STATUS
Big 12 decides to hold off on expansion. 1D
QUO
Japanese are working themselves to death — literally. 1B
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Elections chief left behind Kansas scandal
Brownback says media not reporting good economic news.
Here’s why.
By Roxana Hegeman
Associated Press
Peter Hancock/Journal-World File Photo
N
ews outlets in Kansas are not reporting the good news about the Kansas economy, and if they did, voters might feel differently about the impact that Gov. Sam Brownback’s tax policies have had on the state. That’s the message that Brownback himself has been delivering lately, in talks to various groups around the state, including a recent get-together with the Kansas Press Association board of directors. So when word of that conversation got back to the news desk, the Lawrence Journal-World asked to meet with the governor and let him make his case. Brownback agreed, and in the course of a 25-minute interview, he laid out his case — complete with a wealth of charts and graphs — with data that he says prove the Kansas economy is in better shape than people give it credit for. “It just never gets out,” Brownback said at the outset. “That’s what I was complaining about, because
Statehouse Live
Peter Hancock phancock@ljworld.com
we’ve got some really good employment numbers and small business growth numbers in the state, and that just never gets out.” Much of that, he said, is directly due to the tax cuts he championed in 2012 and 2013. And in the areas where the state’s economy seems to be lagging, Brownback blames global, macroeconomic forces, such as commodity prices in the farm and energy sectors that are beyond the state’s control. Brownback has good reason to try to shore up his case at this point. His allies in
the Legislature who helped push through the tax cuts — at least those who actually ran for re-election — suffered badly in the Aug. 2 primary, and many people say there’s a good chance they could suffer more defeats in the Nov. 8 general election. If 2016 turns out to be a “wave” election, in which the balance of power in the Legislature completely shifts, then Brownback could be in for a tough ride in the last two years of his administration. And although there’s every reason to believe that most voters who are motivated on the tax issue have already made up their minds, Brownback has an incentive for trying to make his case while he still has time. The purpose of the tax cuts, Brownback reminds people, was to spur business development and increase private sector jobs over the long term. And by putting more money in the pockets of individuals, the theory was, that would generate economic activity that would produce
revenue for the state from other sources, such as retail sales taxes, to offset the loss of income taxes. “What that was built upon is, if you get a kind of normal economic situation, that as you cut income taxes, you’ll gain it back in sales,” Brownback said. “That was the theory. That was the experience in some other areas.” Here are some of the numbers that Brownback cites to make his case. l The border wars. One of the boldest claims Brownback makes is also the most difficult to verify independently. That is the claim that Kansas tax policy has reversed the outflow of economic wealth from the Kansas side of the Kansas City metropolitan area to the Missouri side. “We were losing tax filers to Missouri for 19 years in a row,” Brownback said. “That’s us losing wealth to Missouri. Enact the tax policy, and boom. We were having out-migration
> BROWNBACK, 4A
Wichita — When Brian Newby took the helm of a federal election agency, he left behind an unfolding scandal in Kansas where he was having an affair with a woman he promoted in his previous job and used her to Newby skirt oversight of their lavish expenses, prompting a local prosecutor to investigate, according to emails obtained by The Associated Press. The affair and resulting fallout was revealed in hundreds of emails ordered released after AP sued Johnson County, where Newby was the top election official before leaving to become executive director of the U.S. Election Assistance Commission. The emails — coupled with hundreds more obtained from the Kansas secretary of state’s office through a separate open records request — portray a rogue election official who berated employees and deliberately bypassed supervision. They also document a toxic workplace created by his affair with then Assistant Election Commissioner Jessica White, an apparent violation of county policy on intimate relationships with subordinates. In a June 2015 exchange from his work email to her personal address, the then-married Newby told White: “You, my little lover, are so wonderful.” In graphic language, Newby also describes a sex > NEWBY, 6A
County Commission candidates express views on jail expansion seats on this year’s gen- running as an indepeneral election ballot. dent, and 3rd District canAnswering quesdidates Democrat tions at the Voter Bassem Chahine Education Coaliand Republican Mition’s forum at chelle Derusseau. Lawrence City Hall Thellman is were 2nd District the incumbent in candidates Demothe 2nd Douglas COUNTY crat Nancy Thell- COMMISSION County Commisman and challenger sion District of east Jesse Brinson Jr., who is Lawrence precincts and
By Elvyn Jones ejones@ljworld.com
Views on the possible expansion of the Douglas County Jail and construction of a mental health crisis intervention center varied at a forum Monday for the four candidates vying of the two Douglas County Commission
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the eastern portions of Douglas County, including Baldwin City and Eudora. Chahine and Derusseau are contesting for the 3rd District seat of west and south central Lawrence and western Douglas County. The 3rd District became an open seat when incumbent Commissioner Jim Flory
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chose not to run for reelection. What emerged from the forum was that no candidate held to the position of the current Douglas County Commission, which would put the funding of the jail expansion and crisis intervention center on the same bond referendum
put before county voters. Although she is a member of the commission that publicly affirmed that position,
> COUNTY, 2A l Voter registration
deadline is today — here’s where to go. Page 2A
Forecast, 6B
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LAWRENCE • STATE
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L awrence J ournal -W orld
DEATHS Mary Jordan Carlson Mary Jordan Carlson, 90, formerly of Prospect Heights, and Glenview, IL passed away September 11, 2016 at Neuvant House in Lawrence, Kansas. Mary, daughter of Leslie and Ruth Jordan; born December 29, 1925 in rural Bristow, OK; skipped a grade in Junior high school; completed high school in three years as valedictorian; graduated at age 20 with a BS in Home Economics with emphasis in Foods and Nutrition at the University of Arkansas in 1946; and a MS in Nutrition with a Minor in Journalism from Drexel Institute in Philadelphia, PA in 1957. Mary’s life had a consistent focus. She was a champion of women in education, independence, equal rights and leadership; a pioneer with excellence and an insatiable appetite to experience different cultures around the world. At age 10, Mary survived the worst dust storm recorded, known as Black Sunday of April 14, 1935; she was less than 150 miles from the epicenter; three years later her father died as a cotton farmer at which time her mother moved the whole house to Cordell, OK and supported the family of two girls as a telephone operator and a nurse to the only doctor in town. Although Mrs. Jordon never learned to drive; she was known to make trips to the grocery store courtesy of the local police. Mary held high expectations for herself and reached beyond the normal boundaries at an early age. One month out of college, Mary was a student dietician for Marshall Field’s Food Service in Chicago, Illinois; within 6 months she was promoted to Food Cafeteria Supervisor. Two years later she exponentially expanded her horizons as a Home Economics Teacher for a Private Girls School in Montevideo, Uruguay, South America with the Board of Missions of the Methodist Church. Her diary at this time reveals her strong character, social and professional persona and her first witness to third-world nutrition deprivation. After experiencing a primitive culture for two and 1/2 years, Mary returned to the United States to Manage the Neiman Marcus Tea
Room of Dallas, Texas. She was associated for at least 10 years with the National Live Stock and Meat Board in several capacities including conducting 3-day Cooking Schools (up to 2000 people) all over the Nation. At this time Mary was treated like a celebrity with paparazzi at every town and even promoting Buicks in fullpage newspaper ads. For 6 years Mary was a Nutrition lecturer to college Nursing programs where her students commented that she “made nutrition fun”! 10 years teaching dietetics to Chicago hospitals; an editor of several professional publications and a freelance food consultant and nutritionist. Mary Carlson co-authored two cookbooks; one a groundbreaking food service professional cookbook in collaboration with the Campbell Soup Company and another called “Living the Good Life Microwave Recipe Book” which is still available on Amazon. com. Mary’s active, long term affiliation with Professional Associations was extensive and littered with awards, chairman of many committees and Presidencies. American Dietetic Association, Past District and State Officer, Member of ADA House of Delegates. American Home Economics Association past Illinois district and state officer, past President of the Chicago Nutrition Association, past State President of American Association of University Women in the year of the AAUW 75th Year Celebration Convention. Mary had over 40 years of active membership of AAUW in which she started several number of chapters in Illinois and also received the distinction of AAUW Woman of the Year Award. Mary was also very active with the United Methodist Church Women’s Society and held offices at the local, district and conference levels.
Additionally, Mary finished a respectable 5th out of 16 to represent the 3rd Senatorial District in 1969 to re-write the Illinois Constitution. The Governor appointed her initially to sit on the Illinois Committee for a Constitutional Convention and was also a member of the Illinois Advisory Committee on Education. Mary married Elmer V. Carlson on October 13, 1956, in Ardmore, Pennsylvania and resided for many years in Prospect Heights, Illinois. She was preceded in death by her husband in 2003, also her parents, sister and brother-in-law, Betty and Howard Gilmer and niece, Leslie, Hot Spring, AR, and brothersin-law, Frank J. Carlson, Euless, TX, and Kenneth L. Wheeler, Plymouth, MI. Mary and Elmer were extensive world-wide travelers throughout their married life to many developing countries; where she witnessed the “ill-fated lives of children as a result of malnutrition” which fueled her passion to establish the American Association of University Women Mary Jordan Carlson International Fellowship in 2000 that inspires girls to make a difference in their own countries by providing them the opportunity to come and study in the United States. Survivors include sisters/brothers-in-law, Evelyn Carlson (Robert) Senecal, of Lawrence, KS; Edna Carlson Wilson of Cohoctah, MI; Agnes Carlson Wheeler of Plymouth, MI; 13 nieces and nephews and 31 great nieces and nephews. Mary surely be missed, but not forgotten, as we know by her strong faith in God, that she is exploring the expansive universe of heaven; ready to greet us for when we will meet her there. Memorials may be made in her memory to Hillsdale College, the Heritage Foundation, the American Association of University Women or the United Methodist Church of Arlington Heights, Illinois and may be sent in care of the WarrenMcElwain Mortuary. Online condolences may be sent to warrenmcelwain.com.
Voter registration deadline is today The deadline in Kansas to register to vote in this year’s general election is midnight tonight. Douglas County Clerk Jamie Shew said his office in the Douglas County Courthouse, 1100 Massachusetts St., will be open from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. today to accept voter registration applications. The office also will accept online applications from Douglas County residents until midnight through its website, douglascountyks.org. Additionally, the clerk’s office will accept mailed voter applications if they are postmarked today, Shew said. As of Monday, the clerk’s office had received 6,250 applications
for advance ballots. That is 89 percent of 6,986 advance ballots mailed out in 2012, Shew said. Shew expects the pace of requests for advance ballots to decline dramatically once in-person advance voting begins Wednesday. Advance in-person voting starts during the office’s normal business hours of 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. on the first floor of the Courthouse. Douglas County inperson advance voting options available for the general election are: l Douglas County Courthouse, 1100 Massachusetts St: 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Oct. 19-21; 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Oct. 24-28; 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. Oct.
31-Nov. 4; 8 a.m. to noon Nov. 7 l Douglas County Fairgrounds Building 21, 2120 Harper St.: 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Oct. 31-Nov. 4 l University of Kansas Sabatini Multicultural Resource Center, 1299 Oread Ave.: 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Oct. 31-Nov. 4 l Golf Course Superintendents Association, 1421 Research Park Drive: 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Oct. 31-Nov. 4 l Baldwin City Fire Department, 610 High St.; Eudora City Hall, 4 E. Seventh St.; Lecompton City Hall, 327 Elmore St.; and the Douglas County Courthouse: 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 29 and 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 5.
Every life is worth celebrating
Journal-World obituary policy: For information about running obituaries, call 832-7151. Obituaries run as submitted by funeral homes or the families of the deceased.
ljworld.com 645 New Hampshire St. (News Center) Lawrence, KS 66044 (785) 843-1000 • (800) 578-8748
PUBLISHER Scott Stanford, 832-7277, sstanford@ljworld.com
LILA ANN WINN Memorial services for Lila Ann Winn, 69, Lawrence, will be at 11 am Friday at RumseyYost Funeral Home. Sister of Sandra Tutwiler. Full obituary and condolences at rumseyyost.com
MARILYN JUNE PUCKETT NIEDER A memorial service for Marilyn J. Nieder, 71, Baldwin City, will be 3:306:30 pm at The Lodge in Baldwin City. She died Saturday Oct. 15, 2016, at Lawrence Memorial Hospital. rumseyyost.com
EDITORS Chad Lawhorn, editor 832-6362, clawhorn@ljworld.com Kim Callahan, managing editor 832-7148, kcallahan@ljworld.com Tom Keegan, sports editor 832-7147, tkeegan@ljworld.com Kathleen Johnson, advertising manager 832-7223, kjohnson@ljworld.com
OTHER CONTACTS Joan Insco: 832-7211 circulation manager Classified advertising: 832-2222 or www.ljworld.com/classifieds
PHYLLIS MARIE REYNOLDS Funeral services for Phyllis Reynolds, 84, Lawrence, are pending at RumseyYost Funeral Home. Mrs. Reynolds died Sunday, Oct. 16, 2016, at Lawrence Memorial Hospital. rumseyyost.com
County CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A
Thellman said it would be the County Commission seated in January that would decide how to present a question or questions on funding to the public. Thellman did, however, speak on the need for both facilities. Because the jail’s population is exceeding its beds, the county is spending more than $1 million a year to place inmates in the jails of other counties, she said. Brinson called for more exploration of programs before asking taxpayers to pay for either of the two expensive facilities. The focus should be in investing in people and effective programs, not buildings, he said. The County Commission’s decision in March to form the Douglas County Criminal Justice Coordinating Council and then charging it with exploring options to incarceration took the commission’s position off the table, Derusseau said. The next County Commission was obligated to let that process go forward before making any decision on the jail expansion, she said. Her opponent, Chahine, said he supported the crisis intervention center and jail expansion after seeing first-hand the effects of inmate overcrowding. However, he supports giving county voters the opportunity to vote separately on the financing of the buildings because many in the county did not share his support for both facilities. In many of his answers at the forum, Brinson said as a commissioner he would consult with the public or community groups before making a decision. “Taxpayers should be heard,” he said. “That would be my top priority as a commissioner.” He suggested commissioners ask seniors about their views in gaps in senior services, adding that many were disappointed in the proposed remodeling of the Douglas County Senior Center. He also said “both parties” should be consulted concerning any upgrades to security measures when state law mandates concealed
weapons be allowed in county buildings absent appropriate security measures starting Jan. 1, 2018. Appropriate security measures mean armed guards and electronic monitoring devices costing “millions and millions” of dollars, Thellman said. Her solution to the concern was to work with friendly legislators to modify the law. “The costs are extraordinary, and we need those tax dollars for other purposes,” she said. “I agree Bert Nash (Community Mental Health) is a special case, but the fairgrounds, Courthouse and Public Works Building — it’s the entire budget if you want to make them secure.” Derusseau supported the proposed joint county and city of Lawrence partnership to gut and remodel the Douglas County Senior Center, which Brinson questioned. There was an effort several years ago to market Lawrence and Douglas County as a destination for retirees, Derusseau said. It was found there wasn’t enough senior services available to support that effort, she said. The remodeling of the Senior Services and the vision of new Douglas County Senior Services Executive Director Marvel Williamson would help address that, she said. “The place is a dump,” she said of the current Senior Services site. “They are very excited to get it fixed up.” Local businessman Chahine returned several times at the forum to the theme of economic development and the need to attract primary industries to the county, which would provide livable wages. Lack of that kind of effort or investment would make Lawrence another Topeka, he said. All the candidates agreed on the importance of answering emails, texts or phone calls within 24 hours. Chahine said commissioners should be responsive to their employers. “If I get elected, I’ll be your employee,” he said. “If I don’t answer the phone, you can yell at me. If I don’t answer in 24 hours, I’ll apologize.”
CALL US Let us know if you have a story idea. Email news@ljworld.com or contact one of the following: Arts and entertainment: .................832-6353 City government: ..............................832-6314 County government: .......................832-7166 Courts and crime: ..............................832-7284 Datebook: .............................................832-7112 Lawrence schools: ..........................832-6388 Letters to the editor: .....................832-6362 Local news: .........................................832-7154 Obituaries: ...........................................832-7151 Photo reprints: ..................................832-6353 Society: .................................................832-7151 Sports: ..................................................832-7147 University of Kansas: .........................832-7187 SUBSCRIPTIONS: 832-7199 Didn’t receive your paper? For billing, vacation or delivery questions, call 832-7199. Weekday: 6 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Weekends: 6 a.m.-10 a.m. In-town redelivery: 6 a.m.-10 a.m. Published daily by Ogden Newspapers of Kansas LLC at 645 New Hampshire Street, Lawrence, KS 66044-0122. Telephone: 843-1000; or toll-free (800) 578-8748.
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LOTTERY SATURDAY’S POWERBALL 23 49 57 64 67 (20) FRIDAY’S MEGA MILLIONS 7 27 60 64 74 (5) SATURDAY’S HOT LOTTO SIZZLER 3 9 11 15 40 (11) SATURDAY’S SUPER KANSAS CASH 1 4 20 21 30 (22) MONDAY’S KANSAS 2BY2 Red: 4 22; White: 3 17 MONDAY’S KANSAS PICK 3 (MIDDAY) 9 4 5 MONDAY’S KANSAS PICK 3 (EVENING) 6 3 9
BIRTHS Aric and Melissa Baker, Ottawa, girl, Monday. Sabrena ChancePobjoy and James Brown, Lawrence, a girl, Monday. Kate and Austin Elser, Lawrence, a boy, Monday.
CORRECTIONS The Journal-World’s policy is to correct all significant errors that are brought to the editors’ attention, usually in this space. If you believe we have made such an error, call 832-7154, or email news@ljworld.com.
— County reporter Elvyn Jones can be reached at 832-7166. Follow him on Twitter: @ElvynJ
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LAWRENCE • STATE
L awrence J ournal -W orld
Tuesday, October 18, 2016
Commission eyes complex south of city limits By Rochelle Valverde rvalverde@ljworld.com
At their meeting today, Lawrence city commissioners will decide whether what is currently farmland on the edge of town will become the site of a new apartment complex. The 55-acre apartment development would house about 240 apartments and require that the land first be annexed to the city and rezoned. The property is located at the southeast corner of 31st and Michigan streets, but is currently outside of the city limits. The city’s comprehensive plan prioritizes infill residential development over projects outside city limits, but a report by city planning staff is recommending the commission approve the annexation proposal because of its proximity to town. “One of the benefits of infill development is the use of existing infrastructure,” the report states. “In
this case, the site is located adjacent to a developed area and the infrastructure is in place either on the property or adjacent to it. No extension of the City sanitary sewer or water mains is necessary to serve this property. This project, while not technically ‘infill’, is very similar to infill development.” The property borders city limits on two sides, with an existing apartment complex to its west and the Menards home improvement store to its north. To its south is the soon-to-be completed South Lawrence Trafficway. The property’s proximity to town means the apartments would be within the service limits of fire stations and existing water and sewer infrastructure, according to the report by city staff. In addition to the annexation, commissioners will have to approve a request to rezone the property from agricultural to
multidwelling residential, adding to a significant amount of land already zoned for apartments. A recent city report — the Multi-Dwelling Inventory Report — found that about 2,500 apartments are currently in progress in Lawrence, and the city is currently zoned to allow for 6,000 more. At current construction rates, the land inventory allotted for apartments could account for decades of growth. In its report on the proposed project, city planning staff noted that the conclusions of the MultiDwelling Inventory Report should be factored into the commission’s analysis. Still, staff stated the merits of the project — particularly its use of existing infrastructure — led them to support it. The project’s location also calls for other considerations. Part of the land contains a floodplain, and requires that
about 25 acres of the property be rezoned to multidwelling residential with a floodplain management regulations overlay. Because of that designation, plans for the apartments indicate that they would be built around the floodplain, and no development is proposed within the floodplain itself. A group led by Lawrence businessman Tim Stultz is proposing the apartment project. Stultz previously told the Journal-World that he envisions a complex with lots of one-bedroom units that could be marketed as affordable apartment units. Calls placed to multiple city commissioners to comment on the proposal were not returned as of Monday evening. City commissioners will meet at 5:45 p.m. today at City Hall, 6 E. Sixth St.
Kansas trio accused of terror attack plot get lawyers By Roxana Hegeman Associated Press
Wichita — Three men accused of plotting to attack Somali immigrants in western Kansas appeared in court Monday, where they were appointed lawyers and ordered to remain in custody for the time being. Magistrate Judge Gwynne Wright Birzer set detention hearings for Patrick Eugene Stein and Gavin Wayne Wright for Friday and for Curtis Wayne Allen next Monday. The trio was charged in a criminal complaint un— City Hall reporter Rochelle Valverde sealed Friday with can be reached at 832-6314. Follow conspiring to use her on Twitter: @RochelleVerde a weapon of mass destruction. Their attorneys declined to comment after the brief hearing Stein in Wichita. Prosecutors say the men are members of a l Rose Barfield (ret.) Advisory Board members. small militia group that — former brigadier “Senator Dole and I calls itself “the Crusadgeneral, U.S. Army are very proud to have ers” and whose meml Shannon Brown — this group advising us,” bers espouse sovsenior vice president Dole Institute Direcereign citizen, and chief HR officer, tor Bill Lacy said in the anti-government, Fedex Corporation announcement. “It’s anti-Muslim and l Nancy Dwight — composed of national and anti-immigrant Republican strategist; local figures and is biparextremist beliefs. former executive director, tisan and very diverse. They allege that National Republican ConAll have supported us or the men planned gressional Committee participated in our proto detonate truck l Peter Fenn — grams, and they know and bombs around a Democratic strategist; believe in our mission.” small Garden City Allen president, Fenn ComHere’s a list of memapartment communications Group bers of the new board, plex where about 120 Sol Joseph Gaylord — with descriptions from mali immigrants live and the Dole Institute. Notes Republican strategist; that they had discussed in parentheses are mine. former senior adviser attacking area churches to House Speaker Newt Board members will that helped settle the refserve two- or three-year Gingrich ugees and get them jobs. appointments upon Stein’s family issued > DOLE, 4A their nomination. a statement through
Dole Institute advisory board packed with known political names
T
he Dole Institute of Politics at the University of Kansas has created an advisory board and filled it with quite a few big names. Aside from the wisdom they have to share, I’m sure politically connectedtypes don’t hurt when recruiting speakers of the caliber who’ve previously visited KU through the Dole Institute (former U.S. presidents Bill Clinton and George H.W. Bush, plus foreign heads of state, to name a few). The 18-person board will serve as the Dole Institute’s chief volunteer advisory group, providing support to promote
Heard on the Hill
Sara Shepherd sshepherd@ljworld.com
and achieve its mission, according to a recent announcement from the institute. Board members will help select speakers, recommend program ideas and be accessible to Dole Institute Student
Big rates equal big money.
attorney Dan Monnat, saying they are “extremely grateful” to law enforcement involved in the intervention of the alleged plot. The family also asked for privacy. “The Stein family is shocked and devastated by the news we received last Friday,” their statement read. “We do not support discrimination of any sort and have never advocated or condoned violence as a solution to differences.” Garden City is home to a Tyson Foods cattle slaughterhouse that employs many immigrants, including many of the Somalis who settled there. On Saturday, law enforcement officials met with hundreds of these immigrants in Garden City to try to reassure them of their safety, including Somalis, Malaysians and Burmese, among others. Police Chief Michael Utz told them that the defendants wanted to attack their religious beliefs, the Wichita Eagle reported. “Some of you have said you can’t go to your mosque to pray, or that you can’t go to your homes because you are afraid,” Utz said. “But we and the sheriff and the FBI are here to say that you are safe in Garden City, and safe in the United States of America.”
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Dole
LAWRENCE • STATE
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— president, Mark and Bette Morris Family Foundation l Maynard Oliverius — former president and CEO, Stormont-Vail HealthCare l Mike Pettit — former chief of staff and administrative assistant to Bob Dole l John Pinegar — partner, Pinegar, Smith and Associates Inc. l Edward Riss — investor l Rebekah Romm — Republican strategist; former student coordinator, Dole Institute of Politics Student Advisory Board l Kathleen Sebelius — former U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services and governor of Kansas l Dolph Simons Jr. — chairman, The World Company (Simons was
editor of the JournalWorld, until Ogden Newspapers purchased the paper effective Aug. 1.) l Jim Slattery — strategic counsel, Wiley Rein LLP; former U.S. representative l Bill Lacy — director, Dole Institute The board’s ex-officio members are KU Chancellor Bernadette GrayLittle and Dole Institute associate director Barbara Ballard, who is also a Democratic member of the Kansas House of Representatives. l Prize money update: In other Dole Institute news, former U.S. Sen. Nancy Kassebaum plans to give back the $25,000 cash award she received for the Dole Leadership Prize to be used for student programming at
KU, the institute recently announced. Kassebaum was named the winner of this year’s Dole Leadership Prize in a surprise ceremony Sept. 17 at the Dole Institute. The money will help fund the Dole Institute’s semi-annual Student Advisory Board program as well as the Pizza and Politics series, both key components of the Dole Institute’s student-led programming, according to the announcement. The 2015 Dole Leadership Prize winner, President Bill Clinton, left his cash award with the Dole Institute to help a program on women in leadership.
analysis of individual tax ‘Look, I’m using this to returns, which are not build buildings — the tax available to the general benefit of being able to put public, and no more dethis, the revenue generCONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A tailed information about ated off of it.’ And he says that analysis was available. we’re doing this in Lawfrom Kansas the last But even accepting that rence. And you’ve got a lot three years prior. We now the numbers are accurate, of building going on.” l Individual income tax have in-migration, and a the creation of those new collections. The tax cuts lot of that’s Missourians businesses has not transmoving to Kansas.” lated into large numbers of that Brownback championed came in two phases. According to one of his new jobs. In 2012, lawmakers passed charts, based on Internal Numbers from the Revenue Service data, in Bureau of Labor Statistics a bill that slashed individual income tax rates overall the three years just before show that since the tax the tax cuts were enacted, cuts took effect in January and completely exempted Kansans moving across 2013, Kansas has added, on income derived from certhe state line into Missouri a seasonally adjusted basis, tain kinds of business entities. The following year, were taking with them only 34,400 new private lawmakers attempted to $150-$200 million a year in sector jobs, a growth rate fix some technical probadjusted gross income. of just 3.1 percent over lems in the original bill, But immediately after three and a half years. but also passed a formula, the tax cuts, in 2013 and That’s less than half of which some called the 2014, the trend reversed, the national average of 8 “glide path to zero,” that and now Missourians are percent growth in private was meant to phase out moving back, bringing sector employment over income taxes altogether with them about $85 milthat same period. over a period of time. lion worth of income. “We’re a little flat,” In the first full fiscal year According to Census Brownback said. of the tax cuts, 2014, indiBureau data, however, Nor would Brownback vidual income tax receipts there was no out-migration say that the job growth of people in the metro area Kansas has seen is directly in Kansas fell 24 percent, to 2.2 billion. They bounced from Kansas to Missouri. related to his tax policies. back slightly by 2.7 percent Looking at migration “We don’t have the in fiscal year 2015, to nearly data from 2009 through hard data that I know of $2.3 billion, but fell again 2013 for Johnson, Wyanto say that because of our in the fiscal year that just dotte and Leavenworth business policy, we have ended June 30: Kansas colcounties on the Kansas this growth in private lected about $2.25 billion side, and Jackson, Clay and sector jobs,” he said. “But in individual income taxes, Platte counties in Missouri, I do know we’ve hit near still 23 percent less than Kansas was a net winner record on private sector the $2.9 billion collected in in migration, gaining 2,396 employment. We’ve got fiscal year 2013, before the more people from Missouri record numbers of new than Missouri picked up small businesses formed.” full impact of the tax cuts from Kansas. Furthermore, Brownback took effect. According to the “We are not saying we acknowledged, some new were losing residents to business entities are merely Legislature’s nonpartisan extensions of existing busi- Research Department, Missouri prior to the tax the full impact of the tax cuts,” Brownback’s spokes- nesses, especially among real estate developers who cuts is that Kansas is now woman said in an email. commonly set up separate collecting about $920 mil“We were gaining resientities, known as limited lion less each year than it dents but that rate tripled would have if lawmakers following the implementa- liability corporations, or LLCs, for each individual had made no changes to tion of the tax policy.” development project. the tax code. “We had been losing But Brownback said But so far in the new wealth (and) money to fiscal year, Brownback Missouri, but not people,” even that represents economic growth. said, individual income tax she continued, “and now “I’ve talked with develreceipts have started to rewe are gaining people opers, and one developer cover. In the first quarter of from Missouri and seeing in particular in Douglas the new fiscal year, receipts wealth transfer in to KanCounty,” he said. “They have grown by $25 million, sas as well.” l Business creation. form a new LLC to put the or nearly 5 percent over the According to data from new building in. He’s out same period last year, and the Kansas Department of of Wichita, but he says, they’ve actually beaten the Revenue, Brownback said, roughly 18,000 new businesses filed tax returns in the first two years of the tax plan, either under business names or Social A widely used chemotherapy drug, TAXOTERE®, used to treat breast Security numbers that had or other cancer, has been linked to permanent hair loss. A safer chemo never shown up in state for your hair was available. If you suffered permanent hair loss after tax records before. chemo, call us now. You may be entitled to significant compensation. “And you’ve got 650 of No fees or costs until your case is settled or won. We practice law only in those in Douglas County,” Arizona, but associate with lawyers throughout the U.S. he said pointedly. GOLDBERG & OSBORNE s Jeannine Koranda, 1-800-THE-EAGLE ay 7 Dek ( ) 1-800-843-3245 n spokeswoman for the Dee e ® www.1800theeagle.com Op a W partment of Revenue, said that was based on internal
official estimates by nearly $1.7 million. “My point is, when people criticize the tax policy, the places where we’re not getting the yield are corporate taxes, which we didn’t do anything to; sales taxes, which we actually raised; and personal income. That’s the one where we’re actually ahead of last year, and we’re ahead of the estimate. That’s the one we cut.” But if income tax receipts are rising, it does not appear that the personal income of Kansans overall is changing very much. According to data from the Bureau of Economic Analysis, growth in percapita personal income in Kansas has not kept pace with the rest of the nation. l Sales tax receipts. One of the most disappointing revenue figures that have been reported since the tax cuts were enacted is the lackluster growth in retail sales. That was, after all, a built-in assumption about cutting income taxes — that it would put more money in people’s pockets and spur consumer spending. In fiscal year 2014, the first full year after the tax cuts, retail sales tax collections actually declined 3.7 percent, to $2.1 billion. That was also the year that the sales tax rate dropped slightly, the result of a previous tax plan enacted by former Gov. Mark Parkinson in 2010 that included a “temporary” increase
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A l Dan Glickman — former U.S. Secretary of Agriculture, U.S. representative and director, Institute of Politics, Kennedy School at Harvard University l Fred Logan — former chair, Kansas Board of Regents and Kansas GOP l Marlon Marshall — Democratic strategist; former special assistant to President Barack Obama and deputy field director, Obama 2012 (Marshall, a KU grad, is now working for Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign.) l Bette Morris
Brownback
— This is an excerpt from Sara Shepherd’s Heard on the Hill column, which appears regularly on LJWorld.com.
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BRIEFLY Former Kansas bank president pleads guilty Wichita (ap ) — A former bank president has admitted he failed to report suspicious activity at a small southwest Kansas bank prosecutors say a Mexican cartel was using to launder drug money. Court documents show former Plains State Bank President James Kirk Friend entered a guilty plea Monday under a deal with prosecutors that would spare him from prison. The binding plea agreement calling for 12 months of probation is contingent on the judge’s approval. Prosecutors contend Friend helped bank customers George and Agatha Enns of Meade launder more than $6.8 million between 2011 and 2014. The Mexican cartel is suspected of laundering drug proceeds in Kansas to avoid tighter restrictions on U.S. currency in its home country. His sentencing is set for Jan. 9.
in the wake of the Great Recession. Since 2014, sales tax have grown slightly, but not nearly at the pace that budget analysts had expected. In the most recent fiscal year, sales taxes grew 6.2 percent over the previous year. Of that, however, 5.7 percent can be attributed to the 2015 Legislature raising the sales tax rate, leaving only half a percent attributable to increased consumer spending. l The rural economy. Brownback says that has begun to turn around in the new fiscal year, with sales tax receipts in the first quarter beating the same period last year, and exceeding current estimates. But he acknowledges that hasn’t been even throughout the state. “The urban areas are working. The rural areas are not,” he said. “If you add up all the rurals, it does actually matter.” The rural economy, Brownback said, has been beset by global economic factors that state government is unable to control. “We cannot overcome a huge falloff in oil prices, or a huge falloff in cattle prices and wheat. … You go west of Salina, it’s basically the pits. You go into the oil areas and gas areas, really bad. And your ag area is not very good, but the urban, where you’ve got a more normal situation. “We’re flowing against a bad commodity market for us that normally hammers
Kansas pretty hard,” Brownback said. “Because once you drop in ag prices, they don’t buy farm equipment; then our farm equipment manufacturers cut back employment. Once you’re not drilling for oil, you don’t have those employment jobs. “The urban areas are working. The rural are not,” he said. “If you add up all the rurals, it does actually matter.” But the Kansas economy has always been moved by global economic forces that are beyond state government’s ability to control. And some have suggested it was folly from the beginning to think that those forces could be overcome with changes in the state of Kansas income tax code. “I disagree with that,” Brownback said. “I agree we can’t impact the price of oil or the price of cattle. That’s a global commodity market. But I do think you can impact people moving. I think you can impact the growth of business, or decline over time. And we’ve got the data to show that’s indeed the case.” — This is an excerpt from Peter Hancock’s Statehouse Live column, which appears on LJWorld.com.
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Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com l Tuesday, October 18, 2016
Trump evokes classic anti-Semitic themes
EDITORIALS
Not rigged Trump’s insistence that the election has been fixed against him lacks evidence and undermines the legitimacy of our system.
R
epublican presidential candidate Donald Trump has made a lot of noise this campaign season. That’s healthy — voters are always served best by a rigorous and open debate. But one issue Trump should tone down the rhetoric on is the idea that the election is rigged against him. It’s a dangerous campaign tactic that undermines the legitimacy of the American election system, the envy and model of the free world. In recent days, Trump has suggested the fix is in, that the election is a rigged system orchestrated by Hillary Clinton and the Democrats. On Sunday, he tweeted “The election is absolutely being rigged by the dishonest and distorted media pushing Crooked Hillary — but also at many polling places — SAD.” On Monday, he tweaked his own party for not doing more to back his election fraud claims, tweeting, “Of course there is large scale voter fraud happening on and before election day. Why do Republican leaders deny what is going on? So naïve.” The problem is there is little evidence to support such election-fraud claims. Academic research into voter fraud has time and again revealed that it is extraordinarily rare and has had almost no impact on elections. Besides, Trump’s own party wields much greater influence on state election laws and oversight than Clinton’s does. In individual states, elected secretaries of state most often also serve as the chief election official for the state. Republicans hold secretary of state positions in 29 of the 50 states. Further, Republicans are the chief election officials in nine of the 13 battleground states including Arizona, Colorado, Iowa, Florida, Michigan, Ohio, Georgia, Nevada and Utah. Democrats serve as the top elections official in just four battleground states: New Hampshire, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Virginia. In recent years, Republicans such as Kris Kobach in Kansas have successfully pushed voter registration laws that make it more difficult for individuals to register to vote. Though many of those laws are now being challenged, they have effectively kept thousands of voters from casting ballots in the 2016 election. Such laws are generally believed to more adversely affect Democrats than Republicans. America’s elections system works best when voters are engaged and participation is high. Let’s hope Trump can stop questioning the legitimacy of the election and instead signal his willingness to embrace the will of the voters, whatever that outcome may be.
I guess it was only a matter of time before we got to this: Donald Trump has accused Hillary Clinton of leading a global conspiracy of international financiers who are out to destroy U.S. sovereignty. Does something about that language sound familiar? “Whether intentionally or not, Donald Trump is evoking classic anti-Semitic themes,” said Jonathan Greenblatt, chief executive of the Anti-Defamation League. This is a new low in a campaign that lacks any depth controls. But Trump’s language can hardly be accidental. After all, his campaign CEO is Steve Bannon, the former head of Breitbart News, a web haven for white nationalists who hate blacks and “jooz.” When such conspiracy theories elicit cheers from crowds of faithful followers, it means our democracy is in deep trouble, even if a majority votes Trump down. I’ll get to the broader threat to democracy in a moment. But first let’s look at the conspiracy theory that Trump is promoting to divert attention from his sex scandal. Referencing “WikiLeaks documents,” the Donald declared last week that “Hillary Clinton meets in secret with international banks to plot the destruction of U.S. sovereignty in order to enrich these global financial powers, her special-interest friends, and her donors.” In his typical wink-wink fashion, the Donald avoided using the word Jews, but his inference was clear. “Mr. Trump focused on the very issues and themes that obsess conspiratorial
Trudy Rubin
“
trubin@phillynews.com
Trump’s latest warnings about a global cabal should convince any voters still on the fence that this man is truly dangerous.” anti-Semites,” Greenblatt said in his statement. “They believe there is an elite group of Jews who control the media, the government, and banking, and who are trying to destroy white America. They also believe that most of Hillary Clinton’s donors are Jewish.” Of course, not all Trump supporters buy into this trope. But, egged on by Bannon, Trump is legitimizing an “alt-right” core who have crawled out from under the rocks and have now entered the mainstream. These are the kind of people who write me email using the epithet “you jooz”; they have deluged several well-known Jewish journalists from national media with a blitz of anti-Semitic hate mail. They are the kind of folks who left a sign bearing a swastika on a table reserved for press who were covering Trump’s conspiracy speech last week. Of course, conspiracy theories are not new to America, nor to Trump. He built
his campaign on a stream of racist and xenophobic conspiracy theories and outrageous claims, an outflow so endless that much of the country (mistakenly) began to shrug them off. For example: the racist birther lie that President Barack Obama was not born in the United States, which Trump peddled for five years, and the claim that Ted Cruz’s father was involved in JFK’s assassination. This from a man who seeks to enter the White House. Now Trump has pumped his conspiracy theories up to an even more dangerous level. We have a presidential candidate who tells his followers that a global cabal, led by Clinton, is out to destroy America. He warns that Hillary (helped by, wink-wink, minorities) is about to steal the election from them. Of course, Trump is helped in promoting his theories by social media. He damns the “mainstream media” as corrupt but, as the conservative columnist Max Boot points out, heaps praise on alternative media so extreme and conspiratorial they make Fox News look liberal. Among them Breitbart, the Drudge Report, and Infowars, run by Alex Jones, a conspiracy monger and radio host who claimed that 9/11 and Sandy Hook were carried out by the U.S. government. Living in this alternate media universe, it’s no wonder that many Trump admirers are ready to accept his conspiracy theories about how the world works. And no doubt this latest conspiracy theory aims to lay the groundwork for claiming the election has been stolen if he loses. Sto-
— Reprinted with permission from local writer Sarah St. John. To see more, go online to www.facebook.com/DailyLawrenceHistory.
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What the Lawrence Journal-World stands for 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 l
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— Trudy Rubin is a columnist and editorial-board member for the Philadelphia Inquirer.
On Oct. 18, 1962, James D. Watson, Francis Crick and Maurice Wilkins were honored with the Nobel Prize for Medicine and Physiology for determining the double-helix molecular structure of DNA. l In 1767, the Mason-Dixon line, the boundary between colonial Pennsylvania, Maryland and Delaware, was set as astronomers Charles Mason and Jeremiah Dixon completed their survey. l In 1867, the United States took formal possession of Alaska from Russia. l In 1892, the first longdistance telephone line between New York and Chicago was officially opened (it could only handle one call at a time). l In 1954, Texas Instruments unveiled the Regency TR-1, the first commercially produced transistor radio.
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From the Lawrence Daily Journal-World for Oct. 18, 1916: l “A record number of years women students of the ago University are learning to IN 1916 swim this fall according to authorities in the physical training department. It is estimated that 500 women regularly enjoy the privileges of the pool including a large number of the faculty women.” l “A party of the city police force are out at the brick yards this afternoon getting some rifle and revolver practice. They expect to be prepared to use a gun if the need should ever arise.”
len by the Clinton cabal of minorities, bankers and you know who. When conspiracy theories go mainstream, democracy is in big trouble. I’ve spent a lot of time in countries where governments use state-controlled media to promote conspiracy theories that obscure their bad behavior and place the blame elsewhere. Lacking any other information sources, much of the public believes what they hear. Take Pakistan. When the Pakistani government failed to help victims of massive floods, the media claimed CIA technology had caused the flooding. When the Pakistani government is attacked by terrorists whom its own intelligence agencies covertly support, it blames the CIA. Throughout the Mideast, media have long claimed the CIA and Israel engineered 9/11. In Russia, media promote the theory that Obama founded the Islamic State. Turkey’s leader claims America was behind the recent coup attempt. Now a large segment of Americans are fed outrageous conspiracy theories on the web, theories that are amplified and promoted by the GOP presidential candidate. Meantime, Trump overtly threatens to go after media critics should he win, in ways that smack of Russia or Pakistan or Turkey. Trump’s latest warnings about a global cabal should convince any voters still on the fence that this man is truly dangerous. His threat takes aim at the underpinnings of our democracy, not just at the “jooz.”
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It’s the fathers of sons who can fix misogyny By Steven I. Weiss
“As a father of daughters” is now a well-worn phrase, trod out every time men feel the need to distance themselves from misogynistic comments or behavior. Of course it’s been particularly pervasive in the last few weeks, as Republicans have denounced Donald Trump for saying he “grabs” women’s genitals in a leaked video from 2005. Rep. Jason Chaffetz of Utah, for example, said that “My wife and I, we have a 15-yearold daughter, and if I can’t look her in the eye and tell her these things, I can’t endorse this person.” Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky issued a statement explaining that “as the father of three daughters, I strongly believe that Trump needs to apologize directly to women and girls everywhere.” The “as a father of daughters” refrain has even become part of Hillary Clinton’s offensive. An ad released by her campaign features a lifelong Republican who announces that he won’t vote for Trump because “I’m the father of three girls.” Fathers of daughters may well feel a personal sense of outrage — but it’s the fathers of sons who could, ultimately, do something to mitigate or end the misogyny that still taints our culture.
Left up to their own devices, we know what boys will grow up to do. According to a 2014 study, 65 percent of women have experienced street harassment, 20 percent have been followed, and 9 percent subsequently forced to do something sexual. But the street isn’t the only danger zone: 1 in 3 women has been harassed at work, according to a Cosmopolitan Magazine study last year. Sexual assault is widespread on college campuses. As a father of sons, it’s my responsibility to help fix these problems. Just as I speak with my children about other issues of civil rights and discrimination, I speak with them about the difficulties women have historically faced at the hands of men. Of course I have to speak in an age-appropriate fashion when it comes to sexual activity and predation, but the basic concept of consent is something every child can understand. My kids were taught not to grab others’ toys when they were still in diapers; surely, over time, that instruction can be applied to other discussions of what else they may not grab. If we don’t have that discussion with our boys, if we don’t speak frankly and specifically about what consent and respect for women mean, we’re leaving them at the mercy of our broader society. Our boys’ morality is too
precious to leave up to television and locker room buddies as their main sources of instruction. But it’s not enough to simply avoid offense. We need to raise our boys to be conscious and critical of the culture they enter. Confronting misogyny around them will make our boys not just individuals who do no harm, but agents of change. When they hear someone make a sexist joke, our boys should be the kind to say, “That’s not funny.” When they hear an unfortunate generalization about women, they should be the ones to interrupt and say, “That’s not true.” Our boys should report abuse and harassment they see to the authorities and avoid ever engaging in a “bro code” of silence. Of course there are others reasons to chafe at the “fathers of daughters” line. As nice as it is to have fathers on the side of equality, there is the obvious question of “where did you stand before?” If men wait until they have girls to join the cause, they’ll have spent decades perpetuating the culture of male privilege. Shouldn’t every person, whether or not they have daughters — or sisters or wives — find talk of sexual assault abhorrent? — Steven I. Weiss is news anchor and managing editor at the Jewish Channel. You can find him on Twitter @steveniweiss. He wrote this for the Los Angeles Times.
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Tuesday, October 18, 2016
LAWRENCE • STATE
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BRIEFLY No updates in Ohio Street homicide Police say they have no new information regarding the recent homicide of a 42-year-old Lawrence man. On the evening of Sept. 16, police found Lenny Dwayne Morrison dead in the 400 block of Ohio Street, Lawrence Police Capt. Anthony Brixius said in a news release. Officers also found a woman with “significant injuries,” Brixius said. She was treated at Lawrence Memorial Hospital and released the next day. Brixius said Morrison’s death was determined to be a homicide. Lawrence Police Sgt. Amy Rhoads said Monday that no updates were available regarding the ongoing investigation into the homicide.
Reported shooting under investigation A man was shot in the foot Saturday and police say they
Newby CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A
act he wishes he was doing with her, “scheming and dreaming with you into the night.” Newby and White did not respond to numerous phone and email messages seeking comment. Newby’s penchant for ignoring supervision continued when he took the top federal job in November 2015 at an agency whose mission is to make voting easier. He enraged voting rights advocates when, without public notice or approval from agency commissioners, he tightened voting registration rules in three states. A federal appeals court last month temporarily blocked Newby from changing a federal voter registration form to require residents of Kansas, Alabama and Georgia to show proof of U.S. citizenship, saying it is “difficult to imagine a more clear violation” of federal
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are investigating the incident. However, additional details were sparse Monday. Lawrence Police Sgt. Amy Rhoads said a 36-year-old man was shot in the foot around 11:06 a.m. Saturday in the 700 block of Iowa Street. According to Lawrence Police Department activity logs, 12 officers responded to the scene. Rhoads said the man’s injuries were nonlife-threatening and that the investigation into the incident is ongoing. Citing the open investigation, Rhoads said she could not provide additional information. As of Monday afternoon, no arrests in the Douglas County Jail booking logs were posted with incident numbers matching the reported shooting.
Man robbed at hotel A man was robbed Saturday night at a Lawrence hotel, police say. Shortly before 9 p.m., officers were dispatched to a hotel in the 1100 block of North Third Street
administrative law. A scathing county audit of the Kansas election office found Newby intentionally circumvented oversight by charging expenses to White’s government credit card, allowing him to review and approve his own spending. Auditors also said Newby and White made purchases without sufficient business justification and supporting documentation. Some emails offer a glimpse into an investigation opened by the district attorney’s office. Newby’s Kansas office had drawers full of phones, tablets and other equipment not listed in inventory. Tom Gottschalk, financial crimes investigator for the district attorney, asked in one email for access to the locked office to examine them. The investigator also wanted a list of everything the elections office had discarded as surplus in the last five years. Kristi Bergeron, spokeswoman for the district attorney’s office, said she did not know the status of that
L awrence J ournal -W orld
for a report of a robbery, said Lawrence Police Sgt. Amy Rhoads. Rhoads did not provide an exact address, but Motel 6, 1130 N. Third St., is the only hotel in that block. According to Lawrence Police Department activity logs, which list the incident as an armed robbery, four police officers responded to the scene. Rhoads said the man heard a knock on his hotel door and, opening it, found a person with a stocking cap and a covered face. The person then took a bag belonging to the man, Rhoads said. The suspect is described as white and thin, with blond hair, possibly female, between 5-foot8 and 5-foot-10, Rhoads said. Although police logs list the incident as an armed robbery, Rhoads did not immediately respond to questions about whether a weapon was used. She also did not say whether the man was injured during the incident. The reported robbery is still under investigation, Rhoads said. — Conrad Swanson
investigation. In an email touching on his management style, Newby prodded an employee to speed up work on a project by noting he had “terrorized” two other employees. He copied one of those employees on that email, telling the person he was doing so in the event they wanted to commiserate or “share the therapy sessions I undoubtedly caused.” Newby promoted White to assistant election commissioner in January 2015, emails show. White at times publicly belittled other employees, often leaving them in tears, and some colleagues feared crossing her because Newby always backed her, said a former employee who spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity because of career concerns. One email sent to the secretary of state’s office refers to numerous grievances filed against her with the
Chris Frederick/Contributed Photo
DAN O’NEIL PROPOSES TO COURTNEY HART in the crosswalk between Seventh and Eighth streets on Massachusetts Street on Oct. 4, 2016. Send us your photos: Got a fun pic of friends or family? Someone in your community you’d like to recognize? We’ll even publish your pets. Visit ljworld.com/friendsphotos or email your photos to friends@ljworld.com.
county’s human resources department. Newby would spend hours alone with her each work day in his closed office or in the warehouse where there is a workout area. They were frequently gone on business trips together, the former employee said. The evening before the local election in April 2015, a line of poll supervisors waited half an hour for a list from White because no one dared knock on his office door and interrupt the couple, the former employee said. Johnson County officials met with Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach and his staff on April 22, 2015, about “several concerns” dealing with the election office, according to an email from county spokeswoman Sharon Watson. The email does not specify the concerns. Kobach said through his spokeswoman that he was not aware of Newby’s
affair at the time he reappointed him to the Kansas job and recommended him for the federal position. “Mr. Newby was, and remains, one of the most highly regarded election administrators in the United States. He has received national awards for his excellent and innovative work,” Kobach told AP in a statement. “It was for that reason that I re-appointed him to the position of Johnson County Election Commissioner in 2014. And it was for that reason that I later recommended him favorably to the EAC when I was asked my opinion.” After auditors presented their findings to county officials in March, Johnson County Commissioner Steve Klika publicly apologized to Newby’s replacement for having “to deal with this.”
White resigned from the Johnson County election office in January, and is now is a Washington, D.C.-area voter services manager at the Montgomery County Board of Elections in Maryland. Newby filed for divorce from Lori Newby in March 2015 and a decree last month ended their 30-year marriage. Elections office staff “collectively gave a sigh of relief” when they learned Newby was leaving, election worker Jenifer Lefort wrote in an email to Kobach. She said his departure would help “restore morale and well-being.” Others were less restrained. Janette Scobey, the office technology manager, wrote to Kobach, “I just wanted to say thank goodness he is out of here.”
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HOUSE CONCURRENT RESOLUTION NO. 5008 A PROPOSITION to amend the bill of rights of the constitution of the state of Kansas by adding a new section thereto, relating to the public right to hunt, fish and trap wildlife. Be it resolved by the Legislature of the State of Kansas, two-thirds of the members elected (or appointed) and qualified to the House of Representatives and two-thirds of the members elected (or appointed) and qualified to the Senate concurring therein:
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Section 1. The following proposition to amend the constitution of the state of Kansas shall be submitted to the qualified electors of the state for their approval or rejection: The bill of rights of the constitution of the state of Kansas is hereby amended by adding a new section to read as follows:
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"§ 21. Right of public to hunt, fish and trap wildlife. The people have the right to hunt, fish and trap, including by the use of traditional methods, subject to reasonable laws and regulations that promote wildlife conservation and management and that preserve the future of hunting and fishing. Public hunting and fishing shall be a preferred means of managing and controlling wildlife. This section shall not be construed to modify any provision of law relating to trespass, property rights or water resources."
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Section 2. The following statement shall be printed on the ballot with the amendment as a whole:
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"A vote for this proposition would constitutionally preserve the right of the public to hunt, fish and trap wildlife that has traditionally been taken by hunters, trappers and anglers. This public right is subject to state laws and rules and regulations regarding the management of wildlife and does not change or diminish common law or statutory rights relating to trespass, eminent domain or private property."
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"Explanatory statement. This amendment is to preserve constitutionally the right of the public to hunt, fish and trap wildlife subject to reasonable laws and regulations. The right of the public to hunt, fish and trap shall not modify any provision of common law or statutes relating to trespass, eminent domain or any other private property rights."
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Iraqis move on Mosul Iraqi forces deploy in the area of al-Shourah, about 28 miles south of Mosul, as they advance toward the city to retake it from Islamic State jihadists Monday. Earlier in the day, Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi announced the start of the long-awaited operation to recapture Iraq’s second-largest city and drive the militants out of Iraq. IN NEWS
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DOWNBEAT GENERATION: Will Millennials vote in the presidential race? Susan Page and Karina Shedrofsky USA TODAY
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FBI, State deny Clinton email deal FBI says there was no “quid pro quo” for email classification change This is an edition of USA TODAY provided for your local newspaper. An expanded version of USA TODAY is available at newsstands or by subscription, and at usatoday.com.
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Long live the queen
64 years, 255 days
With the death of Thai King Bhumibol Adulyadej, Queen Elizabeth II is now the longest-reigning living monarch. SOURCE World Atlas, Statista research MICHAEL B. SMITH AND VERONICA BRAVO, USA TODAY
USA TODAY EXCLUSIVE
Companies used Clinton fundraisers to lobby the State Department Donations prompting conflict-of-interest questions for Democrat Kevin McCoy @kmccoynyc USA TODAY
The nexus among private companies, Hillary Clinton’s State Department and the Clinton family foundations is closer and more complex than even Donald Trump has claimed so far. While it is widely known that some companies and foreign governments gave money to the foundations, perhaps in an effort to gain favor, one of the key parts of the puzzle hasn’t been reported: At least a dozen of those same companies lobbied the State Department, using lobbyists who doubled as major Clinton campaign fundraisers. Those companies gave as much as $16 million to the Clinton charities. At least four of the lobbyists they hired are “Hillblaz-
AMONG DONORS Donors who also used Clintonconnected lobbyists at the State Department Microsoft $1 million to $5 million Pfizer $1 million to $5 million ExxonMobil $1 million to $5 million The Northeast Maglev as much as $100,000 Mexico TV network Azteca as much as $375,000
ers,” the Clinton campaign’s name for supporters who have raised $100,000 or more for her current White House race. Two of the four also raised funds for Clinton’s unsuccessful 2008 presidential bid. USA TODAY reached these conclusions by obtaining federal lobbying data from the non-partisan Center for Responsive Politics for 2009-2013, Clinton’s tenure as secretary of State. Reporters then compared the data with donor lists made public by the Clinton non-profits and federal campaign financial records. Some of the companies appear to have gotten what they wanted; others did not. The companies, which in several cases provided limited answers to detailed USA TODAY questions, said they had done nothing improper. The charity donations, though questioned by Clinton critics, were all legal. “We have no record of Secretary Clinton meeting with these v STORY CONTINUES ON 2B
WASHINGTON Millennials back Hillary Clinton over Donald Trump by more than 3-1, a new USA TODAY/Rock the Vote Poll finds, but enthusiasm about voting is dipping as a sharply negative campaign enters its final weeks. The impact of the invective and attacks that have defined the 2016 race is apparent among the nation’s largest and rising generation. Among Americans under 35, Trump supporters say their main reason by far for backing him is to keep Clinton out of the White House. Clinton supporters in equal numbers say their main reason for backing her is to keep Trump out of the White House. “I am very afraid for our country,” says Richard Devine, 20, a freelance media producer from Bath in Upstate New York, who was among those polled. He plans to vote for Clinton but without the excitement he felt for Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders during the Democratic primaries. “Hillary (has) a lot of scandals on her back,” he says, but he views her opponent as worse. “Trump is a horrible person,” he says. The campaign has been “really annoying,” says Natalie Harris, 29, an occupational therapist from Melbourne, Fla., and a Trump supporter. “It’s kind of like fighting with your brother or sister but dirtier.” Enthusiasm about the election peaked in the poll in March, when Sanders drew wide Millennial support in his bid for the Democratic nomination. It dropped in August and dipped a bit more this month. The online survey of 1,020 adults 18 to 34 years old, taken by Ipsos Public Affairs Oct. 11-13, has a credibility interval (akin to a margin of er-
Poll finds much stronger support for Clinton, but steady spray of venom from negative campaigns saps electorate energy
“I am very afraid for our country.” Richard Devine, 20
v STORY CONTINUES ON 2B
ETHAN MILLER, GETTY IMAGES
Hillary Clinton leads Donald Trump by 48 percentage points among likely young voters.
Japanese are working themselves to death — literally Employees rack up OT but no rack time Kirk Spitzer USA TODAY
TOKYO Matsuri Takahashi was 24 years old when she leaped to her death from her company dormitory on Christmas Day last year. Tokyo Labor Bureau investigators ruled her suicide karoshi — death by overwork. The Labor Bureau announced Oct. 7 that Takahashi had been required to work 100 hours or more of overtime per month for
months on end at the prominent Dentsu advertising agency. She often got as little as two hours of sleep a night, rarely had a day off and was ordered by supervisors to report fewer hours than she actually worked. It’s an all too familiar story in Japan, where employees at nearly one in four companies are at risk of dying from working too many hours, according to a government report issued last month. Last Friday, Labor Ministry inspectors swooped down on Dentsu’s headquarters in Tokyo and other sites, searching for evidence of systemic overtime abuse or other labor violations.
This was not the first such case at Dentsu. In 1991, the suicide of a 24-year-old worker at company headquarters in Tokyo was among the first to focus national attention on the problem of karoshi. “There is definitely going to be an impact from this case,” said Naohiro Yashiro, an economist and professor of global business at Showa Women’s University in Tokyo. “Dentsu is a very big company and if these practices can continue to happen there, it means that it’s necessary to put (stronger) regulations in place.” The Labor Ministry reported about 100 suicides per year due to
KYODO NEWS VIA AP
Yukimi Takahashi, right, is the mother of Matsuri Takahashi, who committed suicide.
karoshi — a number Yashiro said represents “just the tip of the iceberg.” Prime Minister Shinzo Abe appointed an outside panel in Sep-
tember to recommend changes to Japan’s workplace environment. A Cabinet Office report issued last month found that employees at 23% of Japanese companies worked 80 hours or more of overtime per month last year. That’s the threshold at which the risk of death from physical or psychological causes is significant, according to the report. Japan’s Labor Standards Law mandates a 40-hour workweek and a maximum of 15 hours of weekly overtime. But the law effectively allows unlimited overtime if there is a written agreement between a company and its labor union.
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L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY TUESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 2016
FBI, State Dept. deny ‘quid pro quo’ Records official says bureau was asked to unclassify email on Benghazi attack Kevin Johnson USA TODAY
A State Department official allegedly urged the FBI to alter the classification of a secret document found on Hillary Clinton’s private server as part of a “quid pro quo” that would allow the FBI to place additional agents abroad, according to newly released documents from the bureau’s closed investigation into Clinton’s handling of classified information while serving as secretary of State. The FBI and State Department each denied Monday that such an arrangement occurred. The scenario was outlined durWASHINGTON
ing the FBI’s interview last year of an unidentified records management official at the bureau. The official recounted a conversation with a colleague at the FBI’s International Operations Division, who claimed to have been contacted by Undersecretary of State Patrick Kennedy for help in “altering” the classification of an email from Clinton’s private server related to the attack on an American facility in 2012 in Benghazi, Libya. “In exchange for marking the email unclassified, State would reciprocate by allowing the FBI to place more agents in countries where they are presently forbidden,” the records official told agents, recounting the conversa-
tion with the colleague in 2015. That colleague was not identified. The records official said Kennedy continued to press for the change during a subsequent meeting, ultimately asking “who else in the FBI he could speak with on the matter.” The FBI documents described a later conference call to discuss the matter in which Kennedy “continued to pressure the FBI to change the classified markings on the email to unclassified” in a conversation with Michael Steinbach, then-director of the FBI’s Counterterrorism Division, who declined to do so. The records official asserted, according to FBI documents, that “State has an agenda which involves minimizing the classified nature of the Clinton emails in order to protect State interests” and Clinton’s. State Department spokesman
“Classification is an art, not a science.” Mark Toner, State Department spokesman
Mark Toner said the allegation contained in the FBI documents is “inaccurate and does not align with the facts.” “To be clear,” Toner said, “the State Department did upgrade the document at the request of the FBI. Undersecretary Kennedy sought to understand the FBI’s process for withholding certain information from public release. ... Classification is an art, not a science, and individuals with classifications authority sometimes have different views.” In a written statement, the FBI asserted “there was never a quid pro quo,” but the allegations were
“nonetheless referred to appropriate officials for review.” “A senior State Department official requested the FBI re-review that email to determine whether it was in fact classified or whether it might be protected from release under a different (Freedom of Information Act) exemption,” the FBI said. “A now-retired FBI official, who was not part of the subsequent Clinton investigation, told the State Department official that they would look into the matter.” According to the statement, the FBI official asked if State could “address” the pending request for “additional FBI employees assigned abroad.” “The FBI official subsequently told the senior State officials that the email was appropriately classified at the ‘secret level’ and that the FBI would not change the classification of the email,” the FBI said.
Trump could face his own issues which stood to benefit from decisions made by the Department of individuals as Secretary regarding State. issues they were lobbying on at “When you couple all of these the time. The fact remains, Hilla- activities together, it gives an unry Clinton never took action as seemly appearance that this was Secretary of State because of do- another way for Clinton foundanations to the Clinton Founda- tion donors to try to get what they wanted,” said Karen Hobert tion,” her campaign said. Among the donors to the Clin- Flynn, president of Common ton foundations who also used Cause, a non-partisan governClinton-connected lobbyists at ment watchdog. Former president Bill Clinton the State Department: uMicrosoft has given $1 mil- announced in August that if his lion to $5 million to the founda- wife were elected, he would step tions as the tech giant also down from the foundation’s lobbied for visa issues, protection board and no longer raise money of critical infrastructure and cy- for it. The foundation would also bersecurity, software industry accept contributions only from licensing and government U.S. citizens, permanent resiprocurement. dents and U.S.-based indepenuPfizer, one of the world’s dent foundations, while barring top biopharmaceutical compa- foreign and corporate donations, nies, has also given $1 million to he said. Responding to USA TODAY $5 million to the foundations, while lobbying for such issues as questions, Hillary Clinton’s camintellectual property rights over- paign said she’s made no anseas and issues related to medi- nouncement about how she would deal with past donors to cines in Turkey and India. uExxonMobil, the global oil the foundation who might lobby and energy company based in her potential administration. Trump could face his own conTexas, gave the foundations $1 million to $5 million. The flict-of-interest issues if the Recompany lobbied the Department publican presidential nominee of State for issues involving hy- were to win the White House. draulic fracturing, popularly The businessman and reality TV known as fracking, oil sands and star has business ties to companies both domesticalother provisions. uThe Northeast ly and internationally, Maglev, a Washingincluding Muslim naton, D.C.-based comtions in the Middle East. Trump has sugpany that advocates gested that his chilfor high-speed, magdren and business netic levitation rail associates would run service in the U.S., dothe Trump Organizanated as much as tion if he were elected $100,000 while lobbypresident. ing the Department of SCOTT EISEN, AP “We’ve had State to help provide Hillary Clinton wealthy presidents support for the issue. uMexico TV net- addresses the Clin- before, John Kennedy and FDR. But their work Azteca and its ton Global Initiawealth was much less, affiliates donated as tive meeting in and was mostly domuch as $375,000 Chicago on June mestic,” said Craig while lobbying for U.S. 13, 2013. Holman of Public business opportunities, an education initiative in- Citizen, a non-partisan governvolving students from the U.S., ment watchdog. “Trump would Mexico and Latin America, and be making foreign policy decisions that would be having an imother causes. While the review did not find mediate impact on his personal instances where companies re- wealth.” Since its founding in 1998, the ceived special favors, each example illustrates the unique Bill, Hillary and Chelsea Clinton challenge the Democratic presi- Foundation has grown into a dential nominee would face in global organization with more dealing with potential conflicts of than 1,000 workers and voluninterest if she were to win the teers in dozens of countries worldwide. White House. Related entities include the If elected, Clinton would be the first U.S. president to have Clinton Global Initiative, which had previous involvement with a started in 2005 and through this foundation that raised millions of year held annual meetings of dollars tied to foreign interests world leaders and philanthropic and other donors, said Douglas companies and individuals who Brinkley, a history professor at pledged commitments to act on global education, health care and Rice University. To the extent that wealthy other challenges. In all, 181 foundation donors presidential candidates have been philanthropists, they typically re- lobbied State during Clinton’s lied on their own fortunes. For in- leadership tenure, Vox reported stance, H. Ross Perot, the last year. billionaire businessman who ran These relationships and giving as an independent in 1992, has on their own aren’t illegal, or self-funded his private even unethical. But critics, infoundation’s giving, disclosure cluding Trump, have argued they at least pose potential conflicts of records show. In contrast, the Clinton non- interest. Flynn, the president of Comprofits have been intertwined with the U.S. and global power mon Cause, said if Clinton bethe nation’s 45th structure. They have received comes millions of dollars in state or pri- president, “she does need to vate contributions linked to Ku- think about what kinds of things wait, the United Arab Emirates, she’d put in place to assure the Qatar, Kazakhstan and other na- public these 6,000-plus donors to tions whose interests at times the foundation don’t get improper access.” conflict with those of the U.S. Millions more have been donated by U.S. companies and spe- Contributing: Brad Heath, Nick cial interest groups, many of Penzenstadler v CONTINUED FROM 1B
Donald Trump arrives to speak at a rally in Bangor, Maine, on Oct. 15.
EVAN VUCCI, AP
Youthful enthusiasm ebbs v CONTINUED FROM 1B
ror) of +/-3.5 percentage points. Those who are likely voters overwhelmingly support Clinton, 68%-20%, as Trump’s support hits historic lows and backing for third-party candidate ebbs. Concern among Democratic strategists about whether voters under 35 can be counted on to show up and vote is prompting candidate speeches and surrogate appearances targeting them. “We cannot afford to be tired or turned off,” first lady Michelle Obama warned a rally at Southern New Hampshire University last week. “And we cannot afford to stay home on Election Day.” That is a risk in the age group that typically is the least likely to vote and this year has lost much 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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of the energy that fueled support for Sanders. In January, 55% agreed with the statement, “There are better ways to make a difference than voting.” Now 62% endorse that sentiment. At the beginning of the year, 37% said, “My vote doesn’t really matter.” Now 46% feel that way. That said, eight in 10 call voting a responsibility and say it is a way to have an impact on issues they care about. Among those who are undecided or don’t plan to vote, twothirds say the reason isn’t because voting doesn’t matter or because they’re not interested in politics. Instead, they say it is because “I don’t like any of the candidates.” SETTING A RECORD
If Clinton has a problem generating enthusiasm among Millennials, Trump faces outright rejection. He trails Clinton by a stunning 48 percentage points among likely voters. Even a third of Republican Millennials don’t back him. Kristiana Kershaw, a student at Loyola University in Chicago, plans to vote for Trump because she likes his business expertise and his conservative policies. But she keeps quiet about it. “My only concern is that as an 18-year-old supporting Trump, I can’t say that I support him because it’s not safe for me to say that,” she says. “On a college campus, people feel very strongly and social media bias says Hillary is the only candidate.” The first two presidential debates hurt Trump among Millennials. A majority of those surveyed say the debates made him seem less presidential, less credible and less trustworthy. By wide margins, they say he came off less accessible and less “human.” Forty percent say Clinton seemed more presidential, compared with 24% who say she seemed less presidential. By a margin of 15 points, they say the debates made her seem more rather than less “human.” The debates didn’t boost the former secretary of State when it came to seeming trustworthy and credible. In a disparity that has frustrated her campaign, younger women remain significantly less likely than their male counterparts to support Clinton. Two-thirds of men, 65%, plan to vote for her.
Despite her breakthrough status as the first woman nominated by a major party for the presidency, less than half, 47%, of women support her. That doesn’t mean Millennial women are drawn to Trump. Eighteen percent support the GOP nominee, a bit lower than his 20% support among men. An equal 18% of women support Libertarian Gary Johnson or Jill Stein of the Green Party. Just 6% of younger men back those thirdparty candidates. “I’d love to see a female in the office,” says Mara Jones, 31, a nurse from Mesquite, Texas. She plans to vote for Stein, not Clinton. “I can’t see myself voting for Hillary just to keep Trump out of office; can’t vote for Trump because of things he’s said,” she says. She is determined not to “just vote the lesser of two evils.” STILL FEELING THE BERN
Sanders still looms as a powerful factor for Millennials. A majority of those surveyed say they supported the Vermont senator during the primaries. Clinton has consolidated support among most but not all of them: Eight in 10 of former Sanders supporters back her; one in 10 support Trump. Six percent plan to vote for Johnson or Stein. Sanders “seems a little bit more real than all the candidates,” says Susan Miller, 34, a researcher from Allentown, Pa., a former Sanders supporter who is trying to decide between voting for Johnson or Clinton. “Where he was coming from was a more human approach than narcissistic and political,” Miller said of Sanders. Among all Clinton supporters, 36% say their main reason for backing her is to block Trump. The only other reason cited by double digits is that she has “the right experience to lead,” chosen by 16%. Among Trump supporters, an equal 36% say their main reason for backing him is to block Clinton. The only other reason cited by double digits are the 17% who say he is “best suited to fix America.” The downbeat mood of Millennials contrasts with the generation’s optimism in 2008, when Barack Obama’s message of hope and change drew the support of 66% of voters under 30, the highest level in modern times.
USA TODAY - L J TUESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 2016 6B
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USA TODAY TUESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 2016
awrence ournal -W orld
AMERICA’S MARKETS What to watch Adam Shell @adamshell USA TODAY
Long-term government bond yields ticked up to their highest level since early June on Monday, as investors continue to price in greater odds of a Federal Reserve interest rate hike later in 2016. Futures markets are now pricing in nearly a 70% chance that the Fed will boost rates for the first time this year at its final meeting of the year in December. On Monday, the yield on the 10-year Treasury note rose as high as 1.814%, its highest intraday yield since touching 1.841% on June 2, according to Tradeweb. Long-term rates are now up nearly half of a percentage point since hitting a low of 1.323% in the aftermath of the Brexit vote in late June, when Britain
Facts about America’s investors who use SigFig tracking services:
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Sept. 19
Oct. 17
Prev. .8206 1.3125 6.7284 .9105 104.18 18.9918
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$35.09
Oct. 17
6 mo. ago .7040 1.2837 6.4736 .8859 108.70 17.5530
Yr. ago .6470 1.2910 6.3541 .8790 119.37 16.3701
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%Chg. YTD % -0.7% -2.2% -0.8% +5.1% +0.3% -11.2% -0.9% +11.3% -0.1% +10.9%
SOURCES: MORNINGSTAR, DOW JONES INDEXES, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
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16.21
20 30
10
0
+0.10 (+0.6%)
40
S&P 500 P/E RATIO The price-to-earnings ratio, based on trailing 12-month “operating” earnings: 20
21.66 30
10 Change -76.81 -195.77 +43.75 -66.00 -44.12
15.2%
CBOE VOLATILITY INDEX Measures expected market volatility based on S&P 500 index options pricing:
FOREIGN MARKETS Close 10,503.57 23,037.54 16,900.12 6,947.55 47,657.33
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$6
Utilities
% Chg %YTD -0.3% +4.2% -0.5% -0.1% +1.5% +70.1% -0.1% +14.4% -0.6% +3.4% -1.0% unch. -0.5% unch. +4.2% unch. +1.2% +76.4% +4.3% unch.
INTEREST RATES
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Oct. 17
MARKET PERFORMANCE BY SECTOR
NAV 196.52 53.09 194.45 53.07 194.46 14.80 100.15 43.16 21.15 53.09
1 – CAPITAL GAINS AND DIVIDENDS REINVESTED
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Sept. 19
The department store plans to $40 open its stores on Thanksgiving Day once again and open an hour earlier. Rival J.C. Penney credited $30 its earlier opening last year for Sept. 19 strong quarterly results.
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Whirlpool (WHR) Rating lowered, but appliance shipments rose.
AGGRESSIVE 71% or more in equities
The grocery retailer agreed to sell its Save-A-Lot supermarket chain to Onex for $1.37 billion instead of spinning it off and going public. Shares jumped to October’s high.
Price: $5.30 Chg: $0.29 % chg: 5.8% Day’s high/low: $5.49/$5.13
Vulcan Materials (VMC) Rises as declares quarterly dividend.
Martin Marietta Materials (MLM) 177.19 Shrugs off downgrade and reaches month’s high.
LOSERS
$ Chg
-0.23 5.29 AAPL AAPL MSFT
MODERATE 51%-70% equities
SuperValu
CLOSE: 1,210.14 PREV. CLOSE: 1,212.41 RANGE: 1,209.82-1,215.42
S&P 500’S BIGGEST GAINERS/LOSERS
5-day avg.: 6-month avg.: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold:
-0.28 3.49 AAPL AAPL AAPL
The bank’s quarterly profit increased for the first time in three $20 quarters. Bond trading surged and expenses fell. Stock makes up early drop. $15
Price: $16.05 Chg: $0.05 % chg: 0.3% Day’s high/low: $16.19/%15.90
RUSSELL 2000 INDEX
CHANGE: -.2% YTD: +74.25 YTD % CHG: +6.5%
5-day avg.: 6-month avg.: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold:
STORY STOCKS Bank of America
RUSSELL
RUT
BALANCED 30%-50% equities
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.
STANDARD & POOR'S
CHANGE: -.3% YTD: +82.56 YTD % CHG: +4.0%
CONSERVATIVE Less than 30% equities
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USA’s portfolio allocation for tech stocks Here’s how America’s individual investors are performing based on data from SigFig online investment tracking service:
shocked markets by voting to leave the single-market European Union. Rising bond yields could be a reason why stocks again struggled to gain traction on Monday, when the Dow Jones industrial average tumbled 52 points, trimming its year-to-date gain to 3.8% and pushing it down 3% from its Aug. 15 record high. Investors are still weighing the odds of a Fed rate hike this year, as well as monitoring incoming third-quarter earnings releases from Corporate America and the upcoming final presidential debate between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump. The Fed’s first rate hike in nearly a decade in December 2015 sent stocks into a downward spiral in early 2016. That negative reaction has stock investors playing it safe in the possible run-up to the next rate increase.
MAJOR INDEXES DJIA
How we’re performing
DID YOU KNOW?
Bond yields tick up amid rate hike talk
ALL THE MARKET ACTION IN REAL TIME. AMERICASMARKETS.USATODAY.COM
0 SOURCE BLOOMBERG
-0.07 (-0.3%)
40
IN-DEPTH MARKETS COVERAGE USATODAY.COM/MONEY
Bank of America shares up on profit beat Roger Yu
@ByRogerYu USA TODAY
Bank of America said Monday its third-quarter net income rose 7% as interest income and average deposits climbed higher. Net income totaled $5 billion, compared with $4.6 billion a year ago. Adjusted earnings per share were 41 cents, handily beating the 34 cents estimated by analysts who were polled by S&P Global Market Intelligence. Analysts’
earnings forecasts are typically adjusted to leave out certain onetime or non-operating charges. Despite low interest rates and the Wells Fargo sham-accounts scandal clouding the industry, all major business lines of Bank of America, including consumer banking and wealth management, reported income gains. Earlier this month, Wells Fargo CEO John Stumpf abruptly quit amid heavy criticism of his leadership following the company’s revelation that upward of 2 million fraudulent accounts were created
JUSTIN SULLIVAN, GETTY IMAGES
Bank of America’s client balances rose 11% to $1 trillion.
without consumers’ consent. Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan said in a statement
that his company “delivered strong results this quarter by staying true to our strategy of responsible growth and focusing on the quality of the relationships with our customers and clients.” Total revenue jumped 3% to $21.6 billion. Net interest income was 3% higher to $10.2 billion. The Charlotte-based company’s largest business line, consumer banking, reported a 3% income gain due to higher interest income and cutting expenses. Revenue was relatively flat at $8 billion.
Bank of America claims to be the nation’s largest retail bank in deposit market share, and its client balances increased 11% to $1 trillion. Average deposit balances rose 9% to $49.7 billion. Average loan balances also grew 7% to $15.6 billion. With mortgage rates still low, total mortgage production spiked 21% to $20.4 billion. Average deposit balances jumped 4% to $9.8 billion. Bank of America shares closed Monday up 5 cents a share, or 0.3%, to $16.05, but fell 0.2% in after-hours trading.
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USA TODAY TUESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 2016
LIFELINE
SPORTS LIFE AUTOS TRAVEL
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L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY TUESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 2016
MOVIES
HOW WAS YOUR DAY? GOOD DAY ‘BULL’ FANS CBS is grabbing the freshman series by the horns. On Monday, the network handed full-season orders to ‘Bull’ as well as ‘Kevin Can Wait’ and ‘MacGyver,’ extending the shows for nine additional episodes beyond the 13 originally ordered.
MICHAEL WEATHERLY BY CBS
MAKING WAVES Stephen Colbert is going live — and unfiltered — on election night. On Monday, Showtime announced the comedian will air an hour-long special, ‘Stephen Colbert’s Live Election Night Democracy’s Series Finale: Who’s Going to Clean Up This S - - - ?,’ Nov. 8 (11 p.m. ET/PT). It will be broadcast from the Ed Sullivan Theater in New York and feature a handful of special guests.
Jon Hamm and Gal Gadot play undercover spies in suburbia in Keeping Up With the Joneses, out Friday.
Jon Hamm and Gal Gadot play the superspy game Fandom, frolicking and ‘Keeping Up With the Joneses’
TIMOTHY A. CLARY, AFP/GETTY IMAGES
THEY SAID WHAT? THE STARS’ BEST QUOTES “She threw open the White House doors to people on the margins of America.” — Author Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie to ‘T’ magazine on first lady Michelle Obama
CHIP SOMODEVILLA, GETTY IMAGES
IT’S YOUR BIRTHDAY WHO’S CELEBRATING TODAY?
ROBERT HANASHIRO, USA TODAY
Andrea Mandell @andreamandell USA TODAY
SANTA MONICA , CALIF.
To be clear, Jon Hamm is one of the rare, verifiably tall male stars in Hollywood. But when Gal Gadot walks in, the Israeli actress looms over him. “Hi, shorty,” she grins from her sky-high perch in 6-inch heels. The two make for a genetically gifted spy couple in the new comedy Keeping Up With the Joneses (in theaters Friday), in which their characters go undercover in the suburbs as Natalie and Tim Jones, sharing a cul-de-sac with the Gaffneys, an HR manager and an interior designer played by Zach Galifianakis and Isla Fisher. While “there are parallels to be made” to Mr. & Mrs. Smith, Hamm, 45, acknowledges, this film “deals with issues all of us are experiencing,” says Gadot, 31. “We come to their neighborhood and they think we’re so perfect and so great. When actually we have our own issues going on.” In this case, the Gaffneys’ mar-
FRANK MASI, SMPSP
For the secret-agent Joneses (Hamm and Gadot), life in the burbs is not exactly ball games and barbecues. riage is in a rut, while Tim is too afraid to tell his Type A wife he’s ready to hang up the spy biz. On the set, the foursome got on famously, with the espionage tale culminating in a raucous getaway scene filmed in a hotel pool. “It was like trying to herd kittens into a shoebox,” says director Greg Mottola. “I could not get any respect from them. They would not listen to a word I was saying. They were chicken-fighting and dunking each other. They all regressed into children.” But Hamm, who grew up on
James Bond films, initially had his reservations about playing another suave character who carries deep secrets. Mottola approached the actor as he was wrapping up Mad Men, and “I got panicked that Jon would say no,” Mottola says. “His only reticence at all was he was like, ‘Am I playing the comedy Don Draper?’ ” But at the end of the day “he just said, ‘Ah, screw it, this will be fun.’ ” Today the two stars kick back together (Gadot ditches her heels), Hamm filling in for Gadot when she searches for the right
word and Gadot holding up bunny ears behind her co-star’s head in portraits. He also knows what Gadot is about to go through, having been through cult fandom. It can be a fraught process: After Suicide Squad premiered to dismal reviews in August, attention turned to Wonder Woman, the next big DC Comics movie (out June 2). “With reviews, I try not to enjoy it when it’s good and not to get upset when it’s bad,” she says. But with Wonder Woman, Gadot says, it’s different: “Because it’s such a special and iconic character, I do feel the responsibility, and so many people care so much about this character.” “You’ve been to my blog,” Hamm deadpans. “There will be a time when Gal will look back and say, ‘That Wonder Woman era of my life was awesome, but I’m glad I’m not doing it anymore,’ ” he predicts. “It’s not to say that I have any bad feelings for it. I certainly look back on my time as Don Draper and think it gave me a wonderful career. There were a lot of things that it changed in my life for good and for bad.” “But you also have a life to live. If you’re constantly looking back” — he smacks his hands together — “you’re going to walk into traffic.”
PEOPLE
‘Today’ cuts Billy Bush over tape Maria Puente @usatmpuente USA TODAY WIREIMAGE; GETTY IMAGES
Chuck Berry is 90. Ne-Yo is 37. Zac Efron is 29. Compiled by Jaleesa M. Jones
USA SNAPSHOTS©
Chris Wallace to make history Number of times a Fox News anchor has moderated a general-election presidential debate in the network’s 20-year history:
one
1
1 – Provided Wednesday's broadcast goes off as planned SOURCE Fox News Channel TERRY BYRNE AND PAUL TRAP, USA TODAY
Billy Bush has been cut from NBC’s Today show for his role in Donald Trump’s lewd talk about women in a 2005 hot-mike tape. Settlement details were not immediately disclosed. The end came Monday afternoon after the network spent more than a week negotiating the terms of departure with Bush and his crisis lawyer. Hours earlier, a CNN interview with Melania Trump was released in which she said Bush “egged on” Trump. She said Bush and Trump were engaged in “boy talk” and that Trump was “led on, like egged on, from the host to say dirty and bad stuff.” A note went out to NBC staff from executive producer Noah Oppenheim on Monday, announcing that “Billy Bush will be leaving the TODAY show’s 9am hour, effective today. While he was a new member of the TODAY team, he was a valued colleague and longtime member of the broader NBC family. We wish
PETER KRAMER, AP
Billy Bush’s apology for his role in the hot-mike Access Hollywood tapes apparently wasn’t enough for NBC brass.
him success as he goes forward.” Bush released his own statement. “I am deeply grateful for the conversations I’ve had with my daughters, and for all of the support from family, friends and colleagues. I look forward to what lies ahead,” he said. Thus ends Bush’s time at Today, NBC’s beleaguered morning show, where Bush was promoted to co-host the third hour this
summer, after 12 years as an anchor on the network’s entertainment-news show, Access Hollywood. Bush’s fate hinged on what he knew about Trump’s toxic tape, when he knew it and whether and when he told his new bosses at NBC News about it. Bush, 45, could not have been indifferent to the ground-changing impact of the tape in presidential politics: He’s the nephew of former President George H.W. Bush and cousin to former President George W. Bush and his brother, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, who was trounced by Trump in the GOP primary. In 2005, when Trump was the star of NBC’s The Apprentice and Bush was an Access host, they came together on an Access bus to tape a visit to a soap opera set. While both were miked, Trump was recorded talking in obscene terms about groping women by their genitals, trying to pressure Bush’s married co-star Nancy O’Dell into a sexual relationship, and claiming he could get away with anything because he was a “star.” During the misogynistic conversation, Bush
laughed and encouraged him. For 11 years, the recording remained in an Access vault, until someone at the show unearthed it and Access and NBC News began preparing a report on it. Then the tape was leaked to The Washington Post on Oct. 7. It caused instant turmoil in Trump’s campaign: He at first dismissed it as mere “locker-room talk,” then apologized, then returned to discounting it as insignificant and irrelevant “words.” Meanwhile, the tape posed a problem for Bush, who issued a contrite statement hours after the tape leaked, blaming his youth and immaturity at the time. (He was 33, married and the father of daughters.) On Oct. 9, NBC announced it was suspending Bush, effective the next day. “This is the biggest story of the political season, and he knew about it and did not report it. A journalist’s job is to report the news, not cover it up,” said University of Maryland broadcast journalism professor and ex-NBC News staffer Mark Feldstein. Contributing: Andrea Mandell
L awrence J ournal -W orld
Tuesday, October 18, 2016
Dear Annie: My daughter and I have not spoken in over 12 years. I am now getting up in age (I am 82) and don’t know what to do to even say hello to her. She has told me over and over again that she does not love me or want anything to do with me. She is still my daughter, and I do still love her. My grandson got married last year, and I was not allowed to go to the wedding. My grandson and I keep in touch, but I don’t want him to get in the middle of all this, nor do I want my other two children to get involved. My two sons don’t really like their sister and do not see her that often or speak to her. My daughters-in-law have tried to be her friends, but she will not call them, either. I don’t know how
Dear Annie
Annie Lane
dearannie@creators.com
many more years God has for me, and I just want to let her know that I’ve always loved her. Friends have told me to move on and know that I have done everything one can do. All these years, I have been deeply depressed because of this situation. What can I do? — Missing Her Dear Missing: I am a firm believer in trying to mend family relationships whenever you can. Your friends
Tesla on ‘American Experience’ “American Experience” (8 p.m., PBS, check local listings) enters its 28th season with “Tesla.” Now acclaimed as “the patron saint of geeks,” Nikola Tesla literally lit up the world. “Tesla” follows a scientist who dared to live and think like a poet, an attribute that would lead to world-changing creativity, but also sow the seeds of delusion that would earn him a reputation as a mad scientist. He would die broke and alone, fo r g o t t e n by history and befriended, it seemed, only by the pigeons in the park. Born in 1856, Tesla arrived in New York in 1884, a Serbian immigrant with only four cents in his pocket. Tesla patented dynamos and systems that enabled the generation and transmission of alternating current. Some of Tesla’s more patient investors backed off after the announcement of Guglielmo Marconi’s “invention” of radio. It was later determined that Marconi had used so many of Tesla’s patents that the credit for “the wireless” should go to him. While just these two developments — electricity and radio — literally defined 20thcentury life, Tesla would fall into obscurity for much of that period. Since the 1990s however, Tesla has become a kind of cult figure and pop culture hero, the very symbol of the misunderstood visionary, the genius stifled by something as mundane as the lack of venture capital. O “30 for 30” (7 p.m., ESPN) presents the documentary “Phi Slama Jama,” a glance back at a remarkable run for the University of Houston Cougars basketball team, a squad featuring Hakeem Olajuwon and Clyde Drexler that would make three consecutive trips to the Final Four between 1982 and 1984. O Evie has doubts about Xavier’s theory on “No Tomorrow” (8 p.m., CW, TV-14). The ratings for this series may have it living up to its title. TV-themed DVDs available today include “Wallander: The Complete Collection.” Tonight’s other highlights O Battles continue on “The Voice” (7 p.m., NBC, TV-PG). O The Cleveland Indians and Toronto Blue Jays tangle in game four of the American League Championship Series (7 p.m., TBS). O “The Contenders: 16 for 16” (7 p.m., PBS, check local listings) recalls minor party challengers Ross Perot and Ralph Nader. O An impromptu pool party makes waves on “This Is Us” (8 p.m., NBC, TV-14). O Athletes make the scene on “Atlanta” (9 p.m., FX, TV-MA). Copyright 2014 United Feature Syndicate, distributed by Universal Uclick.
hate seeing you get hurt by your daughter, and there is wisdom in their advice for you to move on. She seems quick to burn bridges rather than repair them. But if you’re just in this to have some contact with your daughter, I think you should continue reaching out as much as you’d like. Just make sure you’re wearing the proper emotional armor when you do. Dear Annie: This is in response to the letter from “Crushed in California.” Shame on you for giving her such bad advice. You should have told her to make a beeline to an attorney who specializes in family law. After 24 years of marriage, her husband has decided he wants a divorce and ordered her to move out, as if she were a mere tenant, without making any fi-
JACQUELINE BIGAR’S STARS
For Tuesday, Oct. 18: This year you are more upbeat than you have been in a long time. If you are single, you meet people with ease. If you are attached, you and your sweetie share many conversations of a caring nature. 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 hear much more from a close associate than you’d really care to. Know that anything you do right now could backfire. Tonight: With a friend. Taurus (April 20-May 20) ++++ A partner will let you know how very precious you are to him or her. Feelings run deep on both sides. Tonight: Dinner for two. Gemini (May 21-June 20) ++++ You could argue with a partner or associate, but wouldn’t it be more constructive to work as a team? Tonight: Listen to a friend’s news. Cancer (June 21-July 22) ++++ dency to overdo it, which will emerge in the next few weeks. Tonight: Take a brisk walk after dinner. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) ++++ A need to focus on something emerges in the afternoon, allowing for more frivolous moments to occur. Tonight: Follow your friends. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) +++ Tension builds.
nancial arrangements. What typically happens in a long-term marriage is the husband is ordered to leave the home and pay his wife about 50 percent of his income for the support of the children and her. The children are typically allowed to live with their mother in the family home, and the husband is given reasonable visitation rights. At a later time, the support order is adjusted. The judge takes into account the earnings of the wife, outstanding financial obligations, the needs of the children, etc. No court in the world would ever allow the scenario described by Crushed in California. — Attorney — Send your questions for Annie Lane to dearannie@ creators.com.
jacquelinebigar.com
Someone will let you know what he or she expects from you. You might wonder whether you will be able to deliver. Tonight: Out late. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ++++ Reach out to a loved one at a distance who has a way of adding a lot of excitement to your life. Tonight: Use your imagination well. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) +++++ You might find a partner or associate charming for wanting to please you so much. Tonight: Share news with a loved one. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) +++++ You might not be able to follow through on certain details right now, as you could be distracted. Tonight: Say “yes.” Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) +++ Certain events might force you to look at matters from a different perspective. Tonight: Partake in a special hobby. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) ++++ You might find it difficult to come out of the doldrums in the morning. A domestic issue needs handling. Tonight: Act as if you don’t have a care in the world. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) ++++ You could be at your wits’ end when dealing with a family member. You might attempt to make yourself understood. Tonight: Head home. — The astrological forecast should be read for entertainment only.
UNIVERSAL CROSSWORD Universal Crossword Edited by Timothy Parker October 18, 2016
ACROSS 1 Keg spigot 4 Window parts 9 Musical exercise 14 Valuable rock 15 Move very gradually 16 Huge ship 17 Major network 18 Crew member 19 Express audibly 20 Totally prepared 23 Crime committed with bad lighting? 24 Pizza fractions, often 28 Court figure, briefly 32 Honeybunch alternative 33 Parenthesis, essentially 36 Mixtures or medleys 38 Akin to 39 Apt end to a peaceful day 43 ___-bodied 44 Ogre’s lack 45 Medicos, briefly 46 One who has your home covered? 49 Device in the beauty salon 51 Section of a lyric poem 10/18
53 Cheese chunk 57 Treat for a babysitter 61 Set straight, as tires 64 Comparatively sicker 65 Kiwi’s extinct relative 66 Like Swiss cheese 67 Like some sugar units 68 Pothook shape 69 Bit of severe weather 70 Some freshwater ducks 71 “Just as I predicted!” DOWN 1 Island nation east of Fiji 2 Ann ___, Mich. 3 River to the Rio Grande 4 City in Pennsylvania 5 Clothes presser 6 Bawdy 7 Lecherous gaze 8 Bender 9 Gunk 10 It’s tough to fight, it’s said 11 Picnic pest 12 Director Spike 13 Human thing to do, it’s said 21 Cuban couple
22 Word with “first” or “band” 25 Attempted 26 Boy Scout, at times 27 Oozes 29 Certain Ivy Leaguer 30 Approaching, poetically 31 ___ and aahed 33 Some culture mediums 34 Automaton 35 Amber, for one 37 Name on a billboard 40 Visibility helper 41 ___ Lanka (Ceylon) 42 Shop VIPs 47 Item name derived from a person
48 P on a frat house 50 Gun, as an engine 52 Pronouncement 54 Some coins 55 Barnyard honker 56 Clear a blackboard 58 Down in the dumps 59 Isle of exile for Napoleon 60 Command to a dog 61 Sounds of understanding 62 Auction offering 63 U.N. workers protection gp.
PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER
10/17
© 2016 Universal Uclick www.upuzzles.com
WELL, WELL, WELL By Timothy E. Parker
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.
GANYT ©2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.
XTREE BLUMME
UNSOIC Print your answer here: Yesterday’s
Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app
Try to reconnect with daughter; plan for pain
| 5B
Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.
(Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: ODDER CLOWN PERMIT POROUS Answer: They became skeptical of the scuba equipment after seeing the — DEEP DISCOUNT
BECKER ON BRIDGE
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WEATHER
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Tuesday, October 18, 2016
L awrence J ournal -W orld
DATEBOOK
Family Owned.
TODAY
WEDNESDAY
THURSDAY
FRIDAY
SATURDAY
Mostly sunny and cooler
Partly sunny and pleasant
Mostly sunny
Plenty of sunshine
Pleasant with plenty of sunshine
High 75° Low 52° POP: 5%
High 68° Low 48° POP: 15%
High 64° Low 39° POP: 10%
High 68° Low 43° POP: 0%
High 73° Low 48° POP: 0%
Wind NNW 7-14 mph
Wind ENE 6-12 mph
Wind NNW 7-14 mph
Wind S 7-14 mph
Wind NNW 6-12 mph
POP: Probability of Precipitation
McCook 69/41
Kearney 70/43
Oberlin 69/43
Clarinda 72/45
Lincoln 71/44
Grand Island 69/42
Beatrice 72/46
Centerville 72/48
St. Joseph 74/49 Chillicothe 76/53
Sabetha 71/48
Concordia 74/46
Kansas City Marshall Manhattan 76/56 78/56 Salina 76/47 Oakley Kansas City Topeka 76/49 70/43 75/52 Lawrence 73/53 Sedalia 75/52 Emporia Great Bend 79/58 75/52 76/46 Nevada Dodge City Chanute 77/60 75/45 Hutchinson 78/58 Garden City 77/50 73/41 Springfield Wichita Pratt Liberal Coffeyville Joplin 81/66 74/46 78/53 75/43 77/62 78/59 Hays Russell 72/43 74/45
Goodland 68/39
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
LAWRENCE ALMANAC
Through 8 p.m. Monday.
Temperature High/low Normal high/low today Record high today Record low today
88°/72° 67°/45° 87° in 1953 24° in 1999
Precipitation in inches 24 hours through 8 p.m. yest. 0.00 Month to date 1.52 Normal month to date 1.96 Year to date 31.31 Normal year to date 34.75
REGIONAL CITIES
Today Wed. Today Wed. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W 75 51 s 70 47 pc Atchison 74 49 s 68 47 pc Holton Independence 76 56 s 66 49 pc Belton 74 55 s 65 48 c 74 54 s 65 49 pc Burlington 76 55 s 71 49 pc Olathe Osage Beach 79 61 pc 74 53 t Coffeyville 78 59 pc 78 52 c 75 53 s 70 49 pc Concordia 74 46 s 69 43 pc Osage City 77 54 s 68 49 pc Dodge City 75 45 s 72 40 pc Ottawa 78 53 s 77 48 pc Fort Riley 75 49 s 71 46 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 Wed. 7:34 a.m. 7:35 a.m. 6:37 p.m. 6:36 p.m. 8:58 p.m. 9:51 p.m. 10:17 a.m. 11:26 a.m.
Last
Oct 22
New
First
Full
Oct 30
Nov 7
Nov 14
LAKE LEVELS
As of 7 a.m. Monday Lake
Clinton Perry Pomona
Level (ft)
Discharge (cfs)
877.37 893.82 976.53
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 90 78 t 56 47 r 66 54 pc 96 63 pc 90 76 t 69 54 s 57 45 sh 55 44 r 64 55 sh 86 68 s 42 29 pc 54 40 sh 59 44 sh 83 79 r 76 60 s 81 43 s 57 44 r 69 53 c 75 51 pc 75 49 sh 42 29 c 95 66 s 46 42 sh 62 44 pc 91 77 pc 67 52 r 71 52 pc 89 77 c 48 43 sh 79 58 s 77 67 pc 77 49 sh 55 47 sh 51 45 sh 50 43 c 46 32 c
Wed. Hi Lo W 90 78 t 54 45 r 69 55 pc 96 63 s 90 78 t 74 53 s 51 40 c 53 43 r 61 50 r 82 66 s 51 27 s 54 41 sh 56 41 sh 84 79 sh 75 59 pc 77 42 s 58 46 pc 70 51 pc 75 49 pc 65 49 s 39 31 c 96 69 s 48 39 sh 58 44 pc 95 78 pc 70 58 pc 72 53 s 90 79 c 47 39 sh 71 57 s 72 62 pc 68 55 c 56 47 c 55 43 r 50 43 r 43 32 c
Warm Stationary Showers T-storms
7:30
Rain
Flurries
Snow
Ice
-10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s National Summary: Sun and record warmth will spread from the Deep South to the Northeast today. Rain will wet northern New England, with showers through the Ohio Valley. Expect rain and mountain snow showers in the Northwest. Today Wed. Today Wed. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Memphis 90 69 s 89 68 pc Albuquerque 79 50 s 72 43 s Miami 87 75 pc 87 73 pc Anchorage 41 34 pc 45 33 c Milwaukee 69 51 pc 67 50 pc Atlanta 87 64 s 88 65 s 64 47 pc 62 39 c Austin 93 69 pc 91 67 pc Minneapolis Nashville 89 65 s 89 67 pc Baltimore 83 63 s 84 62 s Birmingham 89 66 s 89 65 pc New Orleans 89 74 pc 89 73 pc New York 84 67 s 82 62 pc Boise 57 37 sh 59 43 s 71 49 s 69 45 c Boston 80 62 pc 78 56 pc Omaha 86 68 pc 86 67 pc Buffalo 75 54 c 68 52 sh Orlando Philadelphia 86 64 s 85 63 s Cheyenne 56 34 pc 50 26 c 91 66 s 92 65 s Chicago 73 50 pc 69 52 pc Phoenix Pittsburgh 82 64 s 75 60 t Cincinnati 86 66 pc 79 66 c Cleveland 85 59 c 71 56 sh Portland, ME 65 56 sh 74 46 pc Dallas 90 71 s 89 63 pc Portland, OR 60 47 sh 60 55 c 59 32 s 62 35 s Denver 67 37 pc 58 30 pc Reno 84 64 s 85 64 s Des Moines 71 50 s 69 46 pc Richmond 70 48 s 75 48 s Detroit 80 52 c 70 53 pc Sacramento St. Louis 87 63 pc 75 58 t El Paso 88 56 s 86 56 s Salt Lake City 56 37 sh 57 36 s Fairbanks 31 14 pc 31 13 s 75 61 s 86 63 s Honolulu 87 74 pc 86 75 pc San Diego Houston 92 73 s 90 72 pc San Francisco 69 53 s 72 54 s Seattle 58 45 c 58 53 c Indianapolis 83 60 pc 75 57 t 52 38 pc 54 44 pc Kansas City 73 53 s 66 49 pc Spokane Tucson 92 59 s 90 61 s Las Vegas 82 60 s 80 58 s 81 63 pc 84 54 c Little Rock 87 67 s 87 64 pc Tulsa Wash., DC 84 67 s 85 67 s Los Angeles 79 60 s 94 60 s National extremes yesterday for the 48 contiguous states High: Gage, OK 102° Low: Gunnison, CO 26°
WEATHER HISTORY
WEATHER TRIVIA™
Q:
On Oct. 18, 1910, a hurricane in Florida caused 70-mph northeast winds on Florida’s west coast.
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KSNT
Tonight Show
S.H.I.E.L.D.
News
Jimmy Kimmel Live Nightline
Meyers
Amer. Experience
Frontline (N) h
World
Business Charlie Rose (N)
Middle
Fresh-
S.H.I.E.L.D.
News
Jimmy Kimmel Live Nightline
NCIS “Philly” (N)
Bull (N) h
NCIS: New Orleans
News
Late Show-Colbert
Corden
C I 14 KMCI 15 L KCWE 17
41 38
41 The Voice (N) 38 Jeopardy Million.
This Is Us (N)
Chicago Fire (N)
News
Tonight Show
Meyers
Holly
The List
Broke
Broke
29
29 The Flash (N)
ION KPXE 18
50
Minute
Minute
Simpson Fam Guy
No Tomorrow (N)
KMBC 9 News
Mod Fam Mod Fam ET
Criminal Minds
Criminal Minds
Criminal Minds
Saving Hope (N)
Saving Hope (N)
Extra (N)
Varsity
6 News
Our
6 News
Tower Cam
Cable Channels WOW!6 6 WGN-A THIS TV 19 CITY
25
USD497 26
Home
City Bulletin Board, Commission Meetings
Tennis
School Board Information TBA
dNBA Preseason Basketball: Clippers at Kings
Football
E:60 (N)
SportsCenter (N)
UFC
Blues
kNHL Hockey St. Louis Blues at Vancouver Canucks. Blues
NBCSN 38 603 151 NHL Live kNHL Hockey: Flyers at Blackhawks FNC
Towr
City Bulletin Board
School Board Information
ESPN2 34 209 144 NFL Live (N) 36 672
Kitchen
Cops
ESPN 33 206 140 30 for 30 (N) FSM
Wild
››‡ Austin Powers in Goldmember ››‡ Austin Powers in Goldmember ›››› Rio Grande (1950) John Wayne. ›››‡ The High and the Mighty (1954)
307 239 Cops
39 360 205 The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File (N)
CNBC 40 355 208 Shark Tank MSNBC 41 356 209 All In With Chris
SportsCenter (N) NHL Overtime (N)
Shark Tank
The Profit (N)
Shark Tank
Rachel Maddow
The Last Word
11th
Anderson Cooper
CNN Tonight
CNN Tonight
45 245 138 Arrow
Arrow “Damaged”
Arrow “Legacies”
Arrow
USA
46 242 105 WWE SmackDown! (N) (Live)
Chrisley
Chrisley
Chrisley
A&E
47 265 118 O.J.
Married at First Sight (N)
60 Days
First 48
The First 48
Jokers
Ad. Ru
Do Better Billy
Jokers
Jokers
AMC
50 254 130 The Walking Dead
TBS
51 247 139 aMLB Baseball Cleveland Indians at Toronto Blue Jays. (N) (Live) 54 269 120 American Pickers
SYFY 55 244 122 ››‡ Maleficent
The Walking Dead
The Walking Dead
Shark Tank
Hardball Rachel Maddow
44 202 200 Anderson Cooper
HIST
Poker After Dark
The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File
TNT
BRAVO 52 237 129 Below Deck
SportCtr
SportCtr Baseball
Hannity (N)
CNN
TRUTV 48 246 204 Jokers
You can check your registration status online. You may register online if you have a valid Kansas driver's license or non-driver's identification. You can fill out a voter registration application at the Douglas County Courthouse, 1100 Massachusetts Street.
WOW DTV DISH 7 PM
SPORTS 7:30
8 PM
8:30
October 18, 2016 9 PM
9:30
10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30
Cable Channels cont’d
This Is Us (N)
O’Neals
VISIT DouglasCountyDems.org or DouglasCountyElections.com
BEST BETS
Contenders -- 16 House
Commission meeting, 4 p.m., Douglas County Courthouse, 1100 Massachusetts St. American Legion Bingo, doors open 4:30 p.m., first games 6:45 p.m., snack bar 5-8 p.m., American Legion Post No. 14, 3408 W. Sixth St. Genealogy and local history drop-in, 4-5 p.m., Lawrence Public Library Local History Room, 707 Vermont St. Community Dinner, 5:30-7 p.m., Centenary United Methodist Church, 245 N. Fourth St. Steak and Salmon Dinner, 5:30-7:30 p.m., Eagles Lodge, 1803 W. Sixth St. National Alliance on Mental Illness-Douglas County support group, 6-7 p.m., Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St. Billy Ebeling and his One-Man Band, 6-9 p.m., Jazz: A Louisiana Kitchen, 1012 Massachusetts St. The Beerbellies, 6:309:30 p.m., Johnny’s Tavern, 401 N. Second St. Conroy’s Trivia, 7:30 p.m., Conroy’s Pub, 3115 W. Sixth St. The Hump Wednesday Dance Party with DJ Parle, 10 p.m.-2 a.m., Jazzhaus, 926 Massachusetts St.
is the last day to register to vote for the November election...
KIDS
Fresh-
O’Neals
Find more information about these events, and more event listings, at ljworld.com/events.
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 18TH
Paid for by Marci for Senate, Rita Spradlin, Treasurer
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Karen Eckmeier workshop, 9 a.m.-3:30 p.m., Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St. Books & Babies, 9:30-10 a.m. and 10:3011 a.m., Lawrence Public Library Readers’ Theater, 707 Vermont St. Public Incentives Review Committee meeting, 1:30 p.m., City Commission Room, Lawrence City Hall, 6 E. Sixth St. Teen Zone Expanded (grades 6-12), 2-5 p.m., Lawrence Public Library Teen Zone, 707 Vermont St. Douglas County
Don’t be shy — we want to publish your event. Submit your item for our calendar by emailing datebook@ ljworld.com at least 48 hours before your event.
Be ready to vote to keep Marci in the Senate, working for us.
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Red Dog’s Dog Days workout, 6 a.m., South Park, 1141 Massachusetts St. Guest speaker Karen Eckmeier at Kaw Valley Quilter’s Guild, 9:30 a.m., Plymouth Congregational Church 925 Vermont. Skillbuilders series, Stress: The Good, the Bad and the Inevitable, 10-11:30 a.m., Smith Center, 4730 Brandon Woods Terrace. League of Woman Voters voter registration and information session, 1:30-4:30 p.m., Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. Lawrence Parkinson’s Support Group, 2-3 p.m., First Presbyterian Church, 2415 Clinton Parkway. New Medicines/Therapies/Advances in Parkinson’s Disease Research. Toss Out the Playbook: Trump, Clinton and the Wacky Politics of 2016, 4 p.m., Dole Institute of Politics, 2350 Petefish Drive. Discussion group with Steve Kraske and guests. Friends of the Lawrence Public Library Pop-Up Book Sale, 4-6 p.m., Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. Enter on Kentucky Street side. Lawrence Farmers’ Market, 4-6 p.m., parking garage, 700 block of Kentucky Street, just south of the Library. Pottery Jam, 5:30-10 p.m., Lawrence Arts Center, 940 New Hampshire St. Attendees encouraged to bring snacks to share. Lawrence City Commission meeting, 5:45 p.m., City Hall, 6 E. Sixth St.
A:
Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset
Books & Babies, 6-6:30 p.m., Lawrence Public Library Readers’ Theater, 707 Vermont St. Red Dog’s Dog Days workout, 6 p.m., South Park, 1141 Massachusetts St. Open Jam with Lonnie Ray, 6-10 p.m., Slow Ride Roadhouse, 1350 N. Third St. Maker Meet-Up, 6:30 p.m., Lawrence Creates Makerspace, 512 E. Ninth St. League of Women Voters Hot Topic: Informed Voters, Fair Judges Project with Supreme Court Justices Marla Luckert and Carol Beier, 7 p.m., Carnegie Building, 200 W. Ninth St. Trivia night at Johnny’s Tavern, 7 p.m., Johnny’s West, 721 Wakarusa Drive. Lawrence Huntington’s Disease Support Group, 7-9 p.m., Conference Room D South, Lawrence Memorial Hospital, 325 Maine St. KU Undergraduate Honor Recital, 7:30 p.m., Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall, 1530 Naismith Drive.
18 TODAY
Helping Families and Friends Honor Their Loved Ones for More Than 100 Years. Serving Douglas, Franklin and Osage Counties since 1898. Baldwin City, KS Ottawa, KS Overbrook, KS 712 Ninth Street 325 S. Hickory St 730 Western Heights Drive (785) 594-3644 (785) 242-3550 (785) 665-7141
Anderson Cooper Arrow “Vendetta”
Chrisley Billy
The Walking Dead MLB
Chrisley
Chrisley
Married-Sight Jokers
Jokers
The Walking Dead Conan
Below Deck (N)
Below Deck
Happens Housewives/OC
American Pickers
American Pickers
American Pickers
Channel Zero
Aftermath (N)
Below
American Pickers
›‡ Push (2009) Chris Evans.
FX 56 COM 58 E! 59 CMT 60 GAC 61 BET 64 VH1 66 TRV 67 TLC 68 LIFE 69 LMN 70 FOOD 72 HGTV 73 NICK 76 DISNXD 77 DISN 78 TOON 79 DSC 81 FREE 82 NGC 83 HALL 84 ANML 85 TVL 86 TBN 90 EWTN 91 RLTV 93 CSPAN2 95 CSPAN 96 ID 101 AHC 102 OWN 103 WEA 116 TCM 162
248 249 236 327 326 329 335 277 280 252 253 231 229 299 292 290 296 278 311 276 312 282 304 372 370
136 107 114 166 165 124 162 215 183 108 109 110 112 170 174 172 176 182 180 186 185 184 106 260 261
››‡ Jack Reacher (2012) Tom Cruise.
351 350 285 287 279 362 256
211 210 192 195 189 214 132
Atlanta Atlanta Atlanta ››‡ Non-Stop (2014) Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Drunk Daily At Mid. Melt South Pk Rob & Chyna Catching Kelce Total Bellas E! News (N) ››› Mrs. Doubtfire (1993, Comedy) Robin Williams, Sally Field. ››› Mrs. Doubtfire (1993) Big Sky Big Sky Big Sky Big Sky Big Sky Big Sky Big Sky Big Sky Big Sky Big Sky Martin Martin Hus Gary Ink, Paper, Scissors Hus Gary Kevin Hart: Let Love & Hip Hop Love & Hip Hop ››› Coach Carter (2005) Samuel L. Jackson, Robert Ri’chard. Delicious Delicious Delicious Delicious Bizarre Foods Bizarre Foods Delicious Delicious Counting On (N) Sweet 15 Outdaughtered Counting On Sweet 15 Dance Moms (N) Dance Moms (N) Dance Moms Dance Moms The House Sitter (2015) Kate Ashfield. ››‡ The Perfect Marriage (2006) The House Sitter Chopped Junior (N) Chopped Chopped (N) Star Chopped Chopped Fixer Upper Fixer Upper House Hunt Intl Welcome Welcome Fixer Upper Thunder Jagger Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Friends Friends Friends Friends Lab Rats Lab Rats Lab Rats Lab Rats Lab Rats Lab Rats Lab Rats Lab Rats Lab Rats Lab Rats Chihu Cali Style Jessie Stuck The Vampire Liv-Mad. Austin Girl Best Fr. Regular Regular King/Hill Cleve American Burgers Fam Guy Fam Guy Chicken Squidbill. Dungeon Cove Dungeon Cove Last Frontier Dungeon Cove Last Frontier Ben & Lauren The Letter (N) Ben & Lauren The 700 Club Mindy Mindy Life Below Zero Life Below Zero (N) Port Protection (N) Life Below Zero Life Below Zero Last Man Last Man Middle Middle Middle Middle Golden Golden Golden Golden River Monsters North America North America River Monsters River Monsters Andy Griffith Show Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond King King King King Trinity Joyce Prince Cornelius Praise the Lord Unquali God For Impact Mother Angelica News Rosary Threshold of Hope Cate Women Daily Mass - Olam Safari Safari Second Second Stanley Stanley Safari Safari Second Second Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. Capitol Hill Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. Capitol Hill Swamp Murders Swamp Murders (N) Swamp Murders (N) Swamp Murders Swamp Murders Alcatraz: Beyond San Quentin Codes and Conspir Alcatraz: Beyond San Quentin Loving You Loving You Loving You Loving You Loving You Strangest Weather Strangest Weather Strangest Weather 23.5 Degrees (N) Why Planes Crash ››› In This Our Life (1942) ›››› West Side Story (1961, Musical) Natalie Wood. Piccad
HBO 401 MAX 411 SHOW 421 STZENC 440 STRZ 451
501 515 545 535 527
300 310 318 340 350
Westworld Westworld ›› Mr. Right (2015) Insecure Divorce Fight ››‡ Magic Mike XXL (2015) ›› Entourage (2015) ››› Ali (2001) Will Smith. Shameless Inside the NFL (N) FSU FSU Inside the NFL Gringo: Life ››‡ Vertical Limit (2000) ››‡ Transporter 2 (2005) ››‡ Blade II (2002) Summer School Ash ›› The Jackal (1997) Bruce Willis. ››› Undercover Brother
WellCommons.com
Lawrence Journal-World
Tuesday, October 18, 2016
Well Commons
1C
YOUR HEALTH YOUR COMMUNITY YOUR STORY
No Child Left Inside Shutterstock
Program puts a premium on outdoor, physical activity outside — and away from the TV, video game console and myriad screens — for ach fall, the Lawabout an hour and a half on rence Parks and those Wednesdays, when Recreation DepartLawrence’s public elemenment encourages tary schools (the program kids to get outdoors — and is aimed at kindergartners maybe get a little messy in through sixth-graders) disthe process. The goal behind miss students for the day a these biweekly hikes is little earlier. also the name of the annual “Kids are disconnected program, cleverly titled “No with the environment in a Child Left Inside.” major kind of way because Offered every other they’re spending all this time Wednesday between Sepin school,” Birrell says. “Their tember and November, the time outside engaging in conkids-centric “Hiking Club,” as tact with the natural world it’s alternatively called, leads has been seriously limited, a gaggle of young science unless these kids are in very, enthusiasts and explorers on very rural environments. So, after-school adventures at they’re not getting much opPrairie Park Nature Center portunity to get outside and and nearby venues such as play in natural ways.” Clinton Lake and the Baker When school ends for the Wetlands Discovery Center. day, Birrell says, plenty of The idea, says Prairie Park kids head immediately into nature education supervisor regimented activities like Marty Birrell, is to get kids “soccer and ballet class,”
By Joanna Hlavacek
jhlavacek@ljworld.com
E
which are perfectly healthy pursuits, she acknowledges, but not the kind of organic “free play” she believes integral to every child’s development. And that’s assuming kids are getting outside at all. A global study earlier this year revealed that children worldwide spend less time outdoors per day than prison inmates. And, according to 2010 findings by the Keiser Family Foundation, they’re spending that time (seven and a half hours a day, for school-aged children) on electronic media. That has left a lot of children, Birrell speculates, “afraid” or unfamiliar with the natural world around them. In “No Child Left Inside” classes, Prairie Park naturalist Andrea Woody aims to offer an enriching educational experience
that doesn’t simply mimic what students may already be learning at school. The adventures go beyond textbooks, Birrell says, to include hands-on activities such as fossil hunting, butterfly tagging and bird watching. Kids, many of whom have become “No Child Left Inside” regulars, seem to enjoy the opportunity to learn more about nature in an immersive setting, says Birrell. The program is one of Prairie Park’s most popular, and still has two open spots (Wednesday and Nov. 2) this fall before closing for the season, she adds. “We encourage observational skills and exploratory skills and really engaging themselves in a hands-on way with the environment,” Birrell says of the program’s perks. There’s also the fitness benefit, she says, for kids
who may not necessarily be interested in team sports but are still in need of physical activity after sitting in class all day. “Everybody agrees that kids should be spending more time engaged in outdoor, physical activity,” Birrell says. Outdoor playtime has been linked in studies with everything from reduction of ADHD symptoms in children, according to the American Journal of Public Health, to strengthened immune systems and lowered stress levels. For more information on “No Child Left Inside” and other Prairie Park programming, visit www.lawrenceks. org or call the center at 832-7980. — Joanna Hlavacek can be reached at 832-6388. Follow her on Twitter: @HlavacekJoanna
Preventing vital health information from being lost in translation By Michael Ollove Tribune News Service
Washington — A 9-year-old girl, misdiagnosed with the stomach flu, died after a doctor failed to communicate to her Vietnamese-speaking parents that the drug he prescribed for her could have dangerous side effects. A 78-year-old stroke victim had to have her leg amputated after doctors and nurses didn’t understand her when she complained, in Russian, of pain and numbness. And a 7-year-old boy suffered organ damage because his pediatrician mistakenly diagnosed him with strep throat, having
struggled to communicate with his Spanish-speaking father and grandparents during repeated visits over several weeks. New federal rules requiring thousands of hospitals, doctors and dentists to provide free interpretation and translation services for people who don’t speak English aim to prevent tragedies like these, which were among those included in a study of interpretation-related malpractice cases in four states. The new rules, which apply to providers who receive Medicaid reimbursement or other federal funds, are expected to expand access to preventive care and reduce medical costs, at least in the long run. A lan-
guage other than English is spoken at home in 21 percent of U.S. households. “The language services are going to keep people healthier and that will end up saving health care dollars down the road,” said Cary Sanders of the California Pan-Ethnic Health Network. “It’s a small investment for a big return.” But some struggling rural hospitals and smaller medical and dental practices are worried about the cost of following the new rules, which require them to offer interpretation and translation services for the most popular 15 languages in their state. In a letter to the U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services, the American Medical Association argued that “the financial burden of medical interpretive services and translation should not fall on physician practices.” The AMA suggested that insurance plans should be required to cover those services. The American Dental Association described the new rules as “confusing, duplicative and burdensome, as well as unnecessary,” and a coalition of dental groups that includes the ADA warned that dentists may turn away Medicaid patients who don’t speak English to avoid having to comply. And the American Osteopathic Association, which represents doctors who practice
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osteopathic medicine, is worried about how the rules will affect small practices. “If physicians don’t receive additional funding or the rules are enforced in a strict manner then I can see some doctors choosing not to take Medicaid patients,” said Laura Wooster, interim senior vice president of public policy for the group. Some states have their own laws related to language services. A number of states, including Kansas, Louisiana and Michigan, require that nonEnglish-speaking women considering abortions receive information about the procedure
> TRANSLATION, 2C
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2C
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Tuesday, October 18, 2016
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or have their questions answered in their own languages. Some states, such as Michigan, require that information about HIV testing be made available in English and Spanish. New Jersey requires its health department to disseminate information on breast cancer in English and Spanish. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 prohibits discrimination on the basis of race, color, religion, sex or national origin. In 2000, President Bill Clinton issued an executive order reiterating that hospitals and other health care providers that receive federal financial assistance under health plans such as Medicaid, Medicare and the Children’s Health Insurance Program have to meet the language needs of non-English speaking patients. But Clinton’s order didn’t specify how to do so. Without
L awrence J ournal -W orld
any guidance, many providers have been relying on family members — even minor children — to serve as interpreters. An article published in August in the journal Health Affairs found that a quarter of the hospitals with the greatest need for language services (based on the surrounding population) did not provide such services in a systematic way, and nearly a third of all U.S. hospitals don’t offer language services at all. “The services are definitely not matching the need,” said Melody Schiaffino, an assistant professor at the Graduate School of Public Health at San Diego State University and one of the coauthors of the Health Affairs paper. Using an interpreter unfamiliar with medical terminology can produce dangerous misunderstandings. A study published in 2012 found that serious medical errors were less likely to occur with professional health care interpreters than with interpreters who don’t have special training, such as bilingual friends or family
members, or no interpreters at all. A provision in the 2010 Affordable Care Act (ACA) aimed to shore up interpreting services and this month the federal government is finally rolling out rules that detail the specific steps that health care providers must take. The rules apply to about 900,000 physicians, and 133,343 hospitals, home health agencies, nursing homes and other health facilities. It also applies to at least 180 insurers. Under the rules, health care providers must post notices telling patients and their families that language services are available. Websites and other written materials must be translated into the 15 most frequently used non-English languages spoken in the state. In Kansas, that means providing interpretation and translation services for the state’s 525 Swahili speakers. Providers in Idaho must be prepared to help 245 residents who speak Ukrainian, while those in Alabama must be ready to serve
Health & Wellness SERVICES DIRECTORY
484 residents who speak Japanese. The rules require that providers offer interpretation services during direct encounters and translations of vital written communications, including discharge and medication instructions, explanations of benefits and appeal notices. They also require that interpreters be trained in medical terminology and health care ethics. Family members or friends may not substitute for a trained interpreter unless requested by the patient, and bilingual staff members can only interpret in an emergency. The new regulations apply to all hospitals and other health care providers — doctor’s offices, dental offices, and clinics — that take federal money. Doctors who see patients on Medicaid are covered, but physicians who treat patients in certain Medicare plans would be exempt (unless they also see patients on Medicaid). The regulations also apply to insurance marketplaces created un-
CA
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der the ACA, and insurers that participate in them. Health policy experts say the new rules will improve the health of non-English speakers by making it easier for them to get preventive care, helping them avoid more serious — and costly — health crises. Studies have found that language barriers prevent patients from receiving regular checkups, cholesterol and cancer screenings, breast exams and flu shots. When they do visit a doctor, non-English speakers often misunderstand their doctor’s advice, or struggle with prescription directions. “If someone can’t understand what their doctor says or what they are signing in a consent form, that is not considered equal access to health care,” said Marina Hadjioannou Waters, a vice president of the National Council on Interpreting in Health Care, which advocates for greater availability of interpreting and translation services for non-English speakers.
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L awrence J ournal -W orld
Tuesday, October 18, 2016
| 3C
Couple develop pen to help with dyslexia By Mark Davis Kansas City Star
Jamee Miller struggles to read, even at 30 years old. Most readers see words. She sees strings of letters. “My sight words, I go to five letters. After that, I’m sounding out,” she said. This is one way dyslexia disrupts the meaning of text and, to Miller’s mind, works to hide the abilities she and others like her have. Help may be coming in the form of a small, unobtrusive scanner that reads text aloud while its users silently read along. It’s called Read ‘n Style and is being developed by Hidden Abilities LLC, a business started by Miller and her husband, Payden, whom she calls an honorary dyslexic. They and their crew work on the pensized, text-reading scanner at the Catalyst, a student business incubator at the University of Kansas in Lawrence. The “early stage” nature of Read ‘n Style means the software-proving prototype is the size of a grade-school pencil box. That’s because it is a grade-school pencil box with a few strategic holes cut out. And there’s a cap from a can of styling mousse. The cap serves as the housing over a tiny camera and lights, which are covered with tape to soften their glow. These scan the text. Software that the company is licensing turns the scanned text into voice, and the user hears the words through a wireless ear bud that uses Bluetooth technology.
Keith Myers /The Kansas City Star via AP
IN THIS SEPT. 28, 2015, PHOTO, Jamee, left, and Payden Miller pose with Read ‘n Style, a text to speech digital pen reader they are developing that will transmit audio to a Bluetooth earpiece. Their prototype, built in a pencil box, will be miniaturized into a pen that is moved across the text to be read. The Millers showed off the prototype in a visit to The Star, though making it work requires more stuff back in Lawrence. The work at Hidden Abilities has focused on squeezing all that function into the small device. The company has launched a Read ‘n Style Indiegogo campaign to
One task also means the tiny computer inside the reading pen won’t slow down from doing all the other stuff. It means Read ‘n Style will be able to read text roughly in real time. As the pen scans the text, it will move past each word in time for the user to see the word and hear the word at the same time. This, Jamee said, can help a struggling young reader build vocabulary and gain sight recognition of more words, rather than seeing just strings of letters. The company name comes from a less wellknown aspect of dyslexia. “Most see it as just a disability, but actually
it’s a trade-off. Maybe you’re weak in reading, but there’s other positive aspects, like spacial reasoning. A lot of engineers are dyslexic,” Payden said. The concept of a dyslexic advantage is reported by experts who study dyslexia. The International Dyslexia Association also notes that the condition may have hidden the talents of Ikea founder Ingvar Kamprad, neurosurgeon and former presidential candidate Ben Carson, actress Keira Knightley and many others. But it didn’t stop their success. “We wanted that to be our company’s message,” Jamee said.
fund a production run. Reading pens are nothing new, as a quick search on Amazon.com shows. The current products’ chief problem, Jamee said, is that they do too much. Read ‘n Style’s big strength is that it sticks to reading the scanned text. There is no built-in digital dictionary. No tiny
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screen to read back text that has been scanned. No capacity to store the scanned text (or for that matter store test answers and cheat at school). No way to transmit the scanned text to a computer so it can be edited or printed. No earphone jack to plug in wired headphones. Skipping all of that does two important things, Jamee said. First, it keeps Read ‘n Style’s final product design small and unremarkable-looking. Like a pen. “As a dyslexic myself, I wanted something that was discreet, that could be used in the classroom without drawing attention,” she said.
Lawrence, KS
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Lawrence
Lawrence
Lawrence
(First published in the Lawrence Daily JournalWorld October 18, 2016)
SHEILA WARREN AKA SHEILA D. WARREN, et al., Defendants.
Important information for WOW! Cable customers: Effective November 16, 2016, Hallmark Movies & Mysteries will be available on WOW! Medium Cable channel 160. ________
Case No. 15 CV 197 Court No. Title to Real Estate Involved
111 E. 11th Street Lawrence, Kansas 66044 on November 3, 2016, at 10:00 AM of said day, the following described real estate situated in the County of Douglas, State of Kansas, to-wit:
NOTICE OF SHERIFF’S SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that under and by virtue of an Order of Sale issued by the Clerk of the District (First published in the Court of Douglas County, Lawrence Daily Journal- Kansas, in the case above World October 11, 2016) numbered, wherein the parties above named were IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF respectively plaintiff and DOUGLAS COUNTY, Defendant, and to me, the KANSAS undersigned Sheriff of Douglas County, Kansas, CIVIL COURT DEPARTMENT directed, I will offer for sale at public auction and PLAZA HOME MORTGAGE sell to the highest bidder INC, for cash in hand at the Jury Plaintiff, Assembly Room of the District Court on the lower vs. level of the Judicial and Law Enforcement Center,
TRACT FOUR (4), LOT A, IN REPLAT OF EAST PART OF LOT 3, HILLS WEST NO. 2, AN ADDITION TO THE CITY OF LAWRENCE, AS SHOWN BY THE RECORDED PLAT THEREOF, IN DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS (“PROPERTY”) (“Property”)
Lawrence Order of Sale. _____________________ DOUGLAS COUNTY SHERIFF Submitted by: MARTIN LEIGH PC /s/ Lauren L. Mann Beverly M. Weber KS #20570 Lauren L. Mann\ KS #24342 ATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF
MARTIN LEIGH PC IS ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. More commonly known as: _______ 2517 West 24th Terrace, Lawrence, KS 66047 (First published in the said real property is levied Lawrence Journal World upon as the property of October 18, 2016) Defendant Sheila Warren aka Sheila D. Warren and NOTICE OF all other alleged owners PUBLIC HEARING and will be sold without appraisal to satisfy said TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN
legals@ljworld.com Lawrence AND TO ALL PERSONS INTERESTED:
Lawrence
dence; and to add a new section to allow for reduction of one-half the disNOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN tance of the front yard that on November 8, 2016, setback on corner lots. the Baldwin City Planning Commission will hold a 2. A request for prelimipublic hearing at the Pub- nary plat approval for the lic Library meeting room, Schoolhouse Partners sub800 7th Street, Baldwin division situated at 704 Full legal City, Kansas, at 7:00 P.M., Chapel Street. to consider the following description of the property is available for review in applications: the office of the Zoning 1. To consider amend- Administrator during norments to the City’s Zoning mal business hours. Regulations, specifically, As provided in the Baldwin to amend Article 1 for City Zoning Regulations, Group Home and to in- the above applications will crease the total to 12 per- be discussed and considsons; to amend Article 12 ered by the Baldwin City to allow automotive sales Planning Commission, and with additional require- all person interested in ments in the CP-2 district; said matter will be heard to delete Section 25-103 (1) at this time concerning (a); to amend Section their views and wishes; 26-108 (1) (c) to increase and all matters concerning the maximum allowed the request and presented square footage for acces- at the hearing will be conThe Planning sory structures to 1,200 sidered. square feet or size of resi- Commission may continue
Lawrence this matter to a later date without additional notice. Certified, this 13th, day of October, 2016 ________
Lawrence Involved NOTICE OF SHERIFF’S SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that under and by virtue of an Order of Sale issued (First published in the by the Clerk of the District Lawrence Daily Journal- Court of Douglas County, Kansas, in the case above World October 11, 2016) numbered, wherein the above named IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF parties were respectively plaintiff DOUGLAS COUNTY, and Defendants, and to KANSAS me, the undersigned SherCIVIL COURT DEPARTMENT iff of Douglas County, Kansas, directed, I will offer for sale at public aucNATIONSTAR MORTGAGE tion and sell to the highLLC, est bidder for cash in Plaintiff, hand at the Jury Assembly vs. Room of the District Court on the lower level of the MICHELAYN W. AGNEW; Judicial and Law EnforceANDREW S. AGNEW , et al., ment Center, 111 E. 11th Defendants. Street Lawrence, Kansas Case No. 16 CV 218 Court No. Title to Real Estate
PUBLIC NOTICE CONTINUED ON 5C
Tuesday, October 18, 2016
jobs.lawrence.com
CLASSIFIEDS
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Mail and Copy Center Temporary
The Golf Course Superintendents Association of America is seeking a highly detailed, customer focused individual to join our team on a temporary basis. This position will be full-time and will begin the end of November and last through mid-February. The primary duties include receiving, sorting and delivering mail items, preparing all outgoing deliveries and assisting with GCSAA print and copy orders. The position will also assist with phone coverage as needed. Qualified candidates must be able to stand for long periods of time, quickly learn the operation of the mail and copy center equipment and possess general computer and phone customer service skills. Hourly rate is $12.00 and a bonus will be paid upon completion of assignment. Applicants should apply online and attach a resume by October 31st at www.gcsaa.org and select “Work for GCSAA.” GCSAA is proud to be an equal opportunity employer. EOE/M/F/Vet/Disabled
SERVICES TO PLACE AN AD: Antique/Estate Liquidation
785.832.2222 Concrete
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Guttering Services
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 Needing to place an ad? 785-832-2222
Mike - 785-766-6760 mdcraig@sbcglobal.net
Decks & Fences Pro Deck & Design
Specializing in the complete and expert installation of decks and porches. Over 30 yrs exp, licensed & insured. 913-209-4055
prodeckanddesign@gmail.com
ESTATE SERVICES • Estate sales • Organizing • Interior Stylist Debbie King
Stacked Deck Estate Sale Services In home & Off site options to suit your tag sale needs. 785.260.5458
Seamless aluminum guttering.
Decks • Gazebos Siding • Fences • Additions Remodel • Weatherproofing Insured • 25 yrs exp. 785-550-5592
Lawn, Garden & Nursery
jayhawkguttering.com
Golden Rule Lawncare Mowing & lawn cleanup Snow Removal Family owned & operated Call for Free Est. Insured. Eugene Yoder 785-224-9436
785-842-0094
Home Improvements
Deck Drywall Siding Replacement Gutters Privacy Fencing Doors & Trim Commercial Build-out Build-to-suit services Fully Insured 22 yrs. experience
913-488-7320
Serving KC over 40 years
STARTING or BUILDING a Business?
Higgins Handyman Interior/exterior painting, roofing, roof repairs, fence work, deck work, lawn care, siding, windows & doors. For 11+ years serving Douglas County & surrounding areas. Insured.
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785-832-2222 classifieds@ljworld.com Advertising that works for you!
Foundation Repair New York Housekeeping Accepting clients for weekly, bi-weekly, seasonal or special occasion cleaning. Excellent References. Beth - 785-766-6762
Quality Office Cleaning We are here to serve you, No job too big or small. Major CC excepted Info. & Appointments M-F, 9-5 Call 785-330-3869
Concrete Concrete Driveways, Parking lots, Pavement repair, Sidewalks, Garage Floors Foundation walls, Remove & Replacement Specialists Call 843-2700 or Text 393-9924 Stamped & Reg. Concrete, Patios, Walks, Driveways, Acid Staining & Overlays, Tear-Out & Replacement Jayhawk Concrete Inc. 785-979-5261
Int/ext. Drywall, Siding, 30 plus yrs. Locally owned & operated.
Foundation & Masonry
Specialist Water Prevention Systems for Basements, Sump Pumps, Foundation Supports & Repair & more. Call 785-221-3568 Foundation Repair Limestone wall bracing, floor straitening, sinking or bulging issues foundation water-proofing, repair and replacement Call 843-2700 or text 393-9924
HOME BUILDERS Repair & Remodel. When you want it done right the first time. Home repairs, deck repairs, painting & more. 785-766-9883 Retired Carpenter, Deck Repairs, Home Repairs, Interior Wall Repair & House Painting, Doors, Wood Rot, Power wash and Tree Services. 785-766-5285
Insurance
albeil@aol.com
Ideal candidates should have two-plus years of writing/editing experience within a magazine, journal or publication. A bachelor’s degree in journalism, English or a related field is preferred. We are looking for an editor with a commitment to conceptualizing content, photography and design of print publications. They must have strong verbal and written communication skills, as well as leadership qualities. Strong organizational skills and ability to multitask to ensure deadlines are met. This is an ideal, long-term position for a starting or seasoned editor. Apply via email or by mail with resume, cover letter, and portfolio (if applicable). Attn: General Manager Sunflower Publishing 645 New Hampshire Lawrence, KS 66044 editorial@sunflowerpub.com
Family Tradition Interior & Exterior Painting Carpentry/Wood Rot Senior Citizen Discount Ask for Ray 785-330-3459 Interior/Exterior Painting
Plumbing RETIRED MASTER PLUMBER & Handyman needs small work. Bill Morgan 816-523-5703
Professional Organizing
Attic, Basement, Garage, Any Space ORGANIZED! Items sorted, boxed, donated/recycled + Downsizing help. Call TILLAR 913-375-9115
Roofing BHI Roofing Company Up to $1500.00 off full roofs UP to 40% off roof repairs 15 Yr labor warranty Licensed & Insured. Free Est. 913-548-7585
Medicare Home Auto Business
Call Today 785-841-9538
General
General
New Warehouse/ Distribution Center
HIRING IMMEDIATELY!
All Shifts Available! $12.75 - $14.00 Get in on the ground floor and grow with the company! Requirements: • High School Diploma/GED • 1+ Year Warehousing/ Forklift Experience • PC-Computer Experience (Warehouse Management Software) • Ability to lift up to 50lbs throughout a shift • RF Scan Gun experience • Ability to work Flexible Schedule when needed Temp-to-Hire positions: Warehouse Clerks, Material Handlers, and Forklift Operators $12-$14.00 Gardner, KS Apply Mon.-Fri. 9:00 am - 3:00 pm 10651 Lackman Rd. Lenexa, KS 66219 Apply online at: prologistix.com Call 913-599-2626
Fredy’s Tree Service
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)
Deliver Newspapers! Choose a route in:
Drive for Lawrence Transit System, KU on Wheels & Saferide/ Safebus! Day & Night shifts. Flexible full & part-time schedules, 80% company paid employee health insurance for full-time. Career opportunities. $11.50/hr after paid training. Age 21+ w. gooddriving record.
Perry Lawrence It’s Fun! Part-time work
Apply online: lawrencetransit.org/ employment Or come to: MV Transportation, Inc. 1260 Timberedge Road Lawrence, KS
Early schedules keep your daytime free! Be an independent contractor, Deliver every day, between 2-6 a.m. Reliable vehicle, driver’s license, insurance in your own name, and a phone required.
We are an equal opportunity employer and all qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, national origin, disability status, protected veteran status, or any other characteristic protected by law.
Come in & Apply! 645 New Hampshire 816-805-6780 jinsco@ljworld.com
Healthcare
Hotel-Restaurant
LPNs
Front Desk & Night Auditor
Trade Skills
$880 More Each Month! If you earn $8.00 hr. working 40 hrs a week, that’s $1,408 per month. Apply and earn $13.00/hr working 40 hr weeks & that’s $2,288 per mo.
APPLY for 5! of our hundreds of job openings and it could change your life! Decisions Determine Destiny
Tree/Stump Removal
KansasTreeCare.com
Providing top quality service and solutions for all your insurance needs.
Sunflower Publishing and Ogden Publications, Inc., offer training, a benefits package including health, dental and vision insurance, 401k, paid time off and more. EOE
Hiring in Gardner, KS
cutdown • trimmed • topped • stump removal Licensed & Insured. 20 yrs experience. 913-441-8641 913-244-7718
FOUNDATION REPAIR Mudjacking, Waterproofing. We specialize in Basement Repair & Pressure Grouting. Level & Straighten Walls & Bracing on wall. BBB. Free Estimates Since 1962 Wagner’s 785-749-1696 www.foundationrepairks.com
Established in 2004 Sunflower Publishing, based in Lawrence, Kansas, is a leading publisher for city/regional magazines,trade publications and directories. Premier publications include KANSAS! magazine, Lawrence Magazine, Topeka Magazine,Manhattan Magazine,Best of Lawrence magazine,Kansas Weddings Magazine and more. For more information, visit www.sunflowerpub.com.
Call Al 785-331-6994
Call Lyndsey 913-422-7002
Dirt-Manure-Mulch
913-962-0798 Fast Service
Cleaning
A.B. PAINTING & REPAIR
Quality Work Over 30 yrs. exp.
Rich Black Top Soil No Chemicals Machine Pulverized Pickup or Delivery
Sunflower Publishing, a division of Ogden Publications, is hiring a Magazine Editor to manage the editorial content and flow of a series of city/regional titles. If you love magazines that are the heart and soul of a community, this opportunity is unmatched.
Painting AAA Home Improvements Int/Ext Repairs, Painting, Tree work & more- we do it all! 20 Yrs. Exp., Ins. & local Ref. Will beat all estimates! Call 785-917-9168
Carpentry
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
YARDBIRDS LANDSCAPING Tractor and Mowing Services. Yard to fields. Rototilling Call 785-766-1280
Many colors to choose from. Install, repair, screen, clean-out. Locally owned. Insured. Free estimates.
Full Remodels & Odd Jobs, Interior/Exterior Painting, Installation & Repair of:
785-764-2323
THE RESALE LADY
JAYHAWK GUTTERING
Landscaping
MAGAZINE EDITOR
Join our 5 star team! Full & Part-time. Rewarding team environment within long term care. Shift and weekend differentials and up to $1,000 sign-on bonus. Apply online or in-person at: www.lawrence presbyterianmanor.org 1429 Kasold Dr. Lawrence, KS 66049
Experience is a must. Apply in person at 740 Iowa St. Need to sell your car? Place your ad at classifieds.lawrence.com or email classifieds@ljworld.com
Commercial Electricians Oliver Electric is accepting applications for experienced Journeyman & Apprentice, for work in the Lawrence & surrounding area. Top wages/benefits. EOE. For details please call:
(785) 748-0777
O C T
P R E S E N T E D BY S H AW N E E J O B O P E N I N G S .C O M Wednesday, October 26, 2016 • 11:30 AM - 2:30 PM • Shawnee Civic Centre, 13817 Johnson Dr. Meet, mingle & connect with great local employers with many job openings. Includes a special presentation, “What Employers Want” by Peter Steimle.
L awrence J ournal -W orld
Tuesday, October 18, 2016
MERCHANDISE PETS
CARS
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AUCTIONS
785.832.2222
Antiques
FARM AUCTION Sat, October 22 9:00 AM 325 East 1250 Rd Baldwin City
1800’s Welsh Cupboard Dark Tiger Oak (Used as a media cabinet) $ 500.00 Old Large Iron Sideboard with stone top $ 400.00
Auctioneers: Mark Elston & Jason Flory Elston Auctions (785-594-0505) (785-218-7851) “Serving Your Auction Needs Since 1994” Please visit us online at www.KansasAuctions.net/ elston & www.FloryAndAssociates .com for pictures!!
PUBLIC AUCTION SATURDAY, OCT. 22 10 AM 3.4m N of Globe, KS, on E 550 Rd. (643 E 550 Rd. Lawrence, KS. OR 8.5m E of Overbrook, KS. OR 7m W of Hwy Jct. 56 & 59 then North on E550.) JOHN, EVELYN & CHERYL MUSICK ESTATE EDGECOMB AUCTIONS785-594-3507 Les’s cell 785-766-6074 Kansasauctions.net/ Edgecomb edgecombauctions.com
REAL ESTATE AUCTION 120 Oak Street Downtown Bonner Springs, KS October 21, 11 A.M. 21,000 Sq Ft Mall! www.billfair.com BILL FAIR & COMPANY 800-887-6929 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
Furniture
Miscellaneous
Chevrolet Cars
Desk, 47” wide X 24” deep X 52” high. Roll out shelf for keyboard, raised shelf for screen, attached hutch w/book cases & storage space. Great condition. In Lawrence. $20 785-691-6667
Sponge Bob Halloween costume New Sponge Bob Square Pants toddler size 2-4 costume, retail $40. and Sponge Bob trick-or-treat bag, retail $8. $25 for all 785-615-9587
2015 CHEVROLET CAMARO 2SS
Old Fashion Butcher Block Old Fashion Butcher Block ~ Heavy & Sturdy , on rollers w/ bottom shelf ~ Was $ 300 ~ asking $ 45 ( reason, downsizing ) $$ 45 785 550 4142
Music-Stereo
MERCHANDISE
Auction Calendar
Seller: C.T. Taul
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Call 785-979-8050
Appliances
FREE ADS
17 Cu. Ft Whirlpool Upright Freezer For Sale Like New $ 350 Call 785-842-3808 After 5 pm
for merchandise
under $100
PIANOS
one owner, fwd, automatic, power equipment, cruise control, fantastic commuter car with great gas mileage! Stk#389951
785-832-9906
CALL 785-832-2222
2010 Craftsman 21 hp Riding Lawn Tractor 46” Cut. Very good condition. $900 obo 785-424-3784
For Sale: Canning Jars 3-Pints & 2-Quarts $4.00 per dozen Call 785-542-1147 Nora Roberts Readers 30 Books $ 7 Call 785-542-1147
DOWNTOWN LOFT
October 21, 11 A.M. 21,000 Sq Ft Mall, 2/3 empty, one national tenant. Two Commercial Acres!
View: Friday, Oct. 14 11 to 1 PM. Photos and due diligence online at
Studio Apartments 825 sq. ft., $880/mo. 600 sq. ft., $710/mo. No pets allowed Call Today 785-841-6565
3 BR w/2 or 2.5 BA W/D hookups, Fireplace, Major Appliances. Lawn Care & Dbl Car Garage! Equal Housing Opportunity
LAUREL GLEN APTS All Electric
2 Bedroom Units Available Now! Some with W/D, Water & Trash Paid, Small Pet
Open House Special!
• 1 Day - $50 • 2 Days - $75
Duplexes
Call 785-832-2222
Call 785-842-2575 www.princeton-place.com
785-838-9559
• 28 Days - $280
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
advanco@sunflower.com
www.billfair.com
All choices include: 20 lines of text & a free photo!!!
Townhomes
RENTALS
Real Estate Auction 120 Oak Street Downtown Bonner Springs, KS
785-865-2505 grandmanagement.net
EOH
2BR in a 4-plex New carpet, vinyl, cabinets, countertop. W/D is included.
grandmanagement.net Equal Housing Opportunity. 785-865-2505
Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
Mercury Cars
stk#13812A
Baldwin City 3+ BR, 2 BA, House, 1001 Bluestem, Baldwin City, KS, 12 months lease, Single family ranch style home on a partially finished basement w/ a poss 4th br. Fully remodeled in 2013. W/D hook-ups. No smoking or pets. $1200.00, 785-615-1552.
Office Space DOWNTOWN OFFICE 1,695 Flexible Sq Ft Conference Room Access Customer Parking 2 Reserved Parking Spots $1,400 Monthly Rent 211 E 8th Charlton - Monley Bldg 785- 865-8311 Downtown Office Space Single offices, elevator & conference room, $725. Call Donna or Lisa
785-841-6565
Thicker line? Bolder heading? Color background? Ask how to get these features in your ad TODAY!! Call: 785-832-2222
FIND IT HERE. UNITED METHODIST WOMEN CHILI & CHICKEN NOODLE DINNER Saturday, October 22 Vinland United Methodist Church
Serving 5pm to 7:30 pm or when it’s all gone. Please join us for good food and fellowship. Homemade pies! Free will donation.
LAW R E N CE JOURN A L-WO RL D
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CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
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Got Stuff To Sell? Merchandise Ad 1 Week - $19.95 Call 785.832.2222
Toyota 2007 Avalon Limited heated & cooled leather seats, sunroof, power equipment, JBL sound system, navigation, alloy wheels and more! Stk#537861 Only $11,415.00 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
Volkswagen Cars
Chevrolet Trucks Pontiac Cars
leather power seats, alloy wheels, On Star, steering wheel controls, all of the luxury that you expect from Buick and only $7,250.00 stk#149301
Mercury 2008 Grand Marquis GS power equipment, great room, very comfortable and affordable. Stk#45490A1
Only $7,877 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
Nissan Cars
Buick 2007 Lucerne CXL
2009 PONTIAC G8 BASE One owner locally owned car! Leather heated seats, alloy wheels, Blaupunkt stereo, very sharp and well taken care of, all service work performed here!! Stk#373891
Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
Motorcycle-ATV
Only $13,855 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
MOTORCYCLE TRIKE
Toyota Cars
$4,200. Volkswagen engine. Four on the floor with back bench seating, comes with helmet and some leathers.
Call 785-842-5859
SELLING A MOTORCYCLE?
Stk#101931
Only $10,455
Ford 2004 Explorer XLT 4wd, running boards, tow package, alloy wheels, power equipment, stk#122401 only $7,855.00 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
CODY PLAZA APTS Spacious 1 BR Apartment $600 / month, All Utilities Pd, Off Street Parking, On Site Laundry, Seniors Welcome, On the River In Historic Downtown Leavenworth, Under New Ownership 913-651-2423 OR 816-550-4546
YOUR NEXT APARTMENT IS READY.
1724 N 692 RD Baldwin City, KS 66006
Only $9,855
Nissan 2011 Sentra SR Fwd, power equipment, alloy wheels, spoiler, low miles
Leavenworth
NOTICES Special Notices
Nissan 2009 Murano SL, one owner, power equipment, power seat, Bose premium sound, alloy wheels, all-wheel drive Stk#316801
Toyota SUVs
Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
Dodge Vans
Maltese ACA Puppies 9 weeks old. These sweet little girls are waiting to meet you. Parents on premises. Vaccinated & wormed. 2 Females. $575 each Call or text 785-448-8440
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Apartments Unfurnished
V6, fwd, power equipment, cruise control alloy wheels, very affordable at $4250.00!
classifieds@ljworld.com Nissan SUVs
Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
Miscellaneous
No spray, GMO free, $5 per lb. Pick up at downtown KC Farmers Market Saturdays, or at our farm. www.mychestnutsroasting onanopenfire.com 816-596-3936
Real Estate Auctions
Only $8,949.00
Honda 2011 CRV SE
RENTALS REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE
Chevrolet 2003 Impala
4wd, power equipment, alloy wheels, steering wheel controls, low miles, stk#300922 Only $16,415.00
Lawn, Garden & Nursery
AMERICAN CHESTNUTS FOR SALE
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High performance package, RS Package, 2SS. 12k miles. Perfect condition. 450HP. Yellow with Black Stripes. Full warranty for 6 years / 100,000 miles. $39,000. 785-218-0685 erik@efritzler.com
Pontiac 2009 Vibe
PETS
Food & Produce
GMC SUVs
• H.L. Phillips upright $650 • Cable Nelson Spinet $500 • Gulbranson Spinet - $450 Prices include delivery & tuning
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THENCE SOUTH 00° 26` 04” EAST 50.00 FEET TO THE NORTH LINE OF SAID LOT 3; THENCE SOUTH 89° 36` 46” EAST ALONG SAID NORTH LINE 65.21 FEET TO THE POINT OF BEGINNING, ALL IN THE CITY OF LAWRENCE, DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS (“Property”)
66044 on November 3, 2016, at 10:00 AM of said day, the following described real estate situated in the County of Douglas, State of Kansas, More commonly known as: to-wit: 310 E. 15th Pl., Lawrence, KS 66044 LOT THREE (3), IN LEARNARD COURT, A SUBDIVI- said real property is levied SION IN THE CITY OF LAW- upon as the property of RENCE, DOUGLAS Defendants Andrew S. AgCOUNTY, KANSAS, AND A new and Michelayn W. AgTRACT OF LAND IN THE new and all other alleged NORTHEAST QUARTER owners and will be sold (NE/4) OF SECTION SIX (6), without appraisal to satTOWNSHIP THIRTEEN isfy said Order of Sale. SOUTH (T13S), RANGE TWENTY EAST (R20E) OF _____________________ THE 6TH P.M., DESCRIBED DOUGLAS COUNTY SHERIFF AS FOLLOWS: BEGINNING AT THE NORTHEAST COR- Submitted by: NER OF LOT THREE (3), IN MARTIN LEIGH PC LEARNARD COURT, A SUBDIVISION IN THE CITY OF /s/ Lauren L. Mann LAWRENCE; THENCE Beverly M. Weber NORTH 00° 00` 00” EAST KS #20570 50.00 FEET; THENCE Lauren L. Mann NORTH 89° 51` 52” WEST KS #24342 65.59 FEET; THENCE ATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF SOUTH 00° 26` 04” EAST 50.00 FEET TO THE NORTH MARTIN LEIGH PC IS ATLINE OF SAID LOT THREE TEMPTING TO COLLECT A (3); THENCE SOUTH 89° DEBT AND ANY INFORMA36` 46” EAST ALONG SAID TION OBTAINED WILL BE NORTH LINE 65.21 FEET TO USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. THE POINT OF BEGINNING, _______ ALL IN THE CITY OF LAWRENCE, DOUGLAS (First published in the COUNTY, KANSAS Lawrence Daily Journal(“Property”) World October 18, 2016) Also described as: LOT 3, IN LEARNARD COURT, A SUBDIVISION IN THE CITY OF LAWRENCE, DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS, AND A TRACT OF LAND IN THE NORTHEAST QUARTER OF SECTION 6, TOWNSHIP 13 SOUTH, RANGE 20 EAST OF THE 6TH P.M., DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS: BEGINNING AT THE NORTHEAST CORNER OF LOT 3, IN LEARNARD COURT, A SUBDIVISION IN THE CITY OF LAWRENCE; THENCE NORTH 00° 00` 00” EAST 50.00 FEET; THENCE NORTH 89° 51` 52” WEST 65.59 FEET;
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS CIVIL DEPARTMENT The Bank of New York Mellon fka The Bank of New York, as Trustee for the Certificateholders of CWMBS, Inc., CHL Mortgage Pass-Through Trust 2006-8, Mortgage PassThrough Certificates, Series 2006-8 Plaintiff, vs. John B. Crawford and Mi-
legals@ljworld.com
chelle E. Crawford, et al. Defendants. Case No. 14CV459 Court Number: Pursuant to K.S.A. Chapter 60 NOTICE OF SALE Under and by virtue of an Order of Sale issued to me by the Clerk of the District Court of Douglas County, Kansas, the undersigned Sheriff of Douglas County, Kansas, will offer for sale at public auction and sell to the highest bidder for cash in hand, at the Lower Level of the Judicial and Law Enforcement Center of the Courthouse at Lawrence, Douglas County, Kansas, on November 10, 2016, at 10:00 AM, the following real estate: Tract I: The Southeast Quarter of the Southeast Quarter of Section 11, Township 14 South, Range 18 East of the Sixth Principal Meridian, in Douglas County, Kansas. Tract II: Beginning at the Southwest corner of the Southwest Quarter of Section 12, Township 14 South, Range 18 East of the Sixth Principal Meridian; thence North 00° 30’ 10” West 374.56 feet along the West line of said Quarter Section; thence North 89° 52’18” East 147.72 feet parallel to the South line of said Quarter Section; thence South 00° 30’ 10” East 374.56 feet parallel to the West line of said Quarter Section to a point on the South line of said Southwest Quarter; thence South 89° 52’ 18” West 147.72 feet along said South line to the point of beginning, in Douglas County, Kansas. Tract III: Beginning at the Northwest corner of the Northwest Quarter of Section 13, Township 14 South, Range 18 East of the Sixth Principal Meridian; thence South 00° 18’ 00” East 202.40 feet, deed and measured, along the
West line of said Quarter Section; thence South 80° 18’ 00” East, by deed 150.00 feet; thence North 00°18’00” West 227.96 feet parallel to the West line of said Quarter Section to a point on the North line of said Northwest Quarter; thence South 89° 52’18” West 147.73 feet along said North line to the point of beginning, in Douglas County, Kansas, commonly known as 688 East 715th Road, Lawrence, KS 66047 (the “Property”) to satisfy the judgment in the above-entitled case. The sale is to be made without appraisement and subject to the redemption period as provided by law, and further subject to the approval of the Court. For more information, visit www.Southlaw.com Kenneth M McGovern, Sheriff Douglas County, Kansas Prepared By: SouthLaw, P.C. Kristen G. Stroehmann (KS #10551) 13160 Foster, Suite 100 Overland Park, KS 66213-2660 (913) 663-7600 (913) 663-7899 (Fax) Attorneys for Plaintiff (175127) ________ (First published in the Lawrence Daily JournalWorld, September 18, 2016) Due to long term non-payment, ACE SELF STORAGE OF LAWRENCE, KS will for-close the following units: MARY SLEDGE, SCOTT WHITEBREAD, REBECCA TODD, TEDDI JAMES, DELL JOHNSTON, SUSAN KLINDT, MILVINA YAZZIE. Payments must be received by October 21th in order to stop foreclosure. ACE Self Storage 2400 Franklin Road Lawrence, KS 66046 ________
Peter Steimle
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Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com/sports l Tuesday, October 18, 2016
KU guard Mason on Bob Cousy Watch List By Matt Tait mtait@ljworld.com
Kansas senior Frank Mason was one of 20 players named to the preseason Bob Cousy Award watch list on Monday. The award, named for the legendary Boston Celtics and Holy Cross point guard, has been given annually to college basketball’s best player at each position since 2004. A national committee of top college basketball personnel determined the watch list of 20 candidates. Mason is one of three players from the Big 12 Conference on the point guard watch list, joining Iowa State’s Monte Morris, the Big 12 preseason player of the year, and Oklahoma State’s Jawun Evans. Mason is Kansas’ leading returning scorer at 12.9 points per Mason game, which ranked 12th in the Big 12 and made Mason the second-highest returning scorer in the league for 2016-17. He led KU in assists at 4.6, which was fourth in the conference. By mid-February, the watch list of 20 players for the 2017 Bob Cousy Point Guard of the Year Award will be narrowed to 10. In March, five finalists will be presented to Mr. Cousy and the Hall of Fame’s selection committee. The winner of the 2017 Bob Cousy Award will be presented at the ESPN College Basketball Awards Show in Los Angeles on April 7, 2017.
Big 12 presidents pass on expansion By Stephen Hawkins
—
AP Sports Writer
Grapevine, Texas (ap) — The smallest Power Five conference is not getting any larger. The Big 12 is staying at 10 schools. After three months of analyzing, vetting and interviewing possible new members, Big 12 leaders on Monday took expansion off their agenda. “This was not a decision to not expand,” Commissioner Bob Bowlsby said. “This was an endorsement and reinvestment in the 10 that we had.” Oklahoma President David Boren said the decision was unanimous and no specific schools were discussed or voted on during five hours or so of expansion talk while Big 12 presidents and chancellors met Sunday night and Monday. On Monday, University of Kansas Chancellor Bernadette Gray-Little weighed in on the conference’s decision. “As we have said all along, the priority for the University of Kansas and our athletics program is a strong and competitive Big 12 Conference,” she said in a statement. “The board’s
LM Otero/AP Photo
OKLAHOMA PRESIDENT DAVID BOREN, LEFT, and Big 12 Commissioner Bob Bowlsby laugh during a news conference Monday after The Big 12 Conference meeting in Grapevine, Texas. unanimous decision today goes a long way toward ensuring the long-term stability and strength of the conference and its member institutions.” Boren, the chairman of the
Big 12 board of directors and the Texas President Greg Fenves only president who has been in said 10 is the right number for the league since its inception in the league. 1996, insisted he has never seen “It promotes a competitive “such a unified sense of purpose on the board.” > BIG 12, 4D
Kansas’ Cole Moos named Big 12’s top specialist of the week
HIGH SCHOOL GOLF
By Benton Smith basmith@ljworld.com
Green cuts Kansas Five-star, Class of 2017 point guard Quade Green recently trimmed his list to a final five and Kansas was not on it. Green, a 6-foot lead guard from Philadelphia is now down to Duke, Kentucky, Villanova, Syracuse and Temple. Ranked No. 23 overall by Rivals.com, Green visited Kentucky’s Big Blue Madness over the weekend and some analysts believe the Wildcats have become the team to beat, with Syracuse also strongly in the mix. In early August, Rivals recruiting guru Eric Bossi predicted that Green would land at Duke. Regardless of where he winds up, we now know it won’t be at Kansas, which remains heavily involved with a few other five-star Class of 2017 point guards, including Collin Sexton, Trae Young and Trevon Duval. Sexton and Duval visited for Late Night and Young has a visit to campus scheduled for later this month.
FSHS girls golf places 11th at state, Goebel leads in 29th bnightengale@ljworld.com
ack at the Class 6A state golf tournament for the fourth and final time, Free State High senior Anne Goebel was more relaxed than ever. Older and wiser, Goebel stopped overthinking and she played the best golf of her career at the end of the season. In her final tournament Monday, she carded a 97 and tied for 29th place at the Country Club of Leawood, leading the Firebirds to 11th in the team standings among 12 teams. Free State junior Tori Hoopingarner followed in 44th place with a 102, senior Claire Yackley shot a 111 for 59th place and senior Macie Reeb was in 69th place with a 115. In the past three years, Goebel said she has played “really terrible” at the state tournament. Monday was the first time she cracked the top-60.
Bobby Nightengale/ Journal-World Photo
FREE STATE SENIOR ANNE GOEBEL lines up a putt on hole No. 3 Monday in the Class 6A girls golf state event.
By Bobby Nightengale
B
‘
to a re th
“I was more carefree,” Goebel said. “Mentally I was more relaxed today knowing that it was my last tournament ever in high school. I was just going out there playing golf and having fun.” Playing through windy conditions, Goebel made up for it with strong putting on the greens. Starting at hole No. 10, Goebel shot a 47 on the back nine and a 50 on the front.
> GOLF, 3D
When you punt a football 82 yards in a Big 12 game, odds are people will take notice. Kansas junior punter Cole Moos found out as much Monday, when the conference named him its special teams player of the week. Moos’ monster punt in the Jayhawks’ 49-7 loss at Baylor came on his first kick of the day, with the wind at his back. The ball took a massive forward bounce once the Bears didn’t field it, and traveled just shy of 40 yards via a fortuitous roll. Still, Moos added a 52-yard punt in the first quarter, and punts of 73 yards and 52 yards in the fourth, helping his average for the day reach 50.4 yards, on eight attempts . The Jayhawks hadn’t received any Big 12 Player of the Week distinctions in more than two years — since cornerback Dexter McDonald was named the conference’s top defensive performer of the
> MOOS, 3D
> HOOPS, 4D
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Arrieta to start vs Hill as NLCS shifts to LA By Beth Harris AP Sports Writer
Los Angeles (ap) — Back in spring training, Joe Maddon cornered Jake Arrieta for a frank conversation about his workload during the upcoming season. Maddon knew Arrieta would be upset any time he got lifted early, especially after tossing 229 innings for the Chicago Cubs on his way to winning the NL Cy Young Award in 2015. “But understand it’s going to pay off in the latter part of the season,” Maddon counseled his ace. “Our intention is to play deeply into October and possibly November this year.” Maddon knew Arrieta might just feel invincible after shouldering the burden of huge innings while compiling a 1.77 ERA. He didn’t want the righthander thinking he could pitch that much every year. Arrieta bought into Maddon’s plan, and it’s gotten him to the NL Championship Series with 197 1/3 innings and a 3.10 ERA. “I’m in a much better place,” Arrieta said Monday before the Cubs worked out. “Going through that last year has prepared myself as well as the rest of the guys mentally for a longer run this year, and we’ve been able to handle the moments mentally a lot better as well as physically.” With the series tied 1-1, Arrieta starts for the Cubs against Los Angeles’ Rich Hill tonight at Dodger Stadium. Arrieta threw his first career no-hitter in the venerable ballpark on Aug. 30 last year in a game that began shortly after 5 p.m., the same starting time as Game 3. Shadows can creep between the mound and home plate at that hour, which Arrieta believes favors the pitchers. “I really think it can be difficult to pick up spin,” he said. “From a pitching perspective, you want to be aggressive early because of the fact that it is a little more difficult to pick up some rotations and spin on pitches when the shadow’s kind of in between and then it starts to creep out to the mound.” In his no-hitter last year, a 2-0 victory, Arrieta struck out 12 and allowed two baserunners — one on an error and the other via walk. The mound is a place Arrieta feels comfortable. He complemented the Dodgers ground crew for creating a consistent surface that gives him confidence in his positioning and footing. “When you’ve been in these situations before, it makes it a lot easier just to kind of take that deep breath, focus on your execution and go from there,” he said. Hill follows Clayton Kershaw as the second straight lefthander to start for the Dodgers in the NLCS, and he draws inspiration from the three-time Cy Young Award winner. “He’s got the stuff, right? You can’t argue that,” Hill said. “But then there’s another level of that competitiveness that comes out where if you’re on the other side and you’re down on one knee, he’s going to put you away. That’s something that when I see that, you just never quit, you never give up, you continue to attack.” Hill had a 2.12 ERA during the regular season allowed a combined five runs in seven innings starting Game 2 of the NL Division Series against Washington and returning on short rest in the decisive Game 5. Now, Hill returns on regular rest and manager Dave Roberts said the finger blisters that have bothered the left-hander this season are not an issue. “With Richie, it’s an inningby-inning thing, so we’ll just keep our fingers crossed,” Roberts said. “Because all things being equal, the blister holds, I really, really like our chances.”
HIGH SCHOOLS HUB:
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KANSAS
TODAY • Tennis at ITA Regionals, at Minneapolis, all day
On football: Run it, run it some more
FREE STATE HIGH TODAY WEST
SOUTH
By Barry Wilner
• Volleyball vs. LHS, 6 p.m. • Boys soccer at Shawnee Mission South, 7 p.m.
AP Pro Football Writer AL EAST
Even the guys who tote the ball recognize that the NFL is a passer’s league. No argument LAWRENCE HIGH SOUTH AL CENTRAL here. WEST TODAY As this week shows, how • Volleyball at FSHS, 6 p.m. ever, running backs still have AL EAST • Boys soccer vs. Shawnee a prime role in the outcome of Mission North, 7 p.m. games. When the weather turns AL WEST cool, then cold, then frigid, and the winds begin to whip on the VERITAS CHRISTIAN AL CENTRAL tundras, they will become even TODAY more critical. • Volleyball at Veritas triangular, So it was enlightening to see 5 p.m. runners young and old making AFC TEAM LOGOS 081312: Helmet and team logos for the AFC teams; various sizes; stand-alone; staff; ETA 5 p.m. a difference — or keeping their AL WEST teams in games. From veterans Marcio Jose Sanchez/AP Photo LATEST LINE Frank Gore, Jonathan Stewart and especially LeSean McCoy , KANSAS CITY CHIEFS RUNNING BACK SPENCER WARE (32) runs against NFL to kids such as rookie sensation Oakland Raiders safety Karl Joseph (42) during the second half of an Favorite.............. Points (O/U)........... Underdog Ezekiel Elliott, Spencer Ware, NFL football game Sunday in Oakland, Calif. Thursday Week 7 Matt Jones and Jay Ajayi, it was AFC TEAM LOGOS 081312: Helmet and team logos for the AFC teams; various sizes; stand-alone; staff; ETA 5 p.m. impressive, win or lose. like all of us here in Buffalo, we one of three RBs the Chiefs GREEN BAY...................9 1/2 (45.5).......................Chicago Sunday McCoy and Gore have all- think, ‘Hey man, you’ve played can use moving forward. Their x-NY Giants.......................3 (44)....................Los Angeles star credentials and are show- great.’ star, Jamaal Charles, finally is Minnesota...................... 2 1/2 (40)............PHILADELPHIA ing they remain dangerous “And he’s like, ‘No, I can play back from a long rehab after KANSAS CITY........... 7 (50)............New Orleans and dependable. McCoy ran 19 better.’ And I guess he was right, knee surgery, and Charcan- DETROIT............................ 1 (48.5)...................Washington times for 140 yards and scored but we would have been happy drick West showed last year CINCINNATI.................... 9 1/2 (46).....................Cleveland three touchdowns as the Bills, with how he played last year.” with Charles sidelined that he Buffalo................................3 (45).................................MIAMI who want to pound oppoWare, Jones and Ajayi can be the main man behind JACKSONVILLE................. 1 (49)............................ Oakland TENNESSEE........................3 (49)....................Indianapolis nents on the ground, thumped weren’t big factors last year. Alex Smith. NY JETS.............................. 1 (43).........................Baltimore the 49ers 45-16 with their best Ware had 72 carries for Kan“Having them both out there, ATLANTA........................ 6 1/2 (53).................... San Diego rushing performance in 24 sas City, though he scored six that’s a win-win, I think,” coach Tampa Bay........................2 (48).............SAN FRANCISCO years. Gore, at 33, became the times; Jones rushed 144 times Andy Reid said of Ware and New England....................7 (46)....................PITTSBURGH first Colt in 3 1/2 years to rush for 490 yards as a backup to Charles. “They’re completely ARIZONA............................1 (43.5)............................ Seattle Monday, Oct 24th for more than 100 yards, getting Alfred Morris in Washington. different players, and they both DENVER..............................7 (41.5)..........................Houston 106 in a 26-23 loss at Houston. Ajayi barely saw the field in did a nice job.” x-at Twickenham Stadium-London, England. Jones also was part of a com“He’s just very dynamic,” Miami with 49 carries. Bye Week: Carolina, Dallas. Bills quarterback Tyrod TayOn Sunday, they were mittee of runners. Washington College Football lor, a pretty good runner him- prime-timers as Ware went for already has a solid corps of re- Favorite................... Points................ Underdog self, said of McCoy. “I’ve said 131 yards and a touchdown on ceivers, particularly when tight Thursday this before. Whether it’s in 34 runs, Jones had 135 on 16 and end Jordan Reed is healthy — VIRGINIA TECH..................4 1/2..................Miami-Florida the running game or the pass- scored once, while Ajayi had he missed the win over Phila- Troy......................................9 1/2........... SOUTH ALABAMA ing game, he’s a playmaker. He a breakout game in a stunning delphia with a concussion. In BOISE ST..............................7 1/2......................................Byu Friday wants the ball, and when he upset of Pittsburgh with 204 Jones, Robert Kelley and Chris South Florida....................6 1/2..............................TEMPLE gets the ball he knows what to yards on 25 carries and two Thompson, they could find CALIFORNIA........................2 1/2...............................Oregon do with it, and he can create scores — including a clinching plenty of offensive balance. SAN DIEGO ST...................23 1/2.....................San Jose St That trio combined for 231 plays. Some of those plays he 62-yard scamper. Saturday made out there from the back“From last week, coach yards and a touchdown against ARMY.......................................18.......................North Texas WESTERN MICHIGAN.......22 1/2..........Eastern Michigan field position, there are only (Adam) Gase told me that he the Eagles. “I think just us three guys BOSTON COLLEGE............5 1/2...........................Syracuse one or two guys — maybe just would feature me more in the a-MINNESOTA.....................OFF...............................Rutgers him — who can do that in the run game and he would try to coming together and believ- CINCINNATI. ........................... 2......................East Carolina National Football League.” get me a good amount of touch- ing in ourselves and going WEST VIRGINIA......... 4 1/2.......................... Tcu It’s not just him Tyrod, es,” said Ajayi, whose previous out there and doing things we NORTHWESTERN................1 1/2...............................Indiana know we can do,” Kelley said. NEBRASKA.........................23 1/2..............................Purdue though few runners have as high was 13 carries. good a pedigree or nickname, The Dolphins had to do “That’s why they got us here.” Oklahoma St............... 24.....................KANSAS Even more promising for the Wisconsin.............................. 3...................................... IOWA “Shady,” as McCoy. something with their offense You can be sure Bills coach stagnant and their season spi- rushing game’s influence in the North Carolina..................... 8...............................VIRGINIA ..........................20.............North Carolina St Rex Ryan will keep feeding raling away. Ajayi was the an- NFL moving forward in 2016 is LOUISVILLE. TOLEDO...................................10..............Central Michigan McCoy the ball, too. swer, and he certainly will get that such stars as Le’Veon Bell, BALL ST.................................. 2.....................................Akron “I think, talking to LeSean, more opportunities because DeMarco Murray, Todd Gurley Louisiana Tech....................15.....................FLORIDA INTL he was really disappointed the Dolphins’ air game is so in- and Doug Martin weren’t fac- AIR FORCE..............................16.................................. Hawaii tors in Week 6. Look for them UL-Lafayette........................ 7..............................TEXAS ST how he played last year,” Ryan consistent. said. “And all of us as we know, Ware’s numbers are even to be heading into November APPALACHIAN ST............ 21 1/2................................. Idaho SOUTH CAROLINA............20 1/2...............Massachusetts and I’ve told him several times, more impressive because he’s and December. BALTIMORE ORIOLES
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MARSHALL.............................14.............................Charlotte NEW MEXICO.........................17...........................UL-Monroe NORTHERN ILLINOIS....... 21 1/2..............................Buffalo Central Florida.................3 1/2..................CONNECTICUT Ohio......................................... 3................................KENT ST Washington St..................... 7.........................ARIZONA ST Oklahoma.....................14............... TEXAS TECH b-MICHIGAN.........................OFF................................. Illinois Houston.............................20 1/2....................................SMU Memphis................................ 3......................................NAVY Wyoming................................ 4................................ NEVADA Toronto — An Ontario judge quashed a last- logo on its front and Cleveland’s jerseys remain TULSA...................................11 1/2................................Tulane minute effort to attempt to bar the Cleveland adorned with the Wahoo logo on one sleeve. WASHINGTON....................35 1/2........................ Oregon St Indians from using their team name and “Chief BOWLING GREEN...............4 1/2.......................Miami-Ohio Wahoo” logo during Monday’s night playoff game Mississippi St....................... 3............................KENTUCKY FOOTBALL in Toronto. UTSA........................................ 9.......................................Utep WESTERN KENTUCKY.........13......................Old Dominion The legal challenge by indigenous activist KANSAS ST................... 3...........................Texas Douglas Cardinal came hours before the team STANFORD..........................2 1/2........................... Colorado Bellefonte, Pa. — A Penn State lawyer on played the Blue Jays in Game 3 of the AL Chamc-MARYLAND.......................OFF.......................Michigan St Monday turned claims in a civil lawsuit against a pionship Series. MISSOURI............................6 1/2................Middle Tenn St former coach who offered key testimony against The long-standing logo, which appears on Georgia Southern........... 13 1/2............. NEW MEXICO ST Jerry Sandusky, saying it’s not the school’s fault some team caps and jerseys, depicts a grinning, d-UCLA..................................OFF.....................................Utah he can’t find a coaching position but rather a rered-faced cartoon with a feather headband. LSU........................................... 6...........................Mississippi AUBURN...............................9 1/2...........................Arkansas sponse to the man’s own failure to stop the child Ontario Superior Court Justice Tom McEwen Ohio St....................................19...............................PENN ST dismissed Cardinal’s application on Monday and sexual abuse he witnessed. ALABAMA........................... 16 1/2.......................Texas A&M Attorney Nancy Conrad cited Mike Mcsaid he would give his reasons at a later date. UNLV.....................................2 1/2......................Colorado St Queary’s own words from an email as the defaAt least 27 lawyers representing the CleveUTAH ST.................................16............................ Fresno St mation and whistleblower lawsuit began, saying land Indians, Major League Baseball and others, a-Minnesota QB M. Leidner is questionable. the national media and public ruined him — not including the plaintiffs, attended the hearing, b-Illinois QB W. Lunt is questionable. Penn State. which was moved to a larger court room to acc-Maryland QB P. Hills is questionable. d-UCLA QB J. Rosen is questionable. “He should not be permitted to exploit the commodate the crowd. CFL tragedy that was caused by Jerry Sandusky The Indians dropped Wahoo as their primary Favorite.............. Points (O/U)........... Underdog logo two years ago, switching to a block “C’’, and for his own personal financial gain,” she said. Friday reduced the logo’s visibility. However, one of the McQueary is seeking at least $4 million in lost Week 18 caps the Indians wear at home has the “Wahoo” wages and other damages. OTTAWA.......................... 4 1/2 (53)...................... Hamilton CALGARY...........................17 (52)........................... Toronto Saturday SASKATCHEWAN............7 (49.5).........................Montreal B.C. LIONS..........................2 (58)........................Edmonton MLB Playoffs Favorite............... Odds (O/U)............ Underdog National League Championship Series Hockey Time Net Cable Barcelona v. Manchester City 1:30 p.m. FS2 153, 227 TODAY Best of Seven Series Flyers at Blackhawks 7:30 p.m. NBCS. 38, 238 Series is tied at 1-1 Baseball Time Net Cable Blues at Canucks 9 p.m. FSN 36, 236 Women’s Soccer Time Net Cable Chicago Cubs.............Even-6 (6.5).............LA DODGERS Indians at Blue Jays 3 p.m. TBS 51, 251 American League Championship Series U.S. v. Switzerland 8 p.m. ESPN2 34, 234 Cubs at Dodgers 7 p.m. FS1 150, 227 Best of Seven Series WEDNESDAY Game Four Baseball Time Net Cable Women’s Volleyball Time Net Cable TORONTO......................No Line (X)...................Cleveland Soccer Time Net Cable NHL Cubs at Dodgers 7 p.m. FS1 150, 227 Rutgers at Michigan St. 5 p.m. BTN 147, 170, Favorite............... Goals (O/U)........... Underdog Leicester City v. Copen. 1:30 p.m. ESPN2 34, 234 Madrid v. Legia Warsaw 1:30 p.m. FSN 36, 172, 171, 237 Anaheim.......................Even-1/2 (5)..............NEW JERSEY Basketball Time Net Cable 236 Baylor at Iowa St. 6 p.m. ESPNU 35, 235 WASHINGTON................ 1/2-1 (5.5)...................... Colorado NY ISLANDERS..........Even-1/2 (5.5).................. San Jose Knicks at Celtics 6:30 p.m. ESPN 33, 233 Leverkusen v. Tottenham 1:30 p.m. ESNDEP 142 TCU at Texas 7 p.m. FSN 36, 172, MONTREAL.................Even-1/2 (5.5)............... Pittsburgh Warriors v. Lakers 9 p.m. ESPN 33, 233 FS1 150, 227 TAMPA BAY.....................1/2-1 (5).............................Florida 236 Portugal v. Borussia 1:30 p.m. FS2 153 Ohio St. at Penn St. 7 p.m. BTN 147, 170, OTTAWA......................Even-1/2 (5.5).....................Arizona Golf Time Net Cable NASHVILLE................Even-1/2 (5.5).........................Dallas 171 MINNESOTA.................Even-1/2 (5)..............Los Angeles 9:30 p.m. Golf 156, 289 College Soccer Time Net Cable PGA Tour: CIMB Classic CHICAGO......................... 1/2-1 (5.5)................Philadelphia LSU at Missouri 7 p.m. SECN 157 Akron at Penn St. 6 p.m. BTN 147, 170, EDMONTON................Even-1/2 (5.5)....................Carolina Time Net Cable Auburn at Mississippi 8 p.m. ESPNU 35, 235 CALGARY....................Even-1/2 (5.5)......................Buffalo 171, 237 Soccer St. Louis.......................Even-1/2 (5)..............VANCOUVER Paris Saint-Germain v. Basel 1:30 p.m. ESPN2 34, 234 Home Team in CAPS Time Net Cable Basketball Time Net Cable Bayern Munich v. Eindhoven 1:30 p.m. FSN 36, 172, Hockey (c) TRIBUNE CONTENT AGENCY, LLC
| SPORTS WRAP |
Judge dismisses attempt to ban Indians’ name, logo
Penn State civil trial begins
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L awrence J ournal -W orld
Tuesday, October 18, 2016
| 3D
Beaty: QB competition ‘always open’ passes (64.1 percent), for 437 yards, while suffering 10 sacks. The Jayhawks finished their latest blowout road loss, at BU, with a season-low 134 passing yards — and Willis only accounted for 89. As Kansas (1-5 overall, 0-3 Big 12) begins this
week’s preparation for an 11 a.m. Saturday meeting with Oklahoma State (4-2, 2-1) at Memorial Stadium, Beaty indicated he once again will review the subject of starting quarterback. “Any team would be frustrated with the turnovers and particularly when you believe most of those, if not all of them, are preventable,” Beaty said. “When they’re preventable you’ve gotta do a good job of lookin’ inside and making sure you’re giving yourselves the best chance to be successful on both sides of the ball. And we’ve al-
ways been a competitive team here, when it comes to being competing to play, and we’ve got guys that are all capable of doing the job at every position, so we’ll continue to evaluate that as we move forward each week.” On the season, Wilis, who played sparingly as a backup rotating in the first few weeks, has completed 72 of 117 throws (61.5 percent) for 811 yards, with three touchdowns and seven interceptions. Defenses have sacked him 16 times. Fourth-year junior Montell Cozart, who started the first four
games for KU and hasn’t appeared in one since, has completed 57 of 91 passes (62.6 percent) for 581 yards, with six touchdowns and four interceptions. Neither Rhode Island, Ohio, Memphis nor Texas Tech sacked Cozart. Playing exclusively in late-game mop-up duty, redshirt freshman Carter Stanley is 12-for-20 on passes (60 percent) for 138 yards, with one touchdown and one interception — both coming Saturday at Baylor. The Bears sacked Stanley, as well, marking another first for the backup.
Lopez
Hoopingarner
Reeb
Yackley
tone for the rest of her round. She had a strong cheering section with LHS junior-varsity golfers walking the course in support. “I’ve just been playing more relaxed and I’m not as nervous,” Lopez said. “I think that really helped. My mental game is a lot better than it was last year.” Lawrence sophomore Emily Johnson took 86th with a 146 in the fourth varsity tournament of her career. “Emily reminds of
where Bea was last year,” Schmitt said. “She had some great holes and she had some holes that she would like to improve on. That’s just what experience brings. I’m proud of them for just getting through it. There were challenging conditions out there on a challenging course.” Washburn Rural won the team title with 337 strokes and junior Megan Lucas captured the individual championship with a seven-overpar 79.
Moos
John Hadl owns the program record, with a 94yard punt against Oklahoma in 1959. On the season, Moos has punted 38 times, averaging 41.8 yards. He has seven boots of 50plus yards. Nine of his kicks have been downed inside the opponent’s 20-yard line, while just one has gone for a touchback. A transfer from Northeastern Oklahoma A & M, Moos joined Kansas this past offseason.
By Benton Smith basmith@ljworld.com
University of Kansas football coach David Beaty didn’t name a new starting quarterback Monday morning on the Big 12 coaches conference call, but he didn’t necessarily provide a thorough endorsement of incumbent Ryan Willis, either. “Our competition is always open,” Beaty said on the matter of the Jayhawks’ starting QB before pausing a few seconds. “Just ’cause you start it doesn’t mean you’re gon-
BRIEFLY
Beaty
Willis
na finish it.” Willis, named the firststringer two weeks ago, before KU’s game against TCU, has thrown six interceptions and lost one fumble in his two turns as the starter. In total against TCU and Baylor, Willis completed 41 of 64
Cozart
Golf
Hedges wins state golf title
CONTINUED FROM 1D
One week after winning a regional title, Bishop Seabury freshman Faith Hedges completed a historic season by capturing a Class 3-2-1A state title Monday at Buffalo Dunes Golf Course. Battling through the wind, Hedges shot a 12-over-par 84, beating runner-ups Reagan Boone, of Eureka, and Karee Dinkel, of Thomas More Prep, by three strokes. “There was a lot of tall native grass near the fairways and I worked extra on chipping and putting lately, so that helped, including a lucky chip-in birdie on 17,” Hedges said through a text message on her way back from Garden City. Hedges is the first golfer in school history to win a state championship.
Team goes winless at home
A few weeks ago, Goebel carded personal-best scores at three straight tournaments, continually improving her shots. “I had a lot of fun this year,” Goebel said. “It was probably the best year I’ve ever had.” Goebel and Hoopingarner competed in the state tournament last year, but Yackley and Reeb made their varsity debuts this year and capped it with a chance to play at state. “I didn’t really think I’d be on varsity this year, so just being on the team, first of all, was really amazing,” Yackley said. Reeb recovered from a slow start and shot a 50 on the front nine — her final nine holes. She nailed a 25-foot putt on her last hole, the ninth green, drawing cheers from the crowd and a wide smile
from Reeb. Yackley said she was helped by her drives, drilling fairways to make up for some problems with her putting. “The first hole is always the hardest because it’s like everyone is watching,” Yackley said. “Then you get toward the sixth or seventh hole and no one is really there anymore, and you can kind of loosen up and not really worry.”
sophomore Beatrice Lopez, back at state for the second time, tied for 56th place with a 109. With strong putting and better than usual chipping, Lopez improved by 26 strokes from state last season. “She rose to the challenge and keeps improving,” LHS coach Jennifer Schmitt said. “She had some shots that could’ve been better but she had some holes that were amazing.” Lopez leads LHS golf Lopez carded a 53 on Lawrence High the back nine to set the
Bishop Seabury’s volleyball team went 0-2, with losses to Tonganoxie and Perry-Lecompton, in its final home triangular of the regular season. The Seahawks began the night with a two-set loss to the Chieftains, 25-11 and 25-17. In the final match, the Seahawks fell to the Kaws in three sets, 25-11,15-25, 2514, with the lone win coming in set two. Lindsey Hornberger led the way with 11 kills of the team’s 26. Vivian Aubel also notched six kills, with four Nick Krug/Journal-World Photo in the second set against KANSAS’ COLE MOOS (36) PUNTS from the Jayhawks’ end zone late in the fourth quarter on Perry-Lecompton. Sophia Ostlund recorded 26 assists. Saturday at McLane Stadium in Waco, Texas.
DR. KEVIN LENAHAN OPTOMETRIST
CONTINUED FROM 1D
weekend in September of 2014. Moos, from Broken Arrow, Okla., became the first KU special teams player to win the weekly award since punter Trevor Pardula, in September, 2013. The 82-yard punt put Moos in a tie for the fifthlongest in KU history, with Curtis Ansel (2002) and Dean Royal (1997).
the spectacle
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NTERolS EMILFrYee StVatE e High Scho
School: Year: Senior try Sport: Cross coun nd at hment: Placed seco Week’s Accomplis ading le ue meet in 18:18, the Sunflower Leag le. FSHS to a team tit es to ta Favorite Food: Po SM onent: Molly Born, Most Talented Opp Northwest Ms. O’Neil (Math) Smartest Teacher: e: Emily Infeld Favorite Pro Athlet iPod: “The Greatest” (Sia) on Most Played Song
INEEigN JAY FrD ol ee State H h Scho
School: Year: Senior Sport: Football Made several tack t: en hm is pl m co Ac Week’s to a mble to lead FSHS les and forced a fu e East. th 28-14 victory at Ola filet wrapped in bacon k ea Favorite Food: St s, SM onent: Zach Witter Most Talented Opp West Ms. Elliot (English) Smartest Teacher: e: Brett Favre se” Favorite Pro Athlet od: “Canadian Goo iP on ng So ed ay Most Pl (Lil Uzi Vert)
4D
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Tuesday, October 18, 2016
SPORTS
.
L awrence J ournal -W orld
AMERICAN LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES GAME 3
Indians top Blue Jays The Associated Press
Indians 4, Blue Jays 2 Toronto (Ap) — Andrew Miller and the Cleveland bullpen stitched together their most impressive feat yet in these American League playoffs. Taking over in the first inning after Trevor Bauer’s bloody exit, the relief corps held off the Toronto Blue Jays in a 4-2 victory Monday night that moved the Indians within one win of their first pennant since 1997. Jason Kipnis and Mike Napoli homered for the Indians, who have a 3-0 lead in the AL Championship Series. They are unbeaten in six playoff games this year and can complete their second consecutive sweep on Tuesday. Six relievers combined for 25 outs and 128 pitches, limiting Toronto to two runs and seven hits. Miller got four outs for the save. “If anybody has a hiccup, we probably lose,” manager Terry Francona said. “They all made
pitches against some really good hitters.” Indians ace Corey Kluber is scheduled to start Game 4 on short rest after Bauer’s dronerelated finger injury created more upheaval in a rotation that’s been short-handed all postseason. Bauer faced four batters before getting pulled when his stitched-up right pinkie began dripping blood. Enter those stingy relievers, who pitched the Indians to a Division Series sweep over Boston and have them on the verge of another. Cleveland is one win from its sixth World Series appearance. “It’s a good feeling,” Kipnis said. “We’ve still got one more to get there, and it’s going to be tough. We know these guys. Just kind of like the Boston series — we don’t want to wait around for them to figure it out. We want to get to them now.” After Bauer left with two on and two outs in the first, the final 25 Toronto outs were distributed as follows: four each
for Dan Otero and Jeff Manship, three for Zach McAllister, five each for winner Bryan Shaw and Cody Allen, and four for Miller. “We felt like we had an opportunity with some of their lower-leverage guys coming out of the bullpen, but they’ve got good arms,” Toronto outfielder Kevin Pillar said. “It makes it tough when you’re facing a different guy every inning, every at-bat.” The hard-hitting Blue Jays have mustered only three runs in the series and have never led. Kipnis led off the sixth with a home run to rightcenter field for a 3-2 edge, and Jose Ramirez added an RBI single. Suddenly, the Indians were just a few outs from being able to turn the game over to Allen and Miller. They appeared in that order, yet another instance in which Francona — who was Curt Schilling’s manager with Boston during the famous bloody sock playoff game in 2004 — maneuvered his bullpen
unencumbered by rigid roles. Allen, who usually closes, entered in the seventh with a runner on and nobody out. A two-out walk to Jose Bautista put the potential tying run on, but Josh Donaldson’s liner to left field stayed up long enough for Coco Crisp to make a sliding catch. Cleveland Toronto ab r h bi ab r h bi C.Sntna dh 4 1 0 0 Butista rf 3 0 1 0 Kipnis 2b 4 1 1 1 Dnldson 3b 3 0 1 0 Lindor ss 3 0 0 0 Encrncn 1b 4 0 0 0 Napoli 1b 3 2 2 2 Tlwtzki ss 3 0 0 0 Jose.Rm 3b 4 0 1 1 Ru.Mrtn c 4 0 0 0 Chsnhll rf 4 0 0 0 Sunders dh 3 1 1 1 Crisp lf 3 0 1 0 D.Nvrro ph-dh 1 0 1 0 Ra.Dvis lf 0 0 0 0 Pillar cf 4 0 1 0 Naquin cf 4 0 1 0 Carrera lf 3 1 2 0 R.Perez c 4 0 1 0 M.Upton ph 1 0 0 0 Goins 2b 2 0 0 1 Smoak ph 1 0 0 0 Barney 2b 1 0 0 0 Totals 33 4 7 4 Totals 33 2 7 2 Cleveland 100 102 000—4 Toronto 010 010 000—2 DP-Cleveland 1. LOB-Cleveland 6, Toronto 7. 2B-Napoli (2), Naquin (1). 3B-Carrera (1). HR-Kipnis (2), Napoli (1), Saunders (1). SB-Crisp (1), Pillar (1). CS-Lindor (1). IP H R ER BB SO Cleveland Bauer 2/3 0 0 0 2 1 Otero 1 1/3 2 1 1 0 0 Manship 1 1/3 1 0 0 0 1 McAllister BS,1 1 1 1 1 0 0 Shaw W,1-0 1 2/3 2 0 0 0 2 Allen H,1 1 2/3 0 0 0 1 2 Miller S,1-1 1 1/3 1 0 0 0 3 Toronto Stroman L,0-1 5 1/3 3 4 4 3 5 Biagini 2/3 1 0 0 0 0 Grilli 2/3 1 0 0 0 1 Cecil 1 1/3 0 0 0 1 1 Osuna 1 2 0 0 0 1 B.Shaw pitched to 1 batter in the 7th WP-Stroman, Biagini. T-3:23. A-49,507 (49,282).
NFL ROUNDUP
Johnson, Cardinals roll past listless Jets 28-3 as the quarterback goes,” Fitzpatrick said. “I have got to play better.” Smith’s lone series at quarterback ended when he was intercepted by Tyrann Mathieu with 4:20 to play. “The game was 28-3 with eight minutes left in the game,” Bowles said. “We weren’t doing anything else. I just wanted to give him some reps. Like a relief pitcher, a starting pitcher, on this day you put in the relief pitcher. Fitz will be (the starter) next week.”
years ago. “I say it each and every week. David’s special,” Arizona cornerback Patrick Peterson said. “I mean very, very, very special. We got us one in (No.) 31.” The Cardinals (3-3) won their second in a row to climb back to .500. New York (1-5) lost its fourth straight in a rough return to Arizona for Todd Bowles, who was defensive coordinator for the Cardinals for two seasons before getting the Jets coaching job two years ago. “We’ve won two in a row,” Arizona coach Bruce Arians said. “We’re
still just a .500 ballclub, but I like the way we look right now.” Arians took no great joy in beating Bowles. Their connection goes back to their days together at Temple three decades ago. “I’m glad it’s over,” Arians said. The Jets’ Ryan Fitzpatrick was 16 of 31 for 174 yards and was benched in favor of Geno Smith after New York’s longest drive of the night ended in an interception in the end zone late in the third quarter. “As an offense we are just not consistent right now and the offense goes
N.Y. Jets Arizona
was cut by the Orlando Magic on Sunday. Deemed a long shot to make the roster to CONTINUED FROM 1D begin with, the 6-foot8, 245-pound Alexander Magic waive Alexander appeared in just two Former Kansas for- preseason games and avward Cliff Alexander, eraged 1 point in 5.1 minwho spent the 2015-16 utes. season with the Portland Trailblazers despite go- Ellis recovering ing undrafted following Perry Ellis, who left his lone season at KU, Kansas after a stellar
four-year career as the Jayhawks’ No. 8 scorer (1,798 points) and No. 12 rebounder (834) recently returned to the court after an offseason surgery to repair a sports hernia. Ellis, who went undrafted in last June’s NBA Draft was quickly picked up by the Dallas Mavericks, with whom he played summer league before being cut
and signed by the Charlotte Hornets. Although many believe he will spend the upcoming season playing in the NBA’s Developmental League, the fact that Ellis is back on the floor, playing in some five-onfive settings gives him a chance to get some playing time in the preseason before rosters are finalized.
Houston AD Hunter Yurachek said the Big 12’s decision “is not just about the University of Houston and the Big 12 Conference, it’s about the evolving landscape of collegiate athletics. It does not, and will not, deter our mission of building champions for life.” UConn President Susan Herbst said going through the process was a positive experience and it gave her a better understanding of where UConn stands and what it has to offer. “Most of the schools they were talking to were in our conference,” she said. “I think that shows, without question, that our conference plays at their level and are athletically and academically appropriate to be a Power Five.”
Boren once called the Big 12 “psychologically disadvantaged” as the smallest Power Five league and the only one without a football championship game. “The circumstances have radically changed,” Boren explained Monday when asked about the comment he first made in June 2015. Boren said his interest in expansion was tied to his desire for the Big 12 to start a television network like the ones the Big Ten, Southeastern Conference and Pac-12 have and the one the Atlantic Coast Conference is on target to start with ESPN in 2019. Once it was determined that the market was not there for a network, his interest in expansion cooled. And the Big 12
announced earlier this year it was bringing back its football championship game in 2017, no matter its composition. Knowing now there will be 10 teams, Big 12 athletic directors can move forward with the process of determining if the league will split into divisions and how to determine which teams will play in the championship game. Oklahoma athletic director Joe Castiglione, part of a subcommittee addressing those issues, said that decision could be made by November. As for the site of the title game, he said the league got bids from four potential hosts. While never committing to expansion, the Big 12 has been tossing around the idea for almost two years as it tries
The Associated Press
Cardinals 28, Jets 3. Glendale, Ariz. (ap) — Stopping the run was one of the few things the New York Jets had done well this season. Until they faced David Johnson and the Arizona Cardinals. Johnson rushed for 111 yards and three touchdowns, and the Cardinals shut down the listless Jets 28-3 on Monday night. Johnson scored on runs of 58, 2 and 2 yards while becoming the first player to rush for three scores against the Jets since LeSean McCoy did it five
Hoops
Big 12 CONTINUED FROM 1D
balance and allows for a round-robin schedule in the different sports, which is best for our student-athletes,” Fenves said. “This is the right way to ensure a strong conference moving forward.” Conference officials held interviews in September with Air Force and Colorado State from the Mountain West; Central Florida, Cincinnati, Connecticut, Houston, South Florida, SMU and Tulane from the American Athletic Conference; and BYU, which is a football independent with its other sports in the West Coast Conference.
0 3 0 7 7 7
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SCOREBOARD Class 6A state tournament
Monday at Country Club of Leawood Team scores: Washburn Rural 337, Shawnee Mission East, 350, Olathe Northwest 369, Blue Valley West 370, Manhattan 375, Garden City 389, Gardner-Edgerton 397, Blue Valley Northwest 407, Blue Valley North 408, Hutchinson 415, Free State 425, Derby 426 Top-10 medalists: 1. Megan Lucas, WR, 79; 2. Mia Tovkach, GE, 81; 3. Macie Myers, MAN, 82; 4. Molly Saporito, BVW, 83; 5. Rosalyn Klausner, ONW, 84; 6. Abigail Glynn, WR, 84; 7. Teagan Noblit, SME, 84; 8. Adyson Crough, WR, 86; 9. Victoria Klausner, ONW, 88; 10. Jessica Parker, SME, 88. FSHS results: t-29. Anne Goebel, 97; 44. Tori Hoopingarner, 102; t-59. Claire Yackley, 111; t-69. Macie Reeb, 115. LHS results: t-56. Beatrice Lopez, 109; 86. Emily Johnson, 146.
National Football League
American Conference East W L T Pct PF PA New England 5 1 0 .833 149 91 Buffalo 4 2 0 .667 162 103 Miami 2 4 0 .333 118 134 N.Y. Jets 1 5 0 .167 95 164 South W L T Pct PF PA Houston 4 2 0 .667 108 127 Tennessee 3 3 0 .500 120 127 Jacksonville 2 3 0 .400 101 127 Indianapolis 2 4 0 .333 160 174 North W L T Pct PF PA Pittsburgh 4 2 0 .667 154 123 Baltimore 3 3 0 .500 117 115 Cincinnati 2 4 0 .333 109 145 Cleveland 0 6 0 .000 113 176 West W L T Pct PF PA Oakland 4 2 0 .667 152 163 Denver 4 2 0 .667 140 108 Kansas City 3 2 0 .600 109 102 San Diego 2 4 0 .333 173 155 National Conference East W L T Pct PF PA Dallas 5 1 0 .833 159 107 Washington 4 2 0 .667 142 142 Philadelphia 3 2 0 .600 135 78 N.Y. Giants 3 3 0 .500 116 131 South W L T Pct PF PA Atlanta 4 2 0 .667 199 166 Tampa Bay 2 3 0 .400 94 142 New Orleans 2 3 0 .400 155 168 Carolina 1 5 0 .167 161 176 North W L T Pct PF PA Minnesota 5 0 0 1.000 119 63 Green Bay 3 2 0 .600 114 113 Detroit 3 3 0 .500 150 153 Chicago 1 5 0 .167 101 143 West W L T Pct PF PA Seattle 4 1 0 .800 105 78 Los Angeles 3 3 0 .500 110 137 Arizona 3 3 0 .500 153 104 San Francisco 1 5 0 .167 127 185 Thursday’s Games San Diego 21, Denver 13 Sunday’s Games Jacksonville 17, Chicago 16 New England 35, Cincinnati 17 Detroit 31, Los Angeles 28 Miami 30, Pittsburgh 15 Washington 27, Philadelphia 20 Tennessee 28, Cleveland 26 Buffalo 45, San Francisco 16 N.Y. Giants 27, Baltimore 23 New Orleans 41, Carolina 38 Kansas City 26, Oakland 10 Dallas 30, Green Bay 16 Seattle 26, Atlanta 24 Houston 26, Indianapolis 23, OT Open: Tampa Bay, Minnesota Monday’s Games Arizona, 28, N.Y. Jets 3 Thursday, Oct. 20 Chicago at Green Bay, 7:25 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 23 N.Y. Giants at Los Angeles, 8:30 a.m. Minnesota at Philadelphia, noon
New Orleans at Kansas City, noon Oakland at Jacksonville, noon Baltimore at N.Y. Jets, noon Washington at Detroit, noon Indianapolis at Tennessee, noon Buffalo at Miami, noon Cleveland at Cincinnati, noon Tampa Bay at San Francisco, 3:05 p.m. San Diego at Atlanta, 3:05 p.m. New England at Pittsburgh, 3:25 p.m. Seattle at Arizona, 7:30 p.m. Open: Dallas, Carolina Monday, Oct. 24 Houston at Denver, 7:30 p.m.
2016 Postseason Baseball Glance
WILD CARD Tuesday, Oct. 4: Toronto 5, Baltimore 2, 11 innings Wednesday, Oct. 5: San Francisco 3, N.Y. Mets 0 Division Series (Best-of-5; x-if necessary) American League Toronto 3, Texas 0 Thursday, Oct. 6: Toronto 10, Texas 1 Friday, Oct. 7: Toronto 5, Texas 3 Sunday, Oct. 9: Toronto 7, Texas 6, 10 innings Cleveland 3, Boston 0 Thursday, Oct. 6: Cleveland 5, Boston 4 Friday, Oct. 7: Cleveland 6, Boston 0 Sunday, Oct. 9: Cleveland at Boston, ppd., rain Monday, Oct. 10: Cleveland 4, Boston 3 National League Chicago 3, San Francisco 1 Friday, Oct. 7: Chicago 1, San Francisco 0 Saturday, Oct. 8: Chicago 5, San Francisco 2 Monday, Oct. 10: San Francisco 6, Chicago 5, 13 innings Tuesday, Oct. 11: Chicago 6, San Francisco 5 Los Angeles 3, Washington 2 Friday, Oct. 7: Los Angeles 4, Washington 3 Saturday, Oct. 8: Los Angeles at Washington, ppd., rain Sunday, Oct. 9: Washington 5, Los Angeles 2 Monday, Oct. 10: Washington 8, at Los Angeles 3 Tuesday, Oct. 11: Los Angeles 6, Washington 5 Thursday, Oct. 13: Los Angeles 4, Washington 3 League Championship Series (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) American League All Games on TBS Cleveland 3, Toronto 0 Friday, Oct. 14: Cleveland 2, Toronto 0 Saturday, Oct. 15: Cleveland 2, Toronto 1 Monday, Oct. 17: Cleveland 4, Toronto 2 Today: Cleveland (Kluber 18-9) at Toronto (Sanchez 15-2), 3:08 p.m. x-Wednesday, Oct. 19: Cleveland (Merritt 1-0) at Toronto, 3:08 p.m. x-Friday, Oct. 21: Toronto at Cleveland, 7:08 p.m. x-Saturday, Oct. 22: Toronto at Cleveland, TBA National League Chicago 1, Los Angeles 1 Saturday, Oct. 15: Chicago 8, Los Angeles 4 Sunday, Oct. 16: Los Angeles 1, Chicago 0 Today: Chicago (Arrieta 18-8) at Los Angeles (Hill 3-2), (FS1), 7:08 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 19: Chicago (Lackey 11-8) at Los Angeles (Urias 5-2), (FS1), 7:08 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 20: Chicago (Lester 19-5) at Los Angeles (Maeda 16-11), (FS1), 7:08 p.m. x-Saturday, Oct. 22: Los Angeles at Chicago (Fox or FS1), TBA x-Sunday, Oct. 23: Los Angeles at Chicago (Fox or FS1), TBA
BRIEFLY FSHS boys soccer ties Mill Valley, 1-1 Two overtimes couldn’t help Free State High’s boys soccer team break a tie against Mill
to find ways to increase revenue and improve the conference’s chances to make the College Football Playoff. The Big 12 was left out of the first playoff in 2014, but conference champion Oklahoma made it last season. Boren and Bowlsby both said that expansion could be re-addressed in the future, but said it no longer is an active agenda item. In June, the conference announced record payouts to members of $30 million each, and expansion talk seemed to fade. A month later, at their last board meeting, school presidents were briefed by consultants who explained how the conference could bolster its playoff chances by adding schools and boost revenue. Two new members
Valley, 1-1, on Monday at FSHS. Free State junior Charlie Newsome scored the Firebirds’ lone goal late in the second half. The Firebirds (7-6-2) will travel to Shawnee Mission South today.
would have meant an extra $50 million in TV revenue per year for the Big 12 on contracts with ESPN and Fox that run through 2025. The networks have not been keen on the idea of paying the Big 12 to add schools. When asked if the league would be getting more money from ESPN and FOX for not expanding, Bowlsby wouldn’t get into specifics about negotiations. “We have a new piece of inventory with our championship game, so we’re in the process of discussions with both FOX and ESPN on that,” Bowlsby said. “There are components of the contract that we also talk about in the context of those changes, and we’re going to continue to talk about those.”