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SUNDAY • OCTOBER 25 • 2015
A Thousand Voices
LAWRENCE-DOUGLAS COUNTY FIRE MEDICAL
100 YEARS OF SAVING LIVES From wagons to fire trucks, mission hasn’t changed
Nikki Wentling nwentling@ljworld.com
Survey shows support for new retail center
By Caitlin Doornbos Twitter: @CaitlinDoornbos
A
t 93 years old, Sam Brubaker has been alive almost as long as the fire department in which he spent nearly three decades has been a municipal entity. Brubaker, of Lawrence, joined the Lawrence Fire Department — now known as Lawrence-Douglas County Fire Medical — in 1947 after returning home from World War II the previous year. Firefighting was markedly different then, he said, working in a world where fires were fought without masks
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and rescue ladders were wooden. “Toward the end, we got two Chem-Ox systems, but the canisters were $4.95 each, so the chief said not to use them,” Brubaker said. “And until the last few years I was there, all fire trucks had solid rubber tires and open cabs.” The department’s a lot different now, as LD-
CFM marks its 100th anniversary as a municipal fire department. Since 1915, LDCFM has gone from 10 paid firefighters to 140, one station to five and horse-drawn carriages to $1 million fire engines. Today’s firefighters are also certified medics, so the EMS personnel taking Please see FIRE, page 10A
A
new survey of approximately 1,000 LJWorld.com users found that more than 40 percent — more than any other option — supported a proposal to develop a 250,000-squarefoot shopping center in south Lawrence. But respondents were split when asked whether the new big box stores would draw shoppers away from downtown, and a majority said there was just the right amount of retail options in Lawrence already.
Mike Yoder/Journal-World Photo
Sam Brubaker, 93, spent nearly three decades with the Lawrence Fire Department — now known as Lawrence-Douglas County Fire Medical.
Please see RETAIL, page 8A
Inside: Notable fires in Lawrence history. 10A
Journal-World Poll
New retail center near SLT/Iowa IN FAVOR: 42.5%
UNSURE: 28%
OPPOSED: 29.5%
Margin of error: 2.5% to 2.9%
Google Consumer Surveys sample of 1,000 readers/Journal-World Graphic
‘Ellen’ segment coming to KU “The Ellen DeGeneres Show” is set to engage Kansas University on Monday. The TV show will host a “Twitter event” at KU, said Erinn Barcomb-Peterson, a spokeswoman for the university. Although DeGeneres will not be in Lawrence, the show will have a presence on campus, Barcomb-Peterson said. Follow @TheEllenShow for details.
The crew at No. 1 station in 1955. From left: D. Knight, S. (Buddy) Griffin, D. Headley, M. Lisher, J. Prentice, N. Buffington, unidentified, B. Deay, L. Anderson, K. Dean, C. (Beef) Brubaker, C. (Duchman) Flory, J. Todd, Sam Brubaker, J. Kasberger (Asst. Chief), J. Miller (Chief), F. Sanders (Asst. Chief), unidentified. Lawrence-Douglas County Fire Medical/Journal-World Photo Illustration
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Senior living
Vol.157/No.291 46 pages
Gary Nelson recently took over as executive director for Douglas County Senior Services, and he hit the ground running. Page 6A
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Sunday, October 25, 2015
LAWRENCE • STATE
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L awrence J ournal -W orld
Tiller’s murderer subject to Hard 50
DEATHS RobeRt James ‘bob’ edgin No services are planned for Bob Edgin, 86, Lawrence, who died Friday, Oct. 23, 2015, at Lawrence Memorial Hospital. Full obituary at rumsey-yost.com
Wichita (ap) — Scott Roeder, convicted of killing Wichita abortion provider George Tiller, will be subject to a Hard 50 sentence when he is resentenced, after a Sedgwick County judge rejected a motion contending a change in state law should not to be applied to him. Mark Rudy, chief attorney for the Sedgwick County Public Defender’s Office, argued during a hearing Friday that Roeder should be sentenced to 25 years to life, The Wichita Eagle reported. Roeder’s sentence of life in prison with no chance of parole for 50 years was among many vacated after a 2013 U.S. Supreme Court ruling that juries, not judges, must decide whether aggravating circumstances existed to warrant increasing the penalty for a crime above its mandatory minimum sentence. The Kansas Legislature changed state law to reflect that ruling. Rudy argued the change was unconstitutional and should not be retroactive to Roeder’s case. “The law (prosecutors) are trying to sentence him under didn’t exist in 2010, so he should default to the 25-to-life sentence. The state shouldn’t even be able to ask for 50 to life,” he said. The Sedgwick County District Attorney’s Office said in a written response that legislative changes to the Hard 50 law were merely procedural, are constitutional and didn’t violate Roeder’s rights. Sedgwick County District Court Judge Warren Wilbert rejected the motion, as well as another asking for a new trial based on a change in Kansas law that now defines conception as the beginning of life. Roeder, 57, was convicted of first-degree murder in Tiller’s death and of two counts of aggravated assault for threatening to shoot two other men inside Reformation Lutheran Church on May 31, 2009. He testified that he decided to shoot Tiller because other attempts to stop the doctor from performing abortions had failed. Rudy said he doesn’t expect Roeder to be resentenced until next summer at the earliest. When that happens, a new jury will decide whether Roeder’s crimes warrant a second Hard 50 sentence.
ROADWORK Waterline on East 15th Street expected to be completed Lawrence: l Waterline replacement on East 15th Street from Learnard to Maryland is expected to be completed Friday, weather permitting. l North Sixth Street is expected to remain closed from Walnut to Locust for another week for waterline work related to a new storm sewer pipe. A four-block portion of the levee trail is also closed from the Kansas River Bridge east to the Oak Street boat ramp entrance. The stretch of trail will be closed until Dec. 31. l Waterline work will continue on Arkansas Street from Seventh Street to Ninth Street. No-parking zones may be established and temporary street closings may be necessary. — Staff Reports
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CORRECTIONS
Library to host health care talk The Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St., is hoping to spark a conversation about important health care issues. This afternoon, Jim McLean of the Kansas Health Institute News Service and Sandy Praeger, former Kansas insurance commissioner, will lead that conversation, specifically as it relates to the Affordable Care Act, the library said in a release. The
open discourse is meant to address what can be done to ensure Kansans have access to healthcare. The conversation and a question-and-answer session will take place from 2 to 3 p.m. in the library’s auditorium, the release said. The event is free and open to the public. More information can be found online at lawrencepubliclibrary.org. — Conrad Swanson
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 (785) 832-7154, or email news@ljworld.com.
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Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com/local l Sunday, October 25, 2015 l 3A
School board to review traffic, crosswalk report By Rochelle Valverde Twitter: @RochelleVerde
The Lawrence school board Monday will review changes to school traffic flow and crosswalks at seven schools that were made in response to community concerns.
The traffic and crosswalk report will be presented at the school board meeting Monday evening and includes changes to traffic flow, parking, and location and number of school crossings and crossing guards. Many of the seven
schools in the report are in high-traffic areas or have busy streets nearby that students need to cross to get to school, such as Cordley, Pinkney and Sunset Hill elementary schools. Over the past year, there have been numerous com-
munity concerns regarding traffic flow and school crossings that impact schools in the district, the introduction for the report states. The City of Lawrence has worked closely with the school district and has developed a process to address concerns.
The report will update the school board on changes and upcoming plans at the seven schools. About a year ago, the city began work on its Safe Routes to School plan with a goal of making paths to school more walkable and bikeable for kids. The
project — in partnership with the Lawrence school district, the LawrenceDouglas County Health Department, the Lawrence-Douglas County Metropolitan Planning Organization, LiveWell Please see TRAFFIC, page 4A
Rare, 30-inch-long eel caught in Kansas River By Conrad Swanson Twitter: @Conrad_Swanson
John Young/Journal-World Photo
MARY PAT PELLETT, RIGHT, OF LAWRENCE, CHASES DOWN A LOOSE BALL during the first game of the Granny Basketball League in Kansas Saturday evening at Holcomb Park Recreation Center, 2700 W. 27th St.
‘Grayhawkers’ are first Granny Basketball team in Kansas By Conrad Swanson Twitter: @Conrad_Swanson
It’s not often you see an 81-yearold woman take a shoulder in the chest and fall hard to the floor only to bounce back up a moment later, smiling. But that’s exactly
what Marjorie Beatty did Saturday evening at Holcom Park Recreation Center, 2700 W. 27th St. Beatty popped up, of course, because she was in the middle of a basketball game. “I’m from Iowa,� she said about her fall. “Corn fed.�
Beatty and several other women from out of state were in Lawrence to help start up another Granny Basketball League for women 50 and older. The league began in Iowa in Please see GRANNY, page 7A
A rare fish typically found closer to the Gulf of Mexico or in the Atlantic Ocean was reeled in out of the Kansas River in Lawrence not long ago, according to the Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism. On Sept. 11, Tim Smith, of Larned, pulled a 30-inch-long American Eel out of the river from off the Bowersock Dam, said Ron Kaufman, a spokesman for the department. It has been around 10 years since another eel was documented in the state. The American Eel can be found in salt or fresh water, Kaufman said. They spawn in the Sargasso Sea in the Atlantic Ocean. “So it would have migrated from the Atlantic through the Gulf, up the Mississippi,� he said. “It would have taken a turn at Saint Louis to get to the Missouri River and another left to get into the Kansas River.� Up the Kansas River the eel traveled until it was blocked by the dam from
going upstream farther. For one eel to make the entire trip isn’t all that impossible, Kaufman said, and it’s possible others are lurking in the area, but unlikely they’ll be seen. “They’re pretty secretive and active mainly in the evening and night,� he said. “I think it’s possible that there are more in the Kansas (River) and possibly more around the Bowersock Dam area.� Smith caught the eel using a rod and reel with a worm for bait, Kaufman said, but it wasn’t immediately clear if he kept the fish or threw it back. Although the capture of this eel isn’t the first and likely won’t be the last, it sure makes for an interesting fishing outing, Kaufman said. “It’s always a matter of interest when something like this is caught,� he said. “We occasionally get reports of other species that aren’t often seen, and for our biologist this was likely pretty intriguing.� — Reporter Conrad Swanson can be reached at cswanson@ljworld.com or 832-7284.
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Sunday, October 25, 2015
LAWRENCE • STATE
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L awrence J ournal -W orld
BRIEFLY Topeka man offended by ‘ghost tour’ Topeka — A Topeka man is upset that a ghost tour charged people to enter a site where his grandfather was shot to death while working as a police officer. Ghost Tours of Kansas hosted an event at Topeka’s Moose Lodge earlier this month. The lodge is
where Clarence Shields, a police officer, was shot to death in April 1955 when he surprised two burglars. The Wichita Eagle reports Shields’ grandson, Joey Little, says his family is bothered because charging admission made the site an entertainment venue.
free
Mike Yoder/Journal-World Photo
A THREE-PANEL, 30-BY-4-FOOT MURAL WAS UNVEILED AT EDGEWOOD HOMES, 1600 Haskell Ave., on Thursday. The mural was created by local artists Amber Hansen and Nicholas Ward with the help of about 30 children ages 7 through 16.
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Edgewood Homes mural exhibits neighborhood effort By Rochelle Valverde Twitter: @RochelleVerde
At the unveiling of a mural at Edgewood Homes on Thursday, kids pointed out their own drawings or images of themselves within the scene. The mural, titled “All In My Neighborhood,” is a project of the Full Circle youth program and was made using the drawings, stories and photographs of the program’s participants. Ensuring the project was community-based was key, said Chris Lempa, coordinator for Full Circle. “The community process of really engaging them as equals and helping them find their voices — and not just lip service that we often do with kids — is very powerful,” Lempa said. About 30 kids ages 7 through 16 from Full Circle, a drop-in youth program for LawrenceDouglas County Housing Authority residents, spent the summer working with local artists on the project. The LDCHA provides
Traffic CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A
Lawrence and Lawrence Schools Foundation — considers factors such as sidewalks, safe or efficient routes, and traffic flow for pickup and drop-off. Kyle Hayden, assistant superintendent of business and operations for the school district, and Ron May, director of administrative services, will present the report to the school board. In other business, the
housing assistance to lowincome residents in Douglas County through its voucher program as well as the 130 units at Edgewood, 1600 Haskell Ave. The program didn’t want a project where it was just the artists coming in and doing it, but instead a visioning process that fully involved the kids, Lempa said. As part of that goal, the project included an 11-year-old resident, Jafiya Birdling, as muralist assistant. “I like that I had a say,” Jafiya said. “It’s just like the title says, ‘All in the Neighborhood,’ it’s for everyone.” The 30-by-4-foot mural includes three panels, each with a scene on the theme of place: the kids’ current home, their envisioned future home and other locations important to them, Lempa said. “Seeing pieces of their drawings taken out — mixed in with what their friends were doing, mixed in with what the professional artists were doing — and seeing that become a piece of public art, it’s school board will recognize a seventh-grade science teacher at West Middle School, Lucinda Crenshaw, who is a finalist for Kansas Teacher of the Year. The winner will be announced during ceremonies Nov. 21 in Wichita. District officials also will present a report on changes to the administrative software program BusinessPlus, which supports the district’s management of resources, both financial and personnel. The school board will meet at 7 p.m. Monday at the district offices, 110 McDonald Drive.
“
Seeing pieces of their drawings taken out — mixed in with what their friends were doing, mixed in with what the professional artists were doing — and seeing that become a piece of public art, it’s something they are really proud of.” — Chris Lempa, coordinator of Full Circle
something they are really proud of,” Lempa said. The program received a Lawrence Cultural Arts Commission grant for about $2,000 in May to fund the project. Two Lawrence muralists, Nicholas Ward and Amber Hansen, worked with the LDCHA’s younger residents over the summer to plan the mural and incorporated the kids’ drawings and depictions of stories they told. “They really are the designers and content creators,” Hansen said. Along with the drawings and stories, Ward and Hansen also included actual scenes from the kids’ lives in the mural. Photographs — of residents interacting or playing
outside at Edgewood — were projected to create painted versions of the images, Ward explained. The combination of the three elements allowed residents to represent their stories and their community, he said. “In five years, they’ll be grown up and might have moved away, but it’s just a snapshot of this moment in time,” Ward said. The mural is installed on a fence outside the LDCHA Barbara Huppee Community Facility, which houses the Full Circle program and is located within Edgewood.
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— K-12 education reporter Rochelle Valverde can be reached at rvalverde@ljworld.com or 832-6314.
Traffic and crosswalk report topics l Cordley Elementary, 1837 Vermont St.: Traffic flow and upcoming community meeting l Kennedy Elementary, 1605 Davis Rd.: Change of school crossing and crossing guard location l Pinckney Elementary, 810 W. Sixth St.: Tunnel access l New York Elementary, 936 New York St.:
Traffic flow and parking l Broken Arrow Elementary and South Middle School, 2704 Louisiana St. and 2734 Louisiana St.: Community meeting regarding results of new traffic study l Sunset Hill Elementary, 901 Schwarz Rd.: Request for additional crossing guard at Sixth Street
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Sunday, October 25, 2015
MATURE LIVING .
L awrence J ournal -W orld Serving Lawrence Since 1991
Meet Gary Nelson, new leader of Douglas County Senior Services By Conrad Swanson Twitter: @Conrad_Swanson
Just more than a month ago, Gary Nelson took over as executive director for Douglas County Senior Services, and he hit the ground running. Early on, Nelson said he got his hands dirty filling in for a few employees who were out on vacation. He delivered meals and transported seniors Nelson to and from medical appointments and other obligations around town. “They tested me early,” he said. “It was a good experience because it needed to be done, and that’s a part of my management style, to do what needs to be done. “It just took me a while because I don’t know the town well enough,” he added with a laugh. Nelson is a native of Lindsborg, where he received a good education and learned to appreciate a sense of community, he said. “Fine arts were huge, lots of music,” he said. “It was a great place to grow up. But I think anybody in the Midwest could say that. You get a good farm work ethic, surrounded by hardworking people.” After a brief stint at Washburn University in Topeka, Nelson said he was drafted and sent off to Vietnam for a time. When he returned from overseas, Nelson said he resumed his studies at Western State College of Colorado (now Western State Colorado University) in Gunnison, Colo. There
he studied biology and secondary education. A few years into his teaching career, Nelson moved into a principal position in Lincoln, Kan., and then became the district’s superintendent. In those positions, he said, he enjoyed the work, but missed the feel of a classroom. On particularly difficult days, Nelson said one of the few things that could cheer him up was a quick visit to a firstor second-grade classroom where he could see the smiling faces of students around him. “The only negative about the administrative side is that while we felt we had more of an impact on what we were doing for the kids, you’re stepping further and further away from the kids,” he said. Despite that distance, Nelson said he prefers a hands-on managerial style where he can learn about the issues and the people up close. After retiring from the school district, Nelson said he wasn’t ready to stop working altogether and employment with a nonprofit such as Douglas County Senior Services is just what he was looking for. “I really appreciate the opportunity to come into this position, and hopefully we’ll do some good things,” he said. “I’ve been really impressed with the people we have here.” DCSS Board Chairman Dennis Domer said Nelson has made a few changes
Q: What was your last position? Education? A: I was Superintendent of Schools for USD 298 Lincoln in Lincoln, Kansas. I graduated from Western State College of Colorado (now Western State Colorado University) with a Bachelor of Science in biology with a minor in secondary education. As a teacher I taught biology, human physiology and anatomy, chemistry and physics. I have a master’s degree in educational administration from Emporia State University.
Q&A
Q: What drew you towards Lawrence and Douglas County? A: My wife, Karen, and I had been talking about moving to Lawrence for the past few years. We both like the area, the culture, activities and opportunities that Lawrence and Douglas County have to offer. Karen is a KU graduate, and both of our daughters attended KU. We always enjoyed our visits to Lawrence when the girls were in school. Another blessing that occurred after we had decided to move to Lawrence was the birth of our granddaughter. I would say that pretty much sealed the deal in our decision to move to Lawrence. Q: What about working at Douglas County Senior Services appealed to you? A: As a public school employee, I
since he’s taken over the organization, including hiring a few new faces. As Nelson becomes more acquainted with the group and the population it serves, Domer said he’s sure there will be more positive changes to come. “We’re seeing a slow transformation of the agency,” Domer said. “Gary is getting his feet wet and trying to understand the various issues in particular.” DCSS’s executive director position has changed hands many times in recent years, but Domer said he and the rest of the board are confident with Nelson’s experience and abilities. “We have a lot to do but I think we have a good deal of capability now that we didn’t have a year ago and we should expect great things,” he said. Nelson said he and his wife, Karen, have been married for 35 years. Together they have two daughters, two sons-in-law and one granddaughter. In his spare time, Nelson said he enjoys mountain biking, a hobby he and his wife picked up in Colorado, reading and playing guitar. Now that he’s passed his first month in his new position, Nelson said he’s enjoyed his time in Lawrence, both inside and outside of work. “There was a lot of water under the bridge in the first 30 days of being here,” he said. “It’s good and I feel good about it, and optimistic.”
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— Reporter Conrad Swanson can be reached at cswanson@ljworld.com or 832-7284.
have been a public servant for my entire career. I told my friends that when I retired I wanted to continue contributing to society. I was interested in working for some type of nonprofit organization. When I saw the executive director opening and began checking out DCSS, I thought it would be a good fit for me. Q: Now that you have worked at DCSS for a month, what have you learned? A: I’ve learned that we have a very dedicated staff and an informed board of directors. I’ve had an opportunity to have some formal meetings and some informal conversations with staff members, which has given me lots of encouragement about our organization. I also had a chance to jump into the trenches to help out with scheduling transportation for some of our senior citizens and work at scheduling volunteer drivers for our Senior Meals program, which delivers meals to home bound seniors. Q: What changes do you envision for DCSS in the future? A: I don’t think that I have been here long enough to have a vision that is very far out. But I am confident with our staff and the support of our board of directors, we will move forward in a collaborative and organized effort. — Conrad Swanson
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LAWRENCE
L awrence J ournal -W orld
Sunday, October 25, 2015
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Pets can get allergies just like people
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id you know that animals can be allergic to things, just like you? If your pet is itchy, ruling out parasites or simple skin infections is easy and is often very simple to treat; however, if that treatment fails to resolve the itching and irritated skin, it is important to rule out allergies. Many people don’t know that animals can be allergic to certain components in the food they eat. Your veterinarian can recommend a food that contains a new protein that they have never consumed before, and if the previous food is the cause of the problem, the skin problems will often dissipate with time. In order to test for this problem, the animal must be fed the new food exclusively (including treats) for six to eight weeks (this means no table scraps!). If the skin issues improve, there is a good chance that a food allergy is the cause. If the allergy is not caused by food, it is possible your pet may be allergic to something in their environment. Pets can have reactions to many different allergens including dander from other animals, pollen and different types of grasses. Last year we met an incredible pup named
Granny CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A
2005, explained Michele Clark, one of the players and organizers for Lawrence’s new team, the Grayhawkers. Now there are teams in eight different states, with Kansas being the eighth. Saturday’s first game consisted of Grayhawkers playing Grayhawkers because they’re the only team in the state, Clark said. But with each new practice more women show up to play, and they hope to create another team soon. A second, exhibition game Saturday pitted Grayhawkers against a “Celebrity Town Team” consisting of familiar faces from around Lawrence, including JournalWorld Managing Editor Chad Lawhorn. Teams playing Granny Basketball base their rules and uniforms on standards from the 1920s, Clark said. They play sixon-six. No running, jumping or physical contact is allowed. And if a player’s bloomers begin to ride up, a “flesh foul” may be called, Clark said. Adhering to the uniform standards of the 1920s requires no bare flesh be shown from neck to toes. Each basket is worth two points, and each free
Critter Buzz
Jennifer Stone Shelby. She came from a situation where she was not receiving the care that she needed for her skin problems. She was missing hair all over her body, her skin was chronically thickened, and she was itchy all the time. After running many tests, we learned that many of Shelby’s skin problems were due to allergies. Thanks to the generosity of our donors, we were able to immediately send her to a dermatologist who could provide advanced testing and treatment for her problems. With the help of the dermatologist, we learned that Shelby suffered from environmental allergies, and found that she was allergic to almost every type of grass imaginable. We set out on a path to get her itch under control. Shelby was treated for months with antibiotics, medicated baths and specially throw is worth one point. Granny shots are worth three points, though, ironically, none were taken during the Grayhawkers’ game Saturday night. “It’s a way to preserve the history of girls’ basketball,” Clark said. “And to help people see how it used to be played.” Throughout four eightminute quarters, the ladies hustled up and down the court. Shoes squeaked, baskets were scored and fouls were called. Every now and then, a player would hit the ground and “granny down” could be heard from the announcer, but a declaration of “granny up” was never far behind. At 82 years old, Kathleen Ramonda was the oldest woman on the court Saturday night, though Beatty said her 90-year-old sister is still on a team. Ramonda’s favorite part of the game was just getting to play, and she wasn’t worried about injuries or being sore this morning. Instead, she prefers to focus on the exercise and social interaction she gets when she plays. “I was tired of sitting at home looking at four walls,” she laughed. Ramonda practiced twice with the team before Saturday’s game and said she plans to keep playing. Amber Schreiber and much of her family, young
Be Shelby’s hero — adopt her!
Shelby made immunotherapy to desensitize her to the allergens. At long last, her allergies are under control and she is feeling great again. She’s ready for adoption! Most animals don’t have such severe problems, but Shelby’s story is a great example of how complicated skin issues can be. The best advice is that if you have an animal that appears to be itchy, don’t wait until the problems become severe before taking it to a veterinarian. Many times the solution is simple, such as flea treatment. But if there is an allergic component present, the sooner it is diagnosed, the easier it will be to manage in the long run. — Jennifer Stone is the medical director and staff veterinarian at the Lawrence Humane Society. She has been a shelter veterinarian for more than a decade.
and old, stood along the sidelines to cheer on her mother-in-law, Eileen Schreiber. They clapped, shouted and shook pompoms while rooting for their No. 19. “So many people out there say, ‘I’m too old,’” Amber Schreiber said. “You’re not too old, you’ve just got to have the right mentality. I commend these women. They’re inspiring.” Because of Lawrence’s history with the sport of basketball, Clark said, she’s happy to see the Kansas extension’s first team start here. “It had to start in Lawrence,” she said. “It’s a tribute to Coach (James) Naismith to start Granny Basketball here.” As the Kansas league begins to grow, the teams will travel and compete, Clark said. And playing against Iowa or Missouri teams, or any other teams around the country, could lead to some intense but fun competition. “I think we could have some border wars,” Clark laughed. Anyone interested in playing, refereeing, coaching or scorekeeping can find more information about Granny Basketball at grannybasketball.com, by emailing KansasGBB@gmail.com or by calling 409-2791. — Reporter Conrad Swanson can be reached at cswanson@ljworld.com or 832-7284.
Shelby is ready to find her forever home! This sweet, senior girl loves the great outdoors and enjoys spending her time playing fetch with squeaky balls, going on walks and hikes, and getting lots of belly rubs. Shelby will need ongoing medical support for her special needs. If you’d like to learn more about her needs, or if you’re interested in giving her a loving new home, call the Lawrence Humane Society at 843-6835.
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Sunday, October 25, 2015
LAWRENCE • STATE
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Retail
About this story
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A
A North Carolinabased development group, Collett, filed plans to build the retail and restaurant space at the southeast corner of the South Lawrence Trafficway/Iowa Street interchange. Though not official, Collett officials have said stores such as Academy Sports, Old Navy, Marshalls/ HomeGoods and Designer Shoe Warehouse were possible tenants. This proposal — and a larger one from the same development group that never gained approval — have started the debate on what type of commercial development Lawrence residents want, how much and where. It’s a topic the City Commission soon will have to weigh in on. In August, the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission recommended the development plan for approval. The City Commission must give the final go-ahead for the project to move forward. The issue is currently listed as a future agenda item for the commission, with a tentative date of Nov. 10. Here’s a look at the survey results: l When respondents were asked how they’d describe the amount of retail shopping options in the city, 63 percent voted there was “just the right amount.” Our polling partner, Google Consumer Surveys, noted that the answer had a 95 percent confidence level, meaning if the poll were conducted 100 times, it would be the top-selected choice 95 times. There being “not enough” shopping options had 32.4 percent of votes. Only 4.6 percent said there was “an unhealthy overabundance.” These results had margins of error from 1.1 to 2.8 percent. l In response to the question about the proposal to build a new
A Thousand Voices is a new feature that will measure how at least 1,000 readers of LJWorld. com feel about a variety of issues being debated by the public. The Journal-World will regularly conduct a poll that captures a representative sample of the approximately 35,000 users of LJWorld.com. All polling will be conducted by our partner, Google Consumer Surveys. The Google system chooses participants for the poll at random, has mechanisms in place designed to prevent a single user from casting multiple votes, and calculates results using margins of error and 95 percent confidence levels common to the polling industry. If you have a topic you would like to see as part of a future poll, please suggest it to Nikki Wentling at nwentling@ljworld.com. shopping center near the SLT/Iowa Street interchange, 42.5 percent — again, with a 95 percent confidence level — voted in favor of it. The other two choices were close: 29.5 percent said they did not support the development, and 28 percent said they were unsure. Margins of error for this question ranged from 2.5 to 2.9 percent. l There was no obvious winner on the next question, about whether a new shopping center at the SLT/Iowa Street interchange would draw shoppers away from downtown Lawrence. Of the more than 1,000 responses, 40.3 percent voted that yes, it would draw shoppers from downtown, and 36.9 percent voted no. Another 22.8 percent were unsure. Google Consumer Surveys noted the results were too close to call, and there were margins of error from 2.3 to 2.9 percent. Take note: Would-be respondents were first asked whether they were Lawrence shoppers. If they answered “no” to this screening question, the survey ended. It’s clear from our survey results that there remains debate over whether the development could mean new shopping dollars being spent in the city, or if that money would just be pulled from other places, such as downtown stores. Damage to downtown Lawrence was a concern voiced by residents when
the planning commission was considering a larger shopping center that was also proposed by Collett. The planning commission recommended for denial last year a larger shopping center — more than 500,000 square feet — proposed by the same development group for the same location. At the time, several planning commissioners said they would prefer a large retail development be located in areas already zoned for commercial development near the Rock Chalk Park sports complex in northwest Lawrence. But that area has not yet attracted any retailers. On the other side of the argument, there were Lawrence residents who said the city needed new stores, as well as the tax dollars they would bring. The smaller development plan being considered now comprises two large anchor stores, three junior anchor stores and two other buildings for small shops. Six lots along the SLT are labeled as parcels. When looking at the smaller shopping development, the planning commissioners in August recommended for approval a change to the city’s comprehensive plan to designate the SLT/Iowa Street interchange area for regional commercial use, instead of auto commercial and residential, as it is now. It will be interesting to see what happens when this smaller proposal
L awrence J ournal -W orld
goes to the City Commission. New commissioner Lisa Larsen has said she doesn’t yet have an opinion on the specific project but has concerns in general with “overbuilding.” She said she doesn’t want to see empty storefronts in the city, and she noted the importance of keeping downtown stores healthy. During the election this past spring, commissioner Matthew Herbert said that new retail projects not requesting any tax incentives should be an easy “yes” for the commission, the JournalWorld has reported. We also reported that commissioner Leslie Soden said during the campaign that, without proper planning, Lawrence’s retail scene could become too focused on one area of town.
Asthma&AllergyAssociates We strongly recommend all of our patients get a flu shot every fall. Remember asthma or allergies should not interfere with work, school, activities or sleep. Warren Frick, MD Ronald Weiner, MD Certified ABAI 4601 W. 6th Street, Suite B, Lawrence, KS (785) 842-3778 515 SW Horne, Ste. 102, Topeka, KS (785) 232-9154 www.asthma-allergy-kansas.com
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Kansas nuclear-testing lab has no staff Topeka (ap) — A Kansas laboratory responsible for testing for contamination in the event of an accident at the state’s only nuclear power plant hasn’t been staffed for several weeks after its final two employees left in September. The Kansas Department of Health and Environment said routine samples are being sent to the Iowa State Hygienic Laboratory until new staff can be hired at its Radiochemistry Section. If there were an emergency, several other KDHE bureaus would respond, agency spokeswoman Sara Belfry told The Topeka
Capital-Journal. The KDHE confirmed Thursday that the lab hasn’t been testing samples since late September and hasn’t been staffed since Sept. 22. In addition to routine testing at the nuclear power plant near Burlington, south of Topeka, the lab would be “called upon to analyze samples which would determine extent of resulting contamination” after an accident, according to KDHE’s website. Russel Stukey, emergency management coordinator for Coffey County, where Wolf Creek is
located, said he found out the lab had no staff within the past couple of weeks. “It’s probably not horrible, but it is not the way you would prefer to have it,” Stukey said. In response to any nuclear accident, Stukey said he would likely overevacuate the area around Wolf Creek as a precaution. Belfry said KDHE expects to interview and hire personnel as quickly as possible. It has posted five chemist positions at a salary of either $19.66 or $22.16 an hour. That comes to about $41,000 or $46,000 annually.
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Opinion
Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com l Sunday, October 25, 2015
EDITORIALS
Lie confirmed Thursday’s Benghazi hearings revealed a lie that could affect Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign.
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trong Democratic loyalists and devout Hillary Clinton supporters are crowing about the former secretary of state’s performance in the hours-long grilling by members of the Select U.S. House Benghazi committee. They portray her as coming out of this pressure cooker unscathed and ready to sail past any competition to gain the Democratic presidential nomination and then march into the White House Oval Office. The headline in one national newspaper said, “Plenty of fireworks, no smoking gun.” Another headline read, “Little new revealed in Benghazi hearing.” This may be how many view Clinton’s testimony: that there were no bombshells or damaging blows to Clinton’s years-long campaign to win the presidency. However, there was one glaring and tremendously powerful revelation coming out of the hearing. Clinton lied about the cause of the attack on Benghazi. She lied to the public and she lied to the mothers and fathers of those killed in the terrorist attack. She and her spokespeople initially claimed the attack was a reaction to a video shown in Cairo rather than being a well-organized terrorist attack. Testimony at Thursday’s hearing disclosed Clinton knew immediately it was a terrorist attack. She told others it was a terrorist attack, but she told the public it was merely a reaction to the video and that the U.S. government would not stop looking for and prosecuting the individual who produced the video. This was window dressing designed to minimize the damage to President Obama’s re-election efforts. He had emphasized that dangers from terrorist attacks had been minimized or downsized significantly during his first term in the White House. To many, the “bombshell” coming out of the hearing was that Clinton lied about the attack that cost the lives of a U.S. ambassador and three security officers. Once a person lies, whether it’s a presidential candidate, Republican or Democrat, or an average citizen, how can he or she be trusted to tell the truth on future matters? Various national polls prior to last week’s Benghazi hearings said the word “liar” was one of the most prevalent one-word descriptions respondents attached to Clinton. How can lying be laughed off or considered inconsequential when considering attributes or weaknesses of a presidential candidate — or anyone else? How can a liar be trusted or placed in a high government position?
Letters Policy
The Journal-World welcomes letters to the Public Forum. Letters should be 250 words or less, be of public interest and avoid namecalling and libelous language. The Journal-World reserves the right to edit letters, as long as viewpoints are not altered. By submitting letters, you grant the Journal-World a nonexclusive license to publish, copy and distribute your work, while acknowledging that you are the author of the work. Letters must bear the name, address and telephone number of the writer. Letters may be submitted by mail to Box 888, Lawrence, KS, 66044 or by email to: letters@ljworld.com.
LAWRENCE
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Established 1891
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
W.C. Simons (1871-1952) Publisher, 1891-1944 Dolph Simons Sr. (1904-1989) Publisher, 1944-1962; Editor, 1950-1979
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Scott Stanford, General Manager
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Criminal justice system needs reform Washington — The Republican Party, like Sisyphus, is again putting its shoulder to a boulder, hoping to make modest but significant changes in the Electoral College arithmetic by winning perhaps 12 percent of the African-American vote. To this end, they need to hone a rhetoric of skepticism about, and an agenda for reform of, the criminal justice system. They can draw on the thinking of a federal appellate judge nominated by Ronald Reagan. In an article that has stirred considerable discussion since it appeared this past summer in The Georgetown Law Journal, Alex Kozinski of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit provides facts and judgments that should disturb everyone, but especially African-Americans, whose encounters with the criminal justice system are dismayingly frequent and frequently dismaying. Eyewitness testimony is, Kozinski says, “highly unreliable, especially where the witness and the perpetrator are of different races.” Mistaken eyewitnesses figured in 34 percent of wrongful convictions in the database of the National Registry of Exonerations. Fingerprint evidence, too, has “a significant error rate,” as does spectrographic voice identification (error rates up to 63 percent) and handwriting identification (error rates average 40 percent). Many defendants have spent years in prison “based on evidence by arson experts who
George Will
georgewill@washpost.com
“
Eyewitness testimony is, Kozinski says, ‘highly unreliable, especially where the witness and the perpetrator are of different races.’” were later shown to be little better than witch doctors.” DNA evidence is reliable when properly handled, but is only as good as are the fallible testing labs. “Much of what we do in the courtroom relies,” Kozinski writes, “on human memory.” But the more we learn about the way memories are “recorded, stored and retrieved,” the less confidence we can have that memories are undistorted and unembellished by the mind or external influences. And courts rarely allow expert testimony on memory. The idea that at least confessions are reliable because “innocent people never confess” is refuted by the indisputable fact that they do “with surprising regularity.” They do for reasons ranging from a desire to end harsh interrogations, to emotional and financial exhaustion, and to coercive charging of
multiple offenses made possible by the overcriminalization of life. Kozinski says we know “very little” about how juries decide cases. “Do they assume that the presumption (of innocence) remains in place until it is overcome by persuasive evidence or do they believe it disappears as soon as any actual evidence is presented?” Do they actually distinguish between a “preponderance” of evidence, “clear and convincing” evidence, and evidence “beyond a reasonable doubt”? Research demonstrates that the person — the prosecutor — making a first assertion has a substantial advantage over those who subsequently deny it. In the courtroom, juries first hear from prosecutors. Prosecutions are preceded by police investigations. Police, says Kozinski, have “vast discretion” about, among many other things, which leads to pursue and witnesses to interview. They also have opportunities “to manufacture or destroy evidence, influence witnesses, extract confessions” and otherwise “stack the deck against people they think should be convicted.” A woman spent 23 years on death row because of an oral confession she supposedly made during a 20-minute interrogation by a detective who Kozinski says was later shown “to be a serial liar.” The conviction of a man who spent 39 years in prison was based “entirely” on the eyewitness testimony of a 12-year-old who saw the crime from a distance, failed
to identify the man in a lineup, and was fed information by the police. Kozinski suggests many reforms, including recording all interrogations of suspects, strictly limiting uses of jailhouse informants, allowing jurors to take notes and ask questions during the trial, and repealing three felony statutes a day for three years. He cites “disturbing indications that a non-trivial number of prosecutors — and sometimes entire prosecutorial offices — engage in misconduct.” Because a conscientious FBI agent revealed that Justice Department prosecutors concealed exculpatory evidence, we know that Alaska’s Republican Sen. Ted Stevens was wrongly convicted of corruption. Kozinski, who recommends establishing independent prosecutorial integrity units, thinks the Justice Department’s unit “seems to view its mission as cleaning up the reputation of prosecutors who have gotten themselves into trouble.” Kozinski favors abrogating absolute prosecutorial immunity. Finally, he advocates careful study of exonerations, of which there have been 1,576 since 1989. And for every one “there may be dozens who are innocent but cannot prove it.” If the error rate is 1 percent, 22,000 innocent people are in prison. If the rate is 5 percent, the number is 110,000. Whatever the number, it almost certainly is disproportionately African-American. — George Will is a columnist for Washington Post Writers Group.
OLD HOME TOWN
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From the Lawrence Daily Journal-World for Oct. 25, 1915: “The Meryears chants and Farmago ers’ Association IN 1915 today voted … that in their judgment all the places of business in Lawrence should close at 2:30 and remain closed until 5 o’clock the afternoons of Saturday, November 13, and of Friday, November 19, those being the dates of the more notable football games to be held here this season. On the 13th Nebraska University plays Kansas University, and on the 20th Haskell plays the Oklahoma State Normal.” — Compiled by Sarah St. John
Read more Old Home Town at LJWorld.com/news/lawrence/ history/old_home_town.
Police should have nothing to hide The question was first posed by Juvenal, a Latin poet whose life spanned the first and second centuries: Quis custodiet ipsos custodes? Translation: “Who watches the watchmen?” The old question finds new relevance in an era of heightened concern about police brutality, where cameras are omnipresent and police misbehavior routinely goes viral. These days, all of us watch the watchmen, a de facto citizens review board armed with cellphone cameras. Why not? Police certainly use sophisticated versions of the same gadgets to watch us. Cameras catch us speeding and running red lights. There is even a camera that reads your license plate and checks for warrants. All that notwithstanding, police have long resisted the idea that citizens have a right to record them at work. The ante has been upped in recent years amid a flurry of citizen, dashcam and surveillance videos capturing questionable police behavior ranging from a man killed by a chokehold in New York to the takedown of a 15-yearold girl in a bikini in Texas, to a man in Delaware kicked in the head while comply-
Leonard Pitts Jr. lpitts@miamiherald.com
“
This is about accountability, something that has been absent from police interactions with the public for far too long. And where there is no accountability, justice is tenuous.”
ing with an order to get on the ground, to a New Jersey man having a police dog sicced on him after he was subdued, to a man shot in the back in South Carolina. Which brings us to the unfortunate thing Rahm Emanuel said earlier this month at a summit of police officials and politicians in Washington. In explaining a recent uptick in violent crime, the Chicago mayor said cops have gotten “fetal.” He added, “They have pulled back from the ability to
interdict … they don’t want to be a news story themselves, they don’t want their career ended early and it’s having an impact.” No, he is not known to have been drunk. And for the record, police chiefs and elected officials from other cities reportedly seconded his remarks. They are calling it the YouTube effect. In response, a few things must be said. One: Had it been Emanuel’s intention to make police seem petulant, pouty and entitled, he could hardly have chosen more effective language. Small wonder a police union official promptly denied that officers have returned to the womb or are otherwise giving less than their best effort. Two: Emanuel’s city was a killing field long before the recent spate of viral video embarrassments. Exactly how long have his officers been “fetal”? And what did he blame before he blamed YouTube? Three: There is a virtually foolproof strategy for police to avoid Internet mortification. Three syllables: Do your job. Then there’ll be no YouTube videos to worry about. It is disappointing to see
President Obama’s former chief of staff join the ranks of those who insist we must treat police like hothouse flowers or Faberge eggs. First, we are told we may not criticize bad cops because that means we hate all cops. Now, apparently, we may not criticize them because doing so hurts their feelings. Look: It is important to be concerned about police morale. But what about the morale of Eric Garner’s family? Or Walter Scott’s? Or Freddie Gray’s? Or Tamir Rice’s? What about the morale of all the families who daily send sons — and daughters — into unforgiving streets, honestly unsure if the police — their police — will be friends or foes? Is it OK if we spare some concern for them, too? This is about accountability, something that has been absent from police interactions with the public for far too long. And where there is no accountability, justice is tenuous. The plain truth is, cameras are here to stay; this genie will not go back in the bottle. Police will not stop the watchers from watching. But a smart cop will make sure there’s nothing to see. — Leonard Pitts Jr. is a columnist for the Miami Herald.
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Fire CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A
you away in an ambulance might be fighting a house fire on the next call. Back in 1947, things were tough — especially for new firefighters, Brubaker recalled. When he first started on the department, he couldn’t understand how the maskless senior firefighters could rush into a burning building without being overcome by the smoke and heat. Brubaker recalled with humor the fire chief — who at that time was Chief Paul Ingles — would give the youngsters tips, but “the guys” wouldn’t. “They would keep their nose next to that water hose. The water would give off oxygen,” Brubaker said. “I was 10 feet behind them, and I’d get nothing but smoke. I’d be choking to death to catch up with them.” He didn’t stay the new guy forever, working his way up to captain before retiring in 1973. Since then, many have joined, climbed the ranks and retired after him. “They fight fires now in all different ways than we did,” Brubaker said. “But a fire’s a fire; it doesn’t matter how you fight it as long as you get them out.”
The early days Brubaker isn’t the first firefighter to say after the end of his career that the “new guys” have it easier. Looking through newspaper archives, many a former chief interviewed said their generation of firefighters had it tougher than those after. In a 1953 Journal-World article that ran just before former chief Ingles’ retirement, Ingles said, “Here’s a scene that’s changed a little during the past 40 years.” Reporter Rich Clarkson called Ingles’ quote the “understatement of the day.” In the article, Ingles recalled the days of horsedrawn fire wagons and an alarm bell atop the fire station to summon firefighters to the station. When Ingles started his career in 1912, the department wasn’t even a “department” yet. It would not change from a volunteer organization to a paid municipal fire department until 1915. And 21 years before Ingles’ departure, former chief William Reinisch ended his career, remarking in an article that the “youngsters” of 1932 “who fight fires now do not realize what it meant in the old days.” “We had no warm clothing, no rubber suits to keep us dry and no equipment with which to do much,” Reinisch said. “If we got a hot one it meant getting soaked to the skin and staying with it, winter or summer.” “I guess some of that is showing up now that I’m getting old,” Reinisch said after his 38-year career as a Lawrence firefighter.
LAWRENCE
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Notable fires in Lawrence history Oct. 7, 2005, Boardwalk fire: Three people — Yolanda Riddle, Jose Gonzalez and Nicole Bingham — died and 20 were injured in an early morning blaze at Boardwalk Apartments, 524 Fireside Drive. Many had broken bones from escaping through secondand third-story windows as they fled the flames that destroyed the 76-unit apartment building. Investigators would later learn 20-year-old Jason Allen Rose set the fire, and he was convicted in 2007 of involuntary manslaughter, aggravated arson and seven counts of aggravated battery in connection with the case. He was sentenced to 10 years in prison, but was released in 2014 because of timeserved credit he earned in jail before his conviction. April 20, 1970, Kansas University Union fire: A still-unidentified arsonist set fire to the Kansas Union, 1301 Jayhawk Blvd., amid unrest and a tumultuous year of violent protests against inequalities, war, the draft and the establishment. Firefighters responded as flames burst through the roof. Fire department records indicate all personnel — even those who were off-duty — were called to help and “the maximum amount of water” was placed on the fire. The fire took 12 hours to extinguish and caused more than $1 million in damages.
July 17, 1986, Rimrock Drive fatal fire: David Winebrenner, 21 at the time, set fire to his parents’ home at 3028 Rimrock Drive while they were sleeping inside because he was angry about not being able to drive the family’s new truck. The Winebrenners escaped from the home unharmed, but a roof beam collapsed and killed 34-year-old firefighter Mark Blair while he was inside searching for other occupants. Winebrenner spent nearly 22 years in prison for Blair’s death before his release in 2009. Blair was the first — and only — Lawrence firefighter to die in the line of duty. Sept. 17, 2006, New Jersey Street fatal fire: An early morning fire killed Charles Glover Sr., 66, and his grandchildren, Nolan Vender, 13, DaVonte Brockman, 11, Mario Johnson, 2, and Mariyana Johnson, 1. Glover’s wife, Learlean, survived the fire. The house was entirely destroyed. Fire investigators were never able to determine the fire’s cause, but said there were no indications of any criminal activity. City Hall at the time released an announcement that said, “The heavy damage to the structure, as well as the absence of witnesses, contributed to the inability to identify electrical or human factor as the cause.” Jan. 14, 1922, barbershop fire: Lawrence firefighters were alerted to a fire in the basement of a barbershop
L awrence J ournal -W orld
at 921 Massachusetts Street at 7:40 p.m. Jan. 14, 1922. But before firefighters could get the flames under control, the fire had spread and affected the following neighboring downtown businesses: Bell’s Music Store, Stoffer Drugs, Ward’s Flower Shop, Welch and Welch Chiropractors, Doctor Tibbers’, Vogt’s, Doctor Gifford’s, Mrs. Wagghan’s shop and the Bittie Farm Association. Damages were estimated at $62,000. Aug. 24, 1954 Sterling building fire: A fire tore through the second-story storage area of the former Sterling Furniture Co. at 938 Massachusetts St. Several firefighters were overcome by the extensive flames and smoke and one collapsed after fighting the blaze, according to a Journal-World article. Luckily, the firefighters were OK after some rest, and no one suffered any serious injuries. Damages were estimated at $50,000. March 1955 Patee Theater fire: The alleyway between the Antique Mall and Dutch Boy Paints in the 800 block of Massachusetts Street was once home to the Patee movie theater. But in March 1955, a fire broke out, destroying the theater “considered the first-ever theater to operate west of the Mississippi River,” according to a Journal-World article from the time. Although no one was injured, a section of the balcony dropped onto the seats below and all available firemen were called to keep the fire from
An early morning fire in October 2005 at Boardwalk Apartments, 524 Frontier Road, killed three residents and left many homeless. Mike Yoder/ Journal-World File Photo
New world, different problems Now, firefighters not only wear masks but also thermal-lined, thick rubber boots (in Brubaker’s day, their rubber boots were no more than your typical rain boot). Firefighters today also wear heavy, thermal garments with layers of fireand chemical-resistant fabric, all of which are fit to each firefighter so that there are no gaps of skin showing when worn, current LDCFM fire chief Mark Bradford said. Brubaker, meanwhile, said his firefighting getup consisted of blue jeans and a raincoat. Even the helmets are different, as modern helmets are constructed similar to football helmets, Bradford said, with the crown specially designed to protect the head from impact. In Brubaker’s day, helmets were like hardhats, as Bradford said they were essentially a “pressed-out piece of plastic.” Plus, each firefighter wears a mask that feeds compressed air to their lungs, even in the midst of thick, black smoke. The biggest change, Bradford said, is the influence of technology. Firefighters now have access to computers with important information in emergencies, including GPS, floor plans of more than 500 Lawrence
buildings, hazards in those buildings and even how much water is left in hydrants close to the fire at hand. This information lets firefighters save valuable time and create strategies when they see what they’re up against. But it’s not just the firefighting that’s changed, Bradford said, it’s also the fires themselves. Previously, homes, furniture and other items were made with predominantly metal, wood and other natural products. Now, there are more plastics, composites and other materials that not only produce hazardous chemicals, but also burn hotter and faster, Bradford said. “There are hotter temperatures inside as plastics melt and materials burn,” Bradford said. “Hence, we have to have coats and helmets because it used to be not near as hot as it is today.” The byproducts of those artificial materials are also dangerous to inhale, causing cancer rates of firefighters to increase nationwide over the years. “Think of a campfire; you can breathe some of that smoke,” Bradford said. “But the smoke that comes off houses now is combined with all of these chemical gasses that change composition when heated.”
What hasn’t wavered over LDCFM’s 100-year history are the basic qualifications a firefighter must have, according to Ingles, as he laid out in a 1952 Journal-World article: “A good heart and a good pair of legs … but the first qualification is complete honesty.”
spreading to neighboring businesses. Loss was estimated at $60,000. Sept. 10, 1955, Plymouth Congregational fire: In the early morning hours of Sept. 10, 1955, a fire tore through the Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St. Each of the 25 men on the Lawrence Fire Department were called to battle the blaze, and it took about two and a half hours to extinguish. Afterward, the firefighters were required to get tetanus shots because they’d received many scratches and scrapes during the incident. Damages were estimated at more than $100,000. Oct. 7, 1967, Popcorn plant fire: Firefighters spent more than seven hours fighting a fire at TNT Product Inc., a popcorn plant that held at least a million pounds of unpackaged popcorn in the building’s second floor. The building, originally home to the Barteldes Seed Co. in 1867, was completely destroyed in the fire. Damages were estimated at more than $250,000. Oct. 5, 1953, Higgins house fatal fire: An oil stove inside a home at Seventh and Grant streets in North Lawrence caused the residence to catch fire just before 7:30 a.m. Oct. 5, 1953. When the fire department arrived, the home was “totally engulfed in flames,” according to fire department records. A woman identified as Charles John Higgins’ wife died in the fire.
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With luck, Mexico escapes worst of former Hurricane Patricia. 1B A&E, 4D
Recruiting slam dunk
JEFF DANIELS
Jayhawks land sought-after Texas forward Mitch Lightfoot.
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Survey shows support for new retail center
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t 93 years old, Sam Brubaker has been alive almost as long as the fire department in which he spent nearly three decades has been a municipal entity. of Lawand rescue ladders were KANSAS CFM marks its 100th an25Brubaker, 3 PEOPLE WANTED IN THE rence, joined the wooden. niversary as a municipal CITY (25 in “Toward LAWRENCE) WHO HAVE Since Lawrence AREA Fire Departthe end, fire department. ment — now known we got two Chem-Ox 1915, LDCFM has gone DIFFICULTY in noisy as Lawrence-DouglasHEARING, systems, butespecially the canisfrom 10 paid firefightCounty Fire Medical ters were $4.95 each, so ers to 140, one station situations. To evaluate a never before available — in 1947 after returnthe chief said not to use to five and horse-drawn hearing device, FREE. Call to see ing home from World RISK them,” Brubaker said.today carriages to $1 million War II the previous “And until the last few fire engines. Today’s if you are a candidate for this program. year. Firefighting was years I was there, all fire firefighters are also markedly different then, trucks had solid rubber certified medics, so the Review the in list ofcabs.” our 11 EMS locations he said, working a inside. tires Each and open personnel taking world where fires were The department’s a have a select number of candidates that Please cansee FIRE, page 10A fought without masks lot different now, as LD-
35 0
A
new survey of approximately 1,000 LJWorld.com users found that more than 40 percent — more than any other option — supported a proposal to develop a 250,000-squarefoot shopping center in south Lawrence. But respondents were split when asked whether the new big box stores would draw shoppers away from downtown, and a majority said there was just the right amount of retail options in Lawrence already.
Mike Yoder/Journal-World Photo
Sam Brubaker, 93, spent nearly three decades with the Lawrence Fire Department — now known as Lawrence-Douglas County Fire Medical.
Please see RETAIL, page 8A
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‘Ellen’ segment coming to KU “The Ellen DeGeneres Show” is set to engage Kansas University on Monday. The TV show will host a “Twitter event” at KU, said Erinn Barcomb-Peterson, a spokeswoman for the university. Although DeGeneres will not be in Lawrence, the show will have a presence on campus, Barcomb-Peterson said. Follow @TheEllenShow for details.
Review the list inside
Southwestern will perform a comprehensive hearing evaluation At NO Charge for qualified The crew at No. 1 station in 1955. From left: D. Knight, S. (Buddy) Griffin, D. Headley, M. Lisher, J. Prentice, N. Buffington, callers to determine ifDean, youC.are candidate for Flory, J. Todd, Sam Brubaker, J. Kasberger unidentified, B. Deay, L. Anderson, K. (Beef)aBrubaker, C. (Duchman) (Asst. J. Miller (Chief), F. Sanders that (Asst. Chief), unidentified. will the Chief), program. Applicants are selected Lawrence-Douglas County Fire Medical/Journal-World Photo Illustration be asked to evaluate the latest revolutionary h hearing aids for 30 days Rissk FREE. Mostly sunny Participants tha a wish to at Senior living Arts&Entertainment 1D-6D Horoscope 8E Sports 1C-8C purchase the in n nstruments Gary Nelson recently took Classified 1E-7E Movies 4D Television 2C, 6D may do at Tre emendous over as executive director Deaths 2A Opinion 9A USA Today 1B-8B for Douglas County Senior Savings, for p listings participation. Events 6D, 2C Puzzles 8E, 5D Services, and he hit the
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USA TODAY — L awrence J ournal -W orld
IN MONEY
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Tech world philanthropy
Kerry Washington: ‘Scandal’ deals in truth
10.25.15 JACK DORSEY BY SCOTT OLSON, GETTY IMAGES
Cities pull back on filling the boot
ROBERT HANASHIRO, USA TODAY
TROPICAL DEPRESSION PATRICIA
With roadside firefighter drives, it’s now safety first Tara Golshan USA TODAY
At least seven U.S. cities and counties have stopped firefighters from collecting charitable donations at busy intersections, citing safety concerns. For nearly 61 years, career and volunteer firefighters around the country have participated in “Fill the Boot,” raising money, while on duty and in their firefighting gear, by asking passing motorists and pedestrians to contribute to various charities. More than 100,000 firefighters raise about $25 million a year for the Muscular Dystrophy Association, for example. But traffic and safety concerns, including the death of a firefighter in Michigan, have spurred cities to re-evaluate or halt such fundraising methods. uIn August, citing concerns about firefighter safety, the city of Marshfield, Wis., rejected their fire department’s permit request to fundraise on the streets. uCharleston, S.C., began enforcing a ban on passing items to and from motor vehicles in late September. uOklahoma City and other municipalities are weighing whether to ban firefighters’ roadside donation drives. v STORY CONTINUES ON 2B
This is an edition of USA TODAY provided for your local newspaper. An expanded version of USA TODAY is available at newsstands or by subscription, and at usatoday.com.
For the latest national sports coverage, go to sports.usatoday.com
USA SNAPSHOTS©
Polar ice shavings On Sept. 11, Arctic sea ice hit its minimum mark, extending
1.7 million square miles,
Russia Arctic Ocean
North Pole
the fourthlowest measurement on record. Canada Source National Snow & Ice Data Center TERRY BYRNE AND JANET LOEHRKE, USA TODAY
Two Union Pacific crewmembers were rescued after their freight train derailed in floodwaters north of Corsicana, Texas.
HURRICANE REMNANTS ARE NEW TEXAS THREAT
WFAA
Already inundated state prepares for arrival of more rain Gregg Zoroya USA TODAY
U
p to a foot and a half of rain pounded Texas on Saturday, raising fears of widespread flooding to the rain-soaked state even as the remnants of record-setting Hurricane Patricia were bearing down from Mexico. While the band of storms created by a stalled cold front in north and central Texas were expected to ease late Saturday, a new storm generated by what’s left of Patricia in the Gulf of Mexico will begin dumping up to 6 inches of rain in eastern Texas. Still, rains that have hammered north and central Texas wreaked havoc Friday and Saturday. A homeless man was reported swept into a drainage ditch by floodwaters in San Antonio sometime early Saturday while trying to rescue a dog, according to KENS-TV. Elsewhere, a Union Pacific freight train was partially submerged north of Corsicana on Saturday morning after apparently being swept off the rails by floodwaters, WFAA-TV reported. The incident happened on a trestle near Interstate 45 and Highway 287, about 60 miles south of Dallas. Two crewmembers aboard the train were brought to safety by a Navarro County swift water rescue team. More than 18 inches of rain closed Interstate 45 near Corsicana, 50 miles south of Dallas, on Friday, leaving a 12-mile traffic jam. Officials had been urging residents to simply pull off the highway, find a parking lot and
spend the night in their vehicles. Accuweather senior meteorologist Dan Pydynowski said the storms were expected to move east into Louisiana on Sunday. The rains in Texas have vanquished a drought that struck the state over the summer. More than half of the state’s 254 counties still had outdoor burn bans in effect Friday, the Texas A&M Forest Service reported. But now state officials worry about widespread flooding. Officials in Hidalgo County planned to hand out free sandbags to help residents prepare for the expected deluge there. Heavy rains, gusty winds and tidal rises of up to 5 feet prompted a coastal flood advisory for the upper Texas Gulf Coast, the Associated Press reported.
A homeless man was reported swept into a drainage ditch by floodwaters in San Antonio early Saturday while trying to rescue a dog. The potential for flooding comes five months after torrential spring storms caused more than 30 deaths. That Memorial Day weekend weather system brought an astonishing amount of rainfall, with some isolated areas receiving more than 20 inches. Homes were damaged or swept away by river water southwest of Austin, about 1,500 homes in the Houston area alone sustained flood damage, and rising waters cut off neighborhoods throughout the state. Little rain had fallen since.
Fearsome Patricia does little damage once it hits Mexico Rick Jervis and David Agren USA TODAY
GUADALAJARA , MEXICO
Hurricane Patricia, one of the strongest storms ever to make landfall, degenerated into a low pressure system late Saturday afternoon as it moved north toward Texas, leaving behind less major damage than feared south of the border. No deaths were initially reported as emergency crews made their way into the hardest-hit areas. This capital of the state of Jalisco — ground zero for Hurricane Patricia’s arrival on shore late Friday — was wet with some debris Saturday morning but mostly unscathed. The U.S. National Hurricane Center downgraded Patricia to a low pressure system late Saturday afternoon, a stunning transformation from the Category 5 hurricane that roared toward Mexico’s Pacific coast packing sustained winds of 200 mph Friday. “So far, there are no reports of major damage from Patricia,” Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto said in a statement Saturday afternoon. “Our gratitude to all for your thoughts, prayers and actions.” The highway between Gua-
dalajara and Manzanillo appeared generally unaffected. Federal police officers waved motorists through toll stations, which were suspended Saturday to allow residents to return to their coastal homes. The highway cuts through the Sierra del Tigre mountain range, but there were no signs of major mudslides or bridge damage. Barricades cordoned off small mudslides or pools of water, but mostly the road was open and fast-moving. Residents here described heavy rain and strong winds Friday night. In Tlaquepaque, a suburb of Guadalajara popular with tourists and folk artists, shop owners opened their gift stores and fast-food joints early Saturday for business, even as large dark clouds roamed overhead. Sofia Quintero, 23, a manager at a shop selling candies and tequila, said Friday night’s winds were stronger than usual, but the storm wasn’t nearly as bad as predicted. Her power and Internet never went out. “Strong winds and a lot of water,” Quintero said. “But like they said it would be? No.” Agren reported from Monterrey, Mexico. Contributing: Alan Gomez in Miami; Doug Stanglin in Virginia.
Sunday’s elections in Ukraine mark a turning point Local authorities will get more power Oren Dorell USA TODAY
Whether voters elect a new wave of leaders bent on reform or turn to ultra-nationalist or proRussian parties vying to capitalize on Ukrainians’ frustration with a dismal economy, local leaders will soon have more power than ever before. Sunday’s local elections in Ukraine will likely be a turning point in the nation’s struggle to break
free of the corruption that prompted the 2014 ouster of a Russian-backed president and the beginning of a war fueled by Russian-backed separatists. Decentralization in the central government is pushing decisionmaking and budgetary authority down from the capital in Kiev to municipal bodies. Soon, local authorities will be able to dismantle the web of regulations that choke off economic growth and promote corruption — or to block anti-corruption efforts and deal with the consequences later. If voters bring more reformers into office, “I hope that will be a sign the country is moving in the
right direction,” said Andriy Kurochka, a fundraiser for the Ukrainian Catholic University who discussed the elections during a visit to Washington. with a group of Ukrainian business leaders. The way Ukrainians rallied around their armed forces against Russian-backed separatists gave Kurochka hope for the future. “Ukraine will continue united, or it will not exist,” he said. He and others in his group from Lviv said new blood is needed to bring about the change that the country demanded when it threw out former president Viktor Yanukovych and his pro-Russian Party of Regions.
SERGEY DOLZHENKO, EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY
Polls show Ukrainians are dissatisfied with national leaders but engaged politically. Turnout Sunday was likely to be 75%.
2B
L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2015
Accidents, alleged murder of firefighter force scrutiny v CONTINUED FROM 1B
Tragedy struck in early September when a driver allegedly intentionally hit and killed Michigan firefighter Dennis Rodeman, 35, during his “Fill the Boot” shift. The driver has since been charged with murder. “That was just an incident that none of us could have predicted,” MDA spokeswoman Roxan Olivas said. “It certainly wasn’t an accident and that was what was so hard about it.” A USA TODAY review of federal fatality records indicates Rodeman’s case may be the only instance in which a firefighter has died during a fire departmentsponsored roadside fundraiser in the past five years. But firefighters’ stories of close calls and accidents speak to the risks of stepping into traffic. In March, a Ladson, S.C., firefighter collecting money for the Carolina Children’s Charity was hit and sent to the hospital with head injuries. In 2012, Haughton, La., firefighter Sean Stewart was seriously injured while collecting for the Muscular Dystrophy Association when a driver hit him in the back. “We’ve had some minor stuff,” said Roger Lopez, coordinator of the International Association of Fire Fighters National MDA drive. “But out of the thousands of the Fill the Boot drives it is very minimal.” These accidents are often underrepresented in the National Fire Incident Reporting System records because they are not injuries occurring in response to an incident, said Brad Pabody, chief of the National Fire Data Center. Even without concrete numbers, in the past 10 years a mishmash of solicitation bans and panhandling bans have created new barriers for firefighters raising money on the road. In Oklahoma City, Council-
Dozens injured as car plunges into homecoming crowd Jim Varney and Trevor Hughes USA TODAY
ROBERT KILLIPS, LANSING STATE JOURNAL
Lansing comrades Ward Morris-Spindle, left, and Rahshemeer Neal honor Dennis Rodeman. woman Meg Salyer introduced a median solicitation ban in early September driven by citizens’ safety concerns. Nearly half of all traffic accidents in Oklahoma City in the past five years happened at intersections, according to Oklahoma City police spokesman Capt. Paco Balderrama. However, no firefighters have been injured. The roadside “Fill the Boot” events are some fire departments’ most lucrative fundraising campaigns. This year, fire departments in Fairfax County, Va., alone raised $615,945.44 for efforts to cure Muscular Dystrophy. A review of donations shows that busy intersections bring in more donations than busy super-
market parking lots. In 2009, St. Andrews Fire Department in Charleston, S.C., moved their teams off the roads, which led to more than a 50% decline in contributions, St. Andrews Fire Department Deputy Fire Chief Ken Fischer said. This year Marshfield, Wis., a city of about 19,000, raised about $1,500 at a grocery store. But in 2014, Rhinelander, Wis., a city of 7,500 people, raised more than $12,000 roadside. Organizers say safety is their primary priority. “These are trained public safety officers,” Olivas said. “They are trained to handle difficult situations. Safety is absolutely a priority in what they do and with what they do for us.”
Melanie Eversley
Make A Difference Day, in its 24th year, helps feed, clothe and comfort untold thousands
From refurbishing local parks to chipping in on yardwork for families hit by cancer, tens of thousands of people across the country took part in a nationwide day of community volunteerism Saturday. Make A Difference Day is an annual event of community service sponsored by USA TODAY and its parent company, Gannett. Other sponsors include the volunteer organization Points of Light, and Newman’s Own, the philanthropic food company founded by actor Paul Newman and author A.E. Hotchner. Projects across the country took place with help from $400,000 in grants from the Gannett Foundation, $170,000 in community grants from TEGNA Foundation and $130,000 in grants from Newman’s Own. There were 702 projects with roughly 25,000 volunteers. In Appleton, Wis., Gannett employees from 10 sites did yardwork and light household projects for families with children battling cancer, to aid Midwest Athletes Against Childhood Cancer. On the U.S. territory of Guam, volunteers took part in a toy drive. In Monroe, La., volunteers delivered meals to seniors for the local Meals on Wheels program. “Make A Difference Day is an opportunity for Americans to come together for the sole purpose of making their communities stronger by giving back,” said Bob Dickey, Gannett’s president and chief executive officer. “Gannett is built on serving our local communities and empowering people to create positive change. With Make A Difference Day, we are inspired and gratified to see the communities and participants around the country who come together to make a positive impact for so many people and causes each year.” “Newman’s Own is all about supporting people doing great things,” said David Best, the food company’s president and CEO. Make A Difference Day is in its
A boy helps rejuvenate a bicycle for the Free Bikes 4 Kidz project in Minneapolis on Make A Difference Day in 2014.
USA TODAY
NOAA
A satellite image shows Patricia’s menacing eye on Thursday.
El Niño blamed for wild Pacific storms Doyle Rice USA TODAY
Hurricane Patricia’s rampage into Mexico was part of the Pacific Ocean’s hyperactive hurricane season of 2015, one that’s been supercharged by weather troublemaker El Niño. So far this season, eight hurricanes of Category 4 or 5 strength (at least 130 mph) have formed in the eastern Pacific Ocean, which is an all-time record, according to hurricane researcher Phil Klotzbach of Colorado State University. Patricia set several weather records, including strongest hurricane winds (200 mph), strongest Pacific hurricane at landfall (165 mph) and fastest to intensify from a tropical storm to Category 4 hurricane. In the central Pacific, a record 14 named tropical storms or hurricanes have spun through the region this season. Fortunately, as is the case with most Pacific hurricanes, few have hit land. El Niño, a natural warming of tropical Pacific Ocean waters, has provided fuel for the storms, which usually need warm water of at least 80 degrees to form.
Salyer, the Oklahoma City councilwoman, said she wants to be clear: Regardless of who is on the median, intersections are not safe. “If the Girl Scouts chose using medians as their business model to sell cookies, the community would likely be in an uproar,” Salyer said. “This is a dangerous place people are doing business.” Nonetheless, the tradition has remained strong in many parts of the country. “Taking this away is going to hurt (MDA),” Lopez said. “We are their No. 1 sponsor hands down and if all the cities say you can’t do this then it will hurt them.” But just as the Jerry Lewis Labor Day telethon came and went, “times change,” Salyer said.
A woman who police said was driving drunk crashed into the Oklahoma State Homecoming parade Saturday morning, killing 4 people and injuring 44 others. Adacia Chambers, 25, was arrested and detained on suspicion of driving under the influence, Stillwater police Capt. Kyle Gibbs said. Police didn’t immediately release any details about the three people killed in the crash, which happened around 10:30 a.m. ET. The homecoming game against Kansas started as scheduled, players bowing their heads in prayer as the American flag fluttered at half-staff in Boone Pickens Stadium. Paramedics and firefighters participating in the parade were able to assist the injured immediately, authorities said. The Oklahoma University Medical Center said one victim was a 2-year-old boy who died Saturday evening. “Tragically, we lost three. I hope we don’t lose any more,” said the university’s president, Burns Hargis, before the fourth fatality. “The Cowboy family pulls together.” Gibbs declined to discuss the evidence against Chambers and asked witnesses with photos and videos to contact investigators. The car was not part of the parade, according to police. Gibbs said Chambers drove her silver Hyundai Elantra sedan through several barriers and hit a parked police motorcycle before careening into the crowd.
Pausing for one day to bring joy, change to those in need
TROPICAL DEPRESSION PATRICIA
A record for the region: 8 powerful hurricanes — so far
DRIVER KILLS 4 AT PARADE IN OKLAHOMA
Ocean temperatures near Hawaii are at record highs, Klotzbach said. El Niño also reduces the winds that tend to tear hurricanes and typhoons apart. Other than Hurricane Joaquin, the Atlantic hurricane season has been mostly a dud, as predicted and as is typical during El Niño. Only three hurricanes have formed, according to the National Hurricane Center. As for global warming, would warmer oceans mean that stronger, more frequent hurricanes like Patricia are possible? The jury is still out on that one: “It is premature to conclude that human activities — and particularly the greenhouse gas emissions that cause global warming — have already had a detectable impact on Atlantic hurricane or global tropical cyclone activity,” according to NOAA’s Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory. (Tropical cyclones are all tropical storms, hurricanes and typhoons.) However, looking ahead, the laboratory said that “warming by the end of the 21st century will likely cause tropical cyclones globally to be more intense on average.” Scientists are always clear to point out that no one storm can be blamed on or caused by manmade climate change. Patricia, like all weather events, was due to many causes, such as El Niño.
TERRY ESAU
“Gannett is built on serving our local communities and empowering people to create positive change.” Bob Dickey, Gannett’s president, CEO
24th year and serves a range of causes. Employees from Gannett headquarters in McLean, Va., put together 7,200 weekend food packs for needy elementary school children to assist Food for Others, a food bank that serves Fairfax County, Va. The children served often do not otherwise have access to adequate meals on the weekends. In Auburn, Wash., volunteers worked at Seattle Tilth Farm Works, a program that helps about 20 refugee immigrants each year learn organic farming and small-business management.
The program helps refugees stay afloat, Mohamad Aden Juma, a Somali refugee, told King 5 TV. “For my children — clothes for school and everything,” he said. “I’m buying from what I produce here.” In Bound Brook, N.J., the Courier News funded a park refurbishment project that was open to fundraisers and volunteers, according to MyCentralJersey.com. “After the work was done, we served lunch, and we were done by around noon, so everyone could go out and enjoy a beautiful fall afternoon,” police Capt. Kevin Rivenbark said. Anyone who wished to participate in one of the projects across the country could learn more by visiting the Make A Difference Day website at makeadifferenceday.com. Those who exhibited the greatest spirit of volunteerism will be recognized at an event in Washington in the spring.
USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2015
ON POLITICS
Bush making campaign ‘adjustment’ Refocuses efforts on early-voting states after trimming staff
Cooper Allen
@coopallen USA TODAY
David Jackson USA TODAY
It was a week that’s likely to be pivotal in shaping the 2016 presidential race, as Vice President Biden passed on a run, and Hillary Clinton testified before the House Benghazi panel. More news from the world of politics: 43 IS NOT A TED CRUZ FAN They may share a home state, but George W. Bush reportedly isn’t an admirer of Texas’ junior senator. According to Politico, Bush, speaking to a group of donors recently, said of Cruz: “I just don’t like the guy.” Cruz, who worked on Bush’s 2000 presidential campaign, didn’t seem to take it hard, attributing the critique to the fact he’s running against the former president’s brother, Jeb, for the GOP presidential nomination.
CHARLESTON, S . C. Jeb Bush says he’s not reducing his presidential campaign, he is simply refocusing it with an eye toward the early caucus and primary states. “We’ve made an adjustment in our campaign,” Bush said Saturday before conducting a town hall in the pivotal state of South Carolina. “That’s what leaders do.” Stumping in the Palmetto State a day after his campaign announced staff reductions and pay cuts, Bush dismissed critics who said the changes reflect a struggling campaign that is losing ground to any number of rivals. “Blah, blah, blah,” Bush said.
Vice President Biden with President Obama: It’s too late. 2016 FIELD REACTS ON BIDEN Biden’s decision to to sit out the 2016 presidential race elicited a range of reactions from White House hopefuls. Hillary Clinton called Biden “a good man and a great vice president” who “helped save the auto industry and pull our economy back from the brink of depression.” Some Republicans used the moment to take swipes at Clinton. Donald Trump tweeted that he “would rather run against Hillary because her record is so bad.” STARS COME OUT FOR CLINTON New reports show that Clinton banked donations in the most recent quarter from such Hollywood stars as Matt Damon, Meg Ryan and Tom Hanks. Republicans nabbed a few famous donors, too. Bush received $2,700 from country USA TODAY singer Toby Matt Damon Keith, while singer and producer Kenneth “Babyface” Edmonds gave to Marco Rubio.
DEBATE LINEUP ANNOUNCED The GOP presidential field gathers Wednesday in Boulder, Colo., for its third debate. Trump, Ben Carson, Carly Fiorina, Bush, Rubio, Cruz, Mike Huckabee, John Kasich, Chris Christie and Rand Paul will be on the main stage in prime time. Rick Santorum, Bobby Jindal, George Pataki and Lindsey Graham qualified for the prelminary debate at 6 p.m. ET. The only real change? The absence of Scott Walker, who has left the race. Contributing: David Jackson, Fredreka Schouten and Christopher Schnaars
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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again referred to the early Republican contests during the town hall hosted by Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C. Scott — who has not yet endorsed in the primary — said after the town hall he doesn’t think Bush’s campaign changes will hurt him in South Carolina. The senator compared the slim-down to the diet that Bush himself used to lose weight. “I think he’s doing the Paleo diet to his campaign,” Scott said. Also appearing at the town hall: U.S. Rep. Trey Gowdy, R-S.C., two days after chairing a hearing in which Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton testified about the 2012 terrorist attack on a U.S. facility in Benghazi, Libya, which killed four Americans, including Ambassador Christopher Stevens. “I don’t know what y’all were doing Thursday,” Gowdy told the crowd. “I had a rough Thursday.”
BERNIE SANDERS’ CAMPAIGN ENTERS ‘PERSUASION’ PHASE Nicole Gaudiano
EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY
“That’s my answer — blah, blah, Iowa caucuses, the New Hampblah.” shire primary, the South Carolina The cuts came after a slide in primary and the Nevada caucuspolls showing the former Florida es. He said he is also taking aim at governor well behind Donald a March 1 group of primaries, inTrump, Ben Carson and cluding key Southern other Republican candistates like Georgia and dates, creating some unTexas. rest among Bush donors. “We have a campaign In response, Bush that is designed to win,” cited a number of candiBush said. “And I’m godates who have held ing to win.” early leads in Republican In discussing his camcontests and then faded, paign changes, Bush also talked about the changa list that ranges from GETTY IMAGES ing nature of the RepubHerman Cain to Rudy lican race. He cited a Giuliani. John McCain, Jeb Bush “new phenomenon” of meanwhile, rallied from candidates who have risinternal campaign troubles to win the 2008 Republican en in the polls without any previpresidential nomination. ous political experience, an “October is not when you elect apparent reference to Donald people,” Bush said before hosting Trump and Ben Carson. He dea town hall at a Catholic high scribed them as “the front-runschool in Charleston. ners right now” who will be “held Bush said his efforts now focus to account, just like all of us will.” on four contests in February: the Later Saturday morning, Bush
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WASHINGTON Iowa and New Hampshire voters, prepare to hear even more from Sen. Bernie Sanders. The underdog candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination, armed with more than $30 million, has hired a pollster and will start running ads in the two states early next month. After proving he can draw crowds in the thousands, Sanders is moving toward the “persuasion” phase of his candidacy. He’ll hold smaller events in the two early-voting states, in addition to his mega-rallies, so he can take questions from undecided voters, according to Tad Devine, Sanders’ senior media strategist. Vice President Biden’s decision to opt out of the 2016 campaign helps solidify Sanders’ position as the Democratic Party’s alternative to front-runner Hillary Clinton. But Devine said that doesn’t impact Sanders’ strategy. “From the beginning, this campaign really has not been about opponents, it’s been about Bernie and his message,” Devine said. “We’re not going to deviate from that strategic course.” It’s unclear how a Biden bid would have affected Sanders’ chances, but national polls suggest the vice president’s absence could make Sanders’ path toward the nomination even more challenging. Four polls taken since the first Democratic debate on Oct. 13 showed Clinton’s lead over Sanders jumped from an average of 23.5 percentage points to an average of 30 when Biden was excluded as an option. “Now she is the formidable front-runner again,” said Patrick Murray, director of the Monmouth University Polling Institute in New Jersey. “It doesn’t look like (Sanders) can make this up. Even if he pulls off a win in New Hampshire, the problem is he doesn’t have the blue-collar
Gatherings to get more intimate; policy specifics on way
“This campaign really has not been about opponents, it’s been about Bernie and his message.” Tad Devine, Sanders’ senior media strategist
SCOTT OLSON, GETTY IMAGES
Democrat Bernie Sanders speaks at a fundraising concert Friday in Davenport, Iowa. vote, he doesn’t have the Latino or African-American vote. When we get to Super Tuesday, those groups are going to dominate.” James Campbell, a political science professor at the University at Buffalo, said Biden’s decision helps Clinton. He said the opposition Clinton faces from Sanders was a secondary concern compared with the significance of her performance Thursday testifying before the House committee on Benghazi, and the controversy over her use of a private email server while secretary of State. Now “most likely the only way she is not getting that nomination would be a self-destruction,” he said in a statement. Devine disagreed, saying Sanders’ path is clearer because Biden cited priorities in his Wednesday announcement that are similar to Sanders’, such as the need for
campaign finance reform and to end income inequality. “Now we don’t have someone competing that directly with us on that message terrain,” Devine said. Sanders has begun to show his lighter side, dancing on The Ellen DeGeneres Show and joking about comedian Larry David’s portrayal of him on Saturday Night Live. David bragged, in Sanders’ characteristic shout, that he had only one clean pair of underwear, prompting Sanders to assure reporters in Iowa he has “an ample supply of underwear.” Part of Sanders’ strategy is to begin speaking more substantively on issues, including what it means to be a democratic socialist, the term he uses to describe his politics. He plans to offer more specifics about his economic plan, including his ideas for
taxes and generating revenue. Another topic: how he’d handle being commander in chief. The campaign has continued to draw significant small contributions, according to Devine. Between Sept. 28 and Oct. 15, it raised $6.7 million in contributions of less than $200. That has allowed the campaign to continue to hire staff, open field offices and conduct research to begin advertising. The campaign hired pollster Ben Tulchin, who previously worked for former Democratic National Committee chairman and former presidential candidate Howard Dean, Devine said. “It shows that the debate was a hell of a good night,” Devine said. “But it also shows that we’re building a campaign structure that is going to allow us to compete for resources all the way through this election.”
IN BRIEF UAW SETS SUNDAY GM STRIKE DEADLINE
The UAW on Saturday set a deadline in its contract talks with General Motors of 11:59 p.m. ET on Sunday, at which point the union could call a strike if a tentative agreement has not been reached. “Your UAW-GM bargaining team has served official notice to GM terminating the National Agreement and Salaried Master Agreement effective at 11:59 p.m. Sunday October 25,” the union said in a Facebook posting to the membership about 3 p.m. on Saturday. The UAW’s decision to set the deadline comes two days after it resumed high-level discussions with the automaker. — Alisa Priddle and Brent Snavely, Detroit Free Press OBAMA PLAN LIMITS STANDARDIZED TESTING
President Obama says students are spending too much time in the classroom taking tests, many of them unnecessary, and urged officials in the nation’s schools to
HANGING TOUGH FOR HALLOWEEN
posted on Facebook. ‘‘So we’re going to work with states, school districts, teachers and parents to make sure that we’re not obsessing about testing.’’ — Christopher Doering POLICE ‘VIRAL VIDEOS’ LINKED TO VIOLENCE RISE
FREDERIC J. BROWN, AFP/GETTY IMAGES
Surfers dressed up for Halloween conquer the waves at Newport Beach, Calif., on Saturday at the 11th annual Blackies Classics Longboard Association Halloween Surf Day. take steps to administer fewer and more meaningful exams. The White House said Saturday the proliferation of testing in the United States — a problem the administration acknowledged it had played a role in — has taken away too much valuable time that can be better spent learning,
teaching and fostering creativity in schools. To curb excessive testing, Obama recommended limiting standardized testing to no more than 2% of a student’s instructional time in the classroom. ‘‘Learning is about so much more than just filling in the right bubble,’’ Obama said in a video
Recent criticism and scrutiny of police departments and viral videos of officer-involved killings might explain the rise in violent crime in some cities, FBI Director James Comey said Friday. Comey made the remarks in a speech at the University of Chicago Law School, lending the prestige of the FBI to a theory that is far from settled: that the increased attention on the police has made officers less aggressive and emboldened criminals, according to The New York Times. The paper added that Comey acknowledged that there is so far no data to back up his assertion and that it may be just one of many factors that are contributing to the rise in crime, like cheaper drugs and an increase in criminals being released from prison. — Yamiche Alcindor
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L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2015
Japan braces for ‘yakuza’ gang violence In largely gun-free nation, division threatens reprise of 1980s mob war Kirk Spitzer USA TODAY
Japan is bracing for war. Not with other countries, but with the nation’s notorious gangsters. A 43-year-old man was gunned down in the parking lot of a hot springs resort in western Japan earlier this month in what authorities say they fear could be the start of a deadly war among the nation’s largest organized crime gangs, known collectively as the yakuza. The powerful Yamaguchi-gumi crime syndicate, which marked its 100th anniversary this year, split into two rival groups in September. Police arrested a member of the Yamaguchi-gumi in the hot springs shooting and identified the victim as a member of the breakaway group. Analysts said the rupture was due to long-running disputes over succession plans and high fees that member groups were required to pay Yamaguchi-gumi leaders. Japan’s National Police Agency warned of possible gang violence at an emergency meeting of senior officials from each of the country’s 47 prefectures shortly after the split. “We don’t have specific information thus far that the rift will develop into inter-gang conflicts, but there were incidents in the past which involved civilians,” Takashi Kinoshita, chief of the JNPAs organized crime division, said at the meeting in early September, according to local media. A dispute over the gang’s leadership in the early 1980s led to a two-year war that left an estimated 30 gangsters dead, 70 others wounded and more than 500 in police custody. However, there are no statistics on the number of civilians killed or injured in the violence. Local news media report that yakuza groups are beginning to stockpile weapons and recruit members to carry out potential hits. The price of a handgun sold on the black market has risen from $2,500 to $10,000 in recent weeks, according to Asahi Shimbun, a leading mainstream newspaper. Legal firearms are highly restricted in Japan. In a nation of TOKYO
PHOTOS BY JIJI PRESS, AFP/GETTY IMAGES
Riot police stand guard outside the headquarters of one of Japan’s largest yakuza crime syndicates, the Yamaken-gumi, during a Sept. 9 police raid on the building in Kobe.
“The general public is no longer tolerant of yakuza conflict. It’s costly to kill people.” Jake Adelstein, Toyko journalist and authority on organized crime
roughly 127 million people, Japan had just 35 cases of firearm shootings in 2010, according to the most recent data available from the National Police Agency’s “Crime in Japan” report. Last month, in the western Japanese city of Toyama, one yakuza group paraded as many as 100 gangsters down a busy street in a show of strength. Two nights later, a rival group did the same nearby, Kyodo News Service reported. Authorities responded by sending scores of police to raid each group’s headquarters, according to Kyodo. Police estimate that Yamaguchi-gumi had about 10,000 core members and about 14,000 affiliated members before the split. About one-third are believed to have broken off to form a rival organization, called the Kobe Yamaguchi-gumi. Atsushi Mizoguchi, a journalist and author who has written extensively on the yakuza, said it is unlikely that senior leaders would
order a full-on war. But he said at least some violence is likely as rival groups fight for turf. “If organized criminals were able to establish viable revenues by invading the domain of others … it could lead to skirmishes in various places around the country. That could expand and eventually could well lead to a (violent) struggle,” Mizoguchi said at a Tokyo press briefing last week. Jake Adelstein, a Tokyo journalist and authority on organized crime, is less sure. He points to the case of Tadamasa Goto, a yakuza boss who was ordered to pay $1.2 million in damages to the family of a real estate agent murdered by members of his gang in 2012. Although Goto was not charged in the death, he was still held liable. “The situation is very different from what it was in the ’80s,” Adelstein said. “It’s not economically wise to have a gang war. The general public is no longer toler-
JIJI PRESS, AFP/GETTY IMAGES
Kenichi Shinoda is the boss of Japan’s largest yakuza gang, the Yamaguchi-gumi, which is threatened by an internal rift.
ant of yakuza conflict. It’s costly to kill people.” Yakuza gangs, long tolerated as a “necessary evil” in Japan, have been in slow decline since orga-
nized crime countermeasures were enacted in the early 1990s. Many gangs still operate semiopenly, however, with headquarters, business cards and legitimate-appearing front companies. Yakuza engage in a variety of “serious criminal activities, including weapons trafficking, prostitution, human trafficking, drug trafficking, fraud and money laundering,” according to a February 2012 report from the U.S. Treasury Department. Extortion, loan-sharking and “protection” rackets also are common yakuza activities in Japan. President Obama issued an executive order in 2011 designating the yakuza as a “transnational criminal organization.” The Treasury Department has since frozen assets in the U.S. of more than a dozen yakuza bosses — including the leaders of the Yamaguchi-gumi and another breakaway faction, the Kodo-kai gang — and has forbidden Americans from doing business with them. In a report issued in April, the Treasury Department labeled the Kodo-kai “the most violent faction within the Yamaguchi-gumi” and said the yakuza has engaged in drug trafficking and money laundering in the United States, but did not provide details. There is no indication that any yakuza violence as a result of the recent split could spread to the U.S.
Barbie as the Virgin Mary doesn’t play well Argentine artwork, which also depicts Ken doll as Jesus, is unpopular with Catholics Kamilia Lahrichi
Special for USA TODAY
An artistic showcase featuring 33 Barbie and Ken dolls as religious figures — including a crucified Jesus Christ and a Virgin Mary — is sparking controversy in this Argentine capital and worldwide a year after the same event was canceled over death and other threats. The exhibit, “Barbie, The Plastic Religion,” has infuriated religious organizations globally, especially Catholic ones in Buenos Aires, Pope Francis’ birthplace. “Barbie and Ken have offered for decades a model of a couple that attracts children of every age to play with them and identify with them,” said Adrian Santarelli, a priest at St. Thomas More parish in Buenos Aires. “The idea of dressing (dolls) with sacred images of sacred persons alters and damages the child’s levels of understanding of the sacred.” “Could we consider normal that a child prays to Barbie?” he added. Artists Marianela Perelli and Emiliano Paolini said the exhibit, on display through Nov. 20 at the BUENOS AIRES
POPA art gallery in Buenos Aires, is purely artwork and was not meant to offend. “It was simply the union of the two most popular elements of history: the Barbie doll and religion,” Paolini said. Among others, Barbie is depicted as Joan of Arc, Virgin of Guadalupe — Mexico’s patron saint — and Mary Magdalene, with a low-cut dress that shows her chest. Ken is shown as Buddha and Moses. The art collection also showcases Jewish and pagan mythical figures, but avoids dolls representing Muslim figures, such as the prophet Mohammed, because depiction of them is prohibited in Islam. About 400 people are expected to visit the gallery while the exhibit is on display, organizers said. Police were on hand Saturday for the unveiling of the dolls and will remain present throughout the exhibit. The exhibit was canceled last year after a series of threats to the artwork and the artists, as well as religious and conservative groups that called the display offensive. So far this year there have not been any threats. “For me, this exhibition is not controversial,” said Juan Villanueva, a curious art aficionado
KAMILIA LAHRICHI FOR USA TODAY
The polemical artwork features 33 Ken and Barbie dolls as religious figures, especially representing Christianity. who checked out the artwork Saturday. “Using religious figures with dolls is an artistic technique which produces a nice work,” he added. Perelli and Paolini came up with the idea after becoming captivated by sacred rituals on a trip to Mexico, where they witnessed the annual Day of the Dead celebrations. They argue that if there is a Barbie nurse, astronaut and
It shouldn’t offend Catholics ... there were dolls of Pope Francis that were sold in the U.S. during his visit.” Hugo Fryszberg Argentine government worker
rock star, why wouldn’t there be a religious one? “I think that our work was misinterpreted, and (people opted for) a defensive position on an artwork that was not believed to be offensive, but it seemed that it was hiding something terrible, suspicious,” Perelli said. “I think that Barbie has a bad reputation but the reality is that she’s the most widely sold doll to children so why do people think she’s like a prostitute?” Perelli added. Still, the unorthodox artwork has angered other religious denominations as well, including Hindus for its depiction of the goddess Kali. Rajan Zed, a Hindu cleric living in Nevada called the “Barbie-fication of Kali … simply improper, wrong and out of place.” Not everyone agrees with that view. “We can’t be stuck in the past with our traditions,” said Elina Aguilar, a retired woman attending the display’s opening. “It doesn’t outrage me.” Hugo Fryszberg, 55, an employee of the Buenos Aires government, pointed out dolls have been sold of other religious figures without issue: “It shouldn’t offend Catholics ... as there were dolls of Pope Francis that were sold in the U.S. during his visit with a clear commercial end.”
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USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2015
THE SWEET AND THE SCARY
Halloween is less than a week away. How better to prepare yourself than to look at facts from both the past and present, this life or the afterlife.
HALLOWEEN BY THE NUMBERS
THE BEST COSTUMES OVER TIME Top-selling costumes over time from Spirit Halloween, the nation’s largest Halloween specialty retailer. PRINCESS LEIA
FREDDY KRUEGER
HULK HOGAN
157
CARE BEARS
MILLION 1983
1984
1985
1986
WHERE'S WALDO?
ELVIRA
BATMAN
TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES
AMERICANS PLAN ON CELEBRATING THE HOLIDAY
$6.9
1987
1988
1989
1990
TERMINATOR
CATWOMAN
BARNEY
POWER RANGERS
BILLION
TOTAL SPENDING
$1.2 BILLION
$74
ADULT COSTUMES 1991 STAR TREK
1992
1993
1994
SCREAM
BATMAN
SOUTH PARK
AVERAGE SPENDING
$950 MILLION CHILDREN’S COSTUMES
FAVORITE HALLOWEEN CANDY THE MATRIX
Three candies got the most votes in a 50-state survey of candy:
1996
1997
1998
AUSTIN POWERS
SNL SPARTAN CHEERLEADERS
SPIDER-MAN
1995
Reese’s Peanut Butter Cups
Kit Kat
HOW WILL YOU CELEBRATE HALLOWEEN?
1999
2000
2001
2002
PIRATES
SPONGEBOB
STAR WARS
BARACK OBAMA
Hand out candy
68% Decorate home or yard
45% Dress in costume
44% 2003
2004
2005
2006
SPIDER-MAN
THE JOKER
VAMPIRES
LADY GAGA
Butterfinger
Carve a pumpkin
41% Throw or attend a party
32%
20 MILLION PLAN ON DRESSING A PET
Take children trick-or-treating
28% Visit a haunted house
18% 2007
2008
2009
2010
SNOOKI
THE AVENGERS
TWERKIN’ TEDDY
FROZEN
Dress pet/pets in costume
13% Note: Multiple answers permitted Survey of 6,754 adults conducted Sept. 1-8. Margin of error ±1.2 percentage points.
2011
2012
2014
2013
TOP 3 FOR 2015: DISNEY’S DESCENDANTS
TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES
STAR WARS $8.0 billion
TOTAL ANNUAL SPENDING ON HALLOWEEN
$6.9 billion
$7 billion $6 billion $5 billion $4 billion $3 billion $2 billion
$3.3 billion
$1 billion $0 2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
Note: Includes costumes, candy, decorations, greeting cards and other expenses Sources Costumes: Spirit Halloween; annual spending and celebration information: National Retail Federation; popular candy: Influenster survey of 40,000 members in 2015 RAMON PADILLA AND GEORGE PETRAS , USA TODAY
2013
2014
2015
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MONEYLINE
Beth Belton @bethbelton USA TODAY
BUSINESS SURVEILLANCE FOGLE’S FINANCIAL FALLOUT uIn a nutshell: Jared Fogle, the former Subway restaurant pitchman, has paid out a total of $1 million in restitution to 10 of his 14 victims, writes our Christopher Doering. uThe lowdown: Fogle, who has agreed to plead guilty to child pornography charges and having sex with minors, has paid $100,000 to each of the 10 victims. Prosecutors expect the remaining four individuals to receive similar payments before Fogle is sentenced on Nov. 19. uThe back story: Fogle, a 38-year-old father of two, rose to national prominence when the Subway chain discovered he lost more than 200 pounds by eating their sandwiches and exercising. The restaurant giant featured him in their ads starting in 2000 and he continued working for the chain until July — the same month when authorities raided his Indianapolis home.
MATT DETRICH, THE INDIANAPOLIS STAR
ON THE FRONT BURNER YAHOO PLAYS BALL Yahoo has something to prove, namely that it can successfully stream the nation’s most popular sport to a global audience without the delays and disruptions that have come to characterize so much of live online viewing. The company paid about $17 million for the rights to stream the Jacksonville Jaguars and the Buffalo Bills faceoff from London at 9:30 a.m. ET, according to a post on Bloomberg News. By comparison, CBS paid about $37.5 million per game in its one-year deal to broadcast the National Football League on Thursday nights. Yahoo will play the game big across its various Web properties with video that automatically starts when visitors land on one of its sites, according to the Bloomberg item.
KIRBY LEE, USA TODAY SPORTS
Jaguars coach Gus Bradley, left, receiver Allen Robinson
IN THE HOT SEAT MOMENTARY BUSINESS CLOT Walgreens Boots Alliance won’t open any new Theranos blood-testing centers until the start-up company resolves questions about its technology, a Walgreens official told The Wall Street Journal. On Thursday, a team from the drugstore chain met with senior Theranos executives, including founder and Chief Executive Elizabeth Holmes, at the start-up’s headquarters in Palo Alto, Calif., to discuss the issues involved, the Journal reported. USA SNAPSHOTS©
Maybe tomorrow
would rather pull weeds than research best health care benefits choices.
Source Aflac 2015 Open Enrollment Survey of 2,000 employees JAE YANG AND JANET LOEHRKE, USA TODAY
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L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2015
DOMINICK REUTER, AFP/GETTY IMAGES
Bill Gates speaks as his wife, Melinda, center, reacts during a press conference for the organization Every Woman Every Child on Sept. 24 in New York. Once Gates attained ultra-wealth status, he plunged into philanthropy and fundamentally changed it.
A charitable zeal grips tech billionaires After all, ‘nobody wants to be a jerk,’ despite stereotypes Jon Swartz @jswartz USA TODAY
SAN FRANCISCO Shortly after Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg visited San Quentin State Prison to speak out about overcrowded prisons this month, word quickly spread that Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey was donating a sizable amount of the riches expected from the forthcoming IPO of Square, his other company, to underserved communities. In an industry often derided for its selfish, self-aggrandizing behavior, the good works of Zuck and Jack were heartening, though not entirely surprising. HBO’s hit sitcom Silicon Valley aside, the Valley is increasingly putting its money where its heart is. “The story is that not just the big guys are giving,” says Alison Murdock, who has done philanthropic work in the region for years. “There has been a backlash against Silicon Valley, and nobody wants to be a jerk.” On Thursday, Zuckerberg and
MARK ZUCKERBERG, FACEBOOK
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, right, visits with Aly Tamboura during a coding boot camp at San Quentin State Prison. his wife, Priscilla Chan, launched a multimillion-dollar private preschool, K-8 school and health services for children and families in impoverished East Palo Alto, Calif. On Wednesday, Radha Basu, the former general manager of Hewlett-Packard’s $1.5 billion channel business, announced that iMerit, the company she founded to help train and prepare millions of marginalized youth in the USA and India for the digital jobs of the future, raised $3.5 million. She has enlisted the help of Michael and Susan Dell, venture capitalist Vinod Khosla and eBay
“What’s important is for tech millionaires to give as its billionaires have.” Ben Nelson, Minerva Project
founder Pierre Omidyar. The intersection of tech and philanthropy — some call it “philanthrocapitalism” — is epitomized by e-commerce site YouGiveGoods, which lets people “e-give” tangible goods to causes and start charity drives of their own. Company CEO Lisa Tomasi, who created the site, has worked
with the NFL, Morgan Stanley and Verizon to help groups like Toys for Tots and SPCA shelters. The young turks of tech lead the charge, though they learned plenty from the Hewlett and Packard families, Google, Salesforce and others before them, says Sharon Tanenbaum, a nonprofit consultant in the San Francisco Bay Area. “San Francisco, by far, is the most generous city in the U.S. per capita,” says Ben Nelson, CEO of Minerva Project, which provides students an Ivy League education for a fraction of the price. “What’s important is for tech millionaires to give as its billionaires have.” Indeed, not just the megawealthy in tech are giving generously: Increasingly, executives from start-ups are pledging time and money to social causes. Many have learned from the dot-com boom of the late 1990s, when the tech industry was dinged for a paucity of donations. Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates and investor Warren Buffett have spearheaded a campaign to get other American billionaires to give at least half their wealth to charity. The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation is the largest private foundation in the world, with a $41 billion endowment. “It’s a gold rush (in Silicon Valley),” Nelson says. “People come here to scratch lottery tickets. A culture of giving is hard to implement.”
Book exposes zombie side of Freddie and Fannie Kathleen Day
Special for USA TODAY
For real zombies this Halloween, look no further than two financial companies that are among the biggest and surely the most peculiar in the world: Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. The two finance the bulk of U.S. home loans, using money borrowed from around the globe. That makes them a mainstay of America’s $10 trillion housing market and of the national and world economies. If Fannie and Freddie tank, it could all tank. But whether they should be run wholly as federal agencies — or partially or not at all — has been debated for decades, especially since the Great Recession. The issue’s always half-alive because it’s key to the financial well-being of so many, yet always half-dead because special interests ensure no one has the political stomach or clout to resolve it. How this policy limbo arose and its danger for taxpayers is the subject of Bethany McLean’s new book, Shaky Ground: The Strange Saga of the U.S. Mortgage Giants. McLean is best known for her BUSINESS BOOK REVIEW
2009 PHOTO BY BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI, GETTY IMAGES, FOR “MEET THE PRESS”
Bethany McLean
star role in exposing the Enron fraud, which she did by simply asking how Enron made money. The answer was it didn’t. As cash cows, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have the opposite problem. Congressionally chartered, shareholder-owned and, since 2008, government-run, they are required to buy and sell residential mortgages in good times and bad. Until the federal
government seized them during the mortgage crisis, Republicans and Democrats for decades cherished their political donations, even as these same elected officials waggled fingers on the need to overhaul them. Seven years after the Bush White House took them over, in theory temporarily, the Obama administration still runs them, using their profits to reduce the deficit. Last week, the White House reiterated it has no plans to release control of the twin companies back to shareholders. In a short, lucid paperback (or ebook) from a new publishing arm of Columbia University, McLean explains how the topsy-turvy world of Fannie and Freddie came to be and why government control of them likely will limp along indefinitely as the major unresolved issue of the financial crisis. The nation’s Byzantine housing-finance system make the book tough to plow sometimes, but expert and beginner alike can learn much. The history of the two giants could take volumes. McLean has captured most essentials in 150 pages.
The companies supposedly married the free-market discipline of shareholder ownership with a government mission to encourage homeownership. In reality, they wed the worst of each in a system with no checks and balances yet, explicitly or not, unlimited draw on taxpayer funds. This system gave Americans widespread access to the 30-year fixed-rate mortgages they love, but, as McLean shows, that’s no excuse to embrace the pre-takeover version of Fannie and Freddie or to accept the government-as-caretaker status quo. The question is whether a different system could — or should — accomplish the same end. The book deftly chronicles the troubling history of Fannie and Freddie — a jampacked one to be sure — but could have better highlighted what the two got right: setting strong standards for mortgage lending. But the book expertly summarizes how the government performs the neat trick of taking the companies’ profits without reflecting their liabilities on the U.S. budget. The companies have repaid the U.S. Treasury the $187 billion pumped in during the crisis and now earn taxpayers billions of dollars a year.
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USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2015
PERSONAL FINANCE
Don’t let investment fees suck away your savings An investor with a $500,000 portfolio could wind up paying almost $1 million in fees over 30 years
M
Jeff Reeves l Special for USA TODAY
ost Americans are so focused on getting the biggest profits possible out of their portfolios that they overlook one tiny thing that adds up to an important part of the big picture: Fees.
A recent study by financial services company Personal Capital found typical advisory fees range from 0.82% to 1.53% annually. That might not sound like a lot, but consider that an investor with a $500,000 portfolio could wind up paying almost $1 million in fees over 30 years, according to the study. “I don’t think people are aware — not the specifics, and certainly not the total when you add all these things up,” says Bill Harris, CEO of Personal Capital. Investment expenses include everything from trading commissions to advisory charges. Frequently they are “busted up into pieces,” so they are difficult for individual investors to keep track of, Harris says. Some of the most common charges you may be paying on your own investments include: Expenses are charged every year as a fixed percentage of your investments in mutual funds or exchange-traded funds. On the surface they can sound rather modest, such as an “expense ratio” of 0.5%. But on a $100,000 portfolio, that figure equals $500 in fees a year … and if you add that up over 20 or 30 years, these expenses start to amount to serious cash. uEXPENSES.
uMUTUAL
FUND
BART NAGEL
“I don’t think people are ACTIVE MANAGEMENT aware — VS. INDEX FUNDS not the It’s tempting to think that somespecifics, times a fund that charges big fees is worth the expense, providing and sophisticated strategies or topcertainly notch research that creates bignot the investment returns. But comtotal when ger monly, that is not the case. you add While some big-name firms all these may be able to beat their peers things up.” for a year or two, consistent outBill Harris, CEO of Personal Capital
LOADS.
Some funds also have “loads,” or charges that resemble commissions, on top of annual expenses. Loads are either paid on the front end when you initially invest or on the back end after you sell your investments. These typically are paid as a fixed percentage of your assets and can be as high as 8.5% under current guidelines. uTRADING COMMISSIONS. Al-
though many brokerages offer a few complimentary trades to new customers to get them started, trading commissions can take a big bite out of investors’ portfolios once those freebies are gone. For instance, say you purchased $500 worth of stock, but you were charged a $7.50 trading fee to purchase and will incur another $7.50 fee when you sell. That means you’ll need your invest-
ment to rise 3%, or $15, just to cover these fees and break even. Harris notes that bigtime fees in these areas can be particularly burdensome for younger savers, considering every dollar they’re charged now is a dollar less that they have to invest and grow over time.
“It’s incumbent on the providers of financial services to find other ways to add value to justify their costs to the end investor.” Josh Brown, a financial adviser and CEO of Ritholtz Wealth Management
performance over decades is “not possible,” says Josh Brown, a financial adviser and CEO of Ritholtz Wealth Management. “Even if you pick the best manager possible, you’re still paying more than they are able to deliver in additional upside,” Brown says. In this environment, it’s not surprising that experts such as Harris and Brown are increasingly recommending low-cost investments like index funds — that is, mutual funds or ETFs that simply track major stock market indexes like the S&P 500 or the Dow Jones industrial average and thus avoid complicated strategies and high management fees. But not all money managers are gouging clients, and not all active funds are evil, says Denny Baish, senior investment analyst at Fort Pitt Capital Group. “The last six years, if you’ve put it in an index fund, you’ve done very well, and active management has struggled. But these things tend to go in cycles,” Baish says. “From the mid- to late ’90s, index funds out-performed for the most part, and then in the early 2000s, active managers earned their fees.” Baish points to the uncertainty right now in the bond market amid talk of higher interest rates as one area of opportunity for ac-
GETTY IMAGES/ ISTOCKPHOTO
tive managers to “go where the value is” instead of just waiting on the Federal Reserve to act. “You’ll see active managers earn their keep in this market over the next couple of years,” he says. Beyond performance, however, there’s also peace of mind that can come from an actual human at the helm instead of just a spreadsheet of stocks. “We’re here to help them not only in the good times but also when things get choppy and volatile,” Baish says. “We’re here to help you stay the course and meet your personal objectives over time, in any environment, and we earn that fee by being there no matter what.” THE RISE OF ROBO-ADVISERS
Although Brown insists promises of out-performance are a fantasy, he does think it’s crucial for investors to feel like they are getting something for their fees. “You can’t eat gross returns, you can only eat net returns,” Brown says. “So it’s incumbent on the providers of financial services to find other ways to add value to justify their costs to the end
“You’ll see active managers earn their keep in this market over the next couple of years.” Denny Baish, senior investment analyst at Fort Pitt Capital Group
investor.” For instance, Ritholtz Wealth Management offers not just traditional wealth management services, but also a “robo-adviser” service it calls Liftoff that uses algorithms and software to provide investment advice. Robo-advisers aren’t as individualized, Brown says, but lower-net-worth clients typically have straightforward investment needs and don’t need as much guidance. Liftoff has a minimum investment of $5,000 and a 0.4% annual fee — or $40 a year on every $10,000 you invest — making it a cheap and accessible option to younger investors. Other robo-advisers offer even lower minimums and fees. For instance, Wealthfront requires $500 to get started, charges nothing to manage your first $10,000 in assets and costs 0.25% in expenses to manage assets in excess of $10,000. Other firms, such as Betterment, offer no minimum deposit. Certain clients will always need personalized advice, Brown says, but robo-advisers like these are the future of wealth management. “Like every other industry in the world, over time the cost for consumers goes down,” Brown says. “Investment management fees will come down on a secular basis for the rest of our lives.” In the meantime, Harris says, it behooves investors to closely watch the fees they pay under their current model focusing on the lowest-cost options available and guarding against the desire to chase short-term investing fads. “Move from stock picking or market timing into long-term asset allocation,” Harris says. “Default toward the lower fee, and default toward indexing.” Reeves is the editor of Investor Place.com and the author of The Frugal Investor’s Guide to Finding Great Stocks.
Where to look to find out how much you’re paying Expense ratios tell a lot, but deciding whether they’re too high is really a judgment call
Jeff Reeves
Special for USA TODAY
All Americans want to keep down their investing costs and hang on to more of their money. But figuring out how much they actually are paying in fees — and, most important, whether it’s too much — can be confusing. For the typical investor with most of their assets in mutual funds via a 401(k) or IRA, the most important number to check for is the “expense ratio” charged by those funds. The figure is expressed as a percentage of your total assets. As a practical example, a mutual fund with a 0.7% expense ratio charges investors $70 each year for every $10,000 invested. “You can find fee information pretty much anywhere you choose to look,” said Charles Sizemore, chief investment officer at Sizemore Capital Management in Dallas. “You can check the fund’s prospectus if you just really like reading legalese,” Sizemore said, however popular finance sites, in-
cluding investment research firm Morningstar and the USA TODAY Portfolio Tracker are more accessible to the casual investor. The thing to remember, he adds, is that you don’t get a bill for these fund fees; they are “baked in” to your investment’s performance. For instance, if that same mutual fund charging 0.7% each year generates a 10% annual return, it passes 9.3% in gains on to you and takes 0.7% off the top. Furthermore, “returns lost to fees actually compound over time,” he said, because you lose not just that fixed fee upfront but also potential investment returns that could have been made on that extra cash. Given all this, it’s crucial for investors to keep an eye on what they are paying and try to keep costs as low as possible. But what is a reasonable expense ratio to shoulder on your investments? Well, a 2014 report by Morningstar states the typical mutual fund that focuses on U.S. stocks charged 0.67% in annual expenses; the average among the entire universe of funds with
GETTY IMAGES
more sophisticated strategies was 1.25%. Those are good places to start, Sizemore says, but it’s also important to compare funds to their peers. Depending on the strategy, some funds are naturally more costly or cheap to manage. “A fee number in a vacuum really doesn’t tell you much. If you’re investing in a strategy that really is different and really adds something to your portfolio, then paying a higher fee shouldn’t be a deal breaker,” he said. A few in-
You don’t get a bill for these fund fees; they are “baked in” to your investment’s performance.
vestment areas that tend to be more sophisticated and charge higher management fees include emerging market investments or unconstrained bond funds, Sizemore said. However, he adds that “if you’re getting a fund that tracks pretty closely to the S&P 500, then it’s hard to justify paying a premium.” There are also a host of other fees in the investment world, particularly for self-directed investors purchasing individual stocks or funds in a brokerage account, due to additional costs for fund transfers or fees incurred with each trade, all of which can vary greatly. And those using a professional money manager can see a wide range of charges, from flat hourly rates to commissions on certain transactions and annual administrative fees. But the bottom line, Sizemore says, is to always shop around and find the least expensive way to meet your financial goals. “When presented with many different ways to do the same thing, always err on the side of lower costs,” Sizemore said.
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Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com/sports l Sunday, October 25, 2015
Arizona prep F Lightfoot taps KU By Gary Bedore gbedore@ljworld.com
Mitch Lightfoot, who committed to the University of New Mexico his sophomore year of high school, decided to re-open his recruitment last spring after averaging 17.9 points and 9.7 rebounds for statechampion Gilbert (Arizona) Christian High. Nothing against the Lobos, but the 6-foot-9, 210-pound Lightfoot suddenly realized his continued improvement in basketball had opened up the possibility of fulfilling a lifelong dream.
Greinke trade catalyst for KC Kansas City, Mo. (ap) — The groundwork for backto-back World Series runs by the Kansas City Royals began on a cold December day in 2010 when they traded perhaps the game’s best pitcher. Back then, the Royals were devoid of talent, going nowhere and doing it slowly. So general manager Dayton Moore packed off Zack Greinke to GAME 1 Milwaukee, swap- Who: Mets ping the Cy vs. Royals Young can- When: 7 p.m. didate for a Tuesday quartet of Where: prospects he Kauffman hoped would Stadium help lead a renaissance TV: FOX in Kansas (WOW! channels 4, City. Two of 204) them were pitchers, Jeremy Jeffress and Jake Odorizzi. The other two? Lorenzo Cain and Alcides Escobar. Five years later, both are All-Stars. Cain has grown into a .300 hitter and one of the game’s best center fielders. Escobar has become such a slick-fielding shortstop that the question is not whether he will capture a Gold Glove but how many. Both of them are MVPs of the AL Championship Series, too. Cain won the award a year ago. Escobar nabbed his Friday night when he helped Kansas City beat the Toronto Blue Jays 4-3 in Game 6 to earn the club’s second straight trip to the Fall Classic. “That’s pretty good,” said Hall of Famer George Brett, now a special assistant in the Royals front office, who has helped tutor both players the past few spring trainings. Brett was watching from a suite in Kauffman Stadium on Friday night, and someone asked him who he thought would be MVP. Before they even announced his name, Brett replied: “Escobar is going to win. He stood head and shoulders above everybody else.” Indeed, Escobar set a postseason record by getting a leadoff hit in the first four games of a series. He finished 11-for-23 against the Blue Jays, joining Dustin Pedroia of the Red Sox as the only hitters with at least 10 hits and five RBIs from the leadoff spot in LCS history. Please see ROYALS, page 7C
“My sights have always been on Kansas,” Lightfoot said Saturday after orally committing to KU in a ceremony at the Arizona Preps Fall Showcase event in Glendale, Arizona. The rabid KU fan — he was born in Kansas City, Missouri, and lived there until he was 6, when his family headed to Tucson — sought out help in getting noticed by the Jayhawks. “I met with my coach (after decommitting),” Lightfoot said of Arizona Power AAU coach John Ortega, “and he said, ‘What do you want out of this?’ “I said, ‘I want to play at
Kansas.’ It’s been my goal since I knew what basketball was, ever since then. I’ve been working my butt off to try to get there. To all the kids sitting in the stands watching the Jayhawks, wanting to be a Jayhawk, you can definitely do it,” Lightfoot, the No. 117-rated player in the recruiting Class of 2016 (by Rivals.com), added. Ortega said that, after speaking with Lightfoot, he phoned recruiting analyst Jerry Mullen, who contacted KU about Lightfoot’s interest. “Forty minutes later, I get a call, and coach Roberts (Norm, KU) is asking about
our practice times. They were going to take a private jet to see a workout. That was a Monday. On Wednesday, coach Roberts saw Mitch work out and was blown away by the workout. Two days later, coach (Bill) Self called to offer him. Mitch came over and said, ‘Kansas just offered.’ It was a dream-come-true-type moment,’” Ortega said. A great student who has qualified for admission to David Kadlubowski/Arizona Republic Stanford, Lightfoot wanted to make his NCAA-allot- GILBERT CHRISTIAN HIGH’S MITCH LIGHTFOOT ted five visits — to KU, St. DUNKS against Arcadia in the Div. II John’s, Stanford, Arizona championship game on March 2 in Glendale, Arizona. Lightfoot committed to Kansas Please see HOOPS, page 7C University on Saturday.
Overcome OKLAHOMA STATE 58, KANSAS 10
Crash casts pall at OSU
By Matt Tait mtait@ljworld.com
Nick Krug/Journal-World Photo
KANSAS UNIVERSITY PLAYERS AND COACHES LEAVE THE FIELD after a 58-10 loss to Oklahoma State on Saturday in Stillwater, Oklahoma. For more pictures, please visit www.kusports.com/kufball102415
Stillwater, Okla. — A wave of emotion leading up to kickoff gave way to a sea of orange jerseys swallowing the Kansas University offense during Oklahoma State’s 58-10 victory Saturday at Boone Pickens Stadium. A few hours after a 25-yearold Stillwater woman drove her car into a crowd of people at a homecoming parade near OSU’s stadium, killing four and injuring a few dozen others, the 14th-ranked Cowboys (7-0 overall, 4-0 Big 12) delivered a much-needed distraction for the home crowd of 59,486 in a dominant win over the overmatched Jayhawks. Prior to Saturday’s kickoff, there was talk about canceling the game. But OSU officials said they believed the game should be played as scheduled as a way to honor the victims and their families. “I just want to start by saying how sorry our staff, the Oklahoma State family and our team is about the incident earlier today,” OSU coach Mike Gundy said after the game. “My message to (our team) was that a decision was made to play the game, so we need to play the game. After that, we need to do everything we can to help the people and the families involved.” Please see KANSAS, page 4C
KU getting crash course in Football 101 Stillwater, Okla.— Drop a student who hasn’t yet taken Math 101 into the middle of a Math 141 classroom full of students who already have passed Math 105, 106, 111, 115, and 121, and ask that student to finish on top, and what do you expect will happen? It’s no different most weeks for the Kansas University football team, which doesn’t have the luxury of
Tom Keegan tkeegan@ljworld.com
putting its players through years of prerequisites before sending them into compe-
tition vs. athletes whose games have grown through years of drilling technique and building bodies in the weight room. They must learn via onthe-job training such as Saturday in T. Boone Pickens Stadium, where Oklahoma State overwhelmed Kansas, 58-10. It was enough to discourage young football players into wondering whether
they ever will become good enough to compete. KU’s true freshman wide receivers won’t reach those depths of self-doubt, because the player who leads their position won’t let them. Just three years ago, senior Tre’ Parmalee stood where they do now, and he repeatedly lets them know, he didn’t stand as tall. Please see KEEGAN, page 5C
Sports 2
AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE
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AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE EAST
Steelers are dealing with their injuries
COMING MONDAY
NORTH NORTH
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EAST EAST• Coverage of Kansas University football and basketball • A report from the Chiefs-Steelers game at Arrowhead
SPORTS CALENDAR
KANSAS UNIVERSITY TODAY • Soccer at Oklahoma State, 1 p.m. • Men’s golf at Price’s Give ’Em Five Invitational, El Paso, Texas • Women’s golf at Palmetto Intercollegiate MONDAY • Women’s golf at Palmetto Intercollegiate
| SPORTS WRAP |
SOUTH
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BOSTON RED SOX
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Kansas City, Mo. (ap) — The Steelers and Chiefs have both dealt with a crippling number of injuries this season, whether it was Pittsburgh losing quarterbacks Ben Roethlisberger and Michael Vick or Kansas City losing Jamaal Charles for the season. The big difference? Pittsburgh has pressed on. Kansas City has shriveled up. The Steelers head to Arrowhead Stadium today in search of their third straight win, and their fifth victory in sixth games. Third-string quarterback Landry Jones is expected to get his first start, and a plethora of other backups are also expected to play significant minutes. Meanwhile, the Chiefs are trying to end a maddening fivegame skid lowlighted by lastminute losses to Denver and Chicago, and a horrid offensive performance last week in Minnesota. “We are extremely fragile. We acknowledge that,” Steelers coach Mike Tomlin said. “We aren’t looking for comfort. We aren’t looking to make excuses. Just in the state of where we are, we are going ... to make necessary adjustments to put ourselves in position to win.” The Steelers (4-2) have so far been able to do just that. Roethlisberger has been practicing but is still unlikely to play as he recovers from a knee injury, and Vick is sidelined by a hamstring injury. But in their place a week ago, Jones threw for 168 yards and two touchdowns in leading Pittsburgh to a 25-13 win over Arizona. It was precisely the kind of gritty performance that has become a Steelers hallmark. “That was really exciting. Not only for us but for Landry,” Steelers wide receiver Antonio Brown said. “He showed amazing growth, amazing poise.” Especially considering everybody he was missing. Offensive tackle Kelvin Beachum is out for the season with a knee injury, center Maurkice Pouncey has a broken leg, wide receiver Martavis Bryant has been dealing with a knee injury, offensive tackle Mike Adams an ailing back. Even more guys are missing on the defensive side. “We focus not on the guys that aren’t playing, but the guys that are,” Tomlin said.
CAPSULE PITTSBURGH (4-2) at KANSAS CITY (1-5) Today, noon, CBS (WOW channels 5, 13, 205, 213) LINE — Chiefs by 3 RECORD VS. SPREAD — Steelers 4-0-2, Chiefs 1-5-0 SERIES RECORD — Steelers lead 20-10 LAST MEETING — Steelers beat Chiefs 20-12, Dec. 21, 2014 LAST WEEK — Steelers beat Cardinals 25-13; Chiefs lost to Vikings 16-10 AP PRO32 RANKING — Steelers No. 8, Chiefs No. 29 STEELERS OFFENSE — OVERALL (17), RUSH (8), PASS (24). STEELERS DEFENSE — OVERALL (23), RUSH (7), PASS (26). CHIEFS OFFENSE — OVERALL (20), RUSH (20), PASS (19). CHIEFS DEFENSE — OVERALL (22), RUSH (11), PASS (25). STREAKS, STATS AND NOTES — Steelers have won three straight in series. Chiefs’ last win was 13-9 on Nov. 27, 2011, at Arrowhead Stadium. ... Pittsburgh has won four out of five. Its lone loss was in OT to Baltimore. ... Third-string QB Landry Jones expected to start for Steelers. He was 8 of 12 for 168 yards and two TDs against Arizona. Ben Roethlisberger and Michael Vick battling injuries. ... Steelers are tied for first with three other teams in turnover differential at plus-6. They have nine takeaways. ... RB Le’Veon Bell has 390 yards rushing since returning from suspension in Week 3, second in league to Atlanta’s Devonta Freeman. ... Kansas City punted on first six possessions last week in Minnesota, then turned over ball on downs on seventh. ... Chiefs rookie CB Marcus Peters intercepted his third pass of season last Sunday.
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Walton will start season as Warriors’ coach Oakland, Calif. — What has been speculated is now official: Steve Kerr will not be on the bench when the Warriors begin the defense of their NBA title Tuesday night at Oracle Arena, and he could miss a number of games at season’s outset as he continues to recover from back surgery. General manager Bob Myers confirmed Saturday that Kerr, who attended practice and enjoyed his most involvement on the court since he initially left the team at the outset of training camp, still isn’t ready to return to the bench. Luke Walton will continue to serve as interim head coach until Kerr is able to return. “I talked to Steve and he is improving, but there still is no timeline as to when he’s coming back,” said Myers. “He’s confident he will be back, but it’s all speculation as to when. So he told the team that Luke’s going to start the season as the coach, and they’re fully aware that they’re going to have to accept more responsibility. Luke we have full confidence in, he has a great staff around him.” Myers said Kerr would continue to stay engaged with the team and talk to Walton frequently. “Luke will hold down the fort until Luke’s able to come back, and stay back,” Myers said. Kerr will be present before Tuesday’s game against the New Orleans Pelicans to take part in the championship ring ceremony. Walton said he was told Friday that he would begin the season as the head coach. Walton coached the Warriors’ summer league team and also has been the head coach throughout the entire preseason, and said he has been preparing mentally for the possibility of being the regular-season head coach to start the season. “The preseason’s been great for some of the stuff, but that’s all over now,” he said. “We’ll find out Tuesday what it’s really like, and I’m looking forward to that.” Kerr was not available for comment after practice. BROADCASTING
UNC honors Stuart Scott Chapel Hill, N.C. — North Carolina spent Friday honoring late ESPN broadcaster and alumnus Stuart Scott. The school inducted Scott into the North Carolina Journalism Hall of Fame, based in the UNC School of Media and Journalism. The school later honored Scott during Friday night’s annual “Late Night with Roy” event, which is the ceremonial start to the basketball season. Scott first hosted the event in 2001 and did so 10 times. Scott’s daughters, Taelor and Sydni, appeared at midcourt and received framed photos of Scott’s time as host from Tar Heels coach Roy Williams. UNC also honored Scott with a “Tar Heel Trailblazer” award, which the school says honors those who “paved the way for success in all aspects of the student-athlete experience.” Scott died in January after a lengthy fight against cancer. BASEBALL
Source: Phillies hire Klentak Philadelphia — Two people familiar with the decision say the Philadelphia Phillies will hire Matt Klentak to be their general manager. Both people spoke to the Associated Press on condition of anonymity Saturday because the team hasn’t announced the move. The 35-year-old Klentak had been the Angels’ assistant general manager since November 2011. Klentak replaces Ruben Amaro Jr. He was fired in September by new team president Andy MacPhail. Klentak previously worked for MacPhail in Baltimore as the Orioles director of baseball operations from 2008-11. He then served as the No. 2 man behind GM Jerry DiPoto for four seasons. Klentak interviewed for DiPoto’s job after he resigned this summer. The Angels hired Billy Eppler earlier this month.
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Names surface for L.A. job Los Angeles — Several hours after the Los Angeles Dodgers confirmed Don Mattingly wouldn’t return to their dugout next season, Gabe Kapler was asked if he was ready to take over as the team’s manager. “I have to go work out,” Kapler said. He smiled, politely declined to comment further and slipped into an elevator. Kapler, who recently completed his first season as the Dodgers’ farm director, has emerged as the early industrywide favorite to replace Mattingly. The former major-league outfielder is one of three in-house candidates under consideration for the position, along with bench coach Tim Wallach and third base coach Ron Roenicke. The Dodgers are also expected to reach out to Chicago Cubs bench coach Dave Martinez and former San Diego Padres manager Bud Black. Andrew Friedman, the team’s president of baseball operations, said he would like to hire a manager in time for baseball’s annual winter meetings in early December. “I imagine it will be a very thorough process,” Friedman said. Previous managerial experience is not a requirement. “My sense is that we’ll have candidates who have prior managerial experience and others who don’t,” Friedman said. NFL
Peterson questionable today Eden Prairie, Minn. — The Minnesota Vikings have downgraded running back Adrian Peterson to questionable for their game today at Detroit due to an illness. Peterson jammed the ring finger on his left hand last week against Kansas City. He was originally listed as probable to play the Lions because of that injury. The illness did not come into play until the Vikings made the announcement Saturday. In 13 career games against the Lions, Peterson has rushed for 90 yards or more 10 times with 11 touchdowns. He’s averaging 5.3 yards per attempt and 107 yards per game against Detroit. The Vikings previously ruled defensive tackle Sharrif Floyd out of the game because of knee and ankle injuries.
Dallas delays Bryant return Irving, Texas — Dez Bryant has been ruled out for the Dallas Cowboys’ game at the New York Giants on today, delaying the All-Pro receiver’s return from a broken right foot at least another week. Bryant was downgraded from doubtful Saturday, a day after he didn’t travel with the team to New York. He hasn’t played since getting injured in the opener against the Giants. The Cowboys (2-3) have lost all three games without Bryant and quarterback Tony Romo, who broke his left collarbone a week after Bryant went out. After the game against the Giants (3-3), Romo will miss at least three more games. NASCAR
Gordon on pole at Talladega Talladega, Ala. — Jeff Gordon will go restrictor-plate racing for the last time today at Talladega. His No. 24 Chevy will start on the pole, but don’t be fooled by any pretense of great expectations. If anything, he is trying to contain himself, and not do a happy dance on his way to his car. Talladega. No more. “In this type of racing, you have to accept it,” said Gordon, who is retiring and next year heading for a Fox TV gig. “You can’t fight against it; it is what it is. There are times where I’ve enjoyed restrictor-plate racing more than any other race I’ve ever been a part of.
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Jones qualifes for state By Chris Duderstadt cduderstadt@ljworld.com
Lawrence High freshman cross country runner Morgan Jones expected it to come down to the wire as to whether she would qualify for the state meet at Saturday’s Class 6A regional championship at Haskell Indian Nations University. Jones’ instinct was right. The LHS freshman placed 14th overall with a 5K time of 20:06.8 and took the fifth and final individual state-qualifying spot. The top five runners who are not a part of one of the top three teams earn a bid to the state meet. “I was really happy for her,” LHS coach Brian Anderson said. “She’s worked hard for it. She tried to step it up at the end of the race.” Jones admitted to being nervous going into her first regional cross country meet, but she was able to remain calm as she carried out her simple race plan. “I was trying to keep
up with the people in front of me and catch up to them and stay with them,” Jones said. Freshman Anna DeWitt joined Jones in the top 35, placing 31st with a time of 21:21.7 to help pace the Lawrence High girls to a seventh-place finish. Jones will be joined at the state meet by the varsity squads of regional champion Shawnee Mission North, SM Northwest and SM West. SMNW’s Molly Born won the individual title with a time of 18:40.0. The 6A girls race will be at 11:45 a.m. Saturday at Rim Rock Farm. Class 3A, 5A and 6A will all be competing at Rim Rock, with the 5A boys kicking off the meet at 10 a.m.
pretty well,” Pederson said. “We were in a close, tight group. We improved quite a bit.” The LHS senior missed out on qualifying for the state meet for the third consecutive year, but Anderson applauded Pederson for the leadership he has displayed over the past four years. “He’s had a good run,” Anderson said. “He’s had a lot of good races and qualified for state a couple of times.” Sophomore Carson Jumping Eagle and junior Garrett Prescott also broke the 18-minute barrier with respective times of 17:48.7 (33rd place) and 17:59.7 (36th place). SM North’s boys squad followed the lead of the girls team and edged Shawnee Mission East by one point for first place. SMN’s boys and girls team also swept the Sunflower League Championships Oct. 17 at Rim Rock. SM North brothers Belesti and Alex Akalu took the top two spots at Saturday’s regional with times of 15:19.0 and 16:13.0.
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Topeka — Free State High’s volleyball team has faced plenty of teams with powerful attacks this season. The Firebirds just haven’t played many quite like Manhattan. The Firebirds had trouble adjusting defensively and couldn’t recover in a season-ending 25-19, 25-21 loss on Saturday at Washburn Rural in the first round of sub-state. Free State finished the season with a 23-17 record. “They were one step ahead of everything, and we were one step behind,” FSHS senior Allie Knapp said. “We just couldn’t quite get on our toes and figure out what they were doing on offense. They were just swinging quick and hitting where we weren’t.” The Firebirds started strong in the first set, jumping to a 7-2 lead with three kills from freshman
BV West downs LHS volleyball By Chris Duderstadt cduderstadt@ljworld.com
Lawrence High’s volleyball team had the honor of hosting one of the four Class 6A sub-state tournaments Saturday, but the home-court advantage was not enough to send the Lions past Blue Valley West. LHS entered as the No. 7 seed, and fell to No. 2-seeded BV West in straight sets (25-12, 25-8). “Blue Valley West is a solid team,” LHS coach Stephanie Magnuson said. “They’ve got swingers at all places, and their setter is fantastic. It’s just hard to keep up with that kind of a team.” The Lions (8-29) hung tough with the Jaguars early in the first set, trailing 8-7, but it was all BV West from there. The Jaguars used an 8-0 run in the middle stages of the first set, and rattled off nine straight midway through the second to keep the Lions from grabbing any momentum. “I think we came out with a lot of energy, and just a lot of fight,” Laurel Bird said. “The underclassmen wanted to
| 3C
BRIEFLY KU’s Miller sets pool mark Kansas University senior swimmer Chelsie Miller broke a Robinson Natatorium record Saturday while winning the 400 individual medley. Miller recorded a time of 4:18.37 in a double dual against Denver and Missouri State. The Jayhawks defeated Missouri State, 277-69, and fell to Denver, 188-162. “It was kind of surprising,” Miller said. “I saw the coaches on the side getting a little excited, so I knew something was up. It’s really cool to be this fast this early in the year.” Miller also won the 500yard freestyle in 4:57.44. KU’s Haley Molden won the 100-yard freestyle in 51.78, Graylyn Jones and Nadia Khechfe went 1-2 in three-meter diving, and KU’s 200-yard freestyle relay team of Haley Bishop, Molden, Pia Pavlic and Hannah Driscoll took second in 1:36.33. Madison Straight (2:03.17) and Sammie Schurig (2:04.25) took second and third in the 200-yard backstroke. The Jayhawks will face TCU on Saturday in Fort Worth, Texas.
8.35 on the floor and 7.85 on the bars. After qualifying as an individual, Free State High senior Callie Hicks took fourth place on the bars (8.75) and fifth on the vault (9.15).
LHS soccer plays Tuesday Lawrence High’s boys soccer team was seeded 12th in its regional and will open against fifth-seeded Shawnee Mission Northwest at 7 p.m. Tuesday at the Shawnee Mission Athletic Complex. The Lions (4-11-1) lost, 2-1, to the Cougars (11-3-2) during the regular season on Sept. 17. The winner will face No. 4-seed Olathe North (13-3) or No. 13-seed SM West (4-12) on Thursday.
Seabury goes 1-1 at regional
Lyndon — Bishop Seabury Academy’s volleyball Pederson pushes boys team defeated BurlinThe Lawrence High game in straight sets boys also tallied a sevbut lost a three-setter to Mike Yoder/Journal-World Photo enth-place finish, with Herington on Saturday LAWRENCE HIGH RUNNER senior Nathan Pederson at regionals to end BSA’s MORGAN JONES WAS THE leading the way. season. TOP FINISHER for the Pederson clocked in The Seahawks defeatLions in the Class 6A cross with a time of 17:34.4, ed Burlingame, 25-14, 25country regional meet good for 31st place. 15, to open competition. Saturday at Haskell Indian “We pushed ourselves They jumped on top of Nations University. pretty hard, and we did KU golfers Herington in their second match, 25-18, but lost lead in Texas the next two sets 16-25, El Paso, Texas — 25-27. Kansas University golfer Taylor Hodge led SeaChase Hanna fired a 5-un- bury with 16 kills, 10 aces, der 66 in the second round, thee assists and 39 digs. and the Jayhawks led the Ellen Almanza had 18 kills, Price’s Give ’Em Five Invita- six aces and 30 digs; ReRachel Hickman, two kills and juniors Payton GanHowever, it was just too tional by one stroke over gan Zaremba contributed by junior Naomi Hickman naway and Larissa Gaum- much ground to make up. Marquette heading into two kills, 47 assists and 11 and an ace by Jenalee er. Junior Natalie Clarke “I think today we just today’s final round at Butdigs; Lindsey Hornberger Dickson. Lauren Johnson added a block. weren’t connecting,” terfield Trail Golf Club. had 18 kills, 19 digs, two added a few assists. Manhattan answered FSHS senior Rebekah AnKU had a team total of blocks and an ace; Vivian After Manhattan fought with a run of 10 straight dersson said. “That hap21-under 555, just ahead Aubel had four kills, 21 back to tie the score, Free points for a command- pens sometimes in volof Marquette (556) and digs, an ace and a block; State held a 19-17 advan- ing 14-7 lead. Free State leyball. You have good Texas-El Paso (557) in the and Celia Taylor-Puckett tage before the Indians senior libero Erin Fried- days, and you have bad 15-team tournament. had 30 digs, three kills, two found their rhythm. richsen was forced to sit days. I think today wasn’t Hanna shot a two-round assists and an ace. The Indians (24-13) out several points after necessarily a bad day, total of 7-under 137, good “I am so proud of how used powerful attacks jamming her wrist on the but we just couldn’t get it for fourth place. the girls played today,” from senior Maddie Mit- court attempting a dig, right.” Other KU placings: Ben coach Chrissy Leuty said. Despite facing a ninetie, freshman Brooklyn replaced by sophomore Welle (T5, 138), Charlie “They left it all out on the Cink and junior Gigi Cameryn Thomas. Fried- point deficit in the secHillier (T11, 139), Jacques court and fought their McAtee to win the fi- richsen returned once ond set, the Firebirds Wilson (T34, 144), Conhearts out. nal eight points and take her left wrist was taped kept encouraging each nor Peck (T42, 145) and “Unfortunately, those the set. They advanced up and she practiced a other to believe they Daniel Hudson (T73, 150). last couple points didn’t fall to the state tournament few passes in the gym’s could mount a huge “Well, we finished much our way but we lost to a comeback. It wasn’t until with a straight-set victory hallway. better today,” KU coach great team in Herington. against Wichita East in “I knew, as soon as the final point was scored Jamie Bermel said. “The “This has been such an the sub-state finals later (the trainer) was work- that they were faced with conditions were much incredible season and I’ve in the afternoon. ing with it,” Friedrich- the reality that their seamore difficult than yester- been so blessed to coach “Their really strong sen said, “I just saw our son was over. day, and we played solid. such a fantastic group “I’m the only senior point was their ability points and we just kept The guys just toughed it of girls. This senior class to use our block,” FSHS getting farther behind. I who is not going to be out today, and we played has meant so much to our coach Amy Hoffsommer was like, ‘I really want to continuing in club or the last hole 5-under par, program and it is going in college,” Knapp said said. “We’ve had teams be in there.’” which was huge for us.” to be drastically different do that to us before, but The Firebirds tried to through tears. “It’s hard next season not having not as habitually. They mount a rally, even scoring to know that I’m never them back. They will be just did not back off.” five straight points with a going to put my shoes on FSHS boys, girls missed.” In the second set, the kill from junior Emma Bar- again, and I’m never gofinish second Seabury ended the seaing to put my knee pads Firebirds once again had berana and an ace by Dickson with a record of 24-15. Junction City — Free a strong start with kills son, along with a few MHS on again. … It’s really hard to go out that way.” State High’s boys and girls from Naomi Hickman attacking errors. Baker defeats cross country teams finished second at their Class rival MNU, 38-19 6A regional on Saturday Baldwin City — at Milford State Park, both Adonis Powell ran for qualifying for the state 122 yards, Clarence Clark meet next week. caught two touchdown Senior Ethan Donley passes from Nick Marra, placed second in the and Baker University deday’s setback was the boys’ 5K race and broke feated MidAmerica Nazafinal match for seniors a school record, finishing rene, 38-19, on Saturday in Severa, Dykes, Katie in 15:49.00. Donley edged Heart of America ConferMurrish, Nico Kenney, Kain Anderson’s record Nez Iskandrani and Ni- time of 15:50.2, set in 2011. ence football. Fourth-ranked Baker Free State junior Emily cole Owens. Dykes was improved to 7-1 overall and sad to see the season Venters won her third 2-0 in the conference, and and her LHS volleyball regional title, winning the MidAmerica fell to 3-5 and career end, especially girls’ race in 18:27.30. 0-2. Manhattan won both with the team coming Marra completed 20 of closer both on and off team titles. 40 passes for 261 yards, The Firebirds will comthe court. including touchdown “We have definitely pete at the state meet at grown together as a team 11:30 a.m. Saturday at Rim strikes of 35 yards to Damon Nolan and 17 and 62 in these past couple of Rock Farm. yards to Clark. weeks, and I’m really Kharon Brown, Alex thankful for that,” Dykes Baird and Avery Parker said. “We all bond really LHS gymnasts John Young/Journal-World Photo all had interceptions. well, so it’s really nice to fifth at state LAWRENCE HIGH PLAYERS COME TOGETHER TO CELEBRATE Brown had 14 tackles. have people that you can A POINT during the Lions’ substate volleyball match against Newton — Lawrence Tyrell Everett had three lean on outside of volleyBlue Valley West on Saturday at LHS. LHS fell to the High’s gymnastics team tackles for loss including ball.” Jaguars, 2-0, and ended their season with a record of 8-29. two sacks. As one of five under- posted a season-high The Wildcats will classmen on a senior- score of 98.025 points celebrate Senior Day on play hard for the seniors, “We got stuck in a few laden team, Bird was a and took fifth place at the Saturday against Central and the seniors wanted rotations, and we just mainstay this season in state meet on Saturday at Methodist at 1 p.m. at to play hard since they couldn’t put the ball away the starting lineup. Bird Newton. LHS senior Ashley Am- Liston Stadium. didn’t want it to be their or get a pass,” said Dykes, credited the six seniors last day.” who had two of the Lions’ for helping her improve mann took fourth place MidAmerica 7 7 3 2 — 19 The Jaguars made it hard three aces. during her sophomore overall in the floor exerBaker 10 7 14 7 — 38 B — Damon Nolan 35 pass from Nick for the Lions to get much Blue Valley West went campaign and said the re- cise, scoring a 9.3 on her Marra (Clarence Clark kick) going offensively, as they on to defeat No. 3-seeded turning Lions will have to routine. She also scored a M — Javon Taylor 3 run (Cristian tallied eight aces. Senior Olathe East in three sets put a lot of work in dur- team-best 8.25 on the bal- Casillas kick) B — Clark 28 field goal Caroline Dykes echoed to advance to the state ing the offseason to get ance beam and 8.025 on M — Derek Pollox 61 run (Casillas kick) Bird’s thoughts about the tournament. off to a better start next the uneven bars. B — Cornell Brown 11 run (Clark Freshman Eden Kingery kick) team’s high energy level LHS senior Kyleigh season. helping the Lions play well Severa led the Lions B — Adonis Powell 12 run (Clark “We didn’t start off as scored a team-high 8.675 kick) early, but said the team against BVW with three well with the record we on the vault, while sophoM — Casillas 18 field goal could not find a rhythm kills, and tied for tops wanted to this year,” Bird more Eliana Seidner B — Clark 17 pass from Marra (Clark kick) once the Jaguars seized on the team four assists said. “Hopefully next year added an 8.575. Junior B — Clark 62 pass from Marra (Clark Jordyn Leon added an momentum. along with Bird. Satur- we’ll switch it up.” kick)
Manhattan eliminates Firebirds By Bobby Nightengale
Sunday, October 25, 2015
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Sunday, October 25, 2015
OKLAHOMA ST. 58, KANSAS 10
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2-MINUTE DRILL Kansas 10 Oklahoma St. 58 BRIEFLY Oklahoma State had just one scoreless possession in its first six, a punt to end a five-play second series. The other five ended in touchdowns, as did the first three possessions of the second half. … Kansas, meanwhile, punted away its first five possessions and six of its first seven, managing a punt and a TD to keep it to a four-score deficit (35-10) at the half. … KU’s second-half possessions, though, ended with two interceptions, three punts and a safety.
L awrence J ournal -W orld
QB Walsh stellar for OSU By Matt Tait mtait@ljworld.com
Stillwater, Okla. — He’s no Don Larsen, and Saturday’s 58-10 victory by Oklahoma State over visiting Kansas University at Boone Pickens Stadium was not the World Series, but Oklahoma State quarterback J.W. Walsh was just about perfect. Walsh, who typically takes over for OSU startKANSAS LEADERS ing quarterback Rudolph Rushing: De’Andre Mann 7-30. Mason when the Cowboys Passing: Ryan Willis 12-for-31 for 191 yards, enter the red zone, finTD, 2 INTs. ished Saturday’s rout with Receiving: Tre’ Parmalee 6-115; Jeremiah 24 yards and three rushing Booker 2-37; Steven Sims 1-33, TD
touchdowns on six carries and added 68 yards and two more TDs on 5-of-5 passing. “We have a lot of good packages for me, and the guys around me executed perfectly,” Walsh said. “Today, it wasn’t so much what I did, it was what everyone else did and the coaches making great play calls because, when you watch them, they were just great play calls where everyone did their jobs. That’s just what happens when you’re clicking on offense.” For fitting into his new role and not whining about a lack of opportunities, Walsh,
a fifth-year senior and former starter from Denton, Texas, has earned the respect of his teammates and OSU coach Mike Gundy. “He continues to make plays for us,” Gundy said. “I mentioned to you guys in the preseason, during the season and almost every week that we need to continue to involve him in our offense. He’s a good football player.” Kansas coach David Beaty agreed with that assessment and said Walsh gave the Jayhawks’ run defense fits all afternoon. The OSU senior scored on runs of one, three and four yards and put the
14th-ranked Cowboys (7-0 overall, 4-0 Big 12) up 14-0 early with a pair of walk-in touchdowns. “He’s a good player,” Beaty said of Walsh. “He can run. He did that all through his high school career. I watched him run right past me several times (while recruiting him). He’s a talented guy.” While Walsh was whipping the Jayhawks with his legs, OSU starter Mason Rudolph, a sophomore, was torching Kansas with his arm. Rudolph finished 20of-26 passing for 305 yards and one touchdown.
OKLAHOMA STATE LEADERS Rushing: Jeff Carr 12-51, TD; Chris Carson 9-44; J.W. Walsh 6-24, 3 TDs. Passing: Rudolph 20-for-26 for 305 yards, TD. Receiving: James Washington 6-103, TD; David Glidden 6-91, Chris Lacy 4-76. TALE OF THE TAPE Kansas...................................................Oklahoma State 9......................................... first downs................................ 4 33 27............................................rushes..................................... 4 47 39.....................................rushing yards............................4 202 12-31-2..................passing (comp.-att.-int.)..........4 27-36-0 191...................................passing yards............................ 4 381 58..............................total offensive plays........................ 4 83 221............................ total offensive yards.....................4 583 0........................................ return yards................................4 81 8-43.1 4..............................punting...................................4-35.5 0-0....................................fumbles-lost...................................0-0 10-102........................... penalties-yards........................ 4 2-25 22:37..........................time of possession....................4 37:23 SCORE BY QUARTERS Kansas 0 10 Oklahoma State 14 21
0 21
0 — 10 2 — 58
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING (CARRIES-YARDS) Kansas: De’Andre Mann 7-30, Ke’aun Kinner 9-16, Taylor Cox 5-5, Taylor Martin 1-(minus-1), Ryan Willis 5-(minus-20). Oklahoma State: Jeff Carr 12-51, TD; Chris Carson 9-44; J.W. Walsh 6-24, 3 TDs; Raymond Taylor 5-23; Rennie Childs 4-21; Corey Bennett 2-18; Taylor Cornelius 3-11; Jalen McCleskey 1-10; Rudolph 5-0. PASSING (COM.-ATT.-YARDS) Kansas: Willis 12-31-191 (TD, 2 INTs) Oklahoma State: Rudolph 20-26-305 (TD), Walsh 5-5-68 (2 TDs), Cornelius 2-5-8.
Nick Krug/Journal-World Photos
OKLAHOMA STATE WIDE RECEIVER CHRIS LACY (15) ROLLS ONTO HIS FEET after a touchdown while covered by Kansas cornerback Derrick Neal during the third quarter of the Cowboys’ 58-10 victory Saturday in Stillwater, Oklahoma.
Kansas CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C
Added KU coach David Beaty: “This is a football game. As upset as I am right now, it pales in comparison to what these families are going through. I just can’t imagine.” The moment of silence that preceded Saturday’s game was the last time the Jayhawks were in this one. OSU, which racked up 331 yards in the first half and 583 for the game, scored touchPUNTING (NO.-AVERAGE) downs on five of its first six Kansas: Matthew Wyman 8-43.1. possessions and built a 35-10 Oklahoma State: Zach Sinor 4-35.5. lead at the break. Three OSU touchdowns TACKLING LEADERS: in the third quarter and Kansas: Joe Dineen 11, Fish Smithson 10, a safety late in the fourth Tevin Shaw 7, Daniel Wise 6, Marcquis Robset the final margin of the erts 5. loss, which looked a lot Oklahoma State: Devante Averette 4, Kirk more like KU’s last couple Tucker 3, Deric Robertson 3, Jordan Burton 3, Tre of trips to Stillwater — a Flowers 3, Chad Whitenener 3, Vincent Taylor 3. 42-6 loss in 2013 and 70-28 drubbing in 2011 — than Officials: Reggie Smith (referee), Joel Belllast week’s encouraging efinger (umpire), Miek Moeller (linesman), Mark fort in a 30-20 loss to Texas Stewart (line judge), Lyndon Nixon (back Tech. judge), Matt Mills (field judge), Tim Murray “You try not to hang your (side judge). head,” said sophomore lineAttendance: 59,486. backer Joe Dineen, who led Time of game: 3:10. KU with 11 tackles and a sack. “This one was tough, though. Momentum? I think it’s still there. We obviously took a step back, but I think we’re still on the right track.” CANDIDATES FOR GAME BALLS As with any game, and n LB Joe Dineen made his second-quarter, especially when a man like blind-side sack of quarterback Mason Rudolph Beaty is the one looking hurt. A week after Dineen posted 10 tackles vs. for them, there were a few Texas Tech, he went one better with 11. n WR Tre’ Parmalee ran crisp routes, showed terrific hands, creatively ate up yards after the catch and generally was the team’s best player in catching six passes for 115 yards.
RECEIVING (NO.-YARDS) Kansas: Tre’ Parmalee 6-115; Jeremiah Booker 2-37; Steven Sims 1-33, TD; Darious Crawley 1-6; Ben Johnson 1-1; Emmanuel Moore 1-(minus-1). Oklahoma State: James Washingotn 6-103, TD; David Glidden 6-91; Chris Lacy 4-76, 2 TDs; Blake Jarwin 2-44; McCleskey 1-20; Austin Hays 2-19; Jhajuan Seales 2-13; Cole Neph 1-5; Carson 1-4; Childs 1-3; Kameron Doolittle 1-3.
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good signs Saturday. But the first-year KU coach, who has remained poised and positive in the face of some tough moments this season, looked visibly upset during his postgame meeting with the media. The reason? Effort. “I can handle getting beat by a really good football team,” Beaty said. “It’s hard for me to deal with people when they can’t play to the end. Most of ’em did that. But there were a few that I saw (who had) a lack of confidence toward the end there. And we’ll get that fixed.” Added Dineen of Beaty: “He wasn’t happy after the game. Any time you have guys that don’t play through the end of the fourth quarter, it’s frustrating. When you get down that much, it sucks. But you’ve gotta keep playing and keep fighting. There’s more to play for. You gotta play for your pride.” Discounting missed tackles and KU penalties, the lasting image from the loss — and it’s a sure bet it was one freshman quarterback Ryan Willis saw Saturday night in his sleep — was Willis sprinting away from pressure, attempting to square his body to throw and firing a pass into the turf at the feet of his receivers. Oklahoma State’s defense, which entered ranked 29th in the nation, had a lot to do with Willis’ 12-of-31 passing
day that included two interceptions, two sacks and no time to breathe. KU’s offensive line provided little resistance, and Willis, in just his third career start, barely had time to secure the snap, let alone process what he saw from the defense. “There’s no two ways about it,” Beaty said. “That’s probably as good of a pass rush as I’ve seen in a long time. They were big and they’re fast. ... The last group I played against that looked that big was Alabama that first year we were at (Texas) A&M. You guys know me. I don’t mince words. I pat ’em on the back when they deserve it. We didn’t play very good up front today. Not at all.” Added center Keyon Haughton on OSU’s defense, which recorded two sacks, five quarterback hurries and eight tackles for loss: “It was really different watching it in person.” In its latest and arguably most disappointing loss of the season, Kansas (0-7, 0-4) committed 10 penalties, lost the turnover battle and committed yet another blunder on special teams. OSU blew the game open early, sacking Willis to end the first quarter and blocking a punt for a touchdown to start the second quarter on the next play. “They outcoached us and they outplayed us today,” Beaty said. “Simply put. In all areas.”
CANDIDATES FOR GASSERS n Safety Bazie Bates IV had the roughest four-play sequence of any Jayhawk this season. I: Missed tackle; II: Missed tackle on receiver who had no trouble getting open on him; III: Pass interference; IV: Missed tackle. n Oft-penalized RT Larry Mazyck was flagged for a pair of chop blocks and a clip.
KU SCHEDULE Sept. 5 — South Dakota State, L 38-41 (0-1) Sept. 12 — Memphis, L 23-55 (0-2) Sept. 26 — at Rutgers, L 14-27 (0-3) Oct. 3 — at Iowa State, L 13-38 (0-4, 0-1) Oct. 10 — Baylor, L 7-66 (0-5, 0-2) Oct. 17 — Texas Tech, L 20-30 (0-6, 0-3) Oct. 24 — at Oklahoma State, L 10-58 (0-7, 0-4) Oct. 31 — Oklahoma, 2 or 2:30 p.m. (FOX or FS1) Nov. 7 — at Texas, 7 p.m. (Jayhawk Net) Nov. 14 — at TCU, TBA Nov. 21 — West Virginia, TBA Nov. 28 — Kansas State, TBA
KANSAS COACH DAVID BEATY STANDS WITH HIS PLAYERS and Oklahoma State fans during a moment of silence to remember the victims who were killed and seriously injured when a vehicle crashed into a crowd of people at a homecoming parade hours before kickoff in Stillwater, Oklahoma. Related story on page 2B.
HOW THEY SCORED FIRST QUARTER 12:10 — J.W. Walsh 3 run. Ben Grogan kick. Oklahoma State forced Kansas into a three-and-out on the game’s first series and then marched 70 yards in eight plays, with three plays of more than 20 yards eating up most of that real estate. (OSU 7, KU 0). 2:47 — Walsh 1 run. Grogan kick. After stuffing KU for the third time in a row, OSU took advantage of great field position and drove 47 yards in 10 plays and 4:09 to take a two-score lead. The drive, which again featured Walsh handling quarterback duties in the red zone, was kept alive by a fourth-down conversion from QB Mason Rudolph to wide receiver David Glidden. (OSU 14, KU 0). SECOND QUARTER 14:50 — Miketavious Jones 13 blocked punt. Grogan kick. Another KU drive ended with a Ryan Willis sack on the final play of the first quarter. On the first play of the second, Matthew Wyman’s punt was blocked and returned for a TD by Jones, who had to hold his breath while officials reviewed it before confirming the score. (OSU 21, KU 0). 10:31 — Jeff Carr 1 run. Grogan kick. A series of defensive blunders by the Jayhawks (most notably, safety Bazie Bates IV) helped Oklahoma State march to another score and blow open the game. The drive, aided by KU missed tackles and pass-interference penalties, covered 86 yards in eight plays and 3:04. (OSU 28, KU 0). 8:41 — Nick Bartolotta 40 field goal. Kansas owed its first scoring drive of the day to a sensational catch-and-run by senior receiver Tre’ Parmalee, who caught a short pass from Willis on third-and-10 and raced 46 yards to set up the kick. (OSU 28, KU 3). 7:17 — James Washington 8 pass from Mason Rudolph. Grogan kick. The Cowboys answered KU’s first score with a lightning-fast touchdown drive starring sophomore wideout James Washington, who caught two balls for 51 yards on the drive, including the TD grab, which he ripped out of the air one-handed. (OSU 35, KU 3). 3:43 — Steven Sims Jr. 33 pass from Ryan Willis. Bartolotta kick. After going nowhere on the first couple of plays of the drive, Willis stepped up and hit Jeremiah Booker for 27 yards on third down. On the next snap, Willis quickly pushed the ball out to Sims, who sprinted past the OSU secondary for the score. The drive covered 62 yards in four plays and 1:15. (OSU 35, KU 10). THIRD QUARTER 14:10 — Walsh 4 run. Grogan kick. Oklahoma State took the opening kickoff of the second half and wasted little time putting up more points. Three plays and 50 seconds was all it took for the Cowboys to march 35 yards. (OSU 42, KU 10). 12:19 — Chris Lacy 6 pass from Walsh. Grogan kick. A Willis interception set up the Cowboys in Kansas territory, and three plays later, Walsh hit a wide-open Lacy in the end zone. (OSU 49, KU 10). 7:25 — Lacy 38 pass from Walsh. Grogan kick. The OSU seven-on-seven scrimmage continued midway through the third quarter when Walsh, who normally just fills in for Rudolph in the red zone, tossed his second TD of the day to Lacy to cap a seven-play, 72-yard drive. (OSU 56, KU 10). FOURTH QUARTER 4:55 — Tyler Ferguson 10-yard sack and safety. An OSU backup freshman defensive tackle, Ferguson got credit for a sack and two more points for the Cowboys when he chased after Willis in KU’s end zone. Willis rid himself of the ball before getting hit, but the incomplete throw didn’t get anywhere near the line of scrimmage, putting a miserable end to a three-play series. (OSU 58, KU 10).
OKLAHOMA ST. 58, KANSAS 10
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Sunday, October 25, 2015
Keegan CONTINUED FROM PAEG 1C
Nick Krug/Journal-World Photos
KANSAS UNIVERSITY OFFENSIVE LINEMAN JORDAN SHELLEY-SMITH (79) LOOKS OVER HIS SHOULDER at the game clock late in the fourth quarter of the Jayhawks’ 58-10 loss to Oklahoma State on Saturday at T. Boone Pickens Stadium in Stillwater, Oklahoma.
NOTEBOOK
Willis has ‘rough day’ By Matt Tait mtait@ljworld.com
Stillwater, Okla. — Seven days after setting a handful of freshman passing records, Kansas University quarterback Ryan Willis was reminded of just how much he still has to learn during the Jayhawks’ 58-10 loss at Oklahoma State. “I think he had a rough day,” KU coach David Beaty said of his quarterback. “He did a few good things, but I thought he overthrew a bunch of guys. I thought his poise wasn’t where it had been.” A big reason for that was the pass rush and chaos created by Oklahoma State’s defense. Willis was under duress all day, from the opening snap to his last, and he completed just 39 percent of his passes (12 of 31), threw two interceptions and was sacked twice and hit a ton. Despite the beating, Willis’ teammates, who spoke on his behalf because KU’s freshmen are not made available to the media, came away impressed with the way he fought through it. “He was cool,” senior wideout Tre’ Parmalee said of Willis. “I was surprised. He doesn’t really get flustered. He’s definitely a confident kid, and he’ll keep getting better each week.” Added Beaty: “Probably the biggest positive I will take out of this game is the way that young man handled today. As he would come off the field, we used every single moment as a teachable moment. He’s a freshman. Obviously. And there’s a lot of things to learn in hostile territory like today, particularly against a front as good as they were.” Willis’ best moments of Saturday came late in the first half, with KU
KANSAS COACH DAVID BEATY, RIGHT, PUTS HIS ARM AROUND QUARTERBACK RYAN WILLIS as they talk late in the fourth quarter. “We were gonna go for that chip at the start of the second half,” Beaty said. “We knew that we had it. We knew it looked really good. We had seen it earlier in the game. And we didn’t execute it.” Failing to shift the momentum was the least of Beaty’s concerns about the close call on the kick. “Where we went from there, that’s probably the most disappointing thing,” Beaty said of his team, which surrendered 21 points and nearly 200 yards of offense to OSU while gaining just 47 Onside kick attempt yards of its own in the fiTrailing 35-10 at half- nal two quarters. time and looking for a spark to give them hope Big play Willis’ 46-yard compleof crawling back into the game, the Jayhawks start- tion to Parmalee in the ed the second half with a second quarter marked surprise onside kick that the Jayhawks’ longest ofresulted in two penalties fensive play of the season. Parmalee, who finished — one for kicking the ball out of bounds, and the with game highs of 115 reother for sideline inter- ceiving yards and six receptions, said he and Wilference. Beaty said the onside- lis communicated well kick attempt was some- throughout the game. “I was in his ear all day,” thing KU drew up in the locker room, and he was Parmalee said. “(Injured KU quarterback) Michael upset it didn’t work. trailing 35-3. On a thirdand-eight play from his own 40, Willis evaded the OSU rush, stepped up in the pocket and hit Jeremiah Booker with a 27-yard touch pass for a first down. On the next play, with the Cowboys on their heels, Willis fired a bullet to Steven Sims Jr., who caught it cleanly and raced 33 yards to the end zone for KU’s only touchdown of the day. “I loved his demeanor,” Beaty said of Willis. “He kept learning, he kept paying attention.”
Cummings was also in his ear, just telling him to speed the clock up because we knew that they had a good front. I was just telling him go back there and relax and have fun.”
The streaks continue KU’s loss at Oklahoma State marked the program’s 36th consecutive setback away from Lawrence, a losing streak that dates back to 2009. KU also now has lost 29 consecutive Big 12 road games. Kansas’ last road win in Big 12 play came in 2008 against Iowa State. This and that ... Freshman linebacker Osaze Ogbebor recorded the first tackle of his college career, a sack in the fourth quarter. ... Junior safety Fish Smithson finished with 10 tackles, giving him double-digit tackles in four of KU’s seven games this season. ... The safety given up by Kansas, which came when Willis was flagged for intentional grounding in the end zone in the fourth quarter, was KU’s first since 2011.
OKLAHOMA STATE RUNNING BACK CHRIS CARSON (32) TRIES TO BREAK FREE from Kansas safety Fish Smithson (9) during the second quarter.
“I tell them every day they’re better than me when I was a freshman,” said Parmalee, the best player on KU’s offense. “Like Steven Sims, he’s a really good athlete, a really good player, a really good kid. I stay in his ear and push him every day because I know his potential, and I don’t want to see him slack off. Same with Jeremiah (Booker), Emmanuel Moore. I try to stay in their ear every day, keep trying to make them get better.” Parmalee, the first high school player recruited to Kansas by Charlie Weis, knows all about improvement. He had the best statistical day of his career Saturday, but naturally wasn’t celebrating. Nor was he sulking. He was carrying out Parmalee assignments with precision, never letting the lopsided scoreboard invade his focus. Parmalee caught six passes for 115 yards, both career highs. Four catches were for first downs. In six games (he missed the Baylor game due to a concussion) for Kansas, Parmalee has 26 catches for 441 yards and two touchdowns. In his first three seasons at Kansas, Parmalee combined for 20 receptions for 174 yards and never caught a TD pass. Nick Harwell, Nigel King and Tony Pierson were targeted the most last season. KU entered the year without a player on the roster with a 2014 offensive touchdown to his name. Someone had to become the most reliable player on the offense, and Parmalee has been the guy. He knew his time would come. “I’ve alwys had the vision,” Parmalee said. “If you don’t have the vision, it’s not going to happen. So I’ve always had that vision since I was a little kid.” The vision didn’t include an 0-7 record with five games as the underdog left on the schedule. “I think about that every day,” Parmalee said. “That’s why you play the game, to win. You can’t always get caught up in the wins and losses, because if you do that can take away from your preparation for the next opponent. So just go out there with your boys and your coaches and try to get better each week.” It takes years of doing that to become the player Parmalee has become. Most of the great athletes will find perennial powerhouses. In time, KU can win by stockpil-
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ing enough good athletes who turn themselves into masters of technique at their positions. KU can win with enough Parmalee-caliber players/ thinkers/competitors becoming major contributors late in their careers. But it will take years. “On the sideline, it was really impressive to watch Tre’ handle his teammates and make sure those guys continued to play and fight,” KU coach David Beaty said. “... He’s a mature guy. He really is. He’s a coach’s son, and I say that a lot, but I think it matters. He’s just a quality kid.” Parmalee said he’s grateful for his KU coaches teaching him how to get better and to his father, Oakland Raiders assistant coach Bernie Parmalee, for football lessons that never stop. “I played football since I was 5 years old, and I was always around my ‘da,’ asking him things,” Parmalee said. “Actually, before today’s game, he texted me a long text and was telling me to have fun, how to use my hands on second-level releases and giving me little points to the game so I could perform well.” I asked him to explain what he meant by using his hands on secondlevel releases, and as he explained it, I pictured him doing just that to perfection on multiple plays. He’s a natural at teaching football. “It’s basically where I’m in the slot, and I have either a safety or a nickel over me, and I’m running an intermediate route or a deep route, and the guy jumps out to collision me, and I have to use my hands and my body to leverage around him to keep in the route and get open,” he explained. On a day in which yet another inconceivable Oklahoma State tragedy reminded everyone not to take life for granted, Parmalee discussed how he never takes football as a given either. “The coaches last night had us all close our eyes and think back to when we were little kids on Saturday playing football in the back yard with our friends, the feeling that we had that, man, maybe one day I can make it to that level being on TV, playing in front of all those people,” Parmalee said. “That’s something that definitely drives me all the time not to take it for granted and just look back to those days when I was like, man, if I could just make it to that stage, it would be awesome.” Losing is the opposite of awesome, but maximizing opportunity has big rewards. If everyone on the roster gives the mental, physical and emotional effort Parmalee does on a daily basis for the entirety of their careers, KU’s football program will move in the right direction.
KANSAS CORNERBACK MARNEZ OGLETREE (25) and Kansas safety Michael Glatczak (39) break up a pass to Oklahoma State wide receiver James Washington.
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COLLEGE FOOTBALL
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TOP 25/BIG 12 ROUNDUP
Georgia Tech stuns FSU on final play ————
Southern California hands third-ranked Utah first loss of season The Associated Press
Top 25 Georgia Tech 22, No. 9 Florida St. 16 Atlanta — Lance Austin returned a blocked field goal 78 yards for a touchdown on the final play of the game, giving Georgia Tech a stunning upset of Florida State on Saturday night. Roberto Aguayo, one of the most accurate kickers in the country, attempted a 56-yard field goal to win the game for the Seminoles (6-1, 4-1 Atlantic Coast Conference) with six seconds remaining. But the kick was low, and Patrick Gamble managed to get a hand on it. While most of the Georgia Tech players celebrated, Austin went back to retrieve the ball, rolling along inside the 25-yard line. At first, he seemed hesitant to pick it up. But then he did, taking off the other way in front of the Georgia Tech bench. He avoided Aguayo’s diving attempt, then cut back on the final guy who had a shot at him to win the game for Georgia Tech (3-5, 1-4). Florida St. 3 13 0 0 — 16 Georgia Tech 3 7 3 9 — 22 First Quarter FSU-FG Aguayo 20, 7:14. GaT-FG Butker 53, 2:38. Second Quarter FSU-D.Cook 2 run (Aguayo kick), 11:46. FSU-FG Aguayo 27, 4:18. GaT-Thomas 60 run (Butker kick), 2:22. FSU-FG Aguayo 38, :00. Third Quarter GaT-FG Butker 40, 8:27. Fourth Quarter GaT-FG Butker 35, :54. GaT-Lan.Austin 78, :00. A-55,000. INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Florida St., D.Cook 17-82, Golson 7-(minus 12). Georgia Tech, Thomas 13-88, M.Marshall 16-69, Lynch 6-52, Willis 7-29, M.Allen 4-15, Lands-Davis 3-8. PASSING-Florida St., Golson 20-301-210, Team 0-1-0-0. Georgia Tech, Thomas 4-10-2-67. RECEIVING-Florida St., Whitfield 6-61, D.Cook 4-50, Wilson 3-32, Rudolph 2-33, Izzo 2-27, Stevenson 2-1, Lane 1-6. Georgia Tech, Lands-Davis 2-(minus 2), Stewart 1-36, Jeune 1-33.
No. 1 Ohio St. 49, Rutgers 7 Piscataway, N.J. — J.T. Barrett threw three touchdown passes and ran for two scores in his first start of the season. Ohio State (8-0, 4-0 Big Ten) extended its winning streak to 21 games, best in the nation, and heads into its off week with no doubt who the starting QB will be when Minnesota comes to Columbus on Nov. 7. Ohio St. 7 14 21 7 — 49 Rutgers 0 0 0 7 — 7 First Quarter OSU-Elliott 2 run (Willoughby kick), :10. Second Quarter OSU-Thomas 50 pass from Barrett (Willoughby kick), 6:48. OSU-Barrett 2 run (Willoughby kick), 3:02. Third Quarter OSU-Samuel 30 pass from Barrett (Willoughby kick), 13:13. OSU-Barrett 10 run (Willoughby kick), 8:24. OSU-Marshall 1 pass from Barrett (Willoughby kick), 4:34. Fourth Quarter OSU-Elliott 55 run (Willoughby kick), 13:42. Rut-Patton 4 pass from Rettig (Federico kick), :13. A-53,111. INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Ohio St., Elliott 19-142, Barrett 13-101, Dunn 6-25, Miller 1-16, Samuel 3-4, Ball 3-1, C.Jones 1-(minus 2), Team 3-(minus 6). Rutgers, P.James 10-56, Martin 6-43, Hicks 6-19, Goodwin 2-0, Team 1-(minus 2), Laviano 4-(minus 12). PASSING-Ohio St., Barrett 14-18-0223, C.Jones 3-3-0-24. Rutgers, Laviano 10-20-1-117, Rettig 3-7-0-72. RECEIVING-Ohio St., Thomas 5-103, Marshall 4-17, Elliott 3-29, Miller 2-55, Samuel 1-30, Greene 1-10, Ball 1-3. Rutgers, Patton 4-33, Carroo 3-55, Agudosi 2-76, Arcidiacono 1-22, Goodwin 1-4, Grant 1-0, Martin 1-(minus 1) .
USC 42, No. 3 Utah 24 Los Angeles — Cameron Smith returned the second of his three interceptions 54 yards for a touchdown, and Southern California knocked Utah from the unbeaten ranks. Ronald Jones II, Justin Davis and fullback Soma Vainuku rushed for scores to help the Trojans (4-3, 2-2 Pac-12) snap their two-game skid and
earn a victory for interim coach Clay Helton in his debut game at the Coliseum. Cody Kessler passed for 264 yards and a touchdown and rushed for another score, while JuJu Smith-Schuster had eight catches for 143 yards and a fourth-quarter TD that wrapped up the win. Britain Covey caught two touchdown passes for the Utes (6-1, 3-1), whose eight-game winning streak ended. Utah 14 3 0 7 — 24 Southern Cal 7 21 7 7 — 42 First Quarter USC-J.Davis 9 run (Wood kick), 7:59. Utah-Covey 30 pass from T.Wilson (Phillips kick), 3:53. Utah-Poole 2 run (Phillips kick), 1:49. Second Quarter USC-Vainuku 1 run (Wood kick), 9:47. USC-Jones II 18 run (Wood kick), 3:40. USC-Ca.Smith 54 interception return (Wood kick), 1:07. Utah-FG Phillips 53, :05. Third Quarter USC-Kessler 1 run (Wood kick), 3:37. Fourth Quarter USC-Smith-Schuster 25 pass from Kessler (Wood kick), 9:58. Utah-Covey 66 pass from T.Wilson (Phillips kick), 4:00. A-73,435. INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Utah, Booker 14-62, T.Wilson 13-35, Poole 1-2. Southern Cal, Jones II 15-73, J.Davis 19-66, D.Davis 2-3, Vainuku 1-1, Team 1-(minus 1), Jackson 2-(minus 1), Kessler 5-(minus 25). PASSING-Utah, T.Wilson 24-36-4254. Southern Cal, Kessler 21-28-0-264, Greene 0-1-0-0. RECEIVING-Utah, Covey 7-129, Booker 6-49, Scott 4-30, Poole 3-3, Singleton 2-18, Sanders-Williams 1-17, Handley 1-8. Southern Cal, SmithSchuster 8-143, Jackson 6-37, D.Davis 3-22, Greene 2-15, Hampton 1-29, Petite 1-18.
No. 5 LSU 48, Western Kentucky 20 Baton Rouge, La. — Brandon Harris passed for a career-high 286 yards, with two of his three scoring passes going for more than 50 yards. Leonard Fournette ran for 150 yards and a short touchdown on a soggy field. W. Kentucky 0 7 6 7 — 20 LSU 7 7 20 14 — 48 First Quarter LSU-Dupre 55 pass from Harris (Domingue kick), 12:13. Second Quarter WKen-Wales 7 pass from Doughty (Schwettman kick), 10:55. LSU-D.Williams 2 run (Domingue kick), 1:25. Third Quarter LSU-FG Domingue 34, 10:26. WKen-Grant 39 pass from Doughty (kick failed), 8:36. LSU-FG Domingue 43, 6:42. LSU-Le.Fournette 1 run (Domingue kick), 5:54. LSU-T.Johnson 61 pass from Harris (Domingue kick), 2:06. Fourth Quarter WKen-Taylor 9 pass from Doughty (Schwettman kick), 13:04. LSU-Dural 17 pass from Harris (Domingue kick), 8:46. LSU-Guice 47 run (Domingue kick), 1:49. A-101,561. INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-W. Kentucky, Wales 12-54, Ferby 6-40, Warr 3-10, A.Davis 1-9, Doughty 1-(minus 10). LSU, Le.Fournette 26-150, Guice 3-48, Brossette 3-23, D.Williams 5-15, Team 1-(minus 1), Harris 5-(minus 24). PASSING-W. Kentucky, Doughty 37-61-1-325. LSU, Harris 11-20-0-286. RECEIVING-W. Kentucky, Taylor 10-103, Dangerfield 8-75, Norris 7-52, Grant 4-66, Wales 3-5, Gorski 2-19, N.Fant 2-6, Ferby 1-(minus 1). LSU, Dural 5-132, Dupre 3-86.
No. 6 Clemson 58, Miami 0 Miami Gardens, Fla. — Clemson handed Miami its worst defeat in the program’s 90-year history to remain unbeaten. Clemson 21 21 3 13 — 58 Miami 0 0 0 0 — 0 First Quarter Clem-Leggett 34 pass from Watson (Huegel kick), 12:18. Clem-Gallman 5 run (Huegel kick), 6:53. Clem-Brooks 1 run (Huegel kick), 2:08. Second Quarter Clem-A.Scott 3 run (Huegel kick), 8:59. Clem-Watson 6 run (Huegel kick), :42. Clem-Tankersley 36 interception return (Huegel kick), :34. Third Quarter Clem-FG Huegel 30, 8:46. Fourth Quarter Clem-K.Bryant 59 run (kick failed), 11:48. Clem-K.Bryant 10 run (Huegel kick), 8:50. A-45,211. INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Clemson, Gallman 22-118, Watson 8-98, K.Bryant 5-59, Dye 8-52, Fuller 8-42, McCloud 2-22, Brooks 6-22, A.Scott 1-3, Schuessler 1-2, Davidson 2-(minus 2). Miami, Yearby 13-42, Walton 4-11, Tucker 1-5, Gray 3-5, Rosier 6-1, Kaaya 2-(minus 11). PASSING-Clemson, Watson 15-19-0143, Schuessler 1-5-0-4, K.Bryant 1-10-4. Miami, Rosier 7-22-2-42, Kaaya 6-10-1-51. RECEIVING-Clemson, Peake 5-44, McCloud 4-36, Gallman 2-11, Leggett 1-34, A.Scott 1-7, Thompson 1-7, Dunn 1-4, D.Rogers 1-4, Seckinger 1-4. Miami, Coley 8-54, Scott 2-21, Waters 1-8, Berrios 1-6, Yearby 1-4.
Mike Stewart/AP Photo
GEORGIA TECH’S LANCE AUSTIN runs for the winning touchdown against Florida State after picking up a blocked field goal. Georgia Tech won, 22-16, on Saturday night in Atlanta. No. 7 Michigan St. 52, Indiana 26 East Lansing, Mich. — Connor Cook threw for 398 yards and four touchdowns, and Michigan State remained undefeated. Indiana 7 13 6 0 — 26 Michigan St. 7 14 7 24 — 52 First Quarter Ind-Howard 5 run (Oakes kick), 9:12. MSU-Shelton 22 pass from Cook (Geiger kick), 5:56. Second Quarter MSU-D.Williams 1 run (Geiger kick), 14:56. Ind-Ri.Jones 11 pass from Sudfeld (kick failed), 8:19. MSU-Burbridge 11 pass from Cook (Geiger kick), 1:37. Ind-Cobbs 37 pass from Sudfeld (Oakes kick), 1:07. Third Quarter MSU-Price 13 pass from Cook (Geiger kick), 11:07. Ind-Booker 3 pass from Sudfeld (kick failed), 9:45. Fourth Quarter MSU-FG Geiger 21, 12:44. MSU-Shelton 10 pass from Cook (Geiger kick), 4:57. MSU-Scott 26 run (Geiger kick), 2:17. MSU-Holmes 22 run (Geiger kick), 1:17. A-74,144. INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Indiana, Howard 11-78, Majette 6-21, Redding 2-5, Team 2-(minus 7), Sudfeld 2-(minus 16). Michigan St., Scott 11-68, Holmes 10-39, Cook 10-18, Shelton 2-10, Terry 4-8, D.Williams 6-0, Macksood 1-(minus 1). PASSING-Indiana, Sudfeld 23-37-1308. Michigan St., Cook 30-52-0-398. RECEIVING-Indiana, Paige 8-99, Cobbs 5-108, Ri.Jones 5-45, Graham 2-30, Booker 2-13, Westbrook 1-13. Michigan St., Burbridge 8-128, Kings Jr. 7-69, Shelton 6-76, Price 3-51, Lang 3-35, Holmes 2-28, Lyles 1-11.
No. 8 Alabama 19, Tennessee 14 Tuscaloosa, Ala. — Derrick Henry’s 14-yard touchdown run with 2:24 left lifted Alabama past Tennessee. Alabama’s aggressive defense then recorded two straight sacks, and Ryan Anderson knocked the ball loose from Joshua Dobbs to preserve the win and the Crimson Tide’s national championship hopes. Alabama (7-1, 4-1 Southeastern Conference) got plenty of help, with Tennessee (3-4, 1-3) missing three long fieldgoal attempts. Tennessee 7 0 0 7 — 14 Alabama 7 0 3 9 — 19 First Quarter Ala-Henry 20 run (Griffith kick), 7:14. Tenn-J.Smith 11 pass from Dobbs (Medley kick), 3:00. Third Quarter Ala-FG Griffith 19, 9:00. Fourth Quarter Ala-FG Griffith 28, 7:08. Tenn-Hurd 12 run (Medley kick), 5:49. Ala-Henry 14 run (pass failed), 2:24. A-101,821. INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Tennessee, Hurd 18-92, Kamara 5-21, Dobbs 16-19. Alabama, Henry 28-143, Drake 3-10, Stewart 1-(minus 3), Team 3-(minus 7), Coker 7-(minus 26). PASSING-Tennessee, Dobbs 13-22-0171. Alabama, Coker 21-27-1-247. RECEIVING-Tennessee, Kamara 4-44, Malone 2-43, J.Smith 2-38, Pearson 2-15, Jo.Johnson 1-18, North 1-8, Et.Wolf 1-5. Alabama, Howard 7-55, Stewart 6-114, Ridley 6-62, Mullaney 1-13, Drake 1-3.
No. 24 Mississippi 23, No. 15 Texas A&M 3 Oxford, Miss. — Chad Kelly threw for 241 yards and two touchdowns, and Mississippi used a dominant defense to beat Texas A&M. Ole Miss (6-2, 3-1 Southeastern Conference) bounced back from last week’s loss to Memphis. Laquon Treadwell caught five passes for 102 yards and a touchdown, and Jaylen Walton ran for 97 yards. Texas A&M (5-2, 2-2) has lost two straight.
Texas A&M 0 3 0 0 — 3 Mississippi 7 9 7 0 — 23 First Quarter Miss-Engram 7 pass from Kelly (Wunderlich kick), 2:33. Second Quarter Miss-FG Wunderlich 41, 11:36. Miss-FG Wunderlich 30, 7:05. TAM-FG Bertolet 44, 2:27. Miss-FG Wunderlich 22, :00. Third Quarter Miss-Treadwell 58 pass from Kelly (Wunderlich kick), 9:16. A-60,674. INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Texas A&M, Carson 14-48, White 9-31, Kirk 1-(minus 2), Hubenak 1-(minus 9), Allen 2-(minus 10). Mississippi, Walton 22-97, Judd 13-68, Wilkins 8-42, Kelly 9-23. PASSING-Texas A&M, Allen 12-341-88, Hubenak 6-12-0-46. Mississippi, Kelly 26-41-3-241. RECEIVING-Texas A&M, Carson 7-9, Seals-Jones 3-75, Reynolds 3-19, Kirk 2-16, Noil 2-6, Ratley 1-9. Mississippi, Adeboyejo 7-35, Treadwell 5-102, Pack 5-27, Engram 4-35, Stringfellow 3-22, Walton 2-20.
No. 19 Toledo 51, Massachusetts 35 Foxborough, Mass. — Phillip Ely recovered from a poor start and threw four of his five touchdown passes in the second half as Toledo stormed back from an 18-point deficit. Toledo 3 7 21 20 — 51 UMass 14 14 0 7 — 35 First Quarter Tol-FG Vest 35, 11:21. Mass-Mills 10 pass from Frohnapfel (Laurent kick), 6:52. Mass-Nesmith 14 pass from Frohnapfel (Laurent kick), 1:47. Second Quarter Tol-C.Jones 20 pass from Ely (Vest kick), 13:10. Mass-Sharpe 35 pass from Frohnapfel (Laurent kick), 11:10. Mass-Young 50 run (Laurent kick), 8:23. Third Quarter Tol-Thompson 4 pass from Ely (Vest kick), 10:33. Tol-Russell 15 pass from Ely (Vest kick), 8:13. Tol-Roberts 4 pass from Ely (Vest kick), 1:56. Fourth Quarter Tol-Swanson 1 run (Vest kick), 14:13. Tol-Thompson 31 pass from Ely (Vest kick), 10:59. Tol-FG Vest 25, 6:31. Mass-Sharpe 3 pass from Frohnapfel (Laurent kick), 4:11. Tol-FG Vest 29, 1:41. A-12,793. INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Toledo, Swanson 21-118, Hunt 20-90, Jones-Moore 14-61, Ely 1-6, Team 2-(minus 10). UMass, Young 13-80, Frohnapfel 2-32, Lindsay 5-25, Isabella 1-8, Wilson 3-3. PASSING-Toledo, Ely 26-47-3-355. UMass, Frohnapfel 27-49-1-240. RECEIVING-Toledo, C.Jones 8-88, Thompson 6-116, Russell 5-96, Zmolik 2-13, Roberts 2-12, Wilcher 1-19, Di.Johnson 1-7, Swanson 1-4. UMass, Sharpe 12-159, Young 5-7, Nesmith 4-35, Mills 2-16, Howard 1-10, Long 1-6, Michel 1-5, Wilson 1-2.
No. 23 Duke 45, Virginia Tech 43, 4OT Blacksburg, Va. — Thomas Sirk threw four touchdown passes and ran for a two-point conversion in the fourth overtime to lift Duke. Sirk hit Erich Schneider with a 25-yard TD pass on the first play of the fourth overtime, after the Hokies had scored and missed the mandatory two-point attempt. Sirk then rolled right and cut upfield, giving the Blue Devils (6-1, 3-0) the victory in the longest game in Atlantic Coast Conference history. Duke 14 0 7 3 3 7 3 8 — 45 Virginia Tech 7 3 6 8 3 7 3 6 — 43 First Quarter Duke-McCaffrey 1 pass from Sirk (Martin kick), 9:49. VT-Hodges 16 pass from Brewer (Slye kick), 7:21. Duke-McCaffrey 16 pass from Sirk (Martin kick), 4:51. Second Quarter VT-FG Slye 44, 13:07. Third Quarter Duke-Wilson 58 run (Martin kick), 10:17. VT-McMillian 2 run (pass failed), :27. Fourth Quarter Duke-FG Martin 41, 11:48. VT-Hodges 23 pass from Brewer (McMillian run), 2:07. First Overtime Duke-FG Martin 38. VT-FG Slye 37. Second Overtime VT-Hodges 11 pass from Brewer (Slye kick). Duke-Nash 4 pass from Sirk (Martin kick). Third Overtime Duke-FG Martin 20. VT-FG Slye 40. Fourth Overtime VT-McMillian 1 run (pass failed). Duke-Schneider 25 pass from Sirk (Sirk run). A-63,257. INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Duke, Sirk 18-109, Wilson 4-60, Powell 7-15, Boehme 2-2, Duncan 1-(minus 7). Virginia Tech, McMillian 29-142, Rogers 8-28, T.Edmunds 5-12, Motley 2-8, Stroman 1-4, Brewer 8-(minus 12). PASSING-Duke, Sirk 19-39-0-270, Boehme 0-1-0-0. Virginia Tech, Brewer 24-45-0-270, I.Ford 0-1-0-0, Motley 0-10-0. RECEIVING-Duke, McCaffrey 6-94, Barnes 5-47, Nash 3-72, Schneider 3-40, Reeves 2-17. Virginia Tech, I.Ford 9-67, Hodges 5-101, Malleck 4-43, Phillips 3-23, Rogers 2-34, McMillian 1-2.
No. 25 Pittsburgh 23, Syracuse 20 Syracuse, N.Y. — Chris Blewitt kicked a 25-yard field goal as time expired to lift Pittsburgh. Syracuse (3-4, 1-2 ACC) has lost four straight. Pittsburgh 3 10 0 10 — 23 Syracuse 7 10 0 3 — 20 First Quarter Pitt-FG Blewitt 33, 9:58. Syr-Philips 20 pass from Dungey (Murphy kick), 9:12. Second Quarter Syr-FG Murphy 23, 7:44. Pitt-Ollison 2 run (Blewitt kick), 1:37. Syr-Ishmael 4 pass from Dungey (Murphy kick), :26. Pitt-FG Blewitt 30, :00. Fourth Quarter Pitt-Ollison 1 run (Blewitt kick), 14:00. Syr-FG Murphy 37, 9:20. Pitt-FG Blewitt 25, :00. A-29,832. INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Pittsburgh, Ollison 23-98, Boyd 6-39, James 6-30, Peterman 7-16, Bradley 1-8, Price 1-1, Hall 2-(minus 4). Syracuse, Fredericks 12-91, Dungey 6-38, Philips 3-8, Morris 1-1. PASSING-Pittsburgh, Peterman 19-25-0-189, Boyd 1-1-0-38, Winslow 1-1-0-12, Team 0-1-0-0. Syracuse, Dungey 21-30-2-210, Mahoney 1-1-0-7. RECEIVING-Pittsburgh, Boyd 12-93, Ford 4-78, James 1-22, Orndoff 1-17, Holtz 1-14, Galambos 1-12, Challingsworth 1-3. Syracuse, Ishmael 7-114, Philips 6-50, Estime 3-22, Parris 3-19, Fredericks 2-8, Morris 1-4.
No. 21 Houston 59, UCF 10 Orlando, Fla. — Kenneth Farrow ran for 167 yards and three touchdowns, and Houston re- Big 12 mained undefeated with No. 2 Baylor 45, a victory over winless Iowa St. 27 Central Florida. Waco, Texas — Shock Houston 7 17 28 7 — 59 Linwood ran for 171 yards UCF 7 3 0 0 — 10 with a touchdown and First Quarter Hou-B.Wilson 85 fumble return caught a pass for another (Cummings kick), 13:46. score as second-ranked UCF-Payton 46 pass from Holman Baylor beat Iowa State (Wright kick), 5:33. for its FBS-best 20th conSecond Quarter UCF-FG Wright 48, 4:38. secutive home win. Hou-Farrow 26 run (Cummings On a rainy day along kick), 2:27. Hou-Ward Jr. 3 run (Cummings the Brazos River, the kick), :50. Bears (7-0, 4-0 Big 12) Hou-FG Cummings 34, :00. were held under 60 Third Quarter Hou-Farrow 30 run (Cummings points for the first time kick), 14:10. Hou-R.Jackson 29 run (Cummings in six games. The only kick), 7:49. other NCAA team with Hou-Ayers 67 pass from Ward Jr. five consecutive 60-point (Cummings kick), 4:10. Hou-Farrow 24 run (Cummings games was Oklahoma in kick), 1:57. 2008. Fourth Quarter Corey Coleman had Hou-Bonner 6 pass from Postma (Cummings kick), 3:41. two more touchdown A-28,350. catches, his sixth consecINDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Houston, Farrow utive game with multiple 13-167, R.Jackson 9-75, Ward Jr. 10-46, Kokuma 10-43, Postma 3-36, scores, pushing his FBSGage 1-4, Team 2-(minus 5). UCF, leading total to 18. He Do.Wilson 19-72, Holman 7-16, also surpassed Kendall Willett 3-7, C.Jones 1-2. PASSING-Houston, Ward Jr. 16-23- Wright’s school record 0-210, Postma 4-5-0-24. UCF, Holman for career touchdowns 14-27-3-183, Harris 0-2-0-0. RECEIVING-Houston, Ayers 5-92, with his 31st. Bonner 5-71, Allen 5-30, Gage 3-7, Coleman had a 36-yard Farrow 1-28, Dunbar 1-6. UCF, Smith 7-89, Payton 2-63, Do.Wilson 2-9, score on Baylor’s opening Stewart 1-9, Oldham 1-8, Cochran 1-5. drive.
Iowa St. 0 7 7 13 — 27 Baylor 21 14 0 10 — 45 First Quarter Bay-Coleman 36 pass from Russell (Callahan kick), 13:25. Bay-Russell 37 run (Callahan kick), 8:00. Bay-Linwood 17 run (Callahan kick), 4:53. Second Quarter Bay-Linwood 6 pass from Russell (Callahan kick), 11:42. Bay-Chafin 2 run (Callahan kick), 8:14. ISU-Jo.Thomas 3 run (Netten kick), 4:49. Third Quarter ISU-Bundrage 2 pass from Lanning (Netten kick), 10:31. Fourth Quarter ISU-Wesley 4 pass from Lanning (kick failed), 7:47. Bay-FG Callahan 34, 5:31. Bay-Coleman 12 pass from Stidham (Callahan kick), 2:13. ISU-Bundrage 29 pass from Lanning (Netten kick), :10. A-45,512. INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Iowa St., Warren 28-145, Jo.Thomas 13-77, Lanning 10-13, Downing 1-8, Ryen 1-2, Sam B.Richardson 2-(minus 13). Baylor, Linwood 27-171, Russell 8-64, Jefferson 4-27, Coleman 3-17, Chafin 3-10, Stidham 2-3, Team 2-(minus 16). PASSING-Iowa St., Lanning 12-170-144, Sam B.Richardson 3-11-2-12, Team 0-1-0-0. Baylor, Russell 16-37-1197, Stidham 1-1-0-12. RECEIVING-Iowa St., Wesley 6-41, Bundrage 4-69, Ryen 2-21, Chandler 1-19, Warren 1-7, Jo.Thomas 1-(minus 1). Baylor, Coleman 6-85, Cannon 5-55, Platt 3-41, Lee 1-13, Penning 1-9, Linwood 1-6.
No. 17 Oklahoma 63, Texas Tech 27 Norman, Okla. — Samaje Perine ran for 201 yards and four touchdowns and helped quarterback Baker Mayfield top his old team. Mayfield transferred from Tech after his freshman season in 2013 and had to sit out last year because the school blocked his ability to play right away. Texas Tech 3 14 10 0 — 27 Oklahoma 14 14 21 14 — 63 First Quarter Okl-Mixon 11 run (Seibert kick), 8:18. Okl-Perine 3 run (Seibert kick), 6:39. TT-FG Hatfield 34, 1:42. Second Quarter Okl-Mixon 17 run (Seibert kick), 13:27. TT-Davis 6 pass from Mahomes II (Hatfield kick), 9:32. TT-D.Washington 13 run (Hatfield kick), 7:05. Okl-Perine 10 run (Seibert kick), 3:31. Third Quarter Okl-Andrews 13 pass from Mayfield (Seibert kick), 14:14. TT-FG Hatfield 28, 9:16. Okl-Perine 6 run (Seibert kick), 7:04. TT-Mahomes II 1 run (Hatfield kick), 4:50. Okl-Neal 15 pass from Mayfield (Seibert kick), 1:03. Fourth Quarter Okl-Perine 2 run (Seibert kick), 8:18. Okl-Ross 9 run (Seibert kick), 2:26. A-85,312. INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Texas Tech, D.Washington 19-94, Mahomes II 15-58, Stockton 6-31. Oklahoma, Perine 23-201, Mixon 16-154, Ross 6-23, Mayfield 9-16, T.Knight 2-13, Team 1-(minus 2). PASSING-Texas Tech, Mahomes II 26-40-4-233, Webb 3-5-0-20. Oklahoma, Mayfield 15-22-1-212. RECEIVING-Texas Tech, Grant 7-55, Davis 7-52, Sadler 3-40, Lauderdale 3-29, Coutee 2-27, Pearson 2-26, T.Brown 2-10, Batson 2-2, D.Washington 1-12. Oklahoma, Neal 5-44, Westbrook 3-58, Shepard 2-50, Baxter 1-18, Andrews 1-13, Mixon 1-13, Perine 1-9, Mead 1-7.
Texas 23, Kansas St. 9 Austin, Texas — Backup quarterback Tyrone Swoopes scored three touchdowns, and Texas defeated Kansas State in a game played in a heavy rainstorm. Swoopes, a 244-pound junior who started last season, is now used primarily in short-yardage situations. His first two touchdowns were on short runs, but his last one, which secured the victory, covered 10 yards with 1:47 remaining. Swoopes ran for 13 and 29 yards on the previous two plays. Kansas State has lost four consecutive games for the first time since 2005. Kansas St. 0 6 3 0 — 9 Texas 3 13 0 7 — 23 First Quarter Tex-FG Rose 28, 6:37. Second Quarter Tex-Swoopes 1 run (Rose kick), 12:38. Tex-Swoopes 2 run (run failed), 6:48. KSt-D.Heath 7 pass from Hubener (pass failed), :32. Third Quarter KSt-FG Cantele 36, 7:18. Fourth Quarter Tex-Swoopes 10 run (Rose kick), 1:47. A-88,283. INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Kansas St., C.Jones 18-122, Hubener 15-18, Silmon 2-(minus 2), Cook 2-(minus 3). Texas, J.Gray 18-103, Heard 15-61, Swoopes 7-50, D.Foreman 10-43, Warren III 2-19, Team 1-(minus 2). PASSING-Kansas St., Hubener 10-221-97, Cook 1-2-0-10. Texas, Heard 10-15-0-99, Swoopes 0-1-0-0. RECEIVING-Kansas St., Burton 5-39, D.Heath 2-23, A.Davis 2-17, Gronkowski 1-16, Klein 1-12. Texas, D.Johnson 6-41, Burt 2-25, Bluiett 1-28, Beck 1-5
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and Utah — before of- Big 12 Standings Big 12 Overall ficially telling Self he’d W L W L accepted his offer earlier Baylor 4 0 7 0 this week. Oklahoma State 4 0 7 0 4 0 7 0 “I took all these visits. TCU Oklahoma 3 1 6 1 I was going to go where Texas 2 2 3 4 2 3 5 3 I felt comfortable. That Texas Tech State 1 3 2 5 was Kansas, by far,” Iowa West Virginia 0 3 3 3 0 4 3 4 Lightfoot said. “I felt like Kansas State 0 4 0 7 I was at home there, and Kansas Saturday, Oct. 24 Oklahoma State 58, Kansas 10 it is home. Everyone in Texas 23, Kansas State 9 Kansas ... Jayhawk fans Baylor 45, Iowa State 27 are a big family. It’s imOklahoma 63, Texas Tech 27 Thursday, Oct. 29 portant to me to be part West Virginia at TCU, 6:30 p.m. (FS1) of a big family organizaSaturday, Oct. 31 Oklahoma at Kansas, 2 p.m. or 2:30 tion. It’s why I want to be p.m. (Fox or FS1) there.” Oklahoma State at Texas Tech, 2:30 Lightfoot — he also p.m. (ABC or ESPN or ESPN2) Texas at Iowa State, 6 p.m. (FS1) grew up a Chiefs fan (“We had season tickets College for 20 years”) and Royals EAST Alfred 42, Hartwick 18 fan (“I watched the game Amherst 27, Wesleyan (Conn.) 18 last night”) — will have a Assumption 32, American batch of blood relatives at International 7 Bethany (WV) 41, Geneva 15 his KU games. Bowie St. 23, Virginia Union 19 Bridgewater (Mass.) 48, Westfield “Aunts, uncles, cous20 ins, everyone,” he said. “I St.Brown 44, Cornell 24 Bryant 26, St. Francis (Pa.) 24 have tons of family there Buffalo 41, Ohio 17 (in KC).” Buffalo St. 28, Utica 16 He attended games CCSU 26, Sacred Heart 10 California (Pa.) 42, Clarion 28 in Allen Fieldhouse as a Carnegie-Mellon 41, St. Vincent 13 toddler, but most of his Castleton 49, NY Maritime 34 Coastal Carolina 23, Monmouth (NJ) memories of KU are from 20 those he watched on TV. Colby 24, Hamilton 19 College of NJ 23, Montclair St. 20 “Obviously, Mario and Cortland St. 35, Brockport 21 the shot ... that’s pretty Curry 42, Coast Guard 14 amazing. It can’t get Dartmouth 13, Columbia 9 Delaware 31, New Hampshire 14 much better than that,” Delaware Valley 28, Albright 23 Lightfoot said of Mario Denison 33, Allegheny 7 Dickinson 53, McDaniel 20 Chalmers hitting the shot Duquesne 16, Robert Morris 7 that forced overtime in Endicott 37, Maine Maritime 14 Fairmont St. 41, Virginia-Wise 32 KU’s win over Memphis Fordham 59, Lehigh 42 in the 2008 NCAA title Framingham St. 34, Plymouth St. 3 Gannon 43, Seton Hill 28 game. “I love watching Georgetown 17, Bucknell 9 Thomas Robinson and Harvard 42, Princeton 7 Jeff Withey, those guys Holy Cross 42, Lafayette 0 Husson 54, Gallaudet 8 more than any one parJohns Hopkins 36, Gettysburg 7 ticular moment.” Kutztown 63, East Stroudsburg 17 Lebanon Valley 48, Wilkes 17 Lightfoot said he can Lock Haven 36, Millersville 28 play small forward or Lycoming 44, FDU-Florham 20 Maine 23, Stony Brook 10 power forward at KU — Mass. Maritime 35, Mass.“Wherever the coaches Dartmouth 34 need me; they’ve won the Merrimack 52, Pace 6 Middlebury 41, Bates 27 national championship Moravian 34, Franklin & Marshall 19 they have a little more Morrisville St. 24, Ithaca 12 Muhlenberg 41, Juniata 35, OT expertise than I do on Navy 31, Tulane 14 the subject,” he said — he New Haven 63, LIU Post 16 Pittsburgh 23, Syracuse 20 figures to bring non-stop RPI 21, Hobart 20 motion onto the court. Rochester 33, Union (NY) 30 S. Connecticut 28, St. Anselm 14 “In my 16 years as Salisbury 45, Kean 33 coach, he’s the toughShepherd 35, Concord 28 est competitor I’ve Shippensburg 70, Cheyney 7 Slippery Rock 40, Indiana (Pa.) 39 had,” Ortega said, notSt. Lawrence 38, Springfield 21 ing Lightfoot has been Stevenson 31, Widener 20 Stonehill 21, Bentley 14 compared to Wisconsin’s Susquehanna 48, Ursinus 21 Sam Dekker. “He works Toledo 51, UMass 35 Towson 28, Villanova 21 endlessly. He is in the Trinity (Conn.) 28, Bowdoin 7 gym all the time, has the Tufts 30, Williams 15 (shooting) machine up. Virginia St. 35, Lincoln (Pa.) 0 Waynesburg 28, Thiel 15 He has the biggest motor. Wesley 38, Rowan 25 He plays with a fire. He West Chester 33, Bloomsburg 22 William Paterson 31, S. Virginia 27 wants it.” Worcester St. 44, W. Connecticut 41 Of his style of play, SOUTH Alabama 19, Tennessee 14 Lightfoot said: “I want Albany St. (Ga.) 26, Clark Atlanta 14 to play the game like it’s Bethune-Cookman 59, Norfolk St. 49 Bluefield South 19, Apprentice 9 supposed to be played, Carson-Newman 41, Wingate 38, OT full speed, not taking any Catawba 39, UNC-Pembroke 21 plays off. Be the best I can Central St. (Ohio) 24, Stillman 7 Centre 35, Sewanee 7 be on the court by workCharleston Southern 34, Gardnering the hardest. It’s an in- Webb 0 Chattanooga 20, Wofford 17 tangible that works to my Chowan 24, Elizabeth City St. 20 benefit.” Clemson 58, Miami 0
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“For me, it’s a surprise,” Escobar said. “I know I’m playing really good and my team is playing really good. ... And when I heard the news, I was so happy for that.” Royals manager Ned Yost wasn’t surprised. After all, he remembers watching Cain and Escobar come up through the Brewers system when he was managing the club in Milwaukee. “I used to bring Esky to big league spring training when he was in A-ball because I used to love to watch him play,” Yost said. If he didn’t win the award, it could have easily gone to Cain again. He again chased down everything hit his way, and again sparked the Royals’ run-run-run offense. Cain had five hits, drove in five runs and scored twice more in the six-game set against Toronto, none of the runs bigger than his last. After the Blue Jays had knotted Game 6 at 3-all on a two-run homer by Jose Bautista in the eighth inning, and a 45-minute rain delay washed through, Cain worked a leadoff walk to put Kansas City back in business.
| 7C
SCOREBOARD
Hoops
Royals
Sunday, October 25, 2015
Cumberlands 48, Pikeville 29 Duke 45, Virginia Tech 43, 4OT E. Kentucky 45, Tennessee St. 21 FIU 41, Old Dominion 12 Faulkner 48, Bethel (Tenn.) 44 Fayetteville St. 40, St. Augustine’s 18 Florida Tech 31, Mississippi College 14 Frostburg St. 19, Christopher Newport 14 Georgetown (Ky.) 28, AldersonBroaddus 15 Georgia Tech 22, Florida St. 16 Grambling St. 49, MVSU 14 Guilford 41, Randolph-Macon 21 Hampden-Sydney 38, Shenandoah 33 Houston 59, UCF 10 Huntingdon 42, Methodist 6 Jackson St. 37, Ark.-Pine Bluff 3 Jacksonville St. 27, Austin Peay 7 Johnson C. Smith 17, Shaw 10 Kentucky Christian 45, Union (Ky.) 38 Kentucky Wesleyan 49, Louisiana College 22 LSU 48, W. Kentucky 20 LaGrange 27, Ferrum 24 Louisiana Tech 45, Middle Tennessee 16 Louisville 17, Boston College 14 Marist 31, Davidson 10 Mars Hill 41, Lenoir-Rhyne 37 Marshall 30, North Texas 13 Maryville (Tenn.) 31, Averett 26 McNeese St. 47, Northwestern St. 27 Miles 37, Lane 20 Mississippi 23, Texas A&M 3 Morehead St. 31, Campbell 27 Morehouse 42, Benedict 10 NC A&T 65, Howard 14 NC Central 20, Morgan St. 17 NC State 35, Wake Forest 17 Newberry 41, Brevard 7 North Carolina 26, Virginia 13 North Greenville 69, U. of Gods Chosen 0 Penn St. 31, Maryland 30 Point (Ga.) 66, Southeastern (Fla.) 34 Reinhardt 42, Lindsey Wilson 24 Rhodes 21, Birmingham-Southern 18 Richmond 59, James Madison 49 SC State 34, Delaware St. 7 South Florida 38, SMU 14 Southern Miss. 44, Charlotte 10 The Citadel 38, Furman 17 Tusculum 45, Limestone 11 Tuskegee 38, Kentucky St. 28 UT Martin 52, Murray St. 45 VMI 28, Mercer 21 Vanderbilt 10, Missouri 3 W. Carolina 56, Samford 36 Washington & Lee 45, Bridgewater (Va.) 23 Webber 35, Ave Maria 7 West Alabama 41, Delta St. 38 West Georgia 31, North Alabama 10 William & Mary 40, Hampton 7 Winston-Salem 23, Livingstone 21 MIDWEST Adrian 30, Wis. Lutheran 12 Alma 35, Hope 24 Ashland 41, N. Michigan 10 Augsburg 57, St. Olaf 35 Augustana (SD) 35, Sioux Falls 28
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Baker 38, Mid-Am Nazarene 19 Becker 48, Mount Ida 13 Bemidji St. 28, St. Cloud St. 27 Benedictine (Ill.) 41, Concordia (Ill.)
Benedictine (Kan.) 24, Graceland (Iowa) 16 Bethel (Kan.) 21, Southwestern (Kan.) 17 Bluffton 28, Manchester 20 Bowling Green 48, Kent St. 0 Carroll (Wis.) 15, Ripon 6 Carthage 39, Augustana (Ill.) 27 Case Reserve 35, Washington & Jefferson 28 Cent. Methodist 34, Evangel 28 Cent. Michigan 23, Ball St. 21 Cent. Missouri 54, Northeastern St. 10 Cent. Oklahoma 38, Washburn 27 Central 27, Coe 13 Chadron St. 39, Black Hills St. 38 Cincinnati 37, UConn 13 Concordia (Moor.) 30, Hamline 20 Concordia (Wis.) 15, Rockford 7 Dakota St. 28, Mayville St. 21 Dakota Wesleyan 27, Northwestern (Iowa) 17 Dayton 27, Butler 24 Defiance 51, Earlham 7 Doane 23, Concordia (Neb.) 20, OT Dordt 24, Midland 17 Drake 28, Jacksonville 24 Dubuque 44, Buena Vista 13 E. Illinois 51, Tennessee Tech 20 Emporia St. 17, Missouri Western 3 Eureka 29, Crown (Minn.) 26 Ferris St. 24, Michigan Tech 14 Grand Valley St. 52, Findlay 7 Grand View 34, Peru St. 3 Greenville 47, Martin Luther 21 Heidelberg 63, Marietta 28 Hendrix 27, Chicago 21 Hillsdale 38, Tiffin 24 Illinois College 52, Lake Forest 28 Illinois St. 48, W. Illinois 28 Illinois Wesleyan 49, Elmhurst 28 Indianapolis 41, Lincoln (Mo.) 18 John Carroll 48, Capital 0 Kansas Wesleyan 52, Bethany (Kan.) 14 Knox 26, Grinnell 12 Lake Erie 27, Malone 24, OT Lakeland 47, Aurora 40, OT Loras 27, Simpson (Iowa) 9 Mac Murray 26, Iowa Wesleyan 13 Macalester 35, Lawrence 7 Michigan St. 52, Indiana 26 Millikin 20, North Park 17 Minn. Duluth 66, Minn.-Crookston 17 Minn. St.-Moorhead 30, Minot St. 20 Missouri S&T 34, McKendree 27 Missouri Southern 27, Lindenwood (Mo.) 20 Missouri Valley 48, Avila 30 Monmouth (Ill.) 49, Cornell (Iowa) 7 Mount St. Joseph 54, Anderson (Ind.) 22 Mount Union 69, Wilmington (Ohio) 0 N. Dakota St. 28, Indiana St. 14 N. Illinois 49, E. Michigan 21 N. Iowa 10, S. Dakota St. 7 NW Missouri St. 45, Fort Hays St. 24 Northern St. (SD) 37, Mary 0 Northwestern 30, Nebraska 28 Northwood (Mich.) 21, Saginaw Valley St. 14 Ohio Dominican 73, Quincy 28 Ohio Wesleyan 27, DePauw 22 Olivet 55, Kalamazoo 21 Pittsburg St. 24, Nebraska-Kearney 19 S. Illinois 38, Youngstown St. 31, OT SW Minnesota St. 34, Upper Iowa 19 Siena Heights 45, Olivet Nazarene 35 South Dakota 40, Missouri St. 10 St. Ambrose 30, Missouri Baptist 6 St. Francis (Ill.) 35, Lindenwood (Ill.) 34 St. Francis (Ind.) 38, Robert MorrisChicago 29 St. John’s (Minn.) 56, Carleton 0 St. Joseph’s (Ind.) 24, SW Baptist 23 St. Mary (Kan.) 41, McPherson 3 St. Scholastica 32, Minn.-Morris 7 St. Thomas (Minn.) 45, Bethel (Minn.) 14 St. Xavier 27, Trinity (Ill.) 18 Sterling 31, Ottawa, Kan. 24 Stetson 37, Valparaiso 14 Tabor 34, Friends 7 Taylor 35, Concordia (Mich.) 24 Trine 55, Albion 51 Truman St. 40, William Jewell 28 Valley City St. 12, Jamestown 6 W. Michigan 35, Miami (Ohio) 13 Wabash 55, Wooster 7 Waldorf 28, Presentation 14 Washington (Mo.) 70, Millsaps 32 Wayne (Mich.) 31, Walsh 16 Wayne (Neb.) 20, Concordia (St.P.) 17 Wheaton (Ill.) 17, North Central (Ill.) 9 William Penn 73, Culver-Stockton 20 Winona St. 31, Minn. St.-Mankato 27 Wis.-LaCrosse 27, Wis.-Eau Claire 25 Wis.-Oshkosh 63, Wis.-Platteville 28 Wis.-River Falls 54, Wis.-Stout 48 Wis.-Whitewater 35, Wis.-Stevens Pt. 27 Wisconsin 24, Illinois 13 Wittenberg 27, Hiram 10 SOUTHWEST Arizona Christian 24, Texas College 0 Arkansas 54, Auburn 46, 4OT Austin 28, Lyon 21, OT Baylor 45, Iowa St. 27 Cent. Arkansas 35, Lamar 17 East Central 62, Harding 20 Hardin-Simmons 63, Howard Payne 7 Henderson St. 29, S. Arkansas 28 Langston 49, Bacone 7 Mary Hardin-Baylor 48, Texas Lutheran 20 NW Oklahoma St. 49, S. Nazarene 20 Oklahoma 63, Texas Tech 27 Oklahoma St. 58, Kansas 10 Ouachita 20, Ark.-Monticello 17 Rice 38, Army 31 SE Louisiana 22, Houston Baptist 7 SE Oklahoma 54, Arkansas Tech 46 SW Assemblies of God 40, Wayland Baptist 14 Sam Houston St. 37, Nicholls St. 7 Southern U. 40, Texas Southern 21 Sul Ross St. 13, McMurry 7 Texas 23, Kansas St. 9 Texas A&M Commerce 27, Midwestern St. 14 Texas St. 36, South Alabama 18 Trinity (Texas) 26, Southwestern (Texas) 21 UTEP 27, FAU 17 FAR WEST Adams St. 17, NM Highlands 13 Air Force 42, Fresno St. 14 BYU 70, Wagner 6 CSU-Pueblo 49, Colorado Mines 21 Claremont-Mudd 45, Occidental 42 Colorado Mesa 21, Fort Lewis 13 E. New Mexico 46, Angelo St. 28 E. Oregon 72, Montana St.-Northern 30 E. Washington 43, N. Colorado 41 Humboldt St. 42, Cent. Washington 17 Idaho 27, Louisiana-Monroe 13 Linfield 52, Whitworth 10 Montana 42, North Dakota 16 Montana St. 63, ETSU 7 Montana Tech 42, Carroll (Mont.) 7 N. Arizona 52, Weber St. 36 Nevada 30, Hawaii 20 Pacific Lutheran 28, George Fox 27 Pomona-Pitzer 25, Whittier 13 Puget Sound 38, Lewis & Clark 7 S. Oregon 63, Coll. of Idaho 21 S. Utah 34, UC Davis 6 San Diego 45, Warner 14 San Jose St. 31, New Mexico 21 Southern Cal 42, Utah 24 Troy 52, New Mexico St. 7 W. Montana 27, Rocky Mountain 26 W. Oregon 37, Simon Fraser 26 Washington St. 45, Arizona 42 Western St. (Col.) 45, W. New Mexico 28
NFL
AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA New England 5 0 0 1.000 183 103 N.Y. Jets 4 1 0 .800 129 75 Buffalo 3 3 0 .500 145 139 Miami 2 3 0 .400 103 111 South W L T Pct PF PA Indianapolis 3 3 0 .500 126 147 Houston 2 4 0 .333 128 155 Tennessee 1 4 0 .200 112 129 Jacksonville 1 5 0 .167 113 176 North W L T Pct PF PA Cincinnati 6 0 0 1.000 182 122 Pittsburgh 4 2 0 .667 145 108 Cleveland 2 4 0 .333 141 158 Baltimore 1 5 0 .167 143 162 West W L T Pct PF PA Denver 6 0 0 1.000 139 102 Oakland 2 3 0 .400 107 124 San Diego 2 4 0 .333 136 161 Kansas City 1 5 0 .167 127 159 NATIONAL CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA Philadelphia 3 3 0 .500 144 110 N.Y. Giants 3 3 0 .500 139 136 Dallas 2 3 0 .400 101 131 Washington 2 4 0 .333 117 138 South W L T Pct PF PA Carolina 5 0 0 1.000 135 94 Atlanta 5 1 0 .833 183 143 Tampa Bay 2 3 0 .400 110 148 New Orleans 2 4 0 .333 134 164 North W L T Pct PF PA Green Bay 6 0 0 1.000 164 101 Minnesota 3 2 0 .600 96 83 Chicago 2 4 0 .333 120 179 Detroit 1 5 0 .167 120 172 West W L T Pct PF PA Arizona 4 2 0 .667 203 115 Seattle 3 4 0 .429 154 128 St. Louis 2 3 0 .400 84 113 San Francisco 2 5 0 .286 103 180 Thursday’s Game Seattle 20, San Francisco 3 Today’s Games Buffalo vs. Jacksonville at London, 8:30 a.m. Atlanta at Tennessee, noon Pittsburgh at Kansas City, noon Cleveland at St. Louis, noon Tampa Bay at Washington, noon Minnesota at Detroit, noon Houston at Miami, noon New Orleans at Indianapolis, noon N.Y. Jets at New England, noon Oakland at San Diego, 3:05 p.m. Dallas at N.Y. Giants, 3:25 p.m. Philadelphia at Carolina, 7:30 p.m. Open: Chicago, Cincinnati, Denver, Green Bay Monday’s Game Baltimore at Arizona, 7:30 p.m.
World Series
(Best-of-7) All games televised by Fox Tuesday, Oct. 27: N.Y. Mets at Kansas City, 7:07 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 28: N.Y. Mets at Kansas City, 7:07 p.m. Friday, Oct. 30: Kansas City at N.Y. Mets, 7:07 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 31: Kansas City at N.Y. Mets, 7:07 p.m. x-Sunday, Nov. 1: Kansas City at N.Y. Mets, 7:15 p.m. x-Tuesday, Nov. 3: N.Y. Mets at Kansas City, 7:07 p.m. x-Wednesday, Nov. 4: N.Y. Mets at Kansas City, 7:07 p.m.
High School Girls
KSHSAA STATE CHAMPIONSHIPS Saturday at Newton Ravenscroft Gym, Newton Team scores — Olathe East 109.15, Newton 106.525, Shawnee Mission Northwest 101.325, Shawnee Mission South 101.2, Lawrence 98.025, Shawnee Mission West 96.9, Shawnee Mission East 96.775, Shawnee Mission North 93.125. Medalists All-Around — 1. Darby Gertsema, OE, 37.05, 2. Samantha Bond, OE, 37.0, 3. Kailey Naysmith, New., 36.375, 4. Katie Wingate, OE, 35.1, 5. Jessie Stindt, SME, 34.6, 6. Kaylee Anderson, New., 34.575. Vault — 1. Gertsema, OE, 9.75, 2. Bond, OE. 9.5, 3. Naysmith, New., 9.275, 4. K.Anderson, New., 9.25, 5. Callie Hicks, Free State, 9.15, 6. Natalie Lanman, SMN, 9.1. Uneven parallel bars — 1. Carlye Anderson, New., 8.85, 2. Gertsema, OE, 8.8, 3. Sara Wilkerson, SMS, 8.775, 4. Hicks, Free State, 8.75, 5. Bond, OE, 8.65, 6. K.Naysmith, New., 8.525. Balance beam — 1. Bond, OE, 9.4, 2. (tie) Naysmith, New., 9.25, Gertsema, OE, 9.25, 4. Wingate, OE, 9.2, 5. Celeste Gordon, SMNW, 8.95, 6. Stindt, SME, 8.9. Floor exercise — 1. Bond, OE, 9.45, 2. Wingate, OE, 9.35, 3. Naysmith, New., 9.325, 4. Ashley Ammann, Lawrence, 9.3, 5. K.Anderson, New., 9.275, 6. Gertsema, OE, 9.25. Lawrence High results Vault — Eden Kingery, 8.675; Eliana Seidner, 8.575; Jordyn Leon, 8.45; Ashley Ammann, 8.25; Klara Hinson, 7.5. Bars — Ashley Ammann, 8.025; Jordyn Leon, 7.85; Eden Kingery, 7.425; Eliana Seidner, 6.575; Klara Hinson, 4.225. Beam — Ashley Ammann, 8.25; Jordyn Leon, 7.5; Eden Kingery, 7.0; Eliana Seidner, 6.95; Klara Hinson, 5.75. Floor — 4. Ashley Ammann, 9.3; Eden Kingery 8.625; Jordyn Leon, 8.35; Eliana Seidner, 8.025; Klara Hinson, 7.35. All-Around — Ashley Ammann, 33.825; Jordyn Leon, 32.15; Eden Kingery, 31.725; Eliana Seidner, 30.125; Klara Hinson, 24.825. Free State results Vault — 5. Callie Hicks, 9.15. Bars — 4. Callie Hicks, 8.75. Beam — Callie Hicks, 8.35; Landon Prideaux, 7.45.
High School
CLASS 4A REGIONAL Saturday at Baldwin City BOYS Team scores: Baldwin 23, De Soto 31, Topeka Hayden 63, Eudora 48, Tonganoxie 53, Ottawa 74, Spring Hill 72, Bishop Miege 70, Basehor-Linwood 64, Atchison 78, Santa Fe Grail 84, Jefferson West 83. Baldwin results: 2. George Letner, 16:26.34; 8. Dakota Helm, 17:03.64; 9. Jacob Bailey, 17:09.52; 13. Parker Wilson, 17:29.88; 17. Nevin Dunn, 17:37.56; 22. Jackson Barth, 17:57.99; 23. Phillip Carroll, 17:58.76. Eudora results: 12. Jack Gerstmann, 17:24.20; 20. Jayce McQuenn, 17:50.27; 30. Noah Kateznmeier, 18:09.28; 33. Kimble Haskett, 18:13.88; 39. Gabriel Taylor, 18:23.86; 45. Aaron Najera, 18:37.53; 48. Jordan Vonderbrink, 18:49.72. Tonganoxie results: 14. Ethan Phillips, 17:30.45; 28. Carter Kietzmann, 18:08.55; 29. Drew Cook, 18:09.23; 38. Dylan Staatz, 18:23.37; 42. Chandler Hamman, 18:32.96; 49. Calvin Morgan, 18:50.81; 53. Nicholas French, 19:01.85. Other top-10 finishers: 1. Dylan Brenneman, Spring Hill, 16:16.22;
3. Jacob Klemz, Topeka Hayden, 16:30.71; 4. Robbie Schmidt, 16:37.28; 5. Brandon Yates, Ottawa, 16:39.25; 6. Luis Murillo, De Soto, 16:45.68; 7. Travis Hodge, De Soto, 16:56.03; John Quinly, Miege, 17:15.61. GIRLS Team scores: Baldwin 39, Atchison 78, Tonganoxie 111, Basehor-Linwood 113, De Soto 129, Eudora 142, Bishop Miege, 156, Spring Hill 169, Topeka Hayden 254, KC Sumner 272. Baldwin results: 1. Addie Dick, 19:17.81; 6. Mackenzie Russell, 20:28.30; 9. Natalie Beiter, 20:47.13; 13. Daelynn Anderson, 21:01.22; 14. Taylor Cawley, 21:05.06; 15. Fayth Peterson, 21:13.39; 69. Hollie Hutton, 24:35.12. Eudora results: 22. Halle Norris, 21:32.22; 25. Ashleigh Hicks, 21:46.34; 29. Sydney Coleman, 21:54.21; 36. Katelyn Ormsby, 22:10.69; 40. Melanie Reese, 22:25.52; 46. Maria Wellman, 22:40.92; 64. Chloe Jo Fewins, 23:55.46. Tonganoxie results: 7. Mia Bond, 20:35.36; 11. Emma Campbell, 20:49.94; 31. Alyssa Scott, 22:01.98; 33. Erin Williams, 22:05.69; 37. Hope Creten, 22:17.47; 41. Sierra Staatz, 22:28.10; 53. Sophia Wetta, 23:13.04. Other top-10 results: 2. Sarah Jaloma, Atchison, 19:39.99; 3. Hannah Honeyman, Santa Fe Trail, 19:49.77; 4. Gabrielle Collins, De Soto, 20:08.83; 5. Lannea Allen, Miege, 20:15.45; 8. Morgan Dierks, Sumner, 20:38.65; 10. Emily Jaloma, Atchison, 20:49.42. CLASS 6A REGIONAL Saturday at Junction City BOYS Team scores: Manhattan 35, Free State 45, Washburn Rural 74, Hutchinson 130, Junction City 134, Derby 139, Wichita Southeast 150, Topeka High 220. Free State results: 2. Ethan Donley, 15:49.0; 4. Tanner Hockenbury, 16:33.70; 8. Avant Edwards, 16:55.10; 13. Jared Hicks, 17:13.0; 18. Grant Alexander Holmes, 17:44.20; 23. William Benkelman, 17:59.80; 27. Joshua Waisner, 18:07.30. GIRLS Team scores: Manhattan 27, Free State 48, Junction City 89, Hutchinson 108, Washburn Rural 134, Topeka High 169, Wichita Southeast 181, Derby 209. Free State results: 1. Emily Venters, 18:27.30; 6. Kiram Cordes, 19:45.20; 12. Julia Larkin, 20:13.0; 14. Sarah Walpole, 20:14.20; 15. Emma Hertig, 20:22.90; 16. Abigail Zenger, 20:29.50; 22. Kate Odgers, 21:40.80. CLASS 6A REGIONAL Saturday at Haskell Indian Nations University Top three teams qualify for state Top five individuals not on top three team qualify for state BOYS Team scores: Shawnee Mission North 41, Shawnee Mission East 43, Shawnee Mission Northwest 68, Shawnee Mission South 101, Shawnee Mission West 124, Olathe Northwest 154, Lawrence High 180. Lawrence High results: 14. Morgan Jones, 20:06.8; 31. Anna DeWitt, 21:21.7; 43. Lacey Greenfield, 22:42.8; 44. Layne Prescott, 22:49.4; 45. Katherine Ahern, 22:54.0; 47. Christina Cho, 23:33.5; 49. Mikayla Herschell, 24:05.4. GIRLS Team scores: Shawnee Mission North 31, Shawnee Mission Northwest 65, Shawnee Mission West 79, Shawnee Mission South 107, Olathe Northwest 119, Shawnee Mission East 140, Lawrence High 177. Lawrence High results: 31. Nathan Pederson, 17:34.4; 33. Carson Jumping Eagle, 17:48.7; 36. Garrett Prescott, 17:59.7; 38. Ben Otte, 18:12.5; 43. Calvin DeWitt, 18:28.10; 45. Carter Shook, 18:34.7; 48. Kai Blosser, 18:47.2.
College Women
Kansas vs. Denver and Missouri State Saturday at Robinson Natatorium Kansas def. Missouri State, 277-69 Denver def. Kansas, 188-162 Kansas results 200 freestyle relay — 2. Haley Bishop, Haley Molden, Pia Pavlic, Hannah Driscoll, 1:36.33; 3. Taylor Sieperda, Leah Pfitzer, Breonna Barker, Hannah Angell, 1:38.07; 6. Brie Balsbough, Cassaundra Pino, Madison Straight, Gretchen Pocisk, 1:40.44; 7. Nika Fellows, Bryce Hinde, Lydia Pocisk, Zoya Wahlstrom, 1:40.72. 200 IM — 1. Chelsie Miller, 4:18.47; 6. Libby Walker, 4:32.61; 10. Laura Bilsborrow, 4:40.02; 12. Anna Peirano, 4:52.79. 100 freestyle — 1. Haley Molden, 51.78; 5. Breonna Barker, 52.79; 6. Hannah Driscoll, 53.05; 11. Zoya Wahlstrom, 59.46. 200 backstroke — 2. Madison Straight, 2:03.17; 3. Sammie Schurig, 2:04.25; 7. Hannah Angell, 2:07.18; 9. Madison Hutchison, 2:09.76. 100 butterfly — 2. Haley Bishop, 56.78; 5. Pia Pavlic, 57.85; 6. Leah Pfitzer, 58.30; 7. Cassaundra Pino, 58.83. 500 freestyle — 1. Chelsie Miller, 4:57.44; 5. Libby Walker. 5:06.38; 8. Nika Fellows, 5:10.02; Lindsay Manning, 5:12.98. Three-meter diving — 1. Graylyn Jones, 239.05; 2. Nadia Khechfe, 231.05. 200 breaststroke — 5. Bryce Hinde, 2:22.92; 6. Lydia Pocisk, 2:24.57; 7. Gretchen Pocisk, 2:24.70; 12. Brie Balsbough, 2:38.27. 400 freestyle relay — 2. Haley Molden, Haley Bishop, Hannah Driscoll, Pia Pavlic, 3:29.64; 4. Breonna Barker, Cassaundra Pino, Taylor Sieperda, Chelsie Miller, 3:34.0; 5. Leah Pfitzer, Madison Straight, Libby Walker, Hannah Angell, 3:36.59; 10. Nika Fellows, Laura Bilsborrow, Anna Peirano, Zoya Wahlstrom, 3:45.46.
NASCAR Trucks Fred’s 250
Saturday At Talladega Superspeedway Talladega, Ala. Lap length: 2.66 miles (Start position in parentheses) 1. (1) Timothy Peters, Toyota, 98 laps, 120.6 rating, 47 points, $67,978. 2. (13) Brandon Jones, Chevrolet, 98, 104.3, 43, $48,318. 3. (19) Mason Mingus, Chevrolet, 98, 87.5, 41, $36,014. 4. (3) Erik Jones, Toyota, 98, 104.8, 41, $27,203. 5. (15) Tyler Reddick, Ford, 98, 85.6, 39, $20,861. 6. (16) Cameron Hayley, Toyota, 98, 79.7, 38, $20,056. 7. (8) Johnny Sauter, Toyota, 98, 84.7, 37, $19,470. 8. (12) Chris Fontaine, Toyota, 98, 72.4, 36, $18,939. 9. (20) Chad Boat, Chevrolet, 98, 66.3, 35, $16,579. 10. (18) Tyler Young, Chevrolet, 98, 63.5, 34, $19,675. 11. (14) John Hunter Nemechek, Chevrolet, 98, 78.5, 33, $18,616. 12. (17) Bobby Gerhart, Chevrolet, 98, 53, 0, $18,428. 13. (10) Christopher Bell, Toyota, 98, 89.3, 31, $18,318. 14. (27) Ray Black Jr., Chevrolet, 98, 47, 31, $18,214. 15. (30) Korbin Forrister, Chevrolet, 98, 44.2, 29, $18,705. 16. (2) John Wes Townley, Chevrolet, 98, 75, 29, $18,000. 17. (11) Brian Keselowski, Ford, 98, 82.5, 28, $17,891.
College Men
Price’s Give ’Em Five Invitational Saturday at El Paso, Texas 1. Kansas 555 (-21) 2. Marquette 556 (-20) 3. Texas El Paso 557 (-19) 4. Western New Mexico 564 (-12) 5. St. Mary’s 565 (-11) 6. UMKC 568 (-8) T7. Idaho 569 (-7) T7. UTSA 569 (-7) T7. San Jose State 569 (-7) 10. New Mexico State 572 (-4) T11. Air Force 582 (+6) T11. Army 582 (+6) 13. George Washington 583 (+7) 14. Texas-El Paso (B) 589 (+13) 15. Texas State 592 (+16) Individual Leaders 1. Antoine Rozner, UMKC 130 (-14) 2. Frederik Dreier, UTEP 134 (-10) 3. Cody Blick, SJSU 135 (-9) 4. Chase Hanna, KU 137 (-7) Kansas Results 4. Chase Hanna 137 (-7) T5. Ben Welle 138 (-6) T11. Charlie Hillier 139 (-5) T34. Jacques Wilson 144 (E) T42. Connor Peck 145 (+1) T73. Daniel Hudson 150 (+6)
Shriners Hospitals Saturday At TPC Summerlin Las Vegas Purse: $6.4 million Yardage: 7,255; Par: 71 Second Round Tyler Aldridge Chad Campbell Morgan Hoffmann Brett Stegmaier Nick Watney Brendon de Jonge Cameron Tringale Daniel Summerhays Jimmy Walker Ryan Palmer Patton Kizzire Jason Bohn Kevin Na David Hearn Mark Hubbard Shane Bertsch Si Woo Kim Ollie Schniederjans Kevin Streelman Brian Harman John Senden Camilo Villegas Spencer Levin Patrick Rodgers Nick Taylor Ricky Barnes Steve Wheatcroft Steve Marino Kyle Stanley Russell Henley Alex Cejka Chris Stroud Chez Reavie Rickie Fowler Davis Love III Fabian Gomez Michael Thompson Ryo Ishikawa Peter Malnati Michael Kim
64-68—132 65-67—132 66-66—132 66-66—132 67-66—133 67-66—133 68-65—133 68-65—133 66-67—133 65-69—134 65-69—134 68-66—134 68-66—134 64-70—134 64-70—134 65-70—135 69-66—135 68-67—135 68-67—135 68-67—135 70-65—135 67-69—136 71-65—136 65-71—136 66-70—136 65-71—136 67-70—137 66-71—137 67-70—137 68-69—137 67-70—137 66-71—137 69-68—137 72-65—137 68-69—137 69-68—137 64-73—137 65-72—137 70-67—137 70-67—137
Taiwan Championship
Saturday At Miramar Resort and Country Club Taipei, Taiwan Purse: $2 million Yardage: 6,450; Par: 72 Third Round a-amateur Lydia Ko 69-67-67—203 Eun-Hee Ji 66-69-72—207 Charley Hull 68-69-71—208 So Yeon Ryu 70-69-70—209 Catriona Matthew 72-70-68—210 Suzann Pettersen 74-66-71—211 Anna Nordqvist 70-70-71—211 Xi Yu Lin 67-70-74—211 Shanshan Feng 70-76-67—213 Hee Young Park 71-72-70—213 Karine Icher 69-73-71—213 Jenny Shin 69-72-72—213 Sun Young Yoo 68-71-74—213 Brittany Lang 77-71-66—214 Paula Creamer 71-73-70—214 Carlota Ciganda 70-74-70—214 Mirim Lee 71-72-71—214 Amy Yang 69-73-72—214
Hong Kong Open
Saturday At Hong Kong Golf Club Hong Kong Purse: $2 million Yardage: 6,699; Par: 70 Third Round Lucas Bjerregaard, Denmark 66-66-63—195 Justin Rose, England 65-66-64—195 Anirban Lahiri, India 67-67-65—199 M. Fitzpatrick, England 67-67-66—200 Jeev Milkha Singh, India 65-70-65—200 Y.E. Yang, South Korea 68-66-67—201 Matt Ford, England 69-65-67—201 J. Scrivener, Australia 68-68-65—201 Gaganjeet Bhullar, India 69-66-67—202 N. Holman, Australia 68-66-68—202 Patrick Reed, U.S. 68-69-65—202 T. Jaidee, Thailand 71-67-64—202
NHL
EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Montreal 9 9 0 0 18 35 12 Tampa Bay 9 5 2 2 12 27 24 Florida 8 4 3 1 9 26 17 Ottawa 8 3 3 2 8 24 26 Detroit 7 3 3 1 7 18 19 Boston 7 3 3 1 7 27 29 Toronto 7 1 4 2 4 16 24 Buffalo 8 2 6 0 4 16 26 Metropolitan Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Washington 7 6 1 0 12 29 18 N.Y. Rangers 9 5 2 2 12 24 19 N.Y. Islanders 8 5 2 1 11 27 22 Philadelphia 7 4 2 1 9 16 18 New Jersey 8 4 3 1 9 20 23 Pittsburgh 8 4 4 0 8 13 16 Carolina 7 2 5 0 4 12 20 Columbus 9 1 8 0 2 19 40 WESTERN CONFERENCE Central Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Nashville 8 6 1 1 13 25 16 Dallas 8 6 2 0 12 27 21 Minnesota 7 5 1 1 11 20 17 St. Louis 8 5 2 1 11 23 20 Chicago 8 5 3 0 10 18 16 Winnipeg 7 4 2 1 9 23 17 Colorado 7 2 4 1 5 19 21 Pacific Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Arizona 8 4 3 1 9 23 19 Los Angeles 7 4 3 0 8 13 15 San Jose 7 4 3 0 8 18 16 Vancouver 7 3 2 2 8 18 14 Edmonton 8 3 5 0 6 19 24 Calgary 7 2 5 0 4 15 27 Anaheim 7 1 5 1 3 6 20 NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. Saturday’s Games Philadelphia 3, N.Y. Rangers 2, SO Minnesota 3, Anaheim 0 New Jersey 4, Buffalo 3 Montreal 5, Toronto 3 Arizona 4, Ottawa 1 N.Y. Islanders 3, St. Louis 2, OT Pittsburgh 2, Nashville 1, OT Florida 6, Dallas 2 Chicago 1, Tampa Bay 0, OT Columbus 4, Colorado 3 Detroit at Vancouver, (n) Carolina at San Jose, (n) Today’s Games Minnesota at Winnipeg, 5 p.m. Calgary at N.Y. Rangers, 6 p.m. Los Angeles at Edmonton, 8:30 p.m.
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ARTS ENTERTAINMENT LIFESTYLE PEOPLE Sunday, October 25, 2015
After prom ‘Prom Dress Room’ author examines inner lives of women through dresses, poetry By Joanna Hlavacek Twitter: @hlavacekjoanna Illustrations courtesy of Sandy Hazlett
“I
t wasn’t really about prom,” insists Sandy Hazlett of her new collection of poems entitled “The Prom Dress Room.” She’s good-natured, even when fielding questions about her own prom (she doesn’t remember much about the dance itself, aside from an Under the Sea theme) and her fuzzy memories of what she wore to the grand event some 40-odd years ago. But for Hazlett, who will host a reading of the book Thursday evening at the Raven Book Store, the collective American teenage experience known as The Prom is really just shorthand for the time in a young person’s life when the first steps are taken into adulthood. “Really, what that means is you’re graduating from high school, and that’s a huge transition,” she says. “And the choices you make after that are really what make us who Hazlett we are.” Yet prom, that fleeting moment between girlhood and the realities of grown-up life, isn’t the focus of “The Prom Dress Room,” which takes its name from a long-standing Lawrence tradition known as Project Prom Dress. Every year, a few months before the onset of prom season, the Social Service League hosts a giveaway of gently used formal dresses for young women in Douglas County. Hazlett, a longtime volunteer with the Social Service League, was tasked with cleaning and organizing the donated dresses one winter about four years ago when she first developed the idea for “The Prom Dress Room.” There, above the historic stone building at 905 Rhode Island St. that houses the Social Service League thrift store, Hazlett sorted through the bevy of colorful frocks. Each seemed to have its own story. Hazlett couldn’t help but wonder who had worn the dress originally.
Who was she? What was her life like? And what kind of person would she grow into? The resulting poems, Hazlett says, “wrote themselves.” Every week, she found herself taking home a new dress, capturing its likeness with ink and colored pencils and writing the story of the girl who wore it to prom. Originally published in this year’s edition of the Coal City Review and Press, “The Prom Dress Room” first became available in book form (it’s published by Anamcara Press) two months ago. Both are local, Hazlett notes. All proceeds from her book sales at the Social Service League and the Raven benefit the organization that inspired her poems in the first place. “The dress you choose says a lot about who you are right then, and how that will extrapolate in the future to make your life….” Hazlett says, her words trailing off. “Now, of course you don’t have control over all these things, but you’re there, and who you are is there, and the woman you become is there.”
Portraits of women Women are at the heart of “The Prom Dress Room.” The poems follow nine different women coming of age amid the kind of familial and societal pressures that seem inherent to growing up female. None are purely autobiographical. “But all these images came from my life, from stories that I’d heard, things that happened to friends,” Hazlett says. Bits and pieces of her teenage years and young adulthood are scattered throughout the book. In the poem “3D Red,” Hazlett’s reallife prom date, identified simply as “MarReally, what (prom) means is you’re tin,” shares his name with the one-time graduating from high school, and that’s husband of the poem’s protagonist, a self-assured and beautiful young woman a huge transition. And the choices you who becomes a surgeon and ends up leaving all three of the men she married. make after that are really what make us “My two girls grow to despise me,” who we are.” the poem reads. “I was not made for this man’s world.”
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And then there’s the heroine of “Diamond Straps,” whose sleek black gown calls to mind the famous John Singer Sargent painting “Portrait of Madame X.” Hazlett’s character wears her “diamonds as they were repainted, high and wide as my dreams.” It’s a reference to the scandal Sargent faced upon debuting his painting in Paris, where critics were outraged by the suggestiveness of one jeweled strap falling down the model’s right shoulder. Humiliated, Sargent painted over the original, showing both straps securely fastened. In “Diamond Straps,” the young woman steps “elegantly into the future,” but within a year, she drops out of college. Plagued by mental illness, the once-hopeful girl becomes “solemn and suicidal,” and is sent away. She survives, but only barely. “It never does get any better than that,” the poem reads. “I become the fallen diamond strap.” Hazlett’s personal connection here is two-fold. Her maternal greatgrandmother, Louise Pomeroy, was also a model of Sargent’s — the painting of the darkhaired beauty belongs to Boston’s Museum of Fine Arts now, Hazlett says. “This kind of depression that can ruin a life,” as it did with the heroine of “Diamond Straps,” runs in Hazlett’s family, “particularly through the women down that line,” she says. For many women, Hazlett acknowledges, “life is difficult.” Her “Prom Dress Room” stories illustrate the ways in which the voices and experiences of young women can
‘Solitaire’ Editor’s note: “Solitaire” is one of nine poems in Sandy Hazlett’s “The Prom Dress Room.” I am the winter prairie, broom sedge, little bluestem, coyote fur, a herding, lone, red heeler. I am thin skinned, indecisive, uncomfortable in crowds. I melt into my dress. I mimic flesh so I can blend in. I keep it short so I can walk away. Clubs, pearls, and lace at my waist, two lines of thought, subtle decorum. I am a pleated column. I will go to nursing school, join Doctors Without Borders, travel to the Caucasus. I will meet a handsome intern who marries me when I become pregnant. I raise his two sons. He never loves me. We retire to Coral Gables, Florida. The doctor dies peacefully in his reading chair. I sneak cigarettes in the bathroom and eat scrambled eggs with ketchup because there is no one to tell me not to. I have chronic catarrh and spit into the coconut tree. In my pearl slippers on terra-cotta tile I shuffle cards in a metal box and play solitaire in the sunroom.
IF YOU GO What: “The Prom Dress Room” reading. In addition to Sandy Hazlett, local authors Ronda Miller and Jose Faus will also be reading their work. When: 7 p.m. Thursday Where: the Raven Book Store, 6 E. Seventh St. Cost: Admittance is free. Hazlett’s book costs $8. All proceeds from sales of “The Prom Dress Room” will benefit the Social Service League. be so easily silenced or devalued. Identities are lost, found and, in the case of the girl in “Crystal Leaf,” reclaimed after years of sexual abuse waged by her own father. “That didn’t happen to
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me,” Hazlett says. “Oh, people I knew, friends. It does happen to a lot of women.” She says this matterof-factly, but not without a twinge of sadness in her voice. And yet, the traumatized young woman at the heart of “Crystal Leaf” is able to discover her own strength and find purpose in her life. So, too, does the spunky protagonist in “Homemade Sparkling Peach.” She sews her own dress — a gaudy, high-hemmed confection, “all sanguine and sequins” — and has plans to become an entrepreneur, importing fabric and handcrafts from the Silk Road. Her future makes no mention of these dreams, but “Homemade
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Sparkling Peach” seems happy to live a “moderately hemmed life” with her Presbyterian minister husband. She ends up sewing her daughter’s prom dress when the time comes. “She is content and she is strong,” Hazlett says of her character. “She made her life as she made her dress.”
Different voices “The Prom Dress Room” is an overtly feminist text, its author realizes. Hazlett knows “that word scares people,” but she’s unapologetic about her stories — what makes them feminist, she says, is their unflinching depiction of the inner lives of ordinary women. Each and every one of them — from the sur-
Jon Ralston, features editor, 832-7189, @jonralston, jralston@ljworld.com
geon in “3D Red” to the schoolteacher in “Crystal Leaf” to the preacher’s wife in “Homemade Sparkling Peach” — feels undeniably real. Perhaps that’s because their stories all come from real people in Hazlett’s life. She hopes they’ll feel as authentic to those who pick up the book. Hazlett won’t be alone at Thursday’s reading. A “surprise” group of local writers — all of them women — will read the nine poems in her book. She’s saving the introduction for herself, and will step in to read if someone can’t make it. For Hazlett, who is so quick to dismiss any attention that comes her way — keep the focus on the Social Service League, she insists — it’s
an “exciting” occasion. “It’s so cool that I’ll have different voices of different women reading the different poems,” she says. “They’ll bring to life the different voices that come out of these stories and these dresses.” — Features reporter Joanna Hlavacek can be reached at jhlavacek@ljworld.com and 832-6388.
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Sunday, October 25, 2015
KANSAS CITY CONNECTION
By Lucas Wetzel
FüD for thought; get your fan gear
H
aving grown up working in my family’s meat market, I didn’t get to sample a lot of vegan food as a kid. Every time I try the organic and gluten-free vegan fare at FüD, however, I start thinking I could eat it every single meal. But that’s probably easier said than done, as it would take a lot of time and talent to get anywhere close to the zest and deliciousness of the dishes prepared at this bustling, cash-only vegetarian restaurant in Kansas City’s Westside neighborhood. At 813 W. 17th St., just west of Summit Street, FüD is tucked between the funky, upscale eatery Novel and gourmet snow cone purveyor Little Freshie. The restaurant was opened in 2010 by Heidi VanPelt-Belle, who started preparing and serving food in Los Angeles and then in the local Bad Seed market in the Crossroads. The concept has been a hit so far, with a steady stream of diners and carryout customers visiting for lunch or dinner Tuesday through Saturday, or for lunch Sunday from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. FüD’s dining room
inside the heart logo, also opened up a brickand-mortar location on the Country Club Plaza at 419 W. 47th St. across from Barnes and Noble.
Japanese eggplant from FüD is cozy and colorful, and the menu includes an extensive array of stir-fry dishes, salads, sandwiches, Latin dishes, raw foods, appetizers, smoothies and desserts. Check out a full menu at eatfud.com. Whether you’re a genuine vegetarian or an erstwhile omnivore like me, chances are good you’ll find something to love.
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Performances Halloween is fast approaching, and audiences of all ages will be in for a treat at two stage events this week. From Tuesday through Saturday, the Theatre for Young America is presenting an adaptation of Washington Irving’s classic “The Legend of Sleepy Hollow” at Union Station. Tickets are $10 each and can be FüD/Contributed Photo purchased at tya.org. At 7 p.m. Thursday, Screenland at the Symseeing more Royals and phony presents “Dr. Kansas City apparel on Jekyll and Mr. Hyde,” the the streets than I have silent 1920 adaptation of anytime since... 2014. the Robert Louis StevenRally House is the son classic featuring an primary outlet for oforgan score performed ficial MLB jerseys, but if by Dorothy Papadakos. you’re looking for some Tickets range from $25 to of the unique T-shirt $50 and can be purchased designs that have popped at kcsymphony.org. up in the past year or so, Tickets are also still check out The Bunker, a available for the Kansas City Symphony’s prelocally owned clothing sentation of the “Clasretailer at 4056 Broadsical Mystery Tour,” way in Westport, or Normal Human, a nearby an orchestral tribute to The Beatles featuring local boutique at 827 original arrangements Westport Road. of the Fab Four’s hits. Charlie Hustle, the Associate conductor custom T-shirt outfit Aram Demirjian will lead responsible for the KC
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the Symphony’s adaptations of Beatles classics, including “Yesterday” performed by guitar and string quartet and “Penny Lane” with a live horn section. Tickets for shows at 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday are $50 and up at kcsymphony.org.
Janet Jackson Finally, I would be disappointing my eighthgrade girlfriend if I didn’t mention Tuesday’s Janet Jackson concert at the Sprint Center. Tickets to Janet’s “Unbreakable” tour cost $37.50 and up and are for sale at sprintcenter.com. Incidentally, if you’re attending the Sprint Center for a concert or game and want to find a no-frills bar that’s cheaper and much less chic than the Power & Light District, head over to Zoo Bar at 1220 McGee St., a cash-only joint serving beer and cocktails until 1:30 a.m. every night but Sunday. Zoo Bar might not be an ideal place to find a mate, but it’s a great spot to slam a few drinks before braving the bright lights and high prices of the big arena. Happy Halloween!
Arts Center spreads Layton drawings across the country A collection of 50 drawings by the late Kansas artist Elizabeth Layton, donated to the Lawrence Arts Center 20 years ago, have been gifted to several art museums across the country, according to a news release. Don Lambert, who first discovered her 37 years ago, proposed the idea of finding new homes for the donated pieces. He and Lawrence Arts Center CEO Susan Tate agreed that the move would mutually benefit Lawrence and communities throughout the U.S. The drawings will now reside in the collections of such high-profile institutions as the Whitney Museum of American Art and the American Folk Art Museum in New York City and the Art Institute of Chicago. They will also go to area institutions such as the Spencer Museum of Art at Kansas University, Johnson County Community College’s Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art, the Mulvane Art Museum at Washburn University, the National World War I Museum and Memorial in Kansas City, Mo., and the Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art in Kansas City, Mo.
— Lucas Wetzel is a writer and editor from Kansas City, Mo.
— Joanna Hlavacek
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Cute critters in danger? There’s a hero for that.
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Three Kansas destinations for fun summer road trips.
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Follow our guide to your best weekend in the Flint Hills.
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Sunday, October 25, 2015
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‘A MUSICAL ADVENTURE’ Jeff Daniels on balancing acting and music, touring with his family and that famous ‘Newsroom’ speech
By Fally Afani
IF YOU GO
Special to the Journal-World
Jeff Daniels has seen his fair share of audiences. From the big screen to the little screen, and stages in between, the Emmy award-winning actor is constantly developing his craft. But amid the recent releases of two new films, “Steve Jobs” and “The Martian,” Daniels will be showcasing a musical talent not everyone gets to see. He’s stopping at the Granada on Oct. 27 with his son’s act, The Ben Daniels Band, for a night of rustic Americana as he dives into his sixth album, “Days Like These.” The Lawrence Journal-World’s Fally Afani recently talked with Daniels about his family-fueled folk act, and what it takes to find a balance between a Hollywood actor and life as a touring musician.
Jeff Daniels and the Ben Daniels Band will perform at 8 p.m. Tuesday at the Granada, 1020 Massachusetts St. Doors open at 7 p.m. Tickets cost $25-$35 and can be purchased at the Granada box office and thegranada.com. the audience is glad you made the effort to come to them FA: I heard you’re quite the storyteller onstage. Since folk music tends to be fairly personal, what are some of the real-life experiences that helped shaped your music? JD: I never know what I’m really going to say, nor does the band. That’s part of the fun of it, that I will go off. I will talk to the audience. If we have a conversation, great. They need to remember that one of us has the microphone, so be careful. But there is room for spontaneity. I know I’ve said things onstage and gone off on little tangents and looked at my son, and he’s shaking his head.
FA: It seems that your acting career keeps your hands full enough, and then I see how much you tour. This isn’t your first rodeo; you tour a lot. Why the decision to go out on tour when you have the new Steve Jobs movie coming up? JD: For one thing, I enjoy it and I It’s a joy for me being in the get the chance to play with my son’s band. This will be the fourth time closet all these years and to kind we go out together. We book these of come out and say, ‘Here’s a things four to six months ahead of time. So, four to six months ago, who song I wrote,’ and the jaws drop.” knew “The Martian” and “Steve Jobs” would come out so close together? — Jeff Daniels There’s something wonderful about going out on the road and looking over there and seeing your son. It’s a great musical adventure that’s as imI certainly do not ignore the movie portant to me as what’s going on with career or television career. We do a the movies. I cherish these tours. song, for instance, called “Now You Know You Can,” which is based on FA: Lawrence is smack dab in the “The Newsroom” and the speech I had middle of the nation. How do your in the first episode. It’s the speech that audiences in the Midwest take to you probably won me the Emmy, and it’s compared with the rest of the nation? certainly a speech that will outlive me JD: It’s aimed at places more like and Aaron Sorkin. Getting ready to do Lawrence than it is in, say, New York that speech and the pressure that was or Chicago. I enjoy going to places on me, I got through that, and it goes to that are off the beaten path. Law- a song “Now You Know You Can.” If rence, Kansas, is one of those places. you don’t try and risk failure, then you I really enjoy finding those venues, won’t succeed… and once you do, now those places that when you get there you know you can do it.
Contributed Photo
JEFF DANIELS AND THE BEN DANIELS BAND will be performing at 8 p.m. Tuesday at the Granada. FA: You’re no stranger to folk festivals. What do you do to set yourself apart from being the actor that shows up with the guitar? JD: You can’t get away from it. That’s what you’re known for. If you can play, that’s it at the end of the day. If you can play, musicians know if you’re getting around or not. I’ve worked hard over the decades, since the late ’70s, on the guitar as a songwriter. It’s a joy for me being in the closet all these years and to kind of come out and say, “Here’s a song I wrote,” and the jaws drop. Their expectations are so low. But if you risk it, I think you’ll be surprised. And that comes from 35 years of getting ready to do it. FA: What, as an actor, prepared you for live music on tours like this one? JD: I’ve been on tour for 40 years. It’s a different tour. You go somewhere, you’re in hotels, you’re spending three months somewhere or you’re on a movie and you’re on location somewhere. I’ve always been a gypsy. It’s a very nomadic experience as an actor. I embrace it as an adventure, doing something with my family. My wife goes, my dogs go. We enjoy these, we really do. FA: You’ve been touring for a
while with your son Ben’s band. What brought you two together to bond over music? JD: I said to him in high school, “If you ever want to learn the guitar, come to me.” Then it was hockey and girls and all of a sudden he was 19 and he said, “All right, I’m ready.” I said, “Ready for what?” and he said, “Teach me the guitar.” He was looking for some direction, and what I didn’t know was that he was an artist. He could draw, he could paint, he could take photographs. So learning the guitar came quickly to him, and he hasn’t had the guitar out of his hands for the last 11 years. I said if you chase this, you have to write your own stuff… He started researching all kinds of writers, the blues, the folk, hip-hop, he chased all of it… and now he’s got this life in music as a recording engineer, as a songwriter. I’ve done that with Luke, my other son. I said find out what you love to do, and spend the rest of your life getting better at it. Not everybody gets that opportunity. Best to find out something that you’re natural at, and that you love, and then chase that as a career. — Fally Afani is a freelance writer and editor of iheartlocalmusic.com.
Get weird on Halloween with a David Lynch double feature
T
he horror movie genre exists because people love to be scared. Take one look at a list of “horror” movies streaming online, though, and you’ll see a ton of gory slasher pictures and sequel after lame sequel that aren’t scary at all. Fear is trickier than that. It manifests itself in a lot of different ways. The jump scares that dominate so many “scary” movies today are cop-outs. It’s a lot tougher for a film to establish and maintain a creepy atmosphere for its entire running time — and if it taps into some universal paranoia or a personal deep-seeded fear, even better. That’s where David Lynch comes in. He’s not as prolific as many great directors — and he has almost as many misfires (“Dune,” “Lost Highway,” “Inland Empire”) as he has classics (“Blue Velvet”). But now is a very good time to introduce or re-acquaint yourself with two of Lynch’s three iconoclastic masterpieces: “Mulholland Dr.” and “Eraserhead.” Why now, you may ask? The answer is simple: Thanks to new 4K digital transfers from The Criterion Collection, these movies have never looked and sounded better. (Anyone who knows Lynch’s filmography knows that the sound is at least as important as the images.) The remastered “Mulholland Dr.” is out on Criterion Blu-ray and DVD Oct. 27, while “Eraserhead” is out now.
Criterion Collection/Contributed Photo
From left, Naomi Watts and Laura Harring in “Mulholland Dr.”
SCENE STEALERS
ERIC MELIN
eric@scene-stealers.com Some movies feel dated just months after their arrival, but 2001’s “Mulholland Dr.” just keeps getting better with time. Expanding on some of the visual themes that made his short-lived ABC series “Twin Peaks” (which is being revived on Showtime soon) so iconic, Lynch accessed deep recesses of the human psyche to create a narrative cinematic experience that is truly like no other. “You’ll see me one more time if you do good. You’ll see me two more times …
if you do bad. Goodnight.” — The Cowboy Only in a David Lynch movie could a small bald man dressed head to toe in Tom Mix western gear be absolutely terrifying. Thanks to non-actor Monty Montgomery’s dead-eyed delivery, Angelo Badalamenti’s low-end synth rumble, and the mounting dread surrounding his introduction, The Cowboy’s words haunt the mystery at the heart of “Mulholland Dr.” There is no conceivable way to spoil the film, but I’ll sum it up in one word: Identity. Every vivid high, every surrealistic low; they exist — and turn on — this key idea. If there is one thing that every human being on the planet can relate to, it’s the idea that nobody gets to choose who they are. We are born, we exist. Hollywood is the dream factory, and it swallows up untold amounts of dreamers who are trying to re-define their identity every day. Naomi Watts is Betty,
the stereotypical smalltown girl hoping to make it big. Lynch doesn’t just recognize movie clichés like Betty, he thrives on them. He uses them against us. When a tall, dark and classic-Hollywoodbeautiful amnesiac (Rita, played by Laura Harring) enters her life, the pair try to find out who she was before her car accident. We already know Rita was about to be murdered seconds before the crash, so the mystery is doubled for the audience. Much has been written about the “dream logic” of “Mulholland Dr.” As a differentiator to most movies that merely employ this strategy in some vague manner, however, let me submit this: An early criticism of this film was that there is no connective tissue, and that is simply dead wrong. There are several recurring themes under the umbrella of identity, and all of the weirdness resonates with its own authenticity. Because Lynch is playing with archetypes like the wide-eyed innocent, he’s able to subvert them with a heightened reality that suckers us in. All of a sudden we’re not experiencing Betty’s raw emotion at a remove. Her biggest fears are ours, and it’s terrifying to see … well … her … identity … decimated. Wiped clean. Like it never existed. Watching it again this week, I was transfixed by its conclusion, and then overcome by an enormous amount of sadness. In a new interview on
the “Mulholland Dr.” Bluray, Watts says, “Some directors want to saturate you with information” and — this is an understatement — Lynch isn’t one of those directors. I believe there’s a freedom in letting go; in not trying to make sense of every detail, but rather letting the big picture wash over you. The meaning in “Mulholland Dr.” will be different for everyone. The same could be said tenfold of 1977’s “Eraserhead,” a black-and-white movie that actually has a more straightforward narrative structure than “Mulholland Dr.” but is a tougher watch because of its incredibly slow pace and lack of character investment. At a distance and with repeated viewings, it becomes easier to relate to Henry Spencer (Jack Nance), who lives in an industrial park and is terrified by his “baby” — an H.R. Giger-like monstrosity that undergoes a number of metamorphoses (or are they in dreams?) and is seriously, painfully ill. As in “Mulholland Dr.,” sound design is absolutely crucial to the spooky atmosphere of this Kafka-esque movie, which was also Lynch’s dynamic debut long-form work. His own fears about being a father are baked into the film’s DNA, then filtered through his lens. The funny thing about the film’s truths is this: The more specific (and weird) they get, the more universal they become.
Again, I’ll pull out this recommendation and warning: Approach “Eraserhead” as a unique cinematic experience. Don’t try to make “sense” of it. There are many ways that motion pictures can move you. Linear plots with easily defined cause and effect are the kinds of stories we are used to, but sometimes it’s refreshing to enter a world where logic takes a backseat to purely evocative storytelling. “I just came here from Ontario and now I’m in this dream place.” — Betty Lynch is certainly tuned into his own peculiar wavelength. “Mulholland Dr.” and “Eraserhead” are eerie examples of filmmaking, shrouded in mystery and darkness. But they are by no means impenetrable. They are forged from our deepest fears and most vulnerable places. Isn’t that what true horror is all about? “Mulholland Dr.” is available on Criterion’s new Blu-ray, DVD, and on Hulu Plus Oct. 27. It is also available online from HBO Go, YouTube, Amazon Video, Vudu, and Google Play. “Eraserhead” is available on Criterion Blu-ray and DVD, plus online at Hulu Plus, YouTube, Amazon Video, Vudu, and Google Play. — Eric Melin is the editor-inchief of Scene-Stealers. He’s a member of the Broadcast Film Critics Association and president of the Kansas City Film Critics Circle.
PUZZLES
L awrence J ournal -W orld
Sunday, October 25, 2015
| 5D
THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD BIG NAMES IN E-TAIL By Dan Schoenholz Puzzles Edited by Will Shortz ACROSS 1 Supreme Court justice who once compared the majority’s reasoning to “the mystical aphorisms of the fortune cookie” 7 Low part 12 Classify 18 A dozen for Hercules 19 Silk case 20 Words of defiance 22 Admission of a lack of familiarity with Mr. Hockey? 24 Business feature? 25 Ancient Persian 26 Like sailors’ talk 27 Celebrity cook Paula 29 Curse (out) 30 Fusses 32 Kyoto concurrence 33 Less serious works by the author of “Brighton Rock”? 36 Take responsibility for 38 Makes fast 40 Roman law 41 One making a roaring start? 45 Only one person can do it 46 Fits comfortably 50 Toque 52 Reason for Brosnan fans to watch 1980s TV? 55 “Home, ____” 56 Beach fronts? 58 A title might be presented in it: Abbr. 59 Being dragged along 60 John Lennon’s
middle name 61 Brand name whose middle two letters are linked in its logo 62 Cameo stone 63 Some briefs 64 Round house? 65 Trying to sell one’s “Au Revoir les Enfants” video? 68 Where safety goggles may be worn 71 Don Juan’s mother 73 Plowmen’s cries 74 “Rhyme Pays” rapper 75 “Catch-22” pilot 76 Deplete 78 Flaky stuff 79 Foam 80 Challenge for a virologist 82 Explosive side of a former tennis great? 85 Fruitcakes 87 Libation with a floral bouquet 88 Noted second-place finisher 90 Make sense of 91 “Smack!” 92 Maybe not even that 95 Rockies game 96 Comic’s copy of “The Importance of Being Earnest”? 100 “Oh, no!” 102 Home of Future World 106 Soil: Prefix 107 Upbeat 108 Rocky debris 110 Brazilian berry 111 Applaud 113 Assign blame to the singer of “Blurred Lines”? 117 “Lake Wobegon
Days” writer 118 Writing award won multiple times by Alice Munro 119 Where Quiznos and Mapquest are headquartered 120 Erotic 121 “All I ____ Do” (Sheryl Crow hit) 122 Tavern vessels
decorations 1 2 3 4 5 6 41 Dead-end position 42 Modern-day home 18 of the ancient Ashanti 22 23 empire 43 Some sites on the 25 26 National Mall 44 Home of Jar Jar 30 31 32 Binks in “Star Wars” films 36 37 46 TV’s ____ Network (sports presenter) 41 42 43 44 DOWN 47 Relaxes and has 1 Slenderizes some fun 50 2 Midshipman’s coun48 Chess’s ____ ratings 55 56 terpart 49 Singers do this 3 Residence 51 Nutrition-related 60 61 4 Single copy of “The 53 Confound Bonfire of the Vanities”? 54 Resident of southern 64 65 5 N.Y.C. line Mexico 6 Questions 57 Llama’s kin 71 72 7 Farfalle shapes 61 Radio freq. 8 Sore 62 Come-____ 76 77 78 9 Great Lakes’ ____ 63 Nonkosher lunch Canals 82 83 order 10 Disperse 65 Onetime title for 87 11 Fidgety Obama and Clinton 12 Net-worth component 66 “They got me!” 91 13 Topsiders? 67 Preceded, with “to” 14 Spain’s Costa del ____ 69 Former kingdom of 96 97 98 99 15 Go too far Provence 16 Actress O’Connor of 70 Military muckety106 107 “Xena: Warrior Princess” mucks 17 Saturn’s largest moon 72 Midwesterners, ste111 112 19 Rum mixers reotypically 117 21 “What we want most, 76 Modern TV feature but what, alas! we use 77 Hundred Acre Wood 120 worst,” per William Penn resident 78 Farrow or Hamm 23 “Uh-uh” 28 Questioning interjec- 79 Mother of Ares 80 France’s ____ tions (Montemezzi opera) Polytechnique 31 Like Vatican guards 89 Sophocles tragedy 81 Buy into “Common 33 Ripsnorter 92 Sue Grafton’s Sense”? 34 Pressing work “____ for Innocent” 83 Post office? 35 Fidgety 93 Come in under the radar, say 84 Hardly fancy 37 Japanese drama 94 Artist Neiman 86 “L’Amore dei ____ Re” 96 Raise, with “up” 39 Some Thanksgiving
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97 Eyes 98 Poisonous snake 99 Producer of wrinkles, it’s said 101 Comprehension 103 First year in Constantine’s reign 104 Like some port vessels
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105 Levels 108 ____ Fein 109 LAX figs. 112 Jupiter’s locale: Abbr. 114 “Got it!” 115 Hankering 116 Riled (up)
UNITED FEATURE SUNDAY CROSSWORD ACROSS 1 Actor -- Reeves 6 Jabs with a tusk 11 Fix up 16 Dusk to dawn 21 Surmise 22 Beyond’s partner 23 Pool resources 24 Google rival 25 Edible bulb 26 Princess abandoned by Jason 27 Ventured 28 Fridge maker 29 California’s Big -30 Buffalo hockey pro 32 Waffler’s answer 34 Earth’s star 36 High sign 37 Chicken style 39 Scouts unit 41 Ralph -- Emerson 43 Earnings 45 Ms. Burstyn of film 47 Light incense to 49 Onetime teen mag 51 Hung-jury result 54 Excalibur 55 End of Caesar’s boast 56 Hit a fly 60 Destroys data 61 Dwindled 62 Bumped against 64 Luau music 65 Red Sonja ally 66 Jockey 67 Aladdin’s servant 68 Posh hotel lobbies 70 Grill, perhaps 71 Flour or sugar 73 Sorts socks 74 Pops 75 Tijuana coin 77 Heavy hydrogen discoverer
78 Hitters’ ploys 79 Sea cow 80 Lou Grant portrayer 82 Needing bleach 83 Gives notice 84 Camera feature 87 DEA agents 88 Abrupt 89 Lean-tos 93 Breathlessly quiet 94 Suspicion 95 Make happy 97 Portuguese king 98 Divert 99 Less than one 100 Asian capital 101 Violin middle 103 Links goal 104 Scribble 106 Jessica of “Tootsie” 107 Ring 108 “Watermark” singer 110 Puts the moves on 111 Archaeology find 112 Jai alai courts 113 African tongue 115 Call, as an elk 116 Limb 117 Contract proviso 120 Steak cut (hyph.) 122 “Eating --” 124 Ivy League member 128 Deighton or Cariou 129 Gridiron stats 131 Beethoven’s “Fur --” 133 Secret signs 135 Winter Games grp. 136 Far from indifferent 138 Port in a storm 140 Gave a hand? 142 Wassailers’ song 144 Cub Scout leader 145 Thumb-turner Roger 146 Glacial ridge 147 Comic-strip queen
148 Innsbruck locale 149 “The Jungle Book” bear 150 Thick with cattails 151 Center DOWN 1 Newsstand 2 The blahs 3 Really excited 4 Prefix for “recent” 5 Samovars 6 Horse’s hock 7 Merle of the silver screen 8 Aaron Copland work 9 Time to celebrate 10 Coal deposit 11 Mr. Kipling 12 Allow to happen 13 Employed 14 Corroded, as acid 15 Motel offerings 16 Striped antelopes 17 “-- -- Woman” 18 Accra’s country 19 Accept, as a check 20 Flatterer 31 Mercator’s tome 33 In -- -- (briefly) 35 Davis of “Evening Shade” 38 Vice -40 Plains tribe 42 Horus’ father 44 Fleur-de- -- (var.) 46 Mortgages 48 Take-charge type 50 Large lot 51 Put in a nutshell 52 Notched, as a leaf 53 Skimpy pullovers 54 With regret 55 Barn toppers 57 Rathskeller fare
58 Go fly -- --! 59 Pick on 61 Windshield device 62 Pier 63 Unnerve 66 Not as common 67 Crews 69 Landfill contents 72 Adjusted a piano 73 Have chips, say 74 Fishing lures 76 Courtroom rituals 78 Thin-barked tree 79 Painting on a wall 81 Pegasus, e.g. 82 Formal ball 83 Waiting line 84 Physical condition 85 Man or woman 86 Loan-sharking 87 Cancels 88 Drain problems 90 Spenser portrayor 91 Physicist Nikola -92 Where things are 94 Laid low (2 wds.) 95 Letter writer 96 Southfork surname 99 1940s suit 100 Iceboat feature 102 Fictional cockroach 105 Held title to 106 Sleek sleds 107 Make watertight 109 Oil-rich -- Dhabi 111 Collide (2 wds.) 112 Reba’s genre 114 Stellar 115 Ravel classic 116 Purified water 117 Turf grabber 118 Dripping 119 Infuriate 121 Slanting edge 123 Up and about
UNIVERSAL SUDOKU
See both puzzle SOLUTIONS in Monday’s paper. 125 Hung in the sun 126 Plunders 127 Brilliance 130 -- Wooley of
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek
Unscramble these six Jumbles, one letter to each square, to form six ordinary words.
1950s pop 132 Kassel’s river 134 Defraud 137 “Xanadu” grp.
139 Lawyers’ org. 141 Language suffix 143 “Rope-a-dope” boxer
HIDATO
See answer next Sunday
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CASOMI QUETEA PABUTE SOTMED MAREPH
Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.
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Solution and tips at sudoku.com.
Last week’s solution
See the JUMBLE answer on page 6D. Answer :
FUSION MOSAIC
EQUATE UPBEAT
MODEST HAMPER
She bought a new wristwatch —
FROM TIME TO TIME
OCTOBER 25, 2015
Last week’s solution
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WEATHER
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Sunday, October 25, 2015
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TODAY
MONDAY
TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY
THURSDAY
Mostly sunny
Partly sunny and pleasant
Morning rain, then a shower
Windy in the a.m.; partly sunny
Sunshine and patchy clouds
High 66° Low 38° POP: 0%
High 66° Low 47° POP: 10%
High 60° Low 46° POP: 75%
High 62° Low 36° POP: 25%
High 57° Low 40° POP: 10%
Wind ESE 4-8 mph
Wind ESE 4-8 mph
Wind ESE 4-8 mph
Wind WNW 10-20 mph
Wind ENE 4-8 mph
POP: Probability of Precipitation
Kearney 67/39
McCook 71/37 Oberlin 70/42
Clarinda 65/37
Lincoln 67/38
Grand Island 67/40
Beatrice 66/37
St. Joseph 67/36 Chillicothe 66/37
Sabetha 65/37
Concordia 67/38
Centerville 63/36
Kansas City Marshall Manhattan 66/42 66/40 Salina 68/35 Oakley Kansas City Topeka 70/38 67/44 67/37 Lawrence 66/40 Sedalia 66/38 Emporia Great Bend 66/40 68/37 68/37 Nevada Dodge City Chanute 67/39 63/36 Hutchinson 68/38 Garden City 69/37 66/36 Springfield Wichita Pratt Liberal Coffeyville Joplin 67/41 69/40 67/38 66/38 68/40 70/38 Hays Russell 68/36 68/37
Goodland 68/38
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
LAWRENCE ALMANAC
Through 7 p.m. Saturday.
Temperature High/low Normal high/low today Record high today Record low today
65°/46° 64°/42° 90° in 1939 23° in 2013
Precipitation in inches 24 hours through 7 p.m. yest. trace Month to date 0.08 Normal month to date 2.71 Year to date 33.70 Normal year to date 35.45
REGIONAL CITIES
Today Mon. Today Mon. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Atchison 66 36 s 66 45 pc Independence 70 38 pc 69 50 pc 69 36 s 67 45 pc Belton 65 40 s 65 50 pc Fort Riley 65 41 s 64 49 pc Burlington 67 38 s 67 48 pc Olathe Coffeyville 70 38 pc 70 48 pc Osage Beach 66 40 pc 68 53 pc 67 37 s 67 46 pc Concordia 67 38 s 65 42 pc Osage City Ottawa 67 38 s 67 48 pc Dodge City 63 36 s 61 41 c 69 40 s 68 49 pc Holton 67 37 s 66 45 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 7:40 a.m. 6:29 p.m. 5:33 p.m. 5:16 a.m.
Last
Oct 27
Nov 3
New
First
Nov 11 Nov 19
LAKE LEVELS
As of 7 a.m. Saturday Lake
Level (ft)
Clinton Perry Pomona
Discharge (cfs)
876.89 892.25 973.48
7 200 15
Shown are today’s noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for today.
Fronts Cold
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015
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 86 78 t 55 43 pc 67 58 s 94 72 pc 91 78 s 60 47 pc 54 38 pc 56 45 pc 66 58 pc 83 67 pc 48 31 c 55 48 sh 61 46 sh 84 76 pc 78 63 c 59 34 r 54 44 pc 69 52 sh 72 55 t 53 26 c 43 38 sn 91 68 s 55 44 s 57 47 pc 76 69 c 68 48 sh 69 50 c 89 79 c 53 34 sh 79 64 s 67 53 s 53 33 pc 58 48 pc 58 43 pc 53 41 c 45 27 c
Hi 85 58 70 94 92 59 53 61 74 80 53 57 62 83 70 59 61 63 70 46 43 90 54 64 83 68 66 90 48 85 66 53 56 56 52 48
Mon. Lo W 77 t 45 pc 58 pc 71 c 78 s 41 sh 39 pc 47 pc 58 pc 66 pc 29 c 51 r 45 s 77 c 58 t 31 s 54 pc 54 t 54 t 34 s 37 r 65 t 43 pc 51 s 71 t 53 pc 52 c 79 pc 38 pc 62 pc 59 pc 35 pc 42 c 46 c 34 pc 33 s
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: Heavy rain and thunderstorms will move through eastern Texas and Louisiana today, bringing a widespread risk for flooding issues and travel delays. There will also be showers from Arkansas to Virginia. Today Mon. Today Mon. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W 66 59 r 69 62 r Albuquerque 66 46 s 68 45 pc Memphis Miami 85 74 pc 85 75 sh Anchorage 46 36 c 44 36 c 59 43 s 61 49 pc Atlanta 76 63 pc 64 53 sh Milwaukee 60 46 pc 56 45 pc Austin 66 55 c 74 52 pc Minneapolis 65 56 r 67 57 c Baltimore 69 40 pc 59 38 pc Nashville Birmingham 78 63 c 69 59 sh New Orleans 76 70 r 78 66 r 66 45 pc 57 44 s Boise 68 47 pc 61 38 pc New York 66 41 pc 64 44 s Boston 62 41 sh 52 39 pc Omaha 85 68 pc 84 69 pc Buffalo 53 34 pc 54 38 pc Orlando Philadelphia 69 44 pc 61 42 s Cheyenne 66 37 pc 55 35 c 89 67 pc 89 63 s Chicago 60 42 s 62 47 pc Phoenix Pittsburgh 57 37 pc 58 40 s Cincinnati 63 40 pc 65 48 s Portland, ME 60 33 sh 51 29 pc Cleveland 55 38 pc 59 41 s Portland, OR 58 52 sh 62 45 pc Dallas 64 54 r 72 54 c Reno 71 37 pc 73 37 s Denver 69 42 pc 63 39 c Richmond 72 44 c 61 44 c Des Moines 64 41 pc 65 47 s 79 51 pc 79 49 s Detroit 59 38 pc 60 44 pc Sacramento 66 45 s 68 53 s El Paso 72 48 s 75 52 pc St. Louis Salt Lake City 71 51 pc 66 42 pc Fairbanks 36 24 c 36 26 c 82 65 pc 81 65 s Honolulu 89 74 s 89 75 pc San Diego San Francisco 69 58 pc 70 56 pc Houston 68 60 r 69 58 r Seattle 61 51 c 60 47 c Indianapolis 63 41 s 65 47 s 62 44 pc 53 37 sh Kansas City 66 40 s 65 48 pc Spokane Tucson 86 61 pc 85 56 s Las Vegas 79 60 pc 82 57 s 71 43 pc 71 50 pc Little Rock 62 56 r 67 60 sh Tulsa Wash., DC 69 46 pc 61 44 pc Los Angeles 87 63 pc 86 62 s National extremes yesterday for the 48 contiguous states High: Burbank, CA 95° Low: Olney, MT 17°
WEATHER HISTORY
WEATHER TRIVIA™
Q:
On Oct. 25, 1959, Yuma recorded its latest 100-degree reading ever. Even in Yuma, the heat usually eases in fall.
SUNDAY Prime Time WOW DTV DISH 7 PM
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Force, 6:30 p.m., City all acoustic instruments welcome, 6-9 p.m., Steve Hall, 6 E. Sixth St. Friends of the LawRipping Yarns, 6:30 Mason Luthiers and Violin rence Public Library p.m., Meeting Room B, Shop, 3809 W. 24th St. Halloween and Beyond Lawrence Public Library, O.U.R.S. (Oldsters Pop-Up Book Sale, noon707 Vermont St. United for Responsible 4 p.m., Lawrence Public INSIGHT Art Talk: Service) dance, doors 5 Library, 707 Vermont St. Frank Baron, Tim Dep.m., potluck 7:15-7:45 Lawrence ArtWalk Paepe, Jeff Weinberg: p.m., dance 6-9 p.m., 2015, noon-6 p.m., maps Albert Bloch, 7 p.m., Eagles Lodge, 1803 W. at lawrenceartwalk.org. Lawrence Arts Center, Sixth St. Lawrence Arts & 940 New Hampshire St. Smackdown! trivia, 7 Crafts group, 1-3 p.m., Lawrence Board of p.m., The Bottleneck, 737 Five Bar and Tables, 947 Education meeting, 7 New Hampshire St. Massachusetts St. p.m., school district headKU Collegium MuHalloween Trick-orquarters, 110 McDonald sicum: “American Treat Event: The EnDrive. Revolution 2.0,” 7:30 chanted Forest, 1-4 p.m., Eudora City p.m., Swarthout Recital THAT SCRAMBLED WORD CommisGAME Prairie Park Nature Center, by Davidmeeting, L. Hoyt and Jeff7Knurek sion p.m., Hall, Murphy Hall, 1530 2730 S.W. Harper St. Unscramble these six Jumbles, Eudora City Hall, 4 E. Naismith Drive. Straight Talk about one letter to each square, Seventh St. to form six ordinary words. Kansas Health with Jayhawk Audubon 26SUNIFO MONDAY Sandy Praeger and Jim Society October ProLawrence Public McLean, 2 p.m., Lawrence gram: Friends of the Library Book Van, 9-10 Public Library Auditorium, ©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC Kaw, 7:30 p.m., Trinity All Rights Reserved. a.m., Prairie Commons, 707 Vermont St. Lutheran Church Fel5121 Congressional Circle. Drop-In Tutoring, 2-4 CASOMI lowship Hall, 1245 New Lawrence Public p.m., Teen Study Room, Hampshire St. Lawrence Public Library, Library Book Van, 10:3011:30 a.m., Presbyterian 707 Vermont St. QUETEA Manor, 1429 Kasold Drive. KU Theatre: “JohanSubmit your stuff: Lawrence Public na: Facing Forward,” Don’t be shy — we want Book Van, 1-2 2:30 p.m., Crafton-Preyer Library PABUTE to publish your event. p.m., Vermont Towers, Theatre, Murphy Hall, Submit your item for 1101 Vermont St. 1530 Naismith Drive. our calendar by emailing Visiting Nurses Flu “The Boy Who Left SOTMED datebook@ljworld.com Shot Clinic, 1-3 p.m., Home to Find Out at least 48 hours before Lawrence Senior Center, About the Shivers,” 3 your event. Find more 745 Vermont St. p.m., Black Box Theater, MAREPH Now information arrange the circledabout letters these Board of CommisLawrence Arts Center, 940 to form the surprise answer, as events, sioners of the Lawrence-suggested New Hampshire St. by the and above more cartoon. event at ljworld.com/ Douglas County Housing Benefit Concert for PRINT YOUR ANSWER IN THElistings, CIRCLES BELOW events. Authority, 5:30 p.m., Family Promise, 3-4:30 Clinton Place Apartments, p.m., First Presbyterian 2125 Clinton Parkway. Church, 2415 Clinton Follow Us On City of Lawrence Parkway. Pedestrian-Bicycle Task KU School of Music: Facebook & Midwest Double Reed Twitter Festival, 3:30 p.m., Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall, 1530 Nai@lcom Answer : smith Drive. facebook.com/ EQUATE MODEST FUSION Irish Traditional Music UPBEAT HAMPER MOSAIC lawrencekansas Session, 5:30-8 p.m., upShe bought a new wristwatch — stairs Henry’s on Eighth, 11 E. Eighth St. FROM TIME Old Time Fiddle TO TIME OCTOBER 25, 2015 Tunes Potluck and Jam,
25 TODAY
Precipitation
Winds that occur annually like the monsoons
Full
Mon. 7:41 a.m. 6:28 p.m. 6:13 p.m. 6:28 a.m.
DATEBOOK
A:
Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset
L awrence J ournal -W orld
Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app
6D
54 269 120 American Pickers
SYFY 55 244 122 The Hollow (2015)
The Walking Dead
Talking Dead (N)
Manzo’d Housewives/NJ American Pickers
›› Daredevil (2003)
MLB
To Be Announced
Manzo’d Happens Housewives/NJ
American Pickers
››› The Cabin in the Woods (2011)
American Pickers
Manzo’d
American Pickers
›› Blade: Trinity (2004) Wesley Snipes.
FX 56 COM 58 E! 59 CMT 60 GAC 61 BET 64 VH1 66 TRV 67 TLC 68 LIFE 69 LMN 70 FOOD 72 HGTV 73 NICK 76 DISNXD 77 DISN 78 TOON 79 DSC 81 FAM 82 NGC 83 HALL 84 ANML 85 TVL 86 TBN 90 EWTN 91 RLTV 93 CSPAN2 95 CSPAN 96 ID 101 AHC 102 OWN 103 WEA 116 TCM 162 HBO MAX SHOW ENC STRZ
401 411 421 440 451
248 249 236 327 326 329 335 277 280 252 253 231 229 299 292 290 296 278 311 276 312 282 304 372 370
136 107 114 166 165 124 162 215 183 108 109 110 112 170 174 172 176 182 180 186 185 184 106 260 261
351 350 285 287 279 362 256
211 210 192 195 189 214 132
501 515 545 535 527
300 310 318 340 350
›››‡ Captain Phillips (2013) Tom Hanks, Catherine Keener.
››‡ Man of Steel (2013) Henry Cavill. Gabriel Iglesias: Fat Brian Regan: Live Gabriel Iglesias: Aloha Fluffy Gabriel Iglesias: Fat Fluffy Sex and the City Dash Dolls House of DVF (N) Dash Dolls Kardashian ›››‡ The Help ›‡ Fool’s Gold (2008) Matthew McConaughey. Cops Cops Cops Flea Flea Flea Flea Flea Flea Flea Flea Flea Flea Being Mary Jane Being Mary Jane The Westbrooks Scandal Popoff Inspir. Out, Hip Hop CrazySexyCool: The TLC Story Black Ink Crew Love Big- RV Big- RV Ghost Adventures Ghost Adventures Ghost Adventures Ghost Adventures Sister Wives Sister Wives (N) 90 Day Fiancé (N) Sister Wives 90 Day Fiancé 16 and Missing Girl Missing (2015) Francesca Eastwood. 16 and Missing (2015) Ashley Scott. Buried Secrets (2015) Sarah Carter. Nowhere to Hide (2009, Suspense) Buried Secrets Guy’s Games Halloween Wars (N) Cutthroat Kitchen Halloween Baking Halloween Wars Hawaii Hawaii Island Island Island Island Hunters Hunt Intl Island Island Game Nicky Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Friends Friends Friends Friends Pickle Gravity Wander Star-For. Rebels Pickle Gravity Wander Star-For. Rebels Liv-Mad. Best Fr. Toy Girl K.C. I Didn’t Liv-Mad. Best Fr. Jessie Good King/Hill Cleve Cleve American American Fam Guy Fam Guy Rick Chicken Aqua Alaska Last Frontier Naked and Afraid Pacific Warriors Naked and Afraid ››› Monsters University ››‡ Hocus Pocus (1993, Comedy) Bette Midler. Osteen Jeremiah Human Family Tree Brain Surgery Live with Mental Floss (N) StarTalk (N) Brain Surgery Live Ever-Cinderella Good Witch Halloween (2015, Drama) Golden Golden Golden Golden Rugged Justice (N) North Woods To Be Announced Rugged Justice (N) North Woods Reba “The Rings” Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond King King King King Osteen K. Shook Copeland Creflo D. ›‡ The Bible (1966, Drama) Michael Parks, George C. Scott. Sunday Night Prime Symbo Rosary News The Admirers (N) Life on the Rock Sunday Taste Taste Second Second Parkinson’s Special Taste Taste Second Second The Gay Revolution After Words Race In America Speaker After Words Q&A Question Time Road to the White Q & A Question Time 48 Hours on ID 48 Hours on ID (N) On the Case, Zahn 48 Hours on ID 48 Hours on ID Who Was Jesus? Who Was Jesus? Who Was Jesus? Who Was Jesus? Who Was Jesus? Master Class OWN at the Apollo Oprah: Where Now? Master Class OWN at the Apollo Strangest Weather Strangest Weather 3 Scientists 3 Scientists 3 Scientists ››› Broken Arrow (1950) Premiere. ››‡ The Battle at Apache Pass (1952) Baby Peggy ››‡ Bad Words The Leftovers (N) ››› Transformers (2007) Shia LaBeouf.
›› Divergent (2014) Shailene Woodley.
The Affair Homeland (N) ››‡ The Equalizer (2014, Action) Survivors Blunt Da Vinci’s Demons
›› Mercury Rising (1998) Bruce Willis. ››› Guardians of the Galaxy (2014)
Green.
Together Last
The Affair (N)
Homeland
The Leftovers
Green. Depravity
The Affair
››‡ Invincible Blunt
Survivors
Sunday, October 25, 2015
E jobs.lawrence.com
CLASSIFIEDS
Holiday Jobs!! Up to $15/hr + Overtime!
See Ad Inside. PLACE YOUR AD:
785.832.2222
classifieds@ljworld.com
A P P LY N O W
1024 AREA JOB OPENINGS! CLO ................................................ 10
GENERAL DYNAMICS (GDIT) ............... 250
MISCELLANEOUS ............................... 44
COTTONWOOD................................... 12
KMART DISTRIBUTION ........................ 20
MV TRANSPORTATION ......................... 25
DST ................................................ 14
KU: STUDENT OPENINGS .................. 113
USA 800 .......................................... 45
FEDEX ........................................... 100
KU: FACULTY/ACADEMIC/LECTURERS .. 100
WESTAFF .......................................... 25
FOCUS WORKFORCES ....................... 200
KU: STAFF OPENINGS ......................... 66
L E A R N M O R E AT J O B S . L AW R E N C E . C O M
AT T E N T I O N E M P L OY E R S !
Email your number of job openings to Peter at psteimle@ljworld.com. *Approximate number of job openings at the time of this printing.
The University of Kansas is committed to providing our employees with an enriching and dynamic work environment that encourages innovation, research, creativity and equal opportunity for learning, development and professional growth. KU strives to recruit, develop, retain and reward a dynamic workforce that shares our mission and core strategic values in research, teaching and service. Learn more at http://provost.ku.edu/strategic-plan Student Program Coordinator Collection Assistant TRIO STEM seeks an experienced Student Program Coordinator.
Accounting Specialists
APPLY AT:
KU Spencer Museum of Art seeks a The University of Kansas seeks Collection Assistant to join their team. Accounting Specialists to serve with the Shared Service Centers Administration. APPLY AT:
https://employment.ku.edu/ staff/4647BR Application deadline is November 1, 2015.
http://employment.ku.edu/ staff/4590BR Application deadline is November 1, 2015.
APPLY AT:
http://employment.ku.edu/staff/4454BR Initial review of applications begins September 28 and will continue as
other positions become available.
Grant Coordinator
Administrative Assistant
The University of Kansas seeks a Grant Coordinator to serve with the Pharmacy & Biomedical Research Shared Service Center.
KU Provost Office seeks a FT Administrative Assistant.
APPLY AT:
http://employment.ku.edu/ staff/4669BR http://employment.ku.edu/staff/4670BR Application review date is Application deadline is November 9, 2015. November 1, 2015.
APPLY AT:
For complete job descriptions & more information, visit:
employment.ku.edu
KU is an EO/AAE, full policy http://policy.ku.edu/IOA/nondiscrimination. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex (including pregnancy), age, national origin, disability, genetic information or protected Veteran status.
Employer of
choice
FHLBank Topeka’s products and services help our member banks provide affordable credit and support housing and community development efforts. We are accepting resumes for a:
BUSINESS INTELLIGENCE QUALITY ASSURANCE ANALYST This position may be filled as a mid level or senior level depending on the qualifications of the selected candidate. At an intermediate or advanced level of proficiency, this individual will work closely with business clients and other members of the Business Intelligence team. They will work in an iterative, Agile software development environment to drive the requirements definition, clarification and prioritization as well as software testing and defect resolution, for data warehouse and business intelligence projects. The position is responsible for applying extensive understanding of the business, knowledge of systems and understanding of data and processes to deliver quality business intelligence solutions. At the advanced level, this individual will be expected to implement process improvements and provide technical oversight, mentoring and direction to team members and other BA/QA staff on data warehouse and business intelligence concepts.
QUALIFICATIONS Mid Level Position
College degree or a minimum of five years of hands-on testing and/or hands-on requirements elicitation, management, and documentation experience in a full-lifecycle software development organization.
LOOKING FOR A REWARDING OPPORTUNITY? Cottonwood, Inc. provides services to individuals with Intellectual/ Developmental Disabilities. Please visit our website at cwood.org or visit us at 2801 W. 31st to apply for the following positions and obtain a full job description for qualifications and position vacancy posting number:
$250 SIGN-ON BONUS!
Familiarity with Microsoft SQL Server in the area of TSQL is preferred and additional Microsoft technologies are a plus.
Case Manager Full-Time M-F day hrs
Hands-on experience with Business Intelligence software is preferred.
Coordinate and monitor the quality of services and resources to persons served. BA and a minimum of six months experience providing services to individuals with IDD. Must complete required trainings as outlined by CDDO & KDADS.
Intermediate understanding of some combination of database design, programming concepts and data warehouse or business intelligence development is required. Three to four years of broad financial and/or banking industry experience comprising a combination of education and hands-on experience is preferred (experience may be in operational or information technology aspects of the financial sector). Experience with Agile development methods is a plus. Ability to think orderly, logically, and analytically and strong problem solving skills. Resourcefulness and creativity when researching new products and techniques. Must be able to work and travel independently and use general office equipment. Must be goal-oriented and have a strong sense of team solidarity.
Senior Level Position Same as Mid Level Position plus the following: Minimum of six years of similar or related professional experience. Three years experience with Microsoft SQL Server in the area of TSQL is required and additional Microsoft technologies are a plus. Two years experience with Business Intelligence software is required, Cognos BI Suite is preferred. Advanced understanding of some combination of database design, programming concepts and data warehouse or business intelligence development is required. Significant experience with Agile development methods is required. In addition to a rewarding, team-oriented work environment, FHLBank Topeka offers opportunities for growth and development, an attractive benefit package including health and dental insurance, 401(k), short-term incentive plan and much more. To see a more detailed job summary and apply for this position, go to the Bank website at
www.fhl btopeka.com p EOE
Residential Full & Part-time evening & weekend hrs Assist individuals with IDD in their homes with life skills such as doing laundry, housekeeping, grocery shopping, money management skills as well as leisure time activities in community settings. Protect and promote the rights, dignity, health and safety of persons served.
All require a valid driver’s license and driving record acceptable to our insurance carrier. Must pass background check and drug screen. Benefits provided. EOE including veterans and persons with disabilities.
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PLACE YOUR AD:
L awrence J ournal -W orld
785.832.2222
classifieds@ljworld.com
PRODUCT
SPECIALISTS
NEEDED
Dale Willey Automotive has positions open for Product Specialists. If you are enthusiastic and a self-motivated, then stop looking. Dale Willey Automotive is the right place for you.
Responsibilities: ▶ Provide Excellent Customer Service ▶ Maintain Product knowledge on all new vehicles ▶ Follow-up with clients to ensure customer satisfaction ▶ Work with management team to achieve sales goals
Requirements: ▶ Good Work Ethic ▶ Great Communication and Customer Service Skills ▶ Outgoing, Enthusiastic and Positive Attitude We believe our employees are our greatest asset. As such, we treat all employees with respect and appreciation for their contributions to the company. We believe not only in providing ongoing training, but also rewarding outstanding effort and results through bonus and commission programs.
Great Benefits: ▶ $30,000 per year Salary + Bonuses ▶ Great Benefits -- medical, dental etc.. ▶ 401k plan ▶ Paid Vacation ▶ Great work schedule & Closed on Sundays and Major Holidays! ▶ Full training program
JOB FAIR Seasonal Customer Service Representatives
General Dynamics offers company-paid benefits!
Tuesday, October 27th
1pm – 4pm at Lawrence Workforce Center 2920 Haskell Ave
Wednesday, October 28th
10am – 6pm at GDIT 3833 Greenway Dr., East Hills Business Park
Thursday, October 29th
1pm – 4pm at Lawrence WFC, 2920 Haskell Ave 5pm – 7pm at GDIT 833 Greenway Dr.
Friday, October 30th
10am – 4pm at GDIT 3833 Greenway Dr., East Hills Business Park
Saturday, October 31st
9am – Noon at GDIT 3833 Greenway Dr., East Hills Business Park
We seek candidates who possess the following: • A high school diploma or GED (or above) • Ability to speak and read English proficiently • Ability to type a minimum of 20 WPM • Computer Literacy • Six months customer service experience • Previous call center experience preferred • Spanish Bilinguals • Ability to successfully pass a background check • Drug Free
PRIOR TO ATTENDING THE EVENT:
Create a candidate profile and complete the online application form at www.gdit.com/jobsearch Please apply online Full Time Marketplace: req# 241321 for 11/2 start date Part Time Marketplace: req# 241322 for 11/9 start date
Dale Willey Automotive is a drug free environment, as well as an Equal Opportunity Employer.
Apply in person or Email your Resume.
Dale Willey Automotive 2840 S Iowa • Lawrence KS 66046 Email – sales@dalewilleyauto.com
General Dynamics Information Technology is an equal opportunity/affirmative action employer, supporting employment of qualified minorities, females, disabled individuals, and protected veterans.
Need Holiday Cash? FOCUS can help! Fo Focu Focus cuss Wo Work Workforces rkfo forc rces es iiss cu curr currently rren entl tlyy se seek seeking ekin ing g wa ware warehouse reho hous use e as asso associates soci ciat ates es tthat hatt ca ha can n perform a variety of job duties and functions in a distribution center in Ottawa, KS! We are looking for candidates that possess the desire and the ability to work in a fast paced environment! If you are driven and ready for a new challenge, we want to interview YOU!
Currently Hiring For: Pickers | Order Selectors | Packers General Labor | Production Work | Special Projects
Maintenance Positions Topeka Public Schools - USD 501 www.topekapublicschools.net
All seasonal jobs are in Ottawa, KS! All Shifts Available-7 days/week! | Must be able to work 12 hour shifts.
Pay up to $15.00/hour + Overtime! Apply at: www.workatfocus.com In person at: 1529 N. Davis Rd. Ottawa, KS 66067 Call (785) 832-7000 to schedule a time to come in!
Maintenance III - Audio/Visual Camera Technician • Successful completion of a course of study in electronics or camera system maintenance from a high school, trade, or technical school, and a minimum of two years’ experience in commercial/industrial electronics or camera system maintenance. • 2-3 years’ experience installing and servicing camera security systems.
Maintenance III - Painter
Think Fast. Think FedEx Ground.
• Minimum of two years’ experience as a painter in a commercial, industrial, or facilities operations setting.
Maintenance IV - Mechanic
Interested in a fast-paced job with career advancement opportunities? Join the FedEx Ground team as a package handler.
Package Handlers $10.20-$11.20/hr. to start Qualifications
• Successful completion of a course of study in automotive mechanics from a college, university, trade or technical school and a minimum of five years’ experience as an automotive mechanic; three years’ experience as a heavy truck mechanic is preferred. Any equivalent experience and training which provides the required knowledge, skills, and abilities will be taken under consideration.
Custodian IV - Topeka West High School
Must be at least 18 years of age Must be able to load, unload and sort packages, as well as perform other related duties
• Good knowledge of custodial methods, materials, and equipment (auto-scrubber, burnisher, floor machine, buffer, extractor, carpet machine, etc.) and ability to use them economically and efficiently.
All interested candidates must attend a sort observation at our facility prior to applying for the position.
To Apply
To schedule a sort observation, go to WatchASort.com 8000 Cole Parkway, Shawnee, KS 66227
Please apply online at http://www.topekapublicschools.net
FedEx Ground is an equal opportunity / affirmative action employer (Minorities/Females/Disability/Veterans) committed to a diverse workforce.
Ground
jobs.lawrence.com
Ruth Marstall Recruitment Coordinator rmarsta@topeka.k12.ks.us EOE/M/F/D/V
classifieds@ljworld.com
L awrence J ournal -W orld
Sunday, October 25, 2015
PLACE YOUR AD:
785.832.2222
| 3E
classifieds@ljworld.com
Behavioral Health Professional Corizon Health, a provider of health services for the Kansas Department of Corrections, has an excellent opportunity at the Kansas Juvenile Correctional Facility in Topeka, KS. Requires experience in individual and group counseling, crisis intervention and psychological evaluation techniques.
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
Requires Masters degree in psychology, social work or related field. Requires license.
For a full job description and to apply, please visit
Corizon Health offers excellent compensation and benefits.
www.cbsks.com
and click on “Apply Now!” under “Jobs”.
PLEASE CONTACT:
Katie Schmidt, RN Adm. 785-354-9800 ext. 596 Katie.Schmidt@CorizonHealth.com EOE/AAP/DTR
WHY WORK ANYPLACE ELSE? Brandon Woods at Alvamar offers part and full-time positions in an environment focused on resident directed care. We are looking to add a few caring, qualif ied team members.
712 Innovations, a maker/ co-work space organization located inTopeka, KS, is currently seeking an Executive Director. The Executive Director will work with the Board of Directors to develop and maintain the environment needed to create and manage a center which provides support, inspiration, education, and innovation to individuals and entrepreneurs in Topeka and Shawnee County. Required qualifications include a bachelor’s degree or relevant experience, as well as experience in fundraising, operations management, and board relations. The successful candidate has knowledge in building a startup community facility with an action-oriented, entrepreneurial, and innovative approach to business.
GROWING TO SERVE OUR MEMBERSHIP BETTER! Member Service Representative: Full and Part-Time Performs a wide variety of teller and member service functions. Must be enthusiastic, dependable and service minded. Previous sales or customer service experience preferred, but not required. Professional appearance and a positive attitude is a must.
* NEW, INCREASED WAGE SCALE FOR LICENSED NURSES *
• LPN Charge Nurse • LPN part time weekends, Assisted Living • Certified Medication Aide • Certified Nursing Assistant • Nursing Scheduler We offer competitive wages and benefits like shift differential, health, dental and vision insurance. Excellent orientation program, paid time off, premium pay on holidays, and save in the 401(k) plan with profit sharing. Benefits such as direct deposit, tuition reimbursement, and an employee assistance program are special services Brandon Woods’ Team Members enjoy. We are an upscale retirement community offering opportunities for new experiences and advancement. Positive attitude a must!
Envista offers an excellent benefits package including competitive pay, performance incentives and a full range of employee benefits including health and life insurance, 401(k) plan, paid holidays, vacation and more. Please apply in person at 1555 Wakarusa Drive in Lawrence or e-mail your resume to human.resources@envistacu.com.
Come see us at Brandon Woods! 1501 Inverness Drive • TProchaska@5ssl.com Equal Opportunity Employer. Drug Free Workplace.
FLEXIBLE SCHEDULES • BENEFITS • PAID TIME-OFF
Senior Buyer (6014) www.topekapublicschools.net Topeka Public Schools USD 501
ARE YOU: 19 years or older? A high school graduate or GED? Qualified to drive a motor vehicle? Looking for a great, meaningful job? Help individuals with developmental disabilities, learn various life skills, lead a self directed life and participate in the community. Join the CLO family today:
SUPPORT! TEACH! INSPIRE! ADVOCATE!
Community Living Opportunities, a non-profit organization dedicated to helping adults and children with developmental disabilities is currently hiring Direct Support Professionals (DSP’s).
WORK THREE DAYS A WEEK, TAKE FOUR DAYS OFF! $10/HOUR
Please apply at: http://www.topekapublicschools.net or contact Human Resources at 785-295-3088.
If you are interested in learning more about becoming a direct care professional at CLO and to fill out an application, please visit our website:
EOO/M/F/D/V
785-865-5520 www.clokan.org
PART-TIME & FULL-TIME PSYCHOTHERAPIST, OUTPATIENT SERVICES & CRISIS SERVICE POSITIONS Southeast Kansas Mental Health Center, a community mental health center, serving Allen, Anderson, Bourbon, Linn, Neosho, and Woodson Counties.
Offices located in Iola, Humboldt, Garnett, Fort Scott, Pleasanton, Chanute, and Yates Center. Immediate openings for qualified mental health professionals. Outpatient therapy and crisis intervention for individual adults and children, couples, and families. Requires Kansas license or temporary license. Social Workers, Psychologists, Professional Counselors, Marriage and Family Therapists, etc. All offices are National Health Service Corp tuition/loan repayment sites for those who qualify. Full time with benefits. EEO/AA Send Resumes to: Robert F. Chase, Executive Director, Southeast Kansas Mental Health Center, PO Box 807, Iola, KS, 66749. 620/365-8641 rchase@sekmhc.org and bstanley@sekmhc.org
jobs.lawrence.com
Topeka Public Schools is looking for a Senior Buyer to assist the Director of Purchasing with the buying responsibilities for district-wide purchasing program. Includes responsibility for maintaining an efficient and responsive system for users to request and receive required goods or services in a timely manner. Primarily responsible for internal online requests for needed goods and services and processing service, construction and equipment bid requests in addition to maintaining district warehouse inventories at acceptable levels. Qualifications Interested persons should have an educational background in business, with knowledge of professional procurement practices and basic accounting principles. Five (5) years purchasing experience desired, preferably in a public or other competitive environment. Buyer must demonstrate strength in the following areas: MS Word, MS Excel, database management, e-mail, maintaining an electronic calendar and ability to work in a multi-faceted office environment.
RNs
New Pay Rates! DAYS or NIGHTS Corizon Health, a provider of health services for the Kansas Department of Corrections, has an excellent opportunity on DAYS at the Kansas Juvenile Correctional Facility, Topeka, KS. Correctional nursing provides a rewarding career in a specialized field, primarily ambulatory care. Corizon Health offers EXCELLENT compensation, great differentials and comprehensive benefits for full time. PART TIME DAYS ALSO AVAILABLE! PLEASE CONTACT:
Katie Schmidt, RN Admin. 785-354-9800 x596 Katie.Schmidt@corizonhealth.com EOE/AAP/DTRs
classifieds@ljworld.com
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L awrence J ournal -W orld
JOBS TO PLACE AN AD:
785.832.2222
classifieds@ljworld.com
Regional Company Drivers $65,000 Guaranteed Salary Riverside Transport has a great opportunity for 1 driver to hire on as a CDL driver & Customer Service Representative. The candidate will haul 53ft trailers loaded with customer freight, typically within a 500 mile radius of the Lawrence/Kansas City Area. Includes helping to unload the merchandise at the customer locations. Every trailer will have multiple stop deliveries, typically requiring about 6 hours to unload. For more details on the unloading process please give us a call. The driver will also be trained as a customer service rep that is knowledgeable of the product we deliver and able to answer questions about merchandise.
NEWSPAPER DISTRIBUTION DRIVER Part-time Opportunity
Miles for the job will be low due to the time it takes to unload the product, but because this is a guaranteed paid job the driver does not need to worry about getting high miles to get paid. This job is designed to keep the driver out throughout the week with home time on the weekend. Occasionally we can get the driver home mid week for pass-through home time, but generally the driver will not get home until the weekend.
Lawrence Journal-World is hiring for a part-time driver to distribute newspapers to homes, machines and stores in Lawrence and surrounding communities. Candidates must be flexible and available to work 25-30 hours per week during the core hours of 2 am-7 am including weekends and holidays. Ideal candidates must have good organizational skills; can work with minimal supervision; reliable transportation, a valid driver’s license, proof of insurance and safe driving record; and ability to lift 50 lbs. We offer a competitive salary, employee discounts and more! Background check and pre-employment drug screen required. Apply online at jobs.the-worldco.com EOE
Please call our recruiting department @ 888-604-9075 if you have any questions. We are only looking for 1 driver for this job and due to the guaranteed nature of the pay we anticipate that this job will fill quickly.
Apply online at jobs.the-worldco.com
Job Requirements: Class A CDL with 1 year of recent driving exp. No more than 3 preventable accidents. No more than 3 moving violations
AdministrativeProfessional
AdministrativeProfessional
Customer Service
General City of Lawrence
10 Hard Workers needed NOW!
Office Manager
Administrative Assistant Fundraising and public relations firm seeking full-time administrative assistant to work in team-oriented environment. Duties include database management for numerous clients mail-merge mailings & related clerical and receptionist tasks. Requires strong organization, communication, & computer skills. Must be dependable, detail oriented, motivated, able to work independently & handle multiple projects at the same time. Proficiency in Microsoft Word, Excel, Raiser’s Edge, & Adobe Acrobat preferred. Salary + benefits.
Provide clerical support to staff, coordinate travel arrangements, manage events, meetings, and office hospitality. High school diploma and 3+ years experience required, bachelor’s degree preferred. Must be highly organized, motivated and able to work independently. Skilled with MS Office and data entry. Exceptional ability to manage multiple deadlines. Submit resume and cover letter with salary requirements to Janelle Brazington at: janelle@kac.org. Open until filled. No phone calls, please. EOE
Drivers Ready Mix Co is looking for qualified drivers. Pay based on yrs of exp. Bonus .84/yd. Execellent benefits. Apply at: KCK 5620 Wolcott Dr. (913) 788-3165
Service Technician Ottawa Chrysler Dodge Ram Jeep has an immediate opening! We are looking for a factory trained technician to join our team. Experience is MANDAORTY! Please apply in person or send resume to: OTTAWACDRJ327@ GMAIL.COM 327 W. 23rd St. Ottawa, KS
Decisions Determine Destiny
Utilities Dept is seeking a Control System Tech responsible for developing, installing, maintaining and supporting instrumentation, SCADA systems and related hardware/software for wastewater and water processes. Requires degree equivalent to completion of 12th grade with 2 yrs of some combination of plant operations, plant maintenance or PLC/ HMI programming experience, with at least one year of actual experience installating, configuring and supporting field instrumentation hardware and process automation systems. $20.08 to $29.12 per hour DOQ. Must pass bk ground ck, post-offer City physical and drg screen. Apply by 11/5/2015. To Apply Go To: www.LawrenceKS.org/Jobs EOE M/F/D
I used to install windows...That job was a real pane!
Learn more online at: penningtonco.com
Please Thank You You’re Welcome
DriversTransportation
HUMOR
Automotive
Magic Words:
Call today! 785-841-9999
is good medicine.
Email resume & cover letter to: employment@ penningtonco.com
Interview TIP #4
$10 hr to train. Quickly earn $12-$15 hr Weekly pay checks. Paid Vacations No Weekends
Utilities
EngineersTechnical Applications Developer III, Sprint Corp, Kansas City, MO. Design, develop, & test mobile applications & test latest mobile devices. Bachelor’s + 4 yrs exp required or HS + 8. Resumes to www.sprint.com/careers, Req# 185016BR. Sprint is a background screening, drug screening, and E-Verify participating employer and considers qualified candidates regardless of previous criminal history. EOE Minorities/Females/Protected Veterans/Disabled.
HIRING IMMEDIATELY! Drive for KU on Wheels or Lawrence Transit System. Flexible part-time schedules, 80% company paid employee health insurance for full time. Career opportunities. $11.50/hr after paid training. Must be 21+ w. good driving record. Apply online: lawrencetransit.org/ employment Or come to: MV Transportation, Inc. 1260 Timberedge Road Lawrence, KS. EOE
Guaranteed salary of $65,000 per year. $1,250 per week, guaranteed.
General
Government
Healthcare
Management
FIVE DIAMOND TEAM NOW HIRING
PARALEGAL
FULL TIME COOK ——— CNA
Medical Practice Administrator
Full-time Only. CUSTOMER SERVICE $400 to $500 per week APPT. SETTERS $300 to $500 per week LABOR/SET UP $500 to $650 per week PAID VACATIONS FLEXABLE SCHEDULES NO LAYOFFS Merit-based Promotions Must be 18 or older, available full-time and able to start by Tues, Oct. 27th. If you are tired of the job hunting and ready to start working full time, call us first
785-749-9692
Or, email name and #to 5dsrhinos@gmail.com and a manager will contact you for an interview.
Government
The Federal Public Defender for Kansas is accepting applications for a paralegal position. Details at: http://kansasfpd.org.
Healthcare Administrator/ Office Manager Needed for busy Family Medicine Office in Lawrence. HR and benefits administration experience is required. We offer great employee benefits.
Wellsville Retirement Community is accepting applications for a Full Time Cook and CNA. We are family owned & operated. We offer a competitive wage and a FABULOUS work environment no kidding! Stop by 304 W. 7th St in Wellsville or apply online:
www.wellsvillerc.com
Maintenance
Please send resume and references to: fp.applicant.11@gmail.com
Project Manager The KS Dept of Health and Environment seeks a project manager to provide oversight of KDHE’s technology system for grants management, support for KDHE’s learning management system, and provide training and technical assistance to users of both systems. Three years of experience or a Bachelor’s Degree in computer science, information technology, instructional design, human services, or health related field required. Go online for details (Req#182124) and how to apply at:
Send resume to pampa@sunflower.com
Community Corrections Clinician Full-time opening for a Kansas licensed mental health professional to provide care coordination and therapy for referrals from Community Corrections for the 4th Judicial District in Ottawa. Some experience in treating substance use preferred, but not required. Open until filled. Submit interest & resume to :
E.O.E.
HR, ELC, PO Box 677 Ottawa, Kansas 66067 hr@laytoncenter.org EOE
Decks & Fences
Foundation Repair
Garage Doors
DECK BUILDER
Foundation and Masonry Specialist Water prevention systems for basements, Sump pumps, foundation supports & repair and more. Call 785-221-3568
www.jobs.ks.gov
Practice Administrator wanted for busy Pediatrics office in Lawrence, KS. Practice has 5 physicians and 2 mid level providers. This role manages a staff of 55 employees divided into 2 departments, oversees the supervisors of those 2 departments, performs accounting duties, payroll, accounts payable, HR, conflict management, benefit administration, project management and additional duties as needed. Requirements: Bachelor’s degree in business/management field (MBA preferred), previous practice management experience, experience with Electronic Health Record systems.
NIGHT CUSTODIAL SPECIALIST Kansas Athletics
Smart-Hire Tip
Speak “Job Seeker” Routine custodial duties including sweeping, cleaning and assisting with set-up/tear down of athletic events. High school diploma or equivalent; valid driver’s license; ability to lift and carry heavy objects; ability to work assigned sporting events including days and week-ends. Working hours 7:00 p.m. - 3:30 a.m. Position open until filled. Apply on-line only: www.kuathletics.com Equal Opportunity M/F/D/V
Don’t speak “HR” to a job seeker—-Use language they’ll be comfortable reading. Get more applicants by writing job ads that appeal to job seekers; Not a lengthy wish list which can cause qualified job seekers to self-eliminate. Job postings can be sent to Peter at: psteimle@ljworld.com 785-832-7119 .
SERVICES TO PLACE AN AD: Antique/Estate Liquidation
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
785.832.2222 Carpentry
classifieds@ljworld.com Concrete
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
CTi of Mid America Concrete Restoration & Resurfacing Driveways, Patios, Pool Decks & More CTiofMidAmerica.com 785-893-8110
Cleaning
Needing to place an ad?
Over 25 yrs. exp. Licensed & Insured. Decks, deck covers, pergolas, screened porches, & all types of repairs. Call 913-209-4055 for Free estimates or go to prodeckanddesign.com
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
785-832-2222
Auctioneers
FOUNDATION REPAIR
Craig Construction Co
HOUSE CLEANER ADDING NEW CUSTOMERS Years of experience, references available, Insured. 785-748-9815 (local)
REAL ESTATE AUCTIONS 785-887-6900 www.billfair.com
New York Housekeeping: Accepting clients for wkly, bi-wkly & seasonal or special occasion cleaning. Ex. Ref. Beth - 785-766-6762.
Driveways - stamped • Patios • Sidewalks • Parking Lots • Building Footings & Floors • All Concrete Repairs Free Estimates
Mike - 785-766-6760 mdcraig@sbcglobal.net Stamped & Reg. Concrete, Patios, Walks, Driveways, Acid Staining & Overlays, Tear-Out & Replacement Jayhawk Concrete Inc. 785-979-5261
SERVICE DIRECTORY 6 LINE SPECIAL!
JAYHAWK GUTTERING
Maintenance & repairs Paint/Drywall repairs Plumbing & Electric All Jobs Considered 913-832-9080
Rich Black Top Soil No Chemicals Machine Pulverized Pickup or Delivery
6 MONTHS $91.95/mo. + FREE LOGO
Need an apartment?
Serving KC over 40 years
Place your ad at apartments.lawrence.com or email classifieds@ljworld.com
785-312-1917
“@ YOUR SERVICE”
Seamless aluminum guttering. Many colors to choose from. Install, repair, screen, clean-out. Locally owned. Insured. Free estimates.
Home Improvements Full Remodels & Odd Jobs, Interior/Exterior Painting, Installation & Repair of:
Dirt-Manure-Mulch
913-962-0798 Fast Service
CALL 785-832-2222
Furniture
Decks • Gazebos Siding • Fences • Additions Remodel • Weatherproofing Insured • 25 yrs exp. 785-550-5592
1 MONTH $118.95/mo. + FREE LOGO 12 MONTHS $64.95/mo. + FREE LOGO
Guttering Services
Garage Doors • Openers • Service • Installation Call 785-842-5203 www.freestatedoors.com
jayhawkguttering.com
Stacked Deck
Painting
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.
785-842-0094
Family Owned & Operated 20 Yrs
Home Improvements
Retired Carpenter, Deck Repairs, Home Repairs, Interior Wall Repair & House Painting, Doors, Wood Rot, Power wash 785-766-5285
AAA Home Improvements Int/Ext Repairs, Painting, Tree work & more. We do it all! 20 Yrs. Exp. w/ Ins. and local ref. Will beat all est. Call 785-917-9168
Family Tradition Interior & Exterior Painting Carpentry/Wood Rot Senior Citizen Discount Ask for Ray 785-330-3459 D&R Painting interior/exterior • 30+ years • power washing • repairs (inside & out) • stain decks • wallpaper stripping • free estimates Call or Text 913-401-9304 Interior/Exterior Painting Quality Work Over 30 yrs. exp.
Call Lyndsey 913-422-7002
Landscaping
Tree/Stump Removal
Deck Drywall Siding Replacement Gutters Privacy Fencing Doors & Trim Commercial Build-out Build-to-suit services
YARDBIRDS LANDSCAPING Father (retired) & Son Operation W/Experience & Top of the Line Machinery Snow Removal Call 785-766-1280
cutdown • trimmed • topped • stump removal Licensed & Insured. 20 yrs experience. 913-441-8641 913-244-7718
Fully Insured 22 yrs. experience
Lawn, Garden & Nursery
913-488-7320 Double D Furniture Repair Cane, Wicker & Rush seating. Buy. Sell. Credit cards accepted.785-418-9868 or doubledfurniturerepair @gmail.com
Review these businesses and more @ Marketplace.Lawrence.com
Golden Rule Lawncare Mowing & lawn cleanup Snow Removal Family owned & operated Call for Free Est. Insured. Eugene Yoder 785-224-9436
Fredy’s Tree Service
KansasTreeCare.com Trimming, removal, & stump grinding by Lawrence locals Certified by Kansas Arborists Assoc. since 1997 “We specialize in preservation & restoration” Ins. & Lic. visit online 785-843-TREE (8733)
L AWRENCE J OURNAL -W ORLD
Sunday, October 25, 2015
| 5E
SPECIAL!
10 LINES & PHOTO 7 DAYS $19.95 28 DAYS $49.95
DOESN’T SELL IN 28 DAYS?
FREE RENEWAL!
PLACE YOUR AD: RECREATION
Chevrolet Crossovers
785.832.2222 Ford Cars
2012 FORD MUSTANG V6
2013 FORD FOCUS SE 2010 CHEVROLET TRAVERSE 2LT
BMW Cars
Sync, Auto, Best Seller!
2012 FORD ESCAPE LIMITED
Stk# PL2022
Leather, Sunroof Stk# 215C582
Stk#2P1746B
$13,495 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
1987 BMW 325i Convertible Auto, 136k, Great Condition. Champagne body, tan leather interior, brown top. $9000 (785)273-5588
2014 FORD ESCAPE SE
PRICED BELOW BOOK!
Flying Scot 19’ LONG SAILBOAT FOR SALE: 913-426-1030
1987 BMW 325i
USED CAR GIANT
Ford Crossovers
Boats-Water Craft
TRANSPORTATION
classifieds@ljworld.com
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
$12,998 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
UCG PRICE
$15,495
Stock #PL1992
2015 FORD ESCAPE SE
UCG PRICE
Stock #115T901
$17,997
2009 FORD EDGE SEL
LOCAL TRADE, LOW MILEAGE!
$17,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
2.0 ECOBOOST. PRICED BELOW NADA!
UCG PRICE
Stock #1PL1934
$20,995
UCG PRICE
Stock #P1768A
$10,995
785-727-7151 23rd & Alabama, Lawrence www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Chevrolet SUVs
Ford Trucks
Ford Trucks
Ford Trucks
Honda Cars
2014 FORD FUSION SE Leather, Luxury Package Stk#PL1937
2006 BMW 3 SERIES 330Ci Driving Machine for the Working Man! Stk#215T787C
$12,295 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
$14,995 Chevrolet 2008 Trailblazer LT, power equipment, alloy wheels, sunroof, tow package. Stk#35514A1 Only $8,8750
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
2014 FORD ESCAPE SE
2008 FORD F-150 XLT
2.0 Ecoboost
Supercab, 2WD
Stk#115T901
Stk# 115T807A
$17,997 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
Chevrolet Vans
2009 FORD F-350SD LARIAT
2013 FORD F-150 XLT
Dullay, Leather
Ecoboost, Crew Cab, 4x4
Stk#1PL1973
Stk# 115T779
$30,995
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Cadillac Cars
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
2014 FORD MUSTANG V6
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
$23,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
2013 Honda Accord EX
$11,974 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Ford Vans
Certified Pre-Owned, Local One-Owner, 31K miles, 7 year/100,000 mile Warranty. Stk# F605A
Only $17,888 Call Coop at
888-631-6458 2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Leather, Convertible
JackEllenaHonda.com Need to sell your car?
Stk#PL1947 Call 785-832-2222 or email classifieds@ljworld.com
$18,998 2010 CHEVROLET 2500 CARGO VAN Terrific Condition! Stk# 114T730 Cadillac 2005 STS V8
$14,495
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Stk# 1PL1934
$20,999 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Chevrolet Cars
2014 FORD TRANSIT CONNECT XLT
Local Trade, Low Mileage!
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Leather heated seats, remote start, alloy wheels, Bose sound, all the luxury without the price! Stk#114211 Only $9,777
2015 FORD ESCAPE SE
Dodge Trucks 2012 FORD MUSTANG V6
Ford SUVs
Local Trade, Only 7,700 Miles!
2012 FORD F-150 LARIAT
Stk#1PL1948A
4x4, Ecoboost, White Platinum
$19,972 Stk#115T551
$33,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Priced Below Book!
2011 FORD F-350SD LARIAT Utility Bed, Ready to Work!
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Stk#PL1974
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
$34,995
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
GMC Crossovers
2014 CHEVROLET CAMARO
Limited, Hemi!
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Convertible Stk#PL1938
Stk#115T785
$21,899
$29,995
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
2013 FORD EXPEDITION EL XLT
2012 FORD F-150 LARIAT
Extended, Leather, 4x4
4X4, Power Sunroof
Stk# 215T877
Stk#1PL1919
$32,995
888-631-6458
Call Coop at
888-631-6458
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
Only $18,997
JackEllenaHonda.com
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
$15,495
Certified Pre-Owned,21K miles, 7 Year/100,000 mile warranty, 182-pt. Mechanical Inspection. Stk# LF722A
2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047
Stk#PL1992
2012 DODGE RAM 1500 LARAMIE LONGHORN
2013 Honda Accord EX
2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047 JackEllenaHonda.com
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Ford Crossovers
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
$29,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
2014 GMC TERRAIN STL-1 Leather, Sunroof, Pioneer Stereo Stk#115T926
2013 FORD F-150 XLT Chrome Package, Crew Cab, 4x4 Stk# 115T984
$28,979
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
$24,495 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
Fully Loaded, 57K miles, Leather, Moonroof, Great Deal, Fully Inspected, Awesome Condition, Well Maintained. Stk# F670A
Only $13,997
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Dodge Vans
2013 Honda Accord EX
Call Coop at
GMC SUVs
888-631-6458 2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
JackEllenaHonda.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
2014 CHEVROLET CAMARO 2SS Only 6,600 Miles!
‘05 Dodge Grand Caravan. Silver, 154k miles, Fair condition. $3400-OBO. Call 785-418-1942
Stk#215T589A
$31,499 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Thicker line? Bolder heading? Color background or Logo? Ask how to get these features in your ad TODAY!! Call 785-832-2222
2014 FORD EDGE SPORT Panoramic Roof
2014 FORD EXPLORER LIMITED
2012 FORD F-150 LARIAT 4X4, Power Sunroof
2013 FORD F-150 FX4 - LOADED
Stk#115T794
Stk#PL1915
Stk#1PL1919
Stk#115T599A
$18,995
$26,995
$29,995
$35,979
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
GMC 2009 Acadia SLT 1 owner, leather heated seats, sunroof, room for 7, Bose sound. Stk#408801 Only $8,8750 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
Dale Willey Automotive 2840 Iowa Street (785) 843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
Honda 2008 Accord EXL Local trade in, leather heated seats, moon roof, cd changer, power equipment, alloy wheels, in great shape! Stk#56166B3 Only $10,500 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
6E
|
Sunday, October 25, 2015
.
L AWRENCE J OURNAL -W ORLD
CARS TO PLACE AN AD: Honda Crossovers
Hyundai Cars
SPECIAL! 10 LINES & PHOTO 7 DAYS $19.95 | 28 DAYS $49.95 Doesn’t sell in 28 days? FREE RENEWAL!
785.832.2222 Jeep
Lincoln Cars
classifieds@ljworld.com Nissan Cars
Pontiac Cars
Toyota Cars
Toyota Vans
2010 Hyundai Elantra GLS Carbon Gray Mist, 59,500 miles, automatic, air, power steering & disc brakes, ABS, power windows & locks, tilt, cruise, keyless entry, CD/ MP3. Excellent cond. $8,900 785-218-2409 or email Dspencer@ku.edu
2009 HONDA CR-V EX-L
$19,995
2012 Hyundai Elantra Limited
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Loaded, Navigation, Leather, Moonroof, Alloy Wheels, 61K miles, Thousands less than a Honda. Stk# G077A
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
Only $13,495
2013 NISSAN ALTIMA 2.5 S
4x4
Stk#PL1921
Hard To Find Coupe!
Stk#2P1794
$28,995
Stk#PL2003
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
$15,232
$22,107 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Call Coop at
Honda SUVs
888-631-6458
2013 LINCOLN MKZ TECHNOLOGY PKG
2011 JEEP GRAND CHREOKEE LAREDO
AWD & Only 24,000 Miles! Stk#115L769B
2013 Toyota Sienna LE
Mazda Cars
Kia Cars
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
2010 PONTIAC G6 Stk#216B007A
2012 TOYOTA CAMRY HYBRID XLE Luxury and Fuel Efficiency
$8,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
Stk# 1PL1991
$18,979 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Toyota SUVs
Pontiac 2009 Vibe
Jeep 2010 Honda CR-V 4WD
2009 NISSAN 370Z BASE 2013 MAZDA 3i TOURING
Only 7,500 Miles! Stk#14T1034B
Hatchback
$11,995
Call Coop at
888-631-6458 2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047 JackEllenaHonda.com
Stk#PL1935
$17,954 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Fwd, 4 cyl, great gas mileage, alloy wheels, power equipment, cruise control. Stk#352451
Absolutely Perfect!
2015 KIA RIO
Only $14,995
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
Stk#115C905
$14,495 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
2008 TOYOTA HIGHLANDER SPORT
Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
AWD, Reduced! Stk# 113L909
$21,995
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
Mazda Crossovers
GT, one owner, sunroof, spoiler, alloy wheels, power equipment, Stk#311522
Toyota Trucks
Only $5,500
Only $23,995
Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
Call Coop at
Stk#216M062
$15,495
Scion
Great Space, 77K miles, Local Ower, Automatic, Safe Vehicle, Fully Inspected and Well Maintained. Stk# F368B
2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047
2014 MAZDA CX-5 SPORT Hard to Find, Low Miles! Stk# 115T983A
$18,995
Only $15,990
2013 NISSAN JUKE SV
2010 TOYOTA TUNDRA
AWD
4X4, 5.7 V-8, Hard to Find Long Bed!
Stk#PL1930
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Mercedes-Benz
Lincoln Cars
JackEllenaHonda.com
FWD, 4 cyl, automatic, power equipment, great gas mileage and room. Stk#473362 Only $12,836 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
2011 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE OVERLAND $3,000 Below NADA!
Nice Car, Well Maintained, 91K miles, Great Condition, Loaded, One Owner Stk# F591A
Only $14,995 Call Coop at
888-631-6458 2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047
AUCTIONS
JackEllenaHonda.com
Stk#115T850
$23,494 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
(First published in the Lawrence Daily JournalWorld October 21, 2015)
2013 LINCOLN MKZ
2007 MERCEDES BENZ CLK 350
AWD
Luxury and Power!
Stk#PL1951
$26,997
$11,837 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
L AW R E N C E J O U R N A L-WO R L D
CLASSIFIED A DV E R T I S I N G
“I love the whole experience an auction offers; from the drive to the location, the hunt for treasure, to the bidding excitement! It’s an honor for me to help you and your sale gain exposure.”
Ariele Erwine Classified Advertising Account Executive + Auction Enthusiast
The Lawrence Journal-World reaches 100,000 print and digital readers every single day. Contact Ariele today to promote your auction and make our audience your audience.
785-832-7168 aerwine@ljworld.com
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
785.832.2222
VEHICLES, EQUIPMENT, ELECTRONICS AND FURNITURE Vehicle Inspection By Appointment Only For details and Internet bidding:
Stk#215T628
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Thicker line? Bolder heading? Color background or Logo? Ask how to get these features in your ad TODAY!! Call 785-832-2222
PUBLIC NOTICES TO PLACE AN AD:
2012 Nissan Maxima 3.5 S
$21,995
Scion 2011 XB
888-631-6458
Call Coop at
Stk#1PL1977
$15,995
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
JackEllenaHonda.com
888-631-6458
2012 VOLKSWAGEN BEETLE 2.0 Tsi Turbocharged!
2012 Honda Pilot EX 4WD
Only $11,555
Volkswagen Cars
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
2012 Kia Sorento LX
Leather, power equipment, alloy wheels. Stk #38866A2
LairdNollerLawrence.com
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 Pontiac 2003 Grand Am
Nissan Crossovers
23rd & Alabama - 2829 Iowa
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Certified Pre-Owned, 4WD, 78K miles, 7 year/100K mile warranty, 8 Passenger, 182-pt. Inspection. Stk# F053A
2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047
$14,495
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
Kia Crossovers
Only $9,714
Stk#PL2006
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
Jeep 2006 Grand Cherokee Laredo
Call Coop at
888-631-6458
We Buy all Domestic cars, trucks, and suvs. Call Scott 785-727-7151
JackEllenaHonda.com
2014 JEEP CHEROKEE SPORT
Only $20,490
JackEllenaHonda.com
2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047
4WD Just in time for winter, Moonroof, 115K miles, Local Owner, Great Value Stk# F784A
7 Passenger, Power Sliding Doors, 76K miles, Local Owner, Awesome Condition, Well Maintained. Stk# G040A
DOUGLAS COUNTY INTERNET ONLY
www.purplewave.com
classifieds@ljworld.com
Clubs of Lawrence LLC, property owner of record. Z-15-00471: Consider a request to rezone approximately .972 acres from IG (General Industrial) District to IL (Limited Industrial) District, located at 1021 E 31st St. Submitted by Richard G. Sells on behalf of Spirit Industries Inc, property owner of record. Z-15-00427: Consider a request to rezone approximately 2.96 acres located at 1501 Learnard Ave from RS7 (Single-Dwelling Residential) District to IL (Limited Industrial) District with conditions to limit certain uses. Submitted by Sunrise Green LLC, property owner of record. Deferred by Planning Commission on 10/19/15.
TA-13-00235: Continue discussion related to proposed Text Amendments to the City of Lawrence Land DevelPurple Wave Auction, Inc. opment Code, Article 9 and related sections of Chapter Monday, October 19, 2015 785-537-5057 20, for comprehensive revisions to parking and access Tuesday, November 3, 2015 ________ standards. Discussion will focus on defining types of Major Recreational Equipment and identifying permitCloses at 10:00 AM ted parking locations for this equipment on residential properties. Action on this item will not occur until after (First published in the Lawrence Daily Journal-World the commission completes their discussion on several October 25, 2015) of the elements of the code language and a final draft is available for their review. NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC TA-15-00443: Consider a Text Amendment to the City of The Lawrence/Douglas County Metropolitan Planning Lawrence Development Code, Chapters 4, 5, 9 and 17, to Commission will hold their regularly scheduled monthly define and create an Event Center use. Initiated by meeting on November 16, 2015 at 6:30 p.m. in the Com- Planning Commission on 8/24/15. mission Meeting Room on the first floor of City Hall, 6 E. TA-15-00391: Consider a Text Amendment to the City of 6th Street. Lawrence Land Development Code to review the PerThe Planning Commission will consider the following sonal Convenience Services and Personal Improvement public hearing and non hearing items at their Mon- Service uses and determine if amendments are necesday, November 16, 2015 meeting: sary to permit salons as a use in the RSO (Single-Dwelling Residential-Office) zoning district. IniZ-15-00463: Consider a request to rezone approxi- tiated by City Commission on 9/1/15. mately 11.855 acres from RM12D (Multi-Dwelling Residential) District to RS7 (Single-Dwelling Residential) Minor Subdivision, MS-15-00213, variance request to reDistrict and OS (Open Space) District, located at 5800 duce the right-of-way for a principal arterial street per Overland Dr. Submitted by Grob Engineering Services, section 20-813(g) of the Land Development Code for LLC on behalf of Oregon Trail Holdings, LC and the City Lawrence-Ousdahl No. 1, located at 1714 W. 23rd Street. of Lawrence, property owners of record. Submitted by Lawrence Ousdahl, LTD, property owner of record. CUP-15-00474: Consider a Conditional Use Permit for a Water Storage Tank & Booster Pump Station for Public Minor Subdivision, MS-15-00462, variance request to reWholesale Water Supply District No. 25, on approxi- duce the right-of-way for a principal arterial street per mately 3 acres in the southeast corner of the intersec- section 20-813(g) of the Land Development Code for tion of E 1300 Rd & N 650 Rd/County Route 460. Submit- Tower Plaza Addition, located at 2540 Iowa St. Submitted by Public Wholesale Water Supply District No. 25, ted by Strick & Co. Inc., for Iowa 33 LLC, property owner for Harrison Family Farms LLC, property owner of rec- of record. ord, and Public Wholesale Water Supply District No. 25, Legal descriptions for public hearing properties contract purchaser. listed above are on file in the Planning Office for reZ-15-00469: Consider a request to rezone approxi- view during regular office hours, 8-5 Monday - Friday. mately 14.756 acres from GPI (General Public and Institutional) District, RM12 (Multi-Dwelling Residential) Dis- Communications to the Commission: trict and RS40 (Single-Dwelling Residential) District to Written comments are welcome and encouraged on all RM12 (Multi-Dwelling Residential) District, located at items to be considered by the Planning Commission. 5200 & 5300 Clinton Pkwy. Submitted by Paul Werner Ar- The Commission has established a deadline for receipt chitects, for Genesis Health Clubs of Lawrence LLC, of all written communications of no later than 10:00 a.m. on Monday, November 16, 2015. This ensures your property owner of record. transmittal to the Commission can be received and SUP-15-00468: Consider a Special Use Permit for an Ac- read prior to their meeting. tive Recreation use, an indoor/outdoor KU Tennis Facility, located at 5200 & 5300 Clinton Pkwy. The proposed Sheila M. Stogsdill facility will include 54,000 SF of indoor space and con- Planning Administrator tinue the use of the 6 existing outdoor tennis courts. www.lawrenceks.org/pds/ Submitted by Paul Werner Architects, Genesis Health ________ SURPLUS AUCTION
L awrence J ournal -W orld
Sunday, October 25, 2015
MERCHANDISE PETS TO PLACE AN AD:
785.832.2222
| 7E
SPECIAL! 10 LINES & PHOTO
7 Days $19.95 | 28 Days $49.95
classiďŹ eds@ljworld.com
E S T A T E
PUBLIC AUCTION: Sunday, November 1st, 9:30 A.M. 2110 Harper Dg. Fairgrounds Bldg. 21, Lawrence, KS Eldon & Betty our downsizing and will offer the following:
67 E. 100th Rd, Overbrook, KS
10 AMCDT, Friday, Oct. 30th
Preview 2 Hours Prior to the Sale Personal Property: 10% buyer’s premium. 7.5% Kansas Sales Tax applies. M.E. Higgenbotham, CAI, CES, AARE, KS Lic# BR00218701
See Website for Full Terms & Details
Auto Parts & Household Items
10 AMCDT, Saturday, Oct. 31st Vintage Vehicles, Equipment & Much More!
11 AMCDT, Saturday, Oct. 31st
20Âą Acres, Includes 3/2 Home, 3 Outbuilding & Pole Barn
800-257-4161 • www.Higgenbotham.com
LAND AUCTION
TAGGED ESTATE SALE 719 RANDALL RD. LAWRENCE, KS. 66049
Douglas County, Kansas
LIVING ESTATE OF JOAN METZGER AND ESTATE OF MARVIN METZGER
50.4Âą Acres
OCT. 30TH 9:00-5:00 OCT. 31ST 9:00-3:00
Tuesday, November 10, at 10:00 AM
at the Old Train Depot €‚ ‚ Â? ƒ
For additional information, contact:
Greg Knedlik, AFM/Agent Paola, Kansas
(913) 294-2829 or (785) 541-1076 Â? Â
TM
L-1600009
 � ���� � �
Woodworkers delight, Marvin was a beautiful woodworker and his equipment and tools are in this sale. Wurlitzer spinet piano, sofas, lamps, end tables, three with marble tops, rockers, coffee tables, plant stands, two secretarial desks, hall trees, shelving , dining room table w/ 4 chairs, china, crystal, kitchen ware, clocks, antique wood fixtures, GE side by side refrigerator, Kenmore microwave, Whirlpool washer/dryer, jewelry, buffet, art work, sheet music cabinet, lawn furniture, Oreck vacuum, Bernina sewing machine, Baby Lock surger. Oak octagonal card table, chairs, cast iron door stops, figurines, antique doll bodies, cedar chest, vanity, three hall tables, linens, desks, love seat, Queen size bedroom suite, metal and wood lathes, grinders, drill presses, hand and power tools, table saw, power sanders, routers, file cabinets, vintage automotive testers, unfinished wood projects, cast iron lawn set, heavy duty car jacks, tool benches, compressor, metal chop saw, welder, parts cabinets and much misc. Shown by John I. Hughes Certified Appraiser 785-979-1941
www.FarmersNational.com
SULLIVAN AUCTIONEERS, LLC LAND AUCTION: RAY COUNTY, MO
• Productive Tillable Cropland! • Improved Pasture Land! • “Premierâ€? Hunting/Recreational Acreage!
MERCHANDISE
AUCTIONS Auction Calendar AUCTION Main Street-Commercial Tonganoxie, KS 508 East 4th Street 11 A.M. Friday October 30 View: Fri Oct 23, 11 to 1 Selling to the high bidder regardless of price! BILL FAIR & COMPANY www.billfair.com 800-887-6929 Commercial Investment Portfolio Reduction AUCTION 20 + Real Estate Parcels in Topeka, KS 3 Sell Absolute Wed, Oct 28, 10:00 AM Ramada Inn 420 SE 6th Ave midwestrealestateauctions.com
UNITED COUNTRY 1-800-895-4430
Consignments Wanted RJ’s Auction Service is looking for consignments of coins, firearms, vehicles, along with quality general merchandise For more information call Rick at 785-224-4492 ESTATE AUCTION Sunday, Nov 1, 9:30am Doug. Co. Fairgrounds,# 21 2110 Harper - Lawrence, KS Pillsbury, John Deere & Harley Davidson Collectibles, Hallmark, Lowell Davis Art, 1-Horse Sleigh, John Deere Lawn Equip, Tools & Misc. ELSTON AUCTIONS (785-594-0505)(785-218-7851) www.kansasauctions.net/elston
ESTATE AUCTION Sunday, Oct. 25, 9 am 2110 Harper Lawrence, KS RARE ITEMS! 19th & 20th Century Furniture, Books, Collectibles, Pictures. Seller: William (Bill) Pendleton ELSTON AUCTIONS (785-594-0505)(785-218-7851) www.kansasauctions.net/elston
for 75+ pictures and list! FINAL AUCTION for 2015 ÂŤ Strickers Auction ÂŤ MONDAY, NOV. 2, 6 PM 801 North Center GARDNER, KANSAS Furniture, Appliances, Tools, Antiques, Garden, Much Misc Website for photos and list: STRICKERSAUCTION.COM JERRY: 913-707-1046 RON: 913-707-1046 LAND AUCTION Tues., Nov. 10, 10 AM Old Train Depot 402 N. 2nd St, Lawrence, KS 50.4 +/- Acres in Douglas Co. KS Greg Knedlik, AFM/Agent 913-294-2829|785-541-1076
www.FarmersNational.com/ GregKnedlik
Auctions FINAL AUCTION for 2015 ď‚Ť Strickers Auction ď‚Ť MONDAY, NOV. 2, 6 PM 801 North Center GARDNER, KANSAS
Antiques Antique Hospital Bed. Adjustable hospital bed from the early part of the 20th century. Great for Halloween decorating! $75 , 785-393-4307
Bicycles-Mopeds
Floor Bicycle Pump-Giant Control Tower #69010 Presta & Schrader valve compatible head. Like New $25. cash 785-865-4215
Computer-Camera HP Printer ALL-IN-One Office Jet 4315 INKJET . Cords included, plus 2 new cartridges $30 cash 784-843-7205 SAMSUNG 22� Desktop monitor. Hardly used with cords. $50 cash 785-843-7205
LARGE ASSORTMENT OF GOOD FURNITURE; BEDROOM SETS, DINING ROOM SETS, LEATHER DIVAN & CHAIRS, RECLINERS, ANTIQUE FURNITURE, RUGS, ART, QUILTS. 3 FREEZERS, STOVES, REFRIGERATORS. ELECTRIC WHEEL CHAIR, GAS EZGO GOLF CART. 4 NEW JACUZZI TUBSCOMPLETE! GLOBE COMMERCIAL MIXER, APPROX 50 NEW / SMALL APPLIANCES. SIGNS, TOOLS, CRAFTSMAN RIDING MOWER, LUMBER. MUSIC INSTRUMENTS, MENS COATS COSTUME JEWELRY, LOTS OF DISHES & COLLECTIBLES. *This will be our last Auction for 2015, so please plan to attend! For more info & pictures, see the website: STRICKERSAUCTION.COM JERRY: 913-707-1046 RON: 913-707-1046
REAL ESTATE AUCTION
ď‚Ť ď‚Ť 359 ACRESď‚Ť ď‚Ť Sat., Nov. 21 at 1:30 pm Osage City Senior Center
605 Market St. Osage City, KS
359 ac., m/l, of Osage Co. hunting land, wildlife habitat and hayland w/ building site potential, to be offered in 6 tracts. Property is located 3 mi. west of Eisenhower State Park at Melvern Lake, at the corner of 293rd and Auburn Rd. in 25-17-14, Osage Co, KS For more info or to schedule a viewing call:
Cline Realty & Auction, John E. Cline, Broker 785-889-4775 or check website: mcclivestock.com/clinerealty ADVERTISE YOUR AUCTION ~or~ ESTATE SALE HERE! Let our Classified Advertising Department help you with a classic liner or eye-catching display ad! All paid ads include 2 weeks FREE in our Auction Calendar! Call or email us TODAY! classifieds@ljworld.com 785.832.2222
Numerous items & collections too many to mention!!!
Sellers: Eldon & Betty Roecker Auction Note:Very Large Auction!The Quality is Outstanding! Many things unlisted.
Auctioneers: Elston Auction Co. (785-594-0505) (785-218-7851) Please visit us online at www.KansasAuctions.net/elston for pictures!!
RENTALS REAL ESTATE TO PLACE AN AD:
classiďŹ eds@ljworld.com
785.832.2222
AUCTION
Apartments Unfurnished
GARAGE SALES
508 East 4th Street
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@JobsLawrenceKS
Furniture Executive Conference Table, traditional, 3 ½’ x 8’ 6 leather chairs, Excellent Condition $2,000 17th Century Rope Bed Make offer. Call 913.488.9368
Miscellaneous 48 inch blacklight in fixture. Can be used over doorway with glowing display for Halloween. $25 firm. The fixture has places for two lamps—I broke one. I can tell you where to get one if you want two. Call 785-749-0670.
Lawrence Indoor Estate Sale 2920 Rimrock Dr. (near Holcom Park)
Sat., Oct. 24, 10-2 Sun., Oct 25, 10-2
****************** Do your Xmas shopping here! Lots of New-in-Box gifts for babies, children, & adults! Collectibles, housewares, plastic storage sets, furniture, barbells & free weights, bag full of NEW size 4 soccer balls, sports equipment, lead crystal lamps, dozens of new unique frames, rocking horse, stuffed animals, antiques, variety of wicker baskets, religious tapes & books, hundreds of pieces of Christmas decor- including 2 beautiful nativity sets, 14 feet of articial flowers, Easter Baskets, a thousand books (all genres), cases of new photo albums, short upright piano, lovely dining room table 6 chairs, tools, glasswares, Precious Moments, over 200 Beanie Babies, artwork, DVDs, CDs, audio books, games, woven baskets and much more, women’s size 4- 12 clothing (by request only) Most items are name your own REASONABLE price! Please enter at rear of house.
Beautiful & Spacious 1 & 2 Bedrooms Start at $450/mo.
Sold Live! On Location!
Great location in the heart of Downtown! 1,375 Sq. Ft. with parking. Highly finished. Suitable for Retail, Office, Medical, More!
* Near campus, bus stop * Laundries on site * Near stores, restaurants * Water & trash paid ——————————————
CALL TODAY (Monday - Friday)
Duplexes Terms: $5,000 down day of sale, balance due in 35 days. Selling to the high bidder regardless of price!
3 and 4 Bedroom Townhouses and Single Family Homes Available Now $950-$1800 a month. Garber Property Management
Duplex for Rent: 2 Bed 1 Bath
Extended BARN Sale 1827 E. 1150 Rd Lawrence
INVESTMENT/DEVELOPMENT
LAUREL GLEN APTS
grandmanagement.net
OPPORTUNITY
147 acres, Lawrence Schools, large custom 4 bed/3 bath home, barns, 2nd house, ponds, just west of 6h & SLT, fastest growing intersection in Kansas. $1.6M
785-842-2475
Bill Fair and Company www.billfair.com 785-887-6900
Building Lots 4 acres bldg site between Topeka and Lawrence Black top, trees and waterline. Repo. Assume owner financing with no down payment. $257/mo. Please call 785-554-9663 for more information.
Some with W/D, Water & Trash Paid, Small Pet, Income Restrictions Apply
785-838-9559 EOH
REAL ESTATE SPECIAL! 10 LINES & PHOTO:
2 DAYS $50 7 DAYS $80 28 DAYS $280 + FREE PHOTO!
ADVERTISE TODAY! CALL 832-2222.
Aspiring Entrepreneurs
3 months old. Have had shots & dewormed. Need Families! $50 each 785-542-1043
MERCHANDISE AND PETS!
Looking for a reputable online business? Flexible hours, free training, great income, and incentives. eurekahealthyhome.com
Special Notices
10 LINES & PHOTO:
7 DAYS $19.95 28 DAYS $49.95 DOESN’T SELL IN 28 DAYS?
+FREE RENEWAL! ADVERTISE TODAY! CALL 832-2222 or email classifieds@ljworld.com
FIRST MONTH FREE! 1 & 2 Bedroom Units Available Now! Cooperative townhomes start at $446-$490/mnth. Water, trash, sewer paid. Back patio, CA, hardwood floors, full bsmnt., stove, refrig., w/d hookup, garbage disposal, reserved parking. On-site management & maintenance. 24 hr. emergency maintenance. Membership & Equity fee required. 785-842-2545 (Equal Housing Opportunity) pinetreetownhouses.com
TUCKAWAY APARTMENTS
Tuckawayapartments.com HARPER SQUARE Harpersquareapartments.com TUCKAWAY AT BRIARWOOD
Tuckawayatbriarwood.com HUTTON FARMS Huttonfarms.com
Office Space OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE Call Garber Property Management at 785-842-2475 for more information.
NOTICES Business Announcements
LAB MIX PUPPIES
2BR with loft, 2 bath, 1 car garage, fenced yard, FP, 3719 Westland Pl. $790/mo. Avail. Aug. 1. 785-550-3427
apartments.lawrence.com
TO PLACE AN AD:
PIANOS
412 Arkansas. Kitchen appliances, W/D hookups, Off street parking, NO SMOKING. Section 8 accepted. $660/ mo. 785-766-2380
785-865-2505
All Electric
1, 2 & 3 BR units
PETS Pets
www.sunriseapartments.com
Lawrence
3 BR w/2 or 2.5 BA
Call 785-832-2222 or email classifieds@ljworld.com
Call now! 785-841-8400
Townhomes
W/D hookups, Fireplace, Major Appliances. Lawn Care & Dbl Car Garage! Equal Housing Opportunity
Need to sell your car?
Pool, On KU Bus Route, Spacious Floorplan,Patios/Decks. Great location: 837 Michigan $200 OFF First Month Rent
2BR, 2 bath, fireplace, CA, W/D hookups, 2 car with opener. Easy access to I-70. Includes paid cable. Pet under 20 lbs. allowed Call 785-842-2575 www.princeton-place.com
Apartments Unfurnished
8 am - 3 pm
Now Leasing 2 BR’s Close to Campus & Downtown
2BR, in a 4-plex. New carpet, vinyl, cabinets, countertop. W/D is included. Equal Housing Opportunity. 785-865-2505
Lawrence
Collectibles & Selection of newer and older furniture; Pac-man upright arcade game, Dining Tables & Chairs, Italian Leather Couch Set, Pie Safe, Armoires, Hoosier Cabinet, Curio Cabinet, Antique Trunks, Drafting Table, 5 foot Butcher Block, Framed Art, Vintage Fabric, Knife Collection, Zane Grey Booket, and Many more surprises!
SUNRISE VILLAGE & PLACE
785-843-1116
Lawrence-Rural
Music-Stereo
785-832-9906
VIEW: Friday October 23, 11 A.M. to 1 P.M. or anytime by appointment.
RENTALS
Two excellent reclinable plastic outdoor chairs for $25. Call 785-749-0670.
• H.L. Phillips upright $650 •Baldwin Spinet - $550 • Cable Nelson or Kimball Spinet - $500 • Gulbranson Spinet - $450 Prices include tuning & delivery
2411 Cedarwood Ave.
REAL ESTATE
(Kasold N. to DG 438, 1/2 mi. W., 1/4 mi N. on DG 7) Sat., Oct 24 & Sun., Oct 25
Townhomes
Cedarwood Apts
11 A.M. Friday October 30
Thurs., Nov. 12 • 1:00 PM
217-847-2160
John Deere Lawn Equipment & Tools & Misc.: JD LX176 riding mower w/bagger; JD JS60 push mower; JD 42 in. front straight blade & wheel weights for a riding mower; JD 37 gas power-washer; JD BH25 blower; JD thatcher; 2 wheel lawn-dump trailer; Brinley thatcher; Stihl FS40C weed-eater; Craftsman 3 hp. air compressor; Makita Tools: 10 in. miter-saw/10 in. table- saw/framing nailer/palm & belt sanders/circular saw/sawzall/drill; numerous other name brand name tools; book cases; misc. furniture; Marksman Biathlon Trainer pellet rifle(NIB);
Main Street Commercial • Tonganoxie, KS
158 Acres¹ • 2 Tracts SullivanAuctioneers.com
Collectibles: 200 +Pillsbury Collectibles Dating back to the 70’s: 10 in. stuffed Poppy Doll(Rare!); 54 in. Doughboy store display w/stand; 48 in. stuffed Doughboy store display; rubber Doughboy & Poppy; cookie jars from various years; Danbury Mint Delivery Truck; Gum Ball machine (salesman sample); 1970’s semi-trucks; 1997 telephone; Danbury Mint 24 porcelain ornaments; tins dating back to 1965; 14 piece baking gadget set; Danbury Mint Lighted Xmas Doughboy Gingerbread House; set 4 porcelain Danbury Mint dolls; children’s serving set & cup; metal serving bowls w/lids; Pyrex serving bowls; stuffed giggle doll; salt/peppers; soccer & football; wallpaper border; curtains; kitchen utensil holders; kitchen clock; napkin holders; tins; wristwatches; several banks of all styles; adult slippers; lounge pants; t-shirts; xmas stockings; kitchen towels & pot holders; This is unbelievable collection of Pillsbury & Eldon & Betty took great pride in collecting it over the years!!! 200 + Hallmark Ornament Collection Dating back to the 70’s to Present: Most are Keepsake Ornament Collectible Club Charter Member Limited Editions Members Only; Winter Surprise; Classic Cars; Here Comes Santa; Rocking Horse; All American Trucks; Crayola Tins; Lone Ranger & Howdy Doody Lunch Boxes; 100 + Lowell Davis Artist from Carthage Mo. Porcelain Figurines made by Schmid of Scotland; Featherin Her Nest; Easy Pickens; Christmas Cottage(lighted); Fox Fire Farm Sign & 12 piece Farm Set; Route 66 Mo. Sign; Welcome Mat; Himself; Pit Stop set 12 xmas ornaments; Many others!! John Deere Collectibles: 1970’s 4020 Diesel Pedal Tractor & Trailer; 8310/8400/Model A Pedal Tractors (NIB’s); 2-Pedal Tractor Loaders(NIB); Pedal Car w/box; 24 Danbury Mint 1/64 Tractor ornaments in box; 1/64 state tractors; gas pump; Thomas Kincaid truck; coin bank; salt/peppers; Franklin Mint pocket watch w/display; 4450 1/16th scale; lawn tractor & dump trailer; ceramic tractor bank; cast-iron A Harley Davidson: telephone; puzzle; Franklin Mint 1/10 scale w/boxes Heritage Softale Classic/1948 Panhead/1957 XL Sportster/1971 Super Glide/1969 Sportster; Harley Hallmark ornaments; Ertl Tuff Trax TMX trike (NIB);Case 970 Demonstrator Coll. Ed. Tractor w/box 1/16th scale; hay wagon w/pressed tin wheels; McCormick Deering hard plastic wagon; Hot Rod & Chevy magazines Vintage full size One Horse Sleigh; 9 ft. vintage oak church pew; vintage oak bookcase; JD & Ford wrenches; Ranch bathtub; spurs; neck-yokes; horse collars; Mobil grease 100lb can; crocks; graniteware; pocket knives; belt buckles; costume jewelry; German wolf horn; Dale Earnhardt items; glassware
Happy Birthday to our bud, Mike B. Thanks for making us look good! Enjoy your lovely Sunday. -Your Classy Pals; Tornado, Boom-Boom, The Terminator, Giggles, Root Beer, & Stedi Hein.
785.832.2222
classiďŹ eds@ljworld.com
Special Notices
Special Notices
KU Dept. of Educational Psychology Parent ConsultationProject
CNA/CMA CLASSES!
Child Behavior Problems at Home? You and your son or daughter are invited to participate in the University of Kansas Parent Consultation Project. The is a research and service project designed to help us understand how to best work with parents to help reduce or eliminate behavior problems with their children at home. Parents with children ages 2-12 are eligible. Parents are required to attend three, 30-45 minute sessions. After a brief screening interview, parents will consult with a dedicated graduate student clinician for the project. All sessions and parking are FREE. All sessions will be held in the Center for Psychoeducational Services (CPS) at KU. CPS is located on the 1st floor north of J.R. Pearson Hall. Daytime and evening appointments are available through April 30, 2016. Limited spaces are available. For additional information or for a screening interview call for the Parent Consultation Project at: 785-864-7021.
Lawrence, KS CNA DAY CLASSES Nov 2 - Nov 24 8.30a-3p • M-Th Nov 30- Dec 22 8.30a-3p • M-Th Jan 4 - Jan 17 8.30a-5p • M-F CNA EVENING CLASSES LAWRENCE KS Nov 2 - Nov 25 5p-9p • T/Th/F CMA DAY CLASSES LAWRENCE KS Dec 1 -Dec 23 8.30a-2p • M/W/F CNA REFRESHER/CMA UPDATE LAWRENCE Nov 6/7 Dec 4/5,18/19 CALL NOW- 785.331.2025 trinitycareerinstitute.com
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Sunday, October 25, 2015
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L awrence J ournal -W orld
Marriage is a partnership, not a 50/50 business Dear Annie: I married “Dean” nine years ago. It was a second marriage for both of us. Soon after we wed, he said we would split all expenses 50-50. However, the house is in his name, and he will not put my name on the deed since I can’t match “his” down payment, even though I pay him rent each month. Everything we do, I have to pay half. He and his teenage son went on a two-week vacation, and I couldn’t go because I couldn’t afford my share. When we go out, I have to pay my own way. He only gives me a gift when I give him one of equal value. We have no joint accounts. I currently have a large debt, but in two years that will be paid off. I feel like a secondclass citizen. I know Dean loves me — but I come after his son, his
Annie’s Mailbox
Marcy Sugar and Kathy Mitchell
anniesmailbox@comcast.net
job, his employees, his computer and his civic organizations. His bank accounts are getting fatter, and I am barely scraping by. Is this a marriage or a lord/serf relationship? — Indentured Servant Dear Servant: It sounds like a lopsided business arrangement. It’s certainly not our idea of a loving marriage where partners should take care of each other instead of sending them a bill for expenses. A
Another ‘Simpsons’ Halloween Kelsey Grammer must be proud knowing that he’s associated with two of the longestrunning TV characters of all time. He played Dr. Frasier Crane on both “Cheers” and “Frasier” over a 20-year span, starting in 1984. But his recurring character on “The Simpsons” (7 p.m. Sunday, Fox), Sideshow Bob, has been around even longer, more than a quarter century! In many ways, Frasier and Sideshow Bob are cut from the same high threadc o u n t c l o t h . They are both incurable snobs with Ivy League affectations, given to pompous asides, Gilbert and Sullivan references and acid remarks about the dubious merits of white zinfandel. The big difference is that Bob is a former sideshow performer for Krusty the Clown and has a homicidal obsession with Bart Simpson. And tonight, in the 26th edition (or is that XXVI?) of the “Treehouse of Horror” Halloween show, Sideshow Bob Terwilliger finally gets his wish. As with any long-deferred goal, killing Bart comes with many downsides. Free of his bloodlust, Bob starts teaching literature at Springfield University. He watches in horror as his bored students stare at their phones during his lectures and retrieve answers from Wikipedia when he quizzes them on T.S. Eliot. Like many “Treehouse” offerings, this “Simpsons” is as gory and gross as an “Itchy & Scratchy” cartoon. And like most, it’s riddled with media parodies and arcane inside jokes. Look for cameos from drooling aliens Kang and Kodos, who complain that their appearances on the show get shorter every year. Worse, they’re broadcast in an oldfashioned 4:3 screen ratio and not letterboxed! Now that’s a crime!
Tonight’s other highlights
The Philadelphia Eagles visit the Carolina Panthers on “Sunday Night Football” (7:20 p.m., NBC).
Elizabeth and POTUS have a falling out on “Madam Secretary” (7 p.m., CBS.
Steph’s embarrassing secret puts her farm in jeopardy on “Home Fires” on “Masterpiece Classic” (7 p.m., PBS, check local listings).
Alicia defends a shoplifter on “The Good Wife” (8 p.m., CBS).
Tom Selleck stars in the 2015 mystery “Jesse Stone: Lost in Paradise” (8 p.m., Hallmark Movies & Mysteries).
“Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown” (8 p.m., CNN) visits Ethiopia.
Rick’s select group circles back to Alexandria on “The Walking Dead” (8 p.m., AMC).
good partnership is 5050, but the contribution can mean household chores, child care, etc. And when one partner has a higher income and fewer debts than the other, it is unfair to expect an equal financial arrangement. Dean is treating you as an inferior. Tell him you’d like to go for counseling. If he won’t go, go without him. You might also want to see an attorney. Having everything in his name puts you in a risky position. Dear Annie: I had some bad memories rise up when I read the letter from “Mother of a Tomboy.” My paternal grandmother always expected me to look and act like a perfect little lady. Every time I went to see her, she made me wear awful curlers all day. Before we left, she would fi-
nally take them out, fix my hair in an old-fashioned style and lacquer it down with hairspray. Nothing I wore was feminine enough. My weight was never right, and she didn’t like me to eat too much of anything. I begged Mom to make Granny stop doing my hair. Fortunately, I learned to like myself as I am. That grandma should enjoy her tomboy granddaughter and not create terrible memories like the ones I have. — Lubbock, Texas Dear Lubbock: If your grandmother had known how negatively you would remember her, we trust she would have done things differently.
JACQUELINE BIGAR’S STARS
For Sunday, Oct. 25: This year you seem to be unusually fortunate in that you tend to stumble into the right place at the right time. Ultimately, everything will work out for the best. If you are single, your upbeat personality draws many people toward you. If you are attached, you are focused on your long-term goals as a couple. 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 have more vigor and enthusiasm than you have had in a while. Opportunities could come in. Tonight: An older person gets pushy. Taurus (April 20-May 20) Take your time when making decisions. You might not be happy with what someone is sharing. Tonight: Keep it confidential. Gemini (May 21-June 20) You are full of energy and driven to hang out with friends. A loved one could appear to be closed off. Tonight: Surrounded by people. Cancer (June 21-July 22) A boss, parent or older person will become demanding, and you might not have the flexibility you would like. Tonight: Get a head start on tomorrow. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) Accept a spontaneous invitation that will pull you away from your daily life. Tonight:
— Send questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or Annie’s Mailbox, P.O. Box 118190 Chicago, IL 60611.
jacquelinebigar.com
Tumble into bed. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) One-on-one relating is likely to draw you and a friend or loved one closer together. Tonight: Say “yes” to a discussion. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) You could be uncomfortable when dealing with a somewhat wild person in your life. Tonight: Defer to someone else. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) You could be put off by news that heads your way. Clear out some thoughts. Tonight: Make it early. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Be sure of your choices, and allow a child to have some part in deciding what your plans will be. Tonight: Let the party go on. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) You have been very busy lately, but there is a need to spend some time at home with your roommates or family. Tonight: Order in. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) You’re likely to say what is on your mind. Don’t be surprised by a loved one’s response. Tonight: At a favorite place. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) You might be allowing money to slip through your fingers. Tighten up your financial habits. Tonight: A friend presents a problem.
UNIVERSAL CROSSWORD Universal Crossword Edited by Timothy E. Parker October 25, 2015
ACROSS 1 Largest bone in the body 6 Bring shame to 11 Came in first 14 Greeks gathered here 15 Apia’s home 16 Ended a fast 17 Homebuyer’s outlay 19 Not just “a” 20 Answers to charges 21 Guiding principle 23 Motorless vessel 27 Cooking wine 28 Baseball blunders 29 Be in mourning 31 Fee for grazing cattle 32 Harass with persistent criticism 33 Banned bug-killer 36 Siamese and Persian 37 Football foursome 38 Jewish month 39 Demolition letters 40 Tot’s vehicle, for short 41 Chauffeured 42 In a spinetingling way 44 Old World plover 45 Lampooned 10/25
47 Voiced sounds 48 Large country in Africa 49 Windjammer gear 51 Miracle-___ (garden product) 52 Realistic and practical 58 Stranded motorist’s need 59 Tarzan’s swing 60 Insolent look 61 Tax form ID 62 “Pomp and Circumstance” writer 63 Does some keyboarding DOWN 1 Short-lived rage 2 Psychoanalysis subject 3 Do a summer lawn job 4 Ashes container 5 Emotional connection 6 Heretofore 7 Crimson Tide, informally 8 Iowa State location 9 Male delivery? 10 Shorthandled axe 11 Diluted 12 “None of the above” choice
13 Destitute 18 “Ah, me!” 22 Gun, as an engine 23 Acknowledge a stimulus 24 Ballpark music maker 25 Noted 26 Head for business? 27 Breaks commandments 29 Awkward 30 Ancient alphabetic character 32 Work hard 34 Lifeboat lowerer 35 Packingweight deductions 37 IV procedure 38 Length x width, for a rectangle 40 Rollaway bed
41 Most slow-witted 43 Airport info 44 Game played on horseback 45 Some Air Force NCOs 46 Continental money 47 Shankar’s instrument 49 Plunderer’s take 50 “___ and the King of Siam” 53 Lubricate 54 “___ day now ...” 55 Bench-press unit 56 Golf prop 57 Abbr. in a marathon time
PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER
10/24
© 2015 Universal Uclick www.upuzzles.com
UNDER CONSIDERATION By Tim Burr
— The astrological forecast should be read for entertainment only.
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LAWRENCE BOARD OF EDUCATION Vanessa Sanburn President Term: 2013-2017 765 Ash Street Lawrence, KS 66044 785-856-1233 vsanburn@usd497.org
Marcel Harmon Vice President
Term: 2015-2017 753 Lauren Street Lawrence, KS 66044 785-550-7749 mharmon@usd497.org
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Term: 2013-2017 4924 Stoneback Place Lawrence, KS 66047 785-840-7989 kadair@usd497.org
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Term: 2015-2019 1720 Mississippi Street Lawrence, KS 66044 785-691-6678 jbeeson@usd497.org
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Photos by Diane Guthrie, except Beeson and Fincher.
02
Lawrence Public Schools Newsletter
Table
of
Contents
3
Board of Education Goals
4-5
English Language Arts
ON the COVER
6-7 Mathematics 8-9
New Kansas Assessments
10 Science 11
Social Studies
12
Equity Goal
13
Social Skills, Early Childhood Screenings
14-15
Bond Issue Update
16
Technology Improvements Lawrence Public Schools 110 McDonald Drive Lawrence, KS 66044-1063 785-832-5000 www.usd497.org Facebook.com/LawrencePublicSchools Rick Doll, Superintendent of Schools
This newsletter produced by the USD 497 Communications Office, Julie Boyle, director, in partnership with the Lawrence Journal-World, Janella Williams, senior graphic artist/Creative Imaging. Lawrence Public Schools USD 497 is an equal opportunity employer and will not discriminate in its employment practices and policies. Discrimination against any individual on the basis of race, color, religion, sex, age, national origin, disability, sexual orientation or gender identity is prohibited by Lawrence Board of Education policy.
Board Meeting Calendar November 9 & 23 December 14 January 11 & 25 February 8 & 22
March 28 April 11 & 25 May 9 & 23 June 13 & 27
Public meetings begin at 7 p.m., unless otherwise announced, at 110 McDonald Drive. Review board agendas online at: usd497.org Watch board meetings via: • Live broadcasts on LPS-TV 26 (with a WOW! cable box) with replays at 6 p.m. on Wednesdays. • Live Webstream at http://video.usd497.org/26webstream/ with video archives at http://publicmedia.usd497.org/
West Middle School sixth grade students Quincy Kastens, Jalen Jordan, Lindsay Witt, Quez Lee, Lakin Peterson, Bianco Nieto and Ashley Edwinson gather their literature circle in a hallway at school to discuss “Maniac Magee.” The novel gives the students a good example of a story whose main character has strong personal experiences. They’ll use the example to guide them in writing personal narratives in English language arts. Their teacher, Kristyn Nieder, listens as they rotate through the roles of Discussion Director, who leads the group by posing thought-provoking questions; the Connector, who connects the text to self, the world and to other text; the Literary Luminary, who finds passages that are special, unique, confusing or descriptive; and the Illustrator, who draws and writes about a scene from the reading that is important to the plot. Nieder says rotating through these jobs as part of their literature group puts more responsibility on the students to facilitate the discussion. “Who doesn’t like to get together and talk about a good book?” Nieder asks. Cover and pages 3-12 photos by Diane Guthrie
Find it at www.usd497.org: • • • • • •
Job Opportunities New Student Online Enrollment Board Meeting Agendas District Budget Information School Videos Breakfast/Lunch Menus
LAWRENCE BOARD OF EDUCATION GOALS In order to achieve educational excellence and equity for students of all races and backgrounds, the Lawrence Board of Education and superintendent will establish a learning climate of high expectations, set annual equity and achievement goals and charge district- and school-level teams with responsibilities for developing strategies to eliminate achievement disparities, while improving achievement for all students. MISSION: Lawrence USD 497 is a learning community committed to ensuring educational equity and excellence so that students of all races and backgrounds achieve at high levels and
graduate prepared for success in college, careers and life in a diverse and rapidly changing world. VISION: The school board, administration, teachers and staff build positive relationships, seek multiple perspectives, set high expectations and hold each other accountable for ensuring that through equitable access to rigorous, culturally relevant and seamlessly aligned curriculum and effective, researchbased instruction, all students achieve at high levels, graduate on time and are well prepared for their future.
BOARD GOALS: EXCELLENCE: Raise the achievement of all students. EQUITY: Raise achievement for all students, while closing achievement gaps. ENGAGEMENT: Develop a learning community of school, family and community partnerships committed to ensuring educational equity and excellence so that all students achieve at high levels and graduate prepared for success in college, careers and life.
5. Deliver quality programs and services. • Areas of Focus: Classified Equity Teams, Equitable Access to Technology, Integrated Software Management Systems and Salary/Benefits Study. 6. Create high quality and adaptable district facilities to meet the diverse 21st century educational program needs of all students and to enhance student achievement. • Areas of Focus: Low-Cost, High-Speed Internet Services; Capital Outlay/Facility/Sustainability Planning, Warehouse/Maintenance Facilities and Safe Routes to School.
Over 20 Years Serving Lawrence and Eastern Kansas
2015-2016 GOALS: 1. Develop and align district expectations for curriculum and instruction in order to raise the achievement of all students. • Areas of Focus: Dual/Articulated Credit, Career and Technical/Virtual/Adult Education, Blended Learning, Digital Citizenship, Beyond Diversity Training, LGBT Student Supports, School Equity Team Empowerment, Comprehensive, Integrated Three-Tiered Models of Intervention (CI3T); K-5 English Language Arts, Special Education Services, K-5 Science Standards, Integrated Digital Course Masters (Grades 6-8) and New Generation Science Standards (High School). 2. Enhance student wellness by integrating supports and services across the district. • Areas of Focus: Physical Activity/Recess, Farm-to-School Program, Curriculum Connections to Outdoor Learning Environments and School Start Times Study. 3. Deliver a differentiated and comprehensive professional development plan to support best practices in instructional methods. • Areas of Focus: Certified Evaluation and Technology Integration. 4. Expand communication and community connections through increased engagement. • Areas of Focus: Partnerships for Academically Successful Students (PASS), Employee Input/Feedback, School Boundaries, Bond Issue Progress, Parent Legislative Advocacy and Parent Organization Information Guide.
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03
ENGLISH/LANGUAGE ARTS
Teachers on Special Assignment Provide Support for English Language Arts By Therese Brink Edgecomb (K-5) and Greg Bonsignore (6-12), Teachers on Special Assignment - English/Language Arts
English/language arts (ELA) continues to be a core subject matter for all students. Reading, writing, listening, speaking and language skills are keys to student success beyond the classroom. With Kansas College and Career Ready Standards requiring more rigorous and interactive requirements of students, teachers and staff are rising to the challenge to provide students enriched and exciting ELA experiences. WHAT’S A TOSA? ELA Teachers on Special Assignment (TOSAs) support teachers in all of the key areas of English/language arts. This includes providing professional
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development for new staff and seasoned teachers. TOSAs provide assistance one-on-one or in small groups to address the needs of specific teams of teachers. Teachers and support staff may turn to the TOSAs to ask questions, such as how to utilize a district-provided resource, where to get help accessing an online resource or how to gain insight and gather ideas in the subject matter. Occasionally TOSAs co-plan, team teach or model lessons in classrooms. A major focus for the K-5 ELA TOSA is providing support for elementary teachers districtwide in implementing the district’s new resource Reading Street. Other elements for the K-5
Lawrence Public Schools Newsletter
ELA TOSA include the district’s writing program, Units of Study; keyboarding program, Type 2 Learn; and handwriting program, Handwriting Without Tears. All are part of the elementary ELA program. The secondary ELA TOSA provides support to teachers in grades 6-12 when it comes to implementing the Units of Study in Argument/ Opinion, Information and Narrative Writing: A Common Core Workshop Curriculum. Last spring, the district expanded this program from the elementary level to middle schools. Starting with sixth grade, Lawrence Public Schools will be introducing Units of Study into middle schools, one grade level at a time, during the course of the next three years.
WHAT’S NEXT? ELA is an ever-evolving field. New data, resources, information and goals are always in flux. The TOSAs and elementary, middle and high school English/language arts leadership teams comprised of strong teachers across all grade levels, library-media specialists, principals and other key staff members are highly engaged in keeping an eye out for future trends and preparing to meet those needs. These individuals bring a plethora of experiences and perspectives to help guide the district. They review current practices and materials, determine areas of strengths and of need and make recommendations that help guide district decisions.
ENGLISH/LANGUAGE ARTS
Why Lawrence Loves Lucy! By Gregory Bonsignore, Teacher on Special Assignment – English/Language Arts, Grades 6-12
A GUIDE TO LUCY-SPEAK
A renewed focus on the practice of writing followed on the heels of the Kansas College and Career Ready Standards. Lawrence Public Schools adopted a new writing curriculum in the 201415 school year for students in grades K-5. Units of Study in Opinion/Argument, Information and Narrative Writing: A Common Core Workshop Curriculum is a research-based program based on the work of the leading think-tank in the field, the New York-based Teachers College Reading and Writing Project. Lucy Calkins is the series editor and primary author. After a positive reception from Lawrence students, teachers, administrators and parents, the district expanded this curriculum to the middle schools this year. HOW DOES WRITING WORKSHOP-BASED INSTRUCTION DIFFER FROM OTHER APPROACHES TO TEACHING WRITING? Writing workshop uses a predictable daily structure. Teachers lead students through a 1015 minute mini-lesson after which students are free to experiment with and choose strategies that are most relevant to the writing they are doing for that day. While students are writing or revising their work, the teacher conferences with individual students or meets with small groups of students to support them with more personalized instruction. There are always a few minutes at the end of writing workshop to share or celebrate student progress and successes.
HOW DOES WRITING WORKSHOP SUPPORT READING INSTRUCTION OR WORK THAT STUDENTS DO IN OTHER CONTENT AREAS? Even in the sciences, the KCCRS expect students to demonstrate knowledge through their writing. Students can use the explicit instruction they receive during writing workshop throughout their educational career. When teachers sequence the work students do with literature and informational text to provide opportunities for students to experiment with producing the types of text they are reading, both reading and writing skills are enhanced. WHAT TYPES OF WRITING ARE KIDS DOING? The KCCRS has standards for three main types of writing: argument/opinion, information and narrative. Units of Study has students experience all three types of writing every year at increasing levels of rigor. When it comes to information writing, for example, at the first grade, students publish nonfiction chapter books, while in the fifth grade, students publish research reports that rely on historical documents or primary sources like speeches. In eighth grade, students compose position papers that address multiple perspectives. One of the strengths of Units of Study is that it uses common language and expectations to help students progress across grade levels.
The series editor and primary author of Units of Study, Lucy Calkins, uses a variety of terms that might be unfamiliar to the average teacher, student or parent. Here are a few favorites: • “Flash or Discovery-Draft:” This is writing that’s done “fast and furious” and early in the process, filling up a page as quickly as possible to see what one knows about a topic. • “Seed idea:” This is an idea for a story that focuses on a small-moment in a given period of time. In other words, students focus on “one seed” as opposed to the entire watermelon. • “Mentor-text:” A piece of published writing that is “read like a writer,” almost like a form of reverse engineering. • “Craft moves:” The ideas one gets from a mentor-text, like starting a story with a one-word sentence for dramatic effect. • “When you’re done, you’ve just begun!” This refers to the practice of revising or “seeing anew” that occurs when the writer believes he/she has come to the end of drafting a piece. This comes in handy with students who believe that writing time is done once they’ve filled the page or answered a question. October 2015
05
MATHEMATICS
Mathematics is for Everyone! By Philip Thies (K-5) and Danira Flores (6-12), Teachers on Special Assignment – Mathematics
Mathematics and math education are essential components for success in our modern world. Many people, however, hold disparaging beliefs about math. Some may believe there are people born with a “math brain.” Others think math is about memorizing procedures. Others think they will never be good at math. Educators in the Lawrence Public Schools are determined to overcome these unproductive beliefs. We are all mathematicians! Everyone can be successful understanding and learning math. Educators are leveraging the Eight Standards for Mathematical Practice,
as part of the Kansas College and Career Ready Standards, to engage students in richer experiences with math. “I believe the math practice standards outline the way math should have always been taught. Math classrooms should be active classrooms filled with students talking and sharing ideas with one another, using various tools to solve problems and taking risks during the process,” said Cara Aldridge, Southwest Middle School math teacher. “When we encourage students to utilize their natural mathematical intuition to explore math at greater depth, we not only increase their confidence in mathematics, we keep
them excited about the subject as well.” The Standards for Mathematical Practice are process skills that educators help students develop. These processes are essential, because they assist in developing reasoning, understanding of mathematics and promote discourse of ideas using math. These processes are as important as content standards. “The math standards help me to provide my students the opportunity to work together to solve problems that push them beyond basic computation into more rigorous thinking and the use of multiple problem solving strategies,” said Paula Barr, Quail Run Elementary School second grade teacher.
Barr says, for example, a math problem such as “Would you rather have 800 pennies or 3 one dollar bills, 10 quarters, 12 dimes and 22 nickels?” when given to a small group of students extends their thinking, pushes them to persevere and try multiple strategies, to engage in math discourse and to celebrate together their effort to reach an outcome. “The classroom erupts into a working buzz, heads are together, brows furrowed and eyes lit with ideas. It’s a very exciting place to be! We are growing mathematical thinkers, a step above simply solving computational problems at top speed,” Barr said.
Standards for Mathematical Practice STANDARD 1: Make sense of problems and persevere in solving them. Students can understand the problem, make a plan, and solve without giving up. STANDARD 2: Reason abstractly and quantitatively. Students apply what they know about math and about number in different ways. They can look at a problem and represent it mathematically and they can see a math equation and identify a problem it represents. STANDARD 3: Construct viable arguments and critique the reasoning of others. Students can explain their thinking and can construct questions that help
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Lawrence Public Schools Newsletter
them understand others. STANDARD 4: Model with mathematics. Students use and experience math in all aspects of life. STANDARD 5: Use appropriate tools strategically. Students select math appropriate tools, such as ruler, calculator or math manipulative, to best support their process. STANDARD 6: Attend to precision. Students are precise with their mathematical language, work deliberately and evaluate their solutions. STANDARD 7: Look for and make use of structure. Students use previous knowledge and
understanding when solving math problems. STANDARD 8: Look for and express regularity in repeated reasoning. Students look for rules and patterns, and can generalize their thinking to solve related types of math problems. “Our focus on the math standards at the secondary level has brought about changes for teachers as well as students. When we plan together, we are more focused on the manner in which we teach content to students, so we can better facilitate the development of their reasoning and problem solving skills,” said Kathy Wagner, Lawrence Free State High School math teacher.
MATHEMATICS
Nurturing K-5 Mathematicians By Philip Thies (K-5) and Danira Flores (6-12), Teachers on Special Assignment – Mathematics For many, the subject of mathematics instantly causes nervousness or anxiety. When adults reflect on the classroom math experiences they may have had, they think about completing problems based on speed, concepts that were difficult to relate to or maybe even being embarrassed when their logic for solving a problem didn’t match the way it was being taught. These feelings or frustrations may impact the way parents support their children with math. Parents’ past experiences don’t need to undermine their ability to support their children in math. Parents are in integral piece of the puzzle when it comes to supporting students’ math skill building. Math is not a concept only learned in school. Partnerships among parents and teachers must be formed so that math is continually present and experienced throughout students’ daily lives. Jo Boaler, professor of mathematics and author of “Mathematical Mindsets,� and Carol Dweck,
professor of psychology and author of “Mindset: The New Psychology of Success,â€? recently shared tips for parents when helping with math at home: • Encourage children to play math puzzles and games. Those that include dice especially help build numeracy and logic skills. • Always be encouraging. Instead of telling children they are wrong find the logic in their thinking. Even if their “answerâ€? may be incorrect, focus on the process, logic and perseverance they modeled when solving it. • Disassociate math with speed. It is not important to work quickly, particularly in the younger years. Forcing children to work quickly on math is the leading cause of math anxiety for children, especially girls. • Avoid sharing with your children the idea that you were bad at math in school or you disliked it, especially if you are a mother. Researchers
found that when mothers shared negative ideas about math with their daughters, their daughters’ achievement declined. • Encourage number sense. What separates high and low achievers in elementary school is number sense or having an idea of the size of numbers and being able to separate and put numbers together flexibly. • Perhaps most important of all, encourage a growth mindset. This is the idea that ability and smartness change as you work more and learn more. When children have a growth mindset, they do well with challenges and do better in school overall. These six ideas will enrich the partnership between parents and teachers, while enhancing math experiences for children. By working in partnership, parents and teachers can help students grow to their fullest potential in mathematics.
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07
KANSAS ASSESSMENTS
UNDERSTANDING
The 2015 student test score report Last spring marked the first time Kansas students were assessed in English language arts and mathematics using the new Kansas College and Career Ready Academic Assessment. Developed by the Center for Educational Testing and Evaluation at the University of Kansas, it fully aligns to the Kansas College and Career Ready Standards. Kansas Assessment Program tests also align to Kansas’ content standards, which help educators and policymakers evaluate student learning and meet federal and state accountability requirements.
TEST PURPOSE These student scores can be used to: • Understand your child’s test results level as defined by the state of Kansas in English language arts and mathematics • Compare your child’s performance to other students in the school, district and state • Help identify your child’s relative strengths and limitations
TEST COMPONENTS For 2015, all students in grades 3-8 and grade 10 took untimed computerized assessments in English language arts and mathematics. The ELA assessment contained reading and writing sections, including a multidisciplinary performance task that required students to read, take notes and then write a response. Grades 4 and 7 also took a science assessment, and grades 6-8 participated in a required field test for history, social studies and government.
TEST FORMAT Unlike previous assessments, this computerized test employs technology-enhanced items that require students to do more than pick the right answer from a list. For example, students were required to order items, create categories, label areas, plot graphs and select multiple responses.
Also different is the use of scaled scores based on analysis of a large number of scores for the same test using expert committee-based decisions and mathematical formulas. With scaled scores, it doesn’t matter what version of an assessment a student took because the scores would be similar. To obtain a scale score, the total number of score points attained by a student on a test is converted to a scale score, which looks different but still means the same. For instance, the fraction ¼ means the same when converted to the decimal .25. Kansas’ weighted scaled scores range from 220, the lowest, to 380, the highest score. Scaled scores create a measurement that isn’t attached to one type of test. That makes it easier to identify a student’s performance level as well as strengths and weaknesses across tested subjects. While scale scores allow consistent reporting and score comparison, they do so only within a grade and content area. Thank you for supporting your student’s participation in the Kansas Assessment Program. In Kansas, we believe in the need for high quality, meaningful assessments that are aligned to college and career ready academic standards and that challenge students to demonstrate the depths of their knowledge. The assessment your student took last spring did just that. While assessments should not be viewed as the “end all, be all,” they do provide a critical piece of information that helps to inform instruction as well as provide consistent benchmarking to ensure students are prepared for whatever path they choose to pursue after graduation. State assessments provide an opportunity for teachers, parents and students alike to check in on the student’s progress. Your student may have commented that this new assessment was more difficult than in previous years, and they would be right. Kansas adopted more rigorous academic standards in
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Lawrence Public Schools Newsletter
2010, and last spring’s assessment was the first time students were asked to demonstrate their mastery of skills such as critical thinking. When you receive your student’s scores, it is important to remember they cannot be compared to your student’s performance in previous years. Doing so would be like comparing apples to oranges – there simply is no comparison. Kansas schools are among the best in the nation, and we all share in the responsibility of and commitment to ensuring the success of your student. Thank you for your continued support of Kansas education and for being the most important champion for your student’s education success. Sincerely, Dr. Randy Watson Kansas Commissioner of Education
HOW CAN STUDENTS IMPROVE THEIR STATE ASSESSMENT SCORE? • Have your child write lists, • Talk with the classroom teacher about ways to letters and other enjoyable develop your child’s critical or purposeful tasks. thinking skills. • Solve math problems with • Ask your child questions that your child using everyday materials such as road trip require explanations and can’t be answered with a maps, sporting events or recipes. single word. • Establish time for your child • Have your child explain to to read and provide suitable you how she or he solves reading materials. math problems.
Because of the dramatic assessment format change as well as the increased rigor, results cannot be compared to previous assessments. The 2015 results will serve as a benchmark to measure future progress.
KANSAS ASSESSMENTS STUDENT TEST SCORE REPORT
grade-level expectations and is on track for college or the workplace. At the 2015 September State Board of Education meeting, members approved these cut scores and four performance levels. Skills listed indicate capabilities for the student’s achievement level within the content level. The Kansas Assessment Program builds on Kansas standards by focusing on broader skills and strategies rather than separate skills. This underlying framework organizes Kansas standards into “claims,” which are broad statements about student mastery of standards (“evidence”).
CLAIMS TARGETS STANDARDS
Student name, identification number and test year are here. This area provides grade level, content area assessed, school and district. The arrow points to the student’s score. Note the thicker line that divides standards-achieved levels (3, 4) from those that have not (1, 2). The four regions differ in size because score ranges for performance levels (maximum score possible for the performance level minus minimum score possible for the performance level) are not equal. Additional graphs show how this student compares to other students in the school, district and state.
A small percentage of students also may have the notification “exited” (student was not enrolled in the reporting school at year end), “incomplete” (student did not complete all sections of assessment) or “data not shown to protect student privacy” (total number of students by grade and content area was too small to report fairly and accurately). The score range possible within each achievement level was determined by more than 150 Kansas educators who gathered in the summer to recommend “cut scores,” which categorize students based on their state assessment performance last spring. Differing for each grade and content area, the four performance levels are Level 1, a student is below grade level; Level 2, a student is at grade level, but not on track for college or career readiness; Level 3, a student is at grade level and on track for college or career readiness; and Level 4, a student exceeds
EVIDENCE
Claim scores are based on different numbers of test items. Generally, claim scores with more items will have smaller standard error of measurement. If the number of items for a claim is too small, that claim can’t be reliably reported on its own. So it may be combined into other claims and will contribute to the total score in a content area. Included on the Kansas State Department of Education website are academic content standards and contact information. The Kansas Assessment Program website offers practice tests, news items and a Frequently Asked Questions section.
Detailed information about Kansas standards can be found at the Kansas Assessment Program website at http://www.ksassessments.org/. October 2015
09
SCIENCE
Lawrence Students Question, Explore and Discuss Science
By Lizette Burks, Teacher on Special Assignment – K-12 Science
they are applying it to their future. What they learn now will help them throughout their lives and could lead them in the direction of a career that may not even exist today,” said Roberts
Lawrence Public Schools’ students, teachers and support staff are learning, growing and working together to provide a new vision for science education and to raise student achievement. “Instead of reading a textbook, my students last year investigated the increasing number of earthquakes in Kansas using a combination of science websites and news reports. This was a hot topic in the news. As students studied this topic, they not only learned about the science of earthquakes, but made cross-curriculum connections to other disciplines, including social studies, math and language arts,” Anna Busby said of the change in her classroom practice with the adoption of Kansas College and Career Ready Standards in science. Busby teaches science at South Middle School. “My students continued to report learning more about the connection between fracking and earthquake activity in Kansas throughout the year and were eager to discuss their new evidence and conclusions, even after we had finished our earthquake unit. Exploring, investigating and evaluating a local issue is a great way to motivate and inspire students to learn,” Busby said. 10
Lawrence Public Schools Newsletter
Science and science education leaders from across the United States developed the KCCRS for science. After the Kansas State Board of Education adopted them in 2013, the Lawrence Public Schools began implementation. In a recent publication “NGSS Parent Q & A,” the National Science Teachers Association describes that the new standards “encourage students to learn the processes of science in a deep, meaningful way through firsthand investigative experiences, instead of just memorizing facts for a test… [t] his scientific way of thinking will ensure that the concepts children learn in school will stay with them not just for a day, a week, or a year-but for a lifetime.” “My teaching has changed into more studentled investigations. I take a step back and without giving them step-by-step directions I watch my students create theories, experiment and feel successful,” said Melissa Roberts, Schwegler Elementary fifth grade teacher. “The engineering and scientific practices help my class understand how these can transfer into all of their core classes. My students have learned science throughout all of their education, but now
KANSAS COLLEGE AND CAREER READY STANDARDS FOR SCIENCE The new standards promote students to experience science in a deep and meaningful way by integrating three dimensions of learning: • Science Disciplinary Core Ideas (the content, for example, physics) • Major Practices (conducting science in an authentic context, for example, developing and using models); and • Crosscutting Concepts (science ideas that permeate all the sciences, such as cause and effect) Engineering and technology principles also are incorporated at every grade level. HOW WILL THIS NEW SHIFT IN SCIENCE EDUCATION CHANGE THE SCIENCE CLASSROOM? • Scientific exploration and experimentation will be emphasized. • Students will be encouraged to ask more questions, exploring and discussing possible solutions. • Instruction will mirror authentic science practices, such as using argumentation and being fully active in the learning process. “The new science standards focus on students learning ways of thinking rather than learning only facts. There is an emphasis on inquiry labs and argumentation. In my classroom, I focus on teaching students how to set up an experiment and how to make an argument based on evidence. We learn about ‘real-life’ applications of the content and how to connect the content within our class to other classes,” said Mattithyah Bergersen, Lawrence Free State High science teacher.
SOCIAL STUDIES
Social Studies: Preparing Informed, Thoughtful and Engaged Citizens By Kristl Taylor, Teacher on Special Assignment – K-12 Social Studies
The Kansas Standards for History, Government and Social Studies support college, career and citizenship outcomes for student learning. They go beyond simple recitation of foundational information and instead encourage the application of that information in authentic and realistic situations. The standards reflect the Kansas College and Career Ready Standards for English/Language Arts and for Literacy in History/Social Studies, Science and Technical Subjects, and current research in discipline-specific best practices. During the last couple of years, educators in the Lawrence Public Schools have been unraveling the new standards and developing a plan for full implementation. “It is exciting to see kids get more involved in their social studies education through approaches like the College, Career and Civic Life Framework. Using an inquiry-based approach allows students to take ownership of their education and how they communicate what they have learned,â€? said Phil Mitchell, Lawrence Free State High Social Studies Department chairman. MISSION STATEMENT: The Kansas Standards for History, Government and Social Studies prepare students to be informed, thoughtful, engaged citizens as they enrich their communities, state, nation, world and themselves. • An informed citizen possesses the knowledge needed to understand contemporary political, economic and social issues.
• A thoughtful citizen applies higher order thinking skills to make connections between the past, present and future in order to understand, anticipate, respond to and solve problems. • An engaged citizen collaborates, contributes, compromises and participates as an active member of a community. KANSAS HISTORY, GOVERNMENT AND SOCIAL STUDIES STANDARDS, K-12: 1. Choices have consequences. 2. Individuals have rights and responsibilities. 3. Societies are shaped by beliefs, ideas and diversity. 4. Societies experience continuity and change over time. 5. Relationships between people, places, ideas and environment are dynamic. “Finding new ways to incorporate technology also allows us to give students access to diverse and divergent perspectives as they investigate social studies content,â€? said Tracy Murray, Lawrence High School Social Studies Department chairperson. “We are finding ways to give students more choice in regards to how they want to approach the content. Using the new standards creates exciting opportunities for both students and teachers to increase their creativity, while examining the content in more meaningful and in-depth ways,â€? said Murray.
“Using an inquiry-based approach allows students to take ownership of their education and how they communicate what they have learned.� — Phil Mitchell, Lawrence Free State High Social Studies Department chairman.
 � October 2015
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EQUITY
Intentionality is Key to Equity Transformation Process
By Danica Moore, Teacher on Special Assignment – Equity
Lawrence Public Schools celebrate many accomplishments made during the past six years toward the district’s Equity Goal. The district has increased graduation rates and narrowed achievement gaps. More than 1,300 employees and school partners have participated in Beyond Diversity training in order to learn a shared protocol for engaging school communities in courageous conversations about race. The District Equity Leadership Team, along with Equity Teams at each school, guide these conversations. The district has created a staff of color support group and middle and high school student leadership groups to further these conversations. Two teachers have completed affiliate training in order to provide on-site leadership for continued development. This year the district committed to a new level of engagement involving equity training by sharing the two-day Beyond Diversity seminar with all new teachers, as part of staff induction week activities. Approximately 75 new teachers participated in this foundational equity training prior to the start of the school year. The Teaching and Learning Division and the Human Resources Department will continue to collaborate to ensure all new employees have an opportunity to participate.
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Lawrence Public Schools Newsletter
“It’s one thing to acknowledge the disparity, but it’s another thing to tackle the ‘how’ as an educator. I think Beyond Diversity starts to open the door in providing a lens to tackle the ‘how,’” said Jennifer Bessolo, South Middle School principal. “My staff came in fired up and ready to act. I had at least five new teachers ask, ‘What can I do to be involved?’ This is refreshing to hear as an administrator.” As the district looks to further its work toward its Equity goal, moving forward with intentionality, without settling for incremental change, will be its challenge. Employees have already begun asking the question, “What’s next?” Danica Moore, Teacher on Special Assignment Equity, Jennifer Attocknie, Native American Student Services coordinator, and Cara Smith, learning coach, collaborated last fall to create a professional development experience for teaching staff around the creation of a rubric to evaluate resources and teaching materials for cultural relevancy. Smith brought this idea back after attending a reading conference in New Orleans and a session focused on using rubrics to evaluate gender equity in texts. ”When I heard the idea of searching for gender biases in teaching resources, I wondered if there was a way to screen for racial biases and stereotypes in our district,” Smith said.
Last fall, more than 30 teachers gathered to identify misrepresentations and biases that occur in school materials. Staff created a rubric to use to gather multiple perspectives before reviewing materials as teaching tools. School Equity Teams were trained to use the rubric and now have the task of training entire building faculties to utilize this rubric in their lesson planning and material selection. “There are many books and materials that must be taught, but the rubric provides a way for teachers to have meaningful conversations with students to really break down stereotypes and disprove them. This is the start!” said Smith. The district now utilizes this tool as part of its curriculum adoption process. This year all school Equity Teams will train teachers and educational support staff to apply the rubric. Staff look forward to the dialogue and extensive lessons that teachers will be able to create due to their increased awareness. Providing students with multiple perspectives and seeking these out as educators is a true sign of commitment to the work of the district. It is not enough to say we are training teachers, it is more empowering to see how we are guiding individuals to impact student learning.
SOCIAL SKILLS
“Connect with Kids” Promotes Behavioral Health and Wellness By Leah Wisdom, Student Services Coordinator In addition to academic instruction and support, Lawrence Public Schools are committed to providing students proactive behavior and social skills instruction and support. “Social development is an integral part of adolescence and preteen maturation. The Connect with Kids Curriculum and time allotted during middle school Advisory period provides us with an opportunity to not only engage students around meaningful, practical issues our students face, but also to provide appropriate strategies and decision making skills they can apply in daily situations. It’s about being proactive and getting out in front of our students’ needs,” said Jennifer Bessolo, South Middle School principal. Teams of teachers, staff, parents, students and administrators from each middle and high school reviewed a
variety of social skills curricula and chose Connect with Kids. Through national studies by the Institute of Educational Sciences, including one conducted in the Kansas City, Kansas Public Schools, Connect with Kids was found to have positive effects on middle and high school students’ behavior. The U.S. Department of Education designated the program an “Effective Producer.” The review teams were excited for the opportunity to bring an award-winning and evidence-based program to Lawrence Public Schools. They especially liked the social skills curriculum’s multimedia programming and the potential for digital learning. “It’s a great opportunity for students to build skills in communication, interpersonal relationships and working with others—skills that will be important to them throughout their
lives,” said Marc Conover, South Middle School counselor. “Connect with Kids also includes resources and lessons for parents and teachers. I like that parents will be able to make use of specific videos and lessons to address their needs.” Emphasizing core character values, Connect with Kids promotes positive behavior and pro-social attitudes designed to improve students’ behavior, health and wellness. The Connect with Kids education network produces and provides documentary-style videos and evidence-based curriculum focusing on discussion and dialogue around social wellness. Lesson plans for each video include summaries of the lesson, discussion questions and student games and activities. As part of the Lawrence school district’s implementation of Connect with Kids,
student representatives from each middle and high school previewed many of the videos and provided positive feedback about having the chance to discuss social wellness issues at school. “The Connect with Kids program is a great resource for teachers to address a wide range of issues that may affect teenagers in our building – attendance, bullying, life skills, technology and drug and alcohol prevention, to name a few. The short documentary-style videos of teenagers dealing with everyday issues are a great way for teachers to help students build strengths beyond academic aptitude,” said Bill DeWitt, Lawrence High assistant principal. “Part of the educational process needs to focus on the social and emotional well-being of our students. I see Connect with Kids as a valuable resource for supporting those student needs at our school.”
EARLY CHILDHOOD SCREENINGS
Early Childhood Special Education Services
By Laura Basham, Assistant Director of Special Education Children develop differently and at their own pace. While the range of what’s “normal” in terms of child development is broad, it’s not uncommon for parents to become concerned when their children don’t seem to be developing at similar rates as other children of the same age. When looking at a child’s educational developments, five areas are considered: • Cognitive development • Physical development, including vision and hearing • Communication • Social or emotional development • Adaptive development Early intervention is critical for children who have developmental delays. Parents concerned about a child’s development should contact the child’s pediatrician. Lawrence Public Schools provide screenings for children to identify possible suspected educational disabilities or developmental delays. Lawrence Public Schools provide early childhood programs for children ages 3-5 (if not eligible for kindergarten)
who meet the eligibility requirements for special education services. School staff and parents work together to determine how to best to meet a child’s needs. Early childhood special education service delivery models for children 3-5 (not kindergarten eligible) include: • Appointment services • Community-based services (within Lawrence school district boundaries) • Early childhood special education/ Peer Model classrooms • Early childhood special education classroom Eligibility for services is determined through the screening and evaluation process for special education. How and where special education services are provided will depend on the unique educational needs and circumstances of each child. Lawrence Public Schools strive to serve students in their Least Restrictive Environment to the maximum extent appropriate. School staff works closely with parents and outside agencies throughout this process.
SCREENINGS Monthly screenings are held throughout the school year. During these screenings, the school team gathers information from parents and children and makes recommendations about next steps. During screenings, children will spend time with early childhood professionals. They will be engaged in games and play activities that allow district professionals to observe developmental areas. School staff focuses on making this experience fun and engaging for children while creating opportunities to identify any possible development concerns. Information from interviews, observations as well as standardized measures are used during each screening. Vision and hearing are also screened for each child. Screening appointments typically last about 35 minutes, although they can take more or less time depending on the unique needs of the child. Depending on information provided by parents on the screening day and what the education professionals
observe, the screening team will make a recommendation. Possible recommendations may include: • No recommendations – skills appear within age-appropriate limits at this time, • Further evaluation - with parent permission, professional staff would like to conduct a more formal evaluation in one or more developmental areas, • More information needed - staff would like to visit with the parent and observe the child in another setting, to determine next steps. Contact Kennedy Elementary School, 785-832-5760, for further information about developmental screenings or to request a screening appointment for children ages 3-5 (not kindergarten eligible). Tiny-K of Douglas County serves eligible children ages 0-2 years. Families may contact Tiny-K at 785-843-3059 for more information.
October 2015
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BOND ISSUE UPDATE
Left photo: Kennedy Elementary’s new safe entry; Center photo: construction on an addition at Woodlawn Elementary of two classrooms, a learning pocket, a music room and an art room. The addition will double as a storm shelter; Right photo: work begins on Lawrence High’s black box theater.
Thanks to voter approval on April 2, 2013, of a $92.5 million bond issue, Lawrence Public Schools continue to work to improve facilities, enhance technology and expand career and technical educational opportunities for students. Bond projects at each school are in various stages of design development, construction and completion. Eleven projects are substantially complete (marked with an * below). Four projects are scheduled to be completed around the first of the calendar year and the remaining six projects will begin later this school year. PACKAGE #1 – Gould Evans Architects, McCownGordon Construction, Smith &
Boucher Engineers *Langston Hughes Elementary • Project completed. *Cordley Elementary • Building construction complete. Site work continues into the fall season. *Hillcrest Elementary • Building construction complete. Site work continues into the fall season. • Ryan Gray Playground improvements will occur next spring/summer. Sunset Hill Elementary • In- progress and on schedule with target date for completion of June 2016. • Students attending school at East
Heights August 2015 – May 2016. Pinckney Elementary • Board approval of construction bids planned for February 2016. • Students will attend school at East Heights August 2016 - May 2017. • Construction to begin in June 2016, with target date for completion of July 2017. PACKAGE #2 – Sabatini & Hollis & Miller Architects; Nabholz Construction; Henderson Engineers *Free State High • Building construction complete. Site work continues into the fall season. Lawrence High • Phase I of building construction
Bond Construction Timeline PACKAGE NUMBER/D&C TEAMS/SCHOOLS
2015 OCT
NOV
DESIGN TO BID TO CONSTRUCTION MOBILIZATION
SUBSTANTIAL COMPLETION & FULL OCCUPANCY
2016 DEC
JAN
#1 - GOULD EVANS/SMITH & BOUCHER/MCCOWNGORDON Sunset Hill Elementary Pinckney Elementary #2 - SABATINI - HOLLIS & MILLER/HENDERSON/NABHOLZ Kennedy Elementary Schwegler Elementary Deerfield Elementary Lawrence High #3-A - BG/LST/MCCOWNGORDON Sunflower Elementary Broken Arrow Elementary Prairie Park Elementary #4-B - GOULD EVANS/SMITH & BOUCHER/AB BRADLEY Woodlawn Elementary
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COLOR KEY
(includes mechanical, electrical, plumbing improvements) complete. • Phase II of the project (addition of a black box theater, new safe entry and cafeteria expansion) in progress. • Target date for substantial completion is February 2016. • Additional improvements planned for food service dock and site improvements, completion in July 2016. Kennedy Elementary • Building construction of Phase I and II (classroom and office addition, interior remodeling of classrooms) complete. • Phase III construction (includes
Lawrence Public Schools Newsletter
FEB
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2017 AUG
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BOND ISSUE UPDATE courtyard infill and classroom remodel) in process with completion in January 2016. Deerfield Elementary • Board approval of construction bids in October 2015. • Construction to begin in January 2016, with target date for completion of December 2016. Schwegler Elementary • Board approval of construction bids in October 2015. • Construction to begin in January 2016, with target date for completion of August 2016. PACKAGE #3A – BG Architects; McCownGordon Construction; LST Engineers *Quail Run Elementary • Building construction complete. Broken Arrow Elementary • Board approval of construction bids in February 2016. • Construction to begin in June 2016, with target date for completion of August 2016. Prairie Park Elementary • Board approval of construction bids in February 2016. • Construction to begin in June 2016, with target date for completion of August 2016. Sunflower Elementary • Board approval of construction bids in February 2016. • Construction to begin in June 2016, with target date for completion of November 2016.
PACKAGE #3B – BG Architects; B.A. Green Construction; LST Engineers *Liberty Memorial Central Middle School • Building construction complete. *South Middle School • Building construction complete. *Southwest Middle School • Building construction complete. *West Middle School • Building construction complete. PACKAGE #4A – Gould Evans Architects, Combes Construction, Smith & Boucher Engineers *New York Elementary • Building construction complete. Site work continues into the fall season. PACKAGE #4B – Gould Evans Architects, A.B. Bradley Construction, Smith & Boucher Engineers Woodlawn Elementary • Phase I of building construction (includes remodeled office area, classrooms, kitchen and new elevator) complete. • Phase II construction of classroom addition has a target completion date of December 2015. PACKAGE #5 - Sabatini & Momenta Architects; Nabholz Construction; Henderson Engineers *Lawrence College & Career Center • Building construction complete. Site work continues through the fall season.
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stmary.edu/Lawrence
Two Weeks in the Life of the Lawrence Public Schools’ IT Department
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Hourly employees clocked 1076 hours in 2 weeks
90
Projectors installed assisted by KCAV
130
Blended Learning classrooms set up
1000
Macbooks deployed
260
Mac Mini desktops set up in classrooms
Wi Fi 800
iPads deployed
20
IT closets installed
16
145
Apple TVs installed
42
Switches configured
Lawrence Public Schools Newsletter
35
Large wall mounted monitors installed
Set up College & Career Center technology and wireless access
225
Wireless access points installed
Thank you for your patience. The IT Department wishes you the best school year yet!
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Security cameras installed
20152016 SCHOOL YEAR