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Town Talk
INSIDE KU BASKETBALL’S ‘INSANE’ NEW HOME
Chad Lawhorn clawhorn@ljworld.com
Bike parking plan could fuel debate Commission will decide Tuesday whether to OK grant
Mike Yoder/Journal-World Photos
THE LOBBY AREA OF KANSAS UNIVERSITY’S NEW MCCARTHY HALL, which houses the men’s basketball players, includes a fireplace, a flat-screen TV and high ceilings. The housing complex opened last week on Naismith Drive next to Allen Fieldhouse.
See the photo gallery at LJWorld.com/mccarthy, and take a video tour at LJWorld.com/mccarthytour.
TALK ABOUT HIGH CEILINGS By Sara Shepherd basketball team plus 21 Twitter: @saramarieshep non-athletes — all upperclass male students. obody has to There’s also an extra duck inside apartment for guests, Kansas Unisuch as recruits or visitversity’s Mcing family members. Carthy Hall. The $11.2 milWith extralion, three-story lofty ceilings, facility was built tall doorways, with private high countertops money, and KU and even shower Student Housing heads mounted runs and staffs it. KANSAS 9 feet off the Construction UNIVERSITY ground, the new fell a few months on-campus apartment behind, and the basketbuilding is constructed ball players and other to scale for 7-footer McCarthy residents types. started the semester Just opened last week at Naismith Hall (in on Naismith Drive next past years, the athletes to Allen Fieldhouse, have lived at Jayhawker Marie S. McCarthy Towers apartments). Hall is home to the But McCarthy was 16-member KU men’s completed and the
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residents moved in Oct. 8 — just in time to show off the new hall to basketball recruits who came to town for Late Night in the Phog on Oct. 9. Here’s what’s inside: l Apartments: With full kitchens and private bedrooms. There are two layouts, two-bedroom with one bathroom or four-bedroom with two bathrooms. l A half-court basketball court: Adjacent to the lobby and visible through big glass windows, with a wooden floor and replicas of the national championship and “Beware of the
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KU alumnus: Uber will change world By Sara Shepherd
Twitter: @saramarieshep
JOURNAL-WORLD REPORTER SARA SHEPHERD points out the height of the 9-foot shower heads in one of the twobedroom apartments at McCarthy Hall.
INSIDE
Clouds and sun
Today’s forecast, page 8A
Kansas University alumni Kent and Missy McCarthy donated the lead gift to construct McCarthy Hall, which is named after Kent’s late mother and proud Kansan, Marie S. McCarthy. Marie McCarthy was born in 1929 and attended KU on a math scholarship, a rarity for women in her day. She graduated in 1951. “Mom was a Kansas girl who grew up during the dust bowl era,” Kent said in a Kansas University Endowment report. “KU and the basketball team were a big part of her life, and we wanted to honor her.”
Please see KU, page 4A
THE $11.2 MILLION, THREE-STORY MCCARTHY HALL was built with private money and is staffed by KU Student Housing.
High: 62
Marie S. McCarthy
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remember the day when a proposal to take away downtown parking spaces on busy Massachusetts Street would require me to pack a tent, a case of beanie weenies, a portable generator for the chocolate fountain and all the other necessary survival gear. I would need it in order to endure the long City Commission meeting that would CITY surely result from the COMMISSION proposal. But perhaps the world has changed, because city commissioners at their meeting on Tuesday will begin the process of removing two prime parking spots near Massachusetts Street, and they’re scheduled to do so with a simple vote on their consent agenda.
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Overland Park — Uber is not just giving people rides, it’s changing the face of transportation — and the world, company executive and Kansas University alumnus Brian McClendon told a crowd Friday in Overland Park. McClendon was the special guest speaker at “KU Elevate: Innovation in Action,” a TED-style McClendon event KU hosted at its Edwards Campus. He joined four current KU professors in presenting talks on their innovative research and ideas. McClendon, a 1986 KU electrical engineering graduate, is vice president of advanced technologies at Uber and a former vice president at Google, where he co-founded Google Earth and other technologies reliant on a web-based maps computer language he invented. McClendon left Google for Uber earlier this year, saying in a recent interview with the Journal-World that “Uber needs maps even more than
A different system? Hillary Clinton and Kris Kobach’s spat over restrictive voting laws has opened a new discussion of automatic registration. Page 3A
Please see UBER, page 2A
Vol.157/No.290 26 pages
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Saturday, October 17, 2015
LAWRENCE • STATE
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DEATHS Henrietta G. Bradley 83, Tonganoxie, died 10/14/15. Funeral 10am Tues 10/20/15 at Sacred Heart Catholic Church. Visitation 6-8pm Mon at the church. www.quisenberryfh.com
Michael l. “Mick” JaMison Michael “Mick” Jamison, 80, Perry. Visitation Gathering 5-8 PM, Monday at Abe and Jake’s Landing. www.barnettfamilyfh.com
Ronda Jeanne BiggeR (Luman) Ronda Bigger 63 of Alamogordo NM, passed Oct. 8th 2015. She is survived by husband Jim, brothers Mike (Terry) Nickerson; David (Debbie) Lawrence; Steven (Barbara) Hutchinson, nieces & nephews. She was preceded in death by parents Robert & Clara
John “BoB” RoBeRt nisely
Marna Joy Brewer Moore died October 15, 2015. She was born April 16, 1933 to Elmer (Dude) Brewer and Mimi Dora Troop Brewer. She was preceded in death by her parents and three siblings, Betty Brewer, Elwanda Blair and Ray Brewer. Also a son, Thomas Matthew Moore. She leaves her husband, Bob Moore and children, Melonie Moore Sullivan (Warren) and Martin Moore (Durand
Reiber) as well as five grandchildren, Lindsey, Alex (Jenny) and Abby Sullivan, Kendra and Jodi Moore. No services are planned at her request. Be kind to others in her memory and/or contribute to the charity of your choice. We are grateful to the staff at Neuvant House and Crossroads Hospice for their loving care. Please sign this guestbook at Obituaries. LJWorld.com.
Uber
though Kansas City poses a special challenge: more roads per capita than any of Uber’s other markets. Uber is pursuing all kinds of ways to improve efficiency and customer experience, McClendon said. One tackles the problem of the “last 100 yards,” which often pose the biggest challenge to ETAs because even sometimes with a specific address drivers and riders can’t find each other. Using machine learning, Uber now has launched “hotspots” to help identify and map precise locations that are popular pickup spots. Uber also is trying UberPool in San Francisco, enabling drivers to pick up multiple riders who may be strangers but need transportation along the same routes, enabling them to share a car and cut their costs. Big picture-wise, Uber being successful stands to make a big difference in the world, McClendon said. The faster, cheaper and more available Uber can be, the more people may choose to use it instead of owning a car. The fewer
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A
Google does” and calling Uber’s potential “exciting.” “We’re trying to make transportation as reliable as running water — everywhere, for everyone,” he said Friday. One of Uber’s keys to succeeding at that goal is and will be efficiency, he said, and at the crux of that is ETAs. That’s the estimated time of arrival an Uber customer will see when they request a ride. If they get on their phone, request a ride and see that the closest Uber driver seems to be a long time out, they’re more likely to jump in their own car and drive, McClendon said. Conversely, “if that number’s low, it becomes magic.” Incidentally, McClendon said right now in the Kansas City area the average Uber ETA is 5 minutes, while the average is 3.4 minutes in New York City. They’re working on it,
BRIEFLY Colorado won’t charge voter Wichita — A Colorado prosecutor says her office does not plan to file any charges against a man who allegedly voted in Kansas after doing so Colorado. Yuma County District Attorney Brittny Lewton said Friday that Lincoln L. Wilson did not commit perjury or voter fraud because he voted first in Colorado. She says it did not become fraud until he went to Kansas several days later and cast a second ballot, and any perjury and double voting occurred in Kansas. Lewton says her office conducted an investigation and sent Kansas its findings. Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach has filed 10 criminal charges, including three felony counts, in Sherman County against the 64-yearold voter. Wilson allegedly voted in both Kansas and Colorado in the same elections in 2010, 2012 and 2014.
Vote machine audit gets help
Luman, sister Betty Jo Schmickle (Joe survives). A celebration of life open house on Sat. 17th from 1-4 pm 3226 Huntington Rd. Lawrence. Memorials to your local Humane Society in lieu of flowers. Please sign this guestbook at Obituaries. LJWorld.com.
Marna Joy Moore
L awrence J ournal -W orld
Wichita — A Wichita mathematician seeking to audit voting machine tapes after finding statistical anomalies in election counts is getting legal and other support in pursuing her lawsuit. Wichita State University statistician Beth Clarkson had been pursuing the case herself, but now has a Wichita lawyer representing her. Other people have set up a nonprofit foundation for donations. A Sedgwick County judge is expected to set filing deadlines and a trial date at a Monday hearing. Clarkson has analyzed election returns in Kansas and elsewhere over several elections that indicate “a statistically significant” pattern where the percentage of Republican votes increase the larger the size of the precinct. The pattern could indicate election fraud. Her attorney, Randy Rathbun, says Clarkson convinced him that she is right and somebody needed to help her.
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No funeral services are planned for John (Bob) Robert Nisely. Inurnment will be held at Oak Hill Cemetery in Lawrence. John passed away Wednesday, October 14, 2015. John was born May 24, 1924 in Douglas County, Kansas, the son of Horace F. and Frances L. (Howard) Nisely. He was a farmer. He also worked for Weavers, Bud Jennings Carpets, KU Concessions and Douglas County Building and Grounds. He married Viola Marie Endicott August 9, 1947 in Garland, Kansas. She preceded him in
death in 2000. Survivors include two daughters, Karen Gentry and Pamela Nisely, and a grandson, Daniel C. Gentry. M e m o r i a l contributions may be made in his name to the Lawrence Humane Society and may be sent in care of WarrenMcElwain Mortuary. Online condolences may be sent to www. warrenmcelwain.com. Please sign this guestbook at Obituaries. LJWorld.com.
cars on the roads, the less traffic jams and harmful environmental emissions. Improved access to affordable transportation helps low-income people, too, McClendon said. Uber can also make a difference in safety, McClendon said, specifically reducing drunk-driving related injuries and deaths. Uber is a popular choice among people who’ve had some drinks and, finding it easy to use, will summon an Uber instead of getting in their own car and driving, McClendon said. He said DUI incidents have dropped 10 percent within a year of Uber launching in Seattle, drunk-
ing: “Ad astra, per renewables” -13 cents, $4.84 lNeal Kingston, professor of educational See more stocks and psychology: “Stay found: commodities in the How maps can improve USA Today section. outcomes in education” l Lisa Stehno-Bittel, professor of physical therapy and rehabilitation science: “Overcom- BIRTHS plexified: How I learned Alex and Heather Kessler, to love my simple mind” Baldwin City, a boy, Friday. Curtis Meyers and Mary Other KU Elevate Find video of Oct. 16 presentations KU Elevate talks by Uber Fowler, Lawrence, a boy, l William Elliott, asso- exec Brian McClendon Friday. ciate professor of social and other presenters onSOUND OFF welfare: “Restoring the line at elevate.ku.edu. American dream of a colIf you have a question, lege education” call 832-7297 or send lBala Subramaniam, — Contact Journal-World email to soundoff@ KU reporter Sara Shepherd at professor of chemical sshepherd@ljworld.com or 832-7187. and petroleum engineerljworld.com. driving crashes fell 6.5 percent among drivers younger than 30 in California, and alcohol-related driving fatalities have dropped about 5 percent after Uber’s entrance into various markets in California. Uber has a lot further to go, McClendon said. “It’s still early stages, and it’s all very exciting.”
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Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com/local l Saturday, October 17, 2015 l 3A
Real election proposal underlies Kobach-Clinton spat Politics
Peter Hancock phancock@ljworld.com
D
emocratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton and Kansas’ Republican Secretary of State Kris Kobach got into a shouting-matchby-press-release this week over Kansas’ restrictive voting laws, and in particular the requirement Kobach championed for people to show proof of U.S. citizenship in order to vote.
Clinton’s campaign started it off Thursday — and didn’t make any friends among the Kansas press corps along the way — by sending an email statement to news desks all over the state slamming Kobach for having supported those laws. And just to show how serious of an issue it is (as if to suggest we didn’t
already know), she hyperlinked to a New York Times story reporting what every major Kansas media outlet has been reporting for months, if not years: that the proof of citizenship law has a disproportionate impact on young voters. Also in a move that could be taken as a sign of disrespect, they didn’t even give us a statement
Pooch smooch
from Clinton herself. It was from a senior policy adviser, Maya Harris. “Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach’s fullcourt press to implement harsh voting restrictions and disenfranchisement efforts continue to deny Kansans their basic freedoms by making it more difficult for them to be active participants in our democracy,” Harris said.
If you know anything about Kobach, you know that’s just red meat for him. “With mounting pressure from Democratic primary challenger Bernie Sanders, the Hillary Clinton presidential campaign has resorted to attacking Kansas election laws,” Kobach said. Please see ELECTION, page 4A
Make the most of late-season produce
G
Nick Krug/Journal-World Photo
GOLF SUPERINTENDENT BILL IRVING GETS DOWN TO EXAMINE THE TURF AS HIS JACK RUSSELL TERRIER MIX, OZZIE, LEFT, gives his labrador mix, Frazier, a kiss on the nose Oct. 5 at Lawrence Country Club. Irving brought his dogs along with him in the golf cart while inspecting some of the progress being made on the driving range, which is being expanded.
ardens are usually as tired as their caretakers by midOctober, but tomatoes, peppers, basil and the like will often hold on until the bitter frosty end. Unfortunately those late green tomatoes are past the point of ripening on the vine outdoors. Gardeners wishing to make the most of their end-ofseason tomatoes and other produce should harvest now. Green tomatoes are damaged by the cold when temperatures reach 50 degrees Fahrenheit. They are still usable at this point, but decay more quickly. Lower temperatures mean even more damage. Pick green and any partially ripened fruit and bring it inside to use. Leave a short piece of stem attached to green or ripening to-
Garden Variety
Jennifer Smith matoes to help prevent early decay. Then decide whether to use the green fruits as they are or try to stimulate ripening. Green tomatoes have a sour flavor that is quite different from their ripe counterparts, but there are lots of ways to use them. Besides the well-known fried version, try green tomato salsa or relish, pickled green tomatoes, marmalade, jam or even green tomato pie. Please see PRODUCE, page 4A
SATURDAY COLUMN
GOP, Democratic debates reveal deep differences By Dolph C. Simons Jr.
Now that the first Democratic presidential debate is over, the public has been given a clear view of the deep differences between the Democratic and Republican parties and how they intend to win the 2016 presidential election. Tuesday evening, the five Democratic candidates made it clear they favored greater government involvement and spending billions of additional dollars to cure the nation’s ills. GOP candidates, in both of their televised debates, focused on the dangers of greater government involvement in the lives of Americans and the danger of an ever-growing national debt. There was one other glaring difference. The five Democratic hopefuls — Jim Webb, Bernie Sanders, Hillary Clinton, Martin O’Malley and Lincoln Chafee — appeared to have been given a message prior to the debate: It was all right to find fault with one another, but take it easy on Clinton. Little, if anything, was said
about Clinton’s relationship and involvement with Obama during almost seven years in the White House, the nation’s image and stature abroad, terrorism, the growing national debt, an FBI investigation and other issues on the public’s mind. Some suggest the other four debaters knew it would be dangerous to come down too hard on Clinton in the debate for fear they would pay serious political consequences if Clinton should win the presidential election. Although there were few references to the Obama years in the Democratic debate, there were frequent references to George W. Bush’s years in the White House. One glaring difference between the Democratic and GOP debates is that it was open season for attacks on fellow debaters in the two Republican debates while there was a much more cautious script for the Democratic debate. This difference probably will extend to the upcoming election campaign. Democrats can
have strong differences, but when it gets close to the time to vote, they band together to form a united and well-organized team. On the other hand, Republicans can’t seem to join hands but remain divided and, in many cases, have the approach that “if I can’t have my way, I’ll sit out and not participate or support my opponent.”
chances to win the presidential race were looking good due to current polls showing a majority of citizens do not favor Obama’s leadership and believe Clinton has lied on numerous matters and is not trustworthy, her performance Tuesday should have made them realize the 2016 election will not be a cakewalk. Clinton will be a tough, mean when necessary, challenger. Who will end up being her opponent? And who knows what will be happening throughout the world during the next 12 months — the level of terrorism, the actions of Russian or Chinese leaders and the American economy — all of which could have a major impact on the election. Politically, the next 12 months are going to be rough and ever-changing. Democrats, in one way or another, will be offering and proposing greater government hand-outs to capture votes, dividing the country between “haves” and “havenots” and injecting racial matters into the election. Republicans will try to show the dangers of greater and greater government control of
COMMENTARY Democrats seem willing to sacrifice themselves for the good of the party while Republicans find it almost impossible to forget their differences and present a united front to the public. Clinton was the clear winner in Tuesday’s debate. Her experience, her debate skills and the homework she had done to be prepared were obvious. Likewise, her onstage challengers were weak compared to the battle among many strong Republican candidates in their two debates. If Republicans thought their
all facets of Americans’ lives, the nation’s strong drift toward socialism, the loss of stature and respect for the U.S. in other parts of the world and the unmet promises of Obama. Does the country want a continuation of the Obama blueprint through a Clinton presidency? l l l
A big question is whether the debates — Democratic or GOP — will change the minds of voters. Do the majority of those who intend to vote already know for whom they will vote? In the minds of Democrats, does it make any difference who the Republican candidate is, or will they simply vote for Clinton? Will Republicans vote for any GOP nominee just to vote against Clinton? How many voters will sit out the election because they don’t like their party’s candidate? There are a lot of questions with so much riding on the outcome of the election. Will voter turnout be the deciding factor regardless of the candidates, or will the candidates determine the turnout?
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the programs we’re recruiting against.” Perry Ellis, a senior forward from Wichita, said he CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A always thought Jayhawker Towers were great. Phog” banners that hang in McCarthy is something Allen Fieldhouse. else. l A multipurpose room: “Words can’t describe With a fully equipped it,” Ellis said. “I think it kitchen, large round tables definitely will help perand a couple more TVs. KU suade kids. It’s just so nice.” Student Housing director The other residents Diana Robertson said the In addition to the kitchen is available to any basketball players, McCarresidents and that Coach thy is open to upperclass Bill Self indicated he may male students who are not use the space for home athletes. game day meals and a preCole Neville is one of game team meeting place. l A movie theater: Or those. media room, with 25 plush A junior majoring in porecliners that each have litical science and minortheir own cup holder. ing in psychology, Neville l A barbershop: There transferred to KU this year won’t be a barber operating from community college in out of the shop, but the fahis hometown of Scottscility is there in case some- dale, Ariz. He said he got one comes in from time to a scholarship that’s paying time, Robertson said. his room and board. l Game room: With a Neville called KU to pool table, pingpong table inquire about campus and big window overlookhousing and was told he ing the basketball court. qualified for a new dorm l An outdoor lounge: that was under construcThis balcony at the north tion. Neville — who end of the third floor has has never been to a KU another fireplace, TVs and basketball game — said he tables and chairs. realized only later that he’d l Study rooms: One on be living with the basketeach floor. ball team. l Fingerprint scanners: At that point, he said In addition to keycard he started getting excited access at other KU resibecause he knew “it was dence halls, McCarthy has going to be really nice.” fingerprint scanners at the Neville said he toured building entrance and all McCarthy for the first time apartments. about a week before movLiving in McCarthy ing in. costs $9,875 a year, Robert“Right when I walked son said, though full schol- in I was like, ‘Oh, wow, arships for athletes cover OK. This is pretty insane,’” their room and board. The Neville said. “I love it.” second most expensive Robertson said there dorm at KU is Oswald/ currently are two open Self — also brand new this spots for non-athletes, after fall — which costs $9,230 one man who had signed for a suite with private up left KU and another bedrooms. decided to move into a different residence hall. ‘Words can’t describe’ Jim Marchiony, associKU envisions the new ate athletics director for facility as both a good public affairs, said it’s good home for its basketball to have both groups of stuplayers but also a draw for dents under the same roof, new recruits. especially for the athletes. “We have the best venue “Interaction with non(Allen Fieldhouse), and we athletes is vital to college will have the best houslife,” Marchiony said. “Mcing,” Coach Self said in a Carthy gives them the best KU Athletics press release of both worlds — it gives prior to McCarthy’s conthem exposure, but it also struction. “These things are provides them with a bit very, very significant for more security.” the benefit, development and overall experience of our student-athletes. We — Contact Journal-World want them to be comfortKU reporter Sara Shepherd at able and have the same sshepherd@ljworld.com or 832-7187. type of living conditions as
Produce CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A
To ripen green tomatoes, sort and select only the most mature of the green fruit. Look for green tomatoes that are lighter than others or almost white. Mature green tomatoes are more likely to fully ripen and develop good flavor than the greenest fruit. Wash and air dry fruit, then place them in open cardboard boxes at temperatures between 55 and 70 degrees F. They will ripen on their own from this point, although some fruit may spoil before fully ripening and should be discarded. Instead of cardboard boxes, some gardeners recommend using paper or plastic bags, wrapping fruit in newspaper or wax paper, or hanging the entire plant upside down in a garage or shed. These methods are fine if preferred — just remember to check the ripening fruit regularly to get rid of any that spoil. (Rotten tomatoes are messy.) Light is unnecessary for ripening. Ripening of green tomatoes takes two to four weeks. To speed the process, green fruit can also be placed in a container with a ripe tomato, apple or banana. Ripe fruit releases ethylene gas, a naturally occurring compound that speeds ripening in green
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In his response to the Clinton campaign, Kobach called that idea “a federal takeover of CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A the registration process (that) would result in “In Kansas we recogmillions of aliens autonize that the problem matically getting onto of aliens registering and the voter rolls.” voting is a serious one,” In point of fact, the he said. “We have already California law requires identified more than 30 the DMV to send inforaliens who either success- mation to the Secretary fully registered before our of State’s office, which law went into effect, or then must verify citizenattempted to register (and ship before adding those were stopped) after the names to the voting rolls. law went into effect.” Chapman Rackaway, a But lurking behind all political science profesthe election-year rhetoric sor at Fort Hays State (even though it’s techni- University who studies cally not an election year elections, said automatic yet) lies a policy registration is common proposal that should be in European democradebated and discussed cies, and he said it’s not seriously: automatic reg- surprising that it would istration. pop up first on the West Last week, California Coast, which is known became the second state for its more liberal politiin the nation to pass a law cal culture. that automatically regisBut he said those kinds fruit. Most tomatoes at groters qualified residents to of voting reforms are cery stores are ripened with vote when they apply for “slow to catch on in the exposure to ethylene gas. a driver’s license. Oregon rest of the country,” and For peppers, beans, enacted a similar law he doesn’t think Kansas squash and other vegearlier this year. Instead will jump on board with etables that are hanging of being asked to opt in the idea anytime soon. on, gardeners choose how to voter registration at Unless, of course, much or little they want to the DMV, people in those there is a federal manharvest. Small peppers will states will be automatical- date to do so. always be small once they — This is an excerpt from ly registered, unless they are picked, but can be eaten Peter Hancock’s Statehouse check a box opting out. anyway. Basil and other Live column, which appears on In their statement annual herbs should also be LJWorld.com. Thursday, the Clinton harvested prior to frost if campaign said she favors the gardener wishes to save “universal, automatic votthem. er registration and a new Even if the produce ends standard of no fewer than up getting left in the garden, 20 days of early in-person it is useful to return nutrivoting in every state.” ents to the soil. Till or plow In this regard, Koit later this fall or early in bach was right in saying the spring, or rake it off and Clinton was responding add it to the compost bin. to pressure from Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders — Jennifer Smith is a former because it was Sanders horticulture extension agent for who introduced legislaK-State Research and Extension tion in August, on the 50th and horticulturist for Lawrence anniversary of the Voting Parks and Recreation. She is Rights Act, to establish the host of “The Garden Show” YOUR NEW PLEDGE OF $1 PER WEEK automatic registration naand has been a gardener since tionwide. Similar legislaBUYS YOU A CHANCE TO WIN DINNER FOR 2 childhood. Send your gardention had been introduced ing questions and feedback to AND 2 TICKETS TO A KU MEN’S earlier by Sen. Chuck features@ljworld.com. Schumer, D-N.Y.
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L awrence J ournal -W orld
Saturday, October 17, 2015
Dear Annie: I was so moved by the letter from “Smarter Now,” and your response that the car shouldn’t move until everyone is buckled up. On July 26, my 18-year-old son was involved in a fatal car accident that took the life of the young offender who crossed over double yellow lines and hit my son’s car head-on, injuring his passenger and severely debilitating my son. The injury will leave him with a permanently disabled leg, but there was no spine or brain injury. My son was one of those new drivers who would not insert his key into the ignition until passengers had their seat belts buckled. Everyone made fun of him for it, but they eventually buckled up if they wanted to reach
Annie’s Mailbox
Marcy Sugar and Kathy Mitchell
anniesmailbox@comcast.net
their destination. I am sending you a photo of the wrecked car so you can see that seat belts save lives. Once my son is healed and able to walk again, he and his passenger will do PSAs to inspire young drivers to use seat belts and drive responsibly. — Pennsylvania Dear Pennsylvania: Your son’s car was so severely mangled that it’s hard to imagine anyone walking away
Schumer is live at the Apollo The comedian of the year gets her own special Saturday night on “Amy Schumer: Live at the Apollo” (9 p.m., HBO). Chris Rock directs this hour of stand-up, recorded before a live audience back in May. Schumer is on a roll, having won an Emmy and a Peabody Award for her Comedy Central series “Inside Amy Schumer” and recently starring in “Trainwreck,” the big-screen comedy she also wrote. Like Sarah Silverman, Schumer arrived as a female comic not afraid to out-raunch her male counterparts. But she has since transcended mere shock value.
Can you be nostalgic for a period piece based on nostalgia itself? Can you do the “Time Warp” again? BBC America presents “The Rocky Horror Show” (11 p.m.), a two-hour performance of the original London stage show that first appeared in 1973. Listen for the voices of Stephen Fry and Anthony Head (”Buffy the Vampire Slayer”) as narrators, along with Richard O’Brien, who created this mad pop culture pastiche all those years ago.
Tonight’s other highlights
College football action includes USC at Notre Dame (6:30 p.m., NBC) and Penn State at Ohio State (7 p.m., ABC).
A coed rues her decision to remain on campus over Thanksgiving break in the 2014 thriller “Kristy” (7 p.m., Lifetime).
Curious college students open a mysterious portal and don’t like what they see in the 2015 shocker “They Found Hell” (8 p.m., Syfy).
Escape from Viking captivity on “Doctor Who” (8 p.m., BBC America).
Walter commemorates his brief war experience on “Blunt Talk” (8 p.m., Starz).
Missy mentors Jupiter on “Survivor’s Remorse” (8:30 p.m., Starz).
Uhtred and Brida escape Aelfric on “The Last Kingdom” (9 p.m., BBC America).
Tracy Morgan hosts “Saturday Night Live” (10:30 p.m., NBC), with musical guest Demi Lovato.
Hell to pay in Dubai on “NCIS” (7 p.m., CBS).
A double surprise on “Grandfathered” (7 p.m., Fox).
Life imitates television on “The Grinder” (7:30 p.m., Fox).
Frazzled on “Code Black” (8 p.m., CBS).
Reasonable doubt on “Rosewood” (9 p.m., Fox).
from it. We are glad he will recover and we appreciate the strong warning to buckle up. Dear Annie: This is in response to “Foolish Daughter in the Midwest,” who was angry when she found out that her parents were leaving all of their land overseas to her brothers, who never provide any help with their care. I, too, spent large amounts of my time and money helping my mother care for my father, who had severe dementia. My brother and sister refused to do a thing, nor did they visit my father in the nursing home. When my father died, I learned that my parents will be giving the bulk of their estate to those same uncaring siblings. My mother will soon need care. I have made
JACQUELINE BIGAR’S STARS
For Saturday, Oct. 17: This year you might be testing your limits. You will be prone to taking risks. Be careful, as you might regret this behavior. If you are single, you meet people with ease and enjoy many different personality types. If you are attached, the two of you notice a new intensity and a need to share even more. 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 have a secret admirer. Look around. Tonight: Opt for different. Taurus (April 20-May 20) Reach out to a dear friend whom you care a lot about. Tonight: Dinner for two. Gemini (May 21-June 20) If you rein in your need to be the alpha dog, friends will make plans that include you. You could have a ball. Tonight: Keep on going. Cancer (June 21-July 22) Know that an unexpected offer or situation might force you in a new direction. Tonight: As you like it. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) You could be off having a great time, enjoying a special person in your life. Tonight: Very playful. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You put your best foot forward, no matter what you do
the painful decision that I will not be responsible for her, primarily because I cannot afford the financial burden. “Foolish” should accept that she cannot change her dysfunctional family. But she can set healthy limits on how much to help. Her parents’ finances and assets should be used to cover their care. — Wiser Now Dear Wiser: While parents do not owe their children an inheritance, they sometimes don’t realize that favoring one child over another in the will, regardless of the reason, can cause hurt feelings that last the rest of their lives.
— Send questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or Annie’s Mailbox, P.O. Box 118190 Chicago, IL 60611.
jacquelinebigar.com
or whom you are with. You have a great deal of sensitivity and energy. Tonight: Invite friends over. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Pick up the phone and catch up on news with a friend. Tonight: Hang out with a favorite person. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Understand that extremes won’t help you with your finances or with an emotional situation. Tonight: Make it your treat. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) You could feel tense, as you know you must make an important appearance with a parent or boss. Make plans that keep you close to home. Tonight: Be gracious. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Be willing to reach out to someone at a distance. Tonight: Relax in a very different environment. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) You’ll have a choice to make between hanging out with friends and getting together with a special person in your life. Don’t overthink this decision. Tonight: Choose a favorite stressbuster. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) You might confuse a friend or partner without intending to. Tonight: A force to be dealt with. — The astrological forecast should be read for entertainment only.
UNIVERSAL CROSSWORD Universal Crossword Edited by Timothy E. Parker October 17, 2015
ACROSS 1 Show fear, in a way 6 No longer due 10 Octagonal warning sign 14 Like mutton or sheep 15 Bone of the forearm 16 Just a smidge 17 Road-repair markers 18 Petty quarrel 19 Sandy particles 20 Priest’s tunic 21 Racetrack drama 24 Protein-rich legume 26 Minimum attendance figure 27 Pendulum paths 28 Some write-offs 33 Palindromic principle or doctrine 35 Dr. Salk’s conquest 36 Olympics cheer 37 Wrinkled or furrowed item 38 Colony to avoid 39 Greenishblue 40 Bro’s counterpart 41 Hundredeyed giant 42 Tusked beasts
43 Without equal 45 Undercoating prevents it 46 “___ before beauty” 47 Tooth component 50 Too close to call, at the track 55 Langley org. 56 Vanity case for milady 57 Brain flash 58 Prepares pastries 60 Final stages 61 Tandoorbaked bread 62 Send to the Senate 63 Recipe estimate 64 “Jabberwocky” verb 65 Palm tree fruits DOWN 1 Stimulantyielding shrubs 2 Quarterrounded molding 3 Triumph, but just barely 4 Storm heading, sometimes 5 Aretha Franklin classic 6 Stage, as a show 7 Got off a horse 8 Data, for short 9 Sign of spring
10 Petition name 11 Actress Spelling 12 Elevator innovator 13 Way through the park 22 Suffers from 23 Prefix with “Chinese” or “European” 25 Witches’ concoction 28 Paycheck extra 29 Cry for “poor Yorick” 30 How to place one’s bet 31 Autocrat until 1917 32 ___ serif (type style) 33 1/2 fl. oz. 34 Great Lakes port 35 Cribbage items 38 Primping
39 ___-of-living increase 41 Pond scum 42 Camp sight 44 Jauntily dashing 45 Kind of center 47 Colonial diplomat Silas 48 Family reunion attendee 49 Some bridge positions 50 Financial aid criterion 51 Europe’s highest volcano 52 They’re chewed in the field 53 Decisive time 54 Come close to 59 Chicken ___ king
PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER
10/16
© 2015 Universal Uclick www.upuzzles.com
ON TRACK By Jennifer T. Trefow
10/17
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek
Unscramble these four Jumbles, one letter to each square, to form four ordinary words.
SLAFK ©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.
SAREO DUEXLE
TUTELO Print your answer here: Yesterday’s
Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app
Demanding passengers buckle up is important
| 5A
Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.
(Answers Monday) Jumbles: SCARF LUCKY ATTAIN POLICY Answer: Everyone loved Leonard Nimoy’s role as a Vulcan and thought he was — “SPOCKTACULAR”
BECKER ON BRIDGE
Religious Directory
AFRICAN CAN METHODIST EPISCOPAL
St Luke African Methodist Episcopal 900 New York Street 785-841-0847 Rev. Verdell Taylor, Jr. Sun. 11:00 am, Sun. School 10:00 am Bible Study Wed. 12:30 pm
ANGLICAN
Lawrence Anglican Mission Meadowlark Chapel 4440 Bauer Farm Rd Saturday, 3:30 PM 816-797-2237 www.stjamesanglican.net
BIBLE
Community Bible Church 906 N 1464 Rd. Pastor Shaun LePage Worship 10:30 am community-bible.org
Lawrence University Ward (Student)
Lawrence Bible Chapel
505 Monterey Way *785-841-2607 John Scollon 785-841-5271 Lord’s Supper Sunday 9am Sun. School 10:10am Bible Hour 11:10am Supper: 6:15 PM; Prayer meeting 7pm
BUDDHIST
Kansas Zen Center
ASSEMBLY OF GOD
Calvary Temple Assembly of God
606 W. 29th Terrace 785-832-2817 Pastor Don Goatlay Sunday Service 10:30 am & 6:30 pm Wed Service 6:30 pm
Eudora Assembly Of God 827 Elm Street 785-542-2182 Pastor Glenn Weld Sunday Worship 10:30 am Sunday Evening 7:00 pm
1423 New York St. Guiding Teacher Judy Roitman Sunday 9:30 am - 11:30 am Orientation for beginners 9 am kansaszencenter.org
CATHOLIC
Annunciation Catholic Church 740 N 6th Street Baldwin City (785) 594-3700 Fr. Brandon Farrar Sunday 10:30 am & 6:00 pm www.annunciationchurch.org
Corpus Christi Catholic Church
Lawrence Assembly of God 3200 Clinton Pkwy 785-843-7189 Pastor Rick Burwick Sunday 10:00 am www.lawrence3620church.com
6001 Bob Billings Pkwy (785) 843-6286 Fr. Michael Mulvany Sat. 4:00 pm * Sun. 8:30 am & 10:00 am www.cccparish.org
Holy Family Catholic Church
New Life Assembly Of God Church
5th & Baker Baldwin City (785) 594-3045 Mark L. Halford Sun. 11:00 am 6 pm Wed. Family Night 6 pm
Williamstown Assembly of God 1225 Oak St. 785-597-5228 Pastor Rick Burch am wagc@williamstownag.org Sunday Worship 10:30 am
311 E 9th Street, Eudora 785-542-2788 Fr. Pat Riley Service Sat. 5:00 pm Sun. 9:30 am holyfamilyeudora@sunflower.com
St. John Evangelist Catholic Church 1229 Vermont ST 785.843.0109 www.saint-johns.net Weekend Mass: Sat 4:30 pm Sun. 7 am, 8:30 am, 10:30 am, 5 pm
CHRISTIAN
BAHA’I FAITH
Lawrence Heights Christian Church
Baha’i Faith
Baha’i Worship Service most Sundays at 10-00 Call 785-843-2703 or friendsoflawrencebahais@gmail.com
2321 Peterson Road 785-843-1729 Pastor Steve Koberlein Sunday Worship 8:45 am & 10:30 am Lawrence-heights.org
BAPTIST
Morning Star Christian Church
First Regular Missionary Baptist Church 1646 Vermont St • 843-5811 Pastor Arsenial Runion Sunday School 9:30 am Wednesday 7:00 pm Prayer Service and Bible Study
998 N 1771 Rd. 785-749-0023 Pastor John McDermott Worship 9:00 am & 11:00 am www.msclawrence.com
North Lawrence Christian Church
Fellowship Baptist Church 710 Locust Street 785-331-2299 Sunday School 9:45 am Worship 11:00 am & 6:30 pm Wednesday Prayer 7:00 pm
Lawrence Baptist Temple
Ninth Street Missionary Baptist Church 901 Tennessee St (785) 843-6472 Pastor Delmar A. White Sun. School 9:30 am * Worship 10:45 am nsmbclk.org
BAPTIST - AMERICAN
First American Baptist Church 1330 Kasold Dr. * 785-843-0020 Rev. Matthew Sturtevant www.firstbaptistlawrence.com Sunday Worship: 8:30 a.m. Sunday School: 10:45 a.m.
CHRISTIAN CHURCH DISCIPLES OF CHRIST First Christian Church 1000 Kentucky Street 785-843-0679 www.fcclawrence.org Reverend Dale Walling Sunday 9am & 11am
Church Of Christ
201 N. Michigan St. 785-838-9795 Elders Tom Griffin & Calvin Spencer Sunday 10 am & 6:00 pm, Wed. 7 pm www.lawrencecoc.org
BAPTIST - INDEPENDENT Heritage Baptist Church
Church Of Christ of Baldwin City 820 High Street, Baldwin City (785) 594-4246 Sunday Worship 11:00 am
1781 E 800th Rd. (785) 887-2200 Dr. Scott Hanks Sunday Worship 10:30 am www.heritagebaptistchurch.cc
Southside Church of Christ
BAPTIST - SOUTHERN
Cornerstone Southern Baptist Church 802 West 22nd Terrace (785) 843-0442 Pastor Gary O’Flannagan Sun. School 9:30 am * Worship 10:45 am www.cornerstonelawrence.com
Eudora Baptist Church
525 W 20th Street 785-542-2734 Pastor Jeff Ingle Sun. School 9:00 am * Worship 10:15 am eudorabc.org
Corner of 25th & Missouri 785-843-0770 Chris Newton, Minister Sun. Bible School 9:15 am Sun. Worship 10:20 am & 5:00 pm Wed. Bible Study 7:00 pm
CHURCH OF GOD
Bridgepointe Community Church 601 W 29th Terrace Lawrence (785) 843-9565 Pastor Dennis Carnahan Sunday 10:45 am www.bridgepointcc.com
1470 N 1000 Rd. 785-843-3940 Bob Giffin, Senior Pastor Celebration & Praise Service 10:15 am www.lawrencefirstnaz.org
COMMUNITY OF CHRIST Lawrence Community of Christ
711 W. 23rd in the Malls Shopping Center 785-843-7535 Pastor Marilyn Myers Sunday Worship 10:00 am
University Community Of Christ 1900 University Drive 785-843-8427 Pastor Nancy Zahniser Sunday Worship 10:00 am Sunday Classtime 9:00 am
EPISCOPAL
St. Margaret’s Episcopal Church 5700 W. 6th St. 785-865-5777 Father Matt Zimmermann 8 am & 10 am Holy Eucharist www.saintmargaret.org
1011 Vermont St (785) 843-6166 The Reverend Rob Baldwin, Rector 8 am; 10:30 am; 6:00 pm Solemn High Mass www.trinitylawrence.org
EVANGELICAL FREE CHURCH OF AMERICA Christ Community Church
1100 Kasold Drive 785-842-7600 Jeff Barclay Pastor Sun. Worship 9:30 am & 10:30 am www.ccclawrence.org
ISLAMIC
Islamic Center Of Lawrence
1802 E 19th St * 843-8765 Sun. 1:30 pm Public Talk & Watchtower Study
River Heights Congregation
1802 E 19th St * 843-8765 Sun. 10:00 am Public Talk & Watchtower Study Tues. 7:30, TMS, & Service Mtg
Chabad Center for Jewish Life 1203 West 19th St. Lawrence 785-832-TORA (8672) www.JewishKU.com “Your Source for Anything Jewish!” 917 Highland Drive 785-841-7636 www.LawrenceJCC.org Worship Friday 7:30pm Religious School Sunday 9:30am
3400 S. Iowa | 843-7700
Kastl Plumbing Inc. 841-2112
2815 West 6th
843-1878
Centenary United Methodist Church 245 North Elm Street 785-843-1756 Pastor Daniel Norwood Sunday Worship 11:00 am centenarylawrence@yahoo.com
1501 Massachusetts St 785-843-7066 New Pastor Moon-Hee Chung Sun. School 9:30 am * Worship 10:45 am www.centralumclawrence.org 297 E. 2200 Rd. Eudora 785-883-2130 Rev. Lane Bailey Worship 9:00 am
2084 N 1300th Rd. Eudora 785-542-3200 * www.eudoraumc.org Sunday Worship 9:30 am Sunday School Children & Youth 10:15 am Adult Spiritual Formation Group 8:30 & 10:40 am
Downtown 946 Vermont St. Rev. Dr. Tom Brady Pastor Traditional 10:30 am Contemporary 9:30 am West Campus 867 Highway 40 Contemporary 9:00 am & 11:00 am www.fumclawrence.org
2211 Inverness Dr. * 785-843-3014 Pastor Ted Mosher Worship 2.0 9:30 am Classic Worship-11:00 am www.gslc-lawrence.org
Oread Friends Meeting 1146 Oregon Street Loring Henderson, Clerk 785-764-2095 Meeting for worship, 10:00 am Sunday www.oreadfriends.org
At Bridge Pointe Community 601 W. 29 Terrace 10:30 a.m. Sunday Pastor Paul Gray 785-766-3624 www.newlifelawrence.com
UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST Unitarian Fellowship of Lawrence
New Hope Fellowship
1263 N 1100 Rd. (785) 842-3339 Rev. Jill Jarvis 9:30 am Program & RE; 11:00 am Service www.uufl.net
1449 Kasold Dr. Lawrence 785-331-HOPE (4673) Darrell Brazell Pastor 10:15 am Sundays www.newhopelawrence.com
UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST - UCC
946 New Hampshire St. 785-843-4188 Lts. Matt & Marisa McCluer Sun. School 9:30 am, Worship 10:45 am lawrence.salvationarmy.us
Plymouth Congregational Church, UCC 925 Vermont Street 785-843-3220 Rev. Dr. Peter Luckey Sun. Worship 9:30 am & 11:00 am www.plymouthlawrence.com
United Light Church 1515 West Main Street Lawrence, KS 66044 785-393-3539
St John’s United Church-Christ 396 E 900th Rd. Baldwin City (785) 594-3478 Rev. Lew Hinshaw Sunday School 10:00 am Worship 11:00 am
Velocity Church
fresh. modern. relevant. 940 New Hampshire, Lawrence, KS Meeting at Lawrence Arts Center Sundays @ 9:30 am & 11:00 am www.findvelocity.org
St Paul United Church-Christ 738 Church St. Eudora 785-542-2785 Rev. Shannah McAleer Sunday Worship 10:00 am stpaulucceudora.com
UNITY
Unity Church of Lawrence
Christ Covenant Reformed Presbyterian Church
402 Elmore Street, Lecompton 785-887-6327 Pastor Billie Blair Sunday 8:30 am & 10:45 am www.lecomptonumc.org
2312 Harvard Road; Lawrence (785) 766-7796 Pastor John M. McFarland Sun. Worship 10:45 am; Classes at 9:30 am www.ChristCovenantChurchRPC.org
Lawrence Wesleyan Church
Clinton Presbyterian Church
Stull United Methodist Church
1596 E 250 Rd. Lecompton (785) 887-6521 Pastor Faye Wagner Worship 11:00am * Sun. School 10:00am www.stullumc.org
900 Madeline Lane 785-841-1447 Sunday Meditation Service 9:30 am Sunday Worship 11:00 am Sunday Child/Nursery Care Available Wednesday Meditation 7:00 pm Moment of Inspiration 785-843-8832 www.unityoflawrence.org
WESLEYAN
PRESBYTERIAN - USA
3705 Clinton Parkway 785-841-5446 Pastor Nate Rovenstine Worship 9:00, 10:00 & 11:15 am lawrencewesleyan.com
588 N 1200 Rd. Pastor Patrick Yancey Worship Sunday 11:00 am www.clintonchurch.net
294 East 900th Rd. Baldwin City 785-594-7598 Pastor Changsu Kim Worship 8:15 & 10:30 wordenumc.com
NON-DENOMINATIONAL
1103 Main St. Eudora KS 66025 785-312-4263 Sunday 10:30 am Wednesdays 6:30 pm
Immanuel Lutheran Church
Christ International Church
Country Community Church
878 Locust St Lawrence 913-205-8304 Pastor, John Hart Sun. School 9 am, Fellowship 10 am, Worship 10:30 am
Eagle Rock Church
2700 Lawrence Ave 785-843-8181 * www.rlclks.org Sunday School 9:00 am Sunday Worship 10:00 am Wed. Evening Worship 7:00 pm
1387 N. 1300 Rd. Lawrence, KS 66046 785-393-6791 www.eaglerocklawrence.com Sundays at 10:00 am
Action Plumbing
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PLUMBING, APPLIANCE HEATING & AIR Lawrence: 843-9559 aceplumbingkansas.com
1115 Massachusetts www.fuzzystacoshop.com
Dale & Ron’s Auto Service
integritymidwestins.com
Great Harvest Bread Co. 807 Vermont Downtown Lawrence
785-749-2227
open daily
609 Massachusetts (785) 843-8593
24 Hour Answering Service Connect Now, Operators Standing By
841-0111
700 Wakarusa Drive 785-841-5685 www.mustardseedchurch.com Wed. Youth Service 7:00 pm Sun. Morning Service 10:00 am
REFORMED-PRESBYTERIAN
LUTHERAN - MISSOURI SYNOD
841-4722
2355 N 1100th Rd. 2 Mi. South. 11/2 Mi. East Eudora Rev. Darin Kearns Pastor Sunday School 9:30 am Sunday Worship 10:30 am
1204 Oread Avenue ( 2nd floor) 785-218-7663 Rev. Dr. Joshua Lollar Sunday Divine Liturgy 9:30 am www.saintnicholaschurch.net
1018 Miami St Baldwin City (785) 594-6555 Rev. Kate Cordes Sunday Worship 11:00 am Church School 9:45 am
P.O. Box 550 Lawrence KS 66044 785-749-2100 info@calledtogreatness.com www.calledtogreatness.com
Carpet Cleaning
1420 Wakarusa Suite 202 Lawrence, KS 66049. • 785-841-5310
Hesper Friends Church
Saint Nicholas Orthodox Church
Ives Chapel United Methodist
1245 New Hampshire St. 785-843-4150 The Rev. Brian Elster, Lead Pastor Sun. 8:30 & 11:00am; Wed., 6:30 p.m. www.tlclawrence.org
wempebros.com
RELIGIOUS SOCIETY OF FRIENDS
Called to Greatness Ministries
Trinity Lutheran Church
Absolutely The Best Steak In Lawrence
GRACE HOSPICE
998 N 1771 Rd. 785-749-0023 Pastor John McDermott Worship 9:00 am & 11:00 am www.msclawrence.com
ORTHODOX - EASTERN
Worden United Methodist Church
Good Shepherd Lutheran Church
Wempe Bros. Construction Co.
Grace Evangelical Presbyterian Church 3312 Calvin Drive 785-843-2005 Pastor William D. Vogler Worship 8:15 am & 10:45 am www.gepc.org
The Salvation Army
Eudora United Methodist Church
Longhorn Steakhouse 843-7000
PRESBYTERIAN-EVANGELICAL
911 Massachusetts Basement below Kinkos 785-838-9093 Gabriel Alvarado Worship 10:30 am AWANA, Wednesday, 6:00
New Life In Christ Church
LUTHERAN - ELCA
P.O. Box 1051
Lawrence Life Fellowship
Mustard Seed Church
1724 North 692 Rood 785-594-3256 Pastor Joni Raymond Sunday School 9:30 am Sunday Worship 10:30 am
KASTL
Westside 66 & Car Wash
96 Highway 40 * 785-887-6823 January Kiefer Pastor Traditional Sun. 9:00am Contemporary call for information www.bigspringsumc.org
722 New Hampshire Street (785) 749-5397 Rabbi’s Neal Schuster www.kuhillel.org
Redeemer Lutheran Church
Crown Automotive
1024 Kasold Drive (785) 843-1504 Rev. Debbie Garber Worship 9:55 am * Sun. School 10:15 www.westsidelawrence.org
Vinland United Methodist Church
K U Hillel House
Praise Temple Church of God in Christ 315 E. 7th St. * 749-0985 Pastor Paul Winn Jr. SS 10:00 am * Worship 11:15 am Wed. & Fri. Bible Teaching 7:00 pm Call early for ride to church
Big Springs United Methodist Church
Lecompton United Methodist Church
JEWISH
Victory Bible Church
1942 Massachusetts St www.victorybiblechurch.net (785) 841-3437 Pastor Leo Barbee Sunday Worship 10:30 am
METHODIST - UNITED
First United Methodist Church
Southern Hills Congregation
West Side Presbyterian Church
416 Lincoln Street 785-842-4926 Pastor Dan Nicholson Sun. Worship 10:00 am * Wed. 7:00 pm lawrencechristiancenter.org
Morning Star Church
704 8th Street; Baldwin Rev. Paul Badcock Sunday School each Sunday 9:30 am Traditional Worship 8:30 am Contemporary Worship 10:45 am Combined Worship 10:45 last Sunday month
646 Alabama Street * 749-0951 Rev. William A Dulin Sun. School 10:30 am Worship 12:15 pm Tue. 7:00 pm Prayer & Bible Study Thur. 7:00 pm Worship & Pastoral Teaching
Calvary Church Of God In Christ
950 E. 21st Street 785-832-9200 Pastor Jami Moss Sun School 10 am *Worship 11 am Thurs Bible Study 7 pm
First United Methodist Church
4300 W. 6th Street (785) 843-8167 Pastor Joe Stiles Worship Service 8:30 am & 11:00 am www.fsbcfamily.com
First Southern Baptist Church
Lawrence Free Methodist Church
Clearfield United Methodist Church
Trinity Episcopal Church
2415 Clinton Parkway 785-843-4171 Rev. Kent Winters-Hazelton Sun. Worship 8:30 & 11:00 am www.firstpreslawrence.org
Lawrence Christian Center
METHODIST
Central United Methodist Church
2104 Bob Billings Pkwy (785) 843-0620 Pastor Randy Weinkauf Wors. with Holy Communion 8:30 am & 11:00 am Sun. School & Christian Ed 9:45 am Nursery Available & Wheelchair Accessible Ministry to Blind Outreach 3 Thur. 5:30 pm www.immanuel-lawrence.com
CHURCH OF GOD IN CHRIST
615 Lincoln St 785-841-8614 Pastor Joanna Harader Service 10:30 am peacepreacher.wordpress.com
Lawrence Indian Methodist Church
Lawrence First Church of the Nazarene
First Presbyterian Church
906 North 1464 Rd. * 843-3325 Pastor: Ron Channell Worship 10:30 am Afterglow & Youth Group 6:00 pm www.FCLHome.org
CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
Lawrence Jewish Community Congregation
CHURCH OF CHRIST
Family Church Of Lawrence
Peace Mennonite Church
3655 West 10th St. Lawrence 1st Ward 785-842-4019, 2nd Ward 785-3315912, Wakarusa Valley 785-842-1283 LDS.org, Mormon.org, institute.lds.org
JEHOVAH’S WITNESSES
883 E 800 Rd Lawrence, Ks Jane Flora-Swick, Pastor Worship 10:30 * Sun. School 10:45am www.lonestarbrethren.com
MENNONITE MENN
3001 Lawrence Ave 785-842-2343 Pastor Bill Bump Blended 9:00 am * Contemporary 10:35 am www.lfmchurch.org
Perry Christian Church
Lone Star Church of the Brethren
700 Chapel Street 785-594-4101 Pastor Richard Austin Sunday Worship 10:30 am llbt115@embarqmail.com.
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints
1917 Naismith Drive (785) 749-1638 Najabat Abbasi Director Friday 1:30 pm www.islamicsocietylawrence.org
CHURCH OF THE BRETHREN
Lighthouse Baptist Church
Church Of Jesus Christ Of LDS 1629 West 19th St. Lawrence 785-832-9622 Sacrament Worship 11:00am LDS.org, Mormon.org, institute.lds.org
7th and Elm Charles Waugh, Minister Bible School 10:00am Worship 10:55 am www.nlawrencechristianchurch.com
603 East Front Street Perry Kansas 785-597-5493 Pastors Will Eickman and Alan Hamer
3201 W 31st Street Rev. Gary L. Myers Pastor Sun. School & Worship 10:00 am Sun. Evening Worship 6:00 pm Wed. Evening 7:30 pm
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER-DAY SAINTS
Contact: amanda@kwnews.com or 1-800-293-4709
930 E. 27th St.
843-1691
(785) 843-5111
Marks Jewelers. 817 Mass. 843-4266
Opinion
Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com l Saturday, October 17, 2015 Lawrence City Commission Mike Amyx, mayor 2312 Free State Lane 66047 843-3089 (H) 842-9425 (W) mikeamyx515@hotmail.com Leslie Soden, vice mayor 715 Connecticut, 66044 (913) 890-3647 lsoden@lawrenceks.org Stuart Boley, 1812 W. 21st Terr., 66046, 979-6699 sboley@lawrenceks.org Matthew Herbert 523 Kasold Dr., 66049 550-2085 matthewjherbert@gmail.com Lisa Larsen, 1117 Avalon., 66044, 331-9162 llarsen@lawrenceks.org
Douglas County Commission Jim Flory, 540 N. 711 Road, Lawrence 66047; 842-0054 jimflory@sunflower.com Mike Gaughan, 304 Stetson Circle, 66049; 856-1662; mgaughan@douglas-county.com Nancy Thellman, 1547 N. 2000 Road 66046; 832-0031 nthellman@douglas-county.com
Lawrence School Board Vanessa Sanburn, president 856-1233 765 Ash St., 66044 vsanburn@usd497.org Marcel Harmon, vice president; 550-7749 753 Lauren Street, 66044 mharmon@usd497.org
Game over; Clinton is the nominee Washington — I repeat: Unless she’s indicted, Hillary Clinton will win the Democratic nomination. I wrote that six weeks ago, amid fevered dreams of a Clinton collapse and a Joe Biden rescue. That those were a mirage is all the more obvious after Tuesday’s debate. The reason, then as now, is simple: Clinton has no competition. She’s up against three ciphers and one endearing, gesticulating, slightly unmoored old man. If Joe Biden was ever thinking of getting into the race, he’d be crazy to do so now. It’s over. Indeed, even before the debate, Clinton’s numbers had stabilized. It began with Kevin McCarthy’s gaffe of the decade. That gave her a perpetual getout-of-jail-free card that she adroitly deploys whenever the email issue arises. Her technique is flawless: a few meaningless phrases about having made a mistake, taking responsibility and being transparent, blah blah, followed by (I paraphrase) “but look at the larger picture, even Kevin McCarthy admits it’s a partisan witch hunt.” QED. At the debate, Bernie Sanders sealed the deal with a thunderous “the American people are sick and tired of hearing about your damn emails.” That rendered the issue officially off-limits to all Democrats. File closed. End of story. Of course, it will be featured in the general election, but we’re talking here about her getting the nomination.
Charles Krauthammer letters@charleskrauthammer.com
“
She’s up against three ciphers and one endearing, gesticulating, slightly unmoored old man. If Joe Biden was ever thinking of getting into the race, he’d be crazy to do so now.”
In gratuitously granting her absolution, Sanders garnered points for high-mindedness. But he’d already cornered the highmindedness market. Sanders was right to call this move dumb politics. His declaration simply and definitively conceded the race to Clinton. Leo Durocher said nice guys finish last. Sanders will finish second, which in this case is the same thing. Clinton won the debate because it didn’t change the dynamic. It froze the race and she’s far in the lead. It doesn’t matter that her lead has shrunk from 50 points to 20. Twenty points is a landslide. She remains a lousy candidate but she is an excellent de-
bater — smart, quick, strategic and extremely practiced. Eight years ago, she debated Barack Obama 25 times. Tuesday night, she successfully bobbed and weaved and pivoted. She was at her most impressive, however, when she whacked Sanders upside the head — twice — right out of the box. He didn’t know what hit him. At the very start, she attacked from the left on gun control, from the right on capitalism. She simply said the magic words — small business, too? — and he beat an unsteady retreat. In general, Sanders was wild and wavy and loud and not very nimble. After all, how much practice do you get when for 35 years you’ve been campaigning as a social democrat in Vermont, America’s Denmark? Sanders is good on an empty podium taking on invisible billionaires. Put him up against a Clinton and he’s lost. He did make history of a sort, however. Every debate has its moment — the sound bite that lives forever (or until the next debate, whichever comes first). His “damn emails” thunderbolt is the first such immortal line to be delivered by one candidate that seals victory for another. The other three candidates hardly registered. Lincoln Chafee, currently polling at 0.3 points (minus-10 Celsius), played Ross Perot’s 1992 running mate, Adm. James Stockdale, who opened his vice presidential debate with: “Who am I? Why am I here?”
100
Jill Fincher, 865-5870 1700 Inverness Dr. 66047 jfincher@usd497.org Rick Ingram 864-9819 1510 Crescent Rd. 66044 ringram@usd497.org Shannon Kimball 840-7722 257 Earhart Circle 66049 skimball@usd497.org
Area legislators Rep. Barbara Ballard (D-44th District) Room 451-S, State Capitol, Topeka 66612 Lawrence: 841-0063; Topeka: (785) 296-7697 barbara.ballard@house.ks.gov
Rep. John Wilson (D-10th District) 54-S, State Capitol, Topeka 66612 Topeka: (785) 296-7652; john.wilson@house.ks.gov Rep. Ken Corbet (R-54th District) 179-N, State Capitol, Topeka 66612 Topeka: (785) 296-7679; ken.corbet@house.ks.gov Sen. Marci Francisco (D-2nd District) Room 134-E, State Capitol, Topeka 66612 Lawrence: 842-6402; Topeka: (785) 296-7364 Marci.Francisco@senate.ks.gov Sen. Tom Holland (D-3rd District) Room 134-E, State Capitol, Topeka 66612 Lawrence: 865-2786; Topeka: 296-7372 Tom.Holland@senate.ks.gov Sen. Anthony Hensley (D-10th District) Room 318-E, State Capitol, Topeka 66612 Topeka: (785) 296-3245 Anthony.Hensley@senate. ks.gov
— Charles Krauthammer is a columnist for Washington Post Writers Group.
From the Lawrence Daily Journal-World for Oct. 17, 1915: “Foreshadowing an unprecedented increase in the price of years drugs which already had quaago drupled since the beginning of IN 1915 the war in Europe, a druggist jobbing salesman in Lawrence received a wire from his house today notifying him to stop quotations entirely on glycerine and quinine. Not only is an increase in price imminent, but the question will shortly be one of getting a supply of the drugs at all, in the opinion of this salesman.... The inquiries indicate that the visible supply of these chemicals is becoming exhausted, and that it will shortly be necessary to gather up all that can be procured and use them only for the most necessary purposes. This indicates also that the price at which they will be sold will be almost prohibitive and will be much higher than were ever heard of before.”
Jessica Beeson, 691-6678 1720 Mississippi St. 66044 jbeeson@usd497.org
Rep. Dennis “Boog” Highberger (D-46th District) Room 174-W, State Capitol, Topeka 66612 Topeka: (785) 296-7122 BoogHighberger@house.ks.gov
Democratic National Committee Chair Debbie Wasserman Schultz came out a winner. She insisted, despite the squawking of Martin O’Malley and others, on no more than six debates. Who needs the other five? Tuesday night settled the issue. When there’s a knockout in the first round, you stop the fight. This is not to say that by objective standards — i.e., against minimally competent competition — Clinton did so brilliantly. After all, to prepare the ground and pre-empt any attack from the left, she preceded the debate with a supremely cynical abandonment of both the Keystone XL pipeline and the Trans-Pacific Partnership, which as secretary of state she’d pronounced “the gold standard” of trade deals. It did smooth her debate night. But by so transparently compounding her inauthenticity problem, the flip-flops will cost her in the general election. But that’s for later. Right now, game over. Amid the playacting between today and Clinton’s coronation next summer, we can joyfully savor the most delightful moment of the debate, when we were reminded by Anderson Cooper that Sanders had honeymooned in the Soviet Union. Springtime for Brezhnev in Yaroslavl. Attention: Mel Brooks.
OLD HOME TOWN
Kristie Adair, 840-7989 4924 Stoneback Place, 66047 kadair@usd497.org
Rep. Tom Sloan (R-45th District) Room 149-S, State Capitol, Topeka 66612 Lawrence: 841-1526; Topeka: (785) 296-7654 tom.sloan@house.ks.gov
7A
— Compiled by Sarah St. John
Read more Old Home Town at LJWorld.com/ news/lawrence/history/old_home_town.
PUBLIC FORUM
Voting issue To the editor: I look forward to Secretary of State Kobach’s explanation of how requiring proof of citizenship for voter registration will prevent people from double voting. Judy Roitman, Lawrence
Parking hammer To the editor: The disaster that is the Here @ Kansas development near Memorial Stadium deepens (Journal-World, Oct. 15). “At this point,” the acting city manager doesn’t “know that we have received a definite answer” from the developer “to understand the status of things.”At this point. Ah, the camel’s nose. To further reassure us, she said that any modification to the parking plan would have to receive City Commission approv-
al. And for even further reassurance, Chad Lawhorn writes, “the city ultimately holds the hammer on this project. … (The development) can’t be used until the city issues an occupancy permit.” Vastly reassuring — until one recollects how many times, while holding the hammer, the city has swung it. None? My suggestion is that they swing it promptly, letting the developer know immediately that, without onsite parking to the number earlier agreed on, there will be no occupancy permit, thus giving the developer the chance before more construction takes place, to change design plans if necessary to provide onsite parking. Oh, sure, it might be nice to rescind the tax rebate, but therein lies another Jarndyce v. Jarndyce. Probably best to let that City Commission mistake stand but not commit another by fudging the parking. Bill Mitchell, Lawrence
Journal-World Established 1891
W.C. Simons (1871-1952); Publisher, 1891-1944 Dolph Simons Sr. (1904-1989) Publisher, 1944-1962; Editor, 1950-1979
Dolph C. Simons Jr., Editor Chad Lawhorn, Managing editor Kathleen Johnson, Advertising Manager Ann Gardner, Editorial Page Editor
Ed Ciambrone, Production and Circulation Manager
To the editor: I would like to see the Journal-World impose a temporary moratorium on “religious witness” in its letters to the editor section. If these missives were few and far between, the discriminate reader might consign them to the category of contrary opinion that enriches a diverse community such as ours. Unfortunately, though, they abound, particularly on the part of one writer whose jury-rigged jeremiads appear with the frequency of a regular column. And too often they reveal a blatant or thinly veiled subtext of homophobia, which attributes our supposed condemnation as nation and community to the presence of certain citizens among us. Now, many of us think that this country is indeed going to hell in a handbasket, but because of issues that can
What the Lawrence Journal-World stands for
LAWRENCE
®
Respite request
l Accurate and fair news reporting.
No mixing of editorial opinion with reporting of the news. l Safeguarding the rights of all citizens regardless of race, creed or economic stature. l Sympathy and understanding for all who are disadvantaged or oppressed. l Exposure of any dishonesty in public affairs. l Support of projects that make our community a better place to live. l
be documented and discussed in rational secular terms without casting aspersions on the personal lives of our neighbors. I realize that there might be an issue of free speech involved here. That is why I am proposing a brief moratorium rather than an outright ban. So no censorship, please! Just exercise your editorial prerogative to give us a breather from our local Bible-thumpers. Bill Getz, Lawrence
Letters Policy
The Journal-World welcomes letters to the Public Forum. Letters should be 250 words or less, be of public interest and should avoid name-calling and libelous language. The Journal-World reserves the right to edit letters, as long as viewpoints are not altered. By submitting letters, you grant the Journal-World a nonexclusive license to publish, copy and distribute your work, while acknowledging that you are the author of the work. Letters must bear the name, address and telephone number of the writer. Letters may be submitted by mail to Box 888, Lawrence, KS, 66044 or by email to: letters@ljworld.com
THE WORLD COMPANY
Dolph C. Simons Jr., Chairman Dolph C. Simons III, President, Newspapers Division
Dan C. Simons, President, Digital Division
Scott Stanford, General Manager
8A
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WEATHER
.
Saturday, October 17, 2015
L awrence J ournal -W orld
DATEBOOK
Family Owned.
TODAY
SUNDAY
MONDAY
TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY
Times of clouds and sun
Partly sunny and windy
Partly sunny, windy and warm
Windy in the a.m.; partly sunny
Pleasantly warm with some sun
High 62° Low 46° POP: 0%
High 71° Low 53° POP: 5%
High 76° Low 58° POP: 5%
High 79° Low 58° POP: 15%
High 79° Low 54° POP: 25%
Wind SE 6-12 mph
Wind S 10-20 mph
Wind S 15-25 mph
Wind S 10-20 mph
Wind SSW 7-14 mph
POP: Probability of Precipitation
McCook 73/44
Kearney 68/44
Oberlin 71/50
Clarinda 61/41
Lincoln 66/44
Grand Island 67/44
Beatrice 64/46
Centerville 57/36
St. Joseph 63/41 Chillicothe 61/40
Sabetha 62/46
Concordia 68/49
Kansas City Marshall Manhattan 61/47 61/40 Salina 66/46 Oakley Kansas City Topeka 70/50 72/54 63/46 Lawrence 61/44 Sedalia 62/46 Emporia Great Bend 62/41 65/45 71/49 Nevada Dodge City Chanute 61/47 72/50 Hutchinson 65/46 Garden City 70/48 76/50 Springfield Wichita Pratt Liberal Coffeyville Joplin 63/43 70/50 69/49 76/52 64/44 67/44 Hays Russell 72/49 70/49
Goodland 73/49
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
LAWRENCE ALMANAC
Through 8 p.m. Friday.
Temperature High/low Normal high/low today Record high today Record low today
65°/36° 67°/45° 87° in 1921 26° in 1976
Precipitation in inches 24 hours through 8 p.m. yest. 0.00 Month to date 0.01 Normal month to date 1.86 Year to date 33.63 Normal year to date 34.60
REGIONAL CITIES
Today Sun. Today Sun. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Atchison 62 45 pc 71 55 pc Independence 66 46 pc 72 51 pc 66 49 pc 76 57 pc Belton 60 46 pc 67 52 pc Fort Riley 60 45 pc 66 50 pc Burlington 64 47 pc 72 52 pc Olathe Coffeyville 67 44 pc 72 49 pc Osage Beach 61 37 pc 65 47 pc 64 47 pc 73 54 pc Concordia 68 49 pc 78 57 pc Osage City 62 45 pc 70 53 pc Dodge City 72 50 pc 79 56 pc Ottawa 70 50 pc 76 56 pc Holton 63 47 pc 74 55 pc Wichita Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
NATIONAL FORECAST
SUN & MOON
Today Sun. 7:32 a.m. 7:33 a.m. 6:40 p.m. 6:39 p.m. 11:39 a.m. 12:32 p.m. 9:58 p.m. 10:49 p.m.
First
Oct 20
Full
Last
New
Oct 27
Nov 3
Nov 11
LAKE LEVELS
As of 7 a.m. Friday Lake
Clinton Perry Pomona
Level (ft)
877.03 892.61 973.65
Discharge (cfs)
7 200 15
Shown are today’s noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for today.
Fronts Cold
INTERNATIONAL CITIES Cities Acapulco Amsterdam Athens Baghdad Bangkok Beijing Berlin Brussels Buenos Aires Cairo Calgary Dublin Geneva Hong Kong Jerusalem Kabul London Madrid Mexico City Montreal Moscow New Delhi Oslo Paris Rio de Janeiro Rome Seoul Singapore Stockholm Sydney Tokyo Toronto Vancouver Vienna Warsaw Winnipeg
Today Hi Lo W 88 78 t 51 43 sh 76 64 pc 96 67 s 91 77 pc 76 53 pc 49 38 pc 50 37 c 64 47 s 90 69 s 66 46 pc 53 45 pc 53 39 c 87 74 s 83 64 s 77 48 s 57 49 pc 74 57 pc 65 54 pc 43 26 sn 46 37 c 94 73 s 49 38 pc 55 41 sh 78 69 c 66 51 pc 76 51 s 91 79 pc 47 30 pc 76 65 t 71 62 r 45 27 pc 61 52 c 50 39 sh 55 44 sh 46 33 s
Hi 88 55 77 95 90 63 50 50 68 90 60 54 55 86 84 71 59 71 63 41 48 95 50 53 74 69 75 91 49 72 74 44 59 52 51 58
Sun. Lo W 80 t 47 sh 65 pc 64 s 77 t 43 pc 41 sh 42 sh 53 s 70 pc 43 c 41 pc 40 sh 73 pc 66 pc 49 pc 48 pc 55 c 53 pc 26 pc 38 c 73 s 39 s 41 s 68 c 56 pc 52 s 79 pc 35 pc 64 pc 61 s 27 pc 50 c 43 sh 43 sh 41 s
Warm Stationary Showers T-storms
7:30
Flurries
Snow
Ice
Today Sun. Today Sun. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W 67 43 s 68 44 pc Albuquerque 71 52 pc 74 54 pc Memphis Miami 84 75 t 85 75 c Anchorage 48 41 r 47 40 c Milwaukee 50 34 s 53 44 s Atlanta 68 44 s 63 43 s Minneapolis 54 35 s 62 49 s Austin 87 49 s 83 48 s 62 35 s 62 36 pc Baltimore 57 34 pc 54 32 pc Nashville New Orleans 77 58 s 73 59 s Birmingham 69 43 s 68 41 s 56 38 pc 51 36 pc Boise 77 54 pc 68 49 sh New York 65 44 pc 73 54 pc Boston 56 36 pc 48 33 pc Omaha 88 67 pc 81 66 pc Buffalo 44 31 c 44 29 sn Orlando 57 39 pc 53 36 pc Cheyenne 72 43 pc 73 46 pc Philadelphia Phoenix 89 73 pc 89 70 pc Chicago 51 34 s 57 43 s Pittsburgh 49 33 c 49 30 c Cincinnati 55 30 s 56 33 s Cleveland 47 37 pc 49 34 pc Portland, ME 53 29 pc 47 25 pc Portland, OR 67 57 r 65 52 pc Dallas 81 52 s 79 53 s 72 46 c 69 42 c Denver 78 47 pc 79 49 pc Reno 62 35 s 56 34 pc Des Moines 60 39 pc 66 50 pc Richmond Sacramento 80 55 c 78 54 pc Detroit 50 31 pc 52 33 s 59 39 pc 64 46 pc El Paso 77 60 pc 81 61 pc St. Louis Salt Lake City 74 57 c 71 54 t Fairbanks 39 31 r 40 29 c 80 70 pc 80 69 pc Honolulu 89 78 sh 89 76 sh San Diego San Francisco 71 60 c 69 59 pc Houston 85 53 s 81 53 s 65 56 r 62 52 sh Indianapolis 54 31 s 58 37 pc Seattle 70 51 pc 64 49 c Kansas City 61 44 pc 70 51 pc Spokane Tucson 85 66 c 86 66 pc Las Vegas 78 67 c 76 64 t 70 47 s 75 50 pc Little Rock 71 43 pc 71 44 pc Tulsa 59 39 pc 55 38 pc Los Angeles 80 67 pc 78 66 pc Wash., DC National extremes yesterday for the 48 contiguous states High: East Mesa, AZ 99° Low: Hettinger, ND 15°
WEATHER HISTORY
WEATHER TRIVIA™
what altitude does the sky no look blue? Q: Atlonger
On Oct. 17, 1977, heavy, wet snow downed thousands of trees and cut power in the mountains of Pennsylvania.
SATURDAY Prime Time WOW DTV DISH 7 PM
Rain
-10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s National Summary: Scattered snow showers will develop across the Northeast as a cold air mass settles in to the region today. The West will remain wet with thunderstorms in the Four Corners and rain in the Pacific Northwest.
Approximately 13 miles.
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015
Precipitation
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CNBC 40 355 208 Undercover Boss MSNBC 41 356 209 Dead Men Talking CNN
44 202 200 This Is Life
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bit of both. In a memo to commissioners, the city’s planning staff says there CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A are 306 bicycle parking spaces in downtown LawAs we previously have rence, compared to 4,083 reported, the idea involves spaces for vehicles. The trying to create more memo notes that new deparking spaces for bicycles velopments in other areas in downtown Lawrence. of town would be required A plan endorsed by the to have a greater percentLawrence-Douglas County age of parking spaces than Bicycle Advisory Commit- what is currently provided tee calls for one vehicular in downtown. parking space near Ninth But one thing to keep and Massachusetts streets in mind is that the city’s to be removed and one count of bicycle parking near Eighth and Massachu- spaces does not include setts streets to be removed, the several hundred parkamong other things. The ing meter poles that line two spaces would be Massachusetts Street and replaced with bike corrals various side streets. It is that would each accommo- legal to lock your bike to date 10 bikes. those poles (as long as it is The idea is catching on not a handicapped spot), in other places, and it may and certainly many bicydo so here as well. Comclists do park their bikes on missioners aren’t slated to those poles. If those poles give final approval to the were included in the city’s idea on Tuesday, but rather analysis, the downtown they are being asked to bike parking numbers approve an application for would look different. an approximately $9,000 It should be noted grant to fund the project. though that the parking You don’t have to spend meter poles aren’t perfect much time reading the bike parking locations. letters to the editor of the Many of the poles don’t Journal-World to underallow bicyclists to use a stand that there is some U-lock to lock their bike tension brewing between to the poles. Instead, they some folks who love their have to use a cable lock automobiles and some who to secure their bikes. The desire a much more pecable locks are more susdestrian/bicycle oriented ceptible to somebody carfuture. Much of the tension rying around a pair of bolt has focused on the propos- cutters, cutting the cable al to redesign a portion of and making off with your Kasold Drive, but the tenbike. U-locks, I’m told, are sions may not be limited to preferred by some bikers. just that issue. Of course, not all vehicle How you view this bike parking spaces are perfect parking issue may boil either. down to whether you beThus far, there have lieve there is a shortage of been no discussions at bike parking in downtown City Hall about making it Lawrence — or in particu- illegal for bicyclists to use lar on Massachusetts Street the parking meter poles as parking spaces. In fact, the — or whether you think city has made accommodathis effort is more about tions to make some of the raising the visibility of bicycling as a form transpor- poles more accessible. You can add a special loop onto tation in Lawrence. City staff members who the poles to make them accessible for U-locks. have proposed the idea have described it as a little Whether adding such
loops to all parking meter poles would be more expensive than the proposed $9,000 plan, I don’t know. I have heard from some bikers that would be upset if the city did anything to make it illegal to park their bikes at the parking meter poles. It makes for convenient parking. If you believe that the parking meter poles are legitimate bike parking spaces — and I realize perhaps some folks don’t — then it is hard to argue there is a shortage of parking spaces for bicyclists on Massachusetts Street, at least not a parking shortage comparable to what vehicles face. I’ve seen many occasions when every vehicle space on Massachusetts Street has been occupied. I’ve never seen every parking meter pole on Mass. Street occupied by a bike. But as I mentioned earlier, staff members also have noted this plan is at least partially about increasing the visibility of bicycling in Lawrence. In the memo, the staff notes that replacing some vehicle parking spaces with bike corrals will help “advertise bike friendliness and bring legitimacy and visibility to bicycling for transportation.” Let me be clear: I’m not saying that is inappropriate. It may be a really good goal, and it may be a really good use of public policy to promote that goal. But, it seems to me that if that is what we are doing here, then people need to understand that is what we are doing. I suspect there are some people who don’t want to reduce downtown parking spaces unless there is an actual shortage of bicycle parking spaces.
Community Garage Sale, 7 a.m.-3 p.m., Faith & Friendship Center, Stull United Methodist Church, 1596 E 250 Road. Red Dog’s Dog Days workout, 7:30 a.m., parking lot in 800 block of Vermont Street. John Jervis, classical guitar, 8-11 a.m., Panera, 520 W. 23rd St. Lawrence Farmers’ Market, 8 a.m.-noon, 824 New Hampshire St. Paul Davis: Reflections on the 2014 Election for Governor and the Future of Kansas, 9 a.m., Lawrence Arts Center, 940 New Hampshire St. German School of Northeast Kansas, 9:3011 a.m., Bishop Seabury Academy, 4120 Clinton Parkway. Multicultural Story-
Bike
BEST BETS WOW DTV DISH 7 PM
SPORTS 7:30
8 PM
8:30
— This is an excerpt from Chad Lawhorn’s Town Talk column, which appears daily on LJWorld.com.
October 17, 2015 9 PM
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Panel discussion: Growing Up Grimm: The Grimm Brothers and the Uncanny Teenage Years, 5-6:30 p.m., Lawrence Arts Center, 940 New Hampshire St. AIM Dance Contemporary Performance: Masque of the Red Death, hourly performances starting 5-9 p.m., Castle Tea Room, 1307 Massachusetts St. Theater: “The Boy Who Left Home to Find Out About the Shivers,” 7 p.m., Black Box Theater, Lawrence Arts Center, 940 New Hampshire St. KU Theatre: “Johanna: Facing Forward,” 7:30 p.m., Crafton-Preyer Theatre, Murphy Hall, 1530 Naismith Drive. David Cook: Digital Vein Tour, 7:30 p.m., Lied Center, 1600 Stewart Drive.
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time: Spanish, 10:30-11 a.m., Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. Norman Akers: “Experiences of a Native Artist in the Mainstream,” 1 p.m., Lawrence Percolator, in the alley behind 913 Rhode Island St. Science Saturday: Rocks, minerals, and fossils, 1-3 p.m., KU Natural History Museum, 1345 Jayhawk Blvd. Great Poetry Discussion, 2 p.m., Meeting Room B, Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. Saturday Afternoon Ragtime, 2-4 p.m., Watkins Museum of History, 1047 Massachusetts St. Theater: “The Boy Who Left Home to Find Out About the Shivers,” 3 p.m., Black Box Theater, Lawrence Arts Center, 940 New Hampshire St.
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Helping Families and Friends Honor Their Loved Ones for More Than 100 Years. Serving Douglas, Franklin and Osage Counties since 1898. Baldwin City, KS Ottawa, KS Overbrook, KS 712 Ninth Street 325 S. Hickory St 730 Western Heights Drive (785) 594-3644 (785) 242-3550 (785) 665-7141
Pawn
They Found Hell (2015) Premiere.
Pawn
Movie Pawn
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›‡ Silent Hill: Revelation (2012)
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FX 56 COM 58 E! 59 CMT 60 GAC 61 BET 64 VH1 66 TRV 67 TLC 68 LIFE 69 LMN 70 FOOD 72 HGTV 73 NICK 76 DISNXD 77 DISN 78 TOON 79 DSC 81 FAM 82 NGC 83 HALL 84 ANML 85 TVL 86 TBN 90 EWTN 91 RLTV 93 CSPAN2 95 CSPAN 96 ID 101 AHC 102 OWN 103 WEA 116 TCM 162 HBO MAX SHOW ENC STRZ
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››‡ Epic (2013) Voices of Colin Farrell. ››‡ Epic (2013) Voices of Colin Farrell. Fargo ›› Tommy Boy (1995) ›› 50 First Dates (2004) Adam Sandler. Chris Rock: Never Scared Kardashian ››› Bridesmaids (2011) Kristen Wiig, Maya Rudolph. The Royals ›‡ Fool’s Gold (2008, Action) Instant Jam (N) Cops Cops Cops Cops Building Alaska Building Alaska Building Alaska Building Alaska Building Alaska 2015 BET Hip Hop Awards ›› Soul Plane (2004) Kevin Hart, Tom Arnold. Foxx The Temptations Fame brings rewards and pressures to the quintet. ››› 42 (2013) Ghost Adventures Ghost Adventures Ghost Adventures Ghost Adventures Ghost Adventures Homicide Hntr Homicide Hntr Homicide Hntr Homicide Hntr Homicide Hntr Kristy (2014) Haley Bennett. Premiere. ›› Derailed (2005) Clive Owen. Kristy (2014) Behind the Wall (2008) Lindy Booth. House of Secrets (2014, Suspense) Behind the Wall Un Un Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Buying and Selling Buying and Selling House Hunters Hunters Hunt Intl Buying and Selling Ultimate Halloween Thundermans Full H’se Full H’se Friends Friends Friends Friends Pickle Gravity Ultimate Guardi Rebels Pickle Gravity Ultimate Guardi Rebels Invisible Girl Jessie I Didn’t Gamer’s Lab Rats Austin Girl Bunk’d K.C. Dragon King/Hill King/Hill Cleve Cleve American American Fam Guy Dragon Akame Dual Survival Dual Survival Dual Survival Dual Survival Dual Survival Harry P ››› Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince (2009) Daniel Radcliffe. ››› Mulan (1998) Drugs, Inc. Drugs, Inc. Underworld, Inc. Drugs, Inc. Underworld, Inc. Bridal Wave (2015) October Kiss (2015) Ashley Williams. Golden Golden Golden Golden Dr. Jeff: RMV Yankee Jungle (N) Pit Bulls-Parole Yankee Jungle Pit Bulls-Parole Ultimate Halloween Instant Instant Raymond Raymond King King King King In Touch Hour Of Power Graham Classic Love’s Resounding Courage Stranger Pope John Paul II (Part 1 of 2) Rosary News Living Right Fatima Popes Mass Taste Taste Second Second Stanley Stanley Taste Taste Second Second Book TV After Words Book TV Book TV Land Washing Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. Capitol Hill Evil Kin “Road Kill” Hell House (N) Fatal Vows (N) Evil Kin “Road Kill” Hell House D-Day in 3D Greatest Raids D-Day in 3D Iyanla, Fix My Life Iyanla, Fix My Life Oprah: Where Now? Iyanla, Fix My Life Iyanla, Fix My Life 3 Scientists 3 Scientists Strangest Weather Strangest Weather Strangest Weather ››› Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore ›››‡ The Petrified Forest ››› The Baron of Arizona
›› Taken 3 (2014) Liam Neeson. ››‡ Escape Plan The Knick
Amy Schumer: Live The Leftovers ›› Jupiter Ascending (2015) The Affair The Affair ›››‡ Snowpiercer (2013) Chris Evans. ››› Eight Below (2006) Paul Walker. ››› The Pursuit of Happyness (2006) Wyatt Blunt Blunt Survivors Blunt Survivors Blunt Survivors
Green. Amy The Knick Homeland Enemies Closer Terminator 2
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USA TODAY — L awrence J ournal -W orld
IN MONEY
IN LIFE
VW unveiling VIN database
‘Goosebumps’ travels rocky road to big screen
10.17.15 DAMIEN MEYER, AFP/GETTY IMAGES
Odom awake, responds to Khloe
JACK BLACK BY DAN MACMEDAN, USA TODAY
PALESTINIAN PROTESTS INTENSIFY
Former NBA star took supplements that might have been spiked Martin Rogers and Alison Young USA TODAY
LAS VEGAS Lamar Odom was awake and responsive to communicative attempts from his estranged wife Khloe Kardashian at a Las Vegas hospital Friday morning, according to Odom’s college basketball coach Jim Harrick. In a telephone conversation with USA TODAY USA TODAY SPORTS Sports, Harrick Lamar Odom said Kardashian, who married the former NBA player in 2009, had texted details of a strong improvement in Odom’s condition. “She reached down and said ‘you know I love you,’ and he kind of nodded,” Harrick said. “Three or four days after being scared to death and fearing the worst, that is a little hope, a little progress. She texted me that (information).” Sexual enhancement supplements — like those reportedly taken by Odom before he collapsed at a Nevada brothel — are often spiked with powerful and
v STORY CONTINUES ON 2B
I
SAID KHATIB, AFP/GETTY IMAGES
ncidents Thursday and Friday heightened tensions between Israel and the Palestinians. Late Thursday, Palestinians set fire to Joseph’s Tomb, a religious site in the West Bank revered by some Jews as the tomb of biblical patriarch Joseph. Friday, a Palestinian impersonating a journalist stabbed an Israeli solider. The attacks came as the militant group Hamas called for a “day of rage” against Israel. Eight Israelis have been killed in Palestinian attacks over the last month, the majority of them a result of stabbings. Over the same period, 31 Palestinians were killed by Israeli fire, including 14 labeled by Israel as attackers. The rest were killed in clashes with Israeli troops. Friday, hundreds of Palestinians from Gaza clashed with Israeli troops. Kim Hjelmgaard
This is an edition of USA TODAY provided for your local newspaper. An expanded version of USA TODAY is available at newsstands or by subscription, and at usatoday.com.
For the latest national sports coverage, go to sports.usatoday.com
USA SNAPSHOTS©
Retiring No. 53, John Boehner To date, the U.S. House has had 53 speakers, with Texas’ Samuel Rayburn serving longest:
17 years, 2 months, 2 days Source United States House of Representatives TERRY BYRNE AND PAUL TRAP, USA TODAY
Above, protesters chant slogans during clashes with Israeli soldiers near the border between Israel and the southern Gaza Strip east of Khan Yunis.
ELECTION 2 0
ABBAS MOMANI, AFP/GETTY IMAGES
A Palestinian protester, left, loads a slingshot during clashes with Israeli soldiers near the Jewish settlement of Beit El, north of Ramallah on Friday.
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Poll: Debate boosts Clinton in N.H. Regains lead over fellow presidential candidate Sanders Susan Page USA TODAY
WASHINGTON After a commanding performance in the first Democratic debate, Hillary Clinton has regained a narrow lead over Bernie Sanders in the crucial state of New Hampshire, a new Suffolk University Poll of likely Democratic voters finds. In the survey, taken in conjunction with The Boston Globe, Clinton is at 37% and Sanders at 35%. That’s within the poll’s 4.4 percentage point margin of error. The poll of 500 Democrats,
taken Wednesday and Thursday, is the first public poll released in the aftermath of Tuesday’s debate. Even what is essentially a tie reflects an improvement for the former secretary of State in the Granite State, which holds the first presidential primary in February. In the four most recent previous statewide polls, averaged by RealClearPolitics, the Vermont senator had led Clinton, 39% to 30%. In the new survey, Vice President Biden, who hasn’t decided whether to run, was at 11%. Former Virginia senator Jim Webb was at 3%, and former governors Martin O’Malley of Maryland and Lincoln Chafee of Rhode Island were each at 1%. Among the 283 Democrats who watched the debate, 54%
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CLINTON
SANDERS
37%
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chose Clinton as the winner, while 24% said Sanders. New Hampshire Democrats also see Clinton as having the best chance of winning the general election in November 2016. A 52% majority chose her, compared with 16% who cited Sanders and 14% Biden. Even so, questions of trust
continue to dog Clinton. Asked which of the potential candidates they trusted the most, 33% chose Sanders, 23% Biden and 22% Clinton. But by nearly 2-1, 62%-36%, poll respondents said the controversy over Clinton’s emails at the State Department didn’t bother them. And Clinton’s position in support of gun control measures was more in step with voters than Sanders, who has voted against some proposals: 41% say Clinton more closely reflects their position on guns; 24% Sanders. The poll also found that New Hampshire Democrats are also inclined to say Biden shouldn’t run. Fifty percent said he shouldn’t, while 36% said he should.
Court rules Google’s massive book-scanning project legal Authors say snippets violate copyrights Elizabeth Weise @eweise USA TODAY
SAN FRANCISCO It’s legal under copyright law for Google to scan millions of books and make snippets of them searchable online, a U.S. appeals court ruled Friday. The ruling is part of a decadelong, bitter battle between authors and publishers on one side and researchers and Google on the other.
Google, whose parent company is known as Alphabet, began its book-scanning project in 2004. The scanned volumes are searchable online but only in snippets. Google’s argument has been that those snippets are legal under the “fair use” provisions of U.S. copyright law, which allows limited use of copyrighted material without the permission of the rights’ holders. It’s the same legal use that allows reviewers to quote from books without paying for the privilege. The Authors Guild and several individual writers sued Google in 2005. The plaintiffs argued that Goo-
DIGITAL VISION VIA GETTY IMAGES
A university student reads a book on a library floor.
gle’s scans illegally deprived them of revenue from their writings. Google responded to author complaints by saying the ability
to search books would not harm authors but help them by aiding readers in finding and choosing to buy volumes they might not have otherwise. Friday, the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New York unanimously agreed with Google. “Google’s division of the page into tiny snippets is designed to show the searcher just enough context surrounding the searched term to help her evaluate whether the book falls within the scope of her interest (without revealing so much as to threaten the author’s copyright interests),” Circuit Judge Pierre Leval wrote in the ruling.
In a statement, Google said it was pleased the court has confirmed its digitization project is fair use, acting much like a card catalog for the digital age. Authors Guild Executive Director Mary Rasenberger said she was disappointed the court was “unable to see the damaging effect that uses such as Google’s will have on authors’ potential income.” She made it clear the Authors Guild planned to appeal the decision. “We trust that the Supreme Court will see fit to correct the 2nd Circuit’s reduction of fair use,” she said.
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L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY SATURDAY, OCTOBER 17, 2015
Researchers suspect entirely new species among Late Triassic-era creatures that lived where once was a shallow lake
JOSH COTTON
A giant pterosaur catches a sphenosuchian in this artist’s conception. The creatures lived near an oasis in what is now Utah.
‘CANDY SHOP’ OF WEIRD ANIMAL FOSSILS FOUND
Traci Watson
Special for USA TODAY
Scientists found an unprecedented cache of fossils of weird animals that thrived at a desert oasis about 200 million years ago, providing a snapshot of a place and time that have long been a mystery. The fossils include the bones of a fanged flying predator and creatures that looked like tiny crocodiles with a Chihuahua’s legs. Small reptiles whose “hands” resemble a mole’s lived alongside dinosaurs that scampered on their hind legs. Researchers suspect many of the fossils represent entirely new species. “Probably almost everything we’re finding (at the site) is previously unknown to science,” says Dan Chure of Dinosaur Na-
tional Monument, one of the site’s co-discoverers. “It’s just an amazing paleontological candy shop.” The fossils are “a spectacular find,” says University of Utah paleontologist Randall Irmis, who isn’t involved in the project. “We so rarely get sites that preserve such a variety of different animals from the beginning of the age of dinosaurs.” The animals at the site should help illuminate the period just before the mass extinction that allowed the dinosaurs to take over the Earth, Irmis says. The fossils also illuminate exactly what was living in the vast sand box that filled what is now the Western USA, where fossils from the Late Triassic are scarce. When a pair of scientists set out to search for fossils in the ancient desert known as “The Sandpit,” their expectations were low.
“Everything ... has been one amazing discovery after another.” Dan Chure, Dinosaur National Monument
“We were hopeful we could find one locality with, maybe, one specimen in it,” says George Engelmann of the University of Nebraska-Omaha, who along with Chure discovered the site. In 2008, after two years of searching, the researchers stepped on land in northern Utah that was thickly littered with old bones, and “everything since then has been one amazing discovery after another,” Chure says.
The site holds more than 11,000 fossils in an area as big as a goodsized living room, says Brigham Young University’s Brooks Britt, who is analyzing fossils from the site. Eons ago, the site was a shallow lake, probably fringed with plants such as ferns until a cataclysmic drought. The result was a Late Triassic time capsule that preserves not only the usual big guys but also the small fry that seldom survive in the fossil record. There are drepanosaurs, an extremely rare reptile with “hands” like a mole’s — animals never suspected of living in deserts. There are creatures like long-legged crocodiles. There are two kinds of lizard-like sphenodonts. Soaring above them all was a pterosaur, which is not a dinosaur but a flying reptile usually found in ancient seas.
FDA long has warned about hidden ingredients v CONTINUED FROM 1B
hidden pharmaceuticals, despite labels claiming they only contain herbs and other natural ingredients, experts and regulators have warned for years. Odom took cocaine and as many as 10 sexual–performance supplement pills leading up to his hospitalization in Las Vegas, according to a 911 call released by the Nye County Sheriff’s Department. The product he took was “Reload 72-hour strong sexual performance enhancer for men,” two employees of the Love Ranch said on the 911 call. In 2013, the FDA issued a public warning that consumers should not purchase or use a supplement called Reload because tests found it contains sildenafil, the active ingredient in the prescription erectile dysfunction drug Viagra. The undeclared ingredient may dangerously interact with other drugs, especially nitrates often taken by men with diabetes, high blood pressure or heart disease, the FDA warned. It’s unclear from the FDA notice what company made the product. USA TODAY’s “Supplement Shell Game” investigation in 2013 found it difficult or impossible to determine who the people or companies are behind many drug-spiked supplements. When companies could be identified, USA TODAY found many are run by people with criminal backgrounds and regulatory run-ins. The FDA said in a statement Thursday that the regulation of dietary supplements is “extremely challenging” and that the industry is huge and growing — currently about $35 billion in sales, up from about $5.8 billion in 1995. Under the existing law, the FDA said it has “limited authority and faces significant hurdles and resource limitations” in regulating supplements.
People power has ruled Switzerland for centuries No bill can become law until approved in a referendum Helena Bachmann Special for USA TODAY
NOAA
A satellite image taken early Friday shows Typhoon Koppu as it spins near the Philippines.
While Atlantic has been mild, Pacific storm season has been wild Doyle Rice USA TODAY
Typhoon Koppu’s predicted hit on the Philippines this weekend adds to what has been a record season for storms in the Pacific Ocean. Koppu, which could strengthen to a Category 4 typhoon, is the 46th named tropical cyclone that’s formed in the Pacific this year, according to meteorologist and hurricane expert Phil Klotzbach of Colorado State University. Tropical cyclones are called hurricanes east of the International Date Line and typhoons to the west of the Date Line. Typically at this point in the year, 36 named storms have formed in the Pacific. The best way of measuring a season’s ferocity, Klotzbach said, is by “Accumulated Cyclonic Energy” (ACE), a measurement that takes into account the number, strength and duration of all the storms put together. “ACE is not only a measure of tropical cyclone activity, but a measure of the damage potential of an individual cyclone or a season,” according to the Weather Underground. The ACE this year in the Pacif-
ic is 615, which is the highest for this period since accurate records began to be kept in 1971, Klotzbach said. El Niño, a natural warming of tropical Pacific waters, has provided fuel for the storms, which usually need warm water of at least 80 degrees to form. Ocean temperatures near Hawaii are at record highs, Klotzbach said. Also, El Niño reduces the winds that tend to tear hurricanes and typhoons apart. The all-time highest Pacific ACE was 760, which occurred in 1992. Pacific ACE is usually much higher than Atlantic ACE, since far more powerful storms usually form in the massive Pacific Ocean. The highest ACE in the Atlantic of 250 was in 2005, a season that included ferocious Hurricane Katrina, which itself had an ACE of 20. Other than Joaquin, the Atlantic hurricane season has been mostly a dud, as predicted and as is typical during El Niño. Only three hurricanes have formed, according to the National Hurricane Center. ACE in the Atlantic this season is a paltry 55. Some computer models hint that a tropical storm could form in the Gulf of Mexico next week.
GENEVA When the Swiss go to the polls Sunday to elect a new parliament, it will be a familiar trudge. That’s because citizens regularly are asked to approve a wide array of legislation, ranging from housing for sex workers in Zurich to approval of assisted suicide in nursing homes. The active role the Swiss play in enacting laws may seem strange in the United States and other nations where elected officials make decisions on behalf of their constituents. But not in Switzerland, where a centuriesold tradition of direct democracy gives people — rather than lawmakers — the power to shape local and national policies. That power of the people explains why the 246 members of parliament, who will be elected to four-year terms, aren’t career politicians. The public has the final word to change laws or create new ones through frequent referendums.
FABRICE COFFRINI, AFP/GETTY IMAGES
A woman casts her ballot during a referendum on May 18, 2014, in Bulle, Switzerland. off the streets and reduce crime. Also, any national, state or municipal law can be vetoed, because the public has the right to put every piece of legislation to a referendum. All it takes is a petition with 50,000 legitimate signatures presented to the federal administration office. And the Swiss can create their own laws through citizen-driven initiatives. To get an initiative on a ballot, a petition with 100,000 signatures is required.
“The threat of an initiative or a referendum creates a high degree of consensus.” Adrian Ritz, Center of Competence for Public Management at the University of Bern
“Switzerland’s political system is exceptional when compared to other democracies,” said Adrian Ritz of the Center of Competence for Public Management at the University of Bern. No measure can become a law here until citizens approve it. On average, the Swiss vote four times a year on several issues at a time. One such issue was the government’s 2008 proposal to renew Switzerland’s publicly funded heroin distribution program. It was overwhelmingly approved, because voters saw it as an effective way to keep addicts
Among the successful initiatives launched in recent years was approving the deportation of immigrants who commit violent crimes in Switzerland. One of the wackiest citizen initiatives was a 2010 push by animal rights activists that would require the government to appoint lawyers to represent animals in court. The voters rejected that proposal since Switzerland already has strict laws protecting pets and farm animals. While some issues are trivial, the system limits polarization. “The threat of an initiative or a
referendum creates a high degree of consensus,” Ritz said. Swiss people power can also make waves beyond the country’s borders. Last year, voters defied government recommendations and approved curbing immigration from European Union countries to protect Switzerland’s workforce. The vote nullified a treaty between Switzerland and the 28-nation EU that allowed citizens of EU countries to live and work in the Alpine nation. The Swiss government is still trying to deal with the fallout. That’s why the grass-roots system has some critics. Edward Girardet, managing editor of the local English language newspaper LeNews, argued that direct democracy is “not the way to run a country responsibly.” Ritz added that putting so many laws to a vote means “the political decision-making process is comparably slow.” Some legislators are calling for more restrictive guidelines. One lawmaker suggested that in addition to the 50,000 signatures required for a referendum, 50 members of parliament must also approve the proposed initiative. This measure, too, would first have to be put to a vote. And the Swiss are unlikely to adopt a law that curbs their own power, Ritz predicted.
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USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld SATURDAY, OCTOBER 17, 2015
Obama’s options in debt limit breach are few Whether he taxes, borrows or refuses to spend, he could be violating law Gregory Korte USA TODAY
In the event of a debt limit breach, President Obama would be forced to do one of three things, each one of them illegal and perhaps even unconstitutional, legal scholars say. He could borrow money unilaterally, in defiance of the $18.1 trillion debt limit set by Congress. He could raise revenue by instituting new taxes, which would encroach on the taxing power of Congress and deprive people of property without due process. Or he could cut spending, which would renege on entitlement programs and violate the Congressional Budget and Impoundment Act of 1974, which requires the president to spend the money that Congress approves. If Congress fails to raise the debt ceiling before the Treasury runs out of borrowed money in early November, the White House may have to decide which of those three options is the least unconstitutional. So which would President Obama choose? The White House won’t say. “This is a thought-provoking WASHINGTON
exercise and probably makes for a good op-ed that I think I would read. But at this point, I wouldn’t speculate on what is a hypothetical situation, primarily because the expectation that we have is that Congress will do the right thing, and they will increase the debt limit,” White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest told USA TODAY on Thursday. “The scenario you just laid out is one that should be avoided at all costs.” That scenario is approaching. Treasury Secretary Jack Lew told Congress on Thursday the projected date of default is now Nov. 3, two days earlier than expected. And that deadline looms under markedly different political conditions than the last two debt limit crises, with the Republican House leadership in question and no accompanying spending bill to tack a debt limit increase on to. Congress has appropriated enough money to run the government through Dec. 12 — but only if there’s money to spend. Since the 2011 debt crisis, the White House has maintained there are no plans to invoke what legal scholars call the “14th Amendment solution.” Section four of that amendment was in-
BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI, AFP/GETTY IMAGES
President Obama “is going to be between a rock and a hard place,” analysts say.
“ ... At this point, I wouldn’t speculate on what is a hypothetical situation.” White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest
tended to assure debt issued by the Union during the Civil War would be honored. “The validity of the public debt of the United States, authorized by law, including debts incurred for payment of pensions and bounties for services in suppressing insurrection or rebellion, shall not be questioned.” The 14th Amendment solution is “off the table” and “not a viable option,” Earnest reiterated. The Treasury Department says it’s also unable to prioritize payments and so would have to stop spending entirely once it ran out of cash. But it’s also illegal for the president not to spend money appropriated by Congress. The 1974 Impoundment Act was a response to President Nixon’s refusal to spend $12 billion in spending he viewed as wasteful. “There’s no option. The president is going to be between a rock and a hard place if the debt limit isn’t increased,” said Neil Buchanan, a George Washington University law professor who first put forward his “trilemma” argument in 2012 with Cornell University’s Michael Dorf. “He has nothing but unconstitutional choices. Once you’re there, you have to make a choice. Not making a choice is a choice.”
And the least unconstitutional of those choices, Buchanan argues, is to borrow just enough money to pay current obligations already mandated by Congress. Conservative lawyers reject that analysis, saying it’s the spending obligations that have to give. “For the government to spend money, two things have to happen. There has to be an appropriation, and there has to be money in the treasury to draw from,” said David Rivkin Jr., a partner at the law firm of Baker & Hostetler. If the government runs out of borrowing authority, there’s no money to spend. “The government makes all sorts of promises. Many, particularly entitlement benefits, are not binding unless there’s money to honor them.” Earnest said he’s not aware of any legal analysis by the White House Counsel’s office about what options the president has in the event of default. But Rivkin, a former White House lawyer in the first Bush administration, suspects there have been talks. “My sense is they’ve looked at it and informally concluded there is no constitutional way for the president to borrow money or increase taxes on his own authority. But they did not want to take any options off the table,” he said.
Meet Jeb Bush’s top fundraisers Republican claims he’s most transparent; watchdogs disagree Fredreka Schouten and Christopher A Schnaars USA TODAY
WASHINGTON Republican Jeb Bush drew on 341 fundraisers to collect at least $6 million for his White House bid, according to a list his campaign released Thursday afternoon. That’s roughly a quarter of the money he has raised to date. Bush’s roster of “volunteer fundraisers” reads like a who’s who of Republican politics in recent years and ranges from Republican strategist and CNN commentator Ana Navarro and Chicago investor Muneer Satter to Indianapolis attorney Bob Grand and Jets’ owner Woody Johnson, who serves as Bush’s national finance chairman. Eric Cantor, the former House majority leader, also makes the list. The list includes at least 64 people who raised money for the campaign of his brother, former president George W. Bush, a USA TODAY analysis shows. The former Florida governor found many fundraisers close to home. Seventy-six, or more than 20% of them, live in the Sunshine State. They include former Florida House speaker Will Weatherford and Adam Putnam, the state’s top agriculture official and a likely 2018 candidate for Florida governor. Bush’s move makes him the first Republican presidential contender to release the names of his bundlers, which his aides tout as a sign that he is the most transparent candidate in the 2016 contest.
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.
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DANIEL ACKER, BLOOMBERG
Jeb Bush, center, greets attendees during the Scott County Republican party Ronald Reagan Dinner in Davenport, Iowa, on Oct. 6. Earlier this year, Bush released 33 years of tax returns, and on Thursday his campaign publicly shared his 2014 returns, along with a statement about his health. (For the record, Bush takes a cholesterol-lowering drug and Vitamin D supplements each day but is healthy, particularly after his recent weight loss, his doctor reports.) Campaign-finance watchdogs, however, say Bush’s decision to release the names of donors who collected at least $17,600 without
detailing how much each actually raised doesn’t give the public a window into the identities of his biggest fundraisers. The list includes their home city and state, but no details about their employment. “Without knowing the amounts — even ranges — these bundlers raised for Bush, we can’t really know who’s most valued,” said Sheila Krumholz, executive director of the Center for Responsive Politics, a non-partisan group that tracks political money.
“Real transparency means we know who’s giving how much to whom — whether it’s millions going to a candidate’s dark money groups or checks being gathered by their bundlers.” Democratic presidential frontrunner Hillary Clinton is identifying donors who collect at least $100,000 for her campaign. Former president George W. Bush, Jeb Bush’s older brother who pioneered the use of bundlers, highlighted two groups of donors in his public disclosures — those
who had collected at least $100,000 and those who had raised $200,000 or more. Candidates for federal office cannot collect more than $2,700 from an individual donor for the primary elections. As a result, White House contenders are relying on supporters to help collect money from their friends, relatives and associates to remain competitive in a presidential battle that likely will top $2 billion. These bundlers win coveted access to White House candidates during the campaign and often are rewarded for their efforts with plum posts, such as European and Caribbean ambassadorships, if their candidate prevails. Later this month, for instance, Bush fundraisers who collect at least $50,000 can mingle with Bush and two former presidents, his father and brother, at an event in Houston. Presidential contenders are not required to release the names of their top fundraisers, except for those who are registered as federal lobbyists and raise at least $17,600. That’s the same threshold Bush is using to determine which supporters’ identities to disclose. With a baseline number that’s so low, the actual amount raised by Bush’s bundlers likely far exceeds $6 million. In all, Bush has collected more than $24.8 million since joining the race in midJune, much of it at high-dollar fundraising events. Bush’s disclosure came as he and other candidates had to file reports Thursday with the Federal Election Commission that detail their fundraising and spending between July 1 and Sept. 30. Contributing: Maureen Groppe and Ledyard King
IN BRIEF OBAMA: U.S. PLEDGES TO DEFEND SOUTH KOREA
President Obama reaffirmed American support of South Korea on Friday, telling President Park Geun-hye that the U.S. commitment to her nation’s security “will never waver” in the face of threats by nuclear-armed North Korea. “Our alliance remains a linchpin of peace and security not just on the Korean peninsula, but across the region,” Obama said during a news conference after meeting with Park at the White House. As for North Korea, Obama said: “Pyongyang’s nuclear and missile programs have achieved nothing except to deepen North Korea’s isolation.” — David Jackson and Gregory Korte TRACTOR SHREDDER MAY HAVE CAUSED WILDFIRE
An overheated tractor bearing may have caused the spark that ignited the sprawling blaze in a fire-prone area of Bastrop County, Texas, a county official said
SCAFFOLDING COLLAPSE IN HOUSTON
Friday, the weather was again hot and dry — conditions that could prolong the fire’s spread, he said. — Rick Jervis MUDSLIDE BURIES I-5 NORTH OF LOS ANGELES
SCOTT HALLERAN, GETTY IMAGES
Workers walk past fallen scaffloding after it collapsed at a downtown Houston construction site Friday. Emergency crews rescued six construction workers trapped under the wreckage. Friday. A worker on a private ranch about 50 miles east of Austin was using a tractor to pull a weed shredder at around noon Tuesday when he noticed a line of fire trailing him, Bastrop County Judge Paul Pape said. The fire quickly spread among the dry
weeds. Within 20 minutes, it was raging out of control, he said. The exact cause was still under investigation. The Hidden Pines Fire, as it is being called, has since consumed 4,582 acres, destroyed 40 homes and buildings and was about onefourth contained, Pape said.
Emergency teams rescued 14 people from a section of Interstate 5 north of Los Angeles late Thursday after flash floods unleashed mudslides that stranded hundreds of vehicles and forced many drivers to scramble to the roof tops of their cars. One rain gauge in the Leona Valley reported 3.38 inches of rain in one hour (of which 1.81 inches was in 30 minutes), which the National Weather Service in Los Angeles described as a “1,000-year rainfall event.” A “1,000-year” event means that there’s a 1-in-1,000 (or 0.1% chance) of it happening in any given year in a given location, the weather service said. This is at least the seventh “1,000-year rain event” in the U.S. since 2010, according to a USA TODAY analysis. —Doug Stanglin and Doyle Rice
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L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY SATURDAY, OCTOBER 17, 2015
MONEYLINE DODGE VIPER FACES UNCERTAIN FUTURE Fiat Chrysler might end production of its super car, the Dodge Viper SRT, in 2017, according to a product plan disclosed as part of the tentative agreement the automaker has with the United Auto Workers union. Sales of the Viper have been disappointing since the company revived the iconic sports car in 2012. A letter included in the tentative fouryear contract reached last week between the automaker and the UAW says production of the current Viper will end in 2017. “No future product has yet been identified beyond the product life cycle,” Glenn Shagena, FCA U.S. head of employee relations for North America, says in the letter, dated Oct. 7.
KIA
KIA RECALLS 377,000 SORENTO SUVS Kia is recalling 377,000 of its Sorento crossover SUVs because the transmission can shift out of “park” on its own. The recall applies to 2011 to 2013 Sorentos, according to documents filed with the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. The filing says if excessive force is applied to the gear shift lever, the brake-shift interlock mechanism might chip or crack. If that happens, the transmission can shift out of the park position on its own without the brakes being applied. STEVE BALLMER TAKES 4% STAKE IN TWITTER Los Angeles Clippers owner and former Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer has taken a 4% stake in Twitter over the past few months, he said Friday in a tweet. Ballmer also said he’s impressed with new chief executive Jack Dorsey and his push to speed innovation at the social media company. Ballmer did not respond to an email seeking USA TODAY SPORTS comment. He Ballmer confirmed to Bloomberg in an email that he had built up the stake in Twitter. The stake makes Ballmer the third-largest individual shareholder in Twitter, ahead of Dorsey, who co-founded the company and has a 3% stake. Twitter co-founder Evan Williams has a 6.8% stake. DOW JONES INDUSTRIAL AVG. 4:00 p.m.
17,250
17,216
17,200 17,150 17,100 9:30 a.m. 17,050
NEWS MONEY SPORTS United Airlines CEO hospitalized LIFE AUTOS TRAVEL
17,142
74.22
17,000
FRIDAY MARKETS INDEX
CLOSE
CHANGE
Nasdaq composite 4886.69 x 16.59 Standard & Poor’s 500 2033.11 x 9.25 Treas. note, 10-year yield 2.04% x 0.02 Oil, lt. sweet crude, barrel $47.26 x 0.88 Euro (dollars per euro) $1.1376 y 0.0007 Yen per dollar 119.37 x 0.59 SOURCES USA TODAY RESEARCH, MARKETWATCH.COM
USA SNAPSHOTS©
Vacation without technology It would give me
Anxiety
51%
Relief
49% slide to power off
Source Charles Schwab survey of 1,808 adults JAE YANG AND JANET LOEHRKE, USA TODAY
Flight crews send ‘healing thoughts’ Bart Jansen USA TODAY
Oscar Munoz, the recently installed CEO of United Airlines, was hospitalized Thursday after an unspecified ailment, the airline said Friday. United said in a statement that it was notified about the action by Munoz’s family. “In the meantime, we are continuing to operate normally,” the airline said. United’s stock ended down 3.1%, closing at $55.97. The Wall Street Journal reported that Munoz suffered a heart attack, but United didn’t respond to questions about the nature of
Liberty International his illness. Airport, a United hub. Crewmembers “around the world are sending A former Port Auhealing thoughts for Oscar thority chairman, DaMunoz,” the Association vid Samson, asked of Flight Attendants-CWA Smisek to provide said in a statement. “We poorly traveled flights offer support to his family to South Carolina, according to a report by and friends, and we await UNITED AIRLINES Bloomberg News. good news.” Munoz, 56, the former Oscar Munoz Bloomberg recounted a dinner in September president and chief operating officer of CSX railroad, was 2011, attended by Samson and a board member at United when Smisek, when Samson allegedly he took the airline’s helm in Sep- asked that United resume service tember after a scandal ousted his between Newark and Columbia, S.C., which had an airport closer predecessor, Jeff Smisek. Smisek and members of his to Samson’s weekend home. Twice-a-week flights between leadership team were forced out abruptly after an internal compa- Newark and Columbia, S.C., were ny investigation that paralleled a less than half full during 11 of the criminal investigation of the Port route’s 19-month run and less Authority of New York and New than one-third full during six Jersey, which operates Newark months, according to a review of
Transportation Department figures by Anna.aero. No charges have been filed against Smisek. Analysts had mixed reactions to how Munoz’s illness would affect United. Jim Corridore, an equity analyst at S&P Capital IQ, said the company has a “deep enough bench” to continue merger integration and improvement. Vicki Bryan, senior high yield analyst at Gimme Credit, a research service for corporate bonds, said United’s improvements could be delayed. “There’s no doubt that Mr. Munoz’s challenges have been extraordinary,” Bryan said. Munoz has traveled the country and met with thousands of workers, apologizing for a decline in the airline’s reputation as it struggled to meet expectations.
ABSURD EXCUSES FOR CALLING IN SICK TO WORK Kevin McCoy USA TODAY
If you called in sick to work during the last year even though you felt fine, you’re not alone. Thirty-eight percent of U.S. employees did it — using such lame excuses as being stuck under a bed — according to an annual survey by CareerBuilder, the largest online job site in the U.S. The findings mark a jump from the 28% who admitted playing hooky in last year’s survey. Many had tried arguably accurate explanations. For instance, 27% reported they had a doctor’s appointment, the survey found. But an equivalent percentage claimed they just didn’t feel like working, 26% said they needed to relax and 21% said they needed to catch up on sleep. The most popular months to call in sick continued to be December (20%), January (15%) and February (14%), findings on par with last year’s survey results, CareerBuilder reported. Fewer than 1 in 10 employees fessed up to calling in sick during the year-end holidays. But the 68% of those who did said they feigned illness to spend time with family and friends, while 21% said they wanted to do gift shopping. Employers are getting wise to questionable excuses — and taking action — the survey found. Although most employers said they trust their workers, 67% said they checked to see if the employee was telling the truth by asking to see a doctor’s note. Thirty-three percent of all employers said they caught a worker lying about being sick by examining her or his social media accounts. Twenty-six percent of that group said they fired the offender, the survey found. However, some employees told surveyors they reported for job duty, even when they feel ill.
MEMORABLE SICKNESS CLAIMS The top 10 most memorable claims reported by the employers surveyed: 1. Employee said his grandmother poisoned him with ham. 2. Worker claimed to be stuck under the bed. 3. Employee said he broke an arm while trying to grab a falling sandwich. 4. Worker claimed the universe was telling him to take a day off. 5. Employee said his wife learned he was cheating — so he had to recover his belongings from a dumpster. 6. Worker said she poked herself in the eye while combing her hair. 7. Employee said his wife put all his underwear in the washer. 8. Worker said the meal he prepared for work potluck turned out badly. 9. Employee said she was going to the beach because a doctor said she needed more vitamin D. 10. Worker said her cat was stuck inside the dashboard of her car. Source: Harris Poll/CareerBuilder survey
Fifty-four percent of workers surveyed said they had gone to work despite sickness because they felt their assignments wouldn’t get done. And 48%, up from 38% last year, said they reported for work because they couldn’t afford to miss a day’s pay.
REASONS FOR CALLING IN SICK — EVEN WHEN YOU’RE WELL Why employees called in sick to work when they were not feeling ill:
Had doctor’s appointment 27% Just didn’t feel like working 27% Needed to relax 26% Needed to sleep 21% Weather was bad 12% CHECKING ON EMPLOYEES One in three employers have checked to see if an employee was telling the truth after calling in sick. How they did it:
Asked for doctor’s note 67%
Called employee at home 49%
Checked employee’s social media 32%
FAKE EXCUSE CAN GET YOU FIRED About one in five employers have fired an employee for calling in sick with a fake excuse.
Source Harris Poll/CareerBuilder online survey conducted Aug. 12-Sept. 2 of 2,326 hiring and HR managers and 3,321 adult employees. Margin of error is ±1.95 percentage points for managers and ±1.70 percentage points for employees. Does not add to 100 because multiple answers permitted. GEORGE PETRAS, USA TODAY
VW owners can check database on emissions Nathan Bomey @NathanBomey USA TODAY
U.S. owners of Volkswagen cars can now determine whether their vehicle is fitted with the manipulative software that has spawned the automaker’s emissions crisis. Volkswagen said Friday that owners can input their Vehicle Identification Number (VIN) into an online database to ascertain the status of their vehicles. The move comes as Volkswagen is expected to order an official recall for the nearly 500,000 U.S. diesel cars involved in the scandal.
DAVID MCNEW, GETTY IMAGES
Volkswagen emissions repairs could take years to complete.
The 2-liter, 4-cylinder diesel cars affected by the crisis include models ranging from 2009 to 2015.
To find the VIN, customers can reference their owner’s manual. The database is available at VWdieselinfo.com. Although a recall is expected, repairs could take years. Older models will be particularly difficult to fix because they will require hardware and software changes. Volkswagen has yet to propose an official fix to U.S. regulators. The software causes vehicles to emit nitrogen oxide — which can exacerbate respiratory conditions such as asthma — at rates of up to 40 times U.S. standards. But in regulatory tests, the software makes the vehicles appear compliant.
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has said it expects to punish Volkswagen, which is also facing a criminal investigation and many other probes. Friday, Volkswagen also said that it was hiring a Daimler executive to lead a new post devoted to integrity and legal affairs. Christine Hohmann-Dennhardt will become a board member for integrity and legal affairs as of Jan. 1. She has been in an identical role at Daimler, which agreed to terminate her contract early at Volkswagen’s request. She held several positions in Germany’s judicial system before taking the Daimler job.
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USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld SATURDAY, OCTOBER 17, 2015
AMERICA’S MARKETS What to watch Adam Shell @adamshell USA TODAY
One by one, 117 companies in the Standard & Poor’s 500 stock index will join the profit parade on Wall Street next week, a fiveday earnings confessional that could propel the stock market to more gains and year-end rally or snuff out optimism if a drumbeat of profit misses piles up. Wall Street will get a big dose of earnings reports from companies that sell discretionary goods to consumers, tech firms that sell services and high-tech gadgets, as well as big industrial companies. So far the bulk of companies that have reported earnings have topped very low estimates. Through midday Friday, 71% of the 58 companies in the S&P 500 that have reported earnings have
Facts about America’s investors who use SigFig tracking services:
topped expectations, above the 63% long-term beat rate, according to Thomson Reuters. But earnings are still forecast to contract in the third-quarter, although the current -3.9% projection tops the -4.2% forecast on Oct. 1. Many of America’s best-known firms will report earnings. Monday, investment firm Morgan Stanley, tech giant IBM and oil services play Halliburton report. Tuesday, consumer companies 5-day avg.: +0.14 such as motorcycle seller Harley6-month avg.: -7.65 Davidson and burrito seller ChiLargest holding: AAPL potle releaseMost results, as does onbought: NFLX Yahoo. line search play Most sold: NFLX Wednesday, Coca-Cola, Boeing and American Express tell investors how much money they made last quarter. Thursday, McDonalds, Google and Amazon.com report. Friday, consumer products maker Procter & Gamble closes out the busy week.
+74.22
DOW JONES
+9.25
INDUSTRIAL AVERAGE
CHANGE: +.4% YTD: -607.10 YTD % CHG: -3.4%
CLOSE: 17,215.97 PREV. CLOSE: 17,141.75 RANGE: 17,107.35-17,220.02
NASDAQ
COMP
+16.59
COMPOSITE
CHANGE: +.3% YTD: +150.63 YTD % CHG: +3.2%
CLOSE: 4,886.69 PREV. CLOSE: 4,870.10 RANGE: 4,851.29-4,886.96
-.46
GAINERS
CLOSE: 1,162.31 PREV. CLOSE: 1,162.77 RANGE: 1,152.56-1,165.23 YTD % Chg % Chg
Mattel (MAT) Misses estimates but expects strong holidays.
23.89
+1.36
+6.0
-22.8
Garmin (GRMN) Rises as seen as attractive investment.
34.09
+1.81
+5.6
-35.5
72.16
+2.89
+4.2
-.9
Endo (ENDP) 69.02 Three-day winning streak makes up month’s loss.
+2.42
+3.6
-4.3
+.95
+3.4
+14.7
General Electric (GE) Hits 2015 high after beating earnings.
Hasbro (HAS) 77.78 +2.45 ‘Star Wars’ product shipments should drive record results.
+3.3 +41.4
Tyson Foods (TSN) 45.30 +1.37 Turns October into winning one after price target increase.
+3.1
+13.0
Sherwin-Williams (SHW) 243.17 Lower oil price means bigger operating margins.
+7.09
+3.0
-7.6
140.57 +3.99
+2.9
-5.6
+2.9
+6.1
Pioneer Natural Resources (PXD) Keeps outperform and hits highest since June. Kraft Heinz (KHC) Three consecutive wins reach October’s high. LOSERS
77.39
+2.17
Price
$ Chg
Quanta Services (PWR) Shares decline after cutting profit forecast.
18.74
-7.47
-28.5 -34.0
Kansas City Southern (KSU) Third-quarter revenue misses lowest estimate.
87.37 -10.63
Genworth Financial (GNW) Slumps on CFO departure.
-28.4
-.43
-7.8
-40.5
207.65
-13.98
-6.3
-18.5
Fluor (FLR) 44.66 Weak industry overshadows share rating upgrade.
-2.77
-5.8
-26.3
11.00
-.57
-4.9
-67.5
Seagate Technology (STX) Rating cut to hold at Craig-Hallum.
39.56
-1.88
-4.5
-40.5
Freeport-McMoRan (FCX) Copper slips as China’s slowdown weighed.
12.44
-.56
-4.3
-46.7
Baker Hughes (BHI) Drillers cut rigs for seventh week, dips early.
53.83
-2.36
-4.2
-4.0
Helmerich & Payne (HP) Drillers suffer, fall early with peers.
56.22
-2.34
-4.0
-16.6
Consol Energy (CNX) Exports to drop and weakness to persist.
The e-commerce giant announced it will scoop up all remaining $80 $65.75 shares in Chinese entertainment service Youku Tudou. Youku founder Victor Koo will stay on as $50 chairman and CEO. Sept. 18
Fund, ranked by size Vanguard 500Adml Vanguard TotStIAdm Vanguard InstIdxI Vanguard TotStIdx Vanguard InstPlus Fidelity Contra Vanguard TotIntl American Funds GrthAmA m American Funds IncAmerA m American Funds CapIncBuA m
Chg. +0.85 +0.18 +0.85 +0.19 +0.84 +0.51 -0.01 +0.11 +0.06 +0.11
4wk 1 +2.0% +1.4% +2.0% +1.4% +2.0% +0.9% +2.5% +0.5% +2.3% +2.7%
YTD 1 +0.4% unch. +0.4% -0.1% +0.4% +5.1% -0.2% +3.4% -1.4% -0.3%
1 – CAPITAL GAINS AND DIVIDENDS REINVESTED
Close 203.27 19.69 36.25 16.39 12.21 115.42 23.55 30.73 108.12 23.73
Chg. +0.92 -0.21 +0.03 -0.50 +0.06 -0.15 +0.14 +0.22 +0.45 -0.22
% Chg +0.5% -1.1% +0.1% -3.0% +0.5% -0.1% +0.6% +0.7% +0.4% -0.9%
%YTD -1.1% -37.5% -7.7% -10.8% +8.6% -3.5% -4.8% -1.3% +4.7% -35.1%
INTEREST RATES
MORTGAGE RATES
Type Prime lending Federal funds 3 mo. T-bill 5 yr. T-note 10 yr. T-note
Type 30 yr. fixed 15 yr. fixed 1 yr. ARM 5/1 ARM
Close 6 mo ago 3.25% 3.25% 0.13% 0.13% 0.01% 0.01% 1.35% 1.30% 2.04% 1.89%
Close 6 mo ago 3.80% 3.79% 2.86% 2.93% 2.60% 2.68% 3.15% 2.99%
SOURCE: BANKRATE.COM
SOURCE: BLOOMBERG AND THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Commodities Close Prev. Cattle (lb.) 1.36 1.33 Corn (bushel) 3.77 3.76 Gold (troy oz.) 1,183.60 1,187.90 Hogs, lean (lb.) .68 .67 Natural Gas (Btu.) 2.43 2.45 Oil, heating (gal.) 1.50 1.49 Oil, lt. swt. crude (bar.) 47.26 46.38 Silver (troy oz.) 16.10 16.15 Soybeans (bushel) 8.98 9.05 Wheat (bushel) 4.92 5.03
Chg. +0.03 +0.01 -4.30 +0.01 -0.02 +0.01 +0.88 -0.05 -0.07 -0.11
% Chg. +2.3% +0.3% -0.4% -1.0% -0.9% +0.7% +1.9% -0.3% -0.8% -2.0%
% YTD -18.0% -5.1% unch. -15.7% -15.9% -19.0% -11.3% +3.5% -11.9% -16.5%
FOREIGN CURRENCIES Currency per dollar British pound Canadian dollar Chinese yuan Euro Japanese yen Mexican peso
Close .6470 1.2910 6.3541 .8790 119.37 16.3701
Prev. .6455 1.2845 6.3457 .8785 118.78 16.3503
6 mo. ago .6685 1.2172 6.1980 .9262 118.85 15.1472
Yr. ago .6226 1.1255 6.1235 .7815 106.19 13.5488
FOREIGN MARKETS Country Frankfurt Hong Kong Japan (Nikkei) London Mexico City
Close 10,104.43 23,067.37 18,291.80 6,378.04 44,364.16
Oct. 16
$71.99 Oct. 16
$18.74 Oct. 16
INVESTING ASK MATT
NAV 187.72 50.87 185.89 50.86 185.90 101.98 15.24 44.15 20.78 57.91
ETF, ranked by volume Ticker SPDR S&P500 ETF Tr SPY Barc iPath Vix ST VXX iShs Emerg Mkts EEM Mkt Vect Gold Miners GDX iShare Japan EWJ iShares Rus 2000 IWM SPDR Financial XLF CS VS InvVix STerm XIV PowerShs QQQ Trust QQQ iShares Brazil EWZ
$31.15
4-WEEK TREND
The specialty contracting services $30 $24.58 provider announced preliminary results for its third quarter and warned earnings will come in 22 to 24 cents a share; it previously had $15 Sept. 18 predicted 34 to 40 cents.
Price: $18.74 Chg: -$7.47 % chg: -28.5% Day’s high/low: $23.06/$18.51
COMMODITIES -10.8
5.06
W.W. Grainger (GWW) Misses earnings and revenue, cuts forecast.
POWERED BY SIGFIG
4-WEEK TREND
TOP 10 EXCHANGE TRADED FUNDS
YTD % Chg % Chg
Company (ticker symbol)
Alibaba
TOP 10 MUTUAL FUNDS
28.98
Prev. Change 10,064.80 +39.63 22,888.17 +179.20 18,096.90 +194.90 6,338.67 +39.37 44,087.59 +276.57
%Chg. +0.4% +0.8% +1.1% +0.6% +0.6%
YTD % +3.1% -2.3% +4.8% -2.9% +2.8%
SOURCES: MORNINGSTAR, DOW JONES INDEXES, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
IN-DEPTH MARKETS COVERAGE USATODAY.COM/MONEY
Chip maker’s ability to rally appears bleak Q: Can AMD survive? Matt Krantz
mkrantz@usatoday.com USA TODAY
A: The reasons for Advanced Micro Devices to exist continue to dwindle — along with its financial resources. The stock might look cheap, but that’s for a good reason. Shares of computer chip maker AMD have been decimated. Following another disappointing quarterly loss reported Oct. 15, the stock dropped Friday and is now down 25% over the past 12 months. AMD shares now trade for about $2 apiece, and the company is clinging to a market value of less than $2 billion. The company is getting clobbered by Intel for chips for desktop systems and by a variety of players in mobile. The fundamentals are ugly. The company has posted adjusted losses in each of the past three quarters and is expected to lose money for at least the next five quarters, S&P Capital IQ says. This is eating away at the company’s financial firepower. The company gets low scores for its ability to service debt as well as on cash flow, S&P Capital IQ says. S&P’s Ratings Services grades AMD’s debt at B- with a negative outlook, putting it just clearly in the speculative area, even among junk bonds. AMD does have $755 million in cash and cash equivalents. But that would only last fewer than three years based on the company’s free cash flow. Investors can do better.
GE earnings top Wall Street forecasts, but revenue lags Kevin McCoy @kmccoynyc USA TODAY
General Electric’s third-quarter financial results topped Wall Street expectations Friday as the U.S. conglomerate posted improved earnings amid continued moves to refocus on its manufacturing roots. Shares of Connecticut-based GE rose nearly 3.4% to close at $28.98. The company reported $2.51 billion in earnings, or 25 cents per share, down from
+0.60 -3.92 GE LOXO CPXX
4-WEEK TREND
Los Angeles Clippers owner and former Microsoft CEO Steve Ball- $35 $27.96 Price: $31.15 mer has taken a 4% stake in TwitChg: $1.44 ter over the past few months, he % chg: 4.8% Day’s high/low: said in a tweet Friday, making him $20 Twitter’s third-largest investor. Sept. 18 $31.40/$29.36
Quanta Services
$ Chg
Yum Brands (YUM) Fund manager joins, shares higher.
5-day avg.: 6-month avg.: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold:
+0.43 -4.55 AAPL AAPL GOOG
NOTE: INFORMATION PROVIDED BY SIGFIG IS STATISTICAL IN NATURE AND DOES NOT CONSTITUTE A RECOMMENDATION OF ANY STRATEGY OR SECURITY. VISIT SIGFIG.USATODAY.COM/DISCLOSE FOR ADDITIONAL DISCLOSURES AND INFORMATION.
Price: $71.99 Chg: $0.21 % chg: 0.3% Day’s high/low: $73.64/$71.21
Price
Company (ticker symbol)
5-day avg.: 6-month avg.: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold:
STORY STOCKS Twitter
CLOSE: 2,033.11 PREV. CLOSE: 2,023.86 RANGE: 2,020.46-2,033.54
S&P 500’S BIGGEST GAINERS/LOSERS
MORE THAN $1 MILLION
More than half a million investors nationwide with total assets of $200 billion manage their investment portfolios online with SigFig investment tracking service. Data on this page are based on SigFig analysis.
RUSSELL 2000 INDEX
CHANGE: unch. YTD: -42.39 YTD % CHG: -3.5%
5-day avg.: +0.01 6-month avg.: -4.96 Largest holding: AAPL Most bought: WFC Most sold: GOOGL
-0.30 -8.49 AAPL CNW LEDIF
$250,001$1 MILLION
POWERED BY SIGFIG
RUSSELL
RUT
$100,001$250,000
5-day avg.: 6-month avg.: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold:
Among the poorest 25% of SigFig users, 61% sold more than 10% of their portfolio during the recent August correction. Only 16% of the wealthiest 25% of users did so.
STANDARD & POOR'S
CHANGE: +.5% YTD: -25.79 YTD % CHG: -1.3%
LESS THAN $100,000
61%
S&P 500
SPX
USA’s portfolio allocation by wealth
Here’s how America’s individual investors are performing based on data from SigFig online investment tracking service:
MAJOR INDEXES DJIA
How we’re performing
DID YOU KNOW?
Wall Street lines up for profit parade close-up
ALL THE MARKET ACTION IN REAL TIME. AMERICASMARKETS.USATODAY.COM
$3.54 billion, or 35 cents mercial lending and per share, for the same leasing businesses to three-month period last Wells Fargo, the latest year. Adjusted earnings, step in a restructuring plan aimed at selling an excluding special charges, were 29 cents per estimated $200 billion in assets from the compashare, GE said. ny’s GE Capital financThird-quarter reveing division. The strategy nue totaled $31.68 bilAFP/GETTY IMAGES features renewed focus lion, down 1% from Immelt on aviation, energy, $32.1 billion last year. transportation and Wall Street analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters health care, marking a return to had forecast nearly $28.65 billion GE’s manufacturing heritage and in revenue and 26 cents in earn- a shift away from financing. The company, viewed as a ings per share. The results came three days af- proxy for the U.S. manufacturing ter GE sold $30 billion in com- sector, said revenue from its avia-
The company reported oil and gas revenue down 16% year-over-year amid a continuing global slump of energy prices.
tion division rose 5% from the year-earlier quarter. GE’s power and water division posted an equivalent rise of 1%. GE said it plans to launch a share exchange next week for the Synchrony Financial division, GE’s consumer finance arm, after
winning approval from the Federal Reserve. The exchange is expected to produce a 6% to 7% reduction in the nearly 10.1 billion shares of GE stock outstanding as of June 30. “Our GE Capital exit plan is ahead of plan and we expect GE Capital dividends to the parent (company) of approximately $3 billion for 2015,” GE Chairman and CEO Jeffrey Immelt said in a statement. Through the expected Synchrony exchange and dividends, “we are on track to return approximately $30 billion to share owners in 2015,” Immelt added.
6B
LIFELINE
SPORTS LIFE AUTOS TRAVEL
L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY SATURDAY, OCTOBER 17, 2015
MOVIES
MAKING WAVES One Direction released a new song, ‘Perfect,’ on Friday and the barb-laced lyrics have some wondering if it’s a slam of Taylor Swift, who used SWIFT BY FILMMAGIC to date 1D’s Harry Styles. “And if you’re looking for someone to write your breakup songs about, Baby, I’m perfect, Baby, we’re perfect.” THEY SAID WHAT? THE STARS’ BEST QUOTES “So if you’re going to be drunk (in a film), you have to meter out the drunkenness and not be too drunk to begin with, otherwise you have no place to go. The real problem is technically how DAN PELED, EPA drunk to get with the amount of time I’m on camera. That required a little math: 10% at a time, resulting in a 50% drunk at the end.” — William Shatner to USA TODAY on his calculus for acting drunk in ‘A Christmas Horror Story’ STYLE STAR Diane Kruger glowed in a cobalt blue-andblack halter gown by Michael Kors at an event for the God’s Love We Deliver charity on Thursday night in New York. “Our blue crush,” Kors tweeted in delight.
CAUGHT IN THE ACT Wife and husband Frances McDormand and Joel Coen looked a quirky couple posing at the Rome Film Festival on Friday before speaking about their frequent professional collaborations.
TIZIANA FABI, AFP/GETTY IMAGES
IT’S YOUR BIRTHDAY WHO’S CELEBRATING TODAY?
FIRST PUBLISHED: 1992 WHY THE HOLDUP? R.L.
Stine’s goofy, gory series of more than 60 kids’ horror novels has taken two decades to creep to the big screen. Various screenwriters have come and gone through the years, with Tim Burton at one point attached to produce in the late ’90s. “They spent all this time trying to figure out which book to dramatize. ‘Which book should we use?’ ‘Which monster should we base the movie on?’ ” Stine told Entertainment Weekly. “And then somebody had this idea ... to put all the monsters in from the early Goosebumps books and to put me in the movie.” That’s the approach Jack the Giant Slayer screenwriter Darren Lemke has taken with Sony’s family adventure, which stars Jack Black as the spooky Stine.
R.L. Stine’s Goosebumps, starring Jack Black, had a few of its own bumps along the way.
HOPPER STONE, SMPSP
SOME BOOKS TRAVEL ROCKY ROAD FROM PAGE TO SCREEN
The journey from book to movie isn’t always a page-turner. Steve Jobs and The Martian opened this month just four years after flying to the top of best-seller lists, while other upcoming adaptations hit rough air in development. USA TODAY’s Patrick Ryan reads up on five movies that experienced delays in their page-to-screen transitions.
WILSON WEBB, THE WEINSTEIN CO.
TAYLOR HILL, FILMMAGIC
GOOSEBUMPS (now showing)
FOCUS FEATURES
JONATHAN PRIME, WARNER BROS. PICTURES
20TH CENTURY FOX
Studios weren’t sure Carol, with Rooney Mara and Cate Blanchett, was worth its salt.
Lots of women signed on to play The Danish Girl before Eddie Redmayne got the job.
Production of In the Heart of the Sea, starring Chris Hemsworth, hit some rough waters.
It took Leonardo DiCaprio to breathe new life into Christmas release The Revenant.
CAROL (in select theaters Nov. 20) FIRST PUBLISHED: 1952 WHY THE HOLDUP? Patricia Highsmith’s lesbian romance was a best seller when it published under original title The Price of Salt in the early ’50s, and was later reprinted as Carol. Highsmith’s friend, playwright Phyllis Nagy, adapted the screenplay more than a decade ago, but the project couldn’t muster interest from studios or filmmakers. “Think about the climate 15 years ago for female-driven films that weren’t comedies,” Nagy told Deadline. “If the film was a buddy comedy, we’d have a much easier time.” Carol picked up steam when it landed at the U.K.’s Number 9 Films and Blanchett signed on four years ago to star and executive produce. In 2013, the period drama lured director Todd Haynes, who cast Rooney Mara as the twentysomething shop girl who engages Blanchett’s conflicted housewife.
THE DANISH GIRL (in select theaters Nov. 27) FIRST PUBLISHED: 2000 WHY THE HOLDUP? Well before Caitlyn Jenner and Laverne Cox ushered transgender issues into the mainstream, A-listers were being courted to star in this David Ebershoff adaptation, about the first person known to undergo genderreassignment surgery. Nicole Kidman was long attached to star as trans woman Lili Elbe, while actresses Charlize Theron, Gwyneth Paltrow, Marion Cotillard and Rachel Weisz all were set to play her wife, artist Gerda Wegener, but dropped out. Swedish filmmakers Tomas Alfredson and Lasse Hallström were slated to helm Girl before The King’s Speech director Tom Hooper signed on early last year. Oscar best-actor winner Eddie Redmayne and Swedish “It” girl Alicia Vikander star as Lili and Gerda, respectively, and both are considered major awards players.
IN THE HEART OF THE SEA (in theaters Dec. 11) FIRST PUBLISHED: 2000 WHY THE HOLDUP? When Nathaniel Philbrick’s historical whaling novel published 15 years ago, the Weinstein Company already was in talks with Barry Levinson (Sleepers) to direct. The project stalled but found its sea legs again in 2012 when Thor’s Chris Hemsworth signed on to star as a sailor whose ship is wrecked after clashing with a sperm whale. (A true story that inspired Herman Melville’s Moby-Dick.) Benedict Cumberbatch, Henry Cavill and Tom Hiddleston all were considered for the film, according to Variety, and Ron Howard came aboard as director in 2013. Initially set for release in March, Heart pushed back to December, which Howard justified to The Hollywood Reporter, saying, “I do feel like it’s more of that fourth quarter, early winter kind of feel in terms of the tone of the movie.”
THE REVENANT (in select theaters Dec. 25) FIRST PUBLISHED: 2002 WHY THE HOLDUP? Leonardo DiCaprio’s grim, gritty turn as a 19th-century fur trapper is arguably this awards season’s biggest question mark, much as Michael Punke’s book was when it was snapped up for a film adaptation. Bought by Warner Bros. in 2001 as an unpublished manuscript, the revenge tale was going to be directed by Oldboy’s Chan-wook Park and star Samuel L. Jackson; and later, Christian Bale, with filmmaker John Hillcoat (The Road), as ScreenRant.com reported in 2010. Birdman’s Oscar-winning director Alejandro González Iñárritu swooped in the next year and DiCaprio officially committed to the project last year — enduring a taxing shoot in remote locations of Canada. A crew member summed up the experience as “a living hell” to The Hollywood Reporter.
TELEVISION
FROM LEFT, FILMMAGIC; GETTY IMAGES
Eminem is 43. Wyclef Jean is 46. Margot Kidder is 67. Compiled by Maria Puente
USA SNAPSHOTS©
Bye-gone era
2006
The last major Hollywood film to be released on VHS was David Cronenberg’s A History of Violence Source USA TODAY research TERRY BYRNE AND VERONICA BRAVO, USA TODAY
Choices improve with age for discarded viewers Old may not be in, but at least it’s no longer completely out. For years, as advertisers have shifted their focus to young audiences, advertiserNEWS supported media & VIEWS have followed suit — ROBERT pushing older audiBIANCO ences aside in the process. Nor is it just older viewers who have suffered: TV’s perhaps misplaced certainty that young people only want to watch other young people has relegated most actors over 60 to supporting roles. But along with its other benefits, the explosive growth in TV choices is giving new hope to aging viewers, as TV services begin to see some profit possibility in serving a neglected audience. It’s a small movement at the moment, and it doesn’t encompass the big broadcast networks. But if you’re past a certain age, any
movement at all is welcome. PBS has long served as an oldfolks home, but it’s not the only place to turn. Older viewers searching for some sign of change could find one at Starz with Blunt Talk, a comedy built around 75year-old Patrick Stewart. An even clearer sign was Netflix’s pickup of a new season for Longmire, a series dumped by A&E because its audience was considered too old. Not its star, though: Robert Taylor is a relative child at 52. Sunday, the scene shifts to Jesse Stone: Lost in Paradise (9 ET/ PT), starring 70-year-old Tom Selleck — whose starring role in CBS’ Blue Bloods makes him a broadcast rarity. But you won’t find Jesse on CBS, which did eight Jesse movies and then bailed because, well, you know. Instead, Selleck has moved the franchise to Hallmark. Though that’s progress, it’s not
CHRIS REARDON, CROWN MEDIA
At age 70, Tom Selleck’s starring turn in Blue Bloods is a rarity on broadcast TV. He next tackles a new Jesse Stone movie on Hallmark.
enough — not when you consider the talent going to waste just in this new TV season alone. It’s impossible to watch Life in Pieces and not conclude that the pieces could be reduced to two: Dianne Wiest and James Brolin. Limitless actors Ron Rifkin and Blair Brown deserve the kind of limitless air time this show will never provide. And just when you think things may be improving, word comes that CBS is considering a series built around a “young” Miss Marple — and never mind that the experience and invisibility that come with age are what made this beloved Agatha Christie character make sense as a detective. On the other hand, CBS apparently also is considering an “older” version of Nancy Drew — who, by my math, should be around 100 now. Don’t panic, CBS. We’ll settle for 70.
KU’S DIALLO TAPPED FOR AWARD WATCH LIST. 3C
Sports
C
Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com/sports l Saturday, October 17, 2015
Royals gain early edge in ALCS By Dave Skretta AP Sports Writer
Paul Sancya/AP Photo
KANSAS CITY’S ALCIDES ESCOBAR CELEBRATES after scoring in a 5-0 victory over Toronto in the ALCS opener Friday at Kauffman Stadium in Kansas City, Missouri.
Raiders showing respect for KU By Matt Tait
Kansas City, Mo. — Edinson Volquez planned to pitch the Toronto Blue Jays inside in Game 1 of their American League Championship Series, just as he did during their contentious series earlier this season. Then, after chatting with Kansas City Royals catcher Salvador Perez, he changed his mind. “We know they got a lot of pull hitters over there, and power hitters, and he told me, ‘How you feel pitching down and away?’
And I said, ‘I feel sexy tonight,’” Volquez recalled. “And he was like, ‘All right, we’re changing the plan right now. We’re pitching those guys away.’” They never touched him all night. Volquez combined with three relievers on a threehitter, Perez hit a soaring home run off Toronto starter Marco Estrada, and Kansas City rolled to a 5-0 victory Friday to open the best-of-seven series. “Tonight was the Volquez show. He was tremendous,” Blue Jays manager John Gibbons said. “He shut down a
good-hitting team, I know that. His ball was ducking and darting everywhere.” Volquez (1-1) ramped up his fastball to 97 mph to slice through a potent Blue Jays offense, never allowing a runner past second base over six innings. His only trouble occurred when he walked the first two batters in the sixth, but he wiggled out of it without any damage. The Royals’ bullpen finished off the club’s eighth consecutive ALCS victory. “There was a lot of energy,” said Volquez, who had Please see ROYALS, page 6C
FREE STATE 35, WASHBURN RURAL 7
Five of a kind
mtait@ljworld.com
The Texas Tech Red Raiders, who visit Lawrence today for an 11 a.m. kickoff at Memorial Stadium against the UP NEXT winless Kansas UniverWho: Kansas sity football (0-5 overall, team, may be 0-2 Big 12) vs. bringing the nation’s topTexas Tech rated pass (4-2, 1-2) offense and When: 11 one of the a.m. today Big 12’s highWhere: est-scoring Memorial teams to Stadium town, but that does TV: FS1 not mean (WOW! for a second channels they’re look150, 227) l GameDay ing past the Jayhawks. on page 4C T e x a s Tech coach Kliff Kingsbury said this week he had too much respect for KU coach David Beaty and too much respect for the wild and crazy ways of football to let his guys show up expecting to give anything less than their best. “I think we’re talking about starting the second half of our season the right way,” Kingsbury said. “And that’s been our focus. You look to last year, when TCU went on the road to Kansas, and Kansas almost got them there. So it’s great to point out that it is a good football team that’s well-coached, and they had a tough run, but they’re getting better. They have young players. So we just need to continue to get better ourselves.” While Tech’s offense, which threw up a schoolrecord 776 yards last week against Iowa State, is rolling, it’s the defense that has Kingsbury hammering home the importance of being focused from start to finish. Tech enters today giving up an average of 40 points per game. And even though KU (0-5) is averaging just 19 per contest, TTU defensive coordinator David Gibbs said true freshman QB Ryan Willis has what it takes to put up points in a hurry. “(Their) freshman quarterback looked pretty good to me,” Gibbs said. “Did not look intimidated by Baylor, so we’ve got our hands full again. ... They’re looking at our film and thinking they’re going to score 50 points, and I would too.”
Willis Part Deux Now that KU freshman
Mike Gunnoe/Special to the Journal-World
FREE STATE’S SAM SKWARLO, CENTER, SLIPS PAST WASHBURN RURAL’S BRAEDEN INGOLD during the Firebirds’ 35-7 victory Friday night in Topeka.
Skwarlo’s scoring spree sparks Firebirds By Bobby Nightengale bnightengale@ljworld.com
Topeka — When Free State High senior running back Sam Skwarlo found open space against Washburn Rural on Friday, he couldn’t be stopped. Skwarlo rushed for 256 yards and five touchdowns to lead the Firebirds to a 35-7 victory at Bowen-Glaze Stadium in their first district game.
It was one of the most dominant performances in school history. Skwarlo finished two yards short of tying the single-game school record set by Camren Torneden in 2008, and it was the first 200yard game since Kyle McFarland ran for 202 yards in 2011. On the fourth play from scrimmage, the 6-foot, 210-pound Skwarlo took an option pitch and raced 58 yards to the end zone. “He’s got speed, plus the
fact he’s pretty intimidating to tackle,” FSHS coach Bob Lisher said. “He’s a pretty strong kid. Once you hit him once, sometimes you don’t want to hit him again.” After Skwarlo was stopped on a fourth-and-short at midfield in the first quarter, he took his first handoff of the second quarter up the middle and bounced to the left sideline for a 56-yard touchdown. Later in the second quarter, Skwarlo added a 54-yard
touchdown run on another option pitch and finished a nine-play drive before halftime with a two-yard touchdown plunge. Free State coaches noticed a tendency by Washburn Rural to blitz on the weak side of the field, so Skwarlo took advantage on quick option-pitches to the outside, running untouched to the end zone. “Definitely the line came Please see FIREBIRDS, page 6C
Walters, Chen hang tough but fall at state By Benton Smith basmith@ljworld.com
Mike Gunnoe/Special to the Journal-World
FREE STATE’S RACHEL WALTERS hits a return in Please see FOOTBALL, page 3C the state tennis tournament Friday in Olathe.
Olathe — The sun set, the bleachers at College Boulevard Activity Center emptied, and Free State High’s doubles team of Rachel Walters and Andrea Chen kept on fighting to extend their stay at the Class 6A state tournament Friday night. Hours after their first match began, the Firebirds and their opponents, Blue
Valley’s Lizzy Meizenbach and Mallory Novicoff, were the only competitors still playing at the 12-court complex as the first day wrapped, and Walters and Chen attempted to join teammates Caitlin and Ali Dodd in today’s medal matches. But a slow start to their fourth state match proved costly in a 9-3, season-ending setback for Free State’s No. 2 doubles team. Chen, a junior, said she
and senior Walters joked about winning the whole shebang, but really their goal was to get to Day 2. “We just made some mistakes that we shouldn’t have in the beginning,” Chen said of their final loss, which made them 2-2 at state, “and it’s really hard to get out of that, mentally.” Chen and Walters won their first elimination match late in the afternoon, with Please see TENNIS, page 3C
Sports 2
2C | LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD | SATURDAY, OCTOBER 17, 2015
AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE
COMING SUNDAY
TWO-DAY NORTH
EAST • Complete coverage of the Kansas-Texas Tech football game • A report from Game 2 of the Royals-Blue Jays ALCS
SPORTS CALENDAR
KANSAS UNIVERSITY
TODAY • Football vs. Texas Tech, 11 a.m. • Tennis, regionals at Stillwater, Oklahoma • Cross country, pre-nationals at Louisville, Kentucky NORTH SUNDAY • Tennis, regionals at Stillwater, Oklahoma • Rowing at Jayhawk Jamboree
TOP 25 FOOTBALL
Utah State routs No. 21 Boise AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE EAST
AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
14 tackles for the Aggies, and RUSHING-Boise St., K.Young 20-60, Demas passes for 222 yards and had 14 Kyler Fackrell added 11. Fack- 6-19, Rypien 4-(minus 45). Utah St., Mays 11-63, carries for 77 yards. EAST NORTH 14-63, Hobbs 6-21, Hunt 8-18, Sharp 4-12. EAST and re- Myers NORTH Utah State 52, Houston held Tulane (2rell forced one fumble PASSING-Boise St., Rypien 25-50-3-299. Utah FREE STATE HIGH St., Myers 17-24-0-157. No. 21 Boise State 26 4, 1-2) to 262 total yards and covered two, while Vigil had SOUTH TODAY WEST RECEIVING-Boise St., Sperbeck 6-156, forced 11 punts. one of each. Anderson 5-50, Williams-Rhodes 5-38, Roh Logan, Utah — Marwin Ev• Volleyball at Emporia Tournament, Boise State’s Brett Rypien 4-38, Richardson 2-16, Demas 1-4, Huff 1-3, Houston 7 21 14 0—42 ans returned an interception 1-(minus 6). Utah St., Sharp 7-42, Hunt AL EAST 8:30 a.m. threw for 299 yards with three K.Young Tulane 0 7 0 0— 7 2-51, Swindall 2-26, Rodriguez 2-15, Robinson 90 yards for a touchdown as First Quarter • Cross country, Sunflower League interceptions. 2-12, Houston 2-11. Hou-Allen 49 pass from Ward Jr. (Cummings time expired before halftime, meet at Rick Rock Farm, 9 a.m. kick), 12:36. and Utah State turned Boise Boise St. AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE Second Quarter 3 7 7 9—26 • Tennis, state at CBAC in Olathe, 17 28 7 0—52 No. 24 Houston 42, State’s seven first-half turn- Utah St. Hou-Ward Jr. 12 run (Cummings kick), 14:52. AL CENTRAL First Quarter 9 a.m. Tul-Hilliard 3 run (DiRocco kick), 10:31. Tulane 7EAST overs into 35 points in the AgBoi-FG Rausa 46, 12:36. Hou-Ward Jr. 5 run (Cummings kick), 8:20. NORTH USU-Houston 2 pass from Myers (Warren New Orleans — Greg Ward gies’ victory over the Broncos Hou-Ayers 15 run (Cummings kick), 1:46. kick), 7:33. Jr. ran for three touchdowns Third Quarter on Friday night. USU-FG Thompson 51, 3:22. Hou-Ward Jr. 2 run (Cummings kick), 6:09. LAWRENCE HIGH The Aggies (4-2, 3-0 MounUSU-Sharp 10 pass from Myers (Warren and threw a scoring pass to SOUTH Hou-Ayers 73 punt return (Cummings kick), WEST :54. :10. TODAY help Houston beat Tulane. tain West) snapped a 12-game kick), AL WEST Second Quarter • Volleyball at Emporia Playing as a ranked team for A-21,522. losing streak against Boise State USU-Hunt 4 run (Warren kick), 14:29. Hou Tul Boi-K.Young 1 run (Rausa kick), 3:12. 24 11 the first time since 2011, the First downs that dated 18 years. AL EAST Tournament, 8:30 a.m. USU-Myers 39 run (Warren kick), 1:25. Rushes-yards 47-239 32-112 The 52 points are the most • Cross country, Sunflower League USU-Sharp 21 pass from Myers (Warren Cougars (6-0, 3-0 American Passing 222 150 Athletic) won by at least 21 Comp-Att-Int Boise State has ever allowed as kick), 1:05. SOUTH 17-25-1 14-33-0 meet at Rick Rock Farm, 9 a.m. WEST USU-Evans 90 interception return (Warren Yards 175 7 points for the fourth time this Return a ranked team. kick), :00. Punts-Avg. 6-39.3 11-41.9 SOUTH season. The Broncos (5-2, 2-1) served Third Quarter AL CENTRAL Fumbles-Lost 1-0 0-0 WEST AFC TEAM LOGOS 081312: Helmet and team logos for the AFC teams; various sizes; stand-alone; Boi-Demas 3 run (Rausa kick), 3:02. Penalties-Yards 10-99 12-133staff; ETA 5 p.m. Houston took a half-game up four fumbles and three inAL EAST USU-Mays 1 run (Warren kick), :22. HASKELL Time of Possession 31:48 28:12 lead over Memphis and Navy INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS terceptions in the first half, in- Fourth Quarter TODAY Boi-FG Rausa 41, 13:31. RUSHING-Houston, Farrow 14-77, Ward Jr. EAST Diviin the conference’s AL West cluding Evans’ big run-back. Boi-K.Young 1 run (pass failed), 8:09. 14-77, Kokuma 5-43, R.Jackson 8-34, Postma • Cross country at College of the sion. Utah State’s Kent Meyers A-22,509. 2-20, Ayers 2-15, Team 2-(minus 27). Tulane, AL WEST Boi USU Ozarks, 9 a.m. Hilliard 11-53, Kelley 8-52, Badie 7-25, Rounds Despite three starting offenthrew for 157 yards and a ca- AL CENTRAL First downs 20 15 1), Joseph 1-(minus 7), Powell sive linemen sitting out with 2-(minus reer-high three touchdowns Rushes-yards 30-34 43-177 SOUTH 3-(minus 10). WEST 299 157 injuries, Houston piled up 461 and added 63 yards rushing and Passing PASSING-Houston, Ward Jr. 17-25-1-222. AL CENTRAL Comp-Att-Int 25-50-3 17-24-0 Tulane, Powell 11-28-0-88, Joseph 3-5-0-62. total yards, including 239 on a touchdown. ROYALS Return Yards 39 123 RECEIVING-Houston, Ayers 6-93, Dunbar EAST Daniels 1-14, Gage 1-4, 3-41.7 7-40.3 the ground, and went 7-of-15 on 4-40, AllenAL3-69, Hunter Sharp caught two Punts-Avg. TODAY Fumbles-Lost 5-5 1-1 R.Jackson 1-2, Farrow 1-0. Tulane, Veal 4-31, third down. touchdown passes. AL WEST • vs. Toronto, 3:07 p.m. Penalties-Yards 3-30 11-104 Breaux 3-88, Badie 2-2, Dace III 1-7, Jones II 1-6, Wardandcompleted of 25 Nick Vigil had a game-high Time of Possession 35:45 AFC TEAM24:15 LOGOS 081312: Helmet team logos for17 the AFC teams; various sizes;1-5, stand-alone; Scott 1-6, Ardoin Glenn 1-5. staff; ETA 5 p.m. The Associated Press
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just received an anti-inflammatory injection Cleveland — Browns backup quarterback USC’s short list” after coach Steve SarkiLATEST LINE TEAM LOGOS 081312: Helmet and team logos for the AFC teams; various sizes; stand-alone; staff; ETA 5 p.m. Johnny Manziel admitted to police heAFC drank to ease discomfort in his back. sian was fired amid personal issues this alcohol before he was pulled over following It’s hardly an ideal beginning for the deweek. NFL a dispute with his girlfriend while driving on When asked whether he’d been contacted fending Eastern Conference champions. But Favorite.............. Points (O/U)........... Underdog Sunday a highway. James is confident that getsizes; backstand-alone; staff; ETA 5 p.m. by Southern Cal or had any interest the Helmet AFC TEAM LOGOSin081312: and team logos for the AFConce teams;they various Week 6 Manziel was questioned by Avon, Ohio, to full speed the Cavs will be fine. job, Harbaugh joked that he’s “been on a lot Denver..............................4 (42.5)....................CLEVELAND police following the incident with girlfriend “I think as we get guys back into the flow of short lists in my life.” Cincinnati..........................3 (43)...........................BUFFALO Colleen Crowley. of things, guys come back off of injury and MINNESOTA............ 31⁄2 (43)...........Kansas City Then he gave a firm answer: “No. No. ObA witness told police Crowley was atJACKSONVILLE...............11⁄2 (43)..........................Houston we’re able to put the time in on the practice viously, no. This is what I’m doing. I love the DETROIT..............................3 (44).............................Chicago tempting to exit Manziel’s speeding vehicle floor, I think we’ll be a much better team,” he Ravens, I love being here. It’s not a considerNY JETS..........................61⁄2 (40.5)................Washington as the quarterback tried to keep her in the said. ation.” Arizona...............................4 (45)...................PITTSBURGH car. Police said Manziel told them he had two James said the shot he received this week TENNESSEE.......................1 (43.5)...............................Miami The Ravens’ 1-4 start is their worst under alcoholic drinks earlier in the day. Manziel was part of a planned maintenance program SEATTLE............................. 7 (41)............................Carolina wasn’t charged, and Crowley told police she Harbaugh, but the Super Bowl-winning coach for the 30-year-old, who missed a careerGREEN BAY..................... 101⁄2 (51)..................... San Diego has little reason to leave, it seems. He has Baltimore...........................2 (44).............SAN FRANCISCO didn’t want to press charges against the high 13 games last season. He had a similar a 73-44 regular season record and has six New England....................9 (54)................INDIANAPOLIS former Heisman Trophy winner. injection early last season when he was Monday playoff appearances in seven seasons with Manziel spent 70 days in a Pennsylvania bothered by both a sore knee and back. He PHILADELPHIA................5 (49.5).......................NY Giants the Ravens. rehab facility during the offseason for treattook two weeks off for the injuries, reviving Bye Week: Dallas, Oakland, St. Louis, Harbaugh last coached in college at the ment of an unspecified condition. Tampa Bay. him for the second half of the season. University of Indiana in 1997. COLLEGE FOOTBALL Browns general manager Ray Farmer Favorite ............. Points (O/U).......... Underdog released a statement Friday night. MLS TOLEDO............................29 (60.5)..................E. Michigan NBA “It is a matter that we take seriously and TEMPLE............................211⁄2 (45).......................C. Florida Earthquakes top Sporting have expressed our concerns to Johnny CENTRAL MICHIGAN.......6 (54).............................Buffalo Cavaliers hit with injuries, directly,” Farmer said. “Those conversations San Jose, Calif. — Anibal Godoy slid in Marshall.......................... 41⁄2 (49)..............FLA ATLANTIC will remain private and we will refrain from CONNECTICUT.................21⁄2 (45).............. South Florida including LeBron’s back a goal early in the second half, and the San GEORGIA SOUTHERN.301⁄2 (64.5).........New Mexico St further comment at this time.” Cleveland — After downplaying injuries, Jose Earthquakes beat Sporting Kansas City MIDDLE TENN ST............11 (54.5).....................Florida Intl Manziel started and won one game for the 1-0 on Friday night to move into a fifth-place BALL ST.............................13 (65)...................... Georgia St LeBron James has accepted reality: the Browns this season and is currently backtie in the Western Conference. CLEMSON...........................16 (37).............Boston College ing up starter Josh McCown. Manziel made Cavaliers won’t start the season looking like VIRGINIA.............................7 (54)..........................Syracuse San Jose (13-12-8) is tied with Portland two starts last year during a turbulent rookie potential NBA champions. WISCONSIN.................... 231⁄2 (50)..........................Purdue and Seattle with 47 points, while Sporting “I don’t think we will immediately be able .....................................1 (41).............NORTHWESTERN season. KC (13-10-9) is alone in fourth place with 48 Iowa. NORTH CAROLINA..........17 (52)...................Wake Forest to play at a high level because we have so According to the police report, officers points. Texas Tech.............321⁄2 (77)................KANSAS many guys out,” he said. “I don’t think our noticed an abrasion on Crowley’s arm, but In the 47th minute, Shea Salinas sent a Nevada...............................6 (53)......................... WYOMING chemistry is where it needs to be to start the said it was caused by Manziel restraining her MISSISSIPPI ST..............131⁄2 (60)........... Louisiana Tech cross to Chris Wondolowski, who oneseason off. “ from jumping from the car. MASSACHUSETTS..........7 (56.5)............................Kent St touched it across goal to an open Godoy at OHIO.................................31⁄2 (52.5).................W. Michigan Decimated by injuries since the 2014-15 the far post. Northern Illinois...........151⁄2 (57).................. MIAMI-OHIO playoffs, the Cavs will open a new season San Jose is undefeated at home in its last John Harbaugh says he’s Air Force..........................31⁄2 (55)..............COLORADO ST without starting guards Kyrie Irving (knee five games and has not lost to Sporting KC at Alabama...........................4 (53.5)....................TEXAS A&M not interested in USC job surgery) and Iman Shumpert (wrist). Kevin home since Aug. 16, 2000. 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Pittsburgh son is holding out for a new, long-term Sporting KC’s best scoring chance came football coach at the University of Southern MIAMI-FLORIDA..............31⁄2 (51)................Virginia Tech contract and guard Matthew Dellavedova when Benny Feilhaber chipped the defense, MICHIGAN...........................7 (42).....................Michigan St California. BAYLOR................. 201⁄2 (76)........West Virginia is slowed by a sprained ankle. but Mikey Lopez’s wide-open header went Harbaugh was asked about a report on INDIANA..........................51⁄2 (64.5)........................Rutgers If that wasn’t concerning enough, James “The Dan Patrick Show” that he was “high on just over the crossbar in the 71st. TROY................................121⁄2 (61.5)............................ Idaho MLB AL LOGOS 032712: 2012 American League team logos; stand-alone; various sizes; staff; ETA 4 p.m.
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KANSAS BASKETBALL NOTEBOOK
Diallo named to Abdul-Jabbar watch list By Gary Bedore gbedore@ljworld.com
Kansas University freshman Cheick Diallo has been named to the 20-member watch list for the 2016 Kareem Abdul-Jabbar Center of the Year Award, the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame announced Friday. Diallo, a 6-foot-9, 220-pounder from Mali, enters college as the No. 5-rated player in the recruiting Class of 2015 by Rivals.com. He averaged 17.6 points, 10.5 rebounds and 2.5 blocks per game during his senior season at Our Savior New American High of Centereach, New York, and was named MVP of the McDonald’s
All-America game and Jordan Brand Classic. Other players up for the award are Kaleb Tarczewski, Arizona; Mamadou Ndiaye, UC Irvine; Josh Scott, Colorado; Egidijus Mockevicius, Evansville; Przemek Karnowski, Gonzaga; Thomas Bryant, Indiana; Jameel McKay, Iowa State; Skal Labissiere, Kentucky; Diamond Stone, Maryland; Stephen Zimmerman, UNLV; Kennedy Meeks, North Carolina; Zach Auguste, Notre Dame; AJ Hammons, Purdue; Jakob Poeltl, Utah; Damian Jones, Vanderbilt; Daniel Ochefu, Villanova; Josh Hawkinson, Washington State; Joel Bolomboy, Weber State; and Devin Williams, West Virginia. Winner will be named
on April 8. Last season, been a KU and Arizona fan Frank Kaminsky of Wis- most of his life. He committed to University of consin won the award. l New Mexico in the sumLightfoot to announce mer of 2014, but reopened in one week: Mitch Light- his recruitment last spring. foot, a 6-8 senior forward Lightfoot’s AAU coach, from Gilbert (Arizona) John Ortega, told Josh Christian High, will an- Gershon of Scout.com, nounce his college choice “Mitch hasn’t decided yet. a week from today at the He’s really got a tough Arizona Preps Fall Show- decision, but I feel like he case at Glendale (Arizo- can be successful at any na) Community College, of his final five. All five showcase organizers re- schools have been fantasported on Twitter. tic through this process.� l Lightfoot, who is Embiid attitude quesranked No. 117 in the Class of 2016 by Rivals. tioned by S.I.: Former KU com, visited KU on Sept. forward Joel Embiid of 18-19. He has also visited the Philadelphia 76ers has Arizona, Stanford, Utah been accused of having a questionable attitude in and St. John’s. Lightfoot was born in his recovery from foot Kansas City, grew up in surgery that sidelined Tucson, then moved to him his rookie season. Sports Illustrated has Gilbert last year. He has
sources that say “some people in Philadelphia’s front office wonder whether a second surgery (on same foot this past summer) would have been necessary if Embiid had worn a boot as much as he was told to.� Also, despite the Sixers front office not wanting Embiid to travel to Las Vegas to watch the Sixers play in the NBA summer league, S.I. reports, “Embiid was determined to go to Vegas to party for the balance of the 10 days of summer league. While Embiid was in Vegas, he was mandated to wear the walking boot in advance of the second surgery, but Embiid not only refused to wear the boot, but he carried himself as if nothing was wrong with the foot,
shooting jumpers and even occasionally dunking. These actions have given rise to the theory that Embiid actually rebroke his foot, rather than the initial injury not healing properly. It also led to Embiid having the surgery a month later than the club originally had hoped.� S.I. also has sources saying, “Embiid’s conditioning and dietary habits are a constant source of strife for the Sixers front office.� And, the magazine website, SI.com, says he was sent home from a road trip last year for reportedly physically threatening a member of the training staff. To read about Embiid’s alleged problems see the web address http://on.si. com/1MHFw8T
Vikings’ Peterson lends support to K.C.’s Charles
Mike Gunnoe/Special to the Journal-World 
LAWRENCE HIGH’S NATALIE COTE, RIGHT, CELEBRATES with teammate Betsy Smoot during a doubles match against Wichita Northwest at the state tennis tournament Friday in Olathe.
Tennis CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C
a 9-8 (7-3) tiebreaker victory over Wichita East’s Dranise Brown and Cassidy Steward, to extend their state run. Walters said the Firebirds, who had led that match 6-3, got through some stressful moments in that one. “We just had to keep our energy up,� she said, “and once we got going, we had to keep fighting.� Sisters and Free State doubles partners Caitlin and Ali Dodd survived the first day, with a bye, a victory and a loss. They’ll be right back at it today, beginning at 9 a.m. Friday marked the end of the line for Betsy Smoot and Natalie Cote, of Lawrence High, who won their first match before finishing 1-2. It looked as if the Lions were in for a swift exit on the consolation side of the bracket, down 4-0, to Lindsey Wagaman and Olivia Taylor, of Washburn Rural. But Smoot and Cote came storming back before a 9-7 loss ended their season. “We pushed back,� said Cote, a junior, “which is all you can really ask for.� Smoot, a senior, left
Football CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C
Willis has made his first start and played his first complete game at quarterback for the Jayhawks, offensive coordinator Rob Likens believes Willis will be even better during his second start. Likens also knows the defense Willis faces be different, as well. “They do a lot of things to try to confuse
Olathe happy they pulled it together after she achieved her seasonlong goal of competing at state for the first time. “I’m so glad I went here with Natalie. I wouldn’t want to be playing with anyone else. She did awesome — awesomely, I guess,� Smoot clarified, as she and her teammate shared a laugh. Cote called Smoot her “rock� and said the Lions showed well at state, noting their 6-2, 6-2 loss to Athena Tran and Lauren O’Brien, of Blue Valley North. “We got some games off of people that we probably shouldn’t have gotten games off of,� Cote said. Class 6A Girls Tennis State Tournament Friday at Olathe, College Boulevard Activity Center City results Doubles Caitlin Dodd-Ali Dodd, Free State: def. Colleen Freeman-Lexy Drummond, Shawnee Mission Northwest, 7-6 (8-6), 6-3; lost to Gretchen Cooper-Larkin McLiney, Shawnee Mission East, 6-3, 6-0. Rachel Walters-Andrea Chen, Free State: def. Grace Proett-Abby Brown, Hutchinson, 6-4, 6-3; lost to Karen Yan-Evelyn Chang, Blue Valley North, 6-2, 6-2; def. Dranise Brown-Cassidy Steward, Wichita East, 9-8 (7-3); lost to Lizzy Meizenbach-Mallory Novicoff, Blue Valley, 9-3 Betsy Smoot-Natalie Cote, Lawrence: def. Brooke PeggsMadison Surmeir, Wichita Northwest, 6-3, 6-2; lost to Athena Tran/Lauren O’Brien, Blue Valley North, 6-2, 6-2; lost to Lindsey Wagaman-Olivia Taylor, Topeka Washburn Rural, 9-7.
you,� said Likens of Texas Tech. “Baylor was a little different. Baylor just lines up and says, ‘This is what I’m doing, come get me.’� Likens said Tech’s smorgasbord of styles defensively made for a much more extensive week of preparation for Willis and him in the film room and on the practice field. “Oh yeah,� Likens said. “It’s not easy at all. They vary their fronts, guys standing up, in a three-
Kansas City, Mo. (ap) — In the days after Adrian Peterson tore the ligaments in his left knee in a game against Washington, Chiefs running back Jamaal Charles reached out to him with encouragement. Charles was already going through rehab for the same injury sustained earlier that season. Now, four years later, Peterson is returning the favor. The Vikings running back said this week he will invite Charles to work out with him in the offseason — both are native Texans who return home during the summer. The idea is that he could help push Charles through rehab after his second torn ACL sustained last Sunday. “I hate for him to go down like that, my guy go down,� said Peterson, whose Vikings host the Chiefs on Sunday. “He’s been through it before with his left knee and now he knows what to expect doing his rehab. That’s one positive.� Charles tore the ACL in his right knee early in the 2011 season, while Peterson was hurt in December. Both of them were back on the field by the start of the next season. Still, there are no guarantees with such a devastating injury, particularly to a running back whose speed is his biggest asset. While Charles was able to overcome his first torn ligament, the surgery and rehab required four years later may not leave him the same player as before. “I would caution you in trying to compare the last injury to this one, and who’s made it back and how fast they made it
back,� Chiefs trainer Rick Burkholder said. The Chiefs already have spoken with noted orthopedist Dr. James Andrews, who performed the surgery on Charles four years ago. Andrews likely will handle this procedure as well. “It looks like he’s leaning that way, going down there to have it done,� Burkholder said. “(Charles) has already been through some rehab sessions here to get ready.� Charles was hurt early in the third quarter of Sunday’s loss to Chicago, when he made a jump cut and his right knee buckled. He immediately reached for his right knee, and never put weight on it as he was helped off the field. The Chiefs confirmed the torn ACL after an MRI on Monday. The injury not only deprives the Chiefs (1-4) of their biggest playmaker, but also the most consistent performer on an inconsistent offense. Charles averages more than five yards per carry, and his ability to loosen up defenses is helpful to quarterback Alex Smith, who has yet to prove that he can carry the Chiefs on the strength of his right arm. The Chiefs worked out several running backs, including former Texans rusher Ben Tate, but decided to elevate Spencer Ware from the practice squad. The former LSU standout will be part of a running back-by-committee approach with Knile Davis and Charcandrick West. “They all need to work together and do their thing,� Chiefs coach Andy Reid said.
Mike Gunnoe/Special to the Journal-World 
FREE STATE’S ANDREA CHEN FOLLOWS THROUGH on a forehand return.
point stance, sometimes the same guy. And they’ll give you more secondary looks than what Baylor did.�
Series history Texas Tech is 15-1 all-time against the Jayhawks, including 6-0 in games played in Lawrence. Kansas’ lone victory in the series came in 2001, when the Jayhawks outlasted the Red Raiders, 34-31 in overtime in Lubbock, Texas.
Tech favored Another week brings another huge point spread for a Kansas football game, as the Red Raiders enter today’s game favored by 32.5 points. The line opened at Texas Tech -27 and, like last week when Baylor opened at -38 and settled at -46 by kickoff, the spread quickly shot up with most of the action coming in on Tech to cover the four-touchdown total.
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Saturday, October 17, 2015
GAMEDAY
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Texas Tech Red Raiders (4-2, 1-2) at Kansas (0-5, 0-2) 11 a.m. today, Memorial Stadium • Game-time forecast: Partly cloudy, 52 degrees, SE winds at 9 mph • TV: FS1 (cable chs. 150, 227) Log on to KUsports.com for our live game blog and follow our coverage team on Twitter: @KUSports @mctait @TomKeeganLJW and @bentonasmith
DEPTH CHARTS KANSAS JAYHAWKS (0-5, 0-2) OFFENSE WR Tre’ Parmalee 5-10, 171, Sr. Derrick Neal 5-10, 170, Soph. LT Jordan Shelley-Smith 6-5, 296, Jr. Clyde McCaulley III 6-5, 292, Fr. LG Bryan Peters 6-3, 300, Sr. Jacob Bragg 6-4, 284, RS-Fr. C Joe Gibson 6-3, 290, Soph. Keyon Haughton 6-2, 285, Sr. RG D’Andre Banks 6-3, 302, Jr. Jayson Rhodes 6-4, 285, Soph. RT Larry Hughes 6-7, 281, Fr. Larry Mazyck 6-8, 335, Sr. TE Ben Johnson 6-5, 230, Soph. OR Kent Taylor 6-5, 220, Jr. RB Taylor Cox 5-11, 206, Sr. Ke’aun Kinner 5-9, 186, Jr. QB Ryan Willis 6-4, 211, Fr. T.J. Millweard 6-4, 219, Jr. WR Jeremiah Booker 6-2, 195, Fr. Tyler Patrick 6-0, 179, RS-Fr. WR Steven Sims Jr. 5-10, 170, Fr. Darious Crawley 5-11, 190, Soph. DEFENSE CB Brandon Stewart 6-0, 171, Jr. Marnez Ogletree 5-10, 190, Jr.
1 2 3
NB Tevin Shaw 5-11, 198, Jr. Chevy Graham 5-9, 196, Jr. DE Ben Goodman 6-3, 253, Sr. T.J. Semke 6-2, 248, Sr.
Nick Krug/Journal-World File Photo
KANSAS LINEBACKER SCHYLER MILES (32) PUTS A HIT ON RUTGERS RUNNING BACK ROBERT MARTIN (7) in this photo from Sept. 26 in Piscataway, New Jersey. Miles and his fellow linebackers will need to have a productive day today for Kansas to have a shot against Texas Tech.
DT Daniel Wise 6-3, 280, RS-Fr. Kapil Fletcher 6-3, 285, Sr.
THREE KEYS FOR KANSAS
NT Corey King 6-1, 295, Sr. D.J. Williams 6-5, 298, RS-Fr. DE Anthony Olobia 6-5, 240, Jr. Dorrance Armstrong 6-4, 225, Fr. CB Tyrone Miller Jr. 6-0, 180, Fr. Ronnie Davis 6-0, 192, Sr. FS Michael Glatczak 5-10, 173, Sr. Greg Allen 5-11, 212, Jr. MLB Marcquis Roberts 6-1, 220, Jr. Schyler Miles 6-2, 221, Jr. WLB Joe Dineen Jr. 6-2, 212, Soph. OR Courtney Arnick 6-2, 210, Jr. SS Fish Smithson 5-11, 190, Soph. Bazie Bates IV 6-1, 189, Jr. SPECIAL TEAMS KO Matthew Wyman 6-1, 218, Jr. Eric Kahn 6-5, 204, Sr. PK Matthew Wyman 6-1, 218, Jr. OR Nick Bartolotta 5-6, 181, Soph. P Eric Kahn 6-5, 204, Sr. OR Ruben Guzman 5-8, 190, Sr.
Linebackers have to show up
With the loss of defensive tackle Jacky Dezir Kansas offensive coordinator Rob Likens to injury, the Jayhawks are down to three interior said the Texas Tech defense likes to move defensive linemen who have played significant around to disguise coverages and blitzes and snaps. That’s tough against any opponent but confuse offenses. Unlike a week ago against particularly difficult against one of the nation’s Baylor, which pretty much lined up in the same fastest-moving, most high-powered offenses. defense and basically said, ‘Here we are, come The Red Raiders average 80 plays per game and and get us,’ the Red Raiders’ look will be more will snap the ball quickly. That gives KU very complicated, which could be especially difficult little time to rest, which will make life difficult for freshman quarterback Ryan Willis and for Corey King, Daniel Wise and Kapil Fletcher in- his young offense to recognize and adjust to. side. Because of that, linebackers Schyler Miles, Because of that, the coaching staff will have Joe Dineen, Marcquis Roberts, Courtney Arnick to simplify as much as possible, giving the KU and Osaze Ogbebor, along with KU’s corneroffense one or two keys to focus on and then backs and safeties, are going to have to be ready asking them to trust what they’re seeing and to support the run and get to the quarterback. execute to the best of their ability. Without a deep rotation, those D-tackles are bound to get worn down quickly.
LS John Wirtel 6-3, 230, Jr. Jordan Goldenberg 6-0, 214, Soph.
KOR Ryan Schadler 5-11, 185, RS-Fr. Steven Sims Jr. 5-10, 170, Fr.
OFFENSE LT Le’Raven Clark 6-6, 316, Sr. Poet Thomas 6-6, 323, Soph. LG Alfredo Morales 6-4, 310, Sr. Emeka Okafor 6-5, 329, Sr. C Jared Kaster 6-3, 293, Sr. Robert Castaneda 6-5, 295, RS-Fr. RG Tony Morales 6-3, 297, Sr. Justin Murphy 6-7, 296, RS-Fr. RT Baylen Brown 6-4, 310, Jr. Paul Stawarz 6-5, 295, Soph. QB Patrick Mahomes II 6-3, 221, Soph. Davis Webb 6-5, 227, Jr. RB DeAndre Washington 5-8, 198, Sr. Quinton White 5-7, 209, Jr.
Z Dylan Cantrell 6-3, 219, Jr. Reginald Davis 6-0, 185, Jr. DEFENSE DE Branden Jackson 6-4, 268, Sr. Talor Nunez 6-4, 256, Soph. NT Rika Levi 6-2, 339, Sr. Marcus Smith 6-3, 311, Sr. DT Demetrious Alston 6-3, 276, Sr. Keland McElrath 6-4, 307, Sr. RUSH Pete Robertson 6-3, 238, Sr. Zach Barnes 6-2, 230, Soph. WLB Kris Williams 6-1, 228, Jr. D’Vonta Hinton 5-9, 225, Fr. SLB Malik Jenkins 6-1, 222, Jr. Sam Atoe 5-11, 232, Sr. MLB Micah Awe 6-0, 223, Sr. Dakota Allen 6-2, 234, RS-Fr. CB Tevin Madison 5-10, 171, Soph. J.J. Gaines 6-0, 181, Sr. CB Justis Nelson 6-2, 179, Jr. Nigel Bethel II 5-9, 184, Soph. FS Jah’Shawn Johnson 5-10, 174, RS-Fr. Payton Hendrix 6-2, 202, RS-Fr. SS Keenon Ward 5-9, 204, Jr. Jalen Barnes 6-0, 189, Soph. SPECIAL TEAMS P Taylor Symmank 6-2, 192, Sr. PK Michael Barden 5-10, 174, RS-Fr. Clayton Hatfield 5-10, 178, RS-Fr. KO Taylor Symmank 6-2, 192, Sr. Clayton Hatfield 5-10, 178, RS-Fr. PR Cameron Batson 5-9, 173, Soph. Justin Stockton 5-10, 189, Soph. KR Cameron Batson 5-9, 173, Soph. Jakeem Grant 5-9, 169, Sr. LS David Brenner 6-0, 230, Sr. H Cameron Batson 5-9, 173, Soph.
— Matt Tait
Grant, a 5-foot-7, 168-pound senior from Mesquite, Texas, is the definition of a multi-use weapon. Through six games this season, the Red Raiders wideout has scored a touchdown in four ways. He enters today’s game with 648 receiving yards and four touchdown grabs on 44 receptions and 1,049 all-purpose yards, which ranks sixth in the country. In addition to his four TDs through the air, Grant also has thrown for a touchdown, run for a touchdown and scored a TD on a kickoff return, where he averages 26.3 yards per return and ranks fifth in the nation. No matter where he is on the field, when Grant touches the ball, the Red Raiders average 16.9 yards per play, so it’ll be up to the Kansas defense and special teams, at all levels, to use a gang mentality to try to bottle up Tech’s dynamic play-maker. — Matt Tait The, uh, world
TEXAS TECH RED RAIDERS (4-2, 1-2)
Y Ian Sadler 5-10, 198, Soph. Brad Pearson 6-2, 211, Sr.
The Jayhawks are averaging just over 3 yards per play on first down, and Likens believes that number has to improve drastically in order to help KU finish more drives. In addition to its troubles on first down, Kansas has struggled on third-and-short as well, another area that makes finishing drives difficult. Likens said he was generally pleased with his team’s play on third-and-long and on second down. But the Jayhawks have not scored more than 14 points in the past three weeks. If they hope to climb above that number today, against a Texas Tech defense that surrenders 40 points per game to opponents, they’re going to have to find ways to jumpstart drives and convert short third and fourth downs.
Texas Tech WR Jakeem Grant vs. The World
PR Tre’ Parmalee 5-10, 171, Sr. Marnez Ogletree 5-10, 190, Jr.
H Jakeem Grant 5-6, 169, Sr. Cameron Baston 5-9, 173, Soph.
Be better on first downs
MEGA MATCHUP
HOLD T.J. Millweard 6-4, 219, Jr.
X Devin Lauderdale 6-0, 181, Jr. Tony Brown 6-1, 187, Fr.
Trust their reads
Texas Tech WR Jakeem Grant
5 QUESTIONS WITH OL JORDAN SHELLEY-SMITH
1
Coach Beaty had no problem saying that Texas Tech head coach Kliff Kingsbury is a “good-looking dude.” What do you think of Kingsbury’s Hollywood image? I’ve got no say on it. I met him at Big 12 media days. He’s a great guy and a great coach, and I’ve heard a lot of good things about him in the world of football, and I’ve got the utmost respect for him.
2
Speaking of Hollywood, what’s the best football movie of all-time?
Oh, “Friday Night Lights,” no question about it. No question. It’s Texas high school football, baby! You can’t beat it.
3
What does the KU offense need to do to start finishing more drives and scoring more points? Establish the run game. You know, the run game sets up everything. We’ve taken it upon ourselves as an offensive line that we need to do better in that regard, and we’ve really challenged each other to get back to doing what we do best. We want nothing more than our running backs to have 100yard games.
4
With true freshman Ryan Willis starting the first game of his career last week — and making start No. 2 today — did the O-line put more of an emphasis on protecting him? All of the time as an offensive line, you want the guy behind you to be safe. For me, as well as a bunch of other linemen on this team, every time that guy gets hit, it hits you hard, and you think, “That’s my dude. I can’t let that happen. That’s on me.” You immediately re-evaluate what you did. No matter what age or who it is back there, you want to protect
him and make sure he doesn’t take any unnecessary hits.
5
As an offensive lineman, what’s the worst thing that can happen out there? A hold, a false start, giving up a sack, something along those lines?
Jayhawk pulse Another week brings another high-powered Big 12 offense to face the winless Jayhawks, but you would never know that these guys are struggling this season from watching them at practice. Credit KU coach David Beaty and his staff for keeping their spirits up and emphasizing that it’s not about the result on the scoreboard this season, rather the improvement they make from rep to rep, day to day and week to week. Finding an argument for a KU victory the rest of the way is tough to do, but it becomes even tougher when considering the number of significant injuries that have plagued this team already. — Matt Tait
Tale of the Tape TTU . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Kansas
4
KU run game vs. TTU run D
For me, personally, as the left tackle, it’s your quarterback getting hurt. That’s by far the worst. You have nightmares about it, and you don’t ever want that to happen no matter what level you’re talking about.
4
KU pass game vs. TTU pass D
4
TTU run game vs. KU run D
4
TTU pass game vs. KU pass D
— Matt Tait
4
Special teams
SPORTS
L awrence J ournal -W orld
Saturday, October 17, 2015
| 5C
SCOREBOARD Kansas
NFL
AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA New England 4 0 0 1.000 149 76 N.Y. Jets 3 1 0 .750 95 55 Buffalo 3 2 0 .600 124 105 Miami 1 3 0 .250 65 101 South W L T Pct PF PA Indianapolis 3 2 0 .600 99 113 Tennessee 1 3 0 .250 102 91 Houston 1 4 0 .200 97 135 Jacksonville 1 4 0 .200 93 145 North W L T Pct PF PA Cincinnati 5 0 0 1.000 148 101 Pittsburgh 3 2 0 .600 120 95 Cleveland 2 3 0 .400 118 132 Baltimore 1 4 0 .200 123 137 West W L T Pct PF PA Denver 5 0 0 1.000 113 79 San Diego 2 3 0 .400 116 134 Oakland 2 3 0 .400 107 124 Kansas City 1 4 0 .200 117 143 NATIONAL CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA N.Y. Giants 3 2 0 .600 132 109 Dallas 2 3 0 .400 101 131 Washington 2 3 0 .400 97 104 Philadelphia 2 3 0 .400 117 103 South W L T Pct PF PA Carolina 4 0 0 1.000 108 71 Atlanta 5 1 0 .833 183 143 Tampa Bay 2 3 0 .400 110 148 New Orleans 2 4 0 .333 134 164 North W L T Pct PF PA Green Bay 5 0 0 1.000 137 81 Minnesota 2 2 0 .500 80 73 Chicago 2 3 0 .400 86 142 Detroit 0 5 0 .000 83 138 West W L T Pct PF PA Arizona 4 1 0 .800 190 90 St. Louis 2 3 0 .400 84 113 Seattle 2 3 0 .400 111 98 San Francisco 1 4 0 .200 75 140 Thursday’s Game New Orleans 31, Atlanta 21 Sunday’s Games Kansas City at Minnesota, noon Miami at Tennessee, noon Washington at N.Y. Jets, noon Arizona at Pittsburgh, noon Cincinnati at Buffalo, noon Chicago at Detroit, noon Denver at Cleveland, noon Houston at Jacksonville, noon Carolina at Seattle, 3:05 p.m. Baltimore at San Fran., 3:25 p.m. San Diego at Green Bay, 3:25 p.m. New England at Indianapolis, 7:30 p.m. Monday’s Game N.Y. Giants at Philadelphia, 7:30 p.m.
Big 12 Standings
Big 12 Overall W L W L Oklahoma State 3 0 6 0 TCU 3 0 6 0 Baylor 2 0 5 0 Oklahoma 1 1 4 1 Iowa State 1 1 2 3 Texas Tech 1 2 4 2 Texas 1 2 2 4 Kansas State 0 2 3 2 West Virginia 0 2 3 2 Kansas 0 2 0 5 Today’s Games Texas Tech at Kansas, 11 a.m. (FOX) West Virginia at Baylor, 11 a.m. (FS1) Oklahoma at Kansas State, 2:30 p.m. (ABC) TCU at Iowa State. 6 p.m. (ESPN2)
Sept. 5 — South Dakota State, L 38-41 (0-1) Sept. 12 — Memphis, L 23-55 (0-2) Sept. 26 — at Rutgers, L 14-27 (0-3) Oct. 3 — at Iowa State, L 13-38 (0-4, 0-1) Oct. 10 — Baylor, L 7-66 (0-5, 0-2) Today — Texas Tech, 11 a.m. (FS1) Oct. 24 — at Oklahoma State, 2:30 p.m. (FS1) Oct. 31 (homecoming) — Oklahoma, TBA Nov. 7 — at Texas, 7 p.m. (Jayhawk Net) Nov. 14 — at TCU, TBA Nov. 21 — West Virginia, TBA Nov. 28 — Kansas State, TBA
Lawrence High
Sept. 4 — Blue Valley West, W 35-14 (1-0) Sept. 11 — at Leavenworth, W 41-14 (2-0) Sept. 18 — at Free State, W 14-12 (3-0) Sept. 24 — SM Northwest at North District Stadium, W 41-6 (4-0) Oct. 2 — SM South, W 42-6 (5-0) Oct. 9 — Olathe South, W 63-7 (6-0) Oct. 15 — Olathe Northwest at CBAC, W 35-7 (7-0) Oct. 23 — Olathe North, 7 p.m. Oct. 30 — Olathe East at CBAC, 7 p.m.
Free State
Sept. 4 — SM West, L 26-34 (0-1) Sept. 11 — Olathe North at ODAC, L 20-24 (0-2) Sept. 18 — Lawrence High, L 12-14 (0-3) Sept. 25 — at Leavenworth, W 43-7 (1-3) Oct. 2 — SM East at North District Stadium, W 32-20 (2-3) Oct. 9 — SM South, W 56-6 (3-3) Today — at Washburn Rural, W 35-7 (4-3) Oct. 23 — Manhattan, 7 p.m. Oct. 30 — Topeka High, 7 p.m.
High School
Abilene 26, McPherson 17 Andale 59, Wichita Trinity 24 Anthony-Harper-Chaparral 49, Belle Plaine 6 Atchison 30, Tonganoxie 14 Attica/Argonia 64, Pretty Prairie 6 Augusta 39, Winfield 0 Axtell 22, Pike Valley 0 Basehor-Linwood 55, KC Piper 21 Beloit 60, Hays-TMP-Marian 21 Bishop Miege 67, Spring Hill 14 Blue Valley Stillwell 35, GardnerEdgerton 7 Bonner Springs 55, KC Turner 15 Buhler 46, Hays 14 Burlingame 66, Flinthills 8 BV North 48, SM South 0 BV Northwest 44, Olathe South 20 BV Randolph 66, Glasco/MiltonvaleSouthern Cloud 20 Central Burden 66, Cedar Vale/ Dexter 20 Central Plains 52, Ellinwood 6 Chase 52, Centre 6 Cheney 19, Conway Springs 15 Cimarron 44, Lakin 0 Clay Center 50, Goodland 14 Clearwater 42, Haven 8 Colby 42, Concordia 13 Columbus 60, Baxter Springs 0 Crest 50, Chetopa 46 Derby 54, Wichita Campus 14 DeSoto 29, Baldwin 16 Dighton/Healy 60, Ness City 20 El Dorado 32, Circle 13 Ell-Saline 18, Bennington 8 Erie 36, Humboldt 28 Eudora 46, Ottawa 8 Flint Hills Christian 66, Hutchinson Central Christian 24
0
Fort Scott 58, Chanute 13 Frankfort 60, Linn 12 Frontenac 34, Parsons 13 Galena 42, Cherryvale 12 Garden City 14, Hutchinson 2 Garden Plain 12, Hutchinson Trinity
Girard 35, Anderson County 8 Goddard 56, Liberal 15 Goddard-Eisenhower 42, Arkansas City 22 Great Bend 52, Newton 21 Halstead 36, Kingman 7 Hanover 68, Lakeside 22 Heartland Christian 68, WheatlandGrinnell 42 Hesston 56, Hillsboro 14 Hiawatha 37, Horton 24 Hodgeman County 54, South Gray 6 Hoisington 46, Ellsworth 0 Holcomb 36, Larned 0 Holton 21, Jefferson West 7 Hoxie 46, Cheylin 0 Hugoton 14, Pratt 7 Independence 49, Coffeyville 6 Ingalls 50, Rolla 0 Iola 28, Burlington 23 Jackson Heights 46, Onaga 8 Jefferson North 44, Valley Falls 14 Junction City 64, Wichita Southeast 0 Kapaun Mount Carmel 34, Emporia 28 Kiowa County 62, Kinsley 12 Lansing 58, KC Washington 8 Lawrence Free State 35, Washburn Rural 7 Leavenworth 38, KC Schlagle 0 Lebo 48, Madison/Hamilton 18 Lincoln 42, Rock Hills 38 Little River 62, Canton-Galva 14 Louisburg 63, KC Sumner 6 Lyons 28, Sterling 24 Maize South 35, Valley Center 16 Marmaton Valley 68, Pleasanton 18 Marysville 45, Minneapolis 28 Maur Hill - Mount Academy 60, Atchison County 20 Meade 33, Marion 18 Mill Valley 45, St. James Academy 14 Minneola 66, Ashland 16 Mission Valley 42, Chase County 19 Moundridge 40, Remington 28 Nemaha Central 43, Centralia 14 Neodesha 35, Fredonia 0 Nickerson 28, Smoky Valley 0 Northern Heights 30, Herington 0 Northern Valley 50, Natoma 18 Norton 47, Russell 7 Oakley 19, Ellis 14 Oberlin-Decatur 50, Quinter 0 Olathe North 53, Olathe East 27 Olpe 28, Lyndon 6 Osawatomie 48, Prairie View 20 Otis-Bison 46, St. John’s BeloitTipton 36 Paola 54, Labette County 14 Phillipsburg 60, Republic County 6 Pittsburg 56, BV West 13 Pittsburg Colgan 52, NortheastArma 0 Plainville 66, Wichita County 21 Pleasant Ridge 48, McLouth 6 Rawlins County 40, Logan/Palco 6 Riverton 40, Southeast 20 Rock Creek 46, St. Mary’s 21 Rossville 63, Oskaloosa 12 Royal Valley 35, Perry-Lecompton 21 Rural Vista 42, Peabody-Burns 30 Sabetha 37, Riverside 18 Salina Sacred Heart 49, Medicine Lodge 14 Salina South 42, Salina Central 35 Santa Fe Trail 41, KC Bishop Ward 14 Satanta 74, Moscow 26 Scott City 53, Southwestern Hts. 14 Sedan 72, Oxford 22 Sedgwick 45, Inman 16
Shawnee Heights 27, Highland Park 26 Silver Lake 53, Osage City 9 SM East 69, KC Harmon 0 SM North 49, KC Wyandotte 30 SM West 45, SM Northwest 6 Smith Center 43, LaCrosse 8 Solomon 60, Goessel 14 South Barber 60, Caldwell 36 South Central 48, Pratt Skyline 0 South Haven 56, Norwich 28 Southeast Saline 46, Council Grove 8 Southern Coffey 60, AltoonaMidway 2 Spearville 54, Trego 6 St. Francis 68, Osborne 22 St. Thomas Aquinas 70, Blue Valley Southwest 7 Stafford 50, Fairfield-Cunningham 0 Stockton 34, Hill City 6 Syracuse 44, Elkhart 8 Tescott 54, Burrton 6 Topeka 41, Manhattan 14 Topeka Hayden 38, Andover Central 29 Triplains-Brewster 61, Greeley County 16 Troy 46, Doniphan West 19 Ulysses 34, Mulvane 31 Uniontown 80, Marais des Cygnes Valley 40 Veritas Christian 46, Cair Paravel 18 Victoria 58, Thunder Ridge 0 Wabaunsee 12, Valley Heights 7 Wakefield 60, Clifton-Clyde 14 Wallace County 54, Golden Plains 0 Wamego 34, Chapman 0 Washington County 22, Riley County 18 Wellington 44, Rose Hill 20 Wellsville 60, Jayhawk Linn 0 West Elk 52, Udall 6 West Franklin 38, Central Heights 20 Wichita Bishop Carroll 48, Maize 26 Wichita Collegiate 76, Bluestem 0 Wichita Heights 35, Andover 14 Wichita Home School 72, Wichita Sunrise 26 Wichita Independent 48, Douglass 14 Wichita Northwest 52, Dodge City 33 Wichita West 41, Wichita South 14 Wilson 66, Sylvan-Lucas 22 Yates Center 44, Oswego 20 POSTPONEMENTS AND CANCELLATIONS Drexel, Mo. vs. Christ Preparatory Academy, ppd.
Postseason
LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) American League Friday, Oct. 16: Kansas City 5, Toronto 0 Today: Toronto (Price 18-5) at Kansas City (Ventura 13-8), 3:07 p.m. (FS1) Monday, Oct. 19: Kansas City (Cueto 11-13) at Toronto (Stroman 4-0), 7:07 p.m. (FS1) Tuesday, Oct. 20: Kansas City at Toronto (Dickey 11-11), TBA (FOX or FS1) x-Wednesday, Oct. 21: Kansas City at Toronto, TBA (FOX or FS1) x-Friday, Oct. 23: Toronto at Kansas City, TBA (FOX or FS1) x-Saturday, Oct. 24: Toronto at Kansas City, TBA (FOX or FS1) National League All games televised by TBS Today: Chicago (Lester 11-12) at New York, 7:07 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 18: Chicago (Arrieta 22-6) at New York, 7:07 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 20: New York at Chicago, TBA
Wednesday, Oct. 21: New York at Chicago, TBA x-Thursday, Oct. 22: New York at Chicago, TBA x-Saturday, Oct. 24: Chicago at New York, TBA x-Sunday, Oct. 25: Chicago at New York, TBA WORLD SERIES (Best-of-7) All games televised by Fox Tuesday, Oct. 27: at American Wednesday, Oct. 28: at AL Friday, Oct. 30: at National League Saturday, Oct. 31: at NL x-Sunday, Nov. 1: at NL x-Tuesday, Nov. 3: at AL x-Wednesday, Nov. 4: at AL
MLS
EASTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA x-New York 16 10 6 54 56 41 x-Toronto FC 15 13 4 49 57 54 x-D.C. United 14 12 6 48 39 40 New England 13 11 8 47 45 45 Columbus 13 11 8 47 51 53 Montreal 13 13 6 45 45 43 Orlando City 12 13 8 44 46 55 NYC FC 10 16 7 37 48 55 Philadelphia 9 16 7 34 40 51 Chicago 8 18 6 30 42 52 WESTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA x-FC Dallas 16 10 6 54 49 38 x-Los Angeles 14 9 9 51 53 39 x-Vancouver 15 13 5 50 42 36 Sporting KC 13 10 9 48 46 42 Seattle 14 13 5 47 40 34 San Jose 13 12 8 47 40 37 Portland 13 11 8 47 32 36 Houston 11 13 8 41 41 45 Real Salt Lake 11 13 8 41 37 44 Colorado 8 14 10 34 30 39 NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie. x- clinched playoff berth Wednesday’s Games Toronto FC 2, New York 1 FC Dallas 2, Vancouver 0 Portland 1, Real Salt Lake 0 Friday’s Games Orlando City 2, New York City FC 1 San Jose 1, Sporting Kansas City 0 Today’s Games Columbus at Toronto FC, 1 p.m. Montreal at New England, 6:30 p.m. FC Dallas at Real Salt Lake, 8:30 p.m. Sunday’s Games Chicago at D.C. United, 1 p.m. Philadelphia at New York, 2 p.m. Seattle at Houston, 4 p.m. Portland at Los Angeles, 6 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 21 Colorado at Sporting Kansas City, 7:30 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 25 New York at Chicago, 4 p.m. D.C. United at Columbus, 4 p.m. Toronto FC at Montreal, 4 p.m. New England at New York City FC, 4 p.m. Orlando City at Philadelphia, 4 p.m. San Jose at FC Dallas, 6 p.m. Colorado at Portland, 6 p.m. Real Salt Lake at Seattle, 6 p.m. Houston at Vancouver, 6 p.m. Los Angeles at Sporting Kansas City, 6 p.m.
Middle School
SEABURY 4, KC CHRISTIAN 2 Friday at YSI Seabury goals: Joe Risley 3, Evan McHenry. Seabury assist: Brayden Schumaker. Seabury record: 6-2.
adopt-a-pet Katana
Katana is a German Shepherd/Doberman Pinscher mix. She is 3 years old and weighs about 90 lbs. You may fall in love with her cute face and funny ears, but keep in mind her size and strength when you meet her. An active home with plenty of room would be ideal. A big couch for lounging (for her) would be a plus. She needs to be the pet in house. Come fees are waived for meet her today.
pets of the week!
bearcat
Not all cats are lap cats. Bearcat is a friendly guy, but prefers to have his paws on solid ground. Unless of course he is the one doing the climbing. He is 2 years old and is a Domestic Short Hair with orange tabby markings. He has an independent attitude, so you won’t have to worry about him being too clingy. He might enjoy being on his own while you are away for the day.
tamba
Even at 11 months, Tamba has learned the best way to be a great ambassador for his breed is by example. He is a polite little Pit Bull Terrier mix and has big hopes of helping people see that he is like many other dogs looking for a home. He wants to learn and be able to be his best, but his new family needs to help make that happen. Come meet this impressive little man today.
SamueL
Samuel likes his naps, but he also likes some snuggles and playtime. He is a 3 year old Domestic Short Hair with orange and white tiger markings. He came in as a stray, so he would probably enjoy some house time to relax and be comfy. Something tells me this young man would be appreciative of a sunny window to nap in and maybe a big chair to watch some football. Come meet him today.
Gomer
Gomer is a sweet 2 year old Pit Bull mix who has personality plus. As with many of the dogs he has a lengthy story, but the bottom line is, he needs a forever home. He loves to play tug. You name the toy and he will figure out a way to play with it. Imagine waking up every morning to this happy face. It doesn’t get much better than that. See you soon.
fees are waived for pets of the week!
oSwaLd
FiLa
Fila reminds me a little of Marilyn Monroe. Not only because she is beautiful and has a cute little birthmark, but also because of her personality. She can be soft and sweet when she wants, but can also be a strong and independent lady. She is a 1 year old Domestic Short Hair with a mostly white coat and grey tiger markings. She is one of many wonderful cats available here at the shelter.
aStra
Astra came to Lawrence with the idea of making lots of new friends. (she’s very good at it) She is a good hearted 1 year old Hound mix with a black and tan coat. The more people she meets, the happier she is, but she would be even happier if she can meet you and all of the people you know. She is ready for some new adventures and friendships. Come meet you new best friend.
Friday At Silverado Resort and Course Napa, Calif. Purse: $6 million Yardage: 7,203; Par: 72 Second Round Brendan Steele Will Wilcox Jhonattan Vegas Graham DeLaet Harold Varner III Martin Laird Justin Rose Russell Henley Justin Thomas Colt Knost Patrick Rodgers J.J. Henry Tyrone Van Aswegen Jonas Blixt Charles Howell III Chris Stroud Michael Kim Boo Weekley Tony Finau Sean O’Hair Charl Schwartzel Kevin Na Daniel Berger Emiliano Grillo Adam Hadwin Rory McIlroy Kyle Reifers Brett Stegmaier Jason Bohn Hideki Matsuyama Ben Crane James Hahn Jason Gore Steve Wheatcroft D.H. Lee Smylie Kaufman Andrew Loupe Mark Hubbard Scott Langley Jerry Kelly Hudson Swafford Brooks Koepka Nick Watney Charlie Beljan Daniel Summerhays Henrik Norlander Miguel Angel Carballo Jamie Lovemark
Spa, North
63-70—133 68-67—135 64-71—135 67-68—135 65-70—135 65-71—136 67-69—136 67-69—136 66-70—136 71-66—137 68-69—137 68-69—137 69-68—137 70-68—138 69-69—138 69-69—138 71-67—138 69-69—138 70-69—139 68-71—139 71-68—139 68-71—139 70-69—139 68-71—139 72-67—139 68-71—139 68-71—139 68-71—139 72-68—140 70-70—140 69-71—140 74-66—140 67-73—140 71-69—140 66-74—140 68-72—140 68-72—140 68-72—140 67-74—141 72-69—141 69-72—141 69-72—141 68-73—141 73-68—141 67-74—141 72-69—141 72-69—141 70-71—141
College Women
ITA Midwest Regionals Friday at Stillwater, Oklahoma Kansas Results Round of 64 Summer Collins, KU, def. Marcelina Cichon, Tulsa, 7-6, 4-6, 6-3 Smith Hinton, KU, def. Renata Kurikova, TU, 6-2, 6-2 Anastasiya Rychagova, KU, def. Annette Dohanics, Iowa, 6-2, 6-2 Nina Khmelnitckaia, KU, def. Malene Stripp, OU, 6-3, 6-1 Vladica Babic, OSU, def. Janet Koch, KU, 7-6 (2), 6-3 Round of 32 Collins def. Sara Castellano, KSU, 6-4, 7-6 Hinton def. Carolina Costamagna, KSU, 6-1, 6-3 Rychagova, def. Lily Miyazaki, OU, 6-0, 6-1 Khmelnitckaia def. Rebecca Pedrazzi, WSU, 6-1, 6-3 Singles Consolation Shelby King, ASU, def. Maria Jose Carona, KU, 3-6, 6-2, 10-6.
Can’t adopt? then please donate! Call, e-mail or Come Visit! help us help them!
Lizard
Good things do come in small packages and Lizard is living proof of that. She is a 2 year old Domestic Short Hair with gray tabby markings. She is a petite 6 lb lady, but there is a lot of personality and love in that little body. She is the perfect size for an apartment or town home, but she won’t say no to a bigger abode either. All cats need to go home in a carrier fees are waived for with a collar.
pets of the week!
When you put the words energetic and goofball together, what you might come up with is Oswald. Be ready for some get up and go, with a lot of fun all rolled into one. This sweet boy is a 6 year old American Bulldog mix with a white and tan coat. He might be a bit much for the tiny members of the family, but he would love to have someone who can keep him active.
Frys.com Open
1805 East 19th Street | Lawrence, Kansas 66046 785-843-6835 | www.lawrencehumane.org Like us on Facebook, too! www.facebook.com/lawrencehumane
We Would like to extend a speCial thanks to these sponsors! Where it’s ALL for Play!!! 785-749-3222 5 minutes W. of Lawrence 727 N. Iowa | Lawrence, Kansas
Visit our website at: www.kibblesnbits.com
cindy
Cindy is a 5 year old Domestic Short Hair with striking black and red tortie markings. In true tortie fashion, she can be a sweet and loving lady, but most definitely when it is on her terms. If you have ever loved one of these beautiful girls then you know that they are capable of running the household and being “the leader of the pack” without batting an eye. Come make her acquaintance today.
celebrating adopt a shelter dog month
lly breed dogs All bu
roxy
Roxy has a long history of being a good dog. She is a 6 year old German Shorthaired Pointer. Her desire to please is one of the things that make her who she is. She knows many commands and enjoys being with her people, but does okay on her own. Not all dogs are meant to be in families with children. Roxy prefers adult companionship and she should do well with another dog. Cats might be a “no” also.
Subaru
Subaru is an adorable all black 8 month old Labrador Retriever mix. It’s the mix part that gets confusing. He has a wiry coat, so your guess is probably as good as ours. He will need some puppy training and still needs to work on his leash skills, but you won’t find a more agreeable fellow. The sooner you come meet him, the sooner you can get started on being best friends. See you soon.
remuS
Remus is only 1 year old and is a handsome little Chihuahua mix. He has made huge strides since coming here. Needless to say, the shelter can be an overwhelming experience for some of the animals. He is doing his best to fit in and seems to be eager to be in the company of people. Children would likely be too much for him, but a loving lap might be just the right fit, especially if you have hot dogs.
6C
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Saturday, October 17, 2015
LOCAL
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L awrence J ournal -W orld
No. 3-ranked WVU rips KU soccer, 6-0 J-W Staff Reports
Morgantown, W. Va. — No. 3-ranked West Virginia scored two goals in the first 20 minutes and cruised to a 6-0 Big 12 soccer rout of Kansas University on Friday at Dick Dlesk Stadium. WVU (13-1-1, 4-0-1) extended its unbeaten
streak to 13 games. Kansas (8-6-1, 3-2-0) suffered its worst league loss since a 6-0 loss to Missouri on Oct. 31, 2008. “West Virginia is a very good team, but to be honest, I thought we made it very easy on them tonight,” KU coach Mark Francis said. “We created some chances tonight,
but we have to be better. We need to move past this one, though. We still have a lot to play for. We have three big games left, so we need to regroup.” West Virginia scored the only goal it would need less than four minutes into the match when a shot from senior forward Kailey Utley was deflected to
the back of the KU net by a Jayhawk defender. The Utley goal brought the Kansas opponent scoreless streak to an end at 307 minutes, the 10th-longest streak in program history. The Mountaineers built upon their lead less than 15 minutes later. Junior Ashley Lawrence beat the Kansas defense
to a long through ball to the center of the Jayhawk penalty area. Lawrence used a light toe poke to redirect it passed KU goalkeeper Maddie Dobyns for West Virginia’s second goal of the night. The score marked just the fourth time Kansas has allowed multiple goals this season.
The Jayhawks were outshot in the match 2310 and managed to get just three shots on goal, their lowest total of the season. Freshman Parker Roberts led KU with three shots on the night. Kansas will play Friday at Texas Tech and Sunday at Oklahoma State.
Rask sparks Veritas football to win J-W Staff Reports
Mike Gunnoe/Special to the Journal-World
FREE STATE HIGH’S JACK FLYNN JUST MISSES A RECEPTION in the Firebirds’ 35-7 victory over Washburn Rural on Friday in Topeka.
Firebirds CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C
through and made some big blocks,” Skwarlo said. “Like coach always says, ‘You have to get downhill and good things will happen.’” When Skwarlo wasn’t running for long touchdowns, he was driving his shoulders into tacklers and picking up several yards on each play. Skwarlo, who missed all but one game last year with a Lisfranc injury in his foot, had 231 of his 256 yards in the first half. “A lot of well-set edges by our tackles,” FSHS senior center Garrett Swisher said. “Good movement upfield by our guards. Had a couple spots there where we didn’t keep our feet, didn’t make the right blocks. But a lot of it comes from our backfield, Sam and Bryce (Torneden) going 100 percent every play.” Free State’s defense was just as dominant as Skwarlo’s running abilities in the first half. The Firebirds allowed only 38 yards in the first two quarters, forcing six straight three-and-out punts. On the defensive line, seniors Jalen Galloway and Darian Lewis
SUMMARY FS WR First downs 14 5 Rushes-yards 55-353 29-90 Passing yards 22 34 Total offense 375 124 Return yards 116 65 Fumbles-lost 2-1 1-0 Penalties-yards 6-53 5-40 Score by quarters Free State 7 21 0 7 — 35 Washburn Rural 0 0 0 7 — 7 Individual statistics Rushing FS: Sam Skwarlo 26-256 5 TD, Bryce Torneden 12-29, Zion Bowlin 7-26, Paul Bittinger 5-21, Gage Foster 5-21. WR: Hunter Browning 9-14, Matthew Williams 8-12, Ben Harrison 7-32, Khalfani Scroggins 5-32. Passing FS: Torneden 2-7–22. WR: Mitchell Schurig 4-12–34 TD and INT. Receiving FS: Daniel Bryant 1-10, Logan McKinney 1-12. WR: Harrison 1-9, Browning 2-5, Jovan Hall 1-20 TD. HOW THEY SCORED First quarter 10:07 — Sam Skwarlo 58 run. Kameron Lake kick. (FS 7, WR 0.) Second quarter 11:49 — Skwarlo 56 run. Lake kick. (FS 14, WR 0.) 3:59 — Skwarlo 54 run. Lake kick. (FS 21, WR 0.) 0:09 — Skwarlo 2 run. Lake kick. (FS 28, WR 0.) Fourth quarter 10:51 — Skwarlo 10 run. Lake kick. (FS 35, WR 0.) 6:23 — Jovan Hall 20 pass from Mitchell Schurig. Grant Kayser kick. (FS 35, WR 7.)
plugged up running lanes with a strong push off of the ball. That helped linebackers Skwarlo, seniors Drew Tochtrop and Paul Bittinger, junior Jay Dineen, and sophomore Nathan Spain fly around the field for tackles in the backfield. Free State senior cornerback Logan McKinney added an interception at
AREA ROUNDUP
the end of the third quarter, and it set up Skwarlo for a 10-yard touchdown run, giving the Firebirds a 35-0 lead. But the Firebirds (3-3) were disappointed when they failed to secure their first shutout since 2012 by allowing a touchdown in the fourth quarter. After the Junior Blues (5-2) ran down the field with long runs by running backs Ben Harrison and Khalfani Scroggins, quarterback Mitchell Schurig found receiver Jovon Hall with a 20-yard fade pass in the end zone. “We were playing good defense,” Lisher said. “They hadn’t done anything against us all night. Then in the fourth quarter we got a little bit tired, we got a little complacent and let them punch it in on us. That’s not something that we can allow to happen, especially in district play when the state puts the 21-point rule in there. We have to guard that.” The late touchdown left the Firebirds with a sour taste, but they couldn’t complain about their four-game win streak. “Coach (Spencer) Bonner actually told us, ‘Winning is contagious,’ and that’s definitely been the case for us,” Swisher said. “Hopefully it continues.”
Eudora 46, Ottawa 8 Eudora — Austin Downing ran for three touchdowns and caught one TD pass in Eudora’s victory over Ottawa on Friday night in high school football. Downing, who gained 123 yards on 14 carries, ran for scores of 57, three and five yards and caught a 17-yard TD pass from Grant Elston. Elson also scored on a one-yard run, Lee Andrews scored on a 10-yard run, and Austin Ormsby scored on a 25-yard fumble return. Eudora (4-3) will play Friday at De Soto. Ottawa 0 0 0 8—8 Eudora 19 13 14 0 — 46 E — Grant Elston 1 run (kick failed)
E — Austin Downing 17 pass from Elston (Elston kick) E — Austin Ormsby 25 fumble return (kick failed) E — Downing 57 run (kick failed) E — Downing 3 run (Elston kick) E — Downing 5 run (Elston kick) E — Lee Andrews 10 run (Elston kick) O — Bethea 18 run (Ray run)
Royal Valley 35, Perry-Lecompton 21 Hoyt — Perry-Lecompton bolted to a quick two-touchdown lead, but Royal Valley ran off 23 unanswered points and held on. Mitchell Bond had 24 rushes for 82 yards and three touchdowns and completed eight of 27 passes for 163 yards, with two interceptions. Perry 13 8 0 0 — 21 Royal Valley 8 15 6 6 — 35 P-L — Mitchell Bond 3 run (kick fail) P-L — Bond 1 run (Toby Meyer kick) RV — Nick Ehrhart 86 kick return (kick fail)
Cair Paravel 6 6 0 6 — 18 Veritas 0 16 22 8 — 46 CP — Freemann Greene 32 pass from Noah Powell (run fail) CP — Ryan Key 2 run (run fail) V — Chad Stieben 35 pass from Michael Rask (Rask run) V — Stieben 3 pass from Rask (Alex Tharp pass from Rask) V — Max Easter 6 run (run fail) V — Easter 11 run (Hayden Pine pass from Rask) V — Rask 4 run (Quinton Donohoe pass from Rask) V — Kammal Dowdell 10 pass from Rask (Ben Post run) CP — Isaiah Wiley 16 run (run fail)
Paul Sancya/AP Photo
KANSAS CITY STARTING PITCHER EDINSON Volquez celebrates after the last out in the top of the sixth inning in the Royals’ 5-0 victory over the Blue Jays on Friday in Kansas City, Missouri.
Royals CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C
been 0-3 with an 8.76 ERA in three career postseason starts. “I don’t know. I was just making my pitches.” Alcides Escobar and Lorenzo Cain drove in runs off Estrada (1-1), while Eric Hosmer and Kendrys Morales tacked on two more off LaTroy Hawkins to put the game away. The Blue Jays’ three hits were their fewest ever in a postseason game. They were shut out five times in the regular LHS soccer falls season. As if the outcome to No. 1 O-East wasn’t bad enough for Lawrence High’s boys them, designated hitter soccer team lost, 4-1, Edwin Encarnacion left against No. 1-ranked Olathe in the eighth inning to East on Thursday at CBAC. get X-rays on the middle LHS junior Cain Scott finger of his left hand. scored in the 24th minute The initial report was a on a free kick, helping the strain of the ligament and Lions tie the score, 1-all, Encarnacion was listed as before halftime. It was only day-to-day. the second goal allowed “He’s been battling by the Hawks (14-0) this this thing,” Gibbons said. season. “We’ll see how it goes.” The Lions (3-10-1) will The Royals will try travel to Shawnee Mission to take a 2-0 series lead North at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday. when they send Yordano Ventura to the mound today. Toronto will counter Edmonds, Zeng with former Cy Young pace Seabury CC Award winner David Price. Bishop Seabury junior “Hopefully things Jack Edmonds paced the change to our favor toboys cross country team morrow,” Toronto catchwith a 18th-place finish at er Dioner Navararo said. the Burlington Invitational RV — Safety The teams entered the RV — Blocked punt recovered in end on Thursday. zone (Derrick Barger run) series with plenty of hisThe Seahawks finished RV — Zack Lux 59 run (Noah Hart tory. kick) ninth among 12 teams in P-L — Bond 4 run (Bond run) To start with, the dethe boys race and sixth RV — Lux 37 run (kick fail) fending AL champs RV — Barger 1 run (run fail) of eight in the girls race. beat Toronto in the 1985 Sophomore Peggie Zeng league championship seDe Soto 29, Baldwin 16 led Seabury’s girls after ries, then beat the St. LouDe Soto — De Soto taking 26th place. is Cardinals for the Roymade a goal-line stand Seabury will compete als’ only World Series then drove the length of at regionals on Oct. 25 at the field to secure a citory Garnett-Anderson. over Baldwin. De Soto built a 21-0 when its defense turned FSHS grad Houk over Baldwin three times 10th for KWU in the first half. De Soto improved to Kansas Wesleyan freshJ-W Staff Reports 5-2. Baldwin is 2-5. man golfer Coleman Houk, Stillwater, Okla. — a Free State High grad, De Soto 14 7 0 8 — 29 Baldwin 0 8 0 8 — 16 finished 10th at the Sterling Kansas University went De Soto scoring: Schmitt 5 run 8-2 in singles matches on (kick); Mocca 80 interception return College Invitational at Carey (kick); Nate Thompson 16-yard run Park on Monday and Tuesthe second day of the In(kick); Schmitt 3 run (Thompson tercollegiate Tennis Assoday. Houk led his school to run) ciation Midwest Regional Baldwin scoring: Jake Katzer 1 fourth place in the team run (Jake Katzer pass from Garrett standings, shooting a 147 on Friday at the GreenBurkhart); Hunter Ramirez 9 pass to wood Tennis Center. Joel Katzer (Ramirez to Garrett Borth) (75-72).
Eudora crushes Ottawa J-W Staff Reports
Michael Rask threw for 170 yards and three touchdowns, and Veritas Christian School rebounded from a twotouchdown deficit to claim a comfortable 46-18 high school football victory over Topeka Cair Paravel on Friday at the Eagle’s Nest. Rask completed 15 of 25 passes with just one interception. He also rushed for 13 yards and a TD. Max Easter had 11 rushes for 54 yards and a pair of touchdowns. Chad Stieben caught eight passes for 103 yards and two TDs. Defensively, Hayden Pine was credited with 16 total tackles, while Kalim Dowdell and Ben Post had 15 apiece. Veritas (5-1) will play Friday at St. Marys.
BRIEFLY
BOX SCORE Toronto AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Revere lf 4 0 0 0 0 1 .000 Donaldson 3b 3 0 1 0 1 0 .333 Bautista rf 1 0 0 0 3 1 .000 Encarnacion dh 3 0 0 0 0 1 .000 a-Smoak ph-dh 1 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Colabello 1b 4 0 1 0 0 0 .250 Tulowitzki ss 4 0 0 0 0 2 .000 D.Navarro c 4 0 0 0 0 1 .000 Pillar cf 3 0 0 0 1 0 .000 Goins 2b 3 0 1 0 0 1 .333 Totals 30 0 3 0 5 7 Kansas City AB R H BI BB SO Avg. A.Escobar ss 3 2 2 1 0 0 .667 Zobrist 2b 4 1 1 0 0 0 .250 L.Cain cf 4 0 1 1 0 1 .250 Hosmer 1b 4 0 1 1 0 0 .250 K.Morales dh 3 0 1 1 0 2 .333 Moustakas 3b 4 0 0 0 0 2 .000 S.Perez c 3 1 1 1 0 0 .333 A.Gordon lf 3 1 1 0 0 0 .333 Rios rf 3 0 0 0 0 2 .000 Orlando rf 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Totals 31 5 8 5 0 7 Toronto 000 000 000—0 3 1 Kansas City 002 100 02x—5 8 1 E-Donaldson (1), Moustakas (1). LOB-Toronto 9, Kansas City 4. 2B-A.Escobar 2 (2), Hosmer (1), A.Gordon (1). HR-S.Perez (1), off Estrada. RBIs-A. Escobar (1), L.Cain (1), Hosmer (1), K.Morales (1), S.Perez (1). SB-L.Cain (1). S-Goins. SF-K.Morales. Runners left in scoring position-Toronto 3 (Donaldson, Tulowitzki, Colabello); Kansas City 4 (Hosmer 2, Moustakas 2). RISP-Toronto 0 for 7; Kansas City 3 for 12. Runners moved up-Zobrist. GIDP-Moustakas. DP-Toronto 1 (Goins, Tulowitzki, Colabello). Toronto IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Estrada L, 0-1 51⁄3 6 3 3 0 6 90 5.06 2⁄3 0 0 0 0 0 2 0.00 Loup Lowe 1 0 0 0 0 1 12 0.00 Hawkins 1 2 2 2 0 0 14 18.00 Kansas City IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Volquez W, 1-0 6 2 0 0 4 5 111 0.00 K.Herrera H, 1 1 0 0 0 0 2 9 0.00 Madson H, 1 1 1 0 0 1 0 18 0.00 Hochevar 1 0 0 0 0 0 13 0.00 Inherited runners-scored-Loup 2-0. HBP-by Hawkins (A.Escobar). Umpires-Home, Tony Randazzo; First, Laz Diaz; Second, John Hirschbeck; Third, Hunter Wendelstedt; Left, Dan Iassogna; Right, Jeff Nelson. T-3:15. A-39,753 (37,903).
triumph. But far more recently was the tense, benches-clearing game that the teams played at Rogers Centre in August. Volquez was right in the thick of things. The veteran starter kept pitching the Blue Jays inside, finally hitting Josh Donaldson with a fastball. Tensions escalated as the game went on, with Toronto reliever Aaron Sanchez returning the favor by hitting Escobar to trigger the first of two benches-clearing scuffles. Afterward, Volquez said Donaldson was “crying like a baby” over his inside approach.
KU tennis wins 8 Sophomores Summer Collins and Smith Hinton and freshmen Anastasiya Rychagova and Nina Khmelnitckaia each recorded two singles wins on the day. All four Jayhawks moved on to today’s Round of 16.
Saturday, October 17, 2015
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AGENT SPOTLIGHT
What are the top 3 things that separate you from your competition?
REALTOR© CRS, ABR, GRI, e-Pro
The beauty about this industry is that all agents work a little differently. I would say my top 3 strengths are communication, organization/ focus, and that I am service-oriented.
785-766-4666 Sarah@SarahDreiling.com
What is one tip you have for someone looking to buy or sell a home?
Sarah Dreiling
My answer isn’t novel, but I believe engaging the services of a full-time, professional Realtor® is the best way to position yourself for success in any market.
W
here did you grow up? I am a native Lawrencian, so I was born and raised right here!
What area do you live in now? What do you like most about it? I live near Free State High School in a small subdivision that really functions like its own little community. We know each other’s names, kids and even pets. What do you enjoy doing when you’re not working? I’m an alumna of KU, so anything related to KU athletics, rock climbing, riding motorcycles, hiking, fire pitting and tailgating at Royals games. How long have you worked in Real Estate? Eight wonderful years. What did you do before that? I was a student at the University of Kansas and earned a double major in Political Science and Communication Studies. What is your specialty? Exceptional client service.
What do you see in the future for real estate sales/prices? What designations do you have and what does that mean for the people you work with?
There are so many types of real estate from condos to single family homes, new construction to properties built in the early 1900’s, residences close to the university and those scattered around the outskirts of Lawrence. The question about prices is really too general to be answered in a sentence or two.
I have earned my CRS, ABR, GRI, and e-Pro certifications. This industry is ever-changing and I believe my willingness to continue to learn and educate myself is an asset. What is the most challenging/gratifying aspect of what you do? The hours can be inconvenient for keeping up a social life and I often need to cancel plans at the last minute. However, being able to truly be of service to people, while they make what is usually the largest financial investment of their lives, is extremely rewarding. What is the most unusual thing you’ve encountered while working in Real Estate?
Why should someone choose you as their real estate agent? To quote some of my past clients, “I honestly do not know if we have ever dealt with someone as knowledgeable, efficient, professional and friendly as Miss Dreiling.” Cheryl & Duane Cox
The most unusual things I have encountered in my business are not really fit for print! What is the most unique property you’ve listed or sold? I assisted a Buyer with purchasing a pretty unique home on the golf course a couple of years ago. He has since completely gutted it and turned it into an amazing showpiece. I’ll be anxious to help him resell it down the road because it is a one-ofa-kind space!
RENTALS REAL ESTATE TO PLACE AN AD: REAL ESTATE Open Houses
RENTALS Apartments Unfurnished 2411 Cedarwood Ave.
OPEN HOUSE 224 SHARON DR. SUNDAY 1 - 7PM Motivated Seller. Family sized home w/4BRs, 2 Baths, eat-in kitchen, living rm w/WBFP & vaulted ceiling opens to formal dining room. Daylight windows in bsmt w/4th bedroom and 2 bonus rooms, family room. Large privacy fenced yard w/raised garden in a beautiful neighborhood near 6th & Wakarusa, 2 car garage w/extra parking. $209,500 Kim Nold-Bates, Remax, Assoc. of Topeka. 785-220-8717
Building Lots 4 acres bldg site between Topeka and Lawrence Black top, trees and waterline. Repo. Assume owner financing with no down payment. $257/mo. Please call 785-554-9663 for more information.
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Beautiful & Spacious 1 & 2 Bedrooms Start at $450/mo. * Near campus, bus stop * Laundries on site * Near stores, restaurants * Water & trash paid ——————————————
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LAUREL GLEN APTS All Electric
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785-838-9559 EOH
Duplexes 2BR, in a 4-plex. New carpet, vinyl, cabinets, countertop. W/D is included. Equal Housing Opportunity. 785-865-2505
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Townhomes
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3 and 4 Bedroom Townhouses and Single Family Homes Available Now $950-$1800 a month. Garber Property Management
1BR country cottage, 5 mi. w. of Lawrence. 500 sq. ft. No smoking, no pets, gas & water paid. $500/mo. 785-843-7892
785-842-2475
Cedarwood Apts
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2BR with loft, 2 bath, 1 car garage, fenced yard, FP, 3719 Westland Pl. $790/mo. Avail. Aug. 1. 785-550-3427
2BR, 2 bath, fireplace, CA, W/D hookups, 2 car with opener. Easy access to I-70. Includes paid cable. Pet under 20 lbs. allowed Call 785-842-2575 www.princeton-place.com
AVAILABLE NOW- Good Location in central Lawrence 2019 Vermont: 2 BR, Central Air, Cable hookups, W/D & appliances - including refrigerater & stove, hardwood & tile floors, deck & extra storage building, lawn care/snow removal provided, no pets, off-street parking. Call for more info: 785-832-2692 Need an apartment? Place your ad at apartments.lawrence.com or email classifieds@ljworld.com
Lawrence
FIRST MONTH FREE! Large 2BR, garage, deck, 1 & 2 Bedroom Units CH/CA, street level in Available Now! fourplex. No Smoking. Cooperative townhomes $650/mo. Avail. NOW! start at $446-$490/mnth. 913-593-8088 Water, trash, sewer paid. Back patio, CA, hardwood floors, full bsmnt., stove, refrig., w/d hookup, garbage disposal, reserved parking. On-site management & maintenance. 24 hr. emergency maintenance. Membership & Equity fee required. 785-842-2545 (Equal Housing Opportunity) pinetreetownhouses.com TUCKAWAY APARTMENTS
Tuckawayapartments.com HARPER SQUARE Harpersquareapartments.com TUCKAWAY AT BRIARWOOD
Tuckawayatbriarwood.com
Townhomes 3 BR w/2 or 2.5 BA W/D hookups, Fireplace, Major Appliances. Lawn Care & Dbl Car Garage! Equal Housing Opportunity
785-865-2505
grandmanagement.net
SUNRISE VILLAGE & PLACE
Now Leasing 2 BR’s Close to Campus & Downtown
Pool, On KU Bus Route, Spacious Floorplan,Patios/Decks. Great location: 837 Michigan $200 OFF First Month Rent
Call now! 785-841-8400 www.sunriseapartments.com
HUTTON FARMS Huttonfarms.com
Office Space OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE Call Garber Property Management at 785-842-2475 for more information.
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KU Dept. of Educational Psychology Parent Consultation Project
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CHILI & CHICKEN NOODLE DINNER Saturday, October 24 Vinland United Methodist Church
Lone Star Church of the Brethren 883 E. 800 Rd
1724 N 692 RD Baldwin City, KS 66006
Monday, October 19
Serving 5pm to 7 pm or when it’s all gone. Please join us for good food and fellowship. Homemade pies! Free will donation.
Whole Hog Sausage, Homemade Pancakes, Applesauce, Coffee, Milk. FREE WILL OFFERING Whole hog sausage available for purchase in 1# packages. Info & questions: 785-865-7211
5:00-8:00 PM
All Things Basementy! Basement Systems Inc. Call us for SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILall your basement needs! ITY BENEFITS. Unable to Waterproofing, Finishing, work? Denied benefits? Structural Repairs, Humidity We Can Help! WIN or Pay and Mold Control FREE ESTI- Nothing! Contact Bill Gordon & Associates at MATES! Call 1-800-998-5574 1-800-706-8742 to start A PLACE FOR MOM. The your application today! nation’s largest senior living referral service. Con- Call now to secure a super tact our trusted, low rate on your Mortgage. local experts today! Our Don’t wait for Rates to inservice is FREE/no obliga- crease. Act Now! Call tion. CALL 1-800-717-2905 1-888-859-9539
You and your son or daughter are invited to participate in the University of Kansas Parent Consultation Project. The is a research and service project designed to help us understand how to best work with parents to help reduce or eliminate behavior problems with their children at home. Parents with children ages 2-12 are eligible. Parents are required to attend three, 30-45 minute sessions. After a brief screening interview, parents will consult with a dedicated graduate student clinician for the project. All sessions and parking are FREE. All sessions will be held in the Center for Psychoeducational Services (CPS) at KU. CPS is located on the 1st floor north of J.R. Pearson Hall. Daytime and evening appointments are available through April 30, 2016. Limited spaces are available. For additional information or for a screening interview call for the Parent Consultation Project at: 785-864-7021.
PUBLIC NOTICES (First published in the Lawrence Daily Journal -World October 3, 2015) IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS In the Matter of the Estate of Janiece Baker, Deceased. Case No. 2015-PR-000137
Division No. 1 Pursuant to K.S.A. Chapter 59 NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Janiece Baker, was named as Executor of the Estate of Janiece Baker, Deceased, with full power and authority as provided by law and the Last Will and Testament.
THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL PERSONS CONCERNED: All creditors are notified to exhibit their demands You are hereby notified against the Estate within that on September 30, four months from the date 2015, Patrick N. Baker, Ex- of the first publication of ecutor named under the this notice, as provided by Last Will and Testament of law, and if their demands
are not thus exhibited, they shall be forever barred. Patrick N. Baker, Petitioner RILING, BURKHEAD, & NITCHER, Chartered 808 Massachusetts Street P. O. Box B Lawrence, Kansas 66044 (785) 841-4700 Attorneys for Petitioner ________
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893 AREA JOB OPENINGS! CLO ................................................. 10
General Dynamics (GDIT) ................... 250
Community Relations/DayCom .............. 12
Kmar t Distribution .............................. 20
Fedex ............................................. 100
KU: Student Openings ...................... 113
Focus Workforces ............................. 100
KU: Faculty/Academic/Lecturers ......... 100
KU: Staff Openings ............................. 66 Miscellaneous ................................... 27 MV Transpor tation .............................. 25 USA800 ............................................ 45 Westaff ............................................ 25
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Director eXplore Lawrence
LABORERS ICL Performance Products, one of the world’s leading fertilizer and specialty chemicals companies, is now accepting applications for Laborer positions at our facility in Lawrence, KS. Laborers perform a variety of duties including super sacking, stenciling and labeling, cleaning, and operating forklifts to load trucks and transport product in the plant. Laborers will have the opportunity to progress into chemical operator positions. Minimum requirements for the Laborer position include high school diploma or equivalent, current driver’s license, the ability to work rotating shifts, and able to lift 50lbs. STARTING PAY
$17.25 PER HOUR
plus shift premiums
INCREASE UP TO
$23.65
PER HOUR after training in chemical operator positions.
Employees are eligible for most benefits the first of the month following hire. Benefits include health, dental, and vision insurance, short term and long term disability, 401k, life insurance, flexible spending accounts, paid holidays and vacation after one year of service. To view the complete job description and requirements and to submit your resume online, please visit:
ICLCAREERS.SILKROAD.COM In order to be considered for these positions, resumes must be received by 10/26/15.
ICL recognizes that our greatest assets are our people. We are committed to recruiting and retaining versatile, highly motivated individuals who can contribute to our success. We have a team-oriented culture that encourages creativity, decision-making and entrepreneurial spirit. EEO/AA EMPLOYER/Veterans/Disabled
Explore Lawrence is the recently re-branded Convention and Visitors Bureau for the City of Lawrence is seeking to hire an exceptional individual to lead the organization and support our mission of attracting visitors to Lawrence. eXplore Lawrence coordinates and develops resources to create an exceptional visitor experience for both leisure and business travelers. The ideal candidate will have a strong ability to communicate with stakeholders, the Governing Board and community partners. Applicants should have 3-5+ YEARS OF MEASURABLY EFFECTIVE EXPERIENCE managing a CVB or industry-related organization with a strong emphasis on sales and development of tourism-related events, initiatives and destination-based marketing.
Applications due Nov. 3. To view the full job description and supplemental information, visit www.eXplorelawrence.com/jobs. Salary is dependent on qualifications and experience. EOE.
ASSISTANT PROPERTY MANAGER WANTED Part Time Leavenworth & Bonner Springs
General office tasks, filing, sorting mail, light bookkeeping, managing calendar & communications, phones. Good computer skills, follow up with e-mails, place orders. Household duties & light housekeeping. Run errands, light grocery shopping Tues, Weds, Thurs 9 am to 4 pm. Pay is competitive. Great work environment. Send resume to Shirley.Smith@adeccona.com
Unique position avail. for a PT personal care attendant, to assist a woman in Lawrence. Call 785-266-5307 for complete details.
Send resume to anne.rcrentals@gmail.com or call 913-727-3804
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AdministrativeProfessional Receptionist Needed For busy chiropractic clinic. Full-Time, permanent position. Apply in person MWF 8-4 pm. Advanced Chiropractic Services 1605 Wakarusa Dr.
AIRLINE CAREERS Start Here - Get hands on training as FAA certified Technician fixing jets. Financial aid if qualified. Call for free information Aviation Institute of Maintenance 1-877-818-0783 www.FixJets.com Sell your structured settlement or annuity payments for CASH NOW. You don’t have to wait for your future payments any longer! Call 1-800-283-3601 START A NEW CAREER in Graphic Arts, Healthcare, Business, Education or Information Tech. If you have a GED, call: 855-670-9765
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Driver Class B with air brakes, call John 785-542-1230 or submit resume to P.O. Box 41, Eudora KS 66025
TIPS
4811 Bob Billings Parkway 785-842-1515
Personal Care and Service
The successful candidate is organized & dependable with excellent phone/ communication skills willing to perform office asst. functions, leasing, collection of rent, and support in resident satisfaction. Strong computers skills needed. Experience preferred/not required. 15-20 hours per week.
BusinessOpportunity
Client seeking a female professional part time personal assistant
DriversTransportation
You choose...and don’t blame me for hiring positive people—I’d rather work with a happy person any day. - Peter Steimle Decisions Determine Destiny
Childcare Assistant Director Support the staff, program and management of a non-profit child care center. Min. 1 year experience working in a child care center, BA in Early Childhood Education or related field & administrative experience preferred. Send cover letter & resume to:
Stepping Stones
Drive for KU on Wheels or Lawrence Transit System. Flexible part-time schedules, 80% company paid employee health insurance for full time. Career opportunities. $11.50/hr after paid training. Must be 21+ w. good driving record. Apply online: lawrencetransit.org/empl oyment Or come to: MV Transportation, Inc. 1260 Timberedge Road Lawrence, KS. EOE
Healthcare
1100 Wakarusa Dr. Lawrence, KS 66049 steppingstones@ sunflower.com Due 10/26/15 EOE
DEVELOPMENT DIRECTOR
Douglas County CASA seeks energetic development professional to support CASA services for abused & neglected children via fundraising and outreach activities. This is a half-time position. EOE. Send cover letter, resume, and three references by Oct. 25 to: mbutler@douglas-county.com Job description available at www.dccasa.org.
Career Opportunities
HUMOR is good medicine. I used to install windows...That job was a real pane!
DriversTransportation Baldwin City USD 348 has an immediate opening for
Director of Transportation Salary Range: $38,000 to $42,000 per year For additional information and to apply go to: https://baldwincity.tedk12. com/hire/Index.aspx
CNA, CMA, LPN, RN, MDS Coordinator & Staffing Coordinator Pioneer Ridge Retirement Community has opportunities for caring and compassionate individuals. We offer part time and full time employees a great benefits package, scholarship programs, advancement opportunities, and even more importantly a resident centered environment that supports employee advancement and educational growth. Come join our 5-Star award winning team. For more information call 785-749-2000 or Apply Online at: www.midwest-health. com/careers
MDS Coordinator
R.N.
Brookside Retirement Community is accepting applications for MDS Coordinator/R.N. MDS experience preferred. We are committed to EXTRAORDINARY quality of life for our residents. Brookside is family owned and operated and pride ourselves in creating a great place to work, live and visit! We offer a competitive wage, 401(k), and health insurance. Apply at www.brooksideks.com or stop by: 700 W. 7th St. Overbrook, KS.
classifieds@ljworld.com
L awrence J ournal -W orld
Saturday, October 17, 2015
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MERCHANDISE PETS TO PLACE AN AD:
AUCTIONS
785.832.2222
Estate Sales
classifieds@ljworld.com
Miscellaneous
ESTATE SALE
Auction Calendar « ESTATE SALE « Fri, Oct. 16 & Sat., Oct. 17 9:00 am - 4:00 pm 1139 Pine Street Eudora, KS
60+ yrs accumulation! AUCTION Main Street-Commercial Tonganoxie, KS 508 East 4th Street 11 A.M. Friday October 30 View: Fri Oct 23, 11 to 1 Selling to the high bidder regardless of price! BILL FAIR & COMPANY www.billfair.com 800-887-6929 Commercial Investment Portfolio Reduction AUCTION 20 + Real Estate Parcels in Topeka, KS 3 Sell Absolute Wed, Oct 28, 10:00 AM Ramada Inn 420 SE 6th Ave
Advertise your product or service nationwide or by region in over 7 million households in North 1139 Pine Street America’s best suburbs! Eudora, KS Place your classified ad in over 570 suburban newsJoin us for a great sale of 60 papers just like this one. years accumulationitems Call Classified Avenue at packed to the brim! Contents in- 888-486-2466 clude; organ, hutch, lamps, 1960’s record player console w/ Get CABLE TV, INTERNET & 8 track, stackable washer/dryer, PHONE with FREE HD. beautiful glassware, antique Equipment and install for dresser, Singer Sewing mach- under $3 a day! Call Now! ing, freezer, hide-abed sofa, 855-752-8550 bedroom set and other items too Get The Big Deal from Dinumerous to mention! Come and recTV! Act Now- $19.99/mo. see us, easy to find, look for the Free 3-Months of HBO, Starz, signs! SHOWTIME & CINEMAX FREE GENIE HD/DVR Upgrade! 2014 NFL Sunday Ticket Included with Select Packages. New Customers Only IV Support Holdings LLC- An authorized DirecTV Dealer Some exclusions apply - Call for details 1-800-897-4169 Fri, Oct. 16 & Sat., Oct. 17 9:00 am - 4:00 pm
MERCHANDISE Clothing
NEW Bill Blass Coat, Size 6. $60. Call 785-979-4937.
Floor Coverings
midwestrealestateauctions.com
UNITED COUNTRY 1-800-895-4430
ESTATE AUCTION Sunday, Oct. 18, 9 am 2110 Harper Lawrence, KS Fly Wheel Engine, Hit Miss Engine & Acc., Railroad items, Truck, Trailer, Tools, Collectibles & Books, so much more! Seller: William (Bill) Pendleton ELSTON AUCTIONS (785-594-0505)(785-218-7851) www.kansasauctions.net/elston
BEST SALE EVER!!! Need New Carpet or Flooring??? All this Special Number for $250.00 off. Limited Time. Free In Home Estimate!! Call Empire Today@ 1-844-369-3371
Acorn Stairlifts. The AFFORDABLE solution to your stairs!** Limited time- $250 Off your Stairlift Purchase!** Buy Direct & Save. Please call 1-800-304-4489 for Free DVD and brochure. Yakima roof rack with Q towers, locks, crossbars, Q14 and Q112 clips and brand new powder hound ski rack: $200. 785-887-6121
Music-Stereo
Find the Right Carpet, Flooring & Window Treatments. Ask about our 50% off specials & our Low Price Guarantee. Offer Expires Soon. Call now 1-888-906-1887
PIANOS • H.L. Phillips upright $650 •Baldwin Spinet - $550 • Cable Nelson or Kimball Spinet - $500 • Gulbranson Spinet - $450 Prices include tuning & delivery
for 75+ pictures and list!
Furniture
ESTATE AUCTION Sunday, Oct. 25, 9 am 2110 Harper Lawrence, KS
785-832-9906
RARE ITEMS! 19th & 20th Century Furniture, Books, Collectibles, Pictures. Seller: William (Bill) Pendleton ELSTON AUCTIONS (785-594-0505)(785-218-7851) www.kansasauctions.net/elston
for 75+ pictures and list! PUBLIC AUCTION: SAT, OCT 24, 2015, 10 AM 633 N NETTLETON, BONNER SPRINGS, KS. CAR, ANTIQUES, COLLECTIBLES, APPLIANCES, & MISC: JODELL SHELTON-LANGLEY Check out next week’s paper for full listing- or see website.
EDGECOMB AUCTIONS: 785-594-3507| 785-766-6074 www.kansasauctions.net/edgecomb
RJ’s COIN AUCTION Friday, Oct. 23rd 6PM 15767 S Topeka Avenue Scranton, Kansas Doors open for preview: 4:30 See web for info, list & terms: www.rjsauctionservice.com RJ’s Auction Service 785-793-2500
GARAGE SALES Furniture & Woodstove. Solid Oak Dining Table with Leaves and 6 Solid Oak Chairs $800; Vermont Castings Defiant Woodburning Stove $800; Sofa $100; Entertainment Center $80; Oct 17 from 8a to noon 614 N Michigan St Lawrence KS
Health & Beauty
RJ’s Auction Sat., Oct. 24th, 3:00 P.M. 15767 S. Topeka Ave. Scranton, KS Rifles, shotguns, furniture, appliances, collectibles, and more. Visit website: www.RjsAuctionService.com for more details & photos or call 785-793-2500. Located 11 mi. south of Topeka at junction of Hwy 75 & 56.
GARAGE SALE 1887 N 1000th Rd (5 miles east on 1000th Rd, look for signs) OCT 16TH, 9AM-5PM OCT 17TH, 9AM-4PM Women shoes & clothes, child appliances, tools, bed, dressers, & MANY MANY misc items. COME BY AND SEE!
CPAP/BIPAP supplies at little or no cost from Allied Medical Supply Network! Fresh supplies delivered right to your door. Insurance may cover all costs. 800-902-9352 Got Knee Pain? Back Pain? Shoulder Pain? Get a pain-relieving brace -little or NO cost to you. Medicare Patients Call Health Hotline Now! 1-800-900-5406
Household Misc. Auctions
Lawrence
Murano Italian Decorative Glass $100 or less. Over a dozen different pieces. Call 785-979-4937.
Miscellaneous KILL BED BUGS! Buy Harris Bed Bug killer Complete Treatment Program/Kit. Harris Mattress Covers add Extra Protection! Available: ACE Hardware. Buy Online: homedepot.com
Antiques Liquidation Sale American Legion 3408 W 6th Lawrence Kansas Friday Oct 16th 9 am - 6 pm Saturday Oct 17th 8 am - 6 pm Sunday Oct 18th 8 am -till sold out
Lawrence
Lawrence
china, wall pockets, brown electric recliner curved glass china chair, Kitchen Wave oven, cab-large unusual over 100 framed pictures, glass yrs old (must see), walnut ware, dishes, and many and oak dressers-chest, other misc. items. trunks, wash stands, library table, suit cases. Clothing 1950’s toys, games, books, Chico and other “name records, banks. Many brand” clothing, purses, unlisted items 1/2 on shoes, scarves, denim Saturday-Sunday. No rea- jeans, children clothing, sonable offers refused. jewelry, fabric, wallets, Sale ends when all items and many other misc. are sold! items.
Big Estate Sale 2629 Bardith Court Lawrence
Something for everyone - a sale you won’t want to miss!!!!
Sat & Sun, Oct 18 & 19 9 am - 4 pm ANTIQUES, LOTS of Furniture: Baldwin piano; Appliances, HUGE selection of Holiday decor, Collectibles: stamp collection, coin collection, Boyd’s Bears, Kennedy era magazines, 45’s; Wilton Armitel, Reed & Burton Sterling silverware, crystal, pressed glass, china, glassware, KU memorabilia; Electronics; Robert Sudlow artwork.
Free Clothing Give-Away
DK’s Statuary Garage Sale 1628 HWY 24/40 Friday & Saturday October 16th and 17th 9 am - 4 pm both days All leftover items, new good Xmas gifts, fixtures, shelving, furniture, household items and lots of children’s clothing (all sizes), large glass lighted showcase, 3 decorated shelving unites, antique oak bar (11ft long), large metal desk, & computer desk. Call 785-550-4836.
Garage Sale 2112 E 25th Place Saturday, October 17th 7 am - 2 pm
Kids’ puzzles and books, toys (ride-on cars, puzzles, saucer sleds, Lite Brite, Vtech and other electronic toys, etc.), clothing (teen boys sz small and med, misses all sizes), shoes (men and women’s Nike, boots, other women’s), KU purses, beauty items, 8-ft fluorescent shop light, kitchen items (full dish ware set, tubber ware, steak knives, place mats, serving trays), bedding (king mattress pad, queen comforter), lamp shades, candles, and much more!
Berg Acres Neighborhood Garage Sale Thurs., Oct. 15 - Sat., Oct. 17, 2015 8:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m. 2 miles south of Lawrence, Hwy 59 Turn east at 1100 Road, then follow signs 1313 N. 1082 Rd 1017 N. 1082 Rd 1319. N. 1082 Rd 1312 N. 1082 Rd 1316 N. 1082 Rd
Liquidating hundreds of antiques from several estates. Several fine art signed oil paintings, water colors, Lithographs, Flo Blue water pitchers, Snap on tools, memoraWeller-Roseville-Hull-Van bilia, jackets, and shirts, Briggle. 100’s of primitives, 2004 50 cc motorcycle in Red Wing, salt glaze, cancrate, 20 ft box van with dle molds, plum pudding tommy lift, generator, mold, tin, copper, cast heat & air, McDermott iron, rug beaters, rub pool cue and case, Coleboards, cherry pitters, apman lanterns, milk cans, ple peelers, cook cutters. pocket motorcycle, fishOver 50 advertising tinsing gear, patio table & 2 tobacco-coffee-tea-candy, chairs. kerosene lamps, Gone-W-Wind table lamps, Household Items floor lamps, adv. wood Matching (burgundy/ boxes, cut glass, Fenton, green) sofa, love seat & crystal, pressed glass, chair, Office desk, TV,
First Regular M.B. Church
1646 Vermont St.
(1 blk West of Mass)
Saturday, October 17, 9:00 am - 2:00 pm Men’s, Women’s, Children’s: Shoes, Handbags, and more. Lots of women’s business & work attire. Come take what you need! Future Give-Aways every 3rd Saturday of each month, 9 am- 2pm- or call for appt.: 785-843-5811
Multifamily Yard Sale 16th St. & Barker Ave. October 17, 8:00am-? Some items for sale will be… Children: infant toys, creative building sets, trains, classic toys, games, books, outdoor toys, riding toys, blue nursery set, mobile, Imaginext play sets… Housewares: stand mixer, coffee maker, salad master, canning jars, plastic bins/organizers… Outdoor: Chiminea, fire ring, grill… Furniture: Love seat, sofa table, World Market TV stand, round dining table with 2 leafs, floor lamp… Clothes: Boy’s (sizes infant-5T, all seasons), women’s (S/M/L), kid’s coats, kid’s shoes, women’s shoes (sizes 6-8), bags, purses, accessories… …AND OF COURSE MUCH MORE! SEE YOU SATURDAY!!
Garage Sale Fri & Sat • Oct 16 & 17 7:30 to 10:30 am 1016 Wagon Wheel Rd
Lawrence
Lawrence-Rural
Ottawa
cycle, Adult clothing, two clothing racks, X large canopy (great for large gatherings) drafting table (still in box), albums, cookbooks, antique child size school desk, antique sewing machine, toaster oven and other household items, office supplies, artwork, numerous small items, exercise mat and undoubtedly many last minute items. Come check it out!
fishing gear, pellet pistol, a deer head mount, lighted beer sign, antique outboard motor (decorative only), a 3/4 size propane/electric refrigerator perfect for an off grid cabin, hot tub pump and cover caddy, record albums and misc. For camping enthusiasts, we have a small retro camping trailer. You can check us out on the Facebook page “The Willow Tree Antiques and Decor”. We are 3 miles South of Eudora then west on county road #458 or from U.S. Hwy #59 south of Lawrence, go 7 miles east on county road #458. Follow the signs to the red barn in the back. You may contact us with questions at: thewillowtreearts@gmail.com
“Come Pickin’” Saturday, Oct 17th 9:00 am - 3:00 pm
Nice Garage Sale! 5121 Congressional Cir, Garage #44 Lawrence Sat, Oct 17, 8 am-3 pm Boys clothes 24 mo-3T, toddler bedding, ladies clothes sz 4-14, books, movies, shoes, LP’s, dishes & misc, some Christmas, cards & pictures, old pop bottles, framed prints, doll patters, beanie babies, stuffed animals, golf balls. DON’T MISS THIS!
ESTATE SALE October 17, 9am-5pm. 2408 Danbury Pl. Estate of Ms. Lentz Chantilly Sterling Silver Flatware complete service for 8; plus extra pieces, Sofa, occasional chairs, cocktail table, pr. Armless chairs, end tables, gait leg table, leather chair & ottoman, wing chair, small desk, dining set & 6th chairs, 4 stools, wishbone dresser, corner shelf, queen bed, dressers, chest & side table, trunk, 1940 twin beds & dresser & vanity & side tables, lamps, patio furniture, lots of kitchen equipment, 7 door china cabinet , art work, silver serving pcs., Farragamo shoe collection, Bruno Malgi shoes, sz. 9-10. Clothing, purses, beaded purses, books, linens, ornaments, lots of Christmas, tools, lots of misc. Sale by Elvira
Lawrence-Rural Fall Sale in Big Springs Antiques, Furniture & more!
9 mi. West on Hwy 40, follow signs! House #77 & #83
Thurs. Friday & Sat.
Ottawa Outdoor Flea Market! Uptown & Downtown on Main Street! Antiques, vintage repurposed furniture, food & music! Family Friendly Event Call 785-242-6355 for more information
Perry
Huge Estate Garage Sale 1027 E 1500 Rd Lawrence-Rural Fri, Oct 16 & Sat, Oct 17. 8 am Huge estate downsize sale. Dining room table with 8 chairs, computer armoir, filing cabinets, recliners, chairs, china cabinet, secretary, end tables, complete vintage whiskey barrel bar set, dresser, shelves, twin day bed, lots of vintage games, toys, and clothing. Girls softball equipment, and LOTS more!
Ultimate Indoor Multi-Family Garage Sale 1596 E 250th Rd Lecompton (Stull UM Church) SATURDAY ONLY 7AM-3PM Cook ware, household items, furniture, exercise equip, aquarium, art work, kids toys, & misc. COME FIND YOURSELF A NEW TREASURE!
Downsizing Sale 1760 E. 1300 Rd (Behind Hallmark cards in the industrial area) Saturday Only, 10/17 8:00 am — ???? Furniture, Lamps, Hand Tools, Lawn & Garden Tools, Dishes, Cookware, Home Decor, Christmas Items, Too Numerous too Mention!
1225 Oak St WILLIAMSTOWN, KS (Hwy 24 E. of Perry)
HUGE GARAGE SALE! Fri, Oct 16, 7 -7 Sat, Oct 17, 7 - 2 Square Dance outfits, Men’s & women’s nice clothing, jeans, all sizes kids clothes, toys, carseat & stroller, household, furniture, electronics, TVs.
PETS Pets
Jack Terrier Puppies 6 CUTE, ADORABLE puppies. 6 weeks old, have first shots, farm raised. $125/ea 785-813-5561 No Sunday Calls, please
Baldwin City GARAGE SALE 2001 College St Friday 10/16 & Saturday 10/17 8 am - 3 pm or ?
8 am - 5 pm Lots of boys clothing sizes from youth 6 to 14 and Furniture; sofa & chairs, chest of (go through the gate, some adult smalls drawers, 2 barstools, antique last house on the hill) Boys bikes, toys, games, rocker, some chairs have new video games. upholstery, wicker chair. Nee- Lots of things! From Brush Household items and dlepoint yarn, magnifying light Hog to jewelry, clothing to more. for sweing, wood dollhouse fur- brand new 3 piece lugniture, upholstery springs for gage set - never used! Large Sale craft projects, depression glass Heavy Leather Jacket 3414 Tam O’Shanter Dr. and many collectibles & an- never worn. Lots of misc. tiques! Wood ladders, woodLawrence WOOD SALE chipper, iron garden pieces, and Sat, Oct 17. iron dolly from bakery. 7:00 am to 1:00 pm Much FUN miscellaneous. Specialized Hard Rock Sport bicycle (21”), skim The Willow Tree board, books, antique Antiques and Decor wooden chest, schwinn Fall Barn Sale evolution air dyne bike, 4 pink low profile rims, bas2031 N. 1000th Rd., kets, kitchen items, shoes Eudora, KS (women size 6 mostly), Lawrence-Rural hex dumbells, bike train41 E. 1250 Rd Fri, Oct 16 & Sat, Oct 17 ers, nice 7.5 foot lighted Friday & Saturday 8am-4pm x-mass tree, large dog 8am - 4 pm Our fall sale will feature an exkennel, camping items, (59 Hwy to 56 Hwy to 1250 Rd, panded showroom and loft area much misc. South 3.5 mi to sale) filled with antiques, glassware, Wood for crafts, silverware, over 50 pieces of GARAGE SALE signs, plaques. furniture, and artwork and de1636 CADET AVE Charging $1.00 per cor from multiple vendors, along LAWRENCE, KS 66044 board- not by board ft! with Halloween, Thanksgiving SAT, OCTOBER 17TH Some pieces free! and Christmas decorating items. 8:00 AM - ?? Interesting wood for The man cave features hunting Kid’s toys, games, and bi- and fishing decorating items, interesting projects.
LAB MIX PUPPIES 3 months old. Have had shots & dewormed. Need Families! $50 each 785-542-1043
Maltese, AKC, shots, wormed, playful & friendly. 2M $425 ea. or both for $800. 785-448-8440
FREE 2 Week AUCTION CALENDAR LISTING when you place your Auction or Estate Sale ad with us! Call our Classified Advertising Department for details! 785.832.2222 classifieds@ljworld.com
SERVICES TO PLACE AN AD: Antique/Estate Liquidation
785.832.2222 Carpentry
classifieds@ljworld.com Concrete
Dirt-Manure-Mulch
Furniture
Home Improvements
Home Improvements
Craig Construction Co Family Owned & Operated 20 Yrs
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
Auctioneers
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
Mike - 785-766-6760 mdcraig@sbcglobal.net Needing to place an ad? 785-832-2222
Cleaning New York Housekeeping: Accepting clients for wkly, bi-wkly & seasonal or special occasion cleaning. Ex. Ref. Beth - 785-766-6762.
Concrete
Decks & Fences
DECK BUILDER Over 25 yrs. exp. Licensed & Insured. Decks, deck covers, pergolas, screened porches, & all types of repairs. Call 913-209-4055 for Free estimates or go to prodeckanddesign.com
Rich Black Top Soil No Chemicals Machine Pulverized Pickup or Delivery
Thicker line? Bolder heading? Color background or Logo?
CTi of Mid America Concrete Restoration & Resurfacing Driveways, Patios, Pool Decks & More CTiofMidAmerica.com 785-893-8110
Ask how to get these features in your ad TODAY!!
Stamped & Reg. Concrete, Patios, Walks, Driveways, Acid Staining & Overlays, Tear-Out & Replacement
Call: 785-832-2222
Jayhawk Concrete Inc. 785-979-5261
Full service handyman. Paint/Drywall repairs. All jobs considered. Call Luke 913-832-9080. Email: cql.ays@hotmail.com
Serving KC over 40 years
913-962-0798 Fast Service
AAA Home Improvements Int/Ext Repairs, Painting, Tree work & more. We do it all! 20 Yrs. Exp. w/ Ins. and local ref. Will beat all est. Call 785-917-9168
Foundation Repair Foundation and Masonry Specialist Water prevention systems for basements, Sump pumps, foundation supports & repair and more. Call 785-221-3568
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
REAL ESTATE AUCTIONS 785-887-6900 www.billfair.com
@ YOUR SERVICE
STARTING or BUILDING a Business?
Double D Furniture Repair Cane, Wicker & Rush seating. Buy. Sell. Credit cards accepted.785-418-9868 or doubledfurniturerepair @gmail.com
Garage Doors
Garage Doors • Openers • Service • Installation Call 785-842-5203 www.freestatedoors.com
Full Remodels & Odd Jobs, Interior/Exterior Painting, Installation & Repair of: Deck Drywall Siding Replacement Gutters Privacy Fencing Doors & Trim Commercial Build-out Build-to-suit services
Retired Carpenter, Deck Repairs, Home Repairs, Interior Wall Repair & House Painting, Doors, Wood Rot, Power wash 785-766-5285
Landscaping YARDBIRDS LANDSCAPING Father (retired) & Son Operation W/Experience & Top of the Line Machinery Snow Removal Call 785-766-1280
Golden Rule Lawncare Mowing & lawn cleanup Snow Removal Family owned & operated Call for Free Est. Insured. Eugene Yoder 785-224-9436
Painting
Decks • Gazebos Siding • Fences • Additions Remodel • Weatherproofing Insured • 25 yrs exp. 785-550-5592
Advertising that works for you!
Seamless aluminum guttering. Many colors to choose from. Install, repair, screen, clean-out. Locally owned. Insured. Free estimates.
785-842-0094
jayhawkguttering.com
Call Lyndsey 913-422-7002
Pet Services
Personalized, professional, full-service pet grooming. Low prices. Self owned & operated. 785-842-7118 www.Platinum-Paws.com
Tree/Stump Removal Fredy’s Tree Service
Guttering Services
JAYHAWK GUTTERING 785-832-2222 classifieds@ljworld.com
Interior/Exterior Painting Quality Work Over 30 yrs. exp.
cutdown • trimmed • topped • stump removal Licensed & Insured. 20 yrs experience. 913-441-8641 913-244-7718
Higgins Handyman
Stacked Deck
D&R Painting interior/exterior • 30+ years • power washing • repairs (inside & out) • stain decks • wallpaper stripping • free estimates Call or Text 913-401-9304
Lawn, Garden & Nursery
Fully Insured 22 yrs. experience
913-488-7320
Painting
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
KansasTreeCare.com
Family Tradition Interior & Exterior Painting Carpentry/Wood Rot Senior Citizen Discount Ask for Ray 785-330-3459
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)
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Saturday, October 17, 2015
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L AWRENCE J OURNAL -W ORLD
SPECIAL!
10 LINES & PHOTO 7 DAYS $19.95 28 DAYS $49.95
DOESN’T SELL IN 28 DAYS?
FREE RENEWAL!
PLACE YOUR AD: RECREATION
Cadillac Crossovers
785.832.2222 Chevrolet Crossovers
2008 VOLKSWAGEN RABBIT S
2014 Ford Focus SE Chevrolet 2006 HR LT Fwd, 4 cyl, great gas mileage, power equipment, alloy wheels. Stk#181681
SELLING AN RV?
DVD Player, Loaded, Leather, Panoramic Sunroof, AWD Northstar V6, One of a Kind! Stk# F209A
Only $11,995
Only $5,875 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
Chevrolet SUVs
Stk#115C582
$13,495
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Call Thomas at 2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047
LT, power equipment, alloy wheels, sunroof, tow package. Stk#35514A1 Only $8,8750
2014 Chevrolet Camaro Convertible
Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
Dodge Trucks
UCG PRICE
Stock #115T815
$10,995
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Stock #115L769A
$17,430
Honda Cars
Honda Crossovers
Honda SUVs
2012 HONDA ACCORD EX-L
$8,993 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Stk#PL1912
$44,995
Stk#115T970
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
$38,979
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
2014 Ford Fusion SE
2012 HONDA PILOT EX-L NAVIGATION 4WD
2009 Honda CR-V EX-L
2014 Ford F150 Platinum
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
2011 Dodge Ram 2500 Laramie
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
1987 BMW 325i Convertible Auto, 136k, Great Condition. Champagne body, tan leather interior, brown top. $9000 (785)273-5588
UCG PRICE
Stk#1P1896
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
$23,994
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
2001 TOYOTA PRIUS FIVE
2010 Ford Fusion SE
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
Stk#PL1938
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
$9,495
Stock #116T066
23rd & Alabama, Lawrence www.lairdnollerlawrence.com Chevrolet 2008 Trailblazer
Call Today!
1987 BMW 325i
2007 MAZDA CX-7 GRAND TOURING
Ford Trucks
- Doesn’t sell in 28 days? + FREE RENEWAL!
BMW Cars
$6,995
Chevrolet Cars
28 Days - $49.95
TRANSPORTATION
Stock #114K242
UCG PRICE
785-727-7151
888-631-6458
7 Days - $19.95
785-832-2222
UCG PRICE
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
JackEllenaHonda.com
Find A Buyer FAST!
2008 FORD ESCAPE XLT
2005 CADILLAC SR5 AWD
RV
Winnebago 2005 Rialta HD Motorhome for sale, Private Seller. Sleeps two, 22 ft long, gasoline powered, excellent condition, fully equipped. Very maneuverable, with powerful VW V6 engine with 24 Valves. 66,xxx miles. Price $39,900. 785-843-2361| 785-865-8075
USED CAR GIANT
Ford Cars
Boats-Water Craft Flying Scot 19’ LONG SAILBOAT FOR SALE: 913-426-1030
classifieds@ljworld.com
Stk#115L769B Honda Certified Pre-Owned Vehicle, 7 Year / 100,00 Mile, Limited Powertrain Warranty. Stk# LF287A
$20,495 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Honda Certified Pre-Owned Vehicle, 7 Year / 100,000 Mile Limited Powertrain Warranty. Stk# F197A
888-631-6458
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
Only $24,950
2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Only $17,999 Call Thomas at
JackEllenaHonda.com
Call Thomas at
Honda SUVs
888-631-6458 2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047
Stk#PL1908 JackEllenaHonda.com
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
$16,979
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Dodge Vans 2014 Chevrolet Camaro SS 2SS 2006 BMW 3 Series 330Ci Stk#215T787C
$12,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
Stk#1215T589A
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
$33,986 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
Ford Crossovers
2008 Dodge Grand Caravan SXT Stk#PL2016
$9,495
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
2015 BMW 6 Series 650i Gran Coupe
2009 Chevrolet Impala LT
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
2012 Ford F-150 SVT Raptor Stk#115T876
$46,995
2009 Honda Accord LX-P
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Stk#1PL1985
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
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2009 HONDA CR-V EX-L AWD
GMC SUVs
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2014 Honda Pilot EX-L
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23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
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Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
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Ford Cars
2008 Ford Escape XLT Stk#116T066
2005 Ford Expedition Limited Stk#115T945
2011 Chevrolet Impala LT Stk#P1861A Cadillac 2005 STS V8
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Cadillac Cars
Hyundai 2007 Sonata
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SPORTS/CLASSIFIED
L awrence J ournal -W orld
Saturday, October 17, 2015
| 11C
Superstitions hard to shed for Cubs fans Chicago (ap) — Billy Siegel doesn’t want to hear any talk about a billy goat curse or a Steve Bartman hex afflicting his beloved Chicago Cubs. He dismisses as rubbish any suggestion that a little black cat had anything to do with the team’s heartbreaking collapse down the stretch in 1969, too. But when Kyle Schwarber hit a home run the other night at Wrigley Field that helped vanquish the hated St. Louis Cardinals, Siegel found it impossible not to see divine providence at work. After all, the ball landed on a videoboard advertising a beer synonymous with St. Louis — and it didn’t come down. “Look at that ball that hit the Budweiser sign,” said the 67-year-old Sie-
gel, a season ticket holder since 1970. “Oh my god, that was a sign.” The Cubs will meet the Mets at 7:07 tonight in New York in Game 1 of the National League Championship Series. Cubs fans can insist all they want that they are done with talk of curses and just plain bad luck, from goats to cats to Bartman. But this is not an easy habit to break for the devoted faithful of a team that has not won a World Series since 1908. Heartbreak and superstition are as much a part of Cubs lore as Wrigley Field itself. As the Cubs take on the New York Mets in the hopes of getting to the World Series for the first time since 1945, fans swear that this team is dif-
ferent from all the teams that have tried and failed before. This team will win — and they will, fans will tell you — because of the way they play and not because a curse was lifted or just ran out of steam. “I am so sick of billy goats, sick of Bartman, it’s all a bunch of baloney,” said Jim Kelly, a 62-yearold substitute teacher. For some, it’s just different rooting for a team that is so young the players have no connection to past failures. These fans seem willing to thumb their noses at those who worry about, say, jinxing the team by celebrating before a victory is secure. “I was in Pittsburgh (for the wild card victory against the Pirates) and I got criticized be-
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cause I was on Twitter saying there are 6 outs to go, 5 outs to go,” said Al Yellon, who runs a Cubs fan site, bleedcubbieblue. com. “But I was saying, no, we’re not going to be slaves to history.” Still, to be safe ... “I have a Jake Arrieta game-worn jersey that seems to be lucky,” Yellon said. “I wear that jersey every time he pitches.” Years of watching a team snatch defeat from the jaws of victory have made it impossible for some other fans to shake the idea that if something bad can happen to the Cubs, it will. “There’s no real curse,” said Steve Rhodes, a longtime fan who runs beachwoodreporter.com. “At the same time, (stuff)
happens to this team that doesn’t happen to anyone else.” While Rhodes wonders if Schwarber’s next home run might be blown back into play by “a gust of wind,” these Cubs have already exorcised the demons that are the Cardinals, at least for one year. Fans wonder if they can now exact revenge on the Mets, the team that overtook the Cubs in 1969 not long after a black cat strolled by Cubs third baseman Ron Santo at Shea Stadium. “I think it would be fitting to go through the Mets after what happened in ’69,” said Jeff Santo, a son of the late Cubs great. For their part, the Cubs are staying far away from all this talk. They have
not, for example, invited Bartman back to Wrigley as a guest of honor — a gesture some fans have suggested would be appropriate for someone vilified after he deflected a foul ball just before the Cubs collapsed in the 2003 playoffs. It is pretty much the same story with the goat. Seventy years after the owner of the Billy Goat Tavern put a curse on the Cubs when they wouldn’t let his pet goat attend the World Series, the tavern owners have asked the Cubs to let a goat back into Wrigley for a postseason game. On its blog, the Billy Goat reminds the team that the last time it refused to sell a ticket to a goat was in 2003 and everyone knows what happened then.
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2007 Mercedes Benz CLK-Class CLK350 Base
2014 Subaru Forester 2.0XT Touring
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2008 Lincoln MKX Base
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$4,295 6102 Merriam Drive Merriam, KS 66203
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Lincoln SUVs
2013 Nissan Altima 2.5 2 DR
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Dale Willey Automotive 2840 Iowa Street (785) 843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
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2008 Toyota Highlander Sport
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2013 Nissan Maxima 3.5 SV
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Motorcycle-ATV
2010 Kawasaki 1700 Voyager Stk#114T1075C
$7,995 2006 Toyota Camry LE
2007 Toyota Camry
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2008 Volkswagen Rabbit S
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Scion
Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
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2009 Toyota Camry
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Stk#1PL1975
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Scion 2011 XB
Stk#115L778
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Volkswagen Cars
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2007 Toyota Camry
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Pontiac 2003 Grand Am
2008 TOYOTA MAXTRX
2007 Mazda CX-9
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Pontiac 2009 Vibe
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2005 Lincoln Aviator Luxury
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2012 Mazda Mazda3 i Touring
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Stk#115M848
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2013 Mitsubishi Outlander Sport LE
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2001 SATURN LS
Stk#115L769A
Toyota Cars
Nissan Cars
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V6, heated & cooled seats, leather, sunroof, alloy wheels, steering wheel controls & more. Stk#480141
23rd & Alabama - 2829 Iowa
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$8,995
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