SPONSORS Cutler Repaving Gilmore & Bell University National Bank
HOLE-IN-ONE SPONSORS
GO FOR THE GREEN SPONSORS Emprise Bank The Trust Company
Crown Automotive Dale Willey Automotive Laird Noller Automotive Auto Exchange
PRIZE SPONSORS
Advanco Dobies Healthcare Group Nancy L. Helmstadter KaMMCO Lathrop and Gage, LLP Lawrence General Surgery Security 1st Title The Midland Group UMR
A special thank you to our hosts:
Lawrence Country Club, the original home of the Penny Jones Golf Tournament 2016 DR. H. P.“PENNY” JONES TOURNAMENT COMMITTEE Co-Chairs: Chris Hutchens, Curt Wright, Cathy Shenoy Susan Anderson Elizabeth Becker David Bennett Liz Botkin Daryl Bugner Becki Carl Justin Cordova Jake Dale Darci Ellis
Don Engel Rheanne Etken Michelle Fales Jaime Gillman Bryan Gonzales Alex Goodpaster Ryan Gausman Jalon Hutchens Chip Halderman
Elizabeth Becker Katie Becker Becca Booth Andrew Brookens Daryl Bugner Janis Bunker Larry Chance Jane Clinton Cathy Cordova Monica Cordova Donna Davis Becki Dick
Reaumur Donnally Charlene Droste Janice Early Linda Easum Don Engel Kristine Furlought Sandra Gautt Becky Gibson Chip Halderman Pam Halderman Louise Howard Kathleen Johnson
Darlene Harrell Peggy Leslie Sara Lies Oliver Minnis Tim Mock Lori Myrick Steve Myrick, M.D. Nathan Oehlert Stephanie Phan
Bobette Puderbaugh Taylor Rockhold Kristen Samp Chris Schmid Chris Senecal Cheryl Trosper Greg Windholz Brandon Young
TOURNAMENT VOLUNTEERS Bonnie Johnston Tana Karim Barb Karr June Keys Peggy Leslie Cynthia Lewis Karen Matthews Makenzie Miller Amy Northrop Donna & Wayne Osness Reed Peterson Men of Phi Delta Theta
Buy tickets at: http://savorfest.org www.LMHEndowment.org
Kim Pixler Christine Reed Roberta Rentz Kristen Schlicht Susan Schmidtberger Sharon Stegman Val Stella Mike Walters Connie Warkins Kate White Janice Yost
October 16, 2016
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All your favorite Lawrence businesses, together in one easy-to-use directory. Lawrence Marketplace.
Picture books to make going to school a little less stressful. SHELF LIFE, PAGE 2D
A&E Lawrence Journal-World
LJWorld.com
OISS E S P E
WHIZ
UBL E O D
Head of cheese shop gets national certification
By Nick Krug
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ARTS ENTERTAINMENT LIFESTYLE PEOPLE Sunday, October 16, 2016
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CLETT E A R
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nkrug@ljworld.com
ccording to the American Bar Association’s 2015 demographics, there are more than 1.3 million lawyers in the United States. Although Sara Knickerbocker has not passed the bar, she might one day be asked to serve as an expert cheese witness now that she is one of only 740 American Cheese Society certified cheese professionals in the U.S., Canada and Europe. After waiting for six weeks, on Sept. 2, Knickerbocker, who heads the Murray’s Cheese Shop at the Dillons at 4701 W. Sixth St., said that she received word that she had passed the three-hour, 150-question CCP exam. “I just cried all of these cheesy tears,” said Knickerbocker, who also attempted the exam in 2015 but did not pass. “I had no idea I was gonna pass. I was freaked out,” she said. “The amount of information that you have to process
is the entire cheese industry,” which Knickerbocker explained goes well beyond being able to identify various cheeses based on appearance, taste and smell or odor, in certain cases. To pass, she explained she had to have an expert understanding of the biological makeup of milkproducing animals, how their milk is composed, the cheese making process, the cheese aging process and how to sell, transport, distribute and merchandise cheese. “The ACS developed this test as a way to kind of set cheese people apart and give them a chance to elevate their status,” she said. As for it being prohibitively difficult? “They want to make sure that the people who pass this test are in it for the long haul.” Now, whether she is referred to as “Big Cheese” — the title on her hat — or “Cheese Master,” which is printed on her nametag, Knickerbocker explained that she is excited to impart her knowledge, which she can happily deliver in block or bite-sized portions.
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Nick Krug/ Journal-World Photos
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NAME THAT
CHEESE
Are you a Cheese Whiz? Step up to the plate by matching each description with one of the types of cheese pictured above.
1
This excellent appetizer cheese is referred to as “King Cheese” and is produced in the Parisian Basin.
2
This American original is a goat cheese that pairs nicely with white wine. Its name refers to a northern California county.
3
This American original from Vermont is sourced from Ayrshire cattle. It pairs well with red wine.
4
During the aging and fermentation process, “eyes” are created within this cheese when paste stretches around gas.
5
This American original was developed in 1874 in Wisconsin. As this cheese is crafted, it is sprayed with cold water to create a more elastic texture.
6
9
7
10
This cheese was originally developed by French monks in the 16th century. As it ages, it is washed in Marc de Bourgogne, the leftovers from burgundy wine production.
This cheese is lactose free, as it is made from sheep’s milk. It is developed in the Pyrenees region.
8
Widely regarded as the best melting party cheese, the name of this cheese is derived from the French word for “scrape.”
E H UC
Produced in Colombia, this cheese, which is made from the milk of water buffalo, has one of the highest protein contents.
This cheese has an ash rind and enhanced mold growth. The French translation of its name is “good mouthful.”
Did you do a grate job? Or melt down? Check your answers inside, 2D.
2D
BEST-SELLERS Here are the best-sellers for the week that ended Sunday, Oct. 9, compiled from nationwide data.
Books
Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com l Sunday, October 16, 2016
SHELF LIFE
Books to squash kids’ back-to-school jitters
W
Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app
ith a preschooler and Gee. Framed as a counting For children who struggle kindergartner in the exercise in rhyme, the book fol- with new experiences and house these days, lows 20 first-time kindergarten- friends at the start of school trips to and from ers as they get ready for a day comes a book dramatizing their school are a big part of my life. of school. dilemma in such an amusing Like most of the experience of It’s not all rise and shine or way it may bring laughter along parenting, many of my preconDick and Jane for these kids, with insight. “Sophie’s Squash ceived worries about school though; each child’s preparaGo to School” catches us up have never materialized, but tion for the school day is as with Sophie, whose offbeat issues I didn’t expect at all have diverse as the class itself, with comfort object, a butternut surprised me. For instance, I spent my own first few years of elementary school staring down long hallways as older kids and adults rushed past me in a faceless torrent. My kids’ experience at school has been quite the opposite—warmer and more welcoming than I predicted, even if that personal touch has THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek included a telephone call from Unscramble these six Jumbles, the school district warning of a one letter to each square, to form six ordinary words. totally unforeseen threat (and one which I’m afraid I still can’t BULTME mention with a straight face): ©2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC creepy clowns. All Rights Reserved. Hardcover nonfiction Another reversal of expectaLARTEL 1. Killing the Rising Sun. tions has been that we sailed O’Reilly/Dugard. Holt ($30) through the first month or so squash 2. Born to Run. Bruce of school. The fact that my kids students of from the farmer’s NORFIM Springsteen. Simon & were so sick of me by the end various ethnic market that she Schuster ($32.50) of summer generated a wave backgrounds facing the typinamed Bernice in Pat Zietlow CUGOLN Miller’s and Anne Wilsdorf’s 3. Jesus Always. Sarah of enthusiasm they rode until cal challenges of waking up, Young. Thomas Nelson October. Only now do my wife dressing themselves, eating first book about her, has left ($15.99) and I see in our kids the fatigue breakfast, and getting out the behind two offspring named 4. Love Your Life, Not and anxiety we anticipated from door. Ashburn and Gee’sCRACES great- Bonnie and Baxter. Theirs. Rachel Cruze. the start, and the back-to-school est accomplishment here is Sophie begins school clinging Ramsey ($24.99) books we thought we’d be read- presenting a book which PCOYUC doesn’t to her two squash and a negative Now arrange the circled letters 5. Is This the End? David ing last month have suddenly gloss over the ups, downs, and attitude, only to formto thelearn, surprise slowly answer, as but suggested by the abovefriends cartoon. Jeremiah. W ($24.99) come into heavy use. differences in each kid’s journey surely, that new human PRINT YOUR ANSWER IN THE CIRCLES BELOW can 6. Divine Dance. RichOne great new title in this to school, where all eventually and a broadening horizon ard Rohr. Whitaker House genre is Boni Ashburn’s “The arrive to form a single class led be as richly rewarding as a life ($23.99) Class,” illustrated by Kimberly by a nurturing teacher. devoted to vegetables. 7. Think Better, Live Better. Joel Osteen. FaithWords ($24) 8. Food Freedom Forever. Melissa Hartwig. HMH ($27) Answer : 1. Double Creme 6. Epoisses 9. Hillbilly Elegy. J.D. INFORM SCARCE TUMBLE UNCLOG OCCUPY TALLER 2.Humboldt Fog 7. Ossau Iraty Vance. Harper ($27.99) When choosing a new yacht, you 3. Cabot Clothbound 8. Raclette 10. Designing Your Life. need to choose the one that — 4. Swiss Emmental 9. Buf Burnett/Evans. Knopf FLOATS 5. Colby 10. Bonne Bouche ($24.95) OCTOBER 16, 2016
Hardcover fiction 1. Two by Two. Nicholas Sparks. Grand Central ($27) 2. Woman of God. Patterson/Paetro. Little, Brown ($28) 3. Home. Harlan Coben. Dutton ($28) 4. Twelve Days of Christmas. Debbie Macomber. Ballantine ($20) 5. Commonwealth. Ann Patchett. Harper ($27.99) 6. The Trespasser. Tana French. Viking ($27) 7. Today Will Be Different. Maria Semple. Little, Brown ($27) 8. Winter Storms. Elin Hilderbrand. Little, Brown ($26) 9. The Woman in Cabin 10. Ruth Ware. Scout ($26) 10. The Underground Railroad. Colson Whitehead. Doubleday ($26.95)
CHEESE QUIZ ANSWERS
YOUR BOAT
But the best of this year’s back-to-school books has to be Adam Rex and Christian Robinson’s “School’s First Day of School.” Rex, whose “True Meaning of Smekday” was last year’s Read Across Lawrence for Kids book, offers a premise that can’t lose in provoking kids with first day jitters to look at their situations from another point of view. In this case, it’s the newly constructed Frederick Douglass Elementary that fears the arrival of its students. Illustrator Robinson, who has won Coretta Scott King Award Honors two years running (for last year’s “Last Stop on Market Street,” and 2015’s “Josephine”), brilliantly anthropomorphizes the building and should be in line for another award this year, while Rex, as usual, offers an offbeat take on a common situation. It’s sure to find its place on the back-to-school bibliotherapy shelf among classics like Kevin Henkes’ “Chrysanthemum,” Joseph Slate’s “Miss Bindergarten Gets Ready for Kindergarten” and Audrey Penn’s “The Kissing Hand.” Search for these, and other books, to help kids find new ways to view their struggles, or just to find characters who share them, in the “Growing Up” section of the library’s picture book area in the children’s department. — Dan Coleman is a collection development librarian at the Lawrence Public Library.
A&E
L awrence J ournal -W orld
Sunday, October 16, 2016
| 3D
MOVIE REVIEWS
Cast makes family drama ‘Hollars’ shine By Rick Bentley The Fresno Bee
T
here are certain actors who automatically lift the level of whatever production they are in merely by being part of the cast. Margo Martindale is certainly one such actor. So is Richard Jenkins. Put those two together, which “The Hollars” does, and there’s a strength despite a script by James Strouse that is little more than the fodder that is so popular with cable movies. The sure-thing actors give the movie a beautiful emotional depth. It doesn’t stop there. Director John Krasinski has cast himself along with Anna
is a family that is not galaxies apart, so when they do come together, the healing seems far more plausible. Catch “The Hollars” They reunite when Sally at Liberty Hall, 644 (Martindale) is diagnosed Massachusetts St. Go with a brain tumor. It’s grown to libertyhall.net for to a massive size because her showtimes. husband, Don (Jenkins), has always believed his wife’s only problem has been a weight Kendrick and Sharlto Copley issue. to put together a compelling Impending surgery sparks ensemble. Even supporting wandering son John (Krasinplayers Josh Groban, Charlie ski), a struggling artist whose Day and Mary Kay Place get girlfriend, Rebecca (Kendrick), the most out of their roles. is pregnant, to come home. He “The Hollars” follows a typi- must deal with his ill mother, cal family drama/comedy for- his father’s failing business and mat. Over the years, they have a brother, Ron (Copley), who grown apart, each dealing with has a very unhealthy obsession their own bumps and bruises. with his ex-wife. Unlike so many movies, this Krasinski uses a light hand
Where to watch
to pull all these elements together. That often means allowing different pairings of actors to be together. The great thing about having a cast this talented is that no matter the pairing, the scene works. Martindale brings a beauty and sweetness to the role, a welcome change where often in these types of movies one or both of the parents has a dark side. It is a joy to watch how Martindale can take what should have been a filler scene and make it sparkle with just her facial expressions. The best example is when it becomes necessary to shave her head for surgery. Martindale plays the moment with both vulnerability and strength.
Jenkins also goes against the typical father type as he’s not the cornerstone of his family. He’s a man in pain because of troubles at work, confused by what’s happened to his wife and overwhelmed by all that’s happening in his life. Jenkins can be strong when needed but is willing to show his vulnerable side, too. Krasinski smartly leans on his cast and the result is a movie that is sweet without being too emotionally gooey. He’s smart enough as a director to allow people who make acting look easy do what they do best. “The Hollars” follows a very predictable storyline but the journey is made far more interesting by a first-rate cast.
Powerful ‘Birth of a Nation’ a story that needs to be told By Moira Macdonald
Where to watch
The Seattle Times
Nate Parker’s historical drama “The Birth of a Nation,” which focuses on a violent 1831 slave rebellion on a Virginia plantation, is a powerful film. It tells, unquestionably, an important story that needs to be heard. It is also a difficult film to review on its own merits, thanks to this summer’s revelations of a rape accusation in Parker’s past. The plot of “Birth of a Nation” contains two pivotal rapes — both of which take place off-camera, but whose aftermath is harrowingly played by
Catch “The Birth of a Nation” at Liberty Hall, 644 Massachusetts St. Go to libertyhall.net for showtimes. Aja Naomi King and a haunting, mute Gabrielle Union. But it’s part of the strength of Parker’s film that the current controversy doesn’t entirely overshadow its impact. Parker plays Nat Turner, a man born into the life of horrific abuse and fear that was slavery. As an adult,
he became a preacher, used by his owner (Armie Hammer) to speak calming words to unruly slaves. It’s a fascinating performance; Parker shows us Nat’s tiny, tight smile, his automatic “yessir,” his expression that seems to instantly harden into stone as soon as Hammer’s character looks away. And, after Nat’s wife is attacked, his control erupts: With a group of fellow slaves, he incites a bloody uprising. The film’s power comes from quiet: from Union’s silent devastation, and from the things Nat cannot say but which can be eloquently read on his face.
PUBLIC NOTICES 785.832.2222 Lawrence
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(First published in the Lawrence Daily Journal-World “LAND DEVELOPMENT CODE OF THE CITY OF LAWRENCE, October 9, 2016) KANSAS, TEXT AMENDMENTS, OCTOBER 11, 2016 EDITION,” AS PREPARED AND PUBLISHED BY THE IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF LAWRENCE-DOUGLAS COUNTY METROPOLITAN PLANNJACKSON COUNTY, KANSAS ING OFFICE OF THE CITY OF LAWRENCE, KANSAS, AND REPEALING EXISTING SECTIONS 20-402, 20-403, 20-529, IN THE INTEREST OF: AND 20-1768. Name Elayne Jane Fuller Case No. 2016-JC-000030 DOB xx/xx/2012 A female BE IT ORDAINED BY THE GOVERNING BODY OF THE CITY and OF LAWRENCE, KANSAS: SECTION 1: Chapter 20, “Land Name Olivia Grace Fuller Case No. 2016-JC-000031 Development Code of the City of Lawrence, Kansas,” DOB xx/xx/2008 A female Code of the City of Lawrence, Kansas, 2015 Edition, and and amendments thereto, is amended as follows: There is Name Paisley Marie Fuller Case No. 2016-JC-000032 hereby adopted and incorporated herein by reference, DOB xx/xx/2013 A female as if fully set forth herein, for the purpose of amending Chapter 20, Article 4, Sections 20-402 and 20-403, ChapNOTICE OF HEARING-Publication ter 20, Article 5, Section 20-529, and Chapter 20, Article Pursuant to K.S.A. 38-2237 17, Section 20-1768, Code of the City of Lawrence, Kansas, 2015 Edition, and amendments thereto, “Land DeTO: Austin Fuller, father velopment Code of the City of Lawrence, Kansas, Text and all other persons who are or may be concerned Amendments, October 11, 2016 Edition,” as prepared and published by the Lawrence-Douglas County MetroYou are hereby notified that a petition has been filed in politan Planning Office of the City of Lawrence, Kansas. this court alleging that the child(ren) named above is a SECTION 2: One copy of “Land Development Code of the Child in Need of Care. The Court may find that the par- City of Lawrence, Kansas, Text Amendments, October ents are unfit by reason or conduct or condition which 11, 2016 Edition” shall be marked “Official Copy as renders the parents unable to care properly for a child, Adopted by Ordinance No. 9296” and shall be filed, tothe conduct or condition is unlikely to change in the gether with one copy of this ordinance, with the City foreseeable future, the parental rights of the parent Clerk. The City Clerk shall make the “Official Copy as should be terminated, and a permanent custodian Adopted by Ordinance No. 9296” open to the public and should be appointed for the child(ren). available for inspection at all reasonable office hours. One additional copy of the “Official Copy as Adopted by An Adjudication Hearing on the petition is scheduled Ordinance No. 9296” shall, at the cost of the City of Lawfor the Thursday, November 17, 2016 at 09:30 AM. At the rence, Kansas, be made available to the hearing the Court may issue orders relating to the care, Lawrence-Douglas County Metropolitan Planning Office custody and control of the child(ren). The hearing will of the City of Lawrence, Kansas. SECTION 3: Existing determine if the parents should be deprived of their pa- sections 20-402, 20-403, 20-529, and 20-1768 Code of the rental rights and the right to custody of the child(ren). City of Lawrence, Kansas, 2015 Edition, and amendments thereto, is hereby repealed, it being the intent of The parent(s), and any other person having legal cus- the Governing Body that this ordinance, adopting and tody are required to appear before this Court on the incorporating herein by reference “Land Development date and time shown, or to file your written response to Code of the City of Lawrence, Kansas, Text Amendthe petition with the Clerk of the District Court prior to ments, October 11, 2016 Edition,” supersede the rethat time. Failure to respond or to appear before the pealed code provision. SECTION 4: If any section, senCourt at the time shown will not prevent the Court from tence, clause, or phrase of this ordinance is found to be entering judgment as requested in the petition, finding unconstitutional or is otherwise held invalid by any that the child is a Child in Need of Care, removing the court of competent jurisdiction, it shall not affect the child from the custody of parent, parents or any other validity of any remaining parts of this ordinance. SECpresent legal custodian until further order of the Court, TION 5: This ordinance shall take effect and be in force or finding the parents unfit, and entering an order per- after its passage and publication as provided by law. manently terminating the parents’ parental rights. PASSED by the Governing Body of the City of Lawrence, Kansas, this 11th day of October, 2016. An attorney has been appointed as guardian ad litem for the child: Alexandria S. Morrissey, Attorney at Law, APPROVED: P.O. Box 166, Holton, KS 66436; Telephone: 785-364-0158. /s/Mike Amyx You have the right to appear before the Court and be Mike Amyx heard personally either with or without an attorney. Mayor The Court will appoint an attorney for any parent who desires an attorney but is financially unable to hire one. ATTEST: The Court may order one or both parents to pay child /s/ Sherri Riedemann support. An attorney has been appointed for you: Sa- Sherri Riedemann mantha Harrington, Attorney at Law, 2708 NW Topeka City Clerk Blvd, Topeka, KS 66617; Telephone: 785-234-0600 Approved as to form: Date and time of hearing: Thursday, November 17, 2016, /s/ Toni R. Wheeler at 09:30 AM. Toni R. Wheeler City Attorney Place of hearing: Jackson County District Court, ________ Courthouse, 3rd floor, Holton, KS 66436 (First published in the Lawrence Daily Journal-World ________________ October 16, 2016) Clerk/Judge of the District Court ORDINANCE NO. 9295 ________
levied and assessed special assessments on certain lots, pieces and parcels of land for the purpose of paying the costs of improvements in the City more fully described in Ordinance No. 6010, deferring said special assessments for a period of 20 years pursuant to the terms and conditions of City Ordinance Nos. 6009 and 6010; and WHEREAS, pursuant to City Ordinance No. 8258, the City was authorized to defer the collection of Assessments levied against lots and pieces of land within the East Hills Business Park Improvement District owned by the Board of County Commissioners of Douglas County for an additional period of five (5) years, for a total deferral period of twenty-five (25) years; WHEREAS, pursuant to City Ordinance Nos. 9293 and 9294, the City is authorized to defer the collection of remaining Assessments levied against lots and pieces of land within the East Hills Business Park Improvement District owned by the Board of County Commissioners of Douglas County for an indefinite period; NOW, THEREFORE BE IT ORDAINED BY THE GOVERNING BODY OF THE CITY OF LAWRENCE, KANSAS: Section 1. As authorized by Ordinance No. 9294, the deferral period for the collection of any remaining Assessments levied by Ordinance No. 6010, as extended by Ordinance No. 8258 and Ordinance No. 9294 against lots and pieces of land within the East Hills Business Park Improvement District owned by the Board of County Commissioners of Douglas County is extended for an indefinite period, or until such time as such property is sold or conveyed to a party other than the current owners of the property. If the property is sold or conveyed to a party other than the current owner who agrees to construct a speculative building for resale on the property, and such party presents proof satisfactory to the City of such party’s ability to construct such building, the deferral period shall continue until such time as such party sells or leases the property to the subsequent purchaser of lessee. The deferred portion of the assessments shall become due and payable as provided in Ordinance No. 9294 and upon a determination that the deferred assessments have become due the City Clerk shall notify the County Clerk of Douglas County of the amount of such assessments and that it is to be collected in the manner provided by law. Section 2. All remaining requirements of City Ordinance No. 6010, as amended by Ordinance No. 9294, other than the length of the deferral period as modified in Section 1 of this Ordinance, remain in full force and effect. Section 3. This Ordinance shall take effect from and after its passage and publication in the official City newspaper, as provided by law. PASSED by the Governing Body of the City of Lawrence, Kansas on this 11th day of October, 2016.
AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF LAWRENCE, KANSAS PERTAINING TO THE DEFERRAL PERIOD OF CERTAIN SPECIAL ASSESSMENTS PREVIOUSLY AUTHORIZED BY THE CITY ON LOTS, PIECES AND PARCELS OF EAST HILLS BUSINESS PARK
AN ORDINANCE PROVIDING FOR DEFERRAL OF PAYMENT OF SPECIAL ASSESSMENTS FOR PUBLIC IMPROVEMENTS IN IMPROVEMENT DISTRICTS ESTABLISHED ON PROPERTY OWNED BY A POLITICAL SUBDIVISION OF THE STATE OF KANSAS; PROVIDING FOR THE PERIOD OF DEFERRAL, THE EXTENSION OF SUCH PERIOD, THE COLLECTION OF ASSESSMENTS, AND PROVIDING FOR PAYMENT OF PRINCIPAL AND INTEREST DURING THE DEFERRAL PERIOD.
(First published in the Lawrence Daily Journal-World October 16, 2016) ORDINANCE NO. 9296 AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF LAWRENCE, KANSAS, AMENDING CHAPTER 20, ARTICLE 4, SECTIONS 20-402 AND 20-403 ARTICLE 5, SECTION 20-529, AND ARTICLE 17, SECTION 20-1768 OF THE CODE OF THE CITY OF LAWRENCE, KANSAS, 2015 EDITION, AND AMENDMENTS THERETO, PERTAINING TO WIRELESS FACILITIES, BY ADOPTING AND INCORPORATING HEREIN BY REFERENCE
WHEREAS, the City of Lawrence, pursuant to City Resolution No. 5328, authorized the formation of the East Hills Business Park Improvement District for the making of certain improvements within said District to recover the cost of the City’s expenditures; and WHEREAS, pursuant to City Ordinance No. 6010, the City
APPROVED: /s/Mike Amyx Mike Amyx Mayor ATTEST: /s/ Sherri Riedemann Sherri Riedemann City Clerk Approved as to form: /s/ Toni R. Wheeler Toni R. Wheeler City Attorney ________ (First published in the Lawrence Daily Journal-World October 16, 2016) ORDINANCE NO. 9294
WHEREAS, the City of Lawrence, Kansas (the “City”) is authorized pursuant to Article 12, Section 5 of the Con-
Lawrence
Lawrence
stitution of the State of Kansas (the “Home Rule Amendment”), to determine its local affairs and government and to provide for the deferral of special assessments levied on improvement districts created by the City; and WHEREAS, the City, in Ordinance No. 6009, determined it was necessary to provide for the deferral of specials assessments levied on improvement districts created by the City in the circumstances specified in Ordinance No. 6009; and WHEREAS, the City, in Ordinance No. 6009, provided for the deferral of the payment of special assessments for public improvements in improvement districts on property owned by a political subdivision of the State of Kansas, under the terms and conditions specified in said ordinance, for a period of twenty (20) years; and WHEREAS, the City, in Ordinance No. 8258, provided for the deferral of the payment of special assessments for public improvements in improvement districts on property owned by a political subdivision of the State of Kansas, under the terms and conditions specified in said ordinance, for an additional period of five (5) years, for a total period of twenty-five (25) years; WHEREAS, the governing body of the City, at the request of the Board of County Commissioners of Douglas County, has determined it is necessary to extend the period of the deferral of the payment of special assessments for public improvements in an improvement district on property owned by Douglas County, a political subdivision of the State of Kansas, under the terms and conditions specified in this ordinance, for an indefinite period; NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT ORDAINED BY THE GOVERNING BODY OF THE CITY OF LAWRENCE, KANSAS: Section 1. Whenever the governing body of the City may create an improvement district in an undeveloped area of the City which is owned by a political subdivision of the State of Kansas, and whenever a public improvement may be constructed in such an improvement district, the expense of which is chargeable to the improvement district, the governing body may, in its discretion, provide for delay in the payment of such assessments, under the terms and conditions specified in this Ordinance; and for such cost may issue internal improvement bonds of the City as provided by law. The procedure for assessing and collecting the assessments or for redeeming property from special assessments shall be for the same as for bonds issued for improvements authorized under K.S.A.12-6a01 et seq., as far as said statutes may be applicable, and for the costs of such improvements which are payable by the City at large, the City may also issue general improvement bonds of the City which bonds shall be repayable by the levy of a general tax on all the property in the City. Section 2. The governing body of the City may, in its discretion, authorize and provide for the deferral of special assessments for the cost of constructing public improvements in improvement districts which contain property owned by a political subdivision of the State of Kansas and which are in undeveloped areas of the City. The governing body may provide for delay in the beginning of payment of assessments upon such property for a designated period not exceeding 20 years or until the time such property is sold or conveyed to a party other than said political subdivision, provided that if the property is sold or conveyed to a party other than the political subdivision and such party agrees to construct a speculative building for resale on such property, and such party presents proof satisfactory to the City of such party’s ability to construct such building, the governing body may provide for a continuation of the deferral period until the time as such party sells or leases the property to a subsequent purchaser or lessee, and provided further, that the entire period of deferral shall not exceed 20 years. All assessments levied upon property which are deferred under the terms of this Ordinance shall become due and payable when ownership of the property changes to an owner not eligible for deferral under this Ordinance, as described above, or at the expiration of the deferral period. Notwithstanding the foregoing, upon written request of Douglas County, Kansas, the governing body of the City may, in its discretion, authorize and provide for the deferral of special assessments for the cost of constructing public improvements
PUBLIC NOTICE CONTINUED ON PAGE 6D
Sunday, October 16, 2016
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classifieds@ljworld.com The University of Kansas is committed to providing our employees with an enriching and dynamic work environment that encourages innovation, research, creativity and equal opportunity for learning, development and professional growth. KU strives to recruit, develop, retain and reward a dynamic workforce that shares our mission and core strategic values in research, teaching and service. Learn more at http://provost.ku.edu/strategic-plan
Accountant Senior
Research Project Coordinator
Scholarly Program Administrator
Assistant Researcher
Student Activities Coordinator
Program Analyst
The Office of the Comptroller is looking for an Accountant Senior to work with their Financial Accounting & Cash Control division. APPLY AT: http://employment.ku.edu/staff/7304BR Deadline to apply 10/23/2016. The KU Life Span Institute is hiring an Assistant Researcher. For complete description see website. APPLY AT: https://employment.ku.edu/staff/7329BR Deadline to apply is 10/28/16.
KU Achievement and Assessment Institute seeks a FT Research Project Coordinator. For more information see website. APPLY AT: https://employment.ku.edu/staff/7298BR Application deadline 10/24/16. KU Applied English Center seeks a Student Activities Coordinator to join their team. APPLY AT: http://employment.ku.edu/staff/7303BR Application deadline is November 1, 2016.
KU Hall Center for the Humanities seeks full-time Scholarly Program Administrator for event planning and administration of the scholarly programs. APPLY AT: http://employment.ku.edu/staff/7319BR Apply on or before 10/29/2016. KU University Career Center seeks a FT Program Analyst. APPLY AT: http://employment.ku.edu/staff/7323BR Application deadline is November 6.
For complete job descriptions & more information, visit:
employment.ku.edu
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APPLY MON.-FRI. Hours 9:00 am - 3:00 pm 10651 Lackman Rd. Lenexa, KS 66219 Apply online at: prologistix.com
CALL 913.599.2626
KU is an EO/AAE, full policy http://policy.ku.edu/IOA/nondiscrimination. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex (including pregnancy), age, national origin, disability, genetic information or protected Veteran status.
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Connex Intl is a leading telecommunications provider of customizable web and audio conferencing and collaboration solutions serving professionals and organizations of all sizes around the world.
P/T & F/T positions available in Lawrence, KS! We have multiple openings for outgoing and experienced employees that can provide professional & positive customer service to our clients! These positions would handle IN-BOUND conference calls from our clients across the US. Your positive personality is in need at Connex! We are a growing company and hiring for several positions for both P/T and F/T shifts between 5am-10pm.
• Conference Call Coordinators • Customer Service Supervisors • Senior Conference Call Leaders • Bilingual Conference Call Coordinators Experience in Customer Service/Call Center environments is a plus. Bring your positive energy, computer skills and top notch telephone skills to Connex and join our growing team! Send resumes to hireme@connexintl.com or visit us at http://www.connexintl.com/ Benefits: Health Insurance, Competitive Pay, Paid time off for vacation/sick days. Growth Opportunities!! EEO/AAE/M/F/V/D
jobs.lawrence.com
ARE YOU LOOKING FOR A STABLE WORK ENVIRONMENT? Lansing Correctional Facility is hiring in our Maintenance Department.
Deliver Newspapers! Choose a route in:
Perry Lawrence It’s Fun! Part-time work Early schedules keep your daytime free! Be an independent contractor, Deliver every day, between 2-6 a.m. Reliable vehicle, driver’s license, insurance in your own name, and a phone required.
Come in & Apply! 645 New Hampshire 816-805-6780 jinsco@ljworld.com
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 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. Submit application and tax clearance on-line at www.jobs.ks.gov prior to close date. Contact: Carmen Maguire, LCF Recruiter 913-727-3235, Ext: 57022 P.O. Box 2, Lansing, KS 66043 EOE/VPE
KANSAS JUDICIAL BRANCH POSITION AVAILABLE: Appellate Court Clerk II $13.992 starting hourly salary $29,103 starting annual salary For details on these positions, please see our website at: http://www.kscourts.org/Court-Administration/Job-Opp ortunities/job-opportunities.asp
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Sunday, October 16, 2016
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L awrence J ournal -W orld
MERCHANDISE PETS TO PLACE AN AD:
785.832.2222
ONLINE AUCTION THE BIDDING HAS STARTED! PREVIEW 10/17 MONDAY 3-7PM 18152 CYPRESS BEND, BASEHOR, KS BIDDING WILL SOFT CLOSE 10/18 @6PM. REMOVAL 10/19 11-6PM The Futrell's have sold their beautiful home in Basehor, KS and moved to Florida. We are selling some very nice items from the estate. Clean furniture, unique décor, quilts, washer/dryer & household items, all in very good shape. Patio furniture, fire pit & garden items.
Plan to attend the preview. There are 314 lots. View the web site for complete list & photos.
View the web site for more info. www.lindsayauctions.com
LINDSAY AUCTION & REALTY SVC INC Thomas J. & Thomas M. Lindsay | 913.441.1557 | LINDSAYAUCTION2010@GMAIL.COM AUCTIONS Auction Calendar 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
Auctions STRIKERS AUCTION REAL ESTATE AND PERSONAL PROPERTY SATURDAY OCTOBER 22 10 AM 157 WEST MAIN ST GARDNER, KANSAS
NICE OLD VICTORIAN HOUSE, W/ BASEMENT, ON SHADED CORNER LOT 1800’s grandfathers clock, Victorian hall tree, unusual oak flip top dinning w/ chairs and buffet, walnut tables, brass lamp table, oak ice box, walnut dresser, chest of drawers, oak and cast iron table, old kitchen clocks, oak commode, lots of nice old quilts, pocket knife collection, lots of tools and dishes, see web site for terms, pictures ,and more complete listing. KG MOLL BROKER BLUE RIBBON REALTY SEE PICTURES ON WEB STRICKERSAUCTION.COM RON 913 963 3800 JERRY 913 707 1046
FARM AUCTION Sat, October 22 9:00 AM 325 East 1250 Rd Baldwin City (Directions:From Lawrence South 10 Miles on Hwy. 59 to Baldwin Junction Hwy. 56/59 or North from Ottawa 10 Miles to Hwy. 56/59 Turn West to Old 59(1250 Rd.) to Auction!) Watch For Signs!! C.T. has retired from farming after 70 years & will sell the following! Combine/Equipment/Vehic les: JD 6600D Combine, chopper w/15’ platform head; JD 7000 6-30 Planter, finger pick-up, insecticide; Great Plains 13’ Solid Stand Grain Drill
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classifieds@ljworld.com Furniture 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 Couch dark green corduroy $50; Camel leather couch/great condition $350; free mauve fabric swivel rocker. Call for pictures. 785-840-5505 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
Music-Stereo
Lawrence
PIANOS
cor, costumes & accessories, tools antique decor, collectible baseball cards, kitchen & household items, mid-century furniture and more
• H.L. Phillips upright $650 • Cable Nelson Spinet $500 • Gulbranson Spinet - $450 Prices include delivery & tuning
Pictures can be seen on our Facebook The Resale Lady Estate Sales
785-832-9906
Lawrence
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
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$24.95 Unlimited Lines Up To 3 Days in Print and Online
Medical Equipment
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Nora Roberts Readers 30 Books $ 7 Call 785-542-1147
Pets
GARAGE SALES
Need to sell your car? Place your ad at classifieds.lawrence.com
FREE! Snug lid, bedliner, upper and lower billet grills for 2003+ Toyota Tacoma. You pick up and haul. Call 843-0689
PETS
Estate Sale in Topeka The Resale Lady Off Site Location 5602 SW Topeka Blvd
Overbrook MODA FABRIC SALE as low as $6-$7 per yard! Pre cuts also on sale
Saturday, October 15 10-4pm Sunday, October 16 10-3pm
October 15-16 10 am - 4 pm
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 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
(Maple Leaf weekend) Miscellaneous New releases available for w/markers & grass 1905 Indian Head Cent, Apartment Size $8.50 per yard seeder; JD 8300 13’ Grain 1909 Lincoln VDB Cent, For Sale: Canning Jars 2nd floor will now be Refrigerator 414 E 700 Rd Overbrook,KS Drill (yellow top); JD 1853/1857/1858 Seated 3-Pints & 2-Quarts open. Located 5 1/2 miles west $25 1000 18’ Field Cultivator; Liberty Half Dimes, 1883 $4.00 per dozen of Hwy 59/56 Junction on 785-865-8059 JD 12’ pull type disc; JD Liberty Nickel No Cent, Call 785-542-1147 Antique non electric pinHwy 56 turn north on E700 for merchandise #100 pull type chisel; 16’ 1886 Liberty Nickel, ball games, 200+ salt & 1 Electric Clothes Dryers Rd north 1 1/8 Sponge Bob Halloween pull type plow disc; IH 1930’s Buffalo Nickels, pepper shakers, array of miles—Watch for signs. Whirlpool costume New Sponge Bob 16’ field cultivator; Jefferson War Time antique to vintage dolls 220 V large capacity. Square Pants toddler size Hesston 1091 swather; Nickels, Barber Dimes, including Shirley Temple, If unable to attend feel 2-4 costume, retail $40. $75 JD 640 side delivery Mercury Dimes, Franklin Cabbage Patches (in box free to contact Carol at and Sponge Bob 785-865-8059 rake; JD 24T square Halves, Kennedy halves, & out of box), women’s 785-633-2919 or trick-or-treat bag, retail baler(shedded); Gehl Peace & Eisenhower 1 Electric Clothes Dryers clothing, Halloween dejwbrune@embarqmail.com $8. $25 for all 785-615-9587 1600 round baler; 6 bale Dollars, Six 2 Coin Mint Kenmore self-unloading bale Proof American Buffalo 220 V large capacity. trailer; Grain-A-Vator Sets, Sacagawea Native $75 #30; JD RM 6-30 cultiva- American Dollars, US 785-865-8059 tor; 16” hay wagon w/ Marshals Mint Proof M. Wards running gear; Sets, Baseball Hall of 17 Cu. Ft Whirlpool 3 pt. carryall; Continen- Fame Mint Proof & UNC Upright Freezer For Sale tal pull type sprayer; Sets; 1950’s & Early 60’s Like New $ 350 Peerless 10-11 pto ham- Baseball Topps Cards Call 785-842-3808 mer mill; JD 2 row Most All in Hard Cases: After 5 pm mounted cultivator; JD 56 #135 & 61 #300 ground driven manure Mickey Mantle’s, 58 Household Misc. spreader(steel floor); IH #238 KC Athletics Team, 2 bottom plow; 3 pt. tree 2-54 #37 Whitey Ford’s, Special Notices shear; JD 3 pt. 12’spring 2- #50 Yogi Berra’s, 54 For Sale: Computer Desk tooth; JD rotary hoe; #10 Jackie Robison, 54 Metal 5’ X 30” Clipper 560H fertilizer #1 Ted Williams, 56 Good Condition buggy; 10 EZ flow style #349 Hoyt Wilhelm, 57 $5 seeder; Hay & Grain ele- #302 & 61 #344 Sandy Call 785-542-1147 vator; 6’ disc; livestock Koufax’s, 60 #10 & 62 Special Notices loading chute on #25 Ernie Bank’s, 62 #1 wheels; JD pancake Roger Maris, Many Lawn, Garden & style front wt. brackets; other Name Players 66th Annual Nursery JD #7 & 8 sickle from the 50’s & early Pancake & Sausage Supper mowers; 1973 Chief 16’ 60’s; Large Collectors bumper hitch stock Card Album of the KC 2010 Craftsman 21 hp Ridtrailer; 1994 Chevrolet Royals ing Lawn Tractor 46” Cut. Silverado 1500 Truck Ex. Collectibles/Household/Mis Very good condition. $900 UNITED METHODIST Cab; 1962 Chevrolet c.: Small claw foot obo 785-424-3784 WOMEN C-60 Grain Truck w/15’ vintage china cabinet; bed & hoist; 1955 Chev- oak dressing mirror CHILI & CHICKEN rolet Grain Truck cabinet; Spartan 3/4 NOODLE DINNER Bicycles-Mopeds w/hoist; 1988 Chevrolet Size Sewing Machine S10 Truck; 1992 Buick (Like A Featherweight); Saturday, October 22 Pet Mate Dog Crate Lesabre 4 door; 1949 Arcade Model T ; Vinland United 28” Long, 20” Wide. Chevrolet 3/4 ton Truck; cast-iron stake truck; Methodist Church Cream color, Never used 1952 Chevrolet 2 ton 1950’s IH Pedal Tractor $ 25.00 Truck; 1956 Chevrolet 1 (Always Stored Inside!); Call 785-842-0214 ton Truck; EZ GO/Caddy 1960’s JD 520 & 620 1724 N 692 RD Car & Yamaha Golf 1/16th scale tractors; Baldwin City, KS 66006 Lone Star Church Carts; (Most All Vehi- Caterpillar Vintage cles Will Sell Not Runn- Dozer; cast-iron Aireof the Brethren Serving 5pm to 7:30 pm ing!); Salvage/Parts: dale Dog; US Calvary 883 E. 800 Rd or when it’s all gone. Gehl 1500 baler, Hesston horse bit; Elgin Pocket Monday, October 17 Please join us for good PT, Mix Mill, other items watches 1899 Model 5:00-8:00 PM food and fellowship. of salvage/metal; misc. 6/1912 Model 7/1906 classifieds@ljworld.com Whole hog sausage available for Homemade pies! cattle bunks/feeders; Model 2 side wind; Illipurchase in 1# packages. Free will donation. hog panels; Millermatic nois pocket watch; VinInfo & questions: 785-865-7211 180 Mig welder; welding tage hard back WestBooks:1936 table; tires/wheels; ern The Building Materials misc. tools; fuel barrels; Lone Ranger by Gaylord dimensional native lum- Dubois, 1938 The Lone ber & vintage barn Ranger set by Fran wood; Striker, Kit Carson, GenDozer/Tractor: Coneral Custer, Daniel signed by neighbor Boone; Dempster pump 1976 Late Model Cat D6C jack; milk cans; porceDozer rops, brush lain dolls & others; sweeps, 10’ tilt blade, Aladdin Lamps w/glass 24” pads, good grous- shades; Longaberger ers, sprockets (nearly baskets; Little Big new), 3306 w/3 spd. Books (Joe Louis) glasspower shift; John Deere ware; kitchen de´cor; Lawrence Lawrence Lawrence Lawrence 3010 Tractor, gas, box lot items; numerous wide-front, syncro items too many to menrange, single remote, 3 tion! and the real property described as Lots A and B of pt., near new rubber Block 1, and those pieces or portions of G, H, and I of w/JD 48 Loader(will sell Seller: C.T. Taul Block 3 as identified in Exhibit A incorporated herein by as one unit!); 3 pt. Rhino levied against lots and pieces of land owned by the reference from any remaining outstanding AssessAuction Note: The Firepost hole digger; Board of County Commissioners of Douglas County ments levied pursuant to Ordinance No. 6010 for the Firearms/Knives Will arms / Coins / Baseball within the East Hills Business Park Improvement Dis- cost of constructing public improvements levied Just like new! 36”x80” Follow Coins/Cards Cards Are Rare & Hard trict, for an indefinite period. Section 3. All ordinances against said lots and pieces of land owned by the Board Factory-finished White Winchester Model 1892 To Find Do Not Miss This of the City levying special assessments for the costs of of County Commissioners of Douglas County within the Premium Steel Door Lever Action .38-40 WCF Opportunity! Please go constructing public improvements upon property for East Hills Business Park Improvement District. Section Oct. Barrel, Winchester to the Internet for More JeldWen pre-hung RH in- which the property has been granted a deferral in pay- 6. Ordinance 8258 is hereby repealed, it being the intent compo- ment shall state that such assessments have been de- of the Governing Body of the City of Lawrence, Kansas Model 1894 Lever Action Detailed Listings!! Con- swing door. All Oct. Barrel .32 Special, cessions. Loader Trac- nents required for quick & ferred and the terms of this Ordinance and shall state that this Ordinance No. 929.4 shall supersede it. Section easy installation, includ- the period of the deferral granted, except that after 7. This Ordinance hereby supersedes Ordinance No. Winchester Model 1894 tor Day of Auction Only! ing brand new Schlage passage of Ordinance No. 9293 the City may defer spe- 6009 and Ordinance 8258 and shall take effect from and Lever Action .30 WCF bright brass finish cial assessments for the cost of construction of public after its passage and publication in the official City Saddle Ring Carbine, Auctioneers: lockset, dead bolt and improvements levied against lots and pieces of land newspaper, as provided by law. PASSED by the GovernWinchester Lever Action Mark Elston & Jason Flory keyed entry. Located in owned by the Board of County Commissioners of Doug- ing Body of the City of Lawrence, Kansas on this 11th Elston Auctions Model 94 Carbine .32 Baldwin City. $129.95 las County within the East Hills Business Park Improve- day of October, 2016. Special, Colt Lightning (785-594-0505) complete. Call to set up ment District for an indefinite period of time and shall Slide Action .22, Win(785-218-7851) an appointment to view. chester Auto Model 74 “Serving Your Auction not be required in any such ordinance to state the pe- APPROVED: (312) 316-7722 .22, Iver Johnson Single Needs Since 1994” riod of the deferral granted. The City Clerk shall, when /s/Mike Amyx Shot Champion 410, certifying such special assessments to the county Mike Amyx Ruger Single Six .22 Please visit us online at clerk, note thereon the words, “payment deferred” and Mayor Clothing www.KansasAuctions. Mag. New Model w/2 the period for which the deferral is granted. Such asnet/elston & cylinders WMR, Ruger sessments, when levied and certified, and when they ATTEST: www.FloryAnd Single Six Convertible become due under the terms of this Ordinance, shall be /s/ Sherri Riedemann Antique Lamp Associates.com Revolver(Colorado Cencollected as other taxes. Section 4. Whenever the gov- Sherri Riedemann Original Kerosene but tennial) WMR, Ruger for pictures!! erning body of the City shall grant a deferral in the pay- City Clerk now electric. Speed Six 357 Revolver ment of assessments under the provisions of this act, Approved as to form: China with painted shade Stainless DA, Colt Fronthe governing body shall provide for the payment of /s/ Toni R. Wheeler $ 50.00 tier Scout Single Action principal and interest on any bonds issued for the pay- Toni R. Wheeler Linwood Area.22 Pistol w/Original ment of the costs of such improvement during the pe- City Attorney 816-377-8928 Box!; Quality & Condiriod for which such deferral has been granted by the tion Outstanding!! (All levy of a tax upon all of the taxable property of the City ________ ATF Rules KS Residents in the manner provided for the payment of bonds payaCollectibles Only!); Compound Bow; ble by the City in at large. The portion of such bonds isKnives: Uncle Henry sued for payment of the costs of such improvements (First published in the relationship to the EPP Antiques Daily Journal (i.e., graduate, present or Schrade LB5 Smokey & which are payable by the City at large during the as- Lawrence Large Collection of former faculty member, LB7 w/leather cases; sessment deferral period shall be considered bonds World October 2, 2016) HUMMEL FIGURINES employer of graduates). Benchmade Bone Col1800’s Welsh Cupboard Some old. $20 -any size. Also payable by the City at large. When such deferred aslector; Old Timer Barsessments become due and payable under the terms of The School of Education at We invite you to submit Dark Tiger Oak plates, books & calendars. Baker University is hosting written testimony to: low; Buck Knight 505; this Ordinance, the costs incurred by the City at large (Used as a media cabinet) 785-842-0293 Imperials by reason of and during the time of the deferral period an accreditation visit by CAEP-Site Visitors; 1140 $ 500.00 Coins/Currency & Vinshall be paid by the special assessment against the the Council for the Accred- 19th Street NW, Suite 400; Old Large Iron Sideboard tage Sport Cards Will with stone top Food & Produce property and the proceeds thereof paid into the general itation of Educator Prepa- Washington, DC 20036 OR e-mail to: start at 9:00 A.M. bond and interest fund of the City. Upon a determina- ration (CAEP) on April 2-5, by $ 400.00 Interested parties callforcomments@caepnet. Gold Coins Graded!: tion that deferred assessments have become due, the 2017. Call 785-979-8050 org are invited to submit AMERICAN CHESTNUTS 1882/1893/1894/1899/1900/ City Clerk shall notify the county clerk of the balance of 1901-S $10 Eagle Cosuch assessment and that it is to be collected in the third-party comments to FOR SALE ins, 1882/1893/1900 $5 manner provided by law. In no event shall the amount the visiting team. Please Letters of comment should No spray, GMO free, $5 per Appliances Half Eagle Coins, lb. Pick up at downtown so collected exceed the amount of the original assess- note that comments must be received no later than 1876-S/1900/1929 $2.50 KC Farmers Market Satur- ment plus interest which would have been charged ini- address substantive mat- March 1, 2017. No anonyQuarter Eagle Coins; Washer & Dryer (electric), days, or at our farm. tially if deferral had not been granted. Section 5. The ters related to the quality mous testimony will be 1834/1856/1857 Half Kenmore & Roper, good www.mychestnutsroasting governing body of the City releases the Board of County of professional education considered. ________ offered, and Cents, 1857 Large Cent, condition. Commissioners of Douglas County, the Economic Devel- programs onanopenfire.com $100. 1857 Flying Eagle Cent, 785-764-4804 opment Corporation of Lawrence and Douglas County, should specify the party’s 816-596-3936
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L awrence J ournal -W orld
Sunday, October 16, 2016
JOBS TO PLACE AN AD: Construction Frame Carpenters needed: Good Pay, Steady Work. Call Scott Jackson at
General
General
HIRING IMMEDIATELY!
DIRECTOR OF FACILITIES
785- 331-6561
APPLY for 5 of our hundreds of job openings and it could change your life! Decisions Determine Destiny
DriversTransportation Driver
NOW HIRING in Topeka, KS Earn up to $65,000 /Year Great Home Time * Full Benefits & 401K * Local Management CDL-A,1 yr. T/T experience Apply Online at www.ruan.com/jobs
800-879-7826
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. Apply online: lawrencetransit.org/ employment Or come to: MV Transportation, Inc. 1260 Timberedge Road Lawrence, KS We are an equal opportunity employer and all qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, national origin, disability status, protected veteran status, or any other characteristic protected by law.
Dedicated to Diversity. EOE
Environmental
Waste Reduction & Recycling Specialist Perform variety of technical & admin tasks related to the City’s waste reduction recycling programs. Will also develop & deliver public recycling edu programs. Requires 2yrs of waste reduction recycling program exp, Requires Bachelors equivalent in Environmental Sciences, Solid Waste Management, Public Relations, Public or Business Admin or related field. $18.35 per hr. Apply online by 10/27/2016. www.LawrenceKS.org/jobs EOE M/F/D
785.832.2222
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
Interview TIP #5
Look Neat Clean clothes No holes Modest Cover tats Remove piercings
Smell Clean Brush Teeth Shower w soap Deodorant Decisions Determine Destiny
KANSAS BOARD OF REGENTS The Board of Regents invites nominations and applications for the Director of Facilities. A complete position description and instructions on how to apply for this position is available on: http://www.kansasregent s.org/about/board_office /employment_ opportunities EOE
Government
Healthcare
Need an apartment? Place your ad at apartments.lawrence.com
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 Temp-to-Hire positions: Warehouse Clerks, Material Handlers, and Forklift Operators $12-$14.00 Gardner, KS Apply Mon.-Fri. 9:00 am - 3:00 pm 10651 Lackman Rd. Lenexa, KS 66219 Apply online at: prologistix.com Call 913-599-2626
LPNs Join our 5 star team! Full & Part-time. Rewarding team environment within long term care. Shift and weekend differentials and up to $1,000 sign-on bonus. Apply online or in-person at: www.lawrencepresbyteri anmanor.org 1429 Kasold Dr. Lawrence, KS 66049
Trade Skills
Commercial Electricians Oliver Electric is accepting applications for experienced Journeyman & Apprentice, for work in the Lawrence & surrounding area. Top wages/benefits. EOE. For details please call:
TO PLACE AN AD: REAL ESTATE
RENTALS
Real Estate Auctions
Apartments Unfurnished
Real Estate Auction 120 Oak Street Downtown Bonner Springs, KS
DOWNTOWN LOFT
October 21, 11 A.M. 21,000 Sq Ft Mall, 2/3 empty, one national tenant. Two Commercial Acres!
View: Friday, Oct. 14 11 to 1 PM. Photos and due diligence online at
Studio Apartments 825 sq. ft., $880/mo. 600 sq. ft., $710/mo. No pets allowed Call Today 785-841-6565 advanco@sunflower.com
LAUREL GLEN APTS All Electric
2 Bedroom Units Available Now! Some with W/D, Water & Trash Paid, Small Pet
www.billfair.com
785-838-9559
Open House Special!
• 1 Day - $50 • 2 Days - $75
Duplexes
• 28 Days - $280 All choices include: 20 lines of text & a free photo!!!
Call 785-832-2222
EOH
2BR in a 4-plex New carpet, vinyl, cabinets, countertop. W/D is included.
grandmanagement.net Equal Housing Opportunity. 785-865-2505
TO PLACE AN AD: Antique/Estate Liquidation
Concrete
GMC SUVs
785.832.2222 Toyota SUVs
Mike - 785-766-6760 mdcraig@sbcglobal.net
Decks & Fences Pro Deck & Design
Specializing in the complete and expert installation of decks and porches. Over 30 yrs exp, licensed & insured. 913-209-4055
prodeckanddesign@gmail.com
785-764-2323
High performance package, RS Package, 2SS. 12k miles. Perfect condition. 450HP. Yellow with Black Stripes. Full warranty for 6 years / 100,000 miles. $39,000. 785-218-0685 erik@efritzler.com
Pontiac 2009 Vibe
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
Chevrolet Trucks
one owner, fwd, automatic, power equipment, cruise control, fantastic commuter car with great gas mileage! Stk#389951 Only $8,949.00 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
Nissan 2009 Murano SL, one owner, power equipment, power seat, Bose premium sound, alloy wheels, all-wheel drive Stk#316801
Only $9,855 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
Pontiac Cars Toyota Trucks
DALE WILLEY
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
4wd, running boards, tow package, alloy wheels, power equipment, stk#122401 only $7,855.00 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
Carpentry
Stk#45490A1
Only $7,877 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
Nissan Cars
One Owner - 145,500 miles - 20R Engine - Mint conditioned cab - New Battery Camper Top - Tailgate Included - Typical Rust Damage. $1500. 785-342-1448
Toyota Cars
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
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.
Volkswagen Cars
Rich Black Top Soil No Chemicals Machine Pulverized Pickup or Delivery
Cleaning
Guttering Services
JAYHAWK GUTTERING
Advertising that works for you!
Foundation & Masonry
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
SELLING A MOTORCYCLE? 7 Days - $19.95 28 Days - $49.95 Doesn’t sell in 28 days? + FREE RENEWAL!
CALL TODAY!
785-832-2222
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
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
Thicker line? Bolder heading? Color background? Ask how to get these features in your ad TODAY!! Call: 785-832-2222
Seamless aluminum guttering.
New York Housekeeping Accepting clients for weekly, bi-weekly, seasonal or special occasion cleaning. Excellent References. Beth - 785-766-6762
Quality Office Cleaning We are here to serve you, No job too big or small. Major CC excepted Info. & Appointments M-F, 9-5 Call 785-330-3869
Concrete Concrete Driveways, Parking lots, Pavement repair, Sidewalks, Garage Floors Foundation walls, Remove & Replacement Specialists Call 843-2700 or Text 393-9924 Stamped & Reg. Concrete, Patios, Walks, Driveways, Acid Staining & Overlays, Tear-Out & Replacement Jayhawk Concrete Inc. 785-979-5261
Specialist Water Prevention Systems for Basements, Sump Pumps, Foundation Supports & Repair & more. Call 785-221-3568 Foundation Repair Limestone wall bracing, floor straitening, sinking or bulging issues foundation water-proofing, repair and replacement Call 843-2700 or text 393-9924
YARDBIRDS LANDSCAPING Tractor and Mowing Services. Yard to fields. Rototilling Call 785-766-1280
Lawn, Garden & Nursery
jayhawkguttering.com
Golden Rule Lawncare Mowing & lawn cleanup Snow Removal Family owned & operated Call for Free Est. Insured. Eugene Yoder 785-224-9436
785-842-0094
Home Improvements 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 Fully Insured 22 yrs. experience
913-488-7320
Painting A.B. PAINTING & REPAIR Int/ext. Drywall, Siding, 30 plus yrs. Locally owned & operated.
Call Al 785-331-6994 albeil@aol.com
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
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
Plumbing RETIRED MASTER PLUMBER & Handyman needs small work. Bill Morgan 816-523-5703
Professional Organizing
HOME BUILDERS Repair & Remodel. When you want it done right the first time. Home repairs, deck repairs, painting & more. 785-766-9883 Retired Carpenter, Deck Repairs, Home Repairs, Interior Wall Repair & House Painting, Doors, Wood Rot, Power wash and Tree Services. 785-766-5285
Insurance
Attic, Basement, Garage, Any Space ORGANIZED! Items sorted, boxed, donated/recycled + Downsizing help. Call TILLAR 913-375-9115
Roofing BHI Roofing Company Up to $1500.00 off full roofs UP to 40% off roof repairs 15 Yr labor warranty Licensed & Insured. Free Est. 913-548-7585
Tree/Stump Removal Fredy’s Tree Service cutdown • trimmed • topped • stump removal Licensed & Insured. 20 yrs experience. 913-441-8641 913-244-7718
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
Landscaping
Many colors to choose from. Install, repair, screen, clean-out. Locally owned. Insured. Free estimates.
785-832-2222 classifieds@ljworld.com
Foundation Repair
Buick 2007 Lucerne CXL
Leavenworth
785.832.2222
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
Thicker line? Bolder heading? Color background?
Call 785-832-2222
Baldwin City
1979 Toyota Pickup SR5
Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
Ask how to get these features in your ad TODAY!!
785-865-2505 grandmanagement.net
Higgins Handyman
STARTING or BUILDING a Business?
Mercury Cars
Mercury 2008 Grand Marquis GS power equipment, great room, very comfortable and affordable.
W/D hookups, Fireplace, Major Appliances. Lawn Care & Dbl Car Garage! Equal Housing Opportunity
Dirt-Manure-Mulch
913-962-0798 Fast Service
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
3 BR w/2 or 2.5 BA
THE RESALE LADY Estate Sale Services In home & Off site options to suit your tag sale needs. 785.260.5458
Serving KC over 40 years
Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
Ford 2004 Explorer XLT
Decks • Gazebos Siding • Fences • Additions Remodel • Weatherproofing Insured • 25 yrs exp. 785-550-5592
AUTOMOTIVE 2840 Iowa Street (785) 843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
Only $13,855
Honda 2011 CRV SE
Stacked Deck
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
Call 785-842-2575 www.princeton-place.com
Full Remodels & Odd Jobs, Interior/Exterior Painting, Installation & Repair of:
ESTATE SERVICES • Estate sales • Organizing • Interior Stylist Debbie King
2015 CHEVROLET CAMARO 2SS
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
Craig Construction Co Driveways - stamped • Patios • Sidewalks • Parking Lots • Building Footings & Floors • All Concrete Repairs Free Estimates
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
Nissan SUVs
Townhomes
Family Owned & Operated 20 Yrs
classifieds@ljworld.com
Chevrolet Cars
785.832.2222
SERVICES
(785) 748-0777
CARS TO PLACE AN AD:
RENTALS REAL ESTATE
FULL TIME POLICE OFFICER 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
| 7D
Providing top quality service and solutions for all your insurance needs. Medicare Home Auto Business
Call Today 785-841-9538
Needing to place an ad? 785-832-2222
KansasTreeCare.com Trimming, removal, & stump grinding by Lawrence locals Certified by Kansas Arborists Assoc. since 1997 “We specialize in preservation & restoration” Ins. & Lic. visit online 785-843-TREE (8733)
8D
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Sunday, October 16, 2016
PUZZLES
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L awrence J ournal -W orld
THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD MOVIE DOUBLES By Michael Ashley Puzzles Edited by Will Shortz ACROSS 1 Loud sound in a storm 5 Brand in the freezer aisle 9 “Well, blimey!” 13 Masked hero 18 ____ land 19 Emergency state 22 Indo-____ 23 One working for Supercuts? 25 “Later” 26 Crusader’s foe 27 Longtime “60 Minutes” reporter 28 Beats handily 29 “Always be a poet, even in ____”: Baudelaire 30 Bro 33 See what one is saying? 35 Barista’s big reveal? 38 Fall guy 41 Awful 45 Allow 46 Put-away shot 48 Pacific farewells 49 Lead-in to -drome 51 Who says, “O, what a noble mind is here o’erthrown!” in Shakespeare 53 Cry after an owie, maybe 54 British terminals? 55 Concord 57 Wakens 59 Winning gesture 62 Biblical kingdom 63 “____ to Psyche”
64 Search for a really funny person? 68 Monthly checkissuing org. 71 Camera setting 74 “____ and the Pussycats” 75 Burdened (with) 78 Nickname for DiMaggio 81 Child in Chile 84 Humpty Dumptyshaped 85 Post-Neolithic period 86 Astrobiologists’ org. 87 “That’s it for me” 88 Actress Amanda of “She’s the Man” 89 Army E-6s: Abbr. 93 Writer who specializes in sentimental stories 95 Program file suffix 96 Declaration at Ringo’s birth? 98 Chef Boyardee offering 100 ’Tis the season 101 ____ football 106 Parthenon feature 109 Singer LaBelle 111 Best: Lat. 113 Send, as payment 114 Photographer’s impossible task? 117 “Poor Richard’s Almanack” offering 118 Menace in “Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea” 119 Other than that 120 “This I Promise You” band, 2000 121 Added details 122 Divisions of office
bldgs. 123 Whole bunch DOWN 1 Hug 2 University in Beaumont, Tex. 3 Old Olds 4 Law-office staffers, informally 5 “Look!” to Livy 6 Spanish nobleman 7 Cry at a card table 8 W.W. II org. 9 Stuck through 10 Specious reasoning 11 University in Garden City, Long Island 12 “____ out!” (ump’s cry) 13 Frank who was called the “Electric Don Quixote” 14 Mountain nymph 15 Politico Paul 16 Billiards need 17 Till compartment 20 Smaller picture 21 Canine command 24 Freezer items 28 Darn, e.g. 31 Radii partners 32 Saw 34 Part of an ignition system 36 Timecard measure: Abbr. 37 Philosophical lead-in to -ism 38 Money in Oregon state coffers? 39 A ____ apple 40 Cool, in old slang 41 Company near the
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 start of the telephone book listings 18 19 20 21 42 Relatives 43 French bachelor? 23 24 44 “Goodness!” 46 Spade holder 26 27 47 It might start “Attn.” 29 30 31 32 33 50 Gets back (to), in a way 35 36 37 52 Katniss’s love in “The Hunger Games” 41 42 43 44 45 54 Morning ____ 55 D.O.J. figures 48 49 50 56 Serengeti roamer 58 Slim beachwear 53 54 55 60 ____ generis 61 Cara of “Fame” 57 58 59 60 61 65 Eye: Sp. 63 64 65 66 66 Part of a boot 67 Prefix with -therm 71 72 73 74 69 River spanned by the Pont Neuf 80 81 82 70 Member of the genus 78 79 Vipera 85 86 72 Magazine founder Eric 88 89 90 91 92 93 73 Members of la familia 95 96 97 76 Own, so to speak 77 Redbox offerings 98 99 100 78 Be in harmony 79 Serengeti roamer 106 107 108 109 110 80 Country music’s Colter 113 114 115 82 “Truly” 83 Daughter of Tantalus 117 118 86 Cold War land: Abbr. 87 Mediterranean land: 120 121 122 Abbr. 90 Pays a short visit 105 Slightly off Abbr. 91 Son of Sir Lancelot 106 Football Hall-of-Famer 98 Rule 92 Large sea snails Tarkenton 99 San Diego State athlete 94 Bit of attire for Roy 107 Cold War side 102 Coasters, e.g. Rogers 108 “____ as well” 103 Online shoppers’ destination 96 Forum greeting 110 Little ’un 104 Sip 97 Quick signature:
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
38
39
40
68
69
70
103
104
105
22 25 28 34
46 51
47
52
56 62 67 75
76
83
77
84 87 94
101 111
102
112
116 119 123
112 Many tenured profs 114 Old Turkish commander 115 Some test results, for short 116 Crank
UNITED FEATURE SUNDAY CROSSWORD ACROSS 1 Shore up 6 “Uncle Miltie” 11 Agave 16 Humphrey to Bacall 21 “Bad, Bad -- Brown” 22 Winter constellation 23 Organic compounds 24 Showers with praise 25 Stand for 26 Transparently clear 27 Meat jelly 28 Whales like Shamu 29 Like a niche 31 Bete -33 Norms 35 Amigo of Fidel 36 Dash 37 “Mila 18” novelist 39 Cause havoc 41 Ardor 43 Louisa May’s family 46 Wagers 48 Curly’s friend 49 Short on iron 52 Berlin article 54 Preclude 56 Strong silent type? 60 Four-bagger (2 wds.) 62 Tiny stream 64 Letterman et al. 66 George Bernard -67 Flight board info 68 On a rampage 70 Survey chart 72 Amazon port 74 Coffee brewer 75 A chunk of the globe 77 Worm or minnow 79 Late tennis great 81 Ready to pick 82 AAA suggestion 83 Toy-store stock 85 The good guy 87 Small job 89 Kept going around
91 Meadow murmur 93 Aliens, of a sort 96 Fritz’s sigh 97 Quick trips 101 Mongol dwelling 102 Ubangi tributary 104 Sonnet segments 108 Aloha token 109 Pith helmet 111 Inoculants 113 Hunger for 115 Limerick writer 116 Tax prep pro 117 Sports complex 119 Ties up the phone 121 Slant 123 Realty ad item 124 Martial -126 Consumer advocate 128 Lantern part 130 Bram Stoker novel 132 Polar explorer -Amundsen 134 Floats to the top 136 Eggnog time 138 Drove a semi 139 -- Wiedersehen 141 Energy 143 Gumshoes, often 145 Port authority? 149 Sponge features 151 Aswan Dam site 152 Like a trampoline 156 “-- -- Road Runner” 157 War movie river 159 Pat’s hostess 161 Canned fruit brand (2 wds.) 163 Speculate 165 Wife’s dad (hyph.) 167 Citrus center 169 “-- vincit amor” 170 Crowbar 171 Delay on purpose 172 Police van 173 Domain
174 Waugh and Baldwin 175 Throw for -- -176 Cooks slowly 177 Ocean fliers DOWN 1 Traffic-jam noise 2 Buck the system 3 Chile’s northernmost city 4 Spy’s alias (2 wds.) 5 Gazes at 6 Ravel favorite 7 Well-read 8 Rocker -- Ocasek 9 Pork selection 10 Finance 11 Kind of sale (hyph.) 12 Ousted from power 13 Cagney or Lacey 14 Barrette 15 Show biz org. 16 Iris or violet 17 Rowboat need 18 Handbag logo 19 Utah neighbor 20 German steel town 30 Give in 32 Rollover subj. 34 Woolly animal 38 Commotion 40 Shish -42 They make waves 44 Onetime Trevi Fountain coin 45 Prune back 47 Pack rat 49 Out in front 50 -- -- fast! 51 Inbox filler 53 Cinder ender 55 Heirloom 57 Oafish one 58 “Ah Sin” playwright 59 Bought 61 Webster or Beery
63 Tipping point (2 wds.) 65 Tintype hue 69 Chicken style 71 Bangkok native 73 Danke, in Dijon 76 “Dark Angel” star 78 Low card 80 Hairy twin 84 -- Fe 86 Obligation 88 Felt certain 90 Bloke 92 Festoon 94 Heavy hydrogen discoverer 95 Thick piece of bread 97 Dana of “MacGyver” 98 Copy, briefly 99 Lariat 100 Asparagus tip 103 Oklahoma town 105 Ski slope bump 106 Blues street in Memphis 107 Famed viol. 110 Town near Palm Springs 112 Comparable 114 Chapel Hill native 118 Fabled teacher? 120 Glasgow citizen 122 Moselle feeder 125 Wooden strip 127 Evictions 129 Composer Jerome -131 Patron 133 Donuts, often 135 Urban problems 137 Hid out (2 wds.) 140 Hardly any 142 She-lobster 144 Mops up 145 Cello kin 146 Strong-arm 147 Wet behind the ears 148 Mrs. Gorbachev
UNIVERSAL SUDOKU
See both puzzle SOLUTIONS in Monday’s paper. 150 Comes down white 153 Kofi of the U.N. 154 Of some worth 155 Ball clubs
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek
Unscramble these six Jumbles, one letter to each square, to form six ordinary words.
158 Part of IBM 160 Room to swing -- -162 Hoarder’s cry 164 Toshiba rival
166 Philosopher -- -Tzu 168 Birthday count
HIDATO
See answer next Sunday
©2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.
LARTEL NORFIM CUGOLN
Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app
BULTME
CRACES PCOYUC
Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.
PRINT YOUR ANSWER IN THE CIRCLES BELOW
Solution and tips at sudoku.com.
Last week’s solution
See the JUMBLE answer on page 2D. Answer :
INFORM SCARCE TUMBLE UNCLOG OCCUPY TALLER When choosing a new yacht, you need to choose the one that —
FLOATS YOUR BOAT
OCTOBER 16, 2016
Last week’s solution