SUNDAY DRIVING KU women’s team beats Emporia State in exhibition play ahead of regular season start this weekend. SPORTS, 1C
Probe finds ethics laws laced with loopholes. 1B
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City could seek $750K for loop trail
A different way to hold the bacon
KDOT funding would pay for majority of work to complete four sections
See the video at LJWorld.com/petpig
By Nikki Wentling Twitter: @nikkiwentling
Holly and Kyle Whitney say their Juliana potbelly pig, Gatsby, is smart, agile, loves to snuggle and craves attention.
City staff hopes to gain approval from the Lawrence City Commission on Tuesday to seek state funding for segments of the “Lawrence Loop,” an incomplete circumferential trail that’s been more than 20 years in the making. The Kansas Portion city would pay Department of if bid were successful Transportation announced in September that it would award an estimated $14 million for alternative transportation projects in 2016. The state is looking to fund projects that are pedestrian or bicycle related; include preserving historic transportation structures; offer
$150,000
Richard Gwin/ Journal-World Photo
Lessons learned from Gatsby, the pet pig By Conrad Swanson Twitter: @Conrad_Swanson
You’ll find no bacon in the Whitney home. Nor will you find pork chops or a holiday ham.
Not since the young couple adopted the newest member of their family last December, a Juliana potbelly pig named Gatsby. “We had him for a
month and I said, ‘I’m not eating pork anymore, I’m only eating chicken,’” said Holly Whitney, Gatsby’s adoptive mother. “Then I
Only in Lawrence A Monday feature highlighting behindthe-scenes stars and unsung heroes who make Lawrence a special place to live. To suggest someone for a feature, email news@ ljworld.com. Put “Only in Lawrence” in the subject line.
Please see TRAIL, page 2A
City manager search proceeds with ‘great interviews’
Please see PIG, page 2A
By Mackenzie Clark
In chapel and beyond, KU makes space for different faiths according to Wichita State — were outraged, and anti-Muslim comments Wichita State Univerpropelled the story into sity recently adapted its national news. on-campus, all-faiths At Kansas Univerchapel to make it sity, there are two more flexible in acseparate on-campus commodating differspaces designated ent uses, including for prayer or mediMuslim prayer. tation. Both are open Specifically, pews to all, although the KANSAS were replaced with UNIVERSITY spaces look and feel moveable chairs. drastically different. Some people — misinOne is Danforth Chaformed about the chapel’s pel — a traditional chapel Richard Gwin/Journal-World Photo origins and the process Danforth Chapel was dedicated in 1946 as a Christian space. Please see CHAPEL, page 5A that led to the change, By Sara Shepherd
Twitter: @saramarieshep
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The Lawrence City Commission met in executive session all day Sunday to discuss filling the city manager position, adjourning at 5:30 p.m. CITY Mayor Mike Amyx said COMMISSION the commission has had some “great interviews.” “We received a lot of really good information. This has been really a good day in Lawrence, Kan.,” Amyx said. “But, like anything else, we need to process this information.” “A lot of great candidates to look at,” Vice Mayor Leslie Soden added. Amyx asked interim city manager Diane Stoddard to include discussion Please see SEARCH, page 2A
Prison pay
Vol.157/No.313 26 pages
With Kansas legislators now putting new emphasis on paying prison workers amid revenue deficits, other cuts could ensue. Page 3A
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safe routes to school; or improve scenic and environmental assets. According to a memo from City Engineer Dave Cronin, the city wants to dna ond olMEs submit an application for a $750,000 construction Service for Edna will be at 2 p.m. Sun. Nov. 15 at project to complete four Eudora United Methodist Church. VISO will be 5-7p.m. sections of the Lawrence Sat. Nov. 14 at Warren-McElwain Mortuary - Eudora. Loop that add up to about 0.7 mile. The sections are: 750 linear feet from 29th Street to the Haskell Rail-Trail to the South Lawrence Trafficway Trail; 1,450 linear feet from Hobbs Park to 9 Del Lofts; 950 linear feet from Poehler Lofts to the Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railway Depot; and 800 linear feet from City Hall to Constant Park. City staff is recommending applying for the funds to “continue with the ultimate goal of a completed loop,” the memo states. The estimated construction cost is $750,000. If the city’s attempt to receive KDOT funding were successful, the city would pay 20 percent, or $150,000. The city would also be obligated to pay the estimated $100,000 in design costs. The Lawrence Loop, when complete, will be 22.4 miles. Thirteen miles of the 10-foot shared-use path are already complete, and there are two areas currently in the works: the half-mile path between Constant Park and Burcham Park and a longer stretch along the under-construction South Lawrence Trafficway. If the city’s proposal is approved and the four sections complete, the entire eastern half of the trail would be finished except for the halfmile between the BNSF Depot and City Hall. With some of the grant funding, city staff would conduct a study for that segment that would include seeking public input on a preferred route. Other unfinished areas in the northern and western sections stretch from Woody Park to Peterson Park; from Stonegate Park to East 1000 Road; and
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through Sports Pavilion Lawrence. The project to create the trail started in the 1990s with the construction of the original west leg of the South Lawrence Trafficway. Through the years, more sections have been added, some using grant funding. The city lost out last year on KDOT funding for the Lawrence Loop. That application asked for funds to continue the trail between Hobbs Park and Constant Park. It wasn’t funded because of uncertainty of the trail’s alignment, the memo states. The four sections that would be included in this year’s application are already mapped out. Part of the project, from City Hall to Constant Park, includes routing a path underneath the Massachusetts Street and Vermont Street river bridges, which could include a scenic river overlook between the bridges. To use the route, the city would have to gain right-of-way approval from BNSF Railway and construct a retaining wall. The project also includes constructing a trailhead and parking lot near the BNSF Depot.
Safe Routes to School In a separate request for the same KDOT funding pool, the city wants to seek $200,000 for the second phase of its Safe Routes to School program. In 2014, KDOT approved a grant application for the first phase of Lawrence’s Safe Routes to School program. The grant, $15,000, is being used to establish a plan to make paths to school more walkable and bikeable for kids. A working group, along with school district staff and a survey of parents, determined sidewalks and crosswalk beacons surrounding Liberty Memorial Central Middle School and Woodlawn Elementary School would be the program’s first priorities. According to a memo from project engineer Nick Voss, the city’s application would call for adding sidewalks where there are now gaps and installing 10 flashing beacons at school
search, said at the Oct. 13 commission meeting that the candidates had an average of 19 years of experience as chief executives. He also said most of them hold master’s degrees in public administration and are credentialed managers through the International City/ County Management Association.
Wichita (ap) — The bishop of the Catholic Diocese of Wichita is preparing to make the case that an Army chaplain from Kansas who died in a North Korean prisoner of war camp deserves to be granted sainthood. Bishop Carl Kemme
is addressing the Vatican’s Congregation for the Causes of Saints in Rome today. It is the most significant moment yet in the push to have the Rev. Emil Kapaun declared a saint. Kapaun grew up on a Marion County farm.
of the city manager position on the regular agenda for the commission’s meeting on Tuesday, Nov. 17. The position became open when former City Manager David Corliss
Pig
and he peed and that was it,” he said. “They’re that smart. There were no accidents. No six months of training. It was instant. And now he oinks at the back door when he’s got to go.” Now Gatsby is just more than a year old and weighs about 50 pounds, Holly said. Kyle, a stay-at-home videographer, tends to lay down the law while Holly, a pharmacist, tends to be the one who sneaks table scraps, they agreed. The couple need to keep any mail and packages out of reach or else the cardboard-loving Gatsby might tear the parcels apart, they said. He can also make his way into their couch’s center console and sniff out any stray snacks or treats. Not only did the Whitneys quickly learn of Gatsby’s intelligence, but they began to notice his personality. Typically the pig is friendly, clever and loves attention from his parents, they said. But when he doesn’t get his way, he’s not shy about making himself heard. “He’ll snuggle with us and when he’s on the couch he has to be on us, otherwise he’ll get angry,” Holly said. “When a dog is upset, it’s more that they pout and go into a corner and sulk,” Kyle added. “Gatsby throws a tantrum. He’ll make this grunt and squeal noise.”
A sizeable portion of Gatsby’s day includes plopping himself on the Whitneys’ linoleum floor and soaking up sunbeams, Kyle said. The sliding glass door to the back yard opens to a magnetic screen that allows Gatsby to trot in and out of the house as a doggy door would. Outside, Gatsby has a small pool he can stand in and keep cool. He also bobs for treats in the water, Kyle said. One of Gatsby’s favorite activities, Kyle said, is rooting around in the yard. And although he enjoys playing with a bit of dirt, cleanliness is never an issue. “He is extremely clean,” Holly said. “We maybe bathe him once a month. He is really, really clean and he’s never really wallowed in dirt to cool down because he’s able to go in and outside when he wants.” Before too long, Holly noticed that Gatsby had a certain photogenic quality and began an Instagram account, posting photos and videos of Gatsby. Now @gatsby_the_minipig has nearly 6,000 faithful online followers. Not only does Gatsby get plenty of online attention, but Kyle said they run into so many interested people when they walk him that they need to carry Cheerios with them to make sure his new fans have something to feed him.
“It’s hard to get 5 feet without somebody stopping us,” he chuckles. More often than not, Kyle said, people are mostly curious about what Gatsby eats. The answer is simple: He eats pig pellets bought from a local tractor supply store. In recent years, pigs have become a more popular pet choice, said Kate Meghji, executive director for the Lawrence Humane Society. She estimates the shelter saw four or five pigs in the past year. But the name “mini pig” or “teacup pig” is generally a misnomer because there’s no guarantee the pigs will stay small, Meghji said. “I think that’s the biggest issue with the mini pigs or teacup pigs is there’s no actual breed like that,” she said. “Often the potbelly pigs you see in shelters are ones that people got and were little, but they got bigger than they expected.” For anyone interested in adopting a pet pig, both the Whitneys and Meghji encourage a lot of research. Although the animals do make for excellent pets, they say, it’s not the same as caring for a dog or a cat. “If you can’t give them the attention they need, they’re going to intentionally be bad pigs out of spite, but if you let them out and have them engaged, they’re as great if not better of a pet as dogs,” Holly said.
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A
went from there to being a pescatarian and now I’m a vegetarian.” Kyle Whitney, Gatsby’s adoptive father, said he couldn’t go as far as cutting meat entirely out of his diet, but he has stopped eating pork. “And I used to eat bacon all the time,” he laughs. “I’ll be honest with you, I do miss it, but we just can’t do it.” Since the days of watching “Charlotte’s Web” as a young girl, Holly said, she always wanted a pet pig. Finally she was able to convince Kyle to take the plunge and adopt Gatsby from a breeder in Abilene. Almost immediately, the couple was surprised by the piglet’s intelligence and surprising agility, they said. “He was deceptively quick. It’s ridiculous how quick they are,” Kyle said. “I mean, he was no bigger than your shoe and he would jump on top of the laundry baskets we used to block off other rooms.” Gatsby even took to training quicker than the couple’s two dogs, a puggle named Daisy Mae and a Shih Tzu named Zeus, they said. “The first day we got him, I set him in the yard
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crossings that don’t have crossing guards. Sidewalk construction is estimated to cost about ljworld.com $100,000 and the beacons $140,000. If approved, the 645 New Hampshire St. (News Center) Lawrence, KS 66044 city would pay $40,000 — (785) 843-1000 • (800) 578-8748 20 percent of the total cost. The City Commission GENERAL MANAGER will consider Tuesday alScott Stanford, lowing city staff to move 832-7277, sstanford@ljworld.com forward with the application. Commissioners will EDITORS also decide in what order to Chad Lawhorn, managing editor rank this and the Lawrence 832-6362, clawhorn@ljworld.com Loop project when requestTom Keegan, sports editor ing the funds from KDOT. 832-7147, tkeegan@ljworld.com Cronin, Voss, assistant Ann Gardner, editorial page editor public works director Mark 832-7153, agardner@ljworld.com Thiel and public works di- Kathleen Johnson, advertising manager rector Charles Soules were 832-7223, kjohnson@ljworld.com unavailable Friday to provide comment. OTHER CONTACTS
Jayhawk Boulevard Another transportationrelated item the City Commission will consider Tuesday is providing a local match of $50,000 for Kansas University’s “streetscaping” project along Jayhawk Boulevard. If approved, the $50,000 would come from KDOT funds annually provided for coordinated efforts between Lawrence Transit and KU Transit. KDOT allocated $1,054,945 to the fund in 2015. KU plans to seek the majority of the funding for the project from the KDOT alternative transportation fund — the same grant opportunity the city hopes to apply to for the construction of the Lawrence Loop and Safe Routes to Schools. If awarded the grant, 80 percent, or $200,000, would come from KDOT’s alternative transportation program, and the $50,000 in the city’s and KU’s joint fund would be used as the 20 percent match. According to a proposal, the project includes constructing a bus shelter between Strong Hall and Bailey Hall that would be modeled on a historic trolley shelter at the location in the early 20th century. There would also be kiosks installed that would display information about the historic trolley loop and the evolution of campus transit. A new bus monitor would display bus arrival times, and the area would feature commissioned art.
resigned earlier this year to become town manager of Castle Rock, Colo. The city has not released any personal information about the candidates. However, Greg Nelson, a consultant with executive search firm Ralph Anderson and Associates who is leading the national
Bishop to seek sainthood for chaplain
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Lawrence&State
Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com/local l Monday, November 9, 2015 l 3A
Dole Institute honors veterans Prison wages
could cut into other services
By John Hanna
“
We’re looking at needing to put Topeka — Employee some significant turnover at Kansas pris- money into this.” ons has increased over Associated Press
the past five years, and the state’s corrections secretary and legislators agree that officers’ pay must rise if the state hopes to end a problem that’s now seen as a threat to public safety. But a legislative committee’s endorsement last week of higher wages for uniformed officers raises potentially contentious questions about how to pay for them.
John Young/Journal-World Photo
WORLD WAR II VETERAN JIMMIE HEFT shares a laugh with his dance partner and daughter Suzanne Germes, both of Topeka, during the annual USO-style Tribute to Veterans hosted by the Dole Institute of Politics, 2350 Petefish Drive, on Sunday evening. Wednesday is Veterans Day.
Company brokers game-day home rentals By Conrad Swanson Twitter: @Conrad_Swanson
A Chicago-based website is now offering Lawrence a way to make a bit of money during big game weekends while bringing out-of-towners into the community. Rent Like a Champion is a business that allows
Rent Like a Champion units average $700 per night homeowners who live on or near college campuses to rent out their digs to anyone coming into town, said CEO Mike Doyle. Rentals average around $700 per night, Doyle said. The homeowners get to keep a chunk of the profit while the business
collects a small fee. “But those are homes that are typically sleeping seven or eight people,” he said, “and taking into account the convenience of having a kitchen and a living room, being able to walk to campus and skip traffic and not worry
about parking.” Originally, the business began in South Bend, Ind., where the company saw a wide gap between the number of people coming into town to watch Notre Dame football games and Please see RENTALS, page 4A
— Kansas Sen. Forrest Knox, a Republican from Altoona “We’re looking at needing to put some significant money into this,” Republican Sen. Forrest Knox, of Altoona, said during a corrections panel meeting last week. “We really see a looming catastrophe.” Please see PRISON, page 4A
School assessment results up for review results from tests given in English, math, science and history/governThe Lawrence ment/social studschool board today ies across various will review the disgrade levels. trict’s results of the Student perforfirst state assessmance is categoments under the rized within one of new Common Core SCHOOLS four levels: Level 1, education standards. below grade level The report on the 2014- expectations; Level 2, at 2015 Kansas Assessment grade level but not yet Program results will be on track for college or presented at the school career readiness; Level board meeting this evePlease see SCHOOL, page 4A ning. The report includes By Rochelle Valverde
Twitter: @RochelleVerde
CORRECTIONS
BIRTHS No births were reported Sunday.
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L awrence J ournal -W orld
Ceramics shop opens location in west Lawrence
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nybody who has watched a DirectTV ad lately knows there is an “arts and crafts” Tony Romo out there. Who knows, maybe there is an arts and crafts Bill Self roaming around Lawrence. If so, he’s going to love this news: Downtown Lawrence’s Sunfire Ceramics is expanding with a new west Lawrence location. Sunfire recently opened in the Westgate shopping center, which is the one next to the Dillons store at Sixth and Wakarusa. Owner Cheryl Roth told me that she had been keeping an eye
Town Talk
Chad Lawhorn clawhorn@ljworld.com
on the spot for years, and the timing finally became right to open a location that she hopes will tap into the large market of west Lawrence families. If you are not familiar with Sunfire, then that must mean you don’t
have a 9-year-old daughter. The business allows people to paint pieces of pottery that are then cured in a kiln operated by Sunfire. The business is particularly popular for birthday parties and other such gatherings. (I have so much pottery at my home that in a thousand years when archeologists are digging through the remains, they are going to assume the site was the home of a leader of a great tribe that worshipped purple dinosaurs and anatomically incorrect stick figures.) The store also offers fused glass projects, which is an art form
Repairing cracks not Prison as hard as you think
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A
R
epairing cracks in walls and ceilings can seem like an endless job. With weather changes and the passage of time, homes shift and settle, often reopening cracks that were previously repaired. Use Abatron’s Krack Kote plaster and drywall repair system to fix the problem once and for all. Step 1: Fill cracks and crevices greater than 1/8 inch wide with joint compound. Do not use any other type of spackling or filler. Leave smaller cracks unfilled. Step 2: Remove any loose material around the repair area. Sand the crack and the surrounding area to make it smooth to the touch. Krack Kote only works on clean and smooth surfaces. Step 3: Use a nonresidual cleaner such as TSP or Dirtex to clean the repair area. Step 4: Stir the can of Krack Kote emulsion thoroughly. Add a small amount of water if necessary to create a smooth and spreadable paste. Step 5: Brush Krack Kote over the crack, smoothing it about 2 inches out along either side of the crack. Step 6: Unroll the Krack Kote bridge material and cut a length 2 to 3 inches longer than the crack. Step 7: Press the bridge material into the Krack Kote emulsion. Completely embed the fabric into the Krack Kote. Step 8: Use a putty knife or the Krack Kote spreader to smooth out any air bubbles and
But new, more pessimistic revenue projections last week forced Republican Gov. Sam Brownback’s administration into budget adjustments to avert a deficit. The governor has ruled out further tax increases since he and the GOP-dominated Legislature raised sales and cigarette taxes in July to close an earlier shortfall. Brownback’s stance wrinkles, creating a — and many Republican smooth and seamless lawmakers’ lack of interpatch over the crack. est in another tax debate Step 9: Brush a sec— could force the Legond layer of Krack Kote islature into considering over the repair, featherspending cuts elsewhere, ing the edges to blend perhaps even in aid to pubin with the surrounding lic schools, to boost pay for surface. corrections officers. Step 10: The Krack The Department of Kote and bridge mateCorrections reported last rial should be smooth week that its turnover rate and tight against the for uniformed officers in surface, with no loose adult prisons was 29.7 peredges or imperfections. cent during the fiscal year Allow the area to dry for ending in June, compared 10 minutes. with 20.8 percent five Step 11: Brush a third years before. The turnover layer of Krack Kote over rate among officers at the the patched area. state’s two juvenile corStep 12: Use a putty rectional centers exceeded knife or the Krack Kote 35 percent, and it was 38 spreader to smooth percent at the state’s maxaway any excess emulimum-security prison outsion. The bridge mateside El Dorado. rial should not be visible The Joint Committee on in any way. Feather Corrections and Juvenile the edges of the patch Justice Oversight recomto make it blend well mended last week that the with the surrounding House and Senate budget area. Do not sand the committees hunt next year Krack Kote patch. When for money to raise correcrepairing textured surtions’ officers pay after faces, the texture can be Corrections Secretary Ray duplicated when apRoberts said the state’s plying the third coat of compensation, starting at Krack Kote. Step 13: Once the patch is dry, usually within an hour, prime the area with a good latex primer and paint CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A to match the surrounding surface.
Fix-It Chick
Linda Cottin
Rentals
— Have a home improvement question for the Fix-It Chick? Email it to Linda Cottin at features@ljworld.com.
BUSINESS BRIEFCASE
Chapin
The Kansas Association of Insurance Agents has named Cooper Chapin the Outstanding Young Agent of the Year in Kansas. Chapin specializes in commercial insurance with Stephens/Chapin Insurance in Lawrence. The award recognizes one agent of more than 3,000 nationwide.
— Let us spread the word about key hires and promotions, honors, business events and other business news of community interest. Send Business Briefcase items to news@ljworld.com. The deadline for Monday publication is 10 a.m. Thursday.
the number of rooms available at area hotels, Doyle said. Now the company has expanded to include a total of 21 college markets across the country, and it’s looking to keep growing, Doyle said. At the end of October, the company appeared on ABC’s “Shark Tank”
School CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A
3, at grade level and on track for college or career readiness; and Level 4, exceeds grade level expectations and on track for college or career readiness. In September,
where you break pieces of colored glass, glue them onto a surface, and then they are heated and can be formed into different shapes for jewelry or other purposes. (My kids are learning this. They break a lot of glass items, and soon I’m sure they will start putting them in the oven instead of under the couch.) Sunfire has been open for 18 years in Downtown Lawrence, all of them in the neat old gas station building that sits at 10th and New Hampshire streets. Roth said the west Lawrence location isn’t meant to replace the downtown location.
“We’re happy to be downtown, and we definitely want to remain downtown,” Roth said. Instead, the west Lawrence location is aimed at expanding the store’s capacity. The business now has twice as much party space to offer, twice as much kiln space (they get up to 1,900 degrees, in case you were wondering) and twice as much space for inventory. Roth said she’s optimistic that the west Lawrence location will take off because she thinks Lawrence families are looking for unique activities. “I think there is always something new to try and
do at a store like ours,” Roth said. “It is a nice hands-on activity. It seems like so many of us are in front of a computer a lot these days. It is nice to pull out a paint brush and have a little fun.” As for the exact location Sunfire has moved into — 4821 W. Sixth St., Suite L — it used to house Scratch Bakery. I haven’t heard of the relatively new bakery moving anywhere, so it appears it may no longer be operating a Lawrence retail operation.
$13.61 an hour, is not competitive. In Leavenworth County, where the state has its oldest prison, officers in the county jail start at more than $16, Roberts said. In Ellsworth, home to another prison, manufacturing jobs can start at $18. Roberts said staff “churning” at adult prisons means half of the entry-level officers have six months or less experience. The department said 9.3 percent of its uniformed positions are vacant and it paid nearly $3 million in overtime during the last fiscal year. “The salaries are going to have to be increased,” Roberts told the committee. Increasing wages $1 per hour for uniformed officers at adult prisons would cost the state $968,000, Roberts said. Lawmakers could be looking at spending several million dollars a year to make wages truly competitive. “You have to look at the seriousness of the issue and prioritize,” said Senate Ways and Means Committee Chairman Ty Masterson, an Andover Republican. “There’s nothing more important than public safety.” Laura Calhoun, a 19year officer who represents fellow corrections department employees on the Kansas Organization of State Employees board, is skeptical that lawmakers can follow through. Department officials said after beginning officers get a 5 percent pay raise after their first year,
there’s no guarantee of additional raises later. Despite her seniority, Calhoun makes less than $18 an hour, and she said other issues, such as rising health care costs and a downsizing of the civil service system, add to “a really sad picture.” The state has struggled to keep its budget balanced since Republican lawmakers followed Brownback’s call to slash personal income taxes in 2012 and 2013 in an effort to stimulate the state’s economy. They’ve preserved most of those past income tax cuts, but the debate leading to the sales and cigarette tax increases earlier this year was bitter — and it split Republicans. Masterson and many other GOP lawmakers aren’t interested in backtracking on the income tax cuts. The joint corrections committee’s chairman, Republican Rep. John Rubin, of Shawnee, suggested trimming aid to public schools to boost pay for corrections officers. He argued that schools don’t spend money as efficiently as they could anyway. But Democratic Rep. Kathy Wolfe Moore, of Kansas City, a House Appropriations Committee member, said lawmakers need to reopen the debate over Brownback’s tax policy. Calhoun agreed. “I don’t believe stealing from somewhere else like education is right to do,” Calhoun said. “They’ve got to fix their budget before we can say anything about a pay raise.”
DATEBOOK
and received a total investment of $200,000 from Mark Cuban and Chris Sacca. Doyle said the company hopes to use the money to expand into another 20 markets. “Clearly the model works for football games, but we wanted to know if we could try this for basketball weekends as well,” he said. “We’ve already received interest from dozens of homeowners in Lawrence, and our hope is that for this basketball season we will
be able to do rentals in Lawrence.” Interested homeowners simply need to head to rentlikeachampion.com, answer some basic questions and add a few photos before they’re ready to start renting, Doyle said. Requesting dates for people looking to travel is just as easy, he said. While the website is now ready to accept Lawrence homeowners and renters looking for a place to stay in town, Doyle said the business is
also open to other uses in the future. Rather than limiting themselves to college game days, prospective renters can ask for any other day of the year, Doyle said. This way anyone coming into town for a wedding, reunion, vacation or anything in between might have a place to stay.
statewide scores in reading and math tests were released, showing that most Kansas students are performing at or above grade level but few are on track to be ready for college or careers by the time they graduate from high school. Terry McEwen, director of curriculum, instruction and assessment for the school district,
will present the report on the district’s test results to the school board. In other business, the school board will vote on whether to approve revisions to elementary and middle school schedules for the next two schoolyear calendars to account for the addition of two professional development days. Board members will
also vote on whether to approve construction bids for Schwegler and Deerfield elementary schools. The school board will meet at 7 p.m. at the district offices, 110 McDonald Drive.
— This is an excerpt from Chad Lawhorn’s Town Talk column, which appears each weekday on LJWorld.com.
9 TODAY
Jesse B. Semple Brownbag: Amiri Baraka and the Congress of African People: History and Memory, 11:30 a.m., Langston Hughes Center, Bailey Hall Room 1, 1440 Jayhawk Blvd. Toddler Storytime, 9:30 and 10:30 a.m., Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. Lawrence Public Library Book Van, 1-2 p.m., Vermont Towers, 1101 Vermont St. “Police Brutality: The Centrality of Race and Place,” with Malcolm Dwight Holmes, 3:30-5 p.m., Hall Center for the Humanities, 900 Sunnyside Ave. Learn about Peace Corps and Teach For America Opportunities, 4-6 p.m., Governor’s Room, Kansas Union, 1301 Jayhawk Blvd. Leopardi (Il giovane favoloso), 7 p.m., Liberty Hall, 644 Massachusetts St. A Night of Traditional Drumming at KU, 7:308:30 p.m., Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall, 1530 Naismith Drive. Free.
Submit your stuff: Don’t be shy — we want to publish your event. Submit your item for our calendar by emailing datebook@ljworld.com at least 48 hours before your event. Find more information about these events, and more event listings, at ljworld.com/ events.
— Reporter Conrad Swanson can be reached at cswanson@ljworld.com or 832-7284.
— K-12 education reporter Rochelle Valverde can be reached at rvalverde@ ljworld.com or 832-6314.
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with Christian roots, now labeled nondenominational and with iconography removed. The other is the newly opened Reflection Room — a small, stark meeting alcove in the Kansas Union, which some say was needed because Danforth still doesn’t feel religion-neutral. “Although it is nondenominational, and I don’t believe there are any crosses or iconography in the space ... it is a chapel, and that is very much associated with the Christian faith,” said Lisa Kring, director of building services for KU Memorial Unions. “It really is not a place that I think students of all faiths feel comfortable going to.” Just steps off campus proper, there are multiple places for KU students and employees of differing belief systems to reflect. Those include the Ecumenical Campus Ministries building on Oread Avenue, the St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center on Crescent Road, the Islamic Center of Lawrence on Naismith Drive and Chabad at KU (Jewish center) on 19th Street. KU’s on-campus meditative spaces — which are public property — seem to have evolved without public controversy, though disputes over religious spaces have sprung up at other public schools nationwide, according to a recent Chronicle of Higher Education article. “It’s such a misreading of the First Amendment to say that a public university can’t accommodate religion,” Charles Haynes, vice president of the Newseum Institute and founder of its Religious Freedom Center, said in the Chronicle article. Public institutions can
accommodate students’ religious needs, he says, “in a way that doesn’t take the university to the level of promoting one or more religions over other religions.”
‘Christian living’ Danforth Chapel, dedicated in 1946, was originally constructed “to be of some solution in the development of a Christian atmosphere on the campus,” according to a KU History article on the building. That was the wish of lead donor William Danforth, whose foundation helped construct numerous campus chapels nationally. Then-KU Chancellor Deane Malott told The University Daily Kansan in 1944 that he welcomed construction of the chapel as “a center of emphasis for Christian living for which this University has stood throughout its history” and envisioned it as a quiet, secure place for students to pray and meditate, according to KU History. Danforth stipulated that a copy of Heinrich Hofmann’s painting “Christ in the Garden of Gethsemane” be hung in the chapel, according to KU History. The chapel originally was equipped with an altar set, stained glass windows and an organ. Two inscriptions carved into walls in the chapel’s entryway — each including a Celtic cross — credit the people who enabled its construction and communicate the following purpose, as requested by Danforth: “The Danforth Chapel, dedicated to the worship of God with the prayer that here in communion with the highest those who enter may achieve the spiritual power to aspire nobly, adventure daringly, serve humbly.” It’s not clear exactly when Danforth officially became labeled nondenominational, although it’s been decades. A Journal-
World article from 1964 describes it as nondenominational. Danforth is open from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. weekdays when school is in session, unless otherwise reserved, said Marsha Carrasco Cooper of KU’s Student Involvement and Leadership Center, who handles Danforth reservations. Several campus organizations routinely reserve the chapel for meetings such as weeknight prayer groups, she said. It’s also often reserved on Fridays for wedding rehearsals, although weddings and other events such as christenings or memorial services are mainly on weekends.
Monday, November 9, 2015
glass windows is that of the KU seal. The seal, which also is carved into the building’s exterior, features Moses kneeling before the burning bush. However, there are traditional wooden church pews and the building’s architecture itself — Gothic Revival, according to KU — hearkens from European Christian churches of old. “I think if people adhere to a faith tradition other than Christianity, they may be a little hesitant to go in there,” Holcombe said.
solution later on.” Student Senate, which is funding reconstruction of the Burge Union, has stipulated that the new building include a Reflection Room. Kring said it’s yet to be decided whether the Reflection Room would move to the Burge or whether campus would just have two.
Controversy in Wichita At Wichita State a committee is now studying “best practices” for oncampus interfaith spaces and will recommend any further changes it believes Reflection Room should happen, President KU Student Senate, the John Bardo wrote in a Office of Diversity and Eq- statement last month. uity and the Union spearBardo reiterated that headed the effort that led Wichita State’s Harvey D. Danforth’s transition to Alcove A, a small room Grace Memorial Chapel, All religious iconogranear the cafeteria on the a modern-style building phy that reasonably could third floor of the Union, constructed in the 1960s, be removed from Danbecoming the Reflection has been all-faith from the forth is now gone. Room this semester. beginning. There’s no altar set, or “We must continue to Early records show the an altar to put it on; the work together and creintent was for no symnooks on either side of the ate inclusive spaces so bols from any religion apse are empty; and the everyone feels valued at — a cross, crucifix, Star painting of Christ is no KU,” Nate Thomas, KU of David, prayer rug, icon longer there. vice provost for diversity screen or anything else — “It really didn’t have and equity, said in a news to be installed in the charelease publicizing the very many adornments, pel, he said, although such room. even to start with,” resymbols may be brought There are blank marker into the chapel for use in called Thad Holcombe, boards on the walls and a longtime Ecumenireligious services and then handful of movable chairs removed. cal Campus Ministries inside the room, and not minister who retired in A campus committee much else. 2013. “When the chapel with input from a ChrisA typed memo on the was redone, that’s when it tian minister, Christian really cleaned up, as far as door calls the room a place students and Muslim stuwhere students, faculty anything at all.” dents approved removing During a major renova- and staff “of all faiths and the pews, which makes the beliefs can access peacetion completed in 2007, small chapel more flexible ful space for reflection, the wall where the paintfor uses including Musmeditation or prayer.” The lim prayer and also Bible ing — which measures room is available anytime study groups, according to 52-by-70 inches — once hung was removed to cre- the Union is open unless Wichita State. reserved for Office of Diate a hallway, leaving no “This isn’t just about “suitable” place to display versity and Equity use. Christians and Muslims There are also rules it in the renovated chapel, or ‘Christians versus listed for using the room. KU spokeswoman Erinn Muslims,’ as we’ve seen Candles, incense or other Barcomb-Peterson said. it described on social She said the painting now fumes are not allowed. media,” Bardo said. “Grace Noise including conversa- Chapel cannot be a onehangs in a KU Libraries tion, singing or chanting office. or two-religion space. ... is prohibited. No sleeping, Grace Chapel can serve The inscriptions and food or use of electronic their Celtic crosses do the needs of all faiths.” devices. remain, as does a stone Kring said Alcove A is Celtic cross atop the roof — KU and higher ed reporter Sara a temporary home for the outside, and the organ. Shepherd can be reached at sshepReflection Room, “a stopThe only imagery in herd@ljworld.com or 832-7187. Danforth’s colorful stained gap for a more intentional
| 5A
ON THE RECORD Marriages Jodie Buster, 30, Lawrence, and Daniel Little, 31, Lawrence. Harvey Lee Bost, 61, Lawrence, and Sheila Ann Vanderhoff, 59, Eudora. Jared Louis Munoz, 30, Lawrence, and Jessica Renee Birdcreek, 33, Lawrence. Kerry Alan Nowak, 41, Eudora, and Angela Mae Keeton, 36, Eudora. William Edward Seldenright, 60, Lawrence, and Katrina Ann Diaz, 52, Lawrence. Malakai A. Edison, 33, Lawrence, and Kira Alexander, 26, Lawrence. Lee Sheldon, 26, Baldwin City, and Morgyn Mitchell, 19, Baldwin City. Melissa JoAnn Fitzgerald, 28, Lawrence, and Philip Alvie Knight, 39, Lawrence. Adam David Braun, 34, Lawrence, and Cassandra Lynn Mesick, 33, Lawrence. Lucy Landis, 26, Murphy, N.C., and Michael Ellis, 26, Shawnee. Cory Allan Fessendon, 38, Lawrence, and Jennifer Dawn Stones, 41, Lawrence. Sean Michael Nordlund, 34, Lawrence, and Lauren Lynette Lentz, 26, Lawrence. Alisha Marie Barnes, 24, Tonganoxie, and Cameron Lee Fish, 25, Tonganoxie. Shawn Marie Hastie, 39, Lawrence, and Paul Harvey Morgan, 42, Lawrence. Andrea Marie Brennan, 29, Lawrence, and Robert Joseph Patty, 30, Lawrence.
Bankruptcies Deanna Tetuan, 501 Nigel Drive, Lawrence. Steven Lee Ritchie and Marilyn Suzanne Ritchie, 2725 Rawhide Lane, Lawrence. Michelle Ann Williams, 870 East 1050 Road, Lawrence. David Allen Wertz, 1846 Alabama St., Lawrence. Kenneth Jamaal Smith, 1107 George Court, Apt. 3, Lawrence. Shelli Ann Thompson, 929 E. 14th St., Lawrence. Jacob Ellis Dee, 2438 Lancaster Drive, Lawrence. Toneesha Rayshea Hackney, 2500 W. Sixth St., Apt. 404, Lawrence.
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Learning truth may be difficult, but important Dear Annie: I am a 17-year-old female. I have been struggling with depression since I was young. I have had traumatic events happen in my life. Both of my parents died before I was 13. My mother was abusive and my father had to be both mother and father to me. I also have a younger brother. I currently live in foster care. I have recently wanted to learn more about my past. I’ve been told I should move on and not dwell on what I can’t change. But I have a lot of questions and some guilt about how I handled things when I was younger. Am I doing the right thing by pursuing this or am I just hurting myself? — Battle with Wanting to Know
Annie’s Mailbox
Marcy Sugar and Kathy Mitchell
anniesmailbox@comcast.net
More Dear Battle: We think you deserve to know the truth. But knowing about your past involves the bad as well as the good. Would it be hurtful? Perhaps. You can’t make amends for past mistakes if you are unaware of them. But if you had an abusive mother, your behavior was in response to hers, and you may be feeling guilt for something that is not your
Different views of Vietnam “Independent Lens” (9 p.m., PBS, TV-14, check local listings) returns for its 17th season, celebrating Veterans Day early with the documentary “Stray Dog.” The film follows Ron Hall, who gave himself the “Stray Dog” moniker to describe his wandering ways as a man still trying to make sense of his Vietnam experience, four decades after the war’s conclusion. The film follows Ron in the At Ease RV park that he owns and operates with his new bride, a Mexican immigrant who is trying to teach him Spanish and perhaps get him to relax a little bit and accept and forgive himself. He still rides his motorcycle with fellow veterans, often to events honoring their fallen comrades. ‘‘Stray Dog” was directed by Debra Granik, who was struck by Ron’s story and personality when she cast him in her Oscarnominated 2010 drama “Winter’s Bone,” a remarkable film probably best known for introducing audiences to a young actress named Jennifer Lawrence.
The second season of “Fargo” (9 p.m., FX, TV-MA) has made interesting use of its historical setting. The year 1979 was chosen for more than just hairstyles, fashion and music. Racism, feminism and Native American issues have surfaced and state policeman Lou Solverson (Patrick Wilson) seems increasingly convinced that his Vietnam War experiences are something he can’t entirely leave behind. Earlier in the season, his World War II vet father-in-law (Ted Danson) suggested that some of the violence of that war had followed the soldiers home. And lately Lou has begun to feel haunted, even attributing his wife’s cancer to a pervading poison in the country’s spirit. Tonight’s episode takes the historical themes of the show to a strange new level when Lou is assigned security detail for presidential candidate Ronald Reagan (Bruce Campbell). Yes, the same Bruce Campbell from the “Evil Dead” movies and the new Starz series “Ash vs Evil Dead.” Campbell does a credible job as the Gipper, and shares a rather remarkable scene with Wilson. Alone with the candidate in the men’s room, Lou seeks some kind of understanding of his Vietnam experience, something that political pieties and Hollywood anecdotes fail to provide.
Tonight’s other highlights
Superman’s nemesis targets his cousin on “Supergirl” (7 p.m., CBS, TV-PG).
The first night of the live playoffs on “The Voice” (7 p.m., NBC, TV-PG).
Galavan wants Barbara to target Gordon on “Gotham” (7 p.m., Fox, TV-14).
Greg has harsh words for Rebecca on “Crazy Ex-Girlfriend” (7 p.m., CW, TV-14).
fault. Also, please look into counseling to help you sort through any negative feelings that surface. Dear Annie: For a number of years, I worked with a man who shared words of wisdom spoken to him on his wedding day. His brand new fatherin-law told him that he could either be right or he could be happy, but not both. So my pal developed a reply to his wife which went something like this: “You’re right, Honey, I don’t know how you put up with me. I’m a jerk.” He realized early on that he didn’t have to “win” an argument. Instead he “won” his happiness. Arguments solve nothing. A difference of opinion is OK. If
JACQUELINE BIGAR’S STARS
For Monday, Nov. 9: This year you will do your fair share of reflection on various matters of importance to you. Learn to let go. If you are single, be as discriminating as possible. If you are attached, the two of you benefit from frequent getaways together. 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) Have an important oneon-one conversation. Sensitivity remains key. Tonight: Stay open. Taurus (April 20-May 20) You’ll hear some very different opinions from someone you consider to be a bit off-thewall. Tonight: Sort through invitations. Gemini (May 21-June 20) You will throw yourself into your work or a project. A friend suddenly could show up and seek your company. Tonight: Off to the gym. Cancer (June 21-July 22) Your creativity opens you up to a new environment full of possibilities. Enrich your life by opening up to new ideas. Tonight: Pretend it isn’t Monday. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) Communication forces thought and perhaps a wild action or two. Consider staying close to home. Tonight: Where you can relax. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Your sense of direction
two people always agree, then only one of them is doing their own thinking. — Now I Know Dear Now: While we realize that many husbands find this advice to be worthwhile, we find it a bit condescending to women. But you are absolutely right that many arguments can be resolved if one party simply says, “You’re right. I’m sorry.” And it doesn’t matter which person.
— Send questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or Annie’s Mailbox, P.O. Box 118190 Chicago, IL 60611.
jacquelinebigar.com
and your long-term goals need to conform to your budget. Tonight: Speak your mind. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) You could be overly cautious of a money matter. How you handle yourself will be important. Tonight: In the moment. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) You have more dynamic energy than you realize. Handle an important matter privately. Tonight: Be spontaneous. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Understand that others might not get where you are coming from right away. Tonight: Where the crowds are. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) You know what you want, yet others might not want to go along with your ideas. Tonight: At a favorite place with a friend. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Take the lead in a project, and you’ll be much happier as a result. The task might be complicated. Tonight: Relax at home. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) A partner clearly has a say in the events about to take place. You might want to have a discussion with this person, but you don’t want him or her to dominate the talk. Tonight: Fun for two!
UNIVERSAL CROSSWORD Universal Crossword Edited by Timothy E. Parker November 9, 2015
ACROSS 1 Ready for harvest 5 Like the Beverly Hills Hotel 9 F on a physics exam 14 Country for some Kurds 15 Hawaii’s “Gathering Place” 16 The 28-Across in proteins 17 Part of a debate 20 Follow, as consequences 21 Some breakfast bars 22 What some salons specialize in 25 General, to a Turk 26 “Toodle-oo!” in 15-Across 28 Acetic or boric 32 Devilish 37 “+” site 38 It’s not on the standard bill 41 Sierra ___ 42 Like some winds 43 Ill at ___ (uncomfortable) 44 Sundance’s sidekick 46 Matterhorn, for one 47 Mascara target
53 Lawmakers, essentially 58 Brown photo tint 59 Maximum effort 62 Athenian marketplace 63 Flue dirt 64 Give a push to 65 Runs gracefully 66 “Ods bodkins!” 67 Some deli loaves DOWN 1 Performed a cooking chore 2 Literary device 3 Break in the action 4 Bored feeling 5 “The Purloined Letter” author 6 Boat propeller? 7 Rug that’s tough to vacuum 8 Cry of triumph 9 Flora’s partner 10 Pistol fill 11 Cambodian currency 12 Fictionalized governess in Siam 13 They may be successfully connected 18 Pins to be bowled over 19 Madly in love
23 Big, splashy party 24 Hairline cut 27 Four couples 28 Pre-deal poker requirement 29 Coconut husk fiber 30 False thing to worship 31 “... which nobody can ___” 32 Chip’s cartoon chum 33 Thought 34 Public scenes 35 “Stand By Me” singer King 36 Offering from Keats 37 Scream “Stella,” for instance 39 Competition for the swift 40 Covered with 63-Across
44 Black Caucus, e.g. 45 Revolted or rebelled 46 One place to find America 48 Suffix for extremists 49 Large-eyed primate 50 Mimic’s skill 51 Scorch slightly 52 Can’t stand at all 53 Abbreviation meaning “and others” 54 NASA postponement 55 Situated above 56 Be concerned 57 Unhealthy air component 60 Wingless extinct bird 61 “___ better be good!”
PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER
11/8
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SUM PLACE By Rob Lee
11/9
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek
Unscramble these four Jumbles, one letter to each square, to form four ordinary words.
— The astrological forecast should be read for entertainment only.
SOKIK ©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.
NERDT DOGRUN
HBRARO
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6A
Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.
A: Saturday’s
(Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: GLAZE MUDDY OPENLY CLAMOR Answer: He had too much cake for his 18th birthday and was now a — “GROAN”-UP
BECKER ON BRIDGE
Opinion
Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com l Monday, November 9, 2015
U.S. drawn in by clever Chalabi
EDITORIALS
Essential support Kansas University would be a far different place without the generous support of private donors.
T
he record amount of support supplied last year by the Kansas University Endowment Association is a vivid reminder of the vital role private giving plays in the life of the university. KU Endowment announced last week that it had supplied $184.6 million in fiscal year 2015 to support students, faculty and facilities at KU. That’s a whopping 48 percent more than the previous year. Several large construction projects contributed to the spike: the $70 million Capitol Federal Hall, which will house the KU School of Business; the $18 million DeBruce Center, which will house the “Original Rules of Basket Ball” penned by James Naismith; and the $11.2 million McCarthy Hall, the new apartment building where the men’s basketball players now live. In addition to the Endowment investment in campus landscaping, buildings and programs, Endowment dollars also went to help support more than 6,500 students and 190 endowed professors and faculty members at KU. It’s hard to imagine what KU would be without the loyal and growing support of private donors. Those private dollars have been essential to maintain and increase the university’s level of excellence as the percentage of KU’s operating budget covered by state funding has declined. In too many cases, legislators have used KU’s robust endowment as an excuse for providing less state funding for the state’s largest public university. Rather than allowing the generosity of private givers to provide the extras KU needs to become a true world-class university, state legislators have forced KU to use private money to pay for basic needs that should be covered by the state. Figures supplied by the KU Endowment Association show steady increases in support over the last several years, and Endowment officials say they expect that trend to continue. That’s great news for KU, its students and faculty and a tribute to the fundraising ability and stewardship of KU Endowment.
Washington — Among the remarkable facts about Ahmed Chalabi was that after turning Iraq and America upside down and unleashing all the gods and devils of war, he died of natural causes in Baghdad last week. Few people have changed the course of the last few decades more, through the force of personality, than did Chalabi. Historians will argue the causes and consequences of the Iraq War, but my own guess is that if it hadn’t been for Chalabi, Saddam Hussein or one of his odious sons or henchmen would probably be ruling Iraq today. Chalabi tirelessly lobbied to convince an America yearning for revenge after 9/11 to destroy his nemesis and that of Iran, his most steadfast patron. Iraqis must judge whether this outcome was better for their country, but it certainly has proved worse for America. Philosophers have debated for centuries what truly drives history. Is it great men and women and their worldhistorical ideas, as Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel contended? Or is there a deeper force embedded in technology and economics (the “means of production,” as Karl Marx had it) that determines the story? Does God, however named, have a plan? Chalabi led me to believe that it was individuals who made the difference. There was nothing inevitable about America’s invasion of Iraq and the catastrophic consequences that have flowed from the decision. Like most
David Ignatius
davidignatius@washpost.com
“
Chalabi tirelessly lobbied to convince an America yearning for revenge after 9/11 to destroy his nemesis and that of Iran, his most steadfast patron. Iraqis must judge whether this outcome was better for their country, but it certainly has proved worse for America.” big things in life, this happened at the margins. If Chalabi hadn’t lectured regularly at Professor Fouad Ajami’s class at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies during the 1990s; if Paul Wolfowitz, later the deputy defense secretary, hadn’t been dean of that school then; if Wolfowitz and Vice President Dick Cheney hadn’t been enamored of Chalabi’s call to strike at the heart of Arab power by toppling Saddam; if Cheney hadn’t disdained the CIA, which tried to warn policymakers that Chalabi was unreliable... . None of it was foreordained.
Chalabi was truly an operator — banker, politician, connoisseur, dirty-tricks coordinator and spy all thrown into one. I first met him in 1991 when he was helping international detective Jules Kroll recover Kuwaiti assets stolen by Iraq during its 1990 invasion. I wrote a novel, “The Bank of Fear,” based partly on that research. Chalabi could be uncommonly generous with his time and brilliance, but he had complicated personal agendas, too, which were sometimes well-disguised. During that time, I met Ayad Allawi, Chalabi’s great rival and eventually Iraq’s deputy prime minister. Over subsequent years, Chalabi grew distant, and by the time of his celebrity in the run-up to the Iraq War, we were barely speaking. My own mistakes in supporting the Iraq invasion, summarized in a 2013 column (http:// wapo.st/1Q7onYe), cannot be explained by Chalabi or his WMD propaganda. Chalabi, like his Iranian friends, played a long game in Iraq. When I called on him in Baghdad in April 2003, after the U.S. military had accomplished his dream of toppling Saddam, one of his aides barred the door, screaming that I was an “Allawi lover.” Chalabi emerged, his genial round face peering out from behind the door: “Now, now. We know David,” he said soothingly, taking me by the hand and leading me into his compound. I watched over the next sev-
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100
From the Lawrence Daily Journal-World for Nov. 9, 1915: years “After the Neago braska game, IN 1915 what? Win or lose, the next day, Sunday the fourteenth, is University Sunday in the Lawrence churches. Are you planning to go to church that day, Friend Student? Try it this once, if you are not a regular attendant. This special day is set apart for students because many have not been taking advantage of church services.” — Compiled by Sarah St. John
The Journal-World welcomes letters to the Public Forum. Letters should be 250 words or less, be of public interest and avoid namecalling and libelous language. The Journal-World reserves the right to edit letters, as long as viewpoints are not altered. By submitting letters, you grant the Journal-World a nonexclusive license to publish, copy and distribute your work, while acknowledging that you are the author of the work. Letters must bear the name, address and telephone number of the writer. Letters may be submitted by mail to Box 888, Lawrence, KS, 66044 or by email to: letters@ljworld.com.
President, Newspapers Division
eral hours as he insisted that he was the Pentagon’s man in Baghdad, and that other Iraqis seeking U.S. support were out of luck. The CIA got many things wrong about Iraq, but it had Chalabi right early on. The agency judged him as unreliable — and, more important, a man who had deep links with the revolutionary regime in Iran. It’s one of the bizarre paradoxes of history that Chalabi was embraced by the proIsrael neo-conservative elite even as he was in contact with an Iran that sought Israel’s destruction. How did that happen? A whole library full of historians probably couldn’t explain it. It wasn’t a conspiracy. It was a mistake. Chalabi did one thing that was surprising, given his cosmopolitan ways. He stayed on in Iraq, dickering with various factions for a slice of power, hoping always that he would emerge as a compromise candidate for prime minister. He had the quality so lacking in U.S. policy — persistence. A two-word lesson from this extraordinary life: Be careful. History doesn’t have a “right side” or an ascending path toward the light. Passionate, worldchanging people are sometimes liars, too. Americans need to know more than we do about the Middle East, before we wander into the web of a man as clever and supple as Chalabi.
OLD HOME TOWN
Letters Policy
Journal-World
7A
Read more Old Home Town at LJWorld.com/news/lawrence/ history/old_home_town.
Republicans need to set policy vision “Where there is no vision, the people perish … “ (Proverbs 29:18, KJV) It was George H.W. Bush who reportedly dismissed an idea from a friend that he should spend time at Camp David thinking about what he might do should he become president. According to a January 26, 1987 article in Time magazine, Bush is said to have dismissed the suggestion with this line: “Oh, the vision thing.” Now comes the new speaker of the House, Rep. Paul Ryan, who is not only embracing the “vision thing,” but is accusing his fellow Republicans of not having any vision at all. Appearing last weekend on “Fox News Sunday,” Ryan said, “We’ve been too timid on policy. We’ve been too timid on vision — we have none. We fight over tactics because we don’t have a vision.” He’s right. Ryan might have also added that for too long Republicans have allowed the left to set the agenda and then spent too much time trying to prove they are not who the Democrats say they are. Continued Ryan: “We have to have a vision and offer an alternative to this
Cal Thomas tcaeditors@tribune.com
“
Ryan’s visionary approach won’t be risky if he demonstrates how Republican ideas have solved problems.”
country so that they can see that if we get the chance to lead, if we get the presidency and if we keep Congress, this is what it will look like; this is how we’ll fix the problems working families are facing.” That Ryan has to state what ought to be obvious is further evidence that too many Republicans are politically blind. Appearing the same day on “Face the Nation” on CBS, Ryan added: “We’ve taken plenty of tactical risks here in Congress. I believe it’s time to take some policy risks.” An indication of the uphill challenge Ryan faces can be
found in a recent New York Times story: “…the two parties do not just disagree on solutions to domestic and foreign policy issues — they do not even agree on what the issues are.” Here’s a radical idea: Ask the people. A major reason for the cynicism in America and the rise of “outsiders” in the current presidential campaign may be that most voters think members of Congress care more about their careers than the people they are supposed to represent. According to a July Quinnipiac University poll, the most important issues for voters leading into the 2016 general election are the economy, health care and terrorism. Ryan should start with these and propose solutions that have worked in the past and could work again. Republicans have to stop allowing Democrats to set the agenda. There is not a single problem facing this country that can’t be solved if the general welfare is put ahead of the welfare of politicians. Ryan’s visionary approach won’t be risky if he demonstrates how Republican ideas have solved problems. These ideas work
at the state level, where Republican governors and legislators are cutting taxes, streamlining government and creating jobs. He should lead a team off defense and into offense, promoting policies that offer hope, optimism and success, rather than policies that may sound and feel good at the moment. The increasingly (un) Affordable Care Act is just one of numerous government programs that sound good at the start, but don’t live up to the hype. Ryan and the Republican majority can begin with something his Catholic Church teaches: repentance. He should acknowledge the mess politicians have made, apologize to taxpayers and voters and vow — yes, vow — to begin to travel a different path. This will also require Americans who have come to expect more from government than it can, or should, deliver also to repent and set off on a new direction. Too much reliance on government has led to addiction and dependency. Self-reliance is in America’s DNA, but it may take the equivalent of 20/20 vision to rediscover it. — Cal Thomas is a columnist for Tribune Content Agency.
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TODAY
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Monday, November 9, 2015
TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY
FRIDAY
THURSDAY
L awrence J ournal -W orld
Lawrence man arrested on suspicion of rape say Sunday morning whether that was the location of the incident or whether the man knew his victim, stating that the investigation is ongoing. No other information regarding the incident was provided Sunday. “We will not be releasing any additional information today,” police spokesman Sgt. Trent McKinley said in an email Sunday evening. “An internal briefing with detectives
Staff Reports Plenty of sun
Clouds and sun; breezy, mild
Showers and gusty thunderstorms
Breezy in the morning; sunny
Plenty of sunshine
High 61° Low 40° POP: 0%
High 66° Low 55° POP: 10%
High 65° Low 38° POP: 65%
High 59° Low 31° POP: 5%
High 52° Low 24° POP: 10%
Wind S 6-12 mph
Wind S 10-20 mph
Wind SSW 15-25 mph
Wind WNW 8-16 mph
Wind WNW 8-16 mph
POP: Probability of Precipitation
Kearney 59/36
McCook 61/29 Oberlin 61/33
Clarinda 61/39
Lincoln 64/40
Grand Island 61/37
Beatrice 63/41
St. Joseph 60/37 Chillicothe 59/33
Sabetha 60/43
Concordia 63/42
Centerville 56/32
Kansas City Marshall Manhattan 61/43 58/36 Goodland Salina 66/42 Oakley Kansas City Topeka 60/32 67/44 60/35 62/41 Lawrence 60/41 Sedalia 61/40 Emporia Great Bend 59/36 62/41 63/42 Nevada Dodge City Chanute 61/36 62/40 Hutchinson 62/41 Garden City 65/44 62/34 Springfield Wichita Pratt Liberal Coffeyville Joplin 59/37 66/47 62/44 66/38 62/42 63/41 Hays Russell 63/38 64/41
A 36-year-old Lawrence man was arrested early Sunday morning on suspicion of six charges, including aggravated burglary, aggravated kidnapping and rape. The arrest occurred in the 800 block of Missouri Street at 2:32 a.m., according to the Douglas County Sheriff’s Office booking log. Lawrence Police Sgt. Max Miller would not
on the weekend cases is planned for tomorrow.” The man is being held without bond in the Douglas County Jail on suspicion of six charges: aggravated burglary, kidnapping, aggravated kidnapping, rape by force or fear, criminal threat and aggravated criminal sodomy. The Journal-World typically does not identify suspects in sex crimes unless they have been convicted.
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
LAWRENCE ALMANAC
Through 8 p.m. Sunday.
Temperature High/low Normal high/low today Record high today Record low today
61°/27° 57°/36° 83° in 1980 22° in 2008
Precipitation in inches 24 hours through 8 p.m. yest. 0.00 Month to date 0.13 Normal month to date 0.72 Year to date 34.78 Normal year to date 36.81
REGIONAL CITIES
Today Tue. Today Tue. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Atchison 61 40 s 65 54 pc Independence 64 39 pc 69 58 pc 66 44 s 70 54 pc Belton 59 41 pc 65 56 pc Fort Riley 58 39 pc 64 54 pc Burlington 62 42 s 68 57 pc Olathe Coffeyville 63 41 pc 69 58 pc Osage Beach 59 32 pc 69 54 pc Osage City 63 42 s 68 57 pc Concordia 63 42 s 65 51 s Ottawa 62 39 pc 65 56 pc Dodge City 62 40 s 70 38 s 66 47 s 73 57 pc Holton 63 43 s 67 55 pc Wichita Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
NATIONAL FORECAST
New
First
Full
Last
Nov 11
Nov 19
Nov 25
Dec 3
LAKE LEVELS
As of 7 a.m. Sunday Lake
Level (ft)
Clinton Perry Pomona
Discharge (cfs)
876.82 892.05 973.35
Family fun event with activities & games!
Tue. 6:58 a.m. 5:11 p.m. 5:47 a.m. 4:55 p.m.
7 25 15
FREE ADMISSION
Concession stand will be open.
Shown are today’s noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for today.
Fronts Cold
INTERNATIONAL CITIES Today Hi Lo W 90 78 pc 57 55 c 71 56 s 73 58 pc 92 79 t 52 34 s 59 51 sh 57 51 c 83 63 c 74 60 s 37 21 sf 60 55 r 63 46 s 84 73 pc 61 52 sh 49 38 sh 57 56 c 71 45 s 73 52 pc 53 32 s 36 32 c 84 62 pc 54 45 c 62 49 pc 85 75 c 70 50 s 57 39 c 88 78 t 49 39 r 75 61 pc 72 63 r 52 36 s 50 38 pc 64 54 sh 54 48 sh 50 35 pc
Hi 91 59 74 71 91 48 59 58 79 77 38 61 59 82 63 48 61 72 74 52 37 84 52 58 89 68 57 88 46 80 67 48 48 63 56 44
Tue. Lo W 77 pc 53 sh 56 s 54 pc 79 t 39 c 52 sh 50 pc 57 c 60 s 22 s 51 sh 40 pc 74 pc 48 pc 36 sh 54 c 44 s 52 s 35 pc 34 r 63 pc 45 c 48 pc 75 t 48 pc 41 pc 78 t 37 pc 65 pc 55 sh 41 r 42 c 52 pc 51 sh 34 c
Precipitation
Warm Stationary
Showers T-storms
7:30
Flurries
Snow
Ice
Today Tue. Today Tue. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Memphis 62 45 pc 69 55 c Albuquerque 60 37 s 59 33 s Miami 87 74 pc 88 74 c Anchorage 36 26 c 32 23 sf 54 36 s 54 39 pc Atlanta 53 49 r 65 46 pc Milwaukee Minneapolis 57 39 pc 55 42 pc Austin 69 52 pc 76 66 c Nashville 52 45 r 61 45 c Baltimore 56 50 pc 64 46 r Birmingham 58 48 r 68 48 pc New Orleans 73 59 pc 75 61 pc 60 51 pc 60 51 r Boise 46 32 sh 46 29 pc New York Omaha 61 41 s 60 46 pc Boston 60 43 s 57 45 r Orlando 86 71 pc 84 60 pc Buffalo 57 41 s 53 44 r 62 53 pc 66 52 r Cheyenne 57 30 s 53 26 pc Philadelphia 79 54 s 68 45 pc Chicago 54 33 s 56 41 pc Phoenix 58 48 pc 54 42 r Cincinnati 52 42 sh 57 36 pc Pittsburgh Portland, ME 57 33 s 55 39 pc Cleveland 59 44 s 55 40 r Portland, OR 53 40 sh 53 46 c Dallas 65 53 pc 73 63 c 45 30 sn 44 17 s Denver 59 36 s 57 28 pc Reno Richmond 56 54 r 66 45 r Des Moines 58 36 s 59 49 c Sacramento 57 42 t 60 37 s Detroit 57 40 s 53 34 r St. Louis 58 36 s 63 50 s El Paso 72 47 s 74 43 s Fairbanks 27 7 sn 16 7 pc Salt Lake City 58 37 sh 45 34 c 70 59 pc 68 52 pc Honolulu 87 76 pc 86 75 pc San Diego Houston 73 53 pc 77 65 pc San Francisco 59 47 t 61 47 s 51 40 c 50 44 c Indianapolis 56 37 sh 58 37 pc Seattle 46 31 r 43 33 c Kansas City 60 41 pc 65 54 pc Spokane 78 48 s 68 39 pc Las Vegas 69 47 pc 61 40 pc Tucson Tulsa 65 46 s 72 62 pc Little Rock 63 44 pc 69 57 c 58 54 pc 63 50 r Los Angeles 68 51 c 66 44 pc Wash., DC National extremes yesterday for the 48 contiguous states High: Zephyrhills, FL 91° Low: West Yellowstone, MT 3°
WEATHER HISTORY
WEATHER TRIVIA™
Q:
On Nov. 9, 2001, Rapid City, S.D., had a high of 75 degrees, a new record for date.
MONDAY Prime Time WOW DTV DISH 7 PM
Rain
-10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s National Summary: A chilly rain, some heavy, will continue to spread across the Southeast today, while dry weather hangs on in the Northeast. The West will be cool with rain showers and mountain snow.
Does all of Earth get about the same duration of sunlight in a year? Yes
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015
Cities Acapulco Amsterdam Athens Baghdad Bangkok Beijing Berlin Brussels Buenos Aires Cairo Calgary Dublin Geneva Hong Kong Jerusalem Kabul London Madrid Mexico City Montreal Moscow New Delhi Oslo Paris Rio de Janeiro Rome Seoul Singapore Stockholm Sydney Tokyo Toronto Vancouver Vienna Warsaw Winnipeg
More information at www.LawrenceRecycles.org 832-3030
MOVIES 8 PM
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FOX 4 at 9 PM (N)
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TMZ (N)
Seinfeld
Scorpion “Area 51”
NCIS: Los Angeles
News
Late Show-Colbert
5
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7
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19 Antiques Roadshow Antiques Roadshow Independent Lens (N)
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Scorpion “Area 51”
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SciTech
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Castle “Cool Boys” NCIS: Los Angeles
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Murder
World
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Jimmy Kimmel Live Nightline
Business C. Rose
News
Late Show-Colbert
Corden
News
Tonight Show
Meyers
Simpson Fam Guy Fam Guy American
Jane the Virgin (N)
News
Two Men Mod Fam Mod Fam Tosh.0
Criminal Minds
Criminal Minds
Criminal Minds
Criminal Minds
Wild
6 News
The
6 News
Office
Criminal Minds
Cable Channels WOW!6 6 WGN-A CITY
Kitchen
Pets
Movie
25
USD497 26
››‡ Look Who’s Talking (1989)
City Bulletin Board, Commission Meetings
City Bulletin Board
School Board Information
School Board Information
ESPN2 34 209 144 2015 World Series of Poker Final Table. From Las Vegas. (N) 36 672
eCollege Football Utah at Washington. (Taped)
NBCSN 38 603 151 FLW FNC
Mother
Hunter
Hunting
39 360 205 The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File (N)
CNBC 40 355 208 Shark Tank MSNBC 41 356 209 All In With Chris
Blue
Premier
SportsCenter (N) (Live) 2015 World Series of Poker Final Table. Big 12
Snyder
Blazers
Manchester Mondays
Big 12 No-Huddle
Hannity (N)
The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File
Shark Tank
Shark Tank
The Profit
The Profit
Rachel Maddow
The Last Word
All In With Chris
Rachel Maddow
CNN
44 202 200 Anderson Cooper
Anderson Cooper
CNN Tonight
Anderson Cooper
Newsroom
TNT
45 245 138 Major Crimes
Major Crimes (N)
Legends (N)
Major Crimes
Legends
USA
46 242 105 WWE Monday Night RAW (N) (Live)
A&E
47 265 118 The Haunting Of...
TRUTV 48 246 204 Jokers
Jokers
Mod Fam Mod Fam ››› Skyfall (2012)
The Haunting Of...
Cursed: Witch
The Haunting Of...
The Haunting Of...
Jokers
Jokers
Billy
Jokers
Jokers
Broke
Conan
Jokers
Super
AMC
50 254 130 ›››‡ The Matrix (1999, Science Fiction) Keanu Reeves.
TBS
51 247 139 Fam Guy Fam Guy American American Big Bang Big Bang Conan (N)
BRAVO 52 237 129 Ladies of London HIST
54 269 120 To Be Announced
SYFY 55 244 122 Live Free-Die
Mother
››› Saturday Night Fever (1977, Drama) John Travolta.
ESPN 33 206 140 eNFL Football Chicago Bears at San Diego Chargers. (Live) FSM
Tower Cam/Weather
307 239 Funny Home Videos Funny Home Videos Funny Home Videos Manhattan h
THIS TV 19
WOW DTV DISH 7 PM
SPORTS 7:30
8 PM
8:30
November 9, 2015 9 PM
9:30
10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30
Cable Channels cont’d
5 8
BEST BETS
10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30
Network Channels
M
PHOTO BOOTH WITH BIG JAY!
A:
Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset
Friday, Nov. 13th, 3pm-6pm
Sports Pavilion Lawrence, 100 Rock Chalk Ln.
SUN & MOON Today 6:56 a.m. 5:12 p.m. 4:51 a.m. 4:22 p.m.
1 year of the City’s Residential Recycling Program
Jokers
›››‡ The Raid: Redemption (2011)
Vanderpump Rules Après Ski (N)
Happens Vanderpump Rules Après
Bigfoot Captured (N)
The Curse of
›› Aeon Flux (2005) Charlize Theron.
Mortal Instruments
To Be Announced
FX 56 COM 58 E! 59 CMT 60 GAC 61 BET 64 VH1 66 TRV 67 TLC 68 LIFE 69 LMN 70 FOOD 72 HGTV 73 NICK 76 DISNXD 77 DISN 78 TOON 79 DSC 81 FAM 82 NGC 83 HALL 84 ANML 85 TVL 86 TBN 90 EWTN 91 RLTV 93 CSPAN2 95 CSPAN 96 ID 101 AHC 102 OWN 103 WEA 116 TCM 162 HBO MAX SHOW ENC STRZ
401 411 421 440 451
248 249 236 327 326 329 335 277 280 252 253 231 229 299 292 290 296 278 311 276 312 282 304 372 370
136 107 114 166 165 124 162 215 183 108 109 110 112 170 174 172 176 182 180 186 185 184 106 260 261
351 350 285 287 279 362 256
211 210 192 195 189 214 132
501 515 545 535 527
300 310 318 340 350
››‡ Fast & Furious 6 (2013) Vin Diesel.
Fargo “The Gift of the Magi” Fargo Fargo South Pk South Park Archer Archer Daily Nightly At Mid. South Pk Kardashian Kardashian Kardashian E! News (N) Last Man Last Man ››‡ Eraser (1996) Arnold Schwarzenegger, James Caan. Steve Austin’s Garage Garage Garage Garage Garage Garage Garage Garage Garage Garage NewJac Martin Martin Martin Martin Martin The Westbrooks Wendy Williams Love & Hip Hop Black Ink: Chicago Love & Hip Hop Black Ink: Chicago Love & Hip Hop Bizarre Foods Bizarre Foods Heroes Delicious Mysteries-Museum Bizarre Foods Hoard-Buried Hoard-Buried Hoard-Buried Hoard-Buried Hoard-Buried Women- Honor ››› G.I. Jane (1997) Demi Moore, Viggo Mortensen. Women- Honor Love Thy Neighbor (2005) Abducted (2007) Sarah Wynter. Love Neighbor Chopped (N) Cake Wars (N) Cake Wars Cake Wars Cake Wars Love It or List It Love It or List It (N) Hunters Hunt Intl Love It or List It Love It or List It iCarly iCarly Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Friends Friends Friends Friends Phineas Wander Pickle Droid Ultimate Rebels Gravity Gravity Phineas and Ferb Invisible Sister (2015) Girl Austin Best Fr. Girl Jessie Good Good Adven Regular King/Hill Cleve Rick American Fam Guy Fam Guy Chicken Aqua Street Outlaws: Full Street Outlaws (N) Vegas Rat Rods (N) Street Outlaws Vegas Rat Rods ››› Steel Magnolias (1989) Sally Field, Dolly Parton. The 700 Club The Perfect Man Brothers in War Combat Rescue Fearless Combat Rescue Fearless ››› Debbie Macomber’s Mrs. Miracle Macomber’s Call Me Mrs. Miracle Snow Bride (2013) To Be Announced To Be Announced To Be Announced To Be Announced To Be Announced FactsLife FactsLife Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond King King King King Trinity End Franklin Duplantis Praise the Lord Osteen P. Stone The Journey Home News Rosary World Over Live Virtue Women Daily Mass - Olam ››› Go for Broke! (1951) Van Johnson. Bookmark ››› Go for Broke! (1951) Van Johnson. Key Capitol Hill Hearings Speeches. Capitol Hill Capitol Hill Landmark Cases Key Capitol Hill Hearings Landmark Cases 48 Hours on ID (N) 48 Hours on ID (N) American Scandals 48 Hours on ID 48 Hours on ID Against the Odds Against the Odds Against the Odds Against the Odds Against the Odds Dateline on OWN Dateline on OWN Dateline on OWN Dateline on OWN Dateline on OWN Why Planes Crash Why Planes Crash Born Monster Born Monster Born Monster ››› Gypsy (1962, Musical) Rosalind Russell. ›››‡ Limelight (1952) Charles Chaplin. Gentle
››› Dawn of the Planet of the Apes The Leftovers Getting The Knick ›‡ Queen of the Damned The Knick Homeland The Affair ››› Gattaca (1997) Ethan Hawke. ››› Fury (2014, War) Brad Pitt. iTV.
sBoxing
Sex Homeland The Affair ››› Executive Decision (1996) ››‡ Army of Darkness
Sex Into Sin City-Dame The Equalizer ›››‡ Die Hard
SECTION B
USA TODAY — L awrence J ournal -W orld
IN MONEY
IN LIFE
Nothing ‘Oldie’ is new again
‘Supergirl’ viewers almost even split of men, women
11.09.15 WIREIMAGE
WARNER BROS. ENTERTAINMENT INC.
SPECIAL INVESTIGATION
INFLUENCE PEDDLING RUNNING RAMPANT Probe finds states’ ethics laws laced with loopholes Nicholas Kusnetz
Center for Public Integrity
IN BURMA, A DAY FOR DEMOCRACY Obama readies for Netanyahu There’s no denying they’ve had some issues, but president and Israeli prime minister hope to put those differences behind them. IN NEWS
LAM YIK FEI, GETTY IMAGES
Sunday was a historic day in Burma: The nation held its first contested national election in 25 years. And it was the first time opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi, center, whose party was expecting victory, was able to vote. IN NEWS
Ripples of racism spur campuses into action Rose Schmidt and Greg Toppo USA TODAY
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©
Nutrition Nu utrrition tion boosters bo ooste ers
68%
of Americans mericans take dietary ary supplements.
Source Council il for Responsible Nutrition’s 2015 5 “Consumer Survey on Dietary Supplements” lements” TERRY BYRNE AND VERONICA BRAVO, USA TODAY
A backlash to racism on U.S. campuses, reminiscent of the civil rights protests of the 1960s, has been growing louder. In the latest incident, about 30 black football players at the University of Missouri say they won’t participate in team activities until the university system’s president resigns. Mizzou joins several schools dealing with racially tinged incidents over the past few weeks. uAt Ithaca College in Upstate New York, students say President Tom Rochon has given inadequate responses to several allegedly racist incidents. Students circulated a petition asking for a vote of “confidence” or “no confidence” in the president. uAt Yale University, protests erupted after an Oct. 28 university email warning about racially insensitive Halloween costumes prompted a professor to complain that Yale and other campuses were becoming “places of censure and prohibition.” uAt Berkeley (Calif.) High School, a freshman confessed to leaving a racist message invoking public lynching last week on a school computer, sparking a massive student walkout. At Mizzou, Jonathan Butler, a black graduate student, started a hunger strike on Nov. 2 in response to what he and other cam-
ELLISE VERHEYEN, AP
Students gather outside the Reynolds Alumni Center after an emotional protest on the University of Missouri campus.
JEFF ROBERSON, AP
Protesters want University of Missouri System President Tim Wolfe to resign.
pus activists say is President Tim Wolfe’s inadequate response to racial harassment. Most recently, on Oct. 24, a swastika was drawn on a dorm wall with human feces. The movement comes about 15 months after a white police officer in Ferguson, Mo., shot and killed Michael Brown, an unarmed black teenager.
“There are a lot of complicated things going on here that do relate to Ferguson, but it also relates to, you know, what’s going on in the United States now,” said Berkley Hudson, chairman of the Missouri Faculty Council race relations committee. “When I grew up in Mississippi the same thing happened in the ’60s in a different kind of a way where there’s a real reluctance of people to let go of the attitudes ... they hold.” In a statement Sunday, Wolfe didn’t mention resigning but said, “It is clear to all of us that change is needed.” He said the university administration had been meeting on how to address the issues. Contributing: Andrew Kreighbaum in Columbia, Mo.
In November 2014, Arkansas voters approved a ballot measure that barred the state’s elected officials from accepting lobbyists’ gifts. That hasn’t stopped influence peddlers from continuing to provide meals to lawmakers at the luxurious Capital Hotel or in top Little Rock eateries; the prohibition does not apply to “food or drink available at a planned activity to which a specific governmental body is invited,” so lobbyists can buy meals as long as they invite an entire legislative committee. Such loopholes are a common part of statehouse culture nationwide, according to the 2015 State Integrity Investigation, a datadriven assessment of state government by the Center for Public Integrity and Global Integrity. The probe found that in state after state, open records laws are laced with exemptions, and parttime legislators and agency officials engage in glaring conflicts of interests and cozy relationships with lobbyists while feckless, understaffed watchdogs struggle to enforce laws as porous as honeycombs. Take the Missouri lawmaker who introduced a bill this year — which passed despite a veto by the governor — to prohibit cities from banning plastic bags at grocery stores. The state representative cited concern for shoppers, but he also happens to be state director of the Missouri Grocers Association. In Delaware, the Public Integrity Commission, which oversees lobbying and ethics laws for the executive branch there, has just two full-time employees. A 2013 report by a special state prosecutor found that the agency was unable “to undertake any serious inquiry or investigation into potential wrongdoing.” These are among the practices illuminated by the State Integrity Investigation, which measured hundreds of variables to compile transparency and accountability grades for all 50 states. The best grade in the nation, which went to Alaska, is just a C. Only two others earned better than a D+; 11 states received failing grades. v STORY CONTINUES ON 2B
Carson on defense, attacking critics as scrutiny heats up GOP candidate’s biography questioned
they see how well he is doing in surveys against Democrat Hillary Clinton. “They’re worried,” Carson said. “There is no question about it.” David Jackson Carson appeared on Sunday USA TODAY interview shows amid news reports that question his Ben Carson says he is ELECTIONS past statements about his under political attack belife story, ranging from cause of his rise in the claims of a youthful tempolls. per and acts of violence “There’s no question to the prospect of an inviI’m getting special scrutitation to attend West ny,” the Republican presiPoint. dential candidate told Carson, has begun to CBS’ Face the Nation on Sunday, attract more attention to his life saying that people — unnamed — story. “are very threatened” because Earlier last week, it was sug-
20 1 6
JOE RAEDLE, GETTY IMAGES
“No question I’m getting special scrutiny,” Ben Carson says.
gestions that his story of a violent and angry upbringing in Detroit wasn’t as violent and angry as he suggested. And on Friday, it was a report by Politico that he “fabricated” the story of an offer to attend West Point. Carson called that report Friday a “boldfaced lie.” (Politico responded late Friday with an editor’s note on the story saying that Carson had implied he applied to West Point but that was not the case.) Donald Trump, who is battling Carson for the top spot in many Republican polls, has picked up on the criticism of Carson, telling ABC’s This Week that there is “a
weird deal going on” with the retired neurosurgeon. In his Sunday interviews, Carson again criticized the news media, though he added that the negative coverage has helped his campaign raise more money from supporters. “Vetting is one thing,” Carson said on NBC’s Meet the Press, but he said he is being asked about incidents that happened 20 and 50 years ago. “You can do that every single day from now until the election,” Carson said. “And I could get distracted, and I could deal with all of those things, or I can deal with what’s important.”
2B
L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY MONDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 2015
ETHICS OVERSIGHT IS OFTEN NEGLECTED v CONTINUED FROM 1B
The top of the pack includes bastions of liberal government, including California (ranked 2nd with a C), and states with corrupt pasts (Connecticut, 3rd with a C-), where scandals led to significant changes. The bottom includes many Western states that champion limited government, such as Nevada and Wyoming, but also others, including Delaware and dead-last Michigan, that have not adopted the types of ethics and open records laws common in many other states. The results are “disappointing but not surprising,” said Paula A. Franzese of the Seton Hall University School of Law, former chairwoman of the New Jersey State Ethics Commission. Franzese said that as many states struggle financially, ethics oversight is among the last issues to receive funding. There has been little progress on these issues since the State Integrity Investigation was first carried out in 2012. Since then, at least 12 states have seen their legislative leaders or top Cabinetlevel officials charged, convicted or resign as a result of ethics or corruption-related scandal. No state has outdone New York, where 14 lawmakers have left office since the beginning of 2012 because of ethical or criminal issues, according to a count by Citizens Union, an advocacy group. GRADING THE STATES
The State Integrity Investigation examines the systems that state governments use to prevent corruption and expose it when it does occur, rather than measuring corruption itself. The 2015 grades are based on 245 questions that ask about key indicators of transparency and accountability and examine both what the laws say and how well they’re implemented. Journalists in every state scored each of the questions, which ask, for example, whether lawmakers are required to file financial interest disclosures, and also whether they are complete. The results are both intuitive — an F for New York’s “three men in a room” budget process — and surprising — Illinois earned the best grade in the nation for its procurement practices.
OVERALL STATE INTEGRITY GRADES A (90 and up)
B- through B+ (80-89)
C- through C+ (70-79)
D- through D+ (60-69)
F (59 and below) Maine
Wash. Mont.
N.D.
Minn.
Ore. Idaho
Wis.
S.D.
Wyo.
Neb.
Nev.
Utah
Colo.
Calif. Ariz.
Kan. Okla.
N.M.
Iowa Ill. Ind. Mo.
Ohio
Ky.
Pa. W. Va. Va. N.C.
Tenn. Ark. Miss. Ala.
Texas
N.Y.
Mich.
S.C. Ga.
N.H. Vt. Mass. R.I. Conn. N.J.
La.
Del.
Alaska Fla.
Md.
Hawaii
HOW YOUR STATE RANKS IN 13 INTEGRITY CATEGORIES Pension fund management Ethics enforcement agencies Lobbying disclosure Internal auditing
Electoral oversight
The number shown inside the circle is your state’s overall grade.
Executive accountability
SCORE
Missouri
Montana
Nebraska
SCORE
SCORE
SCORE
62
61
62
64
67
WEAK OVERSIGHT
Legislative accountability Budget process
Mississippi
SCORE
Political financing
Each arc represents the grade of a topic.
Civil service management
Minnesota
SCORE
51
Public access to information
Procurement
Michigan
Judicial accountability
Nevada
N.H.
New Jersey
SCORE
SCORE
SCORE
57
61
65
Alabama
Alaska
Arizona
N.M.
New York
N.C.
SCORE
SCORE
SCORE
SCORE
SCORE
SCORE
Arkansas
California
Colorado
N.D.
Ohio
Oklahoma
SCORE
SCORE
SCORE
SCORE
SCORE
Conn.
Delaware
Florida
Oregon
Pa.
R.I.
SCORE
SCORE
SCORE
SCORE
SCORE
SCORE
Georgia
Hawaii
SCORE
SCORE
Idaho
Illinois
Indiana
67
SCORE
61
76
73
64
66
61
59
61
68
65
59
DOWNWARD TREND
Overall, states scored notably worse in this second round. Some of that decline is because of changes to the project, such as the addition of questions asking about “open data” policies, which call on governments to publish information online in formats that are easy to download and analyze. The drop also reflects moves toward greater secrecy in some states. No state saw its score fall further than New Jersey. New Jersey earned a B+, the best score in the nation, in 2012 thanks to tough ethics and anti-corruption laws that had been passed over the previous decade in response to a series of scandals. None of that has changed. But journalists, advocates and academics have accused the administration of Gov. Chris Christie of fighting and delaying potentially damaging public records requests and meddling in the affairs of the State Ethics Commission. That’s on top of Bridgegate, the sprawling scandal that began as a traffic jam on the George Washington Bridge but has led to the indictments of one of the governor’s aides and two of his appointees — one of whom pleaded guilty to conspiracy charges. New Jersey dropped to 19th place overall with a D grade. It’s not all doom and gloom. Iowa created an independent board with authority to mediate disputes when agencies reject public records requests. Gov. Terry Branstad cited the state’s previous grade from the center when he signed the bill, and the move helped catapult Iowa to first in the nation in the category for access to information, with a C- grade. In Georgia, good government groups latched on to the state’s worst-in-the-nation rank in 2012 to amplify their ongoing push for changes. The result was a modest law the following year that created a $75 cap on the value of lobbyists’ gifts to public officials. The change helped boost the state’s score in the category of legislative accountability to a C-, sixth-best in the nation. States continued to score relatively well in the categories for auditing practices — 29 earned Bor better — and for budget trans-
71
63
56
69
61
58
58
68
S.C.
S.D.
Tenn.
SCORE
SCORE
SCORE
SCORE
Iowa
62
60
56
66
Texas
Utah
Vermont
SCORE
SCORE
SCORE
SCORE
SCORE
Kansas
Kentucky
Louisianna
SCORE
SCORE
SCORE
Virginia
Wash.
W.V.
SCORE
SCORE
SCORE
Maine
Maryland
SCORE
SCORE
Mass.
Wis.
Wyoming
SCORE
SCORE
SCORE
67
59
59
62
67
64
67
59
SCORE
67
60
66
63
62
67
60
66
51
Source Center for Public Integrity and Global Integrity FRANK POMPA AND JIM SERGENT USA TODAY
parency — 16 got a B- or above. Unfortunately, such bright spots are the exceptions. ACCESS DENIED
In 2013, George LeVines submitted a request for records to the Massachusetts State Police asking for controlled substance seizure reports at state prisons dating back seven years. LeVines, who at the time was assistant editor at Muckrock, a news website and records-request repository, soon received a response from the agency saying he could have copies of the reports, but they would cost him $130,000. Though LeVines is quick to admit that his request was extremely broad, the figure shocked him nonetheless. “I wouldn’t have ever expected getting that just scot-free,” he said. But $130,000? “It’s insane.” LeVines withdrew his request. The Massachusetts State Police
“We will not cut corners for the purpose of expediency or economy if doing so” could release information such as medical or criminal records, he wrote. In Massachusetts, the Legislature and the judicial branch are at least partly exempt from state public records law. The Bay State earned an F for public access to information. So did 43 other states. Though every state in the nation has open records and meetings laws, they’re typically shot through with holes and exemptions and usually have essentially no enforcement mechanisms, beyond the court system, when agencies refuse to comply. Public officials charge excessive fees to discourage requestors. Often, citizens are unable to quickly and affordably resolve appeals. “We’re seeing increased secrecy throughout the country at the state and federal level,” said David Cuillier, director of the University of Arizona’s School of Journalism and an expert on open records laws. “It’s getting worse every year.” In January, The Wichita Eagle reported that Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback’s budget director had used his private email address to send details of a proposed budget to the private email accounts of fellow staff members and to a pair of lobbyists. He later said he did so because he and the rest of the staff were home for the holidays. In May, Brownback acknowledged that he, too, used a private email account to communicate with staff, meaning his correspondence was not subject to the state’s public records laws. A state council is studying how to close the loophole.
ANDREW BURTON, GETTY IMAGES
Bridgegate led to the indictments of one of New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie’s aides and two of his appointees. has become a notorious steel trap of information — it has charged tens of thousands of dollars or even, in one case, $2.7 million to produce documents. Dave Procopio, a spokesman for the State Police, said in an
email that the department is committed to transparency but that its records are laced with sensitive information that’s exempt from disclosure and that reviewing the material is time-consuming and expensive.
Governments write ethics laws for a reason; public officials can’t always be trusted to do the right thing. The trouble is, a law is only as good as its enforcement, and the entities responsible for overseeing ethics are often impotent and ineffective. In many states, a complex mix of legislative committees, standalone commissions and law enforcement agencies police the ethics laws. More often than not, the State Integrity Investigation shows, those entities are underfunded, subject to political interference or are simply unable or unwilling to initiate investigations and issue sanctions when rules are broken. Or at least that’s as far as the public can tell: Many operate largely in secret. The Tennessee Ethics Commission, for example, rose in 2006 out of the ashes of an FBI bribery probe. In its decade of operation, the commission has never issued a penalty as a result of an ethics complaint against a public official (it did issue one to a lobbyist). The dearth of actions is impossible to assess because the complaints become public only if four of six commissioners decide they warrant investigation. Of 17 complaints received in 2013 and 2014, only two are public. “There just haven’t been that many valid complaints alleging wrongdoing,” said Drew Rawlins, executive director of the Bureau of Ethics and Campaign Finance, which includes the commission. In Kansas, staff shortages mean the state’s Governmental Ethics Commission is unable to fully audit lawmakers’ financial disclosures, according to Executive Director Carol Williams. The State Integrity Investigation found that in two-thirds of all states, ethics agencies or committees routinely fail to initiate investigations or impose sanctions when necessary, often because they’re unable to do so without first receiving a complaint. “Many of these laws are out of date. They need to be revised,” said Robert Stern, who spent decades as president of the Center for Governmental Studies, which worked with local and state governments to improve ethics, campaign-finance and lobbying laws until it shut in 2011. Stern, who is helping to write a ballot initiative that would update California’s ethics statutes, said that although he thinks the State Integrity Investigation grades are unrealistically harsh, they do reflect the fact that state lawmakers have neglected their responsibilities when it comes to ethics and transparency. “It’s very, very difficult for legislatures to focus on these things and improve them because they don’t want these laws, they don’t want to enforce them, and they don’t want to fund the people enforcing them.” This article draws on reporting from State Integrity Investigation reporters in all 50 states.
3B
USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld MONDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 2015
IN BRIEF 2nd cyclone in week hit island near Yemen The second cyclone in a week slammed into an island off Yemen’s coast Sunday with 127-mph winds, the equivalent of a Category 3 hurricane, killing at least two people, officials said. Cyclone Megh hit the eastern portion of the Yemeni island of Socotra, AccuWeather said. Megh is forecast to move toward the mainland of Yemen, likely hitting as a tropical storm or depression Tuesday or Wednesday, according to AccuWeather. Socotra, population 44,000, is a small island in the Arabian Sea, about 240 miles off the coast of Yemen. Preliminary reports indicate that two people were killed by the storm, the World Health Organization tweeted Sunday. Megh follows Cyclone Chapala, which hit Yemen last Tuesday, killing at least nine. More than 36,000 people were displaced by the storm, the U.N. said. — Doyle Rice
Sanders says he didn’t seek Obama opponent
Bernie Sanders says he’s had disagreements with President Obama but did not work to gin up a Democratic primary opponent against him in 2012. “I worked very hard to see Barack Obama elected,” Sanders said Sunday on ABC’s This Week. Democratic opponent Martin O’Malley criticized the Vermont senator for talking about a primary challenge to the president in 2012. “When President Obama was running for re-election, I was glad to step up and work very hard for him, while Sen. Sanders was trying to find someone to primary him,” O’Malley said at a Democratic forum Friday. In his ABC interview, Sanders noted that he discussed criticism of Obama on his radio show, and that in the run-up to 2012 he said people had the right to challenge the president if they wanted to. But that doesn’t mean he worked against Obama, and that idea is “categorically false,” Sanders said. — David Jackson
OBAMA, NETANYAHU HOPE TO MOVE PAST DIFFERENCES IN MEETING Both sides say they can find common ground
President Obama meets with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in the Oval Office on Oct. 1, 2014.
Gregory Korte USA TODAY
WASHINGTON As the White House prepares for a meeting between President Obama and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Monday, there’s one thing Obama administration officials concede from the outset: They’ve had their differences. “Obviously there have been occasions when we’ve had disagreements, and that’s well-known,” U.S. Ambassador to Israel Daniel Shapiro told reporters at the start of a press briefing previewing the visit. But he insisted those disagreements wouldn’t prevent the two leaders from making progress on a wide range of security issues involving Iran, Syria and the Palestinian conflict.
WIN MCNAMEE, GETTY IMAGES
The main area of disagreement has been on Obama’s decision to sign a nuclear deal with Iran. The agreement, which was formally adopted last month by the U.S., Iran and five other nations, will lift sanctions in return for assurances by Iran that it will scale down its nuclear weapons program. But there’s also tension over Netanyahu’s tepid support of the two-state solution to the Palestinian conflict that has long
been at the heart of U.S. foreign policy in the region. And that means Obama has had to accept that there will be no resolution to the conflict for the remainder of his presidency, deputy national security adviser Ben Rhodes said. But that “in no way diminishes our very fervent belief that the two-state solution is the one way to achieve the lasting security, peace and dignity that the Israeli
and Palestinian people deserve.” The two leaders will also hammer out a new 10-year framework for security cooperation, including some talk of specific weapons systems. The meeting also comes in the wake of a kerfuffle in the Israeli media over the opinions of Netanyahu’s new communications director. In a posting on Facebook, Ran Baratz said Obama’s response to Netanyahu’s last visit “is what modern anti-Semitism looks like in Western liberal countries.” He also said Secretary of State John Kerry had the mental capacity of a 12-year-old. Netanyahu has called those comments “inappropriate” and has apologized. Rhodes said he wouldn’t expect the issue to come up when the two leaders meet in the Oval Office on Monday morning. “President Obama will have a very substantive agenda to pursue with the prime minister.”
Also ...
uA huge sinkhole swallowed more than a dozen cars in an IHOP parking lot in Meridian, Miss., according to local media. KSLA-TV quoted witnesses as hearing a series of booms Saturday night before the sinkhole, about 50 feet wide and 600 feet long, opened up. WTOK-TV reported that about 15 vehicles were submerged but no one appeared to have been hurt. uGunmen in Libya crashed into a convoy of vehicles taking Serbia’s ambassador to neighboring Tunisia and then kidnapped two other embassy employees, officials told the Associated Press. The embassy’s communications officer, Sladjana Stankovic, and driver Jovica Stepic, were kidnapped in the northwest coastal town of Sabratha, Serbia’s Foreign Ministry said. Corrections & Clarifications USA TODAY is committed to accuracy. To reach us, contact Standards Editor Brent Jones at 800-8727073 or e-mail accuracy@usatoday.com. Please indicate whether you’re responding to content online or in the newspaper.
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NYUNT WIN, EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY
People line up to cast their votes at a polling station in Sittwe, Rakhine State, on Sunday as voters across Burma braved long lines to take part in an election pitting the army-backed establishment against an opposition led by Aung San Suu Kyi.
In Burma, millions take first steps into democracy In first national election since 1990, Aung San Suu Kyi finally is able to cast a vote
“If the outcome is credible and without any vote fixing, then the Burmese people may be very surprised.” Journalist Aung Zaw
Thomas Maresca
Special for USA TODAY RANGOON, BURMA Millions of Burmese voted Sunday in their first contested national elections in 25 years to bring this country from long-time military rule toward democracy — a day marked by excitement and no reports of major violence. Opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi’s party is expected to win parliamentary elections, but preliminary results won’t be available until Monday and could take all week. It was not clear when the final tally will be known. Suu Kyi, 70, a Nobel laureate who heads the opposition National League for Democracy (NLD), voted Sunday at the polling station near her Rangoon home where she spent 15 years under house arrest during the earlier military dictatorship. Sunday’s election is the first time Suu Kyi was actually able to vote. She was locked up during the last openly contested vote in 1990, the first election allowed by the junta since it took power in 1962. Her party won that vote by a landslide, but a shocked army refused to recognize the results. The National League is expected to prevail again against the ruling Union Solidarity and Development Party, which is backed by the military and came to power in 2010 elections, which marked the end of decades of military rule and the installment of a nominally civilian government. The NLD and other opposition parties boycotted those elections, claiming they were rigged. “This is my first time voting and I’m very excited,” said Han Myint Kyu, 26, a bookkeeper in Rangoon who waited in line for more than an hour to cast his ballot. “We need to change and de-
LAM YIK FEI, GETTY IMAGES
People rally outside the National League for Democracy office in Rangoon after Burma’s first openly contested election in 25 years.
mocracy is the best way to do it.” Burma, also known as Myanmar, still provides obstacles to the opposition. Regardless of the results, the military will hold 25% of the seats in parliament as well as control of the army, police and border affairs. Suu Kyi’s party must win two-thirds of Sunday’s vote to control a majority of parliament’s 498 seats. “We are expecting that the NLD is likely to win a plurality but not an absolute majority,” said Christian Lewis, a political risk analyst with Eurasia Group. He said the Union Solidarity party only needs a modest showing to form a coalition with the military. “I think (the Union Solidarity party) is only aiming for 10% to 15% at which point the 25% allocated to the military is going to make them very competitive with the NLD,” he said. Other observers were more optimistic. “If the outcome is credi-
ble and it is without any vote fixing, then I think the Burmese people may be very pleasantly surprised,” said Aung Zaw, founder and editor-in-chief of the news magazine The Irrawaddy. While Sunday’s election appeared to run smoothly, there have been concerns of irregularities in the voting rolls and disenfranchisement of minorities, especially the Rohingya, a Muslim minority. Human Rights Watch has declared the elections “fundamentally flawed.” Parliament will choose the president next year. Suu Kyi is barred from becoming president because of a constitutional clause that excludes anyone with close foreign relatives from holding the office. Suu Kyi’s late husband was a British national, and she has two British sons. Contributing: Gregg Zoroya in McLean, Va.
4B
L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY MONDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 2015
STATE-BY-STATE News from across the USA ALABAMA Lowndes County:
The last member of a ring of five copper thieves who targeted Lowndes County churches turned himself into police, WSFA reported. Lily Baptist Church of Letohatchee started a relief fund that will help the six churches repair $40,000-$50,000 in damages from the robberies. ALASKA Fairbanks: A last-
second change softened a tuition increase when the University of Alaska Board of Regents voted to approve a 5% increase rather than a proposed 9% hike, newsminer.com reported.
ARIZONA Phoenix: Officials
searched for GusGus, a baby goat missing from the Great American Petting Zoo, The Arizona Republic reported. Petting zoo manager Emilie Owen said it isn’t healthy for GusGus to be separated from his mother.
ARKANSAS Hot Springs: After
a court order, police released the audiotapes of 911 calls made by Garland County Circuit Judge Wade Naramore and his fatherin-law in the hot-car death of the the judge’s 18-month-old son, ArkansasOnline reported.
CALIFORNIA Los Angeles:
Owners of thousands of wooden apartment buildings at risk of collapse in a major earthquake will begin receiving retrofit orders as early as February, the Times reported. COLORADO Pueblo: A Pueblo District Court judge ruled last week that there was probable cause to try Joseph Romero, 57, on charges of first-degree murder and unlawful termination of a pregnancy for the stabbing death of girlfriend Phenia Martinez, 25, the Pueblo Chieftain reported. CONNECTICUT New Haven:
Connecticut Fund for the Environment Save the Sound on Thursday announced the launch of the Pond Lily Dam Removal Project, the New Haven Register reported. Removing the dam will restore fish migratory passages and reduce the risk of flooding. DELAWARE Dover: The adolescent addiction clinic Crossroads of Delaware faces another civil lawsuit, with an anonymous underage patient claiming that her counselor supplied her with alcohol and marijuana and allowed her to falsify her own drug tests, The News Journal reported. DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA: The
National Geographic Society will lay off about 180 of its 2,000 employees in a cost-cutting move, The Washington Post reported.
FLORIDA Pensacola: Navy Capt. Thomas Frosch, Boss of the Blue Angels flight squad since 2012, is leaving the Blues to join the Naval Aviation Training Command at Pensacola Naval Air Station, the Pensacola News Journal reported. GEORGIA Atlanta: Three Pied-
mont Hospital locations and two Northside Hospital locations are among the seven safest metro hospitals, according to an analysis published by the Leapfrog Group and cited by the JournalConstitution.
HIGHLIGHT: CALIFORNIA
Mystery light sends residents into a tizzy Matthew Diebel
Side communities experiencing violence, the Tribune reported. INDIANA Bloomington: The
Indianapolis Star reported that the sluggish economic recovery will stick around another year, though Indiana will outperform the 2 percent growth rate projected for the nation. Indiana University economists in the Kelley School of Business have released their annual report.
IOWA Sioux City: A Sioux City
man granted a retrial on sex abuse charges was found guilty for a second time, the Sioux City Journal reported. A jury found Julius Turner, 43, guilty of two counts of second-degree sexual abuse and one count of thirddegree sexual abuse.
KANSAS Conway Springs: Tom
Leahy, a social-studies teacher who was poised to resign for showing his eighth-graders the controversial anti-bullying film Love is All You Need, has changed his mind, The Wichita Eagle reported.
KENTUCKY Louisville: The
condition of former Louisville basketball player Kyle Kuric worsened following brain surgery Thursday in Barcelona to remove a tumor, The Courier-Journal reported. Kuric, who plays professionally in Spain, has developed cerebral edema — a swelling in the brain caused by the presence of excessive fluid.
IDAHO Nampa: Canyon County
Police were asking for the public’s help identifying a suspect in a theft at Jared Galleria of Jewelry on Woodruff Road. Police said the suspect was trying on a gold necklace and bracelet Oct. 26. When the sales associate looked away, the suspect said, “sorry,” and ran out the store wearing the jewelry valued at $3,800, The Greenville News reported.
SOUTH DAKOTA Woonsocket:
EDDY HARTENSTEIN, AP
A light from a navy unarmed missile streaks across the evening sky over Thousand Oaks, Calif., on Saturday. area northwest of Los Angeles where the Navy periodically test-fires Tomahawk and Standard cruise missiles from surface ships and submarines. The Union-Tribune reported that police and news media in San Diego were flooded with calls at about 6 p.m. from people reporting everything from a flare to a comet to a nuclear bomb in the western sky. Some people saw it fade from bright red to white or blue, the paper said, and thought it travthe Boston Herald reported. Joel Nixon, who has a condition that affects his peripheral vision, had been working for Tony’s Barber Shop in Norton for a year before his boss discovered his condition. MICHIGAN Hamtramck: Resi-
dents of this city once known for being a Polish-Catholic enclave have elected a Muslim majority to their City Council, the Detroit Free Press reported. Six candidates ran for three seats. The top three vote-getters were Muslim. MINNESOTA Coon Rapids: A woman who was attacked by another woman in a restaurant, allegedly because she was speaking a foreign language, said she may move out of Minnesota, Minnesota Public Radio News reported. Asma Jama said she was chatting with her family in Swahili at an Applebee’s in Coon Rapids on Oct. 30 when a woman smashed a beer mug in her face. Jodie Burchard-Risch was charged with assault. MISSISSIPPI Tupelo : A $150,000
bond has been set for Marshall Leonard, 61, the man who allegedly detonated an explosive in a Tupelo Walmart last week, The Clarion-Ledger reported.
MISSOURI St. Louis: A proper-
ty-tax increase of 13% in the Mehlville School District was approved, but voters in Kirkwood turned down a tax boost of 18% for their district.
MONTANA Great Falls: Carolyn Valacich announced that she is retiring as executive director of the Great Falls Symphony after 28 years, the Great Falls Tribune reported.
MAINE Augusta: Wade R. Hoo-
“Gil” Lundstrom, the former CEO of TierOne bank, was found guilty of 12 counts in a case that accused him of orchestrating a scheme to hide tens of millions of dollars of the bank’s losses, the Journal Star reported.
ver, 38, a former Lewiston martial arts instructor serving time on a federal child pornography conviction, faces trial in state court later this month on 12 counts of gross sexual assaults against boys, the Kennebec Journal reported.
NEBRASKA Lincoln: Gilbert
eled from south to north. According to the Union-Tribune, several witnesses speculated it was part of the annual Taurid meteor shower. However, Brian Keating, an astrophysicist at UC San Diego, told the paper that scenario was impossible. “The Taurid meteors would be coming from the east — and this light came from the west,” Keating said. “We’d also be more likely to see meteors about midnight, and the flash came near sunset.” NEW MEXICO Albuquerque:
Lincoln Pines juvenile detention center near Ruidoso will close two years after its opening, the Albuquerque Journal reported. The closing follows an internal review after allegations arose that a Children Youth and Families Department therapist had engaged in a sexual relationship with a 17-year-old inmate.
NEW YORK Yonkers: A Yonkers
contracting company that led the renovation of Interstate 287 a decade ago has settled a federal complaint that it duped the state and paid kickbacks that raised the project’s costs, U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara’s office said. Yonkers Contracting Inc. will pay a $2.6 million fine, The Journal News reported.
NORTH CAROLINA Wilming-
ton: Christopher Lee Funk, 35, was sentenced to five years’ probation and 200 hours of community service after he was convicted of aiming a laser pointer at a helicopter attempting to land at Oak Island last year, The News & Observer reported. NORTH DAKOTA Bismarck: An annual yarn fashion show will take place Thursday at Bismarck Art & Galleries Association, The Bismarck Tribune reported. OHIO Cincinnati: Hamilton
County Common Pleas Judge Jody Luebbers upheld a $7.5 million judgment awarded to Zainabou Drame, 7, whose parents filed a lawsuit against the owner of two pit bulls and his mother, The Cincinnati Enquirer reported. Zainabou, 7, has undergone at least a dozen surgeries since being mauled June 4, 2014.
OKLAHOMA Oklahoma City: Almost 78,000 people kicked the habit of smoking. The number of adult smokers in Oklahoma deceased by 19% in the past 4 years, reaching an all time low this year, according to the Oklahoma State Health Department.
NEVADA Carson City: The Nevada Treasurer’s Office opened up enrollment for prepaid college tuition plans, Desert Valley Times reported. Open enrollment began Nov. 1 and continues through March 31. NEW HAMPSHIRE Concord:
MARYLAND Parsonsburg:
election officials surprised poll volunteer Jean Knutson, 92, with an award on Election Day for her more than 50 years of service, The Idaho Statesman reported.
Town fire chief Steve White, 60, has died after an illness, The Daily Times reported. White, who served 20 years, will be remembered for building a firehouse for volunteers in far eastern Wicomico County.
ILLINOIS Chicago: Rapper
MASSACHUSETTS Boston: A
Rhymefest said director Spike Lee owes the city an apology for his upcoming film Chi-Raq because the movie is not authentic nor helpful to the South and West
SOUTH CAROLINA Greenville:
LOUISIANA New Orleans: The Canal Street ferry terminal would be torn down and replaced with a pedestrian landing on a floating barge under a plan being pursued by city and transit leaders, The Times-Picayune reported.
HAWAII Honolulu: Hawai’i
Public Radio President and General Manager Michael Titterton, who has been with HPR since 1999, will step down at the end of June, the Honolulu Star-Advertiser reported.
RHODE ISLAND Providence: Alicia Roman, 28, was arrested after she allegedly beat her husband with a car jack and threw a pumpkin at his car window, Providence Journal reported.
USA TODAY
Many Californians were puzzled — and some panicked — when a mysterious bright light streaked across the night sky over the weekend. It turned out to be an unarmed missile fired from a Navy submarine, creating an illumination that whisked across the state and was visible as far as Nevada and Arizona. A Navy spokesman, Cmdr. Ryan Perry, told The San Diego Union-Tribune that the Navy Strategic Systems Programs conducted the missile test at sea Saturday from the USS Kentucky, a ballistic missile vessel. Local TV station KLTA reported that, “Light seen in OC sky was confirmed through JWA tower to be a Naval test fire off the coast,” the Orange County Sheriff’s Department said on Twitter, referring to John Wayne Airport in Santa Ana. The test was part of a scheduled, on-going system evaluation test, Perry told the paper. The event led to a flurry of calls to law enforcement agencies and lit up social media as people posted photos and videos. According to the Associated Press, the test was conducted in the Pacific Test Range, a vast
legally blind barber was awarded $100,000 after a state agency found that he was illegally fired by a shop that didn’t want a sightimpaired scissorsmith on staff,
PENNSYLVANIA York: A ceremony Tuesday will celebrate the Heritage Rail Trail County Park’s induction into the Rails-to-Trails Conservancy’s Hall of Fame, the York Daily Record reported.
Gov. Hassan asked the Executive Council to approve a special November legislative session to address the state’s heroin and opioid crisis with $11.1 million in new spending, the New Hampshire Union Leader reported. NEW JERSEY Asbury Park:
Towns along the Jersey Shore raked in record revenue from beach badge sales this summer, the Asbury Park Press reported. The total for Monmouth and Ocean counties was $25.3 million, a 16% increase from 2014.
Woonsocket High School, which uses “Redmen” as its school mascot and its nickname, will consider a resolution to change its nickname at its board meeting Monday, the Mitchell Daily Republic reported. TENNESSEE Monterey: A cou-
ple’s recent murder-suicide occurred here after the wife had called 911 at least twice without getting help, WSMV-TV, Nashville, reported. Angela Harville had asked her husband, Danny, to move out in September and in the weeks afterward he had become violent, their children said. TEXAS College Station: Texas
A&M University has set out to raise $4 billion by 2020. Most of the money will fund scholarships, faculty recruitment and retention and construction, with just about 15% earmarked for athletics, the Houston Chronicle reported. UTAH Salt Lake City: A fire destroyed a historic commercial building in Murray on Saturday, KSL-TV reported. The building was an old fish food factory built in 1909, fire officials said. VERMONT Burlington: On
Nov. 14, the second helping of the Trotting of the Turkeys will help cover the cost of Thanksgiving turkeys for the Chittenden Emergency Food Shelf and benefit the Burlington Sunrise Rotary Club, Burlington Free Press reported.
VIRGINIA Powhatan: Seventy-
seven residents attended a meeting to discuss plans to address the lack of broadband Internet access in the county, the Richmond Times-Dispatch reported.
WASHINGTON Bremerton: An
allegedly drunken driver traveled the wrong way on Highway 3 for 14 miles last week, Washington State Patrol said.
WEST VIRGINIA Morgantown: According to West Virginia University police data, crime reported in October rose 63% compared with last year, the Charleston Gazette-Mail reported.
WISCONSIN Green Bay: Brown
County’s new sheriff’s patrol dog made his debut last week, appearing at the County Board meeting with a member of the Stan Kass family, who donated $12,000 for his purchase. Murdock, a 2½year-old Belgian Malinois, replaces Wix, the Belgian Malinois who died in an overheated patrol car this summer, Green Bay Press-Gazette reported. WYOMING Cheyenne: A 30-
OREGON Roseburg: Douglas County Board of Commissioners approved a $30,000 contract with Umpqua Community College to provide a patrol officer from the Douglas County Sheriff’s Department to increase security after the Oct. 1 mass shooting, The News-Review reported.
year-old man will probably undergo psychiatric evaluation after his arrest for allegedly assaulting a city bus driver with a knife, slashing bus tires and attacking a police officer, the Wyoming Tribune Eagle reported.
Compiled by Tim Wendel, Nicole Gill and Jonathan Briggs, with Jenna Adamson, Carolyn Cerbin, Linda Dono, Morgan Eichensehr, Mike Gottschamer, Jiayue Huang, Ben Sheffler and Nichelle Smith. Design by Mallory Redinger. Graphics by Alejandro Gonzalez.
USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld MONDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 2015
NEWS MONEY SPORTS LIFE AUTOS TRAVEL
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MARKET SECTORS REACTION TO RATE HIKES
MONEYLINE
The S&P 500 has average returns of 9.5% in the six months before a rate hike and 2.4% in the six months after. Here are the best and worst sectors for investors when the Fed starts raising the rate, based on same criteria: SECTOR, BEFORE, AFTER
ANDREW YATES, AFP/GETTY IMAGES
ASTRAZENECA ACQUIRES ZS PHARMA FOR $2.7 BILLION U.K. drug giant AstraZeneca plans to acquire smaller drug company ZS Pharma in an allcash deal for about $2.7 billion. The acquisition is expected to close by the end of 2015. The San Mateo, Calif.-based drug company has a key drug ZS-9, currently under review by the Food and Drug Administration, for the treatment of chronic kidney disease and chronic heart failure. The annual global sales peak year forecast for ZS-9 exceeds $1 billion, the companies said. LUFTHANSA STRIKE EXPANDS TO MUNICH A strike by Lufthansa flight attendants has spread to Munich, beyond the German carrier’s Frankfurt and Dusseldorf hubs. Lufthansa will operate 70% of its planned flights Monday, but will cancel 929 to and from those cities. That will affect about 113, 000 passengers, the airline says. The cabin crew union’s strike on Friday grounded flights to and from Frankfurt and Dusseldorf, about 10% of Lufthansa’s flights. With a Sunday break in the strike, the airline said it wanted to resume talks with the union. The parties are clashing over pension benefits and the union has warned of disruptions stretching well into the week. It’s the largest strike in Lufthansa’s history, the airline says. FRIDAY MARKETS INDEX
CLOSE
Dow Jones industrials Dow for the week Nasdaq composite S&P 500 T-bond, 30-year yield T-note, 10-year yield Gold, oz. Comex Oil, light sweet crude Euro (dollars per euro) Yen per dollar
CHG
17,910.33 x 46.90 x 246.79 5147.12 x 19.38 2099.20 y 0.73 3.09% x 0.09 2.33% x 0.10 $1087.90 y 16.30 $44.52 y 0.68 $1.0745 y 0.0142 123.21 x 1.54
SOURCES USA TODAY RESEARCH, MARKETWATCH.COM
USA SNAPSHOTS©
Health care costs 65-year-old woman can expect
13%
higher health care costs than a 65-year-old man during retirement.
Source Guardian Life analysis JAE YANG AND JANET LOEHRKE, USA TODAY
Technology 12.3% 6.5%
Utilities 3.4% 1.4%
Telecom 7.6% 5.8%
Energy 15.4% 3.1%
Consumer discretionary 8.9% 1.9%
Industrials 9.7% 1.2%
Consumer staples 9.4% 1.2%
Materials 9.3% 0.2%
Health care 8.5% 1.5%
Financials 8.0% -0.8% SOURCES: S&P CAPITAL IQ, USA TODAY RESEARCH
INVESTORS: HOW TO PROFIT FROM INTEREST RATE HIKES Matt Krantz
Fed Chair Janet Yellen and her colleagues may raise interest rates in December.
USA TODAY
The Fed just got 271,000 new reasons to boost interest rates. Investors had better get ready. The door is wide open for the Federal Reserve to increase short-term interest rates when it meets in December following the report on Friday showing companies added 271,000 jobs in October. If the move in rates comes, it could signal a tectonic shift in the marketplace and prompt investors to tear up the playbook that has basically been printing them money the last few years. Overnight, higher rates went from a coin toss to a very strong possibility. Futures markets now indicate there’s a 70% chance the Fed takes rates up in December, according to Bloomberg News. That’s up from Thursday when the implied odds of a rate hike were 56%. Savvy investors know it’s perilous to ignore pending moves by the Fed because higher interest rates can dramatically change the investment climate. How much? The benchmark Standard & Poor’s 500 index has seen its average gain shrink to 2.4% in the six months following an initial Fed rate hike going back to 1971, says Sam Stovall of S&P Capital IQ. Compare that to the 9.5% average gain in the six months prior to hikes. Some markets are already behaving like a rate hike is a foregone conclusion. Stocks that have been attractive during the period of practically zero interest rates are suffering now because investors figure the party is just about over. Utilities stocks were hardest hit Friday, with the Utilities Se-
CHIP SOMODEVILLA, GETTY IMAGES
lect Sector SPDR exchange-traded fund falling 3.7%. That’s the largest decline among the 10 sectors in the S&P 500. If interest rates rise, that makes the fat dividend yields traditionally paid by utilities relatively less attractive. Similarly, real estate investment trusts, which have been hugely popular with investors because of their rich dividends, fell too. The Vanguard REIT ETF dropped 2.9%. Bond investors also felt the pain. The Vanguard Total Bond Market ETF lost 0.4%. Things could be close to changing. Investors seem to think fi-
nancials could be the winners. The ability to boost interest rates on loans — as long as demand remains strong — could lift bank profits. The Financial Select Sector SPDR is up 0.9% Friday, the best performer of the 10 industry sectors. But longer term, financial stocks have been laggards when the Fed starting to lift rates. Playing this major market shift will keep investors occupied the next couple months as the Fed goes from background risk to front-burner concern. There will be places to make money, though.
Energy, consumer goods, food stocks and ultimately utilities wind up being the best areas for investors during periods of rising rates, says Robert Johnson, president of the American College of Financial Services and co-author of Invest with the Fed. Commodity prices also tend to be strong, due to increased inflation, which in turn helps emerging markets stocks. Many companies in emerging nations are closely tied to commodity prices. But one thing is for sure. This is not the time to fight the Fed.
Nothing ‘Oldie’ is new again, thanks to digital times Michael Wolff
@MichaelWolffNYC Michael@burnrate.com USA TODAY
MEDIA
There are two, and maybe only two, strategies for success in media: Do what everybody else is doing, or do the
opposite. What everybody wants to do now, of course, is forge a digital strategy — that is, a new digital strategy, to be distinguished from the former failed one. This resulted last week in a movement of digital deck chairs: Time’s digital guy, Scott Havens, went to Bloomberg, and NBC hired Nick Ascheim from BBC America, showing Julian March and Richard Wolffe, who had brief digital tenures respectively at NBC and MSNBC, the door. Everybody wants to reach Millennials. Hence, last week, A&E gave Vice one of its cable channels to run.
For a true instance of doing something profoundly contrary, there was Alexander Chancellor, 75, a British editor who was in the USA for the past few weeks to promote his magazine, The Oldie. The Oldie is a small phenomenon of British publishing, a growing and profitable magazine that celebrates a certain sort of crankiness and deftly turns its back on any interest in the young, or even in being young. Indeed, reading The Oldie is not so much to feel that you’re old — not like, for instance, Modern Maturity, with its rapturous celebration of retirement possibilities — but to feel that the young and their aspirations and enthusiasms do not exist. Or at least don’t impinge on the world in any meaningful way. The unstated but powerful message of The Oldie is a deep satisfaction, even sense of value, in not having to keep up. This is relevant as a media model, as well as a media message. The most elemental part of a media business used to be the precise articulation of whom a media product was for. If you
KARWAI TANG, WIREIMAGE
The Oldie Of The Year Awards were presented by the British magazine Feb. 3, at Simpsons in the Strand in London.
could describe an audience and have substantial insight into its most powerful longings and were able to speak to its sense of self — its conceits, prejudices and aspirations — that was a potentially very profitable business. Think Fox News, The Economist, Cosmopolitan, Car and Driver. That model — a kind of license to print money if your particular media brand became the most efficient way to reach a desirable group — has largely been upended or cast aside in the digital media age. The digital model has evolved from focused audience to
undifferentiated traffic. It’s a pure numbers game, and the biggest number wins, meaning a goal of something like world conquest rather than the hope of a highly valued circle of devotees. Indeed, media companies that once might have had a keen concern about the nature of their audiences now also have to cater to digital ubiquity, always at confusing odds with core identity. Hence, the musical chairs aspects of digital directors. They are hungrily hired and often resentfully fired because their job is so deeply foreign to the established character of a media business. The Oldie needn’t concern itself with any of this. Other than via a subscription offer, it doesn’t really exist online. To the extent it does, it still boasts of its former editor, ousted several years ago. Indeed, everything about The Oldie is designed, consciously or not, to protect its readers from evidence that the world has meaningfully changed from, say, 1975. At least not in terms of look and feel and general pace and overall functionality.
This might seem, if not an obvious death wish, at least eccentrically British. Indeed, Prince Charles reportedly is a great fan of the magazine. But this peculiarity — turning its face from the righteous future — makes it in this flattened age sui generis. One hardly knows whom Time or Vanity Fair or Rolling Stone or even The New Yorker or The New York Times, all shadows of their former clarity, are speaking to anymore. But in the quickest perusal, The Oldie neatly suggests its reader, a type many of us will be lucky to become: genial but skeptical; not so much angry at the world around us but having seen it all before. A laughingstock perhaps, but a contended one. Its message, too, is quite valuable and business-minded. That is, the headlong pursuit of newness and transformation is a highrisk one. Some may succeed and change the world, but most won’t. What’s more, the medium is after all the message: In this your fate may be sealed, as print is an expression at odds with digital.
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TRAVEL
ALL ABOARD FLORIDA
An artist rendering of the Orlando train station that will service the express passenger line between Miami and Orlando.
New Fla. passenger train service to quickly link Miami and Orlando Express rail line — not high-speed — to start in 2017 Nancy Trejos USA TODAY
A privately owned and operated passenger rail service is on track to begin connecting travelers in four major Florida cities by mid-2017. Today, All Aboard Florida is slated to reveal that the new express inter-city train travel service, which will cost more than $3 billion to build, will be called the Brightline. Brightline trains will connect Miami, Fort Lauderdale, West Palm Beach and Orlando along a 235-mile route. The stretch from Miami to Orlando will last three hours, comparable to what it takes to get to the airport, go through security and fly, developers say. The trains, designed by the Rockwell Group, are being built in Sacramento by Siemens. Construction has begun on stations in Miami, Fort Lauderdale and West Palm Beach and on connecting urban centers that developers hope will become dining and shopping destinations. Another station will be next to Orlando International Airport.
All Aboard Florida is a wholly owned subsidiary of Florida East Coast Industries, which is involved in a range of infrastructure, transportation and real estate businesses. The project is being funded by private investors through the issuance of $1.75 billion in tax-exempt bonds and directly from the parent company. The company expects to become profitable in the first couple of years as its adds more trains and ridership increases. All Aboard Florida and tourism officials say the trains and their stations could transform travel throughout Florida, one of the country’s most populous states. Providing trains as an alternative could ease congestion on the roads and alleviate pressure on crowded airports. “Half of our business is international,” says William Talbert, president and CEO of the Greater Miami Convention and Visitors Bureau. “To connect Miami and those other three communities by train makes it convenient, affordable, clean and safe to travel. It gives the visitor options that we haven’t had before.” Not everyone is on board with the new train service, however. Citizens Against Rail Expansion, a coalition of residents and community leaders in South Florida, argues that the rail system will compromise public safety. A
ALL ABOARD FLORIDA
The new passenger rail system will be called Brightline and run along a 235-mile route. The project will cost $3 billion. number of hospitals along the route are on one side of the tracks while first responders are on the other, says Stephen Ryan, an attorney representing CARE. What is now a single-track system will likely change to a double-track at various points along the way, which will pose a danger for school buses trying to cross over, Ryan says. The number of freight trains will also increase, he says. Another reason for concern that the group has brought up: It will harm the maritime industry because it will increase wait times at drawbridges that the train will cross. All that will result in a drop in property values, which will impact tax rolls, he says.
The group also questions All Aboard Florida’s insistence that the project is fully privately funded. The use of tax-exempt bonds, Ryan says, is essentially a federal subsidy. “There are profound issues for the local economy,” he says. All Aboard Florida says that no federal government entity will have exposure to the investment, and that train travel is needed to improve the quality of life. Trains were the primary mode of transportation in the USA until after World War II, when cars and airlines took over the roads and skies. Federally funded Amtrak has remained the predominant interstate passenger train system, but it does not offer the
kind of high-speed service found in Europe and Asia. The closest thing the USA has to high-speed trains is Amtrak’s Acela on the northeast corridor, which can go as fast as 150 mph. Brightline trains will not be highspeed, but its express service will be able to go up to 125 mph. High-speed rail “takes more money and fully dedicated track and electrification,” says Andy Kunz, president and CEO of the U.S. High Speed Rail Association. There’s been a recent resurgence in interest in trains, particularly among younger travelers, says Jim Wallington, a train expert at America by Rail, which promotes train travel. “This younger generation is less car prone,” he says. “They are not buying cars like we used to, and they are demanding that there be alternate transportation.” President Obama’s 2009 stimulus bill proposed billions of dollars in funding to create a true high-speed rail system across the nation. His efforts have stalled amid political opposition. Privately led efforts are underway to create high-speed rail systems in Texas and between Las Vegas and Los Angeles. A publicly led high-speed rail system is under construction in California. That will eventually connect Los Angeles and San Francisco in less than three hours.
Putting entitled travelers in their place Christopher Elliott
HOW TO FIX AIR TRAVELERS’ ENTITLEMENT MENTALITY
chris@elliott.org Special for USA TODAY
They’re spoiled. They’re demanding. And they’re ruining travel for everyone else. Don’t take my word for it. That’s what employees say about these guests, which they derisively call “silver spoon” travelers. Wait, did I just say “ruin” travel? Well, yeah. That’s what reportedly happened to guests at America’s Best Value Inn in Ludington, Mich., when an entitled guest cut in line at the waffle machine. The other guests flipped, sparking a fistfight that involved at least 30 customers. Speaking of the buffet line, who can forget the case of Sarah Buffett, an attorney seated in the first-class cabin of a US Airways flight from Charlotte to London this summer? She reportedly downed three glasses of wine and a sleeping pill, became “aggressive” and damaged her seat before trying to break a window with a remote control. The flight had to be diverted to Philadelphia. You don’t have to be intoxicated to be entitled. Camille Jamerson, a frequent traveler and event planner in Detroit, recalls a stone-cold sober passenger on a ON TRAVEL EVERY MONDAY
MIKE KANE FOR USA TODAY
Airlines coddle first-class passengers with over-the-top amenities, such as showers, onboard nannies, seats that turn into beds and curbside service in luxury sedans. recent flight who informed her he had “Medallion status.” This entitled passenger demanded she give up her first-class seat, so a friend, seated in economy class, could join him. “That didn’t happen,” she says. What’s turning a small group of travelers into spoiled babies? It’s a combination of greed, propaganda and human nature, according to observers. Only a top-to-bottom rethink of this problem can fix it. Silver spoons can pop up anywhere, of course. But ground zero of the entitlement problem is the first-class section of your next flight. “I blame my airline for the unending sense of entitlement,” says Brian, who works for a major car-
rier and asked me not to use his full name. He says the situation is out of control. The entitled classes are offered more and more, including dedicated boarding lines on red carpets, bigger seats and curbside service in a luxury sedan. And they are starting to behave like spoiled brats. “Last week, we had a full Boeing 757, which holds 180 passengers,” he told me. “We had 90 people on the upgrade list ... competing for 22 seats. The scene at the podium can be fun to watch: Grown men and women acting like children when they don’t get their upgrades. I have great admiration for those poor gate agents.” He’s not exaggerating. Abbie Unger, a recently retired flight attendant, remembers asking a pas-
u Lessen the divide. On many airlines, the division between first class and economy class is simply too wide. The contrast is so stark that adults throw tantrums if they don’t get upgrades. It’s time for regulators to mandate a minimum amount of legroom and seat width in the back of the plane, to keep the divide from becoming too disruptive. u Reform loyalty programs. Delta Air Lines and United Airlines took significant steps when they made their programs based on how much their passengers spend. Maybe it’s also time to pull the plug on the credit card point programs, which create trillions of unredeemable points and miles, and inflate travelers’ expectations. u Tell them to behave. Airlines, and indeed all travel companies, could benefit from setting basic behavior standards. Don’t cut in line. Don’t lean your seat all the way back into someone else’s personal space. Say “please” and “thank you.” If they don’t tell them what they expect, how can anyone know?
senger to move for a real VIP, former president Bill Clinton and his Secret Service entourage. “She stomped her feet and threw a fit,” she recalls. It helps to understand what’s happening behind the scenes. Airlines don’t make enough from economy-class passengers, but they can charge a hefty premium to passengers who want a little more comfort. On some routes, a first-class seat can cost 10 times more than a coach seat. So airlines coddle these passengers with over-the-top amenities, such as onboard nannies, seats that turn into beds, and showers. They present them with platinum cards that certify their extra special-ness. Loyalty program fanblogs then reinforce the
dangerous idea that your elite status doesn’t just mean you deserve to be treated better than everyone else but that you are better. These unrealistic expectations can lead to an onboard altercation, then spill over into the rest of the travel experience, sparking everything from road rage to waffle rage. Truth is, we are all just passengers going to the same place. If you set out on your next trip thinking you’re better than the rest of the travelers, stop it. This growing class divide will tear us apart. Elliott is a consumer advocate and editor at large for National Geographic Traveler.
USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld MONDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 2015
LIFELINE
SPORTS LIFE AUTOS ‘Supergirl’ TRAVEL soars with both sexes
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TELEVISION
EXCLUSIVE PHOTO Britney Spears makes quite an impression on ‘Jane the Virgin’ in this exclusive photo of the pop star meeting telenovela star Rogelio. Spears, who plays herself in Monday’s episode of the CW comedy (9 p.m. ET/PT), comes dressed to kill — Rogelio’s ego. Star power clashes when Britney and Rogelio (Jaime Camil) confront each other. Rogelio is still steaming over a teleprompter incident at a 2009 Latin pop music awards show. Britney, in response, forgets his name. Executive producer Jennie Snyder Urman explains Rogelio’s rage: “This is the first time Rogelio has come face to face with his former-friend-now-nemesis: Britney Spears. Rogelio claims they used to be best friends, until she betrayed him! The only problem? When Rogelio confronts Britney, she doesn't remember him! Which, of course, drives Rogelio more crazy! And he is determined to prove the truth.”
GREG GAYNE, CW
CAUGHT IN THE ACT Sure, Diane Kruger looks divine in that Monique Lhuillier ensemble, but we’re too distracted by Jared Leto’s epic photobomb. The red-carpet high jinks happened at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art Art+Film Gala Saturday. The fifth annual event honored Mexican film director Alejandro González Iñárritu and American artist James Turrell.
EUGENE GARCIA, EPA
IT’S YOUR BIRTHDAY WHO’S CELEBRATING TODAY?
Rare female superhero draws range of viewers Gary Levin USA TODAY
Supergirl has girl power. Maybe it’s the title. Maybe it’s that female viewers are hungering for female superheroes. But the latest comics-inspired TV series has an audience that’s nearly evenly split between men and women. That’s a rarity in the male-dominated superhero genre. By contrast, 60% of the adult TV audience for CW’s The Flash is male, as are 57% of viewers for Fox’s Gotham, which airs opposite Supergirl (Mondays, 8 p.m. ET/PT). The only other comic-book series to have nearly equal numbers of men and women is the last to feature a female lead: Marvel’s Agent Carter, which returns to ABC in early 2016. A third, Marvel’s Jessica Jones, arrives Nov. 20 on Netflix, but the streaming site doesn’t share information about how many viewers (and of which gender) are watching. “There is such a limited supply of female superheroes, it would be very appealing for women to watch,” says Brad Adgate, analyst at ad firm Horizon Media. A show that can “attract both genders, a dual audience, bodes well for its success.” Supergirl herself may be 24, but Supergirl also attracts the oldest audience among costumed crime-fighters, with a median age of 56, compared with 41.9 for The Flash and about 47 for Gotham and ABC’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. That’s likely a function of the show’s home on senior-friendly CBS. (About 54% of prime-time TV watchers are women.) But producers say the series, lighter and less mythology-driven than many of its counterparts, is aimed at everyone. “It’s nice to see that there are all kinds of people checking it out,” says executive producer Greg Berlanti, who’s also behind CW’s Arrow and The Flash. “My favorite emails and tweets are the ones where different generations from the same family are watching and enjoying it together.” Supergirl, which stars Melissa Benoist in the title role, premiered Oct. 26 with 13 million viewers but fell about 30% last week, when it no longer followed TV’s top comedy, The Big Bang Theory. But it still ranked as the top superhero series. A third episode airs Monday night.
HOW TV’S SUPERVIEWERS COMPARE
Percentage of adult viewership among men and women for current-season episodes, and median age of all viewers. Show (network)
% male
% female
Median age
Supergirl (CBS)
51
49
56.0
Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. (ABC)
53
47
46.9
Gotham (Fox)
57
43
47.2
Arrow (CW)
58
42
42.9
The Flash (CW)
60
40
41.9
Melissa Benoist’s Supergirl draws more female viewers than Stephen Amell’s The Arrow, left, Matthew Willig’s Lash on Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D., and Grant Gustin’s The Flash.
Source: Nielsen SUPERGIRL BY CLIFF LIPSON, CBS; STEPHEN ARNELL BY ED ARAQUEL, CW; MATTHEW WILLIG BY MARK KOLPACK, ABC; GRANT GUSTIN BY DIYAH PETRA, CW
MOVIES
JON KOPALOFF, FILMMAGIC
Nick Lachey is 42. Vanessa Lachey is 35. Compiled by Cindy Clark
USA SNAPSHOTS©
Time-tested soap
12,714th Episode of “Days of Our Lives” airing today
Note The 50-year-old daytime drama debuted Nov. 8, 1965. Source NBC Entertainment TERRY BYRNE AND JANET LOEHRKE, USA TODAY
‘Spectre’ is lethal; ‘Peanuts’ animate No. 2 Box office bounces back; ‘Goosebumps,’ ‘Martian’ still strong Bryan Alexander @BryAlexand USA TODAY
James Bond had a license to kill at the box office and executed that mission with a $73 million tally, according to studio estimates. Daniel Craig’s fourth turn as James Bond easily outpaced a strong showing for The Peanuts Movie, which still thrived at $45 million in its debut. Both movies provided a needed spark to a box office that has been slumping — down dramatically last weekend vs. the year before in what was an overall tough October for new releases. “It’s a great story, James Bond and Charlie Brown, two iconic characters over 50 years old,”
SONY
Daniel Craig drove Spectre to the second-largest Bond opening. says Paul Dergarabedian, senior box office analyst for Rentrak. “It took Bond and Brown to get the box office back on track.” Spectre is the second-biggest Bond opening behind 2012’s Skyfall, which took $88.4 million. The U.S. tally fell short of analysts’ initial expectations for the weekend, following Spectre’s record opening in the U.K. “Unquestionably, this is a big, big success,” Dergarabedian says.
The 3-D computer animated Peanuts marked a strong return for the beloved comic strip characters. Director Steve Martino and screenwriter/producer Craig Schulz, son of Peanuts creator Charles M. Schulz, carefully developed a film that honored fans. “They obviously took their time with this project and did it right,” says Jeff Bock, box office analyst for Exhibitor Relations. “Peanuts will have legs through
the holiday season. All signs point for this to be the beginning of a new Peanuts franchise.” Matt Damon and The Martian continued to excel with $9.3 million and third place. The Ridley Scott film has $197.1 million total. Jack Black as children’s horror author R.L. Stine in Goosebumps continued to pull in young audiences, taking fourth place with $7 million ($66.5 million total). Tom Hanks and director Steven Spielberg’s Cold War collaboration Bridge of Spies rounded out the top five with $6.1 million for a total of nearly $55 million. Awards hopefuls Spotlight, about The Boston Globe’s investigation into the Catholic Church child abuse scandal, and 1950s drama Brooklyn, starring Irish actress Saoirse Ronan, performed well in limited openings. In five theaters, the two movies averaged $60,400 and $36,200 per screen respectively. Final numbers are expected Monday.
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L awrence J ournal -W orld
PANTHERS SLAM PACKERS, REMAIN UNDEFEATED. 4C
Sports
C
Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com/sports l Monday, November 9, 2015
BIG 12 SOCCER FINAL
‘Cruel’ end
What, Self worry? Not about 3s By Gary Bedore gbedore@ljworld.com
Kevin Anderson/Special to the Journal-World
KANSAS UNIVERSITY’S AURÉLIE GAGNET, LEFT, WALKS AWAY AS TEXAS TECH PLAYERS PLAYER CELEBRATE their 1-0 victory over the Jayhawks in the Big 12 tournament championship game on Sunday in Kansas City, Missouri.
Red Raiders end Kansas’ run, 1-0 By Chris Duderstadt cduderstadt@ljworld.com
Kansas City, Mo. — Kansas University’s soccer team’s deepest run in the Big 12 tournament in school history ended with a 1-0 loss to Texas Tech in the conference championship game Sunday at Swope Soccer Village. Texas Tech freshman Gwennie Puente scored in the 85th minute, as the Red Raiders capitalized on a rare missed save from KU goalkeeper Maddie Dobyns.
TTU senior Caity Heap fired a shot in from the top of the 18-yard box that deflected off of Dobyns to Tech freshman Duke Jordan. Jordan collected the rebound and dished it to Puente for the game’s lone goal. “The opportunity that they got I think was a little bit of a mistake by us, but they capitalized on it,” KU coach Mark Francis said. “Our sport sometimes is cruel.” The sixth-seeded Jayhawks had plenty of chances to score on the Red Raiders,
especially in the first half. KU outshot TTU, 15-11, with 11 of the Jayhawks’ attempts coming before the break. Kansas’ best chance came in the 28th minute, when senior Liana Salazar split two TTU defenders before getting fouled in the 18-yard box to earn a penalty kick. Salazar tried to put it in the lower-right corner, but Tech goalie Lauren Watson guessed correctly to keep KU scoreless. “That PK, the odds are with the kicker,” Watson said. “I just tried to calm my-
self down, take a deep breath and try to cover as much of the goal as I could.” Sophomore Kayla Morrison and Salazar tallied a team-best three shots apiece for the Jayhawks. Salazar also positioned KU for two other golden opportunities — first with a cross from outside of the box into Morrison that was headed high in the 29th minute, and again in the 82nd when she sent a through ball to Ashley Williams. Williams Please see SOCCER, page 3C
Jayhawks, Schneider down familiar foe By Benton Smith basmith@ljworld.com
For nine of the 12 seasons Brandon Schneider served as head women’s basketball coach at Emporia State University, he did so with the help of then-assistant Jory Collins. However, Schneider, in his first season as coach at Kansas University, wasn’t exactly excited about facing his longtime cohort and buddy Collins, who replaced him at ESU, in an exhibition Sunday afternoon at Allen Fieldhouse.
The two talk and text as often as they can, so Schneider sort of felt like he had just defeated a family member following KU’s 68-57 victory. “He knows how I was gonna feel had we lost,” Schneider said of Collins, whose Hornets enter the 2015-16 season ranked No. 1 in Division II and gave the Jayhawks a scare in the first half. “I know how he’s feeling right now. You just don’t wish that on people that you care about.” Schneider, who went 30672 and led ESU to the 2010
national championship, said it felt strange competing against a program that still means a lot to him. “Whether it’s administration in that athletic department, or whether it’s the fan base, I am where I am today because of many of those people,” the new KU coach said. “I will forever have a little bit of Vegas gold in my blood, I promise you.” It became easier for John Young/Journal-World Photo Schneider to forget about those feelings — and his KANSAS UNIVERSITY COACH BRANDON friend Collins — for a little SCHNEIDER, LEFT, and the KU bench celebrate in the Jayhawks’ 68-57 exhibition victory over Please see KU WOMEN, page 3C Emporia State on Sunday at Allen Fieldhouse.
Bill Self wasn’t alarmed at Kansas University’s 4-of19 three-point shooting in Wednesday’s basketball exhibition opener against Pittsburg State. “That’s one thing I’m not worried about,” Self, KU’s 13th-year coach, said Sunday of his Jayhawks, who hit 21.1 percent from three and 58.5 percent of their twopoint tries in an 89-66 victory over the Gorillas. “ E v e n UP NEXT though we shot it mis- Who: Fort erably from Hays State the three- vs. Kansas point line, When: 7 p.m. I’m not wor- Tuesday ried about Where: Allen the shooting Fieldhouse at all. I think one of the TV: TWCSC strengths of (WOW! chanour team is nels 37, going to be 226) our perimeter shooting,” Self added. The Jayhawks practiced once Friday and twice Saturday before taking Sunday off. Next exhibition is Tuesday versus Fort Hays State, set for a 7 p.m. tipoff in Allen. “The other day we were 27-of-44 in our scrimmage from three (for 61.4 percent),” Self said after Wednesday’s game. “It’s fools gold because you don’t play as hard defensively because everything is going in. This was great for us to learn to be exposed what our weaknesses are, because if you make shots, you’re not exposed. The biggest thing is we have to play with more energy and athleticism.” Self said effort has been intense at practice since the Pitt State game. “We’ve gotten better since our last game,” Self said. “I thought we played very poorly in a lot of areas in that game (including staying in front of perimeter players). Hopefully we’ll be improved this week. “I’m not overly pleased,” he added of workouts. “I think some key players, especially some returning guys, can step it up another level.” Self said forward Landen Lucas, who was slowed by a sprained ankle versus Pitt State, “is fine. He’ll be 100 percent (for Tuesday).” Self said junior Wayne Selden Jr., “was sick on Saturday and missed a day. Everybody should be ready to go tomorrow (today).” Please see HOOPS, page 3C
Reesing on hand for loss to ’Horns By Matt Tait mtait@ljworld.com
Former Kansas University quarterback Todd Reesing made a career out of scrambling around the field, avoiding big hits and making big plays. Saturday night, at Darrell K Royal-Texas Memorial Stadium in Austin, Texas, Reesing watched another KU quarterback
attempt to do the same thing. Things did not go quite as well for KU freshman Ryan Willis, who made his fifth consecutive start and took punishing blow after punishing blow in a 59-20 loss. But the man who holds all of KU’s major passing records came away impressed by the first-year QB’s talent and toughness. “I think he looks pretty
good,” Reesing told the Journal-World at halftime. “He’s a true freshman, and you can tell he doesn’t always know how to change the protection. I remember my first game as a freshman. You end up just saying, ‘Hut, there’s a blitz, what am I supposed to do? OK, I gotta beat this guy one-onone.’ I had no idea how to do it. True story.” Reesing’s quick evalua-
tion of Willis came through the eyes of a seasoned veteran who spent three full seasons learning the nuances of playing QB in the Big 12. “He’s still a little slow out there,” Reesing said. “And on those four-yard outs, which you should hit every Nick Krug/Journal-World Photo time, the ball comes out low on the ones he misses, and FORMER KANSAS UNIVERSITY QUARTERBACK you can tell that’s just him TODD REESING WATCHES from the sidelines during the second quarter of KU’s 59-20 loss to Please see FOOTBALL, page 3C Texas on Saturday in Austin, Texas.
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2C | LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD | MONDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 2015
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Clemson takes over at No. 1 in AP poll AL EAST
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Clemson is the new No. 1 team in The Associated Press college football poll, knocking Ohio State from the top spot for the first time this season. The Tigers are top-ranked in the AP media poll for the first time since the final poll of the 1981 season, when Clemson won its only AP national title.
The Tigers (9-0) received 31 first-place votes and 1,489 points after beating Florida State 23-13 on Saturday. Ohio State (9-0) had 26 first-place votes and 1,460 points. The defending national champions have been first since the preseason, when they became the first team to be a unanimous preseason No. 1 in the 79-year history of the AP rankings.
n This is Clemson’s third time No. 3 Alabama (8-1) climbed four spot and got two first overall as the No. 1 team. The AL CENTRAL place votes. No. 4 Baylor also Tigers were top-ranked in the received two first-place votes. final regular-season poll of 1981. BALTIMORE ORIOLES
Poll points n A team dropping from the AL WEST top spot in the AP Top 25 after winning, as Ohio State did Sunday, is not uncommon. Last year, Florida State slipped twice after wins. CHICAGO WHITE SOX
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Johnson charges to victory Fort Worth, Texas (ap) — Brad Keselowski was dominating at Texas, leading lap after lap and getting oh so close to a victory that would have given him one of the four championship-contending spots in the Chase for the Sprint Cup finale. Until Texas fall favorite Jimmie Johnson came charging after the final restart. Keselowski led a track-record 312 of 334 laps Sunday after starting from the pole, but couldn’t keep Johnson from winning the Texas fall race for the fourth straight year. “Just one step short of having the awesome day we needed to have,” Keselowski said. “I’m not sure exactly how to feel about it at the moment. The 48 car had so much speed those last 10 laps.” With the already-eliminated Johnson getting his 75th career victory, three spots are still up for grabs at Phoenix, the last race before the Nov. 22 finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway. The only championship contender set is retiring fourtime champion Jeff Gordon, the Martinsville winner last week and Johnson’s teammate at Hendrick Motorsports. Kyle Busch leads the points race for at least two of the spots, ahead of defending Chase champion Kevin Harvick and Martin Truex Jr. Carl Edwards is next, followed by Keselowski, Kurt Busch and Joey Logano. “It’s not a must-win situation for us like it is for some other guys,” said Kyle Busch, who finished fourth Sunday. “Couldn’t be more pleased with the position we got right now.” After the final restart with 18 laps left, Keselowski and Truex were side-by-side, and even made contact at one point before Truex went in front very briefly. Keselowski almost as quickly got back in front, and Johnson also went charging past Truex into second place and right on the leader’s tail. Truex lost his power steering in those closing laps, and slipped to finish eighth. Johnson kept pushing and on the backstretch on lap 331, he finally got past when Keselowski got really loose out of the second turn. Johnson went on to win by more than a second. “That was the first I had seen him that vulnerable all day. I just kept the pressure on him, kept searching for line,” Johnson said. “I did everything I could to hold him off but he was way faster that last run,” Keselowski said. “As I sit right now, and maybe I’ll change my mind, I don’t know what I would have done differently, or could have done differently.” Minutes after the race, suspended driver Matt Kenseth tweeted, “Good work @JimmieJohnson! Textbook pass for the win at the end of the race when someone is trying to take your lane. #quintessential” After Logano chalked up contact with Kenseth at Kansas last month as aggressive racing for a win, NASCAR chairman Brian France referred to the move as “quintessential.”
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Conference call SPORTS ON TV The American Athletic Conference has something in TODAY common with the Southeastern Conference and Big 12 Pro Football Time Net Cable this week. All have four teams Chicago v. San Diego 7:10p.m. ESPN 33, 233 ranked in the Top 25.
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RUSSELL KNOX CELEBRATES ON THE 18TH HOLE of the final round of the HSBC Champions golf tournament Sunday at the Sheshan International Golf Club in Shanghai.
Knox wins Worlds in debut; Woodland 23rd Shanghai — Russell Knox raised both arms in the air, closed his eyes and tilted his head toward the heavens as if he couldn’t believe what he had just done. Dating to when the World Golf Championship began in 1999, no one had ever won in his debut. Knox wasn’t even eligible for the HSBC Champions until he got in 10 days ago as an alternate, and then it was a mad scramble in Malaysia to get a Chinese visa in time to play. Walking out of the Sheshan International clubhouse on Sunday with a share of the 54hole lead, Knox noticed a billboard with names and images of past winners at the HSBC Champions — Phil Mickelson and Martin Kaymer, Dustin Johnson and Bubba Watson. “Everyone who wins this tournament is a superstar,” Knox said. “I knew this would be the hardest day in my life.” For a 30-year-old from Scotland who had never won in 92 previous tries on the PGA Tour, Knox made it look like a breeze. He broke out of a five-way tie for the lead with two quick birdies to start the back nine and was flawless the rest of the way for a 4-under 68 and a two-shot victory over Kevin Kisner. “I always thought I was going to win a big one for my first one,” he said. “But this is going to take a long time to sink in.” He played alongside Johnson, whose power can be so intimidating that Knox didn’t watch him hit a shot for 12 holes. In the group ahead was Jordan Spieth, on his way back to No. 1 in the world. The cheers were for Li Haotong, the 20-year-old from Shanghai who received rockstar treatment during a wild final round that ended with the best finish ever by a Chinese player on the PGA Tour. “Incredible for me this week,” Li said. “This for me is very, very big.” Imagine how it felt for Knox, whose unexpected trip to China ended with a surprising victory. Knox finished at 20-under 268 and earned $1.4 million, along with perks that include his first trip to the Masters in April. “I got married on Saturday of the Masters,” he said. “What a great wedding anniversary we’re going to have.” Former Kansas University golfer Gary Woodland shot his best round of the tournament — a 65 — and moved up 25 spots Sunday into a tie for 23rd place. He finished 10 back and pocketed $75,750.
Andrade edges Langer Scottsdale, Ariz. — Billy Andrade won the season-ending Charles Schwab Cup Championship, beating Champions Tour points winner Bernhard Langer with a birdie on the first hole of a playoff. Andrade two-putted from the back fringe on the par-5 18th, holing a 21⁄2-footer for his third victory of the year on the 50-and-over tour. The 51-year-old Andrade closed with a 6-under 64 at Desert Mountain, making a 10-foot birdie putt on 18 to post at 14-under 266. Langer missed a chance to win on 18 in regulation when his 18-foot eagle putt lipped out. He finished with a 67, then failed to get up-anddown for birdie from the right greenside rough in the playoff.
Castro leads Sanderson Jackson, Miss. — Roberto Castro clung to a one-stroke lead in the Sanderson Farms Championship after playing the first six holes in the suspended third round in 2-over par. Play was suspended because of darkness at the Country Club of Jackson and will resume this morning, with the final round following immediately. It has been a soggy, stop-and-start tournament that has required plenty of patience. Several players had their second rounds stretch over three days from Friday to Sunday as rain swept through the area. Castro was at 13 under. He started play Sunday with a four-stroke lead, but quickly fell back toward the pack with bogeys on Nos. 3 and 4. They were his first two bogeys of the tournament.
Ahn LPGA playoff winner Shima, Japan — Sun-Ju Ahn won the Toto Japan Classic for her first LPGA Tour victory and 20th Japan LPGA title, beating fellow South Korean player Ji-Hee Lee and American Angela Stanford with a birdie on the first hole of a playoff. The 28-year-old Ahn closed with a 5-under 67 at Kintetsu Kashikojima to match Stanford and Lee at 16-under 200. Stanford also shot 67, and Lee had a 66.
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THE QUOTE “Bad news for baseball fans: No more games until 2016. Good news for baseball fans: No more Joe Buck until 2016.” — Janice Hough of LeftCoastSportsBabe.com, wrapping up the World Series
TODAY IN SPORTS 1912 — The lateral is used as an offensive weapon for the first time by Worcester Tech coach William F. Carney. Carney’s team beats Amherst 14-13. 1946 — Notre Dame fights to a 0-0 tie with Army to snap the Cadets’ 26-game winning streak. 2011 — Joe Paterno is fired by the Penn State board of trustees despite saying he would retire as coach after the football season ended.
LATEST LINE NFL Favorite.............. Points (O/U)...........Underdog Week 9 SAN DIEGO.....................41⁄2 (49.5).......................Chicago Thursday, Nov 12th. Week 10 NY JETS..............................3 (43)............................. Buffalo Sunday, Nov 15th. GREEN BAY..................... 111⁄2 (48)...........................Detroit Dallas................................11⁄2 (45)...................TAMPA BAY Carolina..........................41⁄2 (42.5).................TENNESSEE ST. LOUIS............................8 (45)...........................Chicago New Orleans.....................2 (50)................ WASHINGTON PHILADELPHIA................61⁄2 (47).............................Miami a-PITTSBURGH...............OFF (XX).....................Cleveland BALTIMORE........................6 (49)..................Jacksonville b-OAKLAND....................OFF (XX)....................Minnesota DENVER.................... 7 (43).............Kansas City New England..................7 (54.5).....................NY GIANTS SEATTLE...........................3 (44.5).......................... Arizona Monday, Nov 16th. CINCINNATI......................11 (47.5).........................Houston a-Cleveland QB J. McCown is questionable. b-Minnesota QB T. Bridgewater is questionable. Bye Week: Atlanta, Indianapolis, San Diego, San Francisco.
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COLLEGE FOOTBALL Favorite.............. Points (O/U)...........Underdog Tuesday, Nov 10th. Toledo..................................... 5.........CENTRAL MICHIGAN OHIO......................................... 7.................................Kent St Wednesday, Nov 11th. Bowling Green...................31⁄2. ....WESTERN MICHIGAN Northern Illinois.................. 6..............................BUFFALO Thursday, Nov 12th. GEORGIA TECH...................31⁄2. ................. Virginia Tech UL-Lafayette.........................1...............SOUTH ALABAMA Friday, Nov 13th. Usc...........................................16.........................COLORADO Saturday, Nov 14th. DUKE......................................31⁄2. .......................Pittsburgh CINCINNATI............................16.................................... Tulsa Utsa......................................... 6.........................CHARLOTTE Massachusetts.................... 7.........EASTERN MICHIGAN Middle Tenn St...................51⁄2. ...... FLORIDA ATLANTIC Michigan................................12............................... INDIANA MARSHALL.............................12..........................Florida Intl Akron...................................... 7.........................MIAMI-OHIO MICHIGAN ST.........................18............................Maryland HOUSTON............................... 6..............................Memphis Ohio St....................................17............................... ILLINOIS Clemson..............................261⁄2.......................SYRACUSE
Temple..................................41⁄2.............SOUTH FLORIDA Nebraska.............................91⁄2...........................RUTGERS OLD DOMINION...................31⁄2. .................................. Utep TCU............................. 44......................Kansas TEXAS TECH............... 51⁄2................ Kansas St VANDERBILT.......................... 4.............................Kentucky NORTHWESTERN..................13................................. Purdue FLORIDA ST.........................91⁄2........................... NC State Utah St....................................1............................AIR FORCE TEXAS ST..............................41⁄2........................Georgia St Arkansas St....................... 141⁄2.....................UL-MONROE UCLA........................................ 8...................Washington St WEST VIRGINIA............ 8..........................Texas NOTRE DAME......................271⁄2...................Wake Forest Alabama................................. 7...................MISSISSIPPI ST NORTH CAROLINA.............111⁄2................. Miami-Florida Southern Miss.................... 71⁄2. ...................................RICE NAVY.....................................211⁄2....................................Smu Oklahoma St................14.....................IOWA ST LSU.........................................81⁄2.......................... Arkansas AUBURN...................................1.................................Georgia ARIZONA ST.........................31⁄2. ....................Washington BAYLOR...................... 31⁄2.................Oklahoma x-Byu....................................... 4...............................Missouri Georgia Southern............... 6..................................... TROY NEVADA.................................11⁄2......................San Jose St
CALIFORNIA........................201⁄2........................Oregon St Appalachian St....................16.................................. IDAHO COLORADO ST....................... 7.......................................Unlv LOUISVILLE............................10............................... Virginia Utah......................................... 5.............................. ARIZONA TENNESSEE.........................401⁄2................... North Texas Florida..................................71⁄2. .........SOUTH CAROLINA STANFORD...........................81⁄2..............................Oregon BOISE ST................................30.......................New Mexico IOWA......................................111⁄2........................Minnesota SAN DIEGO ST...................... 23............................ Wyoming HAWAII..................................41⁄2..........................Fresno St x-at Arrowhead Stadium-Kansas City, MO. NBA Favorite.............. Points (O/U)...........Underdog 1 Chicago...........................7 ⁄2 (195)............ PHILADELPHIA INDIANA...........................31⁄2 (195).........................Orlando ATLANTA...........................9 (202).....................Minnesota DENVER..........................11⁄2 (207.5)......................Portland y-San Antonio..............OFF (OFF).............SACRAMENTO z-LA CLIPPERS..............OFF (OFF)......................Memphis GOLDEN ST......................14 (209)...........................Detroit y-Sacramento center D. Cousins is doubtful. z-LA Clippers point guard C. Paul is doubtful. Home Team in CAPS (c) TRIBUNE CONTENT AGENCY, LLC
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Kansas lands D-line pledge By Matt Tait mtait@ljworld.com
Kansas University football coach David Beaty has talked all season about the difficulty associated with upgrading the defensive line, a position where the Jayhawks are thin and inexperienced. Sunday, Beaty and company took a step toward changing that when they received an oral commitment from DeeIsaac Davis, a 6-foot3, 290-pound defensive tackle from Highland Community College. Davis, who hails from the Wichita area, attended Eastern Arizona during his first season of college football. He recorded 76 tackles and earned all-conference honors there before moving on to Highland, where this season he has recorded 76 tackles and five sacks.
Football CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C
not having the calmness to just take the snap and throw. But I like him. He’s a nice player with some talent.” Before being removed from the blowout in the second half by KU coach David Beaty, who said he was trying to prevent further damage to his young QB’s injured groin, Willis finished 17-of-34 passing for 214 yards, one touchdown and two interceptions. He also ran a dozen times for 38 yards but lost 37 yards in sacks and took a heavy does of punishment from the UT defense throughout the night. Asked if he thought the groin injuries Willis suffered Saturday night would cause Willis to miss some time, Beaty pointed to the freshman’s toughness. “You know, I don’t know,” Beaty admitted. “He went back in, but I finally just pulled him. He was trying, and that last ball he just couldn’t get much on it. The kid was trying everything he could. It just wasn’t fair to him to keep leaving him in there. He battled his tail off. I’m proud of him for that. But we’ve said it every week, he’s gotta do a better job of taking care of the football.”
Punt gaffe clarification Before leaving Austin, Texas, The JournalWorld spoke with one of the Big 12 officials who worked Saturday’s KUTexas game to get a clarification on the situation surrounding the punt that was muffed by Derrick Neal in the first half of KU’s 59-20 loss. The ruling on the field
Linebackers coach Kevin Kane and D-line coach Calvin Thibodeaux played key roles in recruiting Davis, who informed Beaty of his decision Sunday. He chose Kansas over offers from Idaho and Southern Miss. “(The KU coaches) said they need a three technique player and they like my hands and feel I can go in and contribute right away,” Davis told JayhawkSlant.com’s Jon Kirby. “I am looking forward to getting there and competing.” Davis plans to graduate in December and report to KU in time for spring John Young/Journal-World Photo football. KANSAS SOPHOMORE GUARD LAUREN ALDRIDGE (3) FLIPS UP AN ACROBATIC SHOT after being fouled by Emporia State “I’m still in shock,” during the Jayhawks’ 68-57 exhibition victory on Sunday in Allen Fieldhouse. Davis told Kirby. “This has always been a dream of mine. I have played yup. Then Manning-Allen One thing that he got an and-one off a pick- BOX SCORE against other players who STATE (57) preaches about most and-roll with freshman EMPORIA are playing in the Big 12 MIN FG FT REB PF TP and I look forward to the guard Kylee Kopatich (10 m-a m-a o-t often is just playing Moten 33 9-20 0-2 1-8 3 19 competition. I hope to CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C four assists). Next, Kelly Kelsey Barnwell 25 2-5 1-2 0-0 0 6 together and playing points, contribute early.” sophomore guard Chayla Sandra Ngoie 30 4-9 0-0 0-8 3 10 Lackey 25 2-5 0-0 0-0 2 5 while, though, when tough.” Cheadle, who scored all Addie Kathryn Flott 24 2-7 0-0 2-6 4 4 Emporia State took an nine of her points in the Shelby Baker 22 1-3 1-2 4-6 1 3 11-point lead in the sec- — KU’s Caelynn Manning-Allen, second half, hit a three- Jacee Kramer 15 3-8 0-0 1-1 2 6 Holloway 13 2-4 0-0 1-3 2 4 was that Neal touched the ond quarter. pointer off a pass from Megan on coach Brandon Schneider Kyrstie Miller 9 0-1 0-0 0-2 1 0 “I’m not thinking about ball and a Texas player Aldridge. When Manning- Tiana Moala 5 0-0 0-0 1-1 0 0 Maria Moylan 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 recovered it at the KU 17. his feelings at that moAllen converted another team 1-4 Replay during the game ment. I’m trying to figure and a timely three-point- layup off a Kopatich dish, Totals 25-62 2-6 11-39 18 57 Three-point goals: 5-24 (Ngoie 2-6, confirmed as much, but out how we can rotate to a er from junior guard the Jayhawks had a 10-0 Lackey 1-2, Barnwell 1-3, Moten 1-5, Flott Beaty continued to have pick-and-pop,” Schneider Timeka O’Neal (eight explosion less than two 0-2, Holloway 0-2, Kramer 0-4). Assists: 5, Lackey 3, Ngoie). Turnovers: discussions with the ref- said. “All that goes out the points off the bench). minutes into the second 920(Moten (Moten 6, Ngoie 3, Baker 3, Lackey 2, erees for several minutes window once you get in “One thing that he half and a nine-point lead Holloway 2, Flott, Moala, Kramer, team). after the replay confirma- the game, because I didn’t preaches about most of- against an ESU team that Blocked shots: 5 (Ngoie 3, Flott, Moala). get to take any shots today, ten is just playing together looked extremely com- Steals: 2 (Moten, Ngoie). tion. KANSAS (68) Beaty said after the and he didn’t get a chance and playing tough,” said fortable a quarter earlier. MIN FG FT REB PF TP game that he was arguing to get any rebounds. It’s Manning-Allen, who finAldridge, who twice m-a m-a o-t that the UT player who really about the players ished with 11 points and in the fourth quarter re- Lauren Aldridge 34 6-11 6-7 0-5 0 18 Robertson 19 3-6 0-0 1-5 1 6 recovered the ball “clear- once you tip it.” four boards. “That’s one sponded with driving la- Aisia Chayla Cheadle 29 3-10 2-2 0-0 1 9 In fact, KU junior for- thing that we did really yups when the Hornets got C. Manning-Allen 26 5-12 1-3 0-4 0 11 ly went out of bounds” and was the first one to ward Caelynn Manning- look more into going into within three points, said Kylee Kopatich 34 4-8 0-0 0-2 2 10 Timeka O’Neal 21 3-5 0-0 0-3 1 8 touch it after returning to Allen said the exhibition the second half. We felt Schneider’s offense makes Jada Brown 18 1-3 0-0 0-1 2 2 Tyler Johnson 13 1-3 2-4 2-4 0 4 the field of play. By rule, didn’t feel any different like we could play harder, every Jayhawk a threat. Christopher 6 0-2 0-0 1-2 2 0 that would be deemed il- for the Jayhawks, because rebound more and just be “I just think it allows Jayde L. Enabulele 1 0-0 0-0 1-1 0 0 legal touching, and pos- Schneider prepared them more physical, and get up people to do what they do team 2-7 26-60 11-16 7-34 9 68 session would be given to as he would have for any and down the court more best,” Aldridge said. “And Totals Three-point goals: 5-11 (O’Neal 2-3, other opponent. Kansas — just play as hard as we when the time comes, I Kopatich 2-4, Cheadle 1-2, Aldridge 0-1, Kansas. 0-1). Assists: 14 (Aldridge The official Sunday didn’t really panic in a could so that we could think each and every one Robertson 7, Kopatich 4, Christopher 2, Cheadle). said that the refs on the double-digit deficit, and stay in the game, get back of us on the team will Turnovers: 13 (Cheadle 3, Aldridge 2, field missed the call dur- by halftime, ESU’s lead in it and just take the lead.” step up and hopefully Robertson 2, Brown 2, O’Neal 2, Kopatich, team). Blocked shots: 5 (Johnson 3, ing live action and that shrunk to 36-35, following Accordingly, Kansas make the play that we’re Robertson, Kopatich). Steals: 8 (Robertson 2, Chaedle 2, Kopatich, Brown, O’Neal, replay could not get in- a couple of baskets form got the start it needed to supposed to.” Christopher). volved after the fact. The sophomore guard Lauren open the third quarter. KU will open its regu- Emporia State 19 17 12 9 — 57 14 21 19 14 — 68 mishap falls in the same Aldridge (18 points, seven Freshman point guard Ai- lar season Sunday against Kansas Officials: Katie Lukanich, Missy Brooks, category as a play in assists, five rebounds) sia Robertson scored a la- Texas Southern. Ann Schroeder. Attendance: 2,871. which a team challenges the spot of the football and on replay officials to be named to the allsee a facemask penalty. tournament team,” WatBecause the penalty was son said. “Credit to their missed on the field — and goalkeeper (Dobyns). I penalties are not reviewwas watching her in some able — the infraction can- CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C of the games, and I know not be flagged after being was set up with a one-onethat when they were playdiscovered by replay. ing Texas, she had one In short, the missed call one matchup with Watson that was tipped over. That on the field cost Kansas and slammed it home, but was an awesome save.” because the rules were on was ruled offside. “I thought we did more Following tournament the Jayhawks’ side. victories over Texas and The official, who said than enough to win the Baylor, and Sunday’s loss he was impressed with game,” Francis said. “We to Tech, the Jayhawks are how hard the Jayhawks clearly had much better 10-9-2 entering today’s played, added that Beaty opportunities, but you’ve NCAA Div. I Tournawas calm and respectful got to give Tech credit. Kevin Anderson/Special to the Journal-World ment selection show. The during his discussions They switched their forKANSAS’ GRACE HAGAN GETS KNOCKED OFF HER FEET in bracket will be revealed at and “asked his questions mation in the second half KU’s 1-0 loss to Texas Tech on Sunday in Kansas City, because I thought we 3:30 p.m. on NCAA.com. in the right way.” Missouri. kind of decimated them The Jayhawks reached KU-TCU set for 11 a.m. in the first half.” the NCAA Tournament TCU’s loss to OklahoSalazar’s and Dobyns’ the quarterfinal),” Francis Heap were also selected last season, but Francis ma State made the Frogs a efforts throughout the Jay- said. “Then Li (Salazar) … to the tournament team thinks KU might need less-appealing primetime hawks’ last three games she’s been tremendous all for fifth-seeded Tech, some help to return. option for next week- did not go unnoticed by year, obviously scoring along with TTU’s Janine “I’d say we’re probably end’s TV broadcasts, and the conference. They the two goals in Friday’s Beckie and Allie Murphy. an outside shot. There’s the Big 12 announced Sat- were named to the All-Big game (against Baylor) The TTU goalkeeper always a chance because urday that the KU-TCU 12 tournament team. and helping us win that was humbled by the nom- we made it this far, and if game in Fort Worth, Tex“We’re not here today one and making it to this ination but was quick to you make the conference as, will kickoff at 11 a.m. if Maddie doesn’t make point. Li’s been clutch for praise Dobyns and the tournament and finish the and be shown on FOX some of those saves she us all season.” Jayhawks. season well, I think that Sports 1. made against Texas (in Watson, Puente and “It’s such an honor helps you,” Francis said.
KU women “
Soccer
BRIEFLY KU men’s golf sixth in Hawaii
Lahaina, Hawaii — Kansas University’s Ben Welle placed 11th, and the KU men’s golf team finished sixth at the Ka’anapali Collegiate Classic, which concluded Sunday at the Ka’anapali Golf Course. Welle shot an even-par 213 to finish in a tie for 11th. Other KU scores: Daniel Hudson, tied for 15, 214; Connor Peck, tied for 36th, 220; Chase Hanna, tied for 49th, 222; Charlie Hillier, tied for 56th, 224; and Brock Drogosch, tied for 71st, 228. Oklahoma won the team
title with 837. Kansas was sixth at 867. “We got off to a hot start today but just couldn’t get finish it off,” KU coach Jamie Bermel said. “It was still a solid round of golf and I’m of proud how the team fought today.” The meet concluded the fall portion of the Jayhawks’ schedule.
Kansas tennis 0-3 at Tech
Lubbock, Texas — Kansas University tennis players dropped all three of their singles matches at the Texas Tech Invitational on Sunday. Smith Hinton fell to
TTU’s Sarah Dvorak, 3-6, 6-1, 6-1; Maria Jose Cardona lost to Tech’s Lynn Kiro, 1-6, 7-6, 6-1; and Summer Collins tumbled to Texas Tech’s Felicity Maltby, 6-1, 6-2. “We had some good opportunities today, but we just couldn’t find a way to close the door,” Kansas coach Todd Chapman said. “This weekend was a great way to close the fall season as a team and we played some good tennis. We now look forward to Anastasiya (Rychagova) competing this weekend at the USTA/ITA National Indoor Collegiate Championships.” KU went 13-6 overall at the Tech Invite.
Hoops Frontier honors volleyball players
Several area high school volleyball players earned All-Frontier League honors on Friday. De Soto High seniors Aubri Hinkle and Kylie Corneliusen, along with Eudora senior Makaila Garcia, picked up firstteam recognition. Baldwin senior Emma Burnett was selected for the second team, while Baldwin senior Kelsey Kehl, De Soto freshmen Kaitlyn Bel and Ally Barnhart, Eudora senior Kristi Daigh and Ottawa sophomore Kamryn Shaffer received an honorable mention.
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C
Self said “I don’t know” when asked when to expect a ruling in the Cheick Diallo initial-eligibility case. l
Jackson scores 30 in Ames: Josh Jackson, a 6-foot-7 senior forward from Prolific Prep in Napa, California scored 30 points with 11 rebounds, six assists and three blocks in his squad’s 98-91 loss to Victory Rock Prep on Saturday at the Cornfield Classic in Ames, Iowa. Jackson, the No. 1 player in the Class of 2016 by Rivals.com, is consider-
ing KU, Michigan State, Arizona, Maryland and others. He will not choose a school in the early signing period which runs Wednesday through Nov. 18. “Josh is the finest high school player I’ve ever seen,” Prolific Prep coach Billy McKnight told Zagsblog.com. “He is a super talented player and not just physically, but mentally. He picks things up so quick. His physical attributes are phenomenal.” l
Lots of pros: The NBA announced that Kentucky has supplied the league with the most players of any college this season (21), followed by KU (19), Duke (18), North Carolina (16), UCLA (14), Arizona (13), Florida (10).
4C
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Monday, November 9, 2015
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NFL
L awrence J ournal -W orld
NFL ROUNDUP
Perfect Panthers push past Packers passes while playing with a torn ligament in his left thumb, Chris Ivory ran for two scores and the Jets took advantage of late mistakes by the Jaguars. Brandon Marshall had a 20-yard TD catch after the Jets (5-3) recovered a muffed punt late in the fourth quarter, helping New York end a twogame skid in a messy performance by both sides.
The Associated Press
Panthers 37, Packers 29 Charlotte, N.C. — Cam Newton threw three touchdown passes and ran for another score Sunday, and Carolina took an important step toward securing homefield advantage throughout the NFC playoffs with a victory over Green Bay. Newton completed 15 of 30 passes for 297 yards and ran for 57 yards on nine carries in one of the best games of his fiveyear NFL career. The Panthers (8-0) extended their regular-season win streak to 12 and put themselves in terrific shape in the NFC standings, where every other team has at least two losses. Green Bay 7 0 7 15—29 Carolina 3 24 3 7—37 First Quarter Car-FG Gano 20, 10:12. GB-R.Rodgers 1 pass from A.Rodgers (Crosby kick), :55. Second Quarter Car-Newton 1 run (Gano kick), 12:09. Car-Olsen 7 pass from Newton (Gano kick), 8:55. Car-FG Gano 49, 4:59. Car-Brown 39 pass from Newton (Gano kick), :41. Third Quarter GB-Cobb 53 pass from A.Rodgers (Crosby kick), 14:00. Car-FG Gano 22, 4:48. Fourth Quarter Car-Funchess 14 pass from Newton (Gano kick), 9:22. GB-Starks 29 pass from A.Rodgers (Adams pass from A.Rodgers), 7:54. GB-R.Rodgers 3 pass from A.Rodgers (Crosby kick), 3:43. A-74,461. GB Car First downs 21 20 Total Net Yards 402 427 Rushes-yards 19-71 36-130 Passing 331 297 Punt Returns 4-18 5-35 Kickoff Returns 3-71 2-33 Interceptions Ret. 1-4 1-(-1) Comp-Att-Int 25-48-1 15-30-1 Sacked-Yards Lost 5-38 0-0 Punts 8-44.6 6-48.2 Fumbles-Lost 2-1 0-0 Penalties-Yards 7-87 6-45 Time of Possession 27:48 32:12 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Green Bay, Starks 10-39, A.Rodgers 4-22, Lacy 5-10. Carolina, Stewart 20-66, Newton 9-57, Whittaker 2-13, Tolbert 3-7, Webb 1-(minus 1), Brown 1-(minus 12). PASSING-Green Bay, A.Rodgers 25-48-1-369. Carolina, Newton 15-301-297. RECEIVING-Green Bay, Adams 7-93, Starks 6-83, R.Rodgers 5-19, Cobb 4-99, J.Jones 2-57, Ripkowski 1-18. Carolina, Olsen 4-66, Cotchery 3-82, Funchess 3-71, Brown 2-50, Ginn Jr. 1-20, Dickson 1-6, Stewart 1-2. MISSED FIELD GOALS-Carolina, Gano 43 (WL).
Steelers 38, Raiders 35 Pittsburgh — Chris Boswell hit an 18-yard field goal with two seconds left to lift the Steelers after Ben Roethlisberger left because of a potentially serious left foot injury. The Steelers (5-4) survived after Roethlisberger exited midway through the fourth quarter after getting sacked by Aldon Smith. Replacement Landry Jones found Antonio Brown for a 57-yard reception on Pittsburgh’s final drive to set up Boswell’s winning kick. Oakland 7 7 7 14—35 Pittsburgh 3 18 0 17—38 First Quarter Oak-Crabtree 22 pass from Carr (Janikowski kick), 12:10. Pit-FG Boswell 34, 4:40. Second Quarter Pit-D.Williams 3 run (D.Williams pass from Roethlisberger), 13:57. Oak-Cooper 15 pass from Carr (Janikowski kick), 6:05. Pit-D.Williams 3 run (Boswell kick), 1:56. Pit-FG Boswell 38, :29. Third Quarter Oak-Walford 1 pass from Carr (Janikowski kick), 7:02. Fourth Quarter Pit-Bryant 14 pass from Roethlisberger (Boswell kick), 12:13. Pit-James 4 pass from Roethlisberger (Boswell kick), 11:24. Oak-Olawale 19 run (Janikowski kick), 9:32. Oak-Crabtree 38 pass from Carr (Janikowski kick), 1:15. Pit-FG Boswell 18, :02. A-65,520. Oak Pit First downs 24 27 Total Net Yards 440 597 Rushes-yards 25-139 30-195 Passing 301 402 Punt Returns 1-1 3-2 Kickoff Returns 5-74 4-83 Interceptions Ret. 1-1 1-25 Comp-Att-Int 24-44-1 28-50-1 Sacked-Yards Lost 0-0 1-11 Punts 7-39.6 5-41.6 Fumbles-Lost 5-3 1-1 Penalties-Yards 3-21 5-42 Time of Possession 27:56 32:04 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Oakland, Murray 17-96, Reece 3-21, Olawale 1-19, Carr 2-3, Jones 2-0. Pittsburgh, D.Williams 27-170, Brown 2-22, Todman 1-3. PASSING-Oakland, Carr 24-44-1-301. Pittsburgh, Roethlisberger 24-44-1334, L.Jones 4-6-0-79. RECEIVING-Oakland, Crabtree 7-108, Cooper 7-88, Roberts 3-73, Rivera 2-16, Murray 2-(minus 1), L.Smith 1-10, Jones 1-6, Walford 1-1. Pittsburgh, Brown 17-284, Miller 3-32, Bryant 3-31, D.Williams 2-55, James 2-13, Wheaton 1-(minus 2). MISSED FIELD GOALS-Pittsburgh, Boswell 41 (WL).
Bob Leverone/AP Photo
CAROLINA’S LUKE KUECHLY (59) HITS GREEN BAY’S RICHARD RODGERS as Rodgers tries to catch a pass in the second half of the Panthers’ 37-29 victory on Sunday in Charlotte, North Carolina. Patriots 27, Whisenhunt was fired Washington 10 and replaced by Mike Foxborough, Mass. — Mularkey. Julian Edelman and Le- Tennessee 10 7 3 8 6 —34 Garrette Blount scored New Orleans 14 7 0 7 0 —28 Quarter touchdowns before First NO-Hill 10 pass from Brees (Forbath Washington ran its sec- kick), 9:46. Ten-FG Succop 51, 6:58. ond play. NO-Cooks 38 pass from Brees Tom Brady completed (Forbath kick), 3:44. Ten-Walker 61 pass from Mariota 26 of 39 passes for 299 (Succop kick), 1:00. yards and two touch- Second Quarter downs, including an NO-Brees 1 run (Forbath kick), 11:01. Ten-Walker 2 pass from Mariota eight-yarder to Edelman (Succop kick), 8:08. on the opening drive. Third Quarter Ten-FG Succop 29, 7:17. New England (8-0) then Fourth Quarter pulled off a surprise onNO-Hoomanawanui 1 pass from side kick, but that drive Brees (Forbath kick), 11:32. Ten-Hunter 8 pass from Mariota stalled when Edelman (Walker pass from Mariota), 7:06. Overtime fumbled. Ten-Fasano 5 pass from Mariota, 9:50. Washington could A-73,075. manage only a single Ten NO First 25 29 play: Kirk Cousins’ pass Totaldowns Net Yards 483 416 that bounced off Pierre Rushes-yards 28-112 26-59 371 357 Garcon and was inter- Passing Punt Returns 2-12 3-21 cepted by Logan Ryan. Kickoff Returns 4-96 3-82 1-0 0-0 New England then Interceptions Ret. 28-39-0 28-39-1 marched downfield to Comp-Att-Int Sacked-Yards Lost 0-0 4-32 5-50.6 4-45.8 make it 14-0 on Blount’s Punts Fumbles-Lost 2-1 1-1 five-yard score. Penalties-Yards 9-66 8-75 Washington 0 3 0 7—10 New England 14 3 3 7—27 First Quarter NE-Edelman 8 pass from Brady (Gostkowski kick), 9:01. NE-Blount 5 run (Gostkowski kick), 4:30. Second Quarter NE-FG Gostkowski 21, 7:56. Was-FG Hopkins 23, :13. Third Quarter NE-FG Gostkowski 21, 7:32. Fourth Quarter NE-Bolden 18 pass from Brady (Gostkowski kick), 11:28. Was-Reed 3 pass from Cousins (Hopkins kick), :25. A-66,829. Was NE First downs 16 27 Total Net Yards 250 460 Rushes-yards 15-37 37-161 Passing 213 299 Punt Returns 1-9 2-(-2) Kickoff Returns 3-48 2-18 Interceptions Ret. 1-44 1-13 Comp-Att-Int 22-40-1 26-39-1 Sacked-Yards Lost 1-4 0-0 Punts 4-47.0 2-34.5 Fumbles-Lost 2-1 2-1 Penalties-Yards 4-27 6-43 Time of Possession 22:55 37:05 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Washington, Jones 11-27, Morris 4-10. New England, Blount 29-129, Lewis 4-14, Bolden 1-12, Amendola 1-8, Brady 1-(minus 1), Garoppolo 1-(minus 1). PASSING-Washington, Cousins 22-40-1-217. New England, Brady 26-39-1-299. RECEIVING-Washington, Crowder 6-50, Garcon 4-70, Reed 3-18, Jackson 3-15, Roberts 2-26, Thompson 2-21, Jones 2-17. New England, LaFell 5-102, Edelman 5-55, Gronkowski 4-47, Lewis 4-39, Amendola 4-24, Bolden 3-27, Chandler 1-5.
Titans 34, Saints 28, OT New Orleans — Tennessee rookie Marcus Mariota came back from his recent injury to pass for 371 yards and four touchdowns, including a 5-yard scoring pass to Anthony Fasano in overtime, and the Titans snapped a six-game skid. The Saints (4-5), who had won three in a row, led 21-10 but could not put away the Titans (26), who turned in a feisty performance in their first game since coach Ken
Third Quarter Min-Bridgewater 6 run (Bridgewater run), 8:39. Fourth Quarter StL-FG Zuerlein 53, :12. Overtime Min-FG Walsh 40, 9:20. A-52,406. StL Min First downs 18 21 Total Net Yards 320 293 Rushes-yards 36-160 35-145 Passing 160 148 Punt Returns 4-27 4-40 Kickoff Returns 0-0 4-96 Interceptions Ret. 1-0 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 18-33-0 15-27-1 Sacked-Yards Lost 1-8 1-11 Punts 8-46.5 8-41.8 Fumbles-Lost 0-0 2-0 Penalties-Yards 12-87 6-67 Time of Possession 32:27 33:13 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-St. Louis, Gurley 24-89, Austin 8-66, Mason 3-3, Foles 1-2. Minnesota, Peterson 29-125, Bridgewater 3-17, Asiata 2-4, Hill 1-(minus 1). PASSING-St. Louis, Foles 18-33-0-168. Minnesota, Bridgewater 13-21-1-144, Hill 2-6-0-15. RECEIVING-St. Louis, Austin 4-15, Britt 3-87, Gurley 3-20, Kendricks 2-25, Bailey 2-13, Cook 1-10, Marquez 1-3, Quick 1-(minus 1), Mason 1-(minus 4). Minnesota, Diggs 3-42, Rudolph 2-30, Peterson 2-18, Ellison 2-11, McKinnon 2-11, C.Johnson 1-25, Wright 1-12, Pruitt 1-6, Wallace 1-4. MISSED FIELD GOALS-St. Louis, Zuerlein 48 (WR).
Time of Possession 32:21 32:49 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Tennessee, Andrews 19-88, McCluster 8-19, Mariota 1-5. New Orleans, Ingram 21-52, Spiller 2-8, Brees 3-(minus 1). PASSING-Tennessee, Mariota 28-390-371. New Orleans, Brees 28-39-1-389. RECEIVING-Tennessee, Walker 7-95, Green-Beckham 5-77, Douglas 5-73, Fasano 3-33, Hunter 3-17, McCluster 2-28, Stevens 2-25, Andrews 1-23. New Orleans, Snead 6-95, Watson 5-60, Cooks 4-73, Ingram 4-42, Colston 3-37, Coleman 2-58, Hill 2-21, Spiller 1-2, Hoomanawanui 1-1. MISSED FIELD GOALS-Tennessee, Succop 55. New Orleans, Forbath 46 (BK).
Bills 33, Dolphins 17 Orchard Park, N.Y. — Sammy Watkins had a career-best performance in leading the Bills. He made eight catches for 168 yards and a 44-yard touchdown that broke open the game late in the third quarter. Rookie running back Karlos Williams scored twice, and LeSean McCoy also scored on a 48-yard run. Buffalo (4-4) won for Vikings 21, Rams 18, OT the first time in four Minneapolis — Adrian home games. Peterson rushed for 125 0 7 7 3—17 yards on 29 carries, help- Miami 9 10 7 7—33 ing set up Blair Walsh’s Buffalo First Quarter Buf-Team safety, 11:48. 40-yard field goal in overBuf-McCoy 48 run (Carpenter kick), time after Vikings quar- 8:50. terback Teddy Bridgewa- Second Quarter Mia-Miller 1 run (Franks kick), 11:28. ter left with a concussion Buf-FG Carpenter 43, 7:08. early in the fourth quarter. Buf-Ka.Williams 11 run (Carpenter kick), 2:26. In a predictably grindThird Quarter it-out game between simMia-Miller 1 run (Franks kick), 10:05. Buf-Watkins 44 pass from Taylor ilarly constructed teams, (Carpenter kick), 2:21. the Vikings (6-2) ended Fourth Quarter Buf-Ka.Williams 38 run (Carpenter Todd Gurley’s streak 8:35. of games with 125-plus kick), Mia-FG Franks 48, 3:53. yards rushing at four. A-70,214. Mia Buf Gurley gained 89 yards First downs 29 18 and a touchdown on 24 Total Net Yards 397 420 Rushes-yards 23-106 36-266 attempts for the Rams 291 154 (4-4), who received the Passing Punt Returns 2-18 0-0 Kickoff Returns 4-50 3-32 overtime kickoff but went Interceptions Ret. 0-0 0-0 three-and-out. Comp-Att-Int 28-37-0 11-12-0 Marcus Sherels tiptoed Sacked-Yards Lost 2-27 3-27 3-31.3 3-50.0 along the sideline for a Punts Fumbles-Lost 3-1 0-0 26-yard return of Johnny Penalties-Yards 8-62 13-94 of Possession 28:47 31:13 Hekker’s 63-yard punt, Time INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS and Peterson ran the ball RUSHING-Miami, Miller 12-44, Ajayi well into Walsh’s range 5-41, Landry 4-18, Tannehill 2-3. McCoy 16-112, Ka.Williams to give the Vikings their Buffalo, 9-110, Taylor 10-44, Woods 1-0. PASSING-Miami, Tannehill 27-36-0seventh straight win at 309, Landry 1-1-0-9. Buffalo, Taylor home. 11-12-0-181. St. Louis 6 9 0 3 0 —18 Minnesota 10 0 8 0 3 —21 First Quarter Min-FG Walsh 34, 10:19. Min-Peterson 6 run (Walsh kick), 5:24. StL-Gurley 1 run (run failed), 1:09. Second Quarter StL-FG Zuerlein 61, 10:55. StL-FG Zuerlein 35, 3:23. StL-FG Zuerlein 45, :00.
RECEIVING-Miami, Landry 11-69, Miller 7-97, Matthews 4-54, Stills 3-74, Sims 1-9, Tannehill 1-9, Cameron 1-6. Buffalo, Watkins 8-168, McCoy 2-7, Clay 1-6.
Jets 28, Jaguars 23 East Rutherford, N.J. — Ryan Fitzpatrick threw two touchdown
Jacksonville 3 7 3 10—23 N.Y. Jets 14 0 7 7—28 First Quarter Jax-FG Myers 45, 8:59. NYJ-Decker 7 pass from Fitzpatrick (Quigley kick), 5:08. NYJ-Ivory 1 run (Quigley kick), :43. Second Quarter Jax-Hurns 30 pass from Bortles (Myers kick), :14. Third Quarter Jax-FG Myers 39, 4:32. NYJ-Ivory 1 run (Quigley kick), 2:02. Fourth Quarter Jax-FG Myers 35, 10:18. NYJ-Marshall 20 pass from Fitzpatrick (Quigley kick), 2:41. Jax-Walters 20 pass from Bortles (Myers kick), 2:16. A-78,160. Jax NYJ First downs 19 14 Total Net Yards 436 290 Rushes-yards 19-98 28-29 Passing 338 261 Punt Returns 2-20 4-42 Kickoff Returns 4-117 4-115 Interceptions Ret. 0-0 2-8 Comp-Att-Int 24-40-2 21-34-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 6-43 2-11 Punts 5-40.6 9-39.0 Fumbles-Lost 3-2 1-0 Penalties-Yards 4-30 6-41 Time of Possession 29:16 30:44 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Jacksonville, Yeldon 14-64, Bortles 4-32, D.Robinson 1-2. N.Y. Jets, Ivory 23-26, Stacy 1-3, Fitzpatrick 4-0. PASSING-Jacksonville, Bortles 24-402-381. N.Y. Jets, Fitzpatrick 21-34-0-272. RECEIVING-Jacksonville, A.Robinson 6-121, Hurns 5-122, Walters 5-54, Yeldon 3-37, Thomas 3-14, Lewis 1-27, Jacobs 1-6. N.Y. Jets, Decker 6-79, Thompkins 4-45, Marshall 4-44, Ivory 3-22, Kerley 2-22, Cumberland 1-44, Stacy 1-16.
Colts 27, Broncos 24 Indianapolis — Andrew Luck threw two touchdown passes, and Adam Vinatieri made a tie-breaking 55-yard field goal with 6:13 to play, giving Indianapolis a surprising victory over Denver. The Colts (4-5) ended a three-game losing streak and stayed atop the AFC South by ruining Peyton Manning’s return to Indy again. Denver (7-1) was the only unbeaten team to lose this weekend. Denver 0 7 10 7—24 Indianapolis 7 10 0 10—27 First Quarter Ind-Gore 7 run (Vinatieri kick), 6:48. Second Quarter Ind-FG Vinatieri 43, 12:13. Ind-Doyle 3 pass from Luck (Vinatieri kick), 7:12. Den-Bolden 83 punt return (McManus kick), :00. Third Quarter Den-Sanders 64 pass from Manning (McManus kick), 11:27. Den-FG McManus 29, 4:57. Fourth Quarter Ind-Bradshaw 8 pass from Luck (Vinatieri kick), 14:05. Den-Daniels 1 pass from Manning (McManus kick), 8:54. Ind-FG Vinatieri 55, 6:13. A-66,894. Den Ind First downs 16 27 Total Net Yards 309 365 Rushes-yards 14-35 40-120 Passing 274 245 Punt Returns 1-83 3-2 Kickoff Returns 2-69 2-33 Interceptions Ret. 0-0 2-1 Comp-Att-Int 21-36-2 21-36-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 1-7 1-7 Punts 5-43.0 5-45.2 Fumbles-Lost 0-0 0-0 Penalties-Yards 8-56 4-30 Time of Possession 21:21 38:39 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Denver, Anderson 7-34, Hillman 7-1. Indianapolis, Gore 28-83, Luck 6-34, Bradshaw 6-3. PASSING-Denver, Manning 21-36-2281. Indianapolis, Luck 21-36-0-252. RECEIVING-Denver, Daniels 6-102, Sanders 6-90, Thomas 5-50, Fowler 2-22, Green 1-13, Anderson 1-4. Indianapolis, Hilton 5-82, Whalen 5-73, Fleener 4-22, Moncrief 3-30, Doyle 2-18, Gore 1-19, Bradshaw 1-8.
49ers 17, Falcons 16 Santa Clara, Calif. — Blaine Gabbert threw a pair of second-quarter touchdown passes to Garrett Celek and undermanned San Francisco held on to beat Atlanta. The 49ers (3-6) head into the bye on a winning note after a week of change. Making his first start in more than two years, Gabbert didn’t take a sack behind an offensive line that has faced heavy scrutiny all year. Atlanta 3 10 0 3—16 San Francisco 0 17 0 0—17 First Quarter Atl-FG Bryant 44, 9:24. Second Quarter SF-Celek 1 pass from Gabbert (Dawson kick), 13:41. Atl-FG Bryant 36, 6:05. SF-FG Dawson 44, 3:20. SF-Celek 11 pass from Gabbert (Dawson kick), 1:16. Atl-Freeman 17 pass from Ryan (Bryant kick), :13. Fourth Quarter Atl-FG Bryant 19, 2:56. A-70,799.
Atl SF First downs 17 18 Total Net Yards 302 318 Rushes-yards 14-17 39-133 Passing 285 185 Punt Returns 4-76 1-17 Kickoff Returns 4-115 3-80 Interceptions Ret. 2-2 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 30-45-0 15-26-2 Sacked-Yards Lost 2-18 0-0 Punts 7-43.4 5-48.2 Fumbles-Lost 1-0 0-0 Penalties-Yards 6-63 5-30 Time of Possession 32:08 27:52 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Atlanta, Freeman 12-12, Coleman 1-3, Ryan 1-2. San Francisco, Draughn 16-58, Gabbert 9-32, Gaskins 7-20, P.Thomas 4-12, Ellington 1-7, Miller 2-4. PASSING-Atlanta, Ryan 30-45-0-303. San Francisco, Gabbert 15-25-2-185, Kaepernick 0-1-0-0. RECEIVING-Atlanta, Jones 10-137, Freeman 8-67, Tamme 6-61, Hardy 4-17, White 1-20, Toilolo 1-1. San Francisco, Draughn 4-38, Patton 3-70, Smith 2-44, McDonald 2-19, Celek 2-12, Ellington 2-2.
Giants 32, Buccaneers 18 Tampa, Fla. — Eli Manning threw for 213 yards and two touchdowns, helping the first-place New York Giants rebound from last week’s road debacle at New Orleans with a victory over Tampa Bay. Josh Brown booted four field goals for the Giants (5-4), including fourth-quarter kicks of 53 and 44 yards that gave New York some breathing room after the Bucs (3-5) pulled within two points. N.Y. Giants 10 7 3 12—32 Tampa Bay 6 3 3 6—18 First Quarter TB-FG Barth 25, 13:26. NYG-FG Brown 35, 9:52. TB-FG Barth 28, 8:04. NYG-Randle 8 pass from Manning (Brown kick), :53. Second Quarter NYG-Vereen 4 pass from Manning (Brown kick), 11:20. TB-FG Barth 21, :06. Third Quarter NYG-FG Brown 35, 11:49. TB-FG Barth 53, 7:15. Fourth Quarter TB-Winston 10 run (pass failed), 9:25. NYG-FG Brown 53, 7:18. NYG-FG Brown 44, :23. NYG-Wade 5 fumble return (run failed), :00. A-64,351. NYG TB First downs 24 19 Total Net Yards 327 385 Rushes-yards 33-114 23-136 Passing 213 249 Punt Returns 0-0 1-1 Kickoff Returns 2-54 4-87 Interceptions Ret. 0-0 2-34 Comp-Att-Int 26-40-2 19-36-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 0-0 0-0 Punts 1-64.0 2-42.5 Fumbles-Lost 1-0 4-3 Penalties-Yards 6-49 9-79 Time of Possession 34:55 25:05 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-N.Y. Giants, Jennings 13-48, Williams 7-30, Darkwa 6-23, Vereen 6-14, Manning 1-(minus 1). Tampa Bay, Sims 8-78, Martin 11-31, Winston 3-24, Rainey 1-3. PASSING-N.Y. Giants, Manning 26-40-2-213. Tampa Bay, Winston 19-36-0-249. RECEIVING-N.Y. Giants, Beckham Jr. 9-105, Randle 5-40, Vereen 4-29, Tye 2-19, Cunningham 2-10, Williams 1-7, White 1-3, D.Harris 1-1, Jennings 1-(minus 1). Tampa Bay, Evans 8-152, Humphries 5-55, Martin 2-12, Brate 1-17, Lane 1-5, Dye 1-4, Sims 1-4. MISSED FIELD GOALS-Tampa Bay, Barth 43 (WR).
Eagles 33, Cowboys 27, OT Arlington, Texas — Sam Bradford threw a 41yard touchdown pass to Jordan Matthews in overtime, and Philadelphia sent Dallas to its longest losing streak in 26 years with a victory in overtime. Matthews broke away from Byron Jones and ran past safety J.J. Wilcox on the first possession of overtime. Philadelphia 0 7 7 13 6 —33 Dallas 7 0 7 13 0 —27 First Quarter Dal-Beasley 5 pass from Cassel (Bailey kick), 6:44. Second Quarter Phi-Murray 1 run (Sturgis kick), 9:01. Third Quarter Phi-Mathews 6 run (Sturgis kick), 8:36. Dal-Beasley 17 pass from Cassel (Bailey kick), 2:04. Fourth Quarter Phi-Hicks 67 interception return (Sturgis kick), 12:47. Dal-Bryant 18 pass from Cassel (Bailey kick), 10:52. Phi-FG Sturgis 31, 7:22. Dal-FG Bailey 41, 2:53. Phi-FG Sturgis 53, 1:46. Dal-FG Bailey 44, :02. Overtime Phi-Matthews 41 pass from Bradford, 10:59. A-91,827. Phi Dal First downs 25 25 Total Net Yards 459 411 Rushes-yards 35-172 29-134 Passing 287 277 Punt Returns 0-0 2-5 Kickoff Returns 0-0 1-79 Interceptions Ret. 1-67 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 25-36-0 25-38-1 Sacked-Yards Lost 1-8 4-22 Punts 5-48.2 4-43.8 Fumbles-Lost 0-0 2-0 Penalties-Yards 10-70 8-58 Time of Possession 25:42 38:19 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Philadelphia, Murray 18-83, Mathews 11-67, Sproles 5-23, Bradford 1-(minus 1). Dallas, McFadden 27-117, Cassel 2-17. PASSING-Philadelphia, Bradford 25-36-0-295. Dallas, Cassel 25-38-1-299. RECEIVING-Philadelphia, Matthews 9-133, Murray 6-78, Ertz 5-44, Huff 2-10, Sproles 2-3, Austin 1-27. Dallas, Beasley 9-112, Witten 6-43, Bryant 5-104, Te.Williams 3-27, Whitehead 1-8, McFadden 1-5.
SPORTS/CLASSIFIED
L awrence J ournal -W orld
Cavaliers 101, Pacers 97 Cleveland — LeBron James scored 29 points while playing with a bruised quadriceps, and Cleveland beat Indiana Sunday for its sixth straight win. James took a knee to the leg Friday and said he would get round-theclock treatment so he could play against the Pacers. The treatment paid off as James hit seven free throws down the stretch and found Kevin Love for two key baskets in the final 27 seconds. Love scored 22 points and had 19 rebounds for the Cavaliers, who haven’t lost since the season opener against Chicago. INDIANA (97) George 11-21 7-8 32, J.Hill 3-15 1-1 7, Mahinmi 3-4 0-2 6, G.Hill 6-16 2-2 14, Ellis 10-17 3-4 25, Allen 0-5 0-0 0, Turner 3-4 0-0 6, Budinger 2-4 0-2 5, Robinson III 1-4 0-0 2. Totals 39-90 13-19 97. CLEVELAND (101) James 10-23 9-14 29, Love 9-18 2-2 22, Mozgov 2-5 4-5 9, Williams 4-15 0-0 10, Jefferson 2-6 0-0 5, Dellavedova 2-3 0-0 5, Thompson 7-8 2-4 16, Jones 0-0 0-0 0, Cunningham 2-5 0-0 5. Totals 38-83 17-25 101. Indiana 22 20 31 24— 97 Cleveland 24 23 27 27—101 3-Point Goals-Indiana 6-18 (George 3-6, Ellis 2-4, Budinger 1-2, Robinson III 0-1, G.Hill 0-5), Cleveland 8-24 (Williams 2-5, Love 2-6, Mozgov 1-2, Dellavedova 1-2, Cunningham 1-3, Jefferson 1-3, James 0-3). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-Indiana 54 (J.Hill, George 11), Cleveland 56 (Love 19). Assists-Indiana 22 (George 6), Cleveland 25 (Dellavedova 9). Total Fouls-Indiana 20, Cleveland 20. A-20,562 (20,562).
How former Jayhawks fared Cliff Alexander, Portland Did not play (coach’s decision). Tarik Black, L.A. Lakers Min: 15. Pts: 8. Reb: 4. Ast: 1. Mario Chalmers, Miami Min: 25. Pts: 9. Reb: 7. Ast: 6. Nick Collison, Oklahoma City Did not play (coach’s decision). Sasha Kaun, Cleveland Did not play (coach’s decision). Marcus Morris, Detroit Min: 37. Pts: 13. Reb: 3. Ast: 3. Markieff Morris, Phoenix Min: 34. Pts: 19. Reb: 5. Ast: 0.
NBA STANDINGS EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W L Pct GB Toronto 5 2 .714 — New York 3 4 .429 2 Boston 2 3 .400 2 Philadelphia 0 6 .000 4½ Brooklyn 0 7 .000 5 Southeast Division W L Pct GB Atlanta 7 1 .875 — Miami 4 3 .571 2½ Washington 3 3 .500 3 Orlando 3 4 .429 3½ Charlotte 2 4 .333 4 Central Division W L Pct GB Cleveland 6 1 .857 — Detroit 5 1 .833 ½ Chicago 4 3 .571 2 Milwaukee 4 3 .571 2 Indiana 3 4 .429 3 WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division W L Pct GB San Antonio 4 2 .667 — Houston 4 3 .571 ½ Dallas 3 3 .500 1 Memphis 3 4 .429 1½ New Orleans 0 6 .000 4 Northwest Division W L Pct GB Utah 4 2 .667 — Minnesota 3 2 .600 ½ Portland 4 3 .571 ½ Oklahoma City 4 3 .571 ½ Denver 2 4 .333 2 Pacific Division W L Pct GB Golden State 7 0 1.000 — L.A. Clippers 4 2 .667 2½ Phoenix 3 4 .429 4 L.A. Lakers 1 5 .167 5½ Sacramento 1 6 .143 6 Today’s Games Orlando at Indiana, 6 p.m. Chicago at Philadelphia, 6 p.m. Minnesota at Atlanta, 7 p.m. Portland at Denver, 8 p.m. San Antonio at Sacramento, 9 p.m. Detroit at Golden State, 9:30 p.m. Memphis at L.A. Clippers, 9:30 p.m. Tuesday’s Games Utah at Cleveland, 6 p.m. Oklahoma City at Washington, 6 p.m. New York at Toronto, 6:30 p.m. L.A. Lakers at Miami, 6:30 p.m. Charlotte at Minnesota, 7 p.m. Dallas at New Orleans, 7 p.m. Boston at Milwaukee, 7 p.m.
| 5C
SCOREBOARD
NBA roundup The Associated Press
Monday, November 9, 2015
NFL
AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA New England 8 0 0 1.000 276 143 N.Y. Jets 5 3 0 .625 200 162 Buffalo 4 4 0 .500 209 190 Miami 3 5 0 .375 171 206 South W L T Pct PF PA Indianapolis 4 5 0 .444 200 227 Houston 3 5 0 .375 174 205 Jacksonville 2 6 0 .250 170 235 Tennessee 2 6 0 .250 159 187 North W L T Pct PF PA Cincinnati 8 0 0 1.000 229 142 Pittsburgh 5 4 0 .556 206 182 Baltimore 2 6 0 .250 190 214 Cleveland 2 7 0 .222 177 247 West W L T Pct PF PA Denver 7 1 0 .875 192 139 Oakland 4 4 0 .500 213 211 Kansas City 3 5 0 .375 195 182 San Diego 2 6 0 .250 191 227 NATIONAL CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA N.Y. Giants 5 4 0 .556 247 226 Philadelphia 4 4 0 .500 193 164 Washington 3 5 0 .375 158 195 Dallas 2 6 0 .250 160 204 South W L T Pct PF PA Carolina 8 0 0 1.000 228 165 Atlanta 6 3 0 .667 229 190 New Orleans 4 5 0 .444 241 268 Tampa Bay 3 5 0 .375 181 231 North W L T Pct PF PA Minnesota 6 2 0 .750 168 140 Green Bay 6 2 0 .750 203 167 Chicago 2 5 0 .286 140 202 Detroit 1 7 0 .125 149 245 West W L T Pct PF PA Arizona 6 2 0 .750 263 153 St. Louis 4 4 0 .500 153 146 Seattle 4 4 0 .500 167 140 San Francisco 3 6 0 .333 126 223 Thursday’s Game Cincinnati 31, Cleveland 10 Sunday’s Games Tennessee 34, New Orleans 28, OT Minnesota 21, St. Louis 18, OT Carolina 37, Green Bay 29 New England 27, Washington 10 Buffalo 33, Miami 17 N.Y. Jets 28, Jacksonville 23 Pittsburgh 38, Oakland 35 San Francisco 17, Atlanta 16 N.Y. Giants 32, Tampa Bay 18 Indianapolis 27, Denver 24 Philadelphia 33, Dallas 27, OT Open: Arizona, Baltimore, Detroit, Houston, Kansas City, Seattle Today’s Game Chicago at San Diego, 7:30 p.m.
18. (24) Aric Almirola, Ford, 334. 19. (12) Greg Biffle, Ford, 333. 20. (16) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 333. 21. (28) Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Ford, 333. 22. (19) Ryan Newman, Chevy, 333. 23. (15) David Ragan, Toyota, 333. 24. (32) Sam Hornish Jr., Ford, 332. 25. (36) Landon Cassill, Chevy, 331. 26. (17) Casey Mears, Chevy, 330. 27. (39) Cole Whitt, Ford, 330. 28. (43) Justin Allgaier, Chevy, 330. 29. (41) David Gilliland, Ford, 329. 30. (35) Brett Moffitt, Ford, 329. 31. (37) Michael Annett, Chevy, 329. 32. (40) Jeb Burton, Toyota, 329. 33. (34) J.J. Yeley, Toyota, 329. 34. (33) Michael McDowell, Ford, 328. 35. (38) Matt DiBenedetto, Toyota, 328. 36. (42) Ryan Preece, Chevy, 326. 37. (5) Kyle Larson, Chevy, accident, 304. 38. (9) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 304. 39. (29) Trevor Bayne, Ford, 296. 40. (4) Joey Logano, Ford, 268. 41. (31) Alex Bowman, Chevy, engine, 236. 42. (22) Tony Stewart, Chevy, accident, 52. 43. (25) Ryan Blaney, Ford, accident, 26.
Sunday at Kashikojima Country Club Shima, Japan Purse: $1.5 million Yardage: 6,506; Par: 72 Final (x-won on first hole of playoff)x-SunJu Ahn, $225,000 68-65-67—200 Ji-Hee Lee, $118,379 67-67-66—200 Angela Stanford, $118,379 65-68-67—200 Jenny Shin, $77,003 66-65-70—201 Ariya Jutanugarn, $61,979 70-68-64—202 Hyo Joo Kim, $37,062 69-67-68—204 Stacy Lewis, $37,062 67-69-68—204 Jiyai Shin, $37,062 67-68-69—204 Lexi Thompson, $37,062 67-68-69—204 Pornanong Phatlum, $37,062 67-66-71—204 Ha-Neul Kim, $37,062 66-66-72—204 Lala Anai, $23,964 73-64-68—205 Yukari Nishiyama, $23,964 68-67-70—205 Caroline Masson, $23,964 67-68-70—205 Ai Suzuki, $23,964 66-68-71—205
College Women College Men
Ka’anapali Collegiate Classic Saturday at Ka’anapali Golf Course Lihina, Hawaii Par-71; 6,100 yards Second Round Oklahoma 557 Georgia 563 North Carolina State 565 CSUN 575 South Carolina 576 Hawaii 581 Kansas 582 Liberty 583 Sacramento State 584 Indiana 585 Loyola Marymount 586 Ball State 589 Gonzaga 589 UC Santa Barbara 591 Bowling Green State 592 Long Beach State 594 Washington State 601 Hawaii (B) 614 Northern Iowa 617 Kansas Results T-17. Ben Welle 143 (+1) T-17. Daniel Hudson 143 (+1) T-43. Connor Peck 148 (+6) T-48. Chase Hanna 149 (+7) T-70. Charlie Hillier 152 (+10) T-78. Brock Drogosch 153 (+11)
9-for-10 shooting for the Thunder, who forced 23 turnovers and outrebounded Phoenix 52-33. Dion Waiters added 19 points. Oklahoma City opened the season with three straight wins, then lost the next three by a com- MIAMI (96) Deng 2-7 1-2 6, Bosh 8-14 3-5 23, bined 16 points. The Whiteside 8-15 4-5 20, Dragic 1-5 0-0 Thunder shot 52 percent 2, Wade 4-13 3-4 12, Winslow 3-8 3-4 9, Knicks 99, Lakers 95 from the field against McRoberts 2-7 1-2 5, Chalmers 3-8 3-3 T.Johnson 4-5 0-0 10, Ennis 0-0 0-0 0, New York — Carme- the Suns to make sure it 9, Haslem 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 35-83 18-25 96. HSBC Champions Toronto 24 23 16 13—76 lo Anthony scored 24 wasn’t close late. Sunday at Sheshan International Golf Miami 22 22 30 22—96 Club points, and New York PHOENIX (103) 3-Point Goals_Toronto 3-19 (Lowry Shanghai spoiled what might have Tucker 1-5 0-0 3, Morris 7-20 5-6 19, 2-8, Scola 1-2, Bennett 0-1, Patterson Purse: $8.5 million 0-3 1-2 1, Bledsoe 10-15 6-7 0-2, Ross 0-3, DeRozan 0-3), Miami AP Top 25 been Kobe Bryant’s last Chandler The Top 25 teams in The Associated Yardage: 7,261; Par: 72 28, Knight 6-14 0-0 14, Goodwin 1-2 1-4 8-20 (Bosh 4-7, T.Johnson 2-2, Wade game at Madison Square 3, Len 2-3 4-4 8, Warren 7-10 3-3 17, 1-1, Deng 1-3, Winslow 0-1, Chalmers Press college football poll, with first- Final votes in parentheses, records Russell Knox (550), $1,400,000 Garden, beating the Los Leuer 3-6 0-0 7, Price 0-0 0-0 0, Booker 0-1, McRoberts 0-2, Dragic 0-3). Fouled place 67-65-68-68—268 0-3 0-0 0, Teletovic 1-3 0-0 3. Totals Out_None. Rebounds_Toronto 47 through Nov. 7, total points based on Kevin Kisner (315), $850,000 Angeles Lakers. (Biyombo, J.Johnson 7), Miami 56 25 points for a first-place vote through 38-84 20-26 103. 64-66-70-70—270 (Whiteside 11). Assists-Toronto 17 one point for a 25th-place vote, and Bryant finished with OKLAHOMA CITY (124) Danny Willett, $422,500 Durant 12-19 6-7 32, Ibaka 5-12 0-0 (Lowry 8), Miami 18 (Chalmers 6). previous ranking: 65-74-70-62—271 18 points, far off the 30.7 10, Adams 3-6 1-1 7, Westbrook 9-20 Total Fouls-Toronto 21, Miami 20. Record Pts Pv Ross Fisher, $422,500 9-0 1,489 3 per game he had been av- 3-4 21, Roberson 3-7 1-2 7, Kanter 9-10 Technicals-DeRozan. A-19,600 (19,600). 1. Clemson (31) 69-69-65-68—271 2. Ohio St. (26) 9-0 1,460 1 21, Waiters 6-9 5-6 19, Singler 1-5 eraging here and fewer 3-3 Branden Grace (110), $276,500 3. Alabama (2) 8-1 1,376 7 0-1 2, McGary 1-3 1-2 3, Augustin 0-2 63-71-70-68—272 4. Baylor (2) 8-0 1,351 2 than half the 40 or more 2-4 2, Payne 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 49-94 Pistons 120, Dustin Johnson (110), $276,500 5. Oklahoma St. 9-0 1,256 12 124. Trail Blazers 103 he managed on three oc- 22-30 65-71-65-71—272 6. Notre Dame 8-1 1,219 8 Phoenix 29 25 23 26—103 Matthew Fitzpatrick, $173,750 Portland, Ore. — An- 7. Stanford casions during a series of Oklahoma City 29 31 29 35—124 8-1 1,144 9 68-69-69-67—273 9-0 1,091 10 3-Point Goals-Phoenix 7-16 (Bledsoe dre Drummond had 29 8. Iowa highlights in the arena. Patrick Reed (86), $173,750 9. LSU 7-1 1,050 4 2-2, Knight 2-6, Leuer 1-2, Teletovic 65-70-68-70—273 8-1 900 13 1-2, Tucker 1-2, Morris 0-1, Goodwin points and 27 rebounds, 10. Utah Jordan Spieth (86), $173,750 L.A. LAKERS (95) 8-1 887 11 0-1), Oklahoma City 4-20 (Waiters 2-3, Reggie Jackson scored a 11. Florida 68-72-63-70—273 Bryant 6-19 4-7 18, Randle 3-12 0-0 6, Durant 2-5, Payne 0-1, Roberson 0-1, 12. Oklahoma 8-1 858 14 Haotong Li, $173,750 Hibbert 5-9 8-10 18, Russell 3-7 0-1 6, Augustin 0-2, Ibaka 0-2, Westbrook career-high 40 points, and 13. TCU 8-1 841 5 66-69-66-72—273 Clarkson 4-13 0-0 10, L.Williams 3-12 0-3, Singler 0-3). Fouled Out-None. Detroit rallied in the fourth 14. Michigan St. 8-1 807 6 Also 2-3 9, World Peace 3-4 0-0 8, Young Rebounds-Phoenix 46 (Chandler 8), 15. Michigan 7-2 684 16 Gary Woodland (47), $75,750 4-10 0-0 10, Nance Jr. 1-2 0-0 2, Black Oklahoma City 59 (Durant 11). Assists- quarter to beat Portland. 16. Houston 9-0 561 18 69-71-73-65—278 4-6 0-2 8. Totals 36-94 14-23 95. Jackson had 26 points 17. North Carolina 8-1 506 21 Phoenix 18 (Bledsoe 11), Oklahoma NEW YORK (99) 18. UCLA 7-2 403 22 City 26 (Westbrook 13). Total Fouls- in the fourth quarter Anthony 8-20 6-6 24, Porzingis 3-10 Phoenix 25, Oklahoma City 25. 19. Florida St. 7-2 379 17 Sanderson Farms 5-6 12, Lopez 5-9 4-4 14, Calderon 6-12 Technicals-Phoenix defensive three alone, and the Pistons 20. Mississippi St. 7-2 357 24 Sunday 0-0 14, Vujacic 2-7 0-0 5, O’Quinn 0-1 1-2 second. A-18,203 (18,203). 21. Temple 8-1 310 23 outscored the Blazers 41At The Country Club of Jackson 1, D.Williams 1-4 4-6 6, Grant 1-6 0-0 2, 22. Navy 7-1 218 NR Jackson, Miss. 11 in the final period. Galloway 5-9 1-1 14, Seraphin 0-3 0-0 0, 23. Wisconsin 8-2 183 NR Purse: $4.1 million Thomas 2-3 3-4 7. Totals 33-84 24-29 99. Heat 96, Raptors 76 7-2 177 NR It was the Pistons’ 24. Northwestern Yardage: 7,364; Par: 72 L.A. Lakers 25 24 21 25—95 25. Memphis 8-1 137 15 Second Round M iami — Chris Bosh first win in Portland New York 25 20 26 28—99 Others receiving votes: Southern Note: Third round was suspended and 3-Point Goals-L.A. Lakers 9-27 scored 23 points, Hassan since 2007 and snapped Cal 104, BYU 35, Mississippi 22, Boise will be completed with the fourth (World Peace 2-2, Clarkson 2-3, Young St. 6, Texas A&M 6, Toledo 4, W. round today. 2-5, Bryant 2-10, L.Williams 1-6, Randle Whiteside added 20 points a six-game overall losing Kentucky 2, Washington St. 2. Roberto Castro 62-67—129 0-1), New York 9-27 (Galloway 3-4, and 11 rebounds, and Mi- streak to the Blazers. Bryce Molder 64-69—133 Anthony 2-6, Calderon 2-6, Porzingis ami rolled in the second DETROIT (120) Jhonattan Vegas 66-67—133 1-3, Vujacic 1-4, O’Quinn 0-1, Grant Michael Thompson 67-67—134 0-3). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds- half to beat Toronto. Morris 5-18 2-2 13, Ilyasova 2-5 0-0 Brian Davis 65-69—134 L.A. Lakers 61 (Randle 11), New York 6, Drummond 14-19 1-6 29, Jackson Dwyane Wade scored 15-26 7-8 40, Caldwell-Pope 6-15 2-2 NASCAR Sprint Cup Patrick Rodgers 70-64—134 62 (Lopez 13). Assists-L.A. Lakers 19 D.J. Trahan 67-67—134 (L.Williams 5), New York 22 (Grant 12, and Tyler Johnson 16, Johnson 1-4 1-2 3, Blake 1-4 0-0 AAA Texas 500 Boo Weekley 68-67—135 8). Total Fouls-L.A. Lakers 20, New added 10 for Miami, 3, Tolliver 2-4 0-0 6, Baynes 1-1 2-2 4. Sunday Nick Taylor 69-66—135 York 15. Technicals-New York Coach Totals 47-96 15-22 120. At Texas Motor Speedway Peter Malnati 69-66—135 Fisher 2, New York defensive three which outscored the Rap- PORTLAND (103) Fort Worth, Texas Ricky Barnes 68-67—135 second. Ejected— New York Coach tors 30-16 in the third and Aminu 3-7 3-4 9, Leonard 7-13 0-0 17, Lap length: 1.5 miles Carl Pettersson 67-69—136 Fisher. A-19,812 (19,763). 3-8 1-3 7, Lillard 8-15 6-7 26, (Start position in parentheses) Robert Garrigus 67-69—136 then put the game away Plumlee McCollum 8-17 2-2 18, Crabbe 7-7 0-0 15, 1. (8) Jimmie Johnson, Chevy, 334 Patton Kizzire 67-69—136 with an 18-3 run in the Davis 2-3 0-2 4, Vonleh 2-3 0-0 4, Harkless laps. David Toms 67-69—136 0-0 3. Totals 41-76 12-18 103. Thunder 124, Suns 103 fourth. Whiteside also 1-3 2. (1) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 334. Adam Hadwin 65-71—136 Detroit 23 24 32 41—120 3. (2) Kevin Harvick, Chevy, 334. Brice Garnett 68-68—136 Oklahoma City — blocked six shots for the Portland 32 25 35 11—103 4. (3) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 334. Goals-Detroit 11-30 (Jackson Kevin Durant had 32 Heat, who started a sev- 3-3,3-Point 5. (13) Carl Edwards, Toyota, 334. Leaderboard at time of suspended Tolliver 2-3, Ilyasova 2-4, Caldwell6. (10) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevy, 334. play points and 11 rebounds, en-game homestand. Pope 2-7, Blake 1-4, Morris 1-7, Johnson 7. (7) Kurt Busch, Chevy, 334. SCORE THRU 0-2), Portland 9-25 (Lillard 4-9, Leonard and Oklahoma City beat 8. (23) Martin Truex Jr., Chevy, 334. Roberto Castro -13 6 3-5, Crabbe 1-1, Harkless 1-2, Aminu TORONTO (76) 9. (18) Jeff Gordon, Chevy, 334. Boo Weekley -12 8 Phoenix to snap a threeJ.Johnson 3-5 1-4 7, Scola 3-5 0-0 7, 0-4, McCollum 0-4). Fouled Out-None. 10. (27) Jamie McMurray, Chevy, 334. D.J. Trahan -12 8 Valanciunas 8-12 1-2 17, Lowry 4-16 Rebounds-Detroit 50 (Drummond 27), game losing streak. 11. (26) Austin Dillon, Chevy, 334. Michael Thompson -12 7 15, DeRozan 5-14 6-6 16, Patterson Portland 47 (Aminu 9). Assists-Detroit Russell Westbrook had 5-6 12. (6) Erik Jones, Toyota, 334. Tyler Aldridge -11 15 1-4 0-0 2, Ross 0-4 0-0 0, Biyombo 1-2 16 (Jackson 5), Portland 24 (Lillard 11). 13. (20) Paul Menard, Chevy, 334. William McGirt -11 12 21 points, 13 assists and 3-3 5, Joseph 2-3 0-0 4, Powell 0-3 Total Fouls-Detroit 16, Portland 22. 14. (21) Brian Scott, Chevy, 334. Brian Davis -11 7 0, Bennett 0-1 0-0 0, Nogueira 1-1 Technicals-Morris, Davis 2. Flagrant six rebounds, and Enes 0-0 Patrick Rodgers -11 7 15. (14) Clint Bowyer, Toyota, 334. 1-1 3, Wright 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 28-71 Fouls-Morris. Ejected— Davis. A-19,393 Jhonattan Vegas -11 6 16. (11) Danica Patrick, Chevy, 334. Kanter had 21 points on 17-22 76. (19,980). 17. (30) AJ Allmendinger, Chevy, 334.
Toto Japan Classic
Bryce Molder
-11
6
Saturday at Texas Tech Invitational Singles Smith Hinton (KU) def. Bobbi Oshiro (Boise State), 6-7, 6-1, 6-1 Nina Khmelnitckaia (KU) def. Arianna Paules Aldrey (Boise State), 6-2, 3-6, 6-3 Janet Koch (KU) def. Megan LaLone (Boise State), 6-1, 6-4 Maria Jose Cardona (KU) def. Nancy Menjivar (Boise State), 6-2, 6-2 Summer Collins (KU) def. Hailey Grillo (South Florida), 6-3, 6-2 Doubles Collins/Cardona (KU) def. Bessonova/Cardosa (South Florida), 6-3 Khmelnitckaia/Koch (KU) def. Cortes Chavez/Martinez (South Florida), 6-3
ATP World Tour BNP Paribas Masters
Sunday at Palais Omnisports de ParisBercy Paris Purse: $3.62 million (Masters 1000) Singles Championship Novak Djokovic (1) def. Andy Murray (2), 6-2, 6-4. Doubles Championship Ivan Dodig and Marcelo Melo (2) def. Vasek Pospisil and Jack Sock, 2-6, 6-3, 10-5.
WTA Huajin Securities WTA Elite Trophy
Sunday at Zhuhai Hengqin International Tennis Center Zhuhai, China Purse: $2.15 million (Tour Championship) Singles Championship Venus Williams (1), def. Karolina Pliskova (3), 7-5, 7-6 (6). Doubles Championship Liang Chen and Wang Yafan (4) def. Anabel Medina Garrigues and Arantxa Parra Santonja (2), 6-4, 6-3.
MLS Playoffs
CONFERENCE SEMIFINALS Eastern Conference New York Red Bulls 2, D.C. United 0 Leg 1 — Sunday, Nov. 1: New York 1, D.C. United 0 Leg 2 — Sunday, Nov. 8: D.C. United 0, New York 1 Columbus 4, Montreal 3 Leg 1 — Sunday, Nov. 1: Montreal 2, Columbus 1 Leg 2 — Sunday, Nov. 8: Columbus 2, Montreal 1, Columbus wins minigame 1-0 Western Conference FC Dallas 4, Seattle 3 Leg 1 — Sunday, Nov. 1: Seattle 2, FC Dallas 1 Leg 2 — Sunday, Nov. 8: FC Dallas 2, Seattle 1, Dallas wins 4-2 on penalty kicks Vancouver (2) vs. Portland (3) Leg 1 — Sunday, Nov. 1: Vancouver 0, Portland 0 Leg 2 — Sunday, Nov. 8: Portland 2, Vancouver 0 CONFERENCE CHAMPIONSHIP Eastern Conference Leg 1 — Sunday, Nov. 22: New York at Columbus, 4 or 6:30 p.m. Leg 2 — Sunday, Nov. 29: Columbus at New York, 4 or 6:30 p.m. Western Conference Leg 1 — Sunday, Nov. 22: FC Dallas at Portland, 6:30 p.m. Leg 2 — Sunday, Nov. 29: Portland at FC Dallas, TBA
NHL
Sunday’s Games Dallas 4, Detroit 1 New Jersey 4, Vancouver 3, OT Boston 2, N.Y. Islanders 1 Chicago 4, Edmonton 2
PUBLIC NOTICES 785.832.2222
PUBLIC NOTICE CONTINUED FROM 9C Shawn Scharenborg, KS # 24542 Michael Rupard, KS # 26954 Dustin Stiles, KS # 25152 Kozeny & McCubbin, L.C. (St. Louis Office) 12400 Olive Blvd., Suite 555 St. Louis, MO 63141 (314) 991-0255 (314) 567-8006 Email:mrupard@km-law.com Send Court Returns to: Kansas@km-law.com Attorney for Plaintiff This firm is a debt collector and any information we obtain from you will be used for that purpose. _______ (First published in the Lawrence Daily Journal -World October 26, 2015) IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS In the Matter of the Estate of THOMAS L. RUSSELL, Deceased.
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given, except for notice of STEVENS & BRAND, L.L.P. final settlement of 900 Massachusetts, decedent’s estate. Ste. 500 Lawrence KS 66044-0189 NOTICE OF HEARING AND You are further advised if (785) 843-0811 NOTICE TO CREDITORS written objections to sim- Attorneys for Petitioner plified administration are ________ THE STATE OF KANSAS TO filed with the Court, the (First published in the Court may order that suALL PERSONS CONCERNED: pervised administration Lawrence Daily JournalWorld, October 26, 2015) You are hereby notified ensue. that on October 7, 2015, a Petition was filed in this You are required to file IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, written defenses Court by THOMAS L. RUS- your KANSAS SELL, JR., an heir, devisee thereto on or before Noand legatee, and Executor vember 19, 2015, at 10:15 In The Matter of the named in the Will of a.m. in the District Court, Estate of Lawrence, Douglas THOMAS L. RUSSELL, de- in John E. Pierson, ceased, dated January 16, County, Kansas, at which Deceased. 2015, praying the instru- time and place the cause ment attached thereto be will be heard. Should you Case No. 2015-PR-166 admitted to probate and fail therein, judgment and Division No. 1 record as the Last Will and decree will be entered in Testament of the dece- due course upon the PetiTITLE TO REAL ESTATE dent; Letters Testamen- tion. INVOLVED tary under the Kansas Simplified Estates Act be is- All creditors are notified to Pursuant to K.S.A. their demands sued to the Executor to exhibit Chapter 59 against the Estate within serve without bond. four months from the date NOTICE OF HEARING You are further advised of the first publication of under the provisions of the this notice, as provided by Kansas Simplified Estates law, and if their demands The State of Kansas - To Act the Court need not su- are not thus exhibited, All Persons Concerned: shall be forever pervise administration of they You are hereby notified the Estate, and no notice barred. that on October 19, 2015, a of any action of the Executor or other proceedings in THOMAS L. RUSSELL, JR., Petition for Determination of Descent was filed in this the administration will be Petitioner Case No.: 2015-PR- 154 Pursuant to K.S.A. Chapter 59.
Court by Judith N. Pierson, the surviving spouse and an heir of John E. Pierson, deceased, asking that the Court determine the descent of the interest in Kansas real estate owned by John E. Pierson at the time of his death. Such real estate is located in the Northwest Quarter of Section 13, Township 12 South, Range 17 East of the 6th P.M., in Douglas County, Kansas as described in the Quitclaim Deed recorded at Book 519, Pages 827-828, with the Douglas County Register of Deeds.
/s/ Robert W. Ramsdell, #19300 333 W. 9th Street P.O. Box 1264 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 (785) 841-4554 Attorneys for Petitioner ________
that on the 29th day of October, 2015, Katherine Sandhaus, daughter of the deceased and named executor of Robert Broun’s will, filed a Petition requesting that the estate of the deceased, who died testate on the 20th day of (First published in the October, 2015, be inforLawrence Daily Journal- mally administered and World November 2, 2015) that the petitioner be appointed as the IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF Designee/Executor to DOUGLAS COUNTY, carry out the orders of the KANSAS Court, and the terms of the Will under informal adminIn the Matter of the istration, and to serve Estate of without bond. Ronald Broun, Deceased You are required to file DOD: 10/20/2015 You are required to file your written defenses Katherine Sandhaus, your written defenses thereto on or before the Petitioner thereto on or before No24th day of November, vember 19, 2015, at 11:00 2015, at 9:30 a.m. on said Case No. 2015PR171 a.m. of such day, in this day, in said Court, in the Div. I (REAL ESTATE Court, in the City of Lawcity of Lawrence, Kansas INVOLVED) rence in Douglas County, (District Court Division I, Kansas, at which time and Douglas County CourtPursuant to K.S.A. place the cause will be house, 111 E 11th Street, Chapter 59 heard. Should you fail, Lawrence, KS 66044), judgment and decree will should you fail, judgment NOTICE OF HEARING AND be entered in due course and decree will be entered NOTICE TO CREDITORS upon the Petition. in due course upon the Petition. All creditors must To the State of Kansas and exhibit Judith N. Pierson their demands, all persons concerned: Petitioner which if not made within Thompson, Ramsdell the running of the You are hereby notified non-claim statute, shall be Qualseth & Warner, P.A.
forever barred. You are further advised that the Petitioner in this matter has requested administration pursuant to the Kansas Informal Administration Act, and the grant of such request will result in the Court not supervising administration of the estate and further, no notice of any action of the Designee/ Executor or other proceedings in the administration will be given unless otherwise ordered by the Court. Should written objections to an informal administration be filed with the Court, the Court may order simplified or supervised administration. /S/ Katherine Sandhaus, Petitioner /S/ John M. Solbach #09441 700 Massachusetts Street, Ste. 203 Lawrence, KS 66044 (785) 841-3881 Attorney for the Petitioner ________
Monday, November 9, 2015
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L AWRENCE J OURNAL -W ORLD
Monday, November 9, 2015
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| 7C
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JOBS TO PLACE AN AD:
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A P P LY N O W
966 AREA JOB OPENINGS! COTTONWOOD................................... 12
KU: STUDENT OPENINGS ................. 113
MV TRANSPORTATION ......................... 25
FEDEX ........................................... 100
KU: FACULTY/ACADEMIC/LECTURERS .. 100
USA 800 .......................................... 45
FOCUS WORKFORCES ....................... 200
KU: STAFF OPENINGS ......................... 66
WESTAFF .......................................... 25
GENERAL DYNAMICS (GDIT) ............... 199
MISCELLANEOUS ............................... 61
VALEO ............................................. 20
L E A R N M O R E AT J O B S . L AW R E N C E . C O M
AT T E N T I O N E M P L OY E R S !
Email your number of job openings to Peter at psteimle@ljworld.com. *Approximate number of job openings at the time of this printing.
8C
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Monday, November 9, 2015
.
PLACE YOUR AD:
L awrence J ournal -W orld
785.832.2222
classifieds@ljworld.com
Need Holiday Cash? FOCUS can help! Fo Focu Focus cuss Wo Work Workforces rkfo forc rces es iiss cu curr currently rren entl tlyy se seek seeking ekin ing g wa ware warehouse reho hous use e as asso associates soci ciat ates es tthat hatt ca ha can n perform a variety of job duties and functions in a distribution center in Ottawa, KS! We are looking for candidates that possess the desire and the ability to work in a fast paced environment! If you are driven and ready for a new challenge, we want to interview YOU!
Currently Hiring For: Pickers | Order Selectors | Packers General Labor | Production Work | Special Projects All seasonal jobs are in Ottawa, KS! All Shifts Available-7 days/week! | Must be able to work 12 hour shifts.
Pay up to $15.00/hour + Overtime! Apply at: www.workatfocus.com In person at: 1529 N. Davis Rd. Ottawa, KS 66067 Call (785) 832-7000 to schedule a time to come in!
AccountingFinance
Customer Service
Accounting Clerk
10 Hard Workers needed NOW!
First Management, Inc., a local property management company, is looking for a qualified individual to fill an opening in their corporate accounting department. Responsibilities include accounts payable and other tasks as needed. Qualified applicants will have knowledge of accounting procedures, Quickbooks software and proficient in Excel and Word. Salary commensurate with experience. This is a full time position with benefits including health, dental, vision and 401(k). Please email resume with cover letter to: jobs@ firstmanagementinc.com
AdministrativeProfessional
Healthcare
Call today! 785-841-9999
Advanced Registered Nurse Practitioner
DriversTransportation
Drivers Ready Mix Co is looking for qualified drivers. Pay based on yrs of exp. Bonus .84/yd. Execellent benefits. Apply at: KCK 5620 Wolcott Dr. (913) 788-3165
Needed for busy Family Medicine & Obstetrics office in Lawrence. We are a full comprehensive office serving patient’s from birth to the elderly as well as obstetrics. This position is 4 days a week with every 5th weekend, no call. We offer great benefits with an attractive salary. Please send resume to: barbriley@sunflower.com
TWILIGHT SHIFT:
http://employment.ku.edu /staff/4688BR Initial review begins December 1. Contact: math@ku.edu
Mon-Fri, 6:30pm-11:30pm OVERNIGHT SHIFT:
Tues-Sat, Midnight-3am SUNRISE SHIFT: Tues-Sat, 4:30am-7:30am
All interested candidates must attend a sort observation at our facility prior to applying for the position.
KU Mathematics Department seeks an Academic Advisor Sr. Application instructions and job description at:
PRELOAD SHIFT: Tues-Sat, 2am-7am *Times are approximate and will vary.
To schedule a sort observation, go to www.WatchASort.com 8000 Cole Parkway, Shawnee, KS 66227 FedEx Ground is an equal opportunity / affirmative action employer (Minorities/Females/Disability/Veterans) committed to a diverse workforce.
Ground
PART-TIME & FULL-TIME PSYCHOTHERAPIST, OUTPATIENT SERVICES & CRISIS SERVICE POSITIONS Southeast Kansas Mental Health Center, a community mental health center, serving Allen, Anderson, Bourbon, Linn, Neosho, and Woodson Counties.
Offices located in Iola, Humboldt, Garnett, Fort Scott, Pleasanton, Chanute, and Yates Center. Immediate openings for qualified mental health professionals. Outpatient therapy and crisis intervention for individual adults and children, couples, and families. Requires Kansas license or temporary license. Social Workers, Psychologists, Professional Counselors, Marriage and Family Therapists, etc. All offices are National Health Service Corp tuition/loan repayment sites for those who qualify. Full time with benefits. EEO/AA Send Resumes to: Robert F. Chase, Executive Director, Southeast Kansas Mental Health Center, PO Box 807, Iola, KS, 66749. 620/365-8641 rchase@sekmhc.org and bstanley@sekmhc.org Scale House Operations and Accounts Receivable Coordinator Local Construction Aggregate Business has full-time opening. Position includes truck scale operation, customer service, truck dispatch, weekly and monthly accounts receivable invoicing, and controlling past-due accounts. Attention to detail w/numerical accuracy & multi-tasking ability important. Excel & Word experience required. Must be able to begin the work day by 6:00 AM. Benefits include: Medical Insurance, 401K & vacation. Send detailed resume & wage requirements for confidential consideration to: Human Resources Director Mid-States Materials PO Box 236 Topeka, KS 66601-0236
KU is an EO/AAE, full policy http://policy.ku.edu/IOA/nondis crimination. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex (including pregnancy), age, national origin, disability, genetic information or protected Veteran status.
Seasonal Tax Pros Needed at Lawrence locations. lauren.durkin@ hrblock.com
Construction
HIRING IMMEDIATELY! Drive for KU on Wheels or Lawrence Transit System. Flexible part-time schedules, 80% company paid employee health insurance for full time. Career opportunities. $11.50/hr after paid training. Must be 21+ w. good driving record. Apply online: lawrencetransit.org/empl oyment Or come to: MV Transportation, Inc. 1260 Timberedge Road Lawrence, KS. EOE
FT position with an established local company. Must have good communication skills & Microsoft Office experience. Competitive wage & benefits.Send resume to:
jbosco@purozone.com EOE
Apply in person. Human Resources 1501 Inverness Drive Lawrence, KS 66047 Equal Opportunity Employer Drug Free Workplace TProchaska@5ssl.com Fax (785) 842-3817
CNA/CMA Fri - Sun • 7pm - 7am Fri - Sun • 9 am - 9 pm
Please Contact: Katie Schmidt RN Admin 785.354.9800 x596 Katie.schmidt@Corizonhe alth.com EOE/AAP/DTR
Full Time Apply in person. Human Resources 1501 Inverness Drive Lawrence, KS 66047 Equal Opportunity Employer Drug Free Workplace TProchaska@5ssl.com Fax (785) 842-3817
Maintenance Tech. Full time, exclnt benefits. Must possess ability to make decisions, follow instructions and deal tactfully w customers. Positive attitude & great personality a must! Apply in person. Human Resources 1501 Inverness Drive Lawrence, KS 66047 TProchaska@5ssl.com EOE Drug Free Workplace
WINTER WORK! NOW HIRING Snow Removal • Plow drivers • Salt truck drivers • Hand Crew • Hand Crew Leaders • Subcontractors Equipment provided & training is available. “Hablamos Espanol” 13030 W. 87th Street Parkway Lenexa, KS 66215 hermeslandscaping.com 913-888-2400 Call: Jorge Rodriguez or April Wilcox
Wellsville Retirement Community is accepting applications for a CNA/ CMA. We are family owned & operated. We offer a competitive wage - including a Weekend Warrior Pay Incentive and a FABULOUS work environment no kidding!
Property Manager Needed. Previous exp. req. Please call 785-979-9555.
Stop by 304 W. 7th St in Wellsville or apply online:
Secretary
Housekeeper Laundry Aide
785-423-7145
Customer Service Rep.
Part Time Corizon Health, a provider of health services for the Kansas Department of Corrections, has an excellent opportunity at Kansas Juvenile Correctional Facility in Topeka. 8 hours per week available. Requires experienced Dental Assistant or recent graduate of dental assisting program. Corizon Health offers competitive compensation.
Landscaping & Lawn
www.wellsvillerc.com
Experienced Concrete Finisher $18 an hr, work mostly Douglas County. Also need laborers.
Customer Service
Dental Assistant
Activity Coordinator
Academic Advisor Sr.
DAY SHIFT: Mon-Fri 2:30pm-7:30pm
Qualifications Must be at least 18 years of age Must be out of high school Must be able to load, unload and sort packages, as well as perform other related duties
www.midwest- health.com/careers
2309 Iowa St
$10 hr to train. Quickly earn $12-$15 hr Weekly pay checks. Paid Vacations No Weekends
General
Package Handlers - $10.70-$11.70/hr. to start
Pioneer Ridge Retirement Community has employment opportunities for caring and compassionate individuals looking for full and part time employment. We offer part time and full time employees a great benefits package, scholarship programs, opportunity for advancement within the company, but most importantly a resident centered care environment that also supports employee advancement and educational growth. Come join our 5 star award winning team. For more information call 785-749-2000 or Apply Online at
Full Time + Part Time Apply in Person. Best Western Lawrence
Assisted Living, Full Time Activity Director or Recreation Therapist preferred. CNA preferred.
Interested in a fast-paced job with career advancement opportunities? Join the FedEx Ground team as a part-time package handler.
Healthcare
Hiring All Positions
Think Fast. Think FedEx Ground.
Career Opportunities for: CNA, LPN, RN, HOUSEKEEPER, DIETARY AIDE MDS Coordinator and Staffing Coordinator
General
RN - Quality Assurance Coordinator Licensed RN. Rewarding, team environment within long term care. Full time with benefits. Apply online at www.lawrencepres byterianmanor.org or in person at: 1429 Kasold Drug Test is required.
Front Desk Receptionist Needed for busy family medicine office in Lawrence. Medical experience required. Our office is open 7 days a week, so it will require working every 4th weekend and some evenings until 7. We offer excellent benefits. Please send resume with references to: barbriley@sunflower.com
Management
Office-Clerical
needed for a growing concrete company. Must be experienced in running an office, using Quick Books, & doing payroll. Submit resume to Concrete-design@gmx.com
Part-Time
Custodian The Lawrence Arts Center seeks a part time Custodian for the weekend shift. Hours vary. Prior experience preferred. Send resume by November 16, 2015 to 940 New Hampshire, Lawrence KS 66044 or business@lawrence artscenter.org
Trade Skills Painter or helper for local exterior re-paints! Through winter! Need car & phone. $9-$10/hr. Call: 785-841-3633
PUBLIC NOTICES TO PLACE AN AD: (First published in the Lawrence Daily JournalWorld November 9, 2015) The Lawrence-Douglas County Housing Authority Board of Commissioners is holding a study session to create a matrix for the development or acquisition of property. The study session is at 6:00 pm Tuesday, November 10, at Edgewood Homes. The public is invited to attend. ________ (First published in the Lawrence Daily JournalWorld November 2, 2015) Shawn Scharenborg, KS # 24542 Michael Rupard, KS # 26954 Dustin Stiles, KS # 25152 Kozeny & McCubbin, L.C. (St. Louis Office) 12400 Olive Blvd., Suite 555 St. Louis, MO 63141 (314) 991-0255 (314) 567-8006 K&M File Code:SOUARNOR IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., Plaintiff,
785.832.2222 vs.
Selma Southard (Deceased), Arvie W. Southard Jr. (Deceased), Unknown Spouse of Christopher D Southard, Christopher D Southard et al. Defendants. Case No. 15CV193 K.S.A. 60 Mortgage Foreclosure (Title to Real Estate Involved) NOTICE OF SUIT THE STATE OF KANSAS to: Christopher D Southard, Unknown Spouse of Christopher D Southard, Defendants, and all other persons who are or may be concerned: YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED: That a Petition has been filed in the District Court of Douglas County, Kansas, Case No. 15CV193 by Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. , praying for foreclosure of a mortgage executed by Southard Selma (Deceased), Arvie W. Southard Jr. (Deceased), Southard Selma on 07/14/2005 and recorded in Book 990 Page 4385 in
classifieds@ljworld.com
the real estate records of Douglas County, Kansas, related to the following property: LOT 3, BLOCK 7, IN EDGEWOOD PARK, AN ADDITION TO THE CITY OF LAWRENCE, DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS. You are hereby required to plead to the Petition on or before December 16, 2015 in the court at Douglas County, Kansas. If you fail to plead, judgment and decree will be entered in due course upon the petition. NOTICE TO BORROWER: If you wish to dispute the validity of all or any portion of this debt, or would like the name and address of the original creditor, you must advise us in writing within thirty (30) days of the first notice you receive from us. Otherwise, we will assume the entire debt to be valid. This is an attempt to collect a debt, and any information obtained will be used for that purpose. Signed: Shawn Scharenborg, KS # 24542 Michael Rupard, KS # 26954
Dustin Stiles, KS # 25152 Kozeny & McCubbin, L.C. (St. Louis Office) 12400 Olive Blvd., Suite 555 St. Louis, MO 63141 (314) 991-0255 (314) 567-8006 Email:mrupard@km-law.com Send Court Returns to: Kansas@km-law.com Attorney for Plaintiff This firm is a debt collector and any information we obtain from you will be used for that purpose. _______ (First published in the Lawrence Daily JournalWorld November 9, 2015) Shawn Scharenborg, KS # 24542 Michael Rupard, KS # 26954 Dustin Stiles, KS # 25152 Kozeny & McCubbin, L.C. (St. Louis Office) 12400 Olive Blvd., Suite 555 St. Louis, MO 63141 (314) 991-0255 (314) 567-8006 K&M File Code:HEAVIBOA
PUBLIC NOTICE CONTINUED ON 9C
L awrence J ournal -W orld
Monday, November 9, 2015
| 9C
MERCHANDISE PETS
RENTALS REAL ESTATE
TO PLACE AN AD:
TO PLACE AN AD:
BIG GUN AUCTION Sun., Nov. 15, 2015 @ 1pm Basehor VFW Hall 2806 N 155th St Basehor, KS Shotguns, rifles, handguns, ammo, bird calls, knives, air gun, bb guns, much more. See internet for more:
classifieds@ljworld.com
Auction Calendar
Computer-Camera
FARM AUCTION: Sunday, Nov. 15, 11:00am 14418 206th Linwood, KS Tractors/Trucks/Combine/Eq uipment/Car/Misc Seller: Quentin Holmes Auction Note: Not Many Small Items, Be On Time! Auctioneers: Elston Auctions Mark Elston & Jason Flory 785-594-0505 | 785-218-7851 Please visit us online at:
HP Printer ALL-IN-One Office Jet 4315 INKJET . Cords included, plus 2 new cartridges $15 cash 784-843-7205
AUCTIONS Auction Calendar
785.832.2222
SAMSUNG 22” Desktop monitor. Hardly used.. $45 cash 785-843-7205
PETS Care-ServicesSupplies
147 acres, Lawrence Schools, large custom 4 bed/3 bath home, barns, 2nd house, ponds, just west of 6h & SLT, fastest growing intersection in Kansas. $1.6M
Furniture
www.KansasAuctions.net/elston
Love Auctions? Check out the Sunday / Wednesday editions of Lawrence Journal-World Classifieds section for all the details and the
MERCHANDISE Appliances
www.edgecombauctions.com
www.kansasauctions.net/miller
Miller Auction LLC 1-913-441-1271
Dual motor, extra wide by Golden Technologies. Good for up to 500 lb person. New, never used. Paid $2000. For sale $1500. Lifetime warranty transfers. Cash only! Call 785-766-1046. Scandinavian wall unit Great storage. Teak wood $75 785-841-3945, leave msg
Lawn, Garden & Nursery
STACKABLE WASHER DRYER
www.kansasauctions.net/edgecomb
Estate Auction Sunday, Nov. 15, 10:30 am 17778 214th St Tonganoxie, KS Honda Goldwing, International Truck, Ford Tractor & Trucks, Chipper, Jewelry, Collectibles, Guns, & much more. See full list on web:
POWER LIFT & RECLINE CHAIR
BIGGEST SALES!
REAL ESTATE AUCTION SAT., NOV. 21, @ 1 PM 2602 LOUISIANA LAWRENCE, KS OPEN HOUSE: Nov. 12, 4:30-7:00 PM 1282 sq ft; ranch style. 3 BR; 1.5 BA. Fireplace, Basement. EDGECOMB AUCTIONS: 785-594-3507 or 785-766-6074 ART HANCOCK-BROKER 913-207-4231
mcclivestock.com/clinerealty
Beautiful & Spacious 1 & 2 Bedrooms Start at $450/mo.
1 unit Maytag, white, LIKE NEW. $350 (913)515-8587
Baby & Children Items 2 Diaper Champs. Like New. $35-$45 retail. $20 Debbie each, OBO. 785-843-7759. BABY CRIB with zip-up dome. Fisher Price + free soft toy $25 cash. 785-843-7205 Fisher-Price tool work bench. Comes with all original tools, nails, & bolts. Tons of extras. $40. Fisher-Price Vintage Little People City Skyway w/out cars & people. Good for hotwheel use. $30. Debbie 785-843-7759.
Snow Thrower GreenWorks 12 amp, 20 inch electric, corded snow thrower with 100 foot, 12 gauge, extension cord included. $95 785-841-2026
Machinery-Tools COMBINE, TRUCK, PROPANE TANK- 4 SALE -815 International Hydrastat Combine, Grain & Maize special, DieselReady to Go! -’61 Ford Grain Truck, Steel, 2 cylinder lift-bed, (truck not running) -1000 gallon, 1948 Delta Propane Tank 913-369-3541
Miscellaneous
Little Tikes Vintage Workshop. Comes with drawers, oringinal tools, nuts and bolts, phone and tons of extra tools. $40. Debbie 785-843-7759.
(2) Old Metal school lockers, $25 ea. 785-255-4340
Vintage Large Little Tikes County Kitchen set. Comes with tons of food & dishes, etc. Bought for $150 w/out anything. Selling all for $80. Debbie 785-843-7759.
Music-Stereo
PIANOS • H.L. Phillips upright $650 •Baldwin Spinet - $550 • Cable Nelson or Kimball Spinet - $500 • Gulbranson Spinet - $450 Prices include tuning & delivery
Building Materials FOR SALE——-Standard size 32’ Wide Steel Door white with window. Excellent cond. Asking $25.00 Please call 785-856-0858 Lawrence.
785-832-9906
*FREE CONSULTATION BEFORE SERVICES!! *SENIOR (75+)DISCOUNT FOR WINTER !! Hi, My name is Lisa and I am a Dog Walker- that’s my job and I love it! COLD WEATHER & HOLIDAYS are COMING- Think about calling for a consult NOW!
Lisa S., Dog Walker 1-608-514-3713 Lawrence KS Background: I have love for dogs and a passion for community. I’m a Lawrence Humane Society behavioral training volunteer, Therapy dog handler and previously a Dental Assistant. Call me & we can discuss your needs :-)
Lost-Found Kitten Found 6 months old, Male. Near Arrowhead and Moccasin Dr. Maine Coon/Mamx Mix. 785-760-1532
MERCHANDISE AND PETS! 10 LINES & PHOTO:
7 DAYS $19.95 28 DAYS $49.95
Lawrence
3 and 4 Bedroom Townhouses and Single Family Homes Available Now $950-$1800 a month. Garber Property Management
For Rent: Lovely town home, 3 BR, 2 Bath, 2 Car Garage, FP, all appliances. Near good schools. Backs to green space. 2732 Coralberry Ct $950.00 Call 785-842-7073
3 BR w/2 or 2.5 BA W/D hookups, Fireplace, Major Appliances. Lawn Care & Dbl Car Garage! Equal Housing Opportunity
785-865-2505
grandmanagement.net
——————————————
CALL TODAY (Monday - Friday)
785-843-1116
Need to sell your car?
apartments. lawrence.com
Place your ad at classifieds.lawrence.com
AVAILABLE NOW Brand New 1 BR APARTMENT ON SIXTH 5100 W. Sixth Full Size W/D Incl, Starting at $595, Small Pet Friendly,
RENTALS
PRICING & SERVICES: $10 - Get Out & Sniff @ 15-20 mins: I’ll let your furry friend out for some fresh air and potty time. $20 - Long Walk @ 40 mins: Geared towards the high energy dogs who need a longer walk. $30 - Adventure Time @ 60 mins: Does your dog deserve a wooftastic adventure? This is a great option for high energy dogs, vacation & holiday let out’s. **I am willing to help feed your pet while you are away for FREE when you purchase an Adventure Time walk!
Townhomes
785-842-2475
* Near campus, bus stop * Laundries on site * Near stores, restaurants * Water & trash paid
Bill Fair and Company www.billfair.com 785-887-6900
Land Auction Ray County, MO Productive Tillable Cropland! Improved Pasture Land! “Premier” Hunting/ Recreational Acreage! 158 Acres± , 2 Tracts Thurs., Nov. 12 , 1:00 PM sullivanauctioneers.com 217-847-2160
REAL ESTATE AUCTION Sat., Nov. 21 at 1:30 pm Osage City Senior Center 605 Market St. Osage City, KS 359 Acres, near Melvern Lake,Offered in 6 Tracts. More info & Viewing: Cline Realty & Auction, John E. Cline, Broker 785-889-4775
2411 Cedarwood Ave.
OPPORTUNITY
Sebree Auction LLC 816-223-9235
Pavement Supplies Auction Friday, Nov. 13, 10 am 15600 Industrial Dr. Independance, MO Ford F250, International 4700 4x2, International 4900, trailers, Bobcat bucket, Tools, and many more industrial tools See web for pics and full list Lindsay Auction Svc. 913.441.1557 lindsaysauctions.com
Cedarwood Apts
Lawrence INVESTMENT/DEVELOPMENT
www.kansasauctions.net/sebree
LAND AUCTION Tues., Nov. 10, 10 AM Old Train Depot 402 N. 2nd St, Lawrence, KS 50.4 +/- Acres in Douglas Co. KS Greg Knedlik, AFM/Agent 913-294-2829|785-541-1076 www.FarmersNational.com/ GregKnedlik
Apartments Unfurnished
REAL ESTATE
classifieds@ljworld.com
785.832.2222
ApartmentOnSixth.com 785-856-3322
Apartments Unfurnished
Duplexes
LAUREL GLEN APTS All Electric
1, 2 & 3 BR units
2BR, in a 4-plex. New carpet, vinyl, cabinets, countertop. W/D is included. Equal Housing Opportunity. 785-865-2505
Some with W/D, Water & Trash Paid, Small Pet, Income Restrictions Apply
785-838-9559 EOH
HARPER SQUARE Harpersquareapartments.com TUCKAWAY AT BRIARWOOD
Tuckawayatbriarwood.com HUTTON FARMS Huttonfarms.com
Office Space OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE Call Garber Property Management at 785-842-2475 for more information.
Need an apartment? Place your ad at apartments.lawrence.com or email classifieds@ljworld.com
NOTICES TO PLACE AN AD:
785.832.2222
classifieds@ljworld.com
Special Notices
Special Notices
Special Notices
CNA/CMA CLASSES!
North Lawrence Improvement Association
PLOUGHMAN’S LUNCH
Lawrence, KS
LUNCH: Fri, Nov. 13 11am-2pm Soup, cheese, bread, & apple pie
Monthly Meeting
Monday, Nov. 9, 7:00 pm At Peace Mennonite Church
CNA DAY CLASSES Nov 2 - Nov 24 8.30a-3p • M-Th Nov 30- Dec 22 8.30a-3p • M-Th Jan 4 - Jan 17 8.30a-5p • M-F
& TRINITY TREASURES SALE
615 Lincoln
Guest Speaker Matt Bond, City Storm Water Engineer, will discuss flood plane map, Big Pump at 6th & Maple Street, and other strom water issues.
CNA EVENING CLASSES LAWRENCE KS Nov 2 - Nov 25 5p-9p • T/Th/F
SALE: Fri. Nov. 13 10am -2pm Handmade quilts, sweaters, toys & Christmas decor
All Welcome!
Info: 785-842-7232
Thicker line? Bolder heading? Color background or Logo?
CMA DAY CLASSES LAWRENCE KS Dec 1 -Dec 23 8.30a-2p • M/W/F
+FREE RENEWAL!
Ask how to get these features in your ad TODAY!!
ADVERTISE TODAY!
CALL NOW- 785.331.2025 trinitycareerinstitute.com
Call 785-832-2222
CALL 832-2222
Tuckawayapartments.com
FIRST MONTH FREE! 1 & 2 Bedroom Units Available Now! Cooperative townhomes start at $446-$490/mnth. Water, trash, sewer paid. Back patio, CA, hardwood floors, full bsmnt., stove, refrig., w/d hookup, garbage disposal, reserved parking. On-site management & maintenance. 24 hr. emergency maintenance. Membership & Equity fee required. 785-842-2545 (Equal Housing Opportunity) pinetreetownhouses.com
CNA REFRESHER/CMA UPDATE LAWRENCE Nov 6/7 Dec 4/5,18/19
DOESN’T SELL IN 28 DAYS?
TUCKAWAY APARTMENTS
2BR, 2 bath, fireplace, CA, W/D hookups, 2 car with opener. Easy access to I-70. Includes paid cable. Pet under 20 lbs. allowed Call 785-842-2575 www.princeton-place.com
Trinity Episcopal Church 10th & Vermont
FREE ADS for merchandise
under $100
CALL 785-832-2222
SERVICES TO PLACE AN AD: Antique/Estate Liquidation
785.832.2222 Carpentry
classifieds@ljworld.com Concrete
Decks & Fences
FOUNDATION REPAIR
Craig Construction Co Family Owned & Operated 20 Yrs
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
The Wood Doctor - Wood rot repair, fences, decks, doors & windows - built, repaired, or replaced & more! Bath/kitchen remodeled. Basement finished. 785-542-3633 • 816-591-6234
Auctioneers
HOUSE CLEANER ADDING NEW CUSTOMERS Years of experience, references available, Insured. 785-748-9815 (local)
Mike - 785-766-6760 mdcraig@sbcglobal.net
Stacked Deck
CTi of Mid America Concrete Restoration & Resurfacing Driveways, Patios, Pool Decks & More CTiofMidAmerica.com 785-893-8110 Stamped & Reg. Concrete, Patios, Walks, Driveways, Acid Staining & Overlays, Tear-Out & Replacement Jayhawk Concrete Inc. 785-979-5261
REAL ESTATE AUCTIONS
Decks & Fences
785-887-6900 www.billfair.com
DECK BUILDER
STARTING or BUILDING a Business? 785-832-2222 classifieds@ljworld.com
New York Housekeeping: Accepting clients for wkly, bi-wkly & seasonal or special occasion cleaning. Excellent References. Beth - 785-766-6762.
Mudjacking, Waterproofing. We specialize in Basement Repair & Pressure Grouting. Level & Straighten Walls & Bracing on wall. BBB. Free Estimates Since 1962 Wagner’s 785-749-1696 www.foundationrepairks.com
Driveways - stamped • Patios • Sidewalks • Parking Lots • Building Footings & Floors • All Concrete Repairs Free Estimates
Cleaning
Foundation Repair
Over 25 yrs. exp. Licensed & Insured. Decks, deck covers, pergolas, screened porches, & all types of repairs. Call 913-209-4055 for Free estimates or go to prodeckanddesign.com
Decks • Gazebos Siding • Fences • Additions Remodel • Weatherproofing Insured • 25 yrs exp. 785-550-5592
Guttering Services
Home Improvements AAA Home Improvements Int/Ext Repairs, Painting, Tree work & more. We do it all! 20 Yrs. Exp. w/ Ins. and local ref. Will beat all est. Call 785-917-9168 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 Fully Insured 22 yrs. experience
913-488-7320
Dirt-Manure-Mulch JAYHAWK GUTTERING Seamless aluminum guttering.
Rich Black Top Soil No Chemicals Machine Pulverized Pickup or Delivery Serving KC over 40 years
Many colors to choose from. Install, repair, screen, clean-out. Locally owned. Insured. Free estimates.
YARDBIRDS LANDSCAPING Father (retired) & Son Operation W/Experience & Top of the Line Machinery Snow Removal Call 785-766-1280
Lawn, Garden & Nursery
Painting Interior/Exterior Painting Quality Work Over 30 yrs. exp.
Call Lyndsey 913-422-7002
Tree/Stump Removal Fredy’s Tree Service
Golden Rule Lawncare Mowing & lawn cleanup Snow Removal Family owned & operated Call for Free Est. Insured. Eugene Yoder 785-224-9436
cutdown • trimmed • topped • stump removal Licensed & Insured. 20 yrs experience. 913-441-8641 913-244-7718
KansasTreeCare.com
Painting D&R Painting interior/exterior • 30+ years • power washing • repairs (inside & out) • stain decks • wallpaper stripping • free estimates Call or Text 913-401-9304
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)
Weddings
785-842-0094 jayhawkguttering.com
Higgins Handyman
STARTING or BUILDING a Business?
Interior/exterior painting, roofing, roof repairs, fence work, deck work, lawn care, siding, windows & doors. For 11+ years serving Douglas County & surrounding areas. Insured.
913-962-0798 Fast Service
Foundation Repair Foundation and Masonry Specialist Water prevention systems for basements, Sump pumps, foundation supports & repair and more. Call 785-221-3568
Landscaping
STRESS FREE WEDDINGS
785-312-1917
785-832-2222 classifieds@ljworld.com
Advertising that works for you!
Retired Carpenter, Deck Repairs, Home Repairs, Interior Wall Repair & House Painting, Doors, Wood Rot, Power wash 785-766-5285
Family Tradition Interior & Exterior Painting Carpentry/Wood Rot Senior Citizen Discount Ask for Ray 785-330-3459
Officiant retired KS Judge offers Shawnee lake front gazebo or parlor fireplace to KS licensees only. Private, convenient & economical. Exchange your private religious vows or standard vows. PHOTOS:
weddingsbythelake.com 913-209-5211
PUBLIC NOTICES 785.832.2222
PUBLIC NOTICE CONTINUED FROM 8C IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS THE BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON FKA THE BANK OF NEW YORK AS SUCCESSOR INDENTURE TRUSTEE TO
classifieds@ljworld.com
JPMORGAN CHASE BANK, N.A., AS INDENTURE TRUSTEE FOR THE CWABS REVOLVING HOME EQUITY LOAN TRUST, SERIES 2004-K, Plaintiff,
Case No. 15CV281 K.S.A. 60 Mortgage Foreclosure (Title to Real Estate Involved)
vs.
THE STATE OF KANSAS to: Craig J. Heath and Vickie L. Heath, Defendants, and all other persons who are or may be concerned:
Craig J. Heath, Vickie L. Heath, et al. Defendants.
NOTICE OF SUIT
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED: That a Petition has been filed in the District Court of Douglas County, Kansas, Case No. 15CV281 by THE BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON FKA THE BANK OF NEW YORK AS SUCCESSOR INDENTURE TRUSTEE TO JPMORGAN CHASE BANK, N.A., AS INDENTURE TRUSTEE FOR THE CWABS REVOLVING
HOME EQUITY LOAN TRUST, SERIES 2004-K , praying for foreclosure of a mortgage executed by Craig J. Heath, Vickie L. Heath on 04/06/2004 and recorded in Book 929 Page 1935 in the real estate records of Douglas County, Kansas, related to the following property:
VEL ADDITION NO. 3, A SUBDIVISION IN THE CITY OF LAWRENCE, AS SHOWN BY THE RECORDED PLAT IN DOUGLAS THEREOF, COUNTY, KANSAS
You are hereby required to plead to the Petition on or before December 21, 2015 in the court at Douglas County, Kansas. If you fail LOT 11, IN BLOCK 2, IN DE to plead, judgment and de-
cree will be entered in due will assume the entire course upon the petition. debt to be valid. This is an attempt to collect a debt, NOTICE TO BORROWER: If and any information obyou wish to dispute the va- tained will be used for that lidity of all or any portion purpose. of this debt, or would like the name and address of Signed: the original creditor, you must advise us in writing within thirty (30) days of the first notice you receive from us. Otherwise, we
PUBLIC NOTICE CONTINUED ON 5C
10C
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Monday, November 9, 2015
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