Lawrence Journal-World 2-1-2017

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LUCAS SHOULDERING HUGE LOAD FOR KANSAS. PAGE 1C TRUMP NOMINATES NEIL GORSUCH TO SUPREME COURT.

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Wednesday • February 1 • 2017

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CHILDREN IN NEED OF CARE

Officials: Diversion program nearly on track By Conrad Swanson cswanson@ljworld.com

Sara Shepherd/Journal-World File Photo

NO GUNS ALLOWED SIGNS ARE POSTED ON DOORS LEADING INTO WESCOE HALL on the University of Kansas campus in 2016. A proposal that would have let colleges and universities continue to ban concealed weapons failed to advance out of a Senate committee Tuesday.

Campus carry repeal bill fails to advance By Peter Hancock phancock@ljworld.com

Topeka — A bill that would let colleges, universities and local governments continue to ban concealed weapons in their buildings failed to advance out of a Senate committee Tuesday, dealing a major setback to supporters of gun restrictions in public buildings. “I’m incredibly angry because the support for this bill was overwhelming,” said Megan Jones, a University of Kansas graduate student and co-president of the Kansas Coalition Jones for a Gun Free Campus. “The universities community and the hospital community and all the students overwhelmingly support extending this exemption, and it’s incredibly clear who the senators on this committee work for, which is the gun lobby and not the people,” she said. Gun rights advocates who opposed the bill, however, were elated. “A win for the 2nd amendment,” Kansas Republican

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I’m incredibly angry because the support for this bill was overwhelming.”

— Megan Jones, KU graduate student and co-president of the Kansas Coalition for a Gun Free Campus

Party Chairman Kelly Arnold posted on Twitter. Sen. Jacob LaTurner, RPittsburg, who chairs the Federal and State Affairs Committee, had given no indication earlier that he intended to bring the bill up for a vote on Tuesday. Senate Vice President Jeff Longbine, R-Emporia, who serves on the committee, said he wasn’t present for the vote because he had been told it wouldn’t happen until Thursday. But during Tuesday’s meeting, LaTurner called up the bill and opened the floor to motions. Sen. Lynn Rogers, D-Wichita, offered a motion to recommend it favorably to the full Senate. His motion failed on an unrecorded voice vote. Later in the day, Sen. Caryn Tyson, R-Parker, was reluctant to discuss how she voted on the bill or why.

Nick Krug/Journal-World File Photo

FANS FILE THROUGH THE DOORS OF ALLEN FIELDHOUSE in this 2014 file photo. Entering the fieldhouse for games this fall will require fans to pass through metal detectors.

Metal detectors coming to KU sporting events By Sara Shepherd sshepherd@ljworld.com

Starting this fall, prepare for an experience reminiscent of pro sports when entering Allen Fieldhouse and Memorial Stadium for games: metal detectors and security guards. Kansas law requires state universities to allow con-

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cealed handguns on their campuses beginning July 1, but KU anticipates banning guns from athletic events where attendance is expected to be more than 5,000 people, according to newly released concealed carry implementation information from the university.

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A large-scale program aimed at diverting children from juvenile correctional facilities toward in-home services better suited to address their needs has faced delays, but officials say it’s nearly back on track. The program, the Juvenile Justice Reform Act, was enacted last year with staged deadlines ranging from Jan. 1 (The bill) to this July is moving and beyond. children The entire bill is supfrom the posed to be juvenile in effect by offender 2019. system into In December, the children R a n d y in need of Bowman, care system, director of communityand that is based serexactly what vices for the we should Kansas Debe doing as partment of Corrections, a state.” asked for ad— Benet ditional time Magnuson, executo “fully vet tive director of through polKansas Appleseed icy issues” before the organization could make formal recommendations to the state. The KDOC is partnering with the state’s Office of Judicial Administration to put the bill into action. Bowman said in December that two problem areas were causing the delays: the Immediate Intervention Program and a Detention Risk Assessment Instrument. Tuesday afternoon Bowman addressed the House Corrections and Juvenile Justice Committee, which is examining the bill, and told the members that one of the problem areas — the Immediate Intervention Program — is complete and the other is set to wrap up by April.

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An odd speed limit situation in eastern Lawrence

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Town Talk

erhaps you are thinking the city of Lawrence has a secret plan to deal with the feared fiscal problems that await once a new property tax lid and other state budget woes filter down to City Hall. The plan: a speed trap on the section of 23rd Street just east of

Chad Lawhorn clawhorn@ljworld.com

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City has asked KDOT to change part of 23rd Street to 55 mph O’Connell Road. If you have driven that stretch of 23rd Street, which turns into Kansas Highway 10 just east of town, you perhaps have noticed that it has a

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45 mph speed limit, despite the road being designed much like a four-lane highway. You also may have noticed that if you actually drive 45 mph on that stretch of road,

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you will have an SUV in your backseat. The stretch of street kind of has the feel of a potential speed trap, in part, because prior to the area becoming a construction zone for the South Lawrence Trafficway, the road had a speed limit of 55.

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About this series Children in Need of Care is a series looking at children who are in the custody of the state of Kansas, and how recently approved state reforms are expected to affect the system and the record number of children who are being served. This is the third and final installment in the series.


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BRIEFLY KU hosting forum on named in the order to avoid international travel for now. immigration order There are 88 students at

The University of Kansas Office of the Provost will hold an informational forum on President Donald Trump’s executive order, “Protecting the Nation From Foreign Terrorist Entry Into the United States.” The event is scheduled for 5:30 p.m. today at Watson Library 3 West, according to a new memo from KU Provost Neeli Bendapudi. The gathering will feature leaders from the provost’s office, KU international programs and all the schools, plus immigration experts and KU international student and scholar advisors. Bendapudi said the goal is “to brief the group on what we know, what we do not know and to discuss your concerns.” “Indeed, the entire university is affected by Friday’s executive action and we stand firmly against any form of discrimination,” Bendapudi wrote in the memo. KU Chancellor Bernadette Gray-Little issued a statement Sunday advising KU community members from the seven Middle Eastern and north African countries

LAWRENCE • STATE

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It was assumed that once the construction work ended, which was late last year, the speed limit would be restored Dole lecture series to 55. That didn’t happen, though. To make kicks off Thursday the situation odder, the The 2017 Presidential westbound portion of the Lecture Series at the road — the section from University of Kansas’ Dole the SLT to O’Connell Institute of Politics kicks Road — is 55 mph. off this week. So, if you are headThe first installment, ing east out of town, the “America’s Road to War,” speed limit is 45. If you is set for 7 p.m. Thursare heading west into day at the Dole Institute. town, it is 55. Michael Neiberg, noted To the city’s credit, scholar and chair of war though, police officers studies in the Army, will have not been running explore the complex paths a speed trap along the of politics, economics stretch of street. Despite and cultural divisions that the fact it is very hard brought America into the to find a vehicle that war. actually travels less than This year’s series, “The 45 mph on the street, I U.S. and the Great War: haven’t seen or heard 100 Years Later,” coincides of any signs of a large with the 100th anniversary number of tickets being of the United States’ entry written in the area. into World War I. I have heard from Each of the four lectures several readers, though, is free and open to the pub- questioning why the lic. Find more information, speed limit is so low. as well as later additions to Also to the city’s the spring schedule as they credit, I’ve been told become available, on the it is working with the Dole Institute’s website, Kansas Department of doleinstitute.org. Transportation to get KU’s Lawrence and Edwards campuses from those countries, according to KU.

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“I don’t know how that vote went. It was hard to tell what was going on,” she said as she walked away from a reporter. But Sen. Ty Masterson, R-Andover, was more forthcoming, saying he voted against advancing the bill because he believes the bill is unnecessary. “The tragedy is, we’re conflating two issues,” he said. “I recognize the emotion that’s involved in the topic, but the data doesn’t bear out that it’s warranted at a level where you would restrict someone’s constitutional rights.” Although technically the bill remains alive in the Federal and State Affairs Committee, its chances of ever coming out are now greatly diminished. But a similar bill is pending in the House and is scheduled to be heard in that chamber’s Federal and State Affairs Committee at 9:30 a.m. today. In 2013, lawmakers passed a bill allowing anyone who is legally qualified to own a firearm to carry concealed weapons in any public building, excluding K-12 school buildings, unless they had adequate security to prevent anyone from bringing weapons into those buildings. But it also allowed cities, counties and public colleges and universities to apply for a four-year exemption to give them enough time to make plans for how they would implement the new law. Those exemptions expire July 1. Senate Bill 53 and House Bill 2074 would have extended those exemptions indefinitely. On Thursday, the same House committee will conduct a hearing on another bill that would specifically exempt the KU hospital complex from the gun law.

The next step is gaining formal approval from the Kansas Board of Regents to set up security measures at those facilities, required at some point before such measures are put in play, Regents spokeswoman Breeze Richardson said. KU Athletics continues working with the university to iron out details for implementing a concealed handgun prohibition for games at Allen Fieldhouse and Memorial Stadium, deputy athletics director Sean Lester said. But generally, he said, getting in will probably look a lot like it does at the Sprint Center, Arrowhead Stadium or Kauffman Stadium in Kansas City, Mo. For men’s basketball games at Allen Fieldhouse, expect wands and portable metal detectors to ensure no one gets in with a gun, Lester said. The number of entrances may need to be reduced, which could slow down the process of getting fans to their seats. “We want the experience at Allen Fieldhouse to be a great one,” Lester said. “So we’re going to assess it thoroughly.” Security measures at Memorial Stadium will probably be similar, he said, but KU Athletics and the university are still working out details to deal with implementation in the “antiquated” facility with a myriad of entry points. Paying for all of this is estimated to cost more than $1 million, Lester said. He said funding would come from KU Athletics’ operating budget. “Metal detectors aren’t

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The KDOC on Tuesday published its standards and procedures for the bill’s Immediate Intervention Program online, Bowman said. Essentially, the IIP allows certain children, often without a criminal record and who have committed lowlevel crimes, to divert the charges being filed against them. The issue causing delays with the IIP was a lack of a centralized database allowing prosecutors to look up a child’s criminal history in order to see who qualifies for the diversion program, Bowman said earlier in January. Now that the KDOC’s standards and procedures are published, prosecutors on the local level

have what they need to see who qualifies for the program, Bowman said. All that’s left now is “implementation for the local level.” The second problem area is the development of a Detention Risk Assessment Instrument, which categorizes juveniles into low-, medium-, and high-risk. The score will then determine whether a child needs to be incarcerated. Bowman said the KDOC and the Office of Judicial Administration are working to develop the DRAI and that work should be finished around the end of February. “In addition, the Secretary of State has issued public notice for hearing on proposed permanent rules and regulations for April 11, 2017,” Bowman wrote in a memo to the committee. Rep. Russ Jennings, RLakin, who oversees the House Corrections and

the speed limit raised to 55. City Engineer David Cronin told me this morning that he made the request to KDOT a few weeks ago. He said KDOT officials told him they intend to change the speed limit, but he wasn’t given a timeline. It sounds like signs have to be ordered, and a time has to be scheduled for them to be installed. (It could be awhile. KDOT officials are very busy hiding their couches from the governor, who keeps going through the cushions looking for loose change.) It is not clear why KDOT put the 45 mph signs up to begin with. Cronin said it wasn’t simply a mistake of construction crews forgetting to take down the construction speed limit signs. Cronin said the design plans for the road show that stretch being 45 mph. But Cronin said there aren’t any traffic standards or particular road conditions that would make a 55 mph speed limit unsafe. “We feel like the signs need to be consistent with what people feel is the comfortable speed for that street,” Cronin said. A long-held theory

KU launches website on guns, plans info session The lawful concealed carry of handguns will be allowed on the University of Kansas campus beginning July 1, 2017. KU has created a website, concealedcarry.ku.edu, packed with information about the impending change to the law. The site explains the law and provides information for students, employees and visitors to campus. There are also answers to frequently asked questions and suggestions for what to do in an active shooter situation or how to help someone you suspect of being at risk to harm themselves or others. The Office of the Provost plans an upcoming informational session from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. Feb. 15 in 120 Budig Hall. The session will feature select campus experts sharing information and answering questions about the law and its implementation at KU.

cheap,” he said. Capacity at Allen Fieldhouse — where a large percentage of fans squeeze side by side onto bench seats — is 16,300, according to Jim Marchiony, KU associate athletics director for public affairs. Men’s basketball games currently are the only events there that draw crowds over 5,000.

Juvenile Justice Committee, said he was pleased with the progress and that the group will be addressing issues related to the bill for the foreseeable future. Among the potential problems presented by the bill is an anticipated uptick in the number of children sent into the custody of the Kansas Department for Children and Families. In October 2016, the DCF hit a record high of 6,911 children in custody, followed by 6,846 in November, according to the department’s website. Those numbers have been increasing steadily over the past five years. A provision within the Juvenile Justice Reform Act will allow courts to refer juveniles to DCF custody in certain situations. Jennings said earlier this month that he had “no doubt” this would increase the DCF’s already high numbers.

L awrence J ournal -W orld in traffic engineering is that speed limits should roughly be equal to the 85th percentile of vehicle speeds on the street. (That is why mathematicians and other people who understand percentiles always drive 120 mph.) The 85th percentile on that stretch of road definitely isn’t 45 mph. At some point, the stretch of street will be a full-fledged city street, and there won’t be a need to get KDOT’s permission to change the speed limits. The state is the controlling party on the road currently because it used to be Kansas Highway 10. The South Lawrence Traffiway is now Kansas Highway 10. At some point, the state will transfer the old K-10 — basically all of 23rd Street — back to the city. But as we have reported, the city is currently negotiating with the state on maintenance work the state should conduct on the street before it is turned back over to the city. Cronin said those negotiations are still underway. — This is an excerpt from Chad Lawhorn’s Town Talk column, which appears on LJWorld.com.

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Memorial Stadium’s capacity is 50,000, Marchiony said. Rock Chalk Park’s capacity is between 7,500 and 10,000, but daily by Ogden only a few track and field events Published Newspapers of Kansas LLC a year have the potential to draw at 645 New Hampshire Street, more than 5,000 people, Marchi- Lawrence, KS 66044-0122. Telephone: 843-1000; or toll-free ony said. (800) 578-8748. The Kansas Personal and Family Protection Act re- POSTMASTER: Send address quires state universities to changes to: Lawrence Journal-World, allow the lawful carry of P.O. Box 888, Lawrence, KS concealed handguns on their 66044-0888 campuses beginning July 1 of 306-520) Periodicals postthis year. If universities want (USPS age paid at Lawrence, Kan. to prohibit guns from any parMember of Alliance ticular facility — permanently for Audited Media or temporarily — they must Member of The Associated Press put in place adequate security measures such as metal detectors and guards. Kansas Board of Regents policy further states that if this is done at athletic events, a notice SATURDAY’S POWERBALL 12 20 39 49 69 (17) must be printed on tickets that TUESDAY’S MEGA MILLIONS guns won’t be allowed in. 3 14 27 62 72 (4) Requests to implement seSATURDAY’S curity measures and prohibit HOT LOTTO SIZZLER guns from certain facilities or 2 17 23 26 38 (5) events must be approved in MONDAY’S open session by the Regents LUCKY FOR LIFE governance committee, and 6 8 28 36 42 (12) may also be taken up by the MONDAY’S full Board of Regents if the SUPER KANSAS CASH 4 7 9 16 31 (7) committee or board wishes, Richardson said. TUESDAY’S KANSAS 2BY2 Red: 14 26; White: 20 24 No universities have brought proposals to the board yet, she TUESDAY’S KANSAS PICK 3 (MIDDAY) said. 6 0 7 Regents policy also allows TUESDAY’S for universities to prohibit guns in certain restricted ac- KANSAS PICK 3 (EVENING) 9 4 2 cess areas, such as labs with sensitive material that are not accessible to the public, Richardson said. Regents policy reBIRTHS quires universities to notify the Julie and Devananda governance committee of those Peruman, Lawrence, a boy, areas, she said, but they won’t Thursday. be listed publicly due to secuLaura and Dustin Terry, Lawrence, a boy, Saturday. rity concerns.

However, Benet Magnuson, executive director of Kansas Appleseed and an advocate for juvenile justice reform, said the net positives of the JJRA outweigh any negatives. Magnuson attended Tuesday afternoon’s hearings, later calling the KDOC and Office of Judicial Administration’s delays “small speed bumps” when compared with what the bill hopes to achieve. The DCF’s record numbers are a significant, however separate, issue from the JJRA, Magnuson said. And in comparison with the DCF’s already-increasing numbers, the JJRA’s impact will likely be relatively small, he said. “The problems that are leading to those record numbers are much larger, and they need to be addressed, but probably in a different way,” he said. In reality, Magnuson said it’s “too early to tell” how strong of an impact

LOTTERY

— KU and higher ed reporter Sara Shepherd can be reached at 832-7187. Follow her on Twitter: @saramarieshep

the JJRA will have on the Department for Children and Families. And if the bill sends more children to that department, then that is where they will best be served, he said. “It is moving children from the juvenile offender system into the children in need of care system, and that is exactly what we should be doing as a state,” he said. If there are kids in the juvenile offender system who are not there because they’ve committed offenses, and everybody really agrees they’re children in need of care and we’re putting them in the juvenile offender system because it’s a little more functional at this point… then what that means is we’re criminalizing kids for being children in need of care.” — Public safety reporter Conrad Swanson can be reached at 8327284. Follow him on Twitter: @Conrad_Swanson

Catelyn Winborn and Zachary Taylor, Lawrence, a girl, Sunday. Kate and Danny Sjursen, Lawrence, a boy, Monday. Lauren and Emily Brighton, Lawrence, a boy, Monday. Raven and Fidel Quintanar, Ottawa, a girl, Monday. Jonathan and Jacqueline Lashbrook, Lawrence, a girl, Tuesday. Eric and Amanda Vail, Lawrence, a boy, Tuesday.

CORRECTIONS The Journal-World’s policy is to correct all significant errors that are brought to the editors’ attention, usually in this space. If you believe we have made such an error, call 832-7154, or email news@ljworld.com.


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Bragg drug paraphernalia case proceeding in municipal court By Sara Shepherd sshepherd@ljworld.com

University of Kansas men’s basketball player Carlton Bragg Jr. has secured an attorney, and his initial court appearance in a drug paraphernalia case has been bumped to early March. Bragg is now scheduled to appear in court at 10:30 a.m. March 3, according to Lawrence Municipal Court case documents, requested by the Journal-World and obtained Tuesday morning. Bragg is charged with one count of possession of drug paraphernalia, a misdemeanor. The charge was entered Monday in Lawrence Municipal Court. The offense is punishable by a fine of up to $2,500 and a jail sentence

up to one year, according to Lawrence city ordinance. Bragg is being represented by Lawrence attorney Hatem Chahine, who did not immediately return messages from the Journal-World Tuesday morning. A c cording to the court clerk’s office, changBragg ing an appearance date is routine when someone secures an attorney. Bragg’s initial citation, also obtained by the Journal-World, said he was to appear Feb. 14. Bragg, 21, is a sophomore from Cleveland. KU men’s basketball coach Bill Self announced

Thursday night that Bragg was suspended indefinitely for a violation of team rules. On Friday, KU police said one person was facing a drug paraphernalia charge in a case that stemmed from a rape investigation at McCarthy Hall, 1741 Naismith Drive, the on-campus apartment building where KU men’s basketball players and other male upperclass or transfer students live. That suspect’s name, Bragg, became public Monday. During the KU police department’s investigation of the alleged sexual assault at McCarthy Hall and a subsequent search, drug paraphernalia was found, KU Police Chief Chris Keary said. He reiterated this week that there was no indication

the drug paraphernalia is related to the sexual assault allegation. The police report in the rape case indicated four crimes had occurred at McCarthy Hall between 10 p.m. Dec. 17 and 5 a.m. Dec. 18: a rape of a 16-year-old girl, contributing to a child’s misconduct, furnishing alcohol to a minor and possession of drug paraphernalia. The rape was reported Dec. 18. Keary said the drug offense in that report was removed and made into its own report, the one that led to the charge against Bragg. The rape investigation remains open, and police have released no information about a possible suspect, including whether the multiple alleged crimes are linked to

a single offender, Keary said. Police have said the victim, who was not a KU student and not from this area, was visiting residents in the building. A runaway juvenile also was reported at McCarthy Hall the morning of Dec. 18, but police would not confirm whether the runaway and the reported rape victim are the same person. All five witnesses named in the police report for the rape are basketball players. The single witness named in the runaway report is Bragg. Police have not shared why those individuals were interviewed, but have said being a witness in an investigation does not necessarily mean an eyewitness to a crime, but rather someone who may have been in the area

or who may have other pertinent information to the investigation. Bragg’s attorney, Chahine, also represented him in December, when Bragg was charged in Douglas County District Court with one count of battery following a dispute with his then-girlfriend. The charge was dismissed a couple days later and the woman was charged with battery instead. The district attorney’s office said in a news release at the time that surveillance video of the dispute showed her shoving him and placing her hand on his neck before he shoved her, causing her to fall backwards on some ascending stairs. — KU and higher ed reporter Sara Shepherd can be reached at 832-7187. Follow her on Twitter: @saramarieshep

School board members pleased with racial equity conversation By Joanna Hlavacek jhlavacek@ljworld.com

On Tuesday afternoon, the Lawrence school board was still mulling over Monday night’s Community Conversation on racial equity. But the two board members who spoke with the JournalWorld a day after the event said they were pleased by the results of the district’s efforts to better include parents and the greater community in the conversation surrounding racial equity in Lawrence schools. The Monday talks, facilitated by pastor Adrion Roberson of the Wichita-based Kansas Leadership Center, drew a large crowd — around 200 people, by school board member Jessica Beeson’s count — to the Lawrence High School cafeteria. “I was pleased with the turnout,” Beeson told the Journal-

World on Tuesday. “I think that’s really telling, that this is a really important topic in our community. So I was happy that so many people came out and wanted to be part of the conversation and solutions moving forward.” What’s more, she and school board Vice President Shannon Kimball said they were pleasantly surprised by the variety in that turnout, which included parents, district and building staffers, comKimball munity members and even a handful of students, who spoke up at critical moments about their experiences as young people of color in Lawrence’s high schools. Some shared stories, emotionally at times, about being

subjected to racially insensitive comments in the classrooms or in the hallways. A few, including Free State High School senior Sonal Soni, even identified the teachers and staffers — by name — that she said had failed to intervene when her peers, she said, called her a “racist (expletive)” and “racist scum,” among other insults. Her transgression, she said, was simply sharing her perspective as a person of color with her fellow students. “We can change the way that we interact with each other, and we can change the way we listen and support each other,” Soni, who is Indian-American, told the crowd Monday. “So, support me and listen to me when I say I am being harassed for the color of my skin and for my gender. Listen to me when I say, ‘Hey, I was yelled at in the hall for speaking up (for) my beliefs.’” Hearing stories like Soni’s was “heartbreaking,” Beeson

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said. She recognizes that racism is complex and long-standing, and certainly not unique to Lawrence and its school system. But it exists here, she also recognizes, and if she’s learned anything from the Community Conversation, it’s that some students may not feel seen or heard by the very people charged with looking out for them. “If we have students feeling unsafe in school — feeling like they Beeson don’t know who to report to, feeling like their reports are being ignored — then there’s clearly something broken at the building level. And that needs to be addressed,” Beeson said. “It’s not any one person’s fault. It’s just a systematic way of doing business, and we are

continuing to do business that way, and it’s not working.” The Intertribal Club of Lawrence High School on Monday night also introduced a list of demands that included, among other things, that all teachers undergo mandatory equity training. It’s one goal that the district and school board “is already moving forward on,” Kimball said. As of November 2016, about 85 percent of the district’s certified staffers (teachers, nurses, counselors and other certified professionals working in schools) had taken part in the district’s Beyond Diversity training. The school board hopes to have nearly all its certified staff undergo the training by the end of the school year. Another demand issued by the group also asked that resources be better publicized and accessible to students. One

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L awrence J ournal -W orld

CJCC told of progress in pretrial monitoring programs By Elvyn Jones ejones@ljworld.com

At its Monday meeting, the Douglas County Criminal Justice Coordinating Council was updated on progress on initiatives involving the electronic monitoring pilot program, a proposed pretrial monitoring program and the behavioral health court. Michelle Roberts, chief operations officer for Douglas County Court Services, reminded CJCC members that the behavioral health court of District Court Judge Sally Pokorny was introduced early in the fall with one defendant. The program releases inmates with mental health issues or dual diagnosis of mental illness and substance abuse from the Douglas

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Intertribal Club member, speaking on behalf of her peers, said that they had only just recently been made aware of the school’s on-site psychologist, for example. “We can make progress in that area,” Kimball agreed. “In order to make progress in the experiences these students are having in our schools, we’ve got to not just equip our staff with the tools to confront racism when it occurs,” she said, “but we also have to a do a better job of educating our students and our families in terms of how that process plays out.” Part of that, Kimball said, is continuing to engage with parents, students and community

County Jail to the court, which then orders and monitors treatment. With the court now operating with $443,000 in funding that the County Commission authorized for 2017, the court has started accepting new defendants, Roberts said. Last week, the court added its second defendant from four applications. Douglas County District Attorney Charles Branson said the other three inmates reviewed were screened out because of histories of violence. The behavioral court’s policies and procedures have now been shared with the county’s defense attorneys, which should lead to a better understanding of those eligible for the court, he said. Two more applications for the court were received Monday, he said.

The court is expected to divert as many as 30 inmates from the jail annually. Roberts said five new inmates were diverted to house arrest in January through a pilot electronic monitoring program. The county started the 90day pilot program Nov. 21, when a manufacturer made 10 electronic devices available. The company later provided two more at its expense, she said. The five inmates diverted from jail in January equated to five beds saved at the Douglas County Jail for a total of 81 days, Roberts said. Twenty-five inmates have been released since the program was started in November, saving the county 1,521 days of jail time, she said. Once the trial period is

complete, court services is expected to request the County Commission to purchase monitors to continue the program. “We’re doing a great job,” Roberts said. “We haven’t even kicked up the program yet. We have to do it right. We have to get our policies and procedures in place and not rush the program.” Ensuring there was a thorough understanding of the county’s proposed pretrial monitoring program among defense attorneys and judges would be key to its success, said Allen Beck. The goal of the program is that of electronic monitoring, but it would release lowrisk inmates from jail with Court Services making followup phone calls to help assure they make required court dates.

members about how to best tackle racial inequity in schools. Their perspectives, she and Beeson agreed, are valuable. In the meantime, school board members are giving district leaders some time to compile a summary report of Monday’s discussion. Julie Boyle, the district’s communications director, said those findings would likely be made public within a few weeks. Several people also expressed interest in participating in the district’s new advisory committee on equity, though Beeson and Kimball both said they weren’t clear on when that group’s roster might be finalized. They hope it’s sooner rather than later. “The school district has to have partnerships with our families and our community in order to have success at what

we’re trying to do in this area. And we can’t do it by ourselves,” Kimball said. “We need those partnerships. We need that input. We need those perspectives. And I think the discussions we had (Monday) will help us move forward.” Calls to school board members Vanessa San-

burn and President Marcel Harmon, as well as Anna Stubblefield, the district’s assistant superintendent of educational support, were not immediately returned Tuesday.

A resident of Kansas City, Mo., Beck has been aiding the county as an unpaid consultant in its criminal justice review. Today, the Douglas County Commission will consider a contract with Beck that would pay him $5,000 a month through June 30. Proper assessment was needed to evaluate inmates for the risks of failing to appear for court dates, staying free of criminal activity while released and a positive response to the program’s more relaxed monitoring efforts, which he said was not “supervision,” Beck said. His recent consulting experience on the same pretrial issue in Minnesota

underscored the need to fully inform the defense bar and judges of policies and procedures, Beck said. The county would also need to track the program once it was in place, he said. “You want to make sure what you got passes the scratch-and-sniff tests,” he said. “Does it make a difference? Is it better than the old system? We will be asked to show results.” His previous experience was that the program could have a significant effect on the Douglas County Jail’s numbers, Beck said. — County reporter Elvyn Jones can be reached at 832-7166. Follow him on Twitter: @ElvynJ

— K-12 education reporter Joanna Hlavacek can be reached at 832-6388. Follow her on Twitter:

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Opinion

Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com l Wednesday, February 1, 2017

EDITORIALS

Commitment to school equity Monday’s conversation about race was a good start, but lasting change requires devotion and hard work.

5A

Bannon’s dangerous populist revolution Washington — At the red-hot center of President Trump’s first 10 days in office has been his strategist Stephen Bannon, who proclaims a global populist movement for “Judeo-Christian” values and against radical Islam.

I

t is clear that the Lawrence school district has serious racial equity issues to address and work through. It is clear that school district personnel and school board members are earnest in their efforts to address those issues. But it also is clear that, much to the chagrin of some students, parents and other community members, change is not going to come quickly. As Adrion Roberson told Lawrence residents gathered Monday night for a forum on race issues in the district, racism is an “issue so huge, you may not live to see any fruit from it. But you’ll be a seed planted.” Certainly seeds need to be planted in Lawrence, where recent data show a growing problem in the schools. Consider: In October, it was revealed that while the number of minority staff members had increased by 25 percent at the Lawrence school district, most of the increase had come in noncertified support positions such as custodians, food service workers and aides. Just 70 of the district’s 1,035 teachers, 6.7 percent, identify as something other than white non-Hispanic. Black male students in the Lawrence district are likely to go through 12 years of school without ever having a black male teacher. The Lawrence district’s 2016 Equity Report revealed more troubling data: Minority students, particularly black students, are vastly underrepresented in gifted and advanced placement programs, but overrepresented in programs for students with learning disabilities. Black students are also far more likely to be suspended from school than white students. Trends are similar for Hispanic students. These are serious problems, much more serious than the issue of a middle school teacher who is alleged to have said something racist in class. That incident fueled emotions and attracted headlines. But it also was a relatively straightforward issue to address — the teacher is no longer with the district. There is no one person to blame for the larger racial issues in the district. The resignation or departure of any teachers or administrators isn’t going to change the fact that minority students are significantly more likely than whites to be labeled learning disabled or to be suspended from school but significantly less likely to be identified as gifted or accepted into advanced placement classes or even have a teacher who looks like them. “If there was an easy fix to this, we would already be doing it,” school board member Shannon Kimball said at a recent board meeting to review some of the racial data. “But it’s hard work; it’s change over time that has to happen. The bigger picture thing is that our district is committed to doing that hard work to make a difference, and we’re not afraid to look at that data and talk about it and be open and transparent about it.” Kimball is right; there are no easy fixes to racial issues that have evolved over generations. Monday’s community conversation was a good start. But there is a whole lot of hard work ahead. Getting to lasting change will require commitment and patience, not only from the district but also from students, parents and others who care about Lawrence schools.

David Ignatius

davidignatius@washpost.com

The folly of the travel ban is that it is producing the opposite of what Trump says he wanted. It weakens America’s alliances, emboldens our adversaries and puts the country at greater risk. It’s not just misguided and heartless; it’s dangerous.” Bannon is a passionate ideologue who is the intellectual center of the new administration. For nearly a decade he has been advertising his desire to turn America and the world upside down. He’s now doing exactly that. Trump’s “America First” trade policies and his anti-refugee travel ban are early glimmers of the revolution Bannon has long been advocating. As the uproar over Trump’s actions grows, it’s important to distinguish between policies that are politically controversial and those that actually undermine the country’s foundations. The haphazard executive order banning travel by people from seven Muslimmajority countries seems to be the latter: It strikes at America’s core values. The folly of the travel ban is that it is producing the opposite of what Trump says he wanted. It weakens America’s alliances, emboldens our adversaries and puts the country at greater risk. It’s not just misguided and heartless; it’s danger-

ous. It affirms the Islamic State’s narrative that it’s at war with an anti-Muslim America. The weakness of Bannon’s strategy in these first days of Trump’s presidency has been its impatience and disorganization. The White House’s opening salvoes have been rushed, poorly planned shots that resulted in what Sen. John McCain called a “self-inflicted wound.” In his seeming counsel to Trump, Bannon appears to have overlooked Benjamin Franklin’s famous advice: “Haste makes waste.” Some critics have argued that Bannon is a white nationalist and, even, a neoNazi. What follows is a more measured account, sticking to his own explanations of how he sees the world — and seeks to overturn the establishment’s network of trade and security policies. As with many revolutionaries, Bannon’s story is that of a wealthy man who came to see himself as a vanguard for the masses. He rose from a middle-class life in Richmond, Va., through an uneventful stint with the Navy; but his life changed after he enrolled at Harvard Business School, joined Goldman Sachs, founded an investment firm and made a fortune. He began directing conservative agitprop documentaries in 2004, but the

2008 financial crisis was a turning point. Bannon saw it as a betrayal of working people, and he embraced the tea party’s conservative revolt against Republican and Democratic elites. Bannon gained a powerful platform in 2012 when he became chairman of the hard-right Breitbart.com after the death of its founder, Andrew Breitbart. In an April 2010 speech to a tea party gathering in New York that was posted on YouTube, Bannon’s radical rhetoric evoked the 1960s and fused left and right: “It doesn’t take a weatherman to tell you which way the wind blows, and the wind blows off the high plains of the country through the prairie, and lighting a fire that’s going to burn all the way to Washington.” By 2014, Bannon saw himself leading what he called a “global tea party movement” against a financial elite that he described as “the party of Davos.” In a summer 2014 speech broadcast to a conference inside the Vatican, he railed against Wall Street bailouts and “crony capitalists.” Racists and antiSemites might get attracted to this movement, he said, “but there’s always elements who turn up at these things, whether it’s militia guys or whatever ... it all gets kind of washed out, right?” The rise of the Islamic

Incentive changes

®

Established 1891

What the Lawrence Journal-World stands for Accurate and fair news reporting. No mixing of editorial opinion with reporting of the news. l Safeguarding the rights of all citizens regardless of race, creed or economic stature. l Sympathy and understanding for all who are disadvantaged or oppressed. l Exposure of any dishonesty in public affairs. l Support of projects that make our community a better place to live. l

OLD HOME TOWN

l

Scott Stanford, Publisher Chad Lawhorn, Editor Kim Callahan, Managing Editor Kathleen Johnson, Advertising Manager Joan Insco, Circulation Manager Allie Sebelius, Marketing Director

— David Ignatius is a columnist for Washington Post Writers Group.

PUBLIC FORUM

LAWRENCE

Journal-World

State in 2014 gave Bannon a new rallying cry: “We are in an outright war against jihadist Islamic fascism,” he told the Vatican audience. “I believe you should take a very, very, very aggressive stance against radical Islam.” Breitbart’s London branch became a leading advocate of “Brexit,” and on the day Britain voted to leave the European Union, it thundered: “There’s panic in the skyscrapers. A popular revolution against globalism is underway.” Bannon pressed that theme after Trump’s victory, telling Breitbart’s radio show on Dec. 30 it was only the “top of the first inning.” Last Friday’s travel ban echoed themes Bannon has developed over a half-dozen years. It brought cheers from the right-wing parties in Europe that are Bannon’s allies. “Well done,” tweeted Dutch populist Geert Wilders. “What annoys the media and the politicians is that Trump honors his campaign promises,” tweeted French right-wing leader Marine Le Pen. Bannon undeniably has a powerful radical vision. But this time, he may have blundered. The travel ban has triggered a counter-revolt among millions of Americans who saw his target as the Statue of Liberty.

100

From the Lawrence Daily Journalyears World for ago Feb. 1, 1917: l “Miss IN 1917 Grace Stotts, a senior at the University, was blown down by the wind near the bulletin board on the campus yesterday morning while on her way to classes and sustained a broken elbow. Miss Stotts was assisted to her rooming house at

1201 Kentucky street, where Dr. John Sundwall, University physician, gave treatment.” l “The most accomplished bad check artist who ever operated in Lawrence made away with $91.50 worth of goods and $54.50 in cash a week ago last Saturday. Checks returned from the New York insurance company on which they had been drawn told the story of the swindle after its perpe-

trator had had a week or more in which to make his getaway. Four business places in town, the Innes store, the Ober store, the Weaver store and the Kennedy & Ernst store, were victimized by a man who had the appearance of an honest farmer.” — Reprinted with permission from Sarah St. John. To see more, go online to www.facebook.com/ DailyLawrenceHistory.

To the editor: The Economic Development Policy was revised by the Lawrence City Commission and became effective as of Jan. 15. There have been many questions raised about whether some developers have met their reciprocal obligations for receiving incentives and abatements as identified in numerous articles in the Journal-World. Questions have rightfully been raised whether these incentives and abatements have provided a return on investment to the people of Lawrence. On the other hand, it has been suggested by some that the Revised Economic Development Policy may suppress development. What the new policy does is that it makes the requirements for receiving an incentive for a development in Lawrence much clearer and makes developers much more accountable than previously. That should be a very good improvement for developers as well as the citizens of Lawrence. The City Commission rightfully has acknowledged that the Revised Economic Development Policy needs to be monitored to see how the revision is working out. The truth, however, is that the revision was a very good step for the city, its taxpayers and prospective developers who want to know what the rules are and want to follow them. Kudos to the mayor, city manager and the Lawrence City Commission for their leadership. Robert G. Harrington, Lawrence


|

6A

WEATHER

.

Wednesday, February 1, 2017

Organize your medical records at event

TODAY

THURSDAY

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

SUNDAY

Partly sunny and cooler

Times of clouds and sun

Mostly cloudy

A bit of ice, then rain

Not as cool with clouds and sun

High 44° Low 18° POP: 10%

High 37° Low 17° POP: 15%

High 37° Low 22° POP: 10%

High 45° Low 30° POP: 55%

High 55° Low 33° POP: 5%

Wind NNE 8-16 mph

Wind N 6-12 mph

Wind ENE 6-12 mph

Wind SE 10-20 mph

Wind SSE 4-8 mph

POP: Probability of Precipitation

Kearney 32/17

McCook 33/17 Oberlin 35/16

Clarinda 38/17

Lincoln 35/17

Grand Island 33/16

Beatrice 38/17

Centerville 37/17

St. Joseph 41/19 Chillicothe 41/19

Sabetha 39/16

Concordia 40/19

Kansas City Marshall Manhattan 45/22 46/23 Hays Russell Goodland Salina 44/19 Oakley 42/19 41/20 Kansas City Topeka 35/18 44/21 36/16 44/21 Lawrence 41/19 Sedalia 44/18 Emporia Great Bend 45/23 46/19 42/20 Nevada Dodge City Chanute 49/25 42/19 Hutchinson 50/24 Garden City 46/21 40/19 Springfield Wichita Pratt Liberal Coffeyville Joplin 51/26 49/23 42/20 45/20 51/26 53/26 Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.

LAWRENCE ALMANAC

Through 8 p.m. Tuesday.

Temperature High/low 48°/23° Normal high/low today 41°/19° Record high today 72° in 1911 Record low today -12° in 1917

Precipitation in inches 24 hours through 8 p.m. yest. Month to date Normal month to date Year to date Normal year to date

0.00 0.98 0.98 0.98 0.98

REGIONAL CITIES

Today Thu. Today Thu. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W 45 21 pc 38 18 pc Atchison 43 19 pc 36 17 pc Holton Belton 44 21 pc 37 20 pc Independence 45 22 pc 37 21 pc 42 20 pc 33 21 pc Burlington 47 21 pc 39 21 pc Olathe Coffeyville 53 26 s 43 28 pc Osage Beach 48 25 pc 42 25 pc 45 20 pc 38 18 pc Concordia 40 19 pc 33 20 pc Osage City Ottawa 45 20 pc 36 17 pc Dodge City 42 19 s 35 21 c 49 23 s 39 25 c Fort Riley 44 19 pc 36 20 pc Wichita Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.

NATIONAL FORECAST

SUN & MOON

Today Thu. 7:27 a.m. 7:26 a.m. 5:42 p.m. 5:43 p.m. 10:13 a.m. 10:48 a.m. 10:53 p.m. 12:00 a.m.

First

Full

Last

New

Feb 3

Feb 10

Feb 18

Feb 26

LAKE LEVELS

As of 7 a.m. Tuesday Level (ft)

Clinton Perry Pomona

Discharge (cfs)

874.55 889.52 973.01

7 25 200

Fronts Cold

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2017

INTERNATIONAL CITIES Cities Acapulco Amsterdam Athens Baghdad Bangkok Beijing Berlin Brussels Buenos Aires Cairo Calgary Dublin Geneva Hong Kong Jerusalem Kabul London Madrid Mexico City Montreal Moscow New Delhi Oslo Paris Rio de Janeiro Rome Seoul Singapore Stockholm Sydney Tokyo Toronto Vancouver Vienna Warsaw Winnipeg

Today Hi Lo W 86 71 pc 45 43 c 53 43 pc 47 28 pc 91 73 s 39 13 s 35 24 pc 50 46 c 81 69 pc 64 45 pc 24 10 pc 50 45 r 53 37 pc 68 61 pc 45 31 pc 47 26 pc 53 48 r 55 44 c 73 48 pc 22 15 sn 29 11 sn 71 48 pc 31 27 i 53 46 c 91 78 c 61 53 pc 31 14 s 86 76 pc 34 28 c 81 71 sh 50 37 s 35 16 sf 42 25 s 31 26 c 34 26 pc 5 -9 pc

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7:30

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WEATHER HISTORY

WEATHER TRIVIA™

was the coldest arctic outbreak in the U.S.? Q: When

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The program offers participants a red file to store medical information that can be placed

BRIEFLY

— This is an excerpt from Conrad Swanson’s Lights & Sirens column, which appears on LJWorld.com.

POLICE BLOTTER

Here is a list of recent Author Schulman Lawrence Police Department calls requiring the to speak at KU response of four or more Sarah Schulman, author officers. This list spans of the 2016 nonfiction book from 6:10 a.m. Monday to “Conflict is Not Abuse: 4:44 a.m. Tuesday. A full Overstating Harm, Commu- list of department calls is nity Responsibility, and the available in the Lights & Duty of Repair,” is scheduled Sirens blog, which can be to speak at 7 p.m. Feb. 16 at found online at LJWorld. The Commons in Spooner com. Each incident listed Hall, the University of Kanonly bears a short desas has announced. scription and may not In addition, Schulman capture the entirety of will be featured in a Coffee what took place. Not ev@ The Commons event, ery call results in cita“Change on a University tions or arrests, and the Campus,” at 10 a.m. Feb. 17. information is subject to Afterward, she will be the change as police investiguest at a Lunch & Learn gations move forward. event addressing student Monday, 9:09 a.m., five activism at noon at the Ofofficers, trespassing, 3600 fice of Multicultural Affairs. block of E. 25th Street. The events are free and open to the public. Schulman has written 10 novels, most recently “The Cosmopolitans,” published in 2016 by the Feminist Press.

Monday, 4:18 p.m., four officers, civil standby, 2300 block of Harper Street. Monday, 6:16 p.m., four officers, building/residence check, 900 block of Michigan Street. Monday, 6:33 p.m., five officers, drunk/reckless driver, intersection of 27th and Alabama streets. Monday, 8:28 p.m., four officers, child out of control, address redacted. Monday, 9:41 p.m., five officers, disturbance, 900 block of Louisiana Street. Monday, 10:39 p.m., six officers, burglary, 200 block of E. 18th Street. Monday, 11:25 p.m., four officers, trespassing, 1700 block of Massachusetts Street. Tuesday, 2:49 a.m., five officers, traffic stop, 2800 block of Iowa Street.

FORT LEAVENWORTH SERIES THE CHINESE WAY OF WAR Thursday, Feb. 2 - 3 p.m. The popular Fort Leavenworth series kicks off 2017 with an examination of Chinese military thought from ancient times to present. Gary Bjorge will draw thought on the topic through the lens of the Huai Hai Campaign, the largest campaign fought by Chinese Communist forces during the Chinese Civil War (1946-49).

THE U.S.AND THE GREAT WAR: 100 YEARS LATER AMERICA’S ROAD TO WAR Thursday, Feb. 2 - 7 p.m. Michael Neiberg, noted scholar and chair of war studies in the U.S.Army War College, introduces the Presidential Lecture Series, exploring the complex paths of politics, economics and cultural divisions that brought America into World War I in 1917. 2350 Petefish. Dr., Lawrence, Kan. - doleinstitute.org

BEST BETS WOW DTV DISH 7 PM

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9:30

10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30

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Network Channels

M

cswanson@ljworld.com

Ice

Today Thu. Today Thu. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Memphis 63 39 pc 50 35 c Albuquerque 58 31 s 59 32 s Miami 78 64 s 81 68 pc Anchorage 30 17 sn 28 10 s 31 11 pc 22 10 s Atlanta 69 50 pc 65 46 pc Milwaukee 21 11 pc 20 8 s Austin 79 48 s 72 48 pc Minneapolis Nashville 59 34 pc 49 32 pc Baltimore 49 31 pc 43 24 s New Orleans 76 54 s 73 57 pc Birmingham 69 49 pc 63 44 c 45 32 pc 40 24 s Boise 32 24 sn 33 26 sn New York Omaha 35 16 pc 30 19 c Boston 42 29 sn 40 22 s 75 50 s 77 54 pc Buffalo 34 20 sf 25 14 sf Orlando 49 32 pc 42 24 s Cheyenne 33 15 sn 33 19 sn Philadelphia 74 48 s 75 50 s Chicago 35 14 pc 26 13 pc Phoenix 39 21 sf 29 16 pc Cincinnati 45 24 sf 34 21 pc Pittsburgh Portland, ME 31 20 sn 36 14 s Cleveland 37 22 sf 27 18 c Portland, OR 38 28 pc 36 29 i Dallas 73 45 s 57 42 c Reno 52 38 c 52 41 r Denver 44 19 pc 42 25 i 53 36 pc 51 29 s Des Moines 34 14 pc 28 18 pc Richmond 58 48 c 60 55 r Detroit 36 18 sf 25 15 pc Sacramento St. Louis 48 26 pc 38 27 pc El Paso 69 38 s 70 41 s Fairbanks 13 -1 c 7 -8 pc Salt Lake City 42 30 pc 46 34 pc San Diego 67 50 s 67 54 pc Honolulu 79 66 s 80 65 s Houston 79 61 pc 77 61 pc San Francisco 59 53 c 62 54 r 43 28 s 42 30 s Indianapolis 41 20 pc 31 18 pc Seattle 27 9 s 24 8 s Kansas City 41 19 pc 34 20 pc Spokane 75 42 s 77 43 s Las Vegas 66 46 s 68 49 pc Tucson Tulsa 57 30 s 46 32 pc Little Rock 62 37 pc 47 33 c 50 36 pc 47 29 s Los Angeles 70 50 s 66 54 pc Wash., DC National extremes yesterday for the 48 contiguous states High: Cotulla, TX 84° Low: Saranac Lake, NY -19°

WEDNESDAY Prime Time WOW DTV DISH 7 PM

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Conrad Swanson

on the refrigerator. “Then in case of a medical emergency, first responders will have immediate access to that important medical information, which can save lives.” Operation Red File will be held from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Arbor Court Retirement Community, 1510 Saint Andrews Drive. Participation is free, and the event is open to the public.

-10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s National Summary: Steady snow will diminish over New England, while lakeeffect snow and flurries continue around the Great Lakes today. Snow will fall over the interior Northwest, while rain approaches California.

Feb. 11-14, 1899. Subzero (F) to the Gulf Coast. -61 (F) in Montana.

Lake

Shown are today’s noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for today.

I

Lights & Sirens

t’s an emergency situation, and you need to find your medical records. Where are they? You don’t know, do you? Well, the Douglas County Sheriff’s Office is teaming up with the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services to help you get organized so you can access the records you need right away. On Feb. 9, representatives from the sheriff’s office and the KDADS will host a free program called Operation Red File, the release said.

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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

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351 350 285 287 279 362 256

211 210 192 195 189 214 132

››‡ Penguins of Madagascar (2014) › Jack and Jill South Pk South Pk South Pk South Pk Work. Jeff Daily At Mid. Barstool South Pk ›› What to Expect When You’re Expecting So E! News (N) ››› Die Hard With a Vengeance (1995) Bruce Willis. Steve Austin’s Die Hard-Veng. Going RV Going RV Going RV Going RV Going RV Going RV Going RV Going RV Going RV Going RV The Quad Madiba “Part 1” (Series Premiere) (N) Madiba “Part 1” Black Ink Crew (N) Black Ink Crew Top Model ›› The Wedding Planner (2001) Expedition Un. Expedition Un. Expedition Un. Expedition Un. Expedition Un. My 600-Lb. Life “Doug’s Story” (N) Too Close to Home My 600-Lb. Life “Doug’s Story” Little Women Little Women Black Magic Black Magic Little Women My Crazy Ex My Crazy Ex (N) My Crazy Sex (N) My Crazy Sex My Crazy Ex Cutthroat Kitchen Cooks vs. Cons (N) Bakers vs. Fakers Cooks vs. Cons Cooks vs. Cons Property Brothers Property Brothers Hunters Hunt Intl Property Brothers Property Brothers Ride (N) Game Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Friends Friends Friends Friends Kirby Right Lab Rats Lab Rats Lab Rats Kirby Spid. Rebels Lab Rats Kirby Stuck Good Liv-Mad. Liv-Mad. Bunk’d Bunk’d Jessie Jessie Girl Best Fr. King/Hill Cleve American American Burgers Burgers Fam Guy Fam Guy Chicken Aqua Alaskan Bush Alaskan Bush Bering Sea Gold (N) Alaskan Bush Bering Sea Gold Note ››‡ Days of Thunder (1990) Tom Cruise. The 700 Club Gilmore Girls Alaska-Trooper Alaska-Trooper Alaska-Trooper Alaska-Trooper Inside Cocaine A Royal Winter (2017) Merritt Patterson. Middle Middle Golden Golden Golden Golden Pit Bulls-Parole Pit Bulls-Parole Pit Bulls-Parole Pit Bulls-Parole Pit Bulls-Parole Andy Griffith Show Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond King King King King John Turning Prince S. Fur Livg BlessLife John History Zachar Duplantis EWTN Live (N) News Rosary Religious Vaticano Catholic Women Daily Mass - Olam ››‡ The Strange Woman (1946) Style Style Echoes: Cross the Tracks Public Affairs Events Public Affairs U.S. House Politics and Public Policy Today Politics-Public Homicide Hntr I, Witness (N) Homicide Hntr Homicide Hntr I, Witness Civil War: Batl. Civil War: Batl. Civil War: Batl. Civil War: Batl. Civil War: Batl. Dateline on OWN Dateline on OWN Dateline on OWN Dateline on OWN Dateline on OWN Secret Earth Secret Earth Super/Natural Super/Natural Super/Natural ›››› All About Eve (1950) Bette Davis. ›››› An American in Paris (1951) Annie

HBO 401 MAX 411 SHOW 421 STZENC 440 STRZ 451

501 515 545 535 527

300 310 318 340 350

››› Straight Outta Compton (2015) The Young Pope The Young Pope Mystic ››‡ San Andreas (2015) ›››› The Terminator (1984) ›‡ End of Days (1999) ›› Diary of a Mad Black Woman ›› Meet the Browns (2008) Why Did I Get Married? The Missing “Eden” ›› Along Came a Spider ››‡ Spanglish (2004) Adam Sandler. Dead Man Wlk ››› The Interpreter (2005) ››‡ Money Monster (2016)


SECTION B

USA TODAY — L awrence J ournal -W orld

IN MONEY

IN LIFE

Fox News tops cable news ratings

Reba sings about faith, hope in her new album

02.01.17 EILEEN BLASS, USA TODAY

ERIKA GOLDRING, FILMMAGIC

TRUMP PICKS GORSUCH FOR SUPREME COURT The conservative federal appeals court judge from Colorado is an acolyte of the late Justice Antonin Scalia

USA TODAY EXCLUSIVE

Bannon takes dark view on Islam Hours of audio give window into thinking of top Trump adviser Steve Reilly and Brad Heath USA TODAY

Steve Bannon, who ascended in months from relative obscurity to become one of President Trump’s most influential advisers, has said Islam is “the most radical” religion in the world and the United States is engaged in a struggle for civilization potentially leading to “a major shooting war in the Middle East again.” Trump installed Bannon this week as a member of his National Security Council, taking the unusual step of installing a political adviser on the power-

CHIP SOMODEVILLA, GETTY IMAGES

Steve Bannon, 63, is now a member of the powerful National Security Council. ALEX WONG, GETTY IMAGES

“I am honored, and I am humbled,” Judge Neil Gorsuch says of his nomination to the Supreme Court on Tuesday night.

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©

We met online

64%

of Americans who have used an online dating service say they met their significant other that way. SOURCE TD Bank survey of 1,902 adults currently in a relationship MICHAEL B. SMITH AND VERONICA BRAVO, USA TODAY

Richard Wolf @richardjwolf USA TODAY

WASHINGTON Nearly a full year after Justice Antonin Scalia’s death left the Supreme Court shorthanded, President Trump nominated federal appeals court Judge Neil Gorsuch of Colorado to fill the void Tuesday night, setting off a pitched battle over the direction of the nation’s highest court. Trump unveiled his nominee to the nation on live television from the East Room of the White House after a day filled with palace intrigue, during which the news media mapped the whereabouts of Gorsuch and federal appeals court Judge Thomas Hardiman of Pennsylvania, the other favorite for the seat. Gorsuch, 49, sits on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit. He is a Scalia acolyte who says judges should interpret laws as they are written

v STORY CONTINUES ON 2B

RECENT SUPREME COURT NOMINEES Four of the past 15 Supreme Court nominees never made it to the bench. Here’s how the past two presidents’ nominees fared. President

Senate vote 1

Merrick Garland (2016) Barack Obama No vote held Elena Kagan (2010) Barack Obama

37

63 Sonia Sotomayor (2009) Barack Obama

31

68 Samuel Alito (2006) George W. Bush

58 Miers2

Harriet Withdrawn

42

(2005) George W. Bush

John Roberts3 (2005) George W. Bush

78

22

1 – Senate Republicans refused to consider nomination; 2 – Nomination withdrawn over scanty credentials; 3 – Chief justice SOURCE USA TODAY research VERONICA BRAVO, USA TODAY

ful White House body responsible for shaping security and foreign policy. Far more significant may be the views he brings to that table, which represent a sharp break from how previous administrations approached security issues, particularly around Islamic terrorism. In dozens of hours of audio recordings reviewed by USA TODAY of his Breitbart News Daily radio show in 2015 and 2016, Bannon told his listeners that the United States and the Western world are engaged in a “global existential war,” and he entertained claims that a “fifth column” of Islamist sympathizers had infiltrated the U.S. government and news media. Those recordings, preserved online, offer an often unfiltered window into the thinking of Trump’s interview-averse senior adviser. The views mark a stark shift from foreign policy doctrine under the previous two administrations. In the days after the Sept. 11 attacks, President George W. Bush was cautious in his public v STORY CONTINUES ON 2B

Groundhog Day is Thursday. Will Phil see his shadow?

Roly-poly rodent cute, not consistent Doyle Rice

@usatodayweather USA TODAY

It’s that time of year again when meteorologists step aside to let a furry rodent make its famed weather forecast. Punxsutawney Phil, the world’s celebrity groundhog, will be coaxed from his burrow in western Pennsylvania early Thursday as an anxious nation watches to

find out whether we’ll have an early spring or six more miserable weeks of cold and snow. According to legend, if it’s sunny and Phil sees his shadow, the scared groundhog will return to his burrow, and the USA will endure six more weeks of winter. If it’s cloudy Feb. 2, the critter won’t see his shadow and will leave his burrow, meaning winter will soon end and an early start to spring is coming. The forecast for Thursday morning in Punxsutawney, Pa., calls for mostly cloudy skies and a slight chance of snow, but Phil is a fickle fuzzball, so who knows what he’ll do?

The Climate Prediction Center, in its official forecast for February released Tuesday, calls for warmer-than-average temperatures for almost the entire USA. Unfortunately, based on past weather data, “there is no predictive skill for the groundhog during the most recent years of the analysis,” according to a report released this week by the National Centers for Environmental Information in Asheville, N.C. Flipping a coin might be as accurate as Phil. Since 1988, the groundhog was “right” 14 times and “wrong” 15 times. In other words, only 14 times did the national average temperature for

KEITH SRAKOCIC, AP

Punxsutawney Phil in action.

the remainder of February match what would be expected based on what the groundhog predicted. Last year, Phil was spot on: The rodent didn’t see his shadow, so winter should have been over.

February and March ended up warmer than average across the nation, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Every state in the contiguous USA had an above-average temperature in March. Although Phil is the most famous groundhog, other furry forecasters include West Virginia’s French Creek Freddie, Georgia’s Gen. Beauregard Lee, Ohio’s Buckeye Chuck, North Carolina’s Sir Walter Wally, Louisiana’s Cajun Groundhog, Alabama’s Smith Lake Jake, Wisconsin’s Jimmy and New York’s Staten Island Chuck (full name: Charles G. Hogg).


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L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 2017

Super Bowl TV ads toned Trump taps ‘best down in Trump’s shadow? judge in the country’ Companies wary amid polarization

v CONTINUED FROM 1B

Erik Brady

@ByErikBrady USA TODAY Sports

Donald Trump appeared in a Super Bowl ad five years ago in which he was outsmarted by a Century 21 agent. This time you won’t find him in the ads, though his unmistakable shadow will loom over them. 84 Lumber, a leading supplier of building materials, has a 90second Super Bowl spot that will air just before halftime. You won’t see the original version unless you go online. M.J. Brunner Inc., the agency that created the ad, says 84 Lumber seeks to present itself as a company looking for good employees, no matter where they come from. The ad’s original imagery included a wall — and the agency says Fox asked it to go back to the drawing board. Trump will have been president for little more than two weeks on Super Bowl Sunday, and ad experts say the mere fact of his administration will be felt in some of the pricey commercials, though in ways more subtle than the explicit example of 84 Lumber. Robert Thompson, director of the Bleier Center for Television and Popular Culture at Syracuse University, points to a country that is polarized by a bruising election campaign and a simmering anger that lingers in the land. “We are obviously in a very tense social moment,” Thompson says. “Most advertisers are not going to want to do something that could be provocative to a

A Budweiser ad will tell the story of Adolphus Busch, the German immigrant who co-founded Anheuser-Busch. large part of a population that’s in an already provoked state.” Shawn McBride, executive vice president, sports, at Ketchum Sports and Entertainment, says the tone of the times is often reflected in Super Bowl ads. Budweiser’s Clydesdales bowing before the New York skyline after 9/11 is a shining example. But in those days the country was united in its grief. “I don’t think we’ll see ads as provocative as we’ve seen maybe years prior,” McBride says. “That’s just not the temperature of the country right now. You don’t want to come across as tone deaf to the audience you’re trying to reach.” Tim Calkins thinks brands will try their best to stay on safe ground in fractious times, especially in an era when social media affords the offended a means to complain instantly and harshly. “There is no question that Super Bowl advertisers are thinking about Trump and thinking about polarization,” says Calkins, clinical professor of marketing at Northwestern University’s Kellogg School of Management. “All of these Super Bowl advertisers are trying to resonate and trying to break through, but I think they

BUDWEISER

will work very hard to be safe.” Budweiser will have an ad that tells the immigrant story of its cofounder, Adolphus Busch. When the ad’s Busch arrives in 19thcentury America he hears catcalls in the streets. “You’re not welcome here! Go home!” That offers echoes of today’s America. Side note: Trump’s grandfather, Frederick, also emigrated from Germany in the 1800s. Super Bowl viewers who watch the ad for Avocados from Mexico might wonder if the guacamole they’re snacking on will soon cost more, as the Trump administration has floated the possibility of a tariff on imported Mexican goods. “We don’t get into those political situations,” says Alvaro Luque, president of Avocados From Mexico, who says the main goal of his marketing organization is brand messaging. This year’s avocado ad has Jon Lovitz; last year’s had Scott Baio, who became notable as a Trump backer. Would Baio’s comic cameo have worked this time? “No, probably not,” says Jay Russell, chief creative officer of GSD&M Advertising. “It’s a different year.”

and enforce the Constitution as the nation’s framers intended. He writes with a Scalia-like flair and has degrees from Columbia, Harvard and Oxford. “Mr. President, I am honored, and I am humbled,” he said, standing next to his wife, Louise. He expounded briefly on his legal philosophy. “In our legal order, it is for the Congress, and not judges, to write laws,” he said. “A judge who likes every outcome he reaches is very likely a bad judge.” Gorsuch, along with Hardiman, emerged from a list of 21 people Trump considered, topped initially by federal appeals court Judges William Pryor of Alabama and Diane Sykes of Wisconsin. Pryor has a more controversial record on issues such as abortion and gay rights, possibly making Senate confirmation risky, and Sykes, 59, has fewer years on the bench. The White House filled the East Room with Washington’s movers and shakers for the announcement. On hand were Vice President Pence, top Republican leaders in Congress and Scalia’s widow, Maureen. Democratic leaders declined their invitations. Trump made sure everyone watching knew he had kept his word to nominate someone from the lists he put forward in May and September. From those, he said, he had chosen “the very best judge in the country” to replace Scalia. “I studied every aspect of his life,” he said. “The qualifications of Judge Gorsuch are beyond dispute.” Gorsuch holds strong views about the limits of executive branch power. He has defended religious liberties, most recently against the Affordable Care Act’s so-called contraception mandate. He will face intense opposition

from Senate Democrats and liberal interest groups, which planned to protest the nomination at the Supreme Court an hour after it was announced. Nan Aron, president of the liberal Alliance for Justice, promised “a mass mobilization to defeat the nomination.” “I look forward to speaking with members from both sides of the aisle,” Gorsuch said. Republicans hold a 52-seat majority in the Senate, large enough to block President Obama’s choice of federal appeals court Judge Merrick Garland last year but not sufficient to overcome a filibuster if Democrats seek to bottle up the nomination as revenge. Unless Trump can win over eight of them, Republicans will have to change the Senate’s rules, eliminating the 60-vote threshold needed to bring the nomination to the floor. Trump endorsed such a move last week. Republican senators sang their praises. “Today was the most important decision President Trump has made,” Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas said. Sen. Cory Gardner predicted “major Democratic support” for his fellow Coloradoan. The White House hopes to have the seat filled in time for the court’s sitting in April, the last of the 2016 term, when several cases could be considered involving such issues as religious liberty and transgender rights. “There’s a lot of cases that I think are in the queue right now that have the potential to be 4-4 (votes),” White House spokesman Sean Spicer said. “I think the idea is to get this individual confirmed as soon as possible, just to get the docket moving.” Contributing: Erin Kelly, Paul Singer and Donovan Slack

Bannon sees West as enmeshed in war v CONTINUED FROM 1B

statements and gave a speech in which he said, “Islam is peace.” In a radio show last May, Bannon said those were “the dumbest” comments made by Bush during his presidency. On his radio show, Bannon repeatedly made sarcastic references to Islam as a “religion of peace.” University of Texas law professor Stephen Vladeck said it’s “unprecedented to have someone who doesn’t just harbor those views but seems to have no compunction basing decisions on those views” as a member of the National Security Council. “It seems like we’re headed for more of the jaw-dropping steps like the immigration order,” he said. Bannon left a position as the executive chairman of the rightwing news organization Breitbart in August 2016 to become chief 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.

PRESIDENT AND PUBLISHER

John Zidich

EDITOR IN CHIEF

Patty Michalski CHIEF REVENUE OFFICER

Kevin Gentzel

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

executive of Trump’s presidential campaign, and after the election, he was named the president’s chief strategist and senior counsel — a position equal in rank to the chief of staff. His role in shaping Trump’s domestic and foreign policy has grown increasingly apparent in the early days of the administration. Bannon played a role in shaping a flurry of executive orders, including one that temporarily blocks immigration from seven majority-Muslim nations. “He’s got a tremendous understanding of the world and the geopolitical landscape that we have now,” White House spokesman Sean Spicer said on ABC’s This Week on Sunday, defending Bannon’s security post. A BREAK FROM POLICY

While hosting his radio program, Bannon made statements that diverged from decades of U.S. foreign policy. “We’re going to war in the South China Sea in five to 10 years, aren’t we?” he said in March 2016. “There’s no doubt about that. They’re taking their sandbars and making basically stationary aircraft carriers and putting missiles on those. They come here to the United States in front of our face — and you nderstand how important face is — and say it’s an ancient territorial sea.” The United States and China have a tenuous relationship in part because China is entangled in a dispute with Japan and other Asian nations in the region over an important trade channel in the South China Sea and China’s attempts to assert its dominion by building islands topped with military installations. During an interview in February 2016, Bannon expressed alarm about China and Islam as he talked about a Breitbart story proclaiming a mosque at the North Pole, although it was actually in a northern Canadian village hundreds of miles away. “You have an expansionist Islam, and you have an expansionist China. Right? They are motivated. They’re arrogant. They’re on the march. And they think the Judeo-Christian West is on the retreat,” he said. “Talk to us about this mosque on the North Pole.” In January 2016, Bannon discussed threats facing Europe in the 1930s and evaluated Islam alongside fascism and Nazism. “This is when Europe’s looking down the barrel of fascism — the rise of Mussolini in Italy, Stalin

ROBERT HANASHIRO, USA TODAY

Steve Bannon, Donald Trump’s right-hand man, arrives at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 20 for Trump’s presidential inauguration. and the Russians and the communist Bolsheviks in the Soviet Union. And obviously Hitler and the Nazis,” he said. “I mean you’re looking at fascism, you’re looking at communism. And to say that — what so blows me away is the timing of it. You could look in 1938 and say, ‘Look, it’s pretty dark here in Europe right now, but there’s something actually much darker. And that is Islam.’ ” Emma Ashford, a research fellow at the Cato Institute, said public statements by other members of Trump’s National Security Council indicate their views are not in alignment with Bannon’s, setting the stage for debate on the council. “I think it’s very good that there is internal dissent on these issues — particularly when you look at how unorthodox, and frankly repulsive, some of these ideas that Bannon expresses are,” she said. “I think the fact that there’s opposition can only be a good thing.” The White House did not an-

swer questions from USA TODAY about Bannon’s radio statements. VIEWS ON IMMIGRATION

Bannon often spoke on his radio show about his concerns over immigration from Muslim-majority countries to Europe and the USA. Many of his concerns are rooted in his perception of cultural differences and sharia, or Islamic religious law. “These are not Jeffersonian democrats,” he said of immigrants to Europe from Muslimmajority countries in April last year. “These are not people with thousands of years of democracy in their DNA coming up here.” “I think that most people in the Middle East, at least 50%, believe in being sharia-compliant,” Bannon said in December 2015. “If you’re sharia-compliant or want to impose sharia law, the United States is the wrong place for you.” Susan Hennessey, a former lawyer for the National Security Agency, said Bannon appears to misunderstand the basic features

of sharia and seems to use the term “sharia-compliant” as shorthand for observant Muslim. “Listening to his words carefully, he is saying observant Muslims don’t belong in the U.S. and isn’t modifying that statement to be about immigrants,” she said. “Plenty of natural-born American citizens are observant Muslims. Those people are every bit as American as Steve Bannon is, and they have real reason to fear his role in the White House.” On his radio shows, Bannon often provided figures about immigration from Muslim-majority nations that are either exaggerations of disputed numbers or lack basis in fact. “And some of the statistics are, what, like up to 510% believe in radical — in radical jihad. I’m mean you’re talking literally — they said thousands, hundreds (of ) thousands are coming in. Say the number is 3 million,” he said in April 2016. “You start to get some pretty big numbers. Particularly if half of these believe in sharia law or over 60%. Right? I mean the numbers are staggering.” In December 2015, Bannon told a guest he heard 1 million Muslim immigrants would enter the USA in each of the next two years. “If we didn’t hit the pause button today, is it already locked up that we’re going to be importing at least a couple of million Muslims whatever happens?” The guest agreed, “Absolutely.” In truth, the Pew Research Center estimates the U.S. Muslim population is 3.3 million and forecasts that it will double — over the next 36 years, not the next few years. About 100,000 Muslims arrived in the USA each of the past few years, Pew said. ‘WE’RE AT WAR’

On Breitbart News Daily, Bannon’s words often centered on the idea of a global clash of civilizations. “To be brutally frank, I mean Christianity is dying in Europe, and Islam is on the rise,” he said in an interview in January 2016 with a Breitbart reporter. In November 2015, Bannon told his listeners it was time to have an “adult conversation” about national security. “Some of these situations may get a little unpleasant,” Bannon said. “But you know what, we’re in a war. We’re clearly going into, I think, a major shooting war in the Middle East again.” Contributing: John Kelly


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USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 2017

ADMINISTRATION TO ALLOW IN 872 REFUGEES 1,060 green-card holders granted waivers Alan Gomez @alangomez USA TODAY

The Department of Homeland Security said Tuesday it will allow 872 refugees to enter the country after they were initially barred from flying to the U.S. under President Trump’s executive order on immigration. Homeland Security began detaining immigrants who arrived at U.S. airports immediately after Trump signed his order Friday evening. The order temporarily suspended the U.S. refugee program and barred entry to most people coming from seven majority Muslim countries — Libya, Iran, Iraq, Somalia, Syria, Sudan and Yemen. By Saturday, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) said it was detaining 109 people affected by the ban. DHS officials say all those people were cleared by Sunday night. But civil rights

groups and immigration advocates say people remained in custody at airports through Monday. On Tuesday, Kevin McAleenan, acting commissioner of U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP), said more than 500,000 foreigners flew into the country in the 72 hours following Trump’s order. He said CBP agents granted waivers to 1,060 green-card holders from the countries affected by Trump’s order. McAleenan said 75 waivers were granted to other visa holders, including people who had special visas intended for military translators. But he said 721 travelers were stopped from boarding planes headed for the U.S. McAleenan and Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly insisted the department was allowed to review drafts of Trump’s order ahead of time. Kelly denied reports of “chaos” at U.S. airports, arguing that things were running smoothly. He added that the executive order “is not a ban on Muslims.”

SAUL LOEB, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

Demonstrators protest President Trump’s ban of travelers from seven countries in a rally outside the Supreme Court.

IN BRIEF SPANISH FESTIVAL CELEBRATES AGRICULTURE

2015 PHOTO BY TONY KARUMBA, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

According to the United Nations, about 14,500 refugees who have been screened to come to the USA live in the Dadaab refugee camp, north of the Kenyan capital of Nairobi.

TRUMP BAN WORRIES REFUGEES IN SOMALIA

Many who have prepared to come to the USA are in limbo Christina Goldbaum Special for USA TODAY NAIROBI , KENYA

Nearly 15,000 Somalis who fled their war-torn country to Kenya and planned to resettle in the United States are stuck in the world’s largest refugee camp because President Trump suspended the U.S. asylum program. They include 137 refugees who just days ago thought they would be boarding flights to the U.S. Now they are gripped with “fear, devastation, worry, panic and heartbrokenness,” said Yvonne Ndege, a spokeswoman for the United Nations refugee agency. Desperate Somalis had hoped to escape warfare and poverty in their nation. Now those hopes are on hold after Trump signed an executive order Friday that suspended entry of refugees into the U.S. for 120 days. Ahmed Ismail Shafat, 25, who was born and raised in the Da-

daab refugee camp on the KenyaSomalia border, was supposed to leave Monday for London, then on to Chicago and finally Kansas City, Mo., to be resettled. Instead, he was part of the group attending a town hall meeting Tuesday with U.N. and U.S. officials at a transit center. “The refugees who were to be resettled in the U.S. have undergone a very, very rigorous process before being identified for resettlement in the U.S.,” Ndege said. “They undergo numerous security checks involving several U.S. agencies and are subject to the highest category security checks of any traveler to the U.S.” Shafat, who also was interviewed by officials from the Department of Homeland Security, has gone through a vetting process that took 10 years to complete. “I just got American clothing because I heard the country is very cold,” he said. “I got a big jacket in the market and told the vendor I would send money for it when I got a job in

America.” He had hoped to begin work on a college degree in math and get a job on the side to send money back to his mother in the camp. Many at the transit center had spent the previous week preparing to leave for America, completing medical checkups and getting a cultural orientation of the United States. Suleimn Yussuf Muhumed, 24, was supposed to begin cultural orientation on Friday — the day Trump signed the order. Muhumed said he heard Ohio “is a very cool place, a very nice place for life, and the people are very welcoming.” According to the U.N., at least 26,000 refugees in Kenya were in the process of resettlement to the U.S. and are affected by the executive order — 14,500 of them from Dadaab. Farhiyo Hassan was supposed to fly Tuesday. “My husband is there already,” Farhiyo said. “I was feeling so happy, so good that I could go, but now I don’t know what is happening.”

Mosque shooting suspect a fan of Katy Perry, Trump on Facebook John Bacon @jmbacon USA TODAY

ANDER GILLENEA, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

Bell ringers, known as “Joaldunaks,” march during the ancient carnival of Zubieta in the Navarra province of northern Spain on Tuesday, the last day of the annual three-day festival that celebrates agriculture and sheepherding. SENATE CONFIRMS CHAO FOR TRANSPORTATION POST

The Senate confirmed Elaine Chao as secretary of transportation on a 93-6 vote Tuesday. Sen. John Thune, R-S.D., who heads the committee that reviewed Chao’s nomination, said she has a momentous opportunity to improve safety and innovation, grow the freight network and advance improvements for infrastructure so that rural and urban communities all benefit. “It would be hard to come up with a more qualified nominee than Secretary Chao for this important role,” Thune said. “Secretary Chao has repeatedly proven her willingness to roll up her sleeves to address the challenges facing our nation.” — Bart Jansen SAN FRANCISCO SUES OVER SANCTUARY CITY ORDER

The city of San Francisco filed a lawsuit Tuesday challenging President Trump’s executive order that directs the federal government to withhold money from so-called sanctuary cities that limit cooperation with federal immigration enforcement agents. The lawsuit, filed by San Francisco City Attorney Dennis Herrera in U.S. District Court in Northern California, marks the first court challenge over the

sanctuary order filed by one of the targeted cities since Trump unveiled his order last week. “The president’s executive order is not only unconstitutional, it’s un-American,” Herrera said. “That is why we must stand up and oppose it. We are a nation of immigrants and a land of laws.” The term “sanctuary city” is a broad term that describes hundreds of communities around the U.S. that have adopted policies protecting the nation’s 11 million undocumented immigrants from deportation. — Aamer Madhani TRUMP POSTPONES CYBERSECURITY ORDER

President Trump postponed the signing of an executive order on cyber security Tuesday, despite a White House messaging blitz on the issue and a signing ceremony on the schedule. Trump even talked up action on cyber security during a “listening session” with experts in the Roosevelt Room, saying he was fulfilling a campaign promise to secure the nation’s computer networks. The canceled signing ceremony is an indication that after a blitz of executive action in his first 10 days, Trump has begun to hit roadblocks in his attempts to govern by executive order. — Gregory Korte

The university student accused of murdering six people at a Quebec City mosque is a fan of Katy Perry, President Trump and French right-wing leader Marine Le Pen, posted anti-feminist comments on social media and dressed as the Grim Reaper for Halloween. Alexandre Bissonnette, 27, made a brief court appearance late Monday but did not enter a plea to six counts of murder and five counts of attempted murder. No terrorism charges were filed, yet Canadian prosecutor Thomas Jacques said the investigation is continuing and that more charges are possible. Quebec Premier Philippe Couillard said Tuesday that government human services departments are aiding families of the victims. He also said it would be a mistake to believe that racism and Islamophobia doesn’t exist in Quebec, adding that those beliefs are held by a small minority. What is worrying, he said, is an increased acceptance of racist views. “Quebequers are a caring, loving people,” Couillard said. “When we talk about issues like how we live together and immigration, I know we will talk about positive values first. Inclusion, brotherhood.” Bissonnette studied social sciences at Université Laval, not far from the Centre Culturel Islamique de Québec where he is accused of conducting his bloody shooting spree Sunday during evening prayers. The victims included a butcher, a pharmacist and a professor. Some were African immigrants, some fathers. The Canadian refugee advocacy group Welcome to Refugees said on its Facebook page that Bissonnette was known for his anti-feminist positions on social media. Posts on Bissonnette’s Facebook page, no longer active, showed he “liked” Trump and Le Pen, donned the Grim Reaper costume in October and was a fan of Perry and Megadeth.

JACQUES BOISSINOT, AP

“He was a pro-Israel and pro-Trump guy. He didn’t have his arms open to immigrants, you could say. He was against all gun control.” Jean-Michel Allard Prus, who worked with the suspect at Université Laval

“He was not overtly racist or Islamophobic, but he had borderline misogynist, Islamophobic viewpoints,” Vincent Boissonneault, an international studies student at Université Laval, told the Montreal Gazette. “Unfortunately, that’s become more or less acceptable these days.” Jean-Michel Allard Prus told Vice Media he once participated in a group project with Bissonnette at Laval. “He was a pro-Israel and proTrump guy,” Allard Prus said. “He didn’t have his arms open to immigrants, you could say. He was against all gun control. He could have been a perfect Republican.” Bissonnette, who lived with his twin brother in an apartment near the mosque, worked for the blood donor organization Héma-

Alexandre Bissonnette is escorted to a van Monday in Quebec City after appearing in court for a deadly shooting at a mosque.

Québec. Héma-Québec issued a statement expressing sympathy to the families of the victims. “As an organization whose primary mission is dedicated to the gift of life, these events have sent a shock wave through the organization,” the statement said. Quebec City, with a population of more than 500,000 people, has averaged fewer than five murders over the last several years. Baltimore, with a population of just over 600,000 people, had more than 300 murders last year alone. A vigil in Quebec City on Monday night drew thousands; hundreds more gathered to pay their respects in Montreal. Since Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s party won election in 2015, Canada has admitted 39,000 Syrian refugees. The assault occurred amid a global uproar this weekend over Trump’s ban on admitting into the United States refugees and immigrants from Syria and six other majority-Muslim countries. On Saturday, after Trump’s controversial executive order was issued, Trudeau tweeted: “To those fleeing persecution, terror & war, Canadians will welcome you, regardless of your faith. Diversity is our strength #WelcomeToCanada“ Contributing: Adam Kovac in Quebec City.


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USATODAY TODAY L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA WEDNESDAY, WEDNESDAY,FEBRUARY FEBRUARY 1, 2017

AMERICA’S MARKETS STORY STOCKS

INVESTING ASK A FOOL

Market frays investing nerves

Price: $33.43 Day’s high: $33.69 Low: $32.19

Q: Is bond investing safer than buying stocks? Dan Caplinger The Motley Fool

A: Many investors use a balanced approach, dividing up their investment portfolios between stocks and bonds in order to manage risk. Bonds have a reputation for being safer than stocks, but both bonds and stocks have their own kinds of risk. The primary benefit of a bond is that the income it pays is predictable. Most bonds make fixed interest payments on a regular basis and then pay back your principal when they mature. There’s a risk that the bond issuer won’t be able to repay the bond when it matures, but you can manage that risk by choosing more creditworthy issuers.

Change -$1.10

However, just because payments are predictable doesn’t mean you can’t lose money with bonds. Bond prices are sensitive to changes in interest rates, and they tend to lose value when rates rise. That doesn’t matter if you own an individual bond and hold it until it matures. But many investors use bond funds to invest, and the share price of those bond funds can fall dramatically if interest rates rise substantially. More importantly, investing solely in bonds offers lower returns than the stock market has produced over the long run. If you’re looking to make the purchasing power of your portfolio grow over time, the danger with bonds is that you won’t find sufficient returns without buying bonds from issuers that are more likely to default.

-107.04

DOW JONES

The pharma company’s shares gapped down after a court invalidated four patents on multiple sclerosis drug Copaxone. Teva will appeal as the ruling could allow competitors to launch a cheaper version.

% chg -3.2%

+1.08

-2.03

CLOSE: 19,864.09 PREV. CLOSE: 19,971.13 RANGE: 19,784.77-19,918.17

CHANGE: -.1% YTD: +40.04 YTD % CHG: +1.8%

Jan. 31

$35

Comcast, the nation’s largest cable provider, plans to enable customers to watch live programming without a cable box via a new app, which formally rolls out later this year. The cable-box manufacturer’s shares reached a 2017 low.

$25

$28.58 Jan. 3

Jan. 31

CLOSE: 5,614.79 PREV. CLOSE: 5,613.71 RANGE: 5,576.09-5,615.15

20,000

19,864.09

RUSSELL

RUT

+9.49

Company (ticker symbol)

17,500

Aug.

RUSSELL 2000 INDEX

STANDARD & POOR’S 500

CLOSE: 1,361.82 PREV. CLOSE: 1,352.33 RANGE: 1,345.65-1,363.59

Price

$ Chg

YTD % Chg % Chg

152.39

+9.10

+6.4

5,600

5,614.79

48.73

+2.28

+4.9

+1.71

+4.7

-2.2 -.3

AmerisourceBergen (ABC) Quarterly earnings beat highest estimate.

87.28 +3.66

+4.4

+11.6

Danaher (DHR) Fourth-quarter earnings top estimates.

83.92 +3.56

+4.4

+7.8

Regeneron Pharmaceuticals (REGN) 359.29 +14.79 Shares rise as company teams with Indivumed.

+4.3

Jan.

Aug.

Fund, ranked by size Vanguard 500Adml Vanguard TotStIAdm Vanguard InstIdxI Vanguard TotStIdx Vanguard InstPlus Vanguard TotIntl Vanguard TotStIIns Vanguard WelltnAdm American Funds GrthAmA m American Funds IncAmerA m

MARKET PERFORMANCE BY SECTOR

NAV 210.48 57.16 207.69 57.13 207.70 15.30 57.16 68.08 43.95 21.95

Chg. -0.18 +0.02 -0.18 +0.02 -0.19 +0.03 +0.01 -0.05 -0.05 unch.

4wk 1 +1.9% +1.9% +1.9% +1.9% +1.9% +3.9% +1.9% +0.9% +4.5% +1.3%

YTD 1 +1.9% +1.9% +1.9% +1.9% +1.9% +3.9% +1.9% +0.9% +4.5% +1.3%

+1.37

+3.8

+6.7

Newmont Mining (NEM) Shares climb on attractive metals.

36.28

+1.31

+3.7

+6.5

Endo International (ENDP) Positive note on generic launches, shares up.

12.24

+.43

+3.6

-25.7

Nasdaq (NDAQ) Misses revenue but beats earnings.

70.54 +2.36

+3.5

+5.1

Price

$ Chg

YTD % Chg % Chg

Under Armour (UAA) Drops after fourth-quarter results disappoint.

21.49

-7.45

-25.7 -26.0

Under Armour C (UA) Shares dip along with sibling stock.

19.22

-5.87

-23.4 -23.6

ETF, ranked by volume VanE Vect Gld Miners SPDR S&P500 ETF Tr iShs Emerg Mkts SPDR Financial Dir Dly Gold Bull3x Barc iPath Vix ST Dirx Jr GoldMin Bull CS VelSh 3xInvrsNGs iShares Rus 2000 iShares EAFE ETF

Ticker GDX SPY EEM XLF NUGT VXX JNUG DGAZ IWM EFA

Close 23.93 227.53 37.34 23.31 11.08 19.42 8.93 4.35 135.23 59.63

Chg. +0.78 -0.02 +0.07 -0.15 +0.94 -0.08 +0.62 +0.33 +0.94 +0.09

% Chg +3.4% unch. +0.2% -0.6% +9.3% -0.4% +7.5% +8.2% +0.7% +0.2%

%YTD +14.4% +1.8% +6.7% +0.3% +45.0% -23.9% +60.0% +43.6% +0.3% +3.3%

INTEREST RATES

MORTGAGE RATES

Type Prime lending Federal funds 3 mo. T-bill 5 yr. T-note 10 yr. T-note

Type 30 yr. fixed 15 yr. fixed 1 yr. ARM 5/1 ARM

Close 6 mo ago 3.75% 3.50% 0.66% 0.40% 0.51% 0.25% 1.92% 1.02% 2.45% 1.45%

Close 6 mo ago 4.04% 3.39% 3.22% 2.66% 3.09% 2.81% 3.19% 2.86%

SOURCE: BANKRATE.COM

COMMODITIES

United Parcel Service (UPS) Fourth-quarter results fail to impress investors.

109.13

-7.90

-6.8

-4.8

Valero Energy (VLO) Higher costs to challenge 2017 earnings.

65.76

-2.47

-3.6

-3.7

Pentair (PNR) Revenue view trails estimates.

58.63

-2.13

-3.5

+4.6

Nucor (NUE) 58.09 -2.01 Negative quarterly result notes, accounting environment.

-3.3

-2.4

Tesoro (TSO) Reverses gain on Western Refining deal.

-3.1

-7.5

80.85

-2.56

Texas Instruments (TXN) 75.54 Earnings consensus raised, shares go other way.

-2.36

-3.0

+3.5

Range Resources (RRC) Shares fall as weak January is expected.

32.34

-1.00

-3.0

-5.9

106.33

-2.97

-2.7

+3.0

SOURCE: BLOOMBERG AND THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SECTOR

PERFORMANCE DAILY YTD

Energy

unch.

20.9%

Materials

-0.6%

19.7%

Industrials

-0.9%

19.6%

Technology

-0.5%

16.9%

Utilities

1.5%

13.6%

1 – CAPITAL GAINS AND DIVIDENDS REINVESTED

TOP 10 EXCHANGE TRADED FUNDS

37.35

Jan. AP

-2.1

Coach (COH) Second-quarter earnings beat estimates.

Company (ticker symbol)

2,278.87

2,050

Aug. TOP 10 MUTUAL FUNDS

Mylan (MYL) 38.05 Teva’s patent invalidation pushes shares higher.

2,300

+8.0 5,000

Mallinckrodt (MNK) Piramal to buy drug portfolio.

Mastercard (MA) Revenue misses analysts estimates.

Jan

NASDAQ COMPOSITE

CHANGE: +.7% YTD: +4.69 YTD % CHG: +.3%

Thermo Fisher Scientific (TMO) Profit tops estimates, shares gain.

LOSERS

Jan. 3

4-WEEK TREND

Arris International

% chg -0.5%

$66.74

CLOSE: 2,278.87 PREV. CLOSE: 2,280.90 RANGE: 2,267.36-2,279.09

S&P 500’S BIGGEST GAINERS/LOSERS GAINERS

$60

Price: $28.58 Day’s high: $28.85 Low: $26.05 Change -$0.14

Jan. 31

$80

The retailer is ending ShippingPass, its Amazon Prime-like service, and will offer free two-day shipping on all orders. The program doesn’t offer as many perks, and minimum purchase is $35. It also is reportedly looking to provide car-buying services.

% chg 0.5%

Jan. 3

4-WEEK TREND

Walmart Stores

Change $0.32

$33.43

STANDARD & POOR'S

COMPOSITE

CHANGE: unch. YTD: +231.67 YTD % CHG: +4.3%

$30

Price: $66.74 Day’s high: $66.89 Low: $65.88

S&P 500

SPX

NASDAQ

COMP

$40

DOW JONES INDUSTRIALS

INDUSTRIAL AVERAGE

CHANGE: -.5% YTD: +101.49 YTD % CHG: +.5%

4-WEEK TREND

Teva Pharmaceutical Industries

MAJOR INDEXES DJIA

ALL THE MARKET ACTION IN REAL TIME. MARKETS.USATODAY.COM

Commodities Close Prev. Cattle (lb.) 1.16 1.16 Corn (bushel) 3.60 3.58 Gold (troy oz.) 1,208.60 1,193.20 Hogs, lean (lb.) .69 .67 Natural Gas (Btu.) 3.12 3.23 Oil, heating (gal.) 1.61 1.61 Oil, lt. swt. crude (bar.) 52.81 52.63 Silver (troy oz.) 17.51 17.12 Soybeans (bushel) 10.25 10.23 Wheat (bushel) 4.21 4.14

Chg. unch. +0.02 +15.40 +0.02 -0.11 unch. +0.18 +0.39 +0.02 +0.07

% Chg. -0.5% +0.6% +1.3% +2.9% -3.6% +0.3% +0.3% +2.3% +0.2% +1.6%

% YTD -2.9% +2.2% +5.1% +4.4% -16.3% -5.4% -1.7% +9.9% +2.8% +3.1%

Close .7949 1.3024 6.8780 .9257 112.76 20.8101

Prev. .8011 1.3119 6.8780 .9351 113.67 20.7690

Close 11,535.31 23,360.78 19,041.34 7,099.15 47,001.06

Consumer staples 0.5%

4.2%

Telcom

0.4%

2.8%

Health care

1.6%

-2.1%

Financials

-0.6%

-2.2%

CBOE VOLATILITY INDEX Measures expected market volatility based on S&P 500 index options pricing:

11.98

20 30

10

6 mo. ago .7553 1.3043 6.6353 .8945 102.03 18.7650

Yr. ago .7021 1.4005 6.5756 .9234 121.10 18.1648

40

Prev. Change 11,681.89 -146.58 23,374.17 -13.39 19,368.85 -327.51 7,118.48 -19.33 47,091.82 -90.76

%Chg. -1.3% -0.1% -1.7% -0.3% -0.2%

15

IN-DEPTH MARKETS COVERAGE USATODAY.COM/MONEY

7.5

YTD % +0.5% +6.2% -0.4% -0.6% +3.0%

SOURCES: MORNINGSTAR, DOW JONES INDEXES, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

+0.10 (+0.8%)

S&P 500 P/E RATIO The price-to-earnings ratio, based on trailing 12-month “operating” earnings:

FOREIGN MARKETS Country Frankfurt Hong Kong Japan (Nikkei) London Mexico City

8.5%

0

FOREIGN CURRENCIES Currency per dollar British pound Canadian dollar Chinese yuan Euro Japanese yen Mexican peso

Consumer discret. -0.2%

20.94 22.5

0 SOURCE BLOOMBERG

-0.02 (-0.1%)

30

Walmart eyes Amazon with free two-day shipping Service now available to all customers Charisse Jones @charissejones USA TODAY

SAUL LOEB, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

Upping the ante in the retail shipping wars, Walmart scrapped a subscription program that gave members free two-day delivery in order to make the service available to all of its customers.

Walmart shares were up 0.5% Tuesday, closing at $66.74.

Walmart customers shopping for items ranging from pet food to peanut butter will be able to get

those items delivered to their homes within two days at no extra cost for a minimum purchase of $35, Walmart said. If they have the products delivered to a local store, customers don’t need to meet a spending threshold. The move comes as Walmart, with its empire of superstores, struggles to find a formula to head off Amazon, which continues to grow as an online retailer. Amazon heavily promotes its offers of Amazon Prime, which charges $10.99 a month or $99 a year, for unlimited two-day ship-

ping along with other perks. Walmart previously offered free two-day shipping to customers who paid a $49 fee to participate in Shipping Pass, a subscription service it was piloting. But that program is going away, and subscribers will get their fees refunded. Explaining the reason for the change, Marc Lore, CEO of Walmart eCommerce U.S., said in a conference call two-day shipping is now expected by customers. And “we don’t think it’s necessary to charge a membership for it.’’

Previously, those who were not part of the Shipping Pass program could get free shipping when they purchased at least $50 worth of items, with a delivery window of four to six days. Nearly 2 million of Walmart’s most popular products will qualify for its newly expanded offer of free two-day shipping. “We think this is going to dramatically accelerate growth,” Lore said. “There won’t be too many products that you’ll want that won’t be available for twoday shipping.”


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USA TODAY -- LLawrence USA TODAY awrence JJournal ournal-W -World orld WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY FEBRUARY1, 2017 1, 2017

LIFE LIFELINE

MUSIC

HOW WAS YOUR DAY? GOOD DAY PHARRELL WILLIAMS AND HELEN LASICHANH They’re parents of triplets, born in January, USA TODAY confirmed Tuesday. The couple already have an 8-year-old son, Rocket. The pair, married since October 2013, broke the news about the pregnancy in September, but were mum on the multiples’ details.

REBA’S NEW ALBUM IS ‘A MESSAGE FROM GOD’ Country star’s new release is more spiritual Bob Doerschuk

TAYLOR HILL, FILMMAGIC

BAD DAY ‘DOCTOR WHO’ FANS The Doctor will soon be out. Peter Capaldi, who assumed the iconic role as the 12th Time Lord in 2013, said he’s leaving after this year’s Christmas special, breaking the news in an interview on BBC Radio. Now who will be the 13th Doctor Who? MAKING WAVES Paris Jackson is going to be a ‘Star.’ The 18-year-old daughter of the late Michael Jackson will make her acting debut on the TV’s ‘Star,’ which follows a girl group seeking fame and fortune. Fox said she will appear in an upcoming episode of the drama starring Queen Latifah.

PASCAL LE SEGRETAIN, GETTY IMAGES

THEY SAID WHAT? THE STARS’ BEST QUOTES “There are certain characters who hold a special place in the hearts of millions. Performing this role demands USA TODAY focus, passion and the very best performance I can give. It has become clear that I cannot do both jobs to the level they require.” — Ben Affleck, star of ‘The Batman,’ in a statement Monday night on why he’s not going to also direct the film.

Special for USA TODAY

“It was a little, bitty oneroom church, right up the hill from Highway 69,” remembers Reba McEntire, 61. “Then there was the cattle guard. You go past that, up the hill and there was our house.” The country music superstar is remembering the Chockie Church, just steps away from where she grew up in Chockie, Okla. By her estimation, it held only 30 or so congregants, yet its effect on her lingers. Even after selling more than 56 million albums worldwide, winning multiple industry awards and being welcomed into the Country Music Hall of Fame, she revisits that modest place often in her memory and her music. “Grandma and Grandpa Smith hit that church every Sunday morning, Sunday night and Wednesday night,” she continues. “When I stayed with them, that’s where we wound up. My favorite times to go there were when everybody would bring a dish and then after the service we’d all go out to the tables. They were full of food … and us McEntire kids, we loved to eat!” Reba’s calendar is always full, too. These days, she’s gearing up for her first headline performances at Nashville’s Ryman Auditorium Feb. 15. And she’s starting work on a new onehour ABC drama. Still, why did she she wait until now to record Sing It Now: Songs of Faith & Hope, some 40 years after releasing her self-titled debut album? Not surprisingly, her reasons are rooted in

JUSTIN MCINTOSH FOR REBA’S BUSINESS, INC.

Reba McEntire’s new album, Sing It Now: Songs of Faith & Hope, is out Friday.

“This isn’t just entertainment. It’s not a country album. It’s deeper than that.” family. “My sister Susie is a gospel singer,” she explains. “I was the country singer.” The CD subtitled “Faith” opens with her singing a solo Jesus Loves Me. The song has special significance to her. “Su-

sie and I used to go fishing with Grandpa,” she remembers. “Then Grandma would tell us Bible stories and we’d sing Jesus Loves Me.” There’s another reason: It was also the first tune she got paid to sing in public. “I got a nickel for it,” she recalls with a grin. In contrast, contemporary songs fill the second disc, “Hope,” buttressed by orchestral instruments, choruses and other hallmarks of modern country arrangements. With appearances by Reba’s daughter-in-law, Kelly Clarkson, and friend Trisha Yearwood, Sing It Now takes on an even more personal meaning. At the same time, her hopes for how it might move listeners are greater than those

she has had for other projects. “I think it was more heartfelt on these songs,” she says. “That’s not to say a country song is not heartfelt, but this is more more spiritual, more about my relationship with God.” “This isn’t just entertainment,” she emphasizes. “It’s not a country album. It’s deeper than that. It’s about changing lives. It’s a message from God. That’s why I’m here, not to be rich and famous and popular but to help people. I’m the conduit or, as I call it, the water hose. That’s what God wanted me to be when He gave me this voice: I’m supposed to stand up and give His message. If I can touch just one person, that’s worth the whole project.”

IT’S YOUR BIRTHDAY WHO’S CELEBRATING TODAY? MUSIC

Lessons for Gaga’s Super Bowl gig She’d be smart to keep things simple and clean INVISION/AP; USA TODAY; WIREIMAGE

Harry Styles is 23. Ronda Rousey is 30. Lisa Marie Presley is 49.

PICK A GUEST 3RELEVANT

Maeve McDermott @maeve_mcdermott USATODAY

Compiled by Maria Puente

USA SNAPSHOTS©

The nation’s best sellers Top five best sellers, shown in proportion of sales. Example: For every 10 copies of 1984 sold, A Dog’s Purpose sold 7.6 copies. 10

1984 George Orwell A Dog’s Purpose W. Bruce Cameron

7.6

Hidden Figures Margot Lee Shetterly

5.6

Never Never 5.4 James Patterson, Candice Fox Hillbilly Elegy J. D. Vance

backdrop remembering the victims. Bono ended by opening his jacket to reveal a U.S. flag.

5.0

THURSDAY Top 50 books list (top150.usatoday.com) SOURCE USA TODAY Best-Selling Books MARY CADDEN AND VERONICA BRAVO, USA TODAY

Bruce Springsteen’s stage slide. Prince’s white sheet. Beyoncé’s bullet belt. An artist’s Super Bowl halftime performance is one of their career’s most enduring moments — which, as Janet Jackson’s Nipplegate controversy proved, isn’t always a good thing. On Sunday, it’s Lady Gaga’s turn. Her upcoming halftime performance at Super Bowl LI bookends a year of high-profile gigs for the star, who sang the national anthem at the 2016 Super Bowl before performances at last year’s Grammys, Oscars and Victoria’s Secret Fashion show. Gaga’s Super Bowl appearance is also the culmination of her years-long image makeover, as she’s transitioned from a costumed pop provocateur to a rock ’n’ roll-loving, Tony Bennett-collaborating image of mainstream accessibility. Here are valuable lessons she can learn from past Super Bowl performers.

INSET, BONO BY KEVIN MAZUR, WIREIMAGE; JEFF KRAVITZ, FILMMAGIC

In recent live shows, Lady Gaga’s pop hits have undergone guitar-heavy makeovers. Perhaps a duet with a classic rock icon?

1 KEEP THINGS PG

The NFL has invited its share of rebels to the halftime show. Sometimes, the gamble pays off, like Prince’s suggestive-yet-electrifying 2007 performance. In cases like Janet Jackson’s nip slip in 2004, it didn’t. Lady Gaga is no stranger to controversy. But in recent years, she has cleaned up her act. Artists who violate decency standards risk heavy penalties, from the NFL’s $16.6 million lawsuit against M.I.A. for flipping the bird during Madonna’s 2012 set to Jackson’s FCC controversy and damaged public image. Gaga would be wise to extend her clean streak into her Super Bowl show.

2 TREAD CAREFULLY

If Lady Gaga wants to incite riots, she can learn from Beyoncé, who courted controversy by performing her political anthem Formation last year backed by dancers in Black Panther-referencing costumes. The NFL has debunked rumors it forbade Gaga from making political statements, so it’s unknown whether the star will use her platform to speak out against President Trump. For a more inclusive message, she might look to U2’s 2002 performance. With the nation still reeling from the 9/11 attacks, the band sang Where the Streets Have No Name in front of a scrolling

Super Bowl performers often invite guests, whether to incorporate a different genre or to make the show more memorable. But the wrong cameo can sink a set. 2001’s star-studded lineup of Aerosmith, Britney Spears, Nelly, Mary J. Blige and ’N Sync inspired too many celebrityclogged performances in the following years. Sometimes, the guest star feels laughably random, like the Black Eyed Peas inviting Slash onstage in 2011. The best guest appearances largely play on an element of surprise. Inviting a classic rock icon would complement Gaga’s performance.

SOMETIMES, SIMPLE BEST 4WORKS

Lady Gaga can learn something else from rock performers of Super Bowls past. Many of the past decade’s best halftime shows have focused less on filling the stage with cameos, and more on the performances themselves. Inventive staging can make all the difference, from U2’s evocative backdrop to Prince’s iconic white sheet. And as Bruce Springsteen proved in 2009, a successful halftime show can be as simple as a world-class band, a dynamic vocalist and a well-placed camera.


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Wednesday, February 1, 2017 H

LAWRENCE • STATE

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L awrence J ournal -W orld

In House, battle begins over who pays for water fund By Peter Hancock phancock@ljworld.com

Topeka — Western Kansas farmers who irrigate their land are about to find themselves in the center of an intense political battle over who should help pay for a long list of expensive projects over the next 50 years aimed at extending the life of the state’s water resources. That’s because those farmers, who account for an estimated 80-85 percent of all the water used in Kansas, currently pay nothing into a state fund that pays for those projects. And as Gov. Sam Brownback’s administration is seeking an additional $43 million a year for the State Water Plan Fund, many lawmakers are now

insisting that irrigators start paying something. “I think there’s a majority of members on the committee that are interested in having them pay,” said Rep. Tom Sloan, R-Lawrence, who chairs the new House Committee on Water and the Environment. Sloan’s committee has been tasked with finding a way to fund a long-term “vision” for preserving the state’s water resources that was put together by a special task force that Brownback appointed in 2013. That task force produced its report in January 2015, and since then, another “blue ribbon” task force has been working on a proposal to fund it. That funding proposal, which was released in

January, calls for carving out one-tenth of a percent of the state’s existing sales tax, or a little more than $43 million a year, and dedicating that to the State Water Plan Fund. The panel also proposed enacting that through a constitutional amendment so the money could not be swept or transferred for any other purpose. Although that plan has support from many cities and other groups interested in the water plan, it hasn’t gained much traction among legislators, who say the state is having a hard enough time funding basic government services with the revenue it has now. On Tuesday, the committee heard testimony on an alternative plan that would increase all of the

current fees going into the water plan, doubling the fee charged to customers of municipal water systems to 6 cents per 1,000 gallons of water they use each month, and raising the other types of fees. But it made no mention of levying a fee on irrigation use. “I see a lot of fee increases in here for everybody but the largest users of water. How come that’s not included in there?” said Rep. Joe Seiwert, R-Pretty Prairie. Doug Mays, a former House Speaker who now lobbies on behalf of rural water districts, said those districts opposed any fee increases without requiring some participation from irrigators. “It would not be fair to

Man arrested, accused of sexual abuse By Conrad Swanson cswanson@ljworld.com

A 41-year-old man is accused of sexually abusing a person who was incapable of consenting, court documents say. On Friday, Brian Kelly Sumpter was booked into the Douglas County Jail, according to the county’s online booking logs. He faces a single felony count of aggra-

vated criminal sodomy. According to the logs, Sumpter is a transient man with ties to Topeka. Sumpter was transferred to Douglas County from the Hutchinson Correctional Facility, where he was serving a prison sentence stemming from two 2013 drug convictions, according to the Kansas Department of Correction’s online offender registry. Sumpter is accused of

sodomizing a 40-year-old who was unable to give consent either “because of mental deficiency or disease” or “because of the effect of any alcoholic liquor, narcotic, drug or other substance,” according to a criminal complaint filed in Douglas County District Court. The reported crime took place on Aug. 14, 2016. In January 2002, Sumpter was convicted in Lyon County of felony

DEATHS EVERETT GEORGE HICKAM Everett George Hickam, 82, passed away January 12, 2017 in hospice care in Lansing Kansas. Everett was born on September 24, 1934, to Jennings Bryan Hickam and Grace (Freeman) Hickam in Bristow, Oklahoma. He grew up in the Church of Christ where his paternal grandfather was the minister. Everett was raised by his mother, Grace, and her second husband, Robert Hines. Everett served his country in the United States Army while stationed in Korea with the ASA Army Security Agency. Everett graduated from Nortonville High School and attended the University of Kansas. Everett worked in the automotive industry in sales as well as managing car dealerships in Lawrence, KS. ,Kansas City area, Beaumont, TX and Springfield, MO. He was an avid artist, especially in retirement and enjoyed reading and studying aircraft. He was preceded in death by his parents, his two sisters Marian McCorkill and Carol Gordon, his first wife Mary Lee (McCaffrey) Hickam, his second wife, Freda

(Hunter) Hickam, his son Michael Gregory Hickam and step daughter, Julia Hunter. He is survived by his sister Eva Cramer, daughters Nancy Hickam Hunt of Lawrence, Janet Hickam Bogart, Ann Arbor, MI. Susan Hickam, Lawrence, son, Robert Hickam Smith of Pittsburg, PA, and a step grandson Michael Fugett of Lawrence, as well as five grandchildren, and one step great grandchild. His ashes will be spread in the mountains of Utah with his second wife, Freda, according to his wishes. Special thanks to his best friend Juls Adams, of Utah, and his friend Michelle Puckett, of Leavenworth, who provided care and friendship in his last days. Memorial contributions may be made to the Lawrence Humane Society and sent to Lawrence Chapel Oaks Cremation & Funeral Services 627 Monterey Way, Lawrence Ks 66049 see www.chapeloaksne.com for online condolences. Please sign this guestbook at Obituaries. LJWorld.com.

JUNE D. PRESTON Memorial service for June D. Preston will be held at 2:00 p.m. Friday, February 3rd at Plymouth Congregational Church. For June's full obituary go to warrenmcelwain.com.

MARGARET "MICKEY" E. RICHARD Memorial service for Mickey, 88, will be 5 pm. Sat., Feb. 4 at Rumsey­Yost Funeral Home. The family will receive friends one hour before the service. rumsey­yost.com

ELEANOR T. WHITE Service for Eleanor, 92, Lawrence will be held at 2 p.m. at Lawrence Free Methodist Church Sat., Feb. 4th. VISO will be 12:30 ­ 1:30 p.m. prior to service. Go to warrenmcelwain.com for obituary.

Every life is worth celebrating

aggravated assault and aggravated assault on a law enforcement officer, according to the Kansas DOC’s online registry. He was also convicted of felony burglary in May 2009 in Osborne County. Sumpter does not have any criminal convictions in Douglas County District Court. He is currently being held in the Douglas County Jail in lieu of a $30,000 bond.

ask our water system customers, both urban and rural, to absorb higher fees while those who are responsible for over 80 percent of the consumption of water in Kansas pay zero percent,” he said. Kent Askern of the Kansas Farm Bureau argued that farmers do contribute to the plan because many of them are customers of the rural water districts that levy the fees, although those fees only apply to the domestic water they use in their homes. The State Water Plan Fund, which was established in 1989, currently gets about $12 million a year in various fees levied on residential and commercial water bills, on farm chemicals and fertilizers, and on stockwater usage.

Those fees currently raise about $12.5 million a year. In addition, though, by statute, the state is supposed to add $6 million each year from the state general fund, plus another $2 million a year from lottery proceeds. But those transfers have not occurred for the last several years as lawmakers, in the face of revenue shortfalls, have elected to keep that money in the general fund. The bill on which the committee heard testimony Tuesday would raise only about $6 million a year in new money, far less than what the Brownback administration is seeking. Sloan said the committee will hear testimony next week on another bill that would levy a water usage fee on irrigators.

BRIEFLY County to consider anti-Zika proposal Douglas County commissioners will be presented today with a proposal intended to reduce the risk of spreading the Zika virus. The Kansas Department of Health and Environment’s Bureau of Waste Management has received Zika Virus Mitigation Funds to share with the state’s most populous counties. The funds are meant to reduce the number of waste tires in which mosquitoes carrying the virus can breed. The program makes available $1,000 to advertise a waste tire amnesty and another $10,000 to properly dispose of waste tires. A report from the county’s Sustainability Department states that waste tires are a concern of the Douglas County Zoning and Codes Department, which has identified properties with large numbers of used tires. The report notes, however, that it is difficult to enforce code violations involving tires and that it’s expensive for property owners to dispose of them at a cost of $2 per car tire and $15 per tractor tire. The proposal before commissioners would have the county advertise the waste tire amnesty and contact landowners about the no-cost disposal. It would also establish a oneday drop-off event with

a limit of seven tires per county household. The Douglas County Commission meets at 4 p.m. today at the Douglas County Courthouse, 1100 Massachusetts St. A complete meeting agenda can be viewed at douglascountyks.org.

Police: 3 sex crimes reported since Friday Three sex crimes have been reported in Lawrence since Friday. Lawrence Police Department activity logs show one sex crime was reported on Friday and two were reported on Saturday. The first was reported at 2:57 p.m. Friday, the second was reported at 12:29 a.m. Saturday and the third was reported at 4:02 p.m. Saturday, the logs show. It’s unclear where the reports were taken because the addresses for the three incidents are redacted in the activity logs. Lawrence Police Sgt. Amy Rhoads declined to comment on the incidents. Reports from the Friday and Saturday afternoon incidents were not complete as of Monday afternoon, Rhoads said. The investigation into Saturday morning’s report is ongoing, she said. As of Tuesday morning, no arrests in the Douglas County Jail booking logs bear incident numbers matching any of the reported sex crimes.

DATEBOOK 1 TODAY

Red Dog’s Dog Days workout, 6 a.m., Rock Chalk Sports Pavilion, 100 Rock Chalk Lane. Meet Russell Johnson, CEO of Lawrence Memorial Hospital, 10 a.m., Auditorium, Lawrence Memorial Hospital, 335 Maine St. Books & Babies, 9:30-10 a.m. and 10:3011 a.m., Lawrence Public Library Readers’ Theater, 707 Vermont St. The World in 2017: An Anthropologist’s Take, noon, Ecumenical Campus Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. Teen Zone Expanded (grades 6-12), 2-5 p.m., Lawrence Public Library Teen Zone, 707 Vermont St. Douglas County Commission meeting, 4 p.m., Douglas County Courthouse, 1100 Massachusetts St.

843-1120

Submit your item for our calendar by emailing datebook@ljworld. com at least 48 hours before your event.

American Legion Bingo, doors open 4:30 p.m., first games 6:45 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. Job Fair presented by Jobs.Lawrence. com, 11 a.m.-2:30 p.m., East Lawrence Recreation Center, 1245 E. 15th St. Langston Hughes Award Celebration and Reading, 7 p.m., Lawrence Arts Center, 940 New Hampshire St.

Locally Owned Since 1904 www.warrenmcelwain.com


LHS GIRLS, FSHS BOYS BOWLERS WIN TRIANGULAR. 4C

Sports

Electric & Industrial Supply, Inc. Since 1948

C

602 E. 9th • Lawrence

(785) 843-4522 patchenelectric.com

Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com/sports l Wednesday, February 1, 2017

KU football expects 12 additions By Benton Smith basmith@ljworld.com

Tom Keegan tkeegan@ljworld.com

Beating Baylor tougher than ever

In order for the Kansas football team to continue on its measured upward trajectory in head coach David Beaty’s third season in Lawrence, the Jayhawks will have to carry on with improving their depth and talent in 2017.

They’ll join eight December signees, giving Kansas a 2017 class ranked 57th nationally by Rivals, and ninth in the Big 12, ahead of in-state adversary Kansas State. Here’s a look at the 11 prep talents and one junior college prospect who plan to sign with Kansas. Earl Bostick (OL or DL): The

newest KU football recruit, the 6-foot-6, 260-pound lineman from Barnwell, S.C., just committed this past weekend. Bostick, rated a two-star prospect by Rivals, hopes to make an impact on the interior, either on the offensive or defensive line. Antonio Cole (CB): The 6-1,

> FOOTBALL, 3C

KANSAS BASKETBALL

BROAD SHOULDERS

T

hese aren’t your older brother’s Baylor Bears. You remember them. Long, tall, sometimes spectacular big men who at other times sat back in a passive 2-3 zone as Kansas picked them apart. You remember the games in which they would fall way behind Kansas and showed no urgency in getting after it with presses or other means to shake things up, instead just fading away. Now forget them. Young coaches do improve and that can mean doing a better job of vetting the desire in players they decide to recruit, which in turn leads to a more solid winning culture passed down from veterans to younger players, etc. Scott Drew, in his 14th year at Baylor, has taken two teams to the Elite Eight, and this is his best team. The Bears made it to No. 1 in the Associated Press college basketball poll released Jan. 9, so naturally the curse of the new No. 1 dictated that they suffered their first, and to-date only, loss of the season, by 21 points at West Virginia. So ended the school’s first week atop the college basketball world. No other school had gone from unranked to No. 1 as swiftly as Baylor did by reaching the top in Week 9 of the poll. That happens when a team is greater than the sum of its parts, and the parts on this team are good, led by do-it-all, 6-foot-10 forward Johnathan Motley and stretching from clutch point guard Manu Lecomte to 7-foot center Jo LualAcuil. Drew mixes defenses, playing more man-to-man than in the past. Per kenpom.com efficiency rankings, Baylor is fifth in the nation in defense and 20th in offense, compared to KU’s rankings of 30th in defense and fifth in offense. As for an overall strength rating, kenpom.com has Baylor No. 7 in the nation with a computer-generated number of 27.10 and has Kansas No. 8 at 27.09, the closest of any two schools to each other. The Associated Press poll has Baylor No. 2 in the nation with 1,504 votes, Kansas No. 3 with 1,503, again, the closest of any two teams in the rankings. They share first place in the Big 12 with 7-1 records, playing each of the other conference teams once. So let’s break the virtual statistical tie between the tips that will tip it off today at 8 p.m. in Allen Fieldhouse by using comparative scores. In its eight Big 12 games, Kansas has a margin of plus-43. Baylor also has a plus-43 margin. KU’s 50-game Allen Fieldhouse winning streak makes Kansas the six-point favorite in Las Vegas. The Bears are 0-14 in the fieldhouse. But remember, these aren’t your older brother’s Baylor Bears.

On today’s National Signing Day, the Jayhawks hope to make another advancement in that direction, with 12 recruits expected to make their commitments to the program official. The group includes additions to KU’s offensive line, secondary, linebacking unit, receiving corps, one specialist and a highly touted running back.

Nick Krug/Journal-World Photo

KANSAS FORWARD LANDEN LUCAS, RIGHT, CATCHES A PASS INSIDE against Texas Tech forward Matthew Temple on Jan. 7 at Allen Fieldhouse.

Lucas carries huge load for Jayhawks By Matt Tait

H

mtait@ljworld.com

e’s coached him for five years, started him for part of three of those and seen him develop into an absolute rock on and off the court. But it was not until Monday’s weekly Kansas basketball press conference that Kansas coach Bill Self revealed a bit of a nickname

for senior forward Landen Lucas. “He’s like your binky or your security blanket,” Self said of KU’s 6-foot-10, 250-pound big man. “I mean, he’s a guy that no matter how bad we want to (play someone else over him and) think, you know what, if we could just get somebody else, we haven’t found anybody as good or better. He’s been good. I mean, he’s been really good.”

A starter for 48 career games, including 15 of 20 this season, Lucas’ role with the Jayhawks often has been easy to overlook. There’s nothing flashy about his game. His offense is slow and methodical and lacks the explosive element that lands on SportsCenter. And defensively, even though his ability to wall up and alter shots has turned him into one of the best big-man defenders in the country, Lucas’ in-

Free State boys prevail in 2OT By Bobby Nightengale

ability to consistently block shots into the fifth row also has kept him a little under the radar. Self’s plans for Lucas to develop into a program player when he recruited him have been well documented, and it’s possible that neither Self nor Lucas ever really saw him becoming the vital piece of the puzzle that he is today. But that time has arrived.

> LUCAS, 3C

Firebird girls fall to Olathe NW By Bobby Nightengale

bnightengale@ljworld.com

After the final horn Tuesday, Free State High boys basketball players lined up alongside their cheerleaders to sing the school’s fight song in front of their student section. For a moment, they were all smiles. Down 14 points in the first half against Olathe Northwest, the fourth-ranked team in the state, the Firebirds fought back for a double-overtime, 68-63 victory at FSHS. Mike Yoder/Journal-World Photo That included playing without junior FREE STATE’S JAY DINEEN (11) passes from the guard Garrett Luinstra (25 points) in the baseline. The Firebirds defeated Olathe NW in > BOYS, 4C double overtime Tuesday night at FSHS.

bnightengale@ljworld.com

When Free State High’s girls basketball team is playing at its best, coach Ted Juneau said it looks like “a million dollars.” That’s one of the reasons he was frustrated at the defensive inconsistency Tuesday in a 69-58 loss to Olathe Northwest at Free State. The Ravens scored on six straight possessions at the end of the first half, finishing on a 14-1 run to turn a seven-point deficit into a 36-30 lead.

> GIRLS, 4C


Sports 2

2C | LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD | WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 2017

TWO-DAY

AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE

SPORTS CALENDAR

EAST

NORTH KANSAS

AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE

TODAY • Women’s basketball at Oklahoma, NORTH 10:30 a.m. • Men’s basketball vs. Baylor, 8 p.m. THURSDAY • Softball media day at Rock Chalk Park, 1 p.m.

EAST NBA Roundup The Associated Press

AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE

Raptors 108, Pelicans 106, OT Toronto — Kyle Lowry had 33 points and 10 assists, and made the tiebreaking jumper with 4.3 seconds left in overtime as Toronto outlasted New Orleans on Tuesday night. Jonas Valanciunas added 20 points and 12 rebounds, while Lowry matched his season high from 3-point range, going 6 of 14. It was the Raptors’ third straight win over the Pelicans, and their ninth in the last 11 meetings. NEW ORLEANS (106) Cunningham 0-0 0-0 0, Hill 1-3 1-2 4, Davis 4-18 10-12 18, Holiday 13-21 1-2 30, Hield 6-9 0-0 15, Jones 6-14 0-1 12, Motiejunas 2-6 0-0 4, Galloway 1-6 2-2 4, Frazier 1-3 0-0 2, Moore 6-14 0-0 17. Totals 40-94 14-19 106. TORONTO (108) Carroll 3-10 2-2 8, Patterson 4-8 0-0 10, Valanciunas 9-17 2-2 20, Lowry 11-21 5-7 33, Powell 8-15 2-2 18, Ross 2-9 0-0 6, Siakam 2-4 0-0 4, Nogueira 3-4 1-2 7, Joseph 1-6 0-0 2, VanVleet 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 43-94 12-15 108. New Orleans 25 35 15 21 10 — 106 Toronto 23 23 31 19 12 — 108 3-Point Goals-New Orleans 12-30 (Moore 5-7, Holiday 3-5, Hield 3-5, Hill 1-3, Jones 0-1, Motiejunas 0-1, Davis 0-1, Frazier 0-2, Galloway 0-5), Toronto 10-31 (Lowry 6-14, Patterson 2-5, Ross 2-7, Powell 0-2, Carroll 0-3). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-New Orleans 47 (Davis 17), Toronto 53 (Valanciunas 12). AssistsNew Orleans 17 (Jones 4), Toronto 19 (Lowry 10). Total Fouls-New Orleans 16, Toronto 19. A-19,800 (19,800).

Rockets 105, Kings 83 Houston — Ryan Anderson had 25 points and 11 rebounds, Eric Gordon added 17 points and Houston Rockets used a big second-quarter run to beat Sacramento. Anderson shot 6 of 12 from 3-point range and Houston went 14 of 45 from behind the arc as a team. James Harden finished with 10 points, seven rebounds and eight assists, and Clint Capella had 12 points and 11 rebounds for the Rockets, who shot 45 percent. SACRAMENTO (83) Koufos 6-7 0-1 12, Cousins 5-16 5-7 16, Collison 2-10 0-0 5, Temple 1-4 0-0 3, Afflalo 3-9 2-3 9, Barnes 2-8 0-0 5, Tolliver 3-4 2-5 10, Labissiere 0-2 3-4 3, Cauley-Stein 4-10 2-2 10, Lawson 0-3 0-2 0, McLemore 1-3 0-0 2, Richardson 3-10 1-2 8. Totals 30-86 15-26 83. HOUSTON (105) Ariza 2-6 2-2 7, Anderson 7-14 5-8 25, Capela 5-8 2-5 12, Beverley 2-11 0-0 5, Harden 3-9 4-4 10, Dekker 1-4 0-0 3, Brewer 2-3 0-0 5, Harrell 3-3 1-2 7, Hilario 5-7 1-1 11, Brown 0-2 0-0 0, Ennis 1-2 0-0 3, Gordon 7-15 0-0 17, McDaniels 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 38-85 15-22 105. Sacramento 24 11 22 26 — 83 Houston 29 25 28 23 — 105

How former Jayhawks fared

EAST

Darrell Arthur, Denver Late game.

SOUTH

SOUTH

BALTIMORE ORIOLES

AL CENTRAL

• Football signing day, 2:45 p.m. • Bowling at St. James triangular, 3 p.m. • Girls basketball at Olathe East, WEST 7 p.m.

Ben McLemore, Sacramento Min: 12. Pts: 2. Reb: 1. Ast: 4. BOSTON RED SOX

NEW YORK YANKEES

TAMPA BAY RAYS

AL EAST

SOUTH

CHICAGO WHITE SOX

AL WEST

CLEVELAND INDIANS

THURSDAY • Girls/boys basketball vs. Troy, WEST 6 p.m.

DETROIT TIGERS

KANSAS CITY ROYALS

BOSTON RED SOX

LOS ANGELES ANGELS OF ANAHEIM

CHICAGO WHITE SOX

BALTIMORE ORIOLES

MLB AL LOGOS 032712: 2012 American RED various SOX League team logos; BOSTON stand-alone; sizes; staff; ETA 4 p.m.

AL WEST

TAMPA BAY RAYS

SEATTLE MARINERS

TEXAS RANGERS

TODAY • Women/men’s basketball vs. Central Christian, 5:30 p.m.

DETROIT TIGERS

CLEVELAND INDIANS

These logos are provided to you for use in an editorial news context only. NEW YORK YANKEES TAMPA Other uses, including as a linking device on a Web site, or in an BAY RAYS advertising or promotional piece, may violate this entity’s trademark or other intellectual property rights, and may violate your agreement with AP.

AFC TEAM LOGOS 081312: Helmet and team logos forAL the AFC teams; various sizes; stand-alone; staff; ETA 5 p.m. CENTRAL

KANSAS CITY ROYALS

TORONTO BLUE JAYS

Spurs 108, Thunder 94 San Antonio — Kawhi Leonard scored 36 points and San Antonio SPORTS ON TV held Russell Westbrook scoreless AL WEST in the fourth quarter for a victory TODAY AFC TEAM LOGOS 081312: Helmet and team logos over for theOklahoma AFC teams;City. various sizes; stand-alone; staff; ETA 5 p.m. Westbrook had 27 points, 14 College Basketball Time Net Cable 5:30 p.m. BTN 147, 237 assists and six rebounds in 34 Penn St. at Indiana Syracuse at N.C. St. 6 p.m. ESPN2 34, 234 minutes, but was shut out after Nick Wass/AP Photo scoring 14 points in the third. Cent. Fla. at Houston 6 p.m. ESPNU 35, 235 WASHINGTON WIZARDS FORWARD MARKIEFF MORRIS (5) goes to the Rookie forward Domantas Sa- George Mason at St. Louis 6 p.m. FSN 36, 236 AFC TEAM 081312: Helmet andHernangomez team logos for the AFC basket against NewLOGOS York Knicks center Willy (14), of teams; various sizes; stand-alone; staff; ETA 5 p.m. bonis matched a season high Villanova at Providence 6 p.m. FS1 150, 227 Spain, during the second half of an NBA basketball game Tuesday in with 13 rebounds and had 13 Marquette at St. John’s 6 p.m. FS2 153 Washington. The Wizards won 117-101. points. The Thunder’s bench Alabama at Arkansas 6 p.m. SEC 157 was outscored 32-22. TCU at Kansas St. 6:30 p.m. ESPNE 140, 231 3-Point Goals-Sacramento 8-29 (Tolliver 2-3, and won for the 11th time in 13 N’western at Purdue 7:30 p.m. BTN 147, 237 Collison 1-2, Temple 1-3, Afflalo 1-4, Richardson OKLAHOMA CITY (94) 1-4, Cousins 1-4, Barnes 1-5, Cauley-Stein 0-1, games. Beal was 12 of 18 from 8 p.m. ESPN2 34, 234 Sabonis 5-11 1-2 13, Adams 7-13 2-4 16, Baylor at Kansas Lawson 0-1, McLemore 0-2), Houston 14-45 the floor, while Anthony was 10 Westbrook 7-17 10-10 27, Roberson 0-4 1-2 1, Texas Tech at Texas 8 p.m. ESPNU 35, 235 (Anderson 6-12, Gordon 3-10, Brewer 1-1, Ennis Oladipo 5-12 4-4 15, Grant 1-2 1-2 3, Lauvergne 1-2, Dekker 1-3, Ariza 1-4, Beverley 1-6, Brown of 17 for 26 points. 2-8 0-0 4, Payne 0-4 2-2 2, Christon 0-2 2-2 2, N. Iowa at Illinois St. 8 p.m. FSN 36, 236 LOS ANGELES ANGELS OF ANAHEIM

CHICAGO WHITE SOX

CLEVELAND INDIANS

OAKLAND ATHLETICS

LOS ANGELES ANGELS OF ANAHEIM

OAKLAND ATHLETICS

MLB AL LOGOS 032712: 2012 American League team logos; stand-alone; various sizes; staff; ETA 4 p.m.

0-2, Harden 0-5). Fouled Out-None. ReboundsSacramento 45 (Barnes 11), Houston 60 (Capela, Anderson 11). Assists-Sacramento 22 (Cousins 5), Houston 28 (Harden 8). Total Fouls-Sacramento 17, Houston 24. A-15,187 (18,055).

Wizards 117, Knicks 101 Washington — Bradley Beal went shot for shot with Carmelo Anthony and then some as Washington blew out New York to move into a tie for first place in the Southeast Division. Beal scored 28 points, Markieff Morris had 24 and John Wall added 15 points and 13 assists as the Wizards rolled to their fifth victory in a row

NEW YORK (101) Anthony 10-17 5-5 26, Hernangomez 5-12 5-5 15, Noah 0-1 0-0 0, Jennings 5-16 9-11 21, Lee 2-10 0-0 5, Kuzminskas 0-5 1-2 1, O’Quinn 6-10 1-1 13, N’dour 3-5 0-0 7, Plumlee 0-0 0-0 0, Holiday 1-9 3-4 5, Vujacic 0-2 3-4 3, Baker 2-6 1-3 5. Totals 34-93 28-35 101. WASHINGTON (117) Porter 5-9 0-1 10, Morris 9-14 4-4 24, Gortat 7-7 1-1 15, Wall 6-18 2-3 15, Beal 12-18 2-2 28, Oubre 5-7 2-2 14, Nicholson 0-0 1-2 1, Smith 1-2 0-0 2, Ochefu 0-1 0-0 0, Burke 2-6 0-0 4, Satoransky 2-5 0-0 4, McClellan 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 49-88 12-15 117. New York 28 26 22 25 — 101 Washington 28 31 32 26 — 117 3-Point Goals_New York 5-24 (Jennings 2-6, N’dour 1-2, Anthony 1-3, Lee 1-5, Vujacic 0-1, Baker 0-1, Kuzminskas 0-2, Holiday 0-4), Washington 7-22 (Oubre 2-4, Morris 2-5, Beal 2-6, Wall 1-2, Burke 0-1, Smith 0-1, Porter 0-3). Fouled Out_None. Rebounds_New York 51 (Hernangomez 14), Washington 46 (Gortat, Morris 10). Assists_New York 18 (Hernangomez 4), Washington 27 (Wall 13). Total Fouls_New York 17, Washington 25. A_16,683 (20,356).

Halftime-Maryland

42-36.

3-Point

0-4). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-Creighton 27 (Patton 7), Butler 32 (Martin 8). AssistsCreighton 19 (Clement 6), Butler 9 (Chrabascz 4). Total Fouls-Creighton 15, Butler 16. A-9,100 (9,100).

TEXAS RANGERS

MINNESOTA TWINS

These logos are provided to you for use in an editorial news context only. Other uses, including as a linking device on a Web site, or in an advertising or promotional piece, may violate this entity’s trademark or other intellectual property rights, and may violate your agreement with AP.

SEATTLE MARINERS

TEXAS RANGERS

These logos are provided to you for use in an editorial news context only. Other uses, including as a linking device on a Web site, or in an advertising or promotional piece, may violate this entity’s trademark or other intellectual property rights, and may violate your agreement with AP.

Morrow 3-12 4-4 11. Totals 30-85 27-32 94. SAN ANTONIO (108) Leonard 13-26 9-11 36, Aldridge 8-15 8-9 25, Dedmon 2-3 2-2 6, Parker 0-3 3-4 3, Green 2-6 0-0 6, Bertans 1-6 0-1 2, Anderson 0-0 0-0 0, Lee 3-7 1-2 7, Anthony 0-0 0-0 0, Murray 0-1 0-0 0, Mills 2-4 2-2 8, Simmons 3-9 1-4 7, Ginobili 3-6 1-3 8. Totals 37-86 27-38 108. Oklahoma City 17 25 33 19 — 94 San Antonio 31 21 27 29 — 108 3-Point Goals-Oklahoma City 7-28 (Westbrook 3-7, Sabonis 2-4, Oladipo 1-3, Morrow 1-6, Lauvergne 0-1, Payne 0-3, Roberson 0-4), San Antonio 7-21 (Mills 2-2, Green 2-5, Aldridge 1-2, Ginobili 1-3, Leonard 1-4, Parker 0-1, Bertans 0-4). Fouled OutNone. Rebounds-Oklahoma City 50 (Adams 12), San Antonio 50 (Leonard, Dedmon 8). Assists-Oklahoma City 21 (Westbrook 14), San Antonio 16 (Leonard, Parker, Ginobili 4). Total Fouls-Oklahoma City 30, San Antonio 25. Technicals-Oklahoma City defensive three second, Oklahoma City team, Oklahoma City coach Billy Donovan.

Goals-

0-0 6, Jordan 0-0 0-0 0, Tate 1-2 0-0 2. Totals 16-58 6-9 43. Halftime-Wisconsin 33-20. 3-Point GoalsWisconsin 7-23 (Iverson 2-2, Showalter 2-4, Hayes 1-4, Brown 1-5, Koenig 1-6, J.Hill 0-1, Trice 0-1), Illinois 5-21 (Coleman-Lands 2-7, M.Hill 2-8, Abrams 1-2, Finke 0-1, Black 0-1, Nichols 0-2). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-Wisconsin 42 (Happ 13), Illinois 30 (Coleman-Lands, Finke, Morgan, Lucas 4). Assists-Wisconsin 10 (Koenig 3), Illinois 7 (M.Hill, Morgan, Tate 2). Total FoulsWisconsin 12, Illinois 15. A-12,334 (15,500).

GEORGIA (13-9) Ogbeide 7-9 4-7 18, Maten 8-15 5-9 22, Frazier 8-21 4-5 23, Parker 2-6 0-0 4, Jackson 0-0 1-2 1, Edwards 1-1 0-0 2, Diatta 1-2 0-0 2, Wilridge 0-0 0-0 0, Geno 0-0 0-0 0, Harris 3-5 1-1 9, Crump 0-2 0-0 0. Totals 30-61 15-24 81. KENTUCKY (18-4) Humphries 2-5 0-0 4, Willis 1-4 0-0 3, Adebayo 4-6 4-6 12, Monk 10-21 10-12 37, Briscoe 6-15 11-15 23, Gabriel 3-8 0-1 7, Wynyard 0-0 0-0 0, Hawkins 1-5 2-2 4. Totals 27-64 27-36 90. Halftime_29-29. End Of Regulation_Tied 76. 3-Point Goals_Georgia 6-10 (Frazier 3-4, Harris 2-2, Maten 1-1, Parker 0-1, Diatta 0-1, Crump 0-1), Kentucky 9-21 (Monk 7-11, Gabriel 1-2, Willis 1-4, Hawkins 0-2, Briscoe 0-2). Fouled Out_Frazier, Parker. Rebounds_Georgia 29 (Ogbeide 13), Kentucky 40 (Briscoe 11). Assists_Georgia 15 (Frazier, Maten 5), Kentucky 14 (Briscoe 8). Total Fouls_Georgia 28, Kentucky 22. A_23,814 (23,500).

Big 12 No. 7 West Virginia 85, Iowa St. 72 Ames, Iowa — Nathan Adrian scored a career-high 23 points and grabbed 11 rebounds as No. 7 West Virginia overwhelmed Iowa State for its third straight win. WEST VIRGINIA (18-4) Macon 0-2 0-0 0, Ahmad 5-10 3-3 14, Adrian 7-10 7-8 23, J.Carter 2-6 0-0 4, Miles 3-10 0-0 9, Watkins 0-0 0-0 0, Konate 2-3 0-0 4, West 0-2 0-0 0, Phillip 4-7 5-7 15, Myers 3-6 2-2 8, Harler 0-0 0-0 0, Bolden 3-4 0-0 8. Totals 29-60 17-20 85. IOWA ST. (13-8) Holden 1-2 2-2 4, Morris 4-14 0-0 8, Burton 4-9 3-5 11, Thomas 6-8 2-2 19, Mitrou-Long 4-13 0-0 10, Bowie 0-1 0-0 0, Young 0-1 0-0 0, Jackson 3-8 2-2 11, Weiler-Babb 1-2 7-8 9. Totals 23-58 16-19 72. Halftime-West Virginia 44-40. 3-Point GoalsWest Virginia 10-21 (Miles 3-6, Adrian 2-3, Phillip 2-3, Bolden 2-3, Ahmad 1-2, J.Carter 0-2, West 0-2), Iowa St. 10-26 (Thomas 5-6, Jackson 3-7, Mitrou-Long 2-7, Weiler-Babb 0-1, Morris 0-2, Burton 0-3). Fouled Out-MitrouLong. Rebounds-West Virginia 31 (Adrian 11), Iowa St. 32 (Morris, Thomas 7). Assists-West Virginia 13 (J.Carter 4), Iowa St. 17 (Burton 10). Total Fouls-West Virginia 16, Iowa St. 20. A-14,384 (14,384).

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KANSAS CITY ROYALS

Seton Hall at Xavier S. Carolina at LSU E. Carolina at SMU USC at Washington

8 p.m. FS1 150, 227 8 p.m. SEC 157 8:30 p.m. ESPNE 140, 231 10 p.m. ESPNU 35, 235

College Football KU signing day sp.

Time Net Cable 11 a.m. TWCSC 37, 226

Women’s Basketball Time Net Cable Kansas at Oklahoma 10:30 a.m. FSN 36, 236 FCSC 145 Fordham at George Wash. 11 a.m. NBCSN 38, 238 KU at OU replay 1 p.m. FCS 146 Kansas St. at Texas Tech 6:30 p.m. FCSC 145 Texas at Okla. St. 7 p.m. FCS 146 Pro Basketball Time Net Cable T’wolves at Cavaliers 6 p.m. ESPN 33, 233 Bulls at Thunder 8:30 p.m. ESPN 33, 233

No. 17 Maryland 77, Ohio St. 71 Columbus, Ohio — Justin Jackson had 22 points and 12 rebounds as No. 17 Maryland held off Ohio State down the No. 8 Kentucky 90, stretch to win. Georgia 81, OT Lexington, Ky. — Malik Monk MARYLAND (20-2) J.Jackson 8-12 2-2 22, Dodd 2-5 1-2 5, Trimble made two 3-pointers and scored 5-13 2-2 13, Cowan 4-8 3-4 11, Huerter 3-7 1-2 9, Bender 0-2 2-2 2, Cekovsky 2-3 0-0 4, Gill 0-0 1-2 eight of 37 points in overtime, 1, Brantley 1-2 0-0 3, Nickens 2-3 1-1 7. Totals and Bam Adebayo and Domi27-55 13-17 77. No. 22 Creighton 76, nique Hawkins added baskets OHIO ST. (13-10) Loving 6-12 2-2 18, Tate 7-10 6-8 20, Potter to help No. 8 Kentucky outlast No. 16 Butler 67 0-0 0, Lyle 4-6 1-2 9, Williams 4-10 0-0 Georgia and end a two-game losIndianapolis — Creighton 0-1 10, Wesson 0-1 0-0 0, Thompson 4-10 1-2 9, spent the last two weeks look- C.Jackson 1-4 2-3 5. Totals 26-54 12-17 71. ing streak.

b-DENVER.......................OFF (OFF).....................Memphis LA Clippers.......................4 (221).........................PHOENIX OKLAHOMA CITY.........3 1/2 (207)......................Chicago GOLDEN ST......................14 (223)......................Charlotte a-Boston Guard A. Bradley is questionable. b-Denver Center N. Jokic is questionable. College Basketball Favorite................... Points............... Underdog INDIANA...............................7 1/2.............................Penn St George Mason..................... 6...................... SAINT LOUIS Marquette..........................4 1/2...................... ST. JOHN’S Wichita St.......................... 16 1/2..............................DRAKE INDIANA ST............................ 3...........................Evansville ARKANSAS..........................4 1/2.......................... Alabama VA COMMONWEALTH......... 11...........................Richmond LA SALLE.............................5 1/2..............Massachusetts

SEATTLE MARINERS

DETROIT TIGERS

MLB AL LOGOS 032712: 2012 American League team logos; stand-alone; various sizes; staff; ETA 4 p.m.

CLEMSON.............................8 1/2................. Georgia Tech HOUSTON............................6 1/2..............Central Florida Villanova................................ 9......................PROVIDENCE NORTH CAROLINA ST..........1..............................Syracuse KANSAS ST................ 6 1/2.........................Tcu SOUTHERN ILLINOIS........... 9................................Bradley VIRGINIA............................. 12 1/2.................Virginia Tech MIAMI-FLORIDA.................2 1/2.........................Florida St St. Bonaventure...............7 1/2.......................DUQUESNE PURDUE...............................8 1/2................Northwestern Cincinnati.............................. 8.................................. TULSA ILLINOIS ST.........................9 1/2...............Northern Iowa South Carolina.................10 1/2....................................LSU Ucla..........................................15............. WASHINGTON ST TEXAS...........................1.................Texas Tech KANSAS........................ 6........................ Baylor

XAVIER.................................... 7.......................... Seton Hall Nevada................................4 1/2...........................UTAH ST SMU.........................................20................... East Carolina CS NORTHRIDGE................3 1/2...............Long Beach St FRESNO ST..........................9 1/2..........................Air Force New Mexico.......................... 2.................................... UNLV Southern Cal.....................2 1/2................. WASHINGTON Added Games North Dakota St.................. 2.................................... IUPUI NEBRASKA OMAHA..........2 1/2.................South Dakota JACKSONVILLE ST............5 1/2................SE Missouri St EASTERN KENTUCKY.......6 1/2....................Austin Peay SOUTH DAKOTA ST............. 8................Western Illinois TENNESSEE TECH..............1 1/2........Tennessee Martin Home Team in CAPS (c) TRIBUNE CONTENT AGENCY, LLC

TORONTO BLUE

HASKELL

Thomas Robinson, L.A. Lakers OAKLAND ATHLETICS

MINNESOTA TWINS

NEW YORK YANKEES

Kelly Oubre Jr., Washington AL CENTRAL Min: 28. Pts: 14. Reb: 2. Ast: 0.

AL EAST

TORONTO BLUE JAYS

SEABURY ACADEMY

Markieff Morris, Washington Min: 34. Pts: 24. Reb: 10. Ast: 2. BALTIMORE ORIOLES

ing for ways to replace their Maryland 10-26 (J.Jackson 4-7, Nickens 2-2, 2-5, Brantley 1-2, Trimble 1-6, Cowan 0-4), star point guard. Coach Doug Huerter Ohio St. 7-17 (Loving 4-5, Williams 2-6, C.Jackson McDermott found the perfect 1-3, Tate 0-1, Wesson 0-1, Potter 0-1). Fouled OutTop 25 None. Rebounds-Maryland 30 (J.Jackson 12), Ohio solution. 26 (Thompson 9). Assists-Maryland 15 (Cowan No. 12 North Carolina 80, Justin Patton, Marcus Foster St. 5), Ohio St. 17 (Lyle 6). Total Fouls-Maryland 16, Pittsburgh 78 and Khyri Thomas all scored 15 Ohio St. 15. A-12,887 (18,809). Chapel Hill, N.C. — No. 12 points and No. 22 Creighton reNorth Carolina found itself in an gained its 3-point shooting touch No. 10 Wisconsin 57, Illinois 43 Champaign, Ill. — Ethan unexpected fight down the stretch as it ran away from No. 16 Butler. Happ scored 14 points to lead against the Atlantic Coast ConferCREIGHTON (20-3) Wisconsin. ence’s last-place team. Huff 3-7 0-0 9, Patton 7-10 0-0 15, Mintz 3-4 0-0 Wisconsin (19-3, 8-1 Big Ten) Coach Roy Williams and 8, Thomas 5-8 1-2 15, Foster 6-14 1-2 15, Hegner the Tar Heels didn’t panic. In- 0-2 0-0 0, Hanson 3-4 0-0 6, Zierden 1-1 2-2 5, started the game with a 16-2 1-2 1-3 3. Totals 29-52 5-9 76. run and never trailed. stead they embraced the situa- Clement BUTLER (18-5) Wideman 3-5 2-2 8, Martin 5-12 0-0 11, tion, and it led to a gritty vic3-13 0-0 6, Lewis 1-2 2-2 4, Baldwin WISCONSIN (19-3) tory that might not impress Chrabascz Hayes 4-11 2-4 11, Happ 7-11 0-3 14, Brown 6-14 0-0 14, Fowler 1-3 0-1 3, Woodson 3-4 0-0 8, very many people beyond their Savage 2-7 2-2 6, Baddley 2-3 0-0 4, McDermott 2-7 0-0 5, Koenig 4-13 0-0 9, Showalter 3-6 0-0 8, Thomas 1-2 0-0 2, Moesch 0-1 0-0 0, J.Hill 0-1 1-3 0-0 3. Totals 27-66 6-7 67. locker room. Halftime-Creighton 37-33. 3-Point Goals- 0-0 0, Trice 1-3 0-0 2, Iverson 2-4 0-2 6. Totals North Carolina held on to Creighton 13-21 (Thomas 4-5, Huff 3-4, Mintz 24-59 2-9 57. beat Pittsburgh on Tuesday 2-2, Foster 2-6, Zierden 1-1, Patton 1-1, Hegner ILLINOIS (13-10) Black 2-8 3-3 7, Morgan 4-8 2-2 10, M.Hill 4-14 Butler 7-27 (Woodson 2-3, Baldwin 2-6, night behind 20 points from 0-2), Fowler 1-3, McDermott 1-3, Martin 1-5, Lewis 0-0 10, Lucas 0-4 0-0 0, Abrams 1-2 1-2 4, Finke Justin Jackson. 0-1, Savage 0-1, Baddley 0-1, Chrabascz 0-5 0-0 0, Nichols 2-6 0-2 4, Coleman-Lands 2-9

HIGH SCHOOLS HUB:

LAWRENCE HIGH WEST TODAY

Nick Collison, Oklahoma City Did not play (coach’s decision).

AL EAST

The Associated Press

NFL Favorite.............. Points (O/U).......... Underdog Sunday Super Bowl 51 NRG Stadium-Houston, TX. New England....................3 (59)............................ Atlanta NBA Favorite.............. Points (O/U).......... Underdog CLEVELAND......................7 (213).....................Minnesota Indiana...........................2 1/2 (211.5)..................ORLANDO Atlanta...............................2 (203).............................MIAMI New York...................... 2 1/2 (223).................BROOKLYN DETROIT.............................6 (213).................New Orleans a-BOSTON......................OFF (OFF).......................Toronto DALLAS..............................6 (202)................ Philadelphia UTAH.................................8 (198.5)...................Milwaukee

TODAY • Football signing day, 2:45 p.m.

Tarik Black, L.A. Lakers Late game.

COLLEGE BASKETBALL ROUNDUP

PITTSBURGH (12-10) Jeter 1-3 0-0 2, Young 7-11 3-3 19, Artis 6-15 2-2 17, Johnson 9-13 0-0 24, Jones 5-6 0-0 12, Nix 1-2 0-0 2, Kithcart 0-0 0-0 0, Wilson 1-4 0-0 2. Totals 30-54 5-5 78. NORTH CAROLINA (20-4) Meeks 5-10 0-0 10, Hicks 6-8 6-8 18, Jackson 7-16 3-4 20, Berry 6-12 2-3 19, Williams 1-3 0-0 2, Maye 3-3 0-0 7, Bradley 1-2 0-1 2, Britt 0-4 2-3 2, Robinson 0-0 0-0 0, Woods 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 29-58 13-19 80. Halftime-North Carolina 42-36. 3-Point Goals-Pittsburgh 13-29 (Johnson 6-9, Artis 3-10, Jones 2-3, Young 2-4, Wilson 0-1, Jeter 0-2), North Carolina 9-24 (Berry 5-9, Jackson 3-9, Maye 1-1, Williams 0-2, Britt 0-3). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-Pittsburgh 21 (Young 10), North Carolina 27 (Hicks 8). AssistsPittsburgh 17 (Artis 5), North Carolina 17 (Britt 4). Total Fouls-Pittsburgh 16, North Carolina 13. A-18,438 (21,750).

NORTH FREE STATE HIGH

Soccer Man United vs. Hull

Time Net Cable 1:55 p.m. NBCSN 38, 238

Pro Hockey Bruins at Capitals Avalanche at Kings

Time Net Cable 7 p.m. NBCSN 38, 238 9:30 p.m. NBCSN 38, 238

Golf Dubai Desert Classic

Time Net Cable 10 p.m. GOLF 156, 289

THURSDAY NBA Basketball

Time

Hawks at Rockets Warriors at Clippers

7 p.m. TNT 9:30 p.m. TNT

Net Cable

College Basketball

Time

45, 245 45, 245

Net Cable

Baylor at Kansas replay 12 a.m. Baylor at Kansas replay 3 a.m. Baylor at Kansas replay 6 a.m. Baylor at Kansas replay 9 a.m. Baylor at Kansas replay 12 p.m. Michigan St. at Neb. 6 p.m. Missouri at Fla. 6 p.m. Bryant at Mount St. Mary’s 6 p.m. Memphis at S. Fla. 6 p.m. Ariz. at Oregon St. 8 p.m. Belmont at Murray St. 8 p.m. Hawaii Pac. at Calif. Baptist 9 p.m. Gonzaga at BYU 10 p.m. St. Mary’s (Cal) at Pacific 10 p.m. Ariz. St. at Oregon 10 p.m.

TWCSC 37, 226 TWCSC 37, 226 TWCSC 37, 226 TWCSC 37, 226 TWCSC 37, 226 ESPN 33, 233 ESPN2 34, 234 ESPNU 35, 235 ESPNE. 140, 231 ESPN2 34, 234 ESPNU 35, 235 FCSC 145 ESPN2 34, 234 ESPNU 35, 235 FS1 150, 227

Golf

Time

Net Cable

Dubai Desert Classic Phoenix Open

5:30 a.m. GOLF 156, 289 2 p.m. GOLF 156, 289

Women’s Basketball Time

Net Cable

Kan. at Okla. replay 3 a.m. FCSC Indiana at Michigan St. 5 p.m. BTN Georgia Tech at Virginia 6 p.m. FSN+ S. Carolina at Kentucky 6 p.m. SECN Maryland at Purdue 7 p.m. BTN Idaho St. at North. Ariz. 7:30 p.m. FCS Mississ. St. at Auburn 8 p.m. SECN NHL Hockey

Time

145 147, 170, 171, 237 172 157 147, 170, 171, 237 146 157

Net Cable

Rangers at Sabres 6:30 p.m. NBCSN 38, 238 Maple Leafs at Blues 8 p.m. FSN 36, 236 Boxing

Time

Net Cable

Vasquez-Collazo

7 p.m.

FS1

150, 227

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MINNESOTA TW


SPORTS

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Football

| 3C

No. 3 Kansas Jayhawks (19-2 overall, 7-1 Big 12) vs. No. 2 Baylor Bears (20-1 overall, 7-1 Big 12)

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C

190-pound corner’s standout sophomore season at Highland Community College netted Cole a three-star rating and reported offers from Iowa State and Minnesota, as well. With Kansas losing three starters in the secondary, Cole’s experience could prove useful. Jay Dineen (LB): A high school playmaker right in KU’s back yard, the twostar Free State linebacker received interest from other college programs. Dineen, though, opted to join some linebackers he knows well: his older brother, Joe, and Keith Loneker Jr. Both played at FSHS, as did two of Jay’s former prep teammates, KU’s Bryce Torneden and Sam Skwarlo. Joey Gilbertson (OL): The 6-4, 290-pound offensive tackle from Wichita Northwest intrigued KU O-line coach Zach Yenser with the way he fires off the ball on snaps. Gilbert, a twostar prospect, committed to KU back in June of 2016, after attending the Jayhawks’ Friday Night Lights camp. Quan Hampton (WR): His measurements read 5-8, 165 pounds, but this three-star receiver from Texarkana, Texas, can sky. With a 40-inch vertical, Hampton, a prep basketball player, as well, possesses the athleticism to make up for his relative lack of size on the football field. Liam Jones (K): A two-star specialist from Chocktaw, Okla., Jones could end up playing a factor in KU’s kicking game immediately, with Matthew Wyman’s days of handling kickoffs, extra points and field goals through. Travis Jordan (WR/ athlete): One of the first Class of 2017 recruits to get on board with Beaty and Kansas, the threestar prep from Marrero, La., committed nearly 10 months ago. Listed at 6-1, 185 pounds, the threestar receiver was the first prospect landed by running backs coach Tony Hull. Cooper Root (LB): One of four Sunflower State recruits on KU’s signing day list, the two-star linebacker from Wichita Collegiate led his team with 77 total tackles as a senior. Root, like Jay Dineen, hopes to impact a linebacking unit that loses Marcquis Roberts and Courtney Arnick. Kenyon Tabor (WR): A three-star, in-state prospect who also had an offer from K-State, the Derby receiver helped lead his team to a Class 6A state championship. At 6-4, 215 pounds, Tabor could have the physical tools to reinforce an already strong group of KU receivers. Robert Topps (CB): The idea of playing at KU for defensive coordinator Clint Bowen and trying to replicate the success of former Bowen pupil Aqib Talib was enough to inspire the 6-2, 185-pound corner to join the Jayhawks. A threestar recruit from Chicago, Topps received offers from 15 other Division I programs. Dominic Williams (RB): Way back in September of 2015, the Frisco, Texas, running back became the first member of this year’s class. And, according to his four-star status, the 5-9, 186-pound Williams is the man most capable of impacting KU’s on-field product soon. In the previous two recruiting classes, only safety Mike Lee earned four stars. Takulve Williams (WR): A two-star New Orleans receiver, Takulve Williams (5-11, 180), like Jordan, decided to leave Louisiana for the midwest after hearing Hull’s recruiting pitch.

Wednesday, February 1, 2017

8 p.m. today, Allen Fieldhouse • TV: ESPN (cable channels 33, 233) • Radio: IMG Jayhawk Radio Network. Log on to KUsports.com for our live game blog coverage and follow the KUsports.com staff on Twitter: @KUSports @mctait @TomKeeganLJW @bentonasmith & @nightengalejr

1 2 3 KEYS FOR KANSAS

Gotta score 70 (or more)

Get in the zone

Mental toughness

Baylor’s seven Big 12 victories all had one thing in common — the Bears’ opponent did not reach the 70-point mark when the final horn sounded. Kansas, which enters the game averaging 84.3 points per game, has shown no problem scoring at home this season and tends to play at its best when running the floor, firing away from 3-point range and putting points on the board. Doing so against Baylor, which leads the Big 12 in scoring defense (61.1 points per game against, tied for 7th nationally), will be among the Jayhawks’ biggest challenges this season. “A lot of times teams have an identity,” KU coach Bill Self said Monday. “We’re still trying to find ours, but their team identity is they don’t let people score. That is what they do. So we’re going to have to run really good offense.” Baylor’s lone Big 12 loss came against West Virginia, which dropped 89 points on the Bears. And BU’s close call at Ole Miss in the SEC/Big 12 Challenge last weekend saw Mississippi reach 75 points.

Given the fact that the Jayhawks have played some form of zone defense in the past two games, it seems likely that Kansas could make it three in a row against Baylor. Whether that’s a traditional 2-3 zone, something more gimmicky, like a box-and-one or triangle-andtwo, or even some sort of match-up zone that shows different looks and aims to confuse the offense, the Jayhawks’ ability to change defenses and avoid relying too heavily on their preferred man-to-man D figures to be a factor in this one. It may only be a few possessions here and there and it may come only if the Jayhawks get behind and need to find a spark to change things up the way they did with the 2-3 zone at Kentucky. Either way, KU has proven that it is both willing and able to manage playing a variety of zone defenses and in games as big as this one, the ability to shift to zone to protect against foul trouble and eliminate the effects of fatigue could be an advantage for the ever-evolving Jayhawks.

Kansas big man Landen Lucas did a masterful job of slowing down and standing up to Kentucky freshman Bam Adebayo during the Jayhawks’ victory over the Wildcats last weekend. His reward? An upcoming battle with yet another ultra-talented big man in Baylor’s Johnathan Motley. Motley, who leads the Big 12 in offensive and defensive rebounding and ranks fifth in the conference in scoring (16.2 points per game), brings an entirely different skill set to the table than Adebayo. Gifted in more ways than one, Motley will force Lucas to play both in the paint and away from the basket and his ability to hold up — both in terms of foul trouble and fatigue — could go a long way toward determining the outcome of this Big 12 showdown. “Anybody that has had games where he’s had 30 (points) and 20 (rebounds) in a game tells you how talented he is,” Self said. “That’s hard to do. But he can score. He can rebound. He can do a lot of different things, and he can face and shoot. He’s a great passer. And certainly he can score with his back to the basket. It’ll be a big challenge for Landen and our other big guys.” — Matt Tait

MEGA MATCHUP

JAYHAWK PULSE

Johnathan Motley vs. Landen Lucas

It’s rare that the game after Kansas-Kentucky can have more meaning and more impact on the KU faithful, but it’s possible that this one will. Mired in a stretch of big, high-profile intense games, the Jayhawks are back in Allen Fieldhouse for the first time in nearly two weeks and will be playing for their familiar spot in the Big 12 driver’s seat. That alone makes this a big one. But we’ve seen supposed big games between Kansas and Baylor turn into duds before. What makes this one bigger is the fact that it’s just the fourth Top 5 showdown at Allen Fieldhouse in the Self era and the Bears are just the eighth Top 5 team to come into Lawrence during that same time. The three other Top 5 clashes during that stretch — all Kansas victories — include: No. 2 KU knocking off No. 5 K-State in 2010; the final Border War game with Missouri in 2012; and last season’s triple-overtime thriller with Oklahoma. The belief within the program is that last weekend’s blue-blood battle in the Bluegrass State was the perfect primer for another big time Big 12 battle. “I think it’s good to play a good team like Kentucky to get prepared for Baylor,” KU senior Frank Mason III said. “Even though they play different, I think it’s still great that we got a chance to go against the size that Kentucky has and we (got) to experience that before we actually play Baylor.”

Kansas big man Landen Lucas did a masterful job of slowing down and standing up to Kentucky freshman Bam Adebayo during the Jayhawks’ victory over the Wildcats last weekend. His reward? An upcoming battle with yet another ultra-talented big man in Baylor’s Johnathan Motley. Motley, who leads the Big 12 in offensive and defensive rebounding and ranks fifth in the conference in scoring (16.2 points per game), brings an entirely different skill set to the table than Adebayo. Gifted in more ways than one, Motley will force Lucas to play both in the paint and away from the basket and his ability to hold up — both in terms of foul trouble and fatigue — could go a long way toward determining the outcome of this Big 12 showdown. “Anybody that has had games where he’s had 30 (points) and 20 (rebounds) in a game tells you how talented he is,” Self said. “That’s hard to do. But he can score. He can rebound. He can do a lot of different things, and he can face and shoot. He’s a great passer. And certainly he can score with his back to the basket. It’ll be a big challenge for Landen and our other big guys.”

PROBABLE STARTERS No. 3 KANSAS G – Frank Mason III, 5-11, 190, Sr. G – Devonté Graham, 6-2, 185, Jr. G – Josh Jackson, 6-8, 207, Fr. G – Sviatoslav Mykhailiuk, 6-8, 205, Jr. F – Landen Lucas, 6-10, 250, Sr.

Lucas CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C

It’s going on two years now. And it will be as important as ever at Allen Fieldhouse tonight, when Lucas and the third-ranked Jayhawks play host to No. 2 Baylor at 8 p.m., with the winner moving into sole-possession of first place in the Big 12 Conference. “Landen is a guy that, when we recruited him, we thought could be a rotation guy in time,” Self reiterated on Monday. “I talked to his dad, I talked to Landen (and said), we’ll redshirt him freshman year, won’t play him. Maybe by the time the end of his sophomore year he can be in the rotation. Well, by the end of his sophomore year, he was a starter, and then last year he wasn’t a starter. We were looking kind of for something else, and what did we come back to? Landen. This year he was starting, and then we kind of went a different direction because we didn’t think he was playing very well, and what did we come back to? Landen. “I mean that with all sincerity and seriousness and in a complimentary way towards Landen, but when you coach at a place like Kansas or Duke or North Carolina or Kentucky, you’re always thinking recruit

these high, high-level guys, and you want to do that. But sometimes when you recruit high, high-level guys, people forget they’ve still got to beat out somebody that’s damned good, that’s been here and experienced and that kind of stuff.” Lucas is that guy. And even though he operates with an even-keeled demeanor and is not the type of player who needs the extra pat on the back or super-sized headlines to do his job, Self said it was worth noting that Lucas has been one of the more under-appreciated Jayhawks to play in the Big 12 during recent years. “I told our guys after the (Kentucky) game, I said, ‘You know what, if I tell you I’m proud of you, you’ll mistake kindness for softness, so I’m not going to do it, OK?,’” Self began. “It’s the same way with him. I probably don’t tell him as much, but he’s as appreciated as any kid that we’ve ever had here. He’s smart. He’s so good with (the media). He’s intelligent. He has done everything we’ve asked him to do, even when the fan base may get onto him because he can’t finish as well and all this stuff, but he just keeps coming back.” On a team with a national-player-of-the-year candidate, in Frank Mason III, and potential freshman-of-the-year contender, in Josh Jackson, Lucas has emerged

No. 2 BAYLOR G – Manu Lecomte, 5-11, 175, Jr. G – Al Freeman, 6-3, 200, Jr. G – Ish Wainright, 6-5, 235, Sr. F – Johnathan Motley, 6-10, 230, Jr. F – Jo Lual-Acquil Jr., 7-0, 220, Jr.

as arguably the most important player in a Kansas uniform. A big part of the reason for that is KU’s lack of depth at the position he plays. But to leave it at that is to undersell Lucas’ importance. Kansas will need him big time tonight against Baylor, which brings 6-10 junior Johnathan Motley and 7-foot junior Jo LualAcuil Jr., among others, to Lawrence looking to use

their size, athleticism and length to seize temporary control of the Big 12 race. Mason, Devonté Graham, Josh Jackson and other Jayhawks no doubt will factor into the outcome. But because of Baylor’s strengths and KU’s lack of depth, it’s hard to make a case for any of them being as critical as Lucas. And even though the identity and strengths of KU’s opponents will

change the rest of the way, it’s hard to imagine the Jayhawks’ reliance on Lucas shifting much at all. “Who would have ever thought we would have recruited a guy that everybody would say, ‘How are you going to win if Landen gets two fouls in the first half,’” said Self, incredulously. “That’s how important he is to us. So that’s about as complimentary as I can be towards anybody.”

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Wednesday, February 1, 2017

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SPORTS

L awrence J ournal -W orld

FSHS boys, LHS girls come out on top SCOREBOARD in Lawrence High bowling triangular Middle School

EIGHTH-GRADE BOYS Tuesday at Leavenworth WEST 45, PATTON 33 West highlights: Thalain Simpson 14 points; Jainte Neal 10 points; Kris Daniels 7 points. West record: 3-3. Next for West: Thursday at Leavenworth Warren. WEST B 34, PATTON B 32 West highlights: Matt Gabriel 14 points; Kristain Harrits 8 points. West B record: 3-3. Next for West: Thursday at Leavenworth Warren.

By Evan Riggs eriggs@ljworld.com

Last time the Free State boys bowling team competed at Royal Crest Lanes, it had to overcome a slow start in order to take first place. This time, it was quite the opposite. Free State bowled an 887 in the opening game — the highest score of any round by any team — on its way to topping Lawrence High by 33 pins Tuesday at the LHS triangular. The Firebirds were led by sophomore Bayn Schrader’s 664 series, which was the second best individual score of the triangular. Schrader sparked the quick start by bowling a career-best 259 in the first game. “The first six balls I threw were strikes,” Schrader said. “I had two spares and the rest were strikes (in the first game). It felt pretty good.” Schrader said the key to his big day was hitting his marks and adjusting when he didn’t. Even when he missed, he still managed to throw strikes, which fueled his confidence. Schrader had help, as senior Alex Jimenez placed fifth among individual bowlers with a 629 series. As a result, the Firebirds were able to top the Lions despite junior Javier Lemmons’ big day.

LHS Triangular

Tuesday at Royal Crest Lanes BOYS Varsity team scores: Lawrence Free State 2494, Lawrence High 2461, SM Northwest 2424. FSHS scores: 2. Bayn Schrader 259-192-213 — 664; 4. Alex Jimenez

Girls Nick Krug/Journal-World Photo

LAWRENCE HIGH BOWLERS DIAMONIQUE VANN, left, and Hannah Reed prepare to roll during a tri with Free State and Shawnee Mission Northwest on Tuesday at Royal Crest Lanes. Lemmons bowled the top individual score with a 683 series, but it wasn’t quite enough for the Lions to top their crosstown rival. “We were competitive, they just were a bit (better),” Lawrence High coach Paula Bastemeyer said. “Losing by 33 pins on your own lane is annoying. Because we know these lanes, the kids know these lanes.” On the girls’ side, Lawrence High topped Free State by 198 pins to win its third consecutive tournament. Morgan Daniels led the Lions with a 621 series and was the top individual bowler. “It’s awesome,” Dan-

iels said. “It feels great to know you won out of the sixty or so players.” The Lions also had two more bowlers place in the top five. Holly Evans was second with a 604 series, and Diamonique Vann placed fifth with a 529 series. “All three of these girls that I’ve got in these top spots of varsity are competitors,” Bastemeyer said. “They know when to show up. They encourage one another and they fight together.” FSHS entered the final game in third place, but the team surged into second place by bowling a 783 to close the triangular. Morgan Wright led

the Firebirds in the final round with a 258, and Nicole Miele was the teams’ top bowler of the day with a 539 series. The Firebirds haven’t won a tournament this year, and they’ve placed second in all five of them. Coach Burton Gepford isn’t discouraged, however, by the results. Instead, he said he was encouraged as he searches for his best lineup. “To continue to switch bowlers up and down and still take second place (is nice),” Gepford said. “I’m looking forward to the end of the season when I’ve got my top bowlers all on the same team.”

AREA HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL ROUNDUP J-W Staff Reports

Seabury boys roll past Hyman Brand, 66-40 Even without a number of its regular players, Bishop Seabury’s boys basketball team rolled past Hyman Brand, 66-40, in Tuesday’s home meeting. The Seahawks have now won nine consecutive games, since losing back-to-back contests on Dec. 9 and Dec. 10. Bishop Seabury (12-2, ranked No. 3 in class 2A) used most of its usual junior-varsity lineup in the team’s lopsided victory. Three players notched double figures for the Seahawks, as Cobe Green paced the team with 19 points. Chris Green and Amir Shami scored 17 and 10, respectively. The Seahawks will play host to Troy at 7:30 p.m. Thursday. Hyman 13 8 11 8 — 40 Seabury 21 18 21 6 — 66 Hyman — Josh Kreisler 14, Jonathan Mechari 5, Edan Cohavi 4, Boaz Shneor 1, Joe Porter 16. Seabury — Henry Nelson 2, Amir Shami 10, Lee Nelson 3, Dawson Chindamo 4, Oliver Xu 2, Chis Green 17, Luke Hornberger 9, Cobe Green 19.

Veritas boys fall to Man. CHIEF Despite putting together

Boys CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C

second overtime after he fouled out. But the celebration was short lived after reflecting on their win in the locker room. Free State coach Sam Stroh was disappointed by his team’s defense prior to the comeback and some execution in the overtimes. “I told them this is not time to celebrate,” Stroh said. “This a tough league any night, anyone can win, and we’ve got our work cut out for us down the stretch. It’s time to refocus tomorrow at practice.” The seventh-ranked Firebirds (8-4, 4-0 in Sunflower League) held

a 21-point fourth quarter rally, Veritas Christian’s boys basketball team fell to Manhattan CHIEF, 6968, in overtime at home on Tuesday. The Eagles (5-11) were outscored through the first three periods, including an eight-point difference in the third quarter. Then in final quarter, Veritas outscored its opposition, 21-10, to force overtime. Tucker Flory led the Eagles with 22 points on 9-of-12 shooting. Trey Husling joined his teammate in double figures with 17 points, while Kammal Dowdell added 10. Veritas will travel to WAHAA at 7:30 p.m Friday. Manhattan 11 17 24 10 7 — 69 Veritas 9 16 16 21 6 — 68

Seabury girls prevail, 43-25

Hyman Brand 6 9 6 4 — 25 Seabury 8 10 14 11 — 43 Hyman Brand — Clauer 4, Sosland 4, Bell 5, Davis 12. Seabury — Allison Eckert 2, Celia Taylor-Puckett 8, Emily Heinz 11, Kayleigh Boos 22.

Perry boys push past Sabetha The Perry Lecompton boys basketball pushed past Sabetha, 49-38, to get back above the .500 benchmark on the season. With the win, the Kaws are now 7-6 on the year, including consecutive double-digit victories. Junior Canaan Daniels netted a team-high 16 points at home Tuesday. Senior Isaac Christman (10 points) was the only other member to record double figures for the Kaws, who outscored their opponent in all but one period. Perry-Lecompton will travel to Royal Valley Saturday. Sabetha 9 5 14 10 — 38 Perry 11 11 11 16 — 49 Sabetha — Christian Meyer 9, Brett Staulbaumer 6, Braden Cox 2, Noah Garber 3, Trae Snyder 3, Joe Gruber 13, Eric Renyer 2. Perry — Isaac Christman 10, Thomas Taylor 2, Dalton Kellum 9, Cam Christman 1, Canaan Daniels 16, Connor Anderson 1, Jordan Spreer 9.

Kayleigh Boos scored 22 points, and Emily Heinz added 11 points as Seabury Academy defeated Hyman Brand, 43-25, in high school girls basketball Tuesday night at Seabury. Celia Taylor-Puckett tossed in eight points, and Allison Eckert scored two for the Seahawks. Seabury (2-10) will host Troy on Thursday night.

Behind a 23-point effort by Tori Huslig, the

the Ravens to one point in the fourth quarter by forcing three turnovers and six missed shots. Down by six with under four minutes left, Free State scored on three straight possessions, including a game-tying layup from senior Shannon Cordes with 2:04 left on a backdoor cut, assisted by senior Jay Dineen (10 points, eight assists). Free State had the ball with the score tied and under a minute left after Dineen took a charge on defense. But the Firebirds turned the ball over and collectively held their breath until Northwest junior Luke Waters’ spinning jump shot bounced off the front of the rim at the buzzer. In the first half, holding the Ravens to one point in a quarter seemed

as likely as Steph Curry missing 50 consecutive shots. The Ravens (10-2, 3-1) made 10 of their first 11 attempts, running out to a double-digit lead in the second quarter. “Last year they started the same way,” Stroh said. “They shot the ball well and we didn’t really have any urgency on the defensive end for more than, maybe, two or three passes. Once they passed it five or six times, we relaxed a little bit.” The Firebirds never trailed in either overtime, but they certainly caught some breaks in their favor. Similar to the end of regulation, the Firebirds turned the ball over in the final seconds of the first OT and watched the Ravens miss a potential game-winner at the buzzer.

Huslig lifts Veritas to win over Man. CHIEF

Veritas girls’ basketball team topped Manhattan CHIEF, 53-42. The Eagles have now won six straight games following their win at home Tuesday. Huslig knocked down nine of her 14 shots from the floor, while also recording eight rebounds and seven assists. Chloe Holland made seven of her 19 attempts, to record 15 points. Veritas (12-3) will travel to Wichita to play WAHAA at 6 p.m. Friday. Manhattan 8 10 9 15 — 42 Veritas 15 15 12 11 — 53 Manhattan — Elyse Peters 16, Autumn Peters 9, Laurel Stewart 3, Alexa Steinbach 4, Bri Blankley 2, Marissa Broak 4, Jessica Steinbach 2, Suadi Peters 2. Veritas — Alyssa Krestan 8, Chloe Holland 15, Alex Avila 5, Delaeny Shelton 2, Tori Huslig 23.

Baldwin girls go to 12-0 Abby Ogle scored 25 points, and Baldwin High’s girls basketball team improved to 12-0 with a 45-32 victory over De Soto on Tuesday night at Baldwin City. Kayla Kurtz added 12 points for the Bulldogs. De Soto 10 10 7 5 — 32 Baldwin 10 11 11 13 — 45 De Soto — Grizzle 9, Beal 9, Jones 2, Johnson 8, Plake 2, Kennard 2. Baldwin — Carly Lindenmeyer 2, Abby Ogle 25, Kayla Kurtz 12, Kate Ogle 4, Riley O’Rourke 2.

In the second OT, Free State used free throws from four players to stay ahead: Dineen, Cordes, Cameron Clark and Simon McCaffrey. The only the shot they made — or attempted — in the second OT was a layup from senior Sloan Thomsen, assisted by Clark. OLATHE NORTHWEST (63) Jackson Nicodemus 1-7 2-2 5, Charlie Holmgren 3-6 1-1 9, Matt Vanderslice 2-5 2-2 6, Luke Waters 6-14 7-9 20, Dominic Messina 3-8 4-6 10, Jack Parks 3-4 0-0 8, Daniel Oppenheim 1-4 0-0 3, Jace Kline 1-3 0-0 2, Kyle Shiever 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 20-51 16-20 63. FREE STATE (68) Garrett Luinstra 9-12 3-4 25, Simon McCaffrey 0-4 5-6 5, Jay Dineen 3-7 4-6 10, Shannon Cordes 3-5 3-3 9, Cameron Clark 5-8 3-5 13, Sloan Thomsen 2-5 0-2 4, Jalan Robinson 0-2 0-0 0, Avant Edwards 0-0 1-4 1, Jared Hicks 0-0 1-2 1. Totals 22-43 20-32 68. Northwest 24 15 11 1 6 6 — 63 Free State 17 12 14 8 6 11 — 68 Three-point goals: Olathe NW 7-22 (Holmgren 2, Parks 2, Nicodemus, Waters, Oppenheim); Free State 4-15 (Luinstra 4). Fouled out: Vanderslice, Parks, Luinstra. Turnovers: Olathe NW 11, Free State 10.

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C

When the Firebirds needed stops in the second half, they couldn’t string them together for multiple possessions. Free State pulled within five points midway through the third quarter and the Ravens simply drilled two straight 3-pointers. Olathe Northwest made 11 of 17 shots from the 3-point line (65 percent). “That’s probably the thing I’m most disappointed in is our defensive effort,” Juneau said. “It wasn’t very good. We have seven more games against teams just like this. I told the girls we can go 0-7 or 7-0, it depends on what they want to do defensively. It’s not about points. We can score points. It’s about stopping people.” For most of the first half, it was the Firebirds (8-5, 2-2 in Sunflower League) outracing the Ferrari. All five starters scored in the first quarter, including a buzzerbeating 3-pointer from junior guard Jaelyn Two Hearts, who finished with 10 points. The Ravens (9-4, 3-1) were making shots, but the Firebirds were just making more of them. Two Hearts and senior forward Madison Piper were drilling threes. Guards Cameryn Thomas, Caely Kesten and Sam Lawrence found driving lanes to the rim.

220-202-207 — 629; 7. Cameron Edens 204-159-216 — 579; 11. Alex Craig 170217-169 — 556; 12. Dmitri Smith 193191-166 — 550; 13. Cam Edgecomb 204-183-157 — 544. LHS scores: 1. Javier Lemmons 216244-223 — 683; 5. Cameron Stussie 193-220-213 — 626; 9. Hunter Krom 179-200-193 — 572; 15. Ethan Huslig 200-149-179 — 528; 16. Adonis Stanwix 146-201-154 — 501; 17. Jared Radford 172-171-157 — 500. GIRLS Varsity team scores: Lawrence High 2251, Lawrence Free State 2053, SM Northwest 1995. FSHS scores: 4. Nicole Miele 182168-189 — 539; 6. Sapphie Knight 167-181-177 — 525; 7. Morgan Wright 139-128-258 — 525; 13. Sydney Jordan 154-146-139 — 439; 16. Erica Crockett 144-125-159 — 428; 18. Brooke Wright 129-99-140 — 368. LHS scores: Morgan Daniels 236204-181 — 621; 2. Holly Evans 193210-201 — 604; 5. Diamonique Vann 156-172-201 — 529; 9. Renea McNemee 182-126-151 — 549; 10. Hannah Reed 136-156-159 — 451; 17. Ashley Dykes 143-129-133 — 405.

But eventually the Firebirds slowed down. After Free State senior Jaycie Bishop scored on a fastbreak layup with 4:37 left in the second quarter, they missed five straight shots with three turnovers mixed in. And that jump-started Olathe Northwest. The Ravens started feeding off their defense by driving inside and kicking back out for triples. Sami Marks led the Ravens with 19 points (five 3-pointers) while Macy Reiber added 13 points (two 3’s). Attempting to claw back in the second half, the Firebirds turned to 5-foot-11 Piper, the Santa Clara signee who finished with a game-high 25 points on 9-of-18 shooting. She added a game-high 12 rebounds and four assists. Piper scored five straight points to open the fourth quarter, pulling Free State within five. But the Ravens went on a 6-0 run and made nearly all of the free throws in the final minutes. Free State will travel to Shawnee Mission Northwest at 5:30 p.m. Friday. OLATHE NORTHWEST (69) Maddi Hesie 2-9 6-6 11, Sami Marks 7-11 0-0 19, Erika Boeh 0-1 1-2 1, Sarah Beth Gueldner 3-11 5-6 12, Christen Curry 4-12 1-1 10, Mary Reiber 3-3 5-6 13, Kaylie Kappelmann 1-1 0-0 3, Taylor Cass 0-0 0-0 0, Shayna Espy 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 20-48 18-21 69. FREE STATE (58) Sam Lawrence 3-6 0-0 7, Cameryn Thomas 2-5 1-2 5, Caely Kesten 2-2 0-0 5, Madison Piper 9-18 4-4 25, Jaelyn Two Hearts 4-9 0-0 10, Jaycie Bishop 1-2 0-0 2, Erin Cushing 1-2 0-0 3, Haley Hippe 0-0 1-2 1. Totals 22-44 6-8 58. Northwest 15 21 18 15 — 69 Free State 16 14 15 13 — 58 Three-point goals: Olathe NW 11-17 (Marks 5, Reiber 2, Heise, Gueldner, Curry, Kappelmann); Free State 8-22 (Piper 3, Two Hearts 2, Lawrence, Kesten, Cushing). Turnovers: Olathe NW 8, Free State 16.

KU-OU WOMEN AT A GLANCE Who: Kansas at Oklahoma When: 10:30 a.m. today Where: Lloyd Noble Center, Norman, Okla. Series: Oklahoma leads, 37-30

On the board Kansas ended its 27-game Big 12 losing streak and earned its first conference win of the season with a 6660 victory over Texas Tech on Saturday. The triumph was also the first Big 12 win for Brandon Schneider as the Kansas coach. As Kansas looks for its second consecutive win at No. 18 Oklahoma, it will have to do something it hasn’t succeeded in doing all year: beat a ranked team. Jayhawks in the record books: Senior Caelynn ManningAllen didn’t have any blocks against Texas Tech, but after recording four blocks against Oklahoma State, she moved into 10th place all-time in Kansas’ record books for blocks. She needs four blocks to pass former Jayhawk Krysten Boogaard and move into ninth place. Also, senior Timeka O’Neal currently has a career three-point field goal percentage of 39.4, which is second all-time behind Sandy Shaw’s 43.6 career average.

12 (50 percent) performance from the free line, which is well below her season average of 69 percent. Washington has scored in double figures in six straight games, and she scored 24 or more points in four of those games. She’s averaging 16.8 points per game for the season, and her 20.6 points per game average in Big 12 play is tops in the conference.

Slumping Junior Chayla Cheadle’s scoring continues to dip in Big 12 play. She’s averaging 5.2 points per game, but she’s only scored nine points in the last five games on an ice-cold 3-22 shooting. She’s also scored two or fewer points on seven occasions in conference play. Cheadle is still rebounding at a decent rate, but her average has dropped from 6.1 to 4.9 per game in January. Probable starters KANSAS (7-14 overall, 1-9 Big 12) G — Jayde Christopher, 5-8, so. G — McKenzie Calvert, 5-9, so. G — Kylee Kopatich, 5-10, so. G — Chayla Cheadle, 6-0, jr. F — Sydney Umeri, 6-0, sr.

OKLAHOMA Streaking (16-6 overall, 7-3 Big 12) Junior Jessica Washington G — Gabbi Ortiz, 5-9 jr. continued her stellar play G — Gioya Carter, 5-9, sr. Saturday in Kansas’ win over G — Peyton Little, 5-11, sr. Texas Tech. Washington G — Maddie Manning, 6-2, sr. scored 24 points and had four C — Nancy Mulkey, 6-9, fr. rebounds and two assists. She could have easily had a bigger — Evan Riggs scoring game if not for a 6-of-


Wednesday, February 1, 2017

jobs.lawrence.com

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F E B P R E S E N T E D B Y J O B S . L AW R E N C E . C O M

TODAY! East Lawrence Rec. Center 11:30 AM 15th - 2:30 PM 1245 East Street

PLACE YOUR AD:

785.832.2222

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East Lawrence Rec. Center 1245 East 15th Street

WED. FEB. 1ST

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MORE THAN 650+ JOB OPENINGS!!

East Lawrence Rec. Center (1245 E 15th St) 11:30 - Free lunch & training for job seekers. 12:30-2:30 - Meet Employers & APPLY! Employers: To reserve a booth, contact Peter at psteimle@ljworld.com

F E AT U R I N G FiveStar

Senior livingtm

J O B C AT E G O R I E S Customer Service • Drivers • Health Care • Landscaping • Maintenance • Personal Care • Professional • Warehouse & More! Do you have Customer Service skills? Put your skills to work in our community!

Drive for Lawrence Transit System KU ON WHEELS & SAFERIDE/SAFEBUS SERVICES Daytime, nighttime, full-time, part-time. 80% company paid employee health, dental, vision insurance for full time. Genuine opportunities for advancement—MV promotes from within! No experience necessary. Age 21+ $11.50/hr, after $11/hr Training. $12/hr for SafeBus

MV Transportation, Inc. 1260 Timberedge Road, Lawrence, KS

785-856-3504 WALK INS WELCOME

APPLY ONLINE: lawrencetransit.org/employment 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.

Douglas County Extension Agent - Horticulture The Douglas County Extension Agent – Horticulture provides primary leadership for the total Horticulture Program – including dissemination of research-based information through the development, delivery, and evaluation of educational programming. This position will work closely with the fresh fruit and vegetable farming community and support efforts to address consumer horticulture programming. Applicants should have expertise in horticulture sciences specific to the needs of commercial specialty crop farmers as well as general horticulture knowledge. Familiarity of the Cooperative Extension Service is preferred, but prior Extension experience is not required. A complete job description, qualifications, and application procedure is available at.

http://tinyurl.com/hxaw2vr Application deadline: 2/16/2017

Kansas State University is an Equal Opportunity Employer of individuals with disabilities and protected veterans and actively seeks diversity among its employees. Background check required.

Program Analyst

KU University Career Center seeks a FT Program Analyst with a BA + 2yrs experience. Information & Application at: http://employment.ku.edu/staff/7870BR Application deadline is February 12.

Research Project Specialist

The University of Kansas is committed to providing our employees with an enriching and dynamic work environment that encourages innovation, research, creativity and equal opportunity for learning, development and professional growth. KU strives to recruit, develop, retain and reward a dynamic workforce that shares our mission and core strategic values in research, teaching and service. Learn more at http:// provost.ku.edu/strategic-plan.

Transition Coalition, a unit within the KU Beach Center on Disability seeks a full-time Research Project Specialist. Information & Application at: https://employment.ku.edu/staff/7875BR Deadline is 2/05/17. KU is an EO/AAE, full policy http://policy.ku.edu/IOA/nondiscrimination. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex (including pregnancy), age, national origin, disability, genetic information or protected Veteran status.

Math Teacher Bishop Seabury Academy, an independent college-preparatory school, is seeking a full-time Middle/High School math teacher. Candidates should have a degree in math and relevant teaching experience. Applicants should send a resume & cover letter to donschawang@seaburyacademy.org

785-832-1717 www.seaburyacademy.org

Member Service Representative Part-Time Performs a wide variety of teller and member service functions. Must be enthusiastic, dependable and service minded. Previous sales or customerservice experience preferred, but not required. Professional appearance and a positive attitude is a must. Envista offers an excellent benefits package including competitive pay, performance incentives and a full range of employee benefits including health and life insurance, 401(k) plan, paid holidays, vacation and more. Please apply in person at 1555 Wakarusa Drive in Lawrence or e-mail your resume to human.resources@envistacu.com Learn more about our career opportunities by visiting www.envistacu.com/careers

Deliver Newspapers on a Driving Route in

Lawrence - Ottawa It’s Fun, part-time work

Be an independent contractor. Deliver every day, between 2-6 a.m., so your days are free! Reliable vehicle, driver’s license, insurance in your own name, and a phone required.

Come in & Apply! Journal-World Media 645 New Hampshire, or call/email Joan: 785-832-7211, jinsco@ljworld.com


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Wednesday, February 1, 2017

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L awrence J ournal -W orld

JOBS

MERCHANDISE PETS

TO PLACE AN AD:

785.832.2222

classifieds@ljworld.com

TO PLACE AN AD:

785.832.2222

TAGGED ESTATE SALE

classifieds@ljworld.com

Miscellaneous

228 Earhart Circle Lawrence, KS 66049

Want To Buy FREON R12 WANTED: Certified buyer will pickup nationwide and pay CA$H for cylinders and cases of cans. (312)291-9169

Take 6th Street to Wakarusa, turn North to Dole, turn right on Earhart to 228. LIVING ESTATE OF RALPH & SONYA BONNER Fri. Feb. 3rd 9:00-5:00 Sat. Feb. 4th 9:00-1:00

GRAPHIC DESIGNER Sunflower Publishing, a division of Ogden Publications, is hiring for a Graphic Designer to maintain all design of marketing and advertising material, as well as managing client communication among a series of city/regional titles. If you love magazines that are the heart and soul of a community, this opportunity is unmatched. Established in 2004 Sunflower Publishing, based in Lawrence, Kansas, is a leading publisher for city/regional magazines, trade publications and directories. Premier publications include KANSAS! magazine, Lawrence Magazine, Topeka Magazine, Manhattan Magazine, Best of Lawrence magazine, Kansas Weddings Magazine and more. For more information, visit www.sunflowerpub.com. Ideal candidates should have two-plus years of graphic design experience,preferably in advertising or marketing design.A Bachelor’s degree in Graphic Design, Fine Arts, Visual Communications or equivalent work experience preferred. Understanding of marketing and ad design. Ability to communicate design/printing principles to advertising clients. Experience producing a high volume of design products using InDesign, Photoshop and Illustrator. Ability to handle multiple projects under deadline pressure. Excellent organizational skills. Successfully builds relationships with customers and coworkers. This is an ideal, long-term position for a starting or seasoned graphic designer. Apply online via email or by mail with resume,cover letter,and portfolio (if applicable).

Sunflower Publishing and Ogden Publications, Inc., offers training, a benefits package including health, dental and vision insurance, 401k, paid time off and more. EOE

Saferide Now Age 19!

MAINTENANCE WORKER I Landscaping

Do you have customer service skills? Drive the Lawrence T, KU on Wheels, & Saferide/ Safebus.

General maintenance & upkeep of LDCHA properties. Work varies due to seasonal changes and nature of tasks. Duties involve variety of mechanical abilities and aptitudes, using small engine power tools, riding mower, outdoor & indoor work, varying weather conditions. Travel within Lawrence. May involve general supervision of other workers. Requires valid driver’s license & driving record acceptable to LDCHA’s insurance carrier. Full time position with benefits.

• NO experience necessary! • Day & Night shifts. • Age 19+ for non-CDL SafeRide positions • 21+ for CDL positions • $11.50/hr after paid training. • Full-time benefits! • Part-time flexibilty • Genuine Career opportunities! Apply online: lawrencetransit.org/employment Or come to: MV Transportation, Inc. 1260 Timberedge Road Lawrence, KS

Job description & application at www.ldcha.org and in our office.

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.

Applications due by 4:00 pm on Tuesday, February 21. Lawrence-Douglas County Housing Authority 1600 Haskell Ave. Lawrence KS 66044

EEO/AA Employer

AccountingFinance

AdministrativeProfessional

Accountant/Bookkeeper Full time opening in our bookkeeping and payroll department. Quickbooks experience required as EXECUTIVE ASSISTANT well as knowledge of fed- Send questions, letter, reeral and state laws re- sume, references to garding wage and payroll mwilliamson@YourSRC.org tax, sales tax and liquor by Feb 8. 785-727-7880 tax. Sandy Miller 785-842-3431

ACCOUNTING CLERK Entry level accounting position for growing construction firm. Position will be responsible for receivables, payables and compliance for construction contracts. No experience necessary. Proficient in all Microsoft applications a plus. Full-time position with benefits. Send resume Attn: HR, to PO Box 17 Perry, KS 66073 Or apply at Hamm 609 Perry Place Perry, KS Equal Opportunity Employer

DriversTransportation Shuttle Driver Rockland West

General

Office-Clerical

Payroll Coordinator

Legal Courier/ Office Aide/ File Retention Clerk Top rated law firm seeks full time Legal Courier / Office Aide / File Retention Clerk. Position requires frequent physical exertion, valid driver’s license, reliable transportation, & clean driving record. Excellent benefits & nice working environment. EOE Send resume to: Attn: Office Manager P.O. Box 189 Lawrence, KS 66044-0189

Ottawa USD 290 is accepting applications for Payroll Coordinator at the District Office. If you are interested in the position please apply online at

www.usd290.org

under the employment opportunities tab. If you have questions please contact Teri George at 785-229-8010.

Installation-Repair

HVAC

Great Compensation & Benefits! Transportation/Real Estate The Shuttle Driver will transport residents in company vehicles to and from predetermined and scheduled destinations in a safe and courteous manner. Interested? Send your resume to hquijas@peakcampus.com

Technician Ottawa USD 290 is accepting applications for a HVAC Technician. If you are interested in the position please apply online at

www.usd290.org

under the employment opportunities tab. If you have questions please contact Darrell Moore at 785-229-8120.

Part-Time Store Delivery of Newspapers It’s Fun, part-time work, putting newspapers on Lawrence store racks. Deliver every day for 2-3 hours starting about 1 a.m. Your days are free, and you’ll be an independent contractor. Reliable vehicle, driver’s license, insurance in your own name, and a phone are required.

Call or email Ben: 785-979-2323 bwoods@ljworld.com Journal-World Media 645 New Hampshire

PUBLIC NOTICES TO PLACE AN AD:

785.832.2222

(First published in the Lawrence Daily JournalWorld on January 25, 2017)

Plaintiff,

IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS CIVIL COURT DEPARTMENT

RONNIE D. GIBSON; VIRGINIA R. GIBSON, et al., Defendants.

U.S. BANK TRUST, N.A., AS TRUSTEE FOR LSF9 MASTER PARTICIPATION TRUST,

legals@ljworld.com NOTICE OF SHERIFF’S SALE

vs.

Case No. 16 CV 159 Court No. Title to Real Estate Involved

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that under and by virtue of an Order of Sale issued by the Clerk of the District Court of Douglas County, Kansas, in the case above numbered, wherein the parties above named were respectively plaintiff and

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ESTATE AUCTION Monday February 6th 6:00 PM Ron Stricker’s Auction Co. 790 N. Center St. Gardner KS. 66030

FREE Patio Grill You Pick It UP! 785-424-7541

Estate of Mr. Donald Wilson and consignors For more info and pictures see web ronstrickersauction.com Ron Stricker Auctioneer 913 963 3800 Office: 913-856-6890

Attn: General Manager General Manager 645 New Hampshire Lawrence, KS 66044 Editorial@sunflowerpub.com

Lawrence-Douglas County Housing Authority

This downsizing sale has many delightful and quality products. Wicker furniture, patio furniture, much art work, numerous beautiful old frames, Cuisinart coffee maker, glassware, kitchenware, Oster mixer, Revere cookware, copper antique kettle, books, antique collectibles, cockery, jugs, area and book shelving, Panasonic flat 42” TV, buffet w/mirror, leather table chairs, antique dining room table w/5 chairs, floor and table lamps, Russian Samovar, decorative balls, large set of red glasses, candle holders, place settings, 3 Amoire’s, rugs, small coffee size table of pine, buffet w/ mirror and marble top, side chairs, tapestrys, sofas, clocks, decorative spindles, mirrors, 2 king size beds, linens, pillows, pine trunks, decorative wood shelving, cedar chest, GE microwave, office chairs, Samsung washer/dryer, side tables, games, vanity table, bar chairs, 2 leather recliners, entertainment center, small childs trunk, Toshiba CD player, Oval dining room table w/ 6 chairs, bird cages, 6 drawer chest, old sewing machine, fabric, easels, art equipment, 1930’s kitchen cabinet, 6’ tall oak cabinet, blank canvases, shelving, walnut pie cupboard, 35MM cameras, Vest pocket Kodak model b, 3 drawer walnut chest w/ mirror, bar refrigerator, small work bench w/ 6 drawers, Oak jewelers work bench, collectibles, Husky work cabinets on wheels, Jewelry making equipment, antique signs, 8’ heavy duty workbench, acetylene torch w/tips and tank, jewelry work bench, steel tapping set, vintage West Lake jewelers staking set in wooden case, Dremel stand, bench metal shear, Tyobi 6” grinder, 6’ cabinet w/ tin front, Toshiba 12” TV, 18” Dynex TV Flat screen, golf clubs, steamer trunks, wicker coffee table, Forge tool cabinets and matching drawers on wheels, Skill 3 tool drill set, router w/ base and 13 bits, wrought iron gate, wheel barrow, space heater, hand tools, decorative tin shelf, marble base scale, Black and Decker hedge trimmer, Homelite gas weed eater, Toro hand mower and much misc. Shown by John I. Hughes - Certified Appraiser 785-979-1941

Defendants, and to me, the undersigned Sheriff of Douglas County, Kansas, directed, I will offer for sale at public auction and sell to the highest bidder for cash in hand at the Jury Assembly Room of the District Court on the lower level of the Judicial and Law Enforcement Center 111 E. 11th Street Law-

PETS DART BOARD Marlboro Country Store Dart Board with 12 darts…never used…sells new for over $140.00 Asking $50.00 316-992-5678

Antiques & Vintage 203 W. 7th • Perry, KS 785-597-5752 When the inventory is great but things aren’t selling, only one thing I know to do-Lower prices-much lower, all reasonable offers will be accepted. More than 50% off Fri-Sat-Sun or call ahead

Magazines Life - Look Saturday Evening Post Magazines 8-Saturday Evening Post from 1944-1967 1-Look April 1969 14-Life from 1962-1981 $25.00 316-992-5678

Music-Stereo

Household Misc. Serta I-Series Mattress Set 4 years old Asking $100 785.764.2853 Twin Size Simmons Suitable for bunk beds. Clean, no stains. Asking $60. 785-393-0726

Pets

MALTESE ACA PUPS Vet checked, 1st shots & wormed. Raised around children. The perfect Valentine gift! 1 male - $500. Call or Text 785-448-8440

AKC LAB PUPPIES 4 Female • 1 Male Chocolate champion bloodlines, blocky heads, parents on site, vet & DNA checked, shots, hunters & companions. Born 12/21/16, Ready 2/8/16. $650. Call 785-865-6013

PIANOS • H.L. Phillips upright $650 • Cable Nelson Spinet $500 • Gulbranson Spinet - $450 • Sturn Spinet - $400 Prices include delivery & tuning

785-832-9906

Norwich Terrier Puppy: Female puppy, intelligent, loving, playful. All shots current. Wheaten in color. Champion bloodlines. 785-842-4841

PUBLIC NOTICES TO PLACE AN AD: rence, Kansas 66044 on February 16, 2017, at 10:00 AM of said day, the following described real estate situated in the County of Douglas, State of Kansas, to-wit: BEGINNING AT A POINT ON THE SECTION LINE 15 FEET WEST OF THE NORTHEAST CORNER OF THE WEST HALF OF THE NORTHEAST QUARTER OF SECTION 12, TOWNSHIP 13 SOUTH, RANGE 20 EAST; THENCE SOUTH PARALLEL TO THE EAST LINE OF SAID WEST HALF 297.21 FEET; THENCE WEST PARALLEL TO THE NORTH LINE OF SAID WEST HALF 417.42 FEET; THENCE NORTH PARALLEL TO THE EAST LINE OF SAID WEST HALF 297.21 FEET TO THE SECTION LINE; THENCE EAST ON THE SECTION LINE 417.42 FEEET TO THE POINT OF BEGINNING, LESS LAND CONDEMNED FOR STATE HIGHWAY PURPOSES BY CASE NO. 15857 IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS, AND RECORDED IN BOOK 132, AT PAGE 498 IN THE OFFICE OF THE REGISTER OF DEEDS, DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS (“Property”) More commonly known as: 1973 N 1400th Rd, Eudora, KS 66025 said real property is levied upon as the property of Defendants Ronnie D. Gibson, and Virginia R. Gibson and all other alleged owners and will be sold without appraisal to satisfy said Order of Sale. _____________________ DOUGLAS COUNTY SHERIFF Submitted by: MARTIN LEIGH PC /s/ Aaron M. Othmer Beverly M. Weber, KS #20570 Aaron M. Othmer, KS #27121 ATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF MARTIN LEIGH PC IS ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. _______ (First published in the Lawrence Daily JournalWorld on January 25, 2017) IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS MTGLQ Investors, LP Plaintiff, vs. Ericka Corrado-Waller, Ericka Corradowaller, James D Waller , Ericka Corrado Waller, James Waller, James Waller, James Dominic Waller, et al., Defendants. Case No. 16CV313 K.S.A. 60 Mortgage Foreclosure (Title to Real Estate Involved) NOTICE OF SHERIFF’S SALE

785.832.2222

Under and by virtue of an Order of Sale issued by the Clerk of the District Court in and for the said County of Douglas, State of Kansas, in a certain cause in said Court Numbered 16CV313, wherein the parties above named were respectively plaintiff and defendant, and to me, the undersigned Sheriff of said County, directed, I will offer for sale at public auction and sell to the highest bidder for cash in hand at 10:00 AM, on 02/16/2017, the Jury Assembly Room of the District Court located in the lower level of the Judicial and Law Enforcement Center building, 111 E. 11th St., Lawrence, Kansas, the following described real estate located in the County of Douglas, State of Kansas, to wit: LOT 97 IN ALVAMAR ESTATES, AN ADDITION TO THE CITY OF LAWRENCE, IN DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS. SHERIFF OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS Respectfully Submitted, By: _________________ Shawn Scharenborg, KS # 24542 Michael Rupard, KS # 26954 Dustin Stiles, KS # 25152 Kozeny & McCubbin, L.C. (St. Louis Office) 12400 Olive Blvd., Suite 555 St. Louis, MO 63141 Phone: (314) 991-0255 Fax: (314) 567-8006 Email: mrupard@ km-law.com Attorney for Plaintiff _______ (First published in the Lawrence Daily JournalWorld on January 18, 2017) IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS NATIONSTAR MORTGAGE LLC PLAINTIFF -vsSHERRY BARBEE, et. al.; DEFENDANTS No. 2016-CV-000446 Div. No. K.S.A. 60 Mortgage Foreclosure NOTICE OF SHERIFF’S SALE Under and by virtue of an Order of Sale issued by the Clerk of the District Court in and for the said County of Douglas, in a certain cause in said Court Numbered 2016-CV-000446, wherein the parties above named were respectively plaintiff and defendant, and to me, the undersigned Sheriff of said County, directed, I will offer for sale at public auction and sell to the highest bidder for cash in hand at the Jury Assembly Room in the City of Lawrence in said County, on February 9, 2017, at 10:00 a.m., of said

legals@ljworld.com

day the following described real estate located in the County of Douglas, State of Kansas, to wit: LOT 10, BLOCK TWO, IN COUNTRY CLUB WEST SUBDIVISION, A SUBDIVISION IN THE CITY OF LAWRENCE, DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS. Commonly known as 2604 Princeton Blvd, Lawrence, Kansas 66049

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 February 16, 2017 at 10:00 AM, the following real estate:

This is an attempt to collect a debt and any information obtained will be A TRACT OF LAND LOCATED IN THE SOUTH used for that purpose. HALF OF THE NORTHWEST QUARTER OF SECTION 13, Kenneth M. McGovern TOWNSHIP 13 SOUTH, SHERIFF OF DOUGLAS RANGE 20 EAST OF THE COUNTY, KANSAS SIXTH PRINCIPAL MERIDIAN, DESCRIBED AS FOLSHAPIRO & KREISMAN, LLC LOWS: COMMENCING AT Attorneys for Plaintiff THE NORTHWEST CORNER 4220 Shawnee Mission OF THE SOUTH HALF OF Parkway - Suite 418B THE NORTHWEST QUARFairway, KS 66205 TER OF SAID SECTION; (913)831-3000 THENCE NORTH 89 DEFax No. (913)831-3320 GREES 27 MINUTES 23 Our File No. 16-009571/jm SECONDS EAST, 1,347.41 _______ FEET TO THE POINT OF BE(First published in the GINNING, SAID POINT BELawrence Daily Journal- ING ON THE NORTH LINE World on January 25, 2017) OF THE SOUTH HALF OF THE NORTHWEST QUARPUBLIC NOTICE OF TER; THENCE CONTINUING ANNUAL MEETING NORTH 89 DEGREES 27 MINUTES 23 SECONDS Jefferson County Rural EAST, 251.12 FEET, SAID Water District #13 public POINT BEING ON THE notice is hereby given in NORTH LINE OF THE accordance with K.S.A. SOUTH OF THE HALF 82-1626, state of Kansas, NORTHWEST QUARTER that on February 16, 2017, AND THE CENTER LINE OF at the Sunnyside School, SPRING CREEK; THENCE 1121 Republic Road, at 7:00 SOUTH 5 DEGREES 15 MINp.m., the membership of UTES 00 SECONDS WEST Jefferson County Rural ALONG THE CENTER LINE Water District #13 shall OF SPRING CREEK 124.79 meet for the purpose of: FEET; THENCE SOUTH 70 DEGREES 39 MINUTES 25 1. Vote for Bylaw Change SECONDS EAST, 147.07 2. Election of Directors FEET; THENCE SOUTH 9 3. Consideration of Any DEGREES 09 MINUTES 17 Other Business SECONDS WEST, 123.88 FEET; THENCE SOUTH 2 In the event of inclement DEGREES 14 MINUTES 49 weather the meeting will SECONDS EAST, 275.23 be rescheduled to Febru- FEET; THENCE NORTH 74 ary 23rd (same time and DEGREES 10 MINUTES 42 location) and an auto- SECONDS EAST, 155.72 mated voice mail message FEET; THENCE NORTH 49 will go out to the entire DEGREES 52 MINUTES 34 District with the update. SECONDS EAST, 126.76 FEET; THENCE SOUTH 46 Gordon A. Brest, DEGREES 15 MINUTES 53 Chairman of the Board SECONDS EAST, 55.13 _______ FEET; THENCE SOUTH 20 DEGREES 00 MINUTES 28 (First published in the EAST, 213.60 Lawrence Daily Journal- SECONDS FEET; THENCE SOUTH 39 World on January 26, 2017) DEGREES 50 MINUTES 11 SECONDS EAST, 137.78 IN THE DISTRICT COURT FEET; THENCE SOUTH 13 OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, DEGREES 03 MINUTES 21 KANSAS SECONDS WEST, 212.88 CIVIL DEPARTMENT FEET, SAID POINT BEING THE CENTER LINE OF SPRDitech Financial, LLC, ING CREEK; THENCE Plaintiff, SOUTH 89 DEGREES 27 MINUTES 23 SECONDS vs. WEST, 563.12 FEET; THENCE NORTH 11 DEDonald W Dulaney, et al., GREES 38 MINUTES 36 Defendants, SECONDS WEST, 1,022.13 FEET TO THE POINT OF BECase No.16CV375 IN DOUGLAS GINNING, Court No. 4 COUNTY, KANSAS. Tax ID Title to Real Estate No.023-106-13-0-00-00-006.04 Involved -0 THE REAL PROPERTY Pursuant to K.S.A. §60 A DESCRIBED INCLUDES MOBILE HOME OR MANUNOTICE OF SALE FACTURED HOME., ComNOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, monly known as 1927 N that under and by virtue of an Order of Sale issued to me by the Clerk of the District Court of Douglas

PUBLIC NOTICE CONTINUED ON 7C


L awrence J ournal -W orld

Wednesday, February 1, 2017

NOTICES TO PLACE AN AD:

RENTALS REAL ESTATE

785.832.2222

classifieds@ljworld.com

Special Notices CNA/CMA CLASSES IN LAWRENCE CNA DAY CLASSES Jan 31-Feb 16 M-Th 8.30-2.30 Feb 27-March 16 8.30a-2p Apr 3 -April 20 8.30a-2p CNA EVENING CLASSES LAWRENCE KS Feb 21-Mar 17 T/Th/F 5p- 9p Apr 4 -May 5 T/Th/F 5p- 9p CMA EVE CLASSES LAWRENCE Mar 22-April 28 5p-9p SUMMER CLASSES: May 15 - May 26 M-F 8a-5p Jun 5 - Jun 16 M-F 8a-5p

Jun 19 - Jun 30 M-F 8a-5p CNA 10 hr REFRESHER LAWRENCE KS CMA 10 hr UPDATE LAWRENCE KS Jan 27/28 Feb 17/18 March 17/18 April 28/29 May 12/13 Classes begin 8.30am

Be My Valentine?

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XOXO, Love You Mimi! Happy Valentin e’s Day!

Email your photo along with your name & telephone number to

submissions@ljworld.com

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CARS 785.832.2222

Chrysler Vans

Chevrolet Cars

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• Fireplace • Easy access to I-70 • Central Air • Includes paid • Washer/Dryer cable. Hookups • 2 Car Garage with • Pet under 20 lbs. allowed Opener

classifieds@ljworld.com Ford Trucks

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Hyundai Crossovers

RENTALS

Apartments Unfurnished

Duplexes

Chrysler 2008 Town & Country Limited,

This is a fantastic car for a commuter or someone who just wants a dependable car around town with a low monthly payment. Stk#529181

alloy wheels, leather heated seats, power equipment, DVD, navigation and more! Stk#160681

Only $9,455 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

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2011 FORD F150 XLT Super Crew - Can Seat 6. 49K Mi, Tow Pkg, 5.8 V8, 2 WD, Roll Up Cover, Sirius Ready, Never Wrecked or Needed Repair. Beautiful blue with grey interior. Call 785-842-4515 or 785-979-7719 Need to sell your car? Call 785-832-2222 or email classifieds@ljworld.com

Ford Crossovers

Apartments Unfurnished 2008 Hyundai Veracruz Limited Limited leather heated seats, sunroof, power equipment, 3rd row seating, room for the family and leaves room in your wallet! Stk#346331

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GMC SUVs

Volkswagen Cars

2015 Chevrolet Spark LT

2010 Ford Escape LTD

automatic, power equipment, alloy wheels, more room and gas mileage than you would expect! Stk#15413

AWD heated leather seats, power equipment, alloy wheels, great finance terms are available. Stk#477331

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

Chevrolet Trucks

Ford SUVs

2012 Volkswagen Jetta fwd power equipment, leather, great gas mileage, stk#183581

2010 Ford Edge Limited

ext cab, tow package, power equipment, alloy wheels, great finance terms are available. Stk#33169B1

heated leather seats, alloy wheels, power equipment, cruise control, SYNC, home link stk#36358A1

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

AUTOMOTIVE 2840 Iowa Street (785) 843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

one owner, heated seats, power equipment, alloy wheels, steering wheel controls, stk#17030

CASH PAID & FREE PICK UP. All makes & models. Call OR Text for quote.

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• 28 Days - $280 Call 785-832-2222 to schedule your ad!

Antique/Estate Liquidation

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

legals@ljworld.com

Estate Sale Services In home & Off site options to suit your tag sale needs. 785.260.5458

Carpentry

By:___________________ Chad R. Doornink, #23536 cdoornink@msfirm.com Jason A. Orr, #22222 jorr@msfirm.com 8900 Indian Creek Parkway, Suite 180 Overland Park, KS 66210 (913) 339-9132 (913) 339-9045 (fax) ATTORNEYS FOR PLAINTIFF

Decks & Fences

CONTACT US TO ADVERTISE! LEGALS@LJWORLD.COM 785.832.2222

Water & Trash Paid Small Dog

785-838-9559

785-865-2505

EOH

grandmanagement.net

785.832.2222

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

Thicker line? Bolder heading? Color background? Ask how to get these features in your ad TODAY!! Call: 785-832-2222

Decks & Fences

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Home Improvements

Deck Drywall Siding Replacement Gutters Privacy Fencing Doors & Trim Commercial Build-out Build-to-suit services

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

Fully Insured 22 yrs. experience

913-488-7320

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

Rich Black Top Soil No Chemicals Machine Pulverized Pickup or Delivery Serving KC over 40 years

913-962-0798 Fast Service

Foundation Repair Foundation Repair Limestone wall bracing, floor straitening, sinking or bulging issues foundation water-proofing, repair and replacement Call 843-2700 or text 393-9924

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 Retired Carpenter, Deck Repairs, Home Repairs, Interior Wall Repair & House Painting, Doors, Wood Rot, Power wash and Tree Services. 785-766-5285

Insurance

785-832-2222

Providing top quality service and solutions for all your insurance needs. Medicare Home Auto Business

Call Today 785-841-9538

Lawn, Garden & Nursery Golden Rule Lawncare Mowing & lawn cleanup Snow Removal Family owned & operated Call for Free Est. Insured. Eugene Yoder 785-224-9436

Painting JAYHAWK GUTTERING Seamless aluminum guttering. Many colors to choose from. Install, repair, screen, clean-out. Locally owned. Insured. Free estimates.

785-842-0094

A.B. PAINTING & REPAIR Int/ext. Drywall, Siding, 30 plus yrs. Locally owned & operated.

Call Al 785-331-6994 albeil@aol.com

jayhawkguttering.com

Home Improvements

785-312-1917

Pet Services

Personalized, professional, full-service pet grooming. Low prices. Self owned & operated. 785-842-7118 www.Platinum-Paws.com

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

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 ARBOR-TECH Licensed and Insured tree climber - trimming, removal, stump removal, storm damage, rigging. Free estimates Dave 785-312-1690

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)

STARTING or BUILDING a Business?

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

Call Lyndsey 913-422-7002

BHI Roofing Company

FOUNDATION REPAIR

Guttering Services

Interior/Exterior Painting Quality Work Over 30 yrs. exp.

Roofing

Needing to place an ad?

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

Painting

Plumbing

Dirt-Manure-Mulch

defendants; the unknown spouses of any defendants; the unknown officers, successors, trustees, creditors and assigns of any defendants that are existing, dissolved or dormant corporations; the unknown executors, administrators, devisees, trustees, creditors, suc1275 Rd, Eudora, KS 66025 cessors and assigns of any defendants that are or were (“the Property”) MS113519 partners or in partnership; the unknown guardians, conservators and trustees of any defendants that are to satisfy the judgment in minors or are under any legal disability; and the unthe above entitled case. known heirs, executors, administrators, devisees, trus- The Wood Doctor - Wood rot reThe sale is to be made tees, creditors and assigns of any person alleged to be pair, fences, decks, doors & winwithout appraisement and deceased, and all other persons who are or may be dows - built, repaired, or resubject to the redemption MILLSAP & SINGER, LLC AS concerned. placed & more! Bath/kitchen reperiod as provided by law, ATTORNEYS FOR DITECH modeled. Basement finished. and further subject to the FINANCIAL, LLC IS AT- You are notified that a Petition has been filed in the Dis- 785-542-3633 • 816-591-6234 approval of the Court. TEMPTING TO COLLECT A trict Court of Douglas County, Kansas, praying to foreDEBT AND ANY INFORMA- close a real estate mortgage on the following described Cleaning ______________________ TION OBTAINED WILL BE real estate: Douglas County Sheriff USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. Lot Eleven (11), in Block Two (2), in PARKSIDE ADDI_______ Quality Office Cleaning MILLSAP & SINGER, LLC TION, an addition to the City of Lawrence, as shown We are here to serve you, by the recorded plat thereof, in Douglas County, KanNo job too big or small. (First published in the Lawrence Daily Journal-World on sas, commonly known as 1114 Parkside Road, LawMajor CC excepted rence, KS 66049 (the “Property”) February 1, 2017) Info. & Appointments M-F, 9-5 Call 785-330-3869 and all those defendants who have not otherwise been IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS served are required to plead to the Petition on or before CIVIL DEPARTMENT the 14th day of March, 2017, in the District Court of Concrete Douglas County,Kansas. If you fail to plead, judgment U.S. Bank National Association and decree will be entered in due course upon the Petition. Plaintiff, Concrete Driveways, Parking lots, Pavement repair, NOTICE vs. Sidewalks, Garage Floors Pursuant to the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, 15 Foundation walls, Remove U.S.C. §1692c(b), no information concerning the collec- & Replacement Specialists Theodore R.J. Smith; John Doe (Tenant/Occupant); Mary tion of this debt may be given without the prior consent Call 843-2700 or Text 393-9924 Doe (Tenant/Occupant); Theodore R.J. Smith, Trustee of of the consumer given directly to the debt collector or the Theodore R.J. Smith Revocable Living Trust under Craig Construction Co the express permission of a court of competent jurisTrust Agreement dated August 14, 200 8 and Restated Family Owned & Operated 20 Yrs diction. The debt collector is attempting to collect a October 17, 2013; Wendy M. Smith; Alison Green-Smith, debt and any information obtained will be used for that Driveways - stamped • Patios Defendants. purpose. • Sidewalks • Parking Lots Case No. 17CV25 • Building Footings & Floors Prepared By: Court Number: • All Concrete Repairs SouthLaw, P.C. Pursuant to K.S.A. Chapter 60 Free Estimates Kristen G. Stroehmann (KS #10551) 13160 Foster, Suite 100 Mike - 785-766-6760 NOTICE OF SUIT Overland Park, KS 66213-2660 mdcraig@sbcglobal.net THE STATE OF KANSAS, to the above-named defendants (913) 663-7600 || (913) 663-7899 (Fax) and the unknown heirs, executors, administrators, de- Attorneys for Plaintiff _______ visees, trustees, creditors and assigns of any deceased

PUBLIC NOTICE CONTINUED FROM 6C

Available Now!

785-633-7556

PUBLIC NOTICES 785.832.2222

W/D hookups, Fireplace, Major Appliances. Lawn Care & Dbl Car Garage! Equal Housing Opportunity

All Electric

2 BR & 3 BR/2BA Units

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

THE RESALE LADY

TO PLACE AN AD:

LAUREL GLEN APTS

3 BR w/2 or 2.5 BA

DALE WILLEY

2013 Hyundai Sonata

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• 1 Day - $50 • 2 Days - $75

Townhomes

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BUYING JUNK VEHICLES

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Autos Wanted Chevrolet 2013 Silverado 4wd Z71 LT

advanco@sunflower.com

grandmanagement.net

785-550-7325

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Hyundai Cars

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New carpet, vinyl, cabinets, countertop. W/D is included.

Near hospital. CentralA, off-street parking, on bus route, W/D hookups, no smoking. $600/mnth. Available Immediately!

SERVICES

2011 GMC Yukon XL SLT 4wd leather heated & cooled seats, sunroof, remote start, navigation, Bose sound, DVD, and much more! Stk#38467A1

DOWNTOWN LOFT

Townhomes

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Large 2BR / 1 BA

2013 Chevrolet Cruze LT

classifieds@ljworld.com

785.832.2222

“ Where Carefree, Comfortable Living Begins…”

JUST $20

There will be no classes Spring Break May 20-May 26

TO PLACE AN AD:

Special Notices

Submit a photo of you and your Valentine to be printed in the Journal-World Tuesday, Feb 14. A portion of the procceds will be donated to Douglas County Visiting Nurses.

HOME HEALTH AIDE:TBA

TO PLACE AN AD:

| 7C

Family Tradition Interior & Exterior Painting Carpentry/Wood Rot Senior Citizen Discount Ask for Ray 785-330-3459

785-832-2222 classifieds@ljworld.com Advertising that works for you!


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OV Er 1 6 5 CaTE g O r i E s !

go To: www.BestofLawrence.com Vote

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Wednesday, February 1, 2017

Delivery issues: (785) 843-1000 or subs@ljworld.com

Sara Moulton/AP Photo

Beef Stroganoff ideal for Valentine’s Day By Sara Moulton Associated Press

P

rimed to romance your certain someone on Valentine’s Day? Nothing says “I love you” more persuasively than a home-cooked meal. This one-pot noodle dish, a variation on Beef Stroganoff, is the ideal messenger. Although the roots of the classic recipe are certifiably aristocratic — a French chef working for Count Pavel Stroganoff, a Russian, created it in the early 1800s — Beef Stroganoff was being treated pretty roughly in America by the 1960s. At that time, when “convenience” trumped every other value, home cooks loved being able to whip up a fancy main course using canned gravy, canned mushrooms, canned minced onions and canned roast beef. We’re going to treat it with a little more respect

About Crave

in this recipe for AmpedUp Beef Stroganoff. To start, the basics remain unchanged — thin slices of beef fillet topped with a sauce of fresh mushrooms and sour cream, all of it ladled over noodles. But I’ve beefed up the umami — and intensified the taste — with dried mushrooms, tomato paste and Dijon mustard. Also, we cook the noodles in the sauce, which makes them that much more delicious. Ideally, your steak of choice will be beef fillet — it is Valentine’s Day, after all — but if you don’t want to splurge, you can swap in less expensive cuts. And if you can’t find dried porcini, you’ll be fine with dried shiitakes or a mix of dried mushrooms. In truth, any dried mushroom packs a one-two punch, contributing not only itself, but also the savory liquid generated when it’s rehydrated. That mushroom liqueur makes a

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lip-smacking base for any sauce. What to serve alongside this love offering? A nice refreshing salad involving citrus will provide the perfect contrast. And don’t forget the stagecraft! Set a proper table with cloth napkins and mats, a candle or two, and a bottle of robust red wine.

Amped-Up Beef Stroganoff

shallot or onion 4 ounces sliced fresh mushrooms (white, cremini, exotic or a mix) 2 teaspoons minced garlic 2 teaspoons fresh thyme 1 tablespoon tomato paste 1 tablespoon flour 1/3 cup dry red wine 4 ounces egg noodles 1/2 cup sour cream 1 tablespoon Dijon mustard 1 tablespoon fresh lemon juice Chopped fresh parsley for garnish

Directions: In a small saucepan combine the porcini mushrooms Ingredients: and the beef broth and bring 1 1/2 ounces dried porcini, the mixture just to a boil. Rerinsed move the pan from the heat 1 1/2 cups low-sodium beef and let the mushrooms steep or chicken broth for 15 minutes. Strain the 2 tablespoons extra-virgin liquid through a fine strainer, olive oil reserving it, and chop the 8 ounces filet mignon cut mushrooms. into 1-inch cubes In a large skillet, heat the Kosher salt and black pep- oil over medium- high heat. per Season the meat with salt 1/4 cup finely chopped and pepper and add it to the Start to finish: 1 hour Servings: 2

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pan. Sear the meat quickly on all sides and transfer it to a plate. Reduce the heat to medium, add the shallot to the skillet and cook stirring until softened; add the mushrooms and cook, stirring occasionally until the mushrooms are lightly browned. Add the garlic, thyme, tomato paste and flour and cook, stirring, 1 minute. Add the red wine, reserved broth, 1 1/2 cups water, the chopped porcini and the noodles to the skillet. Bring to a boil, reduce to a simmer, and cook, covered, stirring occasionally, until the noodles are just al dente, about 10 minutes, adding additional water if necessary to keep the noodles partly submerged. Stir in the sour cream, Dijon and lemon juice; adjust the seasoning if necessary. Add the beef and beef juices and simmer just until the meat is heated, about 1 minute. Serve right away, sprinkled with the parsley.

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Wednesday, February 1, 2017

Dear Annie

. JACQUELINE BIGAR’S STARS

For Wednesday, Feb. 1,: This year you will continue to be more verbal than in the past. You won’t hesitate to let others know how you feel. If you start pushing and manipulating someone to get your way, you could be witness to a huge backfire. If you are single, your outgoing personality melts barriers quickly. When you meet the right person, which could be this year, you will know. If you are attached, the two of you communicate effectively. Don’t let a neighbor or sibling interfere with your bond. ARIES knows how to make his or her ideas sink into your mind.

L awrence J ournal -W orld jacquelinebigar.com

deal of interest in how you are handling a particular risk. Help this person understand why he or she doesn’t need to be so nervous. A loved one might create an uproar. Tonight: Fun and games. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHHHH A partner could be intent on moving in the direction dearannie@creators.com that he or she chooses. You might butt heads with this person, as you don’t seem to see eye to eye on a key topic. Don’t push someone who is stuck on his or her own ideas. Tonight: Say “yes” to an invitation. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHH You have a lot of ground to cover and the determination to The stars show the kind do just that. You might want to of day you’ll have: 5-Dynamic; focus on where you can make the 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; biggest difference. You could feel 1-Difficult as if people are more responsive to you right now. Tonight: Know Aries (March 21-April 19) when to stop playing and start HHHH Finally, events seem to prioritizing. be flowing more easily than in the Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Dear Annie: I was at a din- recent past. You know where you HHHH You might want to ner party with my girlfriends last are heading, and you can coast handle a burning desire by starting week, and we got on the subject of down that path without any inter- to go for it. Your creativity soars weddings. Someone we know had ference. Someone might decide to to an unprecedented level. Use posted wedding photos on Face- give you some flak at the last min- your resourcefulness to solve a book, and it got us talking about ute; don’t let it get to you. Tonight: problem, and use your time more all the details — dress, location, As you like it. effectively. Someone might want etc. When the wedding party was Taurus (April 20-May 20) to push you professionally. Tomentioned, my friend ‘‘Jessica’’ HH Move slowly, even if night: Ever playful. said, ‘‘Well, of course, I’ll let you everything seems A-OK. Though Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) girls all pick your dresses when you might have the cosmic green HHHH You generally are quite I get married.’’ I looked around light, your path could be fraught agreeable and say the right words and thought, ‘‘Me? I would be one with several different obstacles. at the right time. You could be of her bridesmaids?’’ I was pretty Slow down or postpone what you unusually playful and not think stunned. Jessica and I have known are doing for a while, until you feel about the words you are choosing each other for years, but we only surer of yourself. Tonight: Not to to say. As a result, your statement just started getting to know each be found. could be too blunt for someone’s other one-on-one a few months Gemini (May 21-June 20) feelings not to be hurt. Tonight: ago. She’s a lovely girl, and I am HHHHH You could be more Head home. glad we are better friends now, focused on gaining success than Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) but truthfully, I’d feel a little out on handling a project. A meeting HHHH Speak your mind. Presof place in her wedding party. I proves to be more effective than sure builds because you have a tendency to replay a situation over mean, her birthday passed in No- you thought possible. You might and over again in your mind. You’ll vember, and I didn’t even have the need to read between the lines feel energized because of someday memorized. It came and went, with a business dealing. Look to and I had no idea. (Whoops.) others for feedback. Tonight: Keep one’s efforts to draw you in to a project to become more involved More importantly, I know I won’t your eye on the prize. in what he or she is doing. Tonight: ask her to be a bridesmaid at my Cancer (June 21-July 22) wedding. Any thoughts? — Not HHHH Where your friends are Get some exercise. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) Always a Bridesmaid might be the best place for you to HHH Pretend that there is a Dear NAAB: Hold your high be, too. Focus on getting through yellow light flashing over your heels. From your letter, it doesn’t what must get done, no matter bank account. If you use some sound as if Jessica is even engaged what, so that you can join your yet. No need to start sweating her pals. You might need to answer to caution with your finances today, you will feel much better and wedding plans. Whenever that an older person. Once you are in time actually comes, the two of the clear, you will be a lot happier. more in control in the future. A friend might be insistent on having you may be much closer and you’ll Tonight: A must show. his or her way. Just go with the be happy to play an important role Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) flow. Tonight: Where the action is. in her special day. And don’t worHHHH Say little when othry; you don’t have to make some- ers head in the direction that one a bridesmaid purely because they feel is right. Your interaction BORN TODAY you were one of hers. There are with someone at a distance will l Singer/songwriter Lisa so many other factors — the size enlighten you about a situation for Marie Presley (1968) of your wedding party, whether which you might not have all the l actor Brandon Lee (1965), you have sisters, sisters-in-law or facts. Don’t hesitate to revise your l Michael C. Hall (1971) longtime childhood friends to in- plans, as need be. Tonight: Think clude, etc. A true friend wouldn’t about a vacation. hold it against you. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Dear Annie: I like to read adHHHH One-on-one relating vice columns, yours and others, is likely to take you down a new — The astrological forecast should but I usually skip the response path. A partner will show a great be read for entertainment only. to the problem. Invariably, the answer will be ‘‘seek therapy,’’ as if that were some kind of magic solution. Let me tell you what ‘‘seeking therapy’’ means for me and, I suspect, most Americans. I live in a small town; resources for therapy are scarce. I do not qualify for employer insurance or benefits. My individual insurance does not cover counseling. I could, conceivably, drive an hour to the nearest large city for a chance at quality therapy. I would have then spent an hour driving there, an hour in the appointment and an hour driving back — three hours in which I lost potential wages, shelled out money I can’t spare and used gas I was counting on to get me to and from work. This doesn’t even address the issue of getting my employer to OK my missing work on a regular basis (therapy not being a one-and-done undertaking) and the fallout that comes from being known as an employee with issues. Yes, I know about privacy policies at work. We all know the reality is different. If I were still a mother with young children, throw in child care issues while seeking therapy. Turn to my religious adviser? Don’t have one. Talk to my physician — during the 10 minutes he spares me to write a prescription I can’t afford? Combine all these issues for two people seeking couples counseling and look at the likelihood of success. If you detect a touch of bitterness in my letter, it is because it is there. Telling me to seek therapy is akin to saying, ‘‘Let them eat cake.’’ — Frustrated Dear Frustrated: Thank you for this reminder of how difficult it can be to find mental health care. Have you tried remote counseling? Services such as BetterHelp and Talkspace connect patients with professionals via video chats, text messages and phone calls. This might be a more convenient and affordable option for you. Be well.

Annie Lane

Don’t sweat wedding plans prior to engagement

— Send your questions for Annie Lane to dearannie@creators.com.

Universal UNIVERSAL CROSSWORD

Crossword

Edited by Timothy Parker February 1, 2017 ACROSS 1 It may be passed on stage 5 The end of ___ (retirement of a legend) 10 Public relations or board game effort 14 First-class 15 Utilizes a track, in a way 16 Continental cash 17 Things craved in the wee hours 20 City in Utah 21 Baltimore pros 22 Measurable units of work 25 Fairy-tale beast 26 It may participate in school fundraising 29 Little clever remarks 31 Certain military forces 35 “Lord of the Rings” baddie 36 Ancient calculators 38 Raines or Fitzgerald 39 Someone we wait for in the wee hours 43 Grad 44 “Neato!” relative 45 Grade A item 46 Cedar ___, Iowa

2/1

49 Frenzied way to run 50 Bar or bakery order 51 Drop of sadness 53 Stuff that gets filtered 55 Impressive homes and their properties 58 Completes a flight 62 Thing we watch in the wee hours 65 One maker of laptops 66 Like a bad day for baseball 67 Done with 68 Units of electrical resistance 69 Buoy one’s spirits 70 Swear by DOWN 1 Feeler on a creepy crawler 2 Pride sound 3 Word with “stumble” or “latch” 4 Irritate 5 Jeremy’s “Entourage” character 6 Hound and pester 7 Lingering sound effect 8 Old-fashioned 9 Put task to person 10 Altitude baseline 11 Dark purplishbrown to dark red

12 Bugs significantly 13 Refusals 18 Bates of “Psycho” 19 Director Ephron 23 Vast desert 24 Some males in the forest 26 Type of bear or cap 27 Sing-song syllables 28 Misbehave 30 Vowel that’s not stressed 32 More green around the gills 33 Funeral tune 34 Army officer, informally 37 Gossip-rag tidbits 40 Things sending out stuff 41 Hoof-hittingpavement sound

42 High-pH substance 47 Sausage purveyor Jimmy 48 Lampoon 52 Fit for royalty 54 Bruce Wayne’s is stately 55 For every one 56 Thorn locale 57 Actor LaBeouf 59 Campbell of TV and film 60 One-on-one face-off 61 Nimble and quick 62 Member of a Buddhist people 63 “Boom” maker 64 Strong solution of sodium

PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER

1/31 © 2017 Andrews McMeel Syndication www.upuzzles.com

IN THE WEE HOURS By Timothy E. Parker

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

Unscramble these four Jumbles, one letter to each square, to form four ordinary words.

SUDEO ©2017 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.

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A classy and tasty filet that’s easy to prepare all you need is a handful of lightly dressed baby greens on the side ow, does this and you are in business. dish look There are so many apclassy, right? pealing combinations of But look at the ingredient greens available either list — not too long. And by the pound or in look at the steps — pret- 5-ounce plastic containty darn simple. ers in the produce aisle, My boys love all kinds some with herbs or of steaks, though a perother add-ins, and it’s fect, tender filet distincan awfully easy way to tively communicates keep changing up your “special occasion.” They green salad. are no harder to cook Of course, you are than any other steaks; welcome to round out just make sure to have the meal with the starch the temperature high of your choice, anything enough in the pan that from mashed potatoes the outside gets nicely to buttered noodles. But seared while the middle there’s no question that remains pink, and be the star of the plate is the careful not overcook it. steak. A medium rare filet will have an internal temperFilet Mignon ature of 130 F. with Pistou Pistou is similar to pesto, though often and Green Salad made with a looser Serves 4 consistency, and someStart to finish: 25 mintimes the pine nuts and/ or Parmesan cheese are utes omitted, resulting in a simpler basil, garlic and Ingredients: 2 garlic cloves olive oil sauce. That’s 1/2 cup fresh basil the drizzle you’re going leaves for here: just a pop of 1/3 cup plus 3 tableherb-infused green olive spoons extra virgin olive oil to brighten up that perfect little filet. Then oil, divided

By Katie Workman

Associated Press

W

Sarah E Crowder/AP Photo

Kosher salt and freshly ground pepper to taste 4 5-ounce filet mignon steaks, about 1-inch thick 1 tablespoon white wine vinegar 5 ounces mixed baby lettuces Directions: Make the pistou: Place the garlic cloves in a small food processor and mince. Add the basil and process again to chop, then add 1/3 cup of the olive oil, some salt and pepper, and blend until it becomes a bright green sauce. Season the steak generously with salt and pepper. Heat a large heavy skillet, such as cast iron, over

medium-high heat. Add 1 tablespoon olive oil, and when the oil is hot, sear the steak for 3 to 4 minutes on each side for medium rare. Remove the steaks to a cutting board and let them rest for 5 minutes before serving. While the meat is resting, in a large bowl combine the remaining 2 tablespoons olive oil, the vinegar, and salt and pepper. Stir to combine, add the lettuce and toss. Serve the filets with a drizzle of the pistou on top, and a couple of handfuls of the dressed mixed greens. Pass the rest of the pistou on the side for extra drizzling.

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