Lawrence Journal-World 11-16-2015

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MONDAY • NOVEMBER 16 • 2015

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‘Not a lot of people do this’

School leaders oppose plan for gun shop near classes

The rare art of falconry in Kansas

Proposed facility would operate across the street from new career center By Rochelle Valverde

By Karen Dillon

Twitter: @RochelleVerde

Twitter: @karensdillon

F

alconry is an ancient form of hunting, estimated to be about 4,000 years old, and it was dubbed the original sport of kings. While we don’t have kings in Kansas, it does take a special kind of person to be a falconer. Only about 50 Kansans have the required permits and licenses to own and hunt with predatory birds, said Jessica Winebarger, a senior administrative assistant with the Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism. “Not a lot of people do this here,” Winebarger said. There are several reasons, Winebarger said, and one of those is the time commitment. “This is really a lifestyle,” she said.

Every day, the bird must be let out to fly and hunt and must be fed its diet of raw meat. It takes about seven years to become a falconer, and that first bird often is obtained by capturing it in the wild. The relationship between falcon and falconer is extremely close, and the falcon is trained to see the falconer as a hunting partner, Winebarger said. Falconers will spend lots of money for shelter, veterinarians and travel. Access to hunting grounds where the falcon can hunt small game also is necessary.

Lawrence school board members are voicing opposition to a shooting range and gun shop that is proposed for a location across the street from the district’s new college and career center. “It’s not an appropriate loSCHOOLS cation for a business that sells deadly weapons — that close to a school,” said school board member Shannon Kimball.

Last week, about 250 falconers, members of the North American Falconry Association, along with another 1,800 family and friends, traveled to Hutchinson from around the world, including from Australia, France and England, to take part in falconry. “It’s a pretty amazing sport,” said Winebarger, who attended the event. “It’s one of those things where you don’t hear about it much.”

Please see SCHOOL, page 2A

‘Saint Bud’ helped area children on Medicaid smile By Conrad Swanson Twitter: @Conrad_Swanson

Patients would often drive for hours to be seen by Dr. Bud Jacobs. For much of his career as a pediatric dentist, Jacobs was one of a select few in northeast Kansas who would treat Med- Only in Lawrence: icaid patients, said A Monday feature Dr. Mark Edwards, a highlighting behindlongtime friend and the-scenes stars and unsung heroes who colleague. Although the sys- make Lawrence a tem has seen some special place to live. To changes in recent suggest someone for a years, historically feature, email news@ speaking, treating a ljworld.com. Put “Only patient on Medicaid in Lawrence” in the meant more paper- subject line. work and less money for dentists, Edwards explained. But Jacobs continued on undeterred,

Jack Stoddart, of Lawrence, has worked with falcons since he was 14 years old. Currently, he is preparing for duck season with his peregrine falcon, Sophie. The birds require special care, and he must exercise Sophie several times each week. Top: Sophie sets her sights on a lure. Middle: Stoddart gives Sophie a treat of fresh quail after performing a task.

Please see SMILE, page 2A

Richard Gwin/Journal-World Photos

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Monday, November 16, 2015

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.

Juan “Jay” C. Tovar-Ballagh Memorial services will be 2PM- 11/20/2015 at the Barnett Family Funeral Home in Oskaloosa, KS. A full obit at barnettfamilyfh.com. Memorials to “Just Food”.

Joe Dale Newell Service 10:30 AM, Wednesday Barnett Family Funeral Home, Oskaloosa. Visitation 6-8 PM, Tuesday at Funeral Home. www.barnettfamilyfh.com

Thomas J. Ryan Thomas J. Ryan, Jr., 82, Valley Falls, died 11-14-15. Service 11 am Sat. 11-21-15 at Barn B&B Inn at Valley Falls. www.mercerfuneralhomes.com

ON THE RECORD Marriages Erika Lyn Culver, 33, Eudora, and Nicholas Wade Grant, 29, Eudora. Theresa Lynn Gratton, 35, Lawrence, and Natalie Carole Parker, 35, Lawrence. Breonna Renae Emery, 23, Topeka, and Andrew Neil Harris, 27, Topeka. Jason Edwin Mesker, 38, and Shannon Lindemuth, 34, Lawrence. Laurel Rochette Brock, 26, Rantoul, and Shane Michael Gimzo, 25, Lawrence. Barrett Paul Hamilton, 34, Brooklyn, N.Y., and Kathleen Ross McDow, 34, Brooklyn, N.Y. Emily Hadl, 28, Chicago, and Kevin Kelly, 29, Chicago. Julie Estes, 57, Leawood, and Tracy Withrow, 50, Leawood. Benjamin Eugene Koehn, 30, Lawrence, and Jennifer Blair Hunt, 28, Lawrence. Cesar Adrian Rodriguez, 30, Lawrence, and Kara Kristine Schwerdt, 28, Lawrence. Daniel Edward Stevens, 56, Tonganoxie, and Mary Dee Vogel, 56, Tonganoxie. Wanwan Cai, 26, Lawrence, and Andrew David Hodgson, 29, Lawrence. Joshua Lee Hopping, 27, Lawrence, and April Elise Huston, 25, Lawrence. Catherine Elizabeth Piccone, 25, Lawrence, and Pearson Ferrell Skepnek, 31, Lawrence. Mark J. Crowl, 39, Lawrence, and Allyson Stock, 29, Lawrence. Danielle Renee Martinez, 30, Lawrence, and Alicia Diane Martinez, 32, Lawrence.

Divorces Chad Jack Bowen, 50, Lawrence, and Jill Lynn Bowen, 46, Lawrence. Angela Michelle Sage, 25, Topeka, and Travis Alan Sage, 27, Lawrence. John Allan Kepler, 41, Lawrence, and Janna Nannette Kepler, 34,

Smile CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A

offering medical care to those who might otherwise receive none, Edwards said. “He’s a great role model for us. For any dentist,” Edwards said. “He took Medicaid patients and probably many, many, many kids and never got paid, but he delivered the appropriate and ethical treatment, no matter what. He sacrificed a lot of things just to get kids treated.” While Jacobs sold his practice — Robert W. Jacobs DDS, PA — in 2012, he continued working in the operating room at Lawrence Memorial Hospital until this fall. Now, after more than 40 years, he’s officially fully retired. An Oklahoma native, Jacobs always worked with children when he was growing up, and when he began to take an interest in dentistry, leaning toward the pediatric side came naturally to him. “I’d always worked at the swimming pool and summer camps, and I had been around kids a lot,” he said. “And when I got into dental school, I don’t know if I knew how to handle kids or if they

LAWRENCE

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Lawrence. Elizza Michelle Garrett, 31, Kansas City, Kan., and Henry Travis Paustian, 34, Lawrence. Michael Thomas Williams, 28, Lawrence, and Megan Marie Williams, 30, Lawrence. David Hemphill, 64, Lawrence, and Carlotta Hemphill, 64, Lawrence. Chad Brian Blackmore, 38, Goodwell, Okla., and Amber Charisse Blackmore, 39, Lawrence. Darren Lee Howland, 54, Lawrence, and Catherine Louise Howland, 58, Eudora. Ashley Alexander, 28, Lawrence, and Ryne Alexander, 30, Lawrence. Joseph Wesley Brown, 55, Eudora, and Erika Marie J. Brown, 57, Lauenburg, Germany.

Bankruptcies Scott J. Rowland and Amber L. Rowland, 4313 W. 26th Terrace, Lawrence. Nathan Michael Schwermann and Samantha Adrienne Moore-Schwermann, 2619 Bellecrest Drive, Lawrence. Dennis W. Klaasmeyer, 1984 North 1000, Eudora. Robert Ellis Payne and Carol Lee Payne, 774 East 2200 Road, Eudora. Jeanette Renee Parker, 2310 W. 26th St. Apt. B-10, Lawrence. Jason Allen Withers and Sherri Lavon Withers, 1115 Ninth St., Baldwin City.

School CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A

Kimball brought up the topic at the board’s meeting last week, and board members have since written a letter voicing their official opposition, calling the proposal “unreasonable.” The Douglas County Planning Commission will consider the issue at its meeting today, in which a public hearing about the rezoning request that would allow for the proposed shooting range and shop is scheduled. Commissioners will vote on whether to approve the request of Lawrence businessman Rick Sells to rezone an approximately 1-acre property at 1021 E. 31st St. — currently a vacant industrial building — to allow for the indoor shooting range and a gun sales and repair shop, according to the commission’s report. The rezoning request is recommended for approval. Sells — the former owner of Lawrence Athletic Club and a substitute teacher for the school district — said he is not against the district’s concerns and will be providing details about the safety measures and regulations that would be in place. “I can understand why people are a little concerned, because when you say guns, it’s a scary topic,” he said, noting that if people from the school district or community have questions, he’d like to answer them. The Lawrence College and Career Center, 2910 Haskell Ave., is located across 31st — about 760 feet — from the proposed site. The LCCC is attended by hundreds of students from both high schools. It’s also adjacent to the proposed site for the future Boys & Girls Club teen center, which will run an after-school

SOUND OFF If you have a question, call 832-7297 or send email to soundoff@ ljworld.com. were good for me, but I found it more interesting to work with them than the adults.” Jacobs graduated from Oklahoma University, where he met his wife, Sheryl, and then continued on to dental school at the University of Missouri-Kansas City where he graduated in the early 1970s. “At that point, the Vietnam War was going on,” he said. “So I joined the Air Force as a dental officer.” In 1973, Jacobs left the Air Force and began his residency at Children’s Mercy Hospital in Kansas City, Mo., where he learned how to properly handle Medicaid patients, he said. “When I started out, still in residency, I had a nighttime practice two nights a week and all day on Saturday, the office I went into took Medicaid, so I learned from the get go how to do the paperwork, which was really important,” he said. “So in June of 1975, when I started my private practice, I said, ‘We’re going to keep doing this.’” “We didn’t discriminate between what kind of insurance anybody had,” he added. “We just treated everybody the same.” At that time, too, Jacobs was the only pedi-

feet, 500 feet, 1,000 feet or 10,000 feet, if someone is going to do something stupid, they’re goljworld.com ing to do it no matter 645 New Hampshire St. (News Center) what,” he said. Lawrence, KS 66044 The Gun-Free School (785) 843-1000 • (800) 578-8748 Zones Act also requires guns be unloaded within GENERAL MANAGER the 1,000-foot zones, unScott Stanford, less on private property, 832-7277, sstanford@ljworld.com so customers of the proposed business could not EDITORS load their weapons until Chad Lawhorn, managing editor they entered the prop832-6362, clawhorn@ljworld.com erty. Kimball argues that Tom Keegan, sports editor puts the burden to com832-7147, tkeegan@ljworld.com ply on the individual. Ann Gardner, editorial page editor “I don’t think that 832-7153, agardner@ljworld.com there’s any way that you Kathleen Johnson, advertising manager can reasonably expect all 832-7223, kjohnson@ljworld.com customers of a business like that to comply with OTHER CONTACTS that statue,” she said. Ed Ciambrone: 832-7260 Sells said he thought production and distribution director more gun training and Classified advertising: 832-2222 education would be benor www.ljworld.com/classifieds eficial to public safety. His customers would CALL US not only be informed of the law requiring them Let us know if you have a story idea. Email news@ljworld.com or contact to bring their weapons one of the following: unloaded, but also would be required to sign an Arts and entertainment: .................832-7189 agreement to do so, he City government: ..............................832-6362 government: .......................832-7259 said. In addition, Sells County Courts and crime: ..............................832-7144 said, a gun safety and Datebook: ............................................832-7190 range etiquette class Kansas University: ............................832-7187 would be available for Lawrence schools: ...........................832-7259 to the editor: ........................832-7153 $10 and required for cus- Letters Local news: ..........................................832-7154 tomers under the age of Obituaries: ............................................832-7151 18. Photo reprints: ....................................832-7141 “We’re going way out Society: ..................................................832-7151 of our way to make sure Soundoff: .............................................832-7297 this place is safe,” he Sports: ...................................................832-7147 said. SUBSCRIPTIONS: 832-7199 Sells confirmed that there is another poDidn’t receive your paper? For billtential location for the ing, vacation or delivery questions, call business, in the Malls 832-7199. Shopping Center at the Weekday: 6 a.m.-5:30 p.m. intersection of 23rd and Weekends: 6 a.m.-10 a.m. Louisiana streets. He In-town redelivery: 6 a.m.-10 a.m. noted that location has a residential neighbor- Published daily by The World hood to its south and Company at Sixth and New streets, Lawrence, KS is near both Lawrence Hampshire 66044-0122. Telephone: 843-1000; High School and South or toll-free (800) 578-8748. Middle School. The Douglas County POSTMASTER: Send address to: Planning Commission is changes Lawrence Journal-World, scheduled to meet from P.O. Box 888, Lawrence, KS 6:30 to 10:30 p.m. today 66044-0888 at City Hall, 6 E. Sixth St. (USPS 306-520) Periodicals postThe rezoning proposal is age paid at Lawrence, Kan. Member of Alliance the seventh of 10 items for Audited Media on the agenda. Member of The Associated Press

— K-12 education reporter Rochelle Valverde can be reached at rvalverde@ ljworld.com or 832-6314.

Death penalty ruling unlikely to bring changes

BIRTHS Kayla Lutze and Jacob Parkins, Lawrence, a boy, Sunday. Aaron Miller and Bridgett Walthall, Lawrence, a boy, Sunday.

program for about 300 middle and high school students. Colby Wilson, executive director of the Boys & Girls Club of Lawrence, said the club supports the school district’s stance, but explained he will be attending today’s meeting to learn more about the proposal and safety measures that would be in place. “We need the club and the college and career center to be a safe place,” Wilson said. “We need people to trust that their kids are going to be safe there, and I’m not sure if this is the best fit for a gun range.” Amid an increase in school shootings across the country, the district has made efforts to tighten security at its 21 schools. As part of the district’s $92.5 million bond issue, all schools are getting renovations, which include safety updates such as secure entrances, keypad-entry classroom doors and portable remotes that teachers can carry to lock classrooms at the press of a button. Kimball said having a business that sells guns so close to a school is contrary to such measures. “We have undertaken a massive effort in our district to increase the safety and security of our campuses, and this just feels wrong in that light,” she said. However, there are no local codes that would prohibit the location of a gun range or shop within 1,000 feet of a school, according to the commission’s report. The federal Gun-Free School Zones Act prohibits possession and discharge of firearms within 1,000 feet of a school but has several exceptions, including on private property. Sells said he doesn’t think guns are the problem or that the act would necessarily stop violence. “It doesn’t matter whether that act says 5

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Topeka (ap) — Kansas isn’t likely to see executions soon or a shift in how its Supreme Court handles capital murder cases after it recently upheld a death sentence for the first time under the state’s 1994 capital punishment law. Several prosecutors are encouraged by the

I learned from the get go how to do the paperwork, which was really important. So in June of 1975, when I started my private practice, I said, ‘We’re going to keep doing this.’” — Dr. Bud Jacobs, retired Lawrence dentist atric dentist in Lawrence, he said, so there was no shortage of patients. “My practice was busy from the get go,” he said. Keeping that forward momentum going for more than four decades should be considered a significant achievement, said Dr. John Hay, another of Jacobs’ longtime friends and former colleagues. The political atmosphere and work involved with Medicaid often drove other dentists to the point where they would no longer accept new patients on the program, or they would refer them to different practices, Hay said. “There was a period of time when the system was so frustratingly broken that people said, ‘I’m not doing this anymore,’” Hay explained. All the same, Jacobs

court’s decision in the case of John E. Robinson Sr. He was sentenced to die for killing two women in 1999 and 2000 and tied by evidence or his own admissions to the murders of seven women and a teenage girl in Kansas and Missouri, starting in 1984.

kept his resolve. “I’ve referred to him as Saint Bud for a long time,” Hay said. “He’s incredibly giving to the most vulnerable people.” Because many dentists were not accepting Medicaid patients and Jacobs was, their referrals were sent his way, Edwards said. Not only was Jacobs treating children from Lawrence, he was treating children from all over Northeast Kansas. Over the years, Jacobs’ business grew and so did the number of patients he treated on Medicaid. “When I started out, probably 30 percent of my patient population was covered by Medicaid,” he said. “When I finished in 2012, it was probably around 75 or 80 percent.” And though many dentists might have considered those percentages a burden, Jacobs never looked at it that way, Hay said. Jacobs’ professional passion transcended any desire for money or publicity. “He always kept love in his heart for what he was doing, and he didn’t let the politics that be influence him negatively,” Hay said. “He’s done a tremendous amount of good for the kids, and he’s probably one of the most professionally generous people I’ve come across.”

But two Kansas law professors said the 415-page decision in Robinson’s case earlier this month suggests the Supreme Court will keep scrutinizing capital cases thoroughly. A national expert said he doesn’t read too much into a death sentence standing.

LOTTERY SATURDAY’S POWERBALL 14 22 37 45 66 (5) FRIDAY’S MEGA MILLIONS 17 18 31 35 59 (9) SATURDAY’S HOT LOTTO SIZZLER 1 22 24 37 41 (10) SATURDAY’S SUPER KANSAS CASH 2 17 18 23 32 (15) SUNDAY’S KANSAS 2BY2 Red: 7 12; White: 15 20 SUNDAY’S KANSAS PICK 3 5 3 1

NY TIMES CROSSWORD SOLUTION FOR NOV. 15 P A C K S

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Lawrence&State

Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com/local l Monday, November 16, 2015 l 3A

Lights & Sirens

Good reads and wagging tales At library, dogs are literacy stars for kids By Rochelle Valverde

Caitlin Doornbos cvdoornbos@ljworld.com

Recent arrest sign of new training?

T

here’s been a lot of talk about whether the county needs to create a mental health facility as part of a proposed jail expansion. Douglas County officials and the sheriff’s office recently hosted a public meeting to discuss the potential projects for a jail expansion and mental health crisis intervention center. The idea is that addressing the needs of those with serious mental illnesses is not only good for those people and for the community, but it also may help combat crowding in the jail. Research by criminal justice consultants Huskey & Associates indicated that 18 percent of bookings into the jail are people with serious mental illness and that 80 percent of those individuals had not been

K

Twitter: @RochelleVerde

ids practiced reading aloud at the Lawrence Public Library on Saturday morning to an unlikely audience. The Tail Wagging Readers program lets area children read to a dog from Loving Paws Animal Therapy. Students can bring their own book from home or use one from the library, and read and interact with a therapy dog. “It just gives kids an opportunity to practice reading,” said Jen Sherwood, who has been bringing her dog, Jackson, to the library for about a year. “It’s been demonstrated that reading to a dog is often less stressful than reading to a human.” Aiden Najafizadeh, a second-grader at St. John’s School, said he has been coming to the library since last year to read to the dogs and that it helps him to practice more. “I wait for a specific dog,” he said. “I usually get the small ones — they’re cute.” Loving Paws Animal Therapy is a volunteer-based organization that has about 30 owner-dog teams, Sherwood said. Tail Wagging Readers is one of about a dozen activities the teams take part in. Sherwood said a lot of the kids who participate are regulars, and some choose to read to the same dog each time. She noted dogs that have a calm temperament are selected for the program, then

Bob Billings plans face test Tuesday Seven options highlight discussion of $2.25M tabbed for improvements By Nikki Wentling Twitter: @NikkiWentling

Street improvements are coming to Bob Billings Parkway in 2016, and city commissioners will be asked Tuesday to recommend the projects that should be completed. The city budgeted $2.25 million for the section of Bob Billings I anticipate that Parkway from Kasold Drive to turning left into Wakarusa Drive and has compiled my neighborhood a list of priorities at peak traffic for construction hours will become based off the feed- hazardous at back of residents. Some — but not the Bobwhite all — of the pri- intersection.” orities can be initiated next year. — Dianne Schwartz, “At one of the area resident town hall meetings, we gave people two little orange dots and asked, ‘Where are areas that you consider problem areas?’” said Zach Baker, a project engineer with the Lawrence Public Works Department. “The places with the (highest) concentration of dots — these are the areas we want to address first.” A memo from city engineers said Bob Billings Parkway is classified as a principal arterial street, and it sees 6,500 to 15,500 vehicles each day. The volume of traffic is expected to increase with the upcoming opening of the Kansas Highway 10 interchange.

Mike Yoder/Journal-World Photo

GABE RINNERT, 7, READS ALOUD to Jackson, a Loving Paws Therapy Dog, during the twice-a-month Tail Wagging Readers program at the Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St., on Saturday. Jackson’s owner, Jen Sherwood, who brings Jackson often to the activity, got Jackson from the Lawrence Humane Society. go through training. “These are dogs meant to be touched, not service dogs,” she explained, noting that some kids come in just to pet them. Aiden’s mom, Cheryl Alexander, said that in addition to the reading practice, it helps him feel more comfortable around dogs. “It’s kind of nice, too, because we don’t have a dog at home,” she said. “It’s nice for

him to be around big dogs that are so relaxed and gentle.” Tail Wagging Readers takes place the second and fourth Saturday of every month in the children’s department of the library, 707 Vermont St. The program runs from 10 to 11 a.m., and reading sessions are 15 minutes. Students can register ahead or walk in. For more information or to register, call 843-3833.

Please see BILLINGS, page 4A

Please see TRAINING, page 4A

How do we want to live?

Coming soon at the

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NOVEMBER 17, 2015—7:30 P.M. WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM, KANSAS UNION

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Experts from the Kansas City entrepreneurial community and thriving Startup Village will discuss how to achieve entrepreneurial success,from getting funding to governmental support to collaborative environments and more. Co-sponsored by the KU Entrepreneurship Club and the KU Economics Club

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Monday, November 16, 2015

?

ON THE

street By Mackenzie Clark Read more responses and add your thoughts at LJWorld.com

What do you feel so strongly about that you’d go without food for it? Asked on Massachusetts Street

Marina Stevens, waitress, Pleasant Hill, Mo. “My siblings.”

Anthony Neal, works at casino, Independence, Mo. “I’d say family.”

.

Majority of Kansas Billings precinct seats open

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Topeka (ap) — Kansas has more than 7,000 precinct seats per party, but fewer than a fifth of Democratic seats are occupied and less than half of Republican seats are filled, according to a newspaper report. Precincts are geographical units within the electoral system. Each Kansas precinct has two seats per political party. Races for the seats occur on primary ballots in even-numbered years. The Topeka CapitalJournal tallied precinct seats for all of Kansas’ 105 counties using data from election offices and political parties. The data showed that 51 percent of Republican precinct seats appear to be vacant, as well as 83 percent of Democratic seats. Forty counties have no Democratic precinct leaders. The newspaper’s tallies, however, may not reflect any recent resignations or midterm appointments. It also includes precincts that don’t have voters. In Sedgwick County, for example, about 131 of 441 precincts lack any registered voters, while in Shawnee County, 27 of its 248 precincts lack voters. Political scientists and party leaders cite several reasons why precinct seats remain unfilled, ranging from apathy to awkward boundary lines that sometimes result in precincts with few or no residents. “It illustrates a kind of weakness in the political

Training Stephanie Darden, student, Lawrence “If Jesus was calling me to give up food, I’d do it. That’s the only reason.”

Allison Olandese, restaurant general manager, Kansas City, Kan. “Maybe equal rights for everybody.” What would your answer be? Go to LJWorld.com/ onthestreet and share it.

Wichita toddler dies; abuse is suspected Wichita (ap) — A 17-month-old girl has died from injuries that Wichita police suspect are the result of child abuse. The Wichita Eagle reports that the girl was pronounced dead around 8:10 a.m. Saturday. Her mother’s boyfriend has been charged with child abuse and aggravated battery. Wichita police Capt. Jeff Weible says that when emergency crews arrived Monday, they were told the girl had fallen about 30 minutes earlier. The boyfriend had been caring for the girl and her 4-yearold sister while their mother was working. Weible says the baby had multiple bruises and other internal injuries that are “indicative of child abuse.”

LAWRENCE • STATE

parties,” said Burdett Loomis, a professor of political science at Kansas University. “It tells you a lot of people are either unhappy with politics, disgusted by it or don’t care.” Precinct leaders often put up campaign signs during election season, help with fundraising and represent local concerns to the county party. They also elect county party leaders, influencing the party’s direction and use of resources. And, at least 23 members of the current Legislature first gained their seats through precinct appointments, according to the Kansas Democratic and Republican parties. Precinct positions seldom draw public attention, and vacant seats mean many neighborhoods don’t have a voice in steering political parties or filling partisan offices. “It’s a thankless job in a lot of ways,” said Bob Beatty, political science professor at Washburn University. Kerry Gooch, executive director of the Kansas Democratic Party, said some areas of Kansas haven’t had an organized Democratic Party presence for a while. Clay Barker, executive director of the Kansas Republican Party, said filling seats is a struggle but worth it when replacing a legislative or county leader. “The more sets of eyes and ears you have to listen to the different candidates,” the better, he said.

to stay back, which he initially did. But when the officer called for backup and tried to CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A handcuff the man “based on his assaultive behavconvicted of a violent ior,” the man allegedly offense. began struggling with the After reading about officer. That’s when the that meeting in an article officer decided to use his by my colleague, Ropepper spray on the man chelle Valverde, it piqued “in an attempt to gain my interest when I saw control of the suspect,” the Douglas County McKinley said. jail briefly added to its That apparently didn’t inmates another man work, as the man conwho may fit the mold of tinued struggling, even a person with a potenwith additional officers tial mental health issue who arrived on scene. So, booked on a nonviolent one of the officers chose offense. to deploy a Taser on the A transient Lawrence man, which McKinley man was booked into the said “was effective in jail around 2 a.m. Thurs- controlling the subject day but was released and allowing him to be more than eight hours handcuffed.” later “after speaking The man was then with” Bert Nash Commu- taken to Lawrence Menity Mental Health Cenmorial Hospital for an ter, according to booking evaluation, as per LPD logs — an anomaly I protocol when a Taser is don’t recall often seeing deployed. Once checked on the logs. out and released, the Here’s what happened man was booked into the with the man that led to Douglas County Jail on his arrest, according to suspicion of municipal Lawrence Police Depart- court violations of illegal ment spokesman Sgt. camping and suspicion of Trent McKinley: interference with the duAt 1:51 a.m. Thursday, ties of a law enforcement someone called police to officer. report a man was sleepJail booking logs indiing in the backyard of a cate the man was booked house in the 600 block of on a $200 bond, but was West Ninth Street. When released by his own rean officer arrived, the of- cognizance “after speakficer recognized the man ing with Bert Nash.” I’m as someone whom police not yet sure what that had contacted just hours means, but I’ll try to find out. before on Wednesday The Lawrence Police about illegal camping. Department does have The officer apa program underway proached the man, and where it is training offias the officer spoke, the man “became increasing- cers on how to best deal ly upset” with the officer with situations involving about the police contact- suspects with mental illnesses. About 44 Lawing him, McKinley said. rence police officers so The man then allegedly far have completed Crisis “threatened to beat the Intervention Training, officer and called (the which is in part aimed at officer) a racial slur.” de-escalating situations The officer then told with those in mental the man to sit down health crises. McKinwhile the officer spoke with another officer over ley was unable to tell me Friday whether the the police radio about officers involved in the the man’s alleged prior illegal camping incident. arrest were among the 44 certified in CIT. But as the officer was speaking on the radio, the man asked, “What — This is an excerpt from did you say to me?” The Lights & Sirens, LJWorld. man then allegedly came com/lights-sirens, a public toward the officer while safety blog by reporter Caitlin screaming profanities Doornbos. She can be reached and clenching his fist. at 832-7146 or cvdoornbos@ The officer drew his ljworld.com. Taser and told the man

According to the latest information from the Kansas Department of Transportation, the interchange is scheduled to open to traffic on Dec. 18. “When the interchange goes in, likely there will be more traffic along Bob Billings,” Baker said. “There are concerns about speeding going through that corridor and maybe not having any left-turn lanes. It just makes sense to address those issues.” After meeting with neighborhood groups to talk about residents’ priorities, city staff compiled a list of issues to explore in detail. Recommendations from the public included the need for traffic signals or roundabouts and left-turn lanes. Residents also voiced concerns with sight distance at several intersections. City staff are recommending to the City Commission seven options for improvements. The recommendations are: l A $1 million mill and overlay project from Kasold Drive to Wakarusa Drive that would include restriping the lanes between Kasold and Crossgate Drive to create a center turn lane. l Constructing a rightturn lane near the intersection of Bob Billings Parkway and Kasold Drive for $75,000. l Improving sight distance at the intersection of St. Andrews Drive at an estimated cost of $30,000. l Installing a traffic signal at the intersection of Bob Billings Parkway and Stone Meadows Drive for $300,000. l Installing a traffic signal or roundabout at

L awrence J ournal -W orld the intersection of Bob Billings Parkway and the south leg of Inverness Drive. The cost is estimated at $360,000 for the installation of a traffic signal and $600,000 for a roundabout. l Constructing a pedestrian hybrid beacon and crosswalk east of Bobwhite Drive for $80,000. An alternate option is installing a traffic signal with an estimated cost of $350,000. l Constructing a 6-foot sidewalk on the south side of Bob Billings Parkway from Monterey Way to Inverness Drive at an estimated cost of $220,000. Warren Corman, president of the Quail Pointe at Alvamar neighborhood group, said he was pleased the city had recommended a traffic signal for the Stone Meadows Drive intersection. “The biggest thing we were worried about here at Quail Point, we have real trouble getting out of the main entrance,” Corman said. “The hill comes in from both ways, and if people are driving 40 mph, we have about four seconds before they come over the hill and we see them. That’s been a real problem.” City staff received four emails from residents near the Bobwhite Drive intersection who have asked that a traffic signal be installed there, too. According to city engineers’ memo, Bobwhite Drive does not meet any of the warrants for consideration of a traffic signal. Neighbors “strongly favored the roundabout option,” the memo states, but there is not enough right-of-way to construct one. City staff recommended the pedestrian hybrid beacon for the intersection. The memo states the area should also be monitored periodically and that a traffic signal be

installed when it’s needed. Nancy Harper, a resident of the neighborhood, wrote an email asking for a traffic signal at the intersection. She explained the difficulty of turning onto Bob Billings Parkway and said she believed it would worsen with the opening of the new interchange. Another area resident, Dianne Schwartz, had similar concerns. “I anticipate that turning left into my neighborhood at peak traffic hours will become hazardous at the Bobwhite intersection,” Schwartz wrote. Baker said none of the city’s recommendations were “set in stone.” “Up to this point, it’s been reconnaissance — getting ideas from the public, putting out what we think the most viable options are and letting them pick which ones they want to see,” Baker said. Commissioners will recommend which improvements should be pursued. After the meeting, city staff will send a solicitation to engineering firms for the design of the projects. The design process is expected to start this winter, with plans prepared for construction in summer 2016. Final design plans will be brought back to the commission for approval. Commissioners meet at 5:45 p.m. Tuesday at City Hall, 6 E. Sixth St.


BUSINESS

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Monday, November 16, 2015

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Movie theater on track to add cocktail service

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ome news and notes from around town: l Movie theater liquor: It looks like it is coming to Lawrence’s largest cinema chain. The Regal theater chain on south Iowa Street has filed for a city drinking establishment license. I don’t get out to the movies a tremendous amount, but I don’t believe liquor has been one of the concession stand options. If the license is approved by city commissioners — all indications are that it will be approved — it is the type of license that allows for both beer and cocktails to be served. I have no word yet from Regal, though, what its plans are for the Lawrence theater. Obviously, there are numerous theaters in the area that serve alcohol. I may be mistaken, but I think Lawrence’s Liberty Hall currently serves beer as a concession option. Some of the theaters in Kansas City serve full meals and have extensive cocktail offerings. I know this because I recently

Town Talk

Tom Collins cost?) But, on the off chance that both still fit in the budget, it looks like there will be a new downtown dining option soon. I’ve been telling you for awhile now a restaurant is going in the old Round Corner Drug location at 801 Mass. Figuring out exactly what restaurant clawhorn@ljworld.com has been challenging. We’ve got a new clue, though. City officials have signed the paperwork received a drinking eson the home equity loan tablishment license for a that I used to pay off new business called RND that night at the movies. There certainly has been Corner Grille. I’ve previously rea lot of discussion over ported that the person the years about a need behind the venture is for the Regal movie theater to upgrade its offer- Zach Marten, the Kansas ings. It will be interesting City restaurant guy who is one of the operators of to see whether this is a Coal Vines Pizza in the sign of other improvements to come. I’ll reach Country Club Plaza. According to the paperwork out to the Regal folks to related to this drinking see if I can learn more. l Movie theater liquor establishment license, may change the equation Marten and business on whether I can afford partner Bret Springs — both a movie and dinner who also is a partner in on date night. (Questhe Coal Vines business tions: Will the movie the- — are indeed the operaater serve the cocktails in tors of Lawrence’s RND the same cups they serve Corner Grille. the soda? And just how I’ve reached out to much will an 84-ounce Marten in the past with

Chad Lawhorn

no luck. But I’ll do so again to see if he is ready to start sharing some details about his new business. It has been a slow-moving venture up to this point. The group filed a site plan with the city in June 2014 to occupy the building, and we’re just now reaching the end game. It will be interesting to see what concept the group pursues here in Lawrence. It has experience in more than just the pizza game. The duo also is behind the Westport Ale House, which serves a lot of beer and has a menu full of hamburgers, sandwiches, nachos, wings and other such creations. l There is one less dining option in Lawrence: The west Lawrence sports bar and grill Legends has closed at Bob Billings and Wakarusa Drive. Matt Llewellyn, owner of the popular 23rd Street Brewery, was lead owner of Legends. He said Legends just never did attract the volume of business that was expected. “It just didn’t work,” Llewellyn told me. “I’m

pleased and very thankful for the guests that we had, but I just didn’t have enough of them.” The location has proved difficult for a number of restaurants. Among some of the restaurants that have tried and failed there are Tanner’s Sports Bar & Grill, Zig & Mac’s, Bambinos, and I know I’m forgetting some others. Llewellyn partnered with longtime sports personality David Lawrence — the Jayhawk football color commentator — on the restaurant. It had a lot of KU memorabilia, and the restaurant had a strong relationship with several other KU personalities. There was even part of the menu that was created by KU basketball strength and conditioning coach Andrea Hudy. It will be interesting to see whether the location improves any once the new Bob Billings interchange on the South Lawrence Trafficway opens. The interchange, which is scheduled to open later this month, is expected to increase traffic volumes

along Bob Billings Parkway. The interchange really will cause Bob Billings to become a new western gateway for the city of Lawrence, and particularly for anyone wanting an easy route to the KU campus. Llewellyn said the business tried to hold out until that opening but could not continue operating at current levels. Llewellyn, though, said the troubles at Legends have not created any problems for 23rd Street Brewery. He said business remains strong at that microbrewery and restaurant. “Business is still super over there,” Llewellyn said. No word yet on what may come of the space at Bob Billings and Wakarusa. Llewellyn said there has been some interest from other types of businesses to sublease the space, but no deals have been signed. — This is an excerpt from Chad Lawhorn’s Town Talk column, which appears each weekday on LJWorld.com.

Protect concrete with a sealer Help out by shoveling snow

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oncrete driveways and patios are expensive. Protect your investment with a goodquality concrete sealer. A properly applied sealant will create a barrier between the concrete and destructive elements such as water, ice, oils, grease and chemicals, including ice melt. Step 1: Acrylic sealants are the most common, least expensive and easiest to use. They will typically need to be applied every one to three years depending on wear and weather conditions. Choose a satin-finish sealer such as Quikrete’s Cure and Seal to seal smooth and rough surfaces when cost and traction is a concern. Step 2: Wet-look sealers work well on interior or exterior surfaces that are not smooth. Using a wet-look or glossy finish on smooth surfaces can create a very slick surface, especially if water is present. It is best to avoid using glossy finishes on driveways, sidewalks or any interior surface that may be exposed to water, such as a garage floor.

Fix-It Chick

above 50 degrees Fahrenheit and there is no rain in the forecast for at least 24 hours. For new concrete, wait at least 30 days before applying sealant of any kind. Step 6: Clean the surface to be sealed with a nonresidual cleaner such as TSP or Dirtex. Allow it to dry completely before Step 3: Choose a penproceeding. etrating sealer or epoxyStep 7: Wear protective based sealer for longerclothing and goggles when lasting protection. The applying sealant. more expensive sealants Step 8: Following the will seep into the concrete, manufacturer’s instrucsealing the pours, creattions, apply the first ing a more impermeable layer of sealant using a surface. tank sprayer, brush or Step 4: Regardless of roller. Apply the sealant which sealer is chosen, uniformly, wiping away preparation is the key to a any puddles. durable and effective finStep 9: Apply a second ish. Confirm that the concoat immediately following crete is permeable before the first. beginning the project. A Step 10: Let the sealant simple water test will show dry thoroughly, usually if the concrete needs to be around eight to 10 hours, sealed. Place a few drops before allowing foot trafof water on the concrete fic. Wait at least 24 hours surface; if it absorbs into before exposing it to heavy the concrete, a sealer is traffic. needed. If the water beads up, the concrete is sealed — Have a home improveand no further action is ment question for the Fix-It required. Chick? Email it to Linda Cottin Step 5: Apply sealant at features@ljworld.com. when temperatures are

Linda Cottin

BUSINESS BRIEFCASE TherapyWorks, PA, has announced Amy Hileman as the organization’s newest physical therapy assistant.

Hileman, a mother of three, will work with all age groups to help them reach their therapy goals.

— Let us spread the word about key hires and promotions, honors, business events and other business news of community interest. Send Business briefcase items to news@ljworld.com.

Agency: Douglas County Senior Services and the City of Lawrence Contact: Megan Gilliland at mgilliland@lawrenceks. org or at 785-832-3338 Douglas County Senior Services and the City of Lawrence need your help. The Safe Winter Walkways program needs volunteers to help elderly or disabled individuals clear public sidewalks during snow events. Able-bodied Lawrence residents with a passion for helping others and an enjoyment of winter weather are needed to volunteer to create safer and more accessible pedestrian walkways by shoveling snow through the winter months. To register to volunteer, visit lawrenceks.org/safe_winter_walkways.

Share your film skills Heartland Community Health Care provides health services to all community members regardless of income. Heartland is looking for a volunteer with the skill-set and experience required to capture a patient story on film. This individual will need to provide examples of previous work for Heartland staff to review. High-quality filming and editing skills are required, along with a

willingness to create and edit the film for viewing by the end of November. For more information, please contact Rachel Hartford at rhartford@ heartlandhealth.org or 841-7297, ext. 231.

Be a bell ringer The Salvation Army is looking for volunteers to serve as bell ringers for the Red Kettle Christmas Campaign. Two-hour shifts began last week and run Mondays through Saturdays throughout the holiday season. Volunteers can sign up online at ringbells.org or contact Jim Evers at jim_evers@ usc.salvationarmy.org or 764-0962. Help feed families Ballard Community Services provides early education services, emergency assistance, holiday assistance, case management services and a variety of human service programs in support of families. The Ballard Center is looking for a volunteer(s) to serve as a pantry intake assistant. Tasks include tracking individuals and families served and helping families select

the foods that best fit the family’s needs. Volunteers should be outgoing and able to lift 15plus pounds. Shifts are available Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday afternoons. Training provided. Please contact Shawn Hough at shawn@ballardcenter.org or 842-0729 for more information.

Database wizard? The Grassland Heritage Foundation preserves tallgrass prairie in Northeast Kansas through education, stewardship and land protection. Grassland Heritage Foundation is looking for a volunteer to assist with its member database. Tasks include updating and entering new member information into the member database. The database is online so the work can be performed from home. Grassland Heritage Foundation will provide training. For more information, please contact Kim Bellemere at grasslandheritage@gmail.com or at 840-8104. — For more volunteer opportunities, please contact Shelly Hornbaker at the United Way Roger Hill Volunteer Center at 865-5030, ext. 301 or volunteer@unitedwaydgco.org or go to volunteerdouglascounty.org.

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Monday, November 16, 2015

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L awrence J ournal -W orld

In-laws may need a hand up to move out Dear Annie: I am 17, married, with a 1-yearold daughter. I am doing amazingly well for a teen mom. My husband and I have a house and car, I’m finishing school, and we are both working. Before we moved into our house, we lived with my husband’s father and brother. When my brother-in-law expressed interest in getting a dog, I told him that wouldn’t be possible because my daughter is allergic. He became furious and attacked me with a knife. I left the house with my daughter and stayed with my mom until we found our current place. I decided to be the bigger person and let the situation pass. But recently, my father-inlaw’s electricity was

Annie’s Mailbox

Marcy Sugar and Kathy Mitchell

anniesmailbox@comcast.net

shut off and they ended up homeless. So my husband and I decided to let the two of them stay with us until they can get back on their feet. We asked them to pay $150 toward rent and insisted that there be no smoking in the house or near my child or me. I recently discovered that my brotherin-law is smoking pot regularly at school. I told his father that if

India murder makes for powerful film Films don’t come much more harrowing or powerful than “India’s Daughter” on “Independent Lens” (9 p.m., PBS, TV-MA, check local listings). The film recalls the brutal rape and murder of Jyoti Singh, a 23-year-old physiotherapy student. She and a male companion were attacked on a bus commandeered by street thugs who preyed upon women breaking traditional taboos against unmarried females going out at night without a family escort. To her uneducated gang of assailants, Jyoti Singh deserved her fate. She and her friend were returning home after seeing “The Life of Pi” at a movie theater. The film documents the social and political tumult that resulted from her murder — demonstrations held by thousands of students over the course of weeks and months, expressing general outrage over the treatment of women in Indian society. The film also offers heartbreaking interviews with Singh’s parents as well as her murderers and their parents and members of their legal defense team. Singh’s mother and father came from a poor background. They challenged societal mores simply by celebrating her birth with the same joy usually reserved for the birth of a male. They outraged relatives by encouraging her education and by selling ancestral lands to pay for her tuition. Her life, her murder and the resulting upheaval focused on traditional attitudes that depicted women as not merely less equal, but at times less than human. Singh’s rapists were so brutal that they left her disemboweled. “Daughter” is as sympathetic as possible to her attackers, depicting them as uneducated ruffians left on their own in wretched surroundings from a young age; over time, they learned to marginalize, stigmatize and brutalize “bad” women. “Daughter” shows how these prevailing prejudices extend beyond street gangs. The lawyers for the murderers based their defense on such beliefs. After they were convicted and received death sentences, one of their outraged defense attorneys went on television to declare that if he had a daughter who behaved like Jyoti Singh, he would drag her back to his ancestral village, douse her in gasoline and light the match. Tonight’s other highlights

Blake grows ever more suspicious on “Minority Report” (8 p.m., Fox, TV-14).

A teen may have terror links on “NCIS: Los Angeles” (9 p.m., CBS, TV-14).

Undercover as married assassins on “Blindspot” (9 p.m., NBC, TV-14).

I drug test him and it comes out positive, they are gone. But, Annie, it went in one ear and out the other. I am so frustrated. I want my brother-inlaw out of the house now, and no one is listening to me. I don’t know what to do. — Trying to be the Grown-Up Dear Trying: If possession of pot is illegal in your state, then your brother-in-law is putting your entire household at risk if he keeps the stuff in your home. Otherwise, if he is smoking pot only at school, he is technically following your rules. Where is your husband in all this? He should be supportive of your position. Both of you should be helping your in-laws move

JACQUELINE BIGAR’S STARS

For Monday, Nov. 16: This year you are ready to take the next step on a long-term project or situation. Your ability to communicate seems to expand and support your endeavors. If you are single, you will meet someone of significance through a friend. If you are attached, you will focus on an important step in your relationship. The stars show the kind of day you’ll have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult Aries (March 21-April 19) You are likely to surprise people today. Your optimism comes through. Tonight: Are you working too hard? Taurus (April 20-May 20) Keep reaching out to others for more information. You will hear many different versions of what is going on. Tonight: So what if it is Monday? Gemini (May 21-June 20) Your optimism carries you over quite a few hurdles. Others respond well to your energy. Tonight: Play it easy. Cancer (June 21-July 22) Others will be busy, and getting their attention could take a lot of effort. Tonight: Stay centered. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) Get as much done as possible, despite being distracted. If you can, work from home. Tonight: As late as you can go. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)

into their own place as soon as possible. Do they need assistance finding jobs? Finding affordable housing? Give them a hand with those issues and you will also be helping yourself.

— Send questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or Annie’s Mailbox, P.O. Box 118190 Chicago, IL 60611.

jacquelinebigar.com

Others might feel the heaviness of Monday, but you will meet any challenges head-on. Tonight: Do what you most want to do. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Be aware of a family member’s expectations. Only you can choose whether to meet them. Tonight: Kick up your heels. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) You will choose the right words at the right time. Tonight: All smiles. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) You could be in a situation where you feel much better than you have in a long time. Understand your limits. Tonight: Be silly. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Keep reaching out to someone you care a lot about. This person might challenge you to detach. Tonight: Let the fun begin! Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Step back and try to get out of the limelight. Handle something that is important yet private. Tonight: Get some extra R and R. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20 A group of friends will cheer you on no matter where you go. Stay upbeat and pursue your chosen course. Tonight: In the whirlwind of living.

UNIVERSAL CROSSWORD Universal Crossword Edited by Timothy E. Parker November 16, 2015

ACROSS 1 Brewery equipment 5 Current craze 9 Home run in Idaho? 14 Genesis twin 15 Oath of old 16 Peaceful branch? 17 Little brook 18 Scrabble piece 19 Festive celebrations 20 Three different seats 23 Fixes, as a carnival game 24 Butterfly snare 25 “Friends” female 29 Alone (with “by”) 33 Bushed 34 CzechGerman river 36 Nero’s zero 37 Three different seats 41 “Caught in the act!” 42 Be upwardly mobile? 43 Cold-water shorebirds 44 Scammed 47 Toastmaster’s preparation 48 Fond du ___, Wisc. 49 HopeCrosby’s “Road to ___”

22 Architect’s afterthought 25 Capital near Casablanca 26 Hawaiian greeting 27 Dagger companion 28 “To each ___ own” 29 Pastoral woodwind 30 Follow 31 Lavender flower 32 Bones’ partner 34 “___ Brockovich” 35 Abbreviated wts. 38 “Fanny” novelist Jong 39 Jelly used in molds 40 ’50s campaign button name 45 Chooses by voting

51 Three different seats 59 Spinachlike plant 60 Claim to be true 61 Doing nothing 62 “Slowly” in music 63 Snub-nosed dog, briefly 64 Coke, for one 65 Fertile loam 66 Winter vehicle 67 Venetianblind component DOWN 1 Word of action 2 Large section of an atlas 3 Nursery powder 4 Stew in one’s own juices 5 Kind of outlet 6 Curing, in a way 7 Fancy parties 8 Where Adam lived 9 Molasses candy 10 Advisories 11 A Jackson 5 member 12 Entering overtime 13 Conclude one’s case 21 Sportscaster Musburger

46 Salsa go-with 47 Turned on a pivot 49 Feature of a miter joint 50 “Is this some kind of ___?” 51 Laze around 52 Lunchbox treat 53 Barn-topping device 54 Knocks firmly 55 Random muscle movements 56 An object of worship 57 Paella pot 58 Nicely arranged

PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER

11/15

© 2015 Universal Uclick www.upuzzles.com

PLAYING USHER By Mary Jersey

11/16

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.

— The astrological forecast should be read for entertainment only.

NERTD ©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.

GIRDN HAYMME

SECASC “ Saturday’s

For more info on our Guest Jumblers go to facebook.com/jumble

6A

Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.

” (Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: FILMY CLANG FIASCO SPRAIN Answer: He played QB in high school, college and now the NFL because being a QB wasn’t a — PASSING FANCY

BECKER ON BRIDGE


Opinion

Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com l Monday, November 16, 2015

EDITORIALS

Moving ahead Work continues on a plan that pairs the expansion of the Douglas County Jail with expanded mental health services for the community.

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ouglas County commissioners recently confirmed their commitment to reducing the number of county jail inmates with serious mental illness, but a public meeting on the topic last week confirmed that coming up with the right solution may take some time. This conversation started with the realization that a growing number of inmates, and especially female inmates, soon would require the expansion of the Douglas County Jail. For many years, county officials have known that a large number of jail inmates suffer from serious mental illness, and, with that in mind, they decided to seek creative solutions to the jail’s space needs. Reducing the number of jail inmates with mental illness wouldn’t eliminate the need for an expansion, but it would be a step in the right direction for those individuals and the community as a whole. That’s still the goal, Sheriff Ken McGovern told those at last week’s public meeting, which also featured a presentation by two researchers from Kansas University’s School of Social Welfare. After examining programs in other communities, the researchers offered some recommendations about a community crisis center and a mental health court. The court would offer an avenue to divert people with mental illness into appropriate treatment rather than just sending them to jail. A center for people experiencing a mental health crisis is envisioned as a community resource that would serve not only people who have come in contact with law enforcement but those who have not. The need for those services has been a community issue for some time, but funding such a program poses challenges. Because Kansas has not expanded Medicaid coverage, insurance reimbursement for mental health programs is limited, and state funding for community centers such as Bert Nash Community Mental Health Center has been severely cut. Building a mental health project into a funding proposal to pay for a jail expansion could be a reasonable option. McGovern said last week that officials hope to provide more specifics about potential projects at the next public meeting, which will be scheduled during December. It would be nice to see this process moving a little faster, but county law enforcement and mental health officials deserve kudos for their efforts to come up with a creative solution that meets the community’s needs.

Is Rubio the one who can win? Unlike last month’s contentious GOP debate on CNBC, the event staged by Fox Business Network and The Wall Street Journal was thankfully less about the moderators and more about the candidates. It was about content, not about which moderator could ask the best “gotcha” question. We are moving beyond the “who won” stage in these Republican debates into the “who would you be most comfortable with as president” and “who is best equipped to defeat Hillary Clinton?” The answer to both questions seems to be Sen. Marco Rubio. The Florida Republican reminds me of John F. Kennedy’s line in his 1961 Inaugural Address: “The torch has been passed to a new generation.” JFK was 43 when he became president. Rubio would be 46. Beyond the age factor, Hillary Clinton represents not only the past, but a failed present. She has no meaningful accomplishments and no vision for the future. As the cyber columnist Rich Galen wrote on his “Mullings” blog: “(Rubio) was either the smoothest politician on the stage, the best rehearsed, or both. He

Cal Thomas tcaeditors@tribune.com

The Florida Republican reminds me of John F. Kennedy’s line in his 1961 Inaugural Address: ‘The torch has been passed to a new generation.’ JFK was 43 when he became president. Rubio would be 46.” is comfortable on foreign policy, economic policy and fiscal policy. Best answer was on ISIS in a back and forth with Rand Paul. ‘Either they win or we win,’ Rubio said. ‘We better take this risk seriously; it is not going away on its own.’” There was another answer that was Kennedy-esque. It came in response to a question by moderator Maria Bartiromo. She said that Hillary Clinton has more

experience than almost all of the Republicans running for president, as if a resume equals accomplishments, of which Clinton has few to none. Bartiromo phrased her question this way: “Why should the American people trust you to lead this country even though she has been so much closer to the office?” Rubio treated the question like a home run slugger seeing a fastball over the plate. First the vision: “This election is about the future and what kind of country this will be in the 21st century.” He called it a “generational choice,” contrasting Clinton’s age (she would be 69 on Inauguration Day 2017) with his own energetic youth. Next came the diagnosis of where he thinks we are: “A growing number of Americans feel out of place in their own country — a society that stigmatizes those who hold cultural values that are traditional.” He lamented the number of people who live “paycheck to paycheck,” because “the economy has changed under their feet.” Students with crushing student loans, he said, are graduating from college with “a degree that

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Manager

Distribution Director

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

— Cal Thomas is a columnist for Tribune Content Agency.

100

Duty, not right

Journal-World

doesn’t lead to a job.” He added, “For the first time in 35 years we have more businesses dying than we do starting.” Rubio then flashed a dagger he will clearly use against Clinton and her “experience” when he said, “Around the world every day brings news of a new humiliation for America, many the direct consequence of decisions made when Hillary Clinton was secretary of state.” Rubio then indicted not only Clinton, but her party: “The Democratic Party and the entire political left has no ideas about the future. All their ideas are the same tired ideas of the past: more government, more spending. … If I am the nominee, they will be the party of the past; we will be the party of the 21st century.” In an opinion piece for CNN.com, former White House communications adviser Dan Pfeiffer wrote: “There is no question that Rubio is the Republican that Democrats fear most.” After Rubio’s four debate performances, and especially the one Tuesday night, they should.

OLD HOME TOWN

PUBLIC FORUM

LAWRENCE

7A

To the editor: The letter on proof of citizenship to vote (LJW 11/10/15) summarizes current restrictive practices comprehensively. Our own Constitution had to be amended to remove restrictions. I agree with the writer that “...voting rights are a serious matter...”. Everyone should vote. It is a civic duty, not a civic “right” as proposed by voter ID supporters. Further, it is the government’s responsibility to guarantee this. Bernie Sanders has suggested enrolling everyone to vote on their reaching legal age. Everyone’s interests should be represented by voting. Restrictions by any means (gerrymandering, Jim Crow laws, proof of citizenship, etc.) result in minority rule and the likely abuse of power. The majority may be mistaken in representing their interests but mistakes can be corrected. Abuse of power by wealthy and powerful classes are rarely curable since they seem to be part of human nature (greed, etc.). Assuring that everyone that wishes to vote can do so with the greatest ease should make gover-

nance better for everyone. Voting encourages civic cooperation, a quality lacking in some of our legislators. Voting shouldn’t be conflated with other activities like getting a passport or showing your driver’s license when writing a check for Halloween candy. Research tends to support the view that larger voting participation reduces the effect of frivolous issues such as a complete lack of any gun control. Restricting voting tends to increase the percentage of partisan voter turnout that isn’t representative of the greater interests of the population as a whole. Stu Nowlin Lawrence

to those who are not, in fact, citizens. He believes that it is wrong to ask for proof of citizenship prior to voting. By so doing he would take away the right of our citizens to control their own government. Far from benefiting Kansans, the position taken by Davis is designed to harm all of the citizens of the state. Fortunately, the citizens in their wisdom defeated Mr. Davis in his bid to become governor. They were not fooled by a man who wants to take away their fundamental right of self-government and give that right to people who are neither citizens of this state or even this country. Arly Allen Lawrence

Voting issues To the editor: I wish to add my support to the letter by Bill Reynolds ( LJW Nov. 10). Paul Davis wishes to deprive Kansans of one of their most fundamental rights: The right to vote in their own elections. The right to vote is a special privilege available to every citizen of Kansas. Davis wants to take that right away and give it

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 JournalWorld 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.

From the Lawrence Daily Journal-World for Nov. 16, 1915: years “A new possibilago ity of advertising IN 1915 Lawrence among prospective residents was discussed at the weekly meeting and luncheon of the Merchants and Farmers Association today. The advertising committee feels that with the advent of the interurban many families would be attracted to Lawrence as a place of residence, if their attention might be called to the many beauties and advantages of the city. While the plans have not been worked out as yet it is probable that some space will be used in the Kansas City dailies supplemented by the use of illustrated folders.” “The City police are trying to find a way to torpedo the Titanic restaurant at the corner of Eighth and New Jersey streets, which they believe is the center of disturbance in the East Bottoms. Chief of Police Fisher asked the county attorney this morning if an order could not be issued suppressing the place as a nuisance. Mr. Amick said nothing could be done with the information now available.... Although numerous complaints have been made of disturbances and carryings on at the place, the police are never able to get there before the lights are turned out and the frequenters have dispersed. They believe there is a system of lookouts in force in connection with the place that would do credit to a European army.” “If J. W. Canavan, a rural mail carrier who was on duty at the Peerless garage at 5 o’clock last Sunday morning, had been of a more suspicious nature, the Lawrence police force might have had the capture of two automobile thieves to their credit. Two men, one tall and one short, came to the garage early Sunday morning and said that their car had run out of gas and that they wanted three gallons so they could run it in to the garage for more. They got the gas and a new container and didn’t pay for it, nor did they come back for more. Late Sunday afternoon the garage people happened to think that the incident might interest the police so they telephoned in the facts. Earlier in the day, however, the sheriff from Topeka had telephoned that a car had been stolen at Olathe at 1 o’clock Sunday morning and that Lawrence officers should be on the lookout.” — Compiled by Sarah St. John

Read more Old Home Town at LJWorld.com/news/lawrence/ history/old_home_town.


|

8A

TODAY

WEATHER

.

Monday, November 16, 2015

TUESDAY

WEDNESDAY

L awrence J ournal -W orld

DATEBOOK

FRIDAY

THURSDAY

318, 1440 Jayhawk Blvd., KU campus. Lawrence Parkinsons Support Group, 2 p.m., First Presbyterian Church, 2415 Clinton Parkway. Tech Drop-In, 5-6 p.m., Meeting Room B, Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. Community Meal: Pork Loin, 5-7 p.m., dine in or carry out, Stull United Methodist Church, 1596 East 250 Road. Big Brothers Big Sisters of Douglas County volunteer information, 5:15 p.m., United Way Building, 2518 Ridge Court. Lawrence City Commission meeting, 5:45 p.m., City Hall, 6 E. Sixth St. Red Dog’s Dog Days workout, 6 p.m., west side of South Park, 12th and Massachusetts streets. Lonnie Ray’s open jam session, 6-10 p.m., Slow Ride Roadhouse, 1350 N. Third St., no cover. Maker Meet-Up, 6:30 p.m., Lawrence Creates Makerspace, 512 E. Ninth St. Free English as a Second Language class, 7-8 p.m., Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St. Affordable community Spanish class, 7-8 p.m., Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St. Lawrence Huntington’s Disease Support Group, 7-9 p.m., Conference Room D South, Lawrence Memorial Hospital, 325 Maine St. Tuesday Concert Series: Ukulele Fest, 7:30 p.m., Lawrence Arts Center, 940 New Hampshire St. KU School of Music: Trombone Choir, 7:30 p.m., Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall, 1530 Naismith Drive. Baker University Orchestra, 7:30-9 p.m., Rice Auditorium, 404 E. Eighth St., Baldwin City. Gamer Night, 8 p.m., Burger Stand at the Casbah, 803 Massachusetts St., free. Slideshow photography group, 8 p.m., Gaslight Gardens, 317 N. Second St.

16 TODAY

Cloudy, a little rain; breezy

Breezy with occasional Mostly cloudy, breezy rain and cooler

Sunny

Clouds and sun

High 60° Low 57° POP: 60%

High 65° Low 41° POP: 65%

High 58° Low 36° POP: 20%

High 52° Low 31° POP: 5%

High 49° Low 33° POP: 25%

Wind SSE 10-20 mph

Wind S 10-20 mph

Wind WSW 10-20 mph

Wind WNW 7-14 mph

Wind S 3-6 mph

POP: Probability of Precipitation

Kearney 67/38

McCook 69/36 Oberlin 70/38

Clarinda 56/53

Lincoln 60/51

Grand Island 64/46

Beatrice 61/55

St. Joseph 60/53 Chillicothe 56/53

Sabetha 59/55

Concordia 64/48

Centerville 52/50

Kansas City Marshall Manhattan 58/55 57/55 Salina 63/54 Oakley Kansas City Topeka 66/49 67/37 62/56 Lawrence 59/52 Sedalia 60/57 Emporia Great Bend 58/55 61/54 70/45 Nevada Dodge City Chanute 60/58 71/35 Hutchinson 60/55 Garden City 67/48 69/35 Springfield Wichita Pratt Liberal Coffeyville Joplin 59/55 66/53 67/44 71/35 61/57 62/57 Hays Russell 70/44 69/47

Goodland 66/29

Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.

LAWRENCE ALMANAC

Through 8 p.m. Sunday.

Temperature High/low Normal high/low today Record high today Record low today

62°/43° 54°/32° 77° in 1952 6° in 1932

Precipitation in inches 24 hours through 8 p.m. yest. 0.00 Month to date 0.13 Normal month to date 1.28 Year to date 34.78 Normal year to date 37.37

REGIONAL CITIES

Today Tue. Today Tue. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Independence 60 57 r 64 42 r Atchison 59 56 c 66 42 r Fort Riley 63 55 t 64 40 sh Belton 58 55 r 63 42 r Olathe 58 51 r 64 40 r Burlington 60 56 t 64 41 r Osage Beach 57 54 r 67 46 r Coffeyville 62 57 r 64 40 r 61 57 r 64 41 r Concordia 64 48 t 58 37 sh Osage City Ottawa 58 56 r 65 42 r Dodge City 71 35 t 47 32 c Wichita 66 53 t 61 37 c Holton 60 57 c 66 41 r Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.

NATIONAL FORECAST

SUN & MOON

Today Tue. 7:04 a.m. 7:05 a.m. 5:06 p.m. 5:06 p.m. 11:09 a.m. 11:53 a.m. 9:38 p.m. 10:40 p.m.

First

Full

Nov 19 Nov 25

Last

New

Dec 3

Dec 11

LAKE LEVELS

As of 7 a.m. Sunday Lake

Level (ft)

Clinton Perry Pomona

Discharge (cfs)

876.70 891.74 973.09

7 200 35

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 89 78 pc 58 51 sh 69 57 s 70 61 c 92 79 t 48 31 c 55 48 sh 57 52 sh 83 65 pc 76 61 pc 35 26 pc 49 41 r 60 39 pc 83 77 t 69 54 t 57 29 s 57 51 c 64 39 s 74 52 pc 43 26 s 31 25 r 85 55 pc 45 39 sn 58 56 sh 79 73 c 65 47 s 59 48 r 87 78 t 42 38 r 71 58 pc 68 62 pc 50 34 pc 46 45 r 62 46 s 46 43 sh 50 43 c

Hi 87 58 70 69 93 51 56 61 80 75 44 54 55 83 58 62 60 64 74 41 32 81 46 61 83 65 63 87 45 77 69 48 55 59 51 44

Tue. Lo W 78 pc 51 r 54 s 55 t 79 pc 31 pc 49 sh 51 r 62 pc 59 pc 19 c 41 r 47 pc 76 s 52 t 30 s 49 sh 38 s 52 pc 28 s 26 c 53 pc 37 pc 52 sh 74 c 49 pc 44 pc 78 t 36 pc 63 s 62 c 40 pc 39 r 51 pc 46 sh 32 c

Warm Stationary

Showers T-storms

WEATHER HISTORY

Flurries

Snow

Ice

WEATHER TRIVIA™

Q:

On Nov. 16, 1992, 24 inches of lakeeffect snow fell on Boston, N.Y.

MONDAY Prime Time WOW DTV DISH 7 PM

Rain

-10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s National Summary: Strong thunderstorms will form across West Texas and Oklahoma with damaging winds possible today. Rain will spread from Arkansas to southern Wisconsin throughout the day. It will be dry across the East. Today Tue. Today Tue. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W 69 62 r 72 53 r Albuquerque 51 29 sh 48 29 pc Memphis Miami 82 74 sh 83 77 sh Anchorage 7 -2 s 5 -2 s Milwaukee 58 46 r 55 51 r Atlanta 64 51 pc 63 57 c Minneapolis 53 48 sh 55 48 r Austin 79 58 t 68 45 r 61 54 pc 70 63 c Baltimore 69 40 s 59 46 pc Nashville New Orleans 79 70 c 81 56 r Birmingham 69 59 pc 69 63 c New York 62 42 s 51 43 s Boise 41 32 pc 49 41 c Omaha 57 51 sh 61 40 r Boston 56 34 s 48 35 s 84 67 pc 85 71 pc Buffalo 56 36 s 58 45 pc Orlando 68 45 s 57 45 pc Cheyenne 47 24 r 39 31 pc Philadelphia Phoenix 62 42 pc 64 44 s Chicago 58 45 r 58 54 r Pittsburgh 64 41 s 61 51 c Cincinnati 61 46 pc 66 58 c Portland, ME 50 27 s 49 27 s Cleveland 63 43 s 62 53 c Portland, OR 49 47 r 61 44 r Dallas 72 56 t 66 46 r 38 24 pc 52 30 s Denver 51 28 r 39 31 sn Reno Richmond 65 40 s 65 51 pc Des Moines 57 50 sh 63 43 r Sacramento 59 40 s 65 43 s Detroit 62 44 pc 59 52 r 56 51 r 69 50 r El Paso 65 40 pc 57 37 pc St. Louis Fairbanks -8 -17 pc -9 -18 pc Salt Lake City 38 27 sn 41 36 pc San Diego 66 48 s 69 53 s Honolulu 87 72 sh 86 74 s San Francisco 61 50 s 65 50 s Houston 78 71 t 73 49 r Seattle 47 46 r 57 42 r Indianapolis 59 45 r 62 55 r Spokane 39 35 pc 52 34 sh Kansas City 59 52 r 66 41 r Tucson 56 34 pc 59 37 s Las Vegas 56 38 pc 61 43 s Tulsa 64 59 t 64 42 r Little Rock 64 61 r 72 47 r Wash., DC 69 46 s 61 51 pc Los Angeles 64 45 s 73 49 s National extremes yesterday for the 48 contiguous states High: Brownsville, TX 87° Low: Bodie State Park, CA 7°

7:30

Is it true that most raindrops begin as snowflakes?

Yes

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015

Precipitation

MOVIES 8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

A:

Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset

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$

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Law & Order: SVU

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Inside

Cops

Cops

Rules

Rules

FOX 4 at 9 PM (N)

News

News

TMZ (N)

Seinfeld

NCIS: Los Angeles

News

Late Show-Colbert

5

5 Supergirl (N) h

7

19

19 Antiques Roadshow Antiques Roadshow Independent Lens

9

9 Dancing With the Stars (N) (Live) h

9

The Voice The top 12 artists perform live.

D KTWU 11 A Q 12 B ` 13

Blindspot (N)

Castle (N) h

Antiques Roadshow Antiques Roadshow Midsomer Murders Dancing With the Stars (N) (Live) h Supergirl (N) h

Scorpion (N) h

Castle (N) h

NCIS: Los Angeles

C I 14 KMCI 15 L KCWE 17

41 38

Blindspot (N) 41 The Voice The top 12 artists perform live. 38 Mother Mother Commun Commun Minute Holly

29

29 Crazy Ex-Girlfriend

ION KPXE 18

50

G. Parks

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Charlie Rose (N)

KSNT

Tonight Show

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Jimmy Kimmel Live Nightline

Meyers

Murder

World

News

Jimmy Kimmel Live Nightline

Business C. Rose

News

Late Show-Colbert

Corden

News

Tonight Show

Meyers

Simpson Fam Guy Fam Guy American

Jane the Virgin (N)

News

Two Men Mod Fam Mod Fam Tosh.0

Criminal Minds

Criminal Minds

Criminal Minds

Criminal Minds

Wild

6 News

The

6 News

Office

Criminal Minds

Cable Channels WOW!6 6 WGN-A CITY

Kitchen

Pets

Movie

25

USD497 26

››‡ Heartburn (1986, Drama) Meryl Streep.

City Bulletin Board, Commission Meetings

City Bulletin Board

School Board Information

School Board Information

ESPN2 34 209 144 dCollege Basketball 36 672

Big 12 Showcase

NBCSN 38 603 151 Fishing FNC

Mother

Bass

CNBC 40 355 208 Shark Tank MSNBC 41 356 209 All In With Chris

SportsCenter (N) (Live)

dCollege Basketball dCollege Basketball Hunter

Hunting

39 360 205 The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File (N)

Mother

››› Peggy Sue Got Married (1986), Nicolas Cage

ESPN 33 206 140 eNFL Football Houston Texans at Cincinnati Bengals. (Live) FSM

Tower Cam/Weather

307 239 Funny Home Videos Funny Home Videos Funny Home Videos Manhattan h

THIS TV 19

Big 12 Blue

dCollege Basketball dCollege Basketball

RacerTV hFormula One Racing Brazilian Grand Prix.

Hannity (N)

The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File

The Profit

The Profit

The Profit

Jay Leno’s Garage

Rachel Maddow

The Last Word

All In With Chris

Rachel Maddow

CNN

44 202 200 Anderson Cooper

Anderson Cooper

CNN Tonight

Anderson Cooper

Newsroom

TNT

45 245 138 Major Crimes

Major Crimes (N)

Legends (N)

Major Crimes

Legends

USA

46 242 105 WWE Monday Night RAW (N) (Live)

Chrisley

Dodgeball-True

A&E

47 265 118 The Haunting Of...

TRUTV 48 246 204 Jokers

Jokers

Cursed: Witch

The Haunting Of...

The Haunting Of...

Jokers

Jokers

Jokers

Jokers

Jokers

Broke

Conan

Jokers

Super

50 254 130 ››› The Italian Job (2003) Mark Wahlberg.

TBS

51 247 139 Fam Guy Fam Guy American American Big Bang Big Bang Conan (N)

BRAVO 52 237 129 Housewives/Atl. 54 269 120 Nostradamus

Donny!

The Haunting Of...

AMC

HIST

Red Dog’s Dog Days workout, 6 a.m., South Park, 12th and Massachusetts streets. Kaw Valley Quilters Guild: Mary V. Honas, “Quilts of Valor,” 9:30 a.m., Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St. Fall 2015 Study Group: First in their Class - Authentic Women and the Originality That Got Them There, noon, Dole Institute, 2350 Petefish Drive. Brownbag Lecture: Hubert Izienicki: “Immigrants’ Attachment to Gay Community,” noon1 p.m., Bailey Hall Room

BEST BETS WOW DTV DISH 7 PM

18 WEDNESDAY

1 Million Cups presentation, 9-10 a.m., Cider Gallery, 810 Pennsylvania St. Lawrence Public Library Book Van, 9-10 a.m., Brandon Woods, 1501 Inverness Drive. Managing Grief through the Holidays, 9:30-11 a.m., Visiting Nurses, 200 Maine St., Suite C. Lawrence Public Library Book Van, 10:3011:30 a.m., Arbor Court, 1510 St. Andrews Drive.

SPORTS 7:30

8 PM

8:30

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. November 16, 2015

9 PM

9:30

10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30

Cable Channels cont’d

62 Law & Order: SVU

5 8

17 TUESDAY

10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30

Network Channels

M

Lawrence Public Library Book Van, 9-10 a.m., Prairie Commons, 5121 Congressional Circle. Toddler Storytime, 9:30 and 10:30 a.m., Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. Lawrence Public Library Book Van, 10:3011:30 a.m., Presbyterian Manor, 1429 Kasold Drive. Lawrence Public Library Book Van, 1-2 p.m., Vermont Towers, 1101 Vermont St. Lawrence-Douglas County Bicycle Advisory Committee, 5-6:30 p.m., Parks & Recreation Conference Room, 1141 Massachusetts St. Take Off Pounds Sensibly, 5:30 p.m., 2712 Pebble Lane. 842-1516 for info. Book signing: “Mission: Tomorrow” with Bryan Thomas Schmidt, James Gunn, Chris McKitterick and Robin Wayne Bailey, 5:30-7:30 p.m., Jayhawk Ink, KU Student Union, 1301 Jayhawk Blvd. Interpretation of Sugar Plum Dreams: Art, Automata, and E.T.A. Hoffman’s Uncanny Tales, 6 p.m., Lawrence Arts Center, 940 New Hampshire St. Paint and Sip Party, 6-11 p.m., Johnny’s Tavern North, 401 N. Second St. Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission, 6:30-10:30 p.m., City Hall, 6 E. Sixth St. Lecompton City Council meeting, 7 p.m., Lecompton City Hall, 327 Elmore St., Lecompton. Baldwin City Council meeting, 7 p.m., Baldwin Public Library, 800 Seventh St., Baldwin City. Kaw Valley Quilters Guild: Mary V. Honas, “Quilts of Valor,” 7 p.m., Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St. KU School of Music: Tuba/Euphonium Consort, 7:30 p.m., Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall, 1530 Naismith Drive.

University-Community Forum: Joan Schultz, Executive Director at the Willow Domestic Violence Center, 11:30 lunch, noon presentation, ECM building, 1204 Oread Ave. Big Brothers Big Sisters of Douglas County volunteer information, noon, United Way Building, 2518 Ridge Court. The National Active and Retired Federal Employees, noon, Conroy’s Pub, 3115 W. Sixth St. Lawrence Public Library Book Van, 1-2 p.m., Babcock Place, 1700 Massachusetts St. Teens’ Top 10 Book Club, 4-5 p.m., Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. Genealogy/Local History Drop-Ins, 4 p.m., Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. Steak/Salmon Night, 5-7:30 p.m., Eagles Lodge, 1803 W. Sixth St. Douglas County Commission meeting, check website at http:// www.douglas-county.com for meeting time, Douglas County Courthouse, 1100 Massachusetts St. Community Thanksgiving Dinner, 5:30-6:30 p.m., Centenary United Methodist Church, 245 N. Fourth St. The Beerbellies, 6:309:30 p.m., Johnny’s Tavern, 401 N. Second St. American Legion Bingo, doors open 4:30 p.m., first games 6:45 p.m., snack bar 5-8 p.m., American Legion Post #14, 3408 W. Sixth St. Ninth Street Corridor project: Public Presentation: Design Development, 7 p.m., New York Elementary School, 936 New York St. A Wild Science Lecture: Ornithology Expedition to the Solomon Islands, 7-8 p.m., KU Natural History Museum, Dyche Hall, 1345 Jayhawk Blvd. National Alliance on Mental Illness-Douglas County Support Group meeting, 7-8:30 p.m. Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. KU Opera: “Alcina,” 7:30 p.m., The Robert Baustian Theatre, Murphy Hall, 1530 Naismith Drive. KU School of Music: Jazz Ensembles II and II, Jazz Combo I, 7:30 p.m., Lawrence Arts Center, 940 New Hampshire St. Conroy’s Trivia, 7:30 p.m., Conroy’s Pub, 3115 W. Sixth St.

Jokers

›‡ Max Payne (2008) Mark Wahlberg.

Badlands

Vanderpump Rules Après Ski (N)

Happens Vanderpump Rules Après

21st Century Prophecies Revealed

Nostradamus

SYFY 55 244 122 ›› Angels & Demons (2009) Tom Hanks, Ewan McGregor.

Nostradamus

››› Identity (2003) John Cusack.

FX 56 COM 58 E! 59 CMT 60 GAC 61 BET 64 VH1 66 TRV 67 TLC 68 LIFE 69 LMN 70 FOOD 72 HGTV 73 NICK 76 DISNXD 77 DISN 78 TOON 79 DSC 81 FAM 82 NGC 83 HALL 84 ANML 85 TVL 86 TBN 90 EWTN 91 RLTV 93 CSPAN2 95 CSPAN 96 ID 101 AHC 102 OWN 103 WEA 116 TCM 162 HBO MAX SHOW ENC STRZ

401 411 421 440 451

248 249 236 327 326 329 335 277 280 252 253 231 229 299 292 290 296 278 311 276 312 282 304 372 370

136 107 114 166 165 124 162 215 183 108 109 110 112 170 174 172 176 182 180 186 185 184 106 260 261

351 350 285 287 279 362 256

211 210 192 195 189 214 132

501 515 545 535 527

300 310 318 340 350

››‡ 2 Guns (2013) Denzel Washington.

Fargo “Rhinoceros” Fargo “Rhinoceros” Fargo South Pk South Pk South Pk South Pk Archer Archer Daily Nightly At Mid. South Pk Kardashian Kardashian The Royals E! News (N) Last Man Last Man ›››‡ Sleepless in Seattle (1993) Tom Hanks. Steve Austin’s Cops Garage Garage Garage Garage Garage Garage Garage Garage Garage Garage Best Martin Martin Martin Martin Martin The Westbrooks Wendy Williams Love & Hip Hop Black Ink: Chicago Love & Hip Hop Black Ink: Chicago Love & Hip Hop Bizarre Foods Bizarre Foods Booze Traveler Mysteries-Museum Bizarre Foods 90 Day Fiancé 90 Day Fiancé 90 Day Fiancé 90 Day Fiancé 90 Day Fiancé Holiday Switch (2007) Nicole Eggert. ›› Home by Christmas (2006) Holiday Switch ››› G.I. Jane (1997) Demi Moore, Viggo Mortensen. Intervention ››› G.I. Jane Pioneer Wo. Cake Wars (N) Guilty Top 5 Diners Diners Cake Wars Love It or List It Love It or List It (N) Hunters Hunt Intl Love It or List It Love It or List It iCarly iCarly Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Friends Friends Friends Friends ParaNor Wander Pickle Marvel Ultimate Rebels Gravity Gravity Wander Marvel Bunk’d Liv-Mad. Girl Austin Best Fr. Austin Girl Bunk’d Good Good Adven Regular King/Hill Cleve Rick American Fam Guy Fam Guy Chicken Aqua Street Outlaws: Full Street Outlaws (N) Vegas Rat Rods (N) Street Outlaws Vegas Rat Rods Sleepy ››‡ Dark Shadows (2012, Comedy) Johnny Depp. The 700 Club Frankenweenie Crystal Caves How the Earth Changed History (N) How the Earth Changed History Naughty or Nice (2012) Hilarie Burton. Charming Christmas (2015) Julie Benz. Fir Crazy (2013) Yukon Men Yukon Men Yukon Men Yukon Men Yukon Men The Facts of Life Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond King King King King Trinity End Franklin Duplantis Praise the Lord Osteen P. Stone The Journey Home News Rosary World Over Live Virtue Women Daily Mass - Olam ››‡ Road to Bali (1952) Bing Crosby. Bookmark ››‡ Road to Bali (1952) Bing Crosby. Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. Capitol Hill House of Rep. Landmark Cases Key Capitol Hill Hearings Landmark Cases 48 Hours on ID 48 Hours on ID (N) American Scandals 48 Hours on ID 48 Hours on ID Hitler/Aryan High Hitler Nuremberg Hitler/Aryan High Hitler Dateline on OWN Dateline on OWN Dateline on OWN Dateline on OWN Dateline on OWN Weather Strangest Weather Strangest Weather Strangest Weather Strangest Weather ›››‡ My Darling Clementine (1946) ››› Kiss of Death (1947) Victor Mature. ››› The Egyptian

›› Taken 3 (2014)

The Latin Explosion ›› Horrible Bosses 2 (2014) The Leftovers The Knick › Walk of Shame (2014) The Knick Sex Games Cancun Feature 3 Homeland “Oriole” The Affair Homeland “Oriole” The Affair ››‡ What If (2013) ››‡ Videodrome (1983) ››‡ Legends of the Fall (1994) ››‡ Girl, Interrupted (1999) ›››‡ Bugsy (1991) Warren Beatty. iTV. ››‡ Thor: The Dark World (2013) Raven


SECTION B

USA TODAY — L awrence J ournal -W orld

IN MONEY

IN LIFE

Wolff: Protests are more like PR

Meet Shanice Williams, the lively star of TV’s ‘The Wiz’

11.16.15 EUGENE GARCIA, EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY

JEFF RIEDEL, NBC

FRANCE STRIKES BACK Warplanes hit terror targets inside Syria

Maya Vidon and John Bacon USA TODAY

France launched massive retaliatory airstrikes against the Islamic State on Sunday as a manhunt intensified for at least one fugitive linked to the group who vanished after the mayhem that left 132 dead, hundreds injured and residents anxious that terrorists remained among them. French warplanes targeted the Islamic State’s de facto capital in Syria, destroying a training camp and a munitions dump in Raqqa, where Friday’s terrorist attacks on Paris likely were planned. Twelve aircraft including 10 fighter jets dropped a total of 20 bombs in the biggest airstrikes since France extended its bombing campaign against the extremist group to Syria in September, a Defense Ministry statement said. The jets launched from sites in Jordan and the Persian Gulf. In Paris, a wanted alert and photo were issued for Abdeslam Salah, 26, a Brussels native and brother of one of seven terrorists who died in Friday’s wave of deadly assaults. Another brother was arFRENCH POLICE rested in Bel- Abdeslam Salah gium after the attacks, authorities said. French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve said the attack was planned in Belgium and aided by supporters in France. Paris was on edge despite a strong police and military presence. A crowd that had gathered at Place de la République near a large, impromptu memorial Sunday evening scattered in panic after firecrackers apparently were ignited nearby, police said. Security concerns were wellfounded. Earlier Sunday, several Kalashnikov rifles believed to have been used by the attackers were found in a car in the Montreuil neighborhood in eastern Paris, police said. The discovery fueled unease other attackers remained loose in the vast city. Also Sunday, a French official said the father, brother and other family members of suicide bomber Omar Ismael Mostefai — the only dead terrorist to be publicly identified by authorities — were detained, French media reported. Mostefai, 29, was identified after part of his finger was found at the Bataclan concert hall, where most of the victims were found, local media reported. PARIS

PETER DEJONG, AP

A man carries two children after panic broke out among mourners who were paying their respects at two attack sites on Sunday.

France, on edge, begins three days of mourning. IN NEWS

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China creeps up

109million

Chinese adults defined as middle class (11% of population), for the first time outnumbering American middle class at 92 million (38%) Note Middle class is defined as a band of wealth where households are resilient to temporary setbacks. Source Credit Suisse Research Institute’s 2015 “Global Wealth Report” TERRY BYRNE AND JANET LOEHRKE, USA TODAY

IAN LANGSDON, EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY

Armed French police officers take up positions on Place de la Republique after a false alarm triggered panic among a crowd gathered in Paris for a memorial.

One terrorist had a history of petty crimes. IN NEWS

Shock tends to end quickly for markets. IN MONEY

White House, Congress clash over refugees GOP lawmakers see gaps in vetting process

land Security.” Rep. Pete King, R-N.Y., a member of the House Homeland Security and Intelligence committees, said the administration is “rolling Erin Kelly the dice” by taking in Syrian refuUSA TODAY gees. He said there is no true vetting process because there are no WASHINGTON A top administragovernment records or databases tion official said Sunday that the in Syria to confirm the identities. U.S. government is carefully vet- “We don’t know who these peoting Syrian refugees to make sure ple are,” King said on Fox News there are no terrorists among Sunday. He said President Obama them, but congressional Republishould immediately stop cans were skeptical. taking Syrian refugees One suicide bomber into the United States. involved in the attacks on Obama has said he wants Paris reportedly entered the U.S. to take in at least through Greece amid Syr10,000 refugees fleeing ian refugees. from war-torn Syria. “We have very extenRhodes said the United sive screening procedures States should not turn its for all Syrian refugees back on the refugees. who come to the United IMAGES “Let’s remember we’re States,” said White House BenAFP/GETTY Rhodes also dealing with people Deputy National Security Adviser Ben Rhodes on NBC’s who suffer the horrors of war,” he Meet the Press. “There is a very said. “Women and children, orcareful vetting process that in- phans. We can’t just shut our cludes our intelligence communi- doors to those people.” ty, our Counterterrorism Center House Homeland Security and the Department of Home- Chairman Michael McCaul, R-

The Obama administration is “rolling the dice” by taking in Syrian refugees. Rep. Pete King, R-N.Y.

Texas, said there are “gaping holes” in the vetting system for the Syrian refugees. The House Judiciary Subcommittee on Immigration and Border Security has scheduled a hearing Thursday on the Syrian refugee crisis and its implications for U.S. security. Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., a candidate for the GOP nomination for president, said most of the refugees are innocent people, but that Islamic State terrorists may be hiding among them. “This is a swarm of refugees,” he said. “You can have 1,000 people come in, and 999 of them are just poor people fleeing oppression and violence, but one of them is an ISIS fighter. If that’s the case, you have a problem, and there is no way to vet that out.”

Bacon reported from McLean, Va. Contributing: Jane Onyanga-Omara in London and Jabeen Bhatti in Berlin

Syrian passport in Paris sparks refugee crisis debate Jane Onyanga-Omara USA TODAY

As France mourned the victims of a series of terror attacks that occurred Friday, some questioned whether terrorists were sneaking into Europe alongside refugees after a Syrian passport was found near a dead militant. Greece confirmed that the passport’s holder crossed into that country through the eastern Aegean island of Leros on Oct 3. The island is an entry point for refugees and migrants heading to northern Europe from Syria and

elsewhere in the Middle East. Serbian police said Sunday the passport’s holder entered the country Oct. 7 from Macedonia. Identifying him only as A.A., they said he formally requested asylum in Serbia and is the same passport holder that Greek authorities said entered Leros. CNN’s Christiane Amanpour said one of the bombers at the Stade de France was issued a Syrian emergency passport in Greece under the name Ahmad al-Mohammad — believed to be a false identity — after landing on Leros. She said fingerprints on the passport matched the bomb-

Refugees cross the GreekMacedonian border Sunday. A Syrian passport found in Paris has led some to question the open-door policy.

DIMITAR DILKOFF, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

er’s, citing an unnamed French senator briefed by the Interior Ministry. “The open door policy of having migrants come to Europe leaves the door wide open to at-

tacks by terrorists,” said retiree Jack Parker, 65, a long-time British resident of Paris. “Any smart terrorist would have used the open-door policy.” In September, Pope Francis

warned of militants possibly hiding among refugees. “Nowadays, territorial security conditions are not the same as they were in other periods (of mass migration),” he told Portuguese Catholic station Rádio Renascença. Others say Europe already hosts home-grown extremists like the Islamic State executioner known as “Jihadi John,” a naturalized British citizen who was likely killed Thursday in a U.S. drone strike. To suddenly point the finger at migrants would be grossly unfair,” said Leonard Doyle with the International Organization for Migration.


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MASSACRE IN PARIS VOICES

A Paris changed by attacks is my big fear Angela Waters

Special for USA TODAY

BERLIN In my four years studying in Paris, security alerts warning of possible terrorist attacks were a regular occurrence. When they took place, I would avoid certain places in the city: the Champs Élysées, the Eiffel Tower, the Louvre or any other tourist lure where some misguided extremist might try to make a statement. It would never have occurred to me to stay away from the Canal St. Martin — near the scene of Friday’s devastating attacks — because I never considered myself a terrorist target, or this area either. The canal area is often filled with young people sitting on the riverbank with guitars and bottles of wine. In the district’s pubs, people down pints. Couples dine in the cafes while clubgoers line up at the entrances of rock venues. A large part of the Canal St. Martin experience involves sitting outside on terraces, which are like courtside seats to the city’s pedestrian spectacle. That’s why cafe tables aren’t set up with the chairs facing each other — they are side-by-side, looking outward like bleachers. And on the weekends, they are packed full. It isn’t the Paris of fashion week, the diplomat set or the

MIGUEL MEDINA, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

People mourn the dead at a makeshift memorial near the Bataclan concert hall in Paris on Sunday, two days after a series of deadly attacks. city’s movers and shakers — it’s just normal people going out on a Friday night, like I used to. While the attack on Paris’ Charlie Hebdo newspaper in January felt symbolic, the Nov. 13 shootings and explosions felt personal. In my university years, I hung out with a crowd that would have attended the Friday concert at the Bataclan. Had I been in Paris that night, I don’t think I would have been far from the violence. As a result, I spent the hours

It’s also troubling that the attacks focused on an area that is far from the tourist draws: It means the targets were people who actually lived there.

after the attacks glued to the computer, checking to make sure that people I know were OK. I was relieved every time my friends marked themselves “safe” on the Facebook crisis app but knew that there were many who wouldn’t be providing this reassurance. People posted pictures of those not yet accounted for. I found myself scrolling through, hoping that I didn’t recognize any of the faces, and that the comments would reveal that my

friends and acquaintances had been out of the country or safe somewhere. I received calls on Friday from friends in San Francisco and New York who knew people who had been at the club. I was lucky enough not to know any of the casualties, but as more information came out about the attacks, my friends weren’t — some of their friends died in the carnage. It’s deeply unsettling that the attackers looked like my friends and me. They were young men in sweatshirts and baseball caps, who obviously knew the city well enough to pick places where they could maximize casualties. It’s also troubling that the attacks focused on an area that is far from the tourist draws: It means the targets were people who actually lived there. Some Parisians say it will be a while before they feel safe going out again. Many spent the weekend inside, which is understandable, especially with the Islamic State threatening more violence. But other people went to work the next day, opening their shops and cafes to keep the city life going. Still, while the randomness of the events can make you feel unsafe almost anywhere, when I go back to Paris next week, there is something I’m even more scared of than terrorists: clubs without lines, empty cafe tables and streets that go quiet after sundown. Waters, who graduated last year from the American University of Paris, is a reporter based in Berlin with Associated Reporters Abroad.

Obama vows to hunt down Paris terrorists Barry Wood

FRANCE, ON EDGE, MOURNS LIVES LOST, CONDEMNS TERROR

Special for USA TODAY

DAVID RAMOS, GETTY IMAGES

Crowds gather at Notre Dame Cathedral for a service to honor victims of the terrorist attacks. Kim Hjelmgaard USA TODAY

The bells of Notre Dame Cathedral pealed as France began three days of mourning Sunday for the lives lost in multiple terrorist attacks with appeals for the nation’s three major religions to remain united against extremists who commit brutality. “It’s war. We know that, but it’s not against a specific group or religion. It’s against a way of life, the French way of life,” said George de Gaulmyn, a volunteer at the Abbey of Saint Germain des Pres, a Catholic Church on the Left Bank of the River Seine. “We live in a dangerous world, all of us accept this, but we should not have to accept such acts of terror. They are not and never can be in the name of any religion.” France, a mostly Catholic country, and Germany have the largest Muslim populations in Europe, with just less than 5 million each. France also has the largest Jewish population in Europe, nearly 500,000, most of them residents of Paris. The church held regular Mass services Sunday. De Gaulmyn said that Andre Vingt-Trois, the Archbishop of Paris, had requested that churches across the capital refrain from engaging in other activities that would draw attention, in the interest of security. The archbishop, who presided over a special service at Notre Dame honoring the victims and survivors, released a message to parishioners in advance: “Our country knows the pain of mourning and must face barbarity propaPARIS

gated by fanatical groups.” During the service, a brief panic erupted when word spread that gunmen were on the loose outside the church. It turned out to be one of many false reports across the city that alarmed Parisians on Sunday as they struggled to regain a sense of normalcy. At the Place de la Republique, a large square that has become a meeting place for mourners, police sent hundreds scrambling for cover in a Metro station beneath the square when they mistook fireworks for gunfire. Earlier, outside the Grand Mosque of Paris, Abd Wahdid, a Parisian of Algerian descent, shook his head in dismay at the barbarity of the rampage. The Islamic State, a radical group seeking to establish a “caliphate” across the Middle East based on a strict interpretation of Islam, claimed responsibility for the coordinated attacks, the worst in Paris since World War II. Wahdid said he was frustrated by portrayals of Muslims in the French media as heartless murderers bent on destroying whole civilizations. “Islam did not do this,” he said. He said his personal allegiance is “always (to) both: France and Algeria.” Regular services were closed at the Grand Synagogue of Paris. In the USA, rallies and vigils were held across the country. In Boston, hundreds ralied in support of France. Some people in the somber crowd held posters reading “Je suis Paris” (“I am Paris”). Speaking to the crowd, Valery Freland, the Consul General of France, thanked Boston “for the solidarity and support.”

One attacker had history of petty crimes CHARTRES , FRANCE Police describe a terrorist who blew himself up at the Bataclan concert hall as a petty criminal from France who had several run-ins with the law and was once considered a highpriority target for radicalization, according to Paris prosecutor François Molins. The worst carnage of the attacks was at the Bataclan, where gunmen entered during a concert by an American band and opened fire on hundreds in attendance, leaving 89 dead. One gunman, Omar Ismael Mostefai, was identified by a print from a severed finger found at the scene. Mostefai, 29, once lived in the suburbs of Chartres 90 minutes south of Paris. Mostefai had eight convictions in France for petty crimes from 2004 to 2010 but served no jail time, according to Molins. No direct link to terrorist activity was ever established by police. Ben Ayak Karim, vice president of an association for a mosque near his home, said Mostefai would pray there. “He was normal. Nothing was off,” Karim said.

Maya Vidon, special for USA TODAY

Attacks loom as Syria, refugees top G-20 summit

ANTALYA , TURKEY President Obama joined other world leaders for a summit at this Mediterranean resort Sunday, vowing to join French authorities in hunting down the terrorists responsible for the worst attack on Paris since World War II. “The skies are darkened by the horrific attacks that took place in Paris,” Obama declared after meeting with Turkish President Recep Erdogan ahead of the opening of a two-day meeting of leaders representing the world’s top 20 economies. “We stand in solidarity with them in hunting down the perpetrators of this crime and bringing them to justice.” “The killing of innocent people based on a twisted ideology is not just an attack on France, not just an attack on Ankara, but an attack on the civilized world,” Obama said, referring to Friday night’s Paris attacks that killed 132 people, and bombings in the Turkish capital in October that killed more than POOL PHOTO VIA AFP/GETTY IMAGES 100. Obama and Russian Vladimir Putin met for 35 minutes off to the side of Russian the summit, the White House said. The two leaders President mentioned the progress in Syria talks in Vienna, in- Vladimir cluding the areas of agreement outlined in the In- Putin meets ternational Syria Support Group’s statement of with PresiNov. 14. dent Obama “Specifically, President Obama and President Pu- on the sidetin agreed on the need for a Syrian-led and Syrian- lines of the owned political transition, which would be preced- G20 summit ed by U.N.-mediated negotiations between the on Sunday in Syrian opposition and regime as well a ceasefire,” Antalya, the White House said. Turkey. “As the diplomacy continues, President Obama welcomed efforts by all nations to confront the terrorist group ISIL and noted the importance of Russia’s military efforts in Syria focusing on the group,” it said. Obama said he and Erdogan, the summit’s host, discussed fortifying the borders between Syria and Turkey, redoubling efforts to bring about a peaceful end to the four-year-civil war in Syria and eliminating the Islamic State, the radical group that claimed responsibility for the Paris attacks. The Syrian war has unleashed millions of refugees, most winding up in Turkey and raising concerns that Islamic State terrorists may be among those crossing into Turkey and migrating from there to Western Europe. That concern has been heightened by the discovery of a Syrian passport near the body of one of the Paris terrorists. Obama said the United States stands with Turkey and Europe in reducing the flow of migrants there. Hundreds of thousands of them have entered Europe this year.


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IN BRIEF 5 GITMO DETAINEES TRANSFERRED TO UAE

The U.S. Defense Department has transferred five lower-level Guantanamo Bay detainees from the prison in Cuba to the United Arab Emirates, the government said on Sunday. The USA had held each of the detainees for nearly 14 years as wartime prisoners without charging them, The New York Times reported. The resettlement of the five Yemeni detainees is the first of its kind for the United Arab Emirates, which had previously taken in just one of its own citizens in 2008. Each of the five was captured near the Afghanistan-Pakistan border in late 2001 after the battle of Tora Bora, when many lowlevel fighters fled to the mountains, according to leaked military dossiers. — Greg Toppo OBAMA HOLDS OFF ON ENDORSING A CANDIDATE

President Obama is continuing to hold off on an endorsement of front-runner Hillary Clinton or any other Democratic presidential candidate. The president had praise for all three Democratic candidates during an interview with ABC News and said “it’s important for the process to play itself out” before he gets involved. “I think Hillary’s doing great,” Obama said of his former secretary of State, while Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders “is capturing a sense among the American people that they want to know the government’s on their side, that it’s not bought and paid for.” The third Democratic candidate, former Maryland governor Martin O’Malley, “has important things to say,” Obama told ABC. “So we’ll let this process play out” when it comes to an endorsement, Obama said. — David Jackson ALSO ...

uFamily Feud host Steve Harvey is being sued by a Nashville company that says Harvey owes about $200,000 for custom alterations to a private jet, The Tennessean reported. Business Aircraft Leasing says in court papers that Harvey agreed to pay $400,000 for customization of a Gulfstream jet that he “orally promised” to lease for $97,000 a month. Harvey paid about half that before saying he did not want to lease the aircraft, according to the federal lawsuit. uTwo zebras escaped from a circus and ran through the streets of west Philadelphia before they were recaptured, police said. The two animals somehow fled the UniverSoul Circus outside the Mann Center for the Performing Arts in west Philadelphia about 2 p.m. Sunday. A circus spokesman told The Philadelphia Inquirer in a statement that the animals “briefly went on the loose.” No injuries were reported. Corrections & Clarifications USA TODAY is committed to accuracy. To reach us, contact Standards Editor Brent Jones at 800-8727073 or e-mail accuracy@usatoday.com. Please indicate whether you’re responding to content online or in the newspaper.

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7950 Jones Branch Dr., McLean, Va. 22108, 703-854-3400 Published by Gannett The local edition of USA TODAY is published daily in partnership with Gannett Newspapers Advertising: All advertising published in USA TODAY is subject to the current rate card; copies available from the advertising department. USA TODAY may in its sole discretion edit, classify, reject or cancel at any time any advertising submitted. National, Regional: 703-854-3400 Reprint permission, copies of articles, glossy reprints: www.GannettReprints.com or call 212-221-9595 USA TODAY is a member of The Associated Press and subscribes to other news services. USA TODAY, its logo and associated graphics are registered trademarks. All rights reserved.

PHOTOS BY THOMAS COEX, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

Three Jewish worshipers, left, are escorted by Israeli security forces as they visit the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound in Jerusalem’s Old City on Oct. 28. The Dome of the Rock mosque is behind them. The 37-acre complex is the holiest site in Judaism.

JEWISH ACTIVISTS SECRETLY PRAY AT TEMPLE MOUNT Under a decades-old deal, non-Muslims can visit the holy site but can’t pray the site’s religious significance to three faiths, it does not intend to divide the site. Palestinian leaders, however, have linked the attacks against Israel to what they describe as defense of the Temple Mount. Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas said in September that Jews are “defiling” the complex with their “filthy feet” and that he blesses “every drop of blood that has been shed for Jerusalem.”

Shira Rubin

Special for USA TODAY

In a move that could further inflame recent Palestinian violence, Jewish activists are defying Israeli law by secretly praying at a site holy to both Jews and Muslims. On a recent Sunday at the hilltop complex known to Jews as the Temple Mount and to Muslims as the Noble Sanctuary, dozens of religious Jews shoved ahead of a line of tourists. While being closely monitored at the site by security guards, who questioned anyone suspected of engaging in prayer, a number of visitors from a group of about 15 mumbled prayers quietly as they pretended to speak on their cellphones and cupped their hands over their mouths. They recited the prayers from memory, as they had been instructed to leave behind their prayer books before entering. The 37-acre complex is the holiest site in Judaism and the third-holiest site in Islam, housing the Al-Aqsa Mosque and goldtopped Dome of the Rock. Under a decades-old agreement, nonMuslims can visit the site but not pray, and Jordan is custodian of the walled compound in old Jerusalem. “This is anti-Semitism!” exclaimed Yael Kabilio of treatment of Jews at the Temple Mount. Kabilio travels once a month from her home in Netiv Haavot, an unauthorized Israeli settlement in the West Bank, to lead tours to the site for a group called Women for the Temple. She said visiting the site is especially significant now amid heightened tensions between Israelis and Palestinians. Since mid-September, 14 Israelis have been killed in Palestinian attacks, mostly stabbings, and 81 Palestinians have died by Israeli fire, including 51 who Israel says were involved in attacks or attempted attacks, according to the JERUSALEM

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas said in September that Jews are “defiling” the complex with their “filthy feet.” Israeli police arrest a Jewish man after he started to pray inside the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound on Oct. 28. Visitors are instructed to leave behind prayer books before entering.

Israeli security forces guard the main pathway at the Al-Aqsa compound. Jordan is custodian of the walled compound. Associated Press figures through Sunday. The clashes erupted amid rumors that Israel plans to retake control of the site, and Palestinians point to the increase in Jewish visits there as a provocation. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu repeatedly denies the alle-

gations and vows to maintain the status quo of the holy complex. “Israel will continue to enforce its longstanding policy: Muslims pray on the Temple Mount; nonMuslims visit the Temple Mount,” Netanyahu said in a statement last month, adding that while Israel acknowledges

A survey released in September by the Palestinian Center for Policy and Research showed 50% of Palestinians believed that Israel was intent on destroying the Al-Aqsa Mosque and Dome of the Rock to make way for a third Jewish temple. As tensions spiraled last month, parliament member Basel Ghattas defied government orders banning politicians from the site and posted a video to his Facebook page documenting his visit. “Netanyahu and Israel cannot prevent us from entering the mosque,” wrote Ghattas, a Christian Arab. He said he saw Jews singing and praying as Israeli police stood by. At least 27 Temple Mount advocacy groups exist and call for an increase in Jewish visitors so they can pray there. One group called Returning to the Mount said it will pay about $500 to Jews arrested for praying there, said Gilad Hadari, a representative for the group who was at the Sunday visit.

Elite interrogation unit training local police An experimental interrogation room used in research on new ways to approach interrogation techniques.

Kevin Johnson USA TODAY

WASHINGTON The U.S. government’s elite interrogation unit, formed in the aftermath of the alQaeda suspect torture scandal, has been providing extensive training to local police, other federal agencies and friendly foreign governments. Since its creation in 2009, the High-Value Detainee Interrogation Group (HIG), overseen by the FBI with members drawn from the bureau, Defense Department and CIA, has sponsored instruction for at least 40 agencies, including the Los Angeles and Philadelphia police departments. While members of the HIG have been involved in controversial encounters with terror suspects, HIG Director Frazier Thompson asserted that the group’s techniques bear no resemblance to the treatment ex-

SAINT JOSEPH'S UNIVERSITY

posed following the capture of al-Qaeda suspects wanted for their alleged involvement in the 9/11 attacks and during the Iraq War. “Everything we do is lawful, humane,” Thompson, of the FBI, said in an interview with USA TODAY. Mark Fallon, chairman of the HIG’s Research Committee, said

the group’s work has in part been directed at challenging long-held law enforcement practices that have relied on adversarial techniques to elicit information. “Many of us made our bones by getting bad guys to confess to crimes. We’re challenging that identity by suggesting that you may not have been as effective as

you think,” Fallon said. Fallon referred to statistics maintained by the Innocence Project, which laid some of the blame on harsh interrogation methods for contributing to dozens of false confessions. According to the Innocence Project, which uses DNA evidence to challenge flawed convictions, one in four of the 333 people wrongly convicted and later exonerated by DNA evidence made false confessions or incriminating statements to investigators. Thompson declined to elaborate on how the HIG teams have been carrying out their work in high-profile terrorism cases, except to acknowledge that the special interrogation teams have been deployed 32 times since the group’s creation six years ago. In Philadelphia, researchers are assessing whether the design of actual interrogation rooms can improve the quality of information provided to investigators.


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STATE-BY-STATE News from across the USA ALABAMA Hope Hull: The Weights and Measures department shut down a Pacecar gas station after a customer’s discovery of water mixed with her gasoline, WSFA reported. Water running into gasoline storage tanks can be a problem after severe weather. ALASKA Fairbanks: Enrollment is going up in the North Star Borough School District for the first time since the 2011-12 school year, newsminer.com reported. ARIZONA Flagstaff: The Arboretum and the Arts Council are hosting the first annual Festival of Trees. Decorated holiday trees and seasonal decor will be displayed in the historic Walter Reichardt House through Dec. 5, the Arizona Daily Sun reported.

ARKANSAS Saline County: A

former sheriff’s office employee pleaded guilty to one count of abuse of public trust, ArkansasOnline reported. Jo Nell Mallory, 62, was sentenced to 18 months of probation. CALIFORNIA Los Angeles: A

three-judge panel of the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals unanimously found that the long delays prisoners endure on death row awaiting execution do not constitute cruel and unusual punishment, the Los Angeles Times reported. COLORADO Denver: Colorado

students studying abroad in Paris have been accounted for and all are safe following Friday’s deadly terrorist attacks, KMGH-TV reported. CONNECTICUT Hartford: Gov. Malloy and DOT Commissioner James Redeker said that 114 new snowplows will help battle winter storms this season, Fox61.com reported. DELAWARE New Castle County: A $70 million contract was awarded to begin construction on the planned U.S. 301 toll road in the southern part of the county, The News Journal reported. DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA: The

city is testing variable rate parking, The Washington Post reported. Local officials want to reduce downtown traffic congestion.

HIGHLIGHT: TEXAS

Funding for abortion alternatives soars Rick Jervis USA TODAY

COLLEGE STATION Women visiting the Hope Pregnancy Center here could receive a free sonogram, counseling on the virtues of parenting and adoption, a tutorial on the risks of terminating a pregnancy and pamphlets on “Car Seat Safety” and “How to Receive Christ.” What they won’t get is a referral to an abortion doctor. “Our main intent is to give people all the information they need to make an informed decision,” said Tracy Frank, the center’s executive director. Pregnancy centers such as Hope are proliferating around Texas, as abortion clinics, such as those run by Planned Parenthood, shutter under budget cuts and tougher standards. In 2011, state lawmakers slashed the family planning budget by more than $70 million and, two years later, mandated abortion clinics meet the same standards as ambulatory surgical centers and employ doctors with admitting privileges at local hospitals, a move being challenged in court by pro-choice groups. Supporters of the laws say they make abortion procedures in Texas safer. Critics maintain the provisions are too costly for smaller clinics to meet, causing them to close.

$600,000 settlement with Steven Salaita, a professor whose job offer was rescinded last year over his string of anti-Israel comments on social media, the Chicago Tribune reported. INDIANA Indianapolis: The

owner of Scotty’s Brewhouse, a 19-year-old restaurant chain, is planning to expand nationally starting next spring with locations in Champaign, Ill., and Punta Gorda, Fla. Scotty’s has 13 restaurants with five more scheduled to open by mid-2016, The Indianapolis Star reported.

IOWA Storm Lake: Akrihna Daniel, 38, of Storm Lake faces a child endangerment charge after authorities allege she struck a 7-year-old child in the head with a cellphone Friday, the Sioux City Journal reported. The child didn’t require medical attention and was turned over to the custody of a family member. KANSAS Kansas City: Police

are investigating a double homicide here, KMBC-TV reported.

KENTUCKY Fort Mitchell: Cody

Phelps, 23, of Walton has been charged in the death of his girlfriend’s infant, a 7-week-old baby in Boone County, The Kentucky Enquirer reported. Walton faces a charge of manslaughter.

FLORIDA Milton: Fresh off the

March success of an inaugural Tough Mudder endurance event that brought in 6,000 people and $6.1 million, Santa Rosa County plans to spend at least $110,000 to bring it back next year, the Pensacola News Journal reported.

HAWAII Honolulu: A real estate

LOUISIANA New Orleans: Mag-

nus Nilsson of the Netflix series The Chef’s Table will be in town Tuesday to talk food and philosophy and sign his The Nordic Cook Book, The Times-Picayune reported. teenager’s pocket dial to 911 led to three arrests for vandalism that included damage to a fleet of school buses on Halloween, the Sun Journal reported. The teenager who accidentally called police had 911 on speed dial.

IDAHO Twin Falls: The number

MARYLAND Potomac: Bravo

ILLINOIS Chicago: University of Illinois trustees approved a

Miller is a Pastafarian, who are known as members of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster. MICHIGAN Detroit: The City

Council is considering a new zoning proposal that would prohibit marijuana shops from operating within 1,000 feet of a variety of places, including schools, parks, churches, child care centers, liquor stores and other medical marijuana providers, the Free Press reported. Medical marijuana advocates fear the proposal would reduce access to treatment. MINNESOTA Duluth: Minnesota

Power is proposing a rate hike for residential customers as part of a plan to cut electrical costs for struggling mining and paper companies. The proposal calls for a 14.5% rate increase for a typical residential customer. That would amount to about $11.45 per month, according to the Star Tribune.

MISSISSIPPI Tupelo: Weather permitting, the Natchez Trace Parkway will conduct a prescribed burn inside the city limits Monday, the Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal reported. MISSOURI Kansas City: A for-

mer junior high school teacher is facing up to 11 years in prison for having sexual contact with a 14-year-old student in his algebra class, The Kansas City Star reported. High School senior, who serves as the vice chairman of the Hill County Democratic Party, announced plans to run for the state Legislature. Jacob Bachmeier tells the Havre Daily News he will run for the District 28 seat, which is held by Republican Rep. Stephanie Hess of Havre.

agency executive is stepping in to direct the University of Hawaii’s land development. Castle & Cooke senior director for community and government relations Carleton Ching will start his role at the University of Hawaii on Nov. 30, the Honolulu Star-Advertiser reported. of homeless children attending schools here is on the rise. The Times-News reported that as of October, 272 homeless students were enrolled. That’s up from 192 in October 2014 — an increase of 80 homeless students.

As the rules took effect, the number of facilities offering abortions in Texas dwindled by more than half — from 45 in 2010 to 20 today, according to the Texas Health and Human Services Commission. Last month, Texas officials said the state would cut Medicaid payments to Planned Parenthood clinics after videos surfaced purporting to show clinic officials selling fetal tissue. At the same time, state funding for pregnancy centers and other services in the Texas Alternative to Abortion Services Program has nearly quadrupled, from $2.5 million in 2008 to $9.15 this year, according to the commission. At least eight other states, including Missouri, Montana and North Carolina, have sought funding this year for “crisis pregnancy centers,” said Eliza-

MONTANA Havre: A Havre

GEORGIA Atlanta: The vote

that narrowly defeated the proposed city of LaVista Hills won’t be challenged in court, but the LaVista Hills Alliance, a procityhood group, announced it will turn over information about what it called voting irregularities to state authorities investigating the referendum, the Journal-Constitution reported.

RICK JERVIS, USA TODAY

The Hope Pregnancy Center in College Station offers free sonograms, pregnancy tests and counseling to women.

MAINE Lewsiton: Police say a

NEBRASKA Tecumseh: Tecumseh Farms opened a new 30,000square-foot addition to its poultry processing plant here, expanding its production capacity by 50%, the Lincoln Journal Star reported. NEVADA Carson City: Fire officials are investigating what caused a fire to break out in a warehouse, KTVN-TV reported. No one was injured.

woman won a legal battle to wear a colander on her head in her state driver’s license photo, WCVB-TV reported. Lindsay

the family was stuck in the middle of a swamp that was about 2 to 3 feet deep. There were no reported injuries. NEW JERSEY Edison: Nearly one-third of state households can’t make ends meet, the highest percentage since the 1960s, according to a new report issued by Legal Services of New Jersey. The state’s official poverty rate stood at just more than 11% in 2014, the Asbury Park Press reported. NEW MEXICO Albuquerque:

Police arrested two brothers, Nicholas Viera, 15, and Alexander Viera, 16 on charges of vandalism, the Albuquerque Journal reported. The teenagers broke windows, doors, cabinets and equipment and turned on gas spigots in the student science lab at La Cueva High School. NEW YORK Albany: A convicted

murderer who led police on a massive three-week manhunt after he broke out of a prison pleaded guilty last week to three felonies related to his escape, the Gannett Albany Bureau reported. David Sweat, 35, calmly admitted to his role in the headline-grabbing plot.

NORTH CAROLINA Raleigh: The News & Observer profiled Master Bruce Hagins, 57, who has trained thousands of young people, many of them underprivileged, in the art of taekwondo.

NEW HAMPSHIRE Northfield:

A woman and three children were rescued after getting stuck in the middle of a swamp, WMUR-TV reported. Police say

SOUTH CAROLINA Spartan-

burg: An officer with 25 years of law enforcement experience was identified as the officer in a fatal shooting at Spartanburg Methodist College. Officer Andrew Tomlinson has been placed on paid administrative leave, along with fellow campus officer Justin Yarbrough, The Greenville News reported.

SOUTH DAKOTA Rapid City: South Dakota Game, Fish and Parks is evaluating different routes for a trail that would connect the Mount Rushmore National Memorial to the George S. Mickelson Trail, KEVN-TV reported. TENNESSEE Nashville: Fifty-two acres of undeveloped ridgetop property will be added to the Radnor Lake State Natural Area, creating future opportunities for new trails and additional parking, The Tennessean reported. The 52 acres are the last remaining undeveloped piece of Radnor Lake’s viewshed and watershed, said Steve Ward, Radnor Lake park manager. TEXAS Austin: Oil and gas job

losses in Texas may be greater than originally thought, possibly reaching 56,000. There are about 279,600 oil and gas jobs in Texas, but that’s down 8.3% since record employment last December, the Houston Chronicle reported. UTAH Salt Lake City: Charter schools gained more than 6,000 students. Charters now enroll 67,509 students, or one out of every 10 students in the state. VERMONT Burlington: A judge

found probable cause to charge William Schenk, 21, with two counts of disorderly conduct, enhanced by a hate crime penalty based on prosecutors’ belief that Schenk was motivated by the victims’ race when he targeted two women of color with Ku Klux Klan recruitment fliers, Burlington Free Press reported. VIRGINIA Richmond: City officials are making moves to restart work on Kanawha Plaza, which the city demolished three months ago in hopes of completing a renovation before the UCI Road World Championships in September, the Times-Dispatch reported. WASHINGTON Prosser: The

Washington Liquor and Cannabis Board says the Bake Shop, a local marijuana store, was busted for selling to a minor just over a month after it opened, the TriCity Herald reported. WEST VIRGINIA Charleston: Trans-Siberian Orchestra will return to the Charleston Civic Center on Thursday to perform its show “The Ghosts of Christmas Eve,” the Gazette-Mail reported.

NORTH DAKOTA Fargo: KVRRTV reported that the Solid Waste Department is studying whether single-stream recycling would be a fit for the city. Single-stream recycling means don’t need to sort through their cans and bottles. OHIO Cincinnati: An email

address mix-up may have leaked private information of more than 1,000 University of Cincinnati Health patients, The Cincinnati Enquirer reported.

OKLAHOMA McAlester: The

local school board will meet Monday night to discuss the employment of Superintendent Marsha Gore and of Joseph “Skip” Gore, the McAlester NewsCapital reported.

OREGON Newport: Inscapes

Gallery owner Cris Torp told KPTV-TV that local police caught four raccoons who were snooping around the art gallery.

PENNSYLVANIA Erie: Union

has announced that Real Housewives of Potomac will be the latest edition of its long-running reality series, WUSA-TV reported. MASSACHUSETTS Boston: A

beth Nash of the New Yorkbased Guttmacher Institute, a policy and research center that advocates reproductive health rights for women. “This is yet another way for abortion opponents to pursue what they see as their mandate, which is to support any type of law or policy that minimizes abortion,” Nash said. Overall funding for women’s health services is at a historic high in Texas; it’s just not going to clinics that perform abortions, said Joe Pojman, head of the anti-abortion group Texas Alliance for Life. This year, state lawmakers earmarked more than $130 million for services ranging from breast and cervical cancer screenings to family planning counseling and pregnancy centers, according to state figures.

burning house here is being treated as a homicide, the Providence Journal reported.

officials are asking GE Transportation to pay workers scheduled bonuses even if they are laid off from a locomotive manufacturing plant before a January deadline, the Erie Times-News reported. RHODE ISLAND Cranston: The death of a woman found inside a

WISCONSIN De Pere: Two longtime friends were playing with a gun when one fatally shot the other last week, Green Bay PressGazette reported. James C. Vandenack, 21, is charged in Brown County Circuit Court with firstdegree reckless homicide in connection with the shooting of Tyler J. Waldron, 21, of De Pere. WYOMING Cheyenne: A

stretch of Wyoming 130 over the Snowy Range in southeast Wyoming is now closed for the winter. The highway runs between Laramie and Saratoga. Only the portion over the highest areas of Snowy Range is closed.

Compiled by Tim Wendel, Nicole Gill and Jonathan Briggs, with Jenna Adamson, Carolyn Cerbin, Linda Dono, Morgan Eichensehr, Mike Gottschamer, Ben Sheffler and Nichelle Smith. Design by Karen Taylor. Graphics by Alejandro Gonzalez.


USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld MONDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2015

MONEYLINE

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PARIS TERROR ATTACKS

MARK ZUCKERBURG’S FACEBOOK PROFILE PHOTO

FACEBOOK EXPANDS USE OF ITS SAFETY CHECK FEATURE Facebook will now use its Safety Check feature in human-caused disasters after activating it in the wake of last week’s Paris terrorist attacks. The tool, developed after the 2011 earthquake and tsunami in Japan, lets users near disasters tell friends they are OK, and lets friends check on others’ statuses. When Facebook’s staff noted heavy activity on the network after Friday’s attacks, the company decided to activate the feature. Responding to criticism that the network did not turn on Safety Check after last week’s Beirut bombings, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg said the policy had been to only use it for natural disasters. “We just changed this and now plan to activate Safety Check for more human disasters going forward,” he said. GM, LABOR UNION DEAL RATIFICATION STALLED The UAW has delayed formal ratification of a four-year labor agreement with General Motors until Friday, increasing tensions in some plants between production workers, who approved the deal, and skilled trades workers, who rejected it. The UAW held meetings to learn why most skilled trades members opposed the agreement, which will provide each with an $8,000 signing bonus and raises over the next four years. The extension will delay payment of those bonuses until after Thanksgiving, according to sources familiar with the contract, and raises the possibility that Ford’s 52,900 workers could ratify their agreement first.

‘HALO 5: GUARDIANS’ BY MICROSOFT/343 INDUSTRIES

VIDEO GAME SALES INCREASE 2% IN OCTOBER Microsoft’s “Halo 5: Guardians” video game commandeered the top sales slot in October, even though the Oct. 27 release was only in stores for five days. Overall physical sales of video game hardware, software and accessories rose 2% to about $806 million, according to The NPD Group. Other top sellers, ranked by NPD based on copies sold: “NBA 2K16,” “Assassin’s Creed: Syndicate,” “Madden NFL 16,” “WWE 2K 16,” “FIFA 16,” “Destiny: The Taken King” and Yoshi’s “Wooly World.” Based on dollar sales, rebooted music game franchises “Rock Band 4” and “Guitar Hero Live” ranked No. 4 and No. 6, respectively.

FRIDAY MARKETS INDEX

Stocks may slide Monday, but history shows sell-offs don’t last Adam Shell USA TODAY

The deadly terrorist attacks in Paris are likely to strike financial markets when trading resumes Monday. But the initial losses expected in risk assets like stocks and the shift into safer holdings like U.S. government bonds and cash are likely to be short-lived, history says. Investors’ knee-jerk reactions to terrorist attacks and other “shocks” is to sell so-called risky assets until they have a chance to measure the economic fallout, according to data compiled by Sam Stovall, U.S. equity strategist at S&P Capital IQ. The good news is the losses tend to be recouped relatively swiftly as Wall Street typically concludes that both the domestic and global economy won’t be derailed by acts of terrorism. Perhaps the best example of the market’s initial plunge and eventual recovery was the 9/11 terrorist attacks in the U.S., according to S&P Capital IQ data. The Standard & Poor’s 500 stock index fell 4.9% on the first day of trading after the market was

CLOSE

CHG

SOURCES USA TODAY RESEARCH, MARKETWATCH.COM

USA SNAPSHOTS©

The Peanuts creator

Charles Schulz makes $40 million a year, ranked at

3

for the top-earning dead celebrities in 2015. Source Forbes (Oct. 1, 2014-Oct. 1, 2015) JAE YANG AND VERONICA BRAVO, USA TODAY

SHOCK TO THE SYSTEM Market declines and recoveries on the Standard & Poor’s 500 after recent terrorist attacks: % change Calendar days to Event Date One day Total bottom recovery Boston Marathon April 15, 2013 -2.3% -3.0% 4 15 bombing London transit July 7, 2005 -0.8% -0.8% 1 4 bombings Madrid bombing March 11, 2004 -1.5% -2.9% 14 20 U.S. terrorist Sept. 11, 2001 -4.9% -11.6% 11 31 attacks SOURCES: S&P CAPITAL IQ, USA TODAY RESEARCH

KAY NIETFELD, EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY

Flowers and signs pile up at the French Embassy in Berlin on Sunday. After the 9/11 attacks, U.S. stocks recouped all their losses within 31 days.

shuttered for four days. The total stock market loss following 9/11 was 11.6% — which adds up to a “correction” — when the market bottomed 11 calendar days later. However, U.S. stocks then rebounded and recouped all its losses within 31 days. Overall, the median one-day loss (half are bigger, half are lower) for the S&P 500 was 2.1% following terrorist attacks in the U.S. and Europe, as well as other market shocks dating to the 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor. These shocks include market-negative events such as the assassination of President John F. Kennedy in November 1963, the 1987 stock

HERBERT P. OCZERET, EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY

People pause at a memorial in Vienna on Sunday for the victims of Friday’s attacks in Paris. World financial markets are likely to feel a jolt when they open Monday. market crash, the Lehman Bros. bankruptcy in fall 2008 and the 2010 “flash crash.” The total median loss following all of these shocks was a drop of 6.2%, with the market low occurring 13 days later, according to Stovall’s data. The median recovery was 25 calendar days. The Paris attacks may add some velocity to the current slide in global equity prices,” Stovall said. But, he added, “Because I don’t see these terrorist actions adding to weakness in the global economy, the share price will likely be short-lived.” The scope and scale of the Paris attacks were the first of that nature in Europe in more than a decade. The S&P 500 suffered a one-day loss of 0.8% following the London subway bombing in July 2005 and fully recovered four days later. Similarly, U.S. stocks fell 1.5% in the first day of trade after the Madrid bombing in March 2004 on its way to a 2.9% total decline in a 14-day span. Again, the S&P 500 fully recovered 20 calendar days later.

College demonstrations more PR than protest Michael Wolff

@MichaelWolffNYC Michael@burnrate.com USA TODAY

Among the silliest people many of us have ever known are our younger selves, perhaps most of all our politically absolute college selves. Who in hindsight isn’t embarrassed and appalled by his or her undergraduate certainty? Yet here we are, hardly for the first time, as various recent angry declarations by college students are among the most serious media topics. The subject at the University of Missouri, Yale, Wesleyan, Smith, Ithaca College and Claremont McKenna is race, and virtue as well — that is, efforts to dispute the views that the protests represent are in turn a reason to protest. “Protest” is itself a loaded word, implying great disruption on campus and a link between student issues and race-related police brutality in communities around America. More accurately, the university debate reflects less mass movement than a set of statements and positions from campus organizations that have managed to achieve media notice. More PR than protest. In fact, dissing the media as a form of protest — as in efforts at the UniMEDIA

17,245.24 y 202.83 y 665.09 4927.88 y 77.20 2023.04 y 22.93 3.06% y 0.03 2.28% y 0.03 $1080.90 y 0.10 $40.74 y 1.01 $1.0740 y 0.0051 122.72 x 0.10

Dow Jones industrials Dow for the week Nasdaq composite S&P 500 T-bond, 30-year yield T-note, 10-year yield Gold, oz. Comex Oil, light sweet crude Euro (dollars per euro) Yen per dollar

No.

NEWS MONEY SPORTS LIFE FOR MARKETS, SHOCK TENDS TO END SWIFTLY AUTOS TRAVEL

versity of Missouri to restrict journalists’ access — has attracted more notice. This is one of those complicated media moments — perhaps too complicated for the media itself to unravel — in which a story is almost entirely told by self-interested and unreliable narrators. In this case, teenagers. “Systematic oppression affects us all,” said Tyahra Angus, a student at Smith, according to The New York Times, echoing a certain kind of classroom rhetoric. One of the issues at the University of Missouri, according to the Times, is “microaggression,” which the Times defined, with perhaps faint irony, as “tone-deaf slights directed toward minority students.” True, the media did single out as ridiculous a teacher and protest promoter at the University of Missouri, Melissa Click, who had called for the media to pay attention to the grievance of black students and faculty, then was caught trying to block coverage. There was wide note and reasonable horror about the house master at Yale pilloried for doubting the intellectual basis of “safe spaces” free from argument demanded by the protesters. But mostly the media have taken this story at face value. This is a race story, as much about not challenging the narrative — to challenge the narrative makes you part of the problem — as it is about racial conflict itself. And it’s a campus story, implying a cer-

EUGENE GARCIA, EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY

University of California-Irvine students show solidarity with University of Missouri students at a rally Thursday.

tain zeitgeist-level meaning and demographic with-it-ness. (Campus stories have the virtue that wherever there are unreasonable students, there are witless administrators making students look reasonable.) Not dissimilarly, campus rape has emerged in recent years as a largely don’t-challenge story, even as it was nuttily argued that college settings are among the most dangerous places for women in America. This was a story also largely narrated by its own adolescent proponents — here, too, not so much a mass protest movement but a set of agit-prop-type statements and declarations. At the University of Virginia, this resulted in Rolling Stone’s rapt coverage of a single, and now discredited, narrator’s elaborate description of her campus attack. At Colum-

bia, a student carried a mattress to class to symbolize her anger at the university’s failure to prosecute her claim of rape, receiving wide media attention before her account was complicated by a set of solicitous and affectionate emails she wrote her alleged rapist after the purported attack. Unreliable narrators may make news so much more compelling than reliable ones that taking them at face value for as long as possible might have become a certain sort of default media business strategy. No doubt, racism exists at American universities. But the broader charge here, the widespread existence of a culture of depraved institutional indifference at American campuses, is not just anecdotal and subjective but symbolic. We are oppressed because we feel oppressed — with all the great excitement that comes from being able to express feelings of oppression in college. College students, as much as politicians, have become quite savvy aboutcontrolling the narrative. If you question the relative nature of the hostility of the hostile environment, you are an oppressor and microaggressor. At least we know that most college students will in the future look back at their absolute and uncompromising sense of what was right, necessary and due them and surely wonder, “What was I thinking?”


6B

TRAVEL ASK THE CAPTAIN

Wanna be an airline pilot? Here’s some advice on training John Cox

Special for USA TODAY

Q: I am a 15-year-old boy, with hopes to become a major airline pilot. What tips can you give to make sure I take all the right courses in college? Also, is it worth my time to go through the military? — Immad, Calif. A: I wish you success in attaining your dream. Study hard, your grades will count. Math, physics and geography will all be subjects you will use. Additionally, I recommend you take some technical writing courses if available. Pick a good college and make the best of the university education experience. The military requires a long commitment and is very competitive. There are other paths to achieve your goals. Q: What universities do you suggest for becoming a pilot? — Krista A: There are several good universities for a professional pilot curriculum. Examples include Purdue, Western Michigan, University of North Dakota, Middle Tennessee State, Embry Riddle, Florida Tech and many more. Q: My son is about to graduate from college and would like to know the best way to start studying to become a commercial pilot. — Agustin Reyes, Mexico A: I suggest he contact a professional training organization to discuss the necessary steps. Additionally, he can join organizations of aspiring commercial pilots to learn from others. These can be found on the Internet. Q: Is it important for pilots to study meteorology? — Val, Brazil A: Yes, pilots must know meteorology to understand the environment in which they fly. Cox is a retired airline captain and runs his own aviation safety consulting company, Safety Operating Systems.

L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY MONDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2015

Holiday travel tips from USA TODAY Road Warriors Even for frequent fliers, small changes make a big difference Charisse Jones USA TODAY

It’s that time of year. Folks are gearing up to visit relatives and friends for the holidays. As stressful as traveling can be even during the calmest of seasons, navigating the crowds, lines and potential delays nearly ubiquitous through the New Year can be downright dizzying for the occasional flier. To make that trip to Grandma’s house go a little smoother, USA TODAY’s frequent-flying panel of Road Warriors offers its top tips for holiday travel. First off, “book the first flight of the day,” says Amy Sewell, a style expert based in Manhattan. “It’s not fun to get up early, but early flights generally leave on time. To minimize the risk of missing a connection, never book a layover of less than two hours.” On the day of your trip, there are a few things you can — and should do — before you even leave the house. For instance, “download your airline’s app and check it for gate assignments, flight times, seat assignments,” says Jim Sill, a director of global development who’s based in Costa Mesa, Calif. When you’re packing, “think about that carry-on,” he advises. “Everyone will be taking up overhead bin space. If you board too late, you will be struggling to find a spot for it. Is it really that important to carry it on? With a flexible schedule and a few extra bucks (to check a bag), you can avoid so much stress.” If you do decide to check a bag, “never pack items like medicine or valuables,” says Tim Beyrau, an airline pilot based in Mandeville, La. “Consider weighing your checked bags beforehand to ensure you don’t go over the weight limits and incur extra charges.” You also can pack a lunch. “Know that you can bring food and drinks onboard airplanes,” Beyrau says, “but not alcohol due to FAA regulations.” Make sure

TANNEN MAURY, EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY

Travelers from last year’s holiday go to catch their flights at O’Hare International in Chicago.

WHAT YOU CAN DO Five tips from frequent travelers: uBook the first flight of the day. Early flights generally leave on time. uNever pack valuables, and especially medicine, in a checked bag. uIf your flight is canceled, contact the airline by phone while standing in line for customer service. uTake a picture of your car’s location when you park at the airport. uTrack the weather in your destination. If bad weather is expected, airlines may let you leave a day earlier at no cost.

what you pack is allowed through TSA checkpoints. What you wear can be as important as what you toss into your suitcase. “Wear easy on/off shoes to expedite security,” says Sill, who recommends taking off your belt and clearing out your pockets — placing whatever is inside in a

baggie — before you even line up at the screening checkpoint. “Wear layers on planes. It can be hot one minute and really cold the next.” Bring a water bottle. “Empty it before security,” Sill says, “and fill it right back up afterward.” One of the most frustrating aspects of a trip can be when your flight is canceled. If that happens, it pays to be strategic. “If your flight is canceled, contact the airline by phone while standing in line for customer service,” says Trish Bigler of Phoenix. “If your flight is overbooked, look at nearby cities. Always have Plan B available to suggest to the agent. And ask nicely.” A booking app can come in handy during such emergencies. Lisa Finstein, a clinical research associate who lives in Manchester, N.H., recommends Kayak “to make those lastminute hotel reservations when you get stuck in Detroit due to weather or rent a car in Philly when your flight is canceled.” Though the unexpected can strike

at any time, it’s a good idea to check the weather forecast beforehand for the days around your trip. “If bad weather is expected, airlines will generally allow you to change flights at no cost,” says Ashok Raiji, director at a building design firm, who is based in Yonkers, N.Y. “If your schedule is flexible, you could leave a day in advance of the bad weather.” Many airports are upping their game, adding high-end restaurants, spa services and even amenities such as walking trails. Fliers may want to take advantage as they wait to board their flights. “Get there early,” suggests Sheri Spero of New York City. “Enjoy the lounges. Take baggies for the extra goodies.” Spero says, “If parking at the airport ... take a picture of the lane sign, so you don’t forget where you left the car.” Sewell says there’s perhaps one thing to remember above all else. “Pack a good attitude and create a happy zone around you,” she says. “A positive attitude is infectious and will make travel more pleasant for you, your family, gate agents and fellow travelers.”

Smaller carry-on bags help fliers fight for shrinking space Christopher Elliott Special for USA TODAY

Does anyone really believe that airlines are installing bigger overhead bins so you can drag your regulation-size carry-on bag on the plane? Not me. I’ve heard about the so-called Space Bin 737, which promises to increase capacity by up to 50%,. If you’ve been watching this business for as long as I have, you can smell a stunt by an industry addicted to baggage fees. Remember the ill-fated “Cabin OK“ standard by the International Air Transport Association, which would have effectively shrunk carry-on sizes even further? How quickly people forget that some airlines, including Avianca, Azul, Caribbean, Cathay Pacific, China Eastern, China Southern, Emirates, Lufthansa and Qatar Airways, had signed on before the trade organization shelved its plan. “Travelers are slowly getting the ‘pack light’ message,” says Susan Foster, author of Smart Packing for Today’s Traveler. “The main reason, of course, is the price of checking bags. This has forced frugal travelers to rethink luggage. The only answer is smaller and lighter bags.” To find out the actual trajec-

Eagle Creek’s new carry-on, left, can extend to a full-size carry-on. Skyroll’s bag lets you pack without having to fold items.

ON TRAVEL EVERY MONDAY

SKYROLL

EAGLE CREEK

tory of luggage size, don’t watch the airlines. Instead, pivot to the luggage manufacturers. They’re rolling out luggage designed to fit into the smallest spaces, including tiny overheads or even under your economy-class seat. Isha Edwards, a frequent traveler based in Atlanta, is hooked on a carry-on made by Briggs & Riley. It expects a dearth of interior space and reduced itself to about half the size of a conventional carry-on (13 x 15.5 x 9 inches). But the Baseline Rolling Cabin Bag ($349) is full-featured, with rip-resistant nylon and an interlocking system in case you need to attach another bag. “It’s one of the few lightweight pieces I’ve added to my collection that has ample, useful space throughout,” says Edwards, a brand marketing consultant. Another new bag that’s made for a small world is Eagle Creek’s EC Adventure Pop Top Carry-On ($235). It starts at about the same size as the Briggs (14 x 13.75 x 9 inches) but extends to a full-size

carry-on, if necessary. If you’re attending a more formal occasion such as a wedding or a job interview, you’ll want to check out the Skyroll garment bag ($149), which lets you pack suits and formal dresses without folding them. You don’t have to go small to save space. Genius Pack’s 22-inch spinner ($258) uses something called laundry compression technology to fit all your items into small spaces. This applies mostly to your dirty laundry, which you would keep in the secluded compartment that rolls up neatly along the side. The genius part of the standard-size carry-on (22 x 14 x 9 inches) is the handy packing list on the inside and compartments dedicated for chargers, socks and undergarments. The most maneuverable and versatile space-saving bag I tested came from Victorinox, of Swiss Army fame. Its Werks Traveler 5.0 WT 20 Dual-Caster ($279), a 20-inch spinner, offers a garment bag, and a “pack more” divider

SPACE-SAVING TIPS FOR TRAVELERS uCube it. Luggage cubes such as Eagle Creek’s Pack-It Cubes ($38) or Travelwise’s Packing Cube System ($29) allow you to compress lots of clothes into a compact space, which can easily be packed into a smaller bag. uVacuum pack it. You would be surprised how much air is between the clothes in your carry-on. A vacuum-packing technology like Pack Mate’s Compression Bag (pricing varies) can create even more space, although your clothes may be a little wrinkly. uRoll it. Instead of folding your clothes and pushing them into the bag, fold and then roll. Even without a cube or vacuum pack, you’ll fit more in your luggage.

that lets you squish even more of your belongings into this 20 x 14 x 9-inch bag. Oddly, the airlines and luggage manufacturers are doing us a huge favor by encouraging us to downsize. After all, most travel takes place by car in America, and if you think those overhead bins are tight, you should try a car trunk. Even our Honda Odyssey seems to have taken a page from

the low-cost airlines, leaving us with less space than our last car, a Honda Accord. Ah, but it did manage to squeeze an extra row of seats into the car. Can’t think of a better time to downsize my baggage. Elliott is a consumer advocate and editor at large for National Geographic Traveler. Contact him at chris@elliott.org or visit elliott.org.


USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld MONDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2015

LIFELINE

SPORTS LIFE AUTOS SHANICE WILLIAMS TRAVEL

7B

TELEVISION

TWEET TALK STARS KEEP PARIS IN THEIR THOUGHTS @octaviaspencer sifting thru #Gifted photos, shaking off some serious sleep, trying to understand what’s happening in the world. #Paris #Packing #prayerful @channingtatum FEAR MAKES STRANGERS OUT OF PEOPLE WHO WOULD BE FRIENDS. #prayforparis @katyperry Guys, it’s time to #PrayForParis right now. @nickjonas Thoughts and prayers are with you Paris.

SPENCER BY DAN MACMEDAN, USA TODAY

STYLE STAR Kerry Washington was glam in a Giambattista Valli Haute gown Saturday at the Baby2Baby Gala in Los Angeles. The ‘Scandal’ star was recognized at the event for her support of the organization and her dedication to children in need.

GOES LIVE IN ‘THE WIZ’

JB LACROIX, WIREIMAGE

CAUGHT IN THE ACT Heidi Klum spent her Saturday like so many of the rest of us — sitting on the sidelines watching her son play soccer.

Actress makes her professional debut as NBC’s Dorothy Elysa Gardner USA TODAY

HEV, BUZZFOTO VIA GETTY IMAGES

IT’S YOUR BIRTHDAY WHO’S CELEBRATING TODAY?

BETHPAGE , N.Y. Shanice Williams, who beat out hundreds of hopefuls for the lead role of farm girl Dorothy in NBC’s upcoming The Wiz Live!, still cannot believe her good fortune. “It was my first professional audition, ever,” says Williams, 19, during a lunch break at Grumman Studios, where she’s rehearsing with cast members Queen Latifah, Mary J. Blige, Common, Ne-Yo and David Alan Grier, among other seasoned pros. The Dec. 3 live broadcast of the 1975 Broadway musical (adapted from the L. Frank Baum book that inspired The Wizard Of Oz) is the network’s follow-up to last year’s Peter Pan Live!, which starred Allison Williams, and 2013’s The Sound of Music Live!, with Carrie Underwood. The unknown actress, whose wholesome beauty suggests a young Janet Jackson, began sing-

GREG ENDRIES, NBC; TOP BY PAUL GILMORE, NBC

Stephanie Mills, left, was Dorothy in the original The Wiz and is Auntie Em with Williams in NBC’s production. ing in her grandparents’ church choir. She performed in Rahway, N.J., high school productions including You’re A Good Man, Charlie Brown (as Snoopy) and 42nd Street(as diva Dorothy Brock). “Dorothy was fun, because I got to be mean,” says Williams, whose enthusiastic smile and bubbly breathlessness suggest anything but meanness. “We had amazing instructors at school” and at the Paper Mill Playhouse

in Millburn, where Williams was nominated for the prestigious theater’s Rising Star Award. Tony-winning Wiz director Kenny Leon was drawn to Williams by “the softness of her eyes, and the effortlessness of her singing. We needed someone who could show innocence, but who also had musical ability and could move, and could act well enough so that the story seemed seamless.”

After Williams passed those tests, Leon wondered if she “had tough skin, so that she wouldn’t get nervous around people like Queen Latifah,” who plays the formidable Wiz. “Shanice has tough skin.” But behind the scenes, Williams is still pinching herself a little. “Omigosh,” she says, recalling her first meeting with Ne-Yo, who will play the Tin Man, and Elijah Kelley, who’s playing the Scarecrow. “I love them so much that I had to force myself to be like, ‘Shanice, they’re just normal people — don’t fan-girl.’ Because if I fan-girl, they wouldn’t want to work with me, you know? So now we just hang out. They’re like my older brothers.” Her (literal) role model is Stephanie Mills, who played Dorothy in the original Broadway cast and is Auntie Em in the new production. “She’s obviously taught me so much, just being around her, and her energy is amazing,” Williams says. But her biggest role model? Audra McDonald. “I love everything about her. She’ll go from Broadway to film and be great at everything. That’s what I want my career to be like. I want to do everything, and be good at it.”

MOVIES

It’s two in a row for 007 and ‘Spectre’

GETTY IMAGES, FILMMAGIC, WIREIMAGE

Diana Krall is 51. Lisa Bonet is 48. Maggie Gyllenhaal is 38. Compiled by Cindy Clark

USA SNAPSHOTS©

Top pirated TV shows

Shows Americans have illegally downloaded most often this year:

of 15.6% Game Thrones Walking 5.2% The Dead 4% Breaking Bad Note Through Oct. 28 Source Irdeto TERRY BYRNE AND JANET LOEHRKE, USA TODAY

Newcomers almost invisible, but ‘Peanuts’ gang hangs around Patrick Ryan

@PatRyanWrites USA TODAY

In a ho-hum week for newcomers, Spectre left the box office shaken, not stirred. The James Bond blockbuster shot to No. 1 again with $35.4 million to bring its two-week total to $130.7 million, according to studio estimates from tracking firm Rentrak. The fourth 007 movie starring Daniel Craig is a smash overseas but trails 2012 predecessor Skyfall in the USA. “Comparisons to Skyfall are natural, but that was a different kind of marketplace,” says Rentrak senior media analyst Paul Dergarabedian. Theaters are “oversaturated by movies aimed at older audiences, and that can even impact a blockbuster film like Spectre.”

JONATHAN OLLEY, METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER PICTURES

Daniel Craig and Spectre are doing anything but crashing at the box office as the spy thriller passed $130 million. The Peanuts Movie, a computer-animated resurrection of the beloved Charles M. Schulz comic, wasn’t far behind with $24.2 million for second place. That brings its tally to $82.5 million.

Holiday comedy Love the Coopers found little Christmas cheer, decking its halls with $8.4 million at No. 3. The poorly reviewed newcomer may have been boosted by its star-studded cast of

Diane Keaton, John Goodman, Amanda Seyfried and Alan Arkin. Matt Damon’s flyaway hit The Martian dipped to fourth place with $6.7 million in its seventh weekend and a massive $207.4 million total, while Chilean mining drama The 33 fared OK in its first week out, digging up $5.8 million for No. 5. At the specialty box office, By the Sea was a wash. Written, directed by and starring Angelina Jolie, Sea reunites the actress with husband Brad Pitt onscreen for the first time since 2005’s Mr. & Mrs. Smith. The intimate drama, about a grieving married couple on holiday, took in just $95,000 in 10 theaters. “Even though they’re the two biggest stars in the world, it was never going to be a runaway blockbuster,” Dergarabedian says. But “you would’ve hoped for a little more, considering their collective star power. It’s Pitt and Jolie, and there’s always high hopes for their brand.” Final numbers are expected Monday.


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Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com/sports l Monday, November 16, 2015

Traylor fired up for Windy City return By Gary Bedore gbedore@ljworld.com

Tom Keegan tkeegan@ljworld.com

Bledsoe to KU? Makes sense Not much short of a perfect storm of events must fall together for Kansas University’s football program to land a nationally elite recruit on the wish list of perennial powerhouses. The more I think about it, the more I believe that Kansas has a legitimate shot at landing Lawrence High senior defensive end Amani Bledsoe, the top local football recruit in decades. A variety of factors play into that belief. For one thing, word of mouth from Kansas football players in their first year under David Beaty’s staff is strong, both off the record and on the record. Players give the staff high grades for instructing them in a way that leads to improvement. They like the way coaches treat them, pushing them hard but never demeaning them. They also like the personalities of the recruits they pursue, staying away from troublemakers who can grow into divisive forces eroding team unity. For another, Bledsoe would not have to wait a couple of years to earn immediate playing time. Players who get game reps to break the monotony and to increase their knowledge on situations more likely to pop up in games than practice improve at a more rapid rate. “Game reps are very important,” KU senior defensive end Ben Goodman said. “In practice, you practice situations, but games, those situations come to light. In practice you might miss a tackle, and you have a chance to make it up. In games, you don’t. So game experiences makes you focus. The more game reps, the better.” Those would be available to Bledsoe from the start. Kansas defensive-line coach Calvin Thibobeaux’s reputation as an elite instructor who knows how to teach linemen to get to the quarterback also should help. Like his KU predecessor Buddy Wyatt, Thibodeaux builds strong relationships with his players, which enables him to push them hard because they know he cares about them. “He really is a great teacher,” Goodman said.

Jamari Traylor has traveled to some exotic locales in his five years at Kansas University — Bahamas, Switzerland and South Korea internationally — to go with a plethora of U.S. cities, such as Philadelphia, Washington, D.C. and Atlanta.

Of all the flights he has boarded, none may prove as meaningful as today’s charter to Chicago, site of Tuesday’s 9 p.m., Traylor Champions Classic battle against Michi-

gan State in the United Center. Traylor, who is from the Windy City, is fired up that he gets to play a game in his hometown in his final season in college. “I like going home to see my mom, all my aunts and stuff. It’s good to play in front of the home crowd,” said Traylor, a 6-foot-

8, 220-pound forward. “I never played in the United Center before the last game (KU’s 94-83 win over Duke his sophomore season). It’s a cool feeling. It’s good to go back there.” Traylor, who knows every nook and cranny of the South Side after surviving

UP NEXT

Who: Kansas (1-0) vs. Michigan State (1-0) When: Approx. 9 p.m. Tuesday Please see HOOPS, page 3C Where: Chicago

KANSAS WOMEN 72, TEXAS SOUTHERN 65

Strong finish

John Young/Journal-World Photo

KANSAS UNIVERSITY FORWARD JADA BROWN (4) GETS AROUND TEXAS SOUTHERN’S BREASIA MCELRATH (22) and Ashley Ferguson in the Jayhawks’ 72-65 victory on Sunday at Allen Fieldhouse.

Jayhawks survive scare to win opener By Chris Duderstadt cduderstadt@ljworld.com

With only six players returning from the 2014-2015 roster, Kansas University first-year women’s basketball coach Brandon Schneider is

far from being the only fresh new face to the program. Schneider led his young Kansas squad through some adversity in his KU coaching debut, when the Jayhawks outlasted Texas Southern, 72-65, in their

season opener Sunday at Allen Fieldhouse. “We told the team right before the fourth quarter started how perfect the game was for us to have to go try to win it in the fourth quarter,” Schneider said. “To be in that

position the first game, to be tested like that, find out how guys could respond, I thought, was a real positive.” After building a 39-24 lead 21⁄2 minutes into the third Please see KU WOMEN, page 3C

Chiefs rock Manning, Denver

Denver (ap) — The fans were almost all gone, and more than an hour after he’d taken his last snap, Peyton Manning stood on the sideline leafing through the pictures of all those plays gone wrong. Please see KEEGAN, page 3C The Kansas City Chiefs

did all that damage Sunday — picking off the Denver Broncos quarterback four times, holding him to 35 yards passing and sending him to the bench in the third quarter with a 0.0 passer rating en route to a 29-13 win. “We did not expect that,”

Chiefs linebacker Derrick Johnson said. “When you’re going to play against Peyton Manning, you don’t expect, ‘OK, guys, we’re going to Joe Mahoney/AP Photo make them pull him out of DENVER QUARTERBACK PEYTON MANNING (18) is the game.’ helped up to his feet after a sack in the Broncos’ Please see CHIEFS, page 4C 29-13 loss Sunday in Denver.


Sports 2

2C | LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD | MONDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2015

COMING TUESDAY

TWO-DAY

• A look at Kansas University’s Windy City basketball showdown with Michigan State

SPORTS CALENDAR

KANSAS UNIVERSITY

SOUTH

Oklahoma State up to No. 4 in AP poll

TUESDAY

• Men’s basketball vs. Michigan WEST State at Chicago, approx. 9 p.m.

AL EAST

The Associated Press

No. 4 Oklahoma State is the highest ranked team from the Big 12 and Oklahoma moved up five spots to No. 7 in The Associated Press college football poll Sunday. The top three of No. 1 Clemson, No. 2 Ohio State and No. 3 Alabama is unchanged after all three won on Saturday. The Ti-

gers have 34 first-place votes. Ohio State received 23 and Alabama has four. The Sooners made a big jump after beating Baylor 4434 in Waco, Texas. The Bears slipped from No. 4 to No. 10, helping the Cowboys move up a spot. Oklahoma State rallied from 17 points down to win 3531 at Iowa State on Saturday. Notre Dame is No. 5 and

TODAY n No. 12 North Carolina has unbeaten Iowa moved up two • Men’s basketball vs. Ottawa, its best ranking since being No. spots to No. 6. 7 p.m. 12 in the 1998 preseason poll. AL CENTRAL TUESDAY Poll points • Women’s basketball at Park U, n Oklahoma State has its Conference call Big Ten — 6 best ranking since 2011, when 6 p.m. Pac-12 — 5 the Cowboys reached No. 2 Big 12 — 4 and finished No. 3. AL WEST SPORTS ON TV n Iowa has its best ranking SEC — 4 TODAY since the final regular-season ACC — 3 rankings of 2002, when it was AAC — 2 Pro Football Time Net Cable No. 3. Independent — 1 Houston v. Cincinnati 7:15p.m. ESPN 33, 233 BALTIMORE ORIOLES

BOSTON RED SOX

NEW YORK YANKEES

CHICAGO WHITE SOX

CLEVELAND INDIANS

DETROIT TIGERS

LOS ANGELES ANGELS OF ANAHEIM

OAKLAND ATHLETICS

SEATTLE MARINERS

MLB AL LOGOS 032712: 2012 American League team logos; stand-alone; various

TOP 25 ROUNDUP

No. 23 Purdue 107, Vermont 79 West Lafayette, Ind. — Dakota Mathias scored 17 points, and Isaac Haas added 16 in Purdue’s victory in a game in the Naismith Memorial Hall of Fame Tipoff Classic. Caleb Swanigan added 14 points and 13 rebounds, Vince Edwards scored 14 points, Rapheal Davis had 12, and Kendall Stephens scored 11 for Purdue (2-0).

| SPORTS WRAP |

HIGH SCHOOLS HUB:

MINNESOTA TWINS

KANSAS CITY ROYALS

TEXAS RANGERS

Tennessee v. Ga. Tech Austin Peay v. Indiana Md.-B.C. v. St. John’s Virginia v. Geo. Wash. Ark.-P.B. v. Okla. St. Kennesaw St. v. LSU Columbia v. K-State IUPUI v. Marquette San Diego St. v. Utah Baylor v. Oregon

Time

Net Cable

6 p.m. ESPNU 35, 235 6 p.m. BTN 147,237 6 p.m. FS1 150,227 6:30p.m. ESPN2 34, 234 7 p.m. FCSP 146 8 p.m. ESPNU 35, 235 8 p.m. FSN 36, 236 8 p.m. FS1 150,227 8:30p.m. ESPN2 34, 234 10:30p.m. ESPN2 34, 234

Women’s Basketball Time

Net Cable

Fla. St. v. Florida UConn v. Ohio St. Abilene Chr. v. K-State Rutgers v. Seton Hall

4:30p.m. SEC 157 4:30p.m. ESPN2 34, 234 5:30p.m. FCSA 144 6 p.m. FS2 153

Soccer

Time

Ireland v. B.-H.

1:30p.m. FS1

Net Cable 150,227

TUESDAY Ralph Freso/AP Photo

JOSH SHIPPLETT, THE REAR-TIRE CHANGER FOR DRIVER AUSTIN DILLON, PUSHES WATER from the team’s pit stall before the Sprint Cup Series race Sunday at Phoenix International Raceway in Avondale, Arizona.

Harvick, Kyle Busch, Truex make Chase field Avondale, Ariz. — Kevin Harvick, Kyle Busch and Martin Truex Jr. advanced to the Chase for the Sprint Cup championship finale after surviving a long Sunday that ended with a rain-shortened race at Phoenix International Raceway. The race was delayed nearly seven hours by a series of storms, forcing the penultimate race in the Chase to start under the lights at the mile oval. More rain forced NASCAR to called it after 219 laps, with Harvick second behind winner Dale Earnhardt Jr., Busch fourth and Truex 14th. They will join Jeff Gordon next weekend in the finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway, with the series title decided by finishing order among the four drivers. Carl Edwards finished 12th, leaving him five points out of the final spot for the Chase finale. Joey Logano, Kurt Busch and Brad Keselowski also missed the finale. Gordon had the only spot at Homestead locked up before the race, thanks to his win at Martinsville two weeks ago. That left seven drivers fighting for three spots, including three sets of teammates. The long rain delay included numerous stops and starts around pit road, with drivers going on to their cars a couple times, only to be forced back into the garage area. Once the race started, Kurt Busch put himself in a difficult position, forced to the back after being penalized for jumping the start. He worked his way back toward the front, reaching the top 10 near the race’s midpoint. That put all the Chase contenders near the front, hoping they could make the move to get into the top three with Gordon. The Chase pressure ratcheted up with about 120 laps left when Joey Gase slid up into the wall, causing a caution. With rain moving toward the track Harvick, Kyle Busch and Truex were in the final four, and Edwards five points behind the final spot. The caution stretched out as crews tried to

clean the track and the drivers were held in a yellow holding pattern as rain started to fall at PIR.

GOLF

Inbee Park takes Ochoa Mexico City — Inbee Park won the Lorena Ochoa Invitational on Sunday, holding off Carlota Ciganda for her fifth victory of the season and 17th LPGA Tour title. The second-ranked South Korean star birdied the final two holes for a bogey-free 8-under 64 and a three-stroke victory over Ciganda in cloudy conditions at tree-lined Club de Golf Mexico. “It was definitely the putter. It was really good this week,” Park said. “I made a lot of birdies this week. It was a lot of fun today with Carlota playing so well. ... It was almost a perfect day today. I didn’t make any mistakes, so I was able to focus on my game.” Ciganda shot a 63. The Spaniard eagled the par-5 second hole and had eight birdies and a bogey. “I did the best I could,” Ciganda said. “I putted really well today. I think that was the key. ... Inbee played unbelievable and she has lots of experience. She knows how to win.”

Knox leads rainy OHL Playa del Carmen, Mexico — Russell Knox had six birdies in 11 holes and was tied with Graeme McDowell when the fourth round of the rain-delayed OHL Classic at Mayakoba was suspended. McDowell birdied the par-5 13th before it was too dark to continue. Knox was on the 13th hole. They were at 19-under par. It will be the second straight week that a PGA Tour event went to Monday because of rain. That hasn’t happened in 10 years.

Friday, Nov 20th. Cincinnati.............................. 3................SOUTH FLORIDA BOISE ST.................................13.............................Air Force Saturday, Nov 21st. PITTSBURGH........................21⁄2. ........................ Louisville AKRON..................................... 4.................................Buffalo GEORGIA.................................15...........Georgia Southern Rutgers.................................41⁄2.................................ARMY KENTUCKY............................24............................Charlotte MARYLAND..........................21⁄2. .............................Indiana MASSACHUSETTS................10........................Miami-Ohio West Virginia.............. 28.................... KANSAS GEORGIA ST............................1..................South Alabama a-Houston............................OFF.....................Connecticut CLEMSON................................31.......................Wake Forest Western Kentucky..............16....................FLORIDA INTL MISSISSIPPI.........................41⁄2......................................Lsu MIDDLE TENN ST................. 23......................North Texas MINNESOTA.........................51⁄2. .............................. Illinois Memphis................................ 2................................TEMPLE VIRGINIA...............................21⁄2. ................................. Duke North Carolina..................... 6.................. VIRGINIA TECH WISCONSIN............................ 11....................Northwestern b-NC STATE.........................OFF...........................Syracuse ARKANSAS...........................31⁄2. ................ Mississippi St BYU.........................................26...........................Fresno St Navy......................................111⁄2................................TULSA MIAMI-FLORIDA.....................1......................Georgia Tech Tennessee............................. 9............................ MISSOURI OKLAHOMA ST..............1.........................Baylor OHIO ST..................................13........................Michigan St c-OKLAHOMA............. OFF........................... Tcu Michigan..............................51⁄2. ...........................PENN ST SOUTHERN MISS.................20................... Old Dominion d-ARIZONA ST.....................OFF..............................Arizona

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KANSAS ST................. 61⁄2.................... Iowa St UTAH ST.................................14............................... Nevada STANFORD.............................12............................California SMU.......................................... 3..................................Tulane UL-LAFAYETTE.....................13..................New Mexico St Colorado St..........................11⁄2.................... NEW MEXICO Washington...........................16........................OREGON ST UTSA........................................ 3.......................................Rice UTAH........................................ 3.......................................Ucla Texas A&M............................. 7.......................VANDERBILT WASHINGTON ST..................15............................Colorado FLORIDA..................................31................ Florida Atlantic AUBURN................................. 32...................................Idaho e-Notre Dame......................17............ BOSTON COLLEGE OREGON.................................. 4........................................ Usc Louisiana Tech................... 23.................................... UTEP IOWA..................................... 191⁄2..............................Purdue San Diego St.........................12.....................................UNLV San Jose St...........................10................................HAWAII a-Houston QB G. Ward Jr is questionable. b-Syracuse QB E. Dungey is questionable. c-TCU QB T. Boykin is questionable. d-Arizona QB A. Solomon is questionable. e-at Fenway Park-Boston, MA. COLLEGE BASKETBALL Favorite................... Points................Underdog GEORGIA TECH...................61⁄2.......................Tennessee INDIANA ST............................ 5.............................Wyoming MIAMI-FLORIDA................. 101⁄2...................UL-Lafayette OLD DOMINION.....................10................................Buffalo EAST CAROLINA................. 71⁄2. .........................Charlotte WEST VIRGINIA............ 11......... James Madison MICHIGAN............................ 181⁄2....................................Elon Virginia.................................51⁄2. GEORGE WASHINGTON KANSAS ST................. 31⁄2................. Columbia

College Basketball

Time

Net Cable

BYU v. L.B. St. 12:45a.m. ESPN2 34, 234 Nevada v. Hawaii 3 a.m. ESPN2 34, 234 Wis.-G.B. v. E. Tenn. St. 5 a.m. ESPN2 34, 234 SFA v. N. Iowa 7 a.m. ESPN2 34, 234 Valparaiso v. Rhode Is. 9 a.m. ESPN2 34, 234 Alabama v. Dayton noon ESPN 33, 233 Colorado v. Auburn 2 p.m. ESPN 33, 233 Oklahoma v. Memphis 4 p.m. ESPN 33, 233 DePaul v. Penn St. 4 p.m. ESPNU 35, 235 Missouri v. Xavier 5:30p.m. FS1 150,227 Grambling v. Ohio St. 6 p.m. BTN 147,237 Duke v. Kentucky 6:30p.m. ESPN 33, 233 Nebraska v. Villanova 7:30p.m. FS1 150,227 G’town v. Maryland 8 p.m. ESPN2 34, 234 Kansas v. Mich. St. 9 p.m. ESPN 33, 233 Women’s Basketball Time

Net Cable

UNO v. North Dakota 7 p.m. FCSC 145 College Football

Time

Net Cable

Ball St. v. Ohio or Toledo v. B. Green 5 p.m. ESPN2 34, 234 TBA 6 p.m. ESPNU 35, 235 Pro Hockey

Time

Net Cable

St. Louis v. Columbus 6 p.m. FSN 36, 236 Minnesota v. Pittsburgh 6:30p.m. NBCSP 38, 238 Soccer

Time

Denmark v. Sweden England v. France

1:30p.m. ESPN2 34, 234 2 p.m. FS1 150,227

Net Cable

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Double-Chin Music

http://www2.kusports.com/weblogs/ double-chin-music/ Wit and wisdom from sports editor Tom Keegan

LATEST LINE NFL Favorite.............. Points (O/U)...........Underdog Week 10 CINCINNATI........................11 (47)..........................Houston Thursday, Nov 19th. Week 11 JACKSONVILLE.................3 (45)......................Tennessee Sunday, Nov 22nd. CAROLINA..........................7 (46)....................Washington Oakland.......................... 11⁄2 (46.5).......................DETROIT Dallas.................................1 (46.5)..............................MIAMI ATLANTA..........................6 (46.5).................Indianapolis St. Louis............................1 (42.5)...................BALTIMORE NY Jets.............................21⁄2 (44).....................HOUSTON MINNESOTA....................... 1 (45).......................Green Bay PHILADELPHIA..................7 (45).....................Tampa Bay Denver..............................21⁄2 (43).......................CHICAGO ARIZONA...........................21⁄2 (45).................... Cincinnati SEATTLE............................12 (43)..............San Francisco Kansas City............31⁄2 (46)...........SAN DIEGO Monday, Nov 23rd. NEW ENGLAND..............71⁄2 (49.5).........................Buffalo Bye Week: Cleveland, New Orleans, NY Giants, Pittsburgh. COLLEGE FOOTBALL Favorite................... Points................Underdog Tuesday, Nov 17th. BOWLING GREEN.................. 7..................................Toledo OHIO.......................................91⁄2................................Ball St Wednesday, Nov 18th. NORTHERN ILLINOIS........... 3............Western Michigan Central Michigan................10..............................KENT ST Thursday, Nov 19th. East Carolina..................... 141⁄2........ CENTRAL FLORIDA TEXAS ST..............................51⁄2. ......................UL-Monroe

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The Associated Press

No. 17 Wisconsin 92, Siena 65 Madison, Wis. — Bronson Koenig scored 23 points, and Vitto Brown added a careerhigh 16 for Wisconsin. Nigel Hayes, limited to 5 minutes in the first half because of foul trouble, added 14 points for the Badgers (1-1). Nico Clareth led Siena (0-2) with 21 points, while Marquis Wright added 17.

TAMPA BAY RAYS

sizes; staff; ETA 4 p.m. College Basketball AFC TEAM LOGOS 081312: Helmet and team logos for the AFC teams; various sizes; stand-alone; staff; ETA other intellectual property rights, and 5 mayp.m. violate your agreement with AP.

Tar Heels upend Fairfield No. 1 North Carolina 92, Fairfield 65 Chapel Hill, N.C. — Nate Britt matched his career high with 17 points, and North Carolina gradually pulled away in the second half to beat Fairfield on Sunday. Joel Berry II added 15 points for the Tar Heels (2-0), who won their 14th consecutive home opener. But UNC followed its 24-point win over Temple in Friday’s opener with an unimpressive showing full of missed free throws and leaky defense. The Tar Heels struggled to put away a team that went 7-24 last season, leading 40-32 at halftime. They didn’t put the game away until the final 10 minutes against the Stags (0-2), who hit 10 three-pointers that kept them hanging around longer than expected. The Tar Heels are playing without preseason Atlantic Coast Conference co-player of the year Marcus Paige for the first few weeks of the season due to a broken right hand.

HASKELL

MISSISSIPPI...........................16...........Georgia Southern TULANE................................... 2....................................Drake ARIZONA................................28...............................Bradley UTAH......................................51⁄2. ..................San Diego St SAN FRANCISCO................... 5.......................................Rice CALIFORNIA........................ 141⁄2........Cal Santa Barbara OREGON........................1.........................Baylor Byu.........................................51⁄2. ............LONG BEACH ST Added Games INDIANA...............................271⁄2....................Austin Peay BALL ST.................................. 7..................Eastern Illinois MERCER................................51⁄2. ...............George Mason OHIO......................................... 6.................... Tennessee St SOUTH CAROLINA................15.....................Oral Roberts NC WILMINGTON.................. 4............Eastern Kentucky MARQUETTE..........................15.................................... Iupui ILLINOIS ST......................... 101⁄2...................Morehead St SOUTH DAKOTA ST.............10............................ Weber St AIR FORCE.............................. 8...............Tennessee Tech BOISE ST.............................. 151⁄2......... Northern Arizona ST. MARY’S, CA..................... 8..........................Manhattan Montana...............................111⁄2...................SAN JOSE ST ARIZONA ST........................... 4...............................Belmont USC........................................... 9..........................Monmouth NBA Favorite.............. Points (O/U)...........Underdog Dallas..............................81⁄2 (200)...........PHILADELPHIA CHICAGO........................41⁄2 (196.5)........................Indiana HOUSTON.......................51⁄2 (209)......................... Boston MEMPHIS...........................1 (200).............Oklahoma City y-SAN ANTONIO...........OFF (OFF)......................Portland PHOENIX.........................111⁄2 (207)....................LA Lakers y-San Antonio Forward K. Leonard is doubtful. Home Team in CAPS (c) TRIBUNE CONTENT AGENCY, LLC

Tale of the Tait

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THE QUOTE “OK, what’d Kobe Bryant do this time?” — Ian Hamilton of the Regina (Sask.) Leader-Post, after the 12-carat Blue Moon diamond sold at auction for $48.5 million

TODAY IN SPORTS 1952 — An NBA-record 13 players, five Baltimore Bullets and eight Syracuse Nationals, foul out in an overtime game. The Bullets win 97-91. So many Syracuse players fouled out that the officials let some of the players back into the game so the Nationals could keep five men on the court. Whenever those players fouled, Baltimore was given a technical foul shot in addition to the free throws.

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Monday, November 16, 2015

| 3C

KU football toughens up in red zone Never was that more evident than on a pair of fourth-down plays in the red zone, where the Jayhawks dug in to keep points off the board and the road team in the game. “That might be one of the only statistical categories where we’re actually in pretty decent shape right now,” KU coach David Beaty said of his defense’s steady improvement inside the 20. The first fourth-down fight came late in the second quarter at the end of a TCU drive that began at the Horned Frogs’ own

four-yard line. After riding running backs Aaron Green and Kyle Hicks most of the way down the field, TCU faced a fourth-and-one from the Kansas 12 with 1:05 remaining in the half. Rather than taking the three points and heading into halftime with a 13-10 lead, TCU again called Green’s number, but the bruising tailback was met in the backfield by KU’s Marcquis Roberts and Anthony Olobia, who wrapped Green up simultaneously and tossed him to the ground for no gain. The second came two plays into the fourth

quarter. Again, rather than taking an almost-automatic field goal and extending their lead to 16-10, the Frogs elected to go for a fourth-and-three from the KU seven. A fade pass from third-string QB Foster Sawyer sailed out of bounds, and KU held. “The coaches stress all week, you gotta bear down when you’re in there,” sophomore linebacker Joe Dineen said. “Everyone has to come together and play that much harder to not let ’em in the end zone. I felt like we did that (Saturday), and it paid off for us.”

While those two stops by Kansas might not have led to a Jayhawk victory, they were the difference between KU having a chance to win the game late, down six, and KU being behind by two or even three scores in the game’s final minutes. The reason they came? “Those guys have a fireman mentality,” Beaty said. “Everybody else is running out, and they’re running in. And we’ve talked about it … you have to put the fire out, and they’ve adopted that as their mission.” The two red-zone

stops Saturday against a top-15 team delivered an extra dose of confidence to the Kansas defense. But the challenge of playing a clean game, start to finish, and making those plays for four quarters all over the field, remains. “We’re getting closer,” said Beaty, whose team will close the season with home games against West Virginia and Kansas State. “But we still have a couple controlables we’re leaving out there. ... A smart team’s a hard team to beat, and, usually, the smart team is gonna win those close games.”

KU women

Hoops

BRIEFLY

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C

quarter, the Jayhawks saw their advantage dwindle to 48-45 going into the final 10 minutes. The Tigers went on to grab their first lead since 3-2 when Toni Cheadle, cousin of KU sophomore Chayla Cheadle, converted a traditional three-point play to give TSU a 50-48 edge with 8:04 to play. The Jayhawks and Tigers battled for the next four minutes before Kansas closed the contest with a 13-5 run. “They were very heady. They were smart,” TSU coach Johnetta HayesPerry said of the Jayhawks. “Coach (Schneider) has done a great job of coaching them through some certain things with the ball at his end of the floor.” KU sophomore point guard Lauren Aldridge paced the Jayhawks with a career-high 17 points and seven assists. Aldridge got the Jayhawks going early with back-toback dimes to Caelynn Manning-Allen, who also had a career high with 12 points. However, the KU floor general had a tough task at hand on the defensive end with guarding Jazzmin Parker. In the TSU guard’s first game back from a torn ACL that sidelined her last season, Parker scored a gamehigh 25 points. Parker also netted 34 points against the Jayhawks two years ago in Allen. “She gets excited about coming to Kansas,” Hayes-Perry said with a laugh. While Parker helped the Tigers roar back with 11 points in the third quarter, Aldridge shut down TSU’s top-scoring threat in crunch time. “I thought it was cool that the coaches put me in an opportunity to step

up on the defensive end, which I think is always fun. I love playing defense,” Aldridge said. “To be able to disrupt a little bit on the defensive end, it was fun.” Aldridge had plenty of

help down the stretch to help the Jayhawks close it out. Junior Jada Brown, freshman Kylee Kopatich and fourth-year junior Timeka O’Neal each knocked down a threepointer as the Jayhawks were a perfect 3-for-3 from long range in the fourth quarter. Freshman Tyler Johnson also had four of her six points in the fourth and was a big presence down low for KU with five rebounds and three blocks in 15 minutes off the bench. “I’m so happy to be able to play here at Kansas. I wasn’t as nervous as I thought I would because I had a team I could trust,” the Leavenworth product said. “I knew that if we went out and played hard that we would get the win.” Johnson is joined by Kopatich, an Olathe South grad, as a freshman who is expected to make key contributions throughout the season. Kopatich struggled from the floor early but found her shot late on her way to pouring in 14 points and pulling down eight boards. “We’re so young that anyone we have out on the court, we’re going to need them to impact the game in a positive way. Obviously, Tyler and Kylee have both done that,” Schneider said.

homelessness and living on the streets for a time in high school, actually plans to anchor himself back in Chitown after his pro career is over. “Definitely,” he said, asked if he has a love for his place of birth. “What I want to do when I’m done playing ball ... I want to start an organization for kids back home, to help them find somewhere they can play ball and stay off the streets like somebody did for me.” Traylor had four points, one assist, one block and one steal while playing 13 minutes in KU’s victory over Duke in 2013 in Chicago. “As far as feeling different ... it’s just another game, but I’m at home. I guess it’s different,” Traylor said. The opponent is a familiar one. KU is 2-3 versus Michigan State in the 13-year Bill Self era. The Jayhawks topped MSU, 61-56, in the finals of the Orlando Classic last season in Florida. Traylor scored six points with one rebound while playing 15 minutes in that game. Perry Ellis had 17 points to lead the Jayhawks, while current senior Denzel Valentine scored 14 points with seven boards for the Spartans. “They are a good team. They can prepare us for postseason stuff,” Traylor said. “They are a quality team, a well coached team. Any time you go against good competition, it’ll make you better. I feel going against one of the best teams (ranked No. 13 to KU’s No. 4 rating) will help you get better.” A year ago, KU had a horrific night in the Champions Classic, where the Jayhawks are 1-3 all-time. Kentucky

hammered the Jayhawks, 72-40, in Indianapolis. “As you could see, that’s not even in my head anymore,” Traylor said, acknowledging he forgot KU last met UK in 2014. “It’s always good competition. It’s always good to learn,” Traylor said of the Classic. Next year, KU will play Duke in the Classic in New York to complete a second full cycle of games between the fab foursome of KU, Kentucky, Duke and MSU. “You know you are going to play a good team no matter what,” KU coach Self said. “It’d be nice to win at a higher clip than what we’ve won so far. It’s great. All college basketball fans ... their eyes are on that night. We get a chance to be showcased. That will be fun.”

back, put a tight end over him, slide protection to him, do a lot of different things. When you have CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C two, it eliminates a lot of opportunities for an of“He focuses on rushing fense to help on a special the passer. I learned a lot pass rusher.” from coach Wyatt, and Finding an elite athlete coach Thibs helped me to twin with Armstrong to elevate my game to could be the start of another level. He keeps something big, especially pushing, pushing, pushif KU could land a pair ing for greatness.” of game-ready burners at If Bledsoe were to sign cornerback. with KU, the Jayhawks’ “If you can get those two best prospects cornerstones of a dewould be defensive fense, two guys who can ends, teaming for three rush the quarterback seasons, with Bledsoe and two guys who can flying off one edge and cover on the outside, it Dorance Armstrong off definitely changes the the other. game for you,” Bowen That can change the said. “When you can identity of a defense get pressure on the quickly. quarterback with two Not speaking of any people consistently, and specific recruit, I asked you can lock up on the KU defensive coordioutside and take two nator Clint Bowen if receivers away with having Armstrong at your corners, those one D-end spot would are the cornerstones make it easier to recruit that you always like to another. have. That’s why you “Absolutely,” Bowen see in the NFL those are said. “If you only have the guys you see getone, then teams can ting money on defense. chip him with a running Those are the two spots

that everyone wants. It would be nice. Pass-rush guys are a premium.” At linebacker, Marcquis Roberts has one year remaining, Joe Dineen two, Baker transfer Keith Loneker Jr. three. Goodman is the lone major loss on defense after this season, so it’s easy to see improvement on that side of the ball coming rapidly. If Bledsoe came to KU, he could play a significant role in filling the stadium by making the team more competitive. That would have to fill an athlete with pride, especially doing it in the same city where he played high school football. Goodman played along when asked to put himself in the shoes of a defensive end being wooed by the current KU coaching staff. Again, I did not mention the name of any specific recruit. “Playing with Dorance would excite me,” Goodman said. “You have another defensive end

who’s young and who’s going to be good in the future. So that would give me confidence to come here. “And another thing that would excite me coming out of high school is, you’re seeing that they’re not scared to play a freshman, they’re not scared to play young guys. You’d probably feel like you’d have a great opportunity to play early.” Goodman spent one season as a red shirt under Turner Gill, 21⁄3 seasons playing for Charlie Weis, two-thirds of a season under Bowen when he was interim head coach and is playing for Beaty his senior season. “I was looking for a good education, a bigtime program, a nice conference to play in,” said Goodman, a native of Beaumont, Texas. “If I could go back, I would not change the school, but I think I would tell people to look for a coaching staff that’s stable, that’s probably

By Matt Tait mtait@ljworld.com

All season, the knock on these Jayhawks has been that they’re too small, too slow, too weak and too inexperienced to compete. Most weeks during Kansas University’s 0-10 start to the 2015 season, that has proven true. But Saturday, during a hardfought and hard-to-take, 23-17 loss at 13th-ranked TCU, the Jayhawks stood tall, played strong and showed the experience they have gained is starting to pay off.

Keegan

John Young/Journal-World Photo

KANSAS UNIVERSITY COACH BRANDON SCHNEIDER APPLAUDS HIS JAYHAWKS in their 72-65 victory over Texas Southern on Sunday in Allen Fieldhouse.

BOX SCORE TEXAS SOUTHERN (65) MIN FG FT REB PF TP m-a m-a o-t Toni Cheadle 33 3-6 3-5 0-5 1 9 Amari Dennis 35 1-3 0-0 0-3 2 2 Kianna Vines 25 9-13 0-0 2-7 2 18 D. Sophus 19 2-2 0-0 0-3 2 5 Jazzmin Parker 31 9-18 4-4 1-4 1 25 Ladeyh Forte 29 1-5 2-4 0-2 3 4 Breasia McElrath 14 0-1 0-0 0-7 3 0 Ashley Ferguson 8 1-3 0-0 1-2 1 2 M. Pouengue 6 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 team 3-4 Totals 26-51 9-13 7-37 15 65 Three-point goals: 4-9 (Parker 3-7, Sophus 1-1, Forte 0-1). Assists: 13 (Forte 6, Cheadle 3, Dennis 2, Sophus 2). Turnovers: 23 (Cheadle 6, Forte 5, Parker 4, Dennis 3, team 2, Vines, Sophus, McElrath). Blocked shots: 8 (Vines 4, McElrath 2, Cheadle, Sophus). Steals: 7 (Cheadle 4, Dennis, Parker, McElrath). KANSAS (72) MIN FG FT REB PF TP m-a m-a o-t C. Manning-Allen 23 6-12 0-0 3-7 3 12 Lauren Aldridge 35 6-9 4-4 0-0 1 17 Aisia Robertson 19 3-8 0-3 2-4 1 6 Chayla Cheadle 22 0-8 0-0 0-1 2 0 Kylee Kopatich 33 4-14 0-0 3-8 1 9 Jada Brown 25 3-7 1-2 5-6 1 8 Timeka O’Neal 20 4-7 0-0 0-1 2 12 Tyler Johnson 15 3-6 0-1 1-5 3 6 Jayde Christopher 6 1-1 0-0 0-0 0 2 L. Enabulele 2 0-1 0-0 0-0 1 0 team 3-4 Totals 30-73 5-10 17-36 15 72 Three-point goals: 7-20 (O’Neal 4-6, Aldridge 1-3, Brown 1-3, Kopatich 1-5, Cheadle 0-1, Robertson 0-2). Assists: 12 (Aldridge 7, Robertson 2, Kopatich, O’Neal, Christopher). Turnovers: 13 (ManningAllen 2, Cheadle 2, Kopatich 2, Brown 2, Aldridge, Robertson, O’Neal, Enabulele, Johnson). Blocked shots: 5 (Johnson 3, Manning-Allen 2). Steals: 7 (Aldridge 3, Robertson 2, Manning-Allen, O’Neal). Texas Southern 11 12 22 20 — 65 Kansas 18 15 15 24 — 72 Officials: Tina Napier, Kevin Pethtel, Marc Merritt. Attendance: 2,077.

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Baker to host Point U. in NAIA first round Baldwin City — The No. 2-ranked and 2015 Heart of America Athletic Conference Southern Division Champion Baker University football team will host No. 18-ranked Point University (Ga.) in the first round of the NAIA Football Championship Series inside Liston Stadium. The contest will kick off at noon Saturday. This marks the 14th time Baker (10-1 overall, 5-0 in the Heart South) has qualified for the NAIA Playoffs. Baker is 7-6 all-time in the first round. The Skyhawks are from West Point, Georgia, and went 8-2 overall and 5-0 in The Sun Conference, winning the conference championship. It’s the first meeting between the teams.

Collins in NBADL: Former KU guard Sherron Collins is playing in the NBA Developmental League for the Texas Legends, a team affiliated with the Dallas Mavericks based in Frisco, Texas. Collins, who is listed l Complete NAIA playat 5-foot-11, 220-pounds, off pairing on page 5C scored two points, with no assists and a turnover WHS’ Patton while playing five minutes in the Legends’ 105-95 win on all-state Sunday at Oklahoma City. l

volleyball team

Maker update: Thon Maker, a 7-foot senior center from Orangeville Prep in Mono, Ontario, who attended Friday’s KU-Northern Colorado game, wants to make an official visit to KU this season, his guardian, Ed Smith, tells Zagsblog.com. Self on Sunday watched Maker score 29 points as his high school team lost to Sunrise Academy, 76-72, at the Tornado Allen Showcase in Wichita. Maker, who is not ranked by Rivals.com because it was unknown if he’d be in the Class of 2015 or ’16, has a list of KU, Kentucky, Indiana, Arizona State, Notre Dame and St. John’s.

Wellsville junior Karly Patton earned firstteam All-State volleyball honors in Class 3A, the Kansas Volleyball Association announced on Saturday. Patton, a 6-foot outside hitter, recorded 412 kills, 384 digs and 37 blocks this season. Tonganoxie senior setter Lauren Jackson was selected second-team All-State in 4A-I, while De Soto senior outside hitter Aubri Hinkle received an honorable mention. In 4A-II, Santa Fe Trail senior outside hitter Suzie Forbes earned an All-State honorable mention.

going to be around for a minute. I went through a lot of changes, four different head coaches, if you include Clint. “I’d just tell them to look for a stable coaching staff that’s going to be here for a while. This coaching staff is definitely going to be here for a while and be stable.” Bledsoe, who spent much of his youth in Wichita, has no shortage of attractive offers, including Baylor, Missouri, North Carolina State, Oklahoma, Oregon and UCLA. But for many Kansas standouts from the past — Nolan Cromwell, John Hadl,

David Jaynes, Brandon McAnderson, Kerry Meier, Nick Reid, John Riggins, Otto Schnellbacher, Jake Sharp, Oliver Spencer, Darrell Stuckey and John Zook among them — there was no place like home. Don’t count me as one of the shocked if Bledsoe has the strength and smarts to see negative recruiting aimed at a football program struggling to get off the deck for what it is: selfish manipulation by desperate coaches telling an athlete whatever they think they need to tell him to get him to suit up for them.

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4C

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Monday, November 16, 2015

NFL

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L awrence J ournal -W orld

ROUNDUP

Lions roar past Packers The Associated Press

STANDINGS

Lions 18, Packers 16 Green Bay, Wis. — Matthew Stafford threw for two touchdowns, and Detroit stopped a 24game road losing streak against Green Bay when it held on for a victory Sunday despite a late blunder by Calvin Johnson. Mason Crosby missed a 52-yard field goal as time expired after the Packers recovered an onside kick fumbled by Johnson with 31 seconds left. Detroit 0 3 6 9—18 Green Bay 3 0 0 13—16 First Quarter GB-FG Crosby 44, 10:06. Second Quarter Det-FG Prater 49, :12. Third Quarter Det-Pettigrew 2 pass from Stafford (kick failed), 13:33. Fourth Quarter Det-FG Prater 51, 13:10. GB-R.Rodgers 4 pass from A.Rodgers (Crosby kick), 5:55. Det-Moore 4 pass from Stafford (kick failed), 1:57. GB-Perillo 11 pass from A.Rodgers (pass failed), :32. A-78,526. GB Det First downs 16 22 Total Net Yards 287 372 Rushes-yards 26-45 18-47 Passing 242 325 Punt Returns 4-39 2-7 Kickoff Returns 2-134 3-78 Interceptions Ret. 0-0 1-2 Comp-Att-Int 24-38-1 35-61-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 0-0 3-8 Punts 7-42.4 9-41.3 Fumbles-Lost 1-0 1-0 Penalties-Yards 3-35 5-55 Time of Possession 30:40 29:20 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Detroit, Bell 14-17, Abdullah 5-15, Tate 1-11, Riddick 3-1, Stafford 2-1, Burton 1-0. Green Bay, Starks 15-42, A.Rodgers 2-8, Cobb 1-(minus 3). PASSING-Detroit, Stafford 24-38-1242. Green Bay, A.Rodgers 35-61-0-333. RECEIVING-Detroit, C.Johnson 6-81, Tate 4-52, Ebron 4-28, Moore 3-29, Riddick 3-25, Bell 2-18, Abdullah 1-7, Pettigrew 1-2. Green Bay, Adams 10-79, Starks 6-54, Perillo 5-58, Cobb 5-53, R.Rodgers 5-32, Abbrederis 4-57. MISSED FIELD GOALS-Green Bay, Crosby 52 (SH).

Panthers 27, Titans 10 Nashville, Tenn. — Cam Newton completed his first 11 passes — the longest streak of his career — and Carolina remained unbeaten. The Panthers (9-0) extended their leaguebest winning streak to 13 games as Newton ran for a touchdown and passed for another score. Carolina 7 7 3 10—27 Tennessee 7 3 0 0—10 First Quarter Car—Stewart 16 run (Gano kick), 8:36. Ten—McCluster 25 run (Succop kick), 3:38. Second Quarter Car—Dickson 1 pass from Newton (Gano kick), 13:14. Ten—FG Succop 45, 7:45. Third Quarter Car—FG Gano 48, :23. Fourth Quarter Car—FG Gano 19, 9:06. Car—Newton 2 run (Gano kick), 2:42. A—63,591. Ten Car First downs 24 11 Total Net Yards 303 242 Rushes-yards 34-119 21-64 Passing 184 178 Punt Returns 4-61 0-0 Kickoff Returns 1-22 5-86 Interceptions Ret. 1-0 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 21-26-0 16-24-1 Sacked-Yards Lost 5-33 1-7 Punts 4-47.3 5-51.8 Fumbles-Lost 0-0 3-1 Penalties-Yards 5-45 4-30 Time of Possession 35:55 24:05 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Carolina, Stewart 22-91, Newton 9-23, Tolbert 3-5. Tennessee, McCluster 3-25, Mariota 5-24, Andrews 11-8, Sankey 2-7. PASSING—Carolina, Newton 21-260-217. Tennessee, Mariota 16-24-1-185. RECEIVING—Carolina, Olsen 8-80, Ginn Jr. 4-45, Dickson 3-21, Funchess 2-41, Cotchery 2-6, Tolbert 1-16, Brown 1-8. Tennessee, Hunter 4-47, McCluster 4-27, Walker 3-52, Douglas 3-26, Fasano 1-19, Fowler 1-14.

Jaguars 22, Ravens 20 Baltimore — Jason Myers kicked a 53-yard field goal after Jacksonville got one final play on a facemask penalty with no time left, and the Jaguars ended their 13-game road losing streak. Jacksonville 7 3 3 9—22 Baltimore 0 14 0 6—20 First Quarter Jax—Hurns 5 pass from Bortles (Myers kick), 2:29. Second Quarter Bal—Gillmore 10 pass from Flacco (Tucker kick), 11:32. Jax—FG Myers 21, 3:28. Bal—M.Williams 21 pass from Flacco (Tucker kick), 1:11. Third Quarter Jax—FG Myers 45, 14:27. Fourth Quarter Jax—A.Robinson 15 pass from Bortles (pass failed), 13:01. Bal—Givens 14 pass from Flacco (pass failed), 7:30. Jax—FG Myers 53, :00. A—70,837. Bal Jax First downs 22 22 Total Net Yards 258 397 Rushes-yards 22-90 21-89 Passing 168 308 Punt Returns 2-2 4-54 Kickoff Returns 0-0 1-50 Interceptions Ret. 2-1 1-3 Comp-Att-Int 22-45-1 34-45-2 Sacked-Yards Lost 3-20 1-8 Punts 7-52.0 5-40.4 Fumbles-Lost 0-0 2-2 Penalties-Yards 4-30 9-121 Time of Possession 30:32 29:28

Mike Roemer/AP Photo

DETROIT PLAYERS CELEBRATE after Green Bay kicker Mason Crosby missed a field goal in the final seconds of the Lions’ 18-16 victory on Sunday in Green Bay, Wisconsin. INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Jacksonville, Yeldon 18-61, Bortles 2-25, Lee 1-3, D.Robinson 1-1. Baltimore, Forsett 14-53, Allen 5-19, Flacco 2-17. PASSING—Jacksonville, Bortles 22-45-1-188. Baltimore, Flacco 34-452-316. RECEIVING—Jacksonville, Hurns 5-62, A.Robinson 5-51, Yeldon 5-6, Walters 3-29, Thomas 2-23, Lewis 1-9, Lee 1-8. Baltimore, Aiken 7-73, Juszczyk 5-47, Gillmore 4-42, M.Williams 4-40, Givens 4-37, Forsett 4-11, Boyle 3-35, Butler 1-21, M.Brown 1-6, Allen 1-4. MISSED FIELD GOALS—Jacksonville, Myers 26 (WL). Baltimore, Tucker 58 (WR).

Steelers 30, Browns 9 Pittsburgh — Ben Roethlisberger threw for 379 yards and three touchdowns. Roethlisberger began the game on the bench to rest his sprained left foot but entered in the first quarter. Cleveland 3 0 0 6— 9 Pittsburgh 6 15 3 6—30 First Quarter Pit—FG Boswell 24, 10:59. Cle—FG Coons 23, 8:06. Pit—FG Boswell 34, 4:45. Second Quarter Pit—Brown 4 pass from Roethlisberger (Brown pass from Roethlisberger), 3:27. Pit—Bryant 32 pass from Roethlisberger (Boswell kick), :37. Third Quarter Pit—FG Boswell 25, 8:33. Fourth Quarter Cle—Barnidge 7 pass from Manziel (kick failed), 12:28. Pit—Brown 56 pass from Roethlisberger (kick failed), 9:07. A—64,402. Pit Cle First downs 20 22 Total Net Yards 342 459 Rushes-yards 14-15 21-60 Passing 327 399 Punt Returns 0-0 1-0 Kickoff Returns 4-100 0-0 Interceptions Ret. 1-12 1-9 Comp-Att-Int 33-45-1 25-37-1 Sacked-Yards Lost 6-45 1-3 Punts 4-40.0 1-42.0 Fumbles-Lost 2-2 3-1 Penalties-Yards 12-188 5-50 Time of Possession 32:43 27:17 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Cleveland, Manziel 3-17, Johnson Jr. 4-10, Crowell 6-(minus 5), Benjamin 1-(minus 7). Pittsburgh, D.Williams 17-54, Todman 2-8, Roethlisberger 2-(minus 2). PASSING—Cleveland, Manziel 33-451-372. Pittsburgh, Roethlisberger 22-33-1-379, L.Jones 3-4-0-23. RECEIVING—Cleveland, Benjamin 7-113, Hawkins 7-69, Hartline 6-77, Barnidge 6-65, Johnson Jr. 4-18, Gabriel 2-26, Crowell 1-4. Pittsburgh, Brown 10-139, Bryant 6-178, Miller 4-40, Wheaton 2-18, D.Williams 1-15, Nix 1-10, James 1-2.

Patriots 27, Giants 26 East Rutherford, N.J. — Stephen Gostkowski’s 54-yard field goal with 1 second remaining kept New England unbeaten. New England 7 3 7 10—27 N.Y. Giants 7 10 6 3—26 First Quarter NE-Chandler 1 pass from Brady (Gostkowski kick), 6:40. NYG-Beckham Jr. 87 pass from Manning (Brown kick), 5:49. Second Quarter NE-FG Gostkowski 31, 12:54. NYG-FG Brown 37, 3:42. NYG-D.Harris 1 pass from Manning (Brown kick), :13. Third Quarter NYG-FG Brown 38, 9:32. NE-Blount 1 run (Gostkowski kick), 4:46. NYG-FG Brown 53, :49. Fourth Quarter NE-Gronkowski 76 pass from Brady (Gostkowski kick), 11:33. NYG-FG Brown 29, 1:47. NE-FG Gostkowski 54, :01. A-81,061. NYG NE First downs 22 21 Total Net Yards 406 422 Rushes-yards 23-77 23-80 Passing 329 342 Punt Returns 2-84 4-41 Kickoff Returns 4-71 3-38 Interceptions Ret. 0-0 1-2 Comp-Att-Int 26-42-1 24-44-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 3-5 3-19 Punts 4-50.0 4-41.0 Fumbles-Lost 2-1 3-1 Penalties-Yards 7-93 8-49 Time of Possession 31:36 28:24 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING_New England, Blount 19-66, Brady 2-9, White 1-5, Bolden 1-(minus 3). N.Y. Giants, Jennings 11-39, Darkwa 5-15, Vereen 4-14, Manning 1-10, Williams 2-2. PASSING_New England, Brady 26-42-1-334. N.Y. Giants, Manning 24-44-0-361. RECEIVING_New England, Amendola 10-79, Gronkowski 5-113, Edelman 4-53, LaFell 2-66, Blount 2-11, White 1-6, Dobson 1-5, Chandler 1-1. N.Y. Giants, D.Harris 6-82, Tye 5-56, Beckham Jr. 4-104, Randle 3-51, Jennings 2-12, Vereen 2-12, White 1-28, Cunningham 1-16.

Dolphins 20, Eagles 19 Philadelphia — Chris McCain knocked Sam Bradford out, and Reshad Jones spoiled Mark Sanchez’s comeback bid. Ryan Tannehill threw a go-ahead 4-yard touchdown pass to Jarvis Landry and the defense held on to give the Miami Dolphins a 20-19 victory over the Philadelphia Eagles on Sunday. Bradford injured his left shoulder and sustained a concussion on a hard hit by McCain in the third quarter and didn’t return, though X-rays on his shoulder were negative. Miami 3 10 0 7—20 Philadelphia 16 0 0 3—19 First Quarter Mia-FG Franks 42, 10:27. Phi-Huff 2 pass from Bradford (Sturgis kick), 8:43. Phi-Thurmond safety, 8:38. Phi-Mathews 1 run (Sturgis kick), 4:43. Second Quarter Mia-FG Franks 22, 8:18. Mia-Miller 13 pass from Tannehill (Franks kick), 5:52. Fourth Quarter Mia-Landry 4 pass from Tannehill (Franks kick), 14:55. Phi-FG Sturgis 37, 10:20. A-69,596. Phi Mia First downs 15 29 Total Net Yards 289 436 Rushes-yards 26-99 36-83 Passing 190 353 Punt Returns 3-9 7-57 Kickoff Returns 2-42 2-51 Interceptions Ret. 1-7 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 21-36-0 33-48-1 Sacked-Yards Lost 4-27 4-39 Punts 8-49.1 7-36.3 Fumbles-Lost 1-0 3-0 Penalties-Yards 8-84 7-54 Time of Possession 28:53 31:07 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Miami, Ajayi 6-48, Miller 16-43, Landry 1-6, Matthews 1-4, Tannehill 2-(minus 2). Philadelphia, Murray 22-61, Mathews 8-18, Sanchez 2-4, Sproles 3-0, Bradford 1-0. PASSING-Miami, Tannehill 21-36-0217. Philadelphia, Sanchez 14-23-1156, Bradford 19-25-0-236. RECEIVING-Miami, Landry 7-52, Miller 6-50, Matthews 5-93, Jennings 1-9, Sims 1-8, Cameron 1-5. Philadelphia, Ertz 7-68, Murray 6-58, Sproles 5-34, Celek 4-134, Agholor 3-32, Huff 3-23, Matthews 3-21, Mathews 2-22. MISSED FIELD GOALS-Philadelphia, Sturgis 32 (WR).

Buccaneers 10, Cowboys 6 Tampa, Fla. — Jameis Winston scored on a one-yard quarterback keeper with 54 seconds remaining, extending Dallas’ longest losing streak since 1989 to seven games. Dallas 3 3 0 0— 6 Tampa Bay 0 3 0 7—10 First Quarter Dal-FG Bailey 42, 3:55. Second Quarter TB-FG Barth 52, 14:51. Dal-FG Bailey 53, 10:34. Fourth Quarter TB-Winston 1 run (Barth kick), :54. A-64,133. TB Dal First downs 12 23 Total Net Yards 216 327 Rushes-yards 21-42 25-81 Passing 174 246 Punt Returns 3-23 1-3 Kickoff Returns 2-35 0-0 Interceptions Ret. 2-19 1-0 Comp-Att-Int 19-30-1 22-39-2 Sacked-Yards Lost 3-12 2-18 Punts 6-42.0 4-41.8 Fumbles-Lost 1-0 1-0 Penalties-Yards 6-68 7-62 Time of Possession 30:04 29:56 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Dallas, McFadden 17-32, Michael 3-8, Cassel 1-2. Tampa Bay, Martin 18-63, Sims 5-18, Winston 2-0. PASSING-Dallas, Cassel 19-30-1-186. Tampa Bay, Winston 22-39-2-264. RECEIVING-Dallas, Bryant 5-45, Witten 5-42, McFadden 3-26, Te.Williams 2-33, Escobar 1-22, Street 1-10, Beasley 1-8, Whitehead 1-0. Tampa Bay, Evans 8-126, Martin 4-40, Myers 3-35, Humphries 2-25, Sims 2-13, Dye 1-11, Lane 1-8, Brate 1-6. MISSED FIELD GOALS-Dallas, Bailey 48 (WR). Tampa Bay, Barth 46 (WL).

Bears 37, Rams 13 St. Louis — Zach Miller caught two touchdown passes, including an 87yard score that was Chi-

cago’s longest play since 2010, and rookie Jeremy Langford also had two TDs. Chicago 10 14 0 13—37 St. Louis 10 0 3 0—13 First Quarter StL-Gurley 6 run (Zuerlein kick), 12:01. Chi-Miller 87 pass from Cutler (Gould kick), 11:10. StL-FG Zuerlein 26, 5:09. Chi-FG Gould 35, :03. Second Quarter Chi-Miller 2 pass from Cutler (Gould kick), 6:56. Chi-Langford 83 pass from Cutler (Gould kick), 5:00. Third Quarter StL-FG Zuerlein 38, 2:41. Fourth Quarter Chi-FG Gould 37, 11:24. Chi-FG Gould 36, 8:05. Chi-Langford 6 run (Gould kick), 4:55. A-58,653. StL Chi First downs 17 12 Total Net Yards 397 285 Rushes-yards 37-153 21-94 Passing 244 191 Punt Returns 3-9 3-16 Kickoff Returns 2-31 1-27 Interceptions Ret. 1-39 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 19-24-0 17-37-1 Sacked-Yards Lost 2-14 1-9 Punts 4-46.8 6-49.3 Fumbles-Lost 2-2 1-1 Penalties-Yards 4-44 8-57 Time of Possession 34:22 25:38 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Chicago, Langford 20-73, Carey 14-56, Cutler 3-24. St. Louis, Gurley 12-45, Mason 6-31, Austin 3-18. PASSING-Chicago, Cutler 19-24-0258. St. Louis, Hekker 0-1-0-0, Foles 17-36-1-200. RECEIVING-Chicago, Langford 7-109, Miller 5-107, Jeffery 3-23, Bennett 3-18, Wilson 1-1. St. Louis, Gurley 3-44, Welker 3-32, Cook 2-35, Marquez 2-19, Austin 2-5, Quick 1-37, Mason 1-16, Britt 1-6, Kendricks 1-4, B.Cunningham 1-2.

Washington 47, Saints 14 Landover, Md. — Kirk Cousins threw for a career-high four touchdowns — each one longer than any scoring pass he’d completed all season — to lead Washington. New Orleans 7 7 0 0—14 Washington 14 13 10 10—47 First Quarter Was—Reed 16 pass from Cousins (Hopkins kick), 8:14. NO—Cooks 4 pass from Brees (Forbath kick), 5:52. Was—Crowder 11 pass from Cousins (Hopkins kick), :58. Second Quarter NO—Cooks 60 pass from Brees (Forbath kick), 10:44. Was—Jones 78 pass from Cousins (Hopkins kick), 9:52. Was—FG Hopkins 35, 3:18. Was—FG Hopkins 23, :00. Third Quarter Was—FG Hopkins 40, 4:38. Was—Reed 8 pass from Cousins (Hopkins kick), :11. Fourth Quarter Was—Goldson 35 interception return (Hopkins kick), 14:18. Was—FG Hopkins 22, 9:33. A—75,086. Was NO First downs 16 24 Total Net Yards 350 526 Rushes-yards 25-158 31-225 Passing 192 301 Punt Returns 1-10 4-14 Kickoff Returns 3-59 2-29 Interceptions Ret. 0-0 2-35 Comp-Att-Int 19-28-2 20-25-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 2-17 3-23 Punts 4-47.5 2-43.5 Fumbles-Lost 1-0 1-0 Penalties-Yards 7-50 5-26 Time of Possession 26:26 33:34 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—New Orleans, Ingram 5-77, Hightower 11-46, Spiller 8-24, Cooks 1-11. Washington, Morris 15-104, Jones 11-56, Thompson 2-54, Young 3-11. PASSING—New Orleans, Brees 19-28-2-209. Washington, Cousins 20-25-0-324. RECEIVING—New Orleans, Cooks 5-98, Colston 3-22, Ingram 3-21, Watson 3-19, Graham 2-25, Spiller 2-10, Coleman 1-14. Washington, Crowder 4-60, Jones 3-131, Reed 3-29, Morris 3-14, Jackson 2-44, Garcon 2-10, Thompson 1-23, Carrier 1-14, Young 1-(minus 1).

Vikings 30, Raiders 14 Oakland, Calif. — Adrian Peterson ran for 203 yards and a touchdown in his record-tying sixth career 200-yard game, Cordarrelle Patterson returned a kick 93 yards for a score and Minnesota took over sole possession of first place in the NFC North by beating Oakland.

AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA New England 9 0 0 1.000 303 169 Buffalo 5 4 0 .556 231 207 N.Y. Jets 5 4 0 .556 217 184 Miami 4 5 0 .444 191 225 South W L T Pct PF PA Indianapolis 4 5 0 .444 200 227 Houston 3 5 0 .375 174 205 Jacksonville 3 6 0 .333 192 255 Tennessee 2 7 0 .222 169 214 North W L T Pct PF PA Cincinnati 8 0 0 1.000 229 142 Pittsburgh 6 4 0 .600 236 191 Baltimore 2 7 0 .222 210 236 Cleveland 2 8 0 .200 186 277 West W L T Pct PF PA Denver 7 2 0 .778 205 168 Kansas City 4 5 0 .444 224 195 Oakland 4 5 0 .444 227 241 San Diego 2 7 0 .222 210 249 NATIONAL CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA N.Y. Giants 5 5 0 .500 273 253 Washington 4 5 0 .444 205 209 Philadelphia 4 5 0 .444 212 184 Dallas 2 7 0 .222 166 214 South W L T Pct PF PA Carolina 9 0 0 1.000 255 175 Atlanta 6 3 0 .667 229 190 Tampa Bay 4 5 0 .444 191 237 New Orleans 4 6 0 .400 255 315 North W L T Pct PF PA Minnesota 7 2 0 .778 198 154 Green Bay 6 3 0 .667 219 185 Chicago 4 5 0 .444 199 234 Detroit 2 7 0 .222 167 261 West W L T Pct PF PA Arizona 7 2 0 .778 302 185 St. Louis 4 5 0 .444 166 183 Seattle 4 5 0 .444 199 179 San Francisco 3 6 0 .333 126 223 Sunday’s Games Detroit 18, Green Bay 16 Carolina 27, Tennessee 10 Chicago 37, St. Louis 13 Tampa Bay 10, Dallas 6 Washington 47, New Orleans 14 Miami 20, Philadelphia 19 Pittsburgh 30, Cleveland 9 Jacksonville 22, Baltimore 20 Minnesota 30, Oakland 14 Kansas City 29, Denver 13 New England 27, N.Y. Giants 26 Arizona 39, Seattle 32 Open: Atlanta, Indianapolis, San Diego, San Francisco Today’s Game Houston at Cincinnati, 7:30 p.m.

Minnesota 10 10 0 10—30 Oakland 0 14 0 0—14 First Quarter Min-Ellison 11 pass from Bridgewater (Walsh kick), 10:59. Min-FG Walsh 20, 1:32. Second Quarter Min-FG Walsh 38, 10:33. Oak-Walford 10 pass from Carr (Janikowski kick), 5:54. Oak-A.Holmes 34 pass from Carr (Janikowski kick), 1:52. Min-Patterson 93 kickoff return (Walsh kick), 1:39. Fourth Quarter Min-FG Walsh 34, 3:50. Min-Peterson 80 run (Walsh kick), 1:50. A-54,700. Oak Min First downs 21 20 Total Net Yards 385 371 Rushes-yards 33-263 19-84 Passing 122 287 Punt Returns 2-15 2-2 Kickoff Returns 2-105 6-145 Interceptions Ret. 2-4 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 14-22-0 29-43-2 Sacked-Yards Lost 4-18 2-15 Punts 3-47.7 6-42.8 Fumbles-Lost 0-0 1-0 Penalties-Yards 3-15 8-82 Time of Possession 33:01 26:59 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Minnesota, Peterson 26-203, Bridgewater 2-23, Thielen 1-14, Diggs 1-10, Asiata 2-7, Patterson 1-6. Oakland, Murray 12-48, Olawale 5-24, Carr 2-12. PASSING-Minnesota, Bridgewater 14-22-0-140. Oakland, Carr 29-43-2-302. RECEIVING-Minnesota, Diggs 2-46, Asiata 2-18, Ellison 2-18, Peterson 2-13, Pruitt 2-7, Wallace 1-22, McKinnon 1-7, Rudolph 1-7, Wright 1-2. Oakland, Rivera 6-46, Cooper 5-79, Murray 5-29, Crabtree 4-55, Olawale 3-35, Walford 2-18, A.Holmes 1-34, Roberts 1-5, L.Smith 1-1, Reece 1-0. MISSED FIELD GOALS-Minnesota, Walsh 53 (WR), 39 (BK).

Cardinals 39, Seahawks 32 Seattle — The NFC West goes through Arizona. Carson Palmer threw for 363 yards and three touchdowns. Arizona 0 22 3 14—39 Seattle 0 7 10 15—32 Second Quarter Ari-FG Catanzaro 33, 12:52. Ari-Rucker safety, 12:14. Ari-Floyd 27 pass from Palmer (Catanzaro kick), 6:41. Ari-Floyd 35 pass from Palmer (Catanzaro kick), 4:02. Sea-Tukuafu 1 run (Hauschka kick), 1:52. Ari-FG Catanzaro 43, :00. Third Quarter Sea-FG Hauschka 31, 11:18. Ari-FG Catanzaro 43, 6:29. Sea-Baldwin 32 pass from Wilson (Hauschka kick), 4:52. Fourth Quarter Sea-Lynch 3 run (pass failed), 14:44. Sea-Wagner 22 fumble return (pass failed), 13:00. Ari-Gresham 14 pass from Palmer (Catanzaro kick), 8:41. Ari-Ellington 48 run (Catanzaro kick), 1:58. Sea-FG Hauschka 46, :58. A-69,005. Sea Ari First downs 30 18 Total Net Yards 451 343 Rushes-yards 33-117 18-115 Passing 334 228 Punt Returns 3-29 1-0 Kickoff Returns 5-101 5-104 Interceptions Ret. 1-24 1-0 Comp-Att-Int 29-48-1 14-32-1 Sacked-Yards Lost 3-29 2-12 Punts 3-44.7 5-40.8 Fumbles-Lost 2-2 1-0 Penalties-Yards 9-71 14-131 Time of Possession 38:52 21:08 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Arizona, Ellington 5-61, C.Johnson 25-58, Palmer 3-(minus 2). Seattle, Wilson 6-52, Lynch 8-42, Rawls 2-19, Tukuafu 2-2. PASSING-Arizona, Palmer 29-48-1363. Seattle, Wilson 14-32-1-240. RECEIVING-Arizona, Fitzgerald 10-130, Floyd 7-113, Ja.Brown 3-38, Ellington 3-27, Fells 3-21, Gresham 2-26, D.Johnson 1-8. Seattle, Baldwin 7-134, Graham 3-41, Richardson 1-40, Kearse 1-10, Lynch 1-8, Lockett 1-7.

Chiefs CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C

“Our thought process was to do really good and execute our plays. By doing that, Peyton was pulled.” And just like that, the Chiefs (4-5) put themselves in the playoff race and placed the Broncos (7-2) in quite a quandary — losers of two in a row and with quarterback issues. “It’s a great feeling, just winning period,” said Eric Berry, who had his second interception since being diagnosed with cancer last season. “That’s what we needed right now at this point.” Marcus Peters set the tone for the day by picking off Manning on the third play of the game. That turned into a short Charcandrick West touchdown run and the rout was on, especially given how well the defense was playing. Manning broke Brett Favre’s NFL record for most career passing yards in the first quarter, but that was about the only highlight. Peters thought about shaking Manning’s hand shortly after he reached the milestone, before deciding against it because, “we were between the lines.” “I saluted him, man,” Peters added. “I gave him mad respect. That’s the biggest thing to me: I show my respect to the ones who paved the way for us to be playing this game.” Manning looked every bit like a 39-year-old quarterback who entered the game hobbled by a sore foot and aching ribs. The Chiefs took advantage, sacking the fivetime NFL MVP twice and forcing him to make poor throw after poor throw. Manning finished 5 of 20 before giving way to backup Brock Osweiler, with the fans cheering the change. “Is (Manning) the type of quarterback he showed today? No,” Johnson said. “He’s still a great quarterback — just not what he used to be. Today, we had our way.” Up 29-0, Kansas City was 5:27 away from shutting out Denver for the first time at home in its 56-year history. But Ronnie Hillman saved that embarrassment with a one-yard TD. “We weren’t thinking about it,” Johnson said of the shutout. “We were thinking more about the win. We didn’t even know about the shutouttype deal. We didn’t want them to score.” For about 115 out of 120 minutes this season, the Chiefs have outplayed the Broncos. If not for a breakdown in Week 2 at Arrowhead, Kansas City could be 2-0 against Denver. The Chiefs allowed two touchdowns in a ninesecond span during a 31-24 loss to the Broncos.

SUMMARY Kansas City 10 9 3 7—29 Denver 0 0 0 13—13 First Quarter KC-West 4 run (Santos kick), 11:21. KC-FG Santos 48, 6:19. Second Quarter KC-FG Santos 49, 11:35. KC-FG Santos 34, 3:30. KC-FG Santos 33, :00. Third Quarter KC-FG Santos 50, 10:45. Fourth Quarter KC-West 80 pass from A.Smith (Santos kick), 11:10. Den-Hillman 1 run (run failed), 5:27. Den-Caldwell 7 pass from Osweiler (McManus kick), 1:45. A-76,973. KC Den First downs 13 18 Total Net Yards 303 221 Rushes-yards 32-106 16-69 Passing 197 152 Punt Returns 3-6 1-11 Kickoff Returns 1-9 0-0 Interceptions Ret. 5-62 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 17-31-0 19-44-5 Sacked-Yards Lost 2-7 5-29 Punts 5-45.2 6-46.2 Fumbles-Lost 0-0 1-0 Penalties-Yards 11-102 5-55 Time of Possession 33:27 26:33 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Kansas City, West 24-69, A.Smith 6-33, Ware 2-4. Denver, Hillman 11-42, Osweiler 3-18, Anderson 2-9. PASSING-Kansas City, A.Smith 17-31-0-204. Denver, Osweiler 14-24-1146, Manning 5-20-4-35. RECEIVING-Kansas City, Kelce 5-36, Thomas 4-37, West 3-92, Maclin 3-17, A.Wilson 1-16, B.Parker 1-6. Denver, Thomas 7-71, Latimer 3-30, V.Davis 2-19, Caldwell 2-13, Hillman 2-9, Fowler 1-17, Daniels 1-14, Green 1-8.


SPORTS

L awrence J ournal -W orld

The Associated Press

Jazz 97, Hawks 96 Atlanta — Derrick Favors scored 23 points, Rodney Hood added 20 points, and Utah beat Atlanta on Sunday night to end a three-game skid. Paul Millsap had a season-high 28 points for the Hawks but failed to hit the rim on a three-point attempt in the final minute and missed a 12-footer at the buzzer.

Hornets 106, Trail Blazers 94 Charlotte, N.C. — Nicolas Batum scored 33 points, and Al Jefferson added 29 as Charlotte held off a fourth-quarter rally to beat Portland. Kemba Walker added 14 points, and Jeremy Lamb had 13 for the Hornets, who led 71-45 at halftime and by as many as 29 points midway through the third quarter. PORTLAND (94) Aminu 2-5 2-2 7, Vonleh 3-6 3-4 9, Plumlee 2-6 4-4 8, Lillard 9-25 4-5 23, McCollum 5-18 4-4 16, Harkless 1-3 2-2 4, Alexander 2-4 0-0 4, Crabbe 8-11 0-0 17, Davis 3-7 0-0 6, Henderson 0-3 0-0 0, Connaughton 0-0 0-0 0, Frazier 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 35-89 19-21 94. CHARLOTTE (106) Hairston 1-2 0-0 2, Williams 3-8 1-2 7, Jefferson 13-17 3-4 29, Walker 5-12 2-2 14, Batum 11-19 6-7 33, Zeller 0-4 1-2 1, Lamb 6-10 0-0 13, Hawes 0-2 2-2 2, Lin 2-9 0-0 5, Roberts 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 41-83 15-19 106. Portland 27 18 21 28— 94 Charlotte 35 36 18 17—106 3-Point Goals-Portland 5-21 (McCollum 2-6, Crabbe 1-1, Aminu 1-2, Lillard 1-9, Vonleh 0-1, Harkless 0-1, Henderson 0-1), Charlotte 9-31 (Batum 5-10, Walker 2-5, Lin 1-4, Lamb 1-5, Hawes 0-1, Hairston 0-1, Zeller 0-2, Williams 0-3). Fouled Out-Davis. Rebounds-Portland 53 (Plumlee 13), Charlotte 49 (Williams 8). AssistsPortland 20 (Lillard 5), Charlotte 29 (Batum 6). Total Fouls-Portland 25, Charlotte 16. Technicals-Walker. A-15,317 (19,077).

Grizzlies 114, Timberwolves 106 Minneapolis — Jeff Green scored a seasonhigh 21 points, and Mike Conley matched his season-high with 20 points to go with six assists and Memphis held on to beat Minnesota. Six players scored in double figures for Memphis, which won its second straight after losing four in a row. Marc Gasol had 14 points and seven rebounds for the Grizzlies, who shot a seasonhigh 56.3 percent from the field. MEMPHIS (114) Allen 4-6 0-0 8, Randolph 6-8 2-2 14, Gasol 7-10 2-2 16, Conley 7-14 2-4 20, Je.Green 7-12 6-6 21, Lee 3-7 0-0 7, Ja.Green 4-6 3-3 12, Chalmers 2-4 10-10 16, Barnes 0-4 0-0 0. Totals 40-71 25-27 114. MINNESOTA (106) Prince 1-3 0-0 2, Garnett 4-4 0-0 8, Towns 5-11 4-4 14, LaVine 8-15 5-6 25, Wiggins 8-14 4-5 21, Miller 4-8 0-0 8, Bjelica 2-5 0-0 4, Dieng 2-3 4-4 8, K.Martin 3-11 2-2 8, Muhammad 4-8 0-0 8. Totals 41-82 19-21 106. Memphis 22 33 26 33—114 Minnesota 23 26 30 27—106 3-Point Goals-Memphis 9-17 (Conley 4-6, Chalmers 2-3, Lee 1-1, Ja.Green 1-1, Je.Green 1-3, Allen 0-1, Barnes 0-2), Minnesota 5-16 (LaVine 4-7, Wiggins 1-2, Towns 0-1, Miller 0-1, Muhammad 0-1, K.Martin 0-2, Bjelica 0-2). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-Memphis 38 (Randolph 8), Minnesota 38 (Towns 9). Assists-Memphis 21 (Conley 7), Minnesota 20 (Miller 8). Total FoulsMemphis 16, Minnesota 24. A-12,086 (19,356).

Knicks 95, Pelicans 87 New York — Carmelo Anthony had 29 points and 13 rebounds, and New York beat New Orleans. Langston Galloway scored 15 points, and fellow reserve Kevin Seraphin had 12 for New York, which was coming off consecutive losses to Charlotte and Cleveland. Rookie Kristaps Porzingis had 10 points on 4-of-15 shooting. NEW ORLEANS (87) Gee 1-4 0-0 2, Davis 14-26 6-7 36, Asik 0-0 0-0 0, Holiday 2-8 3-4 7, Gordon 5-11 0-0 11, Anderson 5-11 4-4 16, Smith 1-2 0-0 2, Cunningham 3-3 0-0 6, Douglas 0-3 4-4 4, Babbitt 1-2 0-0 3, Ajinca 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 32-71 17-19 87.

Quicken Loans Race for Heroes 500

John Bazemore/AP Photo

UTAH FORWARD GORDON HAYWARD (20) TIES UP ATLANTA FORWARD PAUL MILLSAP in the second half of Utah’s 97-96 victory Sunday in Atlanta.

How former Jayhawks fared Cliff Alexander, Portland Min: 17. Pts: 4. Reb: 4. Ast: 0. Tarik Black, L.A. Lakers Did not play (coach’s decision). Mario Chalmers, Memphis Min: 18. Pts: 16. Reb: 0. Ast: 4. Nick Collison, Oklahoma City Min: 15. Pts: 4. Reb: 4. Ast: 2. Ben McLemore, Sacramento Min: 25. Pts: 8. Reb: 4. Ast: 1. Marcus Morris, Detroit Min: 32. Pts: 7. Reb: 7. Ast: 2. Andrew Wiggins, Minnesota Min: 37. Pts: 21. Reb: 1. Ast: 1. Jeff Withey, Utah Min: 6. Pts: 0. Reb: 0. Ast: 0. NEW YORK (95) Anthony 11-21 6-7 29, Porzingis 4-15 1-2 10, Lopez 0-3 0-0 0, Calderon 4-5 0-0 8, Afflalo 2-7 0-0 4, Amundson 1-3 1-2 3, O’Quinn 0-2 0-0 0, Galloway 5-6 4-4 15, Grant 3-6 1-2 7, Thomas 2-8 2-2 7, Williams 0-2 0-0 0, Vujacic 0-2 0-0 0, Seraphin 6-8 0-0 12. Totals 38-88 15-19 95. New Orleans 27 17 21 22—87 New York 23 19 26 27—95 3-Point Goals-New Orleans 6-21 (Davis 2-4, Anderson 2-5, Babbitt 1-2, Gordon 1-5, Holiday 0-1, Douglas 0-2, Gee 0-2), New York 4-18 (Galloway 1-2, Thomas 1-3, Porzingis 1-4, Anthony 1-5, Grant 0-1, Afflalo 0-1, Vujacic 0-1, Calderon 0-1). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-New Orleans 43 (Davis 11), New York 52 (Anthony 13). AssistsNew Orleans 16 (Smith 5), New York 18 (Anthony, Calderon, Lopez, Grant 3). Total Fouls-New Orleans 22, New York 20. A-19,812 (19,763).

| 5C

SCOREBOARD

NBA roundup

UTAH (97) Hayward 3-9 1-2 7, Favors 11-20 1-1 23, Gobert 3-4 5-7 11, Neto 1-2 0-0 2, Hood 8-17 0-0 20, Booker 2-4 0-0 4, Burke 3-6 2-2 10, Burks 7-13 3-5 18, Withey 0-0 0-0 0, Ingles 1-1 0-0 2, Johnson 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 39-76 12-17 97. ATLANTA (96) Bazemore 6-7 2-2 16, P.Millsap 10-18 7-8 28, Horford 7-16 0-0 16, Schroder 3-10 4-6 11, Korver 5-7 0-0 11, Splitter 1-4 0-0 2, Mack 3-7 1-1 7, Sefolosha 2-6 0-0 5, Holiday 0-1 0-0 0, Muscala 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 37-76 14-17 96. Utah 27 20 27 23—97 Atlanta 24 28 22 22—96 3-Point Goals-Utah 7-21 (Hood 4-9, Burke 2-3, Burks 1-3, Favors 0-1, Neto 0-1, Hayward 0-4), Atlanta 8-22 (Bazemore 2-2, Horford 2-6, Schroder 1-2, Korver 1-3, Sefolosha 1-3, P.Millsap 1-4, Mack 0-1, Holiday 0-1). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-Utah 47 (Gobert 11), Atlanta 37 (Sefolosha, Schroder, P.Millsap 6). Assists-Utah 21 (Burke 5), Atlanta 26 (Schroder 9). Total Fouls-Utah 15, Atlanta 16. Technicals-Gobert. A-14,436 (18,729).

Monday, November 16, 2015

STANDINGS EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W L Pct GB Toronto 7 4 .636 — Boston 5 4 .556 1 New York 5 6 .455 2 Brooklyn 1 9 .100 5½ Philadelphia 0 10 .000 6½ Southeast Division W L Pct GB Atlanta 8 4 .667 — Miami 6 3 .667 ½ Washington 4 4 .500 2 Charlotte 5 5 .500 2 Orlando 5 6 .455 2½ Central Division W L Pct GB Cleveland 8 2 .800 — Chicago 6 3 .667 1½ Indiana 6 4 .600 2 Milwaukee 5 5 .500 3 Detroit 5 5 .500 3 WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division W L Pct GB San Antonio 7 2 .778 — Dallas 6 4 .600 1½ Memphis 5 6 .455 3 Houston 4 6 .400 3½ New Orleans 1 9 .100 6½ Northwest Division W L Pct GB Oklahoma City 6 4 .600 — Utah 5 5 .500 1 Denver 5 5 .500 1 Minnesota 4 6 .400 2 Portland 4 7 .364 2½ Pacific Division W L Pct GB Golden State 11 0 1.000 — L.A. Clippers 6 4 .600 4½ Phoenix 5 4 .556 5 Sacramento 4 7 .364 7 L.A. Lakers 2 8 .200 8½ Today’s Games Dallas at Philadelphia, 6 p.m. Indiana at Chicago, 7 p.m. Oklahoma City at Memphis, 7 p.m. Boston at Houston, 7 p.m. Portland at San Antonio, 7:30 p.m. L.A. Lakers at Phoenix, 8 p.m. Tuesday’s Games Milwaukee at Washington, 6 p.m. Minnesota at Miami, 6:30 p.m. Atlanta at Brooklyn, 6:30 p.m. Cleveland at Detroit, 6:30 p.m. Charlotte at New York, 6:30 p.m. Denver at New Orleans, 7 p.m. Toronto at Golden State, 9:30 p.m.

Rondo had seven points, 14 assists and seven rebounds, but also had seven turnovers. TORONTO (101) Carroll 6-13 1-2 17, Scola 1-5 0-0 3, Valanciunas 2-9 0-0 4, Lowry 8-19 0-0 22, DeRozan 9-22 6-8 24, Biyombo 1-2 2-2 4, Patterson 3-5 0-0 9, Joseph 8-10 0-0 17, Johnson 0-2 1-2 1, Powell 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 38-87 10-14 101. SACRAMENTO (107) Gay 10-16 6-7 27, Cousins 12-22 9-12 36, Cauley-Stein 0-0 0-0 0, Rondo 3-10 0-0 7, McLemore 3-6 0-0 8, Belinelli 2-8 2-2 7, Casspi 6-9 1-1 14, Koufos 1-2 1-2 3, Curry 1-1 0-0 3, Acy 1-2 0-0 2. Totals 39-76 19-24 107. Toronto 23 28 31 19—101 Sacramento 22 31 26 28—107 3-Point Goals-Toronto 15-31 (Lowry 6-12, Carroll 4-9, Patterson 3-4, Joseph 1-1, Scola 1-2, DeRozan 0-3), Sacramento 10-25 (Cousins 3-6, McLemore 2-4, Curry 1-1, Gay 1-3, Belinelli 1-3, Casspi 1-4, Rondo 1-4). Fouled Out-None. ReboundsToronto 47 (Biyombo 6), Sacramento 48 (Cousins 10). Assists-Toronto 18 (Lowry 7), Sacramento 23 (Rondo 14). Total Fouls-Toronto 20, Sacramento 19. Technicals-Biyombo, Toronto defensive three second, Acy, Cousins. A-17,006 (17,317).

Sunday at Phoenix International Raceway Lap length: 1 miles (Start position in parentheses) 1. (3) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevy, 219 laps. 2. (8) Kevin Harvick, Chevy, 219. 3. (14) Joey Logano, Ford, 219. 4. (10) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 219. 5. (1) Jimmie Johnson, Chevy, 219. 6. (11) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 219. 7. (2) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 219. 8. (13) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 219. 9. (18) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 219. 10. (17) Aric Almirola, Ford, 219. 11. (22) Ryan Newman, Chevy, 219. 12. (4) Carl Edwards, Toyota, 219. 13. (15) Paul Menard, Chevy, 219. 14. (5) Martin Truex Jr., Chevy, 219. 15. (12) Jamie McMurray, Chevy, 218. 16. (21) Danica Patrick, Chevy, 218. 17. (25) Justin Allgaier, Chevy, 218. 18. (29) David Ragan, Toyota, 218. 19. (7) Erik Jones, Toyota, 218. 20. (16) Austin Dillon, Chevy, 218. 21. (6) Kyle Larson, Chevy, 218. 22. (24) Casey Mears, Chevy, 218. 23. (27) Clint Bowyer, Toyota, 218. 24. (23) AJ Allmendinger, Chevy, 218. 25. (20) Greg Biffle, Ford, 218. 26. (9) Kasey Kahne, Chevy, 217. 27. (31) Tony Stewart, Chevy, 217. 28. (30) Matt DiBenedetto, Toyota, 217. 29. (33) J.J. Yeley, Toyota, 216. 30. (34) David Gilliland, Ford, 216. 31. (28) Sam Hornish Jr., Ford, 215. 32. (36) Michael Annett, Chevy, 215. 33. (38) Cole Whitt, Ford, 215. 34. (26) Trevor Bayne, Ford, 215. 35. (32) Landon Cassill, Chevy, 215. 36. (40) Brett Moffitt, Ford, 215. 37. (41) Ryan Preece, Ford, 214. 38. (35) Alex Bowman, Chevy, 214. 39. (37) Jeb Burton, Toyota, 213. 40. (42) Ryan Ellis, Chevy, 211, . 41. (19) Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Ford, accident, 194. 42. (39) Joey Gase, Ford, accident, 161. 43. (43) Timmy Hill, Chevy, 127.

College Men

EAST Army 75, Binghamton 60 Rutgers 82, Howard 70 Saint Joseph’s 73, Niagara 62 Seton Hall 69, Wagner 59 Wake Forest 90, Bucknell 82 SOUTH Clemson 78, UTSA 45 Florida St. 109, Nicholls St. 62 NC State 88, South Alabama 70 North Carolina 92, Fairfield 65 Richmond 108, Stetson 85 MIDWEST Cincinnati 106, Robert Morris 44 Evansville 80, SE Missouri 65 Illinois 80, N. Dakota St. 74 Iowa 103, Coppin St. 68 Minnesota 67, Louisiana-Monroe 56 Missouri 73, Md.-Eastern Shore 55 N. Illinois 65, Wright St. 59 Ohio St. 76, Mount St. Mary’s 54 Purdue 107, Vermont 79 S. Illinois 81, Florida A&M 51 Saint Louis 85, Hartford 68 South Dakota 76, CS Northridge 72 UMKC 73, William Jewell 59 Valparaiso 83, Iona 58 SOUTHWEST New Mexico 83, New Mexico St. 74 FAR WEST Hawaii 74, Coastal Carolina 63 Nevada 83, Montana St. 62 Stanford 93, Charleston Southern 59 UCLA 88, Cal Poly 81

Big 12 Men

Big 12 Overall W L W L Kansas 0 0 1 0 Baylor 0 0 1 0 Iowa State 0 0 1 0 Kansas State 0 0 1 0 Oklahoma State 0 0 1 0 TCU 0 0 1 0 Texas Tech 0 0 1 0 West Virginia 0 0 1 0 Oklahoma 0 0 0 0 Texas 0 0 0 1 Today’s Games James Madison at West Virginia, 6 p.m. Chicago State at Iowa State, 7 p.m. Arkansas-Pine Bluff at Oklahoma State, 7 p.m. Columbia at Kansas State, 9 p.m. Baylor at Oregon, 10:30 p.m. Tuesday’s Games Kansas at Michigan State, 9 p.m. Oklahoma at Memphis, 4 p.m.

S. Carolina 91, UNC-Greensboro 44 Tennessee 102, Cent. Arkansas 47 Vanderbilt 89, MVSU 39 Virginia Tech 80, George Mason 63 Wake Forest 69, ETSU 52 MIDWEST Creighton 89, Marist 46 Drake 74, Iowa St. 70 Illinois 62, Ohio 53 Iowa 62, UT Martin 56 Kansas 72, Texas Southern 65 Michigan 88, Detroit 61 Michigan St. 78, W. Michigan 40 N. Iowa 58, Rockhurst 39 Northwestern 89, Howard 49 Notre Dame 85, Bucknell 54 SOUTHWEST Arkansas 67, Sam Houston St. 47 SMU 74, Northwestern St. 36 TCU 85, New Orleans 36 Texas A&M 88, Southern U. 47 FAR WEST Hawaii 61, N. Arizona 52 Idaho 64, UC Santa Barbara 42 Kentucky 68, Arizona St. 64, OT Montana St. 66, Nevada 53 St. John’s 85, UC Irvine 63 Stanford 65, Gonzaga 48 Wyoming 81, Chadron St. 53 TOURNAMENT Women’s Preseason NIT Quarterfinals DePaul 77, St. Bonaventure 54 South Florida 73, Drexel 58

Big 12 Women

Big 12 Overall W L W L TCU 0 0 2 0 Kansas 0 0 1 0 Baylor 0 0 1 0 Kansas State 0 0 1 0 Oklahoma 0 0 1 0 Oklahoma State 0 0 1 0 Texas Tech 0 0 1 0 Texas 0 0 1 0 West Virginia 0 0 1 0 Iowa State 0 0 1 1 Sunday’s Games Kansas 72, Texas Southern 65 Drake 74, Iowa State 70 TCU 85, New Orleans 36 Today’s Games Abilene Christian at Kansas State, 5:30 p.m. Coppin State at West Virginia, 6 p.m. North Texas at Oklahoma, 7 p.m. Southern Miss at Baylor, 7 p.m.

Kansas Women

Nov. 1 — Pittsburg State (exhibition), W 80-54 Nov. 8 — Emporia State (exhibition), W 68-57 Nov. 15 — Texas Southern, W 72-65 (1-0) Nov. 19 — Memphis, 7 p.m. Nov. 23 — at Arizona, 1 p.m. Nov. 27 — Cal State Fullerton at SMU Thanksgiving Classic, Dallas, TBA Nov. 28 — SMU/Northern Illinois at SMU Thanksgiving Classic, Dallas, TBA Dec. 2 — Creighton, 7 p.m. Dec. 6 — St. John’s, 2p.m. Dec. 10 — UMKC, 7 p.m. Dec. 13 — Navy, 2 p.m. Dec. 20 — Washington State, 7 p.m. Dec. 22 — Oral Roberts, 7 p.m. Dec. 30 — at Oklahoma, TBA Jan. 3 — West Virginia, TBA Jan. 6 — Baylor, TBA Jan. 9 — at Iowa State, TBA Jan. 13 — Texas, TBA Jan. 16 — at West Virginia, TBA Jan. 20 — Kansas State, TBA Jan. 24 — Oklahoma State, TBA Jan. 27 — at Texas, TBA Jan. 30 — at Texas Tech, TBA Feb. 2 — Iowa State, TBA Feb. 6 — at Baylor, TBA Feb. 13 — at Kansas State, TBA Feb. 17 — TCU, TBA Feb. 20 — Oklahoma, TBA Feb. 24 — at Oklahoma State, TBA Feb. 27 — Texas Tech, TBA Feb. 29 — at TCU, TBA March 4-7 — Big 12 tournament at Oklahoma City

PGA-OHL Classic at Mayakoba

Sunday at El Camaleon Golf Club Playa del Carmen, Mexico Purse: $6.2 million Yardage: 6,987; Par: 71 Fourth Round (a-amateur; 27 golfers did not finish the round) Keegan Bradley 67-71-68-66—272 Peter Malnati 68-71-67-67—273 Boo Weekley 67-70-69-67—273 Hunter Stewart 68-69-68-68—273 Charles Howell III 66-71-70-67—274 Jim Herman 69-67-70-68—274 Dawie van der Walt 66-74-64-70—274 Si Woo Kim 68-64-72-70—274 Jason Kokrak 68-67-68-71—274 Will Wilcox 69-66-68-71—274 D.J. Trahan 66-71-67-70—274 Bronson Burgoon 71-68-67-69—275 Roberto Castro 70-68-68-69—275 Cameron Beckman 67-71-68-69—275 Jon Curran 68-71-67-70—276 Ryan Blaum 73-65-69-69—276 Camilo Villegas 67-68-70-71—276 Sam Saunders 68-71-68-69—276 Smylie Kaufman 68-72-66-71—277 Kevin Streelman 69-67-70-71—277 Tim Clark 69-69-67-72—277 Jerry Kelly 68-69-71-69—277 Michael Thompson 66-68-70-73—277 Tim Wilkinson 69-70-69-69—277 Brian Harman 70-68-69-71—278 Jason Dufner 71-66-70-71—278 James Driscoll 70-68-68-72—278 Seung-Yul Noh 70-70-67-71—278 Rory Sabbatini 70-68-67-73—278 Martin Laird 70-70-68-70—278 Leaderboard SCORE THRU Russell Knox -19 12 Graeme McDowell -18 12 Jason Bohn -17 12 Scott Brown -15 14 Derek Fathauer -15 12 Fredrik Jacobson -13 13 Patrick Rodgers -13 15 Harold Varner III -13 13 Justin Leonard -13 13 Keegan Bradley -12 F Zac Blair -12 15 Brice Garnett -12 14 Spencer Levin -12 14 Johnson Wagner -12 13 Peter Malnati -11 F Boo Weekley -11 F Hunter Stewart -11 F a-Jon Rahm -11 15 Will Wilcox -11 17

LPGA Tour Lorena Ochoa Invitational

Sunday at Club de Golf Mexico Mexico City Purse: $1 million Yardage: 6,774; Par 72 Final (a-amateur) Inbee Park, $200,000 68-71-67-64—270 Carlota Ciganda, $103,449 72-69-69-63—273 Sei Young Kim, $75,045 73-66-70-66—275 So Yeon Ryu, $58,053 71-70-69-67—277 Sakura Yokomine, $46,726 72-70-69-68—279 Mariajo Uribe, $35,115 71-73-71-65—280 Caroline Masson, $35,115 73-71-70-66—280 Jaye Marie Green , $24,354 71-70-72-69—282 Suzann Pettersen, $24,354 69-71-73-69—282 Cristie Kerr, $24,354 74-69-69-70—282 Christina Kim, $24,354 73-66-73-70—282 Jennifer Song, $18,615 72-73-69-69—283 Minjee Lee, $18,615 69-69-75-70—283 Pernilla Lindberg, $18,615 71-70-71-71—283 Chella Choi, $16,425 73-71-71-70—285

AP Top 25

The Top 25 teams in The Associated Press college football poll, with firstplace votes in parentheses, records through Nov. 14, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote, and previous ranking: Record Pts Pv 1. Clemson (34) 10-0 1,496 1 2. Ohio St. (23) 10-0 1,460 2 3. Alabama (4) 9-1 1,424 3 4. Oklahoma St. 10-0 1,301 5 5. Notre Dame 9-1 1,286 6 6. Iowa 10-0 1,216 8 7. Oklahoma 9-1 1,182 12 8. Florida 9-1 1,055 11 9. Michigan St. 9-1 1,008 14 10. Baylor 8-1 946 4 11. TCU 9-1 857 13 12. North Carolina 9-1 791 17 13. Houston 10-0 790 16 14. Michigan 8-2 738 15 15. Stanford 8-2 668 7 16. Florida St. 8-2 559 19 17. LSU 7-2 549 9 18. Utah 8-2 514 10 19. Navy 8-1 465 22 20. Northwestern 8-2 397 24 21. Wisconsin 8-2 338 23 22. Southern Cal 7-3 201 NR 23. Oregon 7-3 170 NR 24. Washington St. 7-3 167 NR 25. Mississippi 7-3 44 NR Others receiving votes: Toledo 39, Arkansas 35, Memphis 32, Mississippi St. 25, UCLA 18, Pittsburgh 15, Temple 13, Georgia 8, Texas A&M 8, Bowling Green 4, W. Kentucky 4, Air Force 1, Arkansas St. 1.

NHL

Sunday’s Games N.Y. Rangers 4, Toronto 3 Chicago 4, Calgary 1 Today’s Games Arizona at N.Y. Islanders, 6 p.m. Anaheim at Carolina, 6 p.m. Vancouver at Montreal, 6:30 p.m. Detroit at Ottawa, 6:30 p.m. Tampa Bay at Florida, 6:30 p.m. Winnipeg at St. Louis, 7 p.m.

Celtics 100, Thunder 85 Oklahoma City — KU Men Nov. 4 — Pittsburg State (exhibiMarcus Smart scored a tion), W 89-66 Barclays ATP World Tour career-high 26 points to Nov. 10 — Fort Hays State (exhibiFinals help Boston beat Oklation), W 95-59 Sunday at O2 Arena Nov. 13 — Northern Colorado, W homa City. London 109-72 (1-0) Purse: $7 million Isaiah Thomas scored Nov. 17 — Michigan State at Chicago Surface: Hard-Indoor United Center, 9 p.m. 20 points, Avery Bradley Round Robin Nov. 23 — Chaminade at Maui Singles had 14, and Jared SullInvitational, 8 p.m. Stan Smith Group Nov. 24 — UCLA or UNLV at Maui inger added eight points Novak Djokovic (1) def. Kei Nishikori Invitational, 9 p.m. or 3:30 p.m. and 15 rebounds to help (8), 6-1, 6-1. Nov. 25 — TBA at Maui Invitational, Roger Federer (3) def. Tomas TBA the Celtics win their third Berdych (6), 6-4, 6-2. Dec. 1 — Loyola (Md.), 7 p.m. in four games. Boston Lakers 97, Pistons 85 Standings: Djokovic 1-0 (sets 2-0), Dec. 5 — Harvard, 2:15 p.m. Federer 1-0 (2-0), Berdych 0-1 (0-2), Los Angeles — Kobe shot 48 percent and outDec. 9 — Holy Cross, 7 p.m. Nishikori 0-1 (0-2). Dec. 12 — Oregon State at Kansas rebounded the Thunder Bryant had 17 points, eight City Doubles Shootout, Sprint Center, 7 p.m. Ashe/Smith Group rebounds and nine assists 47-34. Dec. 19 — Montana, 1 p.m. Jamie Murray, Britain, and John Dec. 22 — at San Diego State, 10 p.m. to help the Los Angeles Peers (4) def. Simone Bolelli and Fabio BOSTON (100) Dec. 29 — UC Irvine, 8 p.m. Fognini (5), 7-6 (5), 3-6, 11-9. Crowder 4-9 1-1 10, Johnson 3-5 1-2 Lakers beat Detroit for Jan. 2 — Baylor, 3 p.m. Rohan Bopanna and Florin Mergea 7, Sullinger 3-12 2-3 8, Thomas 8-17 1-1 their second win and to Jan. 4 — Oklahoma, 8 p.m. (8) def. Bob and Mike Bryan (1), 6-4, 20, Smart 9-14 5-8 26, Bradley 6-12 1-3 Jan. 9 — at Texas Tech, 8 p.m. 6-3. 14, Olynyk 3-5 0-0 7, Turner 1-5 0-0 2, avoid the worst 10-game Jan. 12 — at West Virginia, 6 p.m. High School Playoffs Standings: Bopanna-Mergea 1-0 Jerebko 1-1 0-0 2, Lee 1-2 2-2 4. Totals start in franchise history. Jan. 16 — TCU, 1 p.m. CLASS 6A (2-0), Murray-Peers 1-0 (2-1), Bolelli39-82 13-20 100. Jan. 19 — at Oklahoma State, 6 p.m. Nov. 20 Sub-State Jordan Clarkson scored Fognini 0-1 (1-2), Bryan-Bryan 0-1 OKLAHOMA CITY (85) Jan. 23 — Texas, 1 p.m. Blue Valley (9-2) vs. Olathe North (0-2). Roberson 3-5 0-0 7, Ibaka 8-16 0-0 17 points, and Los AngeJan. 25 —at Iowa State, 8 p.m. (10-1), 7 p.m. at Blue Valley 16, Adams 0-0 6-8 6, Westbrook 5-20 Jan. 30 — Kentucky in Big 12/SEC Free State (8-3) vs. Derby (10-1), 7 15-17 27, Morrow 0-4 0-0 0, Waiters les snapped a four-game Challenge, Allen Fieldhouse, TBA p.m. at Derby 3-11 0-0 7, Augustin 1-5 0-0 2, Singler skid in its return from a Feb. 3 — Kansas State, 8 p.m. Nov. 28 State • 1 p.m. at Emporia State Fed Cup WORLD GROUP 3-5 0-0 8, Collison 1-3 2-2 4, Kanter 4-7 long East Coast trip. The Feb. 6 — at TCU, 11 a.m. East vs. West sub-state winners Final 0-2 8, McGary 0-0 0-0 0, Payne 0-1 0-0 0. Feb. 9 — West Virginia, 6 p.m. Lakers are only 2-8, but Czech Republic, 3, Russia 2 Totals 28-77 23-29 85. Feb. 13 — at Oklahoma, 1 p.m. Kansas At O2 Arena Boston 24 21 27 28—100 Feb. 15 — Oklahoma State, 8 p.m. that’s one game better Sept. 5 — South Dakota State, L Prague Oklahoma City 24 28 22 11— 85 Feb. 20 — at Kansas State, 5 p.m. 38-41 (0-1) than last season’s Lakers. Surface: Hard-Indoor 3-Point Goals-Boston 9-23 (Smart 3-5, Feb. 23 —at Baylor, 7 p.m. Sept. 12 — Memphis, L 23-55 (0-2) Singles Thomas 3-9, Olynyk 1-1, Bradley 1-2, They finished with the Feb. 27 — Texas Tech, 11 a.m. or 1 p.m. Sept. 26 — at Rutgers, L 14-27 (0-3) Petra Kvitova def. Anastasia Crowder 1-3, Sullinger 0-3), Oklahoma Feb. 29 — at Texas, 8 p.m. worst record in the franOct. 3 — at Iowa State, L 13-38 (0-4, Pavlyuchenkova, 2-6, 6-1, 6-1. City 6-25 (Singler 2-4, Westbrook 2-10, March 5 — Iowa State, TBA 0-1) Maria Sharapova def. Karolina Roberson 1-2, Waiters 1-2, Payne 0-1, chise’s history. March 9-12 — Big 12 tournament at Oct. 10 — Baylor, L 7-66 (0-5, 0-2) Ibaka 0-1, Augustin 0-2, Morrow 0-3). Fouled Out-Olynyk. Rebounds-Boston 58 (Sullinger 15), Oklahoma City 47 (Ibaka 10). Assists-Boston 25 (Thomas 8), Oklahoma City 18 (Westbrook 5). Total Fouls-Boston 26, Oklahoma City 20. Technicals-Smart, Waiters, Westbrook. A-18,203 (18,203).

Kings 107, Raptors 101 Sacramento, Calif. — DeMarcus Cousins scored 10 of his 36 points in the fourth quarter and grabbed 10 rebounds to lead Sacramento to its third straight win, beating Toronto. Rudy Gay had 26 points, and Omri Casspi added 14 for Sacramento, which won despite committing 20 turnovers that led to 20 points. Rajon

Kansas City, Mo.

DETROIT (85) Morris 3-12 1-3 7, Ilyasova 2-10 1-2 6, Drummond 8-18 1-2 17, Jackson 4-11 0-0 9, Caldwell-Pope 4-15 0-1 10, Dinwiddie 6-9 4-5 17, Tolliver 1-6 0-0 3, Bullock 1-4 0-0 3, Baynes 4-5 1-2 9, Johnson 2-6 0-0 4. Totals 35-96 8-15 85. L.A. LAKERS (97) Bryant 6-19 4-4 17, Randle 3-8 2-3 8, Hibbert 3-6 6-8 12, Russell 3-9 2-2 9, Clarkson 5-10 5-8 17, World Peace 0-3 5-7 5, Williams 1-4 2-4 4, Young 4-6 3-3 13, Bass 3-5 0-0 6, Nance Jr. 3-5 0-0 6. Totals 31-75 29-39 97. Detroit 18 26 22 19—85 L.A. Lakers 21 27 18 31—97 3-Point Goals-Detroit 7-27 (CaldwellPope 2-5, Bullock 1-1, Dinwiddie 1-3, Ilyasova 1-4, Jackson 1-4, Tolliver 1-5, Johnson 0-2, Morris 0-3), L.A. Lakers 6-19 (Young 2-2, Clarkson 2-4, Bryant 1-4, Russell 1-6, Williams 0-1, World Peace 0-2). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-Detroit 58 (Drummond 17), L.A. Lakers 64 (Bryant, Randle 8). Assists-Detroit 16 (Dinwiddie 4), L.A. Lakers 24 (Bryant 9). Total FoulsDetroit 25, L.A. Lakers 19. TechnicalsDrummond. A-18,997 (18,997).

College Women

EAST Army 67, Quinnipiac 57 Boston College 55, Maine 48 Navy 50, St. Peter’s 39 Penn St. 75, Fordham 59 Princeton 94, Duquesne 66 UMass 74, Holy Cross 60 SOUTH Belmont 63, UAB 62 California 75, Louisville 71 Charlotte 94, Robert Morris 73 Chattanooga 60, Butler 49 Coastal Carolina 63, Clemson 47 Duke 78, Winthrop 50 Georgia 76, Stetson 55 Georgia Tech 89, St. Francis Brooklyn 51 James Madison 88, Longwood 30 LSU 61, Louisiana-Monroe 54, OT Marshall 92, Brescia 40 Memphis 80, E. Illinois 49 Miami 55, Bethune-Cookman 47 Murray St. 76, Alabama A&M 59 NC State 89, High Point 48 Old Dominion 71, Wagner 57 Oregon 79, North Carolina 77 Richmond 81, E. Kentucky 62

Oct. 17 — Texas Tech, L 20-30 (0-6, 0-3) Oct. 24 — at Oklahoma St., L 10-58 (0-7, 0-4) Oct. 31 — Oklahoma, L 7-62 (0-8, 0-5) Nov. 7 — at Texas, L 20-59 (0-9, 0-6) Nov. 14 — at TCU, L 23-17 (0-10, 0-7) Nov. 21 — West Virginia, 11 a.m. Nov. 28 — Kansas State, TBA

Pliskova, 6-3, 6-4. Reverse Singles Maria Sharapova def. Petra Kvitova, 3-6, 6-4, 6-2. Karolina Pliskova def. Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova, 6-3, 6-4. Doubles Karolina Pliskova and Barbora Strycova def. Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova and Elena Vesnina, 4-6, 6-3, 6-2.

NAIA Playoffs

First Round Saturday, Nov. 21 Saint Xavier (Ill.) (7-3) at Morningside (Iowa) (10-1), 1 p.m. Point (Ga.) (8-2) at Baker (10-1), Noon Lindsey Wilson (Ky.) (8-2) at Grand View (Iowa) (10-1), Noon Reinhardt (Ga.) (9-1) at Saint Francis (Ind.) (9-0), 11 a.m. Dickinson State (N.D.) (8-2) at Montana Tech (9-1), Noon Campbellsville (Ky.) (8-2) at Marian (Ind.) (8-2), Noon Kansas Wesleyan (10-1) at Southern Oregon (8-2), 6 p.m. Doane (Neb.) (9-1) at Tabor (10-1), 1 p.m.

Big 12

Big 12 Overall W L W L Texas 12 1 22 2 Kansas 11 2 23 2 Iowa State 9 4 16 8 Kansas State 8 4 16 8 TCU 7 6 17 8 Baylor 4 9 16 11 Oklahoma 3 9 9 15 Texas Tech 3 10 14 13 West Virginia 0 12 5 20 Wednesday, Nov. 18 Iowa State at Kansas State, 7 p.m. Baylor at Texas, 7 p.m. Texas Tech at TCU, 7 p.m.

Sa T K I K


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www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2014 CHEVROLET CAMARO

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

GMC 2009 Acadia SLT 1 owner, leather heated seats, sunroof, room for 7, Bose sound. Stk#408801

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Leather, Convertible

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

GMC SUVs

Stk#115T599A

Thicker line? Bolder heading? Color background or Logo? Ask how to get these features in your ad TODAY!!

Ford Trucks

2013 FORD F-150 FX4 - LOADED

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

Chevrolet Trucks

Ford Trucks

Call Coop at

888-631-6458 2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047 JackEllenaHonda.com


L AWRENCE J OURNAL -W ORLD

Monday, November 16, 2015

CARS TO PLACE AN AD: Honda Cars

Jeep

2013 Honda Accord EX

SPECIAL! 10 LINES & PHOTO 7 DAYS $19.95 | 28 DAYS $49.95 Doesn’t sell in 28 days? FREE RENEWAL!

785.832.2222 Kia Crossovers

2014 JEEP CHEROKEE SPORT

Only $13,997

Pontiac Cars

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Luxury and Power! Great Space, 77K miles, Local Ower, Automatic, Safe Vehicle, Fully Inspected and Well Maintained. Stk# F368B

Only $15,990 Call Coop at

888-631-6458 2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047

Call Coop at

888-631-6458

Stk#215T628

Pontiac 2003 Grand Am GT, one owner, sunroof, spoiler, alloy wheels, power equipment, Stk#311522

$11,837

Only $5,500

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Stk# 113L909

$14,495 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

Only $9,250 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Scion

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Lincoln Cars

7 Passenger, Power Sliding Doors, 76K miles, Local Owner, Awesome Condition, Well Maintained. Stk# G040A

Only $20,490

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

Call Coop at

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

888-631-6458

Toyota Trucks

2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047 JackEllenaHonda.com

Volkswagen Cars

2010 PONTIAC G6 Stk#216B007A

$8,995

Jeep 2006 Grand Cherokee Laredo

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

Leather, power equipment, alloy wheels. Stk #38866A2 Only $11,555 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

2013 LINCOLN MKZ AWD

2013 NISSAN ALTIMA 2.5 S

Dale Willey Automotive 2840 Iowa Street (785) 843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

AWD & Only 24,000 Miles! Stk#115L769B

$19,995

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

FWD, 4 cyl, automatic, power equipment, great gas mileage and room. Stk#473362

2010 TOYOTA TUNDRA

Only $8,977

4X4, 5.7 V-8, Hard to Find Long Bed!

Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Stk#1PL1977

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Stk#PL1951

$26,997

Scion 2011 XB

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

Hard To Find Coupe!

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

AWD, Reduced! Coupe, Sporty & Fun to drive, V6, leather heated seats, sunroof, alloy wheels, and more! Stk#32726B2

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

Honda Crossovers

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

2008 TOYOTA HIGHLANDER SPORT

Pontiac 2007 G6 GT

Nissan Cars

JackEllenaHonda.com

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

Toyota Vans

Toyota SUVs

JackEllenaHonda.com

2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047

2009 HONDA CR-V EX-L

Pontiac Cars

2013 Toyota Sienna LE

2007 MERCEDES BENZ CLK 350

Stk#PL1935

Fully Loaded, 57K miles, Leather, Moonroof, Great Deal, Fully Inspected, Awesome Condition, Well Maintained. Stk# F670A

Mercedes-Benz

classiďŹ eds@ljworld.com

2012 Kia Sorento LX

$17,954

| 7C

$21,995

Stk#PL2003

Turbocharged!

Toyota Cars

$15,232 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

2012 VOLKSWAGEN BEETLE 2.0 Tsi

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

888-631-6458 2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047 JackEllenaHonda.com

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

Stk#216M062

$15,495 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

2011 JEEP GRAND CHREOKEE LAREDO

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2012 TOYOTA CAMRY HYBRID XLE

4x4

Motorcycle-ATV

Luxury and Fuel Efficiency Stk#2P1794

Honda SUVs

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

2010 Honda CR-V 4WD

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

TECHNOLOGY PKG Stk#PL1921

2009 NISSAN 370Z BASE

$28,995

Absolutely Perfect!

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

Stk#115C905

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Only $14,995 Call Coop at

888-631-6458 2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047 JackEllenaHonda.com

2011 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE OVERLAND

Pontiac 2009 Vibe

2013 LINCOLN MKZ

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

4WD Just in time for winter, Moonroof, 115K miles, Local Owner, Great Value Stk# F784A

We Buy all Domestic cars, trucks, and suvs. Call Scott 785-727-7151

$3,000 Below NADA! Stk#115T850 23rd & Alabama - 2829 Iowa

$23,494

LairdNollerLawrence.com

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

Mazda Cars

$21,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Certified Pre-Owned, 4WD, 78K miles, 7 year/100K mile warranty, 8 Passenger, 182-pt. Inspection. Stk# F053A

Only $23,995

2015 KIA RIO Only 7,500 Miles! Stk#14T1034B

$11,995 Call Coop at

888-631-6458 2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047 JackEllenaHonda.com

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

2012 Hyundai Elantra Limited

7 Days - $19.95

2012 Nissan Maxima 3.5 S

Stk#PL2006

Nice Car, Well Maintained, 91K miles, Great Condition, Loaded, One Owner Stk# F591A

$14,495

Only $14,995

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

888-631-6458

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

JackEllenaHonda.com

Call Coop at

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Nissan Crossovers Mazda Crossovers

2013 NISSAN JUKE SV

TRANSPORTATION SPECIAL!

Hard to Find, Low Miles! Stk# 115T983A

Stk#PL1930

10 LINES & PHOTO:

$18,995

$15,995

Only $13,495

7 DAYS $19.95 28 DAYS $49.95

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

888-631-6458 2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047 JackEllenaHonda.com

ADVERTISE TODAY! CALL 832-2222 or email classifieds@ljworld.com

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

785-542-2232 Harley Davidson 2015 Road Glide 105 cc’s, 2,500 miles with extended service plan. $20,000 (785)218-1568 (913)583-1800

NOTICES TO PLACE AN AD:

785.832.2222

classiďŹ eds@ljworld.com

CNA/CMA CLASSES! Lawrence, KS CNA DAY CLASSES Nov 2 - Nov 24 8 G T * 1? Nov 30- Dec 22 8 G T * 1? Jan 4 - Jan 17 8 G T * # CNA EVENING CLASSES LAWRENCE KS Nov 2 - Nov 25 G G T 1 1? # CMA DAY CLASSES LAWRENCE KS Dec 1 -Dec 23 8 G T * 4 # CNA REFRESHER/CMA UPDATE LAWRENCE Nov 6/7 Dec 4/5,18/19 CALL NOW- 785.331.2025 trinitycareerinstitute.com

MAKE OR SELL GREAT GIFTS OR HOLIDAY DECOR? HOLDING A HOLIDAY EVENT? PROVIDE A HOLIDAY OR WINTER SERVICE? ——————————————————-

Advertise in Our Special

Holiday Section! Liner & Display Ads Available

785-832-2222 Classifieds@LJWorld.com

PUBLIC NOTICES TO PLACE AN AD:

2014 MAZDA CX-5 SPORT

Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

Excellent condition, 50,XXX miles, good tires, clean title, great bike. $2800 OBO

2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047

Loaded, Navigation, Leather, Moonroof, Alloy Wheels, 61K miles, Thousands less than a Honda. Stk# G077A

Call Coop at

Only $9,650 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

Special Notices

2009 Kia Rio 2009 Kia Rio Sedan LX, 1.6 liter. Silver, AT, A/C, 27 mpg city/33 mpg hiway, front & side airbags, new front tires, 46,000 mi., good condition: $6000 firm. No personal checks accepted, cash or confirmed money orders only. Call 785-979-1223.

One owner, V6, automatic, power seat, alloy wheels, very affordable Stk #536752

Find A Buyer Here!

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

Hyundai Cars

Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Kia Cars

Hatchback

Toyota 2004 Highlander

TRAILER?

785-832-2222

2013 MAZDA 3i TOURING

Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

$18,979

SELLING A

28 Days - $49.95

23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151

Fwd, 4 cyl, great gas mileage, alloy wheels, power equipment, cruise control. Stk#352451 Only $9,714

www.lairdnollerlawrence.com

2012 Honda Pilot EX 4WD

1992 Honda Shadow

Stk# 1PL1991

$22,107

AWD

785.832.2222

(First published in the To the State of Kansas and Lawrence Daily Journal- all persons concerned: World November 2, 2015) You are hereby notified IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF that on the 29th day of OcDOUGLAS COUNTY, tober, 2015, Katherine KANSAS Sandhaus, daughter of the deceased and named exIn the Matter of the ecutor of Robert Broun’s Estate of will, filed a Petition reRonald Broun, questing that the estate of Deceased the deceased, who died DOD: 10/20/2015 testate on the 20th day of October, 2015, be inforKatherine Sandhaus, mally administered and Petitioner that the petitioner be appointed as the Case No. 2015PR171 Designee/Executor to carry out the orders of the (Div. I REAL ESTATE Court, and the terms of the INVOLVED) Will under informal administration, and to serve Pursuant to K.S.A. without bond. Chapter 59 You are required to file NOTICE OF HEARING AND your written defenses NOTICE TO CREDITORS thereto on or before the 24th day of November,

classiďŹ eds@ljworld.com

2015, at 9:30 a.m. on said day, in said Court, in the city of Lawrence, Kansas (District Court Division I, Douglas County Courthouse, 111 E 11th Street, Lawrence, KS 66044), should you fail, judgment and decree will be entered in due course upon the Petition. All creditors must exhibit their demands, which if not made within the running of the non-claim statute, shall be forever barred. You are further advised that the Petitioner in this matter has requested administration pursuant to the Kansas Informal Administration Act, and the grant of such request will result in the Court not supervising administration of the estate and further, no notice of any action of

the Designee/ Executor or other proceedings in the administration will be given unless otherwise ordered by the Court. Should written objections to an informal administration be filed with the Court, the Court may order simplified or supervised administration. /S/ Katherine Sandhaus, Petitioner /S/ John M. Solbach #09441 700 Massachusetts Street, Ste. 203 Lawrence, KS 66044 (785) 841-3881 Attorney for the Petitioner ________

PUBLIC NOTICES CONTINUED ON 8C


8C

|

Monday, November 16, 2015

.

L awrence J ournal -W orld

JOBS Mega-Section!

PLACE YOUR AD:

785.832.2222

LOOK HERE on Thanksgiving Day!

classifieds@ljworld.com

A P P LY N O W

1096 AREA JOB OPENINGS! CITY OF LAWRENCE ............................ 37

HOME INSTEAD ................................. 25

MV TRANSPORTATION ......................... 25

COTTONWOOD................................... 12

KU: FACULTY/ACADEMIC/LECTURERS .. 105

USA 800 ........................................ 100

ENGINEERED AIR .................................8

KU: STAFF OPENINGS ......................... 74

VALEO ............................................. 20

FEDEX ........................................... 100

KU: STUDENT OPENINGS .................. 130

WESTAFF .......................................... 25

FOCUS WORKFORCES ....................... 200

LAWRENCE MEMORIAL HOSPITAL .......... 12

GENERAL DYNAMICS (GDIT) ............... 175

MISCELLANEOUS ............................... 48

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.

A GREAT part-time job! Now Hiring School Bus Drivers & Monitors for USD497

INTERVIEWING DECEMBER GRADUATES PART-TIME & FULL-TIME PSYCHOTHERAPIST, OUTPATIENT SERVICES & CRISIS SERVICE POSITIONS

Southeast Kansas Mental Health Center, a community mental health center, serving Allen, Anderson, Bourbon, Linn, Neosho, and Woodson Counties.

There’s no safer way for our children to get to school than the yellow school bus. • $11.50/hour for drivers. $9/hour for Monitors. • Guaranteed 4 hours/school day. • Bring your children to work with you! • Flexible schedule.

• $1,000 Sign on bonus for Drivers**

• Free CDL Training. • We pay for your DOT Physical and licensing.** • Insurance and 401.(k) available

Offices located in Iola, Humboldt, Garnett, Fort Scott, Pleasanton, Chanute, and Yates Center. Immediate openings in Garnett, Chanute, and Iola for qualified mental health professionals. Outpatient therapy and crisis intervention for individual adults and children, couples, and families. Requires Kansas license or temporary license. Social Workers, Psychologists, Professional Counselors, Marriage and Family Therapists, etc. Moving expense assistance. Sign-up bonus for new hire college graduates. All offices are National Health Service Corp tuition/loan repayment sites for those who qualify. Full time with benefits. EEO/AA

Send Resumes to: Robert F. Chase, Executive Director, Southeast Kansas Mental Health Center, PO Box 807, Iola, KS, 66749. 620/365-8641 rchase@sekmhc.org and bstanley@sekmhc.org

Drivers must be 21 years of age or older and be able to pass a drug screen, background check and DOT physical. **Terms and conditions apply – ask at your interview

Drivers Apply Online: apply.firstgroupcareers.com Monitors apply in person at 1548 East 23rd, Suite B in Lawrence 785-841-3594

First Student is an equal opportunity employer.

Think Fast. Think FedEx Ground.

DriversTransportation

Drivers

Interested in a fast-paced job with career advancement opportunities? Join the FedEx Ground team as a part-time package handler.

Manufacturing/Production 1st Shift (De Soto KS)

Package Handlers - $10.70-$11.70/hr. to start DAY SHIFT: Mon-Fri 2:30pm-7:30pm

Qualifications Must be at least 18 years of age Must be out of high school Must be able to load, unload and sort packages, as well as perform other related duties

TWILIGHT SHIFT:

Mon-Fri, 6:30pm-11:30pm OVERNIGHT SHIFT:

Tues-Sat, Midnight-3am SUNRISE SHIFT: Tues-Sat, 4:30am-7:30am

All interested candidates must attend a sort observation at our facility prior to applying for the position.

PRELOAD SHIFT: Tues-Sat, 2am-7am *Times are approximate and will vary.

To schedule a sort observation, go to www.WatchASort.com 8000 Cole Parkway, Shawnee, KS 66227

Starting at $11.00 hr + up! Full-time Jobs!! (Not Temporary)

Ground

1st shift - 7:00 to 3:30 Overtime possible. Health Benefits Medical, Dental, Vision. Able to handle physical work, may include heavy lifting of at least 50 pounds Apply in person. 32050 W. 83rd Street. DeSoto, Kansas 66018 At 83rd and Kill Creek Rd. EOE Se habla Espanol

AdministrativeProfessional

PUBLIC NOTICES 785.832.2222

that a Petition has been filed in the Douglas County Court by Leah Katrina Sotelo. You are hereby required to answer the Peti(First published in the tion on or before DecemLawrence Daily Journal- ber 28, 2015, in the Court at Lawrence, Kansas. A hearWorld November 16, 2015) ing on the matter is scheduled for December 29, IN THE DISTRICT COURT 2015. If you fail to answer, OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, judgment and decree will KANSAS be entered in due course DIVISION 4 upon the petition. Leah Katrina Sotelo, In the Matter of the PETITIONER Marriage of

PUBLIC NOTICES CONTINUED FROM 7C

LEAH KATRINA SOTELO, Petitioner, and FABRICIO ALEJANDRO SOTELO, Respondent. Case No. 2015-DM-663 NOTICE OF SUIT THE STATE OF KANSAS TO FABRICIO ALEJANDRO SOTELO, AND ALL OTHER PERSONS WHO ARE OR MAY BE CONCERNED. You

are

hereby

notified

Paul Klepper Kansas Legal Services 712 S Kansas Ave Ste 201 Topeka KS 66603 Attorneys for Petitioner ________

vs.

Case No. 15CV397 Court No. 5

any defendants that are existing, dissolved or dormant corporations; the unknown executors, administrators, devisees, trustees, creditors, successors and assigns of any defendants that are or were partners or in partnership; and the unknown guardians, conservators and trustees of any defendants that are minors or are under any legal disability and all other person who are or may be concerned:

Title to Real Estate Involved

YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that a Petition for MortPursuant to K.S.A. §60 gage Foreclosure has been filed in the District Court of NOTICE OF SUIT Douglas County, Kansas by CitiMortgage, Inc., praying STATE OF KANSAS to the for foreclosure of certain (First published in the above named Defendants real property legally deLawrence Daily Journaland The Unknown Heirs, scribed as follows: World November 16, 2015) executors, devisees, trustees, creditors, and as- LOT 16, BRAE BURN ADDIIN THE DISTRICT COURT signs of any deceased de- TION, A SUBDIVISION IN OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, fendants; the unknown KANSAS spouses of any defendCIVIL DEPARTMENT ants; the unknown officers, successors, trustees, CitiMortgage, Inc. creditors and assigns of Plaintiff,

PUBLIC NOTICE CONTINUED ON 9C

Customer Service

10 Hard Workers needed NOW! $10 hr to train. Quickly earn $12-$15 hr Weekly pay checks. Paid Vacations No Weekends

classifieds@ljworld.com

Bobick Sarraf aka Bobick M.E. Sarraf, Roxana Sarraf, Jane Doe, John Doe, Saint Luke’s Hospital of Kansas City, US Bank National Association sbm US Bank National Association ND, and WAK2012, LLC, et al., Defendants

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

Welders - Entry Level Production Assembly Sheet Metal Fabricator Electrical Harness Assembly

FedEx Ground is an equal opportunity / affirmative action employer (Minorities/Females/Disability/Veterans) committed to a diverse workforce.

TO PLACE AN AD:

Healthcare

Director of Strategic Growth Seeking a dynamic individual to join a global brand in the Lawrence and KC market. Candidates should have a minimum of 2 years of successful operational experience. This individual will have responsibility to recruit and expand the business of the agents in the offices. Resumes to:

resume@lawrencemax.com

by 11/26/15

CNA & CMA Days/Eves. Enroll Now Lawrence + Ottawa 620-432-0386 trhine@neosho.edu

Call today! 785-841-9999

FT with benefits, PTO, sick leave, competitive pay. Must be CPR certified. Excellent opportunity.

General

HIRING IMMEDIATELY! Drive for KU on Wheels or Lawrence Transit System. Flexible part-time schedules, 80% company paid employee health insurance for full time. Career opportunities. $11.50/hr after paid training. Must be 21+ w. good driving record. Apply online: lawrencetransit.org/ employment Or come to: MV Transportation, Inc. 1260 Timberedge Road Lawrence, KS. EOE

Healthcare

RN/LPN

Breakfast Attendant Join our morning team! Ability to multi task and deliver great customer service with a smile! Apply in person: 3411 S. Iowa Lawrence, KS

Family Medicine and Urgent Care of Basehor LPN or MA

Wellsville Retirement Community has an opening for a Charge Nurse in our CountryView Neighborhood. 30 residents and a GREAT staff. Work 36 hrs. paid for 40. 6a - 6a Fri-Sun. Come join a team committed to creating a new culture for long term care. We are family owned & operated. Apply online at www.wellsvillerc.com or stop by 304 W. 7th

Apply in person or Fax resume to: 913-774-3366 or Email: hr@jcmhospital.org www.fwhuston.com 408 Delaware Winchester, KS 66097

Interview TIP #1 Learn a few things about the company before you interview. Decisions Determine Destiny

Hotel-Restaurant

Sous Chef (Ottawa, KS) Corporate dining environment. Evening & Weekend availability and supervisory experience required. $14-$15/hr & benefits. Fwd resume to eaglewingcafe@gmail. com or call (785) 760-3560

Part-Time

Custodian The Lawrence Arts Center seeks a part time Custodian for the weekend shift. Hours vary. Prior experience preferred. Send resume by November 16, 2015 to 940 New Hampshire, Lawrence KS 66044 or business@lawrence artscenter.org

CONTACT PETER TO ADVERTISE! 785.832.7119 | PSTEIMLE@LJWORLD.COM


L awrence J ournal -W orld

Monday, November 16, 2015

| 9C

MERCHANDISE PETS

RENTALS REAL ESTATE

TO PLACE AN AD:

TO PLACE AN AD:

AUCTIONS Auction Calendar 2 Online Auctions NOW Preview for both auctions: Monday, Nov. 16, Noon-4 Monticello Auction Ctr, 4795 Frisbie Rd. Shawnee, KS Auction 1: Electrical Surplus Auction 2: Farm Toys, & Train Collection from a collector. See web for pics and full list www.lindsayauctions.com Lindsay Auction Svc. 913.441.1557

785.832.2222

Auction Calendar REAL ESTATE AUCTION SAT., NOV. 21, @ 1 PM 2602 LOUISIANA LAWRENCE, KS OPEN HOUSE: Nov. 12, 4:30-7:00 PM 1282 sq ft; ranch style. 3 BR; 1.5 BA. Fireplace, Basement. EDGECOMB AUCTIONS: 785-594-3507 or 785-766-6074 ART HANCOCK-BROKER 913-207-4231 www.kansasauctions.net/edgecomb

www.edgecombauctions.com

MERCHANDISE

 1 DAY ONLY TAG SALE!  2921 Westdale Ct Lawrence, KS Saturday, NOV. 21, 9am-3pm Outstanding Antiques! Beautiful Quality! Too many to list, DO NOT MISS! D & L Auctions Lawrence, KS 785-766-5630

Antiques

ROOFING AUCTION:

REAL ESTATE AUCTION Sat., Nov. 21 at 1:30 pm Osage City Senior Center 605 Market St. Osage City, KS 359 Acres, near Melvern Lake,Offered in 6 Tracts. More info & Viewing: Cline Realty & Auction, John E. Cline, Broker 785-889-4775 mcclivestock.com/clinerealty

Vintage Large Little Tikes Cash Only. 785-838-9879 County Kitchen set. Comes with tons of food & Music-Stereo dishes, etc. Bought for $150 w/out anything. Selling all for $80. Debbie 785-843-7759.

PIANOS

2 Diaper Champs. Like New. $35-$45 retail. $20 Debbie each, OBO. 785-843-7759.

Building Materials

• H.L. Phillips upright $650 •Baldwin Spinet - $550 • Cable Nelson or Kimball Spinet - $500 • Gulbranson Spinet - $450 Prices include tuning & delivery

785-832-9906

Firewood-Stoves

PERSONAL PROPERTY AUCTION

www.edgecombauctions.com

Furniture

2 Single Steel Frames with mattress. Good Condition. Little Tikes Vintage Work2 for $60. shop. Comes with drawers, original tools, nuts 2 Bed side tables with and bolts, phone and tons drawer, natural wood finof extra tools. $40. Debbie ish. 2 for $30. 785-843-7759.

Red concrete pavers The following red concrete pavers are FREE if you pick them up: 48 SF (200) 4”x8”x2” paving bricks. 17 SF (10) 16”x16”x2’ pavers. 24 SF (28) 16”X8”x2” pavers FREE 785-312-4840

Saturday, Nov. 21, 9:30am 6840 SE Johnston Topeka, KS 66619 Supplies, Equipment, Materials- Must see Photos & list online! www.RjsAuctionService.com or call 785-224-4492

www.kansasauctions.net/edgecomb

Baby & Children Items

For Sale—-Steel Door 79”x32” White—Excellent Cond. $15.00 Call 785-856-0858

JB TURNER & SONS

SATURDAY, NOV 21, @ 10 AM, REAL ESTATE SELLS @ 1 PM 2602 LOUISIANA LAWRENCE, KS APPLIANCES & FURNITURE, ANTIQUES & COLLECTIBLES, TOOLS & MISC. EDGECOMB AUCTIONS 785-594-3507 | 785-766-6074 See web for pics & more:

classifieds@ljworld.com

Baby & Children Items

Technics, sx-PX series, Digital Piano....... This Full Size Electric Piano with Stool has a lot of features to make a wide range of sounds. One of the pedals is not working, but otherwise works great and just looking for a new home. $500.00 obo 785-304-9938

Sports-Fitness Equipment

Franklin wood stove in great condition. Heavy cast iron. $400 OBO. 785-841-2259

Fisher-Price tool work bench. Comes with all original tools, nails, & Furniture bolts. Tons of extras. $40. Fisher-Price Vintage Little Weslo Treadmill in very wall People City Skyway w/out Scandinavian unit good condition with hand cars & people. Good for Great storage. Teak wood weights Folds up for storhotwheel use. $30. Debbie $75 785-841-3945, leave age. $95 785-841-2026 785-843-7759. msg

PUBLIC NOTICES TO PLACE AN AD:

785.832.2222

#23536 cdoornink@msfirm.com 8900 Indian Creek Parkway, Suite 180 Overland Park, KS 66210 THE CITY OF LAWRENCE, (913) 339-9132 DOUGLAS COUNTY, KAN- (913) 339-9045 (fax) SAS. Tax ID No. U15753Q Commonly known as 2209 By: /s/ Tiffany T. Frazier Kallarney Ct., Lawrence, KS Tiffany T. Frazier, 66047 (“the Property”) #26544 tfrazier@msfirm.com MS170132 Garrett M. Gasper, for a judgment against de- #25628 fendants and any other in- ggasper@msfirm.com terested parties and, un- Aaron M. Schuckman, less otherwise served by #22251 personal or mail service of aschuckman@msfirm.com summons, the time in 612 Spirit Dr. which you have to plead to St. Louis, MO 63005 the Petition for Foreclo- (636) 537-0110 sure in the District Court of (636) 537-0067 (fax) Douglas County Kansas will expire on December ATTORNEYS FOR PLAINTIFF 28, 2015. If you fail to plead, judgment and de- 170132.346688 KJFC cree will be entered in due course upon the request of MILLSAP & SINGER, LLC IS ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT plaintiff. A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL MILLSAP & SINGER, LLC BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. By: _______ Chad R. Doornink,

PUBLIC NOTICE CONTINUED FROM 8C

classifieds@ljworld.com

(First published in the Lawrence Daily JournalWorld November 9, 2015) Shawn Scharenborg, KS # 24542 Michael Rupard, KS # 26954 Dustin Stiles, KS # 25152 Kozeny & McCubbin, L.C. (St. Louis Office) 12400 Olive Blvd., Suite 555 St. Louis, MO 63141 (314) 991-0255 (314) 567-8006 K&M File Code:HEAVIBOA IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS THE BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON FKA THE BANK OF NEW YORK AS SUCCESSOR INDENTURE TRUSTEE TO JPMORGAN CHASE BANK, N.A., AS INDENTURE TRUSTEE FOR THE CWABS REVOLVING HOME EQUITY LOAN TRUST, SERIES 2004-K, Plaintiff,

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

vs. Craig J. Heath, Vickie L. Heath, et al. Defendants. Case No. 15CV281 K.S.A. 60 Mortgage Foreclosure (Title to Real Estate Involved) NOTICE OF SUIT THE STATE OF KANSAS to: Craig J. Heath and Vickie L. Heath, Defendants, and all other persons who are or may be concerned: YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED: That a Petition has been filed in the District Court of Douglas County, Kansas, Case No. 15CV281 by THE BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON FKA THE BANK OF NEW YORK AS INDENTURE SUCCESSOR TRUSTEE TO JPMORGAN CHASE BANK, N.A., AS INTRUSTEE FOR DENTURE THE CWABS REVOLVING EQUITY LOAN HOME TRUST, SERIES 2004-K ,

Apartments Unfurnished Cedarwood Apts 2411 Cedarwood Ave. Beautiful & Spacious 1 & 2 Bedrooms Start at $450/mo. * Near campus, bus stop * Laundries on site * Near stores, restaurants * Water & trash paid ——————————————

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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

3 and 4 Bedroom Townhouses and Single Family Homes Available Now $950-$1800 a month. Garber Property Management

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Wurlitzer Spinnet Piano, $99 or best offer. 785-856-2509

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classifieds@ljworld.com

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2BR, in a 4-plex. New carpet, vinyl, cabinets, countertop. W/D is included. Equal Housing Opportunity. 785-865-2505

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OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE Call Garber Property Management at 785-842-2475 for more information.

PUBLIC NOTICES TO PLACE AN AD:

785.832.2222

praying for foreclosure of a mortgage executed by Craig J. Heath, Vickie L. Heath on 04/06/2004 and recorded in Book 929 Page 1935 in the real estate records of Douglas County, Kansas, related to the following property:

Dustin Stiles, KS # 25152 Kozeny & McCubbin, L.C. (St. Louis Office) 12400 Olive Blvd., Suite 555 St. Louis, MO 63141 (314) 991-0255 (314) 567-8006 Email:mrupard@km-law.com Send Court Returns to: LOT 11, IN BLOCK 2, IN DE Kansas@km-law.com VEL ADDITION NO. 3, A Attorney for Plaintiff SUBDIVISION IN THE CITY OF LAWRENCE, AS SHOWN This firm is a debt collecBY THE RECORDED PLAT tor and any information DOUGLAS we obtain from you will be THEREOF, IN COUNTY, KANSAS used for that purpose. _______ You are hereby required to (First published in the plead to the Petition on or before December 21, 2015 Lawrence Daily Journalin the court at Douglas World November 2, 2015) County, Kansas. If you fail to plead, judgment and de- Shawn Scharenborg, cree will be entered in due KS # 24542 Michael Rupard, course upon the petition. KS # 26954 NOTICE TO BORROWER: If Dustin Stiles, you wish to dispute the va- KS # 25152 lidity of all or any portion Kozeny & McCubbin, L.C. of this debt, or would like (St. Louis Office) the name and address of 12400 Olive Blvd., Suite 555 the original creditor, you St. Louis, MO 63141 must advise us in writing (314) 991-0255 within thirty (30) days of (314) 567-8006 the first notice you receive K&M File Code:SOUARNOR from us. Otherwise, we will assume the entire debt to be valid. This is an attempt to collect a debt, and any information obtained will be used for that purpose. Signed: Shawn Scharenborg, KS # 24542 Michael Rupard, KS # 26954

IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., Plaintiff, vs.

classifieds@ljworld.com

(Deceased), Unknown Spouse of Christopher D Southard, Christopher D Southard et al. Defendants.

before December 16, 2015 in the court at Douglas County, Kansas. If you fail to plead, judgment and decree will be entered in due course upon the petition.

Case No. 15CV193 K.S.A. 60 Mortgage Foreclosure (Title to Real Estate Involved)

NOTICE TO BORROWER: If you wish to dispute the validity of all or any portion of this debt, or would like the name and address of the original creditor, you must advise us in writing within thirty (30) days of the first notice you receive from us. Otherwise, we will assume the entire debt to be valid. This is an attempt to collect a debt, and any information obtained will be used for that purpose.

NOTICE OF SUIT THE STATE OF KANSAS to: Christopher D Southard, Unknown Spouse of Christopher D Southard, Defendants, and all other persons who are or may be concerned: YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED: That a Petition has been filed in the District Court of Douglas County, Kansas, Case No. 15CV193 by Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. , praying for foreclosure of a mortgage executed by Southard Selma Arvie W. (Deceased), Southard Jr. (Deceased), Southard Selma on 07/14/2005 and recorded in Book 990 Page 4385 in the real estate records of Douglas County, Kansas, related to the following property: LOT 3, BLOCK 7, IN EDGEWOOD PARK, AN ADDITION TO THE CITY OF LAWRENCE, DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS.

Selma Southard (Deceased), Arvie W. Southard Jr.

You are hereby required to plead to the Petition on or

Home Improvements

Home Improvements

AAA Home Improvements Int/Ext Repairs, Painting, Tree work & more. We do it all! 20 Yrs. Exp. w/ Ins. and local ref. Will beat all est. Call 785-917-9168

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Full Remodels & Odd Jobs, Interior/Exterior Painting, Installation & Repair of:

Landscaping

Signed: Shawn Scharenborg, KS # 24542 Michael Rupard, KS # 26954 Dustin Stiles, KS # 25152 Kozeny & McCubbin, L.C. (St. Louis Office) 12400 Olive Blvd., Suite 555 St. Louis, MO 63141 (314) 991-0255 (314) 567-8006 Email:mrupard@km-law.com Send Court Returns to: Kansas@km-law.com Attorney for Plaintiff This firm is a debt collector and any information we obtain from you will be used for that purpose. _______

SERVICES Adult Care Provided

Carpentry

The Wood Doctor - Wood rot repair, fences, decks, doors & windows - built, repaired, or replaced & more! Bath/kitchen remodeled. Basement finished. 785-542-3633 • 816-591-6234

Auctioneers

HOUSE CLEANER ADDING NEW CUSTOMERS Years of experience, references available, Insured. 785-748-9815 (local)

Mike - 785-766-6760 mdcraig@sbcglobal.net

Stacked Deck Decks • Gazebos Siding • Fences • Additions Remodel • Weatherproofing Insured • 25 yrs exp. 785-550-5592

Stamped & Reg. Concrete, Patios, Walks, Driveways, Acid Staining & Overlays, Tear-Out & Replacement Jayhawk Concrete Inc. 785-979-5261

Decks & Fences

DECK BUILDER REAL ESTATE AUCTIONS 785-887-6900 www.billfair.com

New York Housekeeping: Accepting clients for wkly, bi-wkly & seasonal or special occasion cleaning. Excellent References. Beth - 785-766-6762.

Mudjacking, Waterproofing. We specialize in Basement Repair & Pressure Grouting. Level & Straighten Walls & Bracing on wall. BBB. Free Estimates Since 1962 Wagner’s 785-749-1696 www.foundationrepairks.com

Driveways - stamped • Patios • Sidewalks • Parking Lots • Building Footings & Floors • All Concrete Repairs Free Estimates

CTi of Mid America Concrete Restoration & Resurfacing Driveways, Patios, Pool Decks & More CTiofMidAmerica.com 785-893-8110

Over 25 yrs. exp. Licensed & Insured. Decks, deck covers, pergolas, screened porches, & all types of repairs. Call 913-209-4055 for Free estimates or go to prodeckanddesign.com

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Family Owned & Operated 20 Yrs

Cleaning

Downsizing - Moving? We’ve got a Custom Solution for You! Estate Tag Sales and Cleanup Services Armstrong Family Estate Services, LLC 785-383-0820 www.kansasestatesales.com

Decks & Fences

Craig Construction Co

Semi-retired social worker seeks position as in-home caregiver. Meal prep, light housekeeping, personal care, errands. Ref. available. Call Mary 785-979-4317

Antique/Estate Liquidation

Concrete

Dirt-Manure-Mulch

Guttering Services

Deck Drywall Siding Replacement Gutters Privacy Fencing Doors & Trim Commercial Build-out Build-to-suit services Fully Insured 22 yrs. experience

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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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Health Care

Serving KC over 40 years

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Foundation Repair Foundation and Masonry Specialist Water prevention systems for basements, Sump pumps, foundation supports & repair and more. Call 785-221-3568 Needing to place an ad? 785-832-2222

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Elise Young, licensed massage therapist w/ 10+ years experience, in the heart of downtown Lawrence. Student’s, Public Servant’s, & Veteran’s discounts. Call, Text, or Book on website: www.thespringinwinter.com Call/Text: (913)904-2234 EliseFisher@TheSpringinWinter.com

Higgins Handyman

YARDBIRDS LANDSCAPING Father (retired) & Son Operation W/Experience & Top of the Line Machinery Snow Removal Call 785-766-1280

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Ask how to get these features in your ad TODAY!! Call: 785-832-2222

D&R Painting interior/exterior • 30+ years • power washing • repairs (inside & out) • stain decks • wallpaper stripping • free estimates Call or Text 913-401-9304

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)

Painting

Interior/exterior painting, roofing, roof repairs, fence work, deck work, lawn care, siding, windows & doors. For 11+ years serving Douglas County & surrounding areas. Insured.

Thicker line? Bolder heading? Color background?

Painting

Weddings

Family Tradition Interior & Exterior Painting Carpentry/Wood Rot Senior Citizen Discount Ask for Ray 785-330-3459 Interior/Exterior Painting Quality Work Over 30 yrs. exp.

Call Lyndsey 913-422-7002

STRESS FREE WEDDINGS Officiant retired KS Judge offers Shawnee lake front gazebo or parlor fireplace to KS licensees only. Private, convenient & economical. Exchange your private religious vows or standard vows. PHOTOS:

weddingsbythelake.com 913-209-5211


10C

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Monday, November 16, 2015

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COMICS

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PLUGGErs

GArY BrOOKINs

fAMILY CIrCUs

PICKLEs hI AND LOIs

sCOtt ADAMs

ChrIs CAssAtt & GArY BrOOKINs

JErrY sCOtt & JIM BOrGMAN

PAtrICK MCDONNELL

ChrIs BrOwNE BABY BLUEs

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ChArLEs M. sChULZ

DEAN YOUNG/JOhN MArshALL

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BLONDIE

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MArK PArIsI

JIM DAVIs

DILBErt

PEArLs BEfOrE swINE

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MOrt, GrEG & BrIAN wALKEr

PEANUts GArfIELD

BIL KEANE

GrEG BrOwNE/ChANCE wALKEr

BOrN LOsEr BEEtLE BAILEY

L awrence J ournal -W orld

GArrY trUDEAU

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JErrY sCOtt/rICK KIrKMAN

DArBY CONLEY


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