KANSAS VOLLEYBALL SWEEPS SAMFORD IN TOURNEY OPENER. 1D TRUMP TURNS TO BLUNT VETERAN TO HEAD DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE.
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November revenues meet new, lowered estimates
OLD-FASHIONED CHRISTMAS PARADE
BACK IN
BLACK —
Draft horses, coach return as parade finale
By Peter Hancock phancock@ljworld.com
By Elvyn Jones ejones@ljworld.com
O
nce again, viewers of the Lawrence Old-Fashioned Christmas Parade will have to stay to the end to see Robin Dunn’s team of Percheron draft horses and the stage coach they pull. It’s that true-todetail reproduction of a 19th century Wells Fargo Inside: Overland Parade stage on good coach financial that earns footing Dunn her through spot at 2017. 2A the end of the parade. For many of the parade’s 24 years, Dunn’s stage coach has provided Santa Claus with his ride from the Douglas County Fairgrounds to downtown Lawrence.
Nick Krug/Journal-World Photo
ROBIN DUNN, A 23-YEAR FIXTURE OF THE LAWRENCE OLD-FASHIONED CHRISTMAS PARADE, is pictured with her Percheron draft horses, Bruce, left, and Bill, on Monday at her farm, Dunn’s Landing, which is south of Baldwin City. Dunn’s team will be the last in this year’s parade, where she will be carrying a Marine and a police officer with Toys for Tots.
> PARADE, 2A
IF YOU GO
> REVENUES, 2A
DUNN’S COACH makes its way down Massachusetts Street in last year’s parade, on Dec. 5, 2015. The coach will return for Saturday’s parade.
This year’s Old-Fashioned Christmas Parade is set for Saturday morning. The parade departs from the Douglas County Fairgrounds at 9 a.m., arrives downtown at 11 a.m. and travels along Massachusetts Street from Seventh to 13th streets before making its way back to the fairgrounds.
John Young/JournalWorld File Photo
P
erhaps there is a yin and yang involved with the South Lawrence Trafficway. As arguments die down with the opening of the long-debated eastern leg of the trafficway, new ones rise on the western leg of the trafficway. I do have a couple of
Chad Lawhorn clawhorn@ljworld.com
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VOL. 158 / NO. 337 / 26 PAGES
updates on debates that are brewing on the portion of the SLT west of Iowa Street: A county official has confirmed a meeting has been set with KDOT officials to discuss ways to improve safety at the Kasold/SLT intersection, and a Douglas County resident has
Sunshine CLASSIFIED.............. 5C-6C COMICS...........................6A
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begun pitching a new multimillion dollar plan to improve the safety of the road. First, the meeting: Douglas County Public Works Director Keith Browning confirmed that a meeting between both county and Kansas Department of Transportation
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DEATHS...........................5B EVENTS...........................5B
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Markus gathers input at Haskell By Rochelle Valverde rvalverde@ljworld.com
officials has been set to discuss how to improve the safety of the intersection of the SLT and what is commonly called Kasold Drive, although it actually is county road East 1200, but it aligns with Kasold.
Among the varied topics at City Manager Tom Markus’ second “listening post” — held on this occasion at Haskell Indian Nations University — was the city’s link with the venue itself. Chris Sindone, student senate president for Haskell, said Markus he thought the event was a good step toward creating a stronger relationship between the city and Haskell.
> SLT, 5A
> HASKELL, 2A
More discussion of SLT intersection on tap Town Talk
Topeka — Tax revenues flowing into state coffers barely exceeded the official estimates in November, mainly because budget forecasters significantly lowered those estimates earlier in the month. That means the state did not add to its looming $350 million budget shortfall in November, but neither did it make any progress in closing that gap. The Kansas Department of Jordan Revenue said Thursday that total taxes collected in November came in at $401.3 million, or 0.3 percent above the newly revised estimates. That included $174 million in individual income taxes, which was slightly above the new estimate but still $9.7 million, or 5.3 percent below November 2015. Revenue Secretary Nick Jordan said that was mainly due to a difference in the timing of withholding payments.
Forecast, 8A
HOROSCOPE....................4B OPINION..........................7A
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Friday, December 2, 2016
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LAWRENCE • STATE
Parade
Parade funds look good through 2017
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A
The visual pop that the Percheron stage coach provides is greatly appreciated, said Marty Kennedy, president of the Lawrence Old-Fashioned Christmas Parade LLC. “Robin brings a great vehicle, a great team of horses and just a lot of history and character to our parade,” he said. The parade started a new tradition in 2015 of having Santa Claus and Mrs. Claus bring up the rear of the parade on horseback, Kennedy said. As the second to last parade entry, Dunn’s coach will give the Claus couple visual framing. Dunn, who has been in the parade in all but its first year, said she will still have a couple of important gift-bearing passengers in her stage coach as the parade starts at 9:30 a.m. from the Douglas County Fairgrounds, arriving downtown at 11 a.m. to travel from Seventh to 13th streets on Massachusetts Street before making its way back to the fairgrounds. “There will be a decorated Marine and Blue Santa from the Lawrence Police Department in my stage,” Dunn said. “It’s something we started last year for Toys for Tots.” The parade will be a special anniversary for her team of Bruce and Bill. Dunn said the 6and 7-year-old team of brothers made their first public appearance in the 2015 parade. It was a bittersweet experience for Dunn, as she had retired her older team of Percherons shortly before at the Governor’s Christmas Tree Lighting at Cedar Crest in Topeka. “The last time I went out with them was when I delivered the governor’s Christmas tree,” she said. “The governor drove them around Cedar Crest. That’s a pretty good way to go out.” She had to put the older team of Buck and Bill down earlier this year when one of the horses developed cancer and the other was in failing health from old age. “It was time,” she said. “I had them for 15 years. That was a tough day. They lived to a very old age for draft horses. They were full brothers who were trained together. When one goes, the other one would never
Revenues CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A
But retail sales taxes, which are often used as a barometer of consumer spending, came in at only $181 million, slightly below the official estimate and 3.6 percent below November of last year. “Retail sales and corporate taxes continue to show negative growth due to agricultural and energy sector weakness,” Jordan said. Another shortfall, which some might consider to be
Haskell CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A
“We’re neighbors and sometimes it doesn’t feel like it,” Sindone said. “But we live next to each other so we should definitely start acting like it.” Markus, who came to Lawrence after serving as the city manager of Iowa City, said he plans to hold listening posts at several times and locations in order to speak with a crosssection of people. The focus of the conversations
L awrence J ournal -W orld
A local business stepped up to provide funding needed to ensure this year’s OldFashioned Christmas Parade would go off Saturday as scheduled, said Marty Kennedy, president of the Lawrence Old-Fashioned Christmas Parade LLC. “We’re on track to get funding from the city for our 25th annual parade next year,” he said. “We’ll have the parade Saturday, and the 25th anniversary parade is happening, also.” Kennedy said the parade gets good support from businesses and individuals. Donations to the parade can be made through the Lawrence chamber of commerce, Kennedy said. Contact information can be found at the LLC’s website, lawrencechristmas parade.org.
John Young/Journal-World Photos
ABOVE: THOUSANDS OF SPECTATORS LINE BOTH SIDES OF MASSACHUSETTS STREET as horsedrawn carriages go past during the 23rd annual Lawrence OldFashioned Christmas Parade on Dec. 5, 2015. The parade, now in its 24th year, returns Saturday. RIGHT: A team of horses is decked out in sleigh bells during the 2015 parade.
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CALL US Let us know if you have a story idea. Email news@ljworld.com or contact one of the following: Arts and entertainment: .................832-6353 City government: ..............................832-6314 County government: .......................832-7166 Courts and crime: ..............................832-7284 Datebook: ............................................832-7165 Lawrence schools: ..........................832-6388 Letters to the editor: .....................832-6362 Local news: .........................................832-7154 Obituaries: ...........................................832-7151 Photo reprints: ..................................832-6353 Society: .................................................832-7151 Sports: ..................................................832-7147 University of Kansas: .........................832-7187 SUBSCRIPTIONS: 832-7199
production, she said. It’s the event venue It’s a long route. We joke that if your that gave Dunn the opteam isn’t broken, it will be when you get portunity to train her back to the fairgrounds.” young team for the fall festivals and parades she attends by giving wagon — Robin Dunn, longtime parade participant rides popular with her customers. “They’re a very young team, younger than I usumake it. They work alike reintroduce draft horses to the farm, Dunn said. ally start with,” she said. and think alike. That’s “I’ve worked with them what made them so good Her grandfather, one of the first farmers in a lot. They’ll be pretty together.” the area to completely good when they get to be Knowing the sad day switch to mechanical middle-aged. I’m pretty was inevitable, Dunn power from horsepower, happy with them.” bought a younger team tearfully sold the farm’s While on the reins with very similar names last draft horses in the with the new team, she three years ago after early 1940s, she said. tries not to compare checking out and reject“I always wanted a them to Bill and Buck, ing four other teams for team of horses,” she said. Dunn said. her farm south of Bald“I went to a sale and “I try not to, but you win City. bought the first team in find yourself doing it,” she A full-time farmer, Dunn was busy in the the ring.” said. “Bill and Buck will field last week harvesting It was a team of Belalways be with me, but the last of her soybeans. gians, Dunn said. Twelve these boys have their own Her roots go back four years ago, she sold them personalities, and they are generations on the farm, and bought Bill and a good team. These boys which a sign near the Buck, because the black can still step up and show entry to the long lane to Percherons looked better when they need to.” her house identifies as a with her wagons and They’ll get their “century farm,” or one stagecoach. chance to show at Satthat has been in the same The horses, like the urday’s parade as they family for 100 years. Dunn’s Landing special pull the stage coach the She earned her place in events center she offers route’s 7-mile roundtrip that lineage by selling at the farmstead and bed distance. a Southern California and breakfast her brother “It’s a long route,” she landscape company she manages across the road, said. “We joke that if founded to raise money are an extension of her your team isn’t broken, to buy the farm from her farming operation and it will be when you get father. a way to introduce farm back to the fairgrounds.” One of the first things culture to a populace The red stage coach she did when she reincreasingly removed Dunn has had in the turned 23 years ago was from the realities of food parade the last 16 years
is as much a show as Didn’t receive your paper? For billthe team. The Missouri craftsman who built it for ing, vacation or delivery questions, call 832-7199. her visited a Nebraska Weekday: 6 a.m.-5:30 p.m. museum with a surviving Weekends: 6 a.m.-10 a.m. Overland stage coach to ensure all its details are In-town redelivery: 6 a.m.-10 a.m. correct, getting called to Published daily by Ogden account when he went Newspapers of Kansas LLC under display ropes to at 645 New Hampshire Street, Lawrence, KS 66044-0122. take measurements, Telephone: 843-1000; or toll-free Dunn said. Its authentic details include two straps (800) 578-8748. of 120 feet of leather on POSTMASTER: Send address changes to: which the coach rides, Lawrence Journal-World, which act as springs. P.O. Box 888, Lawrence, KS “It’s actually not a bad 66044-0888 ride,” she said. “It swings, (USPS 306-520) Periodicals postnot bounces. Of all the age paid at Lawrence, Kan. old wagons, it’s probably Member of Alliance the most comfortable. I for Audited Media Member of The Associated wouldn’t want to ride in it Press across country, though.” She’s actually never been in the moving coach, having spent her time exclusively in the WEDNESDAY’S POWERBALL driver’s box of the coach. 3 14 18 25 45 (7) If her showy coach and TUESDAY’S MEGA MILLIONS team consigns her to the 22 33 49 51 59 (8) rear of the parade, that’s WEDNESDAY’S fine with Dunn. HOT LOTTO SIZZLER “I get to see the whole 1 6 23 32 34 (2) parade before I leave the THURSDAY’S LUCKY FOR fairgrounds,” she said. LIFE 21 23 39 40 41 (18) “I love to see them all. There is always so much WEDNESDAY’S SUPER KANSAS CASH diversity in that parade 4 5 6 11 16 (12) — the horses, the wagTHURSDAY’S KANSAS ons and the way they are 2BY2 decorated.”
good news, was a drop in cigarette taxes. Kansas collected just more than $10 million in cigarette taxes last month, which was a little more than expected, but it represented an 11 percent drop compared with last year. But taxes on other tobacco products, including e-cigarettes, rose 41 percent compared with last year. On Nov. 10, the state’s Consensus Revenue Estimating Group released new, updated forecasts for the current fiscal year, lowering the estimate by $355 million, or about 6 percent, compared with the previous estimate made in the spring.
That means that even if revenues continue to meet the new, lower estimates through the end of June, they would be about $350 million less than the state has budgeted to spend. The group also said revenues in the next fiscal year, which begins July 1, are expected to grow a mere 1.4 percent, far less than the state needs to keep up with rising costs, creating an estimated $583 million shortfall for that year. That report prompted some legislative leaders, including Senate President Susan Wagle, R-Wichita, to call on Gov. Sam Brownback to take immediate
action to bring the budget into balance. That would most likely require another series of allotment cuts to higher education and other state programs. Brownback, however, has declined to do so. Instead, he has said he will submit a budget plan to the 2017 Legislature when it convenes in January. And although he declined to say specifically what measures he is considering, his communications office has said he is not planning to enact sweeping cuts or mass layoffs of state employees. That has prompted some to speculate that he
will propose selling off the state’s future tobacco settlement payments in exchange for a lump-sum payment that could help close this year’s budget gap. Meanwhile, though, state officials are still awaiting a Kansas Supreme Court decision on the pending school finance lawsuit, which many expect will include an order to increase K-12 education funding by hundreds of millions of dollars a year, which would only add to the projected shortfalls.
is meant to be the City Commission’s strategic planning process, the community’s vision, and challenges and opportunities facing Lawrence. In all, about 20 people attended the listening post session, which was held Thursday evening at Navarre Hall at Haskell Indian Nations University, 155 E. Indian Ave. Anna Buhlinger, the city-university liaison intern, helped organize the listening post. Sindone said such efforts help build a better bridge between the city and Haskell. He said more
collaboration between the city, Haskell and the University of Kansas should be incorporated into the city’s strategic plan. “Making these connections, we’re going to start to collaborate more, cooperate with one another, support each other’s events and different things going on,” Sindone said. “It really shows a community’s strength when everyone is united.” Each participant brought their own — and usually several — concerns to Markus as part of the listening post. Joshua Arce, chief
information officer for Haskell, also said he was at the event to support the initiative between Haskell and the city. In addition, Arce said he wants to see the city continue its support for social service programs, such as Independence Inc., LawrenceDouglas County Housing Authority and the Citizen Review Board. “I think those are very unique to Douglas County and to Lawrence, but also need to remain a priority,” Arce said. Others were also concerned with prioritizing aspects of the community
they thought made the city unique. Ron Gaches said he wanted to make sure the strategic plan, in addition to covering basics such as law enforcement and infrastructure investments, prioritized the city’s comprehensive culture and arts program. “I’m concerned that some of what makes Lawrence really unique, which is the broad support and interest in the arts and culture community, might get overlooked in the strategic planning process,” Gaches said. Gaches, though not affiliated with Haskell, said he
LOTTERY
— County reporter Elvyn Jones can be reached at 832-7166. Follow him on Twitter: @ElvynJ
Red: 3 14; White: 22 23 THURSDAY’S KANSAS PICK 3 (MIDDAY) 4 9 7 THURSDAY’S KANSAS PICK 3 (EVENING) 4 4 8
BIRTHS Alicia and Scott Reed, Lawrence, a boy, Monday. Bryon and Emily Wright, Baldwin City, a girl, Thursday. Chad and Rachel Tate, Lawrence, a boy, Thursday. Sandina Oxford and TJ LeBeau, Lawrence, a boy, Thursday.
CORRECTIONS
The Journal-World’s policy is to correct all significant errors that are brought to the editors’ attention. If you be— Statehouse reporter Peter Hancock lieve we have made such an can be reached at 354-4222. Follow error, call 832-7154, or email him on Twitter: @LJWpqhancock news@ljworld.com.
was glad that it was chosen as the event’s venue. “I’ve only been on the campus a couple of times, so it’s great to have something to draw me out here,” Gaches said. “It’s got a reputation for being a great asset for the community, but I think there are probably a lot of us that don’t get out here very often.” Markus has said that he plans to hold about four listening posts per year at different times and locations throughout the city. — City Hall reporter Rochelle Valverde can be reached at 832-6314. Follow her on Twitter: @RochelleVerde
LAWRENCE • STATE
L awrence J ournal -W orld
Friday, December 2, 2016
| 3A
Student Senate leaders share updates on diversity goals
A
year ago, KU’s Student Senate was embroiled in an impeachment attempt that threatened to kick out the 2015-16 executive officers, whom some accused of failing to do enough to support black and other marginalized students. Those officers ultimately kept their jobs, and took some steps to increase diversity and inclusion in the Senate before their terms were up. The new student body president and vice president, elected in April, made the issue one of the most important in their campaign platform. On Wednesday, 2016-17 Student Body President Stephonn Alcorn, a senior from Gardner; Vice President Gabby
Heard on the Hill
Sara Shepherd sshepherd@ljworld.com
Naylor, a senior from Providence, R.I.; and Senate Director of Diversity and Inclusion Abdoulie Njai, a senior from Wichita, held a meeting to outline some of their new and working diversity and inclusion initiatives. Overall, Alcorn said,
Senate wants programming “to really make sure everyone has the same opportunity to be successful.” Here’s a rundown: Summer Venture in Business: Alcorn described this as a pre-college summer “pipeline” program for minorities. High school students will stay on campus and participate in sessions to familiarize them with the college experience and business academic offerings. It’s set for June 4-6, and scholarships will pay the way for participants. The business venture is a pilot program hoped to soon expand to other schools, Alcorn said. Equitable Student Elections Fund: This KU Endowment fund collects private
Victim of Oak Hill stabbing in stable condition, police say said his condition was stable. Anderson remains an A man critically in- inmate in the Douglas jured after he was County Jail. He is being stabbed last month is still held in lieu of a $105,000 receiving medical treat- bond. He is scheduled to ment, police said. appear in court on Dec. The morning of Nov. 20, when a date will be 18, police arrived at 1518 set for his preliminary Oak Hill Ave. and hearing. found 52-year-old At a prelimiJames William nary hearing, AnConlon with mulderson will have a tiple stab wounds, chance to respond said Lawrence to the charges Police Sgt. Amy filed against him Rhoads. Shortly and a judge will thereafter, Wynn decide if enough Sterling Antrim Anderson evidence exists Anderson, 32, was to order him to arrested. He now stand trial. faces felony charges of Anderson is accused attempted second-de- of threatening Conlon gree murder and making on Oct. 29. Police were a criminal threat. called but Anderson was Conlon was hospital- not arrested after that ized after the incident. incident. He was, howOn Thursday, Rhoads ever, arrested later that
By Conrad Swanson
cswanson@ljworld.com
same day on suspicion of indecent exposure after Rhoads said he was “outside without any clothes on causing a disturbance.” Anderson has lived at the home on Oak Hill Avenue, just across the street from Oak Hill Cemetery, since at least 2012, court records show. He has been arrested a number of times over the past six years and has at least three domestic battery convictions and one assault conviction. Rhoads has declined to comment on the nature of Anderson’s relationship with Conlon and the circumstances surrounding the stabbing. — Public safety reporter Conrad Swanson can be reached at 832-7284. Follow him on Twitter: @Conrad_Swanson
Alcorn
Naylor
donations to help students pay for campaigns to run for Senate seats. There’s a clause in the fund that states it only exists as long as Senate’s election spending cap stays at $1,000. Multicultural Board of Advisers: Chaired by Njai, this body advises the president and vice president on issues affecting the multicultural community and related Senate
or KU policies. Members come from a variety of multicultural groups. Religious minorities ad hoc committee: The group’s goal is to create a survey to see whether campus is accommodating students’ religious observations. Gender in admissions information: Senate is working with Enrollment Management and IT to provide more options for gender identity in students’ KU portals, envisioned to help collect more information on gender identity, sexual orientation and preferred names. Other efforts in progress include a women’s leadership
> SENATE, 8A
Sushi bar, fast-food restaurants found with health violations
T
he last half of November may have yielded the shortest list ever for restaurant inspection results. There is, however, one familiar name on the short list. In May, we reported that Yokohama Sushi Downtown had temporarily closed its doors after finding a number of live roaches. And although it’s back on the restaurant inspection list, I feel it’s important to say the restaurant’s newest inspection report does not show that more live roaches were found. Rather, the majority of the restaurant’s violations were
Lights & Sirens
Conrad Swanson cswanson@ljworld.com
related to storage issues and signage for employees. Twice each month, I take a look at inspection results and list every place either listed out of compliance or with 10 or more code violations. Full reports are available online at
agriculture.ks.gov. There you can find details about specific violations, which can vary greatly. Noncritical citations include unlabeled products, improperly stored cleaning materials, minor plumbing issues and more. Critical violations include cross-contamination of raw and cooked foods, insect and rodent issues, unclean food preparation areas and more. Some violations may be corrected during the inspection; others take longer to fix and require follow-up inspections.
> INSPECTIONS, 8A
open to the public
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Screenings are conducted by KU Medical Center Staff.
FOR MORE INFORMATION ON KANSAS FREEMASONRY CALL 785-841-4745. Kansas Masons have contributed $25+ Million to University of Kansas Cancer Research Center
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LAWRENCE • STATE
L awrence J ournal -W orld
SLT
| 5A
BRIEFLY Masterson will challenge Wagle for Kansas Senate president
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A
Nick Krug/Journal-World Photo
TRAFFIC FLOWS THROUGH THE RECENTLY-MODIFIED INTERSECTION at Kansas Highway 10 and East 1200 Road on Friday, Nov. 25. Recently, stick-like barriers were placed on either side of the intersection to prevent motorists from crossing K-10. would be built to connect Crossgate to the existing county route of East 1150. East 1150 Road already has a bridge across the Wakarusa River and already connects with County Route 458. The debate here is probably not whether another interchange is needed for the South Lawrence Trafficway, but where it ought to be. Douglas County officials, as we have reported, already have begun planning for the day when there would be an interchange at Wakarusa Drive, near the entrance to the Youth Sports Complex. It also would extend to the south to connect to County Route 458. The county already has put the project on its longrange capital improvement plan. It estimates it would cost about $8 million just to build the local roads. KDOT would be responsible for building the actual interchange, and that
easily could be more than $10 million. Male’s lobbying efforts likely will be to get the county — and to a degree, the city because it likely will be asked to share in the cost — to consider Crossgate Drive. Male said the big selling point for a Crossgate alignment is that it could use the existing Wakarusa River bridge on East 1150. The Wakarusa alignment would require a new bridge in order to connect to County Route 458. Male may have his work cut out for him to get the county to change its mind. Browning said the point about the bridge is a valid one, but he said the wide floodplain near a Crossgate alignment may make building a road more difficult and expensive there. Plus, he said Wakarusa Drive just seems like a more natural fit as a western entrance into Lawrence. It puts the interchange closer to the entrance
Topeka (ap) — Senate President Susan Wagle will have a challenger next week for the presidency of the Kansas Senate. Sen. Ty Masterson, of Andover, told Republican colleagues in a letter that he plans to challenge Wagle, of Wichita. The Wichita Eagle reports Masterson, who is budget chairman, helped lead budget negotiations during the past two sessions when the state had serious budget shortfalls. He also Masterson helped craft the bill that repealed the state’s school finance formula in 2015 and replaced it with block grants. Masterson has been a close ally of Gov. Sam Brownback and a strong supporter of income tax cuts the Legislature passed in 2012. Wagle has recently challenged Brownback on fiscal issues and has hinted she would consider rolling back part of the tax cuts. Wagle
to the Youth Sports Complex, which is a major generator of traffic during certain times of the year. Under Male’s plan, a frontage road would be built from the Crossgate interchange to the sports complex. Whatever the case, don’t expect an interchange to emerge anytime soon. Browning said the environmental study required for KDOT to undertake a project of this nature likely would take about three years. Then there is the question of where KDOT would get the money to build the project. Then there is the question of whether the city of Lawrence would contribute any money to help pay for the local portion of the project. All of that could lead to several more debates. — This is an excerpt from Chad Lawhorn’s Town Talk column, which appears each weekday on LJWorld.com.
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The intersection was the site of a multivehicle injury accident last week. Although it is just one accident, tensions are raised around the intersection. There is a fear more are to come because the accident occurred shortly after the intersection was configured to become a right-in, right-out only intersection. It also occurred shortly after traffic volumes increased significantly because of the opening of the east leg of the SLT. Residents of southern Douglas County have contended that the intersection is a vital link to the western part of Lawrence. Some have argued that a traffic signal should be put at the intersection. Browning worked to douse those hopes when I talked with him. He said the upcoming discussion with KDOT — which he said would happen “very soon” — won’t be to discuss a traffic signal. Instead, it will discuss adding more signs to make it clearer that the intersection is right-in and right-out. Browning said more signs could be useful, but he stopped short of saying the intersection is confusing without them. The intersection is marked with double yellow lines, which are illegal to cross, and the configuration of the intersection naturally makes it difficult to go straight across the SLT. (Anybody doing so would have to first turn right and then turn back to the left in order to cross.) Browning’s main message is if you are thinking of trying to cross the SLT — technically Kansas Highway 10 — at Kasold, don’t do it. “It is hard for me to imagine that people think crossing K-10 at Kasold is now a safe alternative,” Browning said. “I can’t comprehend that.” But additional signs making that clear would not hurt anything. KDOT has placed a large, temporary electronic sign just north of the intersection alerting motorists that only right turns are allowed at the intersection. What type of permanent signs may be put in place is one question. The bigger question, though, is how many wrecks will it take at the intersection before KDOT goes back to its original thinking, which was that the intersection should be closed entirely? That brings me to the second update: an idea for a new multimillion dollar interchange that would make the Kasold intersection unnecessary. The idea is being floated by Lawrence businessman Frank Male. He is the owner of a landscape company that has a facility just south of the Kasold and SLT intersection. Male also is active in county politics, and he indicated to me that he is going try to start lobbying support for a new plan that he hopes could be implemented in a few years. The idea essentially is a Crossgate Drive interchange for the South Lawrence Trafficway. Crossgate is the next major street west of Kasold Drive. Male is proposing that Crossgate Drive be extended southward to connect with the SLT. Instead of connecting with an intersection, Crossgate would connect to an interchange with on and off ramps. South of the SLT, a new road
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Opinion
Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com l Friday, December 2, 2016
EDITORIALS
School board failing public Residents are ill-served by district officials who thwart principles of open government.
T
he Lawrence school district and the Lawrence school board are failing constituents when it comes to open government. The district’s instinct is to keep the public in the dark about all matters perceived to be the least bit controversial. Sadly, the public’s chosen representatives on the Lawrence school board are all too comfortable acquiescing to that approach rather than standing up for the public’s right to know. School board members Marcel Harmon, Shannon Kimball, Kristie Adair, Jessica Beeson, Jill Fincher, Rick Ingram and Vanessa Sanburn are failing the people who elected them, and it shouldn’t be OK. This week, the board voted to accept the resignation of a teacher without naming the teacher. The decision to keep the teacher’s name secret conflicts with the Kansas Open Records Act. The Act makes clear that all records of public agencies are open to public inspection with limited exceptions defined in Kansas Statutes 45-221. Specifically, item (4) of the statute states that personnel records are exempt from disclosure “except that this exemption shall not apply to the names, positions, salaries or actual compensation employment contracts or employment-related contracts or agreements and lengths of service of officers and employees of public agencies once they are employed as such.” It’s indisputable — Kansas lawmakers went to great lengths to ensure the names, positions and compensation of employees of public agencies are matters of public record. Contrast what the law requires with what the School Board did Monday night when it voted to approve the resignation of “an employee who was the subject of (a) pending investigation.” Given the opportunity to name the employee, the district and board refused, saying that doing so would violate the employee’s confidentiality. Except that when it comes to employment status with the district, the employee has no right to confidentiality. Teacher contracts are with the local board of education; thus the board is required to act on contract changes, including teacher resignations. Such changes must be acted on in public session and since state law dictates that the employees’ names and positions are a matter of public record, there’s no valid reason for not releasing them. Put another way, the state has dictated that the public has the right to know the who, what, when and where when it comes to teachers in public schools. That’s why, until this most recent resignation, the school board has always named employees in acting on their employment status. The irony of this specific situation is that the board identified the resigning teacher as the “subject of a pending investigation” and then said it couldn’t name the teacher because of employee confidentiality rules. The board could have simply accepted the resignation of the teacher, named him and identified his school and the subject that he taught. Doing so would have met the requirements of the law and protected the teacher’s confidentiality. One of the important roles that newspapers like the Journal-World play in their communities is to be vigilant in advocating for open government. It’s a lot easier for public agencies to make difficult decisions in secret, and if open records and open meetings violations aren’t challenged, such misguided behavior is reinforced. As this latest episode shows, the Lawrence School Board has demonstrated a disturbing lack of transparency in conducting its business. That needs to change immediately.
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Journal-World
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Will Trump embrace new weapons? Washington — The Pentagon has begun briefing key allies on plans for advanced weapons technologies aimed at offsetting Russian and Chinese military gains. But the next round of these discussions is on hold awaiting approval of the programs by the Trump administration. Deputy Defense Secretary Robert Work said that he met in early November for “formal collaborations” with close foreign partners to explain the high-tech weapons systems, which are aimed at restoring U.S. dominance in conventional warfare. This approach, which seeks to leverage U.S. leadership in computer technology, is known within the Pentagon by the cumbersome moniker, the “third offset strategy.” The handoff to the next administration is delicate. During the Obama administration, the Pentagon has become increasingly worried about Russian and Chinese improvements in weapons technology and their aggressive, risk-taking behavior. The push for new weapons systems reflects those fears. But President-elect Donald Trump has said he hopes to improve relations with Russia, a process that might be complicated by a new hightech arms race. Work summarized an unclassified version of the briefing he shared with allies. It proposes interlocking systems of computer-driven sensors, battle-management
David Ignatius
davidignatius@washpost.com
networks, kinetic weapons and logistics. The aim is to create systems that are so fast and pervasive that they can overwhelm what Work described as an adversary’s “OODA loop,” meaning its capacity for “observation, orientation, decision and action.” Work briefed Trump’s transition team about these technologies on Tuesday. He also shared with them a summary prepared by the Pentagon’s Office of Net Assessment describing in graphical form the declining U.S. edge, or “overmatch,” in conventional weapons, relative to Russia and China. “Our conventional overmatch has been eroding for some time,” Work said in an interview at his Pentagon office. “It’s not at a critical stage yet, but it is concerning. And as we look at the trends, we say, when it comes to conventional warfighting, we don’t want fair fights.” Instead, he said, the Pentagon wants “short, sharp and victorious” conflicts. Work’s spokesman wouldn’t describe the Trump team’s reaction to
the “third offset” briefing, or whether they’ve signaled that they will continue the programs. Work has deferred a planned second set of meetings with allies so that these contacts can have Trump’s blessing. “Our hope is that, obviously, this thinking ... will be accepted in some way, shape or form by the new administration,” he said. “The most powerful signal that they could give is if they had the next follow-on meeting, which would indicate to our allies, OK, you know, the ship continues to go in the [same] general direction,” Work explained. Support from allies is important because the new “overmatch” strategy is designed to allow foreign partners to “plug into” the complex sensor, battlemanagement and weapons systems, Work said. “You just have to have the right plugs ... so that machines can talk to machines.” As the machines process the information, they would make it available in the cockpits of airplanes, in seaborne command centers or even on the helmet visors of individual soldiers. The power of the new systems comes from their ability to fuse different sensors, platforms and weapons, and to coordinate unmanned systems on land, sea, in the air and underwater. Some of these systems sound like video-game warfare, and others have an ominous resemblance to “killer robots”
or swarms of tiny drones. The value of such ultrahigh-tech battle networks, from the Pentagon’s perspective, is that they would radically complicate a potential adversary’s ability to plan an attack — and thereby, in theory, provide better deterrence. Work has been the chief advocate of this new warfighting concept. After he gave a briefing on the “third offset” concept to a bipartisan strategy group in Aspen, Colorado, last summer, some members argued that he should remain at the Pentagon, whoever was elected, to provide continuity. When asked if he hoped to stay involved, Work responded: “I am very invested in this. ... I will help the next administration in any way I can to help make sure that this type of thinking continues.” Work warned about the danger of halting or slowing the new programs. “We have this momentum built up now inside the department,” he said, noting that the challenge wasn’t just to develop the technologies, but to incorporate them into the U.S. military’s doctrine, training and war-gaming exercises. Would this new generation of weapons provide greater strategic stability with Russia and China, or more instability? Of the many national-security issues facing Trump, this is among the most consequential. — David Ignatius is a columnist for Washington Post Writers Group.
Transition proposals more important than team In recent days, the transition focus has been on President-elect Donald Trump’s retreat from some high-profile campaign stances and his personnel choices, including some unseemly public infighting over whether former critic Mitt Romney should be secretary of state. But the more important aspect of the transition for Trump’s long-term success may be the extent to which his team and congressional Republicans can craft viable legislative proposals to implement the policy changes he promised would spur economic growth and “make America great again.”
Carl Leubsdorf carl.p.leubsdorf@gmail.com
Trump himself signaled in his revised 100-day agenda that he realizes this may prove harder than his sweeping campaign rhetoric suggested. He stressed using his executive authority to spur energy production and crack down on visa violators and excluded such high-profile promises as repealing and replacing Obamacare, building a wall to stop illegal immigration from Mexico and enacting a massive job-creating $1 trillion infrastructure upgrade program. In each area, Trump could confront significant differences with congressional Republicans, who developed their own legislative proposals in hopes of having a GOP president to help enact them. Potentially contentious areas include: l Infrastructure. It’s crucial to Trump’s hope of creating millions of new jobs and spurring economic growth. But Republican lawmakers are expressing concern about the cost, reflecting their long-held belief that new spending programs should be totally funded.
Senate Democrats like the idea better but plan to fight a rumored version that would finance some $1 trillion in upgrades to roads, bridges, tunnels and airports with tax credits designed to encourage contractors to undertake needed projects. Some Republicans would prefer to confine new tax breaks to a tax reform bill. Ron Klain, a former top aide to President Barack Obama and Vice President Joe Biden, warned Democrats in The Washington Post that Trump’s tax credit proposal was a “trap” to get support for “a tax-cut plan for utility-industry and construction-sector investors, and a massive corporate welfare plan for contractors” because there was no guarantee it would fund any new projects. Another possibility is some version of Hillary Clinton’s campaign promise for an infrastructure bank designed to attract private investment for new projects. l Obamacare. Trump pledged to ask Congress on Day 1 “to immediately deliver a full repeal of Obamacare.” GOP lawmakers are chomping at the bit, having voted some 60 times in recent years to repeal the landmark Affordable Care Act. Selecting Rep. Tom Price as secretary of health and
human services puts a strong voice for repeal in the Cabinet. But Trump complicated matters when he told The Wall Street Journal he might keep popular but costly provisions requiring insurers to cover those with pre-existing conditions and let parents cover their children until age 26. That raises the question of helping insurance companies pay their costs if the program’s revenue-raising sections are killed. Senate Democrats, meanwhile, say they’ll fight any effort to scrap Obamacare and, with 48 votes, may be able to force a compromise on replacing it. Some Republican governors are reportedly concerned about the political impact of depriving 22 million constituents of their newly acquired health care. Adding to the potentially politically incendiary mix, Price backs fellow House Republicans trying to partially privatize Medicare, a program Trump said he’d protect. The outcome is murky, but lawmakers might end up revising the ACA over a two- or three-year period, rather than eliminating it. l Immigration. Trump’s repeated promise to build “a great wall” to block immigration and make Mexico pay the tab may find favor in neither Congress nor Mexico.
And in a post-election interview on CBS’ “60 Minutes,” Trump seemed to back off building a wall that is “impenetrable, physical, tall, powerful,” noting “there could be some fencing” in what might become a less dramatic expansion of the current combination of physical and electronic barriers along the 1,989-mile U.S.-Mexico border. l Tax reform. This remains the likeliest area for action within Trump’s first six months because congressional Republicans have already done substantial work on possible legislation. Most pending proposals would simplify the current tax laws and reduce taxes for all, with the biggest breaks going to corporations and the wealthiest taxpayers. But some analysts fear the revenue loss from Trump’s tax plan would balloon the deficit, even using “dynamic scoring” by which GOP sponsors can claim that economic growth will offset most of it. Trump vowed to increase annual economic growth, below 2.5 percent for the past decade, to 4 percent, a level not achieved since the 19971999 dotcom boom. And he promised to create 25 million new jobs, setting a clear target to measure his success. — Carl P. Leubsdorf is the former Washington bureau chief of the Dallas Morning News.
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TODAY
WEATHER
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Friday, December 2, 2016
SATURDAY
SUNDAY
BRIEFLY
TUESDAY
MONDAY
Sunshine and some clouds
Mainly cloudy
A morning shower; turning sunny
Mainly cloudy, a shower or two
Cloudy, a shower in the p.m.
High 50° Low 26° POP: 5%
High 46° Low 36° POP: 25%
High 53° Low 28° POP: 40%
High 52° Low 35° POP: 55%
High 44° Low 17° POP: 55%
Wind NE 4-8 mph
Wind E 4-8 mph
Wind WSW 6-12 mph
Wind SE 6-12 mph
Wind NNW 8-16 mph
POP: Probability of Precipitation
McCook 46/20
Kearney 42/23
Oberlin 47/21
Clarinda 43/25
Lincoln 41/21
Grand Island 41/23
Beatrice 45/24
Concordia 47/26
Centerville 43/26
St. Joseph 46/24 Chillicothe 47/26
Sabetha 44/25
Kansas City Marshall Manhattan 50/31 49/28 Salina 50/26 Oakley Kansas City Topeka 51/30 47/24 50/29 Lawrence 48/29 Sedalia 50/26 Emporia Great Bend 50/30 52/31 48/28 Nevada Dodge City Chanute 52/37 49/27 Hutchinson 54/35 Garden City 52/29 48/24 Springfield Wichita Pratt Liberal Coffeyville Joplin 53/36 54/35 48/30 48/29 56/38 55/37 Hays Russell 48/24 48/25
Goodland 44/19
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
LAWRENCE ALMANAC
Through 8 p.m. Thursday.
Temperature High/low Normal high/low today Record high today Record low today
45°/20° 45°/25° 70° in 2001 2° in 1985
Precipitation in inches 24 hours through 8 p.m. yest. 0.00 Month to date 0.00 Normal month to date 0.06 Year to date 31.70 Normal year to date 38.40
REGIONAL CITIES
Today Sat. Today Sat. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Holton 49 28 pc 46 34 c Atchison 48 25 pc 45 35 c Independence 50 31 pc 46 38 c Belton 50 31 pc 45 38 c 49 30 pc 44 37 c Burlington 52 33 pc 46 37 sn Olathe Osage Beach 52 31 pc 49 37 c Coffeyville 55 37 pc 48 39 r 52 30 pc 46 37 c Concordia 47 26 pc 42 29 pc Osage City 51 29 pc 46 37 c Dodge City 49 27 pc 42 25 pc Ottawa Wichita 54 35 pc 47 35 sn Fort Riley 50 27 pc 45 33 c Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
Today Sat. 7:22 a.m. 7:23 a.m. 4:59 p.m. 4:58 p.m. 9:43 a.m. 10:27 a.m. 7:57 p.m. 8:52 p.m.
Full
Last
New
Dec 7
Dec 13
Dec 20
Dec 29
LAKE LEVELS
As of 7 a.m. Thursday Lake
Level (ft)
Clinton Perry Pomona
Discharge (cfs)
876.91 893.65 976.04
128 25 15
Shown are today’s noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for today.
Fronts Cold
INTERNATIONAL CITIES
Today Cities Hi Lo W Acapulco 88 73 pc Amsterdam 50 34 pc Athens 60 51 pc Baghdad 71 47 pc Bangkok 91 77 pc Beijing 50 27 s Berlin 42 24 s Brussels 49 33 c Buenos Aires 90 67 pc Cairo 67 55 s Calgary 36 26 pc Dublin 42 34 pc Geneva 46 30 s Hong Kong 72 65 pc Jerusalem 51 47 sh Kabul 64 34 s London 45 37 pc Madrid 55 41 pc Mexico City 74 44 pc Montreal 41 30 sh Moscow 24 20 sn New Delhi 80 50 c Oslo 36 24 pc Paris 42 35 c Rio de Janeiro 82 70 pc Rome 60 44 pc Seoul 47 31 s Singapore 85 78 c Stockholm 32 20 sf Sydney 92 66 pc Tokyo 59 47 s Toronto 42 31 pc Vancouver 50 43 r Vienna 42 24 pc Warsaw 35 27 sn Winnipeg 28 21 c
Sat. Hi Lo W 87 73 pc 47 30 s 61 49 pc 69 45 s 91 78 c 51 30 pc 37 26 pc 43 30 s 89 67 s 70 54 s 40 20 c 46 38 pc 42 31 pc 76 67 pc 56 47 pc 68 38 pc 46 35 pc 54 48 pc 74 45 pc 37 26 sf 25 19 sn 79 50 c 32 24 s 42 29 s 88 75 c 62 45 pc 51 38 s 85 78 pc 27 21 s 77 67 pc 59 50 s 42 29 c 50 40 pc 36 22 s 33 24 sf 31 27 pc
Precipitation
Warm Stationary Showers T-storms
Flurries
Snow
WEATHER HISTORY
Q: What is meteorological winter?
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Ninja Warrior
News
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5 I Love Lucy
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19 André Rieu: Waltzing Forever Caught on Camera
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9 D KTWU 11 A Q 12 B ` 13
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Last of the Breed
Dateline NBC (N) h
Shark Tank (N)
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I Love Lucy
Hawaii Five-0
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C I 14 KMCI 15 L KCWE 17
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29 Vampire Diaries
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News
TMZ (N)
Seinfeld
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Late Show-Colbert
Corden
Age Fix With Dr. Youn
Reasons
KSNT
Meyers
Tonight Show
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Jimmy Kimmel Live Nightline
World
Business Charlie Rose (N)
News
Jimmy Kimmel Live Nightline
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Late Show-Colbert
Corden
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Tonight Show
Meyers
Broke
Broke
Simpson Fam Guy
Crazy Ex-Girlfriend
KMBC 9 News
Mod Fam Mod Fam ET
Criminal Minds
Criminal Minds
Criminal Minds
Saving Hope
Clinton
6 News
Turnpike Movie
6 News
Extra (N)
Saving Hope
Cable Channels WOW!6 6 WGN-A CITY
Pets
307 239 Person of Interest
THIS TV 19 25
USD497 26
Our
Person of Interest
›› D.A.R.Y.L. (1985) Mary Beth Hurt.
City Bulletin Board, Commission Meetings
City Bulletin Board
School Board Information
School Board Information
ESPN2 34 209 144 College Football 36 672
SportsCenter (N)
SportsCenter (N)
Supercross Rewind (N) NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Awards (N)
39 360 205 The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File (N)
CNBC 40 355 208 Undercover Boss MSNBC 41 356 209 All In With Chris CNN
dNBA Basketball: Rockets at Nuggets SportsCenter (N)
Tennis
NBCSN 38 603 151 NASCAR Red FNC
Tower Cam/Weather
››‡ Miami Vice (2006) Colin Farrell, Jamie Foxx. ››‡ Explorers (1985) Ethan Hawke.
ESPN 33 206 140 dNBA Basketball: Cavaliers at Bulls FSM
44 202 200 Anderson Cooper
Hannity (N)
Swimming The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File
Undercover Boss
Undercover Boss
Undercover Boss
Rachel Maddow
The Last Word
11th
Anderson Cooper
CNN Tonight
Undercover Boss
Hardball Rachel Maddow
CNN Tonight
United Shades
TNT
45 245 138 ››› The Hunger Games (2012) Jennifer Lawrence.
USA
46 242 105 Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam
A&E
47 265 118 Live PD: Rap Sheet Live PD “Live PD -- 12.02.16” (N) (Live)
TRUTV 48 246 204 Jokers
Jokers
Jokers
Jokers
Jokers
Jokers
50 254 130 Back to the Future Part II
TBS
51 247 139 Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang ELeague (N) (Live)
BRAVO 52 237 129 Housewives/Atl. 54 269 120 Ancient Aliens
SYFY 55 244 122 ››› Galaxy Quest
›› I Am Number Four (2011) (DVS) Leah Remini
Live PD
Jokers
Jokers
››› Back to the Future Part III (1990)
AMC
HIST
Topeka (ap) — A Kansas physician’s assistant has pleaded guilty to breaking federal law while treating patients with Botox and another drug used cosmetically to prevent wrinkles. The U.S. attorney’s office says in a news release that 53-year-old Joel Erskin, of Garden City, admitted Thursday to one count of receiving and dispensing misbranded drugs. He admitted through his plea to purchasing cheaper versions of Botox and Juvederm from Canadian pharmacies while he owned and operated Renovo Medical. The business also is known as University Medical. The release says the Botox he purchased was misbranded and failed to meet labeling requirements. The Juvederm was adulterated and not approved for U.S. distribution. Erskin didn’t inform his clients that the drugs were purchased from Canada and didn’t meet federal standards. Sentencing is set for Dec. 20.
Herington (ap) — The Environmental Protection Agency says it has reached a proposed settlement with Union Pacific Railroad over a sulfuric acid spill in Herington five years ago. The EPA said Wednesday the railroad has agreed to pay a $24,000 civil penalty and complete a $338,100 environmental project because the spill violated federal clean water laws. The Salina Journal reports the railroad agreed to install earthen berms and other structures to minimize runoff from the railroad’s yard in Herington into Lime Creek. Two railroad tank cars at the yard collided in January 2012, releasing 11,000 gallons of sulfuric acid. The EPA says the spill affected about two miles of the creek and caused a fish kill. The settlement doesn’t become final until a public comment period ends Dec. 15.
Senate
oust the Student Senate leaders last year — who are continuing to seek avenues to become their own separate student government. In other matters, here are two KU items of note I spotted today in online news: l Jayhawk with Supreme Court potential: USA Today included KU alumnus David Stras in a roundup of 21 possible U.S. Supreme Court nominees by President-elect Donald Trump. Stras, 42, graduated from the KU School of Law, is now an associate justice on the Minnesota Supreme Court and previously clerked for Supreme Court Justice Clarence
Thomas, according to USA Today. His name was first reported as a potential nominee in May. l Instagram hot spot: KU, once again, is the most-Instagrammed place in Kansas, based on geotagging, USA Today reports. KU’s famous Allen Fieldhouse is No. 4 on the list. (In case you were wondering, No. 2 is Kansas State University, No. 3 is Children’s Mercy Park, home of Sporting KC, and No. 5 is the Kansas Speedway.)
inspections, it’s difficult to offer detailed information about each establishment. Here are Douglas County restaurant inspection results for the second half of November: l Yokohama Sushi Downtown, 811 New Hampshire St., last had a complaint inspection on Nov. 29 and 16 violations were found. The restaurant is currently listed as out of compliance. l Chipotle Mexican Grill, 911 Massachusetts
St., last had a complaint inspection on Nov. 17 and five violations were found. The restaurant is currently listed as out of compliance. l Quick Stop, 1000 W. 23rd St., last had a licensing inspection on Nov. 15 and one violation was found. The establishment is currently listed as out of compliance.
seminar, a peer-mentorship program for first-generation college students, increasing access to mental health services and a multicultural student leader retreat. Several students attending Wednesday’s presentation commended Senate leaders for their efforts, but not everyone thinks Senate will be able to do enough. Also in attendance were leaders of the Multicultural Student Government student organization — including some who pushed to
Inspections CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A
All businesses, even those listed out of compliance, met the basic requirements to safely remain open, unless otherwise noted. With this regular report, I try to provide basic information about food inspections in Douglas County, but due to the sheer volume of
— This is an excerpt from Sara Shepherd’s Heard on the Hill column, which appears regularly on LJWorld.com.
— This is an excerpt from Conrad Swanson’s Lights & Sirens column, which appears regularly on LJWorld.com.
anniversaries • births • weddings • engagements
CELEBRATION ANNOUNCEMENTS Place Your Announcement: Kansas.ObituariesAndCelebrations.com or call 785.832.7151
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M
Wichita (ap) — A man has been sentenced to eight years and four months in prison in the fatal shooting death of a Wichita concrete company worker. The Wichita Eagle reports that 43-year-old Deon Nolan Hale was sentenced Wednesday for voluntary manslaughter in the death of Efren Antonio Villarreal-Alvarado. Authorities have said robbery motivated the February 2014 shooting of the 43-year-old as he sat in his truck. The sentence imposed was the maximum allowable. But the victim’s ex-wife, Dawn Villarreal, said it was too short and that “the system has failed us.” Another man, Donnie Lalonde, was sentenced previously to 24 years in the killing. The homicide conviction is the second for Hale, who also goes by Auriel Huntstwobears. The first was second-degree reckless murder for a 1997 killing in Douglas County.
WEATHER TRIVIA™
On Dec. 2, 1950, a late-season tornado killed four people in Madison and Bond counties of Illinois.
MOVIES 7:30
Ice
Today Sat. Today Sat. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Memphis 61 41 pc 51 43 r Albuquerque 46 28 c 45 27 c Miami 83 72 pc 81 72 pc Anchorage 21 10 sn 13 4 c Milwaukee 39 27 c 38 27 c Atlanta 58 40 s 60 45 c Minneapolis 34 23 c 36 30 c Austin 66 50 r 58 48 r Nashville 56 34 pc 51 39 c Baltimore 52 33 s 50 32 s New Orleans 65 54 pc 67 63 r Birmingham 60 37 s 56 42 r 50 40 s 48 37 pc Boise 39 28 pc 44 32 pc New York 41 24 pc 42 31 pc Boston 51 37 s 46 31 pc Omaha Orlando 74 54 s 77 60 pc Buffalo 42 34 c 42 29 c 51 38 s 49 35 pc Cheyenne 31 13 sn 38 23 pc Philadelphia Phoenix 63 45 pc 70 46 s Chicago 40 25 c 38 26 c 42 32 c 43 30 c Cincinnati 44 28 pc 43 28 pc Pittsburgh Portland, ME 49 32 pc 44 26 pc Cleveland 42 35 sn 43 32 c Portland, OR 50 45 r 53 46 c Dallas 65 47 pc 50 46 r Reno 40 21 s 48 26 s Denver 36 15 c 45 21 c 55 31 s 52 32 s Des Moines 41 28 pc 43 34 pc Richmond Sacramento 59 36 s 59 37 s Detroit 43 31 c 44 30 c St. Louis 48 31 pc 45 35 pc El Paso 62 41 pc 51 37 r Fairbanks -4 -9 sn -6 -17 sn Salt Lake City 35 18 pc 35 22 pc 67 46 s 69 47 s Honolulu 82 70 sh 81 70 sh San Diego San Francisco 60 46 s 61 47 s Houston 69 55 sh 64 60 r 50 45 r 51 41 r Indianapolis 43 28 c 42 30 pc Seattle Spokane 38 33 sn 42 35 pc Kansas City 48 29 pc 45 36 c Tucson 62 39 s 64 41 s Las Vegas 55 38 s 60 41 s Tulsa 58 40 pc 49 40 r Little Rock 59 40 pc 46 41 r Wash., DC 54 38 s 51 36 s Los Angeles 65 45 s 70 48 s National extremes yesterday for the 48 contiguous states High: Stuart, FL 90° Low: Sunrise Mountain, AZ -9°
FRIDAY Prime Time WOW DTV DISH 7 PM
Rain
-10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s National Summary: Rain and snow showers will affect the Great Lakes region with snow showers over the Rockies today. Rain will gather in Texas and linger in the coastal Northwest. Winds will buffet parts of California.
The coldest 1/4 year. Early December through early March.
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016
Guilty plea entered in Settlement in works cosmetic drugs case over 2012 acid spill
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A
A:
First
Man sentenced in worker’s slaying
NATIONAL FORECAST
SUN & MOON Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset
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Snack
Jokers
The Walking Dead
Married to Medicine ››› The School of Rock (2003) Jack Black.
School
Ancient Aliens
Ancient Aliens
Ancient Aliens
Ancient Aliens
Z Nation (N)
Van Helsing (N)
Z Nation
Incorporated
››› 22 Jump Street (2014) Jonah Hill, Channing Tatum. ››› 22 Jump Street (2014) Jonah Hill. Joe Dirt 2: Beautiful Loser (2015) David Spade. ››‡ Bruce Almighty (2003) Jim Carrey. ››‡ Cheaper by the Dozen (2003) Football E! News (N) ›‡ Zookeeper (2011) Kevin James. CMT Crossroads ›‡ Zookeeper (2011) Kevin James.
FX 56 COM 58 E! 59 CMT 60 GAC 61 BET 64 VH1 66 TRV 67 TLC 68 LIFE 69 LMN 70 FOOD 72 HGTV 73 NICK 76 DISNXD 77 DISN 78 TOON 79 DSC 81 FREE 82 NGC 83 HALL 84 ANML 85 TVL 86 TBN 90 EWTN 91 RLTV 93 CSPAN2 95 CSPAN 96 ID 101 AHC 102 OWN 103 WEA 116 TCM 162
248 249 236 327 326 329 335 277 280 252 253 231 229 299 292 290 296 278 311 276 312 282 304 372 370
136 107 114 166 165 124 162 215 183 108 109 110 112 170 174 172 176 182 180 186 185 184 106 260 261
351 350 285 287 279 362 256
211 210 192 195 189 214 132
Flea Flea Flea Flea Flea Flea Flea Flea Flea Flea Martin Martin Martin Martin Martin Martin Martin Martin Wendy Williams ››› Bad Boys (1995, Action) Martin Lawrence. ››› Bad Boys (1995, Action) Martin Lawrence. Expedition Un. Expedition Un. Expedition Un. Expedition Un. Expedition Un. A Haunting: Back A Haunting (N) Kindred Spirits (N) A Haunting Kindred Spirits ›› Christmas With the Kranks (2004) Wish Upon a Christmas (2015) Christmas-Krank Nightmare Wedding (2016) Premiere. Her Dark Past (2016) Anna Lise Phillips. Nightmare Wed Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners House Hunters House Hunters Hunters Hunt Intl Hunters Hunt Intl House Hunters Legends of the Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Friends Friends Friends Friends Star-For. Star-For. Star-For. Star-For. Star-For. Star-For. Star-For. Star-For. Star-For. Star-For. Cali Style Girl Bunk’d K.C. Bizaard Walk the Cali Style Bunk’d Girl Austin Teen Titans Go! King/Hill Cleve American Burgers Fam Guy Fam Guy Neighbor Hinden. Gold Rush: Pay Dirt Gold Rush (N) Treasure Quest Gold Rush Treasure Quest ››› The Santa Clause ››› The Polar Express (2004) Charlie & Chocolate Factory Hubble’s Amazing Mars (Part 3 of 6) Explorer Mission Pluto Explorer The Nine Lives of Christmas (2014) Matchmaker Santa (2012) Royal Chris Tanked: Sea Pet Nation Pet Nation Tanked Tanked Griffith Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond King King King King Behind Lindsey End/ Age P. Stone Praise (N) Christine Price Spirit Alexandrina News Rosary The The Seven Women Fr. Spitzer ››‡ Second Chorus (1940) Film Book Cooking Cooking Second Second Public Affairs Events Public Affairs Public Affairs Politics and Public Policy Today Politics-Public Deadly Women Wives With Knives Truth Is Strang. Deadly Women Wives With Knives What History Forgot Outlaw Biker Gangs Forbidden History What History Forgot Outlaw Biker Gangs Worse Worse Worse Worse Worse Worse Worse Worse Worse Worse Extreme Weather Tornado Road Tornado Road Tornado Road Tornado Road ›› The Devil to Pay (1930) ››› Arrowsmith (1931) Ronald Colman. ›‡ Consolation Marriage
HBO 401 MAX 411 SHOW 421 STZENC 440 STRZ 451
501 515 545 535 527
300 310 318 340 350
Westworld ›› Ted 2 (2015) Mark Wahlberg. Tracey ››› High Fidelity (2000) ››› The Score (2001) Robert De Niro. ››› Panic Room (2002) Jodie Foster. Presumed Inn. ›› No Escape (2015) Owen Wilson. Tony Roberts The Affair Shameless ›› Made of Honor I Know What You Did Last I Still Know What You Did Primeval ››› Jarhead Spartacus: Gods Spartacus: Gods Spartacus: Gods Hills Hve Eyes
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L awrence J ournal -W orld
Friday, December 2, 2016
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NEW CONSTRUCTION
2212 Riviera
339 Headwaters Drive
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
OPEN SUNDAY 12:00-2:00 Wonderful Location!
• Main Level Master Suite • Stainless Steel Appliances • Granite Kitchen Counter Tops • Two Living Areas • Close to Rock Chalk Park
$415,900
4 Bed, 3 Bath, Bsmt: Yes, 2,714 Sqft MLS# 139796
Kate Carnahan 423-1937
NEW CONSTRUCTION 6325 Steeple Chase Court
New Price! Put a Bow on it! • • • • •
Immaculate Home, All Updated New Impact Resistance Roof Main Level Master and Laundry Remodeled Kitchen and Baths Lovely Wood Floors
OPEN SATURDAY 12:00-2:00 New in Langston Heights!
4 Bedroom, 3 Bath, Basement: Yes 2,351 Sqft Price: $299,900 MLS# 141078 1376 Stonecreek Drive
• Big and Open/Vaulted Ceilings • Main Level Master • Hardwood Floors and Ceramic Tile • Formal Dining + Eat-in Kitchen • Langston/SW/Freestate Schools
$340,000
Kim Clements 766-5837
NEW CONSTRUCTION 3908 Blazing Star Court
OPEN SUNDAY 11:30-1:30 Holcomb Floor Plan
• Cul-de-Sac Location • 3 Bed/3 Bath/2 Car Garage • Open Floor Plan with Basement • Large Pantry in Kitchen • Oversized 2+ Garage
$299,900
3 Bed, 3 Bath, Bsmt: Yes, 1,955 Sqft MLS# 138191 VT# 3369868
Amy LeMert 979-9911
$349,900
4 Bed, 3 Bath, Bsmt: Yes, 2,988 Sqft MLS# 138615
NEW CONSTRUCTION
OPEN SUNDAY 12:00-2:00 Now is the Time to Buy!
4 Bed, 4 Bath, Bsmt: Yes, 2,850 Sqft MLS# 139840 VT# 3824648
• Spacious, Luxury Townhouse • Compare the Quality • Special Treatments and Upgrades • Arches and 10 ft Ceilings • Finished Daylight Basement
Lucy Harris 764-1583
NEW CONSTRUCTION
516 N Blazing Star Drive
2250 Lake Pointe Drive #1500
OPEN SUNDAY 1:30-3:30 Sienna Floor Plan!
OPEN SUNDAY 1:00-3:00 Easy Living at Lake View!
• 3 Bed/3 Bath/3 Car Garage • Dual Master Suites • Large Pantry and Walk-in’s • FEMA Rated Storm/Safe Room • Covered Patio with Wonderful View
$329,900
3 Bed, 3 Bath, Bsmt: No, 2,120 Sqft MLS# 139980
• Finished Basement with Wet Bar • Outdoor Fireplace, Covered Deck • Gorgeous Granite Counters • HOA - Lawn Care, Snow Removal • Convenient SW Lawrence Location
Lucy Harris 764-1583
$304,900
3 Bed, 3 Bath, Bsmt: Yes, 2,663 Sqft MLS# 138461
Michelle Hack 760-1337
4423 Gretchen Court
NEW CONSTRUCTION
2250 Lake Pointe Drive #501
OPEN SUNDAY 1:00-3:00 Easy Living at Lake View!
• Beautiful Finishes Throughout • Covered Patio, Clubhouse • Gorgeous Granite Counters • HOA - Lawn Care, Snow Removal • Fast Closing, Capture Low Rate
$279,900
2 Bed, 2 Bath, Bsmt: Yes, 1,586 Sqft MLS# 138458 VT# 3838011
OPEN SATURDAY 12:00-2:00 Great Cul-de-Sac Location
• Lots of Space in this 2 Story • Formal Living and Dining • Large Eat-in Kitchen • Screened Porch and Fenced Yard • Move-in Ready! Alejandra Guzman 550-6023
$269,900
6 Bed, 4 Bath, Bsmt: Yes, 4,276 Sqft MLS# 141373
1704 Mississippi
Thanks to everyone who came out to support the Festival of Trees to donate to the Shelter which provides emergency service for youths and families in Lawrence since 1981.
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
One of a Kind Near Campus • • • • •
Kim Clements 766-5837
Sheila Santee 766-4410
Located One Block South of Campus Provides Relaxing Porches Modern Urban Interior Lofty Ceilings and Natural Light Call For Appointment
3 Bedroom, 2 Bath, Basement: Yes 1,664 Sqft Price: $229,000 MLS# 141074
Toni McCalla 550-5206
Paige Ensminger 550-8180
10A
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Friday, December 2, 2016
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L awrence J ournal -W orld
2110 Crossgate Drive
761 Lincoln Street
OPEN SATURDAY 11:00-1:00
OPEN SATURDAY 11:00-1:00 First Time Open!
• Refreshed Alvamar Townhome • New Granite Counters • New Driveway and Patio • Brand New Roof • Near Alvamar Golf Course
$164,900
Kate Carnahan 423-1937
3 Bed, 2 Bath, Bsmt: No, 1,495 Sqft MLS# 141332
1420 W 3rd
New Construction in North Lawrence • • • • •
Generous Size Lots Modern Finishes 3 Bedrooms and 3 Bath Areas Close to Biking and Running Trails Energy Efficient Home
3 Bedroom, 3 Bath, Basement: No 1,230 Sqft Price: $159,950 MLS# 140102
OPEN SATURDAY 12:00-2:00 Completely Remodeled!
• Hardwood Floors/Tile • Stainless Appliances/Granite • Fenced Backyard/Mature Trees • New Lighting/Fixtures • Full Unfinished Basement
Henry Wertin 760-7499
$149,900
3505 Firefly Court
2726 Ponderosa Drive
1008 W 29 Terrace
NTR O C R E UND OPEN SUNDAY 12:00-2:00 First Time Open
• Open Floor Plan • 3 Beds/3 Baths/2 Car • New Flooring on Main Floor • Granite Countertops • Fenced Yard
$147,500
3 Bed, 3 Bath, Bsmt: No, 1,462 Sqft MLS# 141296 VT# 3924759
Cheri Drake 423-2839
Kim Clements 766-5837
3 Bed, 1 Bath, Bsmt: Yes, 1,320 Sqft MLS# 141195
OPEN SATURDAY 1:00-3:00 New Price
• Great Layout with New Carpet • Mudroom Off Kitchen • Large Fenced Backyard • Out Building with Electricity • Convenient Location
$119,900
3 Bed, 1 Bath, Bsmt: No, 1,120 Sqft MLS# 141020
Holiday Food Collection for Kids NOW thru December 12th, 2016
Drop off at McGrew Office by 12/13/16 Please donate kid friendly non perishable food for the local food pantries. Make the holidays better for the children of Lawrence who depend on food banks.
Lucy Harris 764-1583
ACT
OPEN SUNDAY 12:00-2:00 Move-in Ready Townhome!
• Near Schools • New AC, Appliances Stay • Hard Surface Floors Throughout • Fenced Back Yard • Easy Access to K-10
$79,900
2 Bed, 1 Bath, Bsmt: No, 888 Sqft MLS# 140942
Cheryl Puentes 393-2067
Needing help this year? Come to the Toy Shop at the old Border’s Bookstore at 7th & New Hampshire Open Thursday, December 15th thru Friday, December 23rd Tuesday - Friday 10am-6pm and Saturday 10am - noon DOUGLAS COUNTY
Deborah McMullen 766-6759
Every Child Deserves a Little Christmas
Questions? Mary Jones 766-3023
SECTION B
USA TODAY — L awrence J ournal -W orld
IN MONEY
IN LIFE
Car sales surge post-election
As ‘Jackie,’ Portman is generating Oscar buzz
12.02.16 JUSTIN SULLIVAN, GETTY IMAGES
STEPHANIE BRANCHU
Trump picks a ‘war fighter’ to lead Defense Retired Marine general Mattis is a departure from more civilian control at Pentagon Jim Michaels @jimmichaels USA TODAY
James Mattis, a retired fourstar general, achieved almost mythic status within the Marine Corps as an aggressive combat commander and innovative strategist whose speeches and writings defined the warrior ethos for the latest generation of military men and women. Donald Trump’s decision to name Mattis to head the Defense Department would be a strong NEWSLINE
signal that the president-elect is looking for a wartime leader at the Pentagon and not someone to just manage budgets. At a rally in Cincinnati Thursday night, Trump noted that Mattis had been chosen for the post. During the campaign, Trump said he would overhaul the U.S. strategy to defeat the Islamic State. Trump has said the current plan isn’t working and suggested some military leaders had been cowed by the Obama administration. “You could easily imagine that Trump believes the advice of gen-
ALEX BRANDON, AP
“You are to annihilate them. You are to make them recoil back and say, ‘We don’t ever want to take on the U.S. Marines.’ ” Retired Marine general James Mattis, regarding America’s enemies
erals has been muted and diluted,” said Gregory Newbold, a retired Marine lieutenant general and friend of Mattis. “He’s looking for somebody who is the antidote to that. You certainly get that in Jim Mattis.” If confirmed by the Senate, Mattis would be a departure from previous Defense secretaries who have come from the ranks of civilian government service or politics. He would replace Ash Carter, a physicist who rose through the ranks of the Defense Department. Mattis’ appointment as Defense secretary would require a congressional waiver because federal law requires a seven-year gap between retirement from the
military and assuming the Cabinet post, a statute designed to safeguard the principle of civilian control over the military. The last retired general to head the Defense Department was George Marshall in 1950. Mattis, 66, retired in 2013 after 44 years in the Marine Corps. He led an infantry battalion in the Persian Gulf War in 1990-91 and commanded a task force that struck deep into Afghanistan after the 9/11 attacks. In 2003, he led a division that raced across the desert toward Baghdad in the initial assault into Iraq. His call sign was “chaos.” On and off the battlefield, Matv STORY CONTINUES ON 2B
USA TODAY INVESTIGATION
2015 PHOTO BY JOHN BAZEMORE, AP
Army 1st Lt. Shaye Haver, center, and Capt. Kristen Griest, right, and other female soldiers mark their graduation from Army Ranger training at Fort Benning, Ga.
IN NEWS
EXCLUSIVE Obama supports draft registration for women
Symbolic gesture comes ahead of House vote on defense policy
This is an edition of USA TODAY provided for your local newspaper. An expanded version of USA TODAY is available at newsstands or by subscription, and at usatoday.com.
For the latest national sports coverage, go to sports.usatoday.com
USA SNAPSHOTS©
Shoppers crave retail events
74%
of consumers say perks and memorable events would lure them to brick-andmortar stores vs. online.
SOURCE Coldwell Banker Commercial survey of 2,000 plus consumers MICHAEL B. SMITH AND VERONICA BRAVO, USA TODAY
A CRASH COURSE IN RACIAL DISPARITIES
MIAMI TOWNSHIP POLICE DEPARTMENT
Blacks die in police chases at rates higher than others
Thomas Frank USA TODAY
FLINT, MICH . James Thompson was the first to die. The 75-year-old Navy veteran had just taken four neighborhood boys for haircuts when an SUV whose driver was fleeing the police smashed into his car with such force that the impact ruptured his brain. Four months later, two Michigan troopers chased a driver through Flint at more than 120 mph until he broadsided a car and killed a 42-year-old nursing assistant. The next month, when a driver without a seatbelt wouldn’t pull over, a Michigan trooper chased him, ran a red light and killed a grandmother coming home from a beauty shop. The month after that, a speeding motorcyclist fleeing a trooper,
SALWAN GEORGES, DETROIT FREE PRESS
Margo Thompson lost her husband, James Thompson, in a police chase in 2014 in Flint, Mich.
hit an oncoming car and died. All four chases happened in 2014, all within 4 miles of one another. And all shared one other characteristic: Everyone killed was black. The spate of fatal pursuits in Flint is perhaps the most extraordinary illustration of a longstanding, deadly and, until now, overlooked inequality in U.S. policing. A first-of-its-kind investigation by USA TODAY shows that black people across the nation — both innocent bystanders and those fleeing the police — have been killed in police chases at a rate nearly three times higher than everyone else. USA TODAY examined federal records for 5,300 fatal pursuits since 1999, when the government started tracking the races of people killed in car crashes. USA TOv STORY CONTINUES ON 2B
DEADLY POLICE PURSUITS About 90 black people were killed each year in police chases between 1999 and 2015. Deaths per million residents: Black
White
3.13 3.0
2.0
1.12 1.0
0 ’99
’15
SOURCE National Highway Traffic Safety Administration; U.S. Census Bureau, USA TODAY research JIM SERGENT, USA TODAY
FOR COMPLETE COVERAGE GO TO POLICECHASES.USATODAY.COM
Starbucks CEO stepping down, remains chairman Charisse Jones @charissejones USA TODAY
Howard Schultz, who helped turn Starbucks into an iconic global brand as well known for its activism as its coffee blends, will step down from the role of CEO in April. Schultz will become the company’s executive chairman, concentrating on ramping up Starbucks Reserve Roasteries, a new premium experience that the company is betting on to boost growth worldwide, as well
as the company’s well-known forays into community activism. Kevin Johnson, the company’s current president and COO will become the CEO, retaining the title of president. “In all my years at Starbucks I have never been more energized or exhilarated about the opportunities that lie ahead,’’ Schultz said in a conference call Thursday. “I’m not leaving the company. ... I’m going to contribute to what I consider a significant growth opportunity.” It’s the second time since Schultz bought the Starbucks Coffee Company in the late 1980s
that he has stepped down from the role of CEO. He resigned in 2000, only to return to the helm eight years later. But “the differences between then and now couldn’t be greater,’’ he said, noting that when he returned to the top job in 2008, Starbucks and other companies were riding out the dramatic financial downturn that was the Great Recession. “The management team at that time ... just did not have the capability or experience to really navigate through that difficult period.” In recent years, he says, the company has assembled “the strongest leader-
STEPHEN BRASHEAR
Starbucks’ Howard Schultz is “exhilarated” by new role.
ship team in our history.” Johnson, who began his career as a systems engineer for IBM, joined the Starbucks board in 2009 and began working at the company in 2015. He previously spent 16 years at Microsoft working on global sales and marketing, then five years in Silicon Valley as CEO of Juniper Networks, a Sunnyvale, Calf.-company that develops networking products. It is Johnson’s deep background in technology that Schultz said will be pivotal for Starbucks’ future growth. Contributing: Elizabeth Weise
2B
L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY FRIDAY, DECEMBER 2, 2016
USA TODAY INVESTIGATION Humble, Texas • May 2013
A high-speed police pursuit ended when the suspects crashed into a vehicle killing the driver and injuring a child.
COURT RECORDS
COURT VIDEO
Ashley Howard and Racquel Gonzalez are seen on security video as they shoplifted shirts from Macy’s right before fleeing police and crashing.
A CRASH COURSE IN RACIAL DISPARITIES v CONTINUED FROM 1B
DAY also took a deeper look at 702 chases in 2013 and 2014, reviewing thousands of pages of police documents and hours of video of pursuits across the nation. Among the findings: uBlacks have been killed at a disproportionate rate in pursuits every year since 1999. On average, 90 black people were killed each year in police chases, nearly double what would be expected based on their percentage of the population. uDeadly pursuits of black drivers were twice as likely to start over minor offenses or nonviolent crimes. In 2013 and 2014, nearly every deadly pursuit triggered by an illegally tinted window, a seat-belt violation or the smell of marijuana involved a black driver. uBlack people were more likely than whites to be chased in more crowded urban areas, during peak traffic hours and with passengers in their cars, all factors that can increase the danger to innocent bystanders. Chases of black motorists were about 70% more likely to wind up killing a bystander. USA TODAY’s findings come amidst amid remarkable national tumult over police tactics that increasingly are seen as targeting minorities. Deadly encounters over the past two years between officers and black men sparked unrest from Ferguson, Mo., to Baltimore and Charlotte, and raised difficult questions about why black people are stopped, searched, arrested and shot by the police at higher rates than others. Pursuits are among the most dangerous police activities. They have killed more than 6,200 people since 1999. Black people make up 13% of the U.S. population, but are 28% of those killed in pursuits whose race was known. The racially lopsided death toll mirrors almost exactly the disparity in police shooting deaths. Yet police chases have remained 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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largely unexplored even as the Justice Department moves to track more carefully other types of deadly interactions with the police. USA TODAY asked 11 of the nation’s leading researchers on race and policing to review its analysis. Each said the findings demand additional scrutiny because they raise the prospect that race impacts affects one of the most lethal police activities. “This is not giving someone a traffic ticket. This is people dying,” said Jack McDevitt, director of Northeastern University’s Institute on Race and Justice. “The cost of having small disparities is huge because you’re ending up with loss of life.” Police officials, including those from the Michigan State Police, said a suspect’s race has no impact on officers’ decision to pursue. Instead, they suggested that any disparity was likely a byproduct of police spending more time in high-crime neighborhoods. Michigan’s state police were sent to Flint in 2012 with orders to crack down on minor offenses in a city grappling with rising crime and a shrinking police force. There and elsewhere, officials said officers chase only those who run. “The decision to flee from police is a choice made by the driver, not the officer,” Michigan State Police spokeswoman Shannon Banner said. Still, courts and some law enforcement agencies have said police bear some responsibility for the danger because their decisions to begin or continue a chase can escalate the risk. And critics fear police are more willing to take that risk in black neighborhoods. “It’s an issue of institutionalized racism, that communities of color are not valued as much as communities not of color,” said Michigan state Rep. Sheldon Neeley, a Democrat from Flint. Margo Thompson, who lost her husband of 45 years in one of the Flint chases, blames both men who were speeding that day — the trooper and the man he
SALWAN GEORGES/DETROIT FREE PRESS
Margo Thompson blames a Michigan trooper and the suspect he was chasing for the death of her husband, James. “They took away my heart, my love,” she says.
CHASE DISPARITIES The settings for police chases that ended in fatalities during 2013 and 2014 differ significantly between white and black drivers: Black
White
MINOR OFFENSES
URBAN CHASES
LIGHT LEVEL
Percentage of pursuits started over minor offenses:
Percentage of pursuits on urban roads:
Percentage of pursuits involving black drivers when it was:
63.7% 50.1%
39.6%
Light outside Dark outside
31.9% 21.6%
20.3%
SOURCE National Highway Traffic Safety Administration; USA TODAY research JIM SERGENT, USA TODAY
was chasing. “They took away my heart, my love,” Thompson said as she sat in the small retirement-community apartment where she now lives by herself. Figuring out why the death toll falls so heavily on black people is nearly impossible because states and the federal government do so little to track chases or the people they killed during them. Like the racial imbalance in police shootings and traffic stops,
the disparity in chase deaths could be a consequence of where crimes occur or who commits them, where police patrol, how drivers react to being stopped, or how officers respond, even subconsciously, to suspects based on their race. Measuring police bias is tricky and often imprecise. One way researchers have tried is by comparing incidents that happened in the daytime, when it’s easier for the police to see the color of
Rosabla Quezada was killed during a police chase.
someone’s skin, with those that happened in the dark. USA TODAY analyzed fatal pursuits the same way. In daylight, 31% of the drivers involved in deadly police chases were black. In darkness, 21% of the drivers in deadly chases were black. That difference also shows up in chases that ended in non-fatal crashes. Thousands of records obtained from Texas and Tennessee — the only two states that keep track — showed almost identical patterns. “It’s a provocative difference,” said Jeffrey Grogger, a University of Chicago professor who did the first study of traffic stops in daylight and darkness. Additional research is needed to determine how much of the disparity is caused by police actions and how much is caused by drivers, he said. “The pattern is really striking.” Whatever its causes, the disparity is clear: For every 100,000 black people in the United States, four were killed in police chases over the 17 years between 1999 and 2015. For every 100,000 people who are not black, 1.5 were killed. Those death rates are a broad measure. They cannot account for other things that might influence the death toll, including how often people of different races flee from the police. Nobody tracks that. “Disparity is not the same as discrimination. But disparity does indicate the need for further investigation,” said University of Pittsburgh law professor David Harris, a leading expert on racial profiling. USA TODAY found no evidence that officers overtly considered a suspect’s race in deciding whether to stop or pursue. But research suggests that a suspect’s race can subtly influence how police react to him or her. “Even when people think they’re not using race in decisionmaking in law enforcement, there is this way we as humans see people — particularly black people — as criminal or potentially criminal,” said Delores Jones-Brown, director of the John Jay College Center on Race, Crime and Justice. Contributing: Mark Hannan, Brad Heath, Brett Kelman
Mattis has reputation as a blunt speaker v CONTINUED FROM 1B
tis developed a reputation as a blunt speaker whose language sometimes harkened to an earlier time, capturing the ethos of being a warrior. He avoids military jargon like exit strategy and instead speaks unapologetically about “victory,” “ferocity” and “slaughtering” the enemy. He sprinkles his talk with historic references, often reaching back to the ancient Romans and Greeks. When he was preparing his troops to head into Iraq, he cited an epitaph from Roman general Lucius Cornelius Sulla to explain counterinsurgency to his troops: “No better friend, no worse enemy.” “There was always a sense that we had to put things into words that would touch our troops’ hearts — not just their heads,” Mattis said in a 2013 interview with USA TODAY. Speaking to newly minted infantry officers at the Marine base in Quantico, Va., several years ago, he described the affection that leaders feel for their troops and the need to maintain authority despite those emotions. He worked in references to Little Big Horn and Valley Forge. He left no room for doubt about their role if they find themselves at war with America’s enemies. “You are to annihilate them,” he said. “You are to make them recoil back and say, ‘We
CAROLYN KASTER, AP
Donald Trump calls out to media as he stands Nov. 19 with retired Marine general James Mattis in Bedminster, N.J. don’t ever want to take on the U.S. Marines.’” Those who have worked with him say he is more than a battle commander. As head of U.S. Central Command, which oversees military operations in the Middle East, he traveled the region, cultivating ties with foreign military leaders and helping shape strategy in the area. “I know he has this reputation as a ‘war fighter,’ and it certainly is earned, but he really is a clear, precise strategic thinker, more so than any man I have ever worked for,” said Jim Howcroft, a retired Marine officer who served as Mattis’ intelligence officer during the Iraq invasion in 2003.
Since retiring, Mattis has lamented the lack of strategy in Washington. Testifying before Congress last year, he said the United States should “come out from our reactive crouch and take a firm, strategic stance in defense of our values.” Strategy is often defined as an overarching set of principles and goals that guide policy decisions. In 2013, Mattis left his position as head of Central Command, which oversees combat operations in the Middle East, amid reports the White House squeezed him out. Asked about the reports at the time, Mattis said he provided the unvarnished truth to his civilian
leadership. “The idea that you should moderate it before you give it to them is not showing respect to your civilian leadership,” Mattis said at the time. As Pentagon chief Mattis would also guide the military’s personnel policies, possibly wading into the controversial order by the Obama administration to open all military jobs to women, including the infantry and special operations. The Marine Corps had asked for an exemption for its infantry units, following a study that showed mixed-gender infantry squads did not perform as well as all-male units. Carter denied the exemption request, and the Marine Corps is taking steps to open the infantry to women. Trump during the campaign derided “politically correct” military personnel policies, though he has not said whether he would change it. Mattis has also not publicly stated his position on opening the jobs to women, but he has said the decision should be based on what impact it would have on combat effectiveness. He has talked about what makes jobs like the infantry distinct. “There is a great difference between military service in dangerous circumstances and serving in a combat unit whose role is to search out, close with and kill the enemy at close quarters,” Mattis testified last year before Congress.
SPORTS LIFE AUTOS In theaters this weekend TRAVEL
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USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld FRIDAY, DECEMBER 2, 2016
MOVIES
Compiled from reviews by USA TODAY film critics
Rating; the good and the bad
The Accountant
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Plot: A mysterious accountant (Ben Affleck) has to protect a colleague (Anna Kendrick) when a financial inconsistency puts them both in danger. Director: Gavin O’Connor
2 hours, 8 minutes
Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them eeeE
2 hours, 10 minutes
Rating: R Upside: Affleck nicely captures the physicality and emotions of an action hero with autism. Downside: The movie carries a load of secrets, and the revelations are frustratingly backloaded.
Plot: An out-of-town magizoologist (Eddie Redmayne) has to round up his fantastical critters when they get loose in New York City. Director: David Yates
Rating: PG-13 Upside: J.K. Rowling crafts an enchanting retro adventure in her magical mythology. Downside: Like other franchise starters, it tries to do way too much in a twohour run time.
2 hours, 4 minutes
Hacksaw Ridge
Rating: R Upside: Zemeckis captures an authentic look and the paranoia of the early 1940s. Downside: The movie’s two leads don’t have the needed heat for a real romantic spark.
Plot: A devout young man (Andrew Garfield) enlists in the Army during World War II yet won’t touch a gun. Director: Mel Gibson
1 hour, 56 minutes
Moana
Rating: PG-13 Upside: It’s a supremely crafted, well-acted and thought-provoking exploration of humanity. Downside: Most every other recent sci-fi movie looks pedestrian in comparison.
Plot: A teenage adventurer (voiced by Auli‘i Cravalho) hits the high seas to return a mystical gem and save her island. Directors: John Musker and Ron Clements
1 hour, 32 minutes
Nocturnal Animals
Rating: R Upside: Moronic kid sidekick Thurman Merman (again played by Brett Kelly) steals scenes as an even dumber adult. Downside: The searing image of Thornton and a charity worker (Christina Hendricks) having a quickie in a tree lot.
Plot: An art gallery owner (Amy Adams) receives a manuscript from her writer ex-husband (Jake Gyllenhaal) that captures her imagination. Director: Tom Ford
1 hour, 55 minutes
Rules Don’t Apply
Rating: PG-13 Upside: Cumberbatch adds enchanting spirit to Strange, giving comic-book movies another goateed icon who can hang with the likes of Iron Man. Downside: The movie is overly packed with various dimensions and lore, and the goofier gags fall flat.
Plot: A driver (Alden Ehrenreich) falls for a young actress (Lily Collins) under contract to Howard Hughes (Warren Beatty). Director: Warren Beatty
1 hour, 38 minutes
Trolls
Rating: R Upside: It’s a movie filled with standout performances, including a raw, yet hilarious Steinfeld. Downside: There are times when Nadine really needs to be grounded.
Plot: An unlikely pair of Trolls (voiced by Anna Kendrick and Justin Timberlake) go on a rescue mission to save their friends from the ogre-like Bergens. Directors: Mike Mitchell, Walt Dohrn
WARNER BROS. PICTURES
Allied
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Plot: A Canadian wing commander (Brad Pitt) falls for a French Resistance fighter (Marion Cotillard) in World War II. Director: Robert Zemeckis
PARAMOUNT PICTURES VIA AP
Arrival
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Plot: A linguistics expert (Amy Adams) is tasked with deciphering messages from alien visitors. Director: Denis Villeneuve
Bad Santa 2 Plot: Whiskey-loving, cigarette-smoking Willie Soke (Billy Bob Thornton) returns with a new holiday crime scheme sure to finish off the good name of Kris Kringle. Director: Mark Waters
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After his career is derailed by an accident, a neurosurgeon (Benedict Cumberbatch) goes on a mystical journey to become a superhero sorcerer. Director: Scott Derrickson
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Plot: High school becomes intolerable for angst-filled Nadine (Hailee Steinfeld) when her only friend (Haley Lu Richardson) starts dating her too-perfect brother (Blake Jenner). Director: Kelly Fremon Craig
1 hour, 53 minutes Rating: PG Upside: The charming seafaring epic is buoyed by a bevy of Lin-Manuel Miranda tunes. Downside: The plot drifts away at times.
DISNEY VIA AP
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1 hour, 56 minutes Rating: R Upside: Michael Shannon steals the movie as an enigmatic Texas cop out for justice. Downside: The multi-part storytelling confuses the narrative at times.
FOCUS FEATURES
DISNEY/MARVEL
The Edge of Seventeen
2 hours, 18 minutes Rating: R Upside: Gibson’s latest is a brutally intense and elegantly crafted war drama. Downside: The film wrestles with overt preachiness and military-movie clichés.
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JAN THIJS FOR BROAD GREEN PICTURES
Doctor Strange
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PARAMOUNT PICTURES VIA AP
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STX FILMS
LIFELINE
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2 hours, 7 minutes Rating: PG-13 Upside: Beatty has surrounded himself with attractive young up-andcomers and Hollywood mainstays. Downside: The solid if unspectacular effort struggles with tonal inconsistencies.
20TH CENTURY FOX VIA AP
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1 hour, 33 minutes Rating: PG Upside: The jukebox musical is filled with fun covers and original songs. Downside: Style trumps substance in this sweet cinematic confection.
DREAMWORKS ANIMATION
MOVIES
THEY SAID WHAT? THE STARS’ BEST QUOTES “I used to be someone that they labeled as plus-size. ... I don’t want to be called that. I’m a woman with curves, and what I would say was average size at the time. I was very proud of who I was.” — Khloe Kardashian at ‘Fortune’s Most Powerful Women Next Gen Summit
CAUGHT IN THE ACT Rihanna and Prince Harry joined forces Thursday at the Man Aware event in recognition of World AIDS Day. In Barbados for the nation’s 50th anniversary of independence, they took HIV tests to highlight the importance of testing and reduce the stigma.
USA SNAPSHOTS©
Tangible, now!
61% prefer a physical gift over tickets for a future, fun event.
SOURCE Alliance Data’s “Would You Rather? Holiday Edition” online survey of 1,145 consumers TERRY BYRNE AND PAUL TRAP, USA TODAY
Patrick Ryan USA TODAY
In the pantheon of specific accents, Jackie Kennedy’s reigns supreme. So when Natalie Portman signed on to play the former first lady in the biopic Jackie, she faced the seemingly impossible task of replicating Kennedy’s unusual mid-Atlantic dialect, marked by discordant, rounded vowels and a hushed, breathy timbre. “The first day I did it, I could definitely see everyone’s faces like, ‘Uh-oh,’ ” Portman says with a smirk. “It’s quite eccentric, the way she spoke. We toned it down a little bit even.” Director Pablo Larraín was among those worried that Portman’s accent was too over-thetop — that is, until he rewatched Kennedy’s White House tour TV special from 1962, which is painstakingly re-created in the film. “It was hard for me to get used to ... but then I got it,” Larraín says. And the question of “How long would the audience need to not (be) looking at Natalie, but at Jackie? She achieves that in just a couple of minutes.” Her portrayal has critics convinced. Jackie (in theaters Friday in New York and Los Angeles, expanding nationwide through January) boasts 93% positive reviews on RottenTomatoes.com, with 27 of 28 pundits on awards site GoldDerby.com predicting Portman will clinch her third Academy Award nomination. She won best actress in 2011, playing a deranged ballerina in Darren NEW YORK
CHRIS JACKSON, GETTY IMAGES
ALBERTO E. RODRIGUEZ, GETTY IMAGES
Portman mines the ‘mystery’ of the iconic Jackie Kennedy
STYLE STAR Kate Beckinsale was regal in red for the ‘Underworld: Blood Wars’ premiere Wednesday night in Mexico City. The actress’ body-hugging dress featured cutouts in all the right places. She completed her look with tousled hair and a very smoky eye.
VICTOR CHAVEZ, WIREIMAGE
IT’S YOUR BIRTHDAY WHO’S CELEBRATING TODAY?
FILMMAGIC; EPA; GETTY IMAGES
Lucy Liu is 48. Britney Spears is 35. Jana Kramer is 33.
very hard to know what’s going on with her, and that’s something Natalie has,” he says. “She can be elegant, sophisticated, dangerous and do a great performance. But there’s something that’s impossible to explain, which is her mystery. I was after that.” Portman, 35, says “time and maturity” helped inform her performance. Coincidentally, she was the same age filming Jackie as Kennedy was during the events of the film. And like the first lady — who died of lymphoma in 1994 at age 64 — the Oscar winner is famously private when it ROBERT DEUTSCH, USA TODAY comes to family. She is married Aronofsky’s Black Swan. to French choreogAronofsky, a producer rapher Benjamin Millepied, with on Jackie, brought the STEPHANIE BRANCHU whom she has a 5project to Portman five year-old son, years ago. But Noah Natalie Portman is Aleph, and is exOppenheim’s script — the grieving widow pecting a second an unorthodox account in the dark days of child in the spring. of the week in 1963 af- 1963 in Jackie. (“It’s like I have ter President John F. Kennedy’s assassination, told my own scaffolding,” she jokes, from the harrowing perspective leaning her elbow on her proof his widow — sat in limbo until nounced baby bump as she poses last year, when Portman was in- for a portrait.) troduced to Chilean director “I’m obviously public on a Larraín, whom she calls “the only much smaller scale than she was,” filmmaker who could make this Portman says shyly. But being in movie. He had really interesting the spotlight does make “you ideas and approached every day aware of your image: how other people view you, how you want like a search.” The actress was similarly his them to view you, who you really first choice for Kennedy, a fash- are, and what parts you want to ion icon whose beauty and mys- keep to yourself. “Obviously, I don’t edit my own tique made her the “most unknown (public figure) of the interviews like she did. But you can control what you say and don’t 20th century,” Larraín says. “You look at (Kennedy) and it’s say, and what you put out there.”
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Friday, December 2, 2016
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L awrence J ournal -W orld
Have candid conversation with brother’s partner Dear Annie: My brother and I were born on the same day, exactly one year apart. He told me that his girlfriend was going to take him out on his birthday and that we would celebrate together with our parents the following day for brunch. I said OK. My husband and I also went out to dinner for my birthday that Saturday night. As we were driving to the restaurant, I saw my dad standing across the street in front of a restaurant that my brother and I both love. My husband and I had reservations across the street. After we finished dinner, we decided to walk up and the street. We happened to pass the restaurant I had seen my dad in front of. I decided to pop in and see if my parents were there. I
Dear Annie
Annie Lane
dearannie@creators.com
looked around and saw my brother with his girlfriend and our parents. He saw me and waved us over. When I got to their table, I was laughing. I thought it was funny to find the four of them there. My mother, under her breath, said, “I couldn’t tell you.” The girlfriend looked at me and said, “This is my doing. It’s my party.” I replied, “That’s great.” We chatted briefly and left.
CBS not airing much for holidays CBS reaches back 60 years for its “I Love Lucy Christmas Special” (7 p.m., TV-G). The special is actually a colorized version of a Christmas episode first broadcast in December 1956. It will be paired with a similarly enhanced episode, “Lucy Gets in Pictures,” from February 1955. Even if you enjoy this brand of network “re-gifting,” it would be easy to get the impression that CBS is rushing things, Christmaswise. But for the annual “A Home for the Holidays” special on Dec. 23, this is the last CBS holiday special of the Christmas season. For the record, it’s only the second day of December. I’m not counting “The Victoria’s Secret Fashion Show,” airing on Dec. 5, a salute to overexposure and underdressing that could air at any time of the year. The dearth of holiday spirit on CBS may stem from a feeling that cable has the holiday department more than covered. O Among the Christmas curiosities airing tonight: the 2014 romantic comedy “The Nine Lives of Christmas” (7 p.m., Hallmark), about a veterinary student who uses a stray cat to lure a fireman out of bachelorhood. O A slightly scary vision of Tom Hanks dominates the 2004 adaptation of “The Polar Express” (8:20 p.m., Freeform), an awkward blend of animation and live action. O Speaking of animated adaptations, Amazon Prime begins streaming “Lost in Oz: Extended Adventure” today. In this CGI special, 12-year-old Dorothy Gale (Ashley Boettcher) discovers an enchanted travel journal, utters a few special words and finds herself, her dog Toto and her family’s midcentury split-level home ripped from its Kansas roots and flung into a futuristic, “Jetsons”-like land of Oz. O Also beginning today, Netflix streams the animated Australian cop comedy “Pacific Heat,” a deadpan, “Archer”like look at an anti-crime squad set on that nation’s posh Gold Coast. O Blending the feel-good nature of animal rescue stories with the process-driven narrative of a real estate “makeover” series, “Pet Nation Renovation” (9 p.m., Animal Planet) travels the country documenting vets, experts and donated construction workers as they help pet shelters on tight budgets. Tonight’s other highlights O Skateboard experts, animal nutritionists and makers of edible caffeine join the fray on “Shark Tank” (8 p.m., ABC, TV-PG). Copyright 2016 United Feature Syndicate, distributed by Universal Uclick.
The next day, my brother texted me, “Do not bring up last night.” I said, “OK, but why? I’m not angry. All is cool.” We met for birthday brunch. I asked my brother whether he told his girlfriend what I’d said. He told me to tell her. When I did, she replied with, “Well, it made the rest of the evening awkward.” That was it. I just laughed it off. Well, just recently, my brother told me I needed to apologize to his girlfriend. I said, “For what?” It was not a pleasant conversation. He was adamant that it was my fault. Just to appease my brother, I will apologize, but I just don’t know what to say and still feel I did not do anything wrong. Help.
JACQUELINE BIGAR’S STARS
For Friday, Dec. 2: This year you make waves, whether you intend to or not. If you are single, the person you choose today could be different from whom you choose later on. If you are attached, this year could be a lot of fun if you and your significant other remain flexible. 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) ++++ Optimism surrounds you. Opportunity knocks on your door. You are quick-witted. Tonight: Visit with an older relative. Taurus (April 20-May 20) +++++ Reach out to someone at a distance with whom you are likely to have a rewarding discussion. Tonight: Listen to a juicy morsel of gossip. Gemini (May 21-June 20) +++++ A close encounter or a high-powered one-on-one discussion will leave you with quite an impression. Tonight: A friend provides a laugh. Cancer (June 21-July 22) ++++ You might want to rethink your plans, especially if something comes up at work or with a relative. Tonight: Leader of the gang. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) +++++ A close interaction and a fun moment will put a smile on your face. Good news lies ahead. Tonight: Go where great music is played.
— Confused Dear Confused: I’m confused, too. The best way to straighten this out is just to call your brother’s girlfriend and say, “Did I offend you somehow? I really didn’t intend to, and I’m not sure where things went wrong.” Either it’s a misunderstanding or she’s a little nuts. A candid conversation is the only way to figure it out. Dear Annie: This is a driving tip for people with road rage: Listen to audiobooks — even on short trips, such as to the grocery. It makes waiting at lights, in traffic jams and on the highway much more pleasant, and it makes it easier to forgive the other driver. — RageFree — Send your questions for Annie Lane to dearannie@ creators.com.
jacquelinebigar.com
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) ++++ You could be surprised by a choice a partner makes. Do not judge. Tonight: And the fun begins. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ++++ Avoid trying out ideas or stances that are likely to make most people crazy. Tonight: Choose a favorite pastime. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) ++++ You might want to hear more before committing to a particular course of action. Tonight: Swap news with a loved one. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) ++++ The ramifications of going overboard could be much greater than you initially had thought. Tonight: Let others pick up the tab. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) +++++ Others sense a quality of thoroughness in you, which gives you an edge when leading a project. Tonight: Lead others into the weekend. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) +++ You could be done with everything that is going on and will want to hide. Tonight: Work on a vanishing act. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) +++++ Make up for lost time. Sometimes you sit back and wait for others to make decisions. Tonight: Get the most out of the moment.
UNIVERSAL CROSSWORD Universal Crossword Edited by Timothy Parker December 2, 2016 ACROSS 1 Tennis great Chris 6 Combined 11 Jamaican music genre 14 Old pro 15 Even the score once more 16 Sick 17 What the bird doctor had to make casts do 19 Prefix that means “new” 20 In-flight info 21 It has a supporting role 22 Tonic complement 23 Strangling device 27 Three-note musical interval 29 “Cycle” beginning 30 Provo’s state 32 Feudal subject 33 Where one hopes to find an empty room 34 Spud 36 Made into strings, in the kitchen 39 Carries with great difficulty 41 Cellphone transmitter 43 Faux butter 44 Church authority 46 Not even once 48 Web address 49 Non-jingling change 51 Lacking in manners
52 Drill insert 53 Parts of a drum set 56 Looks over 58 Fearsome Tolkien creature 59 Type of whiskey 60 Slippery aquatic critter 61 Chinese philosophical principle 62 What the designer engaged in for twin girls? 68 Home of the 20s? 69 “This ___” (crate words) 70 Lose rigidity 71 Kathy Gifford’s middle name 72 Grating, voicewise 73 Noted gift-giver DOWN 1 Helper of 73-Across 2 Seven, on a sundial 3 Amphibious young’un 4 Send, as a patient to a specialist 5 Bring forward for inspection, informally 6 Common savings-plan feature 7 Waiting for its first owner 8 Cocked, as a hat 9 Features of winter jackets
10 Like taller models 11 What the melodious caveman would do? 12 Calvin of fashion 13 Solitary 18 Drumroll sound 23 Slyness 24 Make void 25 The prayer of a jeweler? 26 Use, as dinner plates 28 Three harmonizing as one 31 Ax wielder, often 35 Add punch to, as an engine 37 Inducing the creeps 38 Birdbrains 40 Dispatched 42 Thing to do with a coupon
45 Keep an online business happy 47 Enjoys a book again and again 50 Atlanta suburb or city of ancient Ionia 53 Wreck beyond recognition 54 Give a keynote address 55 Planter’s needs 57 Prefix for “violet” 63 Eat dinner quaintly 64 Person handling bugs? 65 Lithiumbattery link 66 “Death Be ___ Proud” 67 Score that’s 4.0 or below
PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER
12/1
© 2016 Universal Uclick www.upuzzles.com
KINGLY PROXY-MATIONS By Timothy E. Parker
12/2
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.
GISNE ©2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.
SUDEO DERGUT
TERLET “ Yesterday’s
Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app
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Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.
” (Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: LEVEL ABATE OPENLY WIZARD Answer: They wanted an affordable home, but the one they looked at didn’t — “ABODE” WELL
BECKER ON BRIDGE
LAWRENCE • STATE
L awrence J ournal -W orld
BRIEFLY Employee sues state over alleged rape at mental hospital Kansas City, Kan. (ap) — An employee at Osawatomie State Hospital is suing the state of Kansas after she allegedly was raped at the institution. The federal lawsuit filed Wednesday alleges female employees at the hospital were sexually and verbally abused by male patients, creating a “sexually hostile work environment.” The Kansas City Star reports the woman says in the lawsuit that she was raped while working at the hospital in October 2015. She says she was not aware the man had made “multiple” attempts to strangle his wife and was involuntarily admitted to the hospital because it was likely he could cause injury or abuse to himself or others. The lawsuit says two patients helped stop the attack before hospital security arrived. Miami County charged the man with rape.
Former Wyandotte County engineer accused of taking bribes Kansas City, Kan. (ap) — A former engineer for the Wyandotte County government has been charged with taking more than $17,000 in bribes. U.S. Attorney Tom Beall said in a news release Thursday that 58-year-old Willie D. Jones was indicted by a federal grand jury in Kansas City, Kan. Prosecutors allege Jones took three bribes from the owner of a company that obtained contracts to do street repairs for the Unified Government. Jones, of Kansas City, Kan., also is charged with five counts of money laundering. Prosecutors alleged Jones funneled the money through his bank account and the account of a Kansas City church where he was a minister.
Topeka Zoo welcomes newborn sloth Topeka (ap) — The Topeka Zoo is celebrating the birth of a Hoffmann’s two-toed sloth. The Topeka Capital-Journal reports the sloth named Newt was born Wednesday morning. Zoo staff hasn’t determined Newt’s gender. Zoo director Brendan Wiley says it’s difficult to know a newborn sloth’s gender without a physical examination, and staff plans to not disturb Newt and the mother unless there is a medical concern. Newt is offspring No. 14 of its mother, 26-year-old Jackie. Hoffmann’s two-toed sloths are native to a small area of Central and South America. They are threatened by deforestation.
Bethany College offers free tuition in 2 Kansas counties Lindsborg (ap) — Bethany College plans to offer free tuition to first-time freshmen who graduate from McPherson or Saline county high schools. The school in Lindsborg announced Thursday that the offer will begin in the fall 2017 semester and last five years. The scholarships are valued at more than $110,000. Bethany College President William Jones said in a statement that the college wanted to invest in its community. He says the program will allow young people in the two counties a chance to attend college close to home and perhaps stay in the area after they graduate. Students who receive a Bethany Good Life Scholarship will be required to live on the Lindsborg campus.
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Sedgwick County payment of about $566K never reached company Wichita (ap) — A Sedgwick County payment of more than half a million dollars that didn’t reach the intended company has triggered a fraud investigation. The county made a payment of about $566,000 to Wichita construction company Cornejo & Sons on Oct. 7 for a road project. Sedgwick County
spokeswoman Kate Flavin said the payment went through the Automated Clearing House, but never reached Cornejo. The ACH is used by governments and businesses to pay for benefits, payroll, bills and business transactions. County staff didn’t realize what happened until Oct. 25, the Wichita
Eagle reported. The county sent another check to Cornejo on Oct. 26 that was cashed. The newspaper said deputy chief financial officer Rick Durham reported to the sheriff that the county was a victim of theft by deception. It’s unclear where the first payment went, and county officials wouldn’t say if the money has
been recovered. The company declined to comment on the ongoing investigation. Cornejo initially received a contract of more than $550,000 in June to work on the Bond Tekk project, which is part of Sedgwick County’s preventive road maintenance. The project later increased to more than $566,000.
DATEBOOK 2 TODAY
30th Annual Scotch Share the Warmth Coat Distribution, 9 a.m.noon, I-70 Business Center, 1035 N. Third St. Van Go’s Adornment Holiday Art Show and Sale, 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Van Go Arts, 715 New Jersey St. Mike Shurtz Trio featuring Erin Fox, 10:1511:45 a.m., Signs of Life, 722 Massachusetts St. Advisory Board for the Transient Guest Tax Grant Program, 1 p.m., City Hall, 6 E. Sixth St. Career Clinic, 1-2 p.m., Lawrence Public Library Health Spot, 707 Vermont St. No appointments needed. Big Brothers Big Sisters of Douglas County’s 22nd Annual Gingerbread Festival and Auction, 7 p.m., Abe & Jake’s Landing, 8 E. Sixth St. Bingo night, doors 5:30 p.m., refreshments 6 p.m., bingo starts 7 p.m., Eagles Lodge, 1803 W. Sixth St. Advent Taizé Service, 6 p.m., St. Paul United Church of Christ, 738 Church St., Eudora. “Peter Pan,” 7:30 p.m., Theatre Lawrence, 4660 Bauer Farm Drive.
3 SATURDAY
Fill the Truck Day for Salvation Army, all day, both Wal-Mart stores, 3300 Iowa St. and 550 Congressional Drive. Red Dog’s Fun Run, POLICE BLOTTER LJWORLD.COM/BLOTTER 7:30 a.m., parking lot behind Kizer-Cummings Wednesday, 12:17 p.m., Here is a list of recent Jewelers, 833 Massachuofficers, disturbance, Lawrence Police Depart- four intersection of Seventh and setts St. ment calls requiring the Vermont streets. John Jervis, classiresponse of four or more Wednesday, 3:17 p.m., cal and Spanish guitar, officers. This list spans five officers, suicide 8-11 a.m., Panera, 520 W. from 6:28 a.m. Wednes- attempt, 400 block of North 23rd St. Street. day to 5:42 a.m. ThursTails and Traditions Wednesday, 4:30 p.m., day. A full list of depart- four officers, fire emerFamily Festival, 9 a.m.-3 ment calls is available in gency, 1000 block of p.m., Watkins Museum of the Lights & Sirens blog, Massachusetts Street. History, 1047 MassachuWednesday, 5:54 p.m., which can be found onfour officers, traffic enforce- setts St. line at LJWorld.com. ment, intersection of 23rd Holiday Extravaganza, Each incident listed only and Iowa streets. 9 a.m.-4 p.m., Sports PaWednesday, 11:07 p.m., bears a short description vilion Lawrence at Rock and may not capture the four officers, suspicious Chalk Park, 100 Rock 2300 block of Iowa entirety of what took activity, Chalk Lane. Street. place. Not every call reGingerbread Festival Wednesday, 11:59 p.m., sults in citations or ar- four officers, alcohol violawith Craft Collective, rests, and the informa- tion, 1300 block of Ohio 9 a.m.-5 p.m., Abe and tion is subject to change street. Jake’s Landing, 8 E. Sixth Thursday, 2:09 a.m., 12 as police investigations officers, administrative, 100 St. Lawrence Parks and move forward. block of East 11th Street. Recreation Department: Cycling Express demonstration, 9:15-9:45 a.m., Community Building, 115 W. 11th St. Kiddie Candle Dipping, 10 a.m.-2 p.m., Waxman Candles, 609 Journal-World obituary policy: Massachusetts St. For information about running obituaries, call Prairie Moon Waldorf 832-7151. Obituaries run as submitted by funeral School: Winterlight homes or the families of the deceased. Faire, 10 a.m.-4 p.m., 841 New Hampshire St. 24th Annual Lawrence Old-Fashioned ChristILLIAM ILL ARRIS mas Parade, 11 a.m., Services for William "Bill" Harris, 90, Lawrence Massachusetts Street. Festival of Nativities, are pending and will be announced by Warren McElwain Mortuary. Bill passed away Wed., Nov. 12-4 p.m., Centenary United Methodist Church, 30th at LMH. warrenmcelwain.com. 245 N. Fourth St. A Science Saturday RAIG OGLEY Event: Exploring Mars, Craig's wife, Judy Carpenter, and friends invite 1 p.m., KU Natural History all who enjoyed Craig, to join them at his Museum and Biodiversity Memorial Mass at St. John the Evangelist Church Institute, 1345 Jayhawk Blvd. in Lawrence, KS at 2:00 pm on December 3, 2016. Van Go’s Adornment Holiday Art Show and OBERT RANCIS TEWART Sale, 1-5 p.m., Van Go Memorial service for Robert Stewart will be Arts, 715 New Jersey St. Build a Fauxman held at 3:00 p.m., Friday, December 2nd at Village Presbyterian Church in Prairie Village, KS. For Competition, 1-3:30 p.m., Lawrence Public Robert's full obituary go to warrenmcelwain.com.
DEATHS
Friday, December 2, 2016
Library Skate Park, 707 Vermont St. Saturday Afternoon Ragtime, 2-4 p.m., Watkins Museum of History, 1047 Massachusetts St. Candy Cane Hunt, 4-6 p.m., Holcom Park Recreation Center, 2700 W. 27th St. American Legion Bingo, doors open 4:30 p.m., first games 6:45 p.m., snack bar 5-8 p.m., American Legion Post No. 14, 3408 W. Sixth St. Live Musical Benefit Concert and Dinner, dinner 5-6:30 p.m., concert 7 p.m., Vinland United Methodist Church, 1724 North 692 Road. Open Mic: Downtown Underground, 6 p.m., Lawrence Arts Center, 940 New Hampshire St. (Under 21 event.) 28th Annual Lessons and Carols, 7 p.m., St. Lawrence Center, 1631 Crescent Road. Lawrence Intergenerational Choir’s Winter Follies, 7-8:30 p.m., Douglas County Senior Center, 745 Vermont St. Arnie Johnson and the Midnight Special, 7-10 p.m., Eagles Lodge, 1803 W. Sixth St. KU Percussion Group, 7:30 p.m., Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall, 1530 Naismith Drive. “Peter Pan,” 7:30 p.m., Theatre Lawrence, 4660 Bauer Farm Drive.
4 SUNDAY
Holiday Extravaganza, 9 am.-4 p.m., Sports Pavilion Lawrence at Rock Chalk Park, 100 Rock Chalk Lane. Clinton Presbyterian Church 150th Anniversary Celebration, 11 a.m., 588 North 1200 Road. Pre-Vespers, 1:30-3:30 p.m., Bales Organ Recital Hall, Lied Center, 1600 Stewart Drive. Festival of Nativities, 12-4 p.m., Centenary United Methodist Church, 245 N. Fourth St. Gingerbread Festival with Craft Collective, 12-5 p.m., Abe and Jake’s Landing, 8 E. Sixth St. Holiday Homes Tour, 12-5, Lawrence area. Visit healthcareaccess.org/ events for specific locations and more information. Van Go’s Adornment Holiday Art Show and Sale, 1-5 p.m., Van Go Arts, 715 New Jersey St. American Legion Bingo, doors open at 2 p.m., first games at 3 p.m., American Legion Post No. 14, 3408 W. Sixth St. Lawrence AntiTrafficking Taskforce and Education (LATTE) Meeting, 2-4 p.m., Lawrence Public Library Meeting Room B, 707 Vermont St. Vespers, 2:30-4:30 p.m., Lied Center, 1600 Stewart Drive. Irish Traditional Music Session, 5:30-9 p.m., upstairs Henry’s on Eighth, 11 E. Eighth St. “Peter Pan,” 7:30 p.m., Theatre Lawrence, 4660 Bauer Farm Drive. Vespers, 7:30-9:30 p.m., Lied Center, 1600 Stewart Drive.
5 MONDAY
Scrabble Club: Open Play, 1-4 p.m., Lawrence Senior Center, 745 Vermont St. Orientation for the CHAMPSS meal program, 2 p.m., Lawrence Public Library Auditorium, 707 Vermont St. PFLAG (Parents, Family and Friends of LGBT Persons) meeting, 2-4 p.m., Lawrence Memorial Hospital, 330 Arkansas St. Caregiver Support Group, 2:15 p.m., Douglas County Senior Services, 745 Vermont St. For more information, call 842-0543. Take Off Pounds Sensibly (TOPS), 5:30 p.m., 2712 Pebble Lane. 842-1516 for info. Baldwin City Council meeting, 7 p.m., Baldwin Public Library, 800 Seventh St., Baldwin City. Lecompton City Council meeting, 7 p.m., Lecompton City Hall, 327 Elmore St. Genaro Mendez, tenor, and Robert Hiller, piano, 7:30 p.m., Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall, 1530 Naismith Drive. Argentine Tango Práctica, 8-10 p.m., Signs of Life Bookstore and Art Gallery, 722 Massachusetts St. Free; no partner necessary.
6 TUESDAY
Holiday Toy Drive Collection by City of Lawrence Solid Waste Crews, 6 a.m., set new toys at curbside (weather permitting). Red Dog’s Dog Days workout, 6 a.m., Community Building, 115 W. 11th St. Lawrence Breakfast Optimists, 7-8 a.m., Brandon Woods Smith Center, 4730 Brandon Woods Terrace. Call 3120743 for details. Lawrence City Commission meeting, 5:45 p.m., City Hall, 6 E. Sixth St. Red Dog’s Dog Days workout, 6 p.m., South Park, 1141 Massachusetts St. Books & Babies, 6-6:30 p.m., Lawrence Public Library Readers’ Theater, 707 Vermont St. Rock Chalk Singers, 6-8 p.m., Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall, 1530 Naismith Drive. Open Jam with Lonnie Ray, 6-10 p.m., Slow Ride Roadhouse, 1350 N. Third St. Maker Meet-Up, 6:30 p.m., Lawrence Creates Makerspace, 512 E. Ninth St. Lawrence All British Car Club, 6:30 p.m., Conroy’s Pub, 3115 W. Sixth St. Trivia night at Johnny’s Tavern, 7 p.m., Johnny’s West, 721 Wakarusa Drive. Tuesday Concert: Cucharada (Argentine tango band), 7:30 p.m., Lawrence Arts Center, 940 New Hampshire St. KU Choirs: Bales Chorale, 7:30-9:30 p.m., Bales Organ Recital Hall, Lied Center, 1600 Stewart Drive.
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.
7 WEDNESDAY
Red Dog’s Dog Days workout, 6 a.m., Rock Chalk Sports Pavilion, 100 Rock Chalk Lane. Books & Babies, 9:30-10 a.m. and 10:3011 a.m., Lawrence Public Library Readers’ Theater, 707 Vermont St. Lit Lunch, noon-1 p.m., Lawrence Public Library Meeting Room C, 707 Vermont St. Teen Zone Expanded (grades 6-12), 2-5 p.m., Lawrence Public Library Teen Zone, 707 Vermont St. (Starting Sept. 7, 2016) Douglas County Commission meeting, 4 p.m., Douglas County Courthouse, 1100 Massachusetts St. Genealogy and local history drop-in, 4-5 p.m., Lawrence Public Library Local History Room, 707 Vermont St. American Legion Bingo, doors open 4:30 p.m., first games 6:45 p.m., snack bar 5-8 p.m., American Legion Post No. 14, 3408 W. Sixth St. National Alliance on Mental Illness-Douglas County support group, 6-7 p.m., Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St. The Nutcracker: A Kansas Ballet ON ICE!, 6-8 p.m., Library Lawn Skate Rink, 707 Vermont St. Print Your Book!, 6:30-7:30 p.m., Lawrence Public Library Auditorium, 707 Vermont St. The Beerbellies, 6:309:30 p.m., Johnny’s Tavern, 401 N. Second St. Conroy’s Trivia, 7:30 p.m., Conroy’s Pub, 3115 W. Sixth St. Flute Studio Recital, 7:30-9:30 p.m., Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall, 1530 Naismith Drive.
8 THURSDAY
Red Dog’s Dog Days workout, 6 a.m., Community Building, 115 W. 11th St. Post-Election Conference, times TBD, Dole Institute of Politics, 2350 Petefish Drive. Toddler Storytime, 9:30-10 a.m. and 10:3011 a.m., Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. Scrabble Club: Open Play, 1-4 p.m., Lawrence Senior Center, 745 Vermont St. Cottin’s Hardware Farmers Market indoors, 4-6 p.m., Cottin’s Hardware and Rental, 1832 Massachusetts St. Dinner and Junkyard Jazz, 5:30 p.m., American Legion Post No. 14, 3408 W. Sixth St. Red Dog’s Dog Days workout, 6 p.m., South Park, 1141 Massachusetts St.
6B
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Hometown Lawrence Lawrence Journal-World l Homes.Lawrence.com l Friday, December 2, 2016
C
Chad Lawhorn/Journal-World Photo
THE SANDBAR SUB SHOP AND CONVENIENCE STORE is closing its location at Eighth and New Hampshire streets.
Downtown sub shop and convenience store closing
T
here soon will be one less convenience in downtown Lawrence. No, you can still get a cup of coffee every 12 feet, and if you like a beverage that is colder with more suds, that’s available about every six feet. But if you are just looking for a bag of chips or a pack of gum, the idea of a downtown convenience store has taken a hit. The Sandbar sub shop and convenience store is closing its location at Eighth and New Hampshire streets perhaps as early as next week, owner and operator Peach Madl said. Sandbar recently became the food vendor for several facilities of the Lawrence Parks and Recreation Department, including the
Town Talk
was meant to serve as a downtown convenience store where you could pick up items like candy, corn nuts, aspirin, corn nuts, chips, bottles of pop, corn nuts, beef jerky and, of course, corn nuts. “The convenience store concept has not been a strong point of the busiclawhorn@ljworld.com ness,” Madl said. The idea had some sports pavilion at Rock fanfare when it opened. Chalk Park and the indoor A convenience store was aquatic center. Madl said touted as the type of busithat contract is keeping ness that would be useful her crew plenty busy, and in an area that is trying she’s decided to close the to add more living units. downtown store. But, for whatever reason, The decision means the idea did not take off one less sandwich shop in with residents and others. downtown, but more signif- Madl speculated that the icantly it marks the end of business may have come an interesting experiment just a bit too early in the in downtown. The business development of downtown
Chad Lawhorn
as a living area. Or, it may be that the concept wasn’t quite right, she said. “Downtown might be a little more upscale than we are,” Madl said. Sandbar shares space with the downtown location of Peoples Bank. The bank will remain in the building, Madl said. Sandbar actually has the lease for the entire building, and Madl said a search for a tenant to fill the Sandbar portion of the building has begun. It also is worth noting that the idea of corn nuts at 10 a.m. is not entirely dead in downtown. Just a couple of doors down from Sandbar’s location at Eighth and New Hampshire is Tobacco Bazaar, 14 E. Eighth St. It primarily is a tobacco
shop, but it also is marketing itself as a small convenience store. It has chips, drinks, frozen sandwiches, some basic medicines and even some dairy products. Owner Raju Ahmed said the majority of his business still comes from the tobacco side, but said he still is optimistic about the convenience store concept. “It is growing a little bit,” Ahmed said. “We have a loyal group of customers, mainly people who work in downtown.” As for Sandbar, it will continue to operate its sandwich shop inside the Zarco convenience store on 23rd Street, Madl said. — This is an excerpt from Chad Lawhorn’s Town Talk column, which appears on LJWorld.com.
Showcase Homes OPEN SATURDAY 11:00 - 1:00 PM
OPEN SUNDAY 1:00 PM - 4:00 PM
761 Lincoln Street
1546 N 300 Rd (56 Hwy) Baldwin
Grand Builders, Inc. is at it again. This home will be built on a generous lot, with a very popular floor plan. Granite Counter tops in the kitchen, and oil rubbed bronze fixtures though out give this home charm. This energy efficient home is located right next to a park in the Lincoln Subdivision of North Lawrence. MLS # 140102 • $159,950
Offered by:
Henry Wertin 785-760-7499
Beautiful custom built brick ranch, 4 bdrm, 2.5 bath, full basement, rural water, pavement, 40’x60’ barn, pond, hay ground, pasture, additional barns/outbldgs, trees, stream, sitting on 20 acres, $398,000.00.
Offered by: Idalee J. Owings 785-980-4001
hometownrealtyinc@yahoo.com
For more info. or viewing call Hometown Realty, Inc. 785 883-4141 Wellsville or 913 980-4001 or 913 226-2940.
618 Main Street • PO Box 747 Wellsville, Kansas 66092
2C
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Friday, December 2, 2016
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L awrence J ournal -W orld
Diamond Partners, Inc.
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS Below are real estate transfers recorded at the Douglas County Clerk’s Office from Nov. 15 through Nov. 28.
Tuesday, Nov. 15 Shannon McCawley and Tonya Beard to Tami R. Keasling, 1141 New York St., Lawrence. Hazel J. Nitcher to Casey Lee and Amy Lee, Vacant Land, Lawrence. Rockwall Farms, LC to Hexad Hearts Acres, LLC, Vacant Land, Rural. Linda K. Eisenhut and Van Eisenhut and David L. Paslay and Toni Paslay and Richard A. Paslay and Edie Paslay and Sheila M. Robles and David Robles to Derek M. Dye and Amy K. Dye, 1951 E. 400 Rd., Rural and . Hutton Farms West, LC to Robert K. Nordyke and Lourdes Gouvela, 414 N. Olivia Ave., Lawrence. Richard C. Wittenauer, Trustee and Laura E. Wittenauer, Trustee to Vanessa Cook, 1427 Anthony Michael Dr., Lawrence. Circle K. Stores, Inc to JMAC, LLC, 602 W. 9th St., Lawrence. Joseph E. Cool, III and Haylie D. Cool to Rebecca L. Weaver, 222 King St., Baldwin City. Brent A. Krenzin and Amy D. Krenzin to Glen L. Lemesany and Resa M. Lemesany, 4512 Turnberry Dr., Lawrence. Dale F. Maas and Karen M. Maas to Gene Hadl, 67 E. 100 Rd., Overbrook. Larry L. Cornelius to Postoak Investments, LLC, 816 Massachusetts St. & and 816 1/2 Massachusetts St., Lawrence. Ralph W. Campbell and Linda S. Campbell to Christopher N.W. King and Megan C. King, 880 E. 500 Rd., Rural. Wednesday, Nov. 16 Quail Run Rental, LLC to Veeder Homes, LLC, 1330 Kanza Dr., Lawrence. Jason M. Metz and Amy
G. Metz to Isaac A. Willems and Grace E. Willems, 3012 W. 29th St., Lawrence. Jake Garber Construction, LLC to Charles A.S. Bankart and Kimberly A.B. Swanson, 508 Wren Dr., Lawrence. DVP, LLC to Oak Tree Homes, Inc, Vacant Land, Rural. Margaret B. Sanders, Trustee to Rebecca L. Dunn and Will M. Dunn, 341 Lincoln St., Lawrence.
Jamie J. Bieberle to Ryan Atkerson and Emily Atkerson, 2612 Knollbrook Ct., Lawrence. Brandon J. Rapp and Paula Rapp to Steven Anderson and Monica Anderson, 756 E. 500 Rd., Rural.
Monday, Nov. 21 Sheridan Thompson and Annie Thompson to John E. Johnson, 814 Maple St., Eudora. Tennille M. McAtee to Thursday, Nov. 17 Huiru Li, 2401 Sequoia Ct., U.S. Bank National Asso- Lawrence. ciation, Trustee to William Brett Harding and Marta Schaetzel, 4100 W. 13th R. Harding to Donald D. St., Lawrence. Currier and Christine D. Stephen D. Reetz and Currier, 2617 W. 27th Ter., Teresa A. Reetz to TheoLawrence. dore R. Tjardes, 1418 Maple Ernest C. Hollmann and Ln., Lawrence. Jeanette G. Hollmann to Moine M. Foster, Trustee Christian C. Barnes and Reto Weld Properties, LLC, becca Barnes, 723 Church 1014 Fir St., Eudora. St., Eudora. Susan Sloop to Kemp Keith Nowland to Family Trust, 4172 BlackSheridan D. Thompson and jack Oak Dr., Lawrence. Annie J. Thompson, 1606 Ann E. Johnson to Dai Q. Cedar St., Eudora. Tran and Oanh Hoang, 308 Gregg L. Gehlbach to Stetson Pl., Lawrence. Myriad Capital of Kansas, LLC, 2700 Bishop St., Friday, Nov. 18 Lawrence. Betty J. Hanson and Nicholas J. Spase and Leonard A. Hanson to JerKendall J. Spase to Jennifer emy Bloom, 317 Edinburgh L. Selvidge, 1142 ConnectiRd., Lawrence. cut St., Lawrence. Steven C. Cregut and New Legacy, LLC to Peggy M. Cregut to Big Top Cody Hanel, 6328 SerProperties, LLC, 62 Hwy enade Dr., Lawrence. 40, Rural and (2tracts). Tuesday, Nov. 22 Jesse Schrader and Dorothy J. Ransom and Stephanie A. Schrader to Kenneth E. Roper and Paula Aaron Dodson and CourtJ. Roper to Stacy L. Wall ney Stillings, 1912 Louisiand Jerod R. Gregg, 1222 ana St., Lawrence. Nickolas A. Walters and Prospect Ave., Lawrence. Kyle M. Unruh and to Renae L. Walters to Christy Christian C. Barnes, 52 L. Grissom, 220 North Stevens Rd., Eudora. Crestline Dr., Lawrence. Samuel L. Wright and Christ International, Inc Connie S. Wright to Erik to One Alliance Property Peterson and Amanda Management, LLC, 1103 Peterson, 302 Perry St., Main St., Eudora. Lawrence. Robert F. DeForest to Mallard Homes, Inc to Andrew N. Stull and Dawn Samuel L. Wright and ConM. Stull, 2333 Brett Dr., nie S. Wright, 4003 SweetLawrence. Firooz Monshizadeh and clover St., Lawrence. Cynthia L. Monshizadeh to J and J King Trust to Richard Floersch, 1636 W. McQuaid 2014 Revocable 22nd St., Lawrence. > TRANSFERS, 4C Lee Bieberle, Jr. and
Deanna Dibble 785-393-9359
OPEN HOUSE SATURDAY 1:30 - 3:30
1139 Cherry St., Eudora Wonderful Ranch style home on corner lot in quiet community. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths and full basement. Dining area with brick hearth fireplace. Lots of natural light in all the rooms. Over sized bedrooms, Hall Way and hall bath door wide enough to accommodate wheelchair. Full Basement with room to expand has 2nd Brick Hearth Fireplace to build your family room around. Some rough plumbing in place for 3rd bath. OVERSIZED One Car garage. $149,900.
OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY 1:30 - 3:30
1647 George Williams Way, Lawrence SELLER SAYS BRING US AN OFFER! Gorgeous & Elegant Traditional 2 Story home - w/out bsmnt affords a family loads of space! Designer Tile Entrance w/gleaming wood floors in Formal Dining Room, Kitchen, hallway & Hearth Room. Fresh NEW Interior paint on main level - Upgraded Formal Living Room Carpet. Hearth Room/Living Room share 2 side FP, Granite Countertops & Backsplash tile in kitchen. Very sizable master suite w/2 closets, separate tub/shower, 2nd bdrm has private bath. Jack & Jill bath @ bdrms 3&4. Sizable family rm & 5th bdrm & 5th bath basement $384,900.
Search all active listings in the Lawrence MLS. • www.deannadibble.kwrealty.com
LAWRENCE HOUSING MARKET STATISTICS QUICK STATS for the year 2016 thru 11/01/16
Tr
1,048 Homes $213,013 Sold in Avg. Sold 2016 Price
CON
-0.8% +5.7% -13.2%
-11.3% 48 Avg. Days on Market
275 Active Listings
www.millermidyettre.com Office: 785-843-8566 Toll free: 1-800-684-6227
Right Feel
1031 Vermont St, Suite C, Lawrence, KS 66044 OPEN SATURDAY 1:003:00 PM
2811 Stratford, Lawrence
Ramzi Zoughaib 785-331-5963 ramzi0415@gmail.com
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4961 Sioux Ct, McLouth
31st St
Washington Rd
Lake Dabanawa
Saratoga Dr
46th Rd
N
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
11885 238th St, Linwood Country solitude minutes from Lawrence,
Cheryl Baldwin 785-423-1881 cheronent@aol.com neighbors. Partially cultivatable and nicely Don Schmidt 785-766-6268 wooded. Say good-bye to the chaos of city donschmidtc21@aol.com KS and I-70. Plenty of wildlife and very few
living. Approx 7 miles from Lawrence and only 1/2 mile off paved road. MLS# 141265
238th St
FOR SALE OR TRADE Super location on Cheryl Baldwin the lake!! Double tiered seawall, covered 785-423-1881 boat dock. Large open air 2 story round cheronent@aol.com house. Enjoy the fall by the stone fireplace Don Schmidt 785-766-6268 with patios overlooking the lake. 1 1/2 donschmidtc21@aol.com lots- awesome building potential, a must see! Don’t miss this unique property! MLS# 139551
$149,900
Denise Breason 785-331-5502 twoneice@aol.com
$174,900
Bob Billings Pkwy
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
Real Estate Done Right
Don’t miss out on this updated all brick ranch home on 1+ acre. Large, open kitchen, dining and living room area for tons of family space. Small, cozy hearth room w/wood burning FP. Full unfinished basement for room to expand. Two car attached & 2 car detached garages. Located just 2 miles north of Hwy 24. Easy access to Lawrence, Topeka & Perry Lake. Great schools. MLS# 141348
Nemaha Rd
$259,900
3084 Oak Road, Perry
Oak Rd
PRICE REDUCED! Complete remodel with no expense spared. An absolute must see in this price range. 3 bedrooms with 2 additional non conforming bedroom and 4 bathroom areas. Very tastefully done and at almost 3000 sqft, there’s enough space to accommodate any size family. New roof, exterior and interior paint, flooring, appliances, vanities, fixtures, you name it, It’s been done. All this on a large wooded lot giving you the feeling of country living. A must see, you won’t be disappointed. MLS# 140998
NEW LISTING
Alexander Rd
$279,600
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
See all of our Open House Listings in Saturday’s paper or visit us at stephensre.com 1313 Vantuyl Drive, Lawrence Beautiful custom built home! Excellent floor plan, soaring ceilings, exotic hardwoods, marble floors. Could be 5 bedrooms, Master on main level. Theater room, game room with bar. Excellent for entertaining with the
313 E Front Street, Perry Cheryl Baldwin 785-423-1881 cheronent@aol.com Don Schmidt 785-766-6268 donschmidtc21@aol.com Vantuyl Dr r lD nt uy
ready for you w/many additional possibilities. Building may be purchased w/o business & inventory for $275,000. MLS# 140897
$500,000
2nd St
E Front St
Va
blocks from Hwy 24. Turn key business Cedar St
Anthony Michael
Conrad & Viola McGrew Nature Preserve
Denise Breason 785-331-5502 twoneice@aol.com
Oak St
ss Dr
erne
$449,900
Inv
www.stephensre.com
backyard. MLS# 139957
corner of Front & Cedar Street just a few
Elm St
holidays ahead! Patio, deck overlook wooded
Large 5600 sq ft metal building houses this busy hardware store. Great location on the
E Front St
Tru 161 73 80 Law J Tru Re Lak R Cy D. Da Law J A. 183 ren A An A. Wi Lec
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HOMETOWN LAWRENCE
L awrence J ournal -W orld
Friday, December 2, 2016
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• Furnaces
• Boilers
• Humidifiers
• Geothermal
• Heat Pumps
785.843.2244 1815 Bullene Avenue Lawrence, KS 66044
Call for Greener, Healthier Cleaning
(785) 842-6264
Because Brighter is Better.
www.scott-temperature.com
JASON TANKING CONSTRUCTION Construction with a new frame of mind
CONTACT JASON TODAY FOR YOUR FREE ESTIMATE! 785.749.0244
Our Mission
Hawk Wash Window Cleaning Inc. will contribute to a cleaner, more pleasant home or work environment by providing prompt, professional service at a fair price. We will consistently exceed customer Window Cleaning Inc. expectations through attention to detail on pleasant, courteous and trouble-free hawkwash.com service visits.
Hawk Wash
785.760.4066
jason@jasontankingconstruction.com jasontankingconstruction.com
Refresh Your Home WITH
TOPEKA 785-234-3384
LAWRENCE 785-843-9559
MOST REPAIRS SAME DAY SERVICE WE SERVICE ALL BRANDS RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL 24-HOUR EMERGENCY SERVICE AVAILABLE www.aceplumbingkansas.com
Comprehensive Cleaning Solutions
See Testimonials and Specials online:
kansascarpetcare.com
Heating & Air Conditioning Locally and Family Owned Since 1970
When You Need Us, We’re There! CALL TODAY 785-842-2258 www.cloudhvac.com
Clean Plumbers for your
Dirty Work!
CLEAN
CARPETS Carpet cleaning Furniture Cleaning and Repairing, Wood Floor Care Tile and Grout Cleaning CARPET CARE Pet Treatment Locally-owned family business with Service GUARANTEES
BASIC
785-979-6851 to Request an Estimate
Blue Duck Plumbing Call (785) 856-1152 anytime
Doing the job right the first time
71 years experience in the heating and cooling business
Residential and Commercial Water Heater Installation & Repair
Kansas Carpet Care
• Garage Doors & Parts • Garage Door Openers • Service & Repairs
CALL 785.841.COOL (2665) VISIT US ON FACEBOOK https://www.facebook.com/ rivercityheatingandcooling
644 Locust St., Lawrence Thurs. 12 -5, Fri & Sat 9 - 5 785-856-3139 • TooterandTillayes.com
Lawrence, KS | 785-842-3311 785-843-9211 • 913-712-0757
See your ad here for as little as $25 per week!
Store Hours: Mon - Fri: 10am - 6pm, Sat: 10am - 5:30pm, Sunday 12pm - 4pm
785-749-4391
We offering Beauty & Comfort for your Home
Seasonal Business?
Our knowledge of the Appliances we sell sets us high above the competition
925 Iowa • Lawrence • 785.843.4170 StonebackAppliance.com
Serving Lawrence, KS and the surrounding areas
love
WITH OVER 66 YEARS’
AFTER HOURS Mon-Fri: 5pm - 7pm Sat: 8am - 12pm
(785) 841-2112
CARPET & FLOORS
Seasonal Business? See your ad here! Only $45 per week for 4 weeks! 785.832.2222 classifieds@ljworld.com
provides a complete range of services for residential, small commercial, remodel, and new construction projects. (785) 423-4464 • kbpaintingllc.com
It all begins with a Master Plan... Our Mission Is To Be The Best, Not The Biggest Nothing transforms your backyard like your very own swimming pool. Our expert staff can assist you in designing the perfect Swimming Pool and Landscape options to fit your yard, your style, and your budget.
810 Pennsylvania St. Lawrence, KS 913.645.3135
strangercreekpools.com
We Keep Lawrence Flowing VITO’S PLUMBING 785-865-0008 645 Locust Street, Lawrence, KS
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Trust, 1601, 1605, 1609, 1613 & 1617 E. 22nd St. and 736 W. 25th St. A, B, C and 802 W. 25th St. A, B, C, Lawrence. Joel M. Broxterman, Trustee to Arlon E. Sullivan Revocable Trust, 3619 Lakecrest Ct., Lawrence. Robert H. Goldstein and Cynthia L. Keeffe to Joshua D. Potter and Rachel K. Davis, 901 W. 27th Ter., Lawrence. Julie A. Cisz to Abigail A. Hall and James A. Hall, 1836 Learnard Ave., Lawrence. Andrew J. Boyd and Andrea N. Boyd to Kent A. Wingert and Pamela L. Wingert, 1806 E. 200 Rd, Lecompton.
Wednesday, Nov. 23 Jason Grove and Lana
.
L awrence J ournal -W orld
Grove to Nickolas L. Patch and Natalie M. Johnson, 627 N. Pennycress Dr., Lawrence. Theodore J. Rosen and Sara T. Rosen to Dylan J. Taylor and Lauren S. B. Taylor, 2536 Arkansas St., Lawrence. Francene K. Beall to Rodney Oelschlager, 3010 W. 29th Ter., Lawrence. Michael E. Harrell to Maxwell M. Harrell, 812 Madeline Ln., Lawrence. Bowden Complete Construction, LLC and to Phillip A. Lacy Revocable Trust & and Cecilia A. Vessel, and Cloud Farm Trust, 627 Connecticut St., Lawrence and . Hardcastle Properties, LLC to Prairie Realty, LLC, 1228 & 1232 Louisiana St., Lawrence. Phyllis A. Bagby to Clell D. Rantz and Linda S. Rantz, Vacant Land, Rural.
Monday, Nov. 28 Luke Oehlert and Sheridyn Oehlert and Nathan Floersch and Ashley Floersch to Joshua Smith, 398 E. 1807 Rd., Baldwin City. John P. Hepford and Stefani K. Hepford to Lexi Filson, 1840 Villo Woods Ct., Lawrence. Kathryn E. T. Mitchell to Taylor Four, LLC, Vacant Land, Rural. Tracy E. Powell to Merlin Semo and Christelle F. K. Manto, 633 Brentwood Dr., Lawrence. Terry L. Messenhimer and Marc S. Hardin to Jeanne P. Haider, 506 Regents St., Lawrence. Hazel J. Nitcher to Mark D. Strand, 1312 Jonathan Dr., Lawrence and . J Bar J Investments, LLC to Richard J. Greene and Karen A. Greene, 3811 Overland Dr., Lawrence.
Lawrence Mortgage Rates LENDERLENDER AS OF 12/2/16
LOAN TYPE Conv. FHA/VA Jumbo
OTHER LOANS 3.875% + 0 (3.971%) Call For Rates Call For Rates
3.125% + 0 (3.293%) Call For Rates Call For Rates
20 Yr. Fixed 10 Yr. Fixed Investment Loans Cashout Refinance Contruction Loans
Conv. 4.000% + 0 (4.055%) APR Loan Amount $100,000 Estimated monthly payment (value of $125,000) of $449.04 for 360 months Real estate taxes and homeowners insurance may increase the monthly payment
3.250% + 0 (3.346%) APR Estimated monthly payment of $678.62 for 180 months
APR = Annual Percentage Rate
Conv. FHA/VA
2.750% + 0 (2.858%)
Capital City Bank
Capital City Bank
Capitol CapitolFederal® Federal® Savings Savings
Visit Lawrence Mortgage Rates online onlineatathometownlawrence.com Homes.Lawrence.com
3.500% + 0 (3.542%) 3.250% + 0 (4.568%)
3.625% + 0 (3.757%) 3.000% + 0 (3.244%) Call For Rates Call For Rates Call For Rates
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION 330-1200 330-1200 www.capcitybank.com www.capcitybank.com 740 New New Hampshire 740 Hampshire 4505A West 6th St
4505A West 6th St 749-9050 749-9050 capfed.com capfed.com 1026 Westdale
1026 Westdale Rd. 30 Yr. 97% Conventional
3.750%+ 0(4.252%)
Central National Bank
838-1882 www.centralnational.com 838-1882
www.centralnation.com
Central National Bank Conv. FHA/VA Jumbo
4.125% + 0 (4.197%) 3.875% + 0 (5.003%) 4.000% + 0 (4.071%)
3.375% + 0 (3.536%) 3.250% + 0 (4.060%) 3.250% + 0 (3.410%)
20 Yr. Fixed 10 Yr. Fixed
Conv. FHA VA Jumbo
4.125% + 0 (4.249%) 3.625% + 0 (4.490%) 3.625% + 0 (3.894%) 4.375% + 0 (4.438%)
3.375% + 0 (3.582%)
20 Yr. Fixed
Conv. Jumbo
Call For Rates Call For Rates
Call For Rates Call For Rates
3.875% + 0 (3.973%) 3.481% + 0 (3.481%)
www.commercebank.com
Commerce Commerce Bank Bank
Central Bank of the Midwest
4.043%
3.625% + 0 (3.724%) FHA USDA/Rural Development
Call For Rates Call For Rates
Conv. FHA/VA Jumbo
3.375% + 0 (3.482%)
Conv. FHA/VA Jumbo
4.000% + 0 (4.191%)
Conv. Jumbo
3.500% + 0 (3.554%) Call for Rates
3.125% + 0 (3.395%) Call
856-LOAN (5626) www.firstassuredmortgage.com 856-LOAN (5626) 4830 Bob Billings Pkwy. Ste. 100A
2.625% + 0 (2.682%) Call Call
www.firstassuredmortgage.com 4830 Bob Billings Pkwy. Ste. 100A
First Assured Mortgage
First State Bank & Trust
Please Call Please Call
3.375% + 0 (3.709%) Please Call Please Call
5/1 ARM 10 & 20 Yr. HELC USDA
Please Call Please Call Please Call Please Call
2.875% + 0 (2.971%) Call for Rates
20 Yr. Fixed 10 Yr. Fixed
3.375% + 0 (3.451%) 2.750% + 0 (2.890%)
First State Bank & Trust
Great American Bank
www.landmarkbank.com 2710 Iowa St 841-7152
3.25% + 0 (3.316%)
Conv. Jumbo
3.625 + 0 (4.116% APR) Please call 856-7878 ext 5037
3.125 + 0 (3.321% APR) Please call 856-7878 ext 5037
Please call 856-7878 ext 5037
97% Advantage Program: Please call for rates (credit score 660) 20 year: please call 15/30 Pricing options available
Conv.
3.875% + 0 (4.125%)
3.250% + 0 (3.686%)
20 Year Fixed Construction
3.625% + 0 (3.967%) 4.75%
Conv. FHA/VA Jumbo
4.000% + 0 (4.064%) 3.625% + 0 (4.491%) 4.000% + 0 (4.064%)
3.250% + 0 (3.360%)
10 Yr. Fixed 20 Yr. Fixed HELOC 97% 30 Yr Fixed Home Possible 30 Yr Fixed Rental
3.250% + 0 (3.360%) 3.750% + 0 (3.837%) 4.000% 4.000% + 0 (4.064%) 4.375% + 0 (4.439%)
749-6804 749-6804 www.truitycu.org www.truitycu.org 3400 3400 W. W. 6th 6th
Conv.
4.022% + 0 (4.069% APR)
3.205% + 0 (3.287% APR)
15 YR Investment 30 YR Investment 10 YR FIXED 20 YR FIXED VA 30, 15 YR
4.289% - APR 4.374% 4.649% - APR 4.698% 3.250% - APR 3.37% 3.772% - APR 3.837% Call For Rates
841-1988 841-1988 www.unbank.com www.unbank.com 1400 Kasold KasoldDr Dr 1400
www.landmarkbank.com 2710 Iowa St 856-7878
Mid American Bank
Pulaski Bank
University National University National Bank Bank
www.meritrustcu.org 650 Congressional Dr
856-7878 www.meritrustcu.org 841-8055 650 Congressional Dr www.mid-americabank.com 4114 W 6th St.
841-8055 www.mid-americabank.com 856-1450 4114 W 6th St. www.pulaskibank.com 3210 Mesa Way, Ste B
3.250% + 0 (3.360%)
Truity Credit Union
Truity Credit Union
www.greatambank.com 3500 Clinton Parkway 838-9704
4.125% + 0 (4.164%) 3.625% + 0 (4.721%) 3.625% + 0 (3.940%) 4.375% + 0 (4.392%)
Meritrust Credit Union
Mid America Bank
www.firststateks.com 609838-9704 Vermont St.
Conv. FHA VA Jumbo
Landmark National Bank
Meritrust Credit Union
312-6810 www.firststateks.com 3901 W. 6th St. 312-6810
www.greatambank.com 3500 Clinton Parkway 841-6677
Great American Bank
Landmark Bank
841-4434 www.fairwayindependentmc.com 841-4434 4104 W. 6th St., Ste. B www.fairwayindependentmc.com
4104 W. 6th St., Ste. B
Fairway Mortgage Corp.
First Assured Mortgage
865-1000 865-1085 www.centralbankmidwest.net www.centralbankmidwest.net 300 W 9th St
4340 W 6th (and Folks Rd)
Central Bank of the Midwest
Fairway Mortgage Corp.
865-4721 865-4721 www.commercebank.com
Friday, December 2, 2016
jobs.lawrence.com
CLASSIFIEDS
PLACE YOUR AD:
785.832.2222
classifieds@ljworld.com General
General
APPLY for 5
Warehouse Clerks, Material Handlers, Forklift Operators, & Janitorial !
BusinessOpportunity
See KU job announcements at:
employment.ku.edu KU is an EO/AAE, full policy http://policy.ku.edu/IOA/ non nondiscrimination. All qualified applicants will receive con consideration for employment without regard to race, color, reli religion, sex (including pregnancy), age, national origin, dis disability, genetic information or protected Veteran status.
AIRLINE MECHANIC TRAINING – Get FAA Technician certification. Approved for military benefits. Financial Aid if qualified. Job placement assistance. Call Aviation Institute of Maintenance. 877-818-0783 www.FixJets.com Sell your structured settlement or annuity payments for CASH NOW. You don’t have to wait for your future payments any longer. Call 1-800-283-3601
General CONTRACT ADMINISTRATOR Entry level administrative position at growing construction firm. Will be responsible for receivables, payables and compliance for construction contracts. No experience req’d. Proficient in all Microsoft applications a plus. Company paid health care, vacation/ holiday pay, 401k with match! Send resume Attn: HR, to PO Box 17 Perry, KS 66073 Or apply at Hamm Companies 609 Perry Place Equal Opportunity Employer
DRAKE’S FRUITCAKE Available now through December at au Marche 931 Massachusetts, Lawrence, KS
WILDERSON Christmas Tree FARM
Come see us at the Lawrence Holiday Farmers’ Market Dec. 10, 9-5pm at the Double Tree Hotel
HOLIDAY COOKIES & CRAFTS
www.drakesfruitcake.com facebook/Drakesfruitcake
14820 Parallel Road Basehor, KS 66007
Let the Eudora United Methodist Women make your holiday cookies for you!
Services: Shake, Net & Load Trees & Hayrides Type of Trees: Scotch, Austrian & White Pine, Fraiser & Balsam Fir “@WildersonChristmas TreeFarm on Facebook”
Saturday, Dec 10th 9 am - 2 pm Eudora United Methodist Church 2084 N 1300 Rd Eudora Cookies for just $7/pound!
Hours: Fri., Sat, Sun., 9am-5pm.
Simple Living Country
913-724-1057|913-961-7506
Store features products made from alpaca fiber, handmade gifts, and much more! A unique little store tucked away in the country. Holiday hours : Saturdays 10:00 - 4:00, Sundays 1:00 - 4:00. 1676 N 1000 Rd, Lawrence, KS 66046.
Handmade Crafts, Gifts & Decor. Breads, jams and candies.
RENTALS REAL ESTATE TO PLACE AN AD:
785.832.2222
REAL ESTATE
Do you have customer service skills? Drive the Lawrence T, KU on Wheels, & Saferide/ Safebus. • NO experience necessary! • Day & Night shifts. • Age 21+ • $11.50/hr after paid training. Flexible full & part-time schedules, 80% company paid employee health insurance for full-time. Career opportunities.
Real Estate Auctions
Apartments Unfurnished DOWNTOWN LOFT
OPEN HOUSE THIS WEEKEND! 1907 Marvonne Rd Saturday, Dec 3rd 1 PM to 3 PM Completely updated 4 bed, 2.5 bath home with TONS of square footage! New flooring and exterior/interior paint throughout, new water heater/gutters, updated bathroom and kitchen with new appliances, finished family room on lower level with fireplace and wet bar. $224,900 Melody Tener 913-422-7119
Open House Special! • 1 Day - $50 • 2 Days - $75 • 28 Days - $280 All choices include: 20 lines of text & a free photo!!!
Call 785-832-2222 Monday - Friday 8:00 am - 5:30 pm to schedule your ad!
REAL ESTATE AUCTION Dec 7, 2016 | 6:30 pm
1406 Clare Ct Lawrence
Preview: 11/27 • 11:30-1:30 12/01 • 4:30-6:30 Visit online for more info:
FloryAndAssociates.com Jason Flory- 785-979-2183
TO PLACE AN AD: Antique/Estate Liquidation
ONE FREE MONTH OF RENT - SIGN BY JAN 1
LAUREL GLEN APTS All Electric
2 BR & 3 BR/2BA Units
Available Now!
2BR, 2 bath, fireplace, CA, W/D hookups, 2 car with opener. Easy access to I-70. Includes paid cable. Pet under 20 lbs. allowed Call 785-842-2575 www.princeton-place.com
785-838-9559
Rooms
EOH
Furnished BR With shared Kitchen, Living space , Laundry & Bathroom. Quiet, near KU, on bus route. $375/mo. Utils paid. 785-979-4317
Acreage-Lots
Duplexes
ACREAGE FOR SALE
1st MONTH FREE!! 2BR in a 4-plex New carpet, vinyl, cabinets, countertop. W/D is included.
grandmanagement.net Equal Housing Opportunity. 785-865-2505
Townhomes FIRST MONTH FREE! 2 Bedroom Units Available Now! Cooperative townhomes start at $446-$490/month. Water, trash, sewer paid. Back patio, CA, hardwood floors, full basmnt., stove, refrigeratpr, 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
Roommates SEEKING RENTAL Walkout basement room or similar setup. Seeking long-term arrangement. Mature quiet male. Established job.
785-840-6401
Office Space DOWNTOWN OFFICE 1,695 Flexible Sq Ft Conference Room Access Customer Parking 2 Reserved Parking Spots $1,400 Monthly Rent 211 E 8th Charlton - Manley Bldg 785- 865-8311 Downtown Office Space Single offices, elevator & conference room, $725. Call Donna or Lisa
785-841-6565
• 1+ Year Warehousing/ Forklift Experience • PC-Computer Experience • Ability to lift up to 50lbs throughout a shift • Ability to work Flexible Schedule when needed Apply Mon-Fri. 9:00 am - 3:00 pm 10651 Lackman Rd. Lenexa, KS 66219 Apply online at: prologistix.com Call 913-599-2626
JOB SEEKER TIP #12
Racism & Anger hurt employers. To get hired/promoted, get along well with all customers & co-workers. Decisions Determine Destiny
Schools-Instruction PARAPROFESSIONAL Family seeks female paraprofessional for 11 year old girl with High Functioning Autism at private school in Lawrence. Hours: 8:15 am to 3:45 pm M-F. Previous work with children with High Functioning Autism a plus. History of working with children and college degree preferred. Progressive ideas about autism, patience, kindness and caring demeanor required. Must be reliable. Position available immediately. $15 to $20 per hour depending on experience. Please send resume and references to astucky@jeffnet.org
classifieds@ljworld.com
785.832.2222 Concrete
classifieds@ljworld.com
Guttering Services
Painting
Craig Construction Co Driveways - stamped • Patios • Sidewalks • Parking Lots • Building Footings & Floors • All Concrete Repairs Free Estimates
Downsizing - Moving? We’ve got a Custom Solution for You! Estate Tag Sales and Cleanup Services Armstrong Family Estate Services, LLC 785-383-0820 www.kansasestatesales.com
Mike - 785-766-6760 mdcraig@sbcglobal.net
Decks & Fences Pro Deck & Design
Specializing in the complete and expert installation of decks and porches. Over 30 yrs exp, licensed & insured. 913-209-4055
prodeckanddesign@gmail.com
JAYHAWK GUTTERING Seamless aluminum guttering. Many colors to choose from. Install, repair, screen, clean-out. Locally owned. Insured. Free estimates.
785-842-0094
jayhawkguttering.com
Home Improvements
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.
AAA Home Improvements Int/Ext Repairs, Painting, Tree work & more- we do it all! 20 Yrs. Exp., Ins. & local Ref. Will beat all estimates! Call 785-917-9168
Call Lyndsey 913-422-7002
Pet Services
Full Remodels & Odd Jobs, Interior/Exterior Painting, Installation & Repair of:
THE RESALE LADY
Deck Drywall Siding Replacement Gutters Privacy Fencing Doors & Trim Commercial Build-out Build-to-suit services
Estate Sale Services In home & Off site options to suit your tag sale needs. 785.260.5458
Carpentry
Stacked Deck Decks • Gazebos Siding • Fences • Additions Remodel • Weatherproofing Insured • 25 yrs exp. 785-550-5592
advanco@sunflower.com
APPROX 76.9 ACRES between Lawrence & Ottawa. Pasture, building site, crop ground. RWD available. E 450 Road, Overbrook, KS Access Realty Frances I. Kinzle, Broker, 110 N. Kentucky, Iola, KS 620-365-SALE (7253) ext 21 or 620.365.9410
785-865-2505 grandmanagement.net
• High School Diploma/GED
Family Owned & Operated 20 Yrs
Call Today 785-841-6565
Water & Trash Paid Small Dog
YOUR NEXT APARTMENT IS READY. FIND IT HERE.
Studio Apartments 825 sq. ft., $880/mo. 600 sq. ft., $710/mo. No pets allowed.
$11 - $15/hr
Get in on the ground floor and grow with the company!
We are an equal opportunity employer and all qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, national origin, disability status, protected veteran status, or any other characteristic protected by law.
Townhomes W/D hookups, Fireplace, Major Appliances. Lawn Care & Dbl Car Garage! Equal Housing Opportunity
All Shifts Available!
Apply online: lawrencetransit.org/ employment Or come to: MV Transportation, Inc. 1260 Timberedge Road Lawrence, KS
3 BR w/2 or 2.5 BA
Open Houses
In Gardner & South Johnson County
Work in the Community
LPNs Join our 5 star team! Full & Part-time. Rewarding team environment within long term care. Shift and weekend differentials and up to $1,000 sign-on bonus. Apply online or in-person at: www.lawrencepresbyteri anmanor.org 1429 Kasold Dr. Lawrence, KS 66049
SERVICES
classifieds@ljworld.com
RENTALS
New Warehouse/ Distribution Center
Decisions Determine Destiny
jobs.lawrence.com
Benefits multiple charities that UMW supports including Della Lamb and Youthville. 785-542-3200
CALL TODAY TO SCHEDULE YOUR AD! 785-832-2222
of our hundreds of job openings and it could change your life!
Healthcare
Fully Insured 22 yrs. experience
913-488-7320
Dirt-Manure-Mulch 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
Cleaning
Higgins Handyman Rich Black Top Soil No Chemicals Machine Pulverized Pickup or Delivery Serving KC over 40 years
913-962-0798 Fast Service
Interior/exterior painting, roofing, roof repairs, fence work, deck work, lawn care, siding, windows & doors. For 11+ years serving Douglas County & surrounding areas. Insured.
785-312-1917
Foundation Repair
New York Housekeeping Accepting clients for weekly, bi-weekly, seasonal or special occasion cleaning. Excellent References. Beth - 785-766-6762
Quality Office Cleaning We are here to serve you, No job too big or small. Major CC excepted Info. & Appointments M-F, 9-5 Call 785-330-3869
Foundation Repair Limestone wall bracing, floor straitening, sinking or bulging issues foundation water-proofing, repair and replacement Call 843-2700 or text 393-9924
FOUNDATION REPAIR Mudjacking, Waterproofing. We specialize in Basement Repair & Pressure Grouting. Level & Straighten Walls & Bracing on wall. BBB. Free Estimates Since 1962 Wagner’s 785-749-1696 www.foundationrepairks.com
Concrete Concrete Driveways, Parking lots, Pavement repair, Sidewalks, Garage Floors Foundation walls, Remove & Replacement Specialists Call 843-2700 or Text 393-9924 Stamped & Reg. Concrete, Patios, Walks, Driveways, Acid Staining & Overlays, Tear-Out & Replacement Jayhawk Concrete Inc. 785-979-5261
Retired Carpenter, Deck Repairs, Home Repairs, Interior Wall Repair & House Painting, Doors, Wood Rot, Power wash and Tree Services. 785-766-5285
Insurance
Providing top quality service and solutions for all your insurance needs. Call Today 785-841-9538
GUTTER CLEANING & REPAIR Seamless Gutters, Gutter Cleaning and Minor Repairs, Gutter Screens and Covers, Aluminum Soffits and Fascia, Carpentry, Wood Rot Repairs and much more... (913)333-2570
Plumbing RETIRED MASTER PLUMBER & Handyman needs small work. Bill Morgan 816-523-5703
Professional Organizing
Attic, Basement, Garage, Any Space ORGANIZED! Items sorted, boxed, donated/recycled + Downsizing help. Call TILLAR 913-375-9115
Roofing BHI Roofing Company Up to $1500.00 off full roofs UP to 40% off roof repairs 15 Yr labor warranty Licensed & Insured. Free Est. 913-548-7585
Tree/Stump Removal
Medicare Home Auto Business
Guttering Services
Personalized, professional, full-service pet grooming. Low prices. Self owned & operated. 785-842-7118 www.Platinum-Paws.com
Lawn, Garden & Nursery Golden Rule Lawncare Mowing & lawn cleanup Snow Removal Family owned & operated Call for Free Est. Insured. Eugene Yoder 785-224-9436
Fredy’s Tree Service 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)
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L awrence J ournal -W orld
MERCHANDISE PETS
NOTICES
TO PLACE AN AD:
TO PLACE AN AD:
AUCTION Saturday, Dec 3 • 6pm Monticello Auction Center 4795 Frisbie Rd Shawnee, KS Metro Pawn Inc. 913.596.1200 www.metropawnkc.com Lindsay Auction Svc. 913.441.1557 lindsayauctions.com
Shop REAL Vintage Fashon! Check local and regional Estate Sales listed HERE! Have a sale you need to advertise? Call 785.832.2222 classifieds@ljworld.com
MERCHANDISE
classifieds@ljworld.com
Furniture
Miscellaneous
BASSETT BABY BED Comes with crib sheets. Adjustable mattress. $50.00 785-727-0593
ULTIMATE BUNDLE from DIRECTV & AT&T. 2-Year Price Guarantee -Just $89.99/month (TV/fast internet/phone) FREE Whole-Home Genie HD-DVR Upgrade. New Customers Only. Call Today 1-800-897-4169
AUCTIONS Auction Calendar
785.832.2222
Queen Size Wrought Iron Canopy Bed Queen Size Wrought Iron Canopy Bed So quaint,, girls would love this ~ mattress & box spring are old, but the bed is beautiful ( downsizing ) $ 95 785-550-4142
Safe Step Walk-In Tub Alert for Seniors. Bathroom falls can be fatal. Approved by Arthritis Foundation. Therapeutic Jets. Less Than 4 Inch Health & Beauty Step-In. Wide Door. Anti-Slip Floors. American Installation InGot Knee Pain? Back Pain? Made. Shoulder Pain? Get a cluded. Call 800-715-6786 for $750 Off. pain-relieving brace -little or NO cost to you. Medicare Pa- Updating your bathroom tients Call Health Hotline does not have to be expenNow! 1-800-900-5406 sive or take weeks to complete. BathWraps makes it easy. Call 855-401-7297 toLawn, Garden & day for a free in home consultation. Nursery BOSTON FERNS! 2 for $5 each. 6 inch pots, great shape! Also, 1 variegated Boston Fern, 10 inch pot, unusual, beautiful plant! $10. Call 865-6766
Music-Stereo
Miscellaneous
Pets
Special Notices F1B GOLDENDOODLE PUPPIES Goldendoodles just in time for Christmas! Brown and black. 3 males, 1 female left from litter of 7. Available 12/19. call or text: 913-620-3199
Lawrence
CARS
Chevrolet 2015 Spark LT automatic, alloy wheels, power equipment, On Star, fantastic gas mileage and great low payments are available. Stk#10223
Only $8,998
Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
Chrysler 2008 Town & Country Limited, alloy wheels, leather heated seats, power equipment, DVD, navigation and more! Stk#160681
classifieds@ljworld.com SALE! ALEK’S AUTO 785.843.9300
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(First published in the You are further advised if Lawrence Daily Journal- written objections to simplified administration are World, December 2, 2016) filed with the court, the IN THE DISTRICT COURT court may order that suOF DOUGLAS COUNTY, pervised administration KANSAS ensue. CIVIL DEPARTMENT Ditech Financial LLC Plaintiff, vs. Laurie A Fitzgerald, et al. Defendants, Case No.16CV342 Court No. Title to Real Estate Involved Pursuant to K.S.A. §60 NOTICE OF SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that under and by virtue of an Order of Sale issued to me by the Clerk of the District Court of Douglas County, Kansas, the undersigned Sheriff of Douglas County, Kansas, will offer for sale at public auction and sell to the highest bidder for cash in hand at the Jury Assembly Room located in the lower level of the Judicial and Law Enforcement Center building of the Douglas County, Courthouse, Kansas, on December 29, 2016 at the time of 10:00 AM, the following real estate: LOT 1, BLOCK 1, IN 202 N 5TH ADDITION, AN ADDITION TO THE CITY OF LAWRENCE, IN DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS. Tax ID No.: N06769A, Commonly known as 202 North 5th Street, Lawrence, KS 66044 (“the Property”) MS167057 to satisfy the judgment in the above entitled case. The sale is to be made without appraisement and subject to the redemption period as provided by law, and further subject to the approval of the Court. _____________________ Douglas County Sheriff MILLSAP & SINGER, LLC By: _________________ Chad R. Doornink, #23536 cdoornink@msfirm.com Jason A. Orr, #22222 jorr@msfirm.com 8900 Indian Creek Parway, Suite 180 Overland Park, KS 66210 (913) 339-9132 (913) 339-9045 (fax) ATTORNEYS FOR PLAINTIFF MILLSAP & SINGER, LLC AS ATTORNEYS FOR DITECH FINANCIAL LLC IS ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. _______ (First published in the Lawrence Daily JournalWorld, December 2, 2016)
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IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS DIVISION IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF: ROBBIE L. CRISS, DECEASED CASE NO. 2016-PR-000206 NOTICE OF HEARING AND NOTICE TO CREDITORS THE STATE OF KANSAS TO ALL PERSONS CONCERNED: You are hereby notified that on the 2nd day of November, 2016, a Petition for Appointment of Administrator under the Kansas Simplified Estates Act was filed in this Court by Wilbur Criss, the son of Robbie L. Criss, deceased.
legals@ljworld.com Lawrence
Lawrence
PETITION OF John Jungyae Chang Present Name
Kansas, by and through counsel, Emily C. Haack, Assistant District Attorney, and provides notice of a hearing as follows:
To Change His Name To: Jung Hyun Yae New Name
You are required to file Case No. 16CV486 your written defenses Div. No. 5 thereto on or before the 29th day of December, PURSUANT TO K.S.A. 2016, at 9:30 o’clock a.m. in CHAPTER 60 the District Court, Douglas NOTICE OF HEARING County, Kansas, at which PUBLICATION time and place the cause will be heard. Should you fail therein, judgment and THE STATE OF KANSAS TO decree will be entered in ALL WHO ARE OR MAY BE due course upon the Peti- CONCERNED: tion. You are hereby notified that John Jungyae Chang, All creditors are notified to filed a Petition in the exhibit their demands above court on the 30th against the Estate within day of November 2016, refour months from the date questing a judgment and of the first publication of order changing his name this notice, as provided by from John Jungyae Chang law, and if their demands to Jung Hyun Yae. are not thus exhibited, they shall be forever The Petition will be heard barred. in Douglas County District Court, 111 E. 11th St, LawWILBUR CRISS rence, Kansas on the 13th PETITIONER day of January, 2017 at 11:30a.m. Submitted by: Timothy J. Pringle #11622 If you have any objection ESCHMANN & to the requested name PRINGLE, P.A. change, you are required 310 SW 33rd Street to file a responsive pleadTopeka KS 66611-2208 ing on or before January tim.pringle@ 16, 2017 in this court or apeschmannpringle.com pear at the hearing and (785) 267-3400 object to the requested FAX (785) 267-0001 name change. If you fail to ATTORNEY FOR act, judgement and order PETITIONER will be entered upon the _______ Petition as requested by Petitioner. (First published in the Lawrence Daily Journal /s/John Jungyae Chang -World November 18, 2016) Petitioner, Pro Se IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS In the Matter of the Estate of FREDRICK MARK INYARD, Deceased Case No. 15-PR-000002 Division No. 1 Pursuant to K.S.A. Chapter 59 Title to Real Estate Involved NOTICE OF HEARING ON MOTION FOR ORDER NUNC PRO TUNC
1815 Naismith Drive, Oliver - #440 Lawrence, KS 66045 785-551-1634 _______ (First published in the Lawrence Daily JournalWorld, December 2, 2016) REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL Ottawa School District 290 is seeking proposals for Interior Painting and Carpet to Vinyl Services at Ottawa Middle School. Work is to be completed in phases.
A petition pertaining to the parental rights to the child whose name appears above has been filed in this Court requesting the Court to find the child is a child in need of care as defined in the Kansas Code for the Care of Children. If a child is adjudged to be a child in need of care and the Court finds a parent to be unfit, the Court may permanently terminate that parent’s parental rights. The Court may also make other orders including, but not limited to, requiring a parent to pay child support. Further, a motion to find the parents of each child named above unfit and to terminate parental rights, appoint a permanent custodian, or enter such orders as are deemed appropriate and just has been filed. The court may enter orders regarding custody and case planning necessary to achieve permanency for each child named above, including proposals for living arrangements for the child and services to be provided the child and the child’s family. On the 9th day of January, 2017, at 1:30 p.m., each parent and any other person claiming legal custody of the minor child is required to appear for the Adjudication as to the Unknown Father and Trial or Default Hearing on the Motion to Terminate Parental Rights as to the unknown father and Russell Hamilton, in Division 6 at the Douglas County Law Enforcement and Judicial Center, 111 E 11th Street., Lawrence, Kansas. Each grandparent is permitted but not required to appear with or without counsel as an interested party in the proceeding. Prior to the proceeding, a parent, grandparent or any other party to the proceeding may file a written response to the pleading with the clerk of court.
All Proposals must be received no later than Monday, December 19, 2016, Christopher Coleman, an THE STATE OF KANSAS TO 3:30pm CST. attorney in Lawrence, KanALL PERSONS CONCERNED: sas, has been appointed as Sealed responses should the Guardian ad litem. JuaYou are hereby notified be in hard copy form and nita Carlson, an attorney in that on October 20, 2016, a delivered to Ottawa USD Lawrence, Kansas, has Motion was filed in this 290 Operations Dept. at been appointed to repreCourt by Joshua Saunders, 1017 W. 13th St. Ottawa, sent the alleged father, requesting an Order nunc Kansas 66067 Russell Hamilton. Kerrie pro tunc to modify the _________ Lonard, an attorney in ToJournal Entry Granting Inpeka, Kansas, has been apformal Administration filed (First published in the pointed to represent the herein on February 19, Lawrence Daily Journalunknown Father. 2015, to clarify the total World, December 2, 2016) debts, costs, and expenses All parties are hereby noto be satisfied by the esIN THE DISTRICT COURT tified that, pursuant to tate, and the specific propOF DOUGLAS COUNTY, K.S.A. 60-255, a default erty to be used to satisfy KANSAS judgment will be taken the same. You are hereby DIVISION SIX against any parent who required to file your writfails to appear in person ten defenses thereto on or IN THE INTEREST OF: or by counsel at the hearbefore December 15, 2016, ing. at 10:00 o’clock a.m., on M. A. A. such day, in such Court, in DOB: 11/01/2013, a male /s/Emily C. Haack the City in the District Emily C. Haack, #23697 Court, in Lawrence, DougCase No. 2015-JC-000070 Assistant District Attorney las County, Kansas, at Office of the which time and place the TO: Russell Hamilton and District Attorney cause will be heard. his relatives; Unknown faDouglas County Should you fail therein, ther and all other persons Judicial Center judgment and decree will who are or may be con111 East 11th Street be entered in due course cerned Lawrence, KS 66044-2909 upon the Motion. (785) 841-0211 AMENDED NOTICE FAX (785) 330-2850 JOSHUA SAUNDERS, OF HEARING ehaack@ Petitioner (K.S.A. Chapter 38) douglas-county.com _________ /s/ Wesley F. Smith COMES NOW the State of WESLEY F. SMITH, #18517 900 Massachusetts, Suite 500 P.O. Box 189 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 Telephone: (785) 843-0811 Facsimile: (785) 843-0341 E-Mail: ~ WSmith@ StevensBrand.com Counsel for the Estate for the latest openings at the best _______
You are further advised under the provisions of the Kansas Simplified Estates (First Published in the Act the Court need not su- Lawrence Daily Journal pervise administration of World, December 2, 2016) the Estate, and no notice of any action of the AdminIN THE 7TH istrator or other proceedJUDICIAL DISTRICT ings in the administration DISTRICT COURT OF will be given, except for DOUGLAS COUNTY, notice of final settlement KANSAS of Decedent’s estate. IN THE MATTER OF THE
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Sports
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Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com/sports l Friday, December 2, 2016
KANSAS VOLLEYBALL Tom Keegan tkeegan@ljworld.com
Jackson may be Self’s top player
W
hen I study the faces of those who pay good money to watch Kansas play basketball, I try to guess what plays are replaying in their minds as they move toward various parking lots at home and on the road. My guess is a higher percentage of those plays were created by Josh Jackson than any player Bill Self has coached in his 14 seasons in Lawrence. The loudest plays happen closer to the ceiling than most athletes can reach. Remember the tomahawk dunk against UAB in Sprint Center and the blink-andyou-missed-it blocked shot vs. Siena in Allen Fieldhouse? Jackson also makes more memorable plays on the floor diving for loose balls than most, not a common trait among freshmen ranked No. 1 in the nation in their high school class. Remember that possession he stole at the end of the half when he missed a free throw and hit the floor to retrieve it in time to feed Lagerald Vick a bucket with one second left in the first half of the UNCAsheville game? And memorable plays happen when he is on his fast-moving feet, such as that bounce-pass in transition with which he hit Svi Mykhailiuk in the rout of Long Beach State. They also happen when he’s on his feet at the other end of the floor. He plays the passing lanes as well as any Kansas player since Mario Chalmers. He’s so active all the way from the floor to well above the rim at both ends of the floor and in transition in both directions. Self has brought a number of versatile performers blessed with long arms and quick feet through Lawrence, but I can’t think of one who put his stamp on so many different areas of a basketball game to the extent Jackson consistently does. His ball security and shooting success can run in streaks, but his effort ensures that on off nights in those areas, he’ll still contribute in others. He doesn’t disappear for stretches. You always know he’s on the floor. It’s not too early to project Jackson as one of three Kansas players, joining Frank Mason III and Devonté Graham, capable of earning Big 12 Player of the Year honors. I was curious if any other player in the conference stuffs a box score with as much variety as Jackson, so I researched the numbers. The answer is no. The Big 12 tracks the top 20 in scoring and rebounding, the top 15 in assists, steals and blocked shots. No player other than Jackson appears in all five categories, even though he’s not in the top 10 in any one of them. He ranks 11th in scoring (14.1), 17th in rebounding (5.7), 15th in assists (3.3), tied for 10th in steals (1.6) and 13th in
> KEEGAN, 4D
Mike Yoder/Journal-World Photos
ABOVE: KANSAS OUTSIDE HITTER JADA BURSE (4) makes a kill for a point in the Jayhawks three-set sweep against Samford University in the first round of the NCAA women’s volleyball tournament Thursday at Horejsi Family Athletics Center. BELOW: THE KANSAS VOLLEYBALL TEAM CELEBRATES a late point in the final set of a three-set sweep of Samford University.
Burse makes NCAA volleyball tournament debut memorable in victory over the Bulldogs By Tom Keegan tkeegan@ljworld.com
Kansas swept its way into the second round of the NCAA volleyball tournament Thursday night in Horejsi Center, but the coach on the receiving end of the broom didn’t sound overly impressed with the Jayhawks. Samford, a private school from Homewood, Ala., that plays out of the Southern Conference, made some runs at Kansas, drawing particularly close late in the second set, but KU prevailed 25-19, 25-21, 25-17. Afterward, Samford coach Keylor Chan was asked if it’s difficult to identify weaknesses to go after against a Kansas team seeded fifth overall in the tournament and carrying a 27-2 record into tonight’s rematch with
Creighton, which advanced on a thrilling five-set victory against Northern Iowa. “No, they definitely have some. I mean, they do,” Chan said of the Jayhawks’ weaknesses. “As they move on in the tournament, they’re going to get exposed, you know. I think we did the best we
could with what we have.” In his first year at Samford after spending 15 seasons at Northwestern of the mighty Big Ten, Chan then listed where he thinks Kansas will run into trouble. “I think that they have some serve-reception issues and I think they have some
middle-hitter issues that’ll become pretty glaring when they get to some teams that can really exploit them,” Chan said. “But you know, I mean, Kansas is very talented, they very much are. But they definitely have some things that you can pick on. We just couldn’t do it well enough tonight.” Kansas, coming off its first Final Four appearance in 2015 and first Big 12 title this season, wasn’t at its dominant best Thursday and suffered from fits of inconsistency. In contrast, freshman Jada Burse was at her best. Not polished enough to appear in early season matches, including the five-set thriller of a victory for KU at Creighton on Sept. 8., Burse didn’t make her first start until the 12th match of the season,
> SWEEP, 4D
Bluejays expect scrappy Jayhawks in Round 2 rematch By Benton Smith basmith@ljworld.com
A lot has transpired in the world since Creighton’s volleyball team faced another one of the nation’s best, Kansas, on a Thursday night in September. So sophomore Bluejays outside hitter Jaali Winters gets a pass for not recalling many of the finer details of the last meeting between the two programs ahead of
the rematch — tonight in the second round of the NCAA Tournament. Creighton led the fivematch thriller, 2-1, before the Jayhawks rallied for the road victory and Winters put away 21 kills. But after the Bluejays knocked out Northern Iowa, 3-2, Thursday night at Horejsi Family Athletics Center, the first KU-related memory that popped to the top of her head was one hustle play
Creighton coach grew up a KU fan Win or lose in tonight’s second-round NCAA tournament volleyball match against Kansas, 14th-year Creighton volleyball coach Kirsten Bernthal Booth knows what’s on the family playlist for the holidays. “At Christmas, on my mom’s side, we do
Christmas carols and one of the Christmas carols they’ll sing is ‘Rock Chalk, Jayhawk, KU,’” Bernthal Booth said with appropriate cadence for the chant. The Creighton and Kansas volleyball programs have followed a similar path to prominence this decade. All six of Creighton’s NCAA appearances have come
> COACH, 3D
> BLUEJAYS, 3D
Former Jayhawk Jerod Haase excited for Saturday homecoming with Stanford By Matt Tait mtait@ljworld.com
Plenty of visiting head coaches have been serenaded with loud and proud boos raining down on them from the Allen Fieldhouse bleachers throughout the years. But it takes a special
set of circumstances for a coach, other than the one sitting on the Kansas bench, to receive a warm welcome from Jayhawk fans. That figures to be what takes place a little before 2:30 p.m. Saturday, when former KU standout Jerod Haase is introduced as the head coach of the Stanford men’s basketball team, in town to take on the Jayhawks on ESPN. KU coach Bill Self, who did not coach Haase but has
great admiration for the way he played, knows this. And Self has just one request for the 16,300 Jayhawk fans who, undoubtedly, will want to welcome Haase back in style. “Unfortunately, the reaction will be he’ll be the most loved head coach in the building,” Self joked Thursday. “So that’ll suck. But he deserves that. He was a tremendous player and a popular player here, and he’s done a really good job after he left here to go to Carolina and
> HAASE, 4D
Sports 2
2D | LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD | FRIDAY, DECEMBER 2, 2016
TWO-DAY SPORTS CALENDAR
AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE
KANSAS NORTH
EAST
Tiger Woods returns with mixed bag and a 73
TODAY • Track at Bob Timmons Challenge, 1 p.m. • Volleyball vs. UNI/Creighton in NCAA tournament (if advance), 6:30 p.m. • Swimming at Minnesota diving invitational SATURDAY NORTH • Men’s basketball vs. Stanford, 2:30 p.m. • Swimming at Minnesota diving NORTH invitational
AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE
By Doug Ferguson
AP Sports Writer
Nassau, Bahamas (ap) — Not only did Tiger Woods return to golf Thursday, he returned to being Tiger. Just not for long. Hardly looking like a player who had not competed in 466 days, Woods ran off three straight birdies with a variety of shots and was tied for the lead in the Hero World Challenge as he approached the turn. Three shots in the bushes, one shot in the water and a few fits of anger sent him toward the bottom of the pack. A pair of double bogeys over the final three holes ruined an otherwise impressive return, and Woods shot 40 on the back nine at Albany Golf Club and had to settle for a 1-over 73. He was in 17th place in the 18-man field. Only Justin Rose had a higher score. Even so, Woods has reason to be encouraged. After taking off 15 months to recover from two back surgeries, he felt no pain or limitations. His misses were not big, just costly. And he was playing again. “It could have been something really good,” Woods said. “I got off to a nice, solid start and made a few mistakes there. I didn’t play the par 5s very well in the middle part of the round and consequently, got it going the wrong way. ... But all in all, I feel pretty good. I’m looking forward to another three more days.” He was nine shots behind J.B. Holmes, who opened with an 8-under 64 and had a one-shot
His confidence kept building — the flop shot from 40 yards to 5 feet for birdie on EAST the par-5 sixth, the wedge to 5 feet for birdie on the seventh, AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE and a 6-iron he struck so well on the par-3 eighth that he was EAST asking for perfection. “One yard! One yard!” he said as the ball was in the air, and then FREE STATE HIGH SOUTH settled 2 feet away. WEST SATURDAY At that point he was tied • Wrestling at Leavenworth invitawith Holmes. tional, 9 a.m. AL EAST But he flubbed a pitch on • Boys basketball at Barstow, at the par-5 ninth and made boLiberty, noon gey. Two holes later, he flared • Girls basketball vs. Lincoln Prep, an iron from the sandy waste AL CENTRAL 7 p.m. area into a bush and had to take a penalty shot, making anLAWRENCE HIGH Lynne Sladky/AP Photo other bogey on a par 5. Woods SOUTH WEST TODAY TIGER WOODS LOOKS AFTER HITTING FROM A BUNKER onto the 14th was still hanging around in the green during the first round at the Hero World Challenge golf tournament middle of the pack when he hit • Girls/boys basketball vs. Topeka, AL WEST Thursday in Nassau, Bahamas. Woods is one-over-par going into the second 7-iron to 12 feet on the par-5 AL EAST 5:30 p.m. round. 15th and two-putted for birdie. SATURDAY And then it all fell apart. • Wrestling at Leavenworth invitaSOUTH WEST lead over Hideki Matsuyama, “By the time I hit my tee From the middle of the 16th tional, 9 a.m. with U.S. Open champion shot on the second hole,ALICENTRAL had fairway, he pulled his approach dropped the club as it Dustin Johnson at 66. already gotten into the flow of and AL EAST AFC TEAM LOGOS 081312: Helmet and team logos for the AFC teams; various sizes; stand-alone; staff; ETA 5 p.m. SEABURY ACADEMY a bush. He had to Curiosity was greater than the round,” Woods said. “That’s sailed into TODAY expectations for Woods, who something that for me, when play that backward to the fair• Girls/boys basketball vs. was coming off the longest hia- I’ve taken layoffs and taken way, pitched a wedge some 30 WEST Maranatha Christian, 6 p.m. tus of his golfing life. Plagued breaks, it’s how quicklyALcan I feet by and made double bogey. AL CENTRAL on the 18th, he pulled by back problems since 2013 find the feel of the round? To And then when he was No. 1 in the world, not play in 15, 16 months and get his driver and immediately VERITAS CHRISTIAN slammed the club into the turf he finally shut it down after ty- it on the second hole is nice.” TODAY ing for 10th in the Wyndham He also knew that with only as he watched for the splash. • Girls/boys basketball vs. Olathe HisALpitch hit the pin — it was Championship on Aug. 23, 2015, a stiff tropical wind behind him WEST Heritage, 5:30 p.m. too strong, —staff; andETA he5 p.m. and then going through onHelmet three thelogos parfor5s, AFC TEAM LOGOStwo 081312: andof team thescores AFC teams; various sizes; anyway stand-alone; missed from 20 feet for another back surgeries. would be low. He was in so much pain last For a short time, Woods bogey. LATEST LINE “Just made some really silly year there were times he won- seemed up to the task. He hit a NFL dered whether he had played 5-iron from 231 yards just over mistakes, mistakes I don’t norhis last tournament. the green and passed his first mally make,” Woods said. “But Favorite.............. Points (O/U)........... Underdog Sunday played in sizes; a while. With high anticipation, he LOGOS test, a 081312: 30-yard pitch-and-run AFC TEAM Helmet and team logos Iforhaven’t the AFC teams; various stand-alone; staff; ETA 5 p.m. 13 tugged his opening tee shot and that checked slightly and Unfortunately, I made those Denver............................ Week 3 1/2 (40)...........JACKSONVILLE into the rough on the left edge rolled out to a few feet from mistakes. I can clean that up. ATLANTA............... 4 1/2 (49).........Kansas City of a bunker and gouged that out the hole for a birdie. He faced We’ve got three more days. GREEN BAY.................... 6 1/2 (45)........................Houston to 15 feet for par. Just like that, a more difficult pitch up the Wind is supposed to pump on CINCINNATI.....................1 1/2 (42).................Philadelphia it all started to feel as though slope on the next hole and hit a the weekend, and I’ll be playing NEW ORLEANS................6 (53.5).............................Detroit CHICAGO............................. 1 (43)................ San Francisco a little bit better.” he had never been away. chunk-and-run to 3 feet. NEW ENGLAND............... 13 (43.5).................Los Angeles BALTIMORE ORIOLES
Associated Press
Chapeco, Brazil (ap) — Relatives of victims who died in an air crash that killed most members of the Brazilian soccer club Chapecoense spoke out in anger Thursday, with several saying the crash was avoidable. Only 6 of the 77 passengers and crew survived, three of them players. Nineteen other players died in the crash late Monday, a few kilometers from the airport in Medellin, Colombia. Recordings of conversations with the pilot and accounts of a surviving flight attendant, along with the lack of an explosion upon impact, indicated the BAE 146 Avro RJ85 jet ran out of fuel. Osmar Machado,
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Woman testifies she was assaulted by Cleaves Flint, Mich. (ap) — A woman who accused former Michigan State basketball star Mateen Cleaves of sexual assault testified Thursday that she twice ran out of a motel room to escape his advances. The woman said Cleaves pulled her back into the room at a Flintarea Knights Inn in September 2015. They had met that day at a charity
> CRASH, 3D
golf event and later had drinks at a bar. A judge must decide whether there’s enough evidence to send Cleaves to trial on many charges, including unlawful imprisonment and second-degree criminal sexual conduct. It’s a lower standard than beyond a reasonable doubt. He has pleaded not guilty. The woman said she believed Cleaves was going to drive her back to Warwick Hills Golf and Country Club after visiting a bar. Instead, they ended up at the motel. “He started kissing me. I kissed him back and I remember being on the bed,” she testified. She said she dashed out of the room but Cleaves caught her, brought her back and sexually assaulted her. She said, “I didn’t want to be there.” The woman said Cleaves pulled her back into the room a second time. Her testimony was similar to the testimony of a motel guest who said she saw the woman twice outside the room. The Associated Press generally doesn’t name people who say they are victims of sexual assault. Cleaves led Michigan State to the 2000 national championship and had a brief NBA career.
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the father of defender Filipe, questioned why that plane was used. His son died on his father’s 66th birthday. “Profit brings greed,” Machado said. “Because of 30 kilometers this plane ended (the lives of) 71 people. But what can we do now? The owner of the plane died.” Experts have said the plane that took off from Santa Cruz, Bolivia, was at its maximum flight range when it crashed into a muddy mountainside. The team was heading to play in the first of two matches in the final of the Copa Sudamerica, South America’s No. 2 club tournament. Williams Brasiliano, uncle of Chapecoense midfielder Arthur Maia, said the crash
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Independence, Ohio (ap) — LeBron James has been chosen Sports Illustrated’s Sportsperson of the Year after leading the Cavaliers to an NBA title and ending Cleveland’s 52-year championship drought. James rallied the Cavs in the NBA Finals to defeat the favored Golden State Warriors, who won 73 games during the regular season. James was selected finals MVP for the third time in his career after Cleveland became the first team to overcome a 3-1 deficit. James scored 41 points in Games 5 and 6 and made a key block in the final minutes of Game 7. James joins Tigers Woods as the only two-time winners of the award.
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Soccer-team crash avoidable, say families By Mauricio Savarese and Stephen Wade
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BALTIMORE...................3 1/2 (40.5)...........................Miami OAKLAND...........................3 (49)..............................Buffalo SAN DIEGO.......................4 (47.5)....................Tampa Bay ARIZONA.............................2 (49).....................Washington PITTSBURGH.................. 6 1/2 (48).....................NY Giants SEATTLE...........................7 (44.5)..........................Carolina Monday Indianapolis....................2 (48.5)..........................NY JETS Bye Week: Cleveland and Tennessee. College Football Favorite.............. Points (O/U)........... Underdog MAC Championship Game Ford Field-Detroit, MI. Western Michigan....18 1/2 (59.5)............................. Ohio PAC 12 Championship Game Levi’s Stadium-Santa Clara, CA. Washington..................7 1/2 (56.5).................... Colorado Saturday WEST VIRGINIA...... 18 (68.5).................. Baylor TCU.........................4 (52.5)..............Kansas St SOUTH ALABAMA...........12 (58)..............New Mexico St Troy.....................................7 (54)............ GEORGIA SOUTH UL-Lafayette...............6 1/2 (56.5)...............UL-MONROE OKLAHOMA........... 11 1/2 (77)........Oklahoma St Arkansas St.....................23 (54)........................TEXAS ST IDAHO.............................6 1/2 (52.5)................. Georgia St Conference USA Championship Game Houchens-Smith Stadium-Bowling Green, KY. WESTERN KENTUCKY.9 1/2 (80).......... Louisiana Tech AAC Championship Game Navy-Marine Corps Mem Stadium-Annapolis, MD. NAVY..................................3 (61.5)............................Temple SEC Championship Game Georgia Dome-Atlanta, GA. Alabama..........................24 (40.5)...........................Florida Mountain West Championship Game War Memorial Stadium-Laramie, WY. San Diego St................. 6 1/2 (62)..................... WYOMING ACC Championship Game Bank of America Stadium-Charlotte, NC. Clemson............................10 (58).................Virginia Tech Big 10 Championship Game Lucas Oil Stadium-Indianapolis, IN. Wisconsin..........................3 (47).............................Penn St NBA Favorite Points (O/U) Underdog PHILADELPHIA.................2 (196)............................Orlando TORONTO......................10 1/2 (214)....................LA Lakers BOSTON.........................6 1/2 (208)...............Sacramento NEW YORK......................2 1/2 (210)...................Minnesota x-ATLANTA....................OFF (OFF)...........................Detroit Cleveland.................... 2 1/2 (203.5)....................CHICAGO LA Clippers...................2 1/2 (207)...........NEW ORLEANS SAN ANTONIO............ 9 1/2 (202.5)..............Washington DENVER..............................2 (222)...........................Houston x-Atlanta Forward P. Millsap is questionable. College Basketball Favorite................... Points................ Underdog PITTSBURGH...................... 14 1/2.........................Duquesne St. John’s............................4 1/2..............................TULANE TEXAS....................... 4 1/2.................. Alabama Added Games MANHATTAN......................... 4................................Canisius MARIST.................................6 1/2..............................Niagara INDIANA.................................26.............. SIU Edwardsville Iona........................................1 1/2.......................ST. PETER’S Home Team in CAPS (c) TRIBUNE CONTENT AGENCY, LLC
TODAY IN SPORTS 1907 — Tommy Burns defends his world heavyweight title by knocking out Gunner Moir in the 10th round at London. 1944 — Ohio State quarterback Leslie Horvath wins the Heisman Trophy. 1947 — Notre Dame quarterback Johnny Lujack wins the Heisman Trophy. 1952 — Oklahoma halfback Billy Vessels is named the Heisman Trophy winner. 1958 — Army back Pete Dawkins is named the Heisman Trophy winner.
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NBA Roundup The Associated Press
Grizzlies 95, Magic 94 Memphis, Tenn. — Marc Gasol scored 25 points, including a pair of free throws with 12.2 seconds remaining to give Memphis a victory over Orlando on Thursday night. Gasol’s free throws completed a 14-point comeback in the fourth quarter as Memphis snapped a two-game losing streak. ORLANDO (94) Fournier 11-14 3-4 28, Ibaka 4-10 3-4 11, Gordon 3-6 2-4 8, Biyombo 1-4 1-2 3, Augustin 2-6 1-2 7, Je.Green 5-8 4-5 14, Vucevic 6-15 5-5 18, Watson 0-3 2-3 2, Payton 1-8 1-2 3. Totals 33-74 22-31 94. MEMPHIS (95) Williams 2-13 0-0 5, Ja.Green 3-4 1-2 8, Gasol 8-14 7-7 25, Harrison 4-8 3-6 11, Allen 4-11 1-2 9, Martin 2-11 2-2 6, Davis 1-2 2-2 4, Baldwin 3-7 2-2 8, Daniels 6-9 4-5 19. Totals 33-79 22-28 95. Orlando 28 21 19 26 — 94 Memphis 30 20 15 30 — 95 3-Point Goals-Orlando 6-24 (Fournier 3-5, Augustin 2-3, Vucevic 1-3, Payton 0-1, Watson 0-2, Je.Green 0-3, Gordon 0-3, Ibaka 0-4), Memphis 7-18 (Daniels 3-5, Gasol 2-3, Ja.Green 1-1, Williams 1-6, Baldwin 0-1, Martin 0-1, Allen 0-1). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-Orlando 42 (Biyombo 14), Memphis 39 (Martin 10). Assists-Orlando 15 (Payton 5), Memphis 18 (Harrison 8). Total FoulsOrlando 19, Memphis 25. TechnicalsPayton, Orlando coach Frank Vogel, Memphis defensive three second, Baldwin. A-13,344 (18,119).
Clippers 113, Cavaliers 94 Cleveland — J.J. Redick scored 23 points, Blake Griffin matched a career high with 11 assists and Los Angeles bounced back from a brutal loss
How former Jayhawks fared Paul Pierce, L.A. Clippers Min: 15. Pts: 4. Reb: 4. Ast: 1. Jeff Withey, Utah Min: 13. Pts: 6. Reb: 2. Blk: 3.
with a victory over Cleveland, which has lost two straight for the first time as defending NBA champions. L.A. CLIPPERS (113) Griffin 4-14 5-8 13, Mbah a Moute 3-7 0-0 6, Jordan 4-8 1-3 9, Paul 5-11 3-3 16, Redick 9-13 1-2 23, Pierce 1-2 2-2 4, Anderson 1-3 0-0 3, Speights 4-7 0-0 8, Felton 3-7 0-0 7, Crawford 4-9 2-4 12, Rivers 4-8 2-2 12. Totals 42-89 16-24 113. CLEVELAND (94) James 5-14 6-11 16, Love 7-11 0-0 16, Thompson 1-3 1-2 3, Irving 8-19 11-12 28, Smith 1-3 0-0 3, Jefferson 4-6 0-0 12, Frye 0-2 5-6 5, Andersen 0-0 2-4 2, Felder 0-3 2-2 2, Jones 0-1 0-0 0, Shumpert 1-4 2-2 4, McRae 1-3 0-0 3. Totals 28-69 29-39 94. L.A. Clippers 24 34 27 28 — 113 Cleveland 28 22 15 29 — 94 3-Point Goals-L.A. Clippers 13-31 (Redick 4-6, Paul 3-7, Rivers 2-4, Crawford 2-5, Anderson 1-2, Felton 1-2, Speights 0-1, Griffin 0-1, Pierce 0-1, Mbah a Moute 0-2), Cleveland 9-24 (Jefferson 4-6, Love 2-5, McRae 1-1, Smith 1-3, Irving 1-4, Frye 0-1, James 0-2, Shumpert 0-2). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-L.A. Clippers 47 (Jordan 15), Cleveland 36 (Thompson 8). AssistsL.A. Clippers 33 (Griffin 11), Cleveland 12 (James 5). Total Fouls-L.A. Clippers 32, Cleveland 24. Technicals-James. A-20,562 (20,562).
Bucks 111, Nets 93 New York— Giannis Antetokounmpo had 23 points, eight rebounds and eight assists, Jabari Parker scored 22 points and Milwaukee beat Brooklyn. MILWAUKEE (111) Antetokounmpo 7-14 7-9 23, Snell 3-7 4-4 13, Henson 4-9 4-4 12, Parker 9-14 4-6 22, Dellavedova 3-6 0-0 9, Beasley 1-4 3-4 5, Teletovic 3-8 0-0 9, Maker 0-1 0-0 0, Monroe 1-4 0-0 2, Plumlee 0-1 0-0 0, Terry 1-5 0-0 3, Vaughn 0-0 0-0 0, Brogdon 4-7 2-2 13. Totals 36-80 24-29 111. BROOKLYN (93) Booker 4-7 1-1 9, Lopez 4-12 4-6 15, Whitehead 3-8 2-2 8, Kilpatrick 5-10 2-2 14, Bogdanovic 5-14 1-1 13, McCullough 0-1 0-0 0, Scola 1-1 0-0 2, Bennett 0-1 0-0 0, Hamilton 2-9 0-0 5, Ferrell 1-1 0-0 2, Hollis-Jefferson 3-7 1-2 7, Harris 4-11 0-0 11, Foye 2-7 2-2 7. Totals 34-89 13-16 93. Milwaukee 27 25 38 21 — 111 Brooklyn 26 25 27 15 — 93 3-Point Goals-Milwaukee 15-34 (Dellavedova 3-4, Brogdon 3-4, Snell 3-6, Teletovic 3-8, Antetokounmpo 2-5, Terry 1-4, Maker 0-1, Parker 0-2), Brooklyn 12-40 (Harris 3-8, Lopez 3-8, Kilpatrick 2-6, Bogdanovic 2-6, Foye 1-4, Hamilton 1-5, Hollis-Jefferson 0-1, Whitehead 0-2). Fouled Out-None. ReboundsMilwaukee 48 (Antetokounmpo, Henson 8), Brooklyn 40 (Booker 8). Assists-Milwaukee 23 (Antetokounmpo 8), Brooklyn 20 (Kilpatrick, Whitehead 4). Total Fouls-Milwaukee 18, Brooklyn 22. A-12,675 (17,732).
Hornets 97, Mavericks 87 Charlotte, N.C. — Kemba Walker scored 18 points and Charlotte beat Dallas for its third win in the last four games. DALLAS (87) Barnes 8-20 0-0 17, Finney-Smith 1-4 1-2 4, Mejri 1-4 1-2 3, D.Williams 6-14 1-1 14, Matthews 4-15 5-5 14, Powell 2-4 2-2 6, Gibson 5-15 0-2 11, Harris 1-3 0-0 3, Anderson 4-7 4-4 15. Totals 32-86 14-18 87.
CHARLOTTE (97) Kidd-Gilchrist 4-9 6-8 14, Zeller 3-5 0-0 6, Kaminsky 0-4 1-2 1, Walker 7-19 1-2 18, Batum 4-12 3-4 12, Hawes 3-3 1-1 7, Hibbert 5-7 1-5 11, Sessions 3-3 2-2 8, Belinelli 3-5 2-2 8, Lamb 3-7 5-5 12. Totals 35-74 22-31 97. Dallas 14 27 19 27 — 87 Charlotte 23 21 24 29 — 97 3-Point Goals-Dallas 9-31 (Anderson 3-3, Barnes 1-2, Finney-Smith 1-2, Harris 1-2, Gibson 1-4, D.Williams 1-7, Matthews 1-11), Charlotte 5-18 (Walker 3-10, Lamb 1-2, Batum 1-5, Belinelli 0-1). Fouled Out-Powell. Rebounds-Dallas 41 (Mejri 11), Charlotte 39 (Batum 9). Assists-Dallas 18 (D.Williams 8), Charlotte 24 (Batum 6). Total Fouls-Dallas 25, Charlotte 18. Technicals-Zeller, Hibbert. A-14,471 (19,077).
Heat 111, Jazz 110 Salt Lake City — Goran Dragic scored 27 points and Miami continued to play better on the road with a victory over Utah. MIAMI (111) Babbitt 0-0 1-2 1, McRoberts 5-10 0-0 10, Whiteside 4-11 1-2 9, Dragic 10-21 5-7 27, McGruder 2-4 4-4 9, J.Johnson 11-15 0-0 24, Reed 3-5 0-0 6, T.Johnson 3-11 2-2 8, Ellington 6-9 2-2 17. Totals 44-86 15-19 111. UTAH (110) Hayward 12-22 5-6 32, J.Johnson 6-9 2-2 18, Diaw 0-4 0-0 0, Gobert 3-4 0-0 6, Exum 1-6 2-2 5, Ingles 6-8 0-0 15, Lyles 5-8 0-0 14, Withey 2-2 2-3 6, Mack 4-9 2-4 11, Neto 1-1 0-0 3. Totals 40-73 13-17 110. Miami 26 26 31 28 — 111 Utah 27 21 29 33 — 110 3-Point Goals-Miami 8-19 (Ellington 3-5, Dragic 2-3, J.Johnson 2-4, McGruder 1-2, McRoberts 0-1, T.Johnson 0-4), Utah 17-30 (Lyles 4-4, J.Johnson 4-6, Ingles 3-4, Hayward 3-7, Neto 1-1, Mack 1-2, Exum 1-4, Diaw 0-2). Fouled Out-None. ReboundsMiami 40 (Whiteside 10), Utah 31 (Gobert 10). Assists-Miami 16 (Dragic 6), Utah 24 (Hayward 7). Total FoulsMiami 15, Utah 14. Technicals-Gobert.
COLLEGE BASKETBALL ROUNDUP No. 24 Florida 91, North Florida 60 Jacksonville, Fla. — Top 25 Chris Chiozza scored 16 No. 20 South Carolina points, Justin Leon added 68, Vermont 50 13 and No. 24 Florida hanColumbia, S.C. — PJ dled North Florida. Dozier had a career-high 21 points and No. 20 South FLORIDA (7-1) Robinson 3-7 4-7 10, Leon 3-6 4-4 13, Carolina improved to 7-0 Egbunu 3-5 1-2 7, Hill 2-5 1-1 5, Allen for with a victory over Ver- 2-2 1-2 5, Stone 2-2 3-4 8, Gak 2-2 0-0 4, Hayes 3-4 2-3 8, Rimmer 0-0 0-0 0, mont on Thursday night. Chiozza 5-8 3-3 16, Hester 1-1 0-0 3, The Associated Press
VERMONT (6-3) Lamb 6-10 1-3 14, Henson 1-4 2-2 4, Er.Duncan 2-9 0-0 6, Bell-Haynes 2-5 1-2 5, Steidl 1-7 0-0 3, Payen 0-1 0-0 0, Urquhart 1-3 1-2 3, Ward 2-5 0-0 5, Wills 2-4 4-5 8, Hearlihy 1-3 0-0 2. Totals 18-51 9-14 50. SOUTH CAROLINA (7-0) Kotsar 7-10 0-0 14, Silva 5-6 2-2 12, Thornwell 4-10 2-2 11, Dozier 9-15 0-1 21, Notice 1-6 0-0 2, Gueye 0-1 0-0 0, Holliman 0-0 0-0 0, Tut 0-1 0-0 0, Keita 1-4 2-2 4, Gravett 1-2 0-0 2, Corchiani 0-0 0-0 0, Felder 0-1 0-0 0, McKie 1-6 0-0 2, Schmitt 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 29-62 6-7 68. Halftime-South Carolina 43-32. 3-Point Goals-Vermont 5-20 (Er. Duncan 2-7, Ward 1-2, Lamb 1-3, Steidl 1-6, Hearlihy 0-1, Henson 0-1), South Carolina 4-13 (Dozier 3-5, Thornwell 1-2, McKie 0-2, Notice 0-4). Fouled OutLamb. Rebounds-Vermont 28 (Henson 7), South Carolina 34 (Dozier, Silva 6). Assists-Vermont 5 (Ward 2), South Carolina 18 (Thornwell 9). Total FoulsVermont 14, South Carolina 15.
Bluejays CONTINUED FROM 1D
from junior Ainise Havili. “I remember that the setter broke our laptop,” Winters replied, when asked to dredge up her recollections from a Sept. 8 loss that came weeks before Creighton embarked on its still active 21-match winning streak. “I remember how scrappy they are and that was obviously one of the very scrappy plays,” she said of Havili crashing into press row to keep a point alive. “So I know that they’re gonna get after it and obviously we’re gonna get after it, too. It’ll be a great battle — if they win.” Winters’ analysis came shortly before Kansas, the No. 5 overall seed in the tournament, swept Samford in three sets to make the rematch (6:30 p.m. at Horejsi) official. Since Creighton (27-6) lost to KU (27-2) on its
Crash CONTINUED FROM 2D
could have been avoided if Chapecoense had chosen a regular airline to travel to Colombia instead of a charter. “Look how complicated that flight was going to be even if it had arrived,” Brasiliano said, tears in his eyes. “Even if they had arrived, it is clear that they would be tired from the trip to play a final. This can’t be right. I doubt that a bigger club would have
Barry 5-11 1-2 12. Totals 31-53 20-28 91. NORTH FLORIDA (3-6) Aminu 0-3 4-8 4, Banks 3-6 1-1 7, Bodager 1-5 0-0 2, Malonga 0-4 0-0 0, Moore 12-21 1-1 31, Odum 0-2 4-4 4, Sams 1-3 0-0 2, Fisher 0-0 0-0 0, Blount 2-6 2-3 6, Horne 1-3 2-2 4. Totals 20-53 14-19 60. Halftime-Florida 45-25. 3-Point Goals-Florida 9-19 (Chiozza 3-5, Leon 3-5, Stone 1-1, Hester 1-1, Barry 1-4, Hill 0-1, Robinson 0-2), North Florida 6-22 (Moore 6-12, Horne 0-1, Blount 0-2, Malonga 0-3, Bodager 0-4). Fouled Out-Aminu. Rebounds-Florida 31 (Robinson 6), North Florida 23 (Blount 4). Assists-Florida 17 (Chiozza 9), North Florida 2 (Aminu, Moore 1). Total Fouls-Florida 18, North Florida 21. A-4,113 (5,800).
had 15 points apiece as No. 8 Gonzaga remained undefeated and kept Mississippi Valley State winless with a victory. MVSU (0-9) Given 6-8 2-2 14, Traylor 5-9 0-0 11, Riley 1-8 0-0 3, Phillips 0-3 0-0 0, Surles 5-11 2-4 13, Strother 0-1 0-0 0, Smith 2-5 0-0 4, Hunt 0-0 1-4 1, Vaughn 1-2 0-0 2, Watson 0-0 0-0 0, I.Williams 3-10 0-0 6, Alex 4-6 1-2 9. Totals 27-63 6-12 63. GONZAGA (7-0) J.Williams 2-6 4-4 8, Karnowski 3-4 0-0 6, Williams-Goss 5-8 1-2 13, Mathews 3-11 1-1 9, Perkins 5-9 0-0 15, Hachimura 5-8 0-2 10, Collins 5-6 3-5 13, Tillie 1-3 0-0 2, Triano 1-3 0-0 3, Bakamus 0-1 0-0 0, Melson 5-8 4-5 15, Alberts 1-4 0-0 3. Totals 36-71 13-19 97. Halftime-Gonzaga 49-28. 3-Point Goals-MVSU 3-18 (Riley 1-3, Surles 1-3, Traylor 1-4, Strother 0-1, Phillips 0-1, Smith 0-2, I.Williams 0-4), Gonzaga 12-32 (Perkins 5-7, Williams-Goss 2-3, Mathews 2-9, Triano 1-3, Melson 1-4, Alberts 1-4, Hachimura 0-1, Bakamus 0-1). Fouled Out-None. ReboundsMVSU 30 (Surles 7), Gonzaga 40 (Hachimura, Collins 9). Assists-MVSU 11 (Riley, Vaughn 4), Gonzaga 23 (Williams-Goss 5). Total Fouls-MVSU 18, Gonzaga 12. A-600 (6,000).
throws with 20 seconds left in overtime and Cincinnati sent Iowa State to its second straight loss. Kyle Washington had 13 points and 10 rebounds and Evans had 11 points for the Bearcats (6-1), who also snapped Iowa State’s 37-game non-conference home winning streak.
Friday, December 2, 2016
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SCOREBOARD
L 6 8 9 13 14
Pct GB .667 — .556 2 .500 3 .278 7 .222 8
Pacific Division W L Pct GB Golden State 16 2 .889 — L.A. Clippers 15 5 .750 2 L.A. Lakers 10 10 .500 7 Sacramento 7 11 .389 9 Phoenix 6 13 .316 10½ Wednesday’s Games Sacramento at Philadelphia, ppd. Detroit 121, Boston 114 Toronto 120, Memphis 105 L.A. Lakers 96, Chicago 90 New York 106, Minnesota 104 Oklahoma City 126, Washington 115, OT San Antonio 94, Dallas 87 Miami 106, Denver 98 Phoenix 109, Atlanta 107 Portland 131, Indiana 109 Thursday’s Games Charlotte 97, Dallas 87 Milwaukee 111, Brooklyn 93 L.A. Clippers 113, Cleveland 94 Memphis 95, Orlando 94 Miami 111, Utah 110 Houston at Golden State, (n) Friday’s Games Orlando at Philadelphia, 6 p.m. L.A. Lakers at Toronto, 6:30 p.m. Minnesota at New York, 6:30 p.m. Sacramento at Boston, 6:30 p.m. Cleveland at Chicago, 7 p.m. Detroit at Atlanta, 7 p.m. L.A. Clippers at New Orleans, 7 p.m. Washington at San Antonio, 7:30 p.m. Houston at Denver, 9:30 p.m. Saturday’s Games Brooklyn at Milwaukee, 4 p.m. Minnesota at Charlotte, 6 p.m. Atlanta at Toronto, 6:30 p.m. Boston at Philadelphia, 6:30 p.m. L.A. Lakers at Memphis, 7 p.m. Chicago at Dallas, 7:30 p.m. Denver at Utah, 8 p.m. Miami at Portland, 9 p.m. Phoenix at Golden State, 9:30 p.m. Sunday’s Games Orlando at Detroit, 5 p.m. New Orleans at Oklahoma City, 6 p.m. Sacramento at New York, 6:30 p.m. Indiana at L.A. Clippers, 8:30 p.m.
L 8 9 12 12 11
Pct GB .579 — .526 1 .368 4 .368 4 .353 4
Hero World Challenge Scores
L 4 7 8 10 10
Pct GB .765 — .588 3 .529 4 .500 4½ .474 5
L 4 7 8 12 15
Pct GB .789 — .611 3½ .600 3½ .368 8 .167 11½
L 8 9 10 11 13
Pct GB .600 — .550 1 .500 2 .389 4 .278 6
Big 12 Men
League Overall Baylor 0-0 7-0 TCU 0-0 7-0 Kansas 0-0 6-1 Kansas State 0-0 6-1 Oklahoma State 0-0 6-1 Texas Tech 0-0 6-1 Oklahoma 0-0 5-1 West Virginia 0-0 5-1 Iowa State 0-0 5-2 Texas 0-0 3-3 Tuesday’s Games Kansas 91, Long Beach State 61 UT Arlington 72, Texas 61 Oklahoma 87, Northern Colorado 66 Wednesday’s Games Washington 71, TCU 86 Incarnate Word 48, Texas Tech 69 Rogers State 85, Oklahoma State 101 Green Bay 61, Kansas State 80 Sam Houston State 45, Baylor 79 Thursday’s Games Cincinnati 55, Iowa State 54 Today’s Games Alabama at Texas, 8:30 p.m. Saturday’s Games Stanford at Kansas, 2:30 p.m. Oklahoma at Wisconsin, noon Rice at Texas Tech, 1 p.m. West Virginia at Virginia, 1 p.m. Xavier at Baylor, 2:30 p.m. Kansas State at Saint Louis, 7 p.m. Arkansas State at TCU, 7 p.m. Oklahoma State at Maryland, 8 p.m. Monday’s Games Omaha at Iowa State, 7 p.m. Tuesday’s Games UMKC at Kansas, 7 p.m. Prairie View at Kansas State, 7 p.m. Texas at Michigan, 8 p.m.
National Basketball Association EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W Toronto 12 Boston 10 New York 9 Brooklyn 5 Philadelphia 4 Southeast Division W Charlotte 11 Atlanta 10 Miami 7 Orlando 7 Washington 6 Central Division W Cleveland 13 Chicago 10 Milwaukee 9 Detroit 10 Indiana 9 WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division W San Antonio 15 Houston 11 Memphis 12 New Orleans 7 Dallas 3 Northwest Division W Oklahoma City 12 Utah 11 Portland 10 Denver 7 Minnesota 5
Thursday At Albany Golf Club, Nassau, Bahamas Purse: $3.5 million Yardage: 7,267; Par: 72 (36-36) First Round J.B. Holmes 33-31—64 Hideki Matsuyama 35-30—65 Dustin Johnson 33-33—66 Henrik Stenson 34-33—67 Matt Kuchar 31-36—67 Louis Oosthuizen 31-36—67 Rickie Fowler 35-33—68 Jordan Spieth 35-33—68 Russell Knox 33-36—69 Jimmy Walker 34-36—70 Emiliano Grillo 34-36—70 Bubba Watson 35-37—72 Brandt Snedeker 37-35—72 Zach Johnson 35-37—72 Patrick Reed 36-36—72 Brooks Koepka 34-38—72 Tiger Woods 33-40—73 Justin Rose 36-38—74
No. 8 Gonzaga 97, Mis- Cincinnati 55, No. 19 sissippi Valley State 63 Iowa St. 54, OT Spokane, Wash. — Josh Ames, Iowa — Jacob Perkins and Silas Melson Evans III made two free
CINCINNATI (6-1) Washington 6-15 0-1 13, Clark 5-8 1-2 11, Caupain 2-11 3-3 7, Johnson 4-10 2-2 11, Evans 4-12 2-2 11, Moore 0-1 0-0 0, Scott 0-1 0-0 0, Brooks 1-1 0-0 2, Cumberland 0-2 0-0 0, Jenifer 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 22-62 8-10 55. IOWA ST. (5-2) Holden 0-1 0-0 0, Thomas 5-11 0-0 13, Burton 4-13 0-0 9, Mitrou-Long 0-7 0-0 0, Morris 7-16 1-1 15, Bowie 4-7 3-8 11, Weiler-Babb 1-3 0-0 2, Jackson 1-2 1-2 4. Totals 22-60 5-11 54. Halftime-Cincinnati 25-24. End Of Regulation-Tied 50. 3-Point GoalsCincinnati 3-21 (Washington 1-3, Evans 1-5, Johnson 1-5, Cumberland 0-1, Clark 0-1, Caupain 0-6), Iowa St. 5-21 (Thomas 3-8, Jackson 1-2, Burton 1-3, Morris 0-3, Mitrou-Long 0-5). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-Cincinnati 45 (Caupain, Washington, Clark 10), Iowa St. 31 (Burton 8). Assists-Cincinnati 9 (Evans, Clark 2), Iowa St. 5 (Morris 2). Total Fouls-Cincinnati 13, Iowa St. 13. A-14,384 (14,384).
home floor, the Big East champions have only experienced two other setbacks — at Nebraska, the top overall seed in the tournament, and at Kansas State, the 14th overall seed. The Bluejays’ undefeated march through conference play only included five lost sets. Despite all those successes, head coach Kirsten Bernthal Booth, of course, had a much clearer picture in her mind of an early non-conference meeting in which Kansas took the final two sets, in Omaha, Neb., earlier this season. “Everyone talks about Payne,” Booth said of Kelsie, KU’s sophomore right side hitter, the Big 12 Player of the Year. “Payne did not play well against us (11 kills, seven errors). So we obviously know that she’s kind of got her mojo going.” Booth called Cassie Wait one of the nation’s top liberos and outside hitter Madison Rigdon KU’s glue. “That kid does it all,”
Creighton’s coach said of Rigdon, who put away a match-high 24 kills the last time the teams met. “You set up one way and she’s gonna go someplace else.” The praises didn’t stop there, as Booth referenced Tayler Soucie, Jada Burse and Havili. “Obviously their setter’s a stud,” the coach said. “And she can break laptops.” For Creighton freshman libero Brittany Witt, though, the feeling after that loss to KU sticks out more than anything. “I just remember that we were like, ‘We could’ve won that. We should’ve won that.’ So I think definitely going into tomorrow’s match — if they win — is we definitely want revenge,” Witt said. “But I think coming out of that game we knew that we could’ve won it. It made us work even harder throughout the season to win those fifth sets.” The Bluejays came so close to knocking off
Kansas, which rallied to edge the home team 2826 and 15-13 in the final two sets, Jayhawks head coach Ray Bechard found it difficult to look back upon it with fondness. “It was two-and-a-half hours, and it was just like pulling teeth to score a point,” Bechard said. “Both teams worked defensively and you felt like you were at the dentist for a couple hours.” However, Bechard added, that came before the emergence of Burse, a freshman whose 14 kills led the team against Samford. “But they are much, much improved, also,” KU’s coach added of the Bluejays, “so I think it’ll be a great match tomorrow.” Kansas, the Big 12 champion, limited Creighton, winner of the Big East, to a .157 hitting percentage — well below its .281 season average — in the regular season. KU is 9-1 all-time against the Bluejays, and 6-0 at home.
mother has her undergrad and master’s from Kansas, my dad his master’s. My brother has his undergrad CONTINUED FROM 1D from Kansas and my sisterin the past seven seasons. in-law her undergrad, plus tons of cousins and aunts.” Kansas has been one of This is the third time seven schools to play host to first- and second-round Creighton has played the tourney matches in each of opening round with Kansas as host school but the first the past five seasons. in Horejsi. The previous “I was brought up a KU ones played in Allen Fieldfan,” said Bernal Booth, house and Kansas Expowho attended high school in Lincoln, Neb. “My centre in Topeka.
done the same.” Chapecoense spokesman Andrei Copetti said more than 30 clubs had used the LaMia company that operated the crashed jet, including Argentina and Bolivia. “LaMia also took us to Barranquilla (Colombia) to play against Junior,” Copetti said. “They had a good service then. It was the airline that got in touch with us because they have experience in doing these long flights in South America. We chose this company for technical reasons. All these rumors have to be discarded.”
He said the governing body of South American football, known as CONMEBOL, was not involved in choosing LaMia. He said also said the city had no role. Soccer legend Pele expressed concern for the families in his first comments about the crash. “We have to ask God to give strength to their families for this sadness to go as quickly as possible,” Pele told ESPN Brasil. “We have to pray, send positive energies to the families. Support those that are still here, in whichever way possible.”
The team announced that a funeral will be held for several players, staff and local journalists at Arena Conda stadium Saturday. It was not clear whether all the victims would be present at a service expected to draw 100,000 people to the 22,000-seat arena. Chapecoense acting president Ivan Tozzo said Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos and FIFA President Gianni Infantino were to be at the funeral. Brazilian President Michel Temer will be present only at the arrival of the bodies at Chapeco’s
airport. Temer has avoided public meetings since he was booed at both the Olympics and Paralympic Games in Rio de Janeiro this year after he took office following the impeachment of President Dilma Rousseff. Also on Thursday, the president of Brazilian club Atletico Mineiro said his team would not play its final-round match of the Brazilian league season against Chapecoense. Chapecoense’s acting president said earlier in the week that the head of the Brazilian Football Con-
NFL ROUNDUP
Cowboys earn 11th straight win By Jon Krawczynski AP Sports Writer
Cowboys 17, Vikings 15 Minneapolis (ap) — Dez Bryant caught four passes for 84 yards and the goahead touchdown in the fourth quarter, helping the Dallas Cowboys win their 11th straight game with a 17-15 victory over the Minnesota Vikings on Thursday night. Bryant’s 56-yard catch in the first half set up Ezekiel Elliott’s 1-yard plunge. The receiver caught
an 8-yard scoring pass in the fourth quarter after a fumbled punt by Minnesota’s Adam Thielen. Elliott rushed for 86 yards on 20 carries for the Cowboys (11-1). They have the longest single-season winning streak in franchise history. Sam Bradford threw a 3-yard touchdown pass to Jerick McKinnon with 25 seconds to play, but the 2-point conversion pass failed. Dallas Minnesota
0 7 0 10 — 17 3 0 3 9 — 15
Coach
federation, Marco Polo Del Nero, had ordered Chapecoense to play its final match using a team made up mostly of junior players. “We believe in sport,” Atletico Mineiro president Daniel Nepomuceno said. “We respect the pain. It’s not the moment to demand that players” play this match. Nepomuceno said that he had talked with Del Nero and that the CBF head had changed his mind. Del Nero was widely criticized on social media for his earlier statements.
4D
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Friday, December 2, 2016
KSHSAA sets new pitch limits at 105 By Bobby Nightengale bnightengale@ljworld.com
After receiving data from high school baseball teams across the state last year, the Kansas High School Activity Association has determined 105 is the magic number for pitchers. Pitchers — at all levels of high school competition — will be allowed to throw a maximum of 105 pitches in one day, KSHSAA announced in November. They will be allowed to finish a batter if they reach 105 pitches in the middle of an at-bat. If a pitcher exceeds 76 pitches, he will be required to rest for at least four days before he is allowed to return to the mound. It’ll be three days of rest for 6175 pitches, two days for throwing 46-60 pitches and one day after tossing 31-45 pitches. If a pitcher throws 30 pitches or fewer, he can throw again on the following day. The National Federation of State High School Associations adopted a national “pitching restriction policy based on the number of pitches thrown in a game” during July. In the past, KSHSAA had an innings limit — nine innings in one day and 12 innings over a 48-hour period. Free State coach Mike Hill, who served on the national rules committee that recommended pitch limits, and Lawrence High coach Brad Stoll have both supported more protection for young pitchers. “For us, we don’t feel like this is going to have
any impact on what we do,” Hill said earlier this year. “I think this is true of a lot of coaches in the Sunflower League. We’ve already tried to be overprotective on arms.” It was up to KSHSAA to determine that 105 pitches would be the state’s maximum number of pitches and the number days of rest in between appearances, but it mostly followed the Pitch Smart recommendations from MLB and USA Baseball. The pitch-count limit was put in place to prevent the number of arm injuries for young pitchers. At an American Orthopaedic Society for Sports Medicine in July 2015, a study presented from Rush University in Chicago found 56.7 percent of Tommy John surgeries are performed for 15- to 19-year-olds. Tommy John surgery involves the reconstruction of the ulnar collateral ligament (UCL), which replaces the elbow ligament that essentially holds the upper and lower arm together with a tendon from elsewhere in the body. The pitch count does not include warmup or bullpen pitches. An official scorer will keep track of pitch counts for both teams and coaches will have to sign a KSHSAA tracking sheet after each game to ensure each school is aware of the days of rest requirements. Violating the pitch count will lead to an immediate suspension for the pitcher and coach, plus the team will have to forfeit the game.
memory from his playing days, Haase, ever the overachiever, provided two. CONTINUED FROM 1D “Probably Senior Night, you know, the last game at UAB and now Stanford, Allen Fieldhouse I thought so, whatever ovation or was really special,” he response that Jerod gets, said. “The other one that from a positive standI’ll always remember was point, is one which he when I was recruited richly deserves.” there and I walked into Saturday’s showdown the Fieldhouse for the first will be the first meeting time and the lights were between Self and Haase off and then (they came as head coaches, but their on) and I saw it and really paths have crossed on the got a sense for what it recruiting trail and both was.” seem to have a great deal Several of the names, of respect for the way the faces, renovations and other does the job. relocations that Haase “Out recruiting, I’ve will encounter on Satbeen able to spend a urday will be new. But little time with him and, one thing that won’t is obviously from afar, the home team trotting I’ve just been watching a wildly talented team what he’s done with the onto the floor just before program and I’ve been tipoff. Haase was a part amazed and impressed,” of that 42 times during Haase said of Self. “All a 101-game KU career in the former (KU) players which he averaged 12.5 take a great deal of pride points, 3.8 rebounds, 3.4 in the program and we all assists and 1.7 steals per appreciate that they’ve game. been so successful.” “There’s a lot more Although returning similarities than differto a venue in which he ences to a typical Kanbecame a fan favorite sas team,” said Haase and was a part of some of when asked for his quick the best teams in school thoughts on the 2016-17 history from 1994-97 will Jayhawks. “They have bring with it all kinds of a great deal of talent, emotions that Haase said they play hard, they’re might not yet have hit athletic, their guard play him, this kind of expeis phenomenal and we’re rience is not without gonna have to be able precedent. to handle pressure and While coaching at handle the environment UAB for four seasons, and those are tall tasks. where he went 80-53 “To have a chance to from 2012-15, Haase twice compete in Allen Fieldfaced Roy Williams, house it’s going to have the man he played for to be truly a full team at Kansas and learned effort.” under at North Carolina, Few coaches who losing at North Carolina have come through here and beating him at UAB. before have been able Haase said getting to say that with such through those games intimate knowledge. And made him believe he even though Haase will could get through some- be making his first apthing like returning to pearance against the JayAllen Fieldhouse, which hawks as a head coach, it he cannot remember the seemed as if it was suplast time he visited. posed to happen sooner “I think it’ll be diffirather than later. Had he cult up until game time,” not elected to leave for Haase said. “But then Stanford, Haase would once the game starts my have been the head coach guess is I’ll be able to at UAB, which faced the lose myself in the game Jayhawks in the CBE and coach our team to Classic last week. the best of my ability.” “Pretty unique situaAsked to give his tion,” Haase said. “This favorite Allen Fieldhouse was the year, I guess.”
Haase
SPORTS
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L awrence J ournal -W orld
Seahawks, McDermott roll past Hanover in season opener, 77-57 passing is off the charts, and he can shoot it. He’s extremely well rounded.” Seabury will look for its second victory when it plays host to Maranatha Academy at 7:30 tonight.
By Evan Riggs eriggs@ljworld.com
Junior Zach McDermott dribbled to the lane and pulled up for a floater. It was one of the few shots he missed, but he was still able to tip it to the corner to his teammate, senior Mikey Wycoff, who drained a three-pointer. It was that sort of a night for McDermott. Even when he missed, just about everything he touched turned into points. McDermott scored a game-high 28 points to lead the Bishop Seabury boys basketball team to a 77-57 victory in its season-opener against Hanover. The win gave Bishop Seabury, ranked No. 2 in the preseason Class 2A poll, a win over the preseason No. 1 team in Class 1A-I. “I was just real focused tonight,” McDermott said. “I wanted to get everyone involved. Some of the shots that were open just happened to be to me. If the next night it’s somebody else, they’re going to hit the shot.” Seabury had to come from behind because Hanover senior Michael Jueneman scored 10 of his 19 points in the first quarter to give the Wildcats a 19-13 lead. Seabury controlled the game from there, which coach Ashley Battles credited to his team’s ability to contain Jueneman, the focal point of the scouting report. In order to do so, the Seahawks played just about every defense imaginable. They played a 2-3, 1-3-1,
Sweep CONTINUED FROM 1D
including the five-set thriller of a victory for KU at Creighton on Sept. 8., Burse didn’t make her first start until the 12th match of the season, Sept. 17. A right-side hitter for her club and high school teams, Burse, a former basketball player, needed to make the switch to outside hitter because Kelsie Payne, a 2015 All-American and 2016 Big 12 player of the year, plays on the right side. It was among many
SEABURY ACADEMY (77) Mikey Wycoff 9-14 2-5 18, Zach McDermott 13-20 2-5 28, Cobe Green 0-1 0-1 1, Thomas diZerega 1-2 0-1 3, Max Easter 0-1 0-0 1, Bansi King 3-11 2-7 10, Austin Gaumer 2-4 1-2 5, Chris Green 1-3 0-0 2, Luke Hornberger 2-2 0-0 4. Totals: 31-58 8-25 77. HANOVER (57) Will Bruna 4-14 0-6 12, Adam Fritschi 1-3 0-0 3, Brennan Zabokrtsky 1-1 0-0 3, Daiken Stallbaumer 3-5 1-1 7, Kevin Diederich 0-0 0-0 1, Adam Zarybnicky 2-2 0-0 4, Michael Jueneman 8-13 2-4 19. Totals: 19-38 3-11 57. Bishop Seabury 13 25 16 23 — 77 Hanover 19 14 11 13 — 57
3-2, 2-1-2, and 1-1-3 zone in addition to man-to-man, where they switched every ball screen. Battles said his team is starting to play smarter. “I think we really trust each other,” Battles said. “Bringing almost everybody back (from last season) has really helped with that.” The Wildcats still hung around for the rest of the first half and were down just 38-33 at halftime after Wycoff threw down a vicious dunk as time expired in the second quarter. “That’s what he can do, and that’s what his athleticism can do for our
team,” McDermott said. “He gave us energy and momentum going into the next quarter.” The Seahawks opened the third quarter on a 10-4 run and held a lead of at least nine points for the remainder of the game. To start the fourth quarter, McDermott made a layup and nailed a deep three-pointer to spark a 9-0 run by the Seahawks to take a commanding 63-44 lead. “There cannot be five better points guards in the state of Kansas than him,” Battles said. “He can do it all. He’s strong, he’s fast, he’s smart, his
Seabury girls drop season opener to Hanover Bishop Seabury’s girls basketball team turned the ball over 41 times in its season-opening 78-7 home loss to Hanover on Thursday night. Senior Kayleigh Boos scored all seven points for the Seahawks in the first quarter before exiting with an ankle injury in the second quarter. After trailing just 17-7 after the first quarter, Seabury allowed Hanover (ranked No. 3 in Class 1AI) to score 61 unanswered points. In the final three quarters, the Seahawks couldn’t deal with Hanover’s pressure defense and only attempted 10 shots during that time. “I don’t want them to get discouraged by the scoreboard,” coach Nick Taylor said. “Give me 100 percent at all times, and we’ll be fine. We need to learn from this.” Bishop Seabury (0-1) will play host to Maranatha Academy at 6 p.m. today.
adjustments to the college game that Burse, a high-flying, hard-hitting explosive player needed to make to work her way into the lineup. Her steady improvement led to a big night for her in her NCAA debut. Burse isn’t one of KU’s five players to have earned first-team Big 12 honors at least once, but she did lead the Jayhawks in kills with 14 and had a .344 hitting percentage. Payne, against whom Samford focused its defense, added nine kills and had a .571 hitting percentage. “I started off kind of nervous, but after a
couple of kills I was fine,” Burse said. That describes how her season has gone as well. “I was really nervous at the beginning of the year because I have never played outside before,” Burse said. “Outside hitter is a big role to play. It’s nothing but fun now. I try not to think too much about that stuff now. It helps me a lot by not overthinking and just playing.” The light went off for her, she said, “when I started getting more comfortable in practice, probably toward the beginning of conference. That’s when I started to get more comfortable and
there was better chemistry with (setter) Ainise (Havili). Teammate Madison Rigdon said of Burse, “She’s become a great player and I’m really excited to play next to her.” Kansas coach Ray Bechard didn’t like everything he saw in his team, but had nothing but praise for Burse. “She’s making more volleyball plays, not just athletic plays,” Bechard said. “I think the light came on for her about six weeks ago when she said, ‘I belong here. I’m a good enough volleyball player.’ That was a great NCAA debut for her.”
Carter Gaskins/Journal-World Photo
BISHOP SEABURY JUNIOR POINT GUARD ZACH MCDERMOTT fights through a couple of defenders for a layup against Hanover on Thursday at Seabury.
Keegan
Nick Krug/Journal-World File Photo
KANSAS GUARD JOSH JACKSON (11) GOES WILD after a dunk during the second half, Tuesday, Nov. 22, during the championship game of the CBE Classic at the Sprint Center.
and athleticism. When you play teams that are smaller and wanna really get after you, he’s the the CONTINUED FROM 1D extra ball handler.” There isn’t anything blocked shots (1.1). opponents can throw at Only one other Big 12 Kansas that Jackson can’t player appears in four help to counteract, even categories. Iowa State’s zone defenses. His shot Deonte Burton ranks 12th isn’t as advanced as the in scoring (14.0), first in rest of his game, but he rebounding (8.5), tied passes so well from the for 15th in steals (1.5) and middle of zones he’s ca12th in blocked shots. pable of making coaches Someone asked 14thregret using them. year Kansas coach Bill Self “When you’ve got a big after Tuesday’s 91-61 rout wing like that who can of Long Beach State if he help you on both the glass ever has had such a versa- and beating the press it tile freshman at Kansas. makes them awfully big “No, no, no, he can do and tough to handle when more things,” Self said. he’s out there,” McDevitt “He was really good said. “That a kind of size, tonight and active. He’s with (Lagerald Vick) and got great vision. He can Josh Jackson throwing pass and can alter (shots) over the top of zones and and is getting more acthrowing over the top tive defensively. He’s of ball pressure to more probably as all-around as size...” any freshman we’ve had He didn’t finish the who can do a little bit of sentence. Going that far everything.” was depressing enough. Or sophomore, junior Jackson brings a suror senior. Game after plus of smarts, talent and game, opposing coaches desire to the equation, marvel at Jackson’s verso there is no reason to satility. believe that he will do “To me, that spot’s anything but steadily critical,” said UNC-Ashe- improve during his one ville coach Nick McDeseason in Lawrence. Add vitt of the one Jackson it all up and that means plays. “When these guys he is well on his way play big teams, he’s a guy to becoming the best who can help you reKansas player Self has bound because of his size coached.