Lawrence Journal-World 2-11-2017

Page 1

SEABURY BOYS ROUT CROSSTOWN FOE VERITAS, 77-52. 1D TRUMP CONSIDERING NEW EXECUTIVE ORDER ON REFUGEES.

PAGE 1B

L A W R E NC E

Journal-World

®

$1.00 / LJWorld.com

Saturday • February 11 • 2017

PUBLISHED SINCE 1891

Adair quits school board —

Blasts members over technology, ‘ethical challenges’

ASHLEY MERCER, FOURTH FROM LEFT, TRAVELED TO AN ISLAND IN THE SOUTH PACIFIC LAST SPRING TO COMPETE ON THE MTV REALITY SHOW “STRANDED WITH A MILLION DOLLARS.” THE SHOW PREMIERES AT 9 P.M. FEB. 21. Contributed Photo

TREASURE ISLAND .....

Local woman vies for share of $1M on reality show

...

By Elvyn Jones

It’s a completely different game than ‘Survivor.’ ... There are other aspects of the game that makes it more difficult than sitting around the campfire singing ‘Kumbaya’ all night.”

ejones@ljworld.com

A

shley Mercer speaks from experience when she says life on a South Seas island isn’t paradise. The 20-year-old Lawrence woman spent time last spring on a tropical island in the South Pacific as part of the MTV reality show “Stranded with a Million Dollars.” Revealing just how long she was on the deserted island with the other nine cast members would give away too much about how the show plays out, but Mercer said she was on the

— Ashley Mercer, “Stranded with a Million Dollars” contestant

island long enough to learn that while it could be beautiful, it wasn’t always idyllic. “When it rains, it pours,” she said. “It rained more than I would have ever expected. I wasn’t expecting such fluctuations in temperatures. It was insanely hot during the daytime and brutally cold at night.”

Mercer and nine other contestants were dropped off on the island to vie for part of a $1 million prize. If that sounds familiar, there are twists that distinguish the MTV show from the granddaddy of reality shows, “Survivor.” In “Stranded,” the 10 contestants were able to spend the prize money — with a majority vote — on items to make their situation more comfortable. But as the show’s website says, the costs of those comforts were “crazy expensive,” giving the example of a $30,000 tent. Hanging on to the money was the goal, because all those who remain on the island after 40 days split what’s left of the $1 million.

> ISLAND, 2A

By Joanna Hlavacek jhlavacek@ljworld.com

Kristie Adair has resigned from the Lawrence school board, effective immediately. Adair, who joined the school board in 2013, told the JournalWorld less than a month ago that she remained committed to finishing the re- Adair maining year of her term despite missing half of the board’s last 10 meetings.

> ADAIR, 2A

Court ‘troubled’ by sex predator case —

Concerns raised over due process By Peter Hancock phancock@ljworld.com

Shutterstock Photo

City, Greyhound working toward library stop By Rochelle Valverde rvalverde@ljworld.com

The City of Lawrence and the Greyhound bus service are now negotiating an agreement for Greyhound to use an area near the Lawrence Public Library as a bus stop, the city’s public works leader said Friday. Two locations are being considered for the stop, Public

L A W R E NC E

Journal-World

®

LJWorld.com | KUSports.com

VOL. 159 / NO. 42 / 24 PAGES

‘‘

representatives are also negotiating a monthly fee for use of the site, Soules said. Originally, the city proposed to charge Greyhound $1,000 per month to use the — Lawrence Public Library Director Brad Allen area north of the library, based on the parking fare the city would forego by removing Works Director Charles Soules and the other is in front of the four metered parking stalls. said. One is directly north of library on Vermont Street. > GREYHOUND, 2A the library on Seventh Street, City staff and Greyhound

Most people who are leaving from Lawrence on a bus, I would guess a lot of them are Lawrence residents or students, and we serve them. We serve everybody.”

Pleasant CLASSIFIED.............. 3C-4C COMICS...........................6A

|

High: 63

|

DEATHS...........................6B EVENTS...........................6B

Low: 35

|

Topeka — The Kansas Court of Appeals on Friday upheld a lower court that denied a petition to release a man being held as a sexually violent predator, but said it was “deeply trouCOURTS bled” by the way his due process Inside: Aprights have been peals court rules on open handled. Matthew B. records (3A), Griffin has been jury selection confined at (6B). Larned State Hospital since 2009 for treatment as a sexually violent predator.

Forecast, 8A

HOROSCOPE....................5B OPINION..........................7A

PUZZLES..........................5B SPORTS.....................1D-4D

> PREDATOR, 2A


2A

|

Saturday, February 11, 2017

Adair CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A

LAWRENCE • STATE

.

‘‘

her being gone,” Harmon told the Journal-World. “If that was the only way for her to participate, I would rather she participate using technology remotely than not participate at all… I was just concerned that she was starting to do that too frequently.” In her letter, Adair also pointed to her frustrations with the board’s “inability,” as she put it, to adopt “appropriate technologies” for Lawrence students. She said her advice on technological matters had been largely ignored by the school board, “usually to the detriment of the students,” an assessment that Harmon also characterized as inaccurate. Adair also highlighted “ethical challenges” faced by the board, among them a ruling from the Universal Service Administrative Company in December that found district officials had violated federal conflict-ofinterest rules. In its findings, the USAC accused administrators of improperly accepting more than a dozen free internet accounts, putting the district at risk of losing out on approximately

$840,000 in funding. “It bothers me that employees and school board members were getting free internet service while low income families were trekking back and forth to the public library so their children could do homework,” Adair said in her letter. “It is unconscionable. It stinks of bribery and official corruption.” Harmon, once again, described Adair’s allegations as an “extreme mischaracterization of what happened.” Both the school district and its then-internet provider Knology have since appealed the USAC findings to the Federal Communications Commission, arguing that the free accounts were offered “as part of Knology’s regular commercial offerings made over the course of many years” and did not influence decision-makers in the district. On Friday, Harmon flatly denied that any bribery had taken place. “Basically, once it came to light that there was a potential issue, board members stopped using it,” Harmon said of the internet accounts. “And we immediately tried to

make things right with the appropriate entities involved.” There has been talk of Adair’s potential resignation for quite s o m e time. Last year, fellow board member Vanessa Sanburn criticized Adair for Sanburn a string of absences that fell amid the selection process for the school district’s new superintendent. In addition to board meetings, Adair didn’t participate in interviewing and selecting semifinalists and finalists for the position. Adair said at the time that those absences were related to her startup company, which had been accepted into a 90-day business accelerator program. Sanburn, who was then president of the school board, suggested that Adair should resign if she wasn’t going to attend meetings. Immediately following Adair’s resignation Friday, Sanburn told the Journal-World that she had reached out to Adair that day via email. She again relayed her recommendation that “if she doesn’t have the time that is necessary in order to commit her service to the board, that resignation is the best option,” Sanburn said. “So I’m pleased to hear

relationships with other people either help or hurt your chances of winning money,” she said. “The relationships you formed were integral.” “Stranded” has another twist that sets it apart, Shumaker said. Production, he maintained, didn’t involve a camera crew hanging close to contestants as they dealt with the environment and each other. Instead, it used drones, tree-mounted remote cameras, microphones and some long-range cameras. Mercer said her involvement was something of a lark. “It wasn’t something that was a dream of mine or anything,” she said. “I was watching a TV show

with friends on how to get on a reality show. I applied online. It just kind of fell in place.” Things moved quickly after submitting the application, which included a couple of her photographs and a description of her personality, Mercer said. She had a whirlwind three weeks of interviews before catching a flight to the show’s location. The brief biography on Mercer provided on the MTV website states that she’s a tomboy who grew up hunting and fishing in rural Kansas. Mercer was born in Kansas City, Mo., and moved as a child with her family to Lenexa, graduating in 2014 from Shawnee Mission West High School. “I basically grew up

in northwest Missouri where my family is from,” she said. “I spent a lot of time outdoors hunting and fishing. I learned outdoor skills doing that with my dad and uncles.” The skills were helpful on the island, although Mercer said there wasn’t any big game to hunt. Living off the land meant catching crabs and fish, she said, adding that she dropped a few pounds during her island stay. “Not as much as I’d have liked,” she said. “I wasn’t gorging on hamburgers two or three times a week, so I dropped a few pounds. That is probably not a bad thing.” Mercer moved to Lawrence to attend the

... I’m pleased to hear that given her business and lack of time to commit to the responsibility, that she did choose to resign.”

— School board member Vanessa Sanburn

On Friday afternoon, however, she submitted a resignation letter to Superintendent Kyle Hayden that cited her “growing responsibilities” in her family’s tech startup business as one of several reasons behind her departure. Most recently, she said, those responsibilities entailed business meetings in San Francisco (where her husband and business partner, Josh Montgomery, now works full-time) that conflicted with her school board schedule. “During our first week in San Francisco I asked to join the school board via teleconference, but my request was denied by the (board) president,” Adair said in her resignation letter. “Without the ability to participate remotely I’m unable to serve our constituents and participate fully in board activities.” School board president Marcel Harmon, however, called that statement a “misunderstanding” of their actual exchange. “That’s Harmon not the conversation we had. I was just concerned with

Island CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A

“It wasn’t a winnertake-all,” Mercer said in an interview that included MTV publicist Jason Shumaker. “It’s a completely different game than ‘Survivor.’ The only way to leave or go home is if you decide you don’t want to be there. There are other aspects of the game that makes it more difficult than sitting around the campfire singing ‘Kumbaya’ all night.” Like many reality shows, teamwork and alliances were important, Mercer said. “Absolutely. Your

Greyhound CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A

Greyhound was not receptive to that amount, indicating it was significantly more than it typically pays for a stop. At the Lawrence City Commission’s meeting on Tuesday, Mayor Leslie Soden suggested the other area on Vermont Street, which would utilize open curb space and potentially one parking stall. Greyhound provides service to Lawrence three times a day — at 8:55 a.m., 1:55 p.m. and 5:50 p.m. — on its route between Topeka and Kansas City, and connects to thousands of cities across the country. The original proposal to use an area near the library as a bus stop came from Brad Allen, the library’s director, who said it would allow bus riders convenient access to shelter, rest­rooms and computers to print tickets. Allen said since making the proposal, he has heard some concerns from the community about the library “becoming a bus depot.” However, he noted that lots of people, not just bus riders, already use the library to print tickets or other documents, and that the library is meant to serve the community. “Most people who are leaving from Lawrence on a bus, I would guess a lot of them are Lawrence

residents or students, and we serve them,” Allen said. “We serve everybody.” Allen also said he didn’t anticipate the relatively small ridership on Greyhound would make much of an impact on the library. Greyhound representatives have said the Lawrence stop serves about 3,000 arrivals and departures per year, and Allen pointed out that’s only about eight people per day on average. He said the potential loss of parking, at least during the day, would be a more contentious issue. “To me, I think the biggest problem is just how the public is going to stomach four parking spots at Seventh and Vermont sitting empty,” Allen said, though he noted it could be possible to allow parking in the evening if the city elects to use that area for the stop. The negotiations between the city and Greyhound follow 14 months of the bus service using city property as its stop free of charge while it attempted to find a permanent stop. On Tuesday, the City Commission voted for the fifth time to extend the agreement for Greyhound to use the city’s rightof-way at East Sixth and New Hampshire streets, this time until March 14. However, commissioners indicated that was the final deadline for Greyhound to make other arrangements.

Predator CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A

He was transferred there after completing his sentence for aggravated indecent solicitation of a 12-year-old girl in Saline County in 1996, according to information on the state’s offender registry website. Kansas is one of several states that allow the continued confinement of people convicted of certain crimes, even after they have served their prison term for a sexually violent crime, if it’s determined they have a mental condition that would make them a danger to the public if they are released. Under one provision of that law, however, those inmates are entitled to an annual review to determine whether they are eligible to be placed in a “transitional release” program. Those evaluations also are supposed to be reviewed by the district court that committed the inmate as a sexually violent predator. In Griffin’s case, the court said, there was no judicial review of his evaluations in four of the first six years of his confinement, even though the hospital had conducted the evaluations. — City Hall reporter Rochelle Valverde However, in Janucan be reached at 832-6314. Follow ary 2016, after his sevher on Twitter: @RochelleVerde enth evaluation, Griffin’s

attorney announced that after reviewing the evaluations, Griffin no longer wished to seek transitional release related to his sixth and seventh evaluations. Instead, Griffin argued that his commitment was vacated in 2010 when the Saline County District Court failed to review his first evaluation, and that he had been unlawfully confined since that date. In a 23-page opinion, Judges G. Joseph Pierron Jr., G. Gordon Atcheson and Karen Arnold-Burger said they were “deeply troubled by the general lack of attention by the district court to the periodic review component of due process for persons confined” under the Sexually Violent Predator Act. “We are also troubled by the difficulty of obtaining any meaningful remedy for such inaction” under the normal legal process. The court also suggested that the Kansas Legislature clarify the law to make it more specific about exactly when the annual reviews should take place. But in Griffin’s case, the court said, the proper answer was not to grant him unconditional release, especially since he had not challenged subsequent evaluations and orders that said he still posed a danger to the general public. — Statehouse reporter Peter Hancock can be reached at 354-4222. Follow him on Twitter: @LJWpqhancock

L awrence J ournal -W orld that given her business and lack of time to commit to the responsibility, that she did choose to resign,” Sanburn said. School board member Shannon Kimball expressed similar sentiments to the JournalWorld on Friday. She called Adair’s letter a “widely inaccurate” mischaracterization of both Adair’s intentions and the actions of the board. She’s also looking forward to finding Adair’s replacement, details of which will be discussed at Monday’s school board meeting, Kimball said. K i m ball did say that the school board will soon start its search for a new Kimball b o a r d member to serve the remainder of Adair’s term, which she said will run through late December or early January at the latest. Kimball hopes to have the position filled by the end of March. “I look forward to the process of finding someone in the community who wants to step up and do the hard work it takes to be an effective school board member,” Kimball said.

University of Kansas, but left school when she couldn’t decide what she wanted to study. She now works at Amarr Garage Doors and has a newfound happiness with her Lawrence life. “I definitely learned to appreciate what I have here at home,” she said. “I learned to not take everyday luxuries for granted. I gained quite a few friendships and am so grateful for the opportunity to participate in something so life-changing.” The show premieres at 9 p.m. Feb. 21 on MTV. More on Mercer and the show can be found at mtv. com/shows/stranded.

ljworld.com 645 New Hampshire St. (News Center) Lawrence, KS 66044 (785) 843-1000 • (800) 578-8748

PUBLISHER Scott Stanford, 832-7277, sstanford@ljworld.com

EDITORS Chad Lawhorn, editor 832-6362, clawhorn@ljworld.com Kim Callahan, managing editor 832-7148, kcallahan@ljworld.com Tom Keegan, sports editor 832-7147, tkeegan@ljworld.com Kathleen Johnson, advertising manager 832-7223, kjohnson@ljworld.com

OTHER CONTACTS Joan Insco: 832-7211 circulation manager Classified advertising: 832-2222 or www.ljworld.com/classifieds

CALL US Let us know if you have a story idea. Email news@ljworld.com or contact one of the following: Arts and entertainment: .................832-6353 City government: ..............................832-6314 County government: .......................832-7166 Courts and crime: ..............................832-7284 Datebook: ............................................832-7165 Lawrence schools: ..........................832-6388 Letters to the editor: .....................832-6362 Local news: .........................................832-7154 Obituaries: ...........................................832-7151 Photo reprints: ..................................832-6353 Society: .................................................832-7151 Sports: ..................................................832-7147 University of Kansas: .........................832-7187

SUBSCRIPTIONS: 832-7199 — K-12 education reporter Joanna Hlavacek can be reached at 832-6388. Follow her on Twitter: @HlavacekJoanna

Didn’t receive your paper? For billing, vacation or delivery questions, call 832-7199. Weekday: 6 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Weekends: 6 a.m.-10 a.m. In-town redelivery: 6 a.m.-10 a.m. Published daily by Ogden Newspapers of Kansas LLC at 645 New Hampshire Street, Lawrence, KS 66044-0122. Telephone: 843-1000; or toll-free (800) 578-8748.

POSTMASTER: Send address changes to: Lawrence Journal-World, P.O. Box 888, Lawrence, KS 66044-0888 (USPS 306-520) Periodicals postage paid at Lawrence, Kan.

Member of Alliance for Audited Media Member of The Associated Press

FOLLOW US Facebook.com/LJWorld Twitter.com/LJWorld

— Reporter Elvyn Jones can be reached at 832-7166. Follow him on Twitter: @ElvynJ

BRIEFLY 1-vehicle crash sends man to trauma center A Lawrence man was flown to an area trauma center as the result of a one-vehicle accident Friday evening, police said. Sgt. Troy Squire with the Lawrence Police Department said Galen Morrison, 44, was headed westbound near the 600 block of West 25th Street at 7:30 p.m. Friday when he struck a parked car. Morrison’s vehicle rolled onto its side and he had to be extracted, Squire said. There were no passengers in the car with him. Squire said police did not yet know whether alcohol was a factor in the accident or whether Morrison was wearing his seatbelt. “We are currently conducting an alcohol investigation coinciding with the accident investigation,” Squire said. Squire said he did not know Morrison’s condition as of 10:15 p.m. Friday, but he said Morrison was communicating with officers on the scene. The accident is considered one-vehicle because only one car was in motion at the time of the crash, Squire said.

LOTTERY WEDNESDAY’S POWERBALL 14 20 42 49 66 (5) FRIDAY’S MEGA MILLIONS 32 39 51 62 75 (14) WEDNESDAY’S HOT LOTTO SIZZLER 2 32 36 41 42 (5) THURSDAY’S LUCKY FOR LIFE 5 9 17 40 44 (4) WEDNESDAY’S SUPER KANSAS CASH 5 15 16 24 28 (21) FRIDAY’S KANSAS 2BY2 Red: 20 22; White: 22 24 FRIDAY’S KANSAS PICK 3 (MIDDAY) 2 8 5 FRIDAY’S KANSAS PICK 3 (EVENING) 8 0 7

BIRTHS Brady and Hannah LaMar, Lawrence, a girl, Friday. Bret and Paige Vannicola, Berryton, a girl, Friday. Amanda Randel, Lawrence, a boy, Friday.

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.


LAWRENCE • STATE

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Saturday, February 11, 2017

| 3A

Judge dismisses portion of ex-KU rower’s Title IX suit By Sara Shepherd sshepherd@ljworld.com

A federal judge on Friday dismissed part of a lawsuit accusing the University of Kansas of violating Title IX in handling a former rower’s report of being raped on campus by a football player. The key accusation that won’t go forward in court is Daisy Tackett’s allegation that KU was institutionally liable for her rape before it occurred. Leaning on a precedentsetting Title IX case, Simpson v. Univ. of Colorado Boulder, Tackett alleged KU should have known there was a heightened risk of sexual assault at Jayhawker Towers apartments, where football players live with less supervision than residence halls. She also argued that KU required

female rowers to go to football games and cheer for the players and encouraged the women to attend off-campus parties with football recruits. Tackett “But these alleged policies played no part in plaintiff’s rape,” Judge J. Thomas Marten, in U.S. District Court in Kansas City, Kan., wrote in dismissing the claim and disputing its likeness to the Simpson case, which involved a university-funded program to show recruits “a good time.” “... There are no allegations that the Halloween party or the gathering at the Towers were university-sponsored or sanctioned, or that KU somehow encouraged the misconduct.”

Further, Marten wrote, Tackett’s allegation that KU should have known of a heightened risk of assault at Jayhawker Towers is “based on the stereotypical assumption that football players are more prone to commit sexual assault.” Tackett, after withdrawing from the university, first sued KU in March 2016. She was a freshman in fall 2014 when, she said in her lawsuit, after a Halloween party, a football player raped her in his apartment at KU’s Jayhawker Towers. Tackett reported the rape to KU a year later, in October 2015, after another rower told her she’d been assaulted by the same man. Tackett did not file a police report. “We are pleased the court has dismissed significant portions of this lawsuit,” KU spokeswoman Erinn Barcomb-Peterson said, in

a statement sent via email. “Moving forward, we are confident the court will agree we’ve fulfilled our obligations to Ms. Tackett.” Tackett’s attorney, Dan Curry, said that Tackett and her parents were ready to continue the court process. “On the whole, we are pleased that the case has been allowed to proceed,” Curry said, in an email. “We are excited to begin discovery. We disagree (with the) court’s ruling on the Simpson liability theory, and we may appeal that decision down the road.” KU had previously requested that the whole case be thrown out. Marten said, in Friday’s filing, that he would allow other portions of Tackett’s suit to move forward, including claims that KU was “deliberately indifferent” to her rape report, that her rowing coach made

inappropriate comments about rowers’ body types and that the coach retaliated against her after she reported her rape to KU. “At this stage, the court is not concerned with whether plaintiff will ultimately prevail, but whether she is entitled to offer evidence to support that claim,” Marten wrote, regarding the deliberate indifference claim. “Plaintiff has pled sufficient facts to allow her to offer evidence to support this claim even if recovery might appear remote on the face of the pleadings.” Also on Friday, Marten agreed to allow Tackett to amend her lawsuit for a second time, adding information about the football player’s transcript and eventual transfer to another university, according to

> LAWSUIT, 8A

Gardeners of all skill levels welcome Court: Open records law affects company running public hospital at today’s Kaw Valley Seed Fair By Peter Hancock

By Joanna Hlavacek jhlavacek@ljworld.com

Master gardeners and horticulture newbies alike are invited to this weekend’s installment of the annual Kaw Valley Seed Fair, slated for 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. today at the Douglas County Fairgrounds, 2110 Harper St. Now in its eighth year, the free event is expected to draw upwards of 1,000 people to the fairgrounds for a day of sustainability-focused seed sharing, educational demonstrations, kids’ activities, raffle prizes and more. Visitors can also purchase vegetarian fare from The Purple Carrot Co-op throughout the day. Trina McClure, one of the organizers behind this year’s event, credits the Seed Fair’s enduring popularity, at least partially, to its accessibility for gardeners of all experience levels. “We always see that ‘I’ve never done this’ anxiety. There’s something so intimidating about the idea of growing a plant,” McClure says. Luckily, more than 25 area exhibitors, including the Douglas County Extension

Master Gardeners, will be on hand today to help ease those anxieties with a little knowledge and friendly conversation. “They want people to grow gardens, whether they’re flower gardens or vegetable gardens or landscaping or container gardens, or just having house plants,” McClure says. A key component of the fair is education, and organizers like McClure believe knowledge comes from sharing ideas, advice and resources. The big draw each year is the seed exchange, for which guests are asked to bring their own excess seeds to swap with others, in addition to books, videos, catalogs and other seedsaving resources. But even those without seeds are welcome to join in, McClure says. Envelopes and containers for storing the goodies are always recommended, but never required, at the seed swap table. “You don’t have to bring something, but we do want to encourage this sense of coming together, in all these small ways, to share something,” McClure says. McClure is one of only

phancock@ljworld.com

a handful of organizers behind the fair, which she says has maintained a high turnout over the years, thanks in part to what she describes as the Lawrence community’s “deeper attachment to food.” And also, she adds, knowing where and how our food is produced. Local businesses pledge each year to help promote the event, for which there’s very little spent on advertising, McClure says. Local artists chip in, too, creating a poster for the fair each year — this time around, it’s Douglas County teen Wil Myslivy. Community members gathered for a “coloring party” last month to add their personal touches to copies of his poster, which were later distributed to local businesses and public sites around town. “All of these little pieces come together, and we wouldn’t be able to do it if we didn’t have people coming together and helping in their own little ways,” McClure says. For more information on the fair, visit facebook.com/kawvalleyseeds.

Topeka — The Kansas Court of Appeals said Friday that financial records of a county-owned hospital are subject to the Kansas Open Records Act, even if the hospital is administered on contract by an outside nonprofit corporation. The case involved the Kiowa County Memorial Hospital in Greensburg. In 2001, the hospital’s board signed a lease agreement with Great Plains of Kiowa County Inc. to administer the hospital. Great Plains, which was formed for the sole purpose of operating the Kiowa County Hospital, is a subsidiary of Great Plains Health Alliance Inc., another nonprofit corporation, but the court noted the two entities have identical officers and directors. Kiowa County levies a tax to support the hospital, but the hospital also receives revenue from federal grants, the state of Kansas and from patients or their insurers. Each year, according to the court’s decision, Great Plains would present the county commission with bottom-line numbers showing the hospital’s revenues and expenses, and

— Reporter Joanna Hlavacek can be reached at 832-6388. Follow her on Twitter: @HlavacekJoanna

would submit a request for the amount of tax subsidy it would need the following year. From 2011 to 2014, according to the court’s opinion, Great Plains asked for steadily increasing support from the county to cover a larger and larger share of the hospital’s overall cost of operations. In October 2014, the Kiowa County Commission filed an open records request with the Great Plains board of directors, seeking documents about the hospital’s budget and vouchers for payments for professional and management fees, as well as information about the salaries and titles of administrative or executive employees of Great Plains and registrations for any vehicles the company operated. Great Plains denied that request, claiming it was not a public entity subject to the Open Records Act. It argued that it only leased the hospital and that the records request should be filed with the hospital’s board of trustees. The county responded, saying it had already contacted the hospital board and was advised that the hospital board did

KU student activist arrested on warrants Carpenter is an active member of Lawrence’s Black Lives Matter group. A prominent University She was a part of the group of Kansas student activist that staged a sit-in at a Lawhas been arrested on sev- rence City Commission eral outstanding warrants. meeting last September. Trinity CarpenThe group demandter, 30, was arrested ed from the comThursday afternoon mission letters of at 1420 Research solidarity with BLM Park Drive regardand with the Ameriing two failure to can Indians protestappear warrants ing the Dakota Acissued out of Lawcess Pipeline. She rence Municipal was also a part of Court, according to Carpenter the group that took the Douglas County over a Lawrence Jail’s online booking logs. school board meeting in DeShe was released from jail cember, causing the board later that same day after to adjourn prematurely. posting a $520 bond. Carpenter has also been The two warrants stem involved in other activities from accusations of misde- around Lawrence, includmeanor traffic violations ing a candlelight vigil held and a misdemeanor theft last July to honor Alton conviction, said Lawrence Sterling and Philando CasMunicipal Court Clerk tile, two black men killed Jennifer Pfeiler. in police shootings. By Conrad Swanson

cswanson@ljworld.com

Representatives from the Lawrence Police Department did not immediately respond to questions seeking more details about Carpenter’s arrest. Douglas County District Court records show Carpenter has several criminal convictions on her record.

Between 2005 and 2008 she was convicted of offenses including conspiracy to commit robbery, criminal damage and obstructing the law enforcement process. — Public safety reporter Conrad Swanson can be reached at 832-7284. Follow him on Twitter: @Conrad_Swanson

Make This Year Special

— Statehouse reporter Peter Hancock can be reached at 354-4222. Follow him on Twitter: @LJWpqhancock

S A THIS I ENT EV F A M I LY GES ALL A E! M O C L WE

Doors open at 12:30

29th Annual

CHOCOLATE

AUCTION

12

SUNDAY, FEBRUARY LUMBERYARD ARTS CENTER 718 HIGH STREET BALDWIN CITY, KS

Contact:

Open Sunday Feb. 12th for Valentine’s Day

NFO@LUMBERYARDARTSCENTER.ORG OR CALL 785-594-3186

Marks Jewelers. Since 1880. 817 Mass. 843-4266

ACADEMY CHOIR PERFORMANCE

BEGINS AT 1:45 P.M. LIVE AUCTION

BEGINS AT 2:00 P.M. CHILDREN’S TABLES

THERE WILL ALSO BE SILENT AUCTION TABLES JUST FOR THE CHILDREN!

Proceeds to benefit the LAC Scholarship Fund and other arts center and community activities throughout the year. Donations of auction items accepted at the Lumberyard Saturday, February 11, 9:00 a.m. -12:00 p.m. & Sunday, February 12, 9:00 a.m. -11:30 a.m.

WWW.LUMBERYARDARTSCENTER.ORG

SUGGESTED DONATION FOR ADMISSION $1 AT THE DOOR

CARPET CLEANING

CARPET CLEANING

ONLY 70

CARPET | TILE & GROUT | HARDWOOD | UPHOLSTERY 24 HR EMERGENCY WATER SERVICES 1-800-STEEMER® | stanleysteemer.com

BEGINS AT 12:30 P.M.

asthma & allergy friendly™

$

BEYOND CARPET CLEANING

SILENT ACTION

asthma & allergy friendly™

2 ROOMS

785-841-8666

not have the records but Great Plains did. The county sued, and the Kiowa County District Court sided with the commission saying the documents the county sought were open public records. It also fined Great Plains $500 for violating the Open Records Act. Great Plains appealed, but the Kansas Court of Appeals on Friday affirmed the lower court ruling and sided with the county. “The (hospital) Board cannot hide its records by delegating the operations to GPKC and violate its statutory duty to maintain adequate financial records pertaining to the operations of the County-created hospital,” the court said. “By assuming the role as the sole operator of the hospital on behalf of the Board, GPKC’s operating records are deemed to be public records.” The opinion was written by Judge G. Joseph Pierron Jr. and joined by Judges Anthony J. Powell and Stephen D. Hill.

5 ROOMS ONLY $149

Cleaning Completed By 3/31/17

Cleaning Completed By 3/31/17

asthma & allergy friendly™ Certificate applies to Carpet Cleaning services only.

asthma & allergy friendly™ Certificate applies to Carpet Cleaning services only.

Minimum charges apply. Not valid in combination with other coupons or offers. Must present promo code at time of service. Valid at participating locations only. Residential only. Cannot be used for water emergency services. Certain restrictions may apply. Call for details. ASTHMA & ALLERGY FRIENDLY and ASTHMA & ALLERGY FRIENDLY LOGO are Certification Marks and Trademarks of ALLERGY STANDARDS LIMITED. The ASTHMA AND ALLERGY FOUNDATION OF AMERICA is a Registered Trademark of AAFA. Combined living areas, L-shaped rooms and rooms over 300 sq. ft. are considered 2 areas. Baths, halls, large walk-in closets and area rugs are priced separately. Offer does not include protector or deodorizer.


4A

|

Religious Directory

AFRICAN METHODIST EPISCOPAL

St Luke African Methodist Episcopal 900 New York Street 785-841-0847 Rev. Verdell Taylor, Jr. Sun. 11:00 am, Sun. School 10:00 am Bible Study Wed. 12:30 pm

ASSEMBLY OF GOD

Calvary Temple Assembly of God 606 W. 29th Terrace 785-832-2817 Pastor Don Goatlay Sunday Service 10:30 am & 6:30 pm Wed Service 6:30 pm

Eudora Assembly Of God 827 Elm Street 785-542-2182 Pastor Glenn Weld Sunday Worship 10:30 am Sunday Evening 7:00 pm

Lawrence Assembly of God 3200 Clinton Pkwy 785-843-7189 Pastor Rick Burwick Sunday 10:00 am www.lawrence3620church.com

New Life Assembly Of God Church 5th & Baker Baldwin City (785) 594-3045 Mark L. Halford Sun. 11:00 am 6 pm Wed. Family Night 6 pm

Williamstown Assembly of God 1225 Oak St. 785-597-5228 Pastor Rick Burch am wagc@williamstownag.org Sunday Worship 10:30 am

BAHA’I FAITH Baha’i Faith

Baha’i Worship Service most Sundays at 10-00 Call 785-843-2703 or friendsoflawrencebahais@gmail.com

BAPTIST

First Regular Missionary Baptist Church 1646 Vermont St • 843-5811 Pastor Arsenial Runion Sunday School 9:30 am Wednesday 7:00 pm Prayer Service and Bible Study

Fellowship Baptist Church 710 Locust Street 785-331-2299 Sunday School 9:45 am Worship 11:00 am & 6:30 pm Wednesday Prayer 7:00 pm

Lawrence Baptist Temple 3201 W 31st Street Rev. Gary L. Myers Pastor Sun. School & Worship 10:00 am Sun. Evening Worship 6:00 pm Wed. Evening 7:30 pm

Lighthouse Baptist Church 700 Chapel Street 785-594-4101 Pastor Richard Austin Sunday Worship 10:30 am llbt115@embarqmail.com.

Ninth Street Missionary Baptist Church 901 Tennessee St (785) 843-6472 Pastor Eric A. Galbreath Sun. School 9:30am * Worship 10:45am nsmbclk.org

BAPTIST - AMERICAN First American Baptist Church 1330 Kasold Dr. * 785-843-0020 Rev. Matthew Sturtevant www.firstbaptistlawrence.com Sunday Worship: 8:30 & 10:45 a.m. Sunday School: 9:30 a.m.

BAPTIST - INDEPENDENT Heritage Baptist Church

1781 E 800th Rd. (785) 887-2200 Dr. Scott Hanks Sunday Worship 10:30 am www.heritagebaptistchurch.cc

BAPTIST - SOUTHERN

Cornerstone Southern Baptist Church 802 West 22nd Terrace (785) 843-0442 Pastor Gary O’Flannagan Sun. School 9:30 am * Worship 10:45 am www.cornerstonelawrence.com

Eudora Baptist Church 525 W 20th Street 785-542-2734 Pastor Jeff Ingle Sun. School 9:00 am * Worship 10:15 am eudorabc.org

First Southern Baptist Church

XXX

.

Saturday, February 11, 2017

BIBLE

Lawrence Bible Chapel 505 Monterey Way *785-841-2607 John Scollon 785-841-5271 Lord’s Supper Sunday 9am Sun. School 10:10am Bible Hour 11:10am Supper: 6:15 PM; Prayer meeting 7pm

BUDDHIST

1423 New York St. Guiding Teacher Judy Roitman Sunday 9:30 am - 11:30 am Orientation for beginners 9 am kansaszencenter.org

CATHOLIC

Annunciation Catholic Church

Connect Now, Operators Standing By

841-0111

Lawrence First Church of the Nazarene 1470 N 1000 Rd. 785-843-3940 Bob Giffin, Senior Pastor Celebration & Praise Service 10:15 am www.lawrencefirstnaz.org

Corpus Christi Catholic Church

Lawrence Community of Christ

6001 Bob Billings Pkwy (785) 843-6286 Fr. Michael Mulvany Sat. 4:00 pm * Sun. 8:30 am & 10:00 am www.cccparish.org

Holy Family Catholic Church 820 Birch Street, Eudora 785-542-2788 Monsignor Vince Krische Service Sat. 5:00 pm Sun. 10:00 am www.holyfamilyeudora.com

St. John Evangelist Catholic Church 1229 Vermont ST 785.843.0109 www.sjevangelist.com Weekend Mass: Sat 4:30 pm Sun. 7am, 8:30am, 11:00am, 2pm (Spanish), 5 pm

CHRISTIAN

Lawrence Heights Christian Church 2321 Peterson Road 785-843-1729 Pastor Steve Koberlein Sunday Worship 8:45 am & 10:30 am Lawrence-heights.org

North Lawrence Christian Church 7th and Elm Charles Waugh, Minister Bible School 10:00am Worship 10:55 am www.nlawrencechristianchurch.com

COMMUNITY OF CHRIST 711 W. 23rd in the Malls Shopping Center 785-843-7535 Pastor Marilyn Myers Sunday Worship 10:00 am

University Community Of Christ 1900 University Drive 785-843-8427 Pastor Nancy Zahniser Sunday Worship 10:00 am Sunday Classtime 9:00 am

EPISCOPAL

St. Margaret’s Episcopal Church

5700 W. 6th St. 785-865-5777 Father Matt Zimmermann 8 am & 10 am Holy Eucharist www.saintmargaret.org

Trinity Episcopal Church

1011 Vermont St (785) 843-6166 The Reverend Rob Baldwin, Rector 8 am; 10:30 am; 6:00 pm Solemn High Mass www.trinitylawrence.org

EVANGELICAL FREE CHURCH OF AMERICA Christ Community Church

1100 Kasold Drive 785-842-7600 Jeff Barclay Pastor Sun. Worship 9:30 am & 10:30 am www.ccclawrence.org

ISLAMIC

Islamic Center Of Lawrence

603 East Front Street Perry Kansas 785-597-5493 Pastors Will Eickman and Alan Hamer

1917 Naismith Drive (785) 749-1638 Najabat Abbasi Director Friday 1:30 pm www.islamicsocietylawrence.org

CHURCH OF THE BRETHREN

JEHOVAH’S WITNESSES

Perry Christian Church

Lone Star Church of the Brethren 883 E 800 Rd Lawrence, KS Jane Flora-Swick, Pastor Worship 10:30 * Sun. School 10:45am www.lonestarbrethren.com

CHRISTIAN CHURCH DISCIPLES OF CHRIST First Christian Church

1000 Kentucky Street 785-843-0679 www.fcclawrence.org Sr. Pastor Dr. David Pendergrass Sunday 9am & 11am

CHURCH OF CHRIST Church Of Christ

201 N. Michigan St. 785-838-9795 Elders Tom Griffin & Calvin Spencer Sunday 10 am & 1:30 pm, Wed. 7 pm www.lawrencecoc.org

Church Of Christ of Baldwin City 820 High Street, Baldwin City (785) 594-4246 Sunday Worship 11:00 am

Southern Hills Congregation

1802 E 19th St * 843-8765 Sun. 1:30 pm Public Talk & Watchtower Study

River Heights Congregation

1802 E 19th St * 843-8765 Sun. 10:00 am Public Talk & Watchtower Study Tues. 7:30, TMS, & Service Mtg

JEWISH

Chabad Center for Jewish Life

Corner of 25th & Missouri 785-843-0770 Chris Newton, Minister Sun. Bible School 9:15 am Sun. Worship 10:20 am & 5:00 pm Wed. Bible Study 7:00 pm

CHURCH OF GOD

Bridgepointe Community Church 601 W 29th Terrace Lawrence (785) 843-9565 Pastor Dennis Carnahan Sunday 10:45 am www.bridgepointcc.com

315 E. 7th St. * 749-0985 Pastor Paul Winn Jr. SS 10:00 am * Worship 11:15 am Wed. & Fri. Bible Teaching 7:00 pm Call early for ride to church

Marks Jewelers. 817 Mass. 843-4266

615 Lincoln St 785-841-8614 Pastor Joanna Harader Service 10:30 am peacepreacher.wordpress.com

METHODIST

Lawrence Free Methodist Church

3001 Lawrence Ave 785-842-2343 Pastor Bill Bump Blended 9:00 am * Contemporary 10:35 am www.lfmchurch.org

Lawrence Indian Methodist Church 950 E. 21st Street 785-832-9200 Pastor Jami Moss Sun School 10 am *Worship 11 am Thurs Bible Study 7 pm

METHODIST - UNITED

Big Springs United Methodist Church 96 Highway 40 * 785-887-6823 Lou Davies, Pastor Worship 9:30 am Sunday School 10:45 am Contemporary call for information www.bigspringsumc.org

Centenary United Methodist Church 245 North Elm Street 785-843-1756 Pastor Daniel Norwood Sunday Worship 11:00 am centenarylawrence@yahoo.com

Central United Methodist Church

1501 Massachusetts St 785-843-7066 Pastor Piet Knetsch Sun. School 9:30am * Worship 10:45am www.centralumclawrence.org

Clearfield United Methodist Church 297 E. 2200 Rd. Eudora 785-883-2130 Rev. Kathy Symes Worship 9:00am Sunday School 10:30am

Eudora United Methodist Church

2084 N 1300th RD, Eudora KS 66025 785-542-3200 | eudoraumc@gmail.com Sunday Contemporary Praise Worship 9AM Classic Traditional Worship 10:45AM Christian Ed/Sunday School Classes 10AM Childcare for children 4 and under during worship. www.eudoraumc.com

First United Methodist Church

704 8th Street, Baldwin Rev. Paul Babcock Sunday School each Sunday 9:30 am Traditional Worship 8:30 am Contemporary Worship 10:45 am Combined Worship 10:45 last Sunday month

First United Methodist Church

Downtown 946 Vermont St. Rev. Dr. Tom Brady Pastor Traditional 10:30 am Contemporary 9:30 am West Campus 867 Highway 40 9:00 am & 11:00 am www.fumclawrence.org

Ives Chapel United Methodist

1018 Miami St Baldwin City (785) 594-6555 Pastor Jeni Anderson Sunday Worship 11:00 am Church School 9:45 am

Lecompton United Methodist Church 402 Elmore Street, Lecompton 785-887-6327 Pastor Billie Blair Sunday 8:30 am & 10:45 am www.lecomptonumc.org

Stull United Methodist Church

Vinland United Methodist Church

917 Highland Drive 785-841-7636 www.LawrenceJCC.org Worship Friday 7:30pm Religious School Sunday 9:30am

K U Hillel House

722 New Hampshire Street (785) 749-5397 Rabbi’s Neal Schuster www.kuhillel.org

2211 Inverness Dr. * 785-843-3014 Pastor Ted Mosher Worship 2.0 9:30 am Classic Worship-11:00 am www.gslc-lawrence.org

Trinity Lutheran Church

1245 New Hampshire St. 785-843-4150 The Rev. Brian Elster, Lead Pastor Sunday 8:30 & 11:00 am www.tlclawrence.org

Immanuel Lutheran Church

Calvary Church Of God In Christ

Peace Mennonite Church

Lawrence Jewish Community Congregation

LUTHERAN - MISSOURI SYNOD

CHURCH OF GOD IN CHRIST

MENNONITE

1596 E 250 Rd. Lecompton (785) 887-6521 Pastor Faye Wagner Worship 11:00am * Sun. School 10:00am www.stullumc.org

Good Shepherd Lutheran Church

Southside Church of Christ

Contact: scooper@ljworld.com 785-832-7261 before 4:00pm Thursday

1203 West 19th St. Lawrence 785-832-TORA (8672) www.JewishKU.com “Your Source for Anything Jewish!”

LUTHERAN - ELCA

Praise Temple Church of God in Christ

24 Hour Answering Service

CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE

740 N 6th Street Baldwin City (785) 594-3700 Fr. Joman Palatty Sunday 10:30 am & 6:00 pm www.annunciationchurch.org

Victory Bible Church

609 Massachusetts (785) 843-8593

Church Of Jesus Christ Of LDS 1629 West 19th St. Lawrence 785-832-9622 Sacrament Worship 11:00am LDS.org, Mormon.org, institute.lds.org

3655 West 10th St. Lawrence 1st Ward 785-842-4019, 2nd Ward 785-3315912, Wakarusa Valley 785-842-1283 LDS.org, Mormon.org, institute.lds.org

4300 W. 6th Street (785) 843-8167 Pastor Joe Stiles Worship Service 8:30 am & 11:00 am www.fsbcfamily.com

open daily

Lawrence University Ward (Student)

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints

Kansas Zen Center

646 Alabama Street * 749-0951 Rev. William A Dulin Sun. School 10:30 am Worship 12:15 pm Tue. 7:00 pm Prayer & Bible Study Thur. 7:00 pm Worship & Pastoral Teaching

1942 Massachusetts St www.victorybiblechurchlawrence.com (785) 841-3437 Pastor Leo Barbee Sunday Worship 10:30 am

CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER-DAY SAINTS

L awrence J ournal -W orld

2104 Bob Billings Pkwy (785) 843-0620 Pastor Randy Weinkauf Worship w/ Holy Communion 8:30 (ASL sign.) & 11:00am ASL Signing lesson 9:35 am Sun. School & Christian Ed 9:45am Nursery Available & Wheelchair Accessible Ministry to Blind Outreach 3 Thur. 5:30pm www.immanuellawrence.org

Redeemer Lutheran Church

2700 Lawrence Ave 785-843-8181 * www.rlclks.org Sunday School 9:00 am Sunday Worship 10:00 am Wed. Evening Worship 7:00 pm

1724 North 692 Rood 785-594-3256 Pastor Joni Raymond Sunday School 9:30 am Sunday Worship 10:30 am

Worden United Methodist Church

294 East 900th Rd. Baldwin City 785-594-7598 Pastor Changsu Kim Worship 8:15 & 10:30 wordenumc.com

Lawrence Christian Center

416 Lincoln Street 785-842-4926 Pastor Dan Nicholson Sun. Worship 10:00 am * Wed. 7:00 pm lawrencechristiancenter.org

First Presbyterian Church

2415 Clinton Parkway 785-843-4171 Rev. Kent Winters-Hazelton Sun. Worship 8:30 & 11:00 am www.firstpreslawrence.org

West Side Presbyterian Church

1024 Kasold Drive (785) 843-1504 Rev. Debbie Garber Worship 9:55 am * Sun. School 10:15 www.westsidelawrence.org

PRESBYTERIAN-EVANGELICAL

Lawrence Life Fellowship

Grace Evangelical Presbyterian Church 3312 Calvin Drive 785-843-2005 Pastor William D. Vogler Worship 8:15 am & 10:45 am www.gepc.org

Morning Star Church

RELIGIOUS SOCIETY OF FRIENDS

911 Massachusetts Basement below Kinkos 785-838-9093 Gabriel Alvarado Worship 10:30 am AWANA, Wednesday, 6:00 998 N 1771 Rd. 785-749-0023 Pastor John McDermott Worship 9:00 am & 11:00 am www.msclawrence.com

Mustard Seed Church

700 Wakarusa Drive 785-841-5685 www.mustardseedchurch.com Wed. Youth Service 7:00 pm Sun. Morning Service 10:00 am

New Life In Christ Church

At Bridge Pointe Community 601 W. 29 Terrace 10:30 a.m. Sunday Pastor Paul Gray 785-766-3624 www.newlifelawrence.com

New Hope Fellowship

1449 Kasold Dr. Lawrence 785-331-HOPE (4673) Darrell Brazell Pastor 10:15 am Sundays www.newhopelawrence.com

The Salvation Army

946 New Hampshire St. 785-843-4188 Lts. Matt & Marisa McCluer Sun. School 9:30 am, Worship 10:45 am lawrence.salvationarmy.us

United Light Church 1515 West Main Street Lawrence, KS 66044 785-393-3539

Velocity Church

fresh. modern. relevant. 940 New Hampshire, Lawrence, KS Meeting at Lawrence Arts Center Sundays 9:00 am,10:15 am & 11:30 am www.findvelocity.org

Vintage Church

1501 New Hampshire St, Lawrence (785) 842-1553 vintagelawrence.com Deacon Godsey Sunday Service 10:00 am

ORTHODOX - EASTERN

Saint Nicholas Orthodox Church 1235 Iowa Street 785-218-7663 Rev. Dr. Joshua Lollar Sunday Divine Liturgy 9:30am www.saintnicholaschurch.net

REFORMED-PRESBYTERIAN

Christ Covenant Reformed Presbyterian Church

2312 Harvard Road; Lawrence (785) 766-7796 Pastor John M. McFarland Sun. Worship 10:45 am; Classes at 9:30 am www.ChristCovenantChurchRPC.org

PRESBYTERIAN - USA

Clinton Presbyterian Church 588 N 1200 Rd. Pastor Patrick Yancey Worship Sunday 11:00 am www.clintonchurch.net

Hesper Friends Church

2355 N 1100th Rd. 2 Mi. South. 11/2 Mi. East Eudora Rev. Darin Kearns Pastor Sunday School 9:30 am Sunday Worship 10:30 am

Oread Meeting

1146 Oregon Street Elizabeth Schultz, Clerk 785-842-1305 Meeting for worship, 10:00 am Sunday www.oreadfriends.org

Tonganoxie Evangelical Friends Church

404 Shawnee St. Tonganoxie Pastor Scott Rose Sunday School 9:45am Sunday Worship 10:30am Wed. Bible Study 6pm

SPIRIT-FILLED Faith, Hope, & Love

2004 E. 23rd St. Lawrence, KS Pastor Hugh & Mary Ellen Wentz Sunday Worship 10:30 am

UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST UU Congregation of Lawrence 1263 N 1100 Rd (785) 842-3339 Rev. Jill Jarvis 9:30 Program & RE; 11:00 Service www.uufl.net

UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST - UCC

Plymouth Congregational Church, UCC 925 Vermont Street 785-843-3220 Rev. Dr. Peter Luckey Sun. Worship 9:30 am & 11:15 am www.plymouthlawrence.com

St John’s United Church-Christ 396 E 900th Rd. Baldwin City (785) 594-3478 Pastor Heather Coates Sunday School 10:00am Worship 11:00am

St Paul United Church-Christ 738 Church St. Eudora 785-542-2785 Rev. Shannah McAleer Sunday Worship 10:00 am stpaulucceudora.com

UNITY

Unity Church of Lawrence

900 Madeline Lane 785-841-1447 Sunday Worship 11:00 am Sunday Child/Nursery Care Available Wednesday Meditation: Robin Goff 1st Wednesday/Month 7:00-8:00 pm Moment of Inspiration 785-843-8832 www.unityoflawrence.org

WESLEYAN

Lawrence Wesleyan Church 3705 Clinton Parkway 785-841-5446 Pastor Nate Rovenstine Worship 9:30am, 11:00am lawrencewesleyan.com

AS I HAVE LOVED YOU

NON-DENOMINATIONAL Called to Greatness Ministries P.O. Box 550 Lawrence KS 66044 785-749-2100 info@calledtogreatness.com www.calledtogreatness.com

Christ International Church

1103 Main St. Eudora KS 66025 785-312-4263 Sunday 10:30 am Wednesdays 6:30 pm

Lawrence Chinese Evangelical Church

Sunday Worship - 10:30 AM Friday Fellowship - 7:00 PM 2211 Silicon Ave Lawrence, KS 66046 www.lcec.org

City Church Lawrence 2518 Ridge Ct #207 (785) 840-8568 citychurchlawrence.org Pastor, Shaun LePage

Country Community Church

878 Locust St Lawrence 913-205-8304 Pastor, John Hart Sun. School 9 am, Fellowship 10 am, Worship 10:30 am

Eagle Rock Church

1387 N. 1300 Rd. Lawrence, KS 66046 785-393-6791 www.eaglerocklawrence.com Sundays at 10:00 am

Crown Automotive 3400 S. Iowa | 843-7700

Family Church Of Lawrence

906 North 1464 Rd. * 843-3325 Pastor: Ron Channell Worship 10:30 am Afterglow & Youth Group 6:00 pm www.FCLHome.org

Photograph: Wolkenengel1565 © A new commandment I give unto you, That ye love one another; as I have loved you, that ye also love one another. By this shall all men know that ye are my disciples, if ye have love one to another. (John 13:34-35) …would Jesus give His disciples a command He knew they couldn’t keep? The answer is obviously no, so why is it so hard for us today to love other people? Could it be this simple—we can’t give what we don’t have?…God’s love has never been or ever will be conditional…When you understand how much God loves you, it becomes easy to love others. And when you love others as He has loved you, your behavior will change toward them. If you loved your mate the way that Christ loves you—unconditionally—you would never commit adultery. If you loved your neighbor as Christ loves you, you would never steal from them or bear false witness against them. Excerpted from “As I Have Loved You”, Teaching Articles, Andrew Wommack Ministries www.awmi.net

Westside 66 & Car Wash PO Box 460, Eudora David G. Miller, CLU

2815 West 6th

843-1878

GRACE HOSPICE 1420 Wakarusa Suite 202 Lawrence, KS 66049. • 785-841-5310 Get Free Car Buying Info & Money Saving Tips At WWW.ACADEMYCARS.COM

ACADEMY CARS

(785) 856-5100

integritymidwestins.com Big City Ability with Hometown Values

(785) 843-5111

785-841-0102 For The People is a registered trademark of Scend, LLC

15% OFF

Frame & Lenses

Kastl Plumbing Inc. 841-2112

when you bring us your bulletin! OPEN 24 hours

PLUMBING, APPLIANCE HEATING & AIR Lawrence: 843-9559 aceplumbingkansas.com

1527 W. 6th Street Lawrence, KS 66044

KASTL

Action Plumbing P.O. Box 1051

785-842-2108

Financial Advisor

Cell: 785-608-2440 www.keithnapier.wrfa.com

785-841-8666

1115 Massachusetts www.fuzzystacoshop.com

630 Connecticut

Keith Napier

Carpet Cleaning

- 843-5670

Dale & Ron’s Auto Service

50% OFF

see store for details or exclusions.

Wempe Bros. Construction Co. wempebros.com

841-4722

Call about

our current specials


LAWRENCE • STATE

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Shopping center to downsize retail space ENGAGEMENTS I

’m sure we’ve all been in this situation: You’re halfway through your weekly shopping trip and realize you should have rented the full-size semitrailer instead of the large UHaul. Well, maybe one Lawrence shopping center is trying to address that common problem. It has filed plans to convert part of its retail space into storage units and to add several more in a portion of its parking lot. Perhaps that is not the exact situation the Southern Hills Shopping Center is trying to address, but the shopping center at the corner of 23rd and Ousdahl indeed has filed plans to convert a significant portion of its space into self-storage units. If you are having a hard time picturing it, the center is the one that houses King Buffet, Pizza Shuttle, The Salvation Army Store, Aaron’s and several other smaller businesses. But the shopping center also has some vacant space, and the Prairie Village-based group that owns the center plans to convert about 30,000 square feet of vacant space in the eastern end of the center into climate-controlled storage space. A good portion of that space is where Pinnacle Career Institute is located currently, but Pinnacle will be leaving soon (see more on this below). The more noticeable change, though, is what would happen in the parking lot on the south side of the building, the side facing 24th Street. Plans call for much of the parking lot to be occupied by five new self-storage buildings totaling about 22,000 square feet. Technically, the plan calls the buildings “mini warehouses.” (I once labeled my garage a mini warehouse as part of a plan to convince my wife to let me buy a forklift. It would have worked, too, if the neighbors hadn’t filed that restraining order.) The plans call for about 280 rental spaces in the mini warehouses. No word yet on a timeline for the project. It must still win site plan approval from Lawrence City Hall. Lawrence’s BG Consultants has filed the plans. A representative with that company said a firm timeline for the project to begin had not been determined. The property is owned by a group led by longtime Kansas City area developer Mark Ledom. No word yet on why the group is proposing the

Town Talk

Chad Lawhorn clawhorn@ljworld.com

change to the center. The center, though, is near a high-density neighborhood to the south that may have some self-storage needs. Plus, self storage seems to be a niche that is gaining some momentum. Plans also have been filed recently to expand the self-storage business that is near 31st and Ousdahl.

Pinnacle leaving Lawrence Lawrence and Douglas County are the capital of higher education in Kansas, as evidenced by the presence of three universities, a campanile and several houses that make the bell tower sound like a quiet library. There is news, though, that Lawrence is losing one provider of higher education. Pinnacle Career Institute has announced that it will close its Lawrence facility this summer. Rebecca Clothier, executive director of the Lawrence branch of Pinnacle, said the ownership of the educational company decided that it no longer made sense to locate two campuses in the Kansas City area and one in Lawrence. The Lawrence facility will close in July after current students finish their classwork. “It is sad for us,” Clothier said. “I have been at this campus for quite a while. Times are changing, though, with online education and flex education.” Clothier said the Lawrence campus has about 100 students at any given time. According to its website, Pinnacle offers a variety of programs in medical, health and fitness, alternative energy and construction trades. The pending closure will end a long history the company has had in Lawrence. The company has operated under the Pinnacle name since 2001, Clothier said. But previously the company operated in Lawrence as CTBI, which I think had been in operation in Lawrence since the 1980s. — This is an excerpt from Chad Lawhorn’s Town Talk column, which appears each weekday on LJWorld.com.

Saturday, February 11, 2017

| 5A

Society

Persinger ­ Myers She never thought she’d do it and he never thought he’d do it again. But now, they’re doing it together: Bobby and Naomi are finally getting married! Robert “Bobby” Samuel Myers, son of Robert “Bob” and Melanie Myers, Frank­ fort, KS, and Naomi K. Persinger, daughter of David Persinger, Wa­ keeney, KS, and the late Barbara (Krier) Hrencher, are thrilled to announce their en­ gagement. Bobby is a 2001 graduate of Frankfort High School and is cur­ rently a staff member of the University of Kan­

L a w r e n c e ’s S u p p l i e r o f Wedding Attire! Bobby Myers and Naomi Persinger

sas Campus Operations department. Naomi is a 2006 graduate of Fort Hays State University and is currently a busi­ ness office specialist for Kansas Athletics Inc. They live in Lawrence with their children. A July wed­ ding is planned.

Located at 731 Mass St. 785.840.4664 | www.JLynnBridal.com

ANNIVERSARY

Walker And Harvey Tom and Leslie Walker of Littleton, Colorado announce the engagement of their daughter Erin A. Walk­ er to Benjamin F. Har­ vey of Lawrence, Kansas. The future bride is a 2014 graduate of Kansas State Uni­ versity, with a Bachel­ ors degree in Elementary Education. Erin and Ben are on staff with Student Mo­ bilization at Kansas State University. The future groom is the son of Joe and Mary Harvey of Baldwin City, Kan­ sas. Ben graduated from Free State High School in 2007 and from Kansas State Uni­

Pam and Dolph Simons

Simons 65th Wedding Anniversary

versity in 2011 with a Bachelors degree in In­ dustrial Engineering. The couple will be get­ ting married in Denver, May 2017. Following their wedding, they will be heading for the mis­ sion field in South Asia for three years.

ANNIVERSARY REYNOLDS 50TH ANNIVERSARY

Sharon and Bill Reynolds are happy to announce their 50th wedding anniversary. They were married at Highland Park UMC in Topeka, February 11, 1967, by the Rev. Virgil Brady who noted it was the first real marriage he officiated as a minis­ ter. Sharon is the former owner of Broers Flower Shop in Eudora and Owens Flower Shop in Lawrence. She still enjoys working part­time at Owens; and is also a board member for the Lawrence Hidden Val­ ley Committee. Bill re­ tired as the Lawrence Postmaster in 2003 after a 36 year career with the postal Service. He was a volunteer at Eagle Bend until 2015; and is a member of the Breakfast Optimist

Sharon and Bill Reynolds

Club and the board for Warm Hearts of Douglas County. Bill & Sharon have two children, Cris Bandle (Jeff) Lawrence and Greg Reynolds (Angie) Overland Park; and six grandchildren. They will celebrate with a family dinner on the 11th and an an­ niversary trip to New Zealand and Australia later in the year. They want to sincerely thank the family and friends who helped make their marriage a success.

In the summer of 1951, she wore a blue striped swimsuit as she enjoyed her quiet solitude while sitting on the end of a dock on Gull Lake in north central Minnesota. He, taking a weekend break with some football team mates, roared by in a speed­ boat and nearly broke his neck as he tried to get a closer look at the beautiful girl sit­ ting on the end of the dock. After a de­ termined courtship, Pamela Counsellor and Dolph Simons were joyously mar­ ried in Rochester, Minnesota on Febru­ ary 7, 1952 in a fierce snow storm. Their wedding was held at Calvary Epis­ copal Church nestled beside the Mayo Clinic, with a recep­ tion following at the home of her parents, Dr. Virgil S. and Mrs. Gladys Counsellor. After the wedding, they began their mar­ riage with a road trip to California as Dolph continued his military service with the United States Marine Corps at El Toro Marine Air Sta­ tion. After their ten­ ure in California, Pam and Dolph re­ turned to Lawrence, with employment stints for newspapers in London, England and Johannesburg, South Africa.

Pam and Dolph are the proud parents of their four children, Pamela A. Simons of Fort Collins, Color­ ado, Linda S. de Menocal (married to Daniel C.) of Bed­ ford, New York, Dolph C. Simons III (married to Lisa M.) of Lawrence, and Dan C. Simons (married to Trisha L.), also of Lawrence. The joys of their lives are their 8 grandchildren: Emily de Menocal of McLean, Virginia, Crosby de Menocal of Lenexa, Jane de Menocal of East Greenwich, Rhode Island, Briahn Si­ mons of Fort Collins, Colorado, Dan Si­ mons, Jr. of Lawrence, Kate Si­ mons of Lawrence, Elizabeth Simons of Charleston, South Carolina and Whit­ ney Simons attending SMU in Dallas, Texas. In their pray­ ers, they give thanks for every day of the short life of their much­loved grand­ daughter, Jennifer Si­ mons. Over the years, they have both been active in supporting many worthy causes within the com­ munity and for Kan­ sas University. On Tuesday, they celeb­ rated their 65th wed­ ding anniversary with their family.

Baldwin City Chocolate Auction to return Sunday for 29th year

V

alentine’s Day is for lovers. For the past three decades in Baldwin City, it also has been for lovers of chocolate and art. The 29th annual Chocolate Auction will start at 12:30 p.m. Sunday at the Lumberyard Arts Center, 718 High St. The event has served as a last-minute option to pick up gifts for significant others and a fundraiser for the local community art organization since former Baker University art department head Tom Russell and his wife, Alice Anne Callahan Russell, a Baker music professor, brought the auction to the community. The couple had witnessed a similar auction during a visit to Tom Russell’s son in South Dakota. The tradition’s current manifestation traces to 2010 when the local arts council morphed into the Lumberyard Arts

Area Roundup

Elvyn Jones ejones@ljworld.com

Center Board of Directors with the opening of the restored arts center. Lumberyard President Laura Dickinson said the annual auction continues to benefit from the willingness of local cooks and artists to provide the event with the results of their kitchen and studio talents. Available to the highest bidder Sunday will be drawings, paintings, ceramics, photographs,

fabric arts, woodworking, stained glass, as well as pies, cookies, candies, fresh flowers and other gifts for Valentine’s Day. All proceeds benefit the Lumberyard Arts Center Scholarship Fund as well as other Arts Center activities throughout the year. Different items will be offered at a children’s auction and silent auction starting at 12:30 p.m. At 2 p.m. the live auction will start with auctioneer Lester Edgecomb running the ring. Those with treats or art to donate for the auction can deliver them to the Lumberyard from 9 a.m. to noon today and from 9 to 11:30 a.m. Sunday. l l l

When he planned Saturday’s Family Fun Night, Eudora Parks and Recreation Director Gary Scott assumed there would be cold weather on the

mid-February date. “There’s going to be record-breaking high temperatures,” he said. “We thought there would be cool weather, everybody would be ready to get out of the house. That’s OK. It will be a good night of free family entertainment.” The two hours of planned activities should still be attractive to Eudora families, Scott said. The evening will start with a 35-to 40-minute performance from Olathe magician Eric Vaughn, he said. When that concludes, the gymnasium will be opened for the rest of the evening. Scott said gym activities will include bounce houses, games, balloon making, face painting and free hot dogs, snacks and drinks. l l l

Eudora’s restaurant options shrank with the recent closing of the Cosmic

Ale House and Grill, 601 E. 10th St., and the Fork, 826 Main St. The latter location may not be closed for long. Assistant to the City Manager Leslie Herring said the city has fielded calls for several parties interested in the location on the south end of downtown. Mellissa Dake and Matthew Houser opened the Fork in March 2016 after being aided by a $3,000 downtown grant from the city. l l l

The Baldwin City Chamber of Commerce and the city government will give residents the opportunity to learn more and voice opinions on economic development issues at Last Wednesday gatherings planned for the next three months. Chamber Executive Director Jeannette Blackmar said there would be three “civic engagement

opportunities” from 8 to 9 a.m. the last Wednesday of February, March and April at Homestead Kitchen and Bakery, 719 Eighth St. The gatherings will start with an about 15-minute presentation from a city staff member, followed by a chance for citizens to express their thoughts on topics. Drinks and snacks will be available at the meetings, Blackmar said. The first session will be Feb. 22 and start with a state-of-the-city address from City Administrator Glenn Rodden. City Community Development Director Ed Courton will speak March 29 on city development incentives, and Rodden and Courton will speak April 26 on “What is Growth?” — This is an excerpt from Elvyn Jones’ Area Roundup column, which appears regularly on LJWorld.com.


6A

|

Saturday, February 11, 2017

NON sEQUItUr

COMICS

. wILEY

PLUGGErs

GArY BrOOKINs

fAMILY CIrCUs

PICKLEs hI AND LOIs

sCOtt ADAMs

ChrIs CAssAtt & GArY BrOOKINs

JErrY sCOtt & JIM BOrGMAN

PAtrICK MCDONNELL

ChrIs BrOwNE BABY BLUEs

DOONEsBUrY

ChArLEs M. sChULZ

DEAN YOUNG/JOhN MArshALL

MUtts

hAGAr thE hOrrIBLE

ChIP sANsOM/Art sANsOM

J.P. tOOMEY

ZIts

BLONDIE

BrIAN CrANE

stEPhAN PAstIs

shOE

shErMAN’s LAGOON

MArK PArIsI

JIM DAVIs

DILBErt

PEArLs BEfOrE swINE

Off thE MArK

MOrt, GrEG & BrIAN wALKEr

PEANUts GArfIELD

BIL KEANE

GrEG BrOwNE/ChANCE wALKEr

BOrN LOsEr BEEtLE BAILEY

L awrence J ournal -W orld

GArrY trUDEAU

GEt fUZZY

JErrY sCOtt/rICK KIrKMAN

DArBY CONLEY


Opinion

Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com l Saturday, February 11, 2017 Lawrence City Commission Leslie Soden, mayor 255 N. Michigan St., 66044; (913) 890-3647 lsoden@lawrenceks.org Stuart Boley, vice mayor 1812 W. 21st Terrace, 66046; 979-6699 sboley@lawrenceks.org Mike Amyx 2312 Free State Lane, 66047; 843-3089 (H) 842-9425 (W) mikeamyx515@hotmail.com Matthew Herbert 523 Kasold Drive, 66049; 550-2085 matthewjherbert@gmail.com Lisa Larsen, 1117 Avalon, 66044; 331-9162 llarsen@lawrenceks.org

Douglas County Commission Michelle Derusseau, 1768 East 1310 Road, 66047; 764-3619 mderusseau@douglas-county.com Mike Gaughan, 304 Stetson Circle, 66049; 856-1662 mgaughan@douglas-county.com Nancy Thellman, 1547 North 2000 Road, 66046; 550-7754 nthellman@douglas-county.com

Lawrence School Board Marcel Harmon, president; 550-7749 753 Lauren St., 66044 mharmon@usd497.org Shannon Kimball, vice president; 840-7722 257 Earhart Circle, 66049 skimball@usd497.org Kristie Adair, 840-7989 4924 Stoneback Place, 66047 kadair@usd497.org Jessica Beeson, 691-6678 1720 Mississippi St., 66044 jbeeson@usd497.org Jill Fincher, 865-5870 1700 Inverness Drive, 66047 jfincher@usd497.org Rick Ingram, 864-9819 1510 Crescent Road, 66044 ringram@usd497.org Vanessa Sanburn, 856-1233 765 Ash St., 66044 vsanburn@usd497.org

Area legislators Rep. Barbara Ballard (D-44th District) Room 451-S, State Capitol, Topeka 66612 Lawrence: 841-0063; Topeka: (785) 296-7697 barbara.ballard@house.ks.gov Rep. Tom Sloan (R-45th District) Room 521-E, State Capitol, Topeka 66612 Lawrence: 841-1526; Topeka: (785) 296-7632 tom.sloan@house.ks.gov Rep. Dennis “Boog” Highberger (D-46th District) Room 174-W, State Capitol, Topeka 66612 Topeka: (785) 296-7122 dennis.boog.highberger@house. ks.gov Rep. John Wilson (D-10th District) 54-S, State Capitol, Topeka 66612 Topeka: (785) 296-7652 john.wilson@house.ks.gov Rep. Jim Karleskint (R-42nd District) 512-N, State Capitol, Topeka 66612 Tonganoxie: (785) 550-4298 Topeka: (785) 296-7683; Jim.Karleskint@house.ks.gov Sen. Marci Francisco (D-2nd District) Room 134-E, State Capitol, Topeka 66612 Lawrence: 842-6402; Topeka: (785) 296-7364 Marci.Francisco@senate.ks.gov Sen. Tom Holland (D-3rd District) Room 134-E, State Capitol, Topeka 66612 Lawrence: 865-2786; Topeka: (785) 296-7372 Tom.Holland@senate.ks.gov Sen. Anthony Hensley (D-10th District) Room 318-E, State Capitol, Topeka 66612 Topeka: (785) 296-3245 Anthony.Hensley@senate.ks.gov

7A

Will GOP end love affair with deficits? Republicans were once married to balanced budgets and conservative money management, but now they have run off with something new: the seduction of tax cuts and budget deficits. They try to cover up the truth about their new relationship by cooking the books. Kansas’ own Dwight Eisenhower would be appalled. Eisenhower presided over the last period when the U.S. ran budget surpluses for several years in a row. To fund this, the top tax rate for some highearning Americans exceeded 90 percent. When President Kennedy backed legislation to drop that rate to around 70 percent, Eisenhower spoke against it, arguing that it would explode the deficit. A few decades later, President Reagan commissioned the W.R. Grace Commission Report, the first of a long series of warnings, reminding Americans to prepare for the impending (now current) retirement of the Baby Boomer generation, which would create (is creating) a demographic bulge straining Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid — particularly long-term care — and the nation’s overall health care system. Then, Republicans ditched

Michael Smith

Now President Trump proposes massive public works projects (including the border wall), plus cuts to top tax rates. Trump’s signature phrase perfectly describes the accompanying deficit increase: It is going to be huge.”

predictable old deficit-reduction policies for the sexy appeal of tax cuts and deficits: the real priority of Reagan, the second President Bush and many congressional Republicans from the 1980s onward. Since Sam Brownback was elected governor in 2010, they have brought their new love to

Kansas. Once, moderate Republicans like Robert Bennett, Mike Hayden and Bill Graves proudly presided over conservatively managed, balanced budgets. Today, Kansas’ budget is balanced in name only: Trust funds have been drained, future payments leveraged and highway bonds misused to create the illusion of a balanced budget that may technically pass legal muster but that will spell disaster down the road. Honestly, the thrill is gone. Now President Trump proposes massive public works projects (including the border wall), plus cuts to top tax rates. Trump’s signature phrase perfectly describes the accompanying deficit increase: It is going to be huge. Some economists like Arthur Laffer argue that tax cuts stimulate enough economic growth to pay for themselves: Lower rates on a broadening base produce more revenue than higher rates on a small base. Alas, this only works when taxes are particularly high beforehand, as with the Kennedy-era cut. When they are not, disaster ensues, as we have learned in Kansas. Critics counter by stating, “We have a spending problem,

not a taxing problem.” Granted, dollar-for-dollar, government spending keeps rising, but this is misleading. Most federal dollars are already committed to entitlement programs like Social Security and Medicare or to interest on the national debt. At the state level resides another pernicious problem: The costs of providing government services increase each year. Teachers and other government employees are not receiving more generous benefits. Rather, the cost of providing the same benefits goes up substantially each year, mainly due to those increasing health care and retirement costs. This has not been a problem until recently — budget estimates factoring in these rising costs are readily available from the Legislature’s own nonpartisan staff (but legislators may ignore them). The anti-Brownback Republicans elected in 2016 are sounding some rather Eisenhower-like talk about a return to responsible budgeting. But, can they give up their party’s love affair with deficit spending? — Michael A. Smith is a professor of political science at Emporia State University.

Trump’s travel ban: A hopeless disaster Washington — Stupid but legal. Such is the Trump administration’s travel ban for people from seven Muslim countries. Of course, as with almost everything in American life, what should be a policy or even a moral issue becomes a legal one. The judicial challenge should have been given short shrift, since the presidential grant of authority to exclude the entry of aliens is extremely wide and statutorily clear. The judge who issued the temporary restraining order never even made a case for its illegality. The Ninth Circuit has indeed ruled against the immigration ban, but even if the ban is ultimately vindicated in the courts (as is likely), that doesn’t change the fact that it makes for lousy policy. It began life as a barstool eruption after the San Bernardino massacre when Donald Trump proposed a total ban on Muslims entering the country “until our country’s representatives can figure out what the hell is going on.” Rudy Giuliani says he was tasked with cleaning up this idea. Hence the executive order suspending entry of citizens from the seven countries while the vetting process is reviewed and tightened. The core idea makes sense. These are failed, essentially ungovernable states (except for Iran) where reliable data is hard to find. But the moratorium was unnecessary and damaging. Its only purpose was to fulfill an illconsidered campaign promise. It caused enormous disruption without making us any safer. What was the emergency that compelled us to turn away people already in the air with already approved visas for entry to the U.S.? President Trump said he didn’t want to give any warning. Otherwise, he tweeted, “the ‘bad’ would rush into our country. ... A lot of bad ‘dudes’ out there!” Rush? Not a single American has ever been killed in a terror attack in this country by a citizen from the notorious seven. The killers have come from precisely those countries not listed: Egypt, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Lebanon, Pakistan and Kyrgyzstan (the Tsarnaev brothers). The notion that we had to act immediately because hordes of jihadists in these seven countries were about to board airplanes to blow up Americans is absurd. Vetting standards could easily have been revised and tightened without the moratorium and its attendant disruptions, stupidities, random cruelties and well-deserved bad press. The moratorium turned into a distillation of the worst aspects of our current airport-security system, which everyone knows to be 95 percent pantomime. The pat-down of the 80-year-old grandmother does nothing to make us safer. Its purpose is to give the illusion of doing something. Similarly, during the

Charles Krauthammer letters@charleskrauthammer.com

brief Trump moratorium, a cavalcade of innocent and indeed sympathetic characters — graduate students, separated family members, returning doctors and scientists — were denied entry. You saw this and said to yourself: We are protecting ourselves from these? If anything, the spectacle served to undermine Trump’s case for extreme vigilance and wariness of foreigners entering the United States. There is already empirical evidence. A Nov. 23 Quinnipiac poll found a 6-point majority in favor of “suspending immigration from ‘terror prone’ regions”; a Feb. 7 poll found a 6-point majority against. The same poll found a whopping 44-point majority opposed to “suspending all immigration of Syrian refugees to the U.S. indefinitely.” Then there is the opportunity cost of the whole debacle. It risks alienating the leaders of even nonaffected Muslim countries — the 57-member Organization of Islamic Cooperation expressed “grave concern” — which may deter us from taking far more real and effective anti-terror measures. The administration was intent on declaring the Muslim Brotherhood a terrorist organization, a concrete measure that would hamper the operations of a global Islamist force. In the current atmosphere, however, that declaration is reportedly being delayed and rethought. Add to that the costs of the illprepared, unvetted, sloppy rollout. Consider the discordant, hostile message sent to loyal law-abiding Muslim-Americans by the initial denial of entry to green card holders. And the ripple effect of the initial denial of entry to those Iraqis who risked everything to help us in our war effort. In future conflicts, this will inevitably weigh upon local Muslims deciding whether to join and help our side. Actions have consequences. In the end, what was meant to be a piece of promise-keeping, toughon-terror symbolism has become an oxygen-consuming distraction. This is a young administration with a transformative agenda to enact. At a time when it should be pushing and promoting deregulation, tax reform and health care transformation, it has steered itself into a pointless cul-de-sac — where even winning is losing. — Charles Krauthammer is a columnist for Washington Post Writers Group.

Letters to the editor l Letters should be 250 words or fewer. l Letters should avoid name-calling and be free

of libelous language. l All letters must be signed with the name, address and telephone number of the writer. The Journal-World will publish only the name and city of the writer. l Letters can be submitted via mail to P.O. Box 888, Lawrence KS 66044 or via email at letters@ ljworld.com.

LAWRENCE

Journal-World

®

Established 1891

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


|

8A

TODAY

WEATHER

.

Saturday, February 11, 2017

SUNDAY

MONDAY

WEDNESDAY

TUESDAY

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Lawsuit

includes sexual harassment — and sexual violence — that creates an environment hostile enough to deprive a student’s access to educational opportunities. A similar Title IX lawsuit by the other rower who said she was victimized by the football player, Sarah McClure, remains pending. McClure was a week into her freshman year, in August 2015, when the man sexually assaulted her in her apartment at Jayhawker

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A Pleasant with clouds and sun

Mostly cloudy and cooler

Sunshine and patchy clouds

Partly to mostly sunny and mild

Sunshine

High 63° Low 35° POP: 10%

High 52° Low 21° POP: 5%

High 47° Low 26° POP: 0%

High 54° Low 25° POP: 0%

High 50° Low 21° POP: 5%

Wind WSW 6-12 mph

Wind NNW 10-20 mph

Wind SSW 4-8 mph

Wind NNW 6-12 mph

Wind N 7-14 mph

POP: Probability of Precipitation

McCook 58/27 Oberlin 60/29

Clarinda 53/29

Lincoln 50/29

Grand Island 50/27

Kearney 50/27

Beatrice 52/30

St. Joseph 59/32 Chillicothe 58/35

Sabetha 54/30

Concordia 59/32

Centerville 51/32

Kansas City Marshall Manhattan 65/38 64/37 Salina 64/35 Oakley Kansas City Topeka 63/36 63/28 63/36 Lawrence 60/35 Sedalia 63/35 Emporia Great Bend 67/38 69/36 67/34 Nevada Dodge City Chanute 76/40 76/32 Hutchinson 76/40 Garden City 69/38 75/31 Springfield Wichita Pratt Liberal Coffeyville Joplin 77/41 75/39 69/33 82/36 77/41 80/40 Hays Russell 62/32 62/32

Goodland 59/25

court documents. The judge noted that the case was still in early stages and that the additional information seeks to bolster Tackett’s original complaints, not raise a new claim. Title IX is the federal law prohibiting sex-based discrimination in education. Disallowed discrimination

Through 8 p.m. Friday.

Temperature

Upcoming Events

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

High/low 71°/26° Normal high/low today 43°/21° Record high today 74° in 1951 Record low today -20° in 1899

Precipitation in inches 24 hours through 8 p.m. yest. 0.00 Month to date trace Normal month to date 0.42 Year to date 0.98 Normal year to date 1.40

CNA EVENING CLASSES LAWRENCE KS Feb 21-Mar 17 T/Th/F 5p- 9p Apr 4 -May 5 T/Th/F 5p- 9p

REGIONAL CITIES

Today Sun. Today Sun. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Holton 65 33 pc 52 25 c Atchison 60 31 c 50 20 c Independence 65 38 c 51 27 c Belton 64 37 c 49 27 c Olathe 63 37 c 47 27 c Burlington 71 37 s 52 26 c Coffeyville 80 40 pc 53 30 pc Osage Beach 72 40 c 53 29 c 68 35 pc 51 24 c Concordia 59 32 pc 48 26 pc Osage City Ottawa 66 36 pc 50 24 c Dodge City 76 32 pc 49 25 c Wichita 75 39 s 52 30 c Fort Riley 64 35 pc 51 22 c Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.

NATIONAL FORECAST

— KU and higher ed reporter Sara Shepherd can be reached at 832-7187.

NOTICES

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

LAWRENCE ALMANAC

Towers, according to her lawsuit. In October 2015, McClure reported the assault to KU and also filed a police report, though the report did not result in criminal charges. A judge has yet to rule on KU’s motion to dismiss McClure’s case, filed under the name Jane Doe 7. Both women have publicly shared their names.

CMA EVE CLASSES LAWRENCE Mar 22-April 28 5p-9p

Mr. MOJO RISING Best Doors tribute in the Midwest

SUMMER CLASSES: May 15 - May 26 M-F 8a-5p Jun 5 - Jun 16 M-F 8a-5p

Saturday, Feb. 11 @ 10 p.m.

Special Notices North Lawrence Improvement Association Annual NLIA Chili Supper Join your neighbors for supper!

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

Who: All North Lawrence Residents & Public! What:The Annual NLIA Chili Supper When: Monday, February 13 5:00 PM to 8:00 PM Where: Union Pacific Depot

HOME HEALTH AIDE:TBA There will be no classes Spring Break May 20-May 26

Info: 785-842-7232

Found Item

CALL NOW- 785.331.2025 trinitycareerinstitute.com

Uhaul Packing Box found in ditch along Highway 40. Found over the weekend, Call to identify contents of the box 785-887-6209

The Jackpot Music Hall 943 Massachusetts St. $5• |21+

SUN & MOON

Sun. 7:16 a.m. 5:55 p.m. 7:57 p.m. 8:14 a.m.

Last

New

First

Full

Feb 18

Feb 26

Mar 5

Mar 12

LAKE LEVELS

As of 7 a.m. Friday Lake

Level (ft)

Clinton Perry Pomona

Discharge (cfs)

874.56 889.27 972.23

7 25 15

Lawrence Humane Society

ADOPT-A-PET

lawrencehumane.org • facebook.com/lawrencehumane 1805 E. 19th St • Lawrence, KS 66046 • 785.843.6835

Fronts Cold

INTERNATIONAL CITIES

Today Cities Hi Lo W Acapulco 87 72 s Amsterdam 36 30 sn Athens 49 40 c Baghdad 66 43 s Bangkok 91 67 s Beijing 47 22 s Berlin 30 24 sn Brussels 38 32 sn Buenos Aires 78 66 pc Cairo 72 52 pc Calgary 33 16 s Dublin 41 37 sh Geneva 44 37 c Hong Kong 63 54 s Jerusalem 57 42 s Kabul 41 19 s London 39 34 c Madrid 47 43 sh Mexico City 78 47 s Montreal 19 11 sn Moscow 30 19 sf New Delhi 73 48 pc Oslo 26 14 sf Paris 36 29 c Rio de Janeiro 91 74 pc Rome 60 47 pc Seoul 32 19 s Singapore 87 77 sh Stockholm 31 20 c Sydney 101 73 pc Tokyo 47 36 s Toronto 42 30 sf Vancouver 44 31 pc Vienna 37 30 pc Warsaw 24 16 sf Winnipeg 26 17 pc

Sun. Hi Lo W 86 72 pc 37 29 pc 49 39 pc 69 46 pc 88 69 s 50 26 s 32 23 pc 44 33 pc 75 64 r 68 52 pc 39 26 pc 40 38 c 50 34 pc 64 58 s 50 41 sh 41 22 s 42 38 c 55 48 sh 77 47 s 30 23 sn 23 11 sn 73 49 c 26 19 pc 49 37 i 94 76 s 60 45 pc 35 19 s 83 76 sh 31 26 c 85 66 pc 49 37 s 35 27 sn 45 33 pc 37 27 pc 26 14 pc 28 20 s

Warm Stationary Showers T-storms

WEATHER HISTORY

Flurries

Snow

Ice

7:30

U.S. town has the lowest average annual temperature? Q: What

MOVIES 8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

KIDS

10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30

Æ

E

$

B

%

D

3

C ; A )

3

62

4

4

62 Ninja Warrior

4 24: Legacy h

Ninja Warrior

News

Edition

Movie

APB “Hard Reset”

FOX 4 at 9 PM (N)

News

Hell’s Kitchen

KCTV5

Chiefs

5

5

5 Ransom “Celina”

48 Hours (N) h

7

19

19 Keep Up Time/By

Midsomer Murders

9

9 NBA

Dateline NBC (N) h

8 9

D KTWU 11 A Q 12 B ` 13

48 Hours (N) h

Bridge TV Saturday Night Live KSNT

dNBA Basketball: Warriors at Thunder

Doc Martin

Father Brown

Time/By

News StiOpnH Red ...

FamFeud

Blue Bloods Austin City Limits

Saturday Night Live (N) Two Men Rizzoli & Isles Songs

Austin City Limits

NBA

dNBA Basketball: Warriors at Thunder News To Be Announced Ransom “Celina” 48 Hours (N) h 48 Hours (N) h 13 News Blue Bloods Elmntry Saturday Night Live News Saturday Night Live (N) 14 41 41 Dateline NBC (N) h

C I KMCI 15 L KCWE 17

29

ION KPXE 18

50

38

38 Mother

29 Castle h

Mother

Law & Order: SVU

Last Man Last Man Mike

Mike

Anger

Mod Fam Big Bang Mod Fam Big Bang Anger

Anger

Law & Order: SVU

News

Law & Order: SVU

Broke

Broke

Fam Guy Fam Guy

Saving Hope

Saving Hope

Rules

Rules

Cable Channels WOW!6 6 WGN-A

Tower Cam/Weather Information 307 239 Blue Bloods

THIS TV 19 CITY

25

USD497 26

Blue Bloods

Outsiders

City Bulletin Board, Commission Meetings

City Bulletin Board, Commission

School Board Information

School Board Information

kNHL Hockey

39 360 205 Watters’ World

Blues

Bob Plager

Basket

dCollege Basketball

Red Bull: Air Race (N)

Match of the Day

Greg Gutfeld

Red Eye-Shillue

Justice Judge

Undercover Boss

Undercover Boss

Undercover Boss

Undercover Boss

Dateline Extra

Dateline Extra

Dateline Extra

Lockup: Tampa

44 202 200 CNN Newsroom (N) Hist.-Comedy

The Seventies

The Seventies

The Seventies

Colony

Suits (DVS)

MSNBC 41 356 209 Dateline Extra TNT

45 245 138 ››› The Bourne Identity (2002) Matt Damon.

USA

46 242 105 Miss

A&E

47 265 118 The First 48: Twists Live PD Riding along with law enforcement. (N) (Live)

TRUTV 48 246 204 Hack

››‡ The Proposal (2009) Sandra Bullock.

Hack

Hack

Hack

Jokers

››› The Bourne Supremacy (2004)

Jokers

Jokers

AMC

50 254 130 The Walking Dead

TBS

51 247 139 Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Full

BRAVO 52 237 129 School HIST

SportsCenter (N) E:60

Justice Judge

CNBC 40 355 208 New-Apprentice CNN

SportsCenter (N)

dCollege Basketball

NBCSN 38 603 151 Alpine Skiing FNC

Rules

›‡ Goodbye Charlie (1964) Tony Curtis.

ESPN2 34 209 144 dCollege Basketball 36 672

Rules

›››‡ The Way We Were (1973, Romance) Barbra Streisand.

ESPN 33 206 140 dCollege Basketball Teams TBA. (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) FSM

PERCY

ROCKY This big ol’ guy is named Rocky! Whoever said old dogs can’t learn new tricks never met this this canine; at 7 years old, this Beagle and Pointer mix walks well on a leash! With all his energy and love to give, Rocky would prefer a home with older children.

Percy, like almost anyone, loves a good stretch! This handsome boy is a 2-year-old Domestic Shorthair. His biggest wish is for a family to bring him home and give him cozy and ample space for all his sleeping and stretching needs. He may not take up much room but his presence will greatly enhance your home decor!

Adopt 7 Days a Week! 11:30am-6pm

MARKETPLACE

PENELOPE

HEATHER

One-year-old Domestic Shorthair Penelope knows that the best relationships take time to build. She wants nothing more than to find her own family to love and grow with. She takes a little time to open up to new people, but giver her love and time to adjust and she’ll blossom as a member of your family!

CLASSIFIEDS

BEST BETS WOW DTV DISH 7 PM

As a resident at the Topeka Petco, Heather has seen many potential families and is still patiently waiting for one to take her home! This 2-year-old Domestic Shorthair mix would love to spend some time with you this weekend. To visit Heather, or better yet adopt her, head over to Petco in Topeka!

Your business can sponsor a pet to be seen here! 785.832.2222 or classifieds@ljworld.com

SPORTS 7:30

8 PM

8:30

February 11, 2017 9 PM

9:30

10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30

Cable Channels cont’d

Network Channels

M

785.843.2044 NOW OPEN SUNDAYS & ONLINE AT ANDERSONRENTALS.COM

WEATHER TRIVIA™

The blizzard of Feb. 11, 1983, buried areas from Washington, D.C., to New York under 2 feet of snow.

SATURDAY Prime Time WOW DTV DISH 7 PM

Rain

-10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s National Summary: Warmth will expand from the South to the mid-Atlantic as snow streaks across New England today. Rain will dampen parts of the Southwest and the northern Plains as some snow falls over the northern Rockies. Today Sun. Today Sun. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W 75 62 c 67 38 c Albuquerque 71 45 pc 51 33 sh Memphis Miami 80 66 pc 81 63 pc Anchorage 10 0 pc 12 8 c Milwaukee 42 32 c 42 26 c Atlanta 73 60 pc 71 41 c Minneapolis 40 29 c 39 24 s Austin 83 59 pc 73 52 c Nashville 68 63 c 67 34 c Baltimore 59 44 c 60 35 r Birmingham 72 62 c 73 39 sh New Orleans 79 63 c 78 58 c New York 43 38 c 40 35 r Boise 43 24 s 42 24 s Omaha 50 29 c 44 23 pc Boston 37 24 sn 38 29 r 81 56 s 83 60 s Buffalo 40 32 c 39 27 sn Orlando Philadelphia 51 40 c 49 35 r Cheyenne 46 17 c 43 21 s Phoenix 80 59 c 78 58 sh Chicago 45 33 c 43 24 c Pittsburgh 53 43 c 51 27 r Cincinnati 59 53 c 54 27 c Cleveland 48 35 c 43 29 sn Portland, ME 27 18 sn 32 27 sn Portland, OR 47 31 pc 47 32 pc Dallas 85 59 pc 64 49 c 48 25 pc 50 24 s Denver 56 22 sh 46 29 pc Reno 65 51 c 77 39 pc Des Moines 50 31 c 44 26 pc Richmond 62 39 pc 63 38 s Detroit 45 33 sh 42 26 sn Sacramento 68 42 c 52 29 c El Paso 84 52 pc 64 40 pc St. Louis Fairbanks -16 -32 s -15 -23 pc Salt Lake City 47 25 sn 42 23 s 64 54 sh 67 53 pc Honolulu 77 68 sh 81 70 sh San Diego San Francisco 60 46 pc 61 44 s Houston 84 66 c 83 61 c Seattle 48 34 c 49 35 pc Indianapolis 54 41 c 46 25 c Spokane 37 21 pc 38 21 pc Kansas City 60 35 c 47 26 c Tucson 84 54 c 77 50 sh Las Vegas 64 51 pc 66 50 s Tulsa 84 43 s 58 34 c Little Rock 77 58 c 65 38 c Wash., DC 62 49 c 68 38 sh Los Angeles 65 50 pc 72 52 s National extremes yesterday for the 48 contiguous states High: Canadian, TX 93° Low: Orange, MA -14°

With a face like Tess’, it won’t be long before she finds her new family! Hopefully it will be you! This photogenic pooch is a gorgeous 5-year-old Norwegian Elkhound mix. Tess is wishing for endless adventures with her new people, learning new tricks and possibly gaining a new canine sibling!

Looking for your best friend? Fall in love with our girl Maggie! She is a year and 7 month old Border Collie who is currently seeking a home with a yard to use for running off all her energy. A friend to grow and play with would be a bonus for Maggie because she loves company, both human and canine!

Precipitation

Barrow, Alaska; 10 F.

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2017

TESS

MAGGIE

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

A:

Today 7:17 a.m. 5:54 p.m. 6:54 p.m. 7:38 a.m.

Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset

The Walking Dead

››› Mrs. Doubtfire (1993), Sally Field

The Walking Dead

The First 48: Twists Jokers

Hack

The Walking Dead

Hack Walk

››‡ Godzilla (2014) Premiere.

››› Mrs. Doubtfire (1993), Sally Field

54 269 120 Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Detroit Steel (N)

Mar

School

Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars

SYFY 55 244 122 ›››‡ Avatar (2009) Sam Worthington, Voice of Zoe Saldana. (DVS)

››‡ Underworld (2003)

›› Transformers: Age of Extinction (2014) Mark Wahlberg. 24: Legacy ››‡ Hot Tub Time Machine (2010) ›› 50 First Dates (2004) Adam Sandler. ›› Dear John (2010) ›› Dear John (2010) Channing Tatum. Failure ››› Dirty Dancing (1987) Jennifer Grey. Rose. Rose.

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

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

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

351 350 285 287 279 362 256

211 210 192 195 189 214 132

24: Legacy Employee-Mnth He’s Just Not Rose. Rose. Texas Flip N Move Texas Flip N Move Texas Flip N Move Texas Flip N Move Texas Flip N Move ››› Beyond the Lights (2014) Premiere. A Very Soul Train Valentine’s Day 2017 Being Mary Jane I Love New York I Love New York I Love New York I Love New York I Love New York Ghost Adventures Ghost Adventures The Dead Files (N) The Dead Files Ghost Adventures Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes From Straight A’s to XXX (2017) High School Lover (2017, Drama) From A to XXX Pregnant at 17 (2016) Josie Bissett. Guilty at 17 (2014) Erin Sanders. Pregnant at 17 Chopped Chopped Chopped Chopped Chopped Property Brothers Property Brothers House Hunters Log Log Property Brothers Henry Game Nicky Thunder Friends Friends Friends Friends Friends Friends MECH-X4 Rebels Spy Kids: All the Time in the World Lab Rats Lab Rats Lab Rats: Bio. K.C. Bizaard ››‡ Cars 2 (2011, Children’s) K.C. Bizaard Liv-Mad. Liv-Mad. Dragon King/Hill Rick American Cleve Fam Guy Fam Guy Dragon One Gundam What on Earth? (N) Dark Side Secrets of the Un Dark Side Twilight Saga-2 ››› Grease (1978) John Travolta. ›› What’s Your Number? Lawless Oceans Lawless Oceans Uncensored Explorer Drugs, Inc. Walking the Dog A Dash of Love (2017) Jen Lilley. Golden Golden Golden Golden Dr. Jeff: RMV Dr. Jeff: RMV The Guardians (N) Dr. Jeff: RMV The Guardians Golden Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond King King King King In Touch Hour of Power Pathway Graham Belle and the Beast (2007, Drama) My Name Is Bernadette (2011) Living Right Web of Faith 2.0 One God Alone Style God: the Almighty Question ››› Carnival of Souls (1962) Style Style Style Book TV After Words Book TV Book TV Washington This Public Affairs Events Public Affairs Ice Cold Killers Ice Cold Killers Your Worst Ice Cold Killers Ice Cold Killers Knights’ Treasure America: Facts America America Knights’ Treasure America: Facts Sweetie Pie’s Sweetie Pie’s Oprah: Where Now? Sweetie Pie’s Sweetie Pie’s Flash Floods Hurricanes Weather Mysteries Weather Gone Viral Weather Gone Viral ›››› Hannah and Her Sisters (1986) ›››‡ A Hard Day’s Night ›››‡ Harvey (1950)

HBO 401 MAX 411 SHOW 421 STZENC 440 STRZ 451

501 515 545 535 527

300 310 318 340 350

››‡ Central Intelligence (2016) Pete Holmes: Faces The Young Pope Intelligence ›› Maze Runner: The Scorch Trials ››› Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix Ted 2 ››‡ Triple 9 (2016) Casey Affleck. ›‡ Fifty Shades of Black ››‡ Southpaw (2015) The Missing ››‡ Lakeview Terrace (2008) ›› 8MM (1999) Nicolas Cage. Day-Tomorrow ›‡ Get a Job (2016) Black Sails “XXX.” ›››‡ Gangs of New York


XXX

L awrence J ournal -W orld

6304 Serenade Ct

Saturday, February 11, 2017

2726 Maverick Ln

SAT. 11:00-1:00

900 Chalk Hill Ct

SUN. 1:30-3:00

Stunning home on cul de sac. Ranch floor plan. 3 bed on main level w/ separate master suite. 5 bed total, 3 bath w/ 3000 sq ft. Covered patio, large lot.

Nice ranch-style home in a quiet neighborhood, 3 bedroom, 1 bath, a basement to finish as you want, fenced back yard. Just down the street from elementary school, mature park, easy access for commuters!

MLS 141229

MLS 141625

Jan Miller 785-331-6412

$395,000

Ariela Unz ABR, ASP, ePRO 785-840-5037

$122,500

404 Jane Ct

SUN. 1:00-3:00

3 Bedroom 2 Bathroom home with newer roof, newer driveway, newer HVAC. New water heater installed in September 2016. Lots of value in a central location! MLS 141732

Ryan Desch 785-218-1975

$179,000

2509 E 25th Pl

SUN. 1:00-3:00

| 9A

6304 Serenade Ct

SUN. 2:00-3:30

SUN. 12:00-1:30

BRAND NEW ROOF, 2654 sq. feet, 1.5 story, 4 BR, 2 bath, 2 car garage, in wonderful neighborhood on quiet cul-de-sac. Nice floor plan, big kitchen, DR, SOLD AS IS. Big back yard w/deck.

Brand new subdivision first time open! 3 bed/ 2 bath 1 level living 1540 sq ft. Separate master suite. Engineered hardwoods throughout main living areas. Storage above garage.

New Construction. Easy I-70 & K-10 access. Nice Cul-de-Sac Location, Drippe Built home with modern open floor plan, 3 car Garage, 5 bedroom home, Langston Heights! This home is staged & a must see!

MLS 141595

MLS 141402

MLS 141229

Stephanie A. Harris 785-979-5808

$219,900

Joy Slavens 785-423-1868

$219,900

905 Silver Rain Rd

SUN. 1:00-3:00

New 4 BR, 3 BA, 3 Car walkout ranch at Langston Heights. Great floor plan & careful attention to detail. Oak floors, walk in pantry, SS, & 19 x 12 Screened Porch. Huge Family room w/ wet bar.

Gorgeous/Super Sharp home in Westwood Hills w/community pool. 5 BR/5 Bath/3 car, 4338 sq. ft, premium upgrades/ trim throughout. Huge main lvl master, daylight basement w/bar, great functional space.

MLS 140676

MLS 141687

Don Minnis, GRI 785-550-7306

$435,000

Lee Beth Dever 785-691-6879

$489,000

1614 Hillcrest Rd

5754 Longleaf Dr

SUN. 12:00-1:30

SUN. 1:00-2:30

Beautifully renovated & improved ranch home sitting on a premium West Campus lot. Terrific floor plan boasts an open layout, gorgeous wood floors, & numerous details. Truly a must see.

Quality-Built one level living with large master suite on main level. 4BR’s, 4BA’s, finished walkout basement & over 4,100 sq.ft. living space. Cozy sunroom , 3 car garage, mature landscaped yard.

MLS 141520

MLS 140926

Oliver Minnis 785-550-7945

$495,000

$519,900

2509 Alabama St

SAT. 1:00-2:30

Stephens Pro Tip:

Ida Lewis 785-865-8699

5006 Inge Ct

Newly listed 3BR, 2BA, ranch with large eat-in kitchen, wood floors, and laundry room on main level. Updated baths, family room & office in basement, new interior paint, 16x20 screened porch.

$179,500

Real Estate Done Right

252 Earhart Cir

SUN. 12:00-2:00

Joy Slavens 785-423-1868

$395,000

Ida Lewis 785-865-8699

MLS 141707

SUN. 2:00-3:30

New Listing-First Open. Gorgeous 2 story custom home in Westwood Hills. 5 BR, 5 BA, 3 Car. High end finishes, trim, & details enhance this standout plan. Complemented by Dream Kitchen & Owner’s Suite.

$699,900

Oliver Minnis 785-550-7945

MLS 141665

Know who to know about buying and selling trends. We have been the industry standard for the local real estate market since 1978.

45 E 900th Rd, Baldwin City

1797 N 300th Rd, Baldwin City

Debbie Morgan, GRI 785-760-1357 NEW PRICE! Custom 2-Story home in pristine condition w/ 20.08 timbered acres, 3 bedrooms, 3 1/2 baths, walkout basement, decks, patio, mature timber w/ walking trails, creek & wildlife!

$448,500 $428,500

MLS 140165

Tract 3 E 500 Rd

Debbie Morgan, GRI 785-760-1357 Price Reduction! Get the best of both worlds with country living near the City, lovely home with 10 acres, 3 bedrooms, 2 1/2 baths, master bdrm on main level, full unfinished basement & new deck!

$289,500 $279,500

MLS 140128

Debbie Morgan, GRI 785-760-1357 New Listing! Beautiful tract of land located near Clinton Lake containing 13 acres with scattered trees and great views. Adjacent 10 acre parcel available to purchase as well.

$84,500

MLS 141397


10A

|

Saturday, February 11, 2017

XXX

.

3386 Linn Rd, Perry

4894 Dabinawa, McLouth

Randy Russell 785-331-7954 Custom Built by Houston homes, Rural setting on 18+ acres, 5 Bed, 3 Bath, 2 car garage on walkout bsmt Ranch plan. Hickory cabinets threw out. An abundance of large widows with a southern exposure.

$349,500

MLS 141731

2312 Westdale

Randy Russell 785-331-7954

Ryan Desch 785-281-1975 Completely remodeled in 2016 with incredible mid-century inspiration! Wood floors on the main floor, painted concrete through the basement give this house a period-specific feel with a modern twist!

Lake Dabinawa 4 bd, 3 ba, 3 car garage born in 2007, surrounded by mature woods. Walk Out basement Heat Pump system. 2nd tier lot all with Lake privileges. Come Join the Fun!

$222,500

MLS 141136

$230,000

2701 Harvard Rd

3510 Republic Rd

Scot Hoffman 785-760-4356 17 acres, Custom Built, heated 72x40 shop, 1100 ft of decks, screened porch, 4 or 5 bedrooms possible, views, open floor plan, large office, security system, 1 owner, incredible home. Call Now!

$444,900

L awrence J ournal -W orld

MLS 141314

731 Coving Ct

Scot Hoffman 785-760-4356

Scot Hoffman 785-760-4356

Location! Cute & Charming 4 bedroom rancher, secluded backyard with green space, walk to schools, spacious walkout basement with huge family room, quiet street and truly a must see, Call Scot!

$184,900

MLS 141238

The Cove @ Diamondhead luxury townhome! Over 2000 sq ft. 3 bedroom, spacious kitchen, dining area. Huge master bath, walkin shower, and open plan, HOA, low fees, tile, granite and luxury features.

$269,000

BILLY ELLIOT O the musical

Lee Hall

MUSIC BY

Elton John

ORIGINALLY DIRECTED BY

Stephen John

MLS 141425

Take an art class!

940 FAMILY THEATRE

BOOK and LYRICS BY

MLS 141684

Winter/Spring classes and workshops are enrolling now for students of all ages.

DIRECTED BY

ELIZABETH SULLIVAN

FEBRUARY 24, 25, 26 MARCH 3, 4, 5 $25/$18/$10

CALL 785.843.2787 BROWSE lawrenceartscenter.org VISIT 940 New Hampshire St. Lawrence, KS 66044

National Strength. Hometown Service. Whether you are buying your first home, moving across town or refinancing your current mortgage, Fairway Independent Mortgage Corporation is here to help. We offer several home financing products that can help make homeownership more affordable with the speed and service you deserve.

Contact us today for a simple, rewarding home loan experience. Diane L. Fry

Jack Wayne Gillespie

Loan Officer NMLS #522202

Loan Officer NMLS #522129

Mobile: 785-423-6721 Office: 785-842-2443 eFax: 866-875-7060

Mobile: 785-218-5050 Office: 785-842-2554 eFax: 866-301-8030

Email: dianef@fairwaymc.com

Email: jackg@fairwaymc.com

4104 W. 6TH STREET, SUITE B • LAWRENCE, KS 66049 Copyright©2016 Fairway Independent Mortgage Corporation. NMLS#2289. 4801 S. Biltmore Lane, Madison, WI 53718, 1-877-699-0353. All rights reserved. This is not an offer to enter into an agreement. Not all customers will qualify. Information, rates and programs are subject to change without notice. All products are subject to credit and property approval. Other restrictions and limitations may apply. Equal Housing Lender. Kansas-Licensed Mortgage Company. KS license #MC.0001375. 1309374_KentFry-PrintAd


SECTION B

USA TODAY — L awrence J ournal -W orld

IN MONEY

IN LIFE

Can Sears stop the bleeding?

Grammys: Who will and should win major awards

02.11.17 FILE PHOTO BY ELISE AMENDOLA, AP

ADELE BY THEO WARGO, GETTY IMAGES

Trump vows to win travel battle President suggests new ban might be next with additional security measures Gregory Korte @gregorykorte USA TODAY

WASHINGTON President Trump said Friday he’s considering a new executive order on refugees as soon as Monday or Tuesday, even as his administration mulls an appeal of a court decision suspending his previous order barring travelers from seven majority Muslim countries.

“We will win that battle,” Trump said of the court fight. “We also have a lot of other options, including just filing a brand new order.” The shifting White House strategy marked the beginning of a third weekend of chaotic developments on the travel ban, which has stranded air travelers and led to nationwide protests and legal challenges. After a three-judge panel refused to reinstate the ban on Thursday, the next stop would or-

“We need speed for reasons of security.” President Trump

PABLO MARTINEZ MONSIVAIS, AP

President Trump says he has a lot of secure border options.

dinarily be the Supreme Court. But a potential roadblock emerged late Thursday when a judge on the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco asked for the case to be heard by the full appeals court, setting a deadline of next Thursday for arguments on that question. Trump, speaking Friday to reporters on Air Force One, suggested that a new executive order

would be the most expedient route. “We need speed for reasons of security,” he said. The new order would include new security measures, Trump said. “We have very, very strong vetting. I call it extreme vetting and we’re going very strong on security. We are going to have people coming to our country that want to be here for good reason.” Washington state sued to block provisions of the order temporarily barring Iraq, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen nationals from U.S. travel. Contributing: David Jackson in Washington, Kevin Johnson in Alexandria.

NEWSLINE

IN NEWS

Senate confirms Price at HHS

Health and Human Services designate affirmed by 52-47 vote

JACK GRUBER, USA TODAY

Gabby Giffords has new allies

Law enforcement coalition to help oppose gun bills in Congress BRAM JANSSEN, AP

Men wait in line for permission to cross the Khazer checkpoint, seen in the background, outside of Mosul on Tuesday. 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©

Healthy cooking

50%

Separated by war, Iraqi families have emotional homecoming Ahmed Al Ta’ee — and others like him — return to Mosul, with ISIS never far from their minds Ahmed Al Ta’ee and his son, Hamza, were separated from Al Ta’ee’s wife and daughters for about 21⁄2 years.

Valerie Plesch and Ali Al-Zobady

Special for USA TODAY DIYALA ,

of women are choosing healthier recipes than they did two years ago.

SOURCE Better Homes & Gardens’ “Food Factor” survey of 2,000-plus women MICHAEL B. SMITH AND VERONICA BRAVO, USA TODAY

AHMED AL TA’EE

IRAQ After pleading with Iraqi soldiers to let him pass through a checkpoint and proceed to his neighborhood in eastern Mosul, Ahmed Al Ta’ee finally reached home. No one was expecting him, not even his wife. When he called out to her and his two daughters, they were too afraid to answer. He found them huddled in a back room. “I was the happiest person on earth,” Al Ta’ee, 32, said in a phone interview. “It was a sur-

prise. I didn’t tell them about my visit.” As Iraqi forces retook control of eastern Mosul — Iraq’s secondlargest city, under the brutal grip of the Islamic State since June 2014 — families such as the Al Ta’ees separated by fighting are reuniting, or trying to. About 30,000 people have returned to Mosul since Iraqi forces launched an offensive in October to take back the city, the United Nations reported. That number has grown since the eastern part of the city was liberated in late January, sometimes overwhelming checkpoints into the city and the stringent security v STORY CONTINUES ON 2B

Knock off from work a little early? Sure, it’s good for you

Study : 39 hours is a perfect schedule Matthew Diebel USATODAY

No wonder we’re envious. The French say employees should work 35 hours a week. Brits tend to be at their desks for 37.5 hours. Meanwhile, Americans typically spend 47 hours a week at work. Now, researchers have found the perfect number: 39 hours, according to a study from the

Australian National University. “Long work hours erode a person’s mental and physical health because it leaves less time to eat well and look after themselves properly,” said lead researcher Huong Dinh from the university’s research school of population health. Shortening the number of hours is particular important for women, the study found. “They spend much more time on care and domestic work,” Dinh said. The study, which looked at a sample of Australians ages 24 to 65, even advocates women should work 34 hours per week

“Long work hours erode a person’s mental and physical health.” Huong Dinh, Australian National University health researcher

CHARLIE NYE, INDIANAPOLIS STAR

A study says women should work fewer hours than men because they tend to have more domestic responsibilities.

once home-based chores are considered. The healthy limit for men was up to 47 hours because they spend less time on care or domestic work. “Given the extra demands placed on women, it’s impossible for women to work long hours often expected by employers unless they compromise their health,” Dinh said.


2B

L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 2017

Senate clears Price as HHS secretary Seven-term congressman-surgeon joins President Trump’s team on party-line vote Jayne O’Donnell and Kim Hjelmgaard USA TODAY

The Senate approved a leading critic of the Affordable Care Act to be the nation’s top health official early Friday, following a heated debate over his potential ethics violations and his conservative policy positions. Rep. Tom Price, 62, an orthopedic surgeon and seven-term Republican from Atlanta, was President Trump’s pick to head the Department of Health and Human Services. Price, who opposes abortion and federal funding of Planned Parenthood, is expected to loosen ACA regulations and to work with Congress to overhaul the law. Senators confirmed his nomination by a strictly party-line 5247 vote after a debate that lasted until nearly 2 a.m. ET. Price’s supporters in Congress have touted him as about the most capable person possible to be HHS secretary. As the former chairman of the House Budget Committee, Price “has a thorough understanding of health care policy and the damage that Obamacare has caused.”

“He can see the view from the doctor’s office as well as from the lawmaker’s office and will be an excellent partner as Congress works to rescue Americans trapped in the failing Obamacare system and to build better health care systems,” Sen. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., said in a statement Friday. Democrats view Price as a polarizing figure with a controversial history of trading health care stocks and whose policies will snatch insurance coverage from Americans, many of whom got health coverage for the first time in their lives. But the law also raised premiums dramatically in many parts of the country, particularly Arizona and North Carolina. These rate hikes hit middle class and wealthier consumers the hardest as they aren’t eligible for tax credits and subsidies that reduce out of pocket costs. Insurers are among those looking for regulatory relief. “We will work to ensure a smooth transition to a better, more competitive private marketplace with minimal disruption for our members,” Scott Serota, CEO of Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association of America, said in a statement. “We share the

ANDREW HARNIK, AP

Democrats fear that HHS Secretary Tom Price’s policies will cause many Americans to lose their health insurance coverage.

Price “will be an excellent partner as Congress works to rescue Americans trapped in the failing Obamacare system.” Sen. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn.

goals of making sure people can access the coverage and care they need in a healthcare system that gives consumers the coverage choices they want at a price they can afford, and puts patients at the center of their care.” Republicans are finding repealing and replacing the law has proven more difficult than expected, especially as constituents and interest groups protest the effect a loss of coverage would have. And Price embodies many of those fears. Democrats also worry that he

will make changes to Medicare and Medicaid, health programs that assist low-income families. Price’s positions are particularly threatening to women’s health, says Debra Ness, president of the National Partnership for Women and Families. “His opposition to contraceptive coverage and abortion care harms women whose access to the full range of reproductive and preventive health services is critical not only to their health and well-being but also to their ability to pursue an education, hold jobs, achieve economic security and function as free and equal members of society,” said Ness. Price’s preference for limiting women’s access to free birth control is “not only wrong, it’s arrogant,” said Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, D-N.H. “He seems to have no higher priority than to terminate health coverage for millions of people,” she added. Republicans see Price as a knowledgeable leader who will help obstruct President Obama’s health care policy that extended insurance coverage for millions. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said Price “knows more about health care policy than just about anyone.” He said Price would help “bring stability to health care markets that Obamacare has harmed.”

U.N.: 30,000 return to eastern Mosul v CONTINUED FROM 1B

checks. Al Ta’ee said he was lucky to cross into the city. He hadn’t seen his wife and two daughters for about 21⁄2 years. His youngest child was a week old when he and his son, Hamza, fled when the Islamic State took control. Fearing the militant group would recruit and convert then-5-year-old Hamza into an extremist, the Al Ta’ee family fled Mosul in summer 2014, as did a half-million other people when the militants overwhelmed government forces. But their escape did not go well. Al Ta’ee said Islamic State fighters took $5,000 and two mobile phones belonging to him, then threw him and Hamza in prison for a day. Before their release, the militants took their fingerprints and said they faced death if they tried again to escape “the land of the caliphate.” He and his son returned home. A month later, they fled again, this time leaving his wife and daughters behind in Mosul. They were safer in the city, he said, adding it was essential to get Hamza out of the militants’ reach. Al Ta’ee paid a smuggler to take him and his son to neighboring Syria. From there, they entered Turkey and stayed about 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.

11⁄2 years, desperately trying to get his wife and daughters to join them. But it was too dangerous to leave Mosul. In March, Al Ta’ee joined an estimated 1 million refugees and migrants who crossed the Aegean Sea from Turkey to Greece last year. They reached Europe but did not make it past the GreekMacedonian border. After many cold nights camping in the Balkans, they returned to war-torn Iraq in June as the U.S.-assisted Iraqi army was retaking territory occupied by the Islamic State, also known as ISIL or ISIS. Mosul remained under the Islamic State’s control, so Al Ta’ee and his son stayed at an uncle’s house in Kirkuk, about 110 miles away, while Iraqi security forces launched their campaign to retake Mosul. It was the biggest military operation in Iraq since the U.S.-led invasion 13 years earlier. The father and son later traveled to Irbil, in Iraqi Kurdistan, to find work, but they finally returned to Mosul as parts of the city were liberated. “It was an indescribable feeling that I never experienced before,” a shocked Marwa Al Ta’ee, 27, said about seeing her husband and son after more than two years of separation. “I did not know if I should cry or laugh. I had not passed a single night without tears and without hearing the sound of bullets, bombs and fear.” In liberated eastern Mosul, power outages are regular, along with phone and Internet service. Schools are still shuttered. Islamic State fighters have shaved their beards to blend in with the rest of Mosul’s residents so they might evade — and ambush — the advancing Iraqi army. No one dares venture out at night. That’s when “they (the Islamic State) can attack people,” Al Ta’ee said. “Islamic State members are sending drones to bomb people. That is the danger in Mosul now.” The Al Ta’ee family is relatively safe for now in the eastern part of the city. But on the other side of the ancient Tigris River that splits Mosul — a once cosmopolitan community of Christians, Muslims and other religions — the battle against the militants still rages. Around 750,000 civilians live under the Islamic State in the western half of the city. For Marwa Al Ta’ee and her family, the future in Iraq remains uncertain. They and 18 other family members moved into an uncle’s house in another district of eastern Mosul to avoid extremists who might have known them in their old neighborhood. “Iraq is not safe. The Islamic State is following us, and I cannot go anywhere out of fear,” she said. “How can we sleep and live peacefully? This is my only hope, to leave Iraq.” Plesch reported from Pristina, Kosovo.

KATYE BRIER, FOR KAISER HEALTH NEWS

“Breast cancer doesn’t seem to have a road map to cure. It’s just a damn sneaky disease,” says Marlene McCarthy, 73, with husband Joe.

New cancer drugs do little to help survival Many medications offer only marginal benefits, and often at a very high price Liz Szabo

Kaiser Health News

Marlene McCarthy’s breast cancer has grown relentlessly over the past seven years, spreading painfully through her bones and making it impossible to walk without a cane. Although the 73-year-old knows there’s no cure, she’s frustrated that the Food and Drug Administration is approving cancer drugs without proof that they help patients live longer. “That simply isn’t good enough,” said McCarthy, of Coventry, R.I. Pushed by patient advocates who want earlier access to medications, the Food and Drug Administration has approved a flurry of oncology drugs in recent years, giving some people a renewed sense of hope and an array of expensive new options. A few have been clear home runs, allowing patients with limited life expectancies to live for years. Many more, however, have offered only marginal benefits, with no evidence that they improve survival or quality of life, said Dr. Vinay Prasad, assistant professor of medicine at the Oregon Health and Sciences University, who has written extensively about FDA approval for cancer drugs. Overall cancer survival has barely changed over the past decade. The 72 cancer therapies approved from 2002 to 2014 gave patients only 2.1 more months of life than older drugs, according to a study in JAMA Otolaryngology– Head & Neck Surgery.

And those are the successes. Two-thirds of cancer drugs approved in the past two years have no evidence showing that they extend survival at all, Prasad said. The result: For every cancer patient who wins the lottery, there are many others who get little to no benefit. “We are very concerned about the push to get more drugs approved, instead of effective drugs approved,” said Fran Visco, president of the National Breast Cancer Coalition.

Cancer drugs approved last year cost an average of $171,000 a year, according to the Center for Health Policy and Outcomes at New York’s Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center. Research shows that a medication’s price has no relationship to how well it works. “We cannot have a system where drugs that may not even work are being sold for these amazingly crazy amounts of money,” said Zuckerman, president of the National Center for Health Research, a non-profit in Washington that aims to explain research to consumers. The American Society of Clinical Oncology has set goals for new

“We are very concerned about the push to get more drugs approved, instead of effective drugs approved.” Fran Visco, president of the National Breast Cancer Coalition.

In a November study published in JAMA Internal Medicine, researcher Diana Zuckerman looked at 18 approved cancer drugs that didn’t help patients live longer. Only one had clear data showing that it improved patients’ lives, such as by relieving pain or fatigue. Two drugs harmed quality of life, Zuckerman said. “Our patients need drugs that provide the greatest possible benefit, particularly when you put that in the context of cost,” said Dr. Richard Schilsky, senior vice president and chief medical officer at the American Society of Clinical Oncology, which represents cancer specialists. “You begin to question what is the real value of a therapy when the benefit is small, the toxicity may be similar to a previous drug and the cost is much higher.”

cancer drugs of extending life or controlling tumors for at least 2.5 months, a relatively low bar because “it’s not very often that we come across a transformative treatment,” said Dr. Sham Mailankody, a myeloma specialist at Memorial Sloan Kettering. Yet in a study published in September in JAMA Oncology, Mailankody found that only one in five cancer drugs approved from 2014 to 2016 met those standards. Cancer is primarily a disease of aging; 59% of patients are over 65 and 30% are older than 75. Yet only 33% of cancer trial participants are over 65 and just 10% are over 75, a 2012 Journal of Clinical Oncology study found. McCarthy said she was twice turned down for clinical trials because of her age.


USA TODAY -- LL JJ 6B SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 2017

3B

USA TODAY SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 2017

awrence ournal ournal-W -World orld awrence

AMERICA’S MARKETS What to watch

STORY STOCKS

Interest rate hike in March? It could happen Paul Davidson USA TODAY

Ho-hum. Another Federal Reserve meeting is slated for midMarch, but almost no one is expecting the central bank to raise interest rates again after lifting them in December for the first time in a year. Don’t be so sure. In a recent interview with Bloomberg TV, San Francisco Federal Reserve President John Williams suggested a March hike isn’t off the table. And Chicago Fed Chief Charles Evans, a dove who typically prefers to keep rates low to stimulate the economy, said he’s still forecasting two rate increases this year but could be comfortable with three. In December, when the Fed lifted its benchmark rate for the

first time in a year, central bank policymakers raised their median forecast to three hikes in 2017, up from their estimate of two previously. Many economists say those moves will be backloaded to the second half of the year, when President Trump’s proposed fiscal stimulus could begin to juice growth. Fed fund futures give just a 9% chance of a rate increase in March but 50% odds for June. Fed Chair Janet Yellen, though, also has said the generally falling unemployment rate, now at 4.8%, calls for pushing up rates to head off inflation as employers bid up wages to attract fewer available workers. And job growth last month was strong. A March increase would let the Fed spread out the three possible hikes through 2017. Her testimony before a Senate committee Tuesday and House panel Wednesday could clarify the outlook.

Change $0.05 % chg unch.

+8.23

CLOSE: 20,269.37 PREV. CLOSE: 20,172.40 RANGE: 20,204.76-20,298.21

NASDAQ

COMP

+18.95

COMPOSITE

CHANGE: +.3% YTD: +351.01 YTD % CHG: +6.5%

CLOSE: 5,734.13 PREV. CLOSE: 5,715.18 RANGE: 5,717.42-5,743.43

CHANGE: +.4% YTD: +77.27 YTD % CHG: +3.5%

RUT

+10.31

Change $1.42 % chg 25.6%

Change -$0.23 % chg -0.2%

Day’s high: $7.75

$120

Low: $6.78

$134.19

Jan. 13

Feb. 10

4-WEEK TREND $10

The retailer’s CEO vowed to cut the company’s debt burden and annual expenses by at least $1 billion. The goal is to reduce overhead and integrate the Sears and Kmart operations. It also plans to slash pension obligations by $1.5 billion.

$4

$6.96

Jan. 13

Feb. 10

Price: $109.26 Day’s high: $109.80 Low: $108.58

4-WEEK TREND

Walt Disney

$120

The theme park operator plans to take full ownership of its financially-troubled park in Paris. It’s acquiring a 9% stake in Euro Disney, $2.13 per share. The company also announced its intention to pay 2 euros per share for all remaining shares.

$109.26

$100

Jan. 13

Feb. 10

20,000

20,269.37

CLOSE: 2,316.10 PREV. CLOSE: 2,307.87 RANGE: 2,311.10-2,319.23

RUSSELL

17,500

Aug.

RUSSELL 2000 INDEX

Company (ticker symbol)

CBRE Group (CBG) Earnings view tops estimates.

Price

$ Chg

YTD % Chg % Chg

47.23

+7.50

+18.9 +30.8

34.00 +2.43

News B (NWS) Shares rise along with sibling stock.

13.60

Mead Johnson Nutrition (MJN) Shares up on Reckitt Benckiser deal.

87.72 +4.67

Interpublic Group of Companies (IPG) 24.23 Shares higher as company announces 2016 results.

+7.7

+8.0

+.90 +.85

+.96

+7.3 +6.7

+16.0 +15.3

+5.6 +24.0 +4.1

2,300

Feb.

Aug.

+1.35

+3.9

+13.9

Hanesbrands (HBI) Shares up another day after positive note.

20.85

+.76

+3.8

-3.3

222.72

+7.95

+3.7

+11.5

Lennar (LEN) 46.81 Rises as it completes WCI Communities acquisition.

+1.62

+3.6

+9.0

YTD % Chg % Chg

Price

$ Chg

Cerner (CERN) Earnings forecast trails estimates.

51.50

-2.38

-4.4

+8.7

Envision Healthcare (EVHC) Reverses gain since stock rating upgrade.

68.44

-2.43

-3.4

+8.1

AP

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

NAV 214.12 58.18 211.29 58.15 15.50 211.30 58.19 44.60 68.72 104.60

Chg. +0.77 +0.23 +0.77 +0.23 +0.06 +0.76 +0.23 +0.21 +0.16 unch.

4wk 1 +2.2% +2.2% +2.2% +2.2% +3.0% +2.2% +2.2% +3.2% +0.9% +3.9%

YTD 1 +3.7% +3.7% +3.7% +3.7% +5.2% +3.7% +3.7% +6.1% +1.9% +6.9%

31.68

-1.06

-3.2

+16.6

Western Union(WU) WU Way program raises concerns.

19.74

-.64

-3.1

-9.1

Nvidia (NVDA) Good earnings, but not good enough.

113.62

-2.76

-2.4

+6.4

Range Resources (RRC) Reverses gain on stock rating upgrade.

33.14

-.67

-2.0

-3.6

145.55

-2.59

-1.7

+9.1

Dollar Tree Stores (DLTR) Loses some of gains in positive market.

78.02

-1.37

-1.7

+1.1

Coca-Cola (KO) Outlook dropped to negative by S&P.

40.58

-.67

-1.6

-2.1

Micron Technology (MU) Reverses gain on double stock rating upgrade.

24.05

-.40

-1.6

+9.7

SOURCE: BLOOMBERG AND THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SECTOR

PERFORMANCE DAILY YTD

Industrials

0.8%

22.1%

Energy

0.8%

21.5%

Materials

0.9%

20.0%

Technology

0.3%

19.8%

Utilities

0.6%

13.9%

1 – CAPITAL GAINS AND DIVIDENDS REINVESTED

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

Ticker XLF GDX SPY JNUG NUGT VXX EEM USO IWM DGAZ

Close 23.78 25.29 231.51 11.94 12.97 18.21 38.22 11.50 137.94 4.65

Chg. +0.07 +0.38 +0.91 +0.75 +0.52 -0.31 +0.35 +0.15 +1.04 +0.28

% Chg +0.3% +1.5% +0.4% +6.7% +4.2% -1.7% +0.9% +1.3% +0.8% +6.4%

%YTD +2.3% +20.9% +3.6% +114.0% +69.8% -28.6% +9.2% -1.9% +2.3% +53.5%

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% 0.53% 0.28% 1.89% 1.07% 2.41% 1.50%

Close 6 mo ago 3.94% 3.39% 3.15% 2.67% 3.19% 2.75% 3.15% 2.87%

SOURCE: BANKRATE.COM

COMMODITIES

Teradata (TDC) Stock rating cut to underperform at Mizuho.

Feb.

MARKET PERFORMANCE BY SECTOR

TOP 10 EXCHANGE TRADED FUNDS

35.84

2,316.10

2,050

Aug.

+3.5

CF Industries (CF) Makes up early drop ahead of earnings call.

Cigna (CI) Shares fall on slim chance of Anthem deal.

5,800

STANDARD & POOR’S 500

TOP 10 MUTUAL FUNDS 13.29

Company (ticker symbol)

5,734.13

5,000

News A (NWSA) Shares up on real estate gain.

Mohawk Industries (MHK) Beats sales, shares reverse early drop.

Feb.

NASDAQ COMPOSITE

CHANGE: +.7% CLOSE: 1,388.84 YTD: +31.71 PREV. CLOSE: 1,378.53 YTD % CHG: +2.3% RANGE: 1,380.07-1,391.17

Activision Blizzard (ATVI) Growth in digital sales offset weak “Call of Duty.”

LOSERS

$150

The social media network has agreed to provide advertising data to the Media Rating Council, an independent measurement watchdog. Some advertisers had become skeptical of the company’s metrics, and it has disclosed several mistakes.

STANDARD & POOR'S

S&P 500’S BIGGEST GAINERS/LOSERS GAINERS

Facebook

Sears Holdings

S&P 500

SPX

INDUSTRIAL AVERAGE

CHANGE: +.5% YTD: +506.77 YTD % CHG: +2.6%

4-WEEK TREND

DOW JONES INDUSTRIALS

DOW JONES

+96.97

Price: $134.19 Day’s high: $134.94 Low: $133.68

Price: $6.96

MAJOR INDEXES DJIA

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

Commodities Close Prev. Cattle (lb.) 1.16 1.18 Corn (bushel) 3.75 3.70 Gold (troy oz.) 1,234.40 1,235.10 Hogs, lean (lb.) .75 .74 Natural Gas (Btu.) 3.03 3.14 Oil, heating (gal.) 1.67 1.64 Oil, lt. swt. crude (bar.) 53.86 53.00 Silver (troy oz.) 17.91 17.72 Soybeans (bushel) 10.59 10.51 Wheat (bushel) 4.49 4.43

Chg. -0.02 +0.05 -0.70 +0.01 -0.11 +0.03 +0.86 +0.19 +0.08 +0.06

% Chg. -1.1% +1.4% -0.1% +0.4% -3.4% +1.5% +1.6% +1.1% +0.8% +1.2%

% YTD -2.2% +6.4% +7.3% +12.7% -18.5% -2.3% +0.3% +12.4% +6.3% +10.1%

Close .8013 1.3092 6.8830 .9406 113.41 20.3272

Prev. .8004 1.3138 6.8672 .9383 113.33 20.4038

Close 11,666.97 23,574.98 19,378.93 7,258.75 47,797.04

Consumer staples 0.1%

6.2%

Telcom

0.1%

2.2%

Financials

0.3%

-0.2%

Health care

0.2%

-0.2%

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

10.85

20 30

10

6 mo. ago .7685 1.3059 6.6388 .8948 101.29 18.3726

Yr. ago .6883 1.3907 6.5706 .8867 113.68 18.8567

Prev. Change 11,642.86 +24.11 23,525.14 +49.84 18,907.67 +471.26 7,229.50 +29.25 47,232.17 +564.87

%Chg. +0.2% +0.2% +2.5% +0.4% +1.2%

15

IN-DEPTH MARKETS COVERAGE USATODAY.COM/MONEY

7.5

YTD % +1.6% +7.2% +1.4% +1.6% +4.7%

SOURCES: MORNINGSTAR, DOW JONES INDEXES, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

-0.03 (-0.3%)

40

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

9.7%

0

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

Consumer discret. 0.6%

21.28 22.5

30

0 SOURCE BLOOMBERG

+0.08 (+0.4%)

Musk, UAW bicker over conditions at Tesla plant Nathan Bomey @NathanBomey USA TODAY

The United Auto Workers union signaled Friday that it’s gathering support to unionize Tesla’s assembly plant in Fremont, Calif., after someone claiming to be an employee of the automaker publicly criticized the company over factory conditions. The UAW confirmed Friday that Tesla workers “have approached the UAW, and we wel-

come them with open arms.” The union said those workers included Jose Moran, who published a blog post Thursday on a site called Medium alleging that “preventable injuries happen often,” workers are forced into “excessive mandatory overtime,” dissent is stifled and compensation is inadequate. He did not provide evidence, but his public call for a UAW chapter drew attention in automotive circles. Tesla’s factory south of San Francisco is the only assembly plant owned by an established

RINGO H.W. CHIU, AP

Elon Musk called the accusations “morally outrageous.“

American automaker that is not unionized, in contrast to foreign automakers that have established

non-union plants in the USA. Tesla CEO Elon Musk disputed Moran’s claims in a Twitter message Thursday to tech blog Gizmodo. He wrote that mandatory overtime is limited, compensation is sufficient and the accusations are “morally outrageous.” “Our understanding is that this guy was paid by the UAW to join Tesla and agitate for a union. He doesn’t really work for us, he works for the UAW,” Musk said without providing evidence. The UAW shot back Friday: “Mr. Moran is not and has not been paid by the UAW. We would

hope that Tesla would apologize to their employee.” Moran did not immediately respond to a USA TODAY message seeking comment Friday. A Tesla representative also did not respond to a request for comment. Organizing the Tesla plant would amount to a major victory for the UAW, which has failed repeatedly to add a foreign auto plant to its roster of unionized factories. UAW President Dennis Williams said in May that the plant’s workers “ought to have collective bargaining rights.”


USA TODAY 4B SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 2017

7B

L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 2017

LIFE LIFELINE AWARDS SEASON HOW WAS YOUR DAY? BAD DAY SHIA LABEOUF New York’s Museum of the Moving Image announced Friday it was shutting down his streaming, anti-Trump protest project, saying it “had become a flashpoint for violence.”

GRAMMY PREDICTIONS

WHO WILL AND SHOULD WIN

TIMOTHY A. CLARY, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

STYLE STAR ‘Stranger Things’ star Millie Bobbie Brown got out of Eleven’s drab duds and showed off some rocker-girl style at Calvin Klein’s New York Fashion Week show on Friday.

GETTY IMAGES

A

slew of mainstream favorites including Drake, Rihanna and Twenty One Pilots are vying for top prizes at Sunday’s Grammy Awards (CBS, 8 ET/5 PT), but it’s the diva showdown between Beyoncé and Adele that will have us on the edges of our seats. USA TODAY’s Patrick Ryan picks the likely winners in major categories and who we’re rooting for in each: ALBUM OF THE YEAR WHO WILL AND SHOULD WIN:

AWARD TRACKER OSCAR SONGS SET Friday, Oscar producers confirmed the performer lineup for the best-original-song nominees Feb. 26. Lin-Manuel Miranda and Auli’i Cravalho will rep ‘Moana.’ John Legend, who acted in ‘La La Land,’ will perform the two numbers from that film. Justin Timberlake will sing his ‘Trolls’ tune, and Sting will do the song he co-wrote for ‘Jim: The James Foley Story.’

MIRANDA BY DAN MACMEDAN, WIREIMAGE

IT’S YOUR BIRTHDAY WHO’S CELEBRATING TODAY?

FROM LEFT, FILM MAGIC, USA TODAY, EPA

Taylor Lautner is 25. Natalie Dormer is 35. Jennifer Aniston is 48. Compiled by Jayme Deerwester

USA SNAPSHOTS©

Utahans united Utah has the lowest divorce rate:

16.22%

That’s 1.8 times lower than the highest in the nation: the District of Columbia’s, at 29.81% SOURCE WalletHub TERRY BYRNE AND VERONICA BRAVO, USA TODAY

Beyoncé, Lemonade The Recording Academy historically has been capricious in awarding its highest honor to an R&B/hip-hop album. In fact, the only two to manage that feat in the last two decades have been OutKast’s Speakerboxxx/The Love Below in 2004 and Lauryn Hill’s The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill in 1999. But even with stiff competition from Adele’s pop steamroller 25 and Sturgill Simpson’s countryrock opus A Sailor’s Guide to Earth — both of which should play well with older, more conservative voters — we still think Beyoncé is going to win the gramophone. With its searing narrative of infidelity, forgiveness and empowerment, a lyrical one-hour visual and genre-spanning track list, no one album captured the zeitgeist quite like Lemonade. It would be a long overdue album-of-the-year win for the 20-time Grammy champ. We don’t think Adele would feel short-changed, either. After all, she earned the accolade in 2012 for 21, and has repeatedly professed her love for Lemonade in interviews and on tour.

SONG OF THE YEAR WHO WILL AND SHOULD WIN: Adele, Hello

If the Grammys follow the recent trend of awards shows making political statements, then Beyoncé’s celebration of black womanhood, Formation, should be a shoo-in for song of the year. But we think Adele’s less-divisive megahit Hello is a safer bet, having spent 10 weeks at No. 1 in late fall 2015 on its way to becoming an inescapable Internet meme and parody wellspring. If anything usurps the power ballad Sunday night, it could be Justin Bieber’s acoustic kiss-off Love Yourself, which was co-written with Grammy favorite Ed Sheeran and helped cement the pop bad boy’s remarkable comeback on fourth album Purpose.

RECORD OF THE YEAR WHO WILL WIN: Adele, Hello WHO SHOULD WIN: Beyoncé, Formation Record of the year — which rewards overall production and performance, rather than songwriting — frequently has overlapped with song, with recent double winners including Sam Smith (Stay With Me), Lady Antebellum (Need You Now), Amy Winehouse (Rehab), and yes, Adele (Rolling in the Deep). Although Bey’s dynamic Formation delivery and swaggering production with Mike Will Made It is worthy of the trophy, we think Adele and co-writer/producer Greg Kurstin have the upper hand with their sweeping, soulful work on the more accessible Hello.

BEYONCÉ BY INVISION FOR PARKWOOD ENTERTAINMENT; ADELE BY GETTY IMAGES; BIEBER BY GETTY IMAGES FOR IHEARTMEDIA; CHANCE BY WIREIMAGE

BEST NEW ARTIST WHO WILL WIN: Chance the

Rapper

WHO SHOULD WIN: Anderson .Paak Country singers Kelsea Ballerini and Maren Morris will cancel each other out, and unless your name is Daft Punk, the Recording Academy doesn’t give major hardware to dance artists. (Sorry, The Chainsmokers.) That leaves us with Chance the Rapper, a well-regarded, extremely likable potential winner who broke boundaries of music consumption with his mixtape Coloring Book. But he already has ascended to the top of hiphop’s class, and with seven nominations, is likely to pull in other awards such as best rap album or rap/sung performance (Kanye West’s Ultralight Beam). In that regard, we think up-andcomer Anderson .Paak could benefit more greatly from a high-profile win. Plus, his prowess as a multi-instrumentalist on Malibu could appeal to voters who are ambivalent to rap.

‘Lego Batman’ has joyous take on Dark Knight The not-so-Dark Knight returns in the joyously bonkers The Lego Batman Movie, and he’s not only the hero we need right MOVIE REVIEW now but also the BRIAN one we deserve. TRUITT From the moment Lego Batman (voiced by Will Arnett) shouts “Wanna get nuts?!” at his arch supervillain the Joker (Zach Galifianakis) — a nod to Tim Burton’s 1989 Batman film — the family-friendly animated superhero comedy (eeeg out of four; rated PG; in theaters now) maniacally blisters the screen with loving homages to WARNER BROS. PICTURES past Bat-flicks, wacky baddies, wickedly clever references (in- Batman (voiced by Will Arnett) is shy around new commish cluding a great jab at Marvel) Barbara Gordon (Rosario Dawson) in The Lego Batman Movie. and one very unsubtle message: Don’t be a jerk, be a pal. (Ralph Fiennes). bara and Alfred to stop Joker and Directed by Chris McKay Change is afoot for the big guy, his evil army’s latest epic assault (Robot Chicken), Lego Batman though: New police commission- when it threatens Gotham. leans hard into the “Yay, best er Barbara Gordon (Rosario DawThe movie features a few infriends!” ethos of 2014’s hit The son) implores Batman to be a sanely busy action sequences Lego Movie, though its main team player and he’s got a lovable that, while hugely entertaining, man has severe loner tenden- and doe-eyed new orphan son in can’t be maintained without leavcies: After saving Gotham City Dick Grayson (Michael Cera), aka ing heads spinning. The slower, for the umpteenth time, billion- sidekick Robin. Before you can more expositional material may aire Bruce Wayne’s masked al- say, “Holy tuxedo dress-up party, have some little kids squirming, ter ego retires for yet another Batman!” the kid slips on colorful but for grown-ups, it allows for night of Lobster Thermidor for togs and gradually wins over his some of the best content. one and an unwanted emotion- new Bat-dad. Their bonds solidify Though The Dark Knight won’t al chat with loyal butler Alfred just in time to team up with Bar- be supplanted any time soon as

tops among Bat-movies, the new film makes a strong argument for second-best simply by taking time to explore the core of Batman that others haven’t: He’s a complicated mess who can’t get out of his own way long enough for the greater good. Arnett plays Bats’ growly dudebro vocals with infectious energy, Cera nicely inhabits the naïve Robin, and Dawson is super as Barbara, a heroine who’s easily the Caped Crusader’s equal (and superior in a few ways). They’re supported by a large ensemble of baddies, though Galifianakis’ down-to-earth Joker is a standout: He gives the Clown Prince of Crime a huffy attitude and hurt feelings when Batman tells him he’s not his greatest enemy. Taking a cue from The Lego Movie, Lego Batman borrows from pop culture in over-the-top fashion — movie nerds will need a second viewing to spot all the surprise cameos. Everything also is awesome on the soundtrack: Batman raps his way through Who’s the (Bat)Man (“Who never skips leg day? BATMAN!”), and the happy-go-lucky Friends Are Family has everybody dancing into the credits, leaving even the grimmest vigilante with a huge grin.


L awrence J ournal -W orld

Saturday, February 11, 2017

Dear Annie: My good friend Grace and I met Beth about two years ago at a summer camp. We all became fast friends and ended up spending the rest of the summer together. Beth moved away that November, but we continued to see her almost as much as we had before. Now we all attend different schools, and it has been hard. We managed to make it work until about four months ago. Grace’s father teaches Beth’s basketball team and has told Grace that Beth is always crying at practice. In response, Grace and I baked her cookies and wrote her a note telling her that we are here for her, and then we delivered them via her father. Later that month, we saw Beth at a dance, and we asked about

Dear Annie

Annie Lane

dearannie@creators.com

the cookies. She told us that they were disgusting and that she had fed them to her dog, and then she walked off to join her school friends. That night, I texted her and asked her what was wrong, and she told me that I needed to stop ‘’nagging’’ her and that I shouldn’t get angry with her for ‘’having a life.’’ Annie, she is my best friend, and I know there has to be something wrong for her to say that to me, but she

Image Awards tonight Anthony Anderson hosts the 48th NAACP Image Awards (8 p.m., TV One) broadcast live from the Pasadena Civic Auditorium. He will be joined by his ‘‘black-ish’’ co-star Tracee Ellis Ross, who recently won a Golden Globe for her role on that ABC series. Ross is among many stars from television and film to present awards that celebrate the accomplishments of people of color in the fields of television, music, literature and film and honor individuals who promote social justice through the creative arts. The NAACP’s Entertainer of the Year will also be revealed. Nominees include Beyonce, Viola Davis, Regina King, Dwayne Johnson and Chance the Rapper. l The next installment of the continuing saga ‘‘When Good Titles Are Wasted on Boring Movies’’ arrives on Saturday with ‘‘From Straight A’s to XXX’’ (7 p.m., Lifetime, TV-14). Based on a true story, ‘‘Straight’’ stars Haley Pullos (’’General Hospital’’) as Miriam Weeks, a Duke freshman who worked as a porn star to pay for her exorbitant tuition. Gosh, why would a smart girl make such a dumb decision? All the clues arrive in about five minutes. She’s from a rather buttoned-down background and wears glasses that, like her clothes, she’s dying to take off. We’re given all sorts of financial incentives. She turned down a free ride at Vanderbilt before her doctor dad lost his job. Just think, had she matriculated in Nashville, we never would have to watch this terrible movie! l Speaking of poor decisions, Oxygen offers a four-hour marathon of ‘‘Snapped’’ (6 p.m.) just in time for Valentine’s Day. Tonight’s other highlights

l The Oklahoma City Thun-

der host the Golden State Warriors in NBA action (7:30 p.m., ABC). l Annette Bening, Andrew Garfield, Asa Butterfield and Elbow appear on ‘‘The Graham Norton Show’’ (9 p.m., BBC America, TV-14). l A flood leaves shelter dogs stranded in Louisiana on the season finale of ‘‘The Guardians’’ (9 p.m., Animal Planet, TV-PG). l ‘‘A Very Soul Train Valentine’s Day 2017’’ (9:10 p.m., BET) recalls romantic moments from the history of the musical showcase. l Alec Baldwin hosts ‘‘Saturday Night Live’’ (10:30 p.m., NBC, TV-14), featuring musical guest Ed Sheeran.

Copyright 2017 United Feature Syndicate distributed by Universal Uclick.

won’t open up and tell me. Should I keep pressing for answers? Should I back up and give her space? Or should I just completely give up and tell her to have a good life? — Confused and Worried Dear Confused: If it helps your own peace of mind, write Beth a letter stating that you’re there to listen whenever she’s ready to talk. Then give her space — or rather, take some space for yourself. Whatever she might be going through, the things she said were flat-out cruel. You are a sweetheart for wanting to see the best in her in spite of it all. But you deserve nothing less than kindness. Dear Annie: I would like to add to your response to ‘’I Ain’t No Mr. Moneybags,’’ the

JACQUELINE BIGAR’S STARS

For Saturday, Feb. 11: This year you feel as if you will be able to change the basis of an important relationship. You will make it clear where you are coming from. Others often will have to make choices now that they know you better. You will pursue an interest or do some traveling. If you are single, your interests and diverse personality attract many different people. If you are attached, your in-laws could play a more significant role than in the past. The stars show the kind of day you’ll have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult Aries (March 21-April 19) HHHH You could be slowing down some after a recent surge of activity. Tonight: Call it a night. Taurus (April 20-May 20) HHHHH You could be less sure of yourself yet more childlike than you have been in quite a while. Tonight: Nurture a romance. Gemini (May 21-June 20) HHH Be willing to call a spade a spade. Someone close to you might be testing you. Tonight: In the whirlwind of the moment. Cancer (June 21-July 22) HHHH You’ll hit extremes and might be left wondering whether you can stabilize your moods and emotions. Tonight: Hang out at home. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHHH Remain more sensitive to your options. Tonight: Curb

law student on a limited budget dating a young woman who hasn’t offered to chip in for any of the dates. He should be honest and tell ‘’Laura’’ that he is on a limited student budget rather than drop hints that she might or might not get. He should ask her whether she can occasionally pay. If she is driven by how much money he spends on her, then she is the wrong girl for him. ‘’I Ain’t No Mr. Moneybags’’ will earn more money when he graduates. Until then, he should take it easy. Share the cost and he will know what kind of person Laura really is. — Dana

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

jacquelinebigar.com

a need to be possessive. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHHH You could be feeling your Wheaties and might be enjoying yourself to the max. Tonight: Allow others to see the real you. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHH Much of what you discuss at present is best kept hushhush. Tonight: Take a break from your routine. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHHHH You could be feeling more together than you have as of late. Tonight: Let the fun begin. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHHHH How you handle an intense situation in the morning could determine the nature of the rest of the day. Tonight: Where the crowds can be found. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHHH While others might not be able to deal with all the responsibilities of everyday life, you can. Tonight: In the limelight. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHHHH Keep reaching out to a dear friend. This person keeps tossing new information into the mix. Tonight: Let the good times roll. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHH Your ability to encourage others to take small risks from time to time emerges. Tonight: Keep it fun and light. — The astrological forecast should be read for entertainment only.

Universal UNIVERSAL CROSSWORD

Crossword

Edited by Timothy Parker February 11, 2017 ACROSS 1 Small lock of hair 5 Bottomless gulf 10 Aerobics class word 14 Tennis great Kournikova 15 Prefix with “type” or “plasm” 16 Invisible vibes 17 Clickable desktop symbol 18 Book inserts 19 Hoofbeat sound 20 What Lisping Louie would do when being congratulated? 23 Snakelike fishes 24 Outcast of long ago 25 Baby of a bald bird 29 Long-running fight 31 Teenagers’ facial disruption 32 Hairdos that don’t live up to their name 34 Acquire 37 What Lisping Louie did while idle? 41 Use a needle and thread 42 V-formation creatures 43 Shankar tune 44 Quiet “Excuse me” 45 One who died for a cause 47 La ___ (Milan opera house) 2/11

50 Sound that breaks a hypnotic trance 52 Lisping Louie’s favorite B-movie weapons? 59 Endangered 60 Groups of countries in a special alliance 61 From square one 62 From quite a distance 63 Spinning woodshop machine 64 What all great inventions begin with 65 Raised seam or skin mark 66 Blunt fencing foils 67 Heavy beer drinker on “Cheers” DOWN 1 What to do in a long line 2 Foot measure 3 White coat that could give one the chills 4 Section of glass 5 Small Java program 6 Wild fight 7 Hindu gurus 8 Proofer’s “never mind” mark 9 Violent dance “pit” 10 Like some vows or cows 11 Dutch bloom

12 Slowly crumble from weather 13 Origami sheet 21 Stan of superheroes 22 Like a thick, deep-pile carpet 25 Is a consumer? 26 Be sore 27 Eat like a beaver 28 Permit 29 Costing nothing 30 Ambulance initials 32 Rhyming piece of work 33 Print shop measures 34 Swarming pest 35 In a tense state 36 Russian leader up to 1917 38 Old Irish alphabet

39 Word between single and married names? 40 Dep. opposite, at airports 44 Baseball slugger Pujols 45 Houses for clergy 46 Jungle primate 47 It’s for suckers 48 Rub raw 49 Hearingrelated 50 Little pig (var.) 51 Recessed area 53 Having the required skill 54 Applaud 55 Opposite of lose 56 Reverse, as an action 57 “___ the twain shall meet” 58 Skinny-dipped

PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER

2/10 © 2017 Andrews McMeel Syndication www.upuzzles.com

LOUIE HAS A LITTLE LISP 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.

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

SOKKI UNMEHA

RICCSU

Yesterday’s

Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app

Back off from cruel friend; take time for self

| 5B

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

(Answers Monday) Jumbles: WHEAT COUNT SHADOW WEIGHT Answer: The identical twin boys dressed so differently because — “TWO” EACH HIS OWN

BECKER ON BRIDGE


6B

|

Saturday, February 11, 2017

LAWRENCE • AREA

.

New trial ordered for alleged sex offender By Peter Hancock phancock@ljworld.com

Topeka — A divided Kansas Court of Appeals panel on Friday ordered a new trial for a Hispanic man charged with molesting a 10-year-old girl because the trial court allowed a prosecutor to strike other Hispanic people from the jury pool. Jose Alberto Gonzalez-Sandoval was convicted in Lyon County District Court for an incident in May 2014 when, according to the opinion, he allegedly touched a 10-year-old who was a friend of his own 9-year-old son while the three of them were playing in a public swimming pool. During jury selection, according to the court, there were three Hispanic individuals in the pool of potential jurors. One was struck for cause because she said she had been the victim of a sex crime herself and could not be impartial. But prosecutors used what’s called a “peremptory challenge” to strike the other two. The one that most troubled the majority on the panel was a woman identified only by her initials, T.R. When Assistant County Attorney Laura Miser

Appeals court says race played role in jury selection was first asked why she struck T.R. from the jury, she said T.R. had been a witness in another criminal case and had previously been questioned by police in yet another case. But when asked during the interview process whether she’d ever been a witness or had been questioned, she didn’t respond. Miser also said T.R. “avoided a lot of eye contact” during the interview process. Defense attorney Vernon Buck objected, saying the lack of eye contact was not a good enough reason to strike a potential juror of the defendant’s own ethnic background. He also said the other two cases had nothing to do with the Gonzalez-Sandoval case, and thus should not preclude her from serving on the jury. On the first day of the trial, Amy Aranda, another lawyer on the prosecution team, informed Judge Merlin Wheeler that she had given Miser the information about the other cases. But after the jury selection process, Aranda

said she had doublechecked and found that one of the two cases involved a different person by the same name, but that the information in the other case was correct, and so the prosecution stood by its decision to strike T.R. from the panel. Then on the second day of trial, Aranda informed the judge that she had done more checking, and their information about the second case in which T.R. was involved was incorrect as well. However, Aranda said, upon further checking, she discovered that T.R. did appear in the police department’s computer system as a witness in a number of burglaries dating back to 2011. Thus, Aranda said, the prosecution continued to object to T.R. based on giving incomplete or inaccurate information about prior experiences in criminal cases. Buck renewed his objection, but Wheeler stood by his original ruling. In a 62-page opinion, two of the three Appeals

DEATHS Journal-World obituary policy:

Court judges on the panel said that should not be allowed. Judges Steve Leben and Henry W. Green said that when reviewing peremptory challenges, courts are limited to examining the initial reasons given for striking a juror and cannot allow prosecutors to substitute or amend their reasons later. Of the first three reasons given, they said, only the two regarding T.R.’s prior involvement in criminal cases or police questioning could be considered “race-neutral” and both of those turned out to be inaccurate. The fourth reason, submitted after the trial had already begun, should not have been considered. Judge Thomas Malone wrote a dissenting opinion. “I believe that the majority’s conclusion that the State ‘must stand or fall on the initial reasons’ it provides for striking a minority (potential juror) and that ‘the trial court is barred from considering’ a substitute reason is an incorrect statement of the law,” Malone wrote.

Virginia Jean (Schuyler) Visser, 94, formerly of Emporia and Lawrence, Kan., died peacefully Feb. 8, 2017, at PathStone Crossing, in Mankato, Minn. A private ceremony to celebrate her life will be held at a later date. Virginia was born June 26, 1922, to William and Edna (Frear) Schuyler in Danbury, Iowa. After she graduated from Danbury High School in 1940, Virginia completed her nursing training at St. Vincent’s Hospital in Sioux City, Iowa. After graduation in 1942, she and many of her classmates enlisted in the military. Virginia became a first lieutenant in the U.S. Army and served as a nurse in England, France and Germany for 22 months. Near the end of World War II, she met and fell in love with her future husband, John E. Visser, an Army captain and native of Iowa. Virginia was proud of an account she wrote about her wartime nursing experiences, titled “Through the Years, 1940­ 1945.” After discharge, they married on May 29, 1946, and settled in Holland, Mich., where John was a history professor and basketball coach for Hope College, while Virginia worked as an industrial nurse for local businesses. Together, they moved with their growing family as John finished advanced degrees and worked in administrative positions at a series of colleges and universities, including Western Michigan University in Kalamazoo, Mich.; Grand Rapids Junior College in Grand Rapids, Mich.; and Ball State University in John was Muncie, Ind. selected as president of Emporia State University in Emporia, Kan., in 1968. Virginia served as “first lady” for the campus for 17 years, during which she also earned a master’s degree in Home Economics and taught

classes in that department. She was actively engaged in the community and championed many civic causes. Through it all, she pursued her life­long passion for entertaining and always worked to make people feel welcome in her home. After their retirement from Emporia State, John worked as a consultant for universities in Wisconsin and Alaska. Virginia very much enjoyed both locations and, as always, became involved in campus and community activities, making many warm friends along the way. During that time, Virginia also became interested in genealogy and compiled a detailed history of several generations of the Schuyler family. The couple returned to Vassar, Kan., in 1988, where they built their dream home on Lake Pomona. They lived there until John’s death in 1997. Virginia then moved to Lawrence, where she developed a new group of friends, especially those in her beloved book club. She moved to Mankato in 2012, to be closer to family. Virginia is survived by daughters Mary Visser of Mankato and Nancy Visser of New York, N.Y., and her brother George F. Schuyler, and his family in La Crosse, Wis. She is preceded in death by her siblings Martha Clark, Fred Schuyler, and Edwin Schuyler, her husband, John, and daughters Betty Visser and Martha Visser. In lieu of flowers, the family requests donations to the Emporia State University Foundation targeted to the John & Virginia Student Athlete Scholarship or the Bargain Box Scholarship Fund (www.emporia.edu/give) or the Mayo Clinic Health System SWMN Regional Hospice (http://mayoclinichealths ystem.org/locations/mank ato/donate). Please sign this guestbook at Obituaries. LJWorld.com.

MARY R. WORLEY Graveside service for Mary, 59, will be 10 am, Monday, at Oak Hill Cemetery. Visitation will be Sunday from 4 to 5 pm at Rumsey­Yost Funeral Home. For full obituary, rumsey­yost.com.

BEATRICE 'TERRY' SALIERNO No public services are planned for Beatrice 'Terry' Salierno, 90, Lawrence, who passed away Thursday, Feb. 9, 2017, at her home. Survivors include sons Mike and Rich. rumsey­yost.com

GERALD DEAN HOWELL Gerald D Howell, 84, Olathe, died Feb. 8th Funeral Service 1pm Mon. Feb. 13th McGilley­Frye 105 E. Loula Olathe. Visitation 12­1pm prior to the service. Burial Jo Co.Mem Gardens.

FRED H. TERRY Funeral services for Fred H. Terry, 60, Lawrence will be held at 10 a.m. Mon. Feb. 13th at Southside Church of Christ. He passed away Wed., Feb. 8th at LMH. warrenmcelwain.com.

MELISSA KAY VAUGHN Arrangements for Melissa Kay Vaughn, 58, Lawrence will be announced by Rumsey­Yost Funeral Home. She died Wednesday at Lawrence Memorial Hospital. rumsey­yost.com

HELEN A. NATION Memorial services for Helen A. Nation, 92, Lawrence, are pending with Rumsey­Yost Funeral Home & Crematory. Mrs. Nation died Thursday, February 9, 2017, at LMH. rumsey­yost.com

MARGARET FISHER Funeral services for Margaret Fisher, 95, Lawrence will be held at 1:00 p.m. Monday, February 13, 2017 at Warren­McElwain Mortuary in Lawrence. Burial will follow at Oak Hill Cemetery. She passed away Wednesday, February 8, 2017 at Comfort Care in Ottawa. Margaret was born October 17, 1921 in Meade, KS the daughter of Charles and Estela Foote. She was a member of the Writer’s Club. She was a Medical Technologist at the University of Kansas in Lawrence. She married Ross Fisher on January 11, 1947. He preceded her in death on June 30, 1989. Survivors include her sons, Albert Fisher and wife, Linda, Kansas City, MO, Harold Fisher, Quenemo, KS and David Fisher, Brookfield, WI; six grandchildren; and eight great­grandchildren.

Man accused of string of burglaries By Conrad Swanson cswanson@ljworld.com

A Friday in January began with vodka for one Lawrence man and ended with a string of burglaries, police say. The man in question, Greg Cunningham, told investigators that he doesn’t remember anything after drinking with friends, according to the recently released arrest affidavit in his case. He’s currently facing felony charges of aggravated burglary, theft and two counts of burglary alongside two misdemeanor counts of theft. An arrest affidavit is a document filed by police explaining the grounds for an arrest. Allegations in the document must still be proved in court. Cunningham, 54, was arrested on Jan. 20 and booked into the Douglas County Jail. He is currently being held in the jail in lieu of a $35,000 bond. Around 3:28 p.m on Jan. 20, officers arrived at an apartment complex at 1043 Indiana St. for a reported burglary, the affidavit says. There, a woman told officers, Cunningham entered her apartment while presenting himself as a maintenance worker and he be— Statehouse reporter Peter Hancock can gan to steal from her and be reached at 354-4222. Follow him on refused to leave. At one point, the woman Twitter: @LJWpqhancock told officers, Cunningham jumped from her balcony to a neighboring apartment, according to the affidavit. The man in the next apartment told officers that Cunningham ran

For information about running obituaries, call 832-7151. Obituaries run as submitted by funeral homes or the families of the deceased.

VIRGINIA JEAN (SCHUYLER) VISSER

L awrence J ournal -W orld

to the building’s basement. Downstairs, officers found Cunningham with “a large number of items in his pockets, including an Apple watch, a number of rings, a bracelet, an article of women’s clothing, a number of headphones, and a pocketful of change,” the affidavit says. Officers arrested Cunningham, who then asked to be taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital because he had been drinking while on medication, the affidavit says. At the hospital, Cunningham was identified as a suspect in two auto burglaries from earlier in the day. As the investigation continued, officers determined Cunningham broke into a Chevrolet Malibu near the intersection of 10th and Indiana streets earlier in the day, the affidavit says. He is also accused of breaking into another car in the 900 block of Indiana Street. From the two vehicles, Cunningham stole beer, keys, a backpack, a wallet, headphones and a book, the affidavit says. Cunningham was booked into jail after he was released from LMH. Douglas County Sheriff’s Office Sgt. Kristen Dymacek declined to release Cunningham’s booking photo to the public, saying that it is “not required to be disclosed under the Kansas Open Records Act.” — Public safety reporter Conrad Swanson can be reached at 832-7284. Follow him on Twitter: @Conrad_Swanson

DATEBOOK 11 TODAY DON’T MISS:

The Biochemistry of Love and Herbal Aphrodisiacs, 9 a.m.-noon, Merkaba Wellness Center, 841 New Hampshire St. (Pre-register: 785-3711141) Mr. Mojo Risin’s Tribute to The Doors, 9 p.m., The Jackpot Music Hall, 943 Massachusetts St.

OTHER EVENTS:

Kaw Valley Seed Fair, 9 a.m.-3 p.m., Building 21, Douglas County Fairgrounds, 2110 Harper St. Community Sneak Peek at New Home, 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Bridge Haven Village, 1701 Research Park Drive. Local District 2 of Kansas Authors Club Meeting, 1:30-3 p.m., Room B, lower level, Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. Free State Brewing Company tours of East Side Brewery, 2 p.m., 1927 Moodie Road. Saturday Afternoon Ragtime, 2-4 p.m., Watkins Museum of History, 1047 Massachusetts St. American Legion Bingo, doors open 4:30 p.m., first games 6:45 p.m., American Legion Post No. 14, 3408 W. Sixth St. Free State Baseball and Softball Auction,

SUBMIT YOUR STUFF Don’t be shy — we want to publish your event. Submit your item for our calendar by emailing datebook@ljworld.com at least 48 hours before your event. To become a Weekend Kickoff Datebook Sponsor and to boost your events further, email datebook@ljworld. com for cost-saving multimedia Datebook campaigns. Find more information about these events, and more event listings, at ljworld.com/events. 6-10 p.m., Six Mile Chop House, 4931 W. Sixth St. Sexual Trauma & Abuse Center Benefit, 6:30-9 p.m., Love Garden Sounds, 822 Massachusetts St. The Mark of Zorro with Lawrence Community Orchestra, 6:45 p.m., Liberty Hall, 644 Massachusetts St. After Hours at the Library: Carnaval de la Biblioteca, 7 p.m., Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St.

POLICE BLOTTER LJWORLD.COM/BLOTTER

The family will greet friends from 12:30 – 1:00 p.m. on Monday, February 13th prior to the service at the mortuary. Memorials may be made in her name to St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital and/or American Heart Association and may be sent in care of the Warren­McElwain Mortuary. Online condolences may be posted at warrenmcelwain.com. Please sign this guestbook at Obituaries. LJWorld.com.

Here is a list of recent Lawrence Police Department calls requiring the response of four or more officers. This list spans from 6:01 a.m. Thursday to 5:39 a.m. Friday. A full list of department calls is available in the Lights & Sirens blog, which can be found online at LJWorld. com. Each incident listed only bears a short description and may not capture the entirety of what took place. Not every call results in citations or arrests, and the information is subject to change as police investigations move forward.

Thursday, 8:16 a.m., eight officers, domestic disturbance, address redacted. Thursday, 10:39 a.m., four officers, wanted person, 3300 block of Iowa Street. Thursday, 12:31 p.m., four officers, warrant service, 1400 block of Research Park Drive. Thursday, 5:33 p.m., five officers, criminal damage/ vandalism, 1200 block of Laura Avenue. Thursday, 6:36 p.m., seven officers, criminal threat, 1900 block of East 23rd Street. Friday, 1:29 a.m., four officers, domestic battery, address redacted. Friday, 1:43 a.m., six officers, fight, 1300 block of Ohio Street. Friday, 2:01 a.m., six officers, fight, 1100 block of Massachusetts Street.


INSIDE: CLASSIFIED ADS, 3C-4C.

Home & Garden

C

Lawrence Journal-World l Homes.Lawrence.com l Saturday, February 11, 2017

Shutterstock

Tips for keeping bouquets fresh Garden Variety

Jennifer Smith

U

.S. consumers are expected to spend about $2 billion on flowers for the upcoming Valentine’s Day holiday, according to the National Retail Federation. Even at premium prices, that accounts for a lot of roses, carnations, lilies, tulips and other flowers. To make a flower investment last as long as possible, both the giver and receiver play roles in

selecting and caring for the flowers. When selecting bouquets, look for flowers whose blooms are on the verge of opening rather than being fully open already. Flowers are like bananas in this way; you want them in that sweet spot just before they are ripe so they will last a few more days on the counter. Also avoid flowers that are still in tight buds, unless it is a special

miniature arrangement meant to contain budded flowers. Otherwise, the buds may start to rot or dry out before they ever open into a flower. Look beyond the flowers into the mass of greenery for healthy leaves and stems. Avoid bouquets with wilted leaves, slime or mold on the stems, or other signs of damage and age. If handled properly by the florist, bouquets in vas-

es and/or in a cooler will last longer than bouquets that are at room temperature and not in water. Once flowers are home, partially fill a sink with room temperature water for most flowers, or slightly cooler water for tulips, daffodils and other cool-weather bloomers. Submerge the cut end of the flower and cut an additional inch or

> FLOWERS, 2C

Showcase Homes OPEN SUNDAY 1:00PM - 3:00PM

OPEN SUNDAY 11:00 AM - 1:00 PM

3502 YALE ROAD - $199,900

3024 W. 30TH COURT

JUST LISTED & FIRST TIME OPEN!!! Totally updated 4 bed/3 bath/2 car bi-level home on large corner lot with HUGE fenced backyard! Open & spacious living, dining and kitchen area. The kitchen features an island, SS appliances and a beautiful tile backsplash. Finished basement has a large family room w/fireplace & bar area, bath and 4th bedroom. Near shopping, restaurants & schools! Stop by and check it out!!!

Offered by: Mary Ann Deck 785-760-1205

Move right in! This quaint 1988 rancher has been updated and renovated by Salb Homes over the past few months. Updates include: new furnace and a/c, new driveway, new garage floor and laundry room floor, master bathroom remodeled, new carpeting, new interior paint. Newer roof, covered patio area updated, all kitchen appliances included as well as washer/dryer included. Great layout of the home with master bedroom on opposite side of house from smaller two bedrooms. Quick access to K10 and South Lawrence. MLS 141505 • $189,900

We’ll CLOSE in 25 days

or give you $595!*

Offered by:

Alejandra Guzman Carrasco

785.550.6023


2C

|

.

Saturday, February 11, 2017

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Fixing a drippy 2-handled faucet

I

f your double-handled bathroom faucet is dripping, grab an adjustable wrench, a Phillips screwdriver, a flathead screwdriver and get under your sink. Step 1: If life is good, there will be two shut-off valves, one for the cold water and one for the hot. Turn the water on in the sink, reach under and twist each valve handle counterclockwise until the water flow has stopped completely. Step 2: Remove the faucet handles by prying up the plastic or metal button on top of each handle and remove the handle screw. Pull the handle straight up and off to expose either a metal or a plastic faucet stem. Step 3: Use an adjustable wrench to remove the retaining nut or bonnet that holds the faucet stem in place. Step 4: Place the handle back on the stem and turn the stem in the same

Fix-It Chick

dental pick works best, but a small screw driver will usually do the trick in a pinch. The spring is located beneath the seat. Step 7: Take the stems, seats and springs to the hardware store and find the necessary replacement parts. If the stem is worn or cracked it should be replaced too, otherwise direction you would to a beveled washer or a shut off the water. With pair of seats and springs a little luck, the stem should solve the problem. should come out easily. Step 8: Install the Step 5: If the stem ap- new washer or the new pears to have the remains seats and springs. Reof a flat rubber washer place the stem and handon the end, held in place tighten the retaining nut. by a screw, it will need to Do not use a wrench to be replaced with a new tighten the nut or somebeveled head washer. thing may break. Step 6: Otherwise, Step 9: Reattach the a new set of seats and handles, pop the butsprings, which are locat- tons in place, open the ed in the faucet base just shut-off valves and pour below where the stem yourself a nice tall glass sat, are in order. If this is of water. the case, use a towel or — Have a home improvewash cloth to soak up the ment question for Fix-It Chick? excess water and pry the Email it to Linda Cottin at little black rubber circles hardware@sunflower.com. up and out of the base. A

Linda Cottin

Flowers

Fill a clean vase with room temperature water and add the flower food according to label direcCONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C tions. Place flowers, with more from the stem while fresh cuts on the ends, keeping the cut underwainto the vase one at a time. ter. Use pruners or very Remove any foliage that sharp shears and cut on will be at or below the a diagonal to make more water level in the vase. surface area for water to be Set the vase and flowabsorbed. Keep the cut end ers in a cool location out submerged until it is moved of direct sunlight. into the vase with water. If the arrangement will Using warm water has fit, move the vase and been a long-standing recflowers into the refrigeraommendation. Within the tor at night and take them first 24 to 36 hours after back out each morning. harvest, warm water may Check the water level be beneficial in prolonging daily and change it every flower life. But after that two to three days or soon(when you will most likely er if it becomes cloudy. get them), the evidence is Changing the water means lacking that warm water removing the flowers, does anything but inspire dumping what water is flowers to open (and fade) left in the vase, rinsing the more quickly. Very hot or vase and the flower stems, very cold water could be refilling the vase, adddetrimental. ing new flower food and

replacing the flowers. The process only takes a few minutes but is probably the thing that people are most likely to skip. Changing the water can make a big difference in the life of the flowers. There are many do-ityourself recipes and old wives’ tales about things to add to the water to keep flowers fresh. The safer, easier way to prolong flower life is to use the free or inexpensive packets that are available anywhere cut flowers are sold. Other recommendations — including copper pennies, bleach, vinegar, soda, aspirin and others — may actually make the flowers fade more quickly. — Jennifer Smith is a former horticulture extension agent for K-State Research and Extension and horticulturist for Lawrence Parks and Recreation.

Lawrence Mortgage Rates LENDERLENDER AS OF 2/10/17

LOAN TYPE Conv. FHA/VA Jumbo

OTHER LOANS 4.000% + 0 (4.103%) Call For Rates Call For Rates

3.250% + 0 (3.429%) Call For Rates Call For Rates

20 Yr. Fixed 10 Yr. Fixed Investment Loans Cashout Refinance Contruction Loans

Conv. 4.250% + 0 (4.306%) APR Loan Amount $100,000 Estimated monthly payment (value of $125,000) of $449.04 for 360 months Real estate taxes and homeowners insurance may increase the monthly payment

3.500% + 0 (3.597%) APR Estimated monthly payment of $678.62 for 180 months

APR = Annual Percentage Rate

Conv. FHA/VA

3.375% + 0 (3.485%) Call For Rates

Capital City Bank

Capital City Bank

Capitol CapitolFederal® Federal® Savings Savings

Visit Lawrence Mortgage Rates online onlineatathometownlawrence.com Homes.Lawrence.com

4.125% + 0 (4.182%) 3.625% + 0 (3.920%)

3.625% + 0 (3.764%) 3.000% + 0 (3.255%) Call For Rates Call For Rates Call For Rates

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION 330-1200 330-1200 www.capcitybank.com www.capcitybank.com 740 New New Hampshire 740 Hampshire 4505A West 6th St

4505A West 6th St 749-9050 749-9050 capfed.com capfed.com 1026 Westdale

1026 Westdale Rd. 30 Yr. 97% Conventional

3.750%+ 0(4.252%)

Central National Bank

838-1882 www.centralnational.com 838-1882

www.centralnation.com

Central National Bank Conv. FHA/VA Jumbo

4.250% + 0 (4.322%) 4.000% + 0 (5.138%) 4.125% + 0 (4.197%)

3.375% + 0 (3.536%) 3.375% + 0 (4.192%) 3.250% + 0 (3.410%)

20 Yr. Fixed 10 Yr. Fixed

Conv. FHA VA Jumbo

4.125% + 0 (4.249%) 3.625% + 0 (4.490%) 3.625% + 0 (3.894%) 4.375% + 0 (4.438%)

3.375% + 0 (3.582%)

20 Yr. Fixed 10 Yr. Fixed

Conv. Jumbo

Call For Rates Call For Rates

Call For Rates Call For Rates

4.000% + 0 (4.099%) 3.250% + 0 (3.481%)

www.commercebank.com 1500 Wakarusa Dr

Commerce Commerce Bank Bank

Central Bank of the Midwest

4.099% 3.481%

3.625% + 0 (3.724%) FHA USDA/Rural Development

Call For Rates Call For Rates

Conv. FHA/VA Jumbo

3.375% + 0 (3.482%)

Conv.

4.125% + 0 (4.317%)

3.125% + 0 (3.395%) Call

856-LOAN (5626) www.firstassuredmortgage.com 856-LOAN (5626) 4830 Bob Billings Pkwy. Ste. 100A

3.375% + 0 (3.709%) Call Call

www.firstassuredmortgage.com 4830 Bob Billings Pkwy. Ste. 100A

First Assured Mortgage

First State Bank & Trust

FHA/VA

Please Call

Please Call Please Call

Conv. Jumbo

3.500% + 0 (3.554%) Call for Rates

3.375% + 0 (3.709%) Please Call Please Call

5/1 ARM 10 & 20 Yr. HELC USDA

Please Call Please Call Please Call Please Call

2.875% + 0 (2.971%) Call for Rates

20 Yr. Fixed 10 Yr. Fixed

3.375% + 0 (3.451%) 2.750% + 0 (2.890%)

First State Bank & Trust

Great American Bank

4.125% + 0 (4.164%) 3.625% + 0 (4.721%) 3.625% + 0 (3.940%) 4.375% + 0 (4.392%)

3.25% + 0 (3.316%)

Conv. Jumbo

3.625 + 0 (4.116% APR) Please call 856-7878 ext 5037

3.125 + 0 (3.321% APR) Please call 856-7878 ext 5037

Please call 856-7878 ext 5037

97% Advantage Program: Please call for rates (credit score 660) 20 year: please call 15/30 Pricing options available

Conv.

4.000% + 0 (4.099%)

3.375% + 0 (3.55%)

20 Year Fixed Construction

3.75% + 0 (3.886%) 4.75%

Conv. FHA/VA Jumbo

4.125% + 0 (4.189%) Please Call 4.125% + 0 (4.189%)

3.375% + 0 (3.487%) Please Call 3.375% + 0 (3.487%)

10 Yr. Fixed 20 Yr. Fixed HELOC 3% Down Home Possible 15/30 Year Rental

3.375% + 0 (3.487%) 3.875% + 0 (3.963%) 4.000% Please Call Please Call

Conv.

4.036% + 0 (4.083% APR)

3.250% + 0 (3.332% APR)

15 YR Investment 30 YR Investment 10 YR FIXED 20 YR FIXED VA 30, 15 YR

4.136% - APR 4.22% 4.675% - APR 4.724% 3.054% - APR 3.173% 3.767% - APR 3.832% Call For Rates

Mid America Bank

Pulaski Bank

University National University National Bank Bank

www.meritrustcu.org 650 Congressional Dr

856-7878 www.meritrustcu.org 841-8055 650 Congressional Dr www.mid-americabank.com 4114 W 6th St.

841-8055 www.mid-americabank.com 856-1450 4114 W 6th St. www.pulaskibank.com 3210 Mesa Way, Ste B

Truity Credit Union

Truity Credit Union

www.greatambank.com 3500 Clinton Parkway 838-9704

www.landmarkbank.com 2710 Iowa St 856-7878

Meritrust Credit Union

Mid America Bank

www.firststateks.com 609838-9704 Vermont St.

www.landmarkbank.com 2710 Iowa St 841-7152

Conv. FHA VA Jumbo

Landmark National Bank

Meritrust Credit Union

312-6810 www.firststateks.com 3901 W. 6th St. 312-6810

www.greatambank.com 3500 Clinton Parkway 841-6677

Great American Bank

Landmark Bank

841-4434 www.fairwayindependentmc.com 841-4434 4104 W. 6th St., Ste. B www.fairwayindependentmc.com

4104 W. 6th St., Ste. B

Fairway Mortgage Corp.

First Assured Mortgage

865-1000 865-1085 www.centralbankmidwest.net www.centralbankmidwest.net 300 W 9th St

4340 W 6th (and Folks Rd)

Central Bank of the Midwest

Fairway Mortgage Corp.

865-4721 865-4721 www.commercebank.com

749-6804

749-6804 www.truitycu.org www.truitycu.org 3400 3400 W. W. 6th 6th

841-1988 841-1988 www.unbank.com www.unbank.com 1400 Kasold KasoldDr Dr 1400


Saturday, February 11, 2017

jobs.lawrence.com

CLASSIFIEDS

PLACE YOUR AD:

785.832.2222

classifieds@ljworld.com

CAREER FAIR Great people! Great pay! Great benefits!

Monday, February 13 • 3:00 – 6:00 pm Tuesday, February 14 • 8:00 am – Noon Location: EZ GO, Mile Post 209, Kansas Turnpike near Lawrence, KS 66044 (For directions call 785-843-2547)

Store Delivery of Newspapers

Deliver Newspapers

It’s Fun, part-time work, putting newspapers on Lawrence store racks.

on a Driving Route in

All applicants will be interviewed on-site!

Can’t make it? Apply online at ezgostores.com/our-team

TO PLACE AN AD: Lawrence

785.832.2222 Lawrence

(First published in the Lawrence Daily Journal-World on February 11, 2017) DOUGLAS COUNTY TREASURER’S Statement of Funds For the Period Ending Jan 31, 2017 Fund 100 - General Fund 201 - Road and Bridge 218 - Employee Benefits 222 - Special Liability 224 - Special Parks & Recreation 225 - Special Alcohol Programs 226 - Special Building 231 - Economic Development 235 - Emergency Telephone Service 236 - Youth Services 240 - Ambulance 245 - Motor Vehicle Operations 253 - Employee Activities 255 - Donation 256 - Workers Compensation 257 - Sheriff Special Use 258 - Prosecuting Training &Assist 259 - Spec Law Enforce Trust 260 - DA Bad Check Admin 261 - Sheriff Holding 301 - Bond & Interest 302 - Local County Sales Tax 1% 450 - Capital Improvement Plan 451 - CIP Sales Tax 452 - Valley View Building 501 - Youth Services Grants 502 - Grant Programs 503 - Community Correction Plan 601 - Special Highway Improvement 602 - Equipment Reserve Fund 603 - Register Of Deeds Technology 604 - Ambulance Capital Reserve 701 - Insufficient Checks 702 - Collection Long/Short 703 - Credit Card Charges 704 - Sales Tax Collection 705 - Rec’d For Distribution 706 - Hold For State Payment 707 - Hold For County Payment 708 - Payroll 750 - Tax District Holding 801 - Advalorem Tax 802 - Vehicle Tax Ledger Total

Amount $31,092,219.64 $4,509,335.95 $8,132,310.79 $537,918.30 $17,676.55 $22,844.79 $1,161,422.48 $2,575.36 $761,098.84 $1,104,790.11 $2,517,381.59 $129,551.53 $12,271.83 $41,224.43 $238,046.87 $84,995.36 $17,015.90 $645,199.07 $12,085.18 $2,803.06 $260,295.17 $246,946.93 $9,873,312.18 $2,566,404.13 $107,167.18 $106,623.81 $205,679.22 $271,436.15 $536,607.06 $5,817,131.58 $621,474.48 $824,663.96 ($13,021.00) $4,413.70 ($31,724.26) $299,528.04 $651,720.59 $9,722.17 $7,051.15 $11,026.30 $41,479.45 $1,693,860.56 $443,127.82 $75,597,694.00

11200 - Cash in Banks 11300 - Idle Investments 11201 - Petty Cash Grand Total

Amount $3,742,886.38 $71,852,307.62 $2,500.00 $75,597,694.00

I hereby certify that the above are the true and correct balances of the Treasurer’s Ledgers as of January 31, 2017.

/s/Paula Gilchrist Paula Gilchrist Douglas County Treasurer Eleventh & Massachusetts Lawrence, Ks 66044-0884 _______ (First published in the Lawrence Daily Journal-World on February 4, 2017) IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS DIVISION SIX IN THE INTEREST OF R. H. DOB: 12/26/2001, a male Case No. 2016-JC-000106 A. B. DOB: 09/08/2003, a female Case No. 2016-JC-000107 TO: JONATHAN HEFFNER, his relatives, and all other persons who are or may be concerned TO: RONALD BEESON, JR., his relatives, and all other persons who are or may be concerned NOTICE OF HEARING (K.S.A. Chapter 38) COMES NOW the State of Kansas, by and through counsel, Emily C. Haack, Assistant District Attorney, and provides notice of a hearing as follows: A petition pertaining to the parental rights to the child whose name appears above has been filed in this Court requesting the Court to find the child is a child in need of care as defined in the Kansas Code for the Care of Children. If a child is adjudged to be a child in need of care and the Court finds a parent to be unfit, the Court may permanently terminate that parent’s parental rights. The Court may also make other orders including, but not limited to, requiring a parent to pay child support. On the 27th day of February 2017 at 2:00 p.m. each parent and any other person claiming legal custody of the minor child is required to appear for an Adjudication and Disposition Hearing in Division 6 at the Douglas County Law Enforcement and Judicial Center, 111 E

legals@ljworld.com Lawrence

Lawrence

11th Street., Lawrence, Kansas. Each grandparent is permitted but not required to appear with or without counsel as an interested party in the proceeding. Prior to the proceeding, a parent, grandparent or any other party to the proceeding may file a written response to the pleading with the clerk of court. Each parent has the right to be represented by an attorney. A parent that is not financially able to hire an attorney may apply to the court for a court appointed attorney. A request for a court appointed attorney should be made without delay to: Clerk of the District Court; ATTN: Division 6; 111 East 11th Street; Lawrence Kansas 66044-9202. Craig Stancliffe an attorney in Lawrence, Kansas, has been appointed as guardian ad litem for the child. Kathryn Barker, an attorney in Lawrence, Kansas, has been appointed as counsel for the father of R.H., Jonathan Heffner. Amy Durkin, an attorney in Lawrence, Kansas, has been appointed counsel for the father of A.B., Ronald Beeson, Jr.

Automotive

MV Transportation is seeking a highly motivated individual with automotive repair experience to join our local team. $15.35/hr and benefits package after 90 days. Class B CDL required after 90 days, training provided. Please apply in person at: 1260 Timberedge Rd. Lawrence, KS EOE

HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERATORS Must have experience operating equipment in highway construction. Benefits include company paid health care, vacation-holiday pay and 401k. Apply at; Hamm, 609 Perry Place, Perry, KS Equal Opportunity Employer

(First published in the Lawrence Daily Journal-World on February 10, 2017)

DriversTransportation

Come in & Apply! Journal-World Media

TRUCK DRIVERS

645 New Hampshire, or contact Ben: 785-979-2323 bwoods@ljworld.com

Class A drivers needed for local hauls. Benefits include company paid health care, vacationholiday pay, 401k and match. Apply at; Hamm, 609 Perry Place, Perry, KS Equal Opportunity Employer

General

Substitute Teachers Perry Unified School District #343 has openings for Substitute Teachers. This includes licensed Emergency Substitutes (to be eligible, you must have 60 hours of college credit, not necessarily in Education.) If you are available to sub for ½ day, one day or two days a week, please apply. For more information, email Deb Brehm @ dbrehm@usd343.org

TO PLACE AN AD:

The CONTRACT DOCUMENTS may be examined at the following locations: Baldwin City Public Works 609 High Street, Baldwin City, KS 66006

Antique/Estate Liquidation

Concrete Concrete Driveways, Parking lots, Pavement repair, Sidewalks, Garage Floors Foundation walls, Remove & Replacement Specialists Call 843-2700 or Text 393-9924

Decks & Fences 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

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

For other project information, please contact the Engineer. Bidders on this work will be required to comply with the President’s Executive Order No. 11246 (Equal Employment Opportunity) as amended. Requirements for bidders and contractors under this order are explained in the specifications. Bidders must fully comply with Subpart C of 2 CFR Part 180 and 2 CFR Part 1532, entitled Responsibilities of Participants Regarding Transactions. Contractors, subcontractors, or suppliers that appear on the Excluded Parties List System at www.sam.gov are not eligible for award of any contracts funded by the KDHE State Revolving Fund programs. All contracts and subcontracts exceeding $100,000, at any tier under a KPWSLF Loan Agreement shall comply with the Anti-Lobbying Act, Section 319 of Public Law 101-121, and file an Anti-Lobbying Certification form, and the Disclosure of Lobbying Activities form, if required, to the next tier above. This project is being funded in part by a KDHE State Revolving Fund (SRF) loan. Bidders must fully comply with all contract provisions and requirements contained in Specifications Section 007310, “KDHE SRF Construction Contract Provisions”. _______

APPLY for 2 or 3 job openings and it could change your life!

Maintenance

CUSTODIAN Basehor-Linwood USD 458 is seeking a custodian.

Apply online at www.usd458.org

FREE to Job Seekers Need help with resumes, interviewing skills, or figuring out which jobs are best for you? United Way Americorps members help with these and other employment needs. Jenna at ECKAN 785-841-3357 Leslie at Catholic Charities 785-856-2694

classifieds@ljworld.com

Home Improvements

Full Remodels & Odd Jobs, Interior/Exterior Painting, Installation & Repair of: Deck Drywall Siding Replacement Gutters Privacy Fencing Doors & Trim Commercial Build-out Build-to-suit services

Carpentry

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

Dirt-Manure-Mulch

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

Cleaning

Rich Black Top Soil No Chemicals Machine Pulverized Pickup or Delivery

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

785-312-1917

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

Serving KC over 40 years

913-962-0798 Fast Service

Insurance

Foundation Repair

Quality Office Cleaning We are here to serve you, No job too big or small. Major CC excepted Info. & Appointments M-F, 9-5 Call 785-330-3869

Concrete

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

Guttering Services

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

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

Providing top quality service and solutions for all your insurance needs.

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

785-842-0094

jayhawkguttering.com

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

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 Int/ext. Drywall, Siding, 30 plus yrs. Locally owned & operated.

JAYHAWK GUTTERING

RETIRED MASTER PLUMBER & Handyman needs small work. Bill Morgan 816-523-5703

BHI Roofing Company

A.B. PAINTING & REPAIR

Craig Construction Co Family Owned & Operated 20 Yrs

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

Pet Services

Roofing

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

New York Housekeeping Accepting clients for weekly, bi-weekly, seasonal or special occasion cleaning. Detail Oriented. Ref Avail. Call 785-551-8023

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

Plumbing

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

Painting

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

913-488-7320

Professional Engineering Consultants, P.A. 1263 S.W. Topeka Blvd., Topeka, Kansas 66612

Printed copies of the Bidding Documents consisting of the drawings and specifications, together with information to bidders, bid proposal form and forms of contracts, performance bond and statutory bond may be obtained from Drexel Technologies at http://www.drexeltech.com/. Additionally, Bidding Documents may be picked up at Drexel Technologies on a CD or downloaded electronically. See the Drexel Technologies website for pricing. All purchases are non-refundable. Drexel Technologies can be contacted by phone at (913) 371-4430 or electronically at http://www.drexeltech.com/. Bidding Documents will be shipped only if the requesting party assumes responsibility for all related shipping charges. Corporate, certified, or cashier’s checks shall be made payable to Drexel Technologies.

Need More Hours?

Fully Insured 22 yrs. experience

Professional Engineering Consultants, P.A. 616 Vermont St., Ste. B., Lawrence, Kansas 66044

Drexel Technologies 10840 West 86th Street, Lenexa, KS 66214

LEGAL ASSISTANT Top rated law firm seeks the services of a full time Legal Assistant. Must be proficient in Microsoft Word & Excel & possess good organizational skills. Prefer candidate with experience in Family Law and knowledge of court rules. Attorney/client liaison skills a must. Excellent pay and benefits, nice working environment. Send resume to: ATTN: Office Manager, P.O. Box 189, Lawrence, KS 66044-0189 EOE. tcole@stevensbrand.com

785.832.2222

REQUEST FOR BIDS NOTIFICATION CITY OF BALDWIN CITY, KANSAS WATERLINE REPLACEMENT PROJECT Separate sealed BIDS for the construction of approximately 1,700 LF of 12” waterline and 6,700 LF of 8” waterline by open cut and horizontal directions drilling, re-establishment of 90 water services, bored railroad and highway crossing, and other miscellaneous appurtenances will be received by the City of Baldwin City, KS at the office of Baldwin City Public Works, 609 High Street, Baldwin City, KS 66006 until 2:00 pm, March 15, 2017, and then at said office publicly opened and read aloud.

Legal - Paralegal

SERVICES

All parties are hereby notified that, pursuant to K.S.A. 60-255, a default judgment will be taken against any parent who fails to appear in person or by counsel at the hearing.

/s/Emily C Haack EMILY C HAACK, 23697 Assistant District Attorney Office of the District Attorney Douglas County Judicial Center 111 East 11th Street, Lawrence, KS 66044-2909 (785) 841-0211 || FAX (785) 330-2850 ehaack@douglas-county.com _______

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.

Journal-World Media - 645 New Hampshire

Construction

PUBLIC NOTICES

It’s Fun, part-time work

Call or email Ben: 785-979-2323 bwoods@ljworld.com

FLEET MECHANIC

Don’t miss the opportunity to be part of a winning team!

Lawrence Ottawa

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 Al 785-331-6994 albeil@aol.com Interior/Exterior Painting

Quality Work Over 30 yrs. exp.

Call Lyndsey 913-422-7002

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)


4C

|

Saturday, February 11, 2017

.

L awrence J ournal -W orld

AUTOMOTIVE SERVICES DIRECTORY

CARS

See Your Business HERE!

TO PLACE AN AD: Buick Cars

785.832.2222

Chevrolet Trucks

classifieds@ljworld.com GMC SUVs

Leather heated seats, alloy wheels, power equipment, one of the most dependable cars in the market! stk#34946A1

4wd long box, tow package, bed liner, power equipment, this one won’t last long! Stk#369001

Only $11,455 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

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

4x4. A/C, tow package, hard top, 5 speed, 62,000 miles, new Mickey Thompson off road tires with Dick Cepek premium wheels, AM / FM / MP3 / CD player with 6-speaker overhead soundbar. $12,400. Contact 785-207-5368

Only $20,885

DALE WILLEY

2011 GMC Yukon XL SLT

2007 Chevrolet Silverado LT

Only $9,555 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

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

Hyundai Cars

Chevrolet Cars

2013 Chevrolet Cruze LT 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

Only $10,655 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

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

Only $12,836

Only $24,886

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

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

Chrysler Vans

Hyundai Crossovers

ACADEMY CARS

2815 W 6th St, Lawrence 785-843-1878

1527 W. 6th Street • 841-0102

WITH YOUR AUTO RESTORATION. Take the Worry Out of Collision Repair Steve has been in the the industry for 40 years

Complete Auto Repair

Only $9,455

including Full Body Restoration

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

Since 1997 we at Das Autohaus have been helping Lawrence drivers with a smoother, safer ride in their Volkswagens and Audis Thanks for your trust in us. We look forward to serving you.

785-841-3672

2015 Chevrolet Spark LT automatic, power equipment, alloy wheels, more room and gas mileage than you would expect! Stk#15413

Only $9,974 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com

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

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

Only $9,455

Only $10,814

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

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

AUCTIONS Auction Calendar AUTOMOTIVE LIQUIDATION MOVING AUCTION Live Auction Saturday February 18 at 10 AM Preview: 9am-2pm Fri Auto Worlds Automotive 7246 W 75th St. Overland Park, KS Auction conducted by: Ron Stricker’s Auction Co. 790 N Center St Gardner, KS Ron Stricker Auctioneer 913 963 3800 Office: 913-856-6890 For More Info & Pics go to: ronstrickersauction.com BIG ANTIQUE & MODERN FURNITURE AUCTION Monday, February 20th 6 PM 790 N Center St Gardner, KS Ron Stricker’s Auction Co. For More Info & Pics go to: ronstrickersauction.com

MERCHANDISE

7 Days - $19.95 28 Days - $49.95

We Deliver!

CALL TODAY!

785-832-2222

Lawrence

An Independent Tire Dealer And Family-Owned Auto Repair Shop Conveniently Located In Downtown Lawrence

(785) 843-0191 1000 Vermont St., Lawrence

Furniture

Miscellaneous paper book Inside Heaven Gods Country - A True Story. Patsy Lingle returned from her journey in Heaven. Pre-sale on Amazon. insideheavengodscountry.com for links to purchase. $14.99

“Serving Your Auction Needs Since 1994”

4 Sale: Plastic Toy Box 27 X 22 W X 32L $ 8.00 Wood Bread Box 17 1/2 L X 11 H X 11 D $ 4.00 Call 785-542-1147

Please visit us online at www.KansasAuctions.net/ elston for pictures!!

Need to sell your car? Place your ad at classifieds.lawrence.com

Sports-Fitness Equipment $15 Steel frame portable basketball goal. Extends to 9.5 ft. Has sand in base for stability. 785-749-3298

GARAGE SALES Lawrence AMERICAN ESTATE SALE 924 Birch St. in Eudora, KS. Starts Thurs Feb 9, 4-7pm; Fri Feb 10, 9-5; Sat Feb 11,

SHARE THE LOVE!

Valentine’s Day is to show the loved ones in our lives how much we care. Share that love with the Douglas County Visiting Nurses! Submit a photo of you and your Valentine to be printed in a special section of the Journal-World, Sunday, February 14 and a portion of the proceeds will be donated to Douglas County Visiting Nurses. JUST

Pets

NordicTrack E5.5 Elliptical Space Saver Elliptical for sell. Back can fold up for more space when not in use. Features a console for different settings and resistance. Used approx. 10-15 times. $500 cash only 785-766-6058

BE MY VALENTINE?

Email your photo, along with your name and telephone number to submissions@ljworld.com to be included.

PETS

$20

Call 785-832-2222

785-843-0550

2112 W. 29th Terr., Lawrence jackellenahonda.com

ING ACTUR MANUF SALES • PARTS E /SERVIC T REPAIR O O F E H BY T METAL

RENTALS REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE

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

646 Connecticut; 785-749-4455

920

TO PLACE AN AD:

AKC LAB PUPPIES

EXPERIENCED

Collision Repair Services You Can Depend On

O., IN0C. C R E L I RA 320 EAGLEET. 30TH 841-

PIANOS

ESTATE AUCTION

Auctioneers: Elston Auctions (785-594-0505) (785-218-7851)

Over 27,000 Vehices Repaired Since 1981

9-5; Sun Feb 12, 9-3. Sunday all day 1/2 off! Look for colored neon signs. Limited parking in rear of Arts-Crafts Very good Condition house. Whole house full. Jeans (Men’s BRE 36L)-Long Assorted furniture, anSleeve Top (Lucky Brand XLT) John Talleur Print tiques, collectibles and 3- Shorts (Nike, Under Armour, Signed, Framed, primitives. Oak dining taCalvin Klein 36)-T Shirts (Hurley, Artist Proof III ble & 6 chairs, King bed, Nike & Under Armour XL) “ The Robin” large oak display case, All for $ 40.00 Asking $ 85.00 smaller oak case. Globe Call 785-542-1147 785-312-2785 Wernicke barrister lawyer Free !! bookcase. Large collection 2 Boxes of Bubble Wrap of Fenton glass. 2 young Clothing Call 479-409-4878 Kenmore working refrigs. Toro mower. 60’s stereo console. Danish dresser. Women’s MBT Music-Stereo Large lot of dolls. Tools. Physiological Walking XMas room. Kitchen items. Shoes- White, Size 8 1/2. Yard art. Punching bag. In original box, worn twice. Many items too numerous Smoke free/pet free home. to mention. All items sold Bought for $284.00 • H.L. Phillips upright as is. Final sale. Living esAsking $ 100.00 $650 tate of Emily Dahlem. Call 785-749-0291 • Cable Nelson Spinet Please be mindful of $500 neighbor’s driveway. Computer-Camera • Gulbranson Spinet - $450 Please bring men with • Sturn Spinet - $400 trucks to move items. Prices include Sceptre Monitor 18 inch, delivery & tuning Find us on facebook at black. Cords included. $10 785-832-9906 American Estate Sales 785-842-9148

Ron Stricker, Auctioneer 913-963-3800 Office: 913-856-6890

Seller: Living Estate Ben & Shirley Tibbits

LOCALLY OWNED & OPERATED

Lawrence (785) 856-8889

Nora Roberts Readers 30 Books $ 9 Call 785-542-1147

White Desk 48 X 20 4 Drawers in excellent condition $ 25.00 842-1760

Sunday, Feb 19th 10:00 A.M. 416 North 1600 Rd (Stull Rd) Lawrence, KS

1045 New Jersey Lawrence, KS 66044 785-843-9494 www.dasautohausinc.net

AUTO.COM

Doesn’t sell in 28 days? + FREE RENEWAL!

785.832.2222 Miscellaneous

Master Volkswagen Registered Technicians

Find A Buyer Fast!

MERCHANDISE PETS TO PLACE AN AD:

BRYANT COLLISION REPAIR

1214 E 23RD STREET • LAWRENCE • 843-5803 WWW.BRYANTCOLLISIONREPAIR.COM

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

SELLING A VEHICLE?

2008 Hyundai Veracruz Limited

WWW.ACADEMYCARS.COM

TRUST ONLY THE EXPERTS

800 East 23rd Street, Lawrence

Chrysler 2008 Town & Country Limited,

You Have the Right To A Fair & Easy Credit Approval Process!

Westside 66 prides itself on being a 100% ethanol free full service gas station and auto repair shop. As the only full service gas station in Lawrence, KS we are happy to assist you!

A Lawrence Tradition for 20 years. (785) 832-0330 • 2862 Four Wheel Drive stevesautoplaza.com

2013 Hyundai Sonata one owner, heated seats, power equipment, alloy wheels, steering wheel controls, stk#17030

Car Dealer For The People

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

Volkswagen Cars

Chevrolet 2013 Silverado 4wd Z71 LT

classifieds@ljworld.com đ 785.832.2222

Jeep

2004 Jeep Wrangler X 2011 Buick Regal CXL

For As Print & Online Little As $35 Per Week!

RENTALS

785.832.2222

Duplexes 1st MONTH FREE!! 2BR in a 4-plex

Real Estate Auctions

Apartments Unfurnished

AUCTION 331 INDIANA STREET

DOWNTOWN LOFT

Old Victorian Apartment House Two lots, needs work Open: Saturday 18th, 11 AM to 1PM one hour before auction or by appointment. Auction Day Saturday, February 25th, 10 AM

www.billfair.com

Studio Apartments 600 sq. ft., $725/mo. No pets allowed Call Today 785-841-6565

Equal Housing Opportunity. 785-865-2505

785-865-2505

Townhomes

grandmanagement.net

Lawrence

FREE MONTH OF RENT SIGN BY MARCH 1

LAUREL GLEN APTS

Water & Trash Paid Small Dog

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

EOH

Call 785-842-2575 www.princeton-place.com

All Electric

2 BR & 3 BR/2BA Units

Available Now!

785-838-9559

• 1 Day - $50 • 2 Days - $75

Large 2BR / 1 BA

Call 785-832-2222 to schedule your ad!

3 BR w/2 or 2.5 BA W/D hookups, Fireplace, Major Appliances. Lawn Care & Dbl Car Garage! Equal Housing Opportunity

grandmanagement.net

advanco@sunflower.com

Open House Special!

• 28 Days - $280

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

Townhomes

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

785-550-7325

BETHEL ESTATES OF LAWRENCE Now Leasing! Seniors 55 Plus 1 and 2 Bedrooms wheatlandinvestmentsgrp.com

Call 785-424-7819


FREE STATE, LAWRENCE HIGH BOYS, GIRLS BASKETBALL ALL LOG VICTORIES. 2D, 3D

Sports

D

Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com/sports l Saturday, February 11, 2017

Graham thrives in supporting role By Matt Tait mtait@ljworld.com

Tom Keegan tkeegan@ljworld.com

Don’t take Tech lightly L

ubbock, Texas — Lubbock’s Smith, first name Zach, doesn’t hit as hard as Lubbock Smith did during his days as a safety for the Kansas football team, but Zach Smith does hit shots for the Texas Tech basketball team that he didn’t even used to take. And Smith still keeps the video crew busy compiling his wide array of dunks for entertaining highlights. He dunks lobs, baseline drives, put-backs. The flashiest come from dunk competitions, such as the time he soared over 6-foot-10 teammate Matthew Temple to throw one down. Plus, Smith’s too used to playing Kansas to feel in any way intimidated by the challenge of facing the nation’s third-ranked basketball team. Smith the player and the Red Raiders as a whole are perfect examples of what makes the Big 12 schedule such a tough one to negotiate this season. Tech tore through the non-conference portion of the schedule with a confidence-building 12-1 record, plays five juniors and four seniors and boasts a 14-1 home record. Yet, the Red Raiders are no better than 4-7 in the Big 12. Still, if Texas Tech “upsets” Kansas, a four-point favorite, many will want to send out a search party to find an explanation for the unthinkable. Were they flat, exhausted, distracted, robbed by the refs? Better question: What if Texas Tech is just better for two hours in the game that tips off at 1 p.m.? A four-point underdog does win every now and then. Smith, a 6-8, 220-pound junior, as with many teammates, gained early experience and steadily has improved. That’s the way it’s supposed to work. His fieldgoal (.472, .511, .544) and free-throw (.619, 658, .688) percentages, scoring (6.2, 10.0, 13.0) and rebounding (4.9, 7.3, 7.8) averages climb every season. Smith even has stretched his game to make himself tougher to guard. He’s not the high-volume 3-point shooter that fellow 6-8, 220-pound starter Anthony Livingston is, but Smith has made 10 of 19 treys in the Red Raiders’ past 11 games. Smith likely will be matched up against Josh Jackson to start the game, possibly Landen Lucas and Carlton Bragg Jr. at other times. Jackson’s rare talent level makes a minutes comparison beside the point here, but it is worth pointing out that Smith has played 1,982 more minutes than Bragg, 799 more than Lucas, who gained valuable experience practicing against future NBA players before working his way into the rotation. A victory today for Kansas counts as a good one, not a ho-hum one.

Kansas basketball coach Bill Self never has talked much about a love of comic books, but he dropped a doozy of a comic reference earlier this week when describing the play of junior Devonté Graham. Self called Graham’s season thus far, “rock solid,” and discussed him settling into a supporting role behind national player of the

year candidate Frank Mason III and ferocious freshman Josh Jackson. “I think he’s played Graham well,” said Self of Graham, KU’s third-leading scorer (13.3 points per game), who also ranks in KU’s Top 3 in 3-point percentage (.392), free-throw

percentage (.725), assists (106) and steals (36). “He probably hasn’t stood out in large part because Frank has probably had the ball more, but he’s been solid. He’s been rock solid. He’s shooting a pretty decent percentage beyond the arc. He’s had some great defensive moments for us and (been) solid, kind of the Robin as opposed to Batman.” Anyone familiar with Self’s DC Comics reference knows there were times

when it was Robin, not the Caped Crusader, who came through and saved the day for the dynamic duo. And that also has been the case for Graham and the Jayhawks plenty of times this season. Although he enters today’s 1 p.m. game at Texas Tech having led the Jayhawks in scoring just once (Jan. 21 vs. Texas), Graham also has led Kansas in assists

NEXT UP

Who: Kansas (21-3 overall, 9-2 Big 12) vs. Texas Tech (16-8, 4-7) When: 1 p.m. today Where: Lubbock, Texas TV: ESPN (Cable chan> JAYHAWKS, 3D nels 33, 233)

CITY HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL

MIXED RESULTS

Kyle Babson/Journal-World Photo

BISHOP SEABURY’S CHRIS GREEN (30) REACHES FOR THE BALL against Veritas Christian. The Seabury boys won, 77-52, on Friday night at Haskell Indian Nations University.

Seabury boys roll By Evan Riggs eriggs@ljworld.com

The Bishop Seabury boys basketball team has continuously put teams away with big runs all season. Those runs usually feature tipped passes, steals, 3-pointers and the occasional dunk by senior Mikey Wycoff. The enthusiasm of each celebration grows with every made basket, and it’s clear the Seahawks feed off of each other.

“We walk around with swagger,” Wycoff said. “When we’re hitting our shots, it’s pretty cool.” That’s exactly what happened in Seabury’s 77-52 win over crosstown foe Veritas Christian on Friday night at Haskell Indian Nations University. After a competitive first quarter, the Seahawks outscored the Eagles, 26-8, in the period, which included a 22-2 run.

> BOYS, 4D

Veritas girls victorious By Evan Riggs eriggs@ljworld.com

Kyle Babson/Journal-World Photo

BISHOP SEABURY’S MIKEY WYCOFF (2) drives for a layup.

Bishop Seabury didn’t get the result it was hoping for Friday night, but the girls basketball still team broke its post-game huddle the same way it does after every game. With a loud and enthusiastic “Family” that echoed throughout the hallway to break the huddle in the locker room. “From the beginning we’ve said that we’re a family,”

Seabury coach Nick Taylor said. “We’re always going to be together what happens on or off the floor. We just want to make sure we’re all together.” Even in a 51-26 loss to Veritas on Friday night at Coffin Sports Complex at Haskell Indian Nations University, Taylor said that he couldn’t fault his team’s effort. In fact, he praised the work ethic his players have demonstrated

> GIRLS, 4D


Sports 2

AMERICAN 2D | LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD | SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 2017

FOOTBALL CONFERENCE NORTH TWO-DAY

EAST

SPORTS CALENDAR

KANSAS

AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE

KU football coaching staff get raises

TODAY • Track at Iowa State Classic • Track at Tyson Invitational NORTH • Softball vs. Savannah State, in Deland, Fla., 10 a.m. • Men’s basketball at Texas Tech, 1 p.m. • Women’s basketball at Texas, 1:30 p.m. • Softball at Stetson, 3 p.m. • Tennis vs. Arkansas, 5 p.m.

EAST

By Tom Keegan tkeegan@ljworld.com

Offensive coordinator Doug Meacham is Kansas head football coach David Beaty’s highestpaid assistant coach, associate head coach/running backs Tony Hull received the biggest raise

and Clint Bowen had his pay coach Kenny Perry ($399,999). boosted by $100,000, according Special teams coach Joe Deto salary information supplied Forest earned an $80,000 raise by KU Athletics. to $300,000, offensive line coach Meacham, hired away from Zach Yenser a $27,000 pay hike TCU, will earn $520,000, Bowen to $247,000 and linebackers $500,000 and Hull $400,000, SOUTH coach Todd Bradford a $25,000 placing him $1 ahead of co-defen- raise to $245,000. Defensive line sive coordinator/cornerbacks coach Mike Slater again will

earn $170,000 and quarterbacks coach Garrett Riley will make $250,000. Beaty had his salary doubled to $1.6 million. The assistant coaching salaries total for 2017 total $3,031,999, compared to $2,299,999 for 2016.

FREE STATE HIGH TODAY WEST • Wrestling at Sunflower League meet, at Shawnee Mission South, 9 a.m. • Boys basketball vs. Raytown, at BVNW, 1 p.m.

AL EAST

Lawrence High girls dismantle Olathe Northwest BOSTON RED SOX

BALTIMORE ORIOLES

SOUTH

By Shane Jackson sjackson@ljworld.com

bnightengale@!ljworld.com

Free State High’s girls basketball players proved Friday that they aren’t going anywhere, despite a season-ending injury to their leading scorer. Madison Piper, a two-time Sunflower League player of the year, is expected to miss the remainder of the year with a broken left ankle. Without her, the Firebirds played well on both ends of the court in a 48-39 victory over second-ranked Olathe South at FSHS, handing the Falcons their first loss in league play. “I think they are on a mission,” Free State coach Ted Juneau said. “They miss Madison, no doubt about it, but hey, one down, who’s next? That’s their attitude and it’s been great.” The Firebirds (10-6, 4-3 in league) took a 10-point lead in

DETROIT TIGERS

CLEVELAND INDIANS

BOSTON RED SOX

BALTIMORE ORIOLES

LOS ANGELES ANGELS OF ANAHEIM

NEW YORK YANKEES

OAKLAND ATHLETICS

CLEVELAND INDIANS

DETROIT TIGERS

LOS ANGELES ANGELS OF ANAHEIM

OAKLAND ATHLETICS

SEATTLE MARINERS

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

TAMPA BAY RAYS

the third quarter when junior guard Jaelyn Two Hearts scored 10 straight points in a 12-3 run. Two Hearts, who scored a game-high 20 points on 6-of7 shooting, found her rhythm with a layup, assisted by freshman point guard Caely Kesten. Then she drained back-to-back 3-pointers on assists from senior Jaycie Bishop. “Them being tight on me, I was getting a little frustrated,” said Two Hearts, who scored 17 points in the second half. “I was like, if I’m going to shoot it, I know nothing good will come out of it because nothing was there. Third quarter, I was just feeling a bit more myself.” When Piper went down with an injury during a loss to Shawnee Mission Northwest last week, Juneau stressed to the Firebirds that they needed to focus on making up Piper’s rebounding and post defense — not her scoring.

Practicing against assistant coach Kimberli Schofield, who played volleyball at BYU, the Firebirds were prepared for Olathe South’s distinct height advantage with the 5-foot-7 Two Hearts and 5-7 junior Cameryn Thomas denying passes in the low post. Freshman 5-11 forward Haley Hippe added eight points, including a four-point spark off the bench in the second quarter on isolation plays. “I still want to play scrappy,” said Thomas, who completed a double-double with 10 points and 10 rebounds. “It’s definitely different. I’ve never played post defense before. I liked it, but I definitely still want to play scrappy and play as hard as I can.” Olathe South (12-2, 6-1) closed its deficit to five points midway through the fourth quarter, but the Firebirds made enough free throws down the stretch and forced the Falcons

Nuggets 131, Knicks 123 New York — Nikola Jokic scored a career-high 40 points to lead Denver past New York. Heat 108, Nets 99 New York — James Johnson scored a season-high 26 points and Miami rallied to win its

NBA Favorite............... Points (O/U)............Underdog CHARLOTTE....................2 1/2 (216)..................LA Clippers INDIANA...............................6 (212).......................Milwaukee Miami...............................3 1/2 (206)...........PHILADELPHIA CLEVELAND.................12 1/2 (228.5)........................Denver Golden St...................6 1/2 (226)OKLAHOMA CITY HOUSTON......................13 1/2 (231.5)......................Phoenix DALLAS.............................6 (204.5)..........................Orlando UTAH..............................5 1/2 (203.5)........................Boston College Basketball Favorite.................... Points.................Underdog WAKE FOREST.....................8 1/2...........North Carolina St Seton Hall................................1............................ ST. JOHN’S Minnesota............................5 1/2............................RUTGERS FLORIDA..................................15........................... Texas A&M WEST VIRGINIA..........9 1/2................. Kansas St Buffalo...................................4 1/2.............BOWLING GREEN GEORGETOWN.....................2 1/2.........................Marquette Kentucky.................................7...............................ALABAMA Syracuse...............................1 1/2......................PITTSBURGH DUKE......................................... 12................................Clemson NOTRE DAME...........................1...............................Florida St LA SALLE..................................3..............................Richmond Kansas.......................... 4................ TEXAS TECH WILLIAM & MARY...................2..............Coll of Charleston INDIANA ST.............................6.......................................Drake Creighton............................10 1/2..............................DEPAUL BAYLOR.....................8 1/2............................Tcu ILLINOIS....................................5...................................Penn St Villanova..................................4....................................XAVIER ST. JOSEPH’S..........................3....................Massachusetts Georgia St...............................5................APPALACHIAN ST Central Michigan..................4...........................MIAMI-OHIO Vanderbilt...............................7...............................MISSOURI TENNESSEE.............................5.................................. Georgia SOUTHERN ILLINOIS............5..............................Evansville ILLINOIS CHICAGO................3.........................Cleveland St MARYLAND..............................8....................................Ohio St

JAMES MADISON...................9............................... Delaware NC Wilmington......................4........................................ELON Butler........................................2.........................PROVIDENCE Towson..................................2 1/2...............................DREXEL OKLAHOMA ST...........11 1/2.......................Texas Louisiana Tech......................8........ TEXAS SAN ANTONIO COLORADO ST........................4...............................Fresno St LOYOLA MARYMOUNT........10................................Portland St. Bonaventure....................1......GEORGE WASHINGTON UTAH.........................................11.........................Washington COASTAL CAROLINA.........1 1/2...........Georgia Southern UL-MONROE.............................1...................South Alabama UT ARLINGTON....................6 1/2......................Arkansas St TEXAS ST..............................4 1/2.....................Arkansas LR GEORGIA TECH.......................7....................Boston College IOWA ST.....................8 1/2................. Oklahoma CENTRAL FLORIDA.............4 1/2......................Connecticut MICHIGAN ST.......................6 1/2.....................................Iowa GEORGE MASON....................7................................Fordham MISSISSIPPI.............................4................................... Auburn BOISE ST..................................11...............................Air Force MIDDLE TENN ST...............15 1/2..........................Charlotte Houston...................................4..................................... TULSA PRINCETON ..................... No Line ......................Columbia BROWN............................... No Line................... Dartmouth Marshall................................1 1/2......WESTERN KENTUCKY UNLV......................................2 1/2......................San Jose St Rice............................................5............FLORIDA ATLANTIC TOLEDO..................................3 1/2................................Kent St WRIGHT ST............................3 1/2...............Wisc Green Bay YALE ................................. No Line .........................Harvard NORTHERN KENTUCKY.......10................. Wisc Milwaukee NORTHEASTERN.................5 1/2...............................Hofstra WESTERN MICHIGAN............4.................Northern Illinois FLORIDA INTL.........................4..........................North Texas LOUISVILLE.............................11..................... Miami-Florida SAINT LOUIS............................1..............................Duquesne South Carolina......................5.....................MISSISSIPPI ST VA COMMONWEALTH...........8................................Davidson

HIGH SCHOOLS HUB:

LJWorld.com/highschool • Facebook.com/LJWorldpreps • Twitter.com/LJWpreps

LATEST LINE

ARIZONA ST............................2.................................Stanford ARIZONA..................................8...............................California ALA-BIRMINGHAM..............4 1/2...................Old Dominion East Carolina.........................3...............SOUTH CAROLINA UC DAVIS..............................8 1/2....................Cal Riverside VALPARAISO..........................18.................. Youngstown St UL-LAFAYETTE.......................5.........................................Troy Arkansas.................................6...........................................LSU SAN DIEGO...............................4...........................Pepperdine UTAH ST................................3 1/2............................Wyoming UTEP.........................................10....................Southern Miss ILLINOIS ST............................18..................................Bradley Santa Clara.............................3...................................PACIFIC Gonzaga...................................4..............SAINT MARY’S, CA CS FULLERTON........................1.....................Long Beach St CS NORTHRIDGE....................11............ Cal Santa Barbara Oregon..................................4 1/2............... SOUTHERN CAL SAN FRANCISCO....................3...........................................Byu Cal Irvine.................................4....................................HAWAII Added Games VMI..........................................4 1/2....................... The Citadel NC Greensboro.....................7..........WESTERN CAROLINA RIDER.........................................5.............................Quinnipiac Tennessee Martin.............6 1/2........SIU EDWARDSVILLE EASTERN ILLINOIS................4..................... SE Missouri St SOUTH DAKOTA.....................7.................South Dakota St NORTH DAKOTA ST..............3....................................Denver EAST TENN ST.....................9 1/2................................Mercer FURMAN...................................7.................................Samford Eastern Washington...........3.....NORTHERN COLORADO Montana St..........................7 1/2............SOUTHERN UTAH NORTH DAKOTA.....................4.......................................Idaho Siena......................................6 1/2............................... MARIST IUPUI..........................................5.........................Oral Roberts Tenn Chattanooga...........1 1/2............................WOFFORD Morehead St..........................2......... EASTERN KENTUCKY IPFW...........................................8...............Nebraska Omaha JACKSONVILLE ST................2.......................Tennessee St MURRAY ST............................10.........................Austin Peay

KANSAS CITY ROYALS

MINNESOTA TWINS

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.

to settle for 3-point attempts in the final minutes. The Falcons shot 26 percent from the floor. “Did not wilt. Did not panic,” Juneau said. “That’s what I was really proud of because they are a very good basketball team. We didn’t back down at all. That really feels good.” The Firebirds will travel to Shawnee Mission South at 5:30 p.m. Tuesday. OLATHE SOUTH (39) Kaiti Butaud 5-11 0-0 14, Makayla Gooch 4-12 3-4 11, Kara Griswold 0-2 1-2 1, DejaNae Roebuck 0-3 4-4 4, Lindsey Bartels 1-4 1-2 3, Dani Winslow 1-6 3-4 6, Caroline Harshbarger 0-4 0-0 0, Sophie Reed 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 11-43 12-16 39. FREE STATE (48) Sam Lawrence 1-6 1-2 3, Cameryn Thomas 4-8 2-5 10, Jaycie Bishop 0-2 0-0 0, Caely Kesten 2-4 3-4 7, Jaelyn Two Hearts 6-7 5-6 20, Erin Cushing 0-3 0-0 0, Haley Hippe 3-4 2-5 8. Totals 16-34 13-22 48. O-South 10 5 11 13 — 39 Free State 8 9 16 15 — 48 3-point goals: Olathe South 5-20 (Butaud 4, Winslow); Free State 3-9 (Two Hearts 3). Turnovers: Olathe South 14, Free State 19.

KU Softball opens with big wins

13th straight game, beating be- John Wall heard “MVP!” chants leaguered Brooklyn. and had 26 points and 14 assists to lead Washington past Indiana. Pelicans 122, Timberwolves 106 Minneapolis — Anthony Spurs 103, Pistons 92 Davis had 42 points and 13 reAuburn Hills, Mich. — bounds to win a duel with Karl- Kawhi Leonard scored 32 Anthony Towns and lift New points and San Antonio never Orleans past Minnesota. trailed against Detroit. Towns scored 36 points, and Andrew Wiggins had 29 for the Lakers 122, Bucks 114 Timberwolves. Milwaukee — Nick Young scored 26 points and Los Angeles overcame a career-high 41 points Wizards 112, Pacers 107 Washington — In a matchup by Giannis Antetokounmpo and between two of the NBA’s top withstood a furious late rally to teams since New Year’s Day, beat Milwaukee.

TORONTO BLUE JAYS

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.

CHICAGO WHITE SOX

MINNESOTA TWINS

KANSAS CITY ROYALS

SEATTLE MARINERS

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

NBA Roundup Warriors 122, Grizzlies 107 Memphis, Tenn. — Draymond Green had an uncommon tripledouble while scoring only four points, and Golden State beat Memphis on Friday night for their first victory over the Grizzlies in three tries this season.

TORONTO BLUE JAYS

LAWRENCE HIGH

FSHS girls shock Olathe South, 48-39 By Bobby Nightengale

TAMPA BAY RAYS

WEST TODAY 4-3 in Sunflower League) led for Stafford said. “I know I have been tremendous job on their two best nearly the entire night at LHS. slacking a little, so I had to step it players,” Dickson said. “That gave • Wrestling at Sunflower League meet, In fact, after falling behind 6-2 at up. I wanted to be more aggresus a good chance to get ahead and AL EAST at Shawnee Mission South, 9 a.m. AL WEST we were ahead we could dicthe 4:03 mark, Lawrence closed sive and be more of a leader.” once • Boys basketball vs. Liberty, at out the opening quarter on a 10-1 Stafford finished with a game- tate how the game went.” BVNW, 2:30 p.m. run, including four points by ju- high 27 points on 9-of-17 shootLawrence will travel to nior E’lease Stafford. ing. She stuck to her game plan Shawnee Mission North at 5:30 AL CENTRAL Stafford continued to attack of attacking, which often led to p.m. Tuesday. SPORTS ON TV Olathe Northwest by driving to fouls. She hit eight of her 10 atOLATHE NORTHWEST (46) TODAY the hoop in the second quarter. tempts from theand free-throw AFC TEAM LOGOS 081312: Helmet team logos line, for the AFC teams; various stand-alone; staff; ETA 5 p.m. Maddie Heise 2-9 4-6sizes; 8, Sami Marks 2-8 0-0 She scored nine of the team’s 14 while settling for just three shots 5, Erika Boeh 2-12 3-6 7, Sarah Beth Gueldner College Basketball Time Net Cable AL WEST 5-19 0-0 11, Christen Curry 3-5 0-0 6, Kaylie second-quarter points to push from beyond the perimeter. Kappelmann 2-6 0-0 4, Mary Reiber 1-2 3-4 5. Kansas St. at W. Va. 11 a.m. ESPN 33, 233 Lawrence’s lead to double digits Senior Olivia Lemus joined Totals: 17-61 10-16 46. Texas A&M at Florida 11 a.m. ESPN2 34, 234 at the intermission. Stafford in double figures with LAWRENCE (59) Stewart 3-6 0-0 7 Olivia Lemus 3-9 Minnesota at Rutgers 11 a.m. ESPNU 35, 235 The Ravens (10-6, 4-3) never 10 points on nine shots. Senior 3-4Hannah 10, Skylar Drum 3-7 1-2 8, E’lease Stafford pulled closer than seven points Skylar Drum and sophomore 9-17 8-10 27, Chisom Ajekwu 2-9 1-2 5, Tyrin NC State at Wake Forest 11 a.m. FSN 36, 236 0-2 0-0 0, Asia Goodwin 1-6 0-1 2. Totals Marquette at Georgetown 11 a.m. FOX 4, 204 in the second half, as the Lions Hannah Stewart recorded eight Cosey 21-56 13-19 59. played withAFC a comfortable adand seven points, respectively. Kentucky at Alabama noon CBS 5, 205 TEAM LOGOS 081312: Helmet and team logos for the AFC teams; various sizes; stand-alone; staff; ETA 5 p.m. 7 13 15 11 — 46 vantage for the remainder of As a team, the Lions were 21- Northwest Lawrence 16 14 14 15 — 59 Kansas at Texas Tech 1 p.m. ESPN 33, 233 the contest. of-56 from the floor while hold3-point goals: Olathe Northwest 2-19 (Marks, Miami at Louisville 1 p.m. ESPN2 34, 234 Lawrence 4-11 (Stewart, Lemus, Drum, “Coming back from a loss, we ing the Ravens to a 17-of-61 mark. Beth); 1 p.m. ESPNU 35, 235 Stafford). Turnovers: Olathe Northwest 15, TCU at Baylor really used that as motivation,” “Olivia and Skylar did such a Lawrence 13. Penn St. at Illinois 1 p.m. BTN 147, 237 CHICAGO WHITE SOX

Just days after a close loss, the Lawrence High girls basketball team had a tough test with an opponent like Olathe Northwest. Still, LHS was able to put its three-point defeat on Tuesday in the rearview mirror, and dismantled a guard-oriented Ravens squad with a commanding 59-46 victory on Senior Night Friday. “Instead of standing flatfooted and hacking like we did on Tuesday,” Dickson said, “we moved our feet and took charges. We played much better defense. We were able to spread them out at the end and win pretty comfortably.” The No. 7 ranked Lions (12-4,

NEW YORK YANKEES

AL CENTRAL

Creighton at DePaul 1 p.m. FS1 150, 227 Villanova at Xavier 1:30 p.m. FOX 4, 204 Mass. vs. St. Joseph’s 1:30 p.m. NBCSN 38, 238 Vanderbilt at Missouri 2:30 p.m. SEC 157 Ohio St. at Maryland 3 p.m. ESPN 33, 233 Texas at Oklahoma St. 3 p.m. ESPN2 34, 234 Georgia at Tennessee 3 p.m. ESPNU 35, 235 Evansville at S. Illinois 3 p.m. FSN 36, 236 St. Bona. at G. Washington 3 p.m. NBCSN 38, 238 Washington at Utah 3:30 p.m. FS1 150, 227 Florida St. at Notre Dame 5 p.m. ESPN 33, 233 Oklahoma at Iowa St. 5 p.m. ESPN2 34, 234 Houston at Tulsa 5 p.m. ESPNU 35, 235 Iowa at Michigan St. 5 p.m. BTN 147, 237 Auburn at Mississippi 5 p.m. SEC 157 Gonzaga at St. Mary’s 7:15 p.m. ESPN 33, 233 S. Carolina at Miss. St. 7 p.m. ESPN2 34, 234 E. Carolina at S. Florida 7 p.m. ESPNU 35, 235 Arkansas at LSU 7:30 p.m. SEC 157 California at Arizona 9 p.m. ESPN2 34, 234 Bradley at Illinois St. 9 p.m. ESPNU 35, 235 Women’s Basketball Time

Net Cable

Northwestern at Indiana 11 a.m. BTN 147, 237 Iowa St. at Kansas St. 1 p.m. FSN 36, 236 Golf

Time

Net

Cable

Pebble Beach Nat’l Pro-AM 2 p.m. Allianz Championship 2 p.m. Maybank Championship 9 p.m.

CBS 5, 205 GOLF 156, 289 GOLF 156, 289

NHL Hockey

Time

Net Cable

Blues at Canadiens

6 p.m. FSN 36, 236

Kansas softball opened its NBA Basketball Time Net Cable season with a 2-1 victory over Warriors at Thunder 7:30 p.m. ABC 9, 209 Akron on Friday morning and a 16-2 win against Savannah State in the afternoon. SUNDAY Senior infielder Taylor Dodson went 5-for-6 in the two games with three home runs. College Basketball Time Net Cable Kansas 001 001 0 – 2 6 0 Akron 100 000 0 – 1 6 2 W – Alexis Reid, 1-0. L – Kelly Hyson, 0-1. 2B – Lily Behrmann, Jessie Roane, Taylor McElhaney, KU. HR – Taylor Dodson, KU. Savannah 001 10 – 2 5 2 Kansas (10)41 1x – 16 13 0 W – Sarah Miller, 1-0. L – Chelsea Malcom, 0-1. 2B – Alexis Singleton, SV; Becki Monaghan, KU. HR – Cortni Jones, SV; Lily Behrmann, Taylor Dodson (2), Harli Ridling, KU.

Belmont...................................11.............. TENNESSEE TECH Montana................................6 1/2.....NORTHERN ARIZONA SACRAMENTO ST..................6................................. Idaho St Weber St...............................3 1/2...................PORTLAND ST MMA UFC 208: Holm vs. De Randamie Barclays Center-Brooklyn, NY. H. Holm +120 G. De Randamie -140 A. Silva +125 D. Brunson -145 T. Boetsch +400 R. Souza -500 J. Cannonier +175 G. Teixeira -200 J. Miller +340 D. Poirier -410 U. Sasaki +450 W. Reis -600 N. Lentz +270 I. Makhachev -330 I. McCall +110 J. Brooks -130 R. Carneiro +280 R. LaFlare -340 P. Nover +170 R. Glenn -190 B. Muhammad +115 R. Brown -135 Boxing Super Lightweight Bout Cintas Center-Cincinnati, OH. (12 Rounds) A. Granados +270 A. Broner -330 Home Team in CAPS (c) TRIBUNE CONTENT AGENCY, LLC

KU at Texas Tech replay 12 a.m. TWC 37, 226 KU at Texas Tech replay 3 a.m. TWC 37, 226 KU at Texas Tech replay 6 a.m. TWC 37, 226 KU at Texas Tech replay 9 a.m. TWC 37, 226 Michigan at Indiana 12 p.m. CBS 5, 205 Cincinnati at SMU 3 p.m. ESPN 33, 233 Wichita St. at Loyola 3 p.m. ESPNU 35, 235 Oregon State at UCLA 4 p.m. FS1 150, 227 Virginia at Va. Tech 5:30 p.m. ESPNU 35, 235 Northwestern at Wisc. 5:30 p.m. BTN 147, 237 Soccer

Time

Net Cable

Burnley vs. Chelsea 7:25 a.m. NBCSN 38, 238 Swansea vs. Leic. City 9:55 a.m. 38, 238 Freiburg vs. Cologne 10:30 a.m. FS1 150, 227 Women’s Basketball Time

Net Cable

Tulane at South Florida 11 a.m. Dayton at G. Washington 11 a.m. Ga. Tech at Notre Dame 12 p.m. Iowa at Ohio St. 11 a.m. Maryland at Michigan St. 1 p.m. Texas A&M at Tennessee 1 p.m. Wisconsin at Michigan 1 p.m. Florida at Alabama 1 p.m. Boston Coll. at Louisville 2 p.m. Baylor at TCU 3 p.m. Mississippi St. at Miss. 3 p.m. Arkansas at Missouri 5 p.m.

ESPN2 34, 234 ESPNU 35, 235 FSN 36, 236 BTN 147, 237 ESPN2 34, 234 ESPNU 35, 235 BTN 147, 237 SEC 157 FSN 36, 236 ESPN2 34, 234 SEC 157 SEC 157

Golf

Net Cable

Time

P. Beach National Pro-AM 2 p.m. Allianz Championship 2 p.m.

CBS 5, 205 GOLF 156, 289

NBA Basketball

Time

Net Cable

Spurs at Knicks

2:30 p.m. ABC 9, 209

NHL Hockey

Time

Red Wings at Wild Canadiens at Bruins

2 p.m. NBC 14, 214 6:30 p.m. NBCSN 38, 238

Net Cable

THE LATEST ON KU ATHLETICS

REPORTING SCORES?

Twitter.com/KUsports • Facebook.com/KUsportsdotcom

Call 832-7147, email sportsdesk@ljworld.com or fax 843-4512


SPORTS

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Saturday, February 11, 2017

| 3D

LHS boys stop O-Northwest in OT By Shane Jackson sjackson@ljworld.com

With less than a minute to go in overtime, Lawrence High senior guard Austin Miller picked up his fifth personal foul. Before dispersing to the bench, Miller made sure to go around and high-five each one of his four teammates on the floor, sharing words of encouragement while his squad tried to hold its advantage down the stretch. As he made his way to the sideline, a chorus of chants boomed from the

LHS crowd — repeating his full name — in the team’s eventual 62-56 victory over Olathe Northwest on Friday at LHS. “They are chanting my name; the crowd is just unbelievable,” Miller said. “They help bigtime. The energy and the feel. It’s a great student section.” But it was a scene that seemed improbable in the waning moments of regulation. With less than 25 seconds to go in the contest, the Lions stared down a six-point deficit. Sophomore Clarence

King brought the ball swiftly up the court, before dishing it back to a trailing Miller, who took one step and bottomed a pull-up 3-pointer from the left wing. His trey cut it to a single possession with 17.1 seconds remaining. On the impending inbounds play, the Ravens were hit with a five-second violation as the Lions shut down all passing lanes. Miller made the most of the new life, by connecting on a deep 3-pointer from the left wing, to ultimately even the score at 48-all.

“It’s not a huge surprise, he can really light it up,” LHS coach Mike Lewis said. “But to be in position to hit those shots and be real clean on our look to tie it. I’m just proud of the way he scored it with confidence.” And Miller wasn’t done there against the very team he played for as a freshman before transferring to LHS. In the free period, Olathe Northwest struck first with a 3-pointer. After senior Kobe Buffalomeat trimmed the deficit to one, Miller buried the

long ball from the top of the key, to recapture the lead with a 1:14 to go. LHS never trailed from that moment on, despite Miller fouling out. “That was just insane,” senior Jackson Mallory said. “He looked at me and Clarence and said, ‘Give me the ball and I’ll get us to overtime.’ We did, and he hit it.” Miller finished with 12 points on four made 3-pointers, all of which came in the fourth quarter and overtime. He started his 4-of-4 effort during that span, with a triple at the 4:48 mark in

the final period to give the Lions their first lead since midway through the opening quarter. OLATHE NORTHWEST (56) Jackson Nicodemus 2-5 5-9 11, Charlie Holmgren 1-4 2-2 5, Matt Vanderslice 3-6 1-2 7, Luke Waters 5-10 0-0 11, Dominic Messina 6-11 5-7 18, Jack Cashman 0-1 0-0 0, Jack Parks 1-5 1-1 3. Totals: 18-42 14-21 56. LAWRENCE (62) Braden Solko 10-2 0-0 0, Brett Chapple 7-11 3-5 17, Clarence King 3-14 11-4 17, Jackson Mallory 3-10 2-4 9, Kobe Buffalomeat 2-6 0-0 4, Anthony Selden 0-1 0-0 0, Austin Miller 4-8 0-0 12, Trey Quartlebaum 1-2 0-0 2, Noah Butler 1-3 0-2 2. Totals: 21-57 16-25 62. Northwest 12 10 10 16 8 — 56 Lawrence 6 12 10 20 14 — 62 Three-point goals: Olathe NW 5-12 (Nicodemus 2, Holmgren, Waters, Messina) ; Lawrence 4-18 (Miller 4). Fouled out: Miller. Turnovers: Olathe Northwest 10, Lawrence 9.

FSHS boys too much for Olathe South By Bobby Nightengale bnightengale@ljworld.com

With less than five minutes remaining in a 6650 victory Friday in the Cage, Free State senior Cameron Clark stood under Olathe South’s basket and saw a layup attempt headed his way. Clark cocked his arm back and slammed the ball flying out of bounds for a highlight rejection. He saw it as a fly sitting on his dashboard. Senior teammate Jay Dineen immediately hugged Clark, who had

Jayhawks CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1D

nine times, steals eight times and once each in rebounding and blocked shots. “I think he’s had a really good year, but probably not the year that you would maybe think after the way he finished last year,” Self said. “He was the best player in the (2016) Big 12 tournament and then he played well in the NCAA Tournament, so there may be the appearance that he may go to a whole other level, and I think he has really improved, I just think that the way the ball is being distributed now, he probably hasn’t had as many chances.” Chances were not tough to come by for Graham in the Jayhawks’ first meeting with the Red Raiders. He made 8 of 14 shots, including 4 of 8 from 3-point range, and added four assists, 3 rebounds and a steal while playing a game-high 37 minutes. Graham repeatedly has said that his concerns about this year’s team go beyond individual numbers. Like all of his teammates, he only wants to win and is willing to play whatever role puts Kansas in the best position to come out on top. He proved that by discussing KU’s late 16-2 run that knocked out Tech in the first meeting without so much as mentioning his strong individual performance. “It was a real good game here until late,” Graham recalled. “They’re long and athletic, they’ve got some good guards and it’s gonna be hard to win down there in Lubbock. It always is.” With Mason leading the Big 12 in scoring, that, more often than not, has made Graham more of a distributor, picking timely spots to shoot and score and deferring to Mason, Jackson, Svi Mykhailiuk and even Landen Lucas the rest of the time. Regardless of the numbers — his or those of his teammates — Graham has been pleased with his play through the season’s first 24 games, in large part because Kansas has won 21 of those.

a wide smile across his face. Another teammate, Jacob Pavlyak, went over to slap hands with Clark. At long last, the Firebirds, known for always making games as close as possible, secured a blowout, subbing in juniorvarsity players with four minutes left. “It’s about time,” junior forward Jalan Robinson said. “We like to blow leads a lot. We like to make it close for some reason.” On the next possession following Clark’s block,

senior guard Shannon Cordes went uncovered against Olathe South’s full-court press. Cordes caught the inbounds pass, raced up the floor and saw Clark on the other side of the lane in a 2-on-1 fast-break. Cordes lobbed up an alley-oop, which Clark flushed with a twohanded slam. By then, the rout was on. Clark scored a gamehigh 21 points, including 15 in the second half. “My mentality has changed,” said the 6-foot7 Clark, who has scored at least 13 points in every

game of the team’s fivegame win streak. “I’m starting to realize that I have to step up for my team. Just play hard and give it my all for 32 minutes.” The Firebirds, undefeated in Sunflower League play, had an 11-point lead at halftime, but know from experience that no lead is big enough. Clark scored eight straight FSHS points at the beginning of the third quarter. He scored on passes from Dineen and made another layup from a near impossible angle

while being fouled, sliding out of bounds as the ball dropped through the net. Along with their inside scoring, the Firebirds (11-4, 7-0 in league) were focused on defense. The Falcons (8-8, 3-4 in league) went scoreless for a six-minute stretch in the third quarter, missing on seven straight shots before senior Nic Slavin hit a buzzer-beating 3-pointer. “I like the way we came out of the half with a little energy,” FSHS coach Sam Stroh said.

OLATHE SOUTH (50) Nic Slavin 5-11 2-2 14, Jacob Peters 1-4 0-0 3, Ryan Koval 0-4 0-0 0, Tre Adger 1-4 0-2 2, Brian DeSanto 6-12 2-2 15, Jared Hutton 1-3 1-2 3, Brett Beene 0-2 0-2 0, Brady Johnson 1-3 2-2 5, R.P. Morgan 1-2 0-0 3, Zach Toutges 0-0 2-2 2, Jake English 1-1 0-0 3, Preston Schuck 0-1 0-2 0. Totals 17-47 9-16 50. FREE STATE (66) Garrett Luinstra 5-15 2-2 12, Simon McCaffrey 1-3 0-0 3, Jay Dinen 4-5 0-2 8, Shannon Cordes 0-5 0-0 0, Cameron Clark 9-11 3-4 21, Sloan Thomsen 3-4 1-1 9, Jacob Pavlyak 0-2 0-0 0, Jalan Robinson 2-4 1-1 5, Avant Edwards 1-2 2-2 4, Jared Hicks 0-0 0-0 0, Turner Corcoran 1-2 0-0 2, Jake Baker 0-0 0-0 0, Kyle Abrahamson 0-2 2-2 2, Jax Dineen 0-0 0-0 0, Kaiy King-Wilson 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 26-56 11-15 66. O-South 6 12 7 25 — 50 Free State 13 16 17 20 — 66 Three-point goals: Olathe South 7-20 (Slavin 2, Peters, DeSanto, Johnson, Morgan, English); Free State 3-19 (Thomsen 2, McCaffrey). Turnovers: Olathe South 9, Free State 6.

No. 3 Kansas Jayhawks (21-3 overall, 9-2 Big 12) vs. Texas Tech Red Raiders (16-8 overall, 4-7 Big 12) 1 p.m. today, United Supermarkets Arena, Lubbock, Texas • 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

Win behind the line

Defensive discipline

This matchup is a battle of two of the Asked what his team was hoping to fineworst 3-point defenses in the Big 12, as tune during the final seven games of the reguTexas Tech ranks eighth while allowing op- lar season, Graham referenced an area the Jayponents to shoot .366 from 3-point range hawks have battled all season — defense. “Still and Kansas ranks ninth allowing opponents working on defensive stuff, mainly,” Graham to shoot .368. The 3-point shot played a big said. “We don’t really worry about offense. We role for both teams in the first meeting and know we can score. We’ve just been watching Kansas, though making two fewer shots film and (looking for) little things, being in the from behind the arc in that one, ultimately right spot, little things like that.” Being sound won the battle with a more efficient effort. defensively will be key in this one because of KU connected on 9 of 18 3-pointers (.500) the style the Red Raiders use offensively. Not in the 85-68 victory at Allen Fieldhouse only will Tech’s experienced backcourt led by while allowing the Red Raiders to make 11 Keenan Evans and Aaron Ross challenge the of 28 (.393), a few of which came late with Jayhawks to stay in front of them, but the Red the game out of reach. Devonté Graham Raiders also like to drag possessions deep into and Frank Mason III combined to go 7-ofthe shot clock before looking for a spot to at12 from 3-point range in the first meeting tack, which KU coach Bill Self said was a staple and, with Josh Jackson having found his of what first-year Tech coach Chris Beard likes stroke (13 of his last 24 from 3) and Svi to do. “I think it’s pretty much the same team Mykhailiuk operating as a 3-point assassin (as the first meeting) on what they’re trying to of late — Mykhailiuk’s has made 19 3-pointaccomplish,” Self said. “Run motion and give ers since the Jan. 7 meeting with TTU — the the defense a chance to break down.” Texas Jayhawks should have plenty of weapons Tech ranks second to Kansas (.495) in the Big with which to attack the Red Raiders, even if 12 in overall field goal percentage at .482. Tech elects to try to eliminate good looks for Mason and Graham.

Another step forward for Bragg

Playing in just his second game after serving a three-game suspension for a violation of team rules, KU sophomore Carlton Bragg Jr., could play a huge role in this one. With the Red Raiders balanced offensively and loaded with long, athletic players in the starting lineup and off the bench, Bragg, if he’s locked in, would provide the Jayhawks with a nice piece to match up with that size and length. Bragg delivered a mixed-bag performance in the first meeting with Texas Tech, tallying 3 points and 6 rebounds to go along with 3 turnovers and 4 fouls. Senior forward Landen Lucas, who plays a much different style than Bragg, has logged 30 or more minutes in 6 of 11 games since Jan. 1 and any chance Kansas gets to lighten his load represents good news for this team, both now and in the future. In his first game back from suspension, Monday night vs. Kansas State, Bragg showed no ill effects of sitting out and contributed six points and three rebounds in 13 minutes. If he’s mentally prepared and called upon, he could double those numbers against Tech.

MEGA MATCHUP

JAYHAWK PULSE

Texas Tech forward Anthony Livingston vs. whoever KU puts on him

With seven games remaining in the regular season and the Jayhawks owning a one-game lead over Baylor at the top of the Big 12 Conference standings, we’re quickly reaching the stretch run in KU’s quest to make it 13 Big 12 regular season titles in a row. That fact alone makes the importance of every game left go up just a tick. But few seem to be quite as important as this one, given the fact that it comes on the road, where life is always tough, and right before a week that very well could decide the Big 12 race. After facing Tech in Lubbock, Kansas will return home for a Big Monday rematch with West Virginia before traveling to Baylor five days later. Both teams are ranked, both teams played KU tough in the first meeting this season and both will take the floor for those games fully expecting to take down Kansas. The Jayhawks probably can afford to lose one of the next three games and be OK. But if they were to fall to Tech on the road, the pressure would rise during the next two games, which already will come with a great deal of pressure to begin with.

Texas Tech’s 6-foot-8, 220-pound forward has scored in double figures in four consecutive games, including a team-high 14 points in a recent loss at TCU. During that stretch, the senior from Washington D.C., has shot .563 from the field, including a scorching .556 from 3-point range. Therein lies one of this match-up’s most intriguing questions for Kansas — which player checks Livingston? In the first meeting, senior forward Landen Lucas opened on Livingston, but the Tech forward’s comfort floating around the 3-point line might not make Lucas the ideal candidate here because guarding Livingston could pull Lucas out of rebounding position. Josh Jackson has the height but not the bulk to match up and also has been slow at times to close out to 3-point shooters. That leaves sophomore Carlton Bragg, who guarded Livingston some in the first match-up. Bragg could be in line for more playing time if Livingston, who ranks fifth in the conference in 3-point percentage (.425) and ninth in the Big 12 in 3-pointers made (48), continues to be a factor for the Red Raiders. In the first meeting with Kansas, Livingston struggled to 6 points, 3 rebounds and 3 turnovers in just 14 minutes. ”

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.

TEXAS TECH G – Devon Thomas, 6-0, 175, Sr. G – Keenan Evans, 6-3, 185, Jr. G – Justin Gray, 6-6, 210, Jr. F – Anthony Livingston, 6-8, 220, Sr. F – Zach Smith, 6-8, 220, Jr.


4D

|

Saturday, February 11, 2017

SPORTS

.

L awrence J ournal -W orld

Third staff the charm for Beaty Editor’s note: The following is a reprint of sports editor Tom Keegan’s column, which, due to a layout error, did not run in its entirety in Friday’s newspaper.

E

arly in David Beaty’s tenure as head football coach at Kansas, athletic director Sheahon Zenger mentioned in passing but with confidence that it had been his experience that it takes until a coach’s third year to get his staff just right. I made a mental note to revisit Zenger on that topic once Beaty entered his third season. Nothing that has happened here has changed Zenger’s third staff’s the charm stance. Beaty’s entire defensive staff — Clint Bowen (coordinator/safeties), Michael Slater (line), Todd Bradford (linebackers), Kenny Perry (co-coordinator/safeties) — remains intact. Joe DeForest, whose impressive background was a useful resource for the defensive coaches last season, returns as special teams boss. Bradford and DeForest were not on

Girls CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1D

over the course of the season. Early on, it looked like there was a chance that hard work may come to fruition. The Seahawks (2-13) held an early 6-5 edge over the Eagles (134), and Taylor liked the way his box-and-one defense was working on

giving them to promoted Garrett Riley. It took Beaty until his third season to get the man he wanted to run his Air Raid offense. Doug Meacham shared offensive coordinator duties with Sonny Cumbie at TCU and tkeegan@ljworld.com received a share of the Beaty’s first staff. credit when the Horned Thanks in part to a Frogs became the nadreadful offense keeption’s most improved ing the defense on the offense and Trevone field so often, the Kansas Boykin grew into one D ranked 109th in total Heisman Trophy canyards (456.2) and 113th in didate. Cumbie turned points (37.3) among 128 down job offers after the FBS schools. past couple of seasons Those numbers don’t and when that happens, sound nearly as bad that sometimes means when compared to the he is given more power previous season, when to stay put. Maybe that’s KU ranked dead-last at what made the jump 128th in both scoring to Kansas appealing to (46.1) and total yards Meacham. Whatever the (560.8). The defense reason, Beaty’s happy to improved by more than have him as part of his 104.6 yards and 8.8 points third and best staff he’s per game. had. Five starters return on Running backs coach defense. Tony Hull, entering his It was on offense that second season, has done Beaty needed to shake up such an impressive job his staff. Give him credit recruiting Louisiana and for re-assigning the in helping to set a clioffensive coordinator, mate that makes playing himself, to full-time head college football a positive coach. He also dropped experience for the playhis quarterback duties, ers, he received a promo-

tion to associate head coach/running backs and a pay raise from $150,000 to $400,000. Offensive line coach Zach Yenser is the only member of the offensive staff who has been with Beaty since his first year. So Zenger’s third-year theory is panning out. “I know in the last 10 to 15 years that I’ve believed that, just from watching staffs I’d been on and staffs I’d seen as an administrator and enough qualitative observation, that it just kind of rang true to me at the time and still does,” Zenger said. “I think it has to do with in your first year, any time you’re interviewing a coach you always ask, ‘Who are you going to have on your staff?’ The wiser coaches will tell you, ‘I won’t be able to get all of these guys, but in a perfect world I’d like these nine.’ Never have I seen anyone get the full nine first-stringers that they want.” Making nine hires at once inevitably leads to bad fits here and there. “Or maybe an op-

portunity comes along that was just perfect for someone, so you replace a couple, anywhere from two to four, maybe five,” Zenger said. “And it seems like the guys who come in that second year often bring more experience, maybe know more that that’s a fit that’s better for them. And then you get in the third year and you have less turnover and the turnover there is seems to have more specific needs for the program itself. That’s not exact science, it’s just my observations over the years. And I’m seeing it happen here.” Fewer hires each year means fewer chances at missing on one. “I think when a coach has a chance to hire a couple of guys, or three or four, you’re more able to focus on what you need and getting the right fit than when you’re trying to hire nine,” Zenger said. It won’t be easy to keep the staff together and will cost money, but the latter shouldn’t be a problem. Big Big 12 TV checks make big salaries for coaches possible.

Veritas standout senior Tori Huslig. But Huslig started to get loose in the second quarter, and Veritas ended the half on a 15-4 run. Huslig, signed to play college softball at Central Oklahoma, was the game’s leading scorer with 25 points. Veritas took advantage of turnovers and quick shots on the offensive end by Seabury to get out in transition.

op Seabury, 18-8, and taking a 39-18 lead into the final period. From there, the Seahawks were never able to get within striking distance. With senior Celia Taylor-Puckett in St. Louis for a college visit, fellow senior Kayleigh Boos was the Seahawks’ only double-digit scorer with 16 points. However, Emily Heinz had one of her best games of the season filling in for Taylor-

Puckett in the backcourt. Heinz scored nine points, and was the Seahawks most aggressive player in driving to the basket and trying to create shots for others all night. “I thought Emily did a great job at the point guard position,” Taylor said.

Tom Keegan

Chloe Holland added 12 points for the Eagles (134) while Delaeny Shelton scored eight. “When we’re moving the ball side to side, we can be pretty good,” Taylor said. “When we’re stagnant, and make one pass and shoot that’s tough. That leads to transition baskets if you don’t get back.” Veritas continued its momentum into the third quarter, outscoring Bish-

KU-TEXAS WOMEN’S BASKETBALL Who: Kansas vs. Texas When: 1:30 p.m. today Where: Frank Erwin Center, Austin, Texas Series: Texas leads 23-10

Texas struggles Kansas will look to snap its nine-game losing streak to Texas in the final meeting of the regular season between the teams. The Jayhawks haven’t beaten the Longhorns since January of 2013. A win against Texas would also give Kansas its first win against a ranked team in eight tries this season. Streaking Senior Timeka O’Neal

scored a season high 13 points and made three shots from beyond the arc in Kansas’ win over Oklahoma State on Wednesday. She’s been on fire from beyond the arc over the last six games, shooting 12-of24 (50 percent).

Slumping Senior Jada Brown isn’t known for her scoring (3.3 points per game) but she’s been scoring even less than that as of late. She’s scored just eight points in the Jayhawks last five games, and she’s only grabbed two rebounds in the last two games.

Probable starters KANSAS (8-16 overall, 2-11 Big 12) G — Jayde Christopher, 5-8, so. G — Jessica Washington, 5-8, jr. G — Kylee Kopatich, 5-10, so. G — Chayla Cheadle, 6-0, jr. F — Sydney Umeri, 6-0, sr. TEXAS (19-4, 13-0) G — Brooke McCarty, 5-4, so. G — Brianna Taylor, 5-9, sr. G — Ariel Atkins, 5-11, jr F — Joyner Holmes, 6-3, fr. C — Kelsey Lang, 6-5, sr. — Evan Riggs

Seabury 5 5 8 8 — 26 Veritas 4 17 18 12 — 51 Seabury — Emily Heinz 9, Allison Eckert 1, Kayleigh Boos 16. Veritas — Holly Scott 1, Chloe Holland 12, Katie Hammer 3, Alex Avila 2, Delaeny Shelton 8, Tori Huslig 25.

Boys CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1D

Wycoff, who led Bishop Seabury with 20 points, said it was important to bounce back and play well Friday after an overtime loss to Metro Academy on Wednesday. “Tonight we really picked it up,” Wycoff said of the Seahawks’ defense. “The Metro loss really opened our eyes. We told ourselves that we can’t lose another game going into sub-state.” Early on, Veritas (7-11) was able to hang tough, and Seabury only led by eight after the first quarter. Veritas scored all 12 of their points in the paint off dribble penetration, which upset Seabury coach Ashley Battles because he said that was a point of emphasis entering the game. “For some reason, it didn’t sink until the second quarter,” Battles said. “Once we stopped that, it was lights out.” The Seahawks (14-3) hit four shots from beyond the arc in the second period, and junior Zach McDermott scored six of his 15 points on two shots well beyond the 3-point arc. His second triple gave the Seahawks a 36-16 lead. BISHOP SEABURY (77) Mikey Wycoff 8-13 2-2 20, Amir Shami 0-1 0-0 0, Cobe Green 1-2 2-2 4, Zach McDermott 4-10 4-6 15, Thomas diZerega 2-2 2-2 6, Max Easter 2-5 0-0 5, Dawson Chindamo 0, Bansi King 6-12, 1-2 15, Austin Gaumer 2-4 0-2 6, Chris Green 1-1 3-3 5, Luke Hornberger 0-0 1-2 1. Totals: 26-52 15-21 80. VERITAS CHRISTIAN (52) Weston Flory 4-5 0-0 8, Trey Huslig 2-10 5-6 9, Jackson Rau 1-3 1-2 3, Kammal Dowdell 2-10 1-2 6, Quinton Donohoe 2-3 0-0 5, Michael Rask 0-3 0-0 0, Calvin Koch 1-1 0-0 2, Peyton Donohoe 1-2 0-0 3, Tucker Flory 7-8 0-0 14, Kyle Weinhold 1-2 0-0 2. Totals 21-27 7-10 52. Seabury 20 26 21 10 — 77 Veritas 12 8 14 18 — 52 Three point goals: Seabury 10-25 (McDermott 3, Wycoff 2, King 2, Gaumer 2, Easter 1). Veritas 3-17 (Dowdell 1, Quinton Donohoe 1, Koch 1). Turnovers: Seabury 8, Veritas 17.

BE PREPARED FOR ALL WEATHER CONDITIONS THIS WINTER!

Exp 2/28/17

$ 10OFF

The Full Line of Automotive Batteries – Limit 2

SCOREBOARD Big 12 Men

League Overall Kansas 9-2 21-3 Baylor 8-3 21-3 West Virginia 7-4 19-5 TCU 6-5 17-7 Iowa State 6-5 14-9 Kansas State 5-6 16-8 Texas Tech 4-7 16-8 Oklahoma State 4-7 15-9 Texas 4-7 10-14 Oklahoma 2-9 8-15 Today’s Games Kansas State at West Virginia, 11 a.m. Kansas at Texas Tech, 1 p.m. TCU at Baylor, 1 p.m. Texas at Oklahoma State, 3 p.m. Oklahoma at Iowa State, 5 p.m.

Big 12 Women

League Overall Texas 13-0 19-4 Baylor 12-1 23-2 Oklahoma 10-3 19-6 Kansas State 7-5 17-7 West Virginia 4-8 16-8 Iowa State 4-8 13-10 TCU 4-8 12-11 Oklahoma State 3-9 13-10 Texas Tech 3-9 11-12 Kansas 2-11 8-16 Today’s Games Iowa State at Kansas State, 1 p.m. Kansas at Texas, 1:30 p.m. Oklahoma State at West Virginia, 5:30 p.m. Oklahoma at Texas Tech, 6:30 p.m.

High School Boys

Abilene 55, Wamego 46 Basehor-Linwood 69, KC Turner 65 Bishop Miege 71, St. James Academy 59 Bishop Seabury Academy 77, Veritas Christian 52 Blue Valley 78, Blue Valley Southwest 53 Butler, Mo. 65, Maranatha Academy 59 BV North 46, Gardner-Edgerton 33

BV Northwest 50, BV West 17 BV Randolph 63, Wetmore 61 Cair Paravel 80, East (Kansas City), Mo. 66 Derby 73, Newton 64 Dodge City 56, Nickerson 54 Ellinwood 58, Kinsley 25 Eudora 57, Spring Hill 46 Garden City 39, Great Bend 32 Garden Plain 59, Conway Springs 54 Halstead 47, Hoisington 35 Lansing 50, Tonganoxie 45 Lawrence 62, Olathe Northwest 56 Lawrence Free State 66, Olathe South 50 Liberal 43, Hays 42 Perry-Lecompton 63, Riverside 34 Pittsburg 61, Chanute 42 Salina South 55, Wichita Campus 45 Shawnee Heights 59, Junction City 44 SM East 51, SM Northwest 48 SM North 61, SM West 55 SM South 37, Leavenworth 31 St. Thomas Aquinas 72, Mill Valley 51 Topeka Hayden 69, Washburn Rural 56 Topeka Seaman 46, Topeka 44 Wichita East 56, Wichita West 28 Wichita Heights 76, Wichita North 44 Wichita South 61, Wichita Bishop Carroll 46

High School Girls

Abilene 48, Wamego 35 Basehor-Linwood 61, KC Turner 27 Bishop Miege 61, St. James Academy 18 Blue Valley 56, Blue Valley Southwest 49 Cair Paravel 52, KC East Christian 48 Derby 39, Newton 34 Ellinwood 49, Kinsley 45 Gardner-Edgerton 55, BV North 53, OT Great Bend 46, Garden City 36 Halstead 47, Hoisington 35 Highland Park 55, Topeka West 46 Holton 43, Jefferson West 39, OT Jackson Heights 42, Oskaloosa 22 Kapaun Mount Carmel 37, Wichita Southeast 36 KC Piper 59, Bonner Springs 22

Exp 2/28/17

Lansing 55, Tonganoxie 29 Lawrence 59, Olathe Northwest 46 Lawrence Free State 48, Olathe South 39 Santa Fe Trail 52, Osawatomie 33 Shawnee Heights 70, Junction City 47 SM Northwest 60, SM East 46 SM West 53, SM North 36 St. Thomas Aquinas 52, Mill Valley 36 Topeka Seaman 46, Topeka 44 Veritas Christian 51, Bishop Seabury Academy 26 Wellsville 65, West Franklin 33

Pebble Beach

Friday p-Pebble Beach Golf Links: 6,816 yards, par 72 m-Monterey Peninsula Country Club: 6,958 yards, par 71 s-Spyglass Hill Golf Course: 6,953 yards, par 72 Pebble Beach, Calif. Purse: $7.2 million Partial Second Round Jordan Spieth 68m-65s—133 Martin Flores 70m-68s—138 Jon Rahm 73s-67p—140 Dustin Johnson 70m-69s—139 James Hahn 73m-67s—140 Mackenzie Hughes 70m-70s—140 Scott Stallings 72s-70p—142 Tyrone Van Aswegen 71p-70m—141 Jimmy Walker 72p-69m—141 Chad Collins 72p-70m—142 Phil Mickelson 70m-72s—142 Leaderboard at time of suspended play Golfer Jordan Spieth Derek Fathauer Jason Day Patrick Reed Seung-Yui Noh Pat Perez Joel Dahmen Also Gary Woodland

Score Through -10 F -10 17 -9 12 -7 17 -7 13 -6 17 -6 11 E

13

$ 5 OFF Alkaline Batteries – buy in bulk $25 or more Exp 2/28/17

$ 10OFF The full line of Optima Batteries – Limit 2

Exp 2/28/17

$10 OFF

The full line of RESCUE jump starters – limit 2 Exp 2/28/17

Lawrence Battery Co. 903 N. 2nd St. Lawrence, KS 785-842-2922

$10

OFF

The full line of BatteryMinder chargers – limit 2


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.