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THURSDAY • OCTOBER 29 • 2015
Black Hills: Gas bills likely down this winter
CLINTON WINS 2015 DOLE PRIZE Limited tickets free for Nov. 23 event with former president By Sara Shepherd
F
Twitter: @saramarieshep
ormer U.S. President Bill Clinton is the winner of the 2015 Dole Leadership Prize, bestowed annually by the Robert J. Dole Institute of Politics at Kansas University. Clinton is scheduled to come to campus to accept the award at 1 p.m. Nov. 23 at the Lied Center. The day’s program also will be broadcast live online at doleinstitute. org.
Dole Institute director Bill Lacy said several of Clinton’s traits made him a worthy recipient of the prize. “President Clinton’s presidency included strong leadership and bipartisanship,” Lacy said. “Much of his work as president — including his balancing of the budget and efforts to reach across the aisle — mirrors the mission of the Dole Institute and the values of Senator Dole.” Please see CLINTON, page 2A
Past recipients 2014: John D. Kemp, president and CEO of The Viscardi Center 2013: Nelson Mandela, former President of South Africa 2012: Wounded Warrior Project 2011: Viktor Yushchenko, former President of Ukraine 2010: World War II Women Airforce Service Pilots 2009: Donna Shalala, former Health and Human Services Secretary 2008: George H.W. Bush, 41st President of the United States 2007: John Lewis, Congressman and Civil Rights activist 2006: Howard Baker, U.S. Senator 2005: Lech Walesa, former President of Poland 2004: George McGovern, U.S. Senator 2003: Rudy Giuliani, former mayor of New York City
Strong supply, low demand could help area consumers By Nikki Wentling Twitter: @NikkiWentling
“
Though it’s ultiForecasted mately up to winter weather, normal prices for the to mild forecasts 2015-2016 combined with an adequate supply of winter season natural gas mean are significantly Lawrence residents lower than last could see natural gas bills that are lower year.” than last winter, Black Hills Energy — Monique Pope, manager representatives indi- of external affairs for cated Wednesday. Black Hills Energy During a luncheon with city officials, Monique Pope, manager of external affairs for Black Hills Energy — the largest natural gas provider in Lawrence — said the company has “an overabundant supply of natural gas heading into the winter season.” The gas is also cheaper. The New York Mercantile Exchange forecasts natural gas prices to be about 11 percent lower than last winter. Pope presented data showing commodity prices in the midcontinent region were about $3.74 per Dth (dekatherm) last winter, and they’re forecasted to be $2.86 per Dth this winter.
— Source: Dole Institute of Politics, doleinstitute.org
Please see GAS, page 2A
Former U.S. Sen. Bob Dole, left, and former President Bill Clinton show off their Kansas University men's basketball jerseys during Clinton's visit to KU to deliver the inaugural Dole Lecture in May 2004. Clinton has been selected as the winner of the 2015 Dole Leadership Prize.
ARTS CORRIDOR
Truck route changes Ninth Street planning ‘Recreational path’ among proposed wider lane options
Journal-World File Photo
By Nikki Wentling Twitter: @NikkiWentling
The East Ninth Street Citizens Advisory Committee talked about different options Wednesday for how East Ninth Street, the proposed arts corridor, could be reconfigured. When getting feedback from community groups on a conceptual design, it was brought up that East Ninth Street is designated as a truck starting salaries for graduthe state, about $1,200 ates of four-year universimore than KU’s. Of course, delivery route, said Josh Shelton with el dorado inc., which ties in Kansas. They Baker’s average CITY is contracted with the city for COMMISSION found graduates at tuition was about Inside: A closer Kansas State Uni$15,000 higher than the East Ninth Project design. look at how KU Shelton asked the advisory committee versity topped the KU’s, too. ranks in the whether they should move the truck route list, while Kansas That, however, SmartAsset to another street or if the current design University graduwasn’t the case at survey. 2A ates finished sixth, K-State. The study should be changed to allow for East Ninth about $3,100 behind. found that K-State Street to remain a truck route. After Mayor Mike Amyx voiced opposiKU did not quite finish first students pay less in tution to changing the route, the discussion in Douglas County in terms ition and receive a greater turned to change the current plan. of top starting salaries for percentage of their tuition “We’re going to create another whole set graduates. Baker University in scholarships and grants of problems if we go moving a truck route,” in Baldwin City finished than KU students. with the third-highest Please see NINTH, page 8A Please see COLLEGES, page 2A starting salary figure in
Survey ranks KU 6th in starting salary among Kansas colleges
P
erhaps you too stayed up later than you intended Monday night watching a magic show that was billed as a baseball game. Perhaps your alarm clock also did not survive the beating it took Tuesday morning from the miniature Alex Gordon bat that you slept with, and now you too are looking for a new job. If so, a Kansas State degree may be a bit more helpful to you than a KU degree, according to one new survey.
Town Talk
Chad Lawhorn clawhorn@ljworld.com
The folks at the financial website SmartAsset have compiled a list of average
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LAWRENCE • STATE
DEATHS Journal-World obituary policy: For information about running obituaries, call 8327151. Obituaries run as submitted by funeral homes or the families of the deceased.
Stan Rood of Tonganoxie, passed 10/24/15. Services pending. Born 12/16/47. Memorial contributions to St. Jude’s or the MS Society.
Ann G. SAlome 85, died 10/27/2015. Funeral Service at 1 P.M., Monday, 11/2/2015, Downing & Lahey East Mortuary, Wichita, KS.
SmartAsset Kansas college survey Rank 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
School Avg. salary K-State $45,200 KU $42,100 Pittsburg State $39,100 Emporia State $37,200 Wichita State $43,600 Washburn $42,300 Baker $43,300 MidAmerica Naz. $43,100 Friends $40,800 Southwestern $40,500
A Celebration of Life for Robert Eugene McCabria, 89, Eudora, will be at 11:30 a.m. on Saturday, October 31st at St. Paul United Church of Christ in Eudora. A luncheon will follow in the basement of the church. Bob died Wednesday, October 28th at Medicaloges Eudora. Bob was born on October 22, 1926 in Eudora and lived there for 89 years. He spent his lifetime farming and maintaining a strong interest in the world of agriculture and farming. He was one of the first in Douglas County to move to mechanized farm equipment and won a conservation award in the 1970s for his terracing efforts. He was a lifelong member of St. Paul United Church of Christ. He married Cherry Koch on July 20, 1952 at St. Paul. He is survived by his wife, Cherry, sons
Rory and Russ McCabria, daughter-in-law Cheryl McCabria, and daughter Robyn Kelso and sonin-law Mike Kelso; five grandchildren, Cheyenne, Seonna and Sierra McCabria, and Matthew and Mason Kelso. He was preceded in death by his brother, Jack McCabria and parents, Lydia and Eugene McCabria. In lieu of flowers memorials are suggested to Bethesda Lutheran Homes, Building 3, in care of the funeral home, Warren-McElwain Mortuary Eudora Chapel, 1003 John L Williams Dr, Eudora, KS, 66025. Online condolences may be sent to www. warrenmcelwain.com. Please sign this guestbook at Obituaries. LJWorld.com.
Gas
National storage levels by Sept. 4 of this year were 17 percent above last year and 4 percent above the five-year average, according to data presented Wednesday. Black Hills Energy uses winter weather forecasts from resources such as the Farmer’s Almanac, AccuWeather and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in deciding the supply of natural gas it purchases to get through the winter season. The Farmer’s Almanac predicts the central U.S. will see “near-normal winter temperatures,” while AccuWeather forecasts occasional mild days for the area. “Again, we always provide the disclaimer that long-range forecasts are not
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A
Estimated prices for consumers were not discussed. “Forecasted prices for the 2015-2016 winter season are significantly lower than last year,” Pope said. “So, that’s encouraging for customers.” Pope said a downward trend in natural gas prices is the result of steady production levels and demand. Last year, Black Hills Energy leaders told city officials there would be a slight increase in natural gas prices as natural gas supplies nationwide were still trying to catch up from heavy usage in the cold 2013 winter season.
Tuition $8,047 $9,678 $5,494 $5,272 $6,442 $5,486 $24,550 $21,500 $22,500 $22,756
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EDITORS
— Source: SmartAsset
Colleges CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A
They do have to wear purple, though, which has to be factored into this equation somewhere. KU fared well, however, in the overall ranking that SmartAsset puts together on universities in the state. It finished second in the “Best Value” category of all schools ranked in the state. Kansas State finished first. Pittsburg State, Emporia State and Wichita State rounded out the top five. Baker finished seventh. It is always interesting to look at how KU stacks up against other colleges, because I can assure you prospective students are looking at such issues. It also is important, though, to keep the numbers in perspective. For example, average starting salaries aren’t necessarily a reflection of what the market thinks of the quality of the degrees being awarded by KU. Instead, it may be more of a reflection of the degree mix of a university. A university that awards a lot more English degrees probably will have a lower starting salary than a university that awards a lot of engineering degrees. It doesn’t have anything to do with the quality of degree. Instead, it’s just a supply and demand thing. America needs lots of engineers, but a quick look at Twitter confirms we have abandoned English as
RobeRt eugene MccabRia
L awrence J ournal -W orld
Clinton CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A
KU Chancellor Bernadette Gray-Little said in the news release that hearing directly from the former president would be “a special experience for our students and a special moment for our university.” The Nov. 23 event is free and open to the public, though a limited number of tickets are available. Tickets will be available beginning 11 a.m. Nov. 9 through the Lied Center box office, 1600 Stewart Drive. Individuals must claim their tickets in person at the box office, and tickets are limited to two per person. They are reserved seating. For KU students, a total of 500 tickets will be reserved through the Student Union Activities office and will be available at 9 a.m. Nov. 9. Students must present a valid KU ID and claim their tickets in person at reliable — they’re based on the best valuable information at the time of the forecast,” Pope said. “A caveat is, we can never predict that there’s going to be a cold spike, which obviously happens, and usage goes up. Prices and volatility are subject to that.” Black Hills Energy representatives also told city officials about the company’s recent acquisition of SourceGas, which brings in about 425,000 customers in five states.
Quonset hut Chuck Hoag, Lawrence operation manager with Black Hills Energy, gave a brief update on the company’s old Quonset hut in East Lawrence. The Journal-World reported in April that the
a language. But the numbers for KU are a little surprising, given that KU has the only medical school in the state. Plus, we have engineering, law, pharmacy and several other high-paying degrees at the university. (To be fair, I can’t tell from the study whether the average starting salary is for all degrees or only undergraduate degrees.) We do have a very large liberal arts school, but so do some of the others that are ahead of KU on the list. The study looks at a host of other statistics. It ranks tuition numbers, student living costs, the average amount of scholarships and grants and other statistics. The figures come from a 2013 report from the National Center for Educational Statistics, and a 2014 report from Payscale, a private company that says it tracks about 54 million individual salaries across the country. I also did a little digging in SmartAsset’s study to see how KU stacked up with the other schools in the Big 12 that were ranked. The value rating is a subjective measure that SmartAsset puts together to measure the overall financial picture of the school. A score of 100 is best. Here’s a look at those numbers: l University of Texas: $50,400 salary; $9,790 tuition; $15,602 student living costs; value rating 80.6 l Texas Tech: $49,000 salary; $7,517 tuition; $14,505 student living costs; value rating 71.65
l Iowa State: $47,800 salary; $7,726 tuition; $11,194 student living costs; value rating 84.84 l University of Oklahoma: $47,700 salary; $8,706 tuition, $14,584 student living costs; value rating 71.09 l Kansas State University: $45,200 salary; $8,047 tuition; $12,100 student living costs; value rating 70.63 l Oklahoma State: $44,400 salary; $7,442 tuition; $14,160 student living costs; value rating 66.08 l West Virginia: $43,800 salary; $6,090 tuition; $10,230 student living costs; value rating 77.46 l Kansas University: $42,100 salary; $9,678 tuition; $12,584 student living costs; value rating 64.02 When you compile the list that way, it doesn’t look too good for KU. The university has the lowest salary of the Big 12 schools that were ranked (I couldn’t find Baylor or TCU in the study), and it has the second-highest tuition of any of the schools ranked in the conference. You’ll have to make what you will of the study’s “value ranking” — it clearly is subjective — but KU finished last in that category in terms of Big 12 schools. But remember, it finished second in Kansas. SmartAsset apparently doesn’t think Kansas’ higher education strategy is that smart.
the Kansas Union Welcome Center, on level four of the Kansas Union, 1301 Jayhawk Blvd. Student tickets are limited to one per person. Former U.S. Sen. Bob Dole of Kansas, for whom the award is named, said in KU’s news release he was proud Clinton would be honored. “I speak with the president now and then, and we have become friends over the years,” Dole said. “I know the event will attract many students and people from across the Midwest. If I could be there, we could have a lively debate.” Dole was on hand to personally introduce Clinton when the former president spoke at KU in 2004. Clinton came to KU to deliver the inaugural speech in the Dole Lecture Series to about 12,000 people in Allen Fieldhouse. Clinton, the 42nd U.S. president, led the country from 1993 to 2001. After leaving the White House, Clinton established the Clinton Foundation, which works to improve global health, increase
opportunity for girls and women, reduce childhood obesity and preventable diseases, create economic opportunity and growth and help communities address the effects of climate change, according to its website. Clinton also has served as the top United Nations envoy for the Indian Ocean tsunami recovery effort and as the U.N. Special Envoy to Haiti. Clinton’s wife, Hillary Clinton, is the Democratic front-runner in the campaign to become the next president of the United States. The Dole Leadership Prize is awarded to honor an individual or group whose public service leadership inspires others. Previous winners have included Nelson Mandela, the Wounded Warrior Project, former Ukrainian president Viktor Yushchenko and former President George H.W. Bush.
city’s Historic Resources Commission voted against a plan that would allow Black Hills Energy to demolish the building. Hoag said the building is currently being used for storage and as a compressed natural gas fueling station. Black Hills Energy decided it would not appeal the commission’s vote, he said. “At one point we were going to appeal that, and we just thought through the process and thought at this point in time it was best just to hang onto it and utilize it as we had been,” Hoag said. There’s been interest from Lawrence residents about using the hut. Hoag said Black Hills Energy is “always open to what people have to say about other uses for the property.”
— This is an excerpt from Chad Lawhorn’s Town Talk column, which appears daily on LJWorld.com.
— KU and higher ed reporter Sara Shepherd can be reached at sshepherd@ljworld.com or 832-7187.
Chad Lawhorn, managing editor 832-6362, clawhorn@ljworld.com Tom Keegan, sports editor 832-7147, tkeegan@ljworld.com Ann Gardner, editorial page editor 832-7153, agardner@ljworld.com Kathleen Johnson, advertising manager 832-7223, kjohnson@ljworld.com
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BIRTHS Nick and Hannah Carswell, Lawrence, a girl, Wednesday. Charlton and Cheyenne Bartz, Lawrence, a girl, Wednesday. Derek and Beth Maddox, Baldwin City, a boy, Wednesday.
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Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com/local l Thursday, October 29, 2015 l 3A
Officials urge smart shopping for health plans
Big names in business
By Peter Hancock Twitter: @LJWpqhancock
Mike Yoder/Journal-World Photo
RECIPIENTS OF THE 2015 LAWRENCE BUSINESS HALL OF FAME, FROM LEFT: representing Bob Shmalberg (Scotch Fabric Care Services) are his son Jeff, his wife, Jackie, and his son Scott; Joan Golden (US Bank); LaVerne Epp (Bioscience & Technology Business Center); and Steve Glass (LRM Industries). They were inducted into the Lawrence Business Hall of Fame during a gala dinner Wednesday evening at the Kansas University Union Ballroom.
County ‘steps up’ for inmate mental health By Conrad Swanson Twitter: @Conrad_Swanson
Douglas County commissioners on Wednesday reaffirmed their commitment toward reducing the number of seriously mentally ill people in jail. The Douglas County Sheriff’s Office asked commissioners during their weekly meeting to join the national Stepping Up Initiative, which aims to seek treatment alternatives to jail for those classified as seriously mentally ill.
Sheriff’s office details case manager plan
“
(It’s) a lot easier to commit to such a big and important program when you know the people behind it are doing great work.” — County Commissioner Nancy Thellman The proclamation request came in conjunction with the county’s ongoing work for a potential jail expansion and mental health crisis intervention center projects, said Mike Brouwer,
re-entry director for the sheriff’s office. “I’m so grateful for all the work you’ve done,” County Commissioner Nancy Thellman said to Douglas County Sheriff Ken McGovern. “You
have our commitment, and, boy, it’s a lot easier to commit to such a big and important program when you know the people behind it are doing great work.” After the commissioners’ proclamation, McGovern spoke to them about a nearly $200,000 grant the sheriff’s office was awarded by the Bureau of Justice Assistance in September. Please see COUNTY, page 5A
Topeka — Federal health care officials say consumers who buy their health insurance on the new exchange markets may be able to find significant savings while keeping the same level of coverage next year, if they shop carefully. “We know that the relatively high rate of switchers in the marketplace are telling us that consumers are using the marketplace to actively shop, and that they are finding significant savings when they do,” said Stephene Moore, regional director for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the agency that operates the health insurance exchange market in Kansas. Under the Affordable Care Act, commonly known as Obamacare, most individuals are required to carry health insurance. Those who don’t will face a tax penalty the following year. People in Kansas who don’t receive insurance through their employer, or who can’t afford their employer-based coverage, can buy insurance through HHS’s web-based exchange market, Healthcare.gov. Open enrollment to obtain coverage for 2016 through that system be-
Alleged drunk driver passes out in running car
T
here’s drunk, and then there’s druuuunk. Obviously, one should be neither behind the wheel. But alas, Lawrence saw 24 total DUI arrests last weekend. And that’s not even an inordinately large number for an average Friday through Sunday in town. But one of the 24 arrests stood out from the rest, causing much ado for Lawrence police. At 2:31 a.m. on Friday, an officer on patrol noticed a car stopped with its headlights on and engine running in the 1400 block of Crestline Drive, Lawrence Police Department spokesman Sgt. Trent McKinley said.
DUI checklane planned for Halloween night with his foot on the brake at the top of a hill facing south toward Bob Billings Parkway. The officer then called for backup before trying to wake the driver. Assisting officers placed patrol vehicles against the front and rear bumpers of the suspect’s car in case the man “suddenly awoke hit the acceleraCaitlin Doornbos and tor,” which McKinley said police “know from Intrigued, the officer got experience does occur.” out of the police car to Once the vehicles see what was going on. were in place, the ofThe officer apficers knocked on the proached the car and man’s car windows in found a male driver an attempt to wake passed out at the wheel him. When that didn’t
Lights & Sirens
work and they found the doors were locked, officers broke the man’s passenger window. Police then got into the car and put it in park. The driver then woke up, reeking of alcohol. McKinley said he also had “other signs of impairment,” so officers conducted a field sobriety test, after which he was arrested. Investigating officers found that the man’s car also had “what appeared to be fresh damage to it” besides the broken window, McKinley said. Please see DUI, page 5A
“
We know that the relatively high rate of switchers in the marketplace are telling us that consumers are using the marketplace to actively shop, and that they are finding significant savings when they do.” — Stephene Moore, regional director for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
gins Sunday. Moore spoke during a telephone news conference Wednesday to release a new report that showed people who shopped carefully in 2014 were able to find significant savings, even while keeping their same level of coverage. And an HHS spokesman in Washington said officials believe that will be the case again this year. “If all the consumers switch from their current plan to the lowestcost plan in the same metal level, the same level of coverage, consumers could save an average of $610 annually, before tax credits,” HHS spokesman Kevin Griffis said. Please see HEALTH, page 5A
Kansas kids lag in math, national test scores say Associated Press
Topeka — Kansas schoolchildren are faring worse on a test known as the nation’s report card. The state’s performance dip follows a national trend of falling scores on the National Assessment of Educational Progress. The scores were released Wednesday. They show that the math scores of Kansas fourth- and eighth-graders slipped over the past two years, which is similar to what
happened with students nationally. Reading scores dropped slightly for Kansas fourth-graders, while nationally they were flat. Among eighthgraders, reading scores held steady in Kansas and were lower nationally. Kansas Education Commissioner Randy Watson said in a statement that the reason for the decrease isn’t clear. But he added that state officials would “take it seriously.” Gov. Sam Brownback says the scores “reflect the need for real education reform.”
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Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) legislation guarantees that employment decisions must be made about individuals based on their abilities— not their disabilities. In a discussion moderated by Associate Director Dr. Barbara Ballard, professor of Constitutional Law STEPHEN MCALLISTER and disability rights attorney GARY NORMAN will discuss the ADA and the Constitution. Free and open to the public - Held at the Dole Institute 2350 Petefish Dr. - Lawrence, KS
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From the Archives
street By Mackenzie Clark Read more responses and add your thoughts at LJWorld.com
Who’s your favorite 20th-century U.S. president?
Twitter: @saramarieshep
See story, 1A
Mike Yoder/Journal-World File Photo
KANSAS CITY ROYALS OWNER EWING KAUFFMAN WAVES TO THE CROWD before the start of Game 3 of the 1985 American League Championship Series. The Royals defeated the Toronto Blue Jays 4 games to 3 to advance KC to the World Series against the St. Louis Cardinals, which they won. Each week, usually on Thursday, the Journal-World runs a photo from its archives, chosen by Journal-World staff.
“Franklin D. Roosevelt.”
Alex Urso, student, Lawrence “John F. Kennedy.”
Abib Drame, student, Lawrence “Bill Clinton.”
Food Network challenge features third Lawrence resident in a month Out & About I f Dianna Keller had it her way, the Nov. 8 airing of “Guy’s Grocery Games” would be watched quietly, “in the comfort of my home,” perhaps with her husband keeping company. But Keller can’t fault her family’s enthusiasm for this episode of the Food Network show. “They’re my biggest fans,” the Lawrencebased caterer says of her grandkids. Keller’s family will cheer on their beloved “Nana” as she competes on the yet-to-air episode of “Guy’s Grocery Games” named “Grandmas That Can Cook.” They’re hosting a watch party for the occasion (everyone’s welcome, Keller says) from 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. at the Lawrence Masonic Lodge, 1301 E. 25th St. Keller, whose menu at Dianna’s Kitchen Catering consists of seasonal and regional dishes as well as “classic family favorites,” is the third Lawrencian to appear on “Guy’s Grocery Games” within the past month. In late September, Ladybird Diner chef-
20 items on her shopping list as possible. The chef ended up netting $12,000 out of a potential $20,000, and plans to use her prize money on a recent hand surgery and an improved heating system for Cafe Beautiful. “It was a (great) experience,” Roeder says of her turn on the show, which jhlavacek@ljworld.com filmed in January. “The best part was meeting owner Meg Heriford all the chefs that I got to took home $14,000 in an work with and compete episode aptly titled “Blue against — the camaraderie Plate Blues.” And just last was just amazing.” Sunday, Mel Roeder, the Keller flew to Califorchef-owner of Cafe Beau- nia in February to film tiful, emerged victorious her episode, which pits from her segment entitled the 67-year-old against “When Guy (Fieri) Gives three other gastronomic You Lemon Bars.” grandmothers and airs at Aside from construct7 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 8. ing a dish made from the “That was just way out ingredients of a lemon of my comfort zone, to bar, among other chaldo anything like that,” lenges, Roeder says the Keller recalls. “Because trickiest aspect was fusing it was so darn unique, it traditional Spanish and was just one of those opGerman cuisines in the portunities that doesn’t final round. Her winning come around very often.” dish — a Spanish paella She wasn’t able to with German sausage and reveal much about the pumpernickel bread — led experience — Keller says to a mad-dash through the she’s had to keep the regrocery-store set in which sults secret, even from her Roeder had two minutes family — but says it’s one to collect as many of the she’ll likely never forget.
Joanna Hlavacek
BRIEFLY KPR falls short of fall fundraising goal
and the second-place winner will receive six months of free bus fare. Kansas University-based Stories are due Dec. 1. Kansas Public Radio fell They can be submitted short of its fall fundraising online at lawrencetransit. goal this year. org. Paper forms for the KPR raised $226,000 entries can be picked up in pledges during its fall and dropped off at the membership drive, about Lawrence Transit System $24,000 short of its administrative office, Jordan Eiberger, $250,000 goal, KU said in 933 New Hampshire St., banker, a news release. or returned via mail to Lawrence “We faced many obLawrence Transit, P.O. Box 708, Lawrence, KS 66044. “Ronald Reagan — every- stacles in this drive,” Felo- Transit system to Participants will be body liked him. I think he niz Lovato-Winston, KPR asked to write a story was one of our most-liked development director, said hold story contest based on this prompt: “As presidents. He helped the in the news release. “There To celebrate its 15 years was beautiful weather, we look back on 15 years economy and saw both of service, Lawrence Transit the Royals played several serving Lawrence, we want sides of the picture.” System is holding a writing day games while we were to celebrate how public contest and asking people to fundraising, and there was transit has shaped our What would your answer share their stories of using community. Tell us how be? Go to LJWorld.com/ a lot more competition for public transportation. you use the transit system onthestreet and share it. listeners’ attention. We’ll The first-place prize is look for alternative ways to and what it means to you.” one year of free bus fare,
DUI
night coming up with not only Halloween and Kansas University homecoming, but also the end CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A of daylight saving time at 2 a.m. Sunday, meaning Police believe the bars will stay open an damage is connected extra hour. to an accident at Sixth For most, this means and Iowa streets earlier F-U-N — but for this that morning in which a crime reporter, it povehicle struck a concrete tentially means a lot of barrier on the north side work. The Lawrence of the roadway and left Police Department apthe scene. parently has similar senThe man was booked timents, as it is conductinto the Douglas County ing a DUI check lane Jail on suspicion of DUI that night. and leaving the scene of From midnight to 3 a.m. an accident. Sunday (which is actuLearn from the incially a span of four hours dent above, especially for with the time change), this weekend. We’ve got Lawrence police will be one heck of a Saturday out in force checking for
make up the shortfall.” Although the on-air portion of the drive is over, listeners can donate anytime via kansaspublicradio.org. The fall membership drive started Oct. 13 with more than $89,000 raised through direct mail, according to KU. The eight-day onair portion of the drive raised another $137,000 before wrapping up on Friday.
drunken drivers at an undisclosed location in Lawrence. But though the check lane starts relatively late, officers will still be “closely monitoring the streets for unsafe behavior throughout the night,” McKinley said. “Halloween night traditionally brings large numbers of people into neighborhoods and surrounding streets, increasing the potential for pedestrians being struck by vehicles,” McKinley said in an email. “While early portions of the evening are marked by children flooding the streets trick-or-treating, later hours often involve adults attending parties
or events which involve alcohol.” And if you’re trying to do the right thing by walking, McKinley still has some safety tips for you: 1) If in costume, wear a bright or reflective item to help drivers see you. 2) It’s best not to don masks and other items that affect your ability to see. If you just have to wear that “Jason” mask, take it off when crossing streets. 3) As always, it’s a good idea to travel in groups. 4) Use crosswalks where available and cross the street at intersections to help motorists see you
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KU Engineering’s expansion honors many donors By Sara Shepherd
Asked on Massachusetts Street
Marc Greenberg, director, KU School of Languages, Literatures and Cultures, Lawrence
Thursday, October 29, 2015
Kansas University’s new engineering building — Learned Engineering Expansion Project Phase 2, or LEEP2 for short — will be dedicated Friday afternoon. Thanks no doubt will include the donors who have spaces in the building named for them. Primary funding for the building came from legislative appropriations through the state’s University Engineering Initiative Act, but various spaces and enhancements were enabled by donors. KU shared the names of those spaces Wednesday, and Rosita Elizalde-McCoy, senior vice president of communications and marketing for KU Endowment, shared the dollar amounts of their donations: l McClendon Atrium: Enabled by a gift from Brian and Beth Ellyn McClendon. Brian McClendon, a 1986 KU electrical engineering graduate, is a co-creator of Google Earth, 2015 inductee to the National Academy of Engineering and current vice president of advanced technologies at Uber.
County CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A
That grant will enable the sheriff’s office to hire two Assess-Identify-Divert (AID) case managers, who will technically be employees of Bert Nash Community Mental Health Center, Brouwer said. Those case managers will assess around 50 potential inmates a month and divert an estimated 25 to treatment alternatives to jail, he said. Although a check for the grant money isn’t expected until January, Brouwer said in the months to come the sheriff’s office will work with Bert Nash and Kansas University to create job
Health CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A
The exchange offers plans in four different categories — bronze, silver, gold and platinum — based on the cost of premiums and the amount of deductibles and co-pays they require. Many people have been anxious over the prices they will see on the exchange market this year because of rate hikes overall in the health insurance market, and because Coventry, one of the companies offering coverage on the exwhile driving. If you’re driving: Be extra vigilant in obeying speed limits, especially in residential neighborhoods, and be prepared to stop suddenly with trick-or-treaters (and later, drunk people) running amok. “Children focused on trick-or-treating often dart into the roadway without thinking about traffic,” McKinley said. And of course, be sober. If you plan on consuming alcohol, designate someone in your group to remain sober so the person can drive you home safely, or make alternate transportation plans. Lawrence has
Elizalde-McCoy said the McClendons requested KU Endowment not disclose the amount of the “generous gift.” l ExxonMobil Student Success Suite: Named in recognition of the ExxonMobil Foundation and ExxonMobil employees and retirees, who donated a total of $1.9 million. l Burns & McDonnell Student Lounge: Enabled by the employee-owners of Burns & McDonnell, who gave $500,000. l Textron Aviation Aerospace Engineering Design Laboratory: Enabled by Textron Aviation, which contributed $250,000. l Koch Unit Operations Laboratory: Enabled by 1969 chemical engineering Kyle Vann, retired CEO of Entergy-Koch and Koch-Glitsch. Vann donated $100,000, and KochGlitsch made an in-kind gift for equipment. Friday’s dedication is planned for 4 p.m. on the lawn of the complex, 1536 W. 15th St. Speakers are to include David Murfin from the Kansas Board of Regents and Greg Graves, CEO and president of Burns & McDonnell. descriptions and write policies for the positions that will soon be open. The sheriff’s office, county officials and other community partners will host a town hall meeting Monday at 6 p.m. at the Douglas County Courthouse, 1100 Massachusetts St., McGovern added. That meeting will offer more insight into the potential projects and give area residents a chance to ask officials any questions they might have. County commissioners meet each Wednesday at 4 p.m. Full agendas for their meetings and more information can be found online at douglascountyks.org. — Reporter Conrad Swanson can be reached at cswanson@ljworld.com or 832-7284.
change market, recently announced it will pull out of the program in 2016. The average increase for Kansas plans is expected to be 16.1 percent, Griffis said. But he said Coventry’s withdrawal won’t affect the rates available from the two other companies in the Kansas market, Blue Cross Blue Shield and United Healthcare. And he said most consumers who buy on the exchange qualify for federal tax credits that will shield them from the impact of rate increases. — Statehouse reporter Peter Hancock can be reached at 354-4222 or phancock@ljworld.com.
Uber now, so you can check that out by downloading the app on your phone. Or, you can do it the old-fashioned way by calling a cab; I’ve listed the local taxi services and their phone numbers below: Ground Transportation Services (GTS) — 842-8294 Jayhawk Taxi — 8438294 RedyCab — 505-8294 Lawrence First Class Transportation — 4091994 — This is an excerpt from Lights & Sirens, a public safety blog by reporter Caitlin Doornbos. She can be reached at 832-7146 or cvdoornbos@ ljworld.com.
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Thursday, October 29, 2015
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L awrence J ournal -W orld
Intrusive roomates must find someplace else Dear Annie: An acquaintance recently lost his job, and we invited him and his wife to move into our home on a temporary basis. We all agreed they would live with us until one of them found another professional position. It’s been only three months, but it’s already uncomfortable. “Sue” and “Bob” do small household chores and pay a minimal amount in rent, but that doesn’t counteract the interruption they have added to our daily lives. They have taken over the fridge, the cabinets, the laundry room, the living space and the kitchen. We have no private time anymore and cannot trust them to lock doors or turn off the dryer or coffeemaker when
Annie’s Mailbox
Marcy Sugar and Kathy Mitchell
anniesmailbox@comcast.net
they leave the house. They parade around the house semi-nude, make a lot of noise when we’re sleeping and talk while we are reading or watching TV. We have discussed these issues and others as they have come up, but it hasn’t helped. We’ve asked them to keep out of our bedrooms and home office, but the other day I found both of them coming out of the of-
‘Bones’ meets ‘Sleepy Hollow’ Halloween hoopla and network ballyhoo collide with a Fox crossover episode blending the mortuary humor of “Bones” (7 p.m., TV-14) with the outlandish supernatural malarkey of “Sleepy Hollow” (8 p.m., TV-14). The integration of the two stories begins when FBI agent Abbie Mills (Nicole Beharie) and Ichabod Crane (Tom Mison) visit the Jeffersonian in search of a headless body that appears to be centuries old and linked to a very recent murder. Because this is crossover a holiday one-off, Booth and Brennan (David Boreanaz and Emily Deschanel) spend a lot of time playing trick-or-treat pranks amid the cadavers. Help yourself. l Elsewhere, ABC repeats “It’s the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown” (7 p.m., TV-G) for the second time in two weeks. This Halloween special held its own last Tuesday, attracting nearly as many viewers in the 18-to-49 age bracket as “NCIS.” That’s rather remarkable, given that it was first broadcast in 1966. Next year it will be older than any member of that coveted demographic. But that hardly seems to matter. l Anther suitably ghoulish Halloween treat includes a new installment of “Monsters Inside Me” (8 p.m., Animal Planet, TV-14), the nonfiction series that takes an up-close-andpersonal glance at infections and even infestations occurring within a patient’s body. First up: an affliction that makes a 4-year-old feel like he’s drowning in his own mucus! l “Evil Twins” (9 p.m., ID, TV-14) ends its short, six-episode season with a tale of Ohio twins with deep, dark secrets who also happen to be rival pediatricians. l “Jimmy Kimmel Live” (10:35 p.m., ABC) continues its Halloween tradition of having the host, band and much of the crew dress up in costume. This year’s theme is “Star Wars,” all the better to welcome tonight’s first guest, Harrison Ford. Katie Lowes (“Scandal”) also appears. Tonight’s other highlights
l The New England Patri-
ots host the Miami Dolphins on “Thursday Night Football” (7:25 p.m., CBS, NFL). l A price on Liz’s head inspires a scrum of would-be abductors on “The Blacklist” (8 p.m., NBC, TV-14). l Fitz and Olivia hatch a solution to their woes on “Scandal” (8 p.m., ABC, TV-14). l Contestants return home to work on their collections and await Tim Gunn’s advice on part one of the season finale of “Project Runway” (8 p.m., Lifetime, TV-PG). l A canine combat veteran gets his own memorial on “Mysteries at the Monument” (8 p.m., Travel, TV-PG). l Alex must stop a serial killer before Halloween arrives on “The Player” (9 p.m., NBC).
fice. We do not want to put locks all over. We want to trust them, but it seems unlikely. They have made comments about our bills, which indicates they have looked at our private mail. They are supposedly applying for jobs, but so far haven’t found anything that pays what they feel they deserve. We worry we’ll be stuck with them forever. They have severance pay, unemployment and money from family members. They spend it on manicures, personal trainers and new electronics. Here’s the kicker: They are actively seeking a divorce. How do we tell them they have overstayed their welcome? — Bad Roomies
JACQUELINE BIGAR’S STARS
For Thursday, Oct. 29: This year you like to relate to others individually. Your level of empathy and understanding increases as well. If you are single, you might often be confused about a romantic relationship. If you are attached, you will spend many intimate hours with your significant other. 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) HHHH You’ll act and feel as if you are more in your element. Return calls. Tonight: Be available. Taurus (April 20-May 20) HHH You could be concerned about someone else’s attitude regarding money. You might find that this person is closing down. Tonight: Pay bills first. Gemini (May 21-June 20) HHHHH You seem to sense various chaotic forces around you. You might feel energized. Tonight: Go for what you want. Cancer (June 21-July 22) HHH Your sensitivity could overwhelm you today, causing your intuition to become confused. Tonight: Buy a fountain on the way home. Relax to the sound of water. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHHH You recognize the importance of networking. Plan on touching base with several key people Tonight: Make weekend plans.
Dear Roomies: You need to set a deadline and stick to it. Tell Sue and Bob that you hadn’t anticipated the job search would take so long and you can no longer accommodate them. Give them one month to find other arrangements. Bring home boxes so they can pack (and help them along). At the end of the deadline, if they make no attempt to leave, tell them you will put their belongings on the front steps. Then change your locks.
— Send questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or Annie’s Mailbox, P.O. Box 118190 Chicago, IL 60611.
jacquelinebigar.com
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHH Tension builds because you feel as though you must act a certain way. Tonight: Whatever you are doing, you could be out till the wee hours. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHHHH Not everyone understands you or your personality. Authenticity will make a difference. Tonight: Be spontaneous. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HH You might feel overwhelmed by all the changes going on right now. Take your time, but don’t rely on feelings. Tonight: Be patient. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHHH Others encourage you to join them. You might not realize how distant you are. Tonight: Sort through offers. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHH You can be overly serious without intending to. Pull away before you say or do anything drastic. Tonight: Easy works. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHHHH Your playfulness is renowned. Be sure not to sign any contracts right now. Tonight: Full of fun and games. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHH Tension builds in your personal or domestic life. No matter what happens, you will have to come face to face with the issue. Tonight: At home. — The astrological forecast should be read for entertainment only.
UNIVERSAL CROSSWORD Universal
Crossword
Edited by Timothy E. Parker October 29, 2015
ACROSS 1 Insect sensory organ 5 Did some greenskeeping 10 Fish-eating duck 14 On the safe side, at sea 15 “___ Little Prayer” (Dionne Warwick hit) 16 Pacific tuber 17 Female operatic star 18 “The Taming of the ___” 19 Response to “Sooey!” 20 Bone breakers in a child’s retort 23 Batter’s success 24 Thing to check on a car 25 Call to a shepherd 28 Collaborating (with “up”) 32 Aswan, for one 35 Bit of kelp, e.g. 37 Eschew spontaneity 38 Doglike laugher 40 What’s in bank vaults? 43 “Nevermore” speaker 44 Small grimace or pout 45 Angel’s symbol
46 “What ___ the odds?” 47 The Magi, notably 50 Longing 51 Hotel amenity 52 Apple or lemon meringue concoction 54 Didn’t change a viewpoint 63 A Pueblo people 64 A noble gas 65 Buzzing summer pest 66 “False” thing of worship 67 Spot of land in the ocean 68 Tense and irritable 69 ___ up (pay) 70 Wind-blown soil 71 Thorny plant DOWN 1 Paper tablets 2 Came to a perch 3 Name on many jeans’ labels 4 Georgia specialty 5 Errors 6 Construction site watchdog, for short 7 Advise caution 8 Word with “bug” or “googly” 9 Former “Family Feud” host Richard 10 “Cheers” chair
11 Bounding site? 12 Fish hawk’s cousin 13 Asian cooking pans 21 Do-it-yourselfer’s need 22 Intimate, as friends 25 Iraqi port 26 Sacrificial spot 27 Century plant, for one 29 San Antonio landmark 30 Lord’s lodgings 31 ___ time (eventually) 32 Dental problem 33 Type of bracelet 34 Type of jar 36 Crackerjack pilot 39 Slangy agreement, as in “Fargo”
41 Clever talent 42 Large snakes 48 Part of a larger picture 49 Bro’s relative 51 Without a trace of cordiality 53 Moth that constructs ovoid cocoons 54 Liner or tanker, e.g. 55 Kind of list 56 “Once __ a time ...” 57 About 58 Size up visually 59 Nein and nay 60 Loosen, as a tie 61 Reminds a bit too much 62 Eyelid infliction
PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER
10/28
© 2015 Universal Uclick www.upuzzles.com
ST-O-CK PILE By Tim Burr
10/29
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek
Unscramble these four Jumbles, one letter to each square, to form four ordinary words.
POMOH ©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.
LODIY SKYCIL
DISBEE
Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app
6A
Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.
A: Yesterday’s
BECKER ON BRIDGE
(Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: SOUPY USHER SCENIC YONDER Answer: The drummer’s tell-all autobiography had — REPERCUSSIONS
Opinion
Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com l Thursday, October 29, 2015
EDITORIALS
Indirect route Planning for a new city transit hub has run into a number of detours. It’s time to settle on a plan and get this project back on track.
I
n summer of 2013, the city decided to move the transit hub for its T bus system to the 700 block of Vermont Street on a temporary basis. The hub needed to be relocated from Ninth and New Hampshire streets to accommodate major construction projects there. At the time, the city already was looking for a more permanent location for a transit hub but indicated it could take a year or more to make that move. More than two years later, buses still are converging in the 700 block of Vermont and the city still seems a long way from settling on a plan for a permanent transit hub. In June 2014, Lawrence city commissioners expressed support for plans to move the transit hub out of downtown and closer to the Kansas University campus. The location under study at that time was near 21st and Iowa streets. Transit officials worked on that plan for about a year and brought back a firmer proposal for a 21st and Iowa transit hub, which was rejected by a new set of commissioners in June 2015. In rejecting the plan, several commissioners said they wanted to look at a more central location, maybe in the area of Ninth and Iowa streets. The hub, they said, needed to be more of a “destination” where shopping and other services were available. That didn’t seem to make a lot of sense because most people at a bus hub are there to transfer to another bus to reach their final destinations, not to shop or grab a cup of coffee. Nonetheless, city transit officials were sent back to the drawing board. This week, they floated the idea of collaborating with KU to build a bus hub in an existing campus parking lot east of Allen Fieldhouse. This seems like a reasonable idea that would benefit the many KU students who ride local buses. The location is close to the central city and probably could be designed to accommodate the large number of buses without hindering traffic or negatively affecting the nearby neighborhood. Transit officials called the KU parking lot location an “intriguing” possibility but emphasized that the plan was very preliminary. Meanwhile, the “temporary” bus hub in downtown Lawrence is heading into its third year of operation. It’s time for the city to get moving on a new permanent location for the hub. The KU parking lot location seems to have possibilities, but if it doesn’t suit city commissioners, they should say so now and give transit officials specific instructions on how and where to proceed. This decision has lingered long enough.
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
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THE WORLD COMPANY
Dolph C. Simons Jr., Chairman Dolph C. Simons III, Dan C. Simons, President, Newspapers Division
President, Digital Division
Scott Stanford, General Manager
7A
Political reality of fantasy sports Washington — Americans have been betting on sports since the first time a Puritan pilgrim boasted that his horse was the fastest in Massachusetts Bay Colony and another said, “Wanna bet?” But fish gotta swim, birds gotta fly and government gotta fret about gambling on fantasy sports. Torrential television advertising by DraftKings and FanDuel is creating millions of customers for these sports fantasy businesses, thereby creating government anxiety lest Americans make unregulated choices inimical to their material and moral well-being. In today’s decidedly unpuritanical America, betting on sports is illegal, except where it isn’t (Nevada, Oregon, Montana, Delaware). Besides, much more money is wagered illegally on sports than in legal casinos. Someday the number of Americans who bet on the Super Bowl will be approximately equal to the number of Americans. In 2006, a year after an estimated 15 million Americans wagered $6 billion online, Congress, evidently convinced that Prohibition was a resounding success at ridding the nation of Demon Rum, launched Prohibition 2.0. Congress enacted a prohibition of Internet gambling, making it illegal for banks or credit card companies to process payments to online gambling operations. Mother-hen government said such gambling was already illegal under the Wire Act, passed in 1961, before there was an
George Will
georgewill@washpost.com
“
Not for the first time, the law is a lagging indicator of where society is going without asking the government’s byyour-leave.” Internet. But this law, which has predictably failed to stop Internet gambling, exempted fantasy sports, which were not then considered a serious commercial opportunity. When government action restricts Americans’ choices, ostensibly for their own good, the paternalism usually has a pecuniary motive. America’s principal promoters of gambling are the 48 states with some form of legalized betting, including 44 that have gambling-addiction problems: They are addicted to revenues from their lotteries and resent fantasy sports games poaching “their” gamblers. Players in fantasy sports assemble make-believe teams from actual athletes — most commonly, NFL athletes — and the teams succeed or fail based on the players’ achievements on a given day. This is
obviously gambling: Players risk money wagering on variables — individual athletes’ performances — beyond the players’ control. It is, however, gambling leavened by skill: Players can improve their odds by acquiring advantageous information — by studying athletes’ performances more assiduously than those they are playing against. One supposed problem is this: In fantasy sports, as in real sports and the rest of life, some people excel, usually because they work harder than others. Justin Van Zuiden, writing in Sports Illustrated, says that “so far this year I’ve made more money — the low six figures as of last weekend — from fantasy sports than from my CPA job.” He is good with numbers. Life is unfair. DraftKings’ advertisements promise “a new fantasy millionaire every week” and the company says it will disburse $1 billion in winnings this year. FanDuel says its patrons win $75 million a week and might receive $2 billion this year. The stakes increase with the entry fee, which can be as low as free and more than $5,000. Major League Baseball, the National Football League, the National Basketball Association, NBC Sports, Fox Networks Group and other entities see not only investment opportunities but ways to deepen fans’ interests in professional sports. Not for the first time, the law is a lagging indicator of
where society is going without asking the government’s by-your-leave. What technology — the Internet — makes possible (a multitude of fantasy games and instantaneous payouts), enough determined people will do until the laws proscribing it become too embarrassing to enforce. The fantasy sports industry already has a trade association. The industry will need it. When politicians say the industry is unregulated, they mean it is not supervised by them. It is, however, sternly regulated by market forces, as the fierce DraftKings/FanDuel competition indicates. Another indication is the speed with which both reacted to a recent mini-not-really scandal: When a DraftKings employee won $350,000 playing on FanDuel, both businesses instantly moved to prevent the equivalent of “insider trading” — players utilizing special access to pertinent information. According to ESPN The Magazine, “The FBI estimates that $2.6 billion was wagered illegally in 2013 on March Madness (the NCAA basketball tournament) alone; pro gamblers would bet it’s 10 times that.” The law will accommodate all sorts of sports gambling not when government becomes a friend of liberty by allowing victimless pleasures, but when government recognizes in fantasy sports something it loves more than liberty: something to regulate and tax. — George Will is a columnist for Washington Post Writers Group.
OLD HOME TOWN
100
From the Lawrence Daily Journal-World for Oct. 29, 1915: years “Warnings given ago by the police that IN 1915 it was their intention to take active steps to reduce the amount of illegal speeding of automobiles in Lawrence were unheeded and so as a result there was a harvest of speeders in police court this morning. Two young men paid $15.50 each to the city treasury today…“ — Compiled by Sarah St. John
Read more Old Home Town at LJWorld.com/news/lawrence/ history/old_home_town.
PUBLIC FORUM
Political motives
Affordable housing Neighborhood vote
To the editor: The Oct. 25 editorial contained 10 versions of the derisive word “liar,” which were all directed to describe former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. We all know that repetitive denigration of any opponent is the pattern which the Republican National Committee and Fox News uses to brainwash their followers, while playing loose with the actual evidence gathered over a period of time. I watched that 11-hour public grilling of Secretary Clinton by Rep. Gowdy’s committee and felt that it revealed a complicated fact-gathering process by the CIA, the State Department and military intelligence as they were all faced with an unexpected attack on a U.S. facility in Benghazi. Who knew what when? Who reported what when? What needed to be corroborated prior to any public releases? The State Department was aware that this anti-Muslim video had been motivational in creating anger in the Mideast for months, and it naturally became the first “cause” that was suspected in the Benghazi attack. Does speculating about suspicions with incomplete information now qualify as “lying?” Countless hearings since then have found no culpability on Secretary Clinton’s part and certainly no malicious intent in the process of reporting the attack. The Gowdy hearings appear to have been politically motivated and have cost the taxpayers millions of dollars. It may be time for some hearings and editorials about the lies Bush, Cheney and Rumsfeld told which led our nation into that unnecessary war on Iraq, precipitating this current crisis in the Mideast. Audrey Mortensen, Lawrence
To the editor: It is good news that housing development in Lawrence is at an all-time record pace this year. But it is shameful that somewhere between 20 percent and 25 percent of Lawrencians are living in poverty, and too poor to benefit from it. So where are our priorities? I found it understandable that a recent poll by the city showed the condition of our streets as our No. 1 concern. I believe that if we saw the condition of our neighbors in need on a daily basis, our conscience would call to more meaningful and urgent priorities. The 2013 City of Lawrence Consolidated Plan estimates that 9,900 rental households are housing cost burdened, with 6,200 paying more than 50 percent of their monthly income for rent with 730 who are elderly. The city plan estimates that more than $90 million in subsidy would be required to address all of the various housing needs here. Our city and county commissioners have verbally acknowledged the need. County commissioners recently approved our Housing Authority’s request for $50,000 for transitional housing assistance. While this is a good step forward, as a community we are actually two steps back because the federally funded transitional housing programs in Lawrence have been cut every year, from $300,000 in 2011 to $174,000 this year. While our neighbors need rent support immediately, that won’t solve our problem. We need to create sustainable transitional, permanent and supportive housing stock. To enable this, a wellrun, well-funded affordable housing trust fund is essential to our community. Steve Ozark, Lawrence
To the editor: The big election is Monday, Nov. 2. No, it’s not for president, governor or even City Commission. This election is for the board of the East Lawrence Neighborhood Association (ELNA), and it’s as important as any for the people who live there. East Lawrence, home to our city’s original town site and mainstay of a diverse working-class community, is beloved and unique. It is also vulnerable to the dreams and desires of those who see it as a blank canvas, i.e., an “up and coming” neighborhood. Engaging with the kinds of development pressures that can spur the displacement of residents due to economic and cultural shifts requires experienced and sensitive neighborhood leadership — that’s ELNA. By cultivating the civic spirit of residents and supporting the economic infrastructure and dynamic culture that make this wonderful place liveable for people of modest incomes, ELNA has for decades helped to sustain a healthy, colorful and thriving neighborhood. They continue that work today. I give thanks to my peers on the current board (and our phenomenal coordinator) who exemplify the civic values that Lawrence prides itself on and who work to embody the Gwendolyn Brooks quote, that until recently, stood upon a mural in our neighborhood: “ We are each other’s harvest; We are each other’s business; We are each other’s magnitude and bond.” If you’re an East Lawrence resident, please vote. Dave Loewenstein, Lawrence
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TODAY
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SATURDAY
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MONDAY
Mostly sunny
Mostly cloudy with a little rain
A passing morning shower
Sunny, pleasant and warmer
Sunny and pleasantly warm
High 56° Low 29° POP: 0%
High 57° Low 47° POP: 60%
High 60° Low 41° POP: 55%
High 68° Low 46° POP: 5%
High 70° Low 51° POP: 10%
Wind WNW 6-12 mph
Wind SSE 6-12 mph
Wind NNW 6-12 mph
Wind SSW 4-8 mph
Wind S 7-14 mph
McCook 57/36 Oberlin 57/37
Clarinda 53/31
Lincoln 54/31
Grand Island 52/32
Kearney 52/32
Beatrice 54/30
Centerville 51/33
St. Joseph 55/29 Chillicothe 55/31
Sabetha 53/32
Concordia 55/33
Kansas City Marshall Manhattan 55/35 54/33 Goodland Salina 57/31 Oakley Kansas City Topeka 55/35 58/34 55/40 58/30 Lawrence 55/34 Sedalia 56/29 Emporia Great Bend 56/33 58/33 58/36 Nevada Dodge City Chanute 57/33 56/36 Hutchinson 59/35 Garden City 60/35 57/39 Springfield Wichita Pratt Liberal Coffeyville Joplin 58/34 60/40 59/39 58/42 58/36 61/35 Hays Russell 58/35 56/36
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
Through 8 p.m. Wednesday.
Temperature High/low Normal high/low today Record high today Record low today
62°/47° 63°/41° 90° in 1937 20° in 1913
Precipitation in inches 24 hours through 8 p.m. yest. trace Month to date 0.27 Normal month to date 3.09 Year to date 33.89 Normal year to date 35.83
REGIONAL CITIES
Today Fri. Today Fri. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Independence 60 36 s 58 51 r Atchison 55 30 s 59 47 c Fort Riley 57 30 s 60 46 r Belton 54 34 s 56 48 r Olathe 55 34 s 56 46 r Burlington 57 33 s 57 48 r Osage Beach 58 32 s 61 47 pc Coffeyville 61 35 s 59 48 r Osage City 57 31 s 58 48 r Concordia 55 33 s 57 41 r Ottawa 56 31 s 57 48 r Dodge City 56 36 pc 50 40 r Wichita 60 40 s 57 47 r Holton 57 31 s 59 48 r Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
Last
Nov 3
First
BEST BETS
Full
Nov 11 Nov 19 Nov 25
LAKE LEVELS
As of 7 a.m. Wednesday Lake
Level (ft)
Clinton Perry Pomona
Discharge (cfs)
876.83 892.12 973.41
7 80 15
Shown are today’s noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for today.
Fronts Cold
INTERNATIONAL CITIES Cities Acapulco Amsterdam Athens Baghdad Bangkok Beijing Berlin Brussels Buenos Aires Cairo Calgary Dublin Geneva Hong Kong Jerusalem Kabul London Madrid Mexico City Montreal Moscow New Delhi Oslo Paris Rio de Janeiro Rome Seoul Singapore Stockholm Sydney Tokyo Toronto Vancouver Vienna Warsaw Winnipeg
Today Hi Lo W 87 78 t 59 49 s 65 57 pc 76 63 t 94 79 pc 55 34 s 55 40 pc 59 48 c 72 56 t 77 60 s 53 35 c 55 47 c 56 41 pc 84 75 pc 61 54 t 75 40 pc 60 54 r 64 48 pc 72 55 t 60 39 r 35 28 pc 80 61 pc 48 46 c 59 50 c 77 71 c 66 47 t 57 31 pc 87 77 c 44 34 pc 70 59 s 63 56 r 50 38 c 56 51 sh 52 42 c 51 38 pc 43 30 c
Hi 86 60 66 75 94 56 54 62 67 78 52 59 60 85 65 74 61 71 72 46 36 81 50 63 80 69 51 87 47 74 70 49 56 54 53 48
Fri. Lo W 76 t 47 c 57 c 62 c 78 pc 31 s 44 pc 47 pc 47 pc 62 s 29 pc 51 r 44 pc 75 s 56 pc 39 s 53 r 50 pc 57 t 29 pc 24 pc 62 s 47 c 47 pc 70 pc 49 pc 32 s 77 t 39 c 61 s 52 c 32 pc 52 sh 41 pc 36 pc 34 c
Flurries
Snow
Ice
Today Fri. Today Fri. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Memphis 72 45 s 70 52 pc Albuquerque 63 48 pc 57 40 t 85 74 t 86 74 pc Anchorage 45 34 c 38 27 sf Miami Milwaukee 50 41 c 53 46 pc Atlanta 74 50 pc 68 50 s Minneapolis 49 38 pc 54 44 pc Austin 80 64 s 79 64 r Nashville 69 39 s 64 45 s Baltimore 71 42 pc 60 36 s New Orleans 81 62 pc 78 69 pc Birmingham 75 46 pc 70 50 s New York 72 49 pc 59 42 pc Boise 59 37 c 56 45 c 54 35 s 58 45 c Boston 71 47 sh 60 39 pc Omaha Orlando 86 64 pc 85 64 s Buffalo 52 41 sh 49 37 c Philadelphia 72 47 pc 61 41 s Cheyenne 55 34 c 50 31 c 82 64 t 79 58 pc Chicago 51 40 c 55 45 pc Phoenix Pittsburgh 56 41 pc 51 37 pc Cincinnati 57 38 s 58 40 s Cleveland 52 41 pc 51 40 pc Portland, ME 69 41 r 56 31 pc Portland, OR 62 55 c 62 58 r Dallas 77 59 s 73 63 r Reno 59 35 pc 68 41 pc Denver 60 36 c 53 34 c 75 45 pc 62 38 s Des Moines 52 36 s 58 46 pc Richmond 80 53 s 85 52 s Detroit 51 39 c 53 41 pc Sacramento St. Louis 58 39 s 62 49 pc El Paso 74 54 t 66 49 c Fairbanks 29 22 sn 26 12 sn Salt Lake City 53 40 sh 55 42 c 77 63 pc 80 62 s Honolulu 89 75 pc 90 76 pc San Diego Houston 79 63 pc 78 69 sh San Francisco 71 57 s 74 57 s Seattle 60 52 sh 61 56 r Indianapolis 54 38 pc 57 42 s Spokane 55 42 pc 55 49 sh Kansas City 55 34 s 57 45 c Tucson 75 54 t 69 48 pc Las Vegas 74 55 pc 75 55 s 63 41 s 58 52 r Little Rock 73 45 s 69 54 pc Tulsa Wash., DC 73 48 pc 61 44 s Los Angeles 83 63 pc 85 61 s National extremes yesterday for the 48 contiguous states High: Falfurrias, TX 97° Low: West Yellowstone, MT 9°
WEATHER HISTORY
WEATHER TRIVIA™
Q:
On Oct. 29, 1991, a storm dumped a foot of snow in Utah. Another storm sank boats along the Massachusetts coast.
THURSDAY Prime Time WOW DTV DISH 7 PM
Rain
-10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s National Summary: Gusty winds and spottier showers will replace the midweek soaking across the Northeast and Midwest today. The Plains will be dry as showers dot the Pacific Northwest, Rockies and Four Corners.
A voice part and also the prefix used for mid-level clouds?
Alto.
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015
Precipitation
Warm Stationary Showers T-storms
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kNHL Hockey Anaheim Ducks at St. Louis Blues.
NBCSN 38 603 151 Nitro Circus
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ESPN2 34 209 144 eHigh School Football North Marion (Fla.) at Hoover (Ala.). (N) 36 672
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City Bulletin Board, Commission Meetings
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44 202 200 Anderson Cooper
TNT
45 245 138 dNBA Basketball Atlanta Hawks at New York Knicks. dNBA Basketball: Mavericks at Clippers
USA
46 242 105 Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam
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47 265 118 The First 48
TRUTV 48 246 204 Jokers
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TBS
51 247 139 Broke
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BRAVO 52 237 129 Tardy
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54 269 120 Pawn
.WEATHER
L awrence J ournal -W orld
WOW DTV DISH 7 PM
Picture Show benefiting Headquarters, 7 p.m. (allages show), The Granada, 1020 Massachusetts St. Constitution Day: The 25th Anniversary of ADA and Senator Dole, 7:30 p.m., Dole Institute, 2350 Petefish Drive. Theater: “Midnight Visit to the Grave of Poe: A Grotesque Arabesque,” 7:30 p.m., Lawrence Arts Center, 940 New Hampshire St.
5-7 p.m., Southwest Middle School cafeteria, 2511 Inverness Drive. Brits’ 20th birthday celebration, 5:30-8:30 p.m., Brits, 929 Massachusetts St. Baker University Community Choir Rehearsal, 6-8 p.m., McKibben Recital Hall (Owens Musical Arts Building), 408 Eighth St., Baldwin City. “Trick-or-Treat So Others Can Eat” Event, 6:30-8 p.m., Booth Family Hall of Athletics, 1651 Naismith Drive. Author Readings: Sandy Hazlett, Ronda Miller and Jose Faus, 7 p.m., Raven Book Store, 6 E. Seventh St. Science of the Macabre, 7 p.m., KU Natural History Museum, 1345 Jayhawk Blvd. Time Warp Against Suicide: Rocky Horror
Submit your stuff: Don’t be shy — we want to publish your event. Submit your item for our calendar by emailing datebook@ljworld.com at least 48 hours before your event. Find more information about these events, and more event listings, at ljworld.com/ events.
come down for the construction of a wide recreational path. “We’d have to do work so it doesn’t feel like it landed from outer space onto the street,” Shelton said of the path. “I have truly mixed feelings about it.” The other approach, he said, would allow the design team to keep much of the original plan, which includes green space in the public right-of-way to be used for social gathering. “It’s a similar strategy,” Shelton said. “We could still pull off really interesting and subtle landscaping and still create the right kinds of places to meet and talk with one another. A lot of that
could roll over into this.” The committee did not take formal action Wednesday. Shelton will present drawings for both options during the committee’s next meeting, on Dec. 16, and members will either take a vote or just provide feedback. The committee decided not to hold a meeting in November because of a delay in getting feedback from the Lawrence City Commission. The commission talked about the project earlier this month, after the appointment of new commissioner Lisa Larsen. Shelton said next week he would provide an updated timeline of the project’s design process.
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SPORTS 7:30
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KIDS
NATIONAL FORECAST
Today Fri. 7:44 a.m. 7:45 a.m. 6:24 p.m. 6:23 p.m. 8:33 p.m. 9:26 p.m. 10:00 a.m. 11:04 a.m.
New
Ninth said Amyx, who serves on the committee. “I don’t think it’s a battle we need to do; I don’t think it’s smart. We do have businesses along Ninth Street that rely on trucks. I think moving it would be wrong.” Streets designated as truck delivery routes are required to have driving lanes at least 12 feet wide, Shelton said. The current project design calls for two 10-foot driving lanes and two 4-foot bicycle lanes. Shelton presented two ideas for reconfiguring the street: adding a landscaped buffer between bike lanes and larger driving lanes, with sidewalks on both sides, or having larger driving lanes and introducing a 10-foot “recreational path” on one side of the street. Members of the 15-person committee cited positives about each option. Emily Peterson, coowner of Merchants Pub & Plate, said the recreational path would be “a natural extension” of the Burroughs Creek Trail, which runs along a former railroad route from 23rd to 11th streets. “I think if it’s done well it will make it feel integrated and organic,” Peterson said. “It would open up so much incredible activity.” Shelton said he wasn’t leaning toward one option over the other, but the recreational path was “really a different approach” than the project’s current concept plan. He also said some existing trees would have to
SUN & MOON Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset
Lecture: “Behind the scenes: The making of a string quartet,” 10 a.m., Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall, 1530 Naismith Drive. Skillbuilders: Financial Planning, 10-11:30 a.m., Smith Center at Brandon Woods at Alvamar, 4730 Brandon Woods Terrace. Tech Classes: Downloading Audio Books, 4-5 p.m., Meeting Room B, Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. Cottin’s Hardware Farmers Market, 4-6:30 p.m., outside store at 1832 Massachusetts St. KU Youth Chorus rehearsal, 4:30 p.m., Room 328, Murphy Hall, 1530 Naismith Drive. KDOT public information open house for K-10 West Leg South Lawrence Trafficway Study,
A:
LAWRENCE ALMANAC
Thursday, October 29, 2015
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Helping Families and Friends Honor Their Loved Ones for More Than 100 Years. Serving Douglas, Franklin and Osage Counties since 1898. Baldwin City, KS Ottawa, KS Overbrook, KS 712 Ninth Street 325 S. Hickory St 730 Western Heights Drive (785) 594-3644 (785) 242-3550 (785) 665-7141
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SYFY 55 244 122 WWE SmackDown! (N)
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Halloween 5: Revenge...
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Office
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Happens Tardy
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Great Wild North
Great Wild North
Pawn
Haven “Wild Card”
Z Nation
Haven “Wild Card”
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FX 56 COM 58 E! 59 CMT 60 GAC 61 BET 64 VH1 66 TRV 67 TLC 68 LIFE 69 LMN 70 FOOD 72 HGTV 73 NICK 76 DISNXD 77 DISN 78 TOON 79 DSC 81 FAM 82 NGC 83 HALL 84 ANML 85 TVL 86 TBN 90 EWTN 91 RLTV 93 CSPAN2 95 CSPAN 96 ID 101 AHC 102 OWN 103 WEA 116 TCM 162 HBO MAX SHOW ENC STRZ
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SECTION B
USA TODAY — L awrence J ournal -W orld
IN MONEY
IN LIFE
No rate hike, but Dec. move hinted
Boy Scouts not prepared to like ‘Zombie Apocalypse’
10.29.15 ANDREW HARRER, BLOOMBERG
ELECTIONS 2 0
JAIMIE TRUEBLOOD, PARAMOUNT PICTURES
1 6
Tone gets tougher in third GOP debate
Two battles playing out on stage: Bush vs. Rubio, Trump vs. Carson Susan Page @SusanPage USA TODAY
The clock is ticking and the heat is rising. Former Florida governor Jeb Bush and Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, once political allies, tangled furiously at the third presidential debate Wednesday as both scrambled for footing in a NEWS ANALYSIS
shifting presidential race. Bush suggested Rubio should resign from his Senate seat if he was going to miss so many votes, and Rubio countered that his former mentor was listening to political consultants that had told him to launch that sort of attack. Meanwhile, Ohio Gov. John Kasich led the charge against the field’s new front-runner, Ben Carson, saying his economic proposals were “a fantasy” and warning, “We’re on the verge of picking someone who perhaps cannot do this job.” The two-hour debate, sponsored by CNBC in Boulder, Colo.,
JUSTIN SULLIVAN, GETTY IMAGES
Ben Carson said he would abide by Ronald Reagan’s “11th Commandment” and not to speak ill of another Republican.
reflected a new and rougher phase of the GOP campaign, and one in which Donald Trump for once wasn’t the center of all the action. Bush and Rubio were in one battle to emerge as the establishment alternative; Trump and Carson were in a separate contest to be the top contender among the political outsiders, the category that has dominated the contest so far. The sharper tone reflected both shifting fortunes — Trump seems stung that Carson now leads in three Iowa polls and one nationwide one — and the calender. In 100 days, the opening Iowa caucuses will be history and the surviving candidates will be making their final pitch to New v STORY CONTINUES ON 2B
MILITARY BLIMP GOES ROGUE MARK WILSON, GETTY IMAGES
GOP nominates Ryan as speaker
A runaway surveillance craft, dragging its cable, floated from Maryland to Pennsylvania on Wednesday, causing power outages and sparking humorous reactions on Twitter. IN NEWS
Wisconsin congressman clears biggest hurdle when the fractious, 247member GOP conference largely unites behind him. IN NEWS
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. JIMMY MAY, AP
For the latest national sports coverage, go to sports.usatoday.com
USA SNAPSHOTS©
Choice Halloween treat We’ll spend $2.6 billion on sweets this holiday, and chocolate cravings still cream candy corn:
70% to
13% Source National Confectioners Association survey of 1,630 consumers TERRY BYRNE AND PAUL TRAP, USA TODAY
U.S. may boost role in Iraq, Syria Advisers may move closer to ground fight Jim Michaels USA TODAY
The Pentagon is considering plans that would place U.S. advisers closer to ground combat in Iraq and Syria in a move that could amount to a major escalation in its war against the Islamic State, a senior defense official told USA TODAY. The potential move reflects growing concern at top government levels that U.S. military operations in Syria and Iraq are not making sufficient progress
against the Islamic State. Last week, U.S. Special The official, who is familForces soldiers and Kurdiar with the plans, was ish units rescued 70 prisoners from the Islamic not authorized to discuss State. The Pentagon said the possible changes pubU.S. forces would assist in licly because no decisions future raids if conditions have yet been made. warranted. The options under The U.S. military curconsideration include BLOOMBERG rently has about 3,400 placing U.S. advisers Ashton Carter troops in Iraq, mostly alongside local combat units in Iraq and embedding a serving in an advise-and-assist small number of U.S. advisers mission for Iraq’s military. The Pentagon hopes the prowith Syrian forces fighting the Isposed changes will bolster local lamic State, the official said. Defense Secretary Ashton Car- forces’ advance in the key cities of ter said Wednesday that U.S. Ramadi, an influential Sunni city strategy in both countries would in western Iraq, and Raqqa, the remain limited to supporting lo- de facto Syrian capital of the Iscal forces working to defeat the lamic State, also known as ISIS Islamic State. and ISIL.
The administration appears to be moving in the direction of engaging more directly with ground forces in Iraq and Syria, said William McRaven, a retired admiral and former commander of U.S. Special Operations Command. “We’ve known for a very long time that airstrikes alone can’t solve the problem,” McRaven, now chancellor of the University of Texas system, told USA TODAY. “You have to put boots on the ground.” “It looks like they are proceeding or moving in that direction, where Secretary Carter and the president are prepared to take more risks in ensuring that we can actively ... degrade ISIS,” McRaven said.
In a first, Iran to join talks on ending Syria’s civil war Nuclear deal opened door to its inclusion Oren Dorell USA TODAY
Iran for the first time will join international talks about Syria’s civil war this week in Vienna, displaying the Islamic Republic’s newfound stature since agreeing to a nuclear deal with world powers. Russia invited Iran to join the talks, and Iran accepted Wednesday, bringing Syria’s two closest allies to the table in support of
embattled President Bashar Assad, whose country is in the fifth year of a civil war that has killed more than 250,000 people and displaced half of its population. The talks Thursday and Friday will involve about 12 countries, including the U.S., Turkey and Saudi Arabia, which back Syria’s opposition. President Obama has said Syria’s conflict cannot be resolved if Assad stays in power. Secretary of State John Kerry said Wednesday that nations participating in the talks agree on the need for a political “transition away from Assad (that) preserves a united and secular Syria.” “We agree on the right of the
“Surely we can find a place where one man (Bashar Assad) does not stand in the way.”
ATTA KENARE, AFP/GETTY IMAGES
Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif will join the talks.
Syrian people to choose a leadership through free and transparent elections,” Kerry said in a speech at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Washington. “Surely we can find
Secretary of State John Kerry
a place where one man does not stand in the way.” He said ending Syria’s civil war is a key component to U.S. policy to defeat the Islamic State militants threatening the Middle East. Kerry said Syrians should
not have to choose between a dictator or terrorists. Iran is a key ally to Assad, providing financial aid and forces it calls “advisers.” Russia in September launched airstrikes in Syria, saying it would target the Islamic State and other terror groups. But the U.S. say the airstrikes are aimed at Assad’s foes. If the U.S. and Tehran meet face to face, it will be their first formal negotiations since reaching a nuclear accord in July. Saudi Arabia and Qatar, plus other Sunni monarchies in the Persian Gulf, are the main suppliers of advanced weaponry to Syria’s opposition forces.
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House GOP nominates Ryan for speaker 43 backers of rival likely to support him in full House vote Erin Kelly USA TODAY
Paul Ryan’s election as House speaker was all but assured Wednesday as the GOP conference voted in a closed-door meeting to nominate the 45-yearold Wisconsin Republican as their top leader. The nine-term congressman still must be elected Thursday in a public vote by the full House. But he cleared the biggest hurdle Wednesday when the fractious, 247-member Republican conference largely united behind him. If he is elected, Ryan will be one of the youngest speakers in history. WASHINGTON
ANDREW HARRER, BLOOMBERG
“This begins a new day,” Paul Ryan said on Wednesday.
“This begins a new day in the House of Representatives,” Ryan said after the vote. “(Speaker) John Boehner served with humility and distinction, and we owe him a debt
of gratitude. But tomorrow we are turning the page. ... Our party has lost its vision and we’re going to replace it with a vision.” Ryan said the country is “on the wrong track.” “We think the country’s heading in the wrong direction, and we have an obligation here in the people’s House to do the people’s business and to give this country a better way forward,” Ryan said. “We are going to respect the people by representing the people.” The only other candidate besides Ryan running for speaker Wednesday was Rep. Daniel Webster, R-Fla. Webster received 43 votes while Ryan received 200, members of the GOP caucus said. Ryan will need 218 votes to be elected speaker Thursday if all House members are present. Most of Webster’s supporters are expected to vote for Ryan.
Ryan initially said he had no interest in the job when House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, announced last month that he planned to retire from Congress on Oct. 30. Boehner decided to leave in part because the rebellious Freedom Caucus, a group of about 40 conservatives, threatened to force a no-confidence vote on his speakership. Freedom Caucus members criticized Boehner for being too willing to compromise with Democrats to avoid a government shutdown. House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., appeared at first to be the front-runner to succeed Boehner, but he abruptly withdrew his bid for speaker when it became clear that the Freedom Caucus would not support him and he could not win a majority of House members. Republicans then turned to Ryan,
Candidates are feeling more heat v CONTINUED FROM 1B
Hampshire primary voters in a field that is likely to be smaller than the 10 candidates on stage for the main debate, not to mention four others in the undercard debate that preceded it. The exception to the sharp elbows of the evening: Retired pediatric neurosurgeon Ben Carson, who announced in his first answer that he would abide by Ronald Reagan’s “11th Commandment,” not to speak ill of another Republican. That may have made others more reluctant to attack him, he wasn’t the central figure that Trump had been as the front-runner in the first two debates. But Carson seemed uncertain in defending his proposal to replace the tax code with a flat tax, responding to a question about whether it would leave the government trillions of dollars short of what it now spends. The debate focused on the details of economic issues, not the social issues on which he talks more comfortably
on the stump. “I didn’t say that the rate would be 10%; I used the tithing analogy,” he said. “The rate is going to be much closer to 15% ... and you also have to get rid of all the deductions and also the loopholes. ... It works out very well.” At that, Kasich, a former chairman of the House Budget Committee, exploded in apparent exasperation. “This is the fantasy that I talked about at the beginning,” he said. “You can’t do it with empty promises. These plans would give us trillions and trillions in debt.” The question ahead is whether Carson’s low-key presentation, in stark contrast to Trump’s selfconfident bluster, will convince Republican primary voters that he would make a credible nominee and a competent president. The Republican establishment only in recent weeks seriously had wrestled with the notion that a real-estate mogul and realityTV star could end up as the party’s nominee. Now Carson, gaining in polls, would be an even
who was seen as the one candidate popular enough to unite the divided GOP caucus. Ryan said he would run only if he had the support of the three major Republican factions in the House: the Freedom Caucus, the conservative Republican Study Committee, and the moderate Tuesday Group. Ryan won support from all three factions last week. Ryan was the 2012 Republican nominee for vice president and serves as the chairman of the powerful House Ways and Means Committee, a position he will have to give up to become speaker. Before that, Ryan served as chairman of the House Budget Committee, where he became known for his efforts to cut the deficit, slash government spending and overhaul costly entitlement programs.
In 100 days, opening Iowa caucuses will be history and surviving candidates will be making their final pitch to New Hampshire primary voters
ALEXANDER TAMARGO, WIREIMAGE
Donald Trump campaigns at Trump National Doral in Florida last Friday. He has questioned rival Carson’s dealmaking skills. more unlikely prospect. A medical doctor, he would have the least extensive involvement in public affairs of a major-party nominee in modern times. Asked about his strategy for Wednesday night’s forum, Carson told USA TODAY’s Capital Download this month that he had no plans to change his style. “The pundits after both of the first debates said, ‘Carson didn’t do that well,’ but my numbers went up, so I’m not really worried about the pundits,” he said. “You’ll notice that I don’t criti-
cize anybody,” he said. “I remember we used to love doing that in the third grade, out on the playground — talk about this person’s clothes and his mama. The things that we have to deal with are so much more important than that.” For several other candidates, the debate posed a nearly existential challenge. Bush, viewed as the top contender before the race began, on Wednesday night had lost his position at the center of the stage, where positions were determined by standing in national polls. He
was forced to counter the perception that his heart isn’t really in it. “I’ve got a lot of really cool things I could do other than sit around being miserable,” he told a South Carolina audience last week. But when he launched his attack on Rubio, the Florida senator was ready to respond in kind. Later, Rubio had to respond to questions about controversies involving his personal finances. He dismissed them as Democratic attacks and said he wouldn’t spend his limited time to respond. “I’m not worried about my finances,” he said. “I’m worried about the finances of everyday Americans.” Meanwhile, Texas Sen. Ted Cruz objected to questions being posed as media bias designed to encourage combat.
Republican debate night gets feisty GOP candidates go after rivals with increased verve Gregory Korte and David Jackson USA TODAY
BOULDER , COLO.
Ohio Gov. John Kasich launched the third Republican presidential debate Wednesday night by going after his fellow presidential contenders for scaring senELECTIONS iors over Medicare and Medicaid, threatening to deport 11 million immigrants, and putting forth tax plans that “don’t add up.” “We are on the verge perhaps of picking someone who cannot do this job,” Kasich said in the first question of the debate, suggesting that the rest of the Republican field was too extreme. “This stuff is fantasy. ... Folks, we’ve got to wake up.” But the chief target of Kasich’s attacks — real estate mogul Donald Trump, who has led in many of the polls — shot back by questioning Kasich’s stewardship of Ohio’s economy and his work as a banker for Lehman Brothers dur-
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ANDREW BURTON, GETTY IMAGES
Low-rung GOP presidential candidates, from left, Bobby Jindal, Rick Santorum, George Pataki and Lindsey Graham served as the warm-up act for the main event in Boulder, Colo. ing the financial crisis. “He was so nice. He was such a nice guy,” Trump said. “And then his poll numbers tanked. That’s why he’s on the end (of the stage). And then he got nasty.” That set the tone for what was perhaps the feistiest Republican debate so far. Senators Marco Rubio of Florida and Ted Cruz of Texas even brought the CNBC
moderators into their fray, suggesting that Republicans were getting tougher questions than Democrats did during their debate. “The questions that have been asked so far in this debate show why the American people don’t trust the media,” Cruz said, accusing CNBC of trying to turn the debate into a “cage match.”
One of those questions came from CNBC reporter John Harwood, who asked Trump about his plans to shrink the deficit by cutting taxes and make Mexico pay for a wall on the U.S. border. “Is this a comic book version of a presidential campaign?” he asked. “That’s not very nice the way you say that,” Trump responded.
non-military programs. It would also extend the nation’s borrowing limit through March 2017, when a new Congress and new president are in place. The deal cleared the House 266-167, with Democrats providing the bulk of yes votes. Republicans were divided on the bill, with 79 voting yes; 168, no. No Democrats voted against the bill. “We pushed through the gridlock to provide more economic certainty,” said House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif. She called the vote a “major victory ... for bipartisanship (and) for working families in our country.”
House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, and others hailed the measure, saying it was a fiscally responsible proposal that would restore order to Washington’s budget process and allow Congress to provide fresh investments in military and domestic programs alike. Rep. Harold Rogers, R-Ky., chairman of the House Appropriations Committee, said the deal would “advance this nation toward our goals of fiscal stability, strong national security and entitlement reform,” and it will “roll back harmful, meat-ax approach” cuts to federal programs.
Most Republicans voted against the bill, which critics derided as an eleventh-hour agreement that handed President Obama and congressional Democrats a big spending victory. “Another last-minute, backroom spending deal by the White House and congressional leaders that busts the budget caps and allows unlimited debt for the next 18 months,” said Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio. “No wonder so many Americans distrust Congress.” Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., said the bill was paid for with a series of budget gimmicks that would come back to haunt lawmakers.
“Mexico is going to pay for the wall. ... A politician cannot get them to pay. I can.” Rubio defended himself from a Fort Lauderdale Sun Sentinel editorial demanding he resign because of the votes he missed in the Senate while running for president. He said Democratic senators who ran for president — Bob Graham, John Kerry and Barack Obama — also missed votes and didn’t get similar treatment. But Rubio’s onetime mentor, former Florida governor Jeb Bush, piled on. “When you signed up for this, it was a six-year term. You should finish what you started,” he said. “The Senate, what is it, like a French work week, where you have to show up three days?” The debate was sponsored by the CNBC financial news network and took place at the University of Colorado-Boulder. As with the two previous Republican debates, the Colorado event featured a preliminary session with the lower-polling candidates. South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham dominated the “undercard” debate with a string of Trumplike one-liners. “Somebody said, or maybe I saw it on the bill of a cap, ‘Let’s make America great again,’ ” Graham said, referring to Trump’s campaign slogan. “America is great. I intend to make America strong again.”
Divided House passes a 2-year budget deal Deirdre Shesgreen USATODAY
The House on Wednesday approved a two-year budget deal to extend the debt limit, boost spending and provide a respite from the fiscal brinkmanship that has gripped Washington in recent years. The agreement, passed after an hour-long debate and a last-minute scramble for votes, would increase federal spending by about $80 billion over the next two years, with the new money evenly divided between military and WASHINGTON
“We’re robbing from the future to pay for today,” Issa said. Boehner quietly negotiated the agreement with the White House and other congressional leaders, unveiling it Monday night as he prepared to resign his speakership and leave Congress. The Senate is likely to take up the measure soon, although a final vote may not come until Monday. Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., who is running for president, said he will filibuster the measure. “I will do everything I can do to stop it,” Paul told reporters in Colorado. Contributing: Paul Singer
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USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2015
Dennis Hastert pleads guilty
‘DISTURBING’ TEST OF COPS PATROLLING HALLWAYS
Ex-speaker could stay mum on hush money Aamer Madhani USA TODAY
DAVID PURDY, GANNETT
Des Moines school resource officer Deb Van Velzen counsels students at Lincoln High.
1 in 4 schools have at least part-time security, which riles civil rights groups Greg Toppo USA TODAY
A viral video of a South Carolina school resource officer slamming a student to the floor of a classroom is focusing attention on the increasing presence of police officers in schools. But cops in classrooms have long been a source of tension. Richland County, S.C., Sheriff Leon Lott said an investigation found that the force Senior Deputy Ben AP Fields used to Lott: “Not arrest a student acceptable.” who was disrupting a class Monday at Spring Valley High School on Monday was “not based on training or acceptable.” Fields was terminated from his job Wednesday, Lott said. Communities nationwide have spent the past several years increasing the presence of police on school campuses, even as crime rates have dropped precipitously in the USA’s schools. The National Center for Edu-
cation Statistics reported this year that the number of crimes against students has plummeted more than 80% since 1992, with the rate of victimization for students in the USA’s middle schools and high schools dropping from about 182 incidents per 1,000 students to 30 in 2013. Yet in its most recent report on school safety nationwide, the Justice Department in 2014 said 43% of public schools reported the presence of one or more security guards, security personnel, school resource officers (SROs) or sworn law enforcement officers during the 2009-10 school year. Civil rights groups have long said that cops in schools actually make safety worse for many children, increasing the likelihood that students will end up severely disciplined for minor infractions. In early 2013, shortly after the Sandy Hook Elementary School shootings in Newtown, Conn., and amid calls for more armed police in schools, Advancement Project, a Washington, D.C.-based civil rights group, proposed that schools use the money they would spend on more police to develop long-term safety plans and invest in conflict resolution, as well as better access to mental health services for students.
Senior Deputy Ben Fields tries to forcibly remove a student who refused to leave class at her Columbia, S.C., high school, in an image recorded by a fellow student.
AP
“This thing went from a school discipline issue to a criminal matter in two minutes.” Curt Lavarello, expert on school law enforcement
As part of its proposal, the group tracked school referrals to Florida’s juvenile justice system in 2010-11 and found that of 16,400 referrals, 69% were for misdemeanors. On Tuesday, Advancement Project co-director Judith Browne Dianis said the video from South Carolina “underscores the problem with police in
schools.” Instead of de-escalating the situation, she said, the officer “dehumanized and criminalized a black teenage girl.” Curt Lavarello, a school law enforcement expert, said that if administered properly, an SRO program “can have incredible value to schools.” Its most important effect is to help young people develop a trusting relationship with law enforcement. That pays dividends if they’re bullied or are crime victims, he said. But the video that surfaced on Monday was “disturbing,” Lavarello said. “This thing went from a school discipline issue to a criminal matter in two minutes,” he said. Lavarello, who founded the National Association of School Resource Officers in 1991, said a well-trained SRO would have tried to “verbally de-escalate” the situation. Civil rights groups say more police officers in schools often mean more suspensions, which disproportionately affect minority students. A study issued in February by the Civil Rights Project at UCLA found that since 1972, suspension rates for white students have risen 2 percentage points, from 3% to 5%. Meanwhile, suspension rates for African-American students nearly tripled, rising from 6% to 16%.
Military blimp goes AWOL for a joy ride Tom Vanden Brook USA TODAY
WASHINGTON
The Pentagon got
its blimp back. It went AWOL from Aberdeen Proving Grounds in Maryland on 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.
Surveillance craft draws oversized attention Wednesday, snapping a more than 1-inch-thick cable and hitting the skies on a joy ride over eastern Pennsylvania. It’s hard to hide when you’re a blimp. At nearly the size of a football field, this one attracted plenty of attention, tweets and two fighter jets. Sen. John McCain, RAriz., former Navy pilot and chairman of the Armed Services Committee, tweeted some advice during the chase: “Note to @usairforce: Follow that blimp!” In the end, all they could do
was wait for the blimp to run out of steam. It did, about 4 p.m., near Moreland Township. While on the lam, dragging its cable, it blacked out power for thousands. Surrounded by local law enforcement, the blimp awaited a team to haul it back. “Mostly deflated,” the military pronounced. When on duty, the blimp serves as a key component of domestic air defense. It is part of a $2.7 billion surveillance system designed to detect cruise missiles, rockets, drones and other weap-
ons that could be used to attack key targets in the United States. Breakaway blimp sounds better than its official name: the Joint Land Attack Cruise Missile Defense Elevated Netted Sensor System. “So everyone just calls it JLENS (pronounced jay-lens),” Raytheon, the contractor that built it, says on its website. How the blimp slipped away is unclear. Its cable is made to withstand winds of 100 mph, and winds Wednesday at Aberdeen were about 12 mph with gusts to 23 mph. Defense Secretary Ashton Carter told reporters not to worry. He vowed to refloat it.
CHICAGO Former U.S. House speaker Dennis Hastert pleaded guilty Wednesday to making dozens of illegally structured bank withdrawals as part of an effort to pay hush money to someone from his past for decades-old misconduct. Hastert pleaded guilty to one count in the indictment, which carries a maximum sentence of five years. Under the plea deal, federal prosecutor Steven Block recommended that Hastert, the longestserving Republican speaker in history, be sentenced to zero to six months in federal prison. A judge will rule on the terms of the sentence and could reject the prosecutor’s recommendation. Sentencing is set for Feb. 29. But with the guilty plea, Hastert, 73, may be able to keep secret further embarrassing details about why he agreed to pay $3.5 million to an unidentified individual from Yorkville, Ill., the town Hastert had noEPA where he comment as he worked as a high left U.S. court school teacher Wednesday. and wrestling coach before entering politics. Hastert, who was once the third-highest-ranking elected official in America, was surrounded by his attorneys and federal marshals who escorted him out of the downtown courthouse to a waiting car after the hearing. He did not comment to reporters. The indictment, unsealed nearly five months ago, referred to the alleged wrongdoing by Hastert as “prior misconduct” against someone identified as “Individual A.” But federal law enforcement officials told USA TODAY Hastert made illegally structured withdrawals in an effort to conceal sexual misconduct he committed against a male student. Hastert circumvented the federal requirement that requires banks to report withdrawals of more than $10,000. He was accused of withdrawing a total of $952,000 in increments under that threshold that were paid to the individual. Block, the lead prosecutor, said Hastert made a total of 106 illegally structured withdrawals between July 2012 and December 2014. “I didn’t want them to know how I was spending the money,” Hastert said in court. He did not reveal any details in his court statement about where he spent the money.
IN BRIEF STUDY: HIGH LEVEL OF RESTAURANT SALMON FRAUD
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Take a second look at that wild salmon entree you paid a premium for in a restaurant. It’s likely mislabeled. Oceana, an advocacy organization that’s previously found fraud in retail marketing of other fish, shrimp and crab cakes, released findings Wednesday that diners were misled in restaurants when ordering salmon 67% of the time. The most common mislabeling was labeling farmed salmon as pricier, more sustainable wild salmon. Oceana also tested salmon in grocery stores, finding it was dramatically less likely to be mislabeled — about 20% — and that large grocery stores were significantly more reliable with salmon sourcing than small markets. — Lindsay Deutsch WHALE-WATCHING TRAGEDY INVESTIGATION CONTINUES
Divers were scheduled to make one last effort Wednesday to recover the body of an Australian
A PRINCELY ASSIST
ANALYSIS: CHICAGO RANKS AS A NOT-SO-WINDY CITY
Despite its nickname, Chicago isn’t even in the top 10 of the windiest U.S. cities, according to a new analysis of recent weather data from CoreLogic, a research and consulting firm. Jackson, Miss., is the windiest city in the nation, followed by Springfield, Mo.; Boston; Cambridge, Mass.; and Shreveport, La., according to CoreLogic. As for Chicago, it’s actually the 50th windiest city in the U.S. — Doyle Rice ALSO ... SAUL LOEB, AFP/GETTY IMAGES
Britain’s Prince Harry hands a basketball to Michelle Obama while Jill Biden applauds during a Wounded Warriors wheelchair basketball game Wednesday at Fort Belvoir, Va. man missing and presumed dead after a Canadian whale-watching boat capsized Sunday off Vancouver Island, killing five others. Authorities said Tuesday that most of the 27 people aboard the Leviathan II were pressed against one side of the vessel when a
strong wave hit the other side. Marc Andre Poisson, director of marine investigations for Canada’s Transportation Safety Board, said the combination of factors could have severely altered the boat’s center of gravity. — John Bacon
The death toll in the magnitude-7.5 earthquake that rocked Pakistan and Afghanistan rose to 385 on Wednesday. Pakistan’s National Disaster Management Authority said that 267 Pakistanis were killed, 220 of them in the northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province. Afghanistan reported 115 dead, while three people died on the Indian side of the disputed region of Kashmir, the Associated Press reported.
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MONEYLINE CABELA’S STOCK TAKES OFF ON TALK OF SALE Shares of Cabela’s rose 17.5% Wednesday to close at $39.26 after Elliott Associates, the hedge fund with an 11% stake in the hunting gear retailer, called for changes, including a possible sale. Elliott said Cabela’s shares are “significant undervalued,” and other private equity firms might be interested in Cabela’s assets.
NEWS MONEY SPORTS LIFE AUTOS TRAVEL SMALL STOCKS + TINY GAINS = SHIFT AWAY FROM RISK S
L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2015
MARKET ANALYSIS
7%
6%
5%
Russell 2000 S&P 500
4%
3%
SLOWER TO RECOVER Stocks in the Russell 2000 have been slower to recover from the August 2015 correction than stocks in the S&P 500. Weekly percentage change YTD for each index:
2%
1.5%
1% 0
-1%
-2%
-2.2%
-3%
FRANCOIS NASCIMBENI, AFP/GETTY IMAGES
COST TO VW: ‘ENORMOUS BUT MANAGEABLE’ Volkswagen executives on Wednesday signaled that the cost of the automaker’s emissions scandal will mushroom but indicated the company can absorb the blow. New Volkswagen CEO Matthias Mueller acknowledged the $7.3 billion in provisions Volkswagen set aside in the third quarter will cover only fixes. It does not include the cost of penalties and potential customer compensation. That means the bill for the scandal could escalate to more than $25 billion. The company declined to offer a specific estimate. It will be “enormous but manageable,” the company’s new financial chief, Frank Witter, told news reporters. 4 CITIES TOP STREAMING LIST Some cities like to stream video more than others. Subscription streaming services such as Netflix have penetrated 47% of U.S. homes, a new Nielsen report finds. The cities with the highest rate of streaming: Washington, D.C., and Seattle (both at 56%), and Portland and San Francisco (both at 55%). Overall, Netflix is in 42% of U.S. homes, Amazon Prime in 18% and Hulu 9%. Portland and Washington were the only two cities among the top five in subscribership to all three streaming services. RECALLS DING FIAT CHRYSLER Fiat Chrysler Automobiles on Wednesday reported a loss of $330 million after adjusting for recall costs that were higher than expected and to account for the cost of vehicles damaged in the China port explosion in August. The company recorded a onetime charge of $842 million for recalls and $157 million for inventory lost or damaged in the port explosion. Without those charges the automaker would have earned $303 million, meeting analyst expectations. DOW JONES INDUSTRIAL AVG. 17,800 17,750 17,700
4:00 p.m.
17,780
198.09
17,550
-5%
-6%
Source Bloomberg
-7%
KRIS KINKADE, USA TODAY
Adam Shell @adamshell USA TODAY
mall stocks have delivered under-sized gains in the big rally after the stock market’s first correction in four years, a sign investors are moving away from less-speculative stocks and reducing risk. Once bull market leaders, small-company stocks — which are deemed as more speculative, high-flying investments — have turned to laggards. The performance math since the market bottom tells a story of investors’ diminishing infatuation with small company stocks and a renewed preference for more stable, safer and solid bluechip stocks. The Russell 2000, an index of small-company stocks, has rallied just 8.8% since its correction low Sept. 29. In contrast, the 30 big blue-chip companies in the Dow Jones Industrial Average are up 13.5% since its late-August low and the large-company Standard & Poor’s stock index has jumped 11.9%. “The larger the stock, in terms of market (value), the better the returns have been (recently),” noted Paul Nolte, a money manager at Kingsview. Small caps lost their leadership status in July. With market volatility on the rise, an interest rate hike from the Federal Reserve on the horizon and some signs of a weakening economy, investors no longer are swinging for the fences. “I’m not surprised to see small cap underperforming in recent weeks,” says Michael Farr, CEO of
@PDavidsonusat USA TODAY
9:30 a.m.
17,581
INDEX
Nasdaq composite S&P 500 T- note, 10-year yield Oil, light sweet crude Euro (dollars per euro) Yen per dollar
CLOSE
CHG
5095.69 2090.35 2.10% $46.15 $1.0909 121.23
x 65.54 x 24.46 x 0.06 x 2.95 y 0.0131 x 0.90
SOURCES USA TODAY RESEARCH, MARKETWATCH.COM
USA SNAPSHOTS©
Average CD yields As of Wednesday: 6-month
This week Last week Year ago 0.17% 0.17% 0.16% 1-year
This week Last week Year ago 0.28% 0.28% 0.27% 21⁄2-year
This week Last week Year ago 0.44% 0.44% 0.41% 5-year
This week Last week Year ago 0.85% 0.85% 0.84% Find more interest rates at rates.usatoday.com. Source Bankrate.com JAE YANG AND KARL GELLES, USA TODAY
The Federal Reserve held off on raising interest rates Wednesday but signaled a hike could come as early as December despite recent speculation that a slowing economy will prompt the central bank to wait until next year. With job gains weakening markedly the past two months and the government BLOOMBERG expected to report Janet third-quarter eco- Yellen nomic growth of less than 2% at an annual rate Thursday, the Fed’s decision to keep its benchmark rate near zero was widely expected. The central bank hasn’t lifted the rate in nearly a decade, and it has been near zero since the 2008 financial crisis. But in a statement after a twoday meeting, the Fed said, “In determining whether it will be appropriate to raise the target rate at its next meeting,” the Fed will assess progress toward its goals of maximum employment and 2% WASHINGTON
WEDNESDAY MARKETS
After lagging in market rebound, small caps are losing favor to more stable blue-chip stocks
RICHARD DREW, AP
Traders such as Mark Puetzer are finding investors trending back to the safety of the Dow and S&P 500.
“Markets are nervous. So the larger companies become the havens.” David Kotok, chief investment officer at Cumberland Advisors
money-management firm Farr, Miller & Washington. “Smaller companies are generally deemed to be more speculative investments compared to large caps. As volatility has increased, some investors may have sought the relative safety of large caps with their strong balance sheets and cash stockpiles.” Unlike big companies that can fund themselves from within,
smaller companies are more dependent on external sources, which is becoming more difficult as credit markets tighten ahead of coming rate hikes, experts say. “Markets are nervous,” says David Kotok, chief investment officer at Cumberland Advisors. “So the larger companies become the havens.” The market advance has become more narrow, too, with fewer stocks powering the advance as worries have increased, prompting investors to seek out bigger, better-known stocks that have proved they can boost sales and profit in a slower-growth economic environment. Dominating the performance charts recently, for example, are the so-called “TFANG” shares, an acronym that stands for technology, Facebook, Amazon.con, Netflix and Google parent Alphabet. Tried-and-true stocks are in vogue. Small upstarts are out of favor. And that new trend could have legs. “Leadership off the lows has been all about large caps vs. small caps and we continue to anticipate this has longer-term implications,” Jason Trennert, founder of Strategas Research Partners told clents in a research note, adding that market leadership has come from the top ranks, or the stocks with the biggest market values in the S&P 500. “If you haven’t owned the right ones or the big ones, returns remain more difficult to find,” Trennert added. So-called “safe” sectors in the S&P 500, such as utilities and consumer staples, have emerged amid an investor shift to higher levels of risk-aversion.
Here we go again: Fed hints at possible rate hike in December Paul Davidson
17,650 17,600
-4%
Stocks trip but regain footing; Dow rises nearly 200 points Adam Shell @adamshell USA TODAY
Wall Street at first reacted negatively when the Fed left rates unchanged and signaled a December rate hike was still possible, but then it rebounded with the Dow ending up nearly 200 points. The Dow Jones industrial average, which had been up about 100 points just before the Federal Reserve announcement at 2 p.m. ET, tumbled and briefly turned negative. But it rebounded to finish up 198 points, or 1.1%. The Standard & Poor’s 500 rose 1.2%, and the Nasdaq composite gained 1.3%. The Fed’s statement sent a annual inflation. That marks the central bank’s first reference to bumping up rates at a specific meeting. Fed policymakers will gather Dec. 15-16. In recent weeks, financial markets and many economists have sharply reduced the odds of such a move. But tellingly, the Fed on
clear message to Wall Street that it keeps a December rate hike on the table, says Russ Koesterich, BlackRock’s global chief investment strategist. “The Fed is telling the market that the December meeting is very much live,” Koesterich says. But he doesn’t think a rate hike of a quarter of a percentage point, with rates near 0%, will kill the bull market in stocks. Bear markets normally are caused by an aggressive Fed, which he does not see, or a recession, which he says is not the “most likely outcome” at the moment. The odds of a rate hike are rising in futures markets. Before the Fed statement, the odds of a December rate hike were about one in three, but now are up closer to 50-50. Wednesday suggested recent headwinds have eased. It dropped an assertion from its previous statement that global and market developments “may restrain economic activity somewhat” and further suppress inflation. Instead, it simply cited global and financial developments. Chi-
na’s slowing economy has performed modestly better than expected and stocks have rallied. The Fed said the economy “is expanding at a moderate pace,” echoing its fairly upbeat September outlook. Policymakers noted “the pace of job gains slowed” recently but added that the unemployment rate “held steady” and household spending and business investment “have been increasing at solid rates.” And it added that labor market slack — such as part-time workers who prefer full-time jobs — “has diminished since early this year.” The Fed reiterated that the risks to its outlook are “nearly balanced” and that it will boost rates when it “has seen some further improvement in the labor market” and is “reasonably confident” inflation will drift back to its 2% goal over the mediumterm. The generally positive appraisal appeared to distinctly leave the door open to a December move. “The Fed sent its clearest signal yet that, pending decent data, it has the December meeting in its sights for the first rate hike,” economist Michael Feroli of JPMorgan Chase wrote to clients. Some policymakers, such as Richmond Fed chief Jeffrey Lacker, believe the Fed already should have hoisted rates. He dissented again Wednesday.
5B
USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2015
AMERICA’S MARKETS What to watch Adam Shell @adamshell USA TODAY
The Federal Reserve’s statement Wednesday hinted strongly that an interest rate hike may still be on the table for December. And stocks rallied on the news. Maybe a rate hike is not the end of the world for stocks. Maybe the Fed finally moving off 0% rates could signal that the U.S. economy can finally stand on its own two feet without the benefit of Fed steroid-like stimulus. Maybe the Fed’s slightly more upbeat assessment of the economy is good news, and good news is again good news for the stock market. And maybe, just maybe, Wall Street is starting to warm up to the idea that now’s the time to start normalizing rates. The stock market’s bullish re-
Facts about America’s investors who use SigFig tracking services:
action to the Fed’s statement, which dialed back concerns about global market tumult and international issues as headwinds for the U.S. economy, seems to be sending a message to the Fed to take the plunge and hike rates for the first time in nearly a decade. Barring any unforeseen hiccups, like more lousy job reports, more sinister-looking economic data or another inflation relapse, the pieces are falling into place for a Fed rate5-day hikeavg.: without upset-0.91 ting the stock market in any-12.43 ma6-month avg.: jor way. Stocks haveholding: nearly erased Largest AAPL all of their correction lows.NFLX ChiMost bought: na’s economy hasn’t Most sold: stopped GILDin its tracks as feared. Wall Street is getting more comfortable with the idea of a rate hike. The Fed’s window to hike rates, which looked like it had passed, is open again. Investors are acting like they want the Fed to hike rates while they still can.
+198.09
DOW JONES
Microsoft (MSFT) was the most-bought stock among millionaire investors in mid-October.
+24.46
INDUSTRIAL AVERAGE
CHANGE: +1.1% YTD: -43.55 YTD % CHG: -.2%
COMP
+65.54 CHANGE: +1.3% YTD: +359.64 YTD % CHG: +7.6%
CLOSE: 17,779.52 PREV. CLOSE: 17,581.43 RANGE: 17,556.71-17,779.95
NASDAQ COMPOSITE
CLOSE: 5,095.69 PREV. CLOSE: 5,030.15 RANGE: 5,019.60-5,095.69
+33.43
CLOSE: 2,090.35 PREV. CLOSE: 2,065.89 RANGE: 2,063.23-2,090.35
CLOSE: 1,178.72 PREV. CLOSE: 1,145.29 RANGE: 1,145.48-1,178.78
S&P 500’S BIGGEST GAINERS/LOSERS GAINERS
Company (ticker symbol)
Price
Genworth Financial (GNW) 5.27 Turns October into winning month ahead of earnings call.
LOSERS
YTD % Chg % Chg
+.49
+10.3 -38.0
L-3 Communications (LLL) 125.59 +11.04 Announces leadership change and jumps pre-market.
+9.6
Boston Scientific (BSX) Beats earnings, raises yearly forecast.
18.40
+9.4 +38.9
Level 3 Communications (LVLT) Beats third-quarter profit forecasts.
51.89 +4.40
+9.3
+5.1
CBRE Group (CBG) Tops third-quarter earnings and revenue.
37.57 +3.08
+8.9
+9.7
Fluor (FLR) 47.22 +3.24 Surges on Toshiba’s Westinghouse nuclear work.
+7.4
-22.1
Tenet Healthcare (THC) 31.85 Rises as it receives rating upgrade and positive note.
+2.17
+7.3
-37.1
Starwood Hotels & Resorts (HOT) Up another day as many are interested to buy.
79.50 +4.69
+6.3
-1.9
Total System Services (TSS) Beats third-quarter earnings and revenue.
54.72 +3.07
+5.9
+61.1
+5.6
-26.5
Noble Energy (NBL) 34.84 Deepwater Gulf of Mexico development commenced. Company (ticker symbol)
Price
+1.86
$ Chg
-0.83 -6.35 AAPL GS HOG
MODERATE 51%-70% equities
AGGRESSIVE 71% or more in equities
5-day avg.: 6-month avg.: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold:
5-day avg.: 6-month avg.: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold:
-0.92 -6.65 AAPL LL AAPL
Akami Technologies
-0.73 -7.21 VTMB NFLX GTATQ
POWERED BY SIGFIG
-.5
The Israeli biotechnology company said it would look at its strategic options after CureXcell, its cell therapy to help heal hard-to-treat wounds from the inside, failed late-stage clinical trials in the U.S.
Price: $1.65 Chg: -$2.61 % chg: -61.3% Day’s high/low: $2.40/$1.57 Fund, ranked by size Vanguard 500Adml Vanguard TotStIAdm Vanguard InstIdxI Vanguard TotStIdx Vanguard InstPlus Fidelity Contra Vanguard TotIntl American Funds GrthAmA m American Funds IncAmerA m American Funds CapIncBuA m
Chg. +2.27 +0.71 +2.25 +0.71 +2.25 +1.13 +0.07 +0.50 +0.15 +0.32
4wk 1 +11.2% +10.5% +11.2% +10.5% +11.2% +9.8% +9.3% +11.1% +8.4% +7.4%
YTD 1 +3.2% +2.5% +3.2% +2.4% +3.2% +8.2% -0.1% +6.3% +0.6% +0.3%
1 – CAPITAL GAINS AND DIVIDENDS REINVESTED
TOP 10 EXCHANGE TRADED FUNDS
Akamai Technologies (AKAM) “Unexpectedly weak guidance” hits shares.
62.91 -12.64
-16.7
-.1
Walgreen Boots Alliance (WBA) Pulled repurchase plan back to buy Rite Aid.
84.95
-10.21
-10.7
+11.5
Verisk Analytics (VRSK) 72.66 -7.67 Analytics Wipes October’s gain after third-quarter results.
-9.5
+13.4
Hershey (HSY) Sees earnings at lower end of estimates.
88.24
-6.09
-6.5
-15.1
Edison International (EIX) Rating cut to neutral at Guggenheim Securities.
61.23
-3.15
-4.9
-6.5
Owens-Illinois (OI) 21.75 Beats earnings but cuts forecast on foreign exchange.
-.91
-4.0
-19.4
Flir Systems (FLIR) Dips after posting weak third-quarter results.
26.01
-.99
-3.7
-19.5
C.H. Robinson (CHRW) Month’s gain gone after missing revenue.
67.99
-2.00
-2.9
-9.2
Automatic Data Processing (ADP) Expects earnings at lower end of estimates.
87.91
-2.42
-2.7
+5.4
Gilead Sciences (GILD) 108.13 Solid quarterly results but concerned about future rival.
-2.83
-2.6
+14.7
Close 208.95 35.14 24.46 15.89 18.34 117.12 12.52 14.69 114.02 10.21
Chg. +2.35 -0.41 +0.56 -0.15 -0.54 +3.32 +0.12 +0.87 +0.94 +1.63
% Chg %YTD +1.1% +1.7% -1.2% -10.6% +2.3% -1.1% -0.9% -13.5% -2.9% -41.8% +2.9% -2.1% +1.0% +11.4% +6.3% -27.8% +0.8% +10.4% +19.0% -79.1%
INTEREST RATES
MORTGAGE RATES
Type Prime lending Federal funds 3 mo. T-bill 5 yr. T-note 10 yr. T-note
Type 30 yr. fixed 15 yr. fixed 1 yr. ARM 5/1 ARM
Close 6 mo ago 3.25% 3.25% 0.12% 0.13% 0.04% 0.01% 1.47% 1.38% 2.10% 2.00%
Close 6 mo ago 3.80% 3.86% 2.85% 3.00% 2.53% 2.70% 3.23% 3.11%
SOURCE: BANKRATE.COM
COMMODITIES
SOURCE: BLOOMBERG AND THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Commodities Close Prev. Cattle (lb.) 1.40 1.37 Corn (bushel) 3.76 3.80 Gold (troy oz.) 1,177.10 1,166.80 Hogs, lean (lb.) .61 .61 Natural Gas (Btu.) 2.03 2.09 Oil, heating (gal.) 1.48 1.42 Oil, lt. swt. crude (bar.) 45.94 43.20 Silver (troy oz.) 16.29 15.86 Soybeans (bushel) 8.82 8.91 Wheat (bushel) 5.06 5.09
Chg. +0.03 -0.04 +10.30 unch. -0.06 +0.06 +2.74 +0.43 -0.09 -0.03
% Chg. +2.2% -1.1% +0.9% unch. -2.8% +4.2% +6.3% +2.7% -1.1% -0.6%
% YTD -15.7% -5.3% -0.6% -24.4% -29.6% -19.6% -13.8% +4.7% -13.5% -14.2%
FOREIGN CURRENCIES Currency per dollar British pound Canadian dollar Chinese yuan Euro Japanese yen Mexican peso
Close .6557 1.3219 6.3567 .9167 121.23 16.6342
Prev. .6536 1.3269 6.3525 .9058 120.33 16.5335
6 mo. ago .6520 1.2031 6.2051 .9109 118.87 15.2480
Yr. ago .6199 1.1190 6.1135 .7852 108.08 13.4733
FOREIGN MARKETS Country Frankfurt Hong Kong Japan (Nikkei) London Mexico City
Close 10,831.96 22,956.57 18,903.02 6,437.80 44,741.68
Oct. 28
4-WEEK TREND
$62.91 Oct. 28
$5
$1
$1.65 Sept. 30
Oct. 28
INVESTING ASK MATT
NAV 193.06 52.15 191.18 52.13 191.19 104.97 15.26 45.35 21.20 58.23
ETF, ranked by volume Ticker SPDR S&P500 ETF Tr SPY iShs Emerg Mkts EEM SPDR Financial XLF Mkt Vect Gold Miners GDX Barc iPath Vix ST VXX iShares Rus 2000 IWM iShare Japan EWJ US Oil Fund LP USO PowerShs QQQ Trust QQQ CS VelSh 3xLongCrude UWTI
$125.59
4-WEEK TREND
TOP 10 MUTUAL FUNDS
YTD % Chg % Chg
4-WEEK TREND
The content delivery network operator had solid third-quarter re- $80 sults but said fourth-quarter earnings would be 62 cents a share and revenue $567 million, both be- $60 low Wall Street analysts’ estimates. Sept. 30
Macrocure
$ Chg
+1.58
5-day avg.: 6-month avg.: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold:
-0.60 -5.01 TSPCF FCX PER
The company named Christopher Kubasik, the former chief operat- $150 Price: $125.59 ing officer of Lockheed Martin, as Chg: $11.04 president and chief operating offi% chg: 9.6% Day’s high/low: cer, a newly created position. Ku- $90 Sept. 30 $126.23/$116.84 basik left Lockheed in 2012.
Price: $62.91 Chg: -$12.64 % chg: -16.7% Day’s high/low: $63.20/$60.25
RUSSELL 2000 INDEX
CHANGE: +2.9% YTD: -25.98 YTD % CHG: -2.2%
5-day avg.: 6-month avg.: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold:
STORY STOCKS L-3 Communications
RUSSELL
RUT
BALANCED 30%-50% equities
More than half a million investors nationwide with total assets of $200 billion manage their investment portfolios online with SigFig investment tracking service. Data on this page are based on SigFig analysis.
STANDARD & POOR'S
CHANGE: +1.2% YTD: +31.45 YTD % CHG: +1.5%
CONSERVATIVE Less than 30% equities
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S&P 500
SPX
USA’s portfolio allocation by risk
Here’s how America’s individual investors are performing based on data from SigFig online investment tracking service:
MAJOR INDEXES DJIA
How we’re performing
DID YOU KNOW?
Market to Fed: We can survive rate hike
ALL THE MARKET ACTION IN REAL TIME. AMERICASMARKETS.USATODAY.COM
Prev. Change 10,692.19 +139.77 23,142.73 -186.16 18,777.04 +125.98 6,365.27 +72.53 44,698.02 +43.67
%Chg. YTD % +1.3% +10.5% -0.8% -2.8% +0.7% +8.3% +1.1% -2.0% +0.1% +3.7%
SOURCES: MORNINGSTAR, DOW JONES INDEXES, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
IN-DEPTH MARKETS COVERAGE USATODAY.COM/MONEY
Twitter stock risky until it figures itself out Q: Can I make money on Twitter? Matt Krantz
mkrantz@usatoday.com USA TODAY
A: Twitter is struggling to find its reason to be. Investors will need to be patient in the meantime. Shares of Twitter have been a point of pain for investors this year, with shares dropping 14%. Twitter’s latest quarter didn’t do much to inspire confidence in the company, which allows users to send short messages to each other. Results during the third quarter actually came in double what Wall Street analysts expected. But the problem is the company’s future. Analysts now expect the company to earn just 12 cents a share in the fourth quarter, which is 36% lower than what was called for six months ago. Twitter is struggling to show mainstream online users why it’s worth the trouble. Wall Street analysts continue to think Twitter has a future; it’s just going to take longer to become clear. Shares are rated “outperform,” and analysts think the stock could be worth $34.31 a share in 18 months. If correct, that would be nearly 12% upside from the stock’s current price of around $31 a share. But Twitter remains a highly risky stock that’s only for investors able to lose money. New Constructs, which compares the stock price to the present value of expected cash flows, rates the stock “dangerous.” It’s a speculative bet for investors willing to take a big chance.
Icahn buys large stake in AIG, calls for break into three parts Kaja Whitehouse USA TODAY
Billionaire investor Carl Icahn is advocating insurance giant AIG be broken into three parts, a call that already is getting support from another large shareholder. In a letter to AIG CEO Peter Hancock on Wednesday, Icahn blasted AIG as “too big to succeed,” a riff on the popular “too big to fail” phrase that emerged from the financial crisis. In the letter, he demanded Hancock rectify the situation by pursuing “tax free separations of
HEIDI GUTMAN, CNBC
Carl Icahn wouldn’t disclose his stake in AIG except to say in a tweet that it is “large.”
both its life and mortgage insurance subsidiaries to create three independent public companies.” The third company would be AIG’s core property and casualty
business. Icahn also called for AIG to “embark on a much needed cost control program.” Icahn — known for making waves at companies he invests in — told Hancock he is not alone in his belief AIG needs to downsize and quoted fellow billionaire hedge fund manager John Paulson making the same request. An AIG breakup “is frankly overdue,” Paulson is quoted as saying in Icahn’s letter. “By separating into three independent companies, reducing unnecessary corporate overhead, operating at average industry returns, and buying back stock, AIG can trade
at over $100 per share — 66% above its current $60 price,” the head of Paulson & Co. said. Shares of AIG rose 4.9% Wednesday to $63.89 following the news. “AIG maintains an open dialogue with all our shareholders and welcomes their feedback and ideas,” Hancock said in a statement on AIG’s website. Hancock says he and his management team have been working on simplifying the company and that they hope to “continue and accelerate those efforts.” Hancock said he expects to provide an update on their progress at the company’s “regularly scheduled
earnings call on Tuesday.” But Icahn’s letter suggests the company has been too slow, despite shareholders’ request for more dramatic change. “We believe there is no more need for procrastination, the time to act is now,” Icahn told Hancock. “I cannot fathom how you could ignore repeated requests from shareholders to execute a plan that would release billions of dollars of capital, free the company from onerous excess regulation, and leave shareholders owning stock in three separate, market leading insurance franchises.”
6B
LIFELINE
SPORTS LIFE AUTOS TRAVEL
L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2015
MOVIES
HOW WAS YOUR DAY? GOOD DAY KRISTIN CHENOWETH Just in time for her role in ‘The Peanuts Movie’ (Nov. 6), Chenoweth puts life into the glamorous dog who has the same vocabulary as her famed beagle boyfriend, giving Snoopy’s beloved French poodle Fifi a voice. “The trick was to invent Fifi’s language and make it emotional, without words. It was vocally challenging,” says Chenoweth, who jumpstarted her career with a Tony Award in 1999 as Sally in Broadway’s ‘You’re a Good Man, Charlie Brown.’ Voicing Fifi was a show of respect to the late Peanuts creator Charles M. Schulz. “I really did this because it’s something close to my heart.”
SCOUTS CAUGHT UP IN TWENTIETH CENTURY FOX & PEANUTS
GOOD DAY CARRIE UNDERWOOD FANS The singer is hitting the road early next year to support her latest album, ‘Storyteller.’ She’ll kick off The Storyteller Tour: GETTY IMAGES Stories in the Round Jan. 30 in Jacksonville, Fla. And for those who won’t be able to see her in person, Ryan Seacrest has announced she’ll perform on this year’s ‘New Year’s Rockin’ Eve.’ MAKING WAVES Khloe Kardashian says that just because she called off her divorce to Lamar Odom doesn’t mean they’re getting back together — and GETTY IMAGES she’s defending why she’s speaking out about it in the first place. “Shame on you all for thinking the worst of me,” she tweeted Wednesday after a ‘People’ magazine interview in which she talked about her divorce. “It’s been a tough few weeks. I don’t need your (messed up) energy!” She says the interview took place only because it was part of a contract, and she is angry anyone would think she was taking advantage of Odom’s near-fatal overdose in a Nevada brothel two weeks ago to promote herself, her new book or her brand. “ I canceled my book tour to avoid this attention,” she adds.
‘ZOMBIE APOCALYPSE’
PHOTOS BY JAIMIE TRUEBLOOD, PARAMOUNT PICTURES
Ben (Tye Sheridan, left) and Augie (Joey Morgan) eventually step up to the task in Scouts Guide to the Zombie Apocalypse.
Comedy portrays them as ‘cool’, but movie team is prepared for a backlash
Bryan Alexander @BryAlexand USA TODAY
Scouts Guide to the Zombie Apocalypse features young men doing their honorable best to stop a full-on zombie onslaught. But be prepared. When the raunchy R-rated comedy opens in theaters Friday, it will show uniformed Scouts gleefully hitting a strip club, killing zombies with zeal and even burning their own troop leader (OK, he turned zombie and had that coming). Some will call this awesome entertainment. The Boy Scouts of America? Not so much. The 105-year-old national organization, whose media representatives declined to discuss the movie’s mischief, directed USA TODAY to a post at ScoutingWire.org. “Moviegoers might assume the characters are actual Boy Scouts,” the post reads. “To be clear, they are not.” The BSA accepts screen imitations but saves a special place of scorn for Zombie Apocalypse, which does not reflect “how Scouts should live out the Scout Oath and Scout Law.” “The film is a form of speech that is protected by the First Amendment,” the post reads. “That freedom, while not absolute, applies to even works of
dubious artistic value.” “We wanted our film to be entertaining in a wild and outrageous way,” says producer Todd Garner. “Because of that, we chose to work independently from the Boy Scouts of America.” Director Christopher Landon incorporated the fictitious American Scouts Society and designed uniforms that felt “relatable and sort of iconic.” The scout characters provide instant emotional resonance as good kids (played by Tye Sheridan, Logan Miller and Joey Morgan) dealing with growing pains in a society that doesn’t always respect outward wholesomeness. But, most important, the young scouts are prepared to step into action.
“If there’s a takeaway from this, it’s that our scouts are clever, smart and nimble,” Landon says. “These guys are cool and they save the world.” Jackson Meyer, 23, an Eagle Scout from Corvallis, Ore., sought and received BSA permission to wear his uniform on NBC’s American Ninja Warrior competition. Meyer says he’s curious enough to check out the movie. “It’s rated R, for sexual encounters, nudity and violence. Those are not facets of the Boy Scout life,” Meyer says. “I’m not stoked about it. But I’m probably going to see it. I want to see how they represent Scouts in this odd and weird way with a very interesting storyline of a zombie apocalypse.”
Denise (Sarah Dumont) Ben (Sheridan) and Carter (Logan Miller) face off against the undead.
CAUGHT IN THE ACT TELEVISION
‘Bones,’ ‘Sleepy Hollow’ team up for Halloween chills SAUL LOEB, AFP/GETTY IMAGES
Even Michelle Obama couldn’t resist joking about Prince Harry’s bearded look! She got a joke in while speaking at an event for wounded warriors Wednesday at Fort Belvoir, Va., during Harry’s visit to the USA. Compiled by Cindy Clark
USA SNAPSHOTS©
Top music downloads Hotline Bling Drake
152,900
Perfect One Direction
135,800
The Hills The Weeknd
110,700
Wildest Dreams Taylor Swift
85,900
Stitches Shawn Mendes
78,600
Source Nielsen SoundScan for week ending Oct. 22 KIM WILLIS AND KARL GELLES, USA TODAY
After digging up a headless corpse, the Bones team needs some help getting to the marrow of the matter. Enter Sleepy Hollow’s crime-solving sleuths, who step out of their supernatural realm for a two-hour crossover episode Thursday (Fox, 8 p.m. ET/PT). Bones star David Boreanaz and Sleepy’s Tom Mison tell USA TODAY’s Patrick Ryan what to expect in the creepy crossover: Q: What did you make of the crossover when you first heard about it? Boreanaz: I didn’t even think of it as a possibility. My first reaction was, “Well, there’s the supernatural world of what they’re doing and the only real resemblance is that they’re both trying to solve things.” Mison: I thought it was a terrible idea. They’re two very different worlds: the Sleepy Hollow world of the supernatural and the pragmatic, logical world of Bones. But I knew David was very, very excited about working with me, so I said, “Yes, this is a great idea.” When we got on set, it suddenly made perfect sense. Boreanaz: Not to mention, Crane wears this badass long coat that I’d like to steal from him. I want to wear it on Bones.
if I’ve mentioned that. Boreanaz: We got a speech before you guys came over to be really nice to you. All joking aside, it was fun. It was fun sharing stories between takes about what you do in Atlanta and obviously Tom’s life — he just had a new baby. At one point, he wanted to stop production for tea, which, on our set, is always happening. We all got along great.
TINA ROWDEN, FOX
Tom Mison and Nicole Beharie of Sleepy Hollow appear with Emily Deschanel and David Boreanaz from Bones. Q: When Crane arrives at the Bones Jeffersonian lab, no one knows what to make of him. What was most fun about that? Mison: It’s nice to have a change of scenery — it’s like walking into Crane’s dream. In fact, there’s a line about the Jeffersonian Institute, how it’s exactly what Thomas Jefferson wanted. And Jefferson, of course, was Crane’s idol. So to see it brought
to life, he was overwhelmed and loved every second of it. Q: How was the atmosphere on set? Mison: Very frosty. Both teams were on either side of the set just eyeing each other up. It’s like school discos, with the girls on one side and the boys on the other. I had met David before. We had met at a few Fox things and I knew he was very excited about working with me — I don’t know
Q: How do you celebrate Halloween? Do you pull pranks on each other like Brennan and Booth do? Boreanaz: There weren’t really many pranks. I thought about bringing out the fart machine, but maybe next time. I don’t know how they’d respond to it. I mean, Tom’s got a great sense of humor, coming from across the pond. They have a different way of looking at things. Mison: We don’t really get into Halloween in quite the same way (in England). I’m looking forward to a big Atlantan Halloween. Boreanaz: What’re you going to dress up as? Mison: I’m going to dress up as you. I stole clothes from your trailer, I’m so sorry. Boreanaz: FedEx me those boots and that coat, and we’ll be good to go.
KU VOLLEYBALL STOPS IOWA STATE FOR 20TH VICTORY. 3C
Sports
C
Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com/sports l Thursday, October 29, 2015
Two to go WORLD SERIES
Tom Keegan tkeegan@ljworld.com
KU golfer ‘Mook’ making the most of talent For most, golf amounts to a cruel tease. Regression follows improvement, over and over. The average golfer essentially runs in place thinking half the time that a great distance has been covered, convinced the horrors of the game have vanished from the rear-view mirror. In so many ways, Yupaporn Kawinpakorn is not like most “Mook” golfers, even beyond her obvious superior physical talent, contained in a 5-foot-2inch frame. Known by everyNahm one by her nickname “Mook,” a senior on the Kansas University women’s golf team, she has a legitimate shot to contend for a national title. “Everybody in Thailand has a nickname,” Mook said. “Our names are so long.” So are her tee shots. In fact, she estimated, that at an average of 240 yards, they’re 30 yards longer than three years ago. As a freshman in 2012-13, Mook, a native of Samutprakan, Thailand, set a school record with a 75.42 stroke average, rewrote the record (74.46) as a sophomore and did so again as a junior (73.35). In five events this season, her average is 71.21. Josh Nahm, chief instructor at Firekeeper, former head of famed Hank Haney’s junior program and a Lawrence resident, has guided her through each phase of improvement. Mook repeatedly references him when asked about her ascent toward the top of college golf. As a freshman, Nahm gave Kawinpakorn the road map to straighter drives and she worked until she had that down. Then Nahm, with the help of launch monitors and searches for the just-right equipment to suit her game, taught her how to add distance to her drives and iron shots. Again, she made it happen. The next challenge, turning good swings into lower scores by managing the round well, kept her improvement rolling. The shots went straighter and longer, the decisions became wiser, and the scores became lower and lower. Still, one statistic screamed that the toughest step remained unscaled. The yards no longer were a problem. It was the toughest six inches in sports she needed to free, that vast, vague, vital expanse of gray matter that extends from the left ear to the right. Entering the season,
David J. Phillip/AP Photo
KANSAS CITY’S ALEX GORDON SCORED PAST NEW YORK METS catcher Travis d’Arnaud during Game 2 of the World Series on Wednesday night at Kauffman Stadium in Kansas City, Missouri.
Cueto’s two-hitter puts Royals up 2-0
Matt Slocum/AP Photo
KANSAS CITY PITCHER JOHNNY CUETO, RIGHT, celebrates with Alcides Escobar at the end of the seventh inning during Game 2 of the World Series on Wednesday night.
Kansas City, Mo. (ap) — Following the final out, after Johnny Cueto completed his two-hitter, several hundred fans remained in Kauffman Stadium, wanting one more look at the Kansas City Royals. The next time they see Eric Hosmer and his teammates may be in a parade. After smothering the Mets, 7-1, on Wednesday night with Cueto and their pesky offense, the Royals have a 2-0 World Series lead and can capture their first title since 1985 when play resumes at New York’s Citi Field this weekend. Hosmer thought about Kansas City’s seven-game loss to the Giants in 2014. “There’s still a lot of work yet to do,” he said. “Last year we took a 2-1 lead in San Francisco and were feeling pretty good about ourselves.”
Kansas City wore down Jacob deGrom with persistence and prowess, then pounced. Hosmer hit a tiebreaking, two-run single with two outs in a four-run fifth inning that included 14 foul balls. Nineteen hours after Hosmer’s sacrifice fly won a 14-inning thriller, Cueto varied his delivery with occasional quick pitches and kept the Mets off balance. An excited crowd stood on its feet for long stretches to cheer on the rainy night. Some fans wore wigs resembling Cueto’s long, dark dreadlocks — including the Royals’ mascot, Sluggerrr. The teams take Thursday off then New York’s Citi Field hosts its first Series game Friday, when rookie Noah Syndergaard starts for the Mets and Yordano Ventura for the Royals. Please see ROYALS, page 3C
With OU next, Jayhawks’ linemen to get no rest By Matt Tait mtait@ljworld.com
A week ago, in a 58-10 loss at Oklahoma State, the Big 12’s top-ranked pass rush ate up the Kansas University offense for a pair of sacks and eight tackles for loss. So what does KU get for surviving that onslaught? A Please see KEEGAN, page 4C date with the conference’s
second most ferocious pass rush Saturday at Memorial Stadium, where the winless Jayhawks will play host to 14th-ranked Oklahoma at 2:30 p.m. OU’s 25 sacks in seven games this season place them two behind the Cowboys, who lead the Big 12 and rank third in the nation. Both teams are aver-
aging just under four sacks per game, and the Sooners, who hit Texas Tech for four sacks in a 63-27 victory last week, could have the luxury of facing a KU team playing without its top tackle. KU coach David Beaty said earlier this week that left tackle Jordan ShelleySmith was dealing with a
concussion that knocked him out of last week’s loss. Even though he was in uniform at Wednesday’s practice, it sounds like a longshot that Shelley-Smith will be able to play. That leaves the Jayhawks facing the real possibility of Please see FOOTBALL, page 3C Shelley-Smith
Sports 2
2C | LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD | THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29,FOOTBALL 2015 AMERICAN
CONFERENCE
COMING AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE EAST
EAST
FRIDAY
TWO-DAY NORTH
• A report on Free State soccer vs. Wichita North in regionals • A look ahead to Lawrence High and Free State football games
SPORTS CALENDAR
NORTH
KANSAS UNIVERSITY FRIDAY • Soccer vs. TCU, 7 p.m.
OUR TOWN SPORTS AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE Ad Astra swimming: Ad Astra Area Aquatics invites your family to experience Lawrence’s only athlete-centered, coachdirected, parent-supported swim team. Tryouts are open, just contact coach Patrick at 785331-6940 or coach Katie at 785766-7423 or visit the website at adastraareaaquatics.org. Come find out why AAAA is known in our area for its reliable staff and fun-friendly-fast culture! l
Horseshoes anyone?: Anyone interested in pitching horseshoes is welcome at 7 p.m. every Thursday at Broken Arrow. Contact Wynne at 843-8450. l
Aquahawks openings: The Aquahawks are always accepting new members. The Aquahawks are a year-round USA Swimming-sponsored competitive swim team. The Aquahawks offer a swim lesson program and competitive swim team for all ages. The Aquahawks are coached by professional coaches with weekly practices geared toward a variety of skill levels. For information contact Andrew Schmidt at andrew.aquahawks@gmail. com l
Cycling team: Join Team GP VeloTek (www.gpvelotek.com) to improve your road cycling. Open to youth and adults from beginners to advanced cyclists. Contact coach Jim Whittaker at 913.269.VELO or velotek@ aol.com l
Next level lessons: Next Level Baseball Academy offers year-round private and semiprivate baseball lessons ages 8-18. Locations in Lawrence, Big Springs and New Century. For information, email Duncanmatt32@yahoo.com or visit NextLevelBaseballAcademy.com l
FUNdamental softball: Learn the proper mechanics and techniques to play softball. Emphasis placed on fundamental instruction teaching the aspects of pitching, catching, fielding, base-running and hitting. Coach and team consulting available, too. For information, contact LuAnn Metsker at 785-331-9438 or dmgshowpig@aol.com l
Archery club: The Junior Olympic Archery Development Club meets at 9 a.m. every Saturday in the indoor target range at Overton’s Archery Center, 1025 N. Third Street, Suite 119. Youth age 8-20, all levels of experience, are invited to join. The Archery Center has a full-service pro shop with rental equipment available. For information, call Overton’s Archery Center at 832-1654 or visit www.overtonsarcherycenter.com l
Basketball basics: One-toone instruction by Frank Kelly, for boys and girls of all ages. Fundamentals of shooting, passing, dribbling, defense and rebounding. Ten years coaching experience. References. Cost: $25 per hour. For information, call 393-3162 or email lingofrank@gmail.com l
Baseball lessons: Hourly lessons. Grades K-12. All skill levels. Fundamentals of hitting, pitching, fielding, baserunning
FREE STATE HIGH l Saturday, Nov. 21, on Clinton WEST TODAYNORTH Titans looking: The LawLake’s North Shore Trails. Sand• Boys soccer, vs. Wichita North in rence Titans U14 baseball team ers’ Saunter begins and ends at Do you have a camp or a regionals at FSHS, 6:30 p.m. is looking for two players. It is a ALthe EASTCorps of Engineers trailhead tournament or a sign-up sesFRIDAY competitive team that will play on the Clinton Lake North Shore sion on tap? How about somein league and 6-8 tournaments • Football vs. Topeka, 7 p.m. Trails, in Clinton Lake State Park. one who turned in a noteworin spring of 2016. Players cannot The marked courses include thy performance? We’d like you turn 15 before May 1, 2016. Con- ALdifficult CENTRAL rocky, root-bound trails; to tell us about it. Mail it to Our LAWRENCE HIGH SOUTH tact baseball66@outlook.com smooth, flat, easy trails, sceTown Sports, Journal-World, WEST FRIDAY for tryout details nic lake views; long stretches Box 888, Lawrence 66044, fax • Football at Olathe East (CBAC), l through old-growth forest; it to 785 843-4512, e-mail to AL EAST 7 p.m. Rebels looking: The Kansas and two traverses of Sanders’ sportsdesk@ljworld.com or call SOUTH AL WEST Rebels U11 baseball team is WEST Mound, for which the race is 832-7147. looking for players. For a private named. Sanders’ Mound is a hill VERITAS CHRISTIAN tryout, text Mark Kern at 785overlooking Clinton Lake at the AL EAST FRIDAY AL CENTRAL 691-6940. East end of the North Shore trail • Football at Manhattan CHIEF, l and other baseball-related skills. system. The race is a benefit for 7 p.m. Group run: At 6 p.m. every Have references. Call coach Dan veterans’ support group Team SOUTH Thursday, Ad Astra at 785-760-6161 (baseballknowAFC TEAM LOGOS 081312: Helmet and Running team logos(16 for the AFC staff; ETA 5 p.m. WEST RWBteams; (Red,various Whitesizes; andstand-alone; Blue). E. 8th St.) holds a group run from More information, including how@weebly.com). AL CENTRAL AL WEST ROYALS l its store. It’s called “Mass Street online entry, is available at trailBasketball lessons: Gary Milers,” and all paces and abilityAL EAST FRIDAY hawks.com. The Lawrence Trail Hammer offers private and levels are welcome. For infor• at New York Mets in Game 3 of Hawks are Lawrence’s original small group basketball lessons. mation, call the store at 785World Series, 7 p.m. trail- and ultra-running club. Hammer is the P.E. teacher and 830-8353 or e-mail j.jenkins@ AL WEST l a coach at Veritas Christian adastrarunning.com AL CENTRAL Thanksgiving Day Run: For SPORTING K.C. l for the AFC teams; various sizes; stand-alone; staff; ETA 5 p.m. School. Affordable prices and exAFC TEAM LOGOS 081312: Helmet and team logos 12 years they’ve been comRoyals looking: The U12 Roycellent instruction! Contact Gary TODAY at gjhammer@sunflower.com or als baseball team is interested in ing home to run with family • at Portland, 9 p.m. and friends. Come join us for adding a new player. The Royals call 785-841-1800. the Thanksgiving Day 5K Run/ AL WEST l will play in the U12 American Walk on Nov. 26, 8:30 a.m. at Basketball Academy: Reign DCABA league next summer. AFC TEAM LOGOS 081312: Helmet and team logos for the AFC teams; various sizes; stand-alone; staff; ETA 5 p.m. SPORTS ON TV Woodlawn School. This year’s Basketball Academy, LLC., offers Player must be 12 or younger as event is also the RRCA 5K State year-round elite level agility, of May 1, 2016. The Royals have TODAY Championship. Signing up will speed and basketball training a experienced coaching staff get you a souvenir neck gaiter Pro Football Time Net Cable for all youth athletes, ages 5-18. with many years of youth and perfect for winter runs. FamPRICING: 4-Session Package high school level experience. Miami v. New England 7:25p.m. CBS 5, 13, AFC TEAM LOGOS 081312: and team logos for the AFCily teams; variousfor sizes; stand-alone; ETA 5 p.m. discounts three or morestaff; (1-hour each) for 5-12 is $140. PlayerHelmet will have unlimited access 205,213 entries before Nov. 20. Free 4-Session Package for 13 & up to indoor hitting and pitching NFL 154,230 one-mile kids run after the 5K. is $200. For more information, facility. Please contact Andy To register: www.runlawrence. contact Rebekah Vann at 785Vigna at 785-691-5656 or at College Football Time Net Cable org/TDay5k.html. More info: 766-3056 or reignbbacademy@ andyvigna14@gmail.com N. Carolina v. Pitt 6 p.m. ESPN 33, 233 Dee Boeck, 785-841-3587, l gmail.com. For more information, Texas St. v. Ga. South. 6:30p.m. ESPNU 35, 235 runlawrence@gmail.com Youth baseball tryouts: A go to reignbasketballacademy. W.Va. v. TCU 6:30p.m. FS1 150,227 l youth baseball team is looking weebly.com. Join us on Twitter Oregon v. Ariz. St. 9:30p.m. ESPN 33, 233 Lady Prospets: The Lady @reignbbacademy, YouTube and for U10 American League kids Prospects AAU Basketball Club for the 2016 season who are Facebook.com/reignbasketbalPro Basketball Time Net Cable interested in playing in competi- will host its inaugural High lacademy. l tive, yet fun DCABA baseball. We School Fall Skills Clinic for all Atlanta v. New York 7 p.m. TNT 45, 245 Robinson Center court will play in the U10 American ninth- through 12th-grade girls. Dallas v. Clippers 9:30p.m. TNT 45, 245 availability: The Robinson regular-season league and posThe clinic will focus on preparCenter at Kansas University has sibly look into playing a couple ing all high school girls for their Golf Time Net Cable courts available for rent for bas- of tournaments. Contact David upcoming high school seasons. Turkish Airlines Open 5 a.m. Golf 156,289 ketball, volleyball, racquetball, Pedersen at pedersen@ku.edu The two-day clinic will take place CIMB Classic 9:30p.m. Golf 156,289 soccer, baseball, softball and or 785-691-5240. Nov. 7 and 8 at Bishop Seabury l other sports. For information, Academy. Details can be found Time Net Cable Softball clinics: Kansas contact Bernie Kish at 864at www.ladyprospectsball.org or College Soccer Softball will be hosting a set of 0703 or bkish@ku.edu. by calling 785-787-2249. Florida v. Georgia 6 p.m. SEC 157 l November clinics on the 7th and l Texas A&M v. Missouri 8 p.m. SEC 157 Parks and Rec. hiring: 8th. The 7th will focus on pitchOutlaws looking: The 13U Lawrence Parks & Recreation ers and catchers only. The 8th Lawrence Outlaws are looking to Women’s Hockey Time Net Cable Youth Sports Office is currently will be dedicated to elite level add a player to their competitive Minn. v. N. Dakota 7 p.m. FCSC 145 taking applications for the folhitting fundamentals. Registrateam for the 2016 Spring/Sumlowing part-time positions: Youth tion information can be found at mer season. Come be part of an FRIDAY Basketball Officials — Applicant www.kusoftballcamp.com. Per established, successful program must be a least 17 years of age. NCAA rules, this camp is open Time Net Cable that has been around since 2011. World Series Must be dependable, knowlto any and all players grades 8 Pitching experience a plus. Play- K.C. v. Mets 7 p.m. Fox 4, 204 edgeable of the rules and have through 12. ers must not turn 14 before May l some basketball background 1, 2016. Please contact Kevin College Football Time Net Cable Hitting clinics: Kansas softexperience either as a player or Burenheide at baseballslugKU v. Texas Tech replay 1 p.m. FSN 36, 236 ball will be hosting weekly hitting gers21@gmail.com to arrange a an official. Scorekeepers—ApLouisville v. W. Forest 6 p.m. ESPN2 34, 234 plicant must be a least 17. Would clinics through Nov. 11. The tryout. clinics will take place on Monday be responsible for keeping the E. Carolina v. UConn 6 p.m. ESPNU 35, 235 l and Wednesday nights. Space is scorebook and clock during Dartmouth v. Harvard 6:30p.m. NBCSP 28, 238 Family fun run: The third limited and open to any and all competitive Hoopster basketLouisiana Tech v. Rice 7 p.m. FS1 150,227 annual TJ5K & Family Fun Run, ages. Per NCAA rules, this camp ball games. Hoopster games Wyoming v. Utah St. 9:15p.m. ESPN2 34, 234 in memory of Thomas John is open to any and all players are played Sunday-Thursday. Giffin, will be held on Saturday, grades 8 through 12. Applicants must apply online at Pro Basketball Time Net Cable Nov. 21, at 1470 N 1000 Road l http://www.lawrenceks.org/jobs (Wells Overlook Road), LawMiami v. Cleveland 6 p.m. ESPN 33, 233 l Winter clinic: The Kansas rence. The events which begin Golden St. v. Houston 6:30p.m. ESPN 33, 233 Youth workouts LawUniversity softball program has rence High Lady Lions Basannounced its winter clinic date. at 9 a.m., include a 5K Trail Run, 1 Mile Run/Walk and tiny-k Kids’ Golf Time Net Cable ketball: Lawrence High Lady Grades 1 through 5 will particiLion Basketball will host youth pate in a morning session on Dec Fun Run. Proceeds benefit tiny- Turkish Airlines Open 5 a.m. Golf 156,289 k Early Intervention of Douglas girls basketball workouts for 12. Grades 8 through 12 will Toshiba Classic 4 p.m. Golf 156,289 County, a local organization, kindergarten-eighth-graders, 8 work in an afternoon session on CIMB Classic 10p.m. Golf 156,289 to 9 a.m. Saturdays in the main the same day. For more informa- that provides developmental support and services at no cost gym at LHS on Nov. 7. There is tion and to register go to www. College Volleyball Time Net Cable to children birth to three years no cost. We will work on ball kusoftballcamp.com. Per NCAA Texas A&M v. Kentucky 6 p.m. SEC 157 of age who need them. Prior to handling, shooting, defensive and rules, this camp is open to any Purdue v. Wisconsin 7 p.m. BTN 147,237 rebounding skills. Please contact and all players with grade excep- his death at 21 months of age, Thomas John received excelcoach Jeff Dickson at LHSLations. lent services from tiny-k. To College Soccer Time Net Cable l dyLionBasketball@gmail.com register, go to tj5k.com. Visit Lawrence Trail Hawks to to let him know if your child will W.Va. v. Baylor 7 p.m. FSN 36, 236 our Facebook page at TJ5K Run. Okla. St. v. Oklahoma 7 p.m. FCSC host 10k and 25k runs: The be attending. And please check 145 Send any questions to tj5krun@ out our website: http://ladylion- Lawrence Trail Hawks will host gmail.com or call Janice Dunn basketball.weebly.com for more the seventh annual “Sanders’ Women’s Hockey Time Net Cable Saunter 10k and 25k Trail Runs,” at 785-760-1191. information.
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Minn. v. North Dakota 7 p.m. FCSA 144
LATEST LINE NFL Favorite ............. Points (O/U).......... Underdog Week 8 NEW ENGLAND ................8 (51).............................. Miami Sunday a-Kansas City ...... 5 1/2 (45)............... Detroit Minnesota .....................1 1/2 (42)...................... CHICAGO ATLANTA ..........................7 (49).................... Tampa Bay NEW ORLEANS ................3 (49)....................... NY Giants ST. LOUIS .....................8 1/2 (39.5)........ San Francisco Arizona ......................... 4 1/2 (46)............... CLEVELAND Cincinnati . ................Pick’em (48).......... PITTSBURGH BALTIMORE .................3 1/2 (50.5)................ San Diego b-HOUSTON ..................OFF (XX).................. Tennessee NY Jets .............................2 (44)....................... OAKLAND Seattle .............................. 6 (41)........................... DALLAS Green Bay ......................3 (45.5)........................ DENVER Monday CAROLINA . ................... 6 1/2 (46).............. Indianapolis a-at Wembley Stadium-London. b-Tenn QB M. Mariota is questionable. Bye Week: Buffalo, Jacksonville, Philadelphia, Washington. COLLEGE FOOTBALL Favorite ............. Points (O/U).......... Underdog North Carolina .............3 (55.5)............... PITTSBURGH
MINNESOTA TWINS
KANSAS CITY ROYALS
NEW YORK YANKEES
TORONTO BLUE JAYS
MINNESOTA TWINS
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Western Michigan ....... 20 (64)................ E. MICHIGAN Buffalo ............................7 (49.5)................. MIAMI-OHIO GEORGIA SOUTHERN ...21 (68)........................ Texas St TCU .........................14 (75)........ West Virginia ARIZONA ST ................. 2 1/2 (66)....................... Oregon Friday Louisville ......................11 1/2 (42).......... WAKE FOREST East Carolina .................. 7 (51).............. CONNECTICUT Louisiana Tech ..........12 1/2 (62)............................. RICE UTAH ST .......................... 28 (49)...................... Wyoming Saturday NAVY ...................................... 7................... South Florida Marshall . .......................... 18 1/2................... CHARLOTTE APPALACHIAN ST .............24.................................... Troy BALL ST . ............................2 1/2............. Massachusetts WISCONSIN . .....................20 1/2.......................... Rutgers Nebraska ..........................10 1/2.......................... PURDUE Clemson ...............................10.......................... NC STATE IOWA ......................................17........................... Maryland Mississippi ........................... 7............................. AUBURN ARKANSAS ST ................. 17 1/2..................... Georgia St Central Michigan . ............. 3................................ AKRON c-WASHINGTON ................OFF............................. Arizona San Diego St ....................3 1/2............... COLORADO ST
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Stanford ............................... 11............. WASHINGTON ST d-FLORIDA .........................2 1/2........................... Georgia Usc ......................................... 6....................... CALIFORNIA Notre Dame . ...................10 1/2........................... TEMPLE Georgia Tech ...................5 1/2.......................... VIRGINIA Oklahoma St ............... 3.............. TEXAS TECH Oklahoma . .............. 39 1/2................ KANSAS Texas ....................... 6 1/2................. IOWA ST PENN ST .............................5 1/2.............................. Illinois HOUSTON .............................12......................... Vanderbilt TEXAS A&M ..........................16............... South Carolina Tennessee ........................8 1/2...................... KENTUCKY UTAH .....................................24......................... Oregon St CINCINNATI ......................... 27............... Central Florida FLORIDA ST .........................20........................... Syracuse UL-LAFAYETTE ....................12........................ UL-Monroe Western Kentucky ...........24................ OLD DOMINION SOUTHERN MISS ...............24.................................... Utep Florida Intl ........................2 1/2...... FLORIDA ATLANTIC Utsa . ...................................8 1/2................ NORTH TEXAS e-DUKE ................................OFF................. Miami-Florida Tulsa ...................................3 1/2................................... SMU Virginia Tech ...................2 1/2........ BOSTON COLLEGE Idaho ..................................5 1/2............ NEW MEXICO ST
TODAY IN SPORTS MEMPHIS .......................... 31 1/2............................. Tulane Michigan . ......................... 13 1/2................... MINNESOTA Boise St ............................ 19 1/2............................... UNLV UCLA ......................................21............................ Colorado Air Force .............................. 7................................ HAWAII c-Washington QB J. Browning is questionable. d-at Jacksonville, Fla. e-Miami-Florida QB B. Kaaya is questionable. NBA Favorite ............. Points (O/U).......... Underdog Memphis . .....................2 1/2 (187)...................... INDIANA Atlanta ..........................4 1/2 (196)................ NEW YORK LA CLIPPERS . ............. 10 1/2 (211)......................... Dallas NHL Favorite .............. Goals (O/U).......... Underdog NY ISLANDERS ............ 1/2-1 (5.5)..................... Carolina PITTSBURGH ...............1-1 1/2 (5.5)....................... Buffalo PHILADELPHIA ..........Even-1/2 (5)............. New Jersey TAMPA BAY . ................ 1/2-1 (5.5).................... Colorado WINNIPEG ...................Even-1/2 (5).................... Chicago ST. LOUIS ........................1/2-1 (5)...................... Anaheim DALLAS .....................Even-1/2 (5.5)............ Vancouver Montreal .....................Even-1/2 (5).............. EDMONTON Home Team in CAPS (c) TRIBUNE CONTENT AGENCY, LLC
1950 — Detroit’s Wally Triplett gains 294 yards in kickoff returns and ends up with 331 total yards, leading the Lions past the Los Angeles Rams, 65-24. Detroit scores 41 points in the third quarter. 1977 — Russell Erxleben of Texas kicks a 60-yard field goal in a 26-0 rout of Texas Tech. 2008 — Brad Lidge and the Philadelphia Phillies finish off the Tampa Bay Rays, 4-3, in a threeinning sprint to win a suspended Game 5 nearly 50 hours after it started, capturing their first World Series title since 1980. 2014 — Madison Bumgarner and the San Francisco Giants succeed where no team had in 3 1/2 decades, winning Game 7 on the road for their third World Series title in five years. Bumgarner comes out of the bullpen to pitch five scoreless innings on two days’ rest as the Giants hold off Kansas City, 3-2.
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LOCAL
L awrence J ournal -W orld
Thursday, October 29, 2015
| 3C
KANSAS BASKETBALL
Texas big man plans to reveal choice By Gary Bedore gbedore@ljworld.com
Blue-chip big man Schnider Herard, a 6-foot-10, 255-pound senior center from Prestonwood Christian Academy in Plano, Texas, will announce his college choice next Wednesday, the day of Kansas University’s first exhibition game against Pittsburg State. Herard — he has a final four of Kansas University, Mississippi State, Purdue and Texas Tech — has not yet revealed a time for his announcement, which will likely take place at a school assembly. Herard as a junior earned first-team all-
state honors in helping Prestonwood Christian to its fourth consecutive state championship. He scored 23 points and grabbed six rebounds in Prestonwood’s title win over Trinity ChristianAddison. A native of Haiti who has been in the U.S. three years, Herard once had Texas, Oklahoma and Oklahoma State on his list of schools. He’s ranked No. 34 in the Class of 2016 by Rivals.com. “Schnider had, I think, 34 scholarship offers and narrowing that down from 10 to five, he was looking for where he might play right away and which programs are going to use their big guys,”
Derrick Shelby, Herard’s guardian, told goldandblack.com. “The most important thing in his decision is going to be the ability to play right away,” Shelby added. “That’s No. 1. So many kids go to these schools and sit there for a year or two. He’d like to be able to play right away. There’s no question about that. That’s the No. 1 criteria.” l Giles sets date, too: Harry Giles, a 6-10 senior center from Oak Hill Academy in Mouth of Wilson, Virginia, will announce his college choice on Nov. 14 at the Phenom Hoop Classic in Lewisville, N.C., his mom told
Phenom Hoop Report. Giles, who is ranked No. 2 nationally, has a final list of KU, Duke, Wake Forest and Kentucky. “I think consensus everybody thinks he’s going to Duke and because of the attraction of staying close to home and because Jayson Tatum (Duke commit) is a friend of his,” Oak Hill coach Steve Smith told Zagsblog.com recently. Giles hails from Winston-Salem, North Carolina. “They (Blue Devils) have the last visit (this weekend) and that was done purposefully and that was a good move on their part I think because when the smoke clears and his head’s
spinning a little bit now he goes to Duke for the final visit, so it’s going to be interesting,” Smith added. l Morris starts: Former KU forward Marcus Morris, who has earned a starting spot with the Detroit Pistons after mostly coming off the bench with the Phoenix Suns, had a strong season-opener on Tuesday. He scored 18 points and grabbed 10 boards in a 106-94 win at Atlanta. The 6-foot-9 Morris, who hit six of 19 shots, told the Detroit News he likes playing for coach Stan Van Gundy. “(Van Gundy) does a great job of giving me
the ball in the spots I like it,” Morris said. “He did a great job of continuing to come to me, miss or make. My confidence is very high right now. The more I play, the more comfortable I’m going to get.” Morris, who followed that performance with 14 points and six rebounds in a 92-87 home win over Utah on Wednesday, added: “We had a hard training camp and we didn’t put as much work in as we did to come out and lay eggs. We’ve been working really hard and it showed that we’re for real and serious and we’re going to keep trying to grind out games and try to win games.”
Kansas volleyball Royals earns 20th victory
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C
J-W Staff Reports
Ames, Iowa — Kansas University sophomore Kelsie Payne slugged a career-high 26 kills with four blocks as Kansas University’s volleyball team bounced back from its first loss of the season with a 3-1 victory over Iowa State on Wednesday night in Hilton Coliseum. Payne committed just three errors in (20-1, 8-1) KU’s 20-25, 28-26, 2515, 25-20 victory, which came on the heels of Saturday’s 3-0 loss at Texas. The Jayhawks actually moved back into a firstplace tie with Texas, following the Longhorns’
Football CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C
starting two freshmen (Larry Hughes and Clyde McCaulley) at the tackle positions against an Oklahoma front that features three seniors and three juniors on its two-deep depth chart at the four defensive line positions. Add to that the fact that true freshman quarterback Ryan Willis will be making just the fourth college start of his career, and it’s fair to say the Sooners (6-1 overall, 3-1 Big 12) will have a significant experience advantage when Kansas drops back to pass. “I know when you’ve got a young quarterback, I’m going to come after him and see if I can get some hits on him,” Beaty admitted. “So they’re going to do that.”
Missed tackles an issue Beaty said earlier this week that the Kansas defense missed 23 tackles and gave up 212 yards to the Cowboys as a result. That number was a season-high, and, although Beaty and defensive coordinator Clint Bowen both credited the Oklahoma State offense for some of the missed tackles but said breakdowns by the Jayhawks led to a lot of them. “On 53 percent of our chances, we made the tackle. That means we missed half of the tackles in that game,” Bowen said. “I don’t want to take anything away from Oklahoma State, but (OSU running back Chris) Carson and those guys aren’t that good. Nobody’s that good.” While a lack of fundamentals and proper technique was a big reason for the breakdown, Bowen said one other element accounted for most of the problem.
stunning 3-0 setback at TCU on Wednesday. TCU is now 6-3. Madison Rigdon totaled 11 kills, while Tayler Soucie and Janae Hall had seven apiece. Soucie had eight blocks and Hall four rejections. Ainise Havili had 46 assists and 20 digs. Tiana Dockery had 13 digs and four kills, while Cassie Wait contributed 12 digs. Jess Schaben had 15 kills, Morgan Kurht 14 and Ciara Capezio 13 for (13-7, 6-3) Iowa State, which was trying to catch second-place KU in the Big 12 standings. KU will next meet Baylor at 11:30 a.m., Saturday, in Horejsi Center.
“A lot of times it’s a slow reaction that puts you in a bigger space to make a harder tackle. A lot of it is that; we’re just not getting the point of attack quick enough and we’re putting ourselves in position to have to make extremely tough tackles.... Our read-andreact phase, we’re not there yet.”
Wyman improving For the second week in a row, junior Matthew Wyman handled the Jayhawks’ punting. And for the second week in a row, Wyman’s average climbed above 40 yards. In to replace the struggling Eric Kahn midway through the Texas Tech game, Wyman finished that day with three punts for a 42.3-yard average. Last week, he hit eight punts for an average of 43.1 yards. “I’m very impressed,” Beaty said of his new punter. “He doesn’t have a whole lot of technique, but, man, he can hit it. I said before, he’s got a powerful, powerful leg. He’s got some talent that you don’t see in a lot of kids. He’s really doing a lot of that off just throwing that ball out there and kicking it. He’s starting to work on technique to get better. Injury update In addition to the likely absence of their left tackle, the Jayhawks will be without safety Greg Allen (groin) and linebacker Schyler Miles (knee) this week against the Sooners. Allen is expected to miss most, if not all, of the rest of the season, and Miles, who did not play at OSU, is dealing with nagging knee issues that have plagued him throughout his career. Junior quarterback Montell Cozart also remains out, though he was throwing lightly on the sideline at Wednesday’s practice.
Forty-one of the 51 teams to take 2-0 leads in best-of-seven World Series have gone on to win the title, including nine straight since Atlanta stumbled against the New York Yankees in 1996. Kansas City had the best contact hitters in the major leagues this season, missing on just 19.7 percent of swings, according to STATS. The Dodgers and Cubs swung and missed 58 times in deGrom’s first three postseason outings, but he got just three swings and misses against the Royals — his career low. “We don’t swing and miss,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. “We find ways to just keep putting the ball in play until you find holes.” Of deGrom’s 94 pitches, 23 were fouled off by the Royals. “I told Jake not everything has to be a strike,” Mets manager Terry Collins said. “You’ve got to move it around. You’ve got to change speeds, give them something to look at. If you continue to pound the strike zone, they’re going to put it in play, and that’s what they did.” Cueto has struggled on the road, where opposing fans taunt him by repeating his name in a sing-song voice. But since the Royals acquired the free-agent-to-be from Cincinnati in July, he’s been Johnny on the spot at Kauffman Stadium. He pitched two-hit ball over eight innings to win Game 5 of the Division Series against Houston, and Kansas City lined up its Series rotation to have Cueto starting Games 2 and 6 at home. Cueto struck out four and walked three in the low-hit Series complete game by an AL pitcher since Boston’s Jim Lonborg threw a one-hitter against St. Louis in 1967.
David Goldman/AP Photo
ROYALS PITCHER JOHNNY CUETO delivers against the New York Mets during Game 2 of the World Series on Wednesday night at Kauffman Stadium in Kansas City, Missouri. Cueto pitched a two-hitter in the Royas’ 7-1 victory. Both New York hits were soft singles by Lucas Duda, an infield roller to third that took advantage of the shift in the second inning and an opposite-field RBI single to left in the fourth. Cueto let loose some emotion at the end of the eighth inning, when Alcides Escobar made a nifty play to retire Juan Lagares for the final out. As Escobar sprinted past him, Cueto exchanged a flamboyant high five with the shortstop. After Yoenis Cespedes flied to center for the final out, Cueto pointed to the sky and was congratulated by catcher Salvador Perez. Cueto pitched the first Series complete game by an AL pitcher since Minnesota’s Jack Morris won Game 7 against Atlanta in 1991. “That’s what they brought me here for, was to help win a World Series,” Cueto said. DeGrom, 3-0 in the postseason coming in, allowed four runs, six hits and three walks over five
innings in a hairy matchBOX SCORE up of pitchers with contrasting long locks. Pitch- Royals 7, Mets 1 ing with seven days’ rest, New York AB R H BI BB SO Avg. rf 3 0 0 0 1 0 .125 deGrom held Kansas City Granderson D.Wright 3b 4 0 0 0 0 0 .182 Dan.Murphy 2b 2 1 0 0 2 2 to one hit through four Cespedes lf 4 0 0 0 0 1 .222 .100 innings but got in trou- Duda 1b 3 0 2 1 0 0 .444 T.d’Arnaud c 3 0 0 0 0 0 ble in the fifth, when he Conforto dh 3 0 0 0 0 1 .111 .000 walked Alex Gordon on a W.Flores ss 3 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Lagares cf 3 0 0 0 0 0 .333 3-2 slider leading off. Totals 28 1 2 1 3 4 Alex Rios followed Kansas City AB R H BI BB SO Avg. ss 5 1 2 2 0 0 .273 with a single and Escobar A.Escobar Zobrist 2b 5 0 0 0 0 0 .273 cf 4 0 0 0 1 0 .100 fouled off a pair of bunt L.Cain Hosmer 1b 4 1 2 2 0 1 .286 attempts before driving K.Morales dh 4 0 1 0 0 1 .143 3b 3 1 2 1 1 0 .444 an 0-2 slider up the mid- Moustakas S.Perez c 4 1 1 0 0 0 .300 dle for a tying single. A.Gordon lf 2 2 1 1 2 0 .286 rf 3 1 1 0 0 1 .167 Ben Zobrist’s grounder Rios Orlando rf 0 0 0 1 0 0 .333 34 7 10 7 4 3 advanced the runners, Totals New York 000 100 000—1 2 1 and Lorenzo Cain fouled Kansas City 000 040 03x—7 10 0 E-Duda (1). LOB-New York 3, Kansas City 8. 2B-S. off four pitches before Perez (1), A.Gordon (1). 3B-A.Escobar (1). RBIs-Duda a flyout to short center. (1), A.Escobar 2 (3), Hosmer 2 (4), Moustakas (2), (2), Orlando (1). SF-Orlando. Hosmer singled off the A.Gordon Runners left in scoring position-New York 2 mound into center field (T.d’Arnaud, Cespedes); Kansas City 4 (S.Perez 3, RISP-New York 1 for 4; Kansas City 5 for 12. for a 3-1 lead, and Kend- L.Cain). Runners moved up-Zobrist, K.Morales. GIDPT.d’Arnaud. rys Morales’ singled in DP-Kansas City 1 (Moustakas, Zobrist, Hosmer). another run. New York IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA deGrom 7.20 Gordon added an RBI Robles L, 0-1 5 1 6 0 4 0 4 0 3 0 2 0 94 11 0.00 double in the eighth off Niese 1 3 3 3 1 1 27 9.00 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 6 0.00 Jon Niese, a ball off the A.Reed Gilmartin 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 4 0.00 glove of shortstop Wilm- Kansas City IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA W, 1-0 9 2 1 1 3 4 122 1.00 er Flores. Paulo Orlando, Cueto Niese pitched to 3 batters in the 8th. Inherited runners-scored-A.Reed 2-2, Gilmartin the first Brazil-born player to appear in a Series, 1-0.Umpires-Home, Mark Carlson; First, Mike Second, Jim Wolf; Third, Alfonso Marquez; followed with a sacrifice Winters; Left, Gary Cederstrom; Right, Bill Welke. fly against Addison Reed, T-2:54. A-40,410 (37,903). Jim Wolf; Third, Alfonso Marquez; Left, and Escobar tripled in a Garycond, Cederstrom; Right, Bill Welke. T-2:54. A-40,410 (37,903). run.
Volquez heads home for father’s funeral Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic (ap) —
Royals pitcher Edinson Volquez said Wednesday that he didn’t know whether he would be ready to play in the World Series once he returns to the U.S. following his father’s funeral in the Dominican Republic. Volquez said he was in a lot of pain as his eyes welled with tears while he attended his father’s memorial service a day before the funeral. “Losing a loved one is hard,” he said. “My father was everything to me, and he supported me in everything throughout my career. We won the game, but I would have
changed that if it meant he could still be alive.” His father, 63-year-old Daniel Volquez, died of heart failure just before the right-hander started Game 1 of the World Series against the New York Mets on Tuesday night. Volquez said he learned about his father’s death when he stepped off the mound after allowing three runs over six innings. “My wife was waiting for me with the general manager and they told me what had happened after I finished working,” he said. “I want to thank my teammates for all their support, to (Johnny) Cueto and Yordano
(Ventura), who were the first ones to call me.” Volquez said he would return to the U.S. on Friday or Saturday. “But I don’t know if I’ll be ready for that appearance,” he said. The Royals were hopeful that Volquez would rejoin them when they head to New York later in the week. “Last thing Eddie told the guys last night when he left is, ‘I’ll see you in New York,’” Kansas City manager Ned Yost said before Game 2 Wednesday night. “I expect Eddie to be there and ready to go for Game 5,” he said. The Royals and Mets
have a day off today. Game 3 is set for Friday night at Citi Field. It was the elder Volquez who introduced his son to the game, buying his son his first glove — a Pedro Martinez model. “I can definitely understand what he’s going through right now,” said Royals third baseman Mike Moustakas, whose mother, Connie, died of cancer in August. “When someone loses a family member, that takes priority over everything that happens. Baseball is baseball, but family, things that happen like that — that’s something that is more important than baseball.”
4C
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Thursday, October 29, 2015
SPORTS
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NBA
SCOREBOARD World Series
Roundup
The Associated Press
Wizards 88, Magic 87 Orlando, Fla. — John Wall hit a floater with 12.7 seconds to play and Washington rallied to defeat Orlando Wednesday night. WASHINGTON (88) Porter 3-10 0-0 7, Humphries 4-9 2-2 11, Gortat 4-6 2-2 10, Wall 9-18 2-6 22, Beal 9-19 4-7 24, Sessions 0-2 4-6 4, Gooden 1-6 0-0 3, Nene 0-6 1-2 1, Neal 3-8 0-0 6. Totals 33-84 15-25 88. ORLANDO (87) Fournier 1-7 1-2 3, Harris 7-14 1-2 15, Vucevic 5-13 0-0 10, Payton 5-15 0-0 11, Oladipo 7-20 2-2 17, Gordon 4-8 4-6 12, Watson 1-6 0-0 2, Hezonja 4-9 0-0 11, Dedmon 2-6 0-0 4, Smith 1-2 0-0 2. Totals 37-100 8-12 87. Washington 31 22 12 23—88 Orlando 29 22 16 20—87 3-Point Goals-Washington 7-28 (Wall 2-6, Beal 2-8, Humphries 1-3, Gooden 1-4, Porter 1-5, Neal 0-2), Orlando 5-26 (Hezonja 3-5, Payton 1-3, Oladipo 1-8, Watson 0-2, Gordon 0-2, Fournier 0-3, Harris 0-3). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-Washington 60 (Porter, Gortat 8), Orlando 68 (Oladipo 11). Assists-Washington 17 (Wall 6), Orlando 20 (Payton 8). Total FoulsWashington 14, Orlando 22. A-18,846 (18,500).
Celtics 112, 76ers 95 Boston — Isaiah Thomas had 27 points and seven assists, and Boston beat Philadelphia. PHILADELPHIA (95) Thompson 3-15 0-0 9, Noel 5-13 4-7 14, Okafor 10-16 6-6 26, Canaan 6-14 2-2 18, Sampson 5-9 3-3 13, McConnell 2-5 0-0 4, Grant 2-7 5-5 9, Wood 0-2 0-0 0, Holmes 1-3 0-0 2. Totals 34-84 20-23 95. BOSTON (112) Crowder 4-7 4-4 14, Lee 2-8 4-4 8, Zeller 2-4 2-2 6, Smart 3-8 4-4 13, Bradley 2-6 0-0 4, Sullinger 6-8 0-0 12, Thomas 10-19 6-7 27, Turner 2-5 2-2 6, Johnson 6-11 2-2 15, Jerebko 2-7 0-0 5, Rozier 0-2 0-0 0, Mickey 0-0 2-2 2. Totals 39-85 26-27 112. Philadelphia 26 14 27 28—95 Boston 21 30 28 33—112 3-Point Goals-Philadelphia 7-22 (Canaan 4-10, Thompson 3-9, Sampson 0-1, Grant 0-1, McConnell 0-1), Boston 8-24 (Smart 3-6, Crowder 2-4, Johnson 1-2, Jerebko 1-2, Thomas 1-6, Bradley 0-1, Turner 0-1, Sullinger 0-2). Fouled Out-Thompson. ReboundsPhiladelphia 51 (Noel 12), Boston 49 (Johnson, Sullinger 7). AssistsPhiladelphia 12 (McConnell 4), Boston 31 (Thomas 7). Total Fouls-Philadelphia 22, Boston 23. A-18,624 (18,624).
Heat 104, Hornets 94 Miami — Chris Bosh scored 21 points in his first game since getting sick last February, Dwyane Wade added 20 and Miami beat Charlotte. CHARLOTTE (94) Hairston 1-5 0-0 3, Williams 4-10 2-2 10, Jefferson 8-14 1-3 17, Walker 5-16 8-9 19, Batum 3-12 1-2 9, Zeller 2-4 3-4 7, Lin 5-10 5-6 17, Hawes 3-5 1-2 7, Roberts 2-6 1-1 5, Kaminsky 0-2 0-0 0. Totals 33-84 22-29 94. MIAMI (104) Deng 5-8 0-0 13, Bosh 5-13 9-10 21, Whiteside 2-4 0-0 4, Dragic 4-8 0-0 8, Wade 7-16 6-6 20, Haslem 3-4 0-0 6, Winslow 2-2 0-0 5, Chalmers 1-3 5-5 8, Green 7-15 0-0 19, McRoberts 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 36-73 20-21 104. Charlotte 27 17 16 34— 94 Miami 23 31 19 31—104 3-Point Goals-Charlotte 6-24 (Lin 2-3, Batum 2-6, Hairston 1-4, Walker 1-4, Kaminsky 0-1, Hawes 0-1, Williams 0-5), Miami 12-20 (Green 5-8, Deng 3-3, Bosh 2-5, Winslow 1-1, Chalmers 1-2, Haslem 0-1). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-Charlotte 49 (Zeller 12), Miami 47 (Bosh 10). Assists-Charlotte 16 (Walker 4), Miami 23 (Dragic 6). Total Fouls-Charlotte 16, Miami 25. A-19,724 (19,600).
How former Jayhawks fared Cole Aldrich, L.A. Clippers Min: 1. Pts: 0. Reb: 0. Ast: 0. Cliff Alexander, Portland Did not play (coach’s decision). Darrell Arthur, Denver Min: 16. Pts: 5. Reb: 2. Ast: 1. Tarik Black, L.A. Lakers Did not play (coach’s decision). Mario Chalmers, Miami Min: 17. Pts: 8. Reb: 3. Ast: 4. Nick Collison, Oklahoma City Min: 8. Pts: 0. Reb: 3. Ast: 1. Drew Gooden, Washington Min: 20. Pts: 3. Reb: 7. Ast: 1. Kirk Hinrich, Chicago Min: 5. Pts: 0. Reb: 0. Ast: 1. Sasha Kaun, Cleveland Min: 6. Pts: 0. Reb: 1. Ast: 1. Ben McLemore, Sacramento Min: 20. Pts: 5. Reb: 0. Ast: 0. Marcus Morris, Detroit Min: 35. Pts: 14. Reb: 6. Ast: 1. Markieff Morris, Phoenix Min: 11. Pts: 4. Reb: 1. Ast: 0. Kelly Oubre Jr., Washington Did not play (coach’s decision). Paul Pierce, L.A. Clippers Min: 24. Pts: 12. Reb: 7. Ast: 0. Thomas Robinson, Brooklyn Min: 15. Pts: 4. Reb: 5. Ast: 2. Andrew Wiggins, Minn. Min: 29. Pts: 9. Reb: 1. Ast: 0. Jeff Withey, Utah Did not play (coach’s decision).
UTAH (87) Hayward 5-11 3-6 13, Favors 10-15 6-8 26, Gobert 3-6 0-0 6, Neto 3-6 0-0 8, Hood 6-15 0-0 12, Burke 0-2 0-0 0, Burks 6-14 6-7 18, Lyles 0-1 0-0 0, Ingles 2-4 0-0 4, Millsap 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 35-75 15-21 87. DETROIT (92) Morris 5-10 3-3 14, Ilyasova 3-6 0-0 8, Drummond 5-11 8-11 18, Jackson 7-14 4-7 19, Caldwell-Pope 5-11 4-4 16, Meeks 0-1 0-0 0, Blake 1-3 0-0 2, Tolliver 0-3 0-3 0, Baynes 1-4 2-2 4, S.Johnson 3-10 4-4 11, Bullock 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 30-74 25-34 92. Utah 15 29 20 23—87 Detroit 16 25 28 23—92 3-Point Goals-Utah 2-12 (Neto 2-2, Ingles 0-1, Hayward 0-2, Hood 0-7), Detroit 7-19 (Ilyasova 2-4, CaldwellPope 2-5, Morris 1-1, S.Johnson 1-3, Jackson 1-3, Bullock 0-1, Blake 0-1, Tolliver 0-1). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-Utah 47 (Gobert 12), Detroit 52 (Drummond 10). Assists-Utah 15 (Hood 6), Detroit 16 (Blake 7). Total Fouls-Utah 25, Detroit 20. TechnicalsMorris, Detroit defensive three second. A-18,434 (22,076).
Knicks 122, Bucks 97 Milwaukee — Derrick Williams scored 24 points, 20-year-old Kristaps Porzingis had 16 in his NBA debut, and New York beat Milwaukee in the season opener for each team. NEW YORK (122) Anthony 4-16 2-2 11, Porzingis 3-11 9-12 16, Lopez 3-5 2-2 8, Calderon 1-5 0-0 3, Vujacic 4-6 2-3 11, Williams 8-17 7-9 24, O’Quinn 4-10 0-0 8, Galloway 5-10 2-2 16, Grant 4-7 2-2 10, Thomas 5-5 3-3 13, Early 1-1 0-0 2. Totals 42-93 29-35 122. MILWAUKEE (97) Middleton 4-15 0-0 11, Copeland 3-7 0-0 8, Monroe 7-17 8-10 22, CarterWilliams 6-17 8-9 20, Bayless 0-6 4-4 4, Vasquez 3-9 8-8 15, O’Bryant 0-1 0-0 0, Henson 2-5 0-0 4, Vaughn 4-6 0-0 10, Plumlee 0-1 0-0 0, Inglis 1-2 0-0 3. Totals 30-86 28-31 97. New York 27 36 27 32—122 Milwaukee 23 28 22 24— 97 3-Point Goals-New York 9-23 (Galloway 4-5, Vujacic 1-2, Porzingis 1-2, Williams 1-3, Calderon 1-4, Anthony 1-5, Grant 0-1, O’Quinn 0-1), Milwaukee 9-18 (Middleton 3-6, Vaughn 2-3, Copeland 2-3, Inglis 1-2, Vasquez 1-3, Carter-Williams 0-1). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-New York 59 (O’Quinn 11), Milwaukee 57 (Monroe 14). Assists-New York 24 (Grant, Anthony 5), Milwaukee 17 (Vasquez 5). Total Fouls-New York 28, Milwaukee 27. A-18,717 (18,717).
Thunder 112, Spurs 106 Oklahoma City — Russell Westbrook had 33 points and 10 assists to help Billy Donovan win his NBA coaching debut as Oklahoma City beat San Antonio. SAN ANTONIO (106) Aldridge 4-12 3-4 11, Leonard 13-22 5-5 32, Duncan 3-8 2-2 8, Parker 5-11 0-0 10, Green 2-9 0-0 4, Mills 3-7 1-2 9, Diaw 4-5 0-0 9, Ginobili 5-8 0-0 11, Anderson 2-4 0-0 4, West 4-7 0-0 8. Totals 45-93 11-13 106. OKLAHOMA CITY (112) Durant 6-19 8-8 22, Ibaka 4-9 2-2 10, Adams 3-4 0-0 6, Westbrook 12-23 6-7 33, Roberson 1-1 0-0 2, Morrow 3-6 0-0 8, Kanter 7-11 1-1 15, Waiters 4-8 0-0 8, Augustin 2-5 4-4 8, Collison 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 42-86 21-22 112. San Antonio 27 28 28 23—106 Oklahoma City 29 21 29 33—112 3-Point Goals-San Antonio 5-15 (Mills 2-3, Ginobili 1-1, Diaw 1-1, Leonard 1-3, Aldridge 0-1, Anderson 0-1, Green 0-5), Oklahoma City 7-19 (Westbrook 3-6, Morrow 2-4, Durant 2-6, Ibaka 0-1, Waiters 0-2). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-San Antonio 43 (Leonard, Green 8), Oklahoma City 52 (Kanter 16). Assists-San Antonio 22 (Ginobili 7), Oklahoma City 21 (Westbrook 10). Total Fouls-San Antonio 18, Oklahoma City 19. A-18,203 (18,203).
3-Point Goals-Denver 13-27 (Gallinari 3-5, Mudiay 3-5, Nelson 2-5, Arthur 1-1, Lauvergne 1-1, Barton 1-2, Harris 1-2, Foye 1-6), Houston 8-35 (Lawson 2-3, Beverley 2-7, Harden 2-12, Brewer 1-3, Ariza 1-7, Terry 0-1, Jones 0-2). Fouled Out-Nelson. Rebounds-Denver 58 (Faried 9), Houston 53 (Beverley 8). Assists-Denver 26 (Mudiay 9), Houston 17 (Lawson, Harden 6). Total FoulsDenver 26, Houston 19. A-18,240 (18,023).
NEW ORLEANS (94) Cunningham 0-3 0-0 0, A.Davis 10-17 2-4 25, Perkins 2-4 0-0 4, Holiday 5-14 1-1 12, Gordon 6-13 5-7 20, Gee 1-3 1-1 3, Anderson 9-20 0-1 21, Smith 3-14 0-2 7, Ajinca 0-3 2-2 2, Robinson 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 36-91 11-18 94. PORTLAND (112) Aminu 3-7 2-2 9, Leonard 5-12 0-0 12, Plumlee 3-4 1-3 7, Lillard 8-21 4-4 21, McCollum 14-22 3-3 37, Crabbe 2-6 0-0 4, E.Davis 5-6 2-2 12, Vonleh 1-4 0-0 2, Harkless 3-6 0-0 8. Totals 44-88 12-14 112. New Orleans 18 25 24 27— 94 Portland 43 27 17 25—112 3-Point Goals-New Orleans 11-33 (A.Davis 3-5, Gordon 3-8, Anderson 3-9, Smith 1-3, Holiday 1-4, Gee 0-1, Cunningham 0-3), Portland 12-32 (McCollum 6-9, Harkless 2-3, Leonard 2-7, Aminu 1-3, Lillard 1-7, Vonleh 0-1, Crabbe 0-2). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-New Orleans 52 (A.Davis 10), Portland 56 (E.Davis 11). AssistsNew Orleans 19 (Smith 8), Portland 22 (Lillard 11). Total Fouls-New Orleans 17, Portland 21. A-19,393 (19,980).
Clippers 111, Kings 104 Sacramento, Calif. — Blake Griffin scored 33 points and Paul Pierce endeared himself to his new teammates by putting Los Angeles ahead for good with a late jumper in the Clippers’ season-opening victory over Sacramento. L.A. CLIPPERS (111) Stephenson 3-5 0-0 7, Griffin 14-20 5-7 33, Jordan 4-6 0-3 8, Paul 6-14 5-6 18, Redick 5-11 3-3 15, Crawford 5-9 1-2 11, Pierce 4-8 3-4 12, Smith 0-2 1-2 1, Johnson 1-2 0-0 3, Rivers 0-3 3-4 3, Aldrich 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 42-80 21-31 111. SACRAMENTO (104) Gay 7-16 1-2 16, Cousins 10-21 8-11 32, Koufos 5-6 0-0 10, Rondo 2-8 0-0 4, McLemore 2-5 0-0 5, Casspi 2-5 0-0 5, Cauley-Stein 1-2 0-0 2, Belinelli 3-12 0-0 9, Collison 5-12 2-5 13, Butler 4-7 0-0 8, Anderson 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 41-94 11-18 104. L.A. Clippers 25 31 29 26—111 Sacramento 17 29 28 30—104 3-Point Goals-L.A. Clippers 6-19 (Redick 2-5, Johnson 1-1, Stephenson 1-2, Pierce 1-4, Paul 1-4, Crawford 0-1, Rivers 0-2), Sacramento 11-24 (Cousins 4-5, Belinelli 3-7, Casspi 1-1, McLemore 1-2, Gay 1-3, Collison 1-4, Butler 0-1, Rondo 0-1). Fouled OutCousins. Rebounds-L.A. Clippers 49 (Jordan 12), Sacramento 59 (Cousins 13). Assists-L.A. Clippers 20 (Paul 11), Sacramento 24 (Belinelli 7). Total Fouls-L.A. Clippers 19, Sacramento 27. A-17,458 (17,317).
Mavericks 111, Suns 95 Phoenix — Raymond Felton scored 18 points to lead eight Dallas players in double figures and Mavericks rolled past Phoenix in the teams’ season opener.
Pistons 92, Jazz 87 Auburn Hills, Mich. — Reggie Jackson put Detroit ahead on a driving layup with 17 seconds left, and the Pistons held on to beat Utah on for its second consecutive victory to start the season.
DENVER (105) Gallinari 7-15 6-6 23, Faried 8-10 2-6 18, Lauvergne 4-5 2-2 11, Mudiay 6-13 2-4 17, Harris 2-5 0-0 5, Nelson 4-9 0-0 10, Barton 5-10 0-0 11, Foye 1-6 0-0 3, Arthur 2-5 0-0 5, Jokic 1-1 0-0 2, Miller 0-0 0-0 0, Green 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 40-79 12-18 105. HOUSTON (85) Ariza 2-10 1-2 6, Jones 6-13 3-5 15, Capela 4-7 1-2 9, Lawson 3-10 4-6 12, Harden 6-21 8-9 22, Harrell 4-4 0-0 8, Brewer 2-12 0-2 5, Beverley 3-9 0-0 8, Terry 0-1 0-0 0, Dekker 0-0 0-0 0, McDaniels 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 30-87 17-26 85. Denver 27 26 23 29—105 Houston 21 28 14 22— 85
almost win, almost win, never win, it’s all up here (puts index finger to temple and taps CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C twice).” Mook said she talked Mook had won one it out with Nahm, a tournament, as a freshman, and had 11 second- relentlessly confident, place finishes. That ratio yet impossible-to-satisfy instructor. bespoke two realities: “I talked to Josh a lot First, she clearly had the about how I think when ability to win multiple I take the lead, when tournaments. Second, I’m a stroke back, what she didn’t fully believe she was good enough to should my mindset be when I’m going into the win. “I was there, so many final day,” said Mook, whose nickname transtimes, getting second spot,” Mook said. “When lates to “pearl.” She said that she used you don’t win, it’s a bad to “try to protect” her feeling; sad too. I told lead, by “trying not to myself, ‘I don’t want make mistakes.” to feel like this again.’ She was trying not to When I’m right there,
lose, instead of chasing victory. “He told me just stay aggressive because I’m a very aggressive player. I go, ‘Boom! Boom! right to the pin. Just go for it.’ He told me to stay that way when I have the lead.” Mook started to say something else, stopped herself and continued: “I don’t know if I should say this, but Josh said, ‘Think that you’re going to embarrass them, win by a lot, let them know you’re the boss.’” She wondered whether she should have shared that, but she didn’t doubt the wisdom of the words.
No longer treading lightly around the second syllable of her last name, Kawinpakorn has won three of the five tournaments in which Kansas has played. Those were her only top-five finishes. She’s closing like a shark in bloody waters. Nahm has a built-in advantage, a spy almost, in taking Mook’s mental temperature. Josh’s wife, Katy Nahm, is KU head coach Erin O’Neil’s assistant, and is with Mook daily. Katy was a sounding board for Mook in the middle of her best round, a 63 in the Schooner Fall Classic
Bulls 115, Nets 100 New York — Jimmy Butler scored 24 points, Nikola Mirotic had 18 and Chicago won for the second time in two nights to open the season, beating Brooklyn. CHICAGO (115) Snell 3-7 2-2 10, Mirotic 5-10 4-4 18, Gasol 7-11 2-2 16, Rose 5-11 5-5 15, Butler 9-11 3-3 24, Brooks 5-9 0-0 12, Noah 0-3 0-2 0, McDermott 3-7 0-0 8, Gibson 1-4 1-2 3, Moore 4-5 0-0 9, Hinrich 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 42-78 17-20 115. BROOKLYN (100) Johnson 4-15 2-3 10, Young 6-12 0-0 12, Lopez 10-17 6-7 26, Larkin 3-8 0-0 6, Ellington 0-3 0-0 0, Sloan 0-4 2-2 2, Bogdanovic 3-8 3-3 9, Bargnani 6-13 5-5 17, Hollis-Jefferson 4-6 0-0 8, Robinson 1-3 2-4 4, Brown 2-4 2-4 6. Totals 39-93 22-28 100.
Keegan
Nuggets 105, Rockets 85 Houston — Danilo Gallinari scored 23 points and Denver never trailed in a victory over Houston in the season opener for both teams.
WORLD SERIES (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) All games televised by Fox Kansas City 2, New York 0 Tuesday: Kansas City 5, N.Y. Mets 4, 14 innings Wednesday: Kansas City 7, N.Y. Mets 1 Friday: Kansas City (Ventura 13-8) at N.Y. Mets (Syndergaard 9-7), 7:07 p.m. Saturday: Kansas City (Young 11-6) at N.Y. Mets (Matz 4-0), 7:07 p.m. x-Sunday: Kansas City (Volquez 13-9) at N.Y. Mets (Harvey 13-8), 7:15 p.m. x-Tuesday: N.Y. Mets at Kansas City, 7:07 p.m. x-Wednesday: N.Y. Mets at Kansas City, 7:07 p.m.
Trail Blazers 112, Pelicans 94 Portland, Ore. — CJ McCollum scored a career-high 37 points, in- NBA CONFERENCE cluding six 3-pointers, EASTERN Atlantic Division W and Portland opened the 1 season with a victory over Boston New York 1 depleted New Orleans. Toronto 1
DALLAS (111) Matthews 3-7 1-2 9, Nowitzki 5-10 0-0 11, Pachulia 2-10 6-6 10, Williams 5-8 0-0 12, Felton 7-14 2-2 18, Powell 4-7 4-8 12, Evans 3-4 0-0 7, Harris 3-8 4-7 10, Barea 3-9 4-6 10, Villanueva 4-5 0-0 10, Jenkins 0-1 0-0 0, Anderson 1-2 0-0 2, Mejri 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 40-85 21-31 111. PHOENIX (95) Tucker 1-3 0-2 2, Morris 1-6 2-2 4, Chandler 1-2 1-2 3, Knight 6-13 2-2 15, Bledsoe 4-12 5-7 13, Warren 4-13 0-0 9, Teletovic 2-10 0-1 5, Len 1-3 2-4 4, Weems 0-2 0-0 0, Leuer 5-9 3-4 14, Price 0-1 0-0 0, Goodwin 3-6 5-6 12, Booker 6-7 1-3 14. Totals 34-87 21-33 95. Dallas 24 30 34 23—111 Phoenix 22 23 21 29— 95 3-Point Goals-Dallas 10-21 (Williams 2-2, Felton 2-3, Villanueva 2-3, Matthews 2-4, Evans 1-1, Nowitzki 1-1, Anderson 0-1, Barea 0-3, Harris 0-3), Phoenix 6-24 (Booker 1-2, Goodwin 1-2, Leuer 1-3, Warren 1-3, Knight 1-4, Teletovic 1-5, Weems 0-1, Tucker 0-1, Price 0-1, Bledsoe 0-2). Fouled OutNone. Rebounds-Dallas 55 (Pachulia 10), Phoenix 65 (Len 8). Assists-Dallas 24 (Williams 7), Phoenix 15 (Bledsoe 4). Total Fouls-Dallas 25, Phoenix 30. Technicals-Bledsoe. A-18,055 (18,055).
Chicago 30 28 28 29—115 Brooklyn 19 36 16 29—100 3-Point Goals-Chicago 14-28 (Mirotic 4-8, Butler 3-3, Snell 2-4, McDermott 2-4, Brooks 2-6, Moore 1-2, Rose 0-1), Brooklyn 0-9 (Ellington 0-1, Brown 0-1, Bargnani 0-1, Larkin 0-2, Bogdanovic 0-2, Johnson 0-2). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-Chicago 49 (Gasol, Mirotic 9), Brooklyn 50 (Johnson 10). AssistsChicago 20 (Butler 6), Brooklyn 19 (Larkin 8). Total Fouls-Chicago 24, Brooklyn 18. Technicals-Rose. A-17,732 (17,732).
L awrence J ournal -W orld
West W L T Pct PF PA Arizona 5 2 0 .714 229 133 St. Louis 3 3 0 .500 108 119 Seattle 3 4 0 .429 154 128 San Francisco 2 5 0 .286 103 180 Today’s game Miami at New England, 7:25 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 1 Detroit vs. Kansas City at London, 8:30 a.m. San Francisco at St. Louis, Noon N.Y. Giants at New Orleans, Noon Minnesota at Chicago, Noon Tennessee at Houston, Noon Tampa Bay at Atlanta, Noon Arizona at Cleveland, Noon San Diego at Baltimore, Noon Cincinnati at Pittsburgh, Noon N.Y. Jets at Oakland, 3:05 p.m. Seattle at Dallas, 3:25 p.m. Green Bay at Denver, 7:30 p.m. Open: Buffalo, Jacksonville, Philadelphia, Washington Monday, Nov. 2 Indianapolis at Carolina, 7:30 p.m.
Big 12 Standings L 0 0 0 1 1
Pct GB 1.000 — 1.000 — 1.000 — .000 1 .000 1
Brooklyn 0 Philadelphia 0 Southeast Division W L Pct GB Miami 1 0 1.000 — Washington 1 0 1.000 — Atlanta 0 1 .000 1 Charlotte 0 1 .000 1 Orlando 0 1 .000 1 Central Division W L Pct GB Chicago 2 0 1.000 — Detroit 2 0 1.000 — Cleveland 1 1 .500 1 Indiana 0 1 .000 1½ Milwaukee 0 1 .000 1½ WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division W L Pct GB Dallas 1 0 1.000 — Memphis 0 1 .000 1 Houston 0 1 .000 1 San Antonio 0 1 .000 1 New Orleans 0 2 .000 1½ Northwest Division W L Pct GB Denver 1 0 1.000 — Oklahoma City 1 0 1.000 — Portland 1 0 1.000 — Minnesota 1 0 1.000 — Utah 0 1 .000 1 Pacific Division W L Pct GB Golden State 1 0 1.000 — L.A. Clippers 1 0 1.000 — L.A. Lakers 0 1 .000 1 Phoenix 0 1 .000 1 Sacramento 0 1 .000 1 Wednesday’s Games Washington 88, Orlando 87 Toronto 106, Indiana 99 Chicago 115, Brooklyn 100 Detroit 92, Utah 87 Boston 112, Philadelphia 95 Miami 104, Charlotte 94 New York 122, Milwaukee 97 Cleveland 106, Memphis 76 Denver 105, Houston 85 Oklahoma City 112, San Antonio 106 L.A. Clippers 111, Sacramento 104 Dallas 111, Phoenix 95 Portland 112, New Orleans 94 Minnesota 112, L.A. Lakers 111 Thursday’s Games Memphis at Indiana, 7 p.m. Atlanta at New York, 8 p.m. Dallas at L.A. Clippers, 10:30 p.m. Friday’s Games Utah at Philadelphia, 7 p.m. Miami at Cleveland, 7 p.m. Oklahoma City at Orlando, 7 p.m. Chicago at Detroit, 7:30 p.m. Toronto at Boston, 7:30 p.m. Washington at Milwaukee, 8 p.m. Charlotte at Atlanta, 8 p.m. Brooklyn at San Antonio, 8:30 p.m. Minnesota at Denver, 9 p.m. Golden State at Houston, 9:30 p.m. L.A. Lakers at Sacramento, 10 p.m. Portland at Phoenix, 10:30 p.m.
Big 12 Overall W L W L Baylor 4 0 7 0 Oklahoma State 4 0 7 0 TCU 4 0 7 0 Oklahoma 3 1 6 1 Texas 2 2 3 4 Texas Tech 2 3 5 3 Iowa State 1 3 2 5 West Virginia 0 3 3 3 Kansas State 0 4 3 4 Kansas 0 4 0 7 Today’s Game West Virginia at TCU, 6:30 p.m. (FS1) Saturday, Oct. 31 Oklahoma at Kansas, 2:30 p.m. (FS1) Oklahoma State at Texas Tech, 2:30 p.m. (ABC or ESPN or ESPN2) Texas at Iowa State, 6 p.m. (FS1)
Kansas
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 (homecoming) — Oklahoma, 2:30 p.m. (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
Baker
Aug. 29 — at Grand View, W 20-15 (1-0, 0-0) Sept. 5 — at Culver-Stockton, W 58-0 (2-0, 0-0) Sept. 12 — William Penn, W 41-13 (3-0, 0-0) Sept. 19 — Graceland, W 52-21 (4-0, 0-0) Sept. 26 — at Benedictine, L 35-31 (4-1, 0-1) Oct. 3 — Peru State, W 35-10 (5-1, 0-1) Oct. 10 — Bye Oct. 17 — at Avila, W 42-14 (6-1. 1-0) Oct. 24 — MidAmerica Nazarene, W 38-29 (7-1, 2-0) Oct. 31 — Central Methodist, 1 p.m. Nov. 7 — at Missouri Valley, 1:30 p.m. Nov. 14 — at Evangel, 1:30 p.m.
Lawrence High
Sept. 4 — BV West, W 35-14 (1-0) Sept. 11 — at Leavenworth, W 41-14 (2-0) Sept. 18 — at Free State, W 14-12 (3-0) Sept. 24 — SM Northwest at North District Stadium, W 41-6 (4-0) Oct. 2 — SM South, W 42-6 (5-0) Oct. 9 — Olathe South, W 63-7 (6-0) Oct. 15 — Olathe Northwest at CBAC, W 35-7 (7-0) Oct. 23 — Olathe North, W 31-28 (8-0) Oct. 30 — Olathe East at CBAC, 7 p.m.
Free State
NFL
AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA New England 6 0 0 1.000 213 126 N.Y. Jets 4 2 0 .667 152 105 Miami 3 3 0 .500 147 137 Buffalo 3 4 0 .429 176 173 South W L T Pct PF PA Indianapolis 3 4 0 .429 147 174 Houston 2 5 0 .286 154 199 Jacksonville 2 5 0 .286 147 207 Tennessee 1 5 0 .167 119 139 North W L T Pct PF PA Cincinnati 6 0 0 1.000 182 122 Pittsburgh 4 3 0 .571 158 131 Cleveland 2 5 0 .286 147 182 Baltimore 1 6 0 .143 161 188 West W L T Pct PF PA Denver 6 0 0 1.000 139 102 Oakland 3 3 0 .500 144 153 Kansas City 2 5 0 .286 150 172 San Diego 2 5 0 .286 165 198 NATIONAL CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA N.Y. Giants 4 3 0 .571 166 156 Washington 3 4 0 .429 148 168 Philadelphia 3 4 0 .429 160 137 Dallas 2 4 0 .333 121 158 South W L T Pct PF PA Carolina 6 0 0 1.000 162 110 Atlanta 6 1 0 .857 193 150 New Orleans 3 4 0 .429 161 185 Tampa Bay 2 4 0 .333 140 179 North W L T Pct PF PA Green Bay 6 0 0 1.000 164 101 Minnesota 4 2 0 .667 124 102 Chicago 2 4 0 .333 120 179 Detroit 1 6 0 .143 139 200
at Belmar Golf Club in Norman, Oklahoma, last month. “I got it going that day,” Mook said. “I was so in the zone. After I finished my nine holes, I saw coach Katy and we walked on down to 10. I said, ‘Coach, I think I just shot 6-under the front nine.’ She was like, ‘I know.’ When I started three, four under, the words of Josh came into my mind: ‘Hey, don’t get nervous. This is the score you’re supposed to shoot every time. It’s very normal. Just think like that every time.” After the 63, Mook asked Josh Nahm, ‘Do you like how I shoot
Sept. 4 — SM West, L 26-34 (0-1) Sept. 11 — Olathe North at ODAC, L 20-24 (0-2) Sept. 18 — Lawrence High, L 12-14 (0-3) Sept. 25 — at Leavenworth, W 43-7 (1-3) Oct. 2 — SM East at North District Stadium, W 32-20 (2-3) Oct. 9 — SM South, W 56-6 (3-3) Oct. 16 — at Washburn Rural, W 35-7 (4-3) Oct. 23 — Manhattan, W 31-14 (5-3) Oct. 30 — Topeka High, 7 p.m.
NHL
Wednesday’s Games Ottawa 5, Calgary 4, SO Pittsburgh 3, Washington 1 Nashville at San Jose, (n) Today’s Games Carolina at N.Y. Islanders, 6 p.m. New Jersey at Philadelphia, 6 p.m. Buffalo at Pittsburgh, 6 p.m. Colorado at Tampa Bay, 6:30 p.m. Anaheim at St. Louis, 7 p.m. Chicago at Winnipeg, 7 p.m. Vancouver at Dallas, 7:30 p.m. Montreal at Edmonton, 8 p.m.
MLS Playoffs
KNOCKOUT ROUND Eastern Conference Wednesday: D.C. United 2, New England 1 Today: Toronto at Montreal, 6 p.m. Western Conference Wednesday: LA Galaxy at Seattle, (n) Today: Sporting KC at Portland, 9 p.m.
today?’ He said, ‘You can still go a couple more.’ I was like, ‘Exactly.’ Every time I talk to him, I never feel like, ‘Oh, that’s good. I don’t have to get any better.’ He did call me later that night and said, “‘Good job today.’” Of course, that’s not all he said. “And then he said, ‘Let’s do some more. Let’s shoot 20-under this tournament.’ I’m not surprised. I knew he was going to say that.” And she no longer doubts that however high the bar is raised, she can clear it, knowing that means it will be raised again.
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Texas Tech 48-44
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Florida 24-14
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Notre Dame 31-20
Notre Dame 31-21
Notre Dame 33-20
Notre Dame 24-20
Notre Dame 35-27
Notre Dame 17-14
Notre Dame 18-10
Notre Dame 35-20
Texas at Iowa State
Texas 35-24
Texas 38-28
Texas 31-21
Texas 28-20
Texas 20-7
Iowa State 35-31
Texas 28-26
Texas 24-17
USC at Cal
USC 28-18
Cal 35-31
USC 28-33
USC 38-31
Cal 44-41
USC 20-17
USC 38-32
USC 35-28
Ole Miss at Auburn
Auburn 24-21
Ole Miss 42-17
Auburn 27-24
Ole Miss 30-23
Ole Miss 17-14
Ole Miss 35-30
Ole Miss 15-14
Ole Miss 30-24
Michigan at Minnesota
Michigan 27-21
Michigan 31-10
Michigan 40-28
Michigan 28-21
Michigan 30-0
Michigan 22-15
Minnesota 26-23
Michigan 35-21
Oklahoma at Kansas
Oklahoma 55-17
Oklahoma 66-14
Oklahoma 48-14
Oklahoma 55-20
Oklahoma 45-14
Oklahoma 57-10
Oklahoma 55-54
Oklahoma 62-10
Detroit at Kansas City
Kansas City 17-13
Kansas City 24-21
Kansas City 27-21
Kansas City 27-24
Kansas City 24-17
Kansas City 31-30
Kansas City 17-16
Kansas City 20-13
N.Y. Giants at New Orleans
New Orleans 24-20
New Orleans 28-21
New Orleans 33-30
New Orleans 31-30
New Orleans 28-24
New Orleans 17-14
New Orleans 27-24
New Orleans 24-21
Minnesota at Chicago
Chicago 17-14
Minnesota 24-17
Minnesota 28-24
Chicago 27-23
Minnesota 17-10
Chicago 28-27
Minnesota 21-20
Minnesota 24-17
San Diego at Baltimore
Baltimore 21-17
Baltimore 27-17
Baltimore 30-20
Baltimore 31-27
San Diego 33-23
Baltimore 19-17
San Diego 17-10
Baltimore 21-20
Cincinnati at Pittsburgh
Cincinnati 27-21
Cincinnati 27-24
Cincinnati 27-23
Pitttsburgh 37-31
Pittsburgh 31-30
Cincinnati 31-30
Pittsburgh 28-27
Cincinnati 24-20
N.Y. Jets 28-24
N.Y. Jets 24-20
N.Y. Jets 23-21
N.Y. Jets 24-19
N.Y. Jets 20-14
N.Y. Jets 28-19
N.Y. Jets 28-20
N.Y. Jets 27-14
Green Bay at Denver
Green Bay 31-28
Green Bay 24-21
Denver 23-21
Denver 27-24
Green Bay 21-17
Denver 20-10
Green Bay 24-20
Green Bay 21-10
Indianpolis at Carolina
Carolina 24-14
Indianapolis 28-17
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Indianapolis 23-22
Carolina 38-32
Indianapolis 31-30
Carolina 31-24
Carolina 28-21
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Thursday, October 29, 2015
SPORTS
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L awrence J ournal -W orld
BAKER UNIVERSITY FOOTBALL
Wildcats work through tough times By Chris Duderstadt cduderstadt@ljworld.com
Baldwin City — For the third straight season, Baker University’s football team finds itself in the top 10 of the NAIA coaches’ poll with a 7-1 record with three weeks remaining in the regular season. The No. 3-ranked Wildcats have built their foundation on the defensive side of the ball — limiting opponents to 15.9 points per game — while also scoring early and often behind junior quarterback Nick Marra. “We’ve been a big-time first-half team,” head coach Mike Grossner said. “To me, that tells you that our preparation has been really good, Khadijah Lane/The Baker Orange and our coaching from a BAKER UNIVERSITY LINEBACKER KHARON BROWN, RIGHT, who played at Lawrence High, makes a tackle against Avila on game-plan situation has Oct. 17 in Kansas City, Missouri. been really good.” Preparation being key for Grossner and the defensive tackle on KU’s Wildcats has been an 2008 Orange Bowl team. understatement, particu“We’re leading the nalarly over the past two tion in turnovers (forced seasons. Grossner and — 21 interceptions, 11 his coaching staff’s gamefumble recoveries),” planing skills were put to Grossner said. “Those the test more than usual interceptions are comduring the 2014 season, ing from the linebackers but it had nothing to do as well as the DBs, and I with the opposing teams think that is a direct reon Baker’s schedule. Cansult of our four-man pass cer and an unexpected rush.” tragedy, which occurred a The defensive line has year ago today, were two some area flavor as well, unscheduled, hard-hitting with Eudora grad Nick opponents that Grossner Becker leading the Wildhad to take on in 2014. cats with four sacks. While Blakesley is in Fighting on his fourth season coachWith the help of his ing the defensive line, Heider joined Grossner’s players, assistant coachstaff shortly before the es, friends and family, 2015 campaign. The move Grossner beat cancer afto hire Heider — who ter being diagnosed with graduated from FSHS besquamous cell carcinoma Khadijah Lane/The Baker Orange fore playing at Baker and on Aug. 12, 2014 — three BAKER WIDE RECEIVER CORNELL BROWN (2), a Baldwin High product, fights for yardage KU — has paid dividends days before BU’s first against MidAmerica Nazarene on Saturday in Baldwin City. with seven Wildcats havpractice. ing at least two intercep“Everything is clear. I have had multiple tests fell to Missouri Valley was that much more year ended, and did not tions. here and there to gauge two weeks later by three meaningful with 58 being come back to Baldwin it,” Grossner said. “I feel points to miss the NAIA Maumau’s jersey number. City as he transferred to Offense oozes a lot better — a lot more playoffs. “Very special, very KU to walk on with the with local ties, too The quarterback-wide energy, weight is good “I was really worried special for me. At the Jayhawks. and right where I want about their health playing end of it, when you look With Loneker Jr.’s de- receiver combo of Jake it to be. I’ll go in every a football game to be hon- up at the scoreboard and parture, the BU lineback- Morse and Jake Green frequently two months and get some est with you, and that’s everything was blank,” ing corp was all of a sud- connected blood work, and make probably the last thing Thoren said. “It was all den thin on experience during their playing days sure things are going the those guys should have zeros except for 58. The aside from senior Tucker at Baker. Now they’re keeping right direction.” been doing, but they went only thing on the score- Pauley. Despite the ongoing out there and played their board was a 58. I didn’t Enter 2013 Lawrence the Baker offense moving bout with the cancer, hearts out,” Thoren said. know who else caught High alumnus Kharon along from the sidelines. With Morse coachGrossner was leading “That was just a game. that. I caught it.” Brown. the Wildcats in the right What we were going Brown, who played ing the quarterbacks and direction, too. Baker through off the field was Defense deep nose guard at Lawrence Green working with the opened the season with a something that we were with Lawrence roots High, has transitioned wideouts, they’ve helped Thoren, a Lawrence to linebacker at BU and Marra and his receiv7-0 record and climbed to all trying to figure out, No. 2 in the nation before but again, that’s where we High and Kansas Uni- is second on the team in ers succeed in an offense consisting of a lot of foursuffering an overtime loss decided to lean on each versity alumnus, is in his tackles with 52. 12th season at Baker. The to MidAmerica Nazarene. other.” “It was really, really and five-receiver sets. former KU and LHS line- hard to do so,” Brown “In a way, you wish you While the setback was a backer has built strong said of making the posi- could play in this style painful one for the Wild- Special shutout The close-knit bond recruiting connections at tion change. “I probably that they’re playing in cats, BU sustained a much bigger loss four days later that the Wildcats devel- both Lawrence High and had the worst football on now that we’re coaching,” — defensive tackle Sione oped at the end of the Free State over the years, the team for the longest Green, a 2009 Lawrence Maumau took his own life 2014 season has carried especially on the defen- time, so it’s really been High alumnus, said. “We over to the 2015 campaign sive side of the ball. on Oct. 29, 2014. gratifying for it to turn attempted to do stuff like Thoren was able to out the way it has.” this, but we still had pack“That’s probably the both on and off the field. The Wildcats grinded bring in 2013 FSHS alumhardest thing any of us Joining Thoren on ages when me and Jake have ever been through,” out a 20-15 road win over nus Keith Loneker Jr. to coaching the defensive played where it was two defensive coordinator Ja- then No. 6 Grand View to BU, and the former Fire- side of the ball are two wide receivers or three begin the season, before bird linebacker made other former KU football wide receivers at a time. son Thoren said. Following Maumau’s an emotion-filled rematch an immediate impact. players: defensive line So this whole five-wide death, Thoren still had to against Culver-Stockton Loneker Jr. led the Wild- coach Caleb Blakesley package that we have gocats with 90 tackles in his and safeties coach Matt ing on now is something find a way to prepare his in Week 2. BU was able to fully freshman campaign, but Heider. Grossner credits that is really fun for us to defense for its next game against Culver-Stockton. prepare for Culver-Stock- that marked the end of his much of Baker’s defensive coach and see it work the Baker gave up an un- ton this go-around, and it short stay at Baker. The success to the pressure of way it’s been working so characteristic 38 points showed. Baker shut out linebacker returned to the front four coached far.” One critical piece to the in a loss to C-SC, and C-SC, 58-0, and the score Lawrence after the school by Blakesley, who played
offense that allows Marra to throw the ball all over the lot is sophomore Cornell Brown. Brown is listed as a wide receiver on Baker’s roster, but is also frequently used out of the backfield after playing running back at Baldwin High. The versatile offensive and special teams weapon has accounted for 681 total yards and six touchdowns. The 5-9, 180-pound sophomore has emerged after former FSHS quarterback and BU running back Camren Torneden took Brown under his wing last season. “I learned a lot from him (Torneden) last year. I knew Cam growing up,” Brown said. “One of his cousins was my best friend, so I’ve looked up to him for a while since he was playing at Free State. When I got to come here and watch him play his senior year and watch him play a lot, it helps.” One other influence on Brown early in his college career has been fellow Baldwin High product Jesse Austin, who starts at left guard for BU. Austin, left tackle Greg Snell from Eudora and right guard Kyle Wittman from LHS have paved the way for Brown and company in the backfield, and helped keep Marra upright. “Nick’s attitude and his play style make it even more fun to block for him,” Austin said of blocking for Marra. “Getting to pass (protect) as much as we have has been awesome.”
Unfinished business If there is a player who knows the ins and outs of the Baker football program better than anyone, it’s Austin. The 6-5, 315-pound lineman grew up attending Baker games every Saturday, and described the team as “a lot more family-oriented this year.” Austin and his teammates still have a bad taste in their mouths from missing the playoffs last season, but he believes the team is better for it now after learning valuable lessons about football and life in 2014. The Wildcats still have the end of the 2014 season in mind, but their focus is geared forward. Baker controls its own destiny in the south division of the Heart of America Athletic Conference with three regular-season games remaining against Central Methodist, Evangel and Missouri Valley and Central Methodist, and looks to return to the postseason for the third time in four years. “It’s just nothing more than a game of king of the hill, and your goal is to move up on the hill,” Thoren said. “There is no doubt I know what’s in the back of their mind, and what’s in their eyes is a national title.”
PUBLIC NOTICES 785.832.2222
PUBLIC NOTICE CONTINUED FROM 10C claim. Copies for the District Court should be mailed to: Clerk of the Douglas County District Court, Civil Division, 111 E. 11th Street, Lawrence, Kansas 66044. Copies for the Law Enforcement Agency should be mailed to: Sergeant Cooper, Lawrence Police Department, 4820 Billings Parkway, Lawrence, Kansas 66049. Issued this 26th day October, 2015. /s/Patrick J. Hurley, #17638 Assistant District Attorney Douglas County District Attorney’s Office 111 E. 11th Street
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Lawrence, Kansas 66044 (785) 841-0211 / Fax: (785) 832-8202 phurley@douglas-county.com Attorney for Plaintiff _______
NOTICE OF SHERIFF’S SALE
To Whom It May Concern: Notice is hereby given that pursuant to an Order of Sale issued and directed (First published in the out of the District Court of Lawrence Daily Journal- Douglas County, Kansas, pursuant to a judgment World October 15, 2015) and decree entered in the above-entitled matter on IN THE DISTRICT COURT September 21, 2015, I will OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, on November 5, 2015, at KANSAS 10:00 o’clock a.m. on said date, offer for sale and sell The University National at public auction, to the Bank, highest and best bidder for Plaintiff, cash in hand, in the Jury Assembly Room of the vs. Douglas County Judicial & Law Enforcement Center, Jason L. Nguyen, et al., in the City of Lawrence, in Defendants. the County of Douglas, in the State of Kansas, the Case No. 2014CV000486 following described real Division No. 4 estate in Douglas County, Proceeding Under K.S.A Kansas: Chapter 60
Commencing at the Southeast corner of Lot 1, Block One, Quail Run No. 1 (Amended), an Addition to the City of Lawrence, Kansas; thence North 00 degrees, 03’ 21” East along the East line of said Lot 1, 158.50 feet for a point of beginning; thence South 82 degrees, 46’ 00” West, 84.67 feet; thence North 07 degrees, 14’ 00” West, 66.46 feet; thence North 82 degrees, 46’ 00” East, 93.18 feet to a point on the East line of said Lot 1; thence South 00 degrees, 03’ 21” West along said East line, 67.00 feet to the point of beginning, all in the City of Lawrence, Douglas County, Kansas, more commonly known as 1424 Monterey Hill Drive, together with an Access and Utility Tract more particularly described as follows:
Commencing at the Southwest corner of Lot 1, Block One, Quail Run No.1 (Amended), an addition to the City of Lawrence, Kansas; thence North 00 degrees, 05’ 57” East along the West line of said Lot 1, 91.75 feet; thence Northwesterly, on a curve to the left with a radius of 740.00 feet, an arc length of 190.40 feet for a point of beginning; thence North 71 degrees, 40’ 38” East, 78.48 feet; thence South 18 degrees, 50’ 04” East, 7.90 feet; thence on a curve to the right with a radius of 216.50 feet, an arc length of 43.84; thence South 07 degrees, 14’ 00” East, 177.84 feet; thence South 17 degrees, 12’ 44” West, 16.09 feet; thence North 89 degrees, 54’ 03” West, 18.76 feet; thence South 00 degrees, 05’ 57” West, 31.00 feet; thence South 89
degrees, 54’ 03” East, 93.00 feet; thence North 00 degrees, 05’ 57” East, 31.00 feet; thence North 89 degrees, 54’ 03” West, 16.77 feet; thence North 40 degrees, 07’ 55” West, 15.38 feet; thence North 07 degrees, 14’ 00” West, 186.93 feet; thence Northerly, on a curve to the left with a radius of 258.50 feet, an arc length of 52.34; thence North 18 degrees, 50’ 04” West, 82.77 feet; thence Northerly, on a curve to the right with a radius of 61.50 feet, an arc length of 49.37 feet; thence North 27 degrees, 09’ 40” East, 43.02 feet; thence South 62 degrees, 50’ 20” East, 5.00 feet; thence North 27 degrees, 09’ 40” East, 5.00 feet; thence Northwesterly, on a curve to the left, with a radius of 56.00 feet, an arc length of 264.26 feet; thence Southerly, on
a Curve to the right with a radius of 10.00 feet, an arc length of 14.18 feet; thence Southerly, on a curve to the left with a radius of 103.50 feet, an arc length of 66.62 feet; thence South 18 degrees, 50’ 04” East, 18.87 feet; thence South 71 degrees, 40’ 38” West, 76.51 feet to a point on the West line of said Lot 1; thence Southerly along said West line, on a curve to the right with a radius of 740.00 feet, an arc length of 56.03 feet to the point of beginning, all in the City of Lawrence, Douglas County, Kansas.
said real estate for those sums found in said judgment to be due and owing to it; together with the costs and accruing costs of said action. Said real estate will be sold without a period of redemption. Ken McGovern Sheriff of Douglas County, Kansas
Calvin J. Karlin - 09555 BARBER EMERSON, L.C. 1211 Massachusetts Street P.O. Box 667 Lawrence, Kansas 66044-0667 ckarlin@barberemerson.com (785) 843-6600 Telephone Said property will be sold, (785) 843-8405 Facsimile to satisfy the judgment of Attorneys for Plaintiff _______ plaintiff The University National Bank, against defendant Jason Nguyen, in which it was decreed that plaintiff has a first and prior mortgage lien upon
Thursday, October 29, 2015
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8C
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Thursday, October 29, 2015
.
L AWRENCE J OURNAL -W ORLD
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Title to Real Estate Involved Pursuant to K.S.A. §60
10 LINES & PHOTO:
NOTICE OF SUIT
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STATE OF KANSAS to the above named Defendants and The Unknown Heirs, executors, devisees, trustees, creditors, and assigns of any deceased defendants; the unknown spouses of any defendants; the unknown officers, successors, trustees, creditors and assigns of any defendants that are existing, dissolved or dormant corporations; the un-
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(First published in the known executors, adminisLawrence Daily Journal- trators, devisees, trustees, World October 22, 2015) creditors, successors and assigns of any defendants IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF that are or were partners BUCHANAN COUNTY, or in partnership; and the MISSOURI PROBATE unknown guardians, conDIVISION servators and trustees of any defendants that are IN THE ESTATE OF: RONALD minors or are under any leJENE AVERY, gal disability and all other Deceased. person who are or may be concerned: Case No. 15BU-PR00769 YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED NOTICE OF HEARING that a Petition for Mortgage Foreclosure has been filed TO ALL PERSONS WHO in the District Court of CLAIM ANY INTEREST IN Douglas County, Kansas by THE PROPERTY OF RONALD CitiMortgage, Inc., praying JENE AV£RY, DECEASED, AS for foreclosure of certain AN HEIR OF SAID DECE- real property legally deDENT OR THROUGH ANY scribed as follows: HEIR OF SAID DECEDENT: LOTS “A” AND 1, IN BLOCK You are hereby notified 1, SMITH’S SUBDIVISION OF that a petition has been THAT PART OF ADDITION filed in the above court by NO. 6 AND 7 NORTH LAWVonda Kim Hurley, for Ap- RENCE, IN THE CITY OF plication for Letters of LAWRENCE, DOUGLAS Ronald Jene Avery, de- COUNTY, KANSAS. Tax ID ceased, which will be No. N07510A Commonly heard by this Court on De- known as 706 Lincoln St., cember 14, 2015, at 1:30 Lawrence, KS 66044 (“the PM, at which time and Property”) MS169734 place you should appear ‘tO protect your interests. for a judgment against deShould you fail therein, fendants and any other injudgment may be entered terested parties and, unin due course upon said less otherwise served by petition. personal or mail service of summons, the time in Petitioner’s address is: which you have to plead to Kim Hurley, 619 Bonton, St. the Petition for ForecloJoseph, MO 64501. sure in the District Court of Petitioner’s attorney is: Douglas County Kansas John M. Spencer, whose will expire on December 9, business address is 702 2015. If you fail to plead, Felix, St. Joseph, MO 64501. judgment and decree will ________ be entered in due course upon the request of plain(First published in the tiff. Lawrence Daily JournalMILLSAP & SINGER, LLC World October 29, 2015) By:___________________ Chad R. Doornink, #23536 IN THE DISTRICT COURT cdoornink@msfirm.com OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, 8900 Indian Creek KANSAS Parkway, Suite 180 CIVIL DEPARTMENT Overland Park, KS 66210 (913) 339-9132 CitiMortgage, Inc. (913) 339-9045 (fax) Plaintiff, By: /s/ Tiffany T. Johnson Tiffany T. Johnson, #26544 vs. tjohnson@msfirm.com Garrett M. Gasper, #25628 Laura A. Davis, Phillip C. Davis, Jane Doe, John Doe, ggasper@msfirm.com Aaron M. Schuckman, City of Lawrence, Kansas, #22251 and United States Bankaschuckman@msfirm.com ruptcy Trustee Jan Hamil612 Spirit Dr. ton, et al., St. Louis, MO 63005 (636) 537-0110 Defendants (636) 537-0067 (fax) Case No. 15CV371 ATTORNEYS FOR PLAINTIFF _______ Court No. 3
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THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL PERSONS CONCERNED: You are hereby notified that on October 16, 2015, a Petition for Probate of Will and Issuance of Letters Testamentary Under the Kansas Simplified Estates Act and Determination of a Valid “Consent of Spouse” was filed in this Court by Phyllis A. Norris, an heir and executor named in the will of Darrell R. Norris, deceased.
2.0 g. Marijuana (more or less), 133.37 g. Marijuana (more or less), 4.5 g. Marijuana (more or less), .28 g. Marijuana (more or less), 19.13 g. Marijuana (more or less), 1.0 g. Marijuana (more or less), 14.9 g. Marijuana (more or less), 1.0 g. Marijuana (more or less), All creditors of the dece4 Trazodone prescripdent are notified to exhibit tion pills. their demands against the Defenants estate within the latter of four (4) months from the Case No. 2015-CV-382 date of the first publicaDiv. 4 tion of notice under K.S.A. 59-2236 and amendments thereto, or if the identity of Pursuant to the Kansas the creditor is known or Standard Asset Seizure reasonably ascertainable, and Forfeiture Act, K.S.A. thirty (30) days after ac60-4101 et seq. tual notice was given as provided by law, and if Pursuant to K.S.A. 60-4109 their demands are not thus NOTICE OF PENDING exhibited, they shall be FORFEITURE forever barred. Phyllis A. Norris, NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN Petitioner that property herein dePREPARED BY: scribed has been seized for forfeiture and is pendBARBER EMERSON, L.C. ing forfeiture to the State of Kansas, Lawrence / Linda Kroll Gutierrez #09571 Douglas County Drug En1211 Massachusetts Street forcement Unit (DEU) purP.O. Box 667 suant to Kansas Standard Lawrence, Kansas Asset Seizure and Forfei66044-0667 ture Act (KSASFA), K.S.A. (785) 843-6600 60-4101 et seq. If you have (785) 843-8405 (facsimile) not previously received a E-mail:lgutierrez@barber Notice of Seizure for Foremerson.com feiture, this is notice purAttorneys for Petitioner suant to the Act. _______ 1. The $11,800, in U.S. Currency was seized at 835 (Published in the Lawrence Maine Street, Lawrence, Daily Journal-World OctoDouglas County, KS 66044, ber 29, 2015) from Scott Southern’s Bedroom, located on top of the IN THE DISTRICT COURT door frame in the closet, OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, on or about the 30th day of KANSAS June, 2015, as property SEVENTH JUDICIAL subject to forfeiture. DISTRICT 2. The $336, in U.S. CurCIVIL DIVISION rency was seized at 835 Maine Street, Lawrence, STATE OF KANSAS, ex. rel. Douglas County, KS 66044, LAWRENCE / DOUGLAS from Scott Southern’s BedCOUNTY DRUG room, located in a safe, on ENFORCEMENT UNIT (DEU) or about the 30th day of Plaintiff; June, 2015, as property subject to forfeiture. vs. 3. The $15, in U.S. Currency was seized at 835 Maine $11,800.00 IN U.S. Street, Lawrence, Douglas CURRENCY, (more or less), County, KS 66044, from $ 2,000.00 IN U.S. Scott Southern’s Bedroom, CURRENCY, (more or less), located on top of a $ 854.00 IN U.S. dresser, on or about the CURRENCY, (more or less), 30th day of June, 2015, as $ 400.00 IN U.S. property subject to forfeiCURRENCY, (more or less), ture. $ 336.00 IN U.S. (First published in the 4. The $9, in U.S. Currency Lawrence Daily Journal- CURRENCY, (more or less), was seized at 835 Maine $ 21.00 IN U.S. World October 22, 2015) Street, Lawrence, Douglas CURRENCY, (more or less), County, KS 66044, from $ 15.00 IN U.S. IN THE DISTRICT COURT Scott Southern’s Bedroom, CURRENCY, (more or less), located on the floor, on or OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, $ 9.00 IN U.S. KANSAS about the 30th day of June, CURRENCY, (more or less), 2015, as property subject And In the Matter of the to forfeiture. 360.52 g. Marijuana Estate of 5. The $854, in U.S. Cur(more or less), Darrell R. Norris, rency was seized at 835 36.8 g. Marijuana deceased. Maine Street, Lawrence, (more or less), Douglas County, KS 66044, 10.3 g. Marijuana Case No. 2015PR000162 from Kevin Mason’s Bed(more or less), Division 1 room, located in a black 4.3 g. Marijuana expandable file folder lo(more or less), (Proceeding Pursuant to 1.0 g. Marijuana K.S.A. Chapter 59) (more or less), 55.89 g. Marijuana NOTICE TO CREDITORS (more or less),
PUBLIC NOTICE CONTINUED ON 10C
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Thursday, October 29, 2015
PLACE YOUR AD:
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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.
NOTICES TO PLACE AN AD:
ANNOUNCEMENTS Business Announcements
NEWSPAPER DISTRIBUTION DRIVER Part-time Opportunity
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
Apply online at jobs.the-worldco.com AdministrativeProfessional
Customer Service
10 Hard Workers needed NOW! $10 hr to train. Quickly earn $12-$15 hr Weekly pay checks. Paid Vacations No Weekends
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. Email resume & cover letter to: employment@ penningtonco.com Learn more online at: penningtonco.com
BusinessOpportunity AIRLINE CAREERS Start Here - Get hands on training as FAA certified Technician fixing jets. Financial aid if qualified. Call for free information Aviation Institute of Maintenance 1-877-818-0783 www.FixJets.com Sell your structured settlement or annuity payments for CASH NOW. You don’t have to wait for your future payments any longer! Call 1-800-283-3601
Call today! 785-841-9999
DriversTransportation
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
Education & Training Science Teacher Bishop Seabury Academy, an independent college-preparatory school, is seeking a part-time, 8th grade Science teacher for the 2016 spring semester. Candidates should have a bachelor’s degree in science or a degree in education and relevant teaching experience. To apply, send a resume & cover letter to chrisbryan@seabury academy.org
785-832-1717 www.seaburyacademy. org
General
Healthcare
HIRING IMMEDIATELY!
FULL TIME COOK ——— CNA
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
Relief Driver Leavenworth LV County Council on Aging is seeking a Relief Driver-Nutrition and Transportation (IOC). To see a complete job description go to: http://www.leavenworth county.org/employment. asp
Weaver’s is seeking highly motivated full and part-time Seasonal and Holiday Sales associates. Excellent customer service and people skills a must. Weekday availability incl mornings helpful. Apply in person: 3rd Floor, 901 Mass. St. EOE
Healthcare Administrator/ Office Manager Needed for busy Family Medicine Office in Lawrence. HR and benefits administration experience is required. We offer great employee benefits. Please send resume and references to: fp.applicant.11@gmail.com
Find Jobs & More Jobs.Lawrence.com
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
Medical Records
RN
KaMMCO, a professional liability insurance carrier seeks a licensed RN to prepare chronologies and detailed case analysis of medical records for our Claims Dept. This FT position located in Topeka is also responsible for conducting medical research related to the case. Good working knowledge of MS Word, Excel, Outlook, and Windows XP. Excellent computer and computer research skills a must. Prefer strong history of clinical and/or litigation case review experience. Require ability to work with minimal supervision, set priorities, and work in a quiet, professional, and confidential environment. Please send resume with salary history to email: hr@kammco.com Deadline for submission is November 10, 2015. More information is available at www.kammco.com
Hotel-Restaurant
Sous Chef (Ottawa, KS) Corporate dining environment. Evening and Weekend availability and supervisory experience required. $14-$15/hr & benefits. Fwd resume to eaglewingcafe@gmail. com or call (785)760-3560
785.832.2222
Special Notices
Special Notices
Call now to secure a super low rate on your Mortgage. Don’t wait for Rates to increase. Act Now! Call 1-888-859-9539
KU Dept. of Educational Psychology Parent ConsultationProject
CNA/CMA CLASSES!
Child Behavior Problems at Home?
Aspiring Entrepreneurs
Lawrence, KS
Looking for a reputable online business? Flexible hours, free training, great income, and incentives.
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
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Special Notices A PLACE FOR MOM. The nation’s largest senior living referral service. Contact our trusted, local experts today! Our service is FREE/no obligation. CALL 1-800-717-2905
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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
All Things Basementy! Basement Systems Inc. Call us for CALL NOW- 785.331.2025 all your basement needs! trinitycareerinstitute.com Waterproofing, Finishing, Structural Repairs, Humidity SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILand Mold Control FREE ESTIITY BENEFITS. Unable to MATES! Call 1-800-998-5574 work? Denied benefits? We Can Help! WIN or Pay Are you in BIG trouble with Nothing! Contact Bill Gor& Associates at the IRS? Stop wage & bank don to start levies, liens & 1-800-706-8742 audits, unfiled tax re- your application today! turns, payroll issues, & AUTO INSURANCE STARTresolve tax debt FAST. Call ING AT $25/ MONTH! Call 844-245-2287 877-929-9397
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 CPS is located on the KU. 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.
LOST & FOUND Found Item FOUND BRACELETS 2 bracelets, in city parking lot on Vermont, near Mark’s Jewelry. Call to identify: 785-749-4136 or 393-6488
Found Set of Keys 6th & Michigan near McDonalds. Call to identify: 785-917-2316 or 785-917-1524
Lost Pet/Animal
LOST TORTOISE Kevin has been missing since Tues, Oct 20, 2015. He is 70 lbs & friendly. Owners are devastated as Kevin needs daily medication. If seen, please call 785-817-6773. Last seen between 200rd and 300rd off Hwy 40, Lecompton, KS - Please look under decks and in bushes. LARGE REWARD Facebook contact: Tallgrass Parrot Sanctuary
RENTALS REAL ESTATE TO PLACE AN AD:
REAL ESTATE Lawrence INVESTMENT/DEVELOPMENT
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 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.
785.832.2222 Apartments Unfurnished
Cedarwood Apts 2411 Cedarwood Ave.
Apartments Unfurnished LAUREL GLEN APTS All Electric
1, 2 & 3 BR units Some with W/D, Water & Trash Paid, Small Pet, Income Restrictions Apply
785-838-9559 EOH
Townhomes 2BR with loft, 2 bath, 1 car garage, fenced yard, FP, 3719 Westland Pl. $790/mo. Avail. Aug. 1. 785-550-3427
Beautiful & Spacious 1 & 2 Bedrooms Start at $450/mo. * Near campus, bus stop * Laundries on site * Near stores, restaurants * Water & trash paid ——————————————
CALL TODAY (Monday - Friday)
785-843-1116
Duplexes 2BR, in a 4-plex. New carpet, vinyl, cabinets, countertop. W/D is included. Equal Housing Opportunity. 785-865-2505
Townhomes
RENTALS
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FREE 2 Week AUCTION CALENDAR LISTING when you place your Auction or Estate Sale ad with us! Call our Classified Advertising Department for details! 785.832.2222 classifieds@ljworld.com
3 BR w/2 or 2.5 BA W/D hookups, Fireplace, Major Appliances. Lawn Care & Dbl Car Garage! Equal Housing Opportunity
785-865-2505
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 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
grandmanagement.net
Lawrence Duplex for Rent: 2 Bed 1 Bath 412 Arkansas. Kitchen appliances, W/D hookups, Off street parking, NO SMOKING. Section 8 accepted. $660/ mo. 785-766-2380
TUCKAWAY APARTMENTS
Tuckawayapartments.com
3 and 4 Bedroom Townhouses and Single Family Homes Available Now $950-$1800 a month. Garber Property Management
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Townhomes
HARPER SQUARE Harpersquareapartments.com TUCKAWAY AT BRIARWOOD
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Now Leasing 2 BR’s Close to Campus & Downtown
Pool, On KU Bus Route, Spacious Floorplan,Patios/Decks. Great location: 837 Michigan $200 OFF First Month Rent
Call now! 785-841-8400 www.sunriseapartments.com
HUTTON FARMS Huttonfarms.com
Office Space OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE Call Garber Property Management at 785-842-2475 for more information.
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Thursday, October 29, 2015
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L awrence J ournal -W orld
MERCHANDISE PETS TO PLACE AN AD:
785.832.2222
Auction Calendar
AUCTIONS
FINAL AUCTION for 2015 « Strickers Auction « 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
Auction Calendar **PAWN SHOP AUCTION** Saturday, November 7, 6 PM 4795 Frisbie Rd Shawnee, KS -Great selection of recreational items from hunting, laptops, game systems, tools, coins, jewelry AND MORE! Metro Pawn Inc 913.596.1200 metropawnks.com Lindsay Auction Svc. 913.441.1557 lindsaysauctions.com
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
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!
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)
BILL FAIR & COMPANY www.billfair.com 800-887-6929 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
www.kansasauctions.net/elston
Bicycles-Mopeds
Floor Bicycle Pump-Giant Control Tower #69010 Presta & Schrader valve compatible head. Like New $25. cash 785-865-4215
Floor Coverings BEST SALE EVER!!! Need New Carpet or Flooring??? All this Special Number for $250.00 off. Limited Time. Free In Home Estimate!! Call Empire Today@ 1-844-369-3371
MERCHANDISE
Mobile HOME Auction Friday, Nov 6, 6pm 1130 75th Terr, KCKS River View Estates Park Very nice, 2 full baths, 2 bdrm, dbl carport, utility shed, 10’X34’ covered deck. Shown by appointment.
Antiques
GUN, ANTIQUES, ENGINE AUCTION SAT., NOV. 7, 9:30 AM WISCHROPP AUCTION FACILITY OSAGE CITY, KS PREVIEW: FRIDAY NOV 6th, 5-7:30pm 40+ Guns, Antique Toys, Hit & Miss Engines, Tools MUCH-MUCH-MORE!
CPAP/BIPAP supplies at little or no cost from Allied Medical Supply Network! Fresh supplies delivered right to your door. Insurance may cover all costs. 800-902-9352
Emergencies can strike at any time. Wise Food Storage makes it easy to prepare with tasty, easy-to-cook meals that have a 25-year shelf life. FREE SAMPLE. Call: 844-797-6877
Got Knee Pain? Back Pain? FOOSBALL TABLE Shoulder Pain? Get a Heavy Duty, arcade style pain-relieving brace -little or Foosball Table, LIKE NEW! NO cost to you. Medicare Pa- $70, Cash only. 785-856-2509 tients Call Health Hotline or 816-741-9358 Now! 1-800-900-5406 Get The Big Deal from DirecTV! Act Now- $19.99/mo. Free 3-Months of HBO, Starz, Household Misc. SHOWTIME & CINEMAX FREE GENIE HD/DVR Upgrade! 2014 NFL Sunday Ticket Included with Select Packages. New Customers Only IV Support Holdings LLC- An authorized DirecTV Dealer Some exclusions apply - Call for details 1-800-897-4169
Lawn, Garden &
Nursery ~ANTIQUE FURNITURE~ Lovely & Pristine Pennsylvania House Queen Anne RED CONCRETE BRICKS drop leaf dining table AND PAVERS. 45 SF red with custom pads, $375. brick, 45 SF basket weave New Amish oak captain’s pavers both 16”x16” and chair, $150. Carved 16”x8”. Call 312-4840 and wooden screen from Inmake offer dia, $100 . (785)727-0414
FREE ADS for merchandise
under $100
See web for pics & listing: www.wischroppauctions.com 785-828-4212
classifieds@ljworld.com Miscellaneous
ANTIQUE FURNITURE Beautiful items, all in good condition. Cash only: Miscellaneous -Dresser Buffet- $150 -Hall Tree w/ seat, from Germany- $250 Acorn Stairlifts. The AFFORD-Hoosier Kitchen Hutch- $100 ABLE solution to your -Wurlitzer Spinnet Piano, stairs!** Limited time- $250 keys/pads perfect condition, Off your Stairlift Purchase!** TUNED- $300 1950’S ANTIQUE VINTAGE Buy Direct & Save. Please 785-856-2509 | 816-741-9358 VANITY MIRROR - 31” DI- call 1-800-304-4489 for Free AMETER. GOOD REFLEC- DVD and brochure. TION MIRROR WITH SOME FLAKING INSIDE GLASS. Advertise your product or $50 CASH OBO. PICTURE service nationwide or by TAKEN 10/15/15 - ORIGI- region in over 7 million households in North NAL OWNER 785-843-8457 America’s best suburbs! Old Fashion (mock) Place your classified ad in Butcher Block 24X24in. over 570 suburban newsButcher Block w/ bottom papers just like this one. CALL 785-832-2222 shelf ~ has wheels on Call Classified Avenue at 888-486-2466 legs ~ $ 50 ~ 785-550-4142
THOMAS J. LINDSAY LINDSAY AUCTION & REALTY www.lindsayauctions.com Agent for the Seller 913.441.1557
7 Days $19.95 | 28 Days $49.95
Health & Beauty
Find the Right Carpet, Flooring & Window Treatments. Ask about our 50% off specials & our Low Price Guarantee. Offer Ex- Vintage Lamp -Ceramic pires Soon. Call now base 21”H 28” Diameter, Shade depth 9 1/2” $10. 1-888-906-1887 785-865-4215
Furniture
SPECIAL! 10 LINES & PHOTO
KILL BED BUGS! Buy Harris Bed Bug killer Complete Treatment Program/Kit. Harris Mattress Covers add Extra Protection! Available: ACE Hardware. Buy Online: homedepot.com Need to sell your car? Place your ad at classifieds.lawrence.com or email classifieds@ljworld.com
Music-Stereo
PIANOS • H.L. Phillips upright $650 •Baldwin Spinet - $550 • Cable Nelson or Kimball Spinet - $500 • Gulbranson Spinet - $450 Prices include tuning & delivery
785-832-9906
Sports-Fitness Equipment Exercise Equipment Spirit XE100 Elliptical Trainer- $595 Pro-Form 970R Recumbent Bike- $95 Weslo Cadence Treadmill- $95 785-841-2026
GARAGE SALES Lawrence 2 Family Garage Sale 4621 Trail Dr. (west off of Folks Rd) Sat. Oct 31st, 8-Noon NO EARLY CALLERS PLEASE Quilts, Fenton Hobnail dish, silverware & chest, vintage Yashica camera, Precious Moments: Brahm Lullaby figure, sheller, & piggy bank. Snowman punch bowl & cups, CDs, suitcases, Christmas garland decor, designer purses, 2 adult bikes, 1 child bike, sled, Papasan chair and pad, nurses 3 XL scrub tops, stuffed animals, toys, 2 bar stools, antique enamel coffee pot, linens, arctic ice maker, fishing rods, Gymnic Plus excercise ball, dart board, bullentin board, computer parts, dishes, beer tubs, tool box, board games, bacon wave, vintage wood wicker picnic basket, and misc.
GARAGE SALE 2417 Stowe Drive Lawrence
Lawrence
Lawrence
Cumberland House; 6x9 Huge Sale Area Rug, Black with Flo2111 Moodie Rd. ral pattern, has been Lawrence p0rofessionally cleaned Saturday, Oct 31 ($100 value!), Children’s 7 am - 3 pm toys and games, Mason jars and other glassware, Halloween, Christmas and Many Antiques and ColSports, LawSt. Patrick’s Day decor lectibles, and items, Self Standing rence and KU memoraFurniture: tables, Toilet seat, Retro Queen bilia, Headboard, footboard chairs, office, dressers, and sideboards, Note- desks, lamps, Household books and other office items, costume jewelry, misc, VHS Tapes of Tools, Oil Lamps, Cookie Operas, Pirates of Pen- Jars, Home decorations, zance, HMS Pinafore and Wall Art, Cameras, Elecothers, Mens Jeans and tronics and much more. 2 Khakis, 36x30, 33x32, blocks west of 21st and shorts, 36 and 38, mens LG Haskell Ave. and XL shirts. Friday and Longaberger Baskets Sat. Oct. 30-31, 8 am - 11 & Vera Bradley Bags am, NO EARLY CALLERS 1104 Parkside Circle PLEASE! 2417 Stowe Drive Halloween Garage Sale 4721 W. 25th ST Sat. Oct. 31st 8 am to 2 pm Sun. Nov. 1st 8 am to 2 pm Lots of great items at low prices. Women’s suits and clothing, children’s clothing, 6 drawer dresser w/ mirror, 4 drawer metal filing cabinet, book shelves and other assorted furniture.. Lots of books and toys.
Clothing Give Away
Fri, Oct 30 and Sat, Oct 31. 8 am - 11 am, NO Early Callers Please! Sat, Oct 31st Really nice boys fall and 8AM - 12 Noon winter clothes, sizes 12 mos up to Size 7, Toddler Shoes and Socks, TONS of at the Southside Children’s books from the Church of Christ 1960s, 70, and 90s, Nice Stuffed animals, Large 25th & Missouri Scooby Doo, Black Bear, Lawrence Emperor Penguin, and Olaf, Vinyl Records: 33, 78 HUGE SALE and 45s,from 50’s, 60’s 27th & Belle Haven and 70’s. Disneyland 33s Lawrence with Books, Ed Sullivan Showboat Musicals, Sat, Oct 31. 9:00 - ? Christmas and Various Several families contributartists;Women’s Shoes ing & collector downsizsize 10, Adult Books - fic- ing. A unique blend of tion and Early Childhood items, some vintage. Prof. Books, Young Adult Household, some furnibooks, SNOW VILLAGE ture, yard items, kid’s Dept. 56 pieces: County bikes & 2 motoried vehiCourthouse,, Toy Shop, cles. Stuff coming in all Mainstreet Hardward week. Starting at 9, NO Store, Cathedral, and EARLIES.
Lawrence Sat, Oct 31. 7:30 am - Noon Great prices. New Condition. Retired products.
Multi Family Sale/ Fall Clean Out Sale 2104 Prairie Terr Fri, Oct 30 & Sat, Oct 31
8 am - Noon
Furniture, Home Decor, Baby Toys & Clothes, Electronics, Books, Much more.
PETS Pets
LAB MIX PUPPIES 3 months old. Have had shots & dewormed. Need Families! $50 each 785-542-1043
PUBLIC NOTICES 785.832.2222
PUBLIC NOTICE CONTINUED FROM 8C cated on the floor of the closet, on or about the 30th day of June, 2015, as property subject to forfeiture. 6. The $400, in U.S. Currency was seized at 835 Maine Street, Lawrence, Douglas County, KS 66044, from Kevin Mason’s Bedroom, located on a night stand next to marijuana, on or about the 30th day of June, 2015, as property subject to forfeiture. 7. The $2,000, in U.S. Currency was seized at 835 Maine Street, Lawrence, Douglas County, KS 66044, from the upstairs hallway closed, located in a white
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envelope, on or about the 30th day of June, 2015, as property subject to forfeiture. 8. The $21, in U.S. Currency was seized at 835 Maine Street, Lawrence, Douglas County, KS 66044, from the living room, located in Scott Southern’s wallet, on or about the 30th day of June, 2015, as property subject to forfeiture. 9. The 36.8 grams of marijuana was located at, 835 Maine Street, Lawrence, Douglas County, KS 66044 in the living room (air hockey table), in the living room (air hockey table), 360.52 grams of marijuana was located in a LG DVD player box, the 10.3 grams of marijuana was located in black envelopes and folded pieces of wax pa-
per, the 4.3 grams of marijuana was located in a mason jar, on or about the 30th day of June, 2015, as property subject to forfeiture. 10. The 1.0 gram of marijuana was located at, 835 Maine Street, Lawrence, Douglas County, KS 66044 in the living room (pool table), located in a black pelican case, on or about the 30th day of June, 2015, as property subject to forfeiture. 11. The 55.89 grams of marijuana was located at, 835 Maine Street, Lawrence, Douglas County, KS 66044 in the upstairs hallway closet, located in mason jars and silver pots, on or about the 30th day of June, 2015, as property subject to forfeiture.
835 Maine Street, Lawrence, Douglas County, KS 66044 in the sofa room (refrigerator), In the sofa room (refrigerator), 133.37 grams of marijuana was located in a plastic baggie, the 19.13 grams of marijuana was located in a mason jar, the .28 grams of marijuana was located in 10 small canisters, 1.0 gram of marijuana, was located in a black pelican case, on or about the 30th day of June, 2015, as property subject to forfeiture. 15. The 1.0 gram of marijuana was located at, 835 Maine Street, Lawrence, Douglas County, KS 66044 in Scott Southern’s bedroom, located in an orange dime bag, on or about the 30th day of June, 2015, as property subject to forfei-
ture. 16. The conduct giving rise to forfeiture and/or the violation of law alleged: the defendant properties are proceeds of and/or was used or intended to be used in an exchange for controlled substances and/or used or intended to be used to facilitate felony violation(s) of the Uniform Controlled Substance Act, act(s) giving rise to the properties forfeiture, to wit: Scott Thomas Southern and Kevin Joseph Mason engaged in unlawful possession of marijuana and prescription Trazodone with intent to distribute, unlawful possession of marijuana and prescription Trazodone, unlawful possession of drug paraphernalia and
unlawful acts involving proceeds derived from violations of K.S.A. 21-5701 through 21-5717. The State pleads that presumption of forfeitability exist pursuant to K.S.A. 60-4112(j), (k) and (s). 17. You may do any of the following: (1) File a verified claim with the District Court, Plaintiff’s Attorney and the Seizing Agency contact person; or (2) Do nothing. 18. The law also provides for provisional return of the certain property under certain circumstances including the posting of a surety bond or a court hearing on whether probable cause existed when the property was seized. You
may wish to consult with an attorney before deciding what is best for you. However, if no petition or claim is filed within thirty (30) days of mailing/publication of this Notice, your interest in the property described above will be forfeited. All such requests, petitions and claims shall comply with the strict affidavit and informational requirements for claims as set out in K.S.A. 60-4111. Please be aware that it is a crime to falsely verify an ownership interest or other information in any request, petition or
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12. The 2.0 grams of marijuana was located at, 835 Maine Street, Lawrence, Douglas County, KS 66044 in Kevin Mason’s bedroom, located in a baggie and loose on the nightstand, on or about the 30th day of June, 2015, as property subject to forfeiture. 13. The (4) four prescription Trazodone pills were located at, 835 Maine Street, Lawrence, Douglas County, KS 66044 in Kevin Mason’s bedroom, located in a prescription bottle prescribed to Byron Lefthand in a black and silver file folder box, on or about the 30th day of June, 2015, as property subject to forfeiture. 14. The 4.5 grams of marijuana and 14.9 grams of marijuana was located at,
PUBLIC NOTICE CONTINUED ON 6C
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Guttering Services
JAYHAWK GUTTERING
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Seamless aluminum guttering. Many colors to choose from. Install, repair, screen, clean-out. Locally owned. Insured. Free estimates.
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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
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Serving KC over 40 years
Place your ad at apartments.lawrence.com or email classifieds@ljworld.com
Home Improvements Full Remodels & Odd Jobs, Interior/Exterior Painting, Installation & Repair of:
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1 MONTH $118.95/mo. + FREE LOGO 12 MONTHS $64.95/mo. + FREE LOGO
Furniture
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Landscaping
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
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
785-312-1917
“@ YOUR SERVICE”
Family Owned & Operated 20 Yrs
SERVICE DIRECTORY 6 LINE SPECIAL!
CALL 785-832-2222
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.
Golden Rule Lawncare Mowing & lawn cleanup Snow Removal Family owned & operated Call for Free Est. Insured. Eugene Yoder 785-224-9436
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
Tree/Stump Removal Fredy’s Tree Service cutdown • trimmed • topped • stump removal Licensed & Insured. 20 yrs experience. 913-441-8641 913-244-7718
KansasTreeCare.com 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)