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THURSDAY • NOVEMBER 12 • 2015
Full house at KU race forum
Kobach registers 2 suspense voters ——
Secretary of state asks federal judge to dismiss lawsuit By Karen Dillon Twitter: @karensdillon
Mike Yoder/Journal-World Photo
TRINITY CARPENTER, A KU SENIOR FROM OTTAWA, SPEAKS DURING A TOWN HALL FORUM ON RACE Wednesday at Kansas University’s Woodruff Auditorium that was moderated by Chancellor Bernadette Gray-Little. Carpenter shared her concerns about how to speak up about race issues on campus without worrying about consequences. KU announced the forum on Monday, after University of Missouri System President Tim Wolfe resigned under pressure from students who said the school failed to properly respond to racial problems there.
Speakers share stories, ideas, T frustrations
By Sara Shepherd Twitter: @saramarieshep
he auditorium overflowed, emotions ran high and voices were loud Wednesday during Kansas University’s town hall forum on race, respect and free speech. About 1,000 people attended the event in the Kansas Union, filling the seats and lining the walls of Woodruff Auditorium, and also filling an overflow room across the hall.
In the crowd were students, faculty and staff of all colors, plus some community members and elected officials. At the front moderating the forum — and taking a fair amount of heat directly — was KU Chancellor Bernadette Gray-Little. Gray-Little opened the forum by saying that KU has offices, staff members and initiatives dedicated to increasing diversity but needs to do more. Please see FORUM, page 2A
KU, Pitt State field questions on Clinton visit costs Heard on the Hill
Sara Shepherd sshepherd@ljworld.com
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ig-time speakers often come with big-time price tags, which had me and no doubt a lot of other people wondering how much Kansas University and Pittsburg State University might be shelling out to get former U.S. President Bill Clinton on their respective campuses later this month. Clinton is not charging a fee for his appearance at KU, though KU’s Dole Institute of Politics will pay his travel
costs to get here, according to Dole Institute spokeswoman Makayla Hipke. She said the Dole Institute’s endowment — which is privately funded — is covering part of Clinton’s chartered plane to get here at a cost of about $30,000. The Dole Institute does not cover any Secret Service costs, she said. Hipke said this is typical for most Dole Institute guests. “We rarely, extremely rarely, pay our guests any
type of an honorarium or speaker fee,” Hipke said. She added that the Dole Institute always covers guests’ travel costs except in special situations, such as governmental employees with stipulations on who can pay those costs. Clinton is the winner of 2015’s Dole Leadership Prize, given annually by the Dole Institute, and will speak at 1 p.m. Nov. 23 at the Lied Center. Please see CLINTON, page 2A
Secretary of State Kris Kobach’s office began registering two Douglas County men to vote just days after they sued Kobach to stop him from purging them and thousands of others from the state’s controversial suspended voters list. Kobach announced Tuesday in a motion he filed with the federal court asking a judge to Kobach dismiss the lawsuit that his office had completed Alder Cromwell’s registration that day, and Cody Keener had been registered Oct. 6, just six days after their lawsuit was filed. Please see KOBACH, page 2A
Sustainability board will work to ban plastic bags By Nikki Wentling Twitter: @nikkiwentling
Lawrence’s Sustainability Advisory Board decided Wednesday to work with environmental groups on a proposal to restrict single-use plastic bags in the city. The 10-member board unanimously voted to have one of its members, Ian Spomer, meet with members of the Sustainability Action Network, the Sierra Club Wakarusa Group and the Lawrence Environmental Teams United for Sustainability (LETUS) who asked Wednesday that the board take up the issue. Please see BAGS, page 2A
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whether Clinton was charging a fee to speak there. Flannery said travel and other costs for CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A Clinton’s visit would be Journal-World obituary policy: covered with private dolFor information about running obituaries, call Tickets to the event lars — no student fees, 832-7151. Obituaries run as submitted by funeral are free but limited, and tuition or public money. homes or the families of the deceased. were doled out within a “All of his expenses few hours after becoming are going to be covered available to KU students through the H. Lee Scott and members of the public Speaker Series or through arole tark Monday morning. other private donors,” she A few hours after his said. Pitt State announced Carole Stark, 77, passed away on November 8, 2015 KU appearance, at 4 p.m., the endowed speaker series in Hays and is survived by three daughters, Vanessa Clinton will speak on the — and that Clinton would Metzger of Lawrence, Debra Stark & Suzanne Stark. Pittsburg State campus in be the inaugural speaker Pittsburg. — on Nov. 3. The series is ouis ayLor Kathleen Flannery, Pitt funded by a $2.076 milState’s vice president lion gift from alumnus and Former resident and Haskell instructor Louis Taylor for university advanceformer Wal-Mart CEO Lee died Tuesday, Nov. 10, 2015 in Albuquerque. Please see ment, said the university Scott (brother to current Haskell Alumni FB page for more information. was not able to confirm Pitt State president Steve
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She said KU has an obligation as a university to encourage conversation. Since it was founded 150 years ago, KU has always been open to minorities and to women, Gray-Little said, although it hasn’t always been “faithful” to those values in practice. “I know and you know that there are still instances of racism here,” she said. “It’s disappointing that we are still talking about these topics, but we do still need to talk about them.” And for more than two hours, people did.
‘More than one kind’ of racism Part of the conversation revolved around which issues KU needed to address. One of the first to take the mic was a black female student who criticized Gray-Little for using “diversity rhetoric.” “Why can we not just call it anti-black racism?” she said. Gray-Little disagreed, saying, “There is more than one kind that is going on.” Speakers that followed included a Native American student, a gay Asian instructor and a Latina communications student who said they, too, had been hurt by racial and sexual jokes and slurs. The Native American student — in tears — said he’d had people ask him why he got so upset by things like cultural appropriation on Halloween.
Kobach CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A
In his motion, Kobach said he used records from vital statistics to identify Keener and Cromwell, an Oregon State University student, as U.S. citizens. The men are actively registered and “suffer no current injury...” Kobach wrote in the motion. “This case must be dismissed for lack of standing.” Kobach’s spokesman did not return a call requesting an interview. But one of the men’s attorneys, Will Lawrence, said Kobach appeared to be “playing games” with voters’ rights. “Obviously we are happy that our two clients are registered to vote but it’s more than these two individuals who are being affected,” Lawrence said. “If Kobach can just go in and get this done, why not do this for everyone?” Lawrence said there will still be a hearing in federal court. Cromwell, whose father is former Lawrence City Commissioner Aron Cromwell, and Keener could not be reached for comment. The database of suspended voters had more than 36,000 names of those who had tried to register to vote but didn’t have all the necessary paperwork. In early October, Kobach’s office had initiated
“Whenever you ask me that, you are diminishing my ancestors that were killed on the Trail of Tears,” he said. “You’re telling me to ‘get over’ the genocide of my people, and I am not OK with that.” One trend that emerged from students of color was stories of instructors ostracizing them — intentionally or not — because of their race. One light-skinned black female student said an instructor asked her whether she was half white, and when she said she was not, the instructor suggested that she tell people she was. Another black female student and track athlete said that she’d been in classes where she was the only black student and had instructors single her out and ask her her opinion on things as though she represented all black people. “Faculty, please stop doing this,” she said. “Don’t stereotype student-athletes.”
Temporary takeover The majority of speakers, however, were black — including most in a group of about 12 holding signs that took the stage midway through the forum, interrupting Gray-Little and other students to speak and read a list of demands. The group said they were called “Rock Chalk Invisible Hawk,” the same as a hashtag that emerged last year within the KU community. Student Kynnedi Grant, president of KU’s Black Student Union, said from the stage that she and some friends were verbally and physically assaulted at an off-campus a new rule that required suspended voters to provide proof of citizenship within 90 days or their names would be purged from the list. Before the new rule, voters had until the next election to provide that information. Lawrence said this was not the first time that Kobach’s office had registered a suspended voter under pressure. Last year, for example, the daughter of Kobach’s primary opponent, Scott Morgan of Lawrence, was notified that she had failed to produce necessary documents to prove her citizenship even though she had provided a passport. She was registered within minutes after the Wichita Eagle asked Kobach about it, the newspaper reported. Kobach seems to take action when there is an imminent news story, Lawrence said. “We will see what the judge does with it,” Lawrence said. “I don’t think this is something the courts are going to look at and be happy about. It’s pretty clear what the intent seems to be here. The intent is to evade judicial review of the law, and that is inappropriate.” Lawrence is part of a team of attorneys that includes Paul Davis, a Lawrence attorney and former gubernatorial candidate.
Mike Yoder/Journal-World Photo
KANSAS UNIVERSITY CHANCELLOR BERNADETTE GRAYLITTLE listens to a question as she moderates a town hall forum on race Wednesday in KU’s Woodruff Auditorium. party on Halloween, called racial slurs and had a gun pulled on them. Grant shared the story on social media this week. She said no police report was filed. Another black female student said KU’s forum was not an attempt to hear student voices but rather an attempt to “silence” them. She read a list of the group’s 15 demands, including hiring a new Office of Multicultural Affairs director by the end of the year (the position has been vacant since May), creating a separate multicultural student senate, giving more support to veterans and banning concealed carry of guns on KU’s campus (which Kansas law says must be allowed beginning in 2017). After the group left the stage, she declined to give her name to a reporter or answer follow-up questions. However, members of the group presented their concerns later in the evening to the Student Senate Rights Committee, which passed a resolution to address them, according to tweets from a
Bags CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A
Spomer and the groups will talk about details of a proposal, which would include either banning single-use bags or imposing a fine on shoppers who use them, or a phased approach that would comprise a combination of both methods. A proposal would be brought back to the advisory board, which could vote to advance it to the City Commission. “We’re not going down this path right now,” Spomer said. “We’re just discussing it.” Dale Nimz, chairman of the board, said a ban on single-use plastic bags was named as a priority of the board in goal-setting sessions this spring. It was not listed as the board’s top three priorities, which are energy conservation, water conservation and land-use planning. “This is not necessarily our highest priority, but it is a priority,” Nimz said. “And if it’s a priority for other people, it becomes more important than us.” Lori Hutfles, one of the residents who brought the idea to the board, said the environmental groups saw it as an “immediate win.” “We wanted to capture the attention of the people who live in this town and — Enterprise reporter Karen Dillon can make them realize they be reached at kdillon@ljworld.com or can do something to make at 832-7162. a difference,” Hutfles said.
University Daily Kansan reporter at that meeting. KU’s forum, announced Monday, was held in response to a race-fueled crisis on the University of Missouri campus. On Monday, MU System President Tim Wolfe and MU Chancellor R. Bowen Loftin resigned under pressure from students who said the school failed to properly respond to racial problems there. Tuesday the university announced that GrayLittle would moderate the discussion. Wednesday morning, the university announced that the forum was moving from the Union’s Big 12 Room to Woodruff, the largest room in the Union after the ballroom.
Suggestions A number of the speakers made suggestions. They included requiring cultural training for all staff, requiring all students to take courses such as AfricanAmerican studies or Latin American studies, and giving more money to minority organizations such as the Black Student Union so that they would have as much “This is a step. This is something tangible.” Eileen Horn, the city and county sustainability coordinator, suggested the board and environmental groups work out details such as what types of retailers would be banned from providing plastic bags, how a ban would be enforced, what kinds of bags would be restricted and how much time retailers would have before a ban went into effect. Horn also suggested looking to cities that have already adopted successful ordinances and making a plan for citizen outreach, which would include answers to potentially frequent questions such as what residents could use to pick up their pet waste. “As this has happened historically, cities have gotten smarter and know how to mitigate the negativity around it and make sure small businesses don’t struggle with it,” Horn said. “I think a ton of research can help mitigate concerns.” Horn said the advisory board would need to decide in the future whether it wanted to champion the proposal or support the environmental groups in presenting it. Board member Sharon Ashworth said she would want to know more before supporting a proposal. She asked Wednesday how big a percentage of litter in the city was plastic bags. Another board member asked how much it cost the city to pick up littered bags.
L awrence J ournal -W orld Scott) and his wife, Linda. Pitt State is charging up to $50 for general admission and $15 for students. Flannery said Clinton would take “private air transportation” from Lawrence to Pittsburg. She said Pitt State had been in conversations with Clinton’s team before learning he was coming to Lawrence. Pitt State announced Clinton’s appearance there several days after KU announced he would be in Lawrence. —This is an excerpt from KU and higher ed reporter Sara Shepherd’s Heard on the Hill column, which appears regularly on LJWorld.com.
money as “privileged” organizations. One student even said Gray-Little should give those groups money from her salary. Another student suggested increasing diversity of faculty and staff, “and not just in positions that pertain to their culture or race.” He used African-American studies as an example — everyone expects AfricanAmerican instructors there, but there should be more in other disciplines. The student also suggested KU do more to “punish” students for acts that offend others and asked white people in the room to support peers of color by recognizing their “white privilege” and not tolerating racist comments or jokes by others. Speakers also criticized KU’s minority retention rates, which Gray-Little called a “serious issue” that KU was working on. “The university has programs, we have offices, we have people doing stuff,” she said. “It’s not enough.” One student told GrayLittle she sounded like Roger Goodell or Donald Trump. Another student told her, “All I have to say is do your job or get replaced.” Gray-Little closed the conversation saying it was valuable to hear about students’ experiences and that she knew they were real. She did not make onthe-spot promises. “I have to hear, I have to evaluate, I have to respond,” she said. — KU and higher ed reporter Sara Shepherd can be reached at 832-7187 or sshepherd@ljworld.com.
Kathy Richardson, the city’s solid waste division manager, said those numbers would be hard to come up with. “To make the argument to the public about the plastic bag bans, it’s really good to quantify the need and problem,” Ashworth said. Board members briefly discussed whether they’d suggest a ban or fee. Michael Almon with Sustainability Action Network said a fee of 5 to 10 cents would be better received than an outright ban. Spomer said he thought a small fee wouldn’t lead to much change. “Lawrence is a pretty affluent town,” Spomer said. “Charging someone 5 cents to use a bag is not going to get the vast majority of people to stop doing it.” It’s unsure when the idea will be discussed further. The board did not outline a timeline for when the proposal would be brought back before the advisory board. Thad Holcombe, a member of the Sierra Wakarusa Group who helped introduce the idea to the board, said he was pleased with Wednesday’s discussion. “I felt they took us seriously,” he said. “We’ll try to kind of summarize things so it is a clean proposal that people can discuss more,” he said. — City Hall reporter Nikki Wentling can be reached at 832-7144 or nwentling@ljworld.com.
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Lawrence&State
Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com/local l Thursday, November 12, 2015 l 3A
County chooses firm for review, OKs Horizon plan Austin Peters Group also has an office in Overland Park and has comCounty commissioners pleted work in Kansas beon Wednesday selected fore, which is something a consulting firm to con- Commissioner Mike duct a third-party review Gaughan said influenced of Douglas County’s his decision. building codes depart“They have an apprement. ciation for the statutory Commissioners unani- environment here that mously chose Ausgives me a little tin Peters Group more comfort,” he Inc., whose staff said. would complete the This summer, review from their county commislocation in Fort Colsioners directed lins, Colo. The firm Assistant County COUNTY estimated the re- COMMISSION A d m i n i s t r a t o r view would take 16 Sarah Plinsky to weeks and cost the county look into a review of the an approximate $9,180 plus Please see COUNTY, page 4A mileage. By Conrad Swanson
Twitter: @Conrad_Swanson
Richard Gwin/Journal-World Photo
VETERAN ALBERT BALLARD, OF LAWRENCE, GIVES A SALUTE during Veterans Day ceremonies Wednesday at The American Legion Dorsey-Liberty Post 14, 3408 W. Sixth St. Post Commander Jerome Hanson said the post has made many changes, including “becoming green,” to keep up with the times.
American Legion working to modernize By Mackenzie Clark Twitter: @mclark59
In the near-century since The American Legion was first chartered by Congress in 1919, almost every aspect of society has changed. The local Dorsey-Liberty Post 14, 3408 W. Sixth St., is doing what it can to keep up. Post Commander Jerome Hanson, a retired Army first sergeant, said the post’s website, legion14. org, was created about a year ago. “That’s all new to us,” he said. The post used to mail bulletins to about 500 members every two months. The most recent one is 10 pages, printed on the front and back. “It’s gotten so it’s kind of expensive to do all that mailing,” Hanson said. “We said to people, ‘Well, if you still want this mailed to you, let us know.’ We only got five people that responded and said they want it mailed. … It’s a
thing that we were late getting into, but people are changing.” Having a website does have its perks, particularly when it comes to speeding up communication among members not only in the district but also statewide and nationwide. “The good part about being on the website is we can change dates or anything like that if we have to,” Hanson said. Taking the bimonthly newsletter online is just one way Dorsey-Liberty is “becoming a green post,” as Hanson put it. They’ve also started recycling anything they can, and Hanson said he hopes soon the city of Lawrence will extend curbside recycling beyond private residences to include businesses. Also, Hanson said, it costs about $170 per day to keep the post open and heated or cooled to the right temperature. Currently its hours are 9 a.m. to noon on Tuesdays
and Thursdays, and when no one is there, Hanson can control the thermostat from his computer at home to save energy. The increasing population of women in military service is also changing the structure of the Legion. “The Auxiliary is for women whose husbands have been in the military, but now we’ve got a situation where we have women in the Legion,” Hanson said. “They have husbands. There’s no place for the husbands to come into the organization.” He said the post is working with National Headquarters to come to a solution. “We’ve said, ‘Well, let’s have an auxiliary for men, so they have a place to go and talk to other men that are married to veterans,’” he said. “It’s all these changes; they’re
Woman, 43, accused of stealing thousands from dependent senior By Caitlin Doornbos Twitter: @CaitlinDoornbos
A 43-year-old Lawrence woman is charged with felony mistreatment of a dependent adult after allegedly stealing more than $25,000 from a woman for whom she had durable power of attorney.
Jennifer Ann York is accused of cashing Billie Jean Shewbart’s certificate of deposit for nearly $27,000 and spending “most” of the money on personal expenses, rather than on Shewbart’s retirement home rent as directed, Please see SENIOR, page 4A
Please see LEGION, page 4A
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according to the affidavit supporting York’s arrest. The affidavit describes Shewbart as “senior” but does not give an age. York had been a housekeeper for Shewbart before Shewbart moved to the retirement home, and York and Shewbart had known each other about 12 years, according to the affidavit. Shewbart had given York durable power of attorney in 2010 after Shewbart’s husband died, and York and Shewbart allegedly had a joint checking account. York also allegedly had possession of Shewbart’s debit and credit cards, Shewbart told police. In February, York allegedly cashed a certificate of deposit of Shewbart’s worth nearly $27,000 to pay Shewbart’s approximate $7,000-per-month rent. However, York allegedly deposited the money in her own personal checking account. Shewbart claimed she never gave York permission to cash the CD, according to the affidavit. Lawrence police were first notified of the alleged theft June 15 when a Brandon Woods business manager told officers
County CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A
department, in part because of a controversy over whether Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach was given too many exemptions from county building codes on a project in rural Douglas County. Plinsky said she reached out to five firms for the work. One replied with a ‘no thank you,’ while Austin Peters and Novak Consulting Group Inc., of Cincinnati, replied with interest. Novak Consulting told the county the review could be completed in eight weeks at a cost of $17,500. Commission Chair Jim Flory said he appreciated Austin Peters’ lower price tag, so long as the county placed a cap on the travel expenses, which he said “could quickly add up.” Now that commissioners have selected a firm, county staff will work with Austin Peters to further define the scope of its review and the timeline. The work is meant to examine the responsiveness, fairness and professionalism and best practices of the department. Although the review will not focus solely on the Kobach case, that case will be addressed over the course of investigating the review’s three main areas of focus, Commissioner Nancy Thellman said in September. The findings of the
Legion CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3A
happening every day.” The Legion has also become “the” bingo place in town, Hanson said. The post holds bingo games every Wednesday and Saturday. Doors open at 4:30 p.m. and games start at 6:45. Despite all the changes, an age-old problem still exists. Hanson said many veterans don’t want to ask for help, or they feel as though they’ll take services away from someone else who needs them. “The major job for the Legion is to take care
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LAWRENCE • STATE
that York was supposed to be paying Shewbart’s rent, but she was behind in payments by about $37,000. Shewbart told police she had given York occasional permission to buy a few personal items — including a used car to take Shewbart on errands — with her money, but expected York to be paying her rent. Shewbart told police she would have preferred York pay her rent rather than purchasing a car, according to the affidavit. “At times during the interview with Shewbart, she appeared sad and would quietly cry,” Lawrence police officer Larry Hamilton wrote in the affidavit. “Shewbart said she felt sorry for York’s children.” When interviewed June 24, York told police that she spent about $18,000 on personal and family expenses at Shewbart’s request to “spend down” Shewbart’s bank account so Shewbart could qualify for government assistance. York told police the rent issues had been “recently taken care of with a check,” according to the affidavit. Police, however, noted Shewbart was still behind in rent by more than $11,000 on June 24. York reported that she had a “great” relationship with Shewbart, and that
Shewbart “calls (York) her daughter,” according to the affidavit. York also told officers that Shewbart’s “health and memory” were “slipping,” so York was in charge of shopping for Shewbart and paying her bills. Early in the interview, York allegedly told officer Mike Cobb that she did not believe she had committed a crime because she had heeded Shewbart’s wishes, according to the affidavit. “I don’t feel like I have done anything wrong,” York allegedly told Cobb. “Billie wanted me to spend the money down to get on Medicare.” Shewbart said she had cashed the CD and spent about $18,000 of it “on personal and family items to ‘spend down the account’ and get Billie on government assistance,” Cobb wrote in the affidavit. York later would say she spent “most” of the nearly $27,000 CD on her own expenses. When asked why she did not spend the money on Shewbart’s rent to deplete the account, York told police that someone named “Kim” at Brandon Woods had “told her to spend the money down.” However York “could not remember anything about this person, including a full name,” Cobb wrote in the affidavit. Eventually, York told Cobb she “feel(s) bad
review will then be presented to county commissioners, Plinsky said. Commissioners on Wednesday also unanimously approved proposed changes to Horizon 2020, the long-term and comprehensive plan for future development in Lawrence and unincorporated areas of Douglas County. In August, the plan’s Horizon 2020 Steering Committee identified 19 areas of focus to be studied and changed, said Lawrence city planner Jeff Crick. The areas include retail development, transportation, housing and more. The Lawrence City Commission unanimously approved the changes on Tuesday. Now that both the county and city commissions have adopted the changes, city planning staff will apply them to the long-term plan. That plan should be updated by next fall, Crick said. Also on Wednesday’s agenda: l Commissioners unanimously agreed to extend contract work with two Kansas University employees whose contract services on the county’s potential mental health crisis center and jail expansion projects have expired. l Commissioners unanimously agreed to allow the county administrator to seek out a design professional to work with the county on the potential mental health crisis center and jail expansion project. The professional will then be asked to “go far enough in the design
process that we could come up with a price tag and work out the issues with the size of the facility and how much it would likely cost and how much it would cost to operate,” said County Administrator Craig Weinaug. Hiring a design professional would not commit the county to any construction work, he added. Instead, it is meant to give commissioners a better idea of what the potential project might look like.
of veterans, no matter how long they served,” Hanson said. “If they’ve served in the military and they need help, they can come to us and we’ll do the best we can.” He said the Legion exists to help veterans get in touch with the right people, and he and his fellow post officers are happy to do so. Members of the post meet starting at 5:30 on the first Tuesday of each month. For more information or to volunteer at the post, contact Jerome Hanson at commander@ legion14.org. — Reporter Mackenzie Clark can be reached at mclark@ljworld.com or 832-7198.
about not taking care of the rent,” according to the affidavit. She allegedly admitted that “it was wrong for her to not pay Billie Jean’s rent, and she did not have an excuse for doing so,” Cobb wrote in the affidavit. “I should have paid her rent,” York said, according to the affidavit. “I am a bad person, I guess.” Cobb said in the affidavit that he then advised York of the criminal statute for mistreatment of a dependent adult, and York allegedly said that she felt the statute “applied to her situation.” York was later arrested and charged last month with felony mistreatment of a dependent adult by taking between $25,000 and $100,000. Kansas statute defines York’s charge as “taking the personal property or financial resources of a dependent adult for the benefit of the defendant or another person by taking control, title, use or management of the personal property or
L awrence J ournal -W orld financial resources of a dependent adult through a violation of the Kansas power of attorney act.” She is scheduled to appear next in court on Nov. 18 for a hearing. York is free on a $10,000 own-recognizance bond, meaning she did not have to pay money to be released from jail, but promised to return for all future court dates. If she fails to appear, she will be taken to jail and required to pay the $10,000 to be released again. If convicted, York could spend about 2.5 to more than 11 years in prison, depending on her criminal history. If York has no more than two prior misdemeanor convictions, she could be eligible for probation. An obituary published in an Enid, Okla. newspaper lists a 71-year-old Billie Jean Shewbart of Lawrence as having died Sept. 9.
BRIEFLY Cause determined in Monday house fire
Fire investigators determined the cause of a Monday evening fire that displaced a family at 1135 Stone Meadows Drive in west Lawrence. Lawrence-Douglas County Fire Medical Division Chief Eve Tolefree said the fire was accidental, caused by a pan left unattended on the stove. She said the fire is estimated to have caused around $150,000 in damage. When crews arrived at the two-story reverse ranch style home Monday, they found heavy fire and smoke emitting from the garage area, Tolefree said Monday. The family escaped the house uninjured, but their dog died. No firefighters were injured while extinguishing the flames. Tolefree said the Douglas County chapter of the — Public safety reporter Caitlin American Red Cross was Doornbos can be reached at 832-7146 assisting the displaced or cvdoornbos@ljworld.com. residents Monday evening.
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— Reporter Conrad Swanson can be reached at cswanson@ljworld.com or 832-7284.
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L awrence J ournal -W orld
Thursday, November 12, 2015
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FRIENDS AND NEIGHBORS
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Contributed Photo
MAJ. DAN ROONEY, CENTER, HAS BEEN RECOGNIZED as a Distinguished Alumni Award recipient by the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences at Kansas University. Rooney was honored at a reception at the Dole Institute of Politics on Oct. 8. He is the founder of Folds of Honor, a nonprofit organization that assists families of veterans. The interim dean and newly named dean of the College were in attendance to congratulate Rooney. Don Steeples, left, is interim dean; Carl Lejuez starts as dean of the College on Feb. 1.
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NEW GENERATIONS SOCIETY OF LAWRENCE RECENTLY ENJOYED A PROGRAM AT WATKINS MUSEUM presented by Bill Tuttle, KU Professor Emeritus of American Studies, titled “Recollections of Turbulent Times at KU: 1965-1970.” Pictured from left to right: Alice Ann Johnston, Penny McDonald, Bill Tuttle, Mike McDonald, Bob Bowline, Kathryn Tuttle.
Red Dog’s Dog Days workout, 6 a.m., west side of South Park, 12th and Massachusetts streets. Skillbuilders: Cooking for One or Two, 1011:30 a.m., Smith Center at Brandon Woods at Alvamar, 4730 Brandon Woods Terrace. Lecture: “Flamenco on the Global Stage: Historical, critical and theoretical perspectives,” with Michelle Heffner Hayes, 3:30-5 p.m., Haricombe Gallery, Third Floor, Watson Library, 1425 Jayhawk Blvd. Cottin’s Hardware Farmers Market, 4-6 p.m., inside Cottin’s Hardware & Rental, 1832 Massachusetts St. KU Youth Chorus rehearsal, 4:30 p.m., Room 328, Murphy Hall, 1530 Naismith Drive. Dinner and Junkyard Jazz, 5:30 p.m., American Legion Post #14, 3408 W. Sixth St. Red Dog’s Dog Days workout, 6 p.m., west side of South Park, 12th and Massachusetts streets. Baker University Community Choir Rehearsal,
6-8 p.m., McKibben Recital Hall (Owens Musical Arts Building), 408 Eighth St., Baldwin City. Turkish Film Series: “Coming Soon,” 7 p.m., Bailey Hall, Room 318, 1440 Jayhawk Blvd. Preventing Diabetes, presented by Dr. Steven Dillon and Anthony Robeson, 7 p.m., TherapyWorks, 1311 Wakarusa Drive, Suite 1000. Young the Giant with special guests Wildling, 7 p.m. doors, 8 p.m. show, Liberty Hall, 644 Massachusetts St. Young Adult Fiction for Grown-Ups, discussing “Through the Woods: Stories,” by Emily Carroll, 7 p.m., Henry’s on Eighth, 11 E. Eighth St. Free English as a Second Language class, 7-8 p.m., Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St. Affordable community Spanish class, 7-8 p.m., Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St. Lawrence Arts & Crafts group, 7-9 p.m., The Community Mercantile cafe, 901 Iowa St. KU Wind Ensemble, 7:30 p.m., Lied Center,
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Lawrence Public Library Book Van, 9-10 a.m., Clinton Place, 2125 Clinton Parkway. Ploughman’s Lunch and Trinity Treasures Sale, 10 a.m.-2 p.m., Trinity Episcopal Church, 1101 Vermont St. Lawrence Public Library Book Van, 10:3011:30 a.m., Wyndham Place, 2551 Crossgate Drive.
Find more information about these events, and more event listings, at ljworld.com/events.
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Thursday, November 12, 2015
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L awrence J ournal -W orld
Missing brother is normal, can be managed Dear Annie: I am a 12-year-old boy with a problem. My dad died when I was a baby, so it’s just my mom, my 22-year-old brother “Jason” and me. Mom works two jobs, and basically, Jason has taken care of me. Jason is my hero. He helps me with my homework, takes me places and protects me. He planned his college classes around my school schedule, so he could drop me off and pick me up every day. He gave up many nights out to stay home with me when Mom had to work an extra shift. Jason graduated from college in June and was accepted to an overseas program. I told him I would be OK with it. He left a month ago and I really thought I would be fine, but I am not. I miss him so much there are
Annie’s Mailbox
Marcy Sugar and Kathy Mitchell
anniesmailbox@comcast.net
days I actually feel sick. I said something about it to my best friend at school, and he just laughed at me. Then he told everybody and they started teasing me, so I said I was only joking, which made me feel guilty. Now I am afraid to say anything about how I feel. If I tell my mom, she will worry. Jason and I email every day and Skype a few times a week, but it’s just not the same. Is there some-
Kids take ‘Project Runway’ Many memorable “Project Runway” contestants have been immature, emotional, highstrung, irrepressible and overbearing in their exuberance. But now they will at least be acting their age. “Project Runway Junior” (8 p.m., Lifetime, TV-PG) invites talented designers ages 13 to 17 to compete under the wise mentorship of Tim Gunn. Christian Siriano, Aya Kanai and Kelly Osbourne serve as judges. The “Junior” edition follows a reunion of the “Project Runway” (7 p.m., TVPG) season 14 cast. You’ll have to remember way back to last week to recall what they all did.
Eminent domain threatens Han’s diner and Max and Caroline’s cupcake window as “2 Broke Girls” (8:30 p.m., CBS, TV-14) opens its fifth season. This more than occasionally smutty sitcom depends almost entirely on the “Odd Couple” casting of a former socialite (Beth Behrs) and a wisecracking waitress (Kat Dennings). The formula has been enough to propel this comedy into syndication, inspiring CBS to reboot “The Odd Couple.” That sitcom, starring Matthew Perry and Thomas Lennon, will return midseason, with Teri Hatcher as a guest star.
Division rivals the Buffalo Bills and New York Jets meet in New Jersey on “Thursday Night Football” (7:25 p.m., NFL), a game that also touches on approaches to business and public relations skills. Bills coach Rex Ryan used to work for the Jets, where his brash personality and penchant for prediction-making fed into the bottomless maw of New York sports media. Some found Ryan entertaining, while others saw his grandstanding as a needless distraction. The Jets have exceeded expectations and have a 5-3 record under their much more reticent coach Todd Bowles. With Ryan at the helm, the Bills are 4-4.
PBS repeats the Veterans Day documentary “Debt of Honor: Disabled Veterans in American History” (8 p.m., TV-PG), a look at how society’s attitudes toward returning veterans have changed, and endured, from the time of the Civil War to today. Tonight’s other highlights
A magician tries a death-de-
fying act and fails on “Bones” (7 p.m., Fox, TV-14).
A long-term-care patient proves taxing on “Grey’s Anatomy” (7 p.m., ABC, TV-14).
An assignment reopens a wound for Samar on “The Blacklist” (8 p.m., NBC, TV-14).
Pandora meets her match on “Sleepy Hollow” (8 p.m., Fox, TV-14).
A White House guest has shocking secrets on “Scandal” (8 p.m., ABC, TV-14).
Holmes’ has his doubts about his father’s kind gestures on “Elementary” (9 p.m., CBS).
thing wrong with me? What can I do to make it stop hurting so much? — Love My Brother Dear Brother: There is nothing wrong with you. Jason has been a father substitute and it is perfectly natural for you to miss him terribly when he is so far away. But it’s obvious that you want what’s best for Jason, and that involves a bit of sacrifice. Some of your heartache will lessen with time, provided you focus less on Jason’s absence and more on what is happening around you. Spend more time with your friends, get involved and consider tutoring someone in a subject you are good at. (Helping someone else can take your mind off of other things.) Don’t be afraid to talk about this — not to your friends, who are too immature
JACQUELINE BIGAR’S STARS
For Thursday, Nov. 12: This year your highly charged energy and your natural charisma mix, to your financial benefit. No one can or will ignore you. If you are single, your popularity is obvious. If you are attached, you’ll want to indulge your sweetie, and you will. 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) Your mood brightens as others lighten up. News could head in from someone at a distance. Tonight: A weekend getaway. Taurus (April 20-May 20) Continue to let others take the lead. Everyone will be a lot happier. Tonight: Opt for teamwork. Gemini (May 21-June 20) Make sure you are in tune with the inner you. Deeper feelings lie beneath the surface. Tonight: Let someone else assume control. Cancer (June 21-July 22) Your imagination can be limitless if you brainstorm with an equally imaginative person. Tonight: Get some rest, if you can. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) Be direct with others. You might be surprised by someone else’s diplomacy. Tonight: Think “weekend.” Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Tension could mount to
to understand, but to your mom, a grandparent, counselor, teacher or other understanding adult. Dear Annie: I am a widow in my 60s. My husband passed away several years ago. I often find I have to introduce myself to someone who knew my husband, but not me. If I say, “I was married to John Doe,” it sounds as though we were divorced. But it also doesn’t sound right to say, “I am John Doe’s widow.” Any suggestions? — Anonymous, Please Dear Anonymous: You can try this: “Hello, I’m Mary Doe. I believe you knew my late husband, John.” — Send questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or Annie’s Mailbox, P.O. Box 118190 Chicago, IL 60611.
jacquelinebigar.com
a level that you had not anticipated. You might not be ready to deal with what is happening. Tonight: Deal with an ongoing issue. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) You seem more energized and charming than usual. You could become difficult if you don’t get what you want. Tonight: No fussing. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Know that you have a lot to offer. Others admire your knowledge and strength. Tonight: Fun doesn’t need to cost money. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) You’ll perk up as the day goes on, as you sense that others are receptive to your ideas and presentation. Tonight: You call the shots. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Know when to back off. Your inner voice might be saying something quite contrary to what you would like to believe. Tonight: Play it cool. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Focus on your goals and desires. Friends could be very distracting. Tonight: The more, the merrier. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) You could be overtired and withdrawn. Pressure has been building around your work and day-to-day life. Tonight: Try to get some sleep. — The astrological forecast should be read for entertainment only.
UNIVERSAL CROSSWORD Universal Crossword Edited by Timothy E. Parker November 12, 2015
ACROSS 1 Sirs’ counterparts 6 Greenhouse louse 11 “Dig in!” 14 Wide tie 15 Air Force One, for one 16 Arm-overarm swinger 17 Open-door joke’s punch line 19 “Messenger” substance 20 Extend a welcome to 21 Fall follower 23 Roman dawn goddess 26 Seized the opportunity, in old slang 27 Expensive wraps 28 Most demure 29 P.I. 30 Royal domain 32 Drinking instrument 35 Aggravates 37 Foot pound? 39 Droughtdamaged 40 Like a hard-liner 42 Practices one’s punches 44 .001 of an inch 45 They contained the hits 47 Nearest the center
49 Brno is its largest city 51 Fabrics with wavelike designs 52 Bewilders 53 Facial expression of dislike 55 Make into a knot 56 “All the world’s a stage ...” writer 61 252 gallons 62 Place of a famous shroud 63 ____ in judgment 64 Common pair? 65 Depleted one’s bank account 66 Daisy’s cousin DOWN 1 Gaping mouth 2 Bit of air pollution 3 Blackjack card 4 Golden Horde member 5 Coffee shop freebie 6 Part of a church 7 Lot developer’s map 8 Leon Uris novel (with “The”) 9 To some extent
10 Subjects to ridicule 11 It causes the ground to move 12 Nighttime breathing problem 13 About to cry 18 Makes fun of 22 Where birds settle down 23 Showing signs of life 24 Wombs 25 Things for those with stone thumbs? 26 Poppa’s pairing 28 Sounds of horses on the move 31 Out of port 33 Come to mind 34 Reinforced garment seams
36 Cordage fiber 38 Upper parts of piano duets 41 Dispossesses 43 Stir-fry tidbit 46 Serve 48 Some longdistance runners 49 A photo finish 50 Hatred or disgrace 53 Injure, as a knee 54 Small bit of change 57 “Who ___ you kidding?” 58 What some collectors collect 59 Fish eggs 60 Make a 63-Across
PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER
11/11
© 2015 Universal Uclick www.upuzzles.com
RATTLED By Kenneth Holt
11/12
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.
FINKE ©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.
KAWET SERDYS
RVAYIA
Yesterday’s
Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app
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Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.
(Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: DAISY AROSE DRENCH ACCORD Answer: When his girlfriend broke up with him on Friday, the weekend started on a — “SADDER-DAY”
BECKER ON BRIDGE
Opinion
Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com l Thursday, November 12, 2015
EDITORIALS
Naming honor Lawrence couple Don and Beverly Gardner are worthy of the new Boys & Girls Club teen center’s name.
I
t is a fitting tribute that the new teen center for the Boys & Girls Club of Lawrence will be named “The Don and Beverly Gardner Center for Great Futures.” Last week, Harry Herington and his wife, Cindy, announced their pledge of $250,000 toward the construction of the center in honor of the Gardners, for whom the new center will be named. The announcement came, appropriately, during an evening workout in South Park led by Don “Red Dog” Gardner. Gardner is well known for leading community workouts for youth and adults. He has done so for three decades. The Gardners also have spearheaded an annual run as a fundraiser for the Boys & Girls Club. Most school day afternoons, the Boys & Girls Club’s teen center hosts approximately 70 teens at 1520 Haskell Ave. Officials say the current facility is limited by space and amenities and that the new center will allow the club to serve more youth and provide more programs. The future teen center will be adjacent to the newly completed Lawrence College and Career Center at 2910 Haskell Ave. The 30,000-square-foot facility will share spaces for music, arts, athletics and a culinary kitchen with the Lawrence school district, according to the club. The tentative timeline for construction of the facility is to break ground next fall and to open the teen center by August 2017. The construction timeline is dependent on fundraising. The new facility is estimated to cost $5 million. The Heringtons’ gift brings the total raised to $1.2 million. As we have noted before, the Boys & Girls Club does outstanding work in Lawrence, and its support in the community has officials optimistic they will reach their fundraising goal. Having the facility named in honor of the Gardners should help the effort. The surprise announcement last week caused Don Gardner, a former Marine and police officer, to choke up. “I grew up in a foster home, and I have said to Boys & Girls Club people that I wish there had been one when I was here,” he told the crowd gathered for the announcement. Colby Wilson, executive director of the Boys & Girls Club, said “We can’t think of two better people for what we’re going to do for our teen center” than the Gardners. Neither can we — naming the teen center for them is an appropriate way to recognize the Gardners, who have made a lasting impact on the lives of thousands of Lawrence residents, particularly the community’s youth.
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O’Reilly makes a mess of history Washington — Were the lungs the seat of wisdom, Fox News host Bill O’Reilly would be wise, but they are not and he is not. So it is not astonishing that he is doubling down on his wager that the truth cannot catch up with him. It has, however, already done so. The prolific O’Reilly has, with his collaborator Martin Dugard, produced five “history” books in five years: “Killing Lincoln,” “Killing Kennedy, “Killing Jesus,” “Killing Patton” and now the best-selling “Killing Reagan.” Because no one actually killed Reagan, O’Reilly keeps his lucrative series going by postulating that the bullet that struck Reagan in March 1981 kind of, sort of killed him, although he lived 23 more years. O’Reilly “reports” that the trauma of the assassination attempt was somehow causally related to the “fact” that Reagan was frequently so mentally incompetent that senior aides contemplated using the Constitution’s 25th Amendment to remove him from office. But neither O’Reilly nor Dugard spoke with any of those aides — not with Ed Meese, Jim Baker, George Shultz or any of the scores of others who could, and would, have demolished O’Reilly’s theory. O’Reilly now airily dismisses them because they “have skin in the game.” His is an interesting approach to writing history: Never talk to anyone with first-hand knowledge of your subject.
George Will
georgewill@washpost.com
“
(O’Reilly’s) is an interesting approach to writing history: Never talk to anyone with first-hand knowlege of your subject.” Instead, O’Reilly made the book’s “centerpiece” a memo he has never seen and never tried to see until 27 days after the book was published. Then Dugard asked the Reagan Library to find it. Recently on Fox, O’Reilly put this on the screen from Sue Janzen of Yorba Linda, California: “We went to the Reagan Library, and were told they do not sell Killing Reagan because it’s not factual.” Then O’Reilly said: “You were deceived, Sue. The Reagan Library is angry at Martin Dugard and me because we’re seeking” the Cannon memo. He added: “The memo’s disappeared. But Dugard and I are on the case and the library is not happy about it.” “Disappeared”? His crude intimation was that the allegedly deceptive library is hiding the memo. The library, however, has never
had it because when James Cannon wrote it he was not a member of the White House staff, hence the memo was not a “presidential record.” O’Reilly recently canceled an interview with Meese, who says O’Reilly told him he was “vetting” the memo. (How does one vet a memo one does not possess?) O’Reilly says he canceled the interview because Meese set “conditions.” Meese, who was eager to be interviewed, waived any conditions. The “centerpiece” memo was written by Cannon at the request of former Sen. Howard Baker when Baker was about to replace the fired Don Regan as Reagan’s chief of staff. The memo assessing White House conditions apparently included disparagements of Reagan from some unhappy Regan staffers. The memo was presented to Baker at a meeting at Baker’s home attended by A.B. Culvahouse, who the next day would become counsel to the president. Culvahouse remembers the normally mildmannered Baker brusquely dismissing the memo: “That’s not the Reagan I met with two days ago.” Neither Baker nor Culvahouse considered the memo important enough to save. Meeting with Reagan the next day, Baker and others found no reason to question his competence. O’Reilly impales himself on a contradiction: He says his book is “laudatory” about Reagan — and that it is being attacked by Reagan “guardians” and “loyalists.”
How odd. Liberals, who have long recognized that to discredit conservatism they must devalue Reagan’s presidency, surely are delighted with O’Reilly’s assistance. The diaspora of Reagan administration alumni, and the conservative movement, now recognize O’Reilly as an opportunistic interloper. He began his profitable paltering with America’s past with “Killing Lincoln.” Historians advising the National Park Service, which administers Ford’s Theatre, found a multitude of errors in the first, uncorrected version, in which, for example, O’Reilly repeatedly places Lincoln in the Oval Office, which was built in 1909. The Theatre bookstore still does not sell “Killing Lincoln.” The Theatre gift shop, a commercial rather than educational entity, does. Four “histories” later, O’Reilly remains slipshod. In “The Great Gatsby,” F. Scott Fitzgerald writes of Tom and Daisy Buchanan who “smashed up things” and then “retreated back into ... their vast carelessness ... and let other people clean up the mess they had made.” Tidying up after O’Reilly could be a full-time job but usually is not worth the trouble. When, however, O’Reilly’s vast carelessness pollutes history and debases the historian’s craft, the mess is, unlike O’Reilly, to be taken seriously. — George Will is a columnist with the Washington Post Writers Group.
OLD HOME TOWN
100
From the Lawrence Daily Journal-World for Nov. 12, 1915: years “The prospects ago of success in the IN 1915 movement to pave Elm street in North Lawrence are growing brighter. A review of the situation last night showed that almost a majority of the property owners from Second to Seventh streets have signified their willingness to sign the paving petition. The promoters of the movement are confident of success in their effort to secure the needed number of signatures....” — Compiled by Sarah St. John
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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.
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What the Lawrence Journal-World stands for Accurate and fair news reporting. l No mixing of editorial opinion with reporting of the news. l Safeguarding the rights of all citizens regardless of race, creed or economic stature. l Sympathy and understanding for all who are disadvantaged or oppressed. l Exposure of any dishonesty in public affairs. l Support of projects that make our community a better place to live. l
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Read more Old Home Town at LJWorld.com/news/lawrence/ history/old_home_town.
African America has promises to keep We are gathered here today not to argue about some policy prescription, nor to excoriate some public figure. No, we are gathered because sometimes, you have no choice, sometimes, you simply have a duty to bear witness. A child was killed last week in Chicago. He was shot to death. It is a measure of America that the statement is, of itself, unremarkable. Children are shot all the time in this country. But what makes this shooting stand out is that 9-year-old Tyshawn Lee was targeted. Police say the child, who was black, was lured into an alley and shot multiple times. According to them, the execution was part of an ongoing dispute between rival street gangs and was intended as retaliation against Tyshawn’s father, Pierre Stokes. They say Stokes, 25, is a gang member who has refused to cooperate with the investigation. Stokes, in turn, told the Chicago Tribune he doesn’t believe the killing had anything to do with him and that anybody who wanted to hurt him could do so easily enough without going after his son. “I’m not hard to find,” he said.
Leonard Pitts Jr. lpitts@miamiherald.com
“
Small wonder, in that sludge of human malfunction, that someone became cold enough to target a little boy for execution.”
Twenty-one years ago, a 5-year-old black child named Eric Morse was dropped 14 stories to his death by a 10-year-old and an 11-year-old because he would not steal candy for them. It is, however, the death of another black boy from Chicago that paints all this in shades of irony. In 1955, Mamie Till Mobley sent her 14-year-old only child, Emmett Till, down South to spend the summer. After he was lynched for supposedly flirting with a white woman, she recalled ruefully how she
had warned him to be careful; told him Mississippi was dangerous for black children. But six decades later, there are few places more dangerous for black children — for black people — than Chicago itself. In 2014, 411 people died there by murder or non-negligent manslaughter. New York City, with three times Chicago’s 2.7 million population, only recorded 333 such deaths. An overwhelming number of the victims were (as always) African-American. Black lives matter, we say. Indeed, a lifetime ago, black people decided they mattered too much to sit helplessly by as they were poured out like water by hateful white men in places like Mississippi, Florida and Arkansas. So six million strong, they fled the South in a Great Migration, seeking “liberty and justice for all,” “all men are created equal,” “life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness” and all the other promises that comprise America. Chicago was one of their major destinations. It was the pot of gold at the end of the railroad tracks. It was the exhalation of hope heard as the bus doors sighed open. But black people soon
found that in Chicago — as in other cities — America’s promise offered them only mop buckets, chauffeur’s caps and ghettos teeming with vermin, the constricted parameters of their lives patrolled by police with batons and bankers with maps crisscrossed by red lines. Eventually, the parameters would also enforce themselves: miseducation, teen pregnancy and crime. Small wonder, in that sludge of human malfunction, that someone became cold enough to target a little boy for execution. Or that a 25-year-old father now mourns a 9-year-old son. And bearing witness feels like impotence, but like duty, too, a reminder that there are promises America still owes African America, and that African America also owes itself, promises life owes to life and that the price of the ongoing refusal to keep those promises is too often paid in children’s blood. Five days after Tyshawn’s murder, a boy named J’Quantae Riles was shot to death shortly after visiting a Chicago barbershop. He was 14. —Leonard Pitts Jr. is a columnist for the Miami Herald.
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SATURDAY
SUNDAY
MONDAY
Sunny, breezy and cooler
Plenty of sunshine
Breezy with plenty of sunshine
Pleasant with clouds and sun
Cloudy with a little rain
High 59° Low 28° POP: 0%
High 58° Low 38° POP: 0%
High 65° Low 46° POP: 5%
High 60° Low 48° POP: 10%
High 61° Low 41° POP: 55%
Wind WNW 10-20 mph
Wind WNW 4-8 mph
Wind SSW 10-20 mph
Wind S 10-20 mph
Wind SSE 8-16 mph
POP: Probability of Precipitation
McCook 49/23 Oberlin 50/24
Clarinda 54/28
Lincoln 54/25
Grand Island 51/25
Kearney 50/25
Beatrice 53/24
St. Joseph 57/28 Chillicothe 57/32
Sabetha 54/30
Concordia 54/27
Centerville 52/31
Kansas City Marshall Manhattan 59/33 59/34 Salina 61/24 Oakley Kansas City Topeka 61/28 50/26 60/28 Lawrence 58/32 Sedalia 59/28 Emporia Great Bend 60/34 60/28 57/28 Nevada Dodge City Chanute 60/31 56/28 Hutchinson 62/29 Garden City 62/27 56/28 Springfield Wichita Pratt Liberal Coffeyville Joplin 59/31 63/32 58/28 58/31 60/32 63/30 Hays Russell 55/27 56/27
Goodland 47/23
Douglas County saw winds of about 35 mph and gusts of up to 55 mph Wednesday, according to the National Weather Service, causing damage and power outages throughout the county. Douglas County was under a high wind advisory from about 2:20 p.m. to 6 p.m. Wednesday as winds knocked over trees and power lines in Lawrence and the surrounding areas. A downed power line just east of Eudora in the 1800 block of North 1500 Road reported around 11:40 a.m. left about 64 customers
ers reported a second power-line pole along North 1500 Road had snapped between East 1750 and East 1900 roads. Around 1:15 p.m., winds broke a power-line pole in the 2300 block of Crestline Drive, causing about 140 Westar Energy customers in the area to lose power, according to Westar. Crestline Drive was closed as Westar employees responded to the report and repaired the pole. Others in Lawrence reported downed trees and branches. One tree limb knocked into the street near the intersection of
Seventh and Locust streets around 1 p.m. blocked traffic before it could be cleared from the road.
Locust and Sixth closed this week The intersection of Locust and Sixth streets in North Lawrence will be closed through Saturday, the city of Lawrence said in a news release Wednesday. The closure is due to the construction involved with the Maple Street Pump Station in North Lawrence. The work taking place involves the rerouting of water lines in preparation for the new storm sewer line that will be installed at a later date.
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
LAWRENCE ALMANAC
Through 8 p.m. Wednesday.
Temperature High/low Normal high/low today Record high today Record low today
75°/44° 56°/34° 76° in 1989 5° in 1911
Precipitation in inches 24 hours through 8 p.m. yest. trace Month to date 0.13 Normal month to date 0.97 Year to date 34.78 Normal year to date 37.06
REGIONAL CITIES
Today Fri. Today Fri. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Independence 63 30 s 59 37 s Atchison 58 27 s 57 37 s Fort Riley 60 26 s 60 42 s Belton 58 33 s 56 40 s Olathe 56 31 s 56 38 s Burlington 60 29 s 59 39 s Osage Beach 60 35 s 57 33 s Coffeyville 63 30 s 61 35 s Osage City 60 29 s 59 40 s Concordia 54 27 s 58 39 s Ottawa 59 29 s 58 39 s Dodge City 56 28 s 59 35 s Wichita 63 32 s 63 38 s Holton 59 29 s 59 39 s Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
NATIONAL FORECAST
SUN & MOON
First
Full
Nov 19 Nov 25
Fri. 7:01 a.m. 5:09 p.m. 8:35 a.m. 6:56 p.m.
Last
New
Dec 3
Dec 11
LAKE LEVELS
As of 7 a.m. Wednesday Lake
Clinton Perry Pomona
Level (ft)
Discharge (cfs)
876.78 891.94 973.23
7 183 35
Shown are today’s noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for today.
Fronts Cold
INTERNATIONAL CITIES Cities Acapulco Amsterdam Athens Baghdad Bangkok Beijing Berlin Brussels Buenos Aires Cairo Calgary Dublin Geneva Hong Kong Jerusalem Kabul London Madrid Mexico City Montreal Moscow New Delhi Oslo Paris Rio de Janeiro Rome Seoul Singapore Stockholm Sydney Tokyo Toronto Vancouver Vienna Warsaw Winnipeg
Today Hi Lo W 88 77 pc 59 51 pc 74 56 s 71 50 s 95 80 pc 49 38 c 57 46 pc 59 50 pc 76 59 sh 77 60 s 38 31 pc 57 38 r 56 41 pc 82 72 pc 65 53 s 47 39 sh 60 47 pc 69 42 s 74 53 pc 54 45 r 37 30 sn 84 62 pc 48 40 pc 59 48 pc 85 73 t 66 46 s 63 45 pc 88 78 t 46 30 sh 80 65 t 60 54 pc 53 43 r 49 46 r 60 43 pc 54 40 pc 36 24 sn
Hi 88 56 73 72 93 51 55 55 78 80 51 48 57 79 68 55 51 70 68 50 34 86 55 58 86 66 60 89 48 80 61 47 54 57 51 39
Fri. Lo W 78 pc 45 sh 57 s 52 s 79 pc 40 c 42 sh 42 sh 57 pc 62 s 30 c 40 sh 40 pc 72 t 55 s 29 pc 43 pc 44 s 51 pc 33 sh 23 c 63 pc 40 r 44 c 76 t 48 s 49 pc 78 t 35 r 62 t 56 pc 31 sh 42 r 48 pc 43 c 32 pc
Warm Stationary Showers T-storms
Flurries
Snow
Ice
-10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s National Summary: Strong winds with locally damaging gusts will usher much cooler air over the Midwest today. Rain will diminish to showers from the Northeast to the southern Appalachians and ramp up in Washington. Today Fri. Today Fri. Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Cities Hi Lo W Hi Lo W Memphis 66 43 s 61 37 s Albuquerque 56 30 s 58 34 s 88 75 pc 86 73 pc Anchorage 27 13 pc 21 9 pc Miami Milwaukee 53 36 c 46 30 c Atlanta 69 45 pc 59 38 s Minneapolis 45 32 c 44 32 pc Austin 70 49 pc 65 47 c 64 41 s 59 32 s Baltimore 61 43 r 57 36 pc Nashville New Orleans 73 55 pc 68 53 c Birmingham 68 44 pc 62 36 s New York 60 49 r 58 42 pc Boise 47 32 s 53 35 s 54 29 s 53 35 s Boston 55 48 r 59 41 pc Omaha 89 64 pc 85 59 s Buffalo 61 45 r 47 34 sh Orlando Philadelphia 61 48 r 58 43 pc Cheyenne 39 19 pc 48 29 s 76 49 s 79 51 s Chicago 52 35 c 46 28 pc Phoenix Pittsburgh 59 39 r 48 37 pc Cincinnati 56 38 pc 51 30 s Portland, ME 50 43 r 57 37 pc Cleveland 56 40 r 48 37 c Dallas 68 44 pc 67 46 pc Portland, OR 52 48 r 58 51 r Reno 46 22 s 49 27 s Denver 42 21 pc 50 27 s Richmond 67 46 c 62 36 s Des Moines 53 33 s 52 34 s Sacramento 65 39 s 66 40 s Detroit 53 41 c 48 34 c 60 38 s 55 34 s El Paso 67 42 pc 69 46 pc St. Louis Fairbanks 3 -7 pc 0 -6 sf Salt Lake City 47 28 pc 50 32 s 75 52 s 77 52 s Honolulu 86 76 sh 86 75 sh San Diego San Francisco 64 48 s 65 48 s Houston 70 50 pc 67 49 c Seattle 51 48 r 57 48 r Indianapolis 55 35 pc 50 28 s Spokane 42 38 pc 49 45 r Kansas City 58 32 s 57 39 s Tucson 75 44 s 77 47 s Las Vegas 65 44 s 67 44 s Tulsa 64 34 s 62 37 s Little Rock 66 41 s 62 37 s Wash., DC 63 48 r 59 40 pc Los Angeles 78 51 s 81 51 s National extremes yesterday for the 48 contiguous states High: Alice, TX 93° Low: West Yellowstone, MT -9°
WEATHER HISTORY
WEATHER TRIVIA™
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FOX 4 at 9 PM (N)
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Seinfeld
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Late Show-Colbert
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Jimmy Kimmel Live Nightline
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NBCSN 38 603 151 Mecum Auto Auctions “Anaheim” (N) FNC
CNBC 40 355 208 Shark Tank
Blues
MVC Preview
The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File
Shark Tank
Jay Leno’s Garage
Jay Leno’s Garage
The Profit
Rachel Maddow
The Last Word
All In With Chris
Rachel Maddow
Anthony Bourd.
CNN Tonight
Anderson Cooper
Anthony Bourd.
44 202 200 Anderson Cooper
45 245 138 dNBA Basketball: Warriors at Timberwolves
USA
46 242 105 Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Behind
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47 265 118 The First 48
dNBA Basketball: Clippers at Suns Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam
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Conan (N)
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50 254 130 ››› Dragon: The Bruce Lee Story (1993)
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51 247 139 Broke 54 269 120 Pawn
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AMC
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TNT
BRAVO 52 237 129 TBA
The Real Rocky Game
Hannity (N)
CNN
TRUTV 48 246 204 Jokers
SportsCenter (N)
Nitro Crazy Train
39 360 205 The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File (N)
MSNBC 41 356 209 All In With Chris
30 for 30
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City Bulletin Board
ESPN2 34 209 144 30 for 30 36 672
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City Bulletin Board, Commission Meetings
ESPN 33 206 140 eCollege Football Virginia Tech at Georgia Tech. (N) SportsCenter (N) (Live) FSM
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Q: What is wind chill?
Twenty-four inches of snow fell in Jacob Lake, Ariz., on Nov. 12, 1985.
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The cooling power of the wind on bare skin.
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015
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Today 7:00 a.m. 5:09 p.m. 7:40 a.m. 6:11 p.m.
Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset
Lawrence City Wide Hiring Fair:
SYFY 55 244 122 WWE SmackDown! (N)
Pawn
Pawn Haven (N)
Billy
›› Kickboxer (1989), Dennis Alexio
Project
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SECTION B
USA TODAY — L awrence J ournal -W orld
IN MONEY
IN LIFE
AB InBev is close to ‘truly’ global
‘Trumbo’ stirs un-American ghosts of Hollywood’s past
11.12.15 JASPER JUINEN, BLOOMBERG
JACK GRUBER, USA TODAY
Massive wiretapping operation in L.A.
Drug agents intercept more than 2 million conversations in USA Brad Heath and Brett Kelman USA TODAY
RIVERSIDE , CALIF. Federal drug agents have built a massive wiretapping operation in the Los Angeles suburbs, secretly intercepting tens of thousands of Americans’ phone calls and text
NEWSLINE
IN NEWS
EU cutting some ‘Made in Israel’ labels; draws ire New rules refer to goods produced in Israeli settlements in Palestinian territories
messages to monitor drug traffickers across the USA despite objections from Justice Department lawyers who fear the practice may not be legal. Nearly all of that surveillance was authorized by a single state court judge in Riverside County, who signed off last year on almost five times as many wiretaps as any other judge in the USA. The judge’s orders allowed investigators — usually from the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration — to intercept more than 2 million
USA TODAY INVESTIGATION conversations involving 44,000 people, federal court records show. The eavesdropping is aimed at dismantling the drug rings that have turned Los Angeles’ dusty eastern suburbs into what the DEA says is the nation’s busiest shipping corridor for heroin and methamphetamine. Riverside wiretaps are supposed to be tied to crime within the county, but
investigators have relied on them to make arrests and seize shipments of cash and drugs as far away as New York and Virginia, sometimes concealing the surveillance in the process. The surveillance has raised concerns among Justice Department lawyers in Los Angeles, who have mostly refused to use the results in federal court because they have concluded the state
court’s eavesdropping orders are unlikely to withstand a legal challenge, current and former officials said. “It was made very clear to the agents that if you’re going to go the state route, then best wishes, good luck and all that, but that case isn’t coming to federal court,” a former Justice Department lawyer said. The lawyer and other officials described the situation on the condition of anonymv STORY CONTINUES ON 2B
VA BONUSES PAID AMID SCANDALS $142M goes out despite problems with veterans’ care
A SALUTE TO OUR HEROES
Donovan Slack and Bill Theobald USA TODAY
ROBERT DEUTSCH, USA TODAY
Koch doesn’t plan to back candidate in GOP primary IN MONEY
Amazon stock most expensive
CEO Jeff Bezos now world’s fourth richest person with $58.2 billion.
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©
Millionaires’ club
15.7 million Number of millionaires in the U.S., 47% of the planet’s 33.7 million.
Source Credit Suisse Research Institute’s 2015 “Global Wealth Report” TERRY BYRNE AND VERONICA BRAVO, USA TODAY
WASHINGTON The Department of Veterans Affairs doled out more than $142 million in bonuses to executives and employees for performance in 2014 even as scandals over veterans’ health care and other issues racked the agency. Among the recipients were claims processors in a Philadelphia benefits office that investigators dubbed the worst in the country last year. They received $300 to $900 each. Managers in Tomah, Wis., got $1,000 to $4,000, even though they oversaw the overprescription of opiates to veterans — one of whom died. The VA rewarded executives who managed construction of a facility in Denver, a disastrous project years overdue and more than $1 billion over budget. They took home $4,000 to $8,000 each. In St. Cloud, Minn., where an internal investigation report last year outlined mismanagement that led to mass resignations of health care providers, the chief of staff cited by investigators received a performance bonus of almost $4,000. As one of his final acts last year before resigning, VA Secretary Eric Shinseki announced he was suspending bonuses in the wake of revelations that VA employees falsified wait lists to meet waittime targets — ostensibly as part of efforts to secure the extra pay. But he curtailed them only for a sliver of VA executives — those in senior levels of the Veterans Health Administration, which oversees health care. The agency has continued to pay performance-based bonuses to nearly half of agency employees, including in health administration, according to data provided to USA TODAY by the House Veterans’ Affairs Committee. In all, about 156,000 executives, managers and employees received them for 2014 performance. VA spokesman James Hutton said the vast majority of agency
IN NEW YORK CITY, BY ROBERT DEUTSCH, USA TODAY
Veterans were honored across the nation Wednesday. At Arlington National Cemetery, President Obama defended his administration’s progress on veterans issues. employees are committed to serving veterans. “VA will continue to review tools and options in order to ensure the department is able to attract and retain the best talent to serve our nation’s veterans, while operating as a good steward of taxpayer funds,” Hutton said. That’s not good enough for Rep. Jeff Miller, R-Fla., chairman of the House VA committee, which has investigated questionable VA bonuses for years. Miller said the most recent awards reflect a “disturbing trend of rewarding employees who preside over corruption and incompetence.” He noted the agency paid more than $380,000 in 2013 performance bonuses to top officials at hospitals where veterans faced long delays in receiving treatment, including those under investigation for wait-time manipulation. “Rewarding failure only breeds more failure,” he said.
BONUS BENEFICIARIES Here are some of the recipients: uIn Tomah, Wis., the former chief of staff of the VA medical center, David Houlihan received a $4,000 bonus in December, nine months after an inspector general investigation report concluded he was prescribing alarmingly high amounts of opiates. uIn Colorado, a flawed facility construction project in Denver was overseen in part by several VA officials headquartered in Washington. Among them were Stella Fiotes, executive director of the VA’s Office of Construction and Facilities Management, who received a $8,985 bonus; Dennis Milsten, an associate director in the same office, who got $8,069; and Chris Kyrgos, former national acquisitions director, who took home $3,800. uIn St. Cloud, Minn., chief of staff Susan Markstrom got a $3,900 bonus in 2014. She was cited in an
internal investigation report in January 2014 that concluded mismanagement led to mass resignations of health care providers at the facility. St. Cloud VA spokesman Barry Venable said issues cited in the report were in 2013 and Markstrom is “an excellent chief of staff.” uIn Augusta, Ga., VA financial manager Jed Fillingim was awarded a $900 performance bonus. He drew scrutiny from Congress last year after news reports revealed he admitted drinking and driving a government truck to a VA meeting in 2010 and a co-worker fell from the truck and was killed. uIn Arizona, Sandra Flint, former director of the Phoenix regional VA benefits office, received a bonus of $8,348. Irate veterans confronted Flint at a public forum in August 2014 over a backlog of about 8,200 pending benefit claims. Included were 3,667 pending longer than 125 days.
New Earth-like planet found — except it’s 500 degrees Traci Watson
Special for USA TODAY
Scientists have spotted a new planet that’s a dead ringer for our own and resides just around the cosmic corner from our part of the galaxy. The planet’s proximity and uncanny resemblance to Earth make it “arguably the most important planet ever found outside the solar system,” the University of Maryland’s Drake Deming wrote in a commentary accompanying the scientific report about the discovery.
Dubbed GJ 1132b, it is slightly wider and more massive than Earth. Its composition is similar to Earth’s, and it lies only 39 light-years, or 230 trillion miles, away, which isn’t very far compared to the unfathomable spread of the universe. Other Earth-size planets are more than three times as distant as this one. If planets outside the solar system, also known as exoplanets, were houses, this one “is not the house right next to yours,” said Boston University astronomer Philip Muirhead, who wasn’t involved in the study. “But it’s on the other side of the block.”
DANA BERRY
An artist’s rendering of GJ 1132b, an exoplanet very similar to Earth in size that circles a red dwarf star.
And if planet GJ 1132b were a house, it would almost certainly be vacant. The coolest part of its atmosphere measures a scorch-
ing 450 to 500 degrees, akin to “the hottest temperature your oven will go,” said study author Zachory Berta-Thompson of MIT. “It’s definitely a very toasty world” and probably too warm to support life. But it’s not too toasty to have an atmosphere. Most Earth-size planets outside our solar system are so hot that no atmosphere could survive, but GJ 1132b may have a wrapper of the same gases that swaddle the Earth, BertaThompson and his colleagues wrote in this week’s Nature. That possibility has scientists rubbing their hands in anticipa-
tion over what they could learn from this world, discovered with a network of small telescopes known as MEarth-South. GJ 1132b is close enough for the Hubble Space Telescope and its successor, now under development, to have a good look at its atmosphere. Other exoplanets live closer to us than GJ 1132b, but this one is a golden combination of very close and very similar in size to Earth. Adding to its charms, it circles a relatively small, faint star called a red dwarf. A planet orbiting such a star is easier to study than a planet orbiting a brilliant star.
2B
L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 2015
Koch has no plans to back primary candidate It takes more than talk, he says, there must be results Fredreka Schouten USA TODAY
Billionaire industrialist Charles Koch said Wednesday he’s unlikely to back a candidate in the crowded Republican presidential primary, the latest sign that one of the most influential figures in conservative politics seems less than enthusiastic about his choices. “I have no plans to support anybody in the primary now,” Koch told USA TODAY. Asked what he wants to hear from Republican contenders vying for his support, Koch said, “It’s not only what they say. “If they start saying things we think are beneficial overall and will change the trajectory of the WASHINGTON
ROBERT DEUTSCH, USA TODAY
Charles Koch is chairman and CEO of Koch Industries. country, then that would be good, but we have to believe also they’ll follow through on it, and by and large, candidates don’t do that.”
Koch acknowledged that the vast policy and political network he helps oversee with his New York-based brother, David, might
exceed his fundraising expectations before the presidential and congressional elections. In recent weeks, the Kansasbased executive downplayed what his organization might spend before the end of 2016, saying his network of about 450 donors might raise $750 million, down from an earlier estimate of $889 million over two years. Wednesday, he said it’s “possible” that the network could hit its original target and says the network’s fundraising team disagrees with his lower assessment. He said he’s likely to help a Republican presidential candidate in the general election. In April, Koch told USA TODAY that his political network could enter the Republican primary for the first time and was weighing supporting one or more contenders from a list of five candidates — former Florida governor Jeb Bush, Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, Florida Sen. Marco
Rubio, Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul and Texas Sen. Ted Cruz. In the months since, Walker has dropped out after struggling financially, and Bush and Paul have seen their standing in the polls fall. Wednesday, Koch refused to discuss any candidates by name. “When we do, it’s totally blown out of proportion,” he said. Koch, who insists he’s not focused on politics, said he has not spoken to any presidential contenders since August when Bush, Walker, Rubio, Cruz and former Hewlett-Packard CEO Carly Fiorina appeared at a donors’ seminar in Southern California staged by Freedom Partners Chamber of Commerce, the network’s umbrella organization. “My brother talks to them a lot more,” Koch said Wednesday. “Being in New York, it’s easier for everybody to come and see him. He’s more interested in the political side.”
Justice Department concerned about taps “the fact that you have my cellphone number is really harassment, and I’m going to report it.”
v CONTINUED FROM 1B
ity because they were not authorized to discuss the department’s internal deliberations. Federal agents often prefer to seek permission to tap phones from state courts, instead of federal courts, because the process is generally faster and less demanding than seeking approval through the Justice Department. In addition, California law allows them to better conceal the identities of confidential informants they rely on to help investigate drug rings. Over the past decade, drug agents have more than tripled their use of wiretaps, mostly by using state court orders. Wiretaps — which allow the police to secretly monitor Americans’ communications — are among the most intrusive types of searches the police can conduct, and federal law imposes strict limits on when and how they can be used. The law requires that police use wiretaps only after they have run out of other tools to build a case. In Riverside, the authorities’ use of that last-ditch tool quadrupled over the past four years. Last year alone, Riverside County prosecutors and a local judge approved 624 wiretaps, far more than any other jurisdiction in the USA, according to records compiled by the federal court system. Nearly all were tied to drug investigations. “Those numbers — the totals and just the size of some of those wiretaps — are huge red flags for us,” said Dave Maass, an investigative researcher for the Electronic Frontier Foundation. “When there’s this amount of secrecy, it starts to raise serious concerns about accountability for electronic interceptions.” Because wiretap orders are sealed, there is no way to know precisely how many of them were sought by the DEA and the local officers it deputized to work on a drug task force. Some of the taps were sought by police officers and officers in neighboring counties. Prosecutors acknowledged, however, that the drug agency plays a leading role in the wiretapping. The county’s former district attorney, Paul Zellerbach, who presided over the rapid rise in wiretapping before he left office in January, said the drug agency was “a significant player.” ‘SERIES OF REFORMS’
Riverside County’s new district attorney, Mike Hestrin, said he found out about the county’s wiretap numbers not long after taking office after other prosecutors approached him to suggest he look into the matter. He was concerned by what he found. Hestrin said in an interview that he made a “series of reforms” to how wiretaps are handled, which he said will lead to fewer taps in the future. He said he personally evaluates new wiretap requests and insists that each one must “have a strong investigative nexus” to the county. Asked if that had been the case in previous years, Hestrin replied, “You’re going to have to extrapolate that.” Hestrin said prosecutors “follow the law to the letter” when seeking wiretaps, but he would not discuss the details. “This is an area of our law, an area of our law enforcement, where we can’t be totally transparent, in the same way that the federal government can’t be totally transparent about the massive intelligence operations they run,” he said.
WIRETAPS BY JURISDICTION The DEA is bypassing federal courts and the Justice Department and using local prosecutors and judges for wiretap permits.
Jurisdictions granting highest numbers of wiretaps in 2014:
WIDESPREAD ARRESTS
Riverside County, California 624
U.S. DISTRICT COURT
Police found heroin and cocaine in a truck in Virginia in 2013. The stop was based on a wiretap in Riverside, Calif.
Clark County, Nevada 175 206
91
90 74 42 2010
NYC Special Narcotics Bureau 155 Los Angeles County 129 Federal Court for Arizona 95 2014
Source USA TODAY research by Brad Heath GEORGE PETRAS, USA TODAY
DEA officials said it should not come as a surprise that so much of their surveillance work happens in the area around Riverside — a vast expanse of suburbs and desert east of Los Angeles, crisscrossed by freeways that have become key shipping routes for drugs moving from Mexico to the USA and for cash making the return journey. “There are organizations here, and we’re working these organizations, and we’re trying to stay abreast of the technology and all the different ways these organizations are operating,” said Stephen Azzam, the associate special agent in charge of the DEA’s Los Angeles division. On paper, agents’ choice of state court over federal should not matter: Federal law sets a minimum standard for police to obtain a wiretap, even when they seek one from a state-court judge. California courts have repeatedly said the state’s wiretaps are sufficient. Current and former Justice Department officials said prosecutors in Los Angeles repeatedly told the drug agency they would not accept cases based on state court wiretaps — and those from Riverside County in particular — because they believed the applications approved by state judges fell short of what federal law requires. Prosecutors were particularly concerned that the DEA sought state court wiretap orders without adequately showing it had first tried other, less intrusive, investigative techniques. “They’d want to bring these cases into the U.S. Attorney’s Of-
fice, and the feds would tell them no (expletive) way,” a former Justice Department official said. In December, for example, court records show, DEA agents and detectives in South Gate, Calif., near Los Angeles, used a state court wiretap to target a suspected drug trafficker named Omar Salazar. Between searches of Salazar’s car and his house, officers seized $76,869.94, a gun and a cache of illegal drugs, including 36 pounds of methamphetamine and 5 pounds of heroin. Investigators found some of the drugs in a safe in Salazar’s garage, along with a box of ammunition and probation paperwork from one of his previous arrests. That should have been enough to build a significant federal case with a long mandatory prison sentence, but that was not what happened. Court records show the Justice Department prosecuted the $76,869.94 in a civil asset seizure case. But it did not prosecute Salazar. Neither the DEA nor prosecutors would explain why. PROLIFIC WIRETAPPING
Perhaps the only outward sign that Riverside has become America’s most wiretapped place can be found on a deserted floor of the city’s courthouse. On a recent Friday afternoon, a handful of officers in scruffy jeans and baseball caps waited there with sealed manila envelopes in their hands. After a few minutes, they disappeared inside Judge Helios Hernandez’s locked courtroom for hearings that are closed to the public. No judge in the USA has been so prolific in authorizing eavesdropping. Records compiled by the federal courts’ administrative office show Hernandez authorized 624 wiretaps that ended last year and 339 that ended the year before. Hernandez approved three times more taps than all of the federal judges in California combined last year and once received more wiretap applications in a day, 17, than most courts do in a year. (The court office counts wires based on when they end, rather than when they begin, to avoid revealing ongoing investigations.) The next-closest court was in Las Vegas, where judges approved 177 wiretaps that ended last year. California law generally requires that each county court appoint one judge to handle wiretaps. For the past three years, that job fell to Hernandez, who was Riverside’s chief narcotics prosecutor before he became a judge. The records do not indicate how many wiretaps, if any, Hernandez turned down. Hernandez declined to com-
ment through a spokesman. Riverside County’s presiding judge, Harold Hopp, said judges do not decide how many eavesdropping applications are submitted to them; “they have to consider each one on its merits.” Federal records show the taps that ended in 2014 cost more than $18 million. The records do not indicate who paid for them. The figures are based on reports that judges and prosecutors are required to submit each year to the federal courts’ administrative office. Those reports show the overwhelming majority of the more than 2 million communications investigators intercepted last year as a result of Riverside wiretaps had nothing to do with crime. Police are not supposed to record conversations that are not relevant to their investigations. DEA officials said the agency conducts its wiretaps wherever their investigations lead them. The Riverside field office, which also covers neighboring San Bernardino County, was responsible for a large share of the agency’s methamphetamine and heroin seizures last year. “We don’t pick a jurisdiction. We take the enforcement action where it’s warranted and where we can do it effectively,” spokesman Timothy Massino said. Nonetheless, Hernandez approved 20 times as many wiretaps as his counterparts in San Bernardino County. DEA officials said they could not explain that difference. Zellerbach said Riverside’s wiretaps multiplied during his tenure because prosecutors and the county’s court became more “efficient and effective” in handling surveillance applications and word spread throughout the law enforcement community, bringing still more applications. Eventually, Zellerbach said, he learned the county was among the nation’s wiretap leaders. “I thought we were doing a hell of a job,” he said. Zellerbach said the taps yielded significant arrests and seizures. And they paid other dividends. “We liked it because in these difficult economic times, my budget was being cut, and that was a way to somewhat supplement funding for my office,” he said in an interview. Prosecutors would not say how much money they received. Zellerbach said the operation grew under the leadership of an aggressive new lawyer, Deena Bennett, who still heads the wiretap unit. Bennett, a one-time contestant on the reality show Survivor, rebuffed attempts to contact her, telling a reporter that
Investigators have used wiretaps in Riverside to seize hundreds of pounds of drugs and millions of dollars in cash. The taps have helped agents pinpoint smuggling tunnels dug beneath the Mexican border and map the inner workings of trafficking groups. If the taps also produce arrests, they are difficult to find. Prosecutors seldom make use of state court wiretaps in the federal courts around Los Angeles. Defense lawyers in Riverside said they only rarely encounter cases with disclosed wiretaps in state court. The county’s public defenders handle 40,000 criminal cases a year; no more than five involve disclosed wires, said Steve Harmon, the head of that office. Instead, court records and interviews with DEA officials and prosecutors show the drug agency has used the fruits of its Riverside wiretaps to help stop and seize shipments of drugs and cash elsewhere in the USA. In some of those cases, agents used wiretaps to identify drug couriers, then tipped off other investigators, who were told to find their own independent evidence to conduct a search. That practice, known within the agency as “parallel construction,” is being investigated by the Justice Department’s inspector general. “That approach ends up insulating dubious police practices from any kind of judicial review. That’s what so pernicious about it,” American Civil Liberties Union lawyer Nathan Wessler said. Kelman reports for The Desert Sun. Contributing: Mark Hannan in McLean, Va.
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USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 2015
EU draws anger over dropping some ‘Made in Israel’ labels
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Shift on goods made in territories is not political, EU says Kim Hjelmgaard USA TODAY
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he European Union drew Israel’s ire Wednesday after regulators approved guidelines to drop the “Made in Israel” label from merchandise produced in Israeli settlements in Palestinian territories. The new rules refer to the “origin of goods from the territories occupied by Israel since June 1967,” an EU Commission statement said. That includes East Jerusalem, the Golan Heights and the West Bank — areas where the EU considers Israeli settlements to be illegal under international law. The guidelines call for new labels across the political bloc’s 28 member states that would distinguish whether merchandise or goods — mostly fruit and vegetables — are made in the controversial Jewish settlements. The directive, called an “interpretive notice” by the EU, was announced at a meeting in Brussels. Israel swiftly condemned the move. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the EU should be “ashamed” of itself and accused the bloc of punishing “the side that is being attacked by terrorism.” Israel’s Foreign Ministry declared the move an “exceptional and discriminatory step.” Later, it announced Israel was suspending ongoing, regular meetings with the EU in protest. Ministry spokesman Emmanuel Nachshon said the suspension would likely be temporary, the Associated Press reported. “It is puzzling and even irritating that the EU chooses to apply a double standard concerning Israel, while ignoring that there are over 200 other territorial disputes worldwide, including those
MENAHEM KAHANA, AFP/GETTY IMAGES
A Palestinian man works at the Lipski factory at the Barkan Industrial Park near the Israeli settlement of Ariel in the occupied West Bank. Israel denounced a European Union directive to label products made in the settlements. Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu, left, said the EU should be ‘ashamed.”
“It is puzzling and even irritating that the EU chooses to apply a double standard concerning Israel while ignoring ... other disputes.” Israeli Foreign Ministry
occurring within the EU or on its doorstep. The ALEX WONG, GETTY IMAGES claim that this is a technical matter is cynical and baseless,” the ministry said in its earlier statement. The EU said the initiative is “not new legislation; it clarifies certain elements linked to the interpretation and the effective implementation of existing EU legislation.” EU trade with Israel was valued at about $32 billion in 2014, with products made on Israeli settlements in Palestinian territories less than 1% of total trade, the commission said. Some EU
nations, such as Belgium, Britain and Denmark, already use labels that distinguish if a product is made in Jewish settlements. The EU said the labels are not a first step toward sanctions against Israel, and the “indication of origin will give consumers the possibility to make an informed choice.” EU Commission Vice President Valdis Dombrovskis said the decision was a purely a “technical one, not a political stance.” The guidelines nevertheless appear to highlight that the EU is seeking to formally distinguish its policy on how it deals with Israel and its settlements, which Palestinians say are on land that makes up their future state but upon
which Israel continues to expand. Israel summoned the EU’s ambassador after the announcement. Speaking to journalists Tuesday night, Yuvak Steinitz, an Israeli cabinet minister, referred to the expected decision as “disguised anti-Semitism.” “What you see is really that some people, and here unfortunately some institutions in the European Union, are taking steps against Israel that are unparalleled in similar situations,” Steinitz said. The Palestine Liberation Organization said the labeling was a “step in the right direction but insufficient,” adding that “products of a war crime must be banned not just labeled.”
Burma government promises peaceful transfer of power Jane Onyanga-Omara USA TODAY
Burma’s government announced Wednesday it will pursue a peaceful transfer of power after decades of military rule, as opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi’s party continues to sweep the ongoing tally of last weekend’s elections, her party said. Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy (NLD) said it received a message of congratulations from Information Minister Ye Htut on behalf of President Thein Sein for leading in Sunday’s parliamentary elections. “In honor of the citizens’ desire, the government will pursue a peaceful transfer in accordance with the legislated timeline,” Ye
Htut said in the message, according to the NLD. The statement could not immediately be confirmed. Results are still being announced, but the NLD won nearly 90% of the 40% of seats declared so far. Sunday’s vote was the first openly contested national election in 25 years for Burma, also known as Myanmar. Suu Kyi, a democracy icon and Nobel laureate, won her seat in parliament, but she is barred by the constitution from becoming president because her close relatives are foreign. Her late husband was a British national, and she has two British sons. She had spent 15 years under house arrest for defying the nation’s military rulers and was released in 2010. The military, which took power
ROMEO GACAD, AFP/GETTY IMAGES
Fans bearing Aung San Suu Kyi’s likeness are for sale at NLD party headquarters in Rangoon. in a 1962 coup, gave way to a nominally civilian elected government in 2011, but still holds several key posts and retains 25% of the seats in parliament. The NLD said on its Facebook
page that Suu Kyi wrote to Thein Sein, commander in chief Min Aung Hlaing and House Speaker Shwe Mann, asking for a meeting. Ye Htut said the president and the military will respect the re-
sults of Sunday’s “free and fair elections,” and that the meeting Suu Kyi requested will be held after the Union Election Commission completes its work, the Associated Press reported.
IN BRIEF AUTHORITIES CONFIRM 9 KILLED IN OHIO PLANE CRASH
Authorities confirmed Wednesday that nine people died when a small plane crashed into a multifamily home in Ohio on Tuesday. The plane’s passengers all were employees of Pebb Enterprises, a real estate company in Florida. A pilot, co-pilot and seven passengers were on board the 10seat Hawker H25, said Ohio State Highway Patrol Lt. Bill Haymaker during a news conference Wednesday. They were killed when the plane clipped utility wires and crashed into a building with four residences. The building was unoccupied when the crash sparked a fire that destroyed the building. — WKYC-TV, Cleveland BOY, 8, ACCUSED OF FATALLY BEATING 1-YEAR-OLD GIRL
Authorities in Alabama were struggling Wednesday to determine the fate of an 8-year-old boy accused of fatally beating a 1-
year-old girl he was left to babysit while her mother went to a nightclub. “This is by far one of the saddest cases that I have witnessed and been a part of since I became a police officer,” Birmingham Police Lt. Sean Edwards said at a news conference Tuesday. Edwards said a murder warrant was issued for the boy after Kelci Devine Lewis was “viciously” beaten to death. Her mother, Katerra Lewis, was charged with manslaughter, he added. The suspect, the oldest of six kids left unattended in the home, became frustrated when Kelci would not stop crying, Edwards said. The tragedy occurred — John Bacon Oct. 11.
charged with making the alleged terrorist threat on the anonymous social media app Yik Yak. — Yamiche Alcindor
LET THE CELEBRATION BEGIN
SLOVENIA ERECTS FENCE AT BORDER WITH CROATIA
PATRIK STOLLARZ, AFP/GETTY IMAGES
ARREST MADE IN THREAT AIMED AT UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI
Revellers celebrate the launch Wednesday of the “Fifth Season,” or Carnival, in Cologne, Germany. Festivities began at 11:11 a.m. on Nov. 11 throughout the country, particularly in the Rhineland, and run until Ash Wednesday next year.
A 19-year-old student at a second Missouri university was arrested early Wednesday on charges of making a “terrorist threat” to the campus of the University of Missouri–Columbia, which has been roiled in recent
weeks by racial tension, campus police said. Hunter Park, of Lake St. Louis, Mo., was taken into custody Wednesday at the Missouri University of Science and Technology, in Rolla, Mo., where he is a
student, the school said in a statement. No weapons were found during the investigation, the university said. Rolla is about 94 miles south of Columbia. Park, a white male, was
Slovenia began erecting a fence along its border with Croatia on Wednesday in a bid to control the flow of refugees and migrants into the country, as leaders from Europe and Africa met in Malta to try and find long-term solutions to help abate the crisis. About 170,000 migrants have entered Slovenia since mid-October, when Hungary closed its border with Croatia. Many are heading to northern European countries such as Germany. Slovenia's Prime Minister Miro Cerar said the fence was not aimed at closing the border, but at better controlling the flow of people. Europe is undergoing its worst refugee crisis since the end of World War II, in large part driven by the Syrian civil war. — Jane Onyanga-Omara
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L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 2015
STATE-BY-STATE News from across the USA ALABAMA Montgomery: State
legislators are considering the creation of an Alabama state lottery, WSFA reported. An Auburn University at Montgomery study estimates a lottery could bring in around $300 million, but it faces opposition from legislators who view the lottery as a tax on the poor.
ALASKA Ketchikan: State Troopers are investigating the theft of signed art prints from the state ferry office building here, the Ketchikan Daily News reported. ARIZONA Phoenix: More than
1.1 million people attended this year’s Arizona State Fair here. Even though rain falling during five of the Fair’s 19-day run, officials say attendance was only down less than 4% from last year. ARKANSAS Union County: A
mother was charged with child endangerment after she gave her 10-month-old son bourbon in a bottle, KATV-TV reported. CALIFORNIA San Francisco:
Plans to lease the Palace of Fine Arts to a tenant with enough money to restore and operate the landmark is meeting disapproval from some residents. KPIX reported that two of the three proposals the San Francisco Recreation and Parks Commission is considering for the space include plans for a hotel. COLORADO Colorado Springs: A man reported to be holding a rifle and threating people was shot by police Tuesday, The Colorado Springs Gazette reported. CONNECTICUT West Haven: A
middle school teacher fired after a video emerged showing him acting aggressively toward a student says he regrets the confrontation, WVIT-TV reported. DELAWARE Newark: The Uni-
versity of Delaware’s Board of Trustees will vote on the school’s new president next week, The News Journal reported. President Patrick Harker stepped down over the summer to head the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia. DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA: Fire-
fighters rescued a woman from an apartment building’s trash chute, The Washington Post reported. FLORIDA West Melbourne:
Construction is under way at the Space Coast Field of Dreams “Community Build” project that, by Sunday, will transform a dirt patch into a 13,000-square-foot playground for special-needs children, Florida Today reported.
HIGHLIGHT: MIDWEST
Snow slams Colo., twisters threaten Midwest Doyle Rice USA TODAY
A snowstorm roared into Colorado, Nebraska and Kansas on Wednesday as a large swath of the Midwest and Plains braced for howling winds Thursday. The threat for severe storms, including tornadoes, remained high late Wednesday in portions of Nebraska and Iowa. A possible tornado damaged buildings in Corning, Iowa, in the afternoon, the National Weather Service reported. There were no reports of injuries. The main threat Thursday will be strong winds across a wide portion of the north-central U.S. Gusts up to 60 mph are expected in some areas from the central Rockies to the Great Lakes. Strong winds could lead to power outages, tree damage and travel disruptions Thursday in Chicago, Detroit and Pittsburgh, AccuWeather said. While wind speeds may die down a bit Thursday night, gusts over 50 mph may persist particularly over and downwind of the southern Great Lakes, according to the Weather Channel. The high winds will spread into the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic on Friday. On Wednesday, 6 to 12 inch-
they have begun reseeding the giant burned area along the Idaho-Oregon border where a wildfire scorched valuable sage grouse habitat and grasslands needed by ranchers, KIVI-TV reported. ( The U.S. Bureau of Land Management plans on dispersing 2.4 million pounds of seed. ILLINOIS Galatia: Residents are bracing for the fallout of the closure of a coal mine planned next year. Murray Energy Corp. announced that it expects to close American Coal Company’s
reported. Blame the tumult headed to the Midwest on the jet stream. A powerful southern dip is punching into the Plains and Midwest, clashing with warmer, moist air sliding north, the Weather Channel reported. “The resultant wind shear ... should ignite severe thunderstorms,” it warned. Severe weather and tornado outbreaks are not unusual in November, according to the Weather Channel. In fact, November is considered a “second season” for severe weather.
MICHIGAN Okemos: A lawsuit
NEW MEXICO Albuquerque:
alleges that police illegally raided an apartment the night a Ingham County sheriff’s deputy was killed because the white SUV they were pursuing was similar to one parked outside, the Lansing State Journal reported. The deputy was killed while chasing the white SUV. MINNESOTA St. Louis Park: A
teaching assistant was arrested and accused of criminal sexual conduct, KSTP-TV reported.
MISSISSIPPI Jackson: Five
ple was sentenced to more than five years in prison after beating and abusing their adopted daughter, The Wichita Eagle reported.
volunteer fire departments in Hinds County each received a new Class A tanker-pumper truck with a 3,000-gallon water capacity. The Clarion-Ledger reported that the new trucks cost the county a total of about $1.2 million.
KENTUCKY Louisville: Police
MISSOURI Richmond: A person
believe a teenager fatally shot and robbed two men on the same day last month here, The CourierJournal reported. Jervon Latrelll Hazelwood, 18, was charged with two counts each of murder, firstdegree robbery and tampering with physical evidence. LOUISIANA New Orleans: A state judge set a $1 million bond for each of the two officers who allegedly killed a 6-year-old boy while pursuing his father’s car, CNN reported.
died after a single-engine plane crashed in northwest Missouri, KCTV reported.
MONTANA Billings: The Bill-
ings Gazette reported that southwestern Montana’s bison season opens Nov. 15. The hunt has attracted more than 10,420 applicants for a limited number of licenses.
NEBRASKA Lincoln: Voters in
the Palmyra-Bennet District OR-1 school district passed an $11.4 million bond issue to renovate and add onto two schools, the Lincoln Journal Star reported. NEVADA Las Vegas: The Las
say 100 inmates have passed the Muscogee County Jail’s GED program, The Columbus LedgerEnquirer reported.
IDAHO Nampa: Officials say
es of snow fell on the Front Range in Colorado and the mountains in Wyoming, with several inches of snow around the Denver metro area, according to AccuWeather. Earlier in the week, snow blanketed portions of the western U.S., with up to 10 inches in parts of the Reno area, the Weather Channel reported. Blame the recent tumult on the jet stream. A powerful southern dip punched into the Plains and Midwest, clashing with warmer, moist air sliding north, the Weather Channel
INDIANA Indianapolis: Sirih,
GEORGIA Columbus: Officials
HAWAII Oahu: The state launched a campaign to spread awareness to dengue fever as the number of confirmed cases on the Big Island continues to climb, West Hawaii Today reported. The state Department of Health confirmed six more cases of the mosquito-borne disease Tuesday, bringing the total number of recent cases acquired on the island to 33.
MARK REIS, AP
Pedestrians and motorists endure snowy conditions during Wednesday’s morning commute in Colorado Springs.
recorders, the Courier-News reported.
KANSAS Wichita: A local cou-
Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority is moving forward with demolition plans for the closed Riviera hotel and casino, the Las Vegas Sun reported. NEW HAMPSHIRE
MAINE Portland: Maine’s larg-
est city is seeking proposals to build a municipal network that would offer affordable high-speed broadband to residents and businesses, the Portland Press Herald reported. Portland currently has a fiber-optic network connecting municipal buildings, which does not service nearby residential or commercial properties.
MARYLAND Annapolis: Delegate Chris Adams is sponsoring a newly filed bill that would allow Maryland counties to reverse a state rule requiring fire sprinklers for new homes, The Daily Times reported. Adams says the rule, enacted July 1, has caused a drought in new home construction on the Eastern Shore. MASSACHUSETTS Boston: Carol Sanchez, the state’s parks chief,
The Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, the Tribune-Review in Greensburg and the Valley News Dispatch in Tarentum will become a single paper, the Tribune-Review. The two suburban papers will become locally zoned editions.
SOUTH CAROLINA Greer: Spar-
resigned after seven months, The Boston Globe reported.
IOWA Des Moines: So far this fall, Iowa’s harvest is shaping up to be among the state’s largest, The Register reported. Iowa farmers are expected to combine a record 2.4 billion bushels of corn, and 520 million bushels of soybeans, its second-largest crop ever, based on federal government estimates.
PENNSYLVANIA Pittsburgh:
RHODE ISLAND Tiverton: Advocates of a proposed casino here say they can guarantee $3 million in annual gambling revenue for the town if their plan is approved, The Newport Daily News reported.
New Era mine in mid-2016, the Southern Illinoisan reported. one of the Indianapolis Zoo’s female orangutans, is expecting, The Indianapolis Star reported. Assuming all goes well, a baby orangutan will join nine others at the zoo some time in the spring, zoo officials said.
over the 296-mile short line between Eugene and Weed.
Lancaster: The New Hampshire Fish and Game Department warned motorists to watch out for increased deer activity during the deer mating season, which extends from now through midDecember, the New Hampshire Union Leader reported. According to the department’s website, “bucks and does have their minds on other things than traffic.” NEW JERSEY Linden: A State
Superior Court Judge dismissed the charges against a man involved in a major drug bust in 2014, citing government misconduct and the destruction of evidence regarding mobile video
State House Majority Leader Nate Gentry expects the House to pass a bill in January permitting cities to enforce curfews for minors and enhancing penalties for crimes against teenagers, the Albuquerque Journal reported. The American Civil Liberties Union of New Mexico opposes the proposal on the grounds that it infringes on teenagers’ civil rights.
NEW YORK Albany: A pair of
daily fantasy sports giants were still collecting entries in the state as they promise to fight ceaseand-desist orders from state Attorney General Eric Schneiderman. Both DraftKings and FanDuel were still allowing New York users to enter daily football, hockey and basketball fantasy contests, a day after Schneiderman ordered both to stop collecting wagers in the state, Gannett’s Albany Bureau reported.
NORTH CAROLINA Raleigh: Officials will consider a proposal to allow food trucks to do curbside business on some downtown streets, The News & Observer reported. NORTH DAKOTA Fargo: The latest cost estimate for a proposed new City Hall here puts the price tag at about $22 million, significantly less than the lowest bid of $31 million submitted for the project last spring, KFGOAM reported. OHIO West Chester Town-
tanburg Regional Healthcare System announced that it plans a major expansion of the Gibbs Cancer Center & Research Institute in order to centralize cancer treatment, support services, research and education in one healing environment, The Greenville News reported.
SOUTH DAKOTA Sioux Falls: Police are crediting three teachers with rescuing a 6-year-old student from an alleged abductor, the Argus Leader reported. TENNESSEE Nashville: State prison administrators plan to pay current officers a $1,000 “retention bonus” before the end of the year, The Tennessean reported. The move affects 3,300 officers, which could result in a $3.3 million price tag. According to a memo, the bonus is a “one-time, self-funded” payment. TEXAS Monahans: The U.S.
Geological Survey says a magnitude-3.2 quake was centered 19 miles south-southwest of here. UTAH Salt Lake City: U.S. Rep.
Mia Love is returning $537 in taxpayer money she received for a flight she didn’t take, The Salt Lake Tribune reported.
VERMONT Burlington: Police
have identified a person they believe to be responsible for placing Ku Klux Klan fliers in mailboxes of activists, The Burlington Free Press reported. Chief Brandon del Pozo said the person admitted distributing the recruiting posters.
VIRGINIA Blacksburg: Virginia Tech students, faculty and community members gathered for an evening rally in support of Muslims, the Richmond Times-Dispatch reported. WASHINGTON Everett: Sno-
homish County health officials voted to prohibit vaping and electronic cigarettes in public places, KOMO-TV reported.
WEST VIRGINIA Clarksburg: A National Energy Technology Laboratory subcontractor was sentenced to a year on probation for double billing the lab for services and expenses, The Exponent Telegram reported. David Haberman, 54, will spend the first three months on home detention. WISCONSIN Kaukauna: A man
was killed Tuesday when a 10foot-deep trench he was working in collapsed Tuesday afternoon, according to the Kaukauna Fire Department. Another man found him and called 911, the (Appleton, Wis.) Post-Crescent reported.
ship: The owners of an “erotic nightclub” in Indiana are bringing a smaller members-only business to Butler County. An application, filed in October, describes the Champagne Club as a “sexually oriented business used as an adult nightclub,” The Cincinnati Enquirer reported. OKLAHOMA
Oklahoma City: A new study by the Center for Public Integrity and Global Integrity gives state officials a failing grade for accountability and transparency, The Oklahoman reported. OREGON Medford: The
$13 million Siskiyou Summit Railroad Revitalization project has been completed, allowing the Siskiyou rail line to reopen for the first time in seven years, the Mail Tribune reported. The Central Oregon & Pacific Railroad has started sending freight trains
WYOMING Casper: Officials say
a 5-year-old boy playing with matches started a fire that badly damaged a local home, the Casper Star-Tribune reported. Fire Chief Kenneth King says the boy was left alone for about five minutes and found the matches outside. King says the child was on his second match when the fire started and spread quickly along a hill.
Compiled by Tim Wendel and Nicole Gill, with Jenna Adamson, Mike Gottschamer, Ben Sheffler and Nichelle Smith. Design by Mallory Redinger. Graphics by Alejandro Gonzalez.
USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 2015
MONEYLINE
MACY’S SALES DISAPPOINT Macy’s said Wednesday thirdquarter profit and sales slipped and that it is examining real estate options for some of its most prized stores, including its Herald Square flagship in Manhattan. Profit dropped 46% to $118 million during the quarter ended Oct. 31, down from the same period a year ago. Sales slipped 5% to $5.9 billion, missing Wall Street expectations of $6.1 billion. The news sent shares plunging 14% to close at $40.44. J.C. PENNEY SETTLES SUIT ON FAKE SALE MARKDOWNS While denying the allegations, J.C. Penney said Wednesday it will make available $50 million to settle a class-action suit that accused it of hoodwinking customers into thinking they were getting big discounts on certain items. Plaintiffs claimed J.C. Penney routinely marked down items from an inflated fake price that was never really in effect.
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WEDNESDAY MARKETS INDEX
Nasdaq composite S&P 500 T- note, 10-year yield Oil, light sweet crude Euro (dollars per euro) Yen per dollar
5B
AB INBEV/SABMILLER DEAL
ALIBABA HAS RECORD SALES OF $14.3B ON SINGLES DAY Chinese e-commerce company Alibaba did a record $14.3 billion in sales on Singles Day Wednesday, breaking last year’s record and blowing past its estimates of $11 billion in sales. Mobile sales made up the bulk of orders — about 70%, Alibaba said.
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CLOSE
5067.02 2075.00 Closed $42.93 $1.0739 122.89
CHG
y y
16.22 6.72
y 1.28 x 0.0032 y 0.36
AB InBev CEO Carlos Brito strives to create ‘a truly global business’ with $107B SAB Miller purchase
SOURCES USA TODAY RESEARCH, MARKETWATCH.COM
USA SNAPSHOTS©
Average CD yields As of Wednesday: 6-month
This week Last week Year ago 0.16% 0.16% 0.16% 1-year
This week Last week Year ago 0.27% 0.27% 0.27% 21⁄2-year
This week Last week Year ago 0.44% 0.44% 0.41% 5-year
This week Last week Year ago 0.85% 0.84% 0.85% Find more interest rates at rates.usatoday.com. Source Bankrate.com JAE YANG AND VERONICA BRAVO, USA TODAY
THE NEW KING OF BEER Kevin McCoy and Nathan Bomey USA TODAY
Anheuser-Busch InBev CEO Carlos Brito is on the verge of achieving perhaps his greatest dream, completing the roughly $107 billion acquisition of top rival SAB Miller and creating “the first truly global beer company.” The deal announced Wednesday would unite the Belgium-based maker of Budweiser, Corona and Stella Artois with the London-based rival whose brews include Miller Genuine Draft, Pilsner Urquell and Peroni. Together, they would sell more than 30% of all the beer commercially produced worldwide. The new company would have a major presence in the U.S. and Europe, as well as growing markets in China, Latin America and Africa. The deal is expected to close in the second half of 2016, provided it wins shareholder approval and passes what’s expected to be tough regulatory scrutiny in the U.S., Europe, China and elsewhere. As part of the transaction, AB Inbev said it would sell SABMiller’s 58% stake in MillerCoors to Molson Coors in a cash deal valued at $12 billion. The divestiture reflects an effort to appease regulators concerned about the combined giant’s market domination. “We’ve admired this company for a very long time,” Brito said during a Wednesday conference call. “Together AB InBev and SABMiller create a truly global business.”
AB InBev is known for its Dream-People-Culture mantra: Having major goals, hiring employees who share the dreams and working under a no-frillsfew-perks meritocracy. Not everyone buys in. The company cut roughly 1,400 workers, or 6% of its U.S. workforce, soon after its 2008 merger with the maker of BudJOE RAEDLE, GETTY IMAGES weiser. The departures didn’t displease Brito. “The first layer of manageA BEER BEHEMOTH A BEER BEHEMOTH ment left day one,” he told anAnheuser-Busch InBevand and Anheuser-Busch InBev other Stanford class in 2010, SABMiller shippedmore morethan than SABMiller shipped Some retired. Others felt out of 70% of the beer produced for 70% of the beer produced for place. the marketin in2014: 2014: theU.S. U.S. market “It was great, because then we promoted a lot of new people that had been waiting for that opportunity,” said Brito. The CEO, who held positions at Shell Oil and Daimler Benz before his brewing industry rise, has no corporate jet. No company car. No assistant of his own. And no free beer. Instead of using a luxurious C-suite, Brito works from a Anheuser-Busch InBev 44.7% large table shared with the Anheuser-Busch MillerCoors 26% InBev 44.7% company’s vice presidents, an MillerCoors 26% All other beers, malt beverages arrangement replicated at AB and ciders 29.3% All other beers, malt beverages InBev’s offices worldwide. Not that AB InBev doesn’t Source Beer Marketer’s Insights 29.3% and ciders offer corporate reward. JIM SERGENT, USA TODAY Source Beer Marketer’s Insights Brito was granted 167,634 JIM SERGENT, USA TODAY The 55-year-old Brazil-born long-term stock options in CEO believes in aiming high. 2014, a public filing shows. “We say our dream is to be Priced at $114.68, they can be the best beer company in a bet- exercised after five years. The delay gives Brito a new ter world,” he told a Stanford Graduate School of Business goal, ensuring that the takeover class in 2008, during a return succeeds and the company’s to the academic center where shares, which closed up 2.77% at $121.63 Wednesday, rise. he earned his MBA. “To dream big or dream “And that’s measured by profitability,” said Brito. “We small takes the same amount of say that internally and exter- energy,” he said during his nally, because we like the pres- 2008 Stanford lecture. “So why sure that that puts ... on us.” not stretch a little bit?”
KRISTOF VAN ACCOM, AFP/GETTY IMAGES
Carlos Brito says AB InBev has “admired (SAB Miller) for a very long time.”
“To dream big or dream small takes the same amount of energy.” Carlos Brito, Anheuser-Busch InBev CEO, in 2008 speech
Amazon breaks barrier as most expensive stock Online retailer in a valuation class all its own
Bezos now worth $58.2B as world’s fourth-richest man
Matt Krantz
Elizabeth Weise
@mattkrantz USA TODAY
Amazon likes to undercut rivals’ prices on everything but this: its stock price. The online retailer’s shares are now trading for almost 950 times diluted earnings during the past 12 months, which makes Amazon the most expensive stock in the Standard & Poor’s 500 index, according to a USA TODAY analysis of data from S&P Capital IQ. It’s also the only stock in the index that has currently cracked the 900 price-to-earnings barrier. There are 14 stocks in the S&P 500, including video streamer Netflix and social media king Facebook, trading for 100 times or more their diluted earnings before extraordinary items. With the financial crisis and battered stock prices a distant
USA TODAY
SAN FRANCISCO Amazon stock closed at $673.25 Wednesday, solidifying CEO Jeff Bezos’ position as the fourth-richest person in the world. Bezos actually passed the milestone Tuesday, when Amazon’s upward trend put his fortune at $58.2 billion, Bloomberg’s Billionaires Index said. Bezos overtook Carlos Slim, Mexico’s telecommunications baron, who had been in fourth place. Bloomberg’s list is slightly different than the one kept by Forbes. Its realtime Richest People on the
Planet list puts Bezos at No. 5, still behind Slim. Amazon’s stock has risen 113% this year, earning Bezos $29.6 billion since Jan. 1, according to the Bloomberg Index, which ranks the world’s 400 richest people. Microsoft founder Bill Gates is still the world’s richest person, worth $85 billion, according to the Index. Second on Bloomberg’s list is Amancio Ortega of Spain, the founder of clothing retailer Inditex SA, with $73.7 billion. Third is U.S. investor Warren Buffett, with $63.2 billion. TED S. WARREN, AP
Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos is the third-richest American.
TOPS IN VALUATION S&P 500 stocks with the highest valuations: Company (ticker) P-E 1. Amazon (AMZN) 942.2 2. Computer Sciences (CSC) 439.4 3. Netflix (NFLX) 298.2 4. Tenet Healthcare (THC) 182.3 5. Staples (SPLS) 160.4 6. Perrigo (PRGO) 157.6 7. Alexion Pharma. (ALXN) 156.7 8. Yahoo (YHOO) 134.6 9. Halliburton (HAL) 127.5 10. Zimmer Biomet (ZBH) 112 11. Regeneron Pharma. 109.3 (REGN) 12. Facebook (FB) 107.9 13. CR Bard (BCR) 105.2 14. Level 3 (LVLT) 100.2 NOTE: VALUATIONS AS OF TUESDAY BASED ON P-E ON DILUTED EARNINGS THE PAST 12 MONTHS BEFORE EXTRAORDINARY ITEMS. SOURCES: S&P CAPITAL IQ, USA TODAY
memory, investors are showing they’re willing to pay up for stocks — dearly in some cases. The P-E on the S&P 500 is now 20 based on operating earnings, S&P Dow Jones Indices says. That’s above the average 18.8 valuation on that basis since 1988. Amazon’s P-E isn’t just high relative to the market; the stock is richly valued even if the company
lives up to investors’ high expectations. Amazon’s P-E is 14 times higher than the astounding 67% annual growth analysts expect long term from the company. That’s an off-the-charts valuation using traditional rules of thumb. Investors start to think a stock is pricey when its P-E is two times its expected growth rate. While these companies are commanding impressive valuations, they’re nowhere near the levels seen during the dot-com boom. Amazon didn’t even have a P-E in March 2000 when the Nasdaq composite peaked because the company still was losing money. Amazon’s valuation today is far from Yahoo’s 2,225 P-E in March 2000; Yahoo has a lofty 135 P-E today. Fifteen years after the dot-com peak, the online media company’s stock is down 43% even though its earnings are up 525% since. Investors ridiculed for “overpaying” for Amazon in 2000 have gotten the last laugh as the stock is up nearly 900%. Amazon could also very well grow into its valuation. The stock is trading for 120 times the $5.50 a share it’s expected to earn in 2016.
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L awrence J ournal -W orld - USA TODAY THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 2015
AMERICA’S MARKETS What to watch Adam Shell @adamshell USA TODAY
Fears of a so-called “earnings recession” are still alive on Wall Street, but with profits coming in better than expected, there’s still a small chance third-quarter profits will eke out a positive gain. At midday Wednesday, 451 of the 500 companies in the Standard & Poor’s 500 stock index had reported earnings. The earnings growth rate shows a contraction of -0.9%, which is better than the -4.2% growth forecast by analysts Oct. 1 and close to the -0.3% contraction estimated on July 1, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S. Earnings have been clipped by a 57% contraction in the hard-hit energy patch, due to the big downdraft in oil prices. Profits
Facts about America’s investors who use SigFig tracking services:
also have been dinged by a slowdown in China and a strengthening dollar, which hurts sales and profitability of big U.S. companies that do a lot of business abroad. It’s not uncommon for actual quarterly earnings to come in 3, 4 or even 5 percentage points stronger than initial analyst estimates. S&P 500 companies eked out quarterly profit gains in the first two quarters of 2015 despite negative growth forecasts headseason. -1.59 ing into the earnings 5-day avg.: If earnings6-month can turn positive it avg.: -10.80 would markLargest a big holding: psychological AAPL boost for investors, as quarterly Most bought: AAPL profits have Most not sold: suffered a AAPL contraction since 2009 at the height of the financial crisis. Indeed, another positive quarter would quiet talk of a profits recession. But if profits finish the third quarter with negative growth, it will make the chatter about earnings weakness grow even louder.
DOW JONES
In mid-October, millionaire SigFig investors were better diversified and had twice as much international exposure than non-millionaires.
-55.99
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INDUSTRIAL AVERAGE
CHANGE: -.3% YTD: -120.85 YTD % CHG: -.7%
CLOSE: 17,702.22 PREV. CLOSE: 17,758.21 RANGE: 17,696.91-17,807.18
NASDAQ
COMP
-16.22
-9.63
CHANGE: -.3% YTD: +330.97 YTD % CHG: +7.0%
CLOSE: 5,067.02 PREV. CLOSE: 5,083.24 RANGE: 5,066.68-5,111.19
CLOSE: 2,075.00 PREV. CLOSE: 2,081.72 RANGE: 2,074.85-2,086.94
RUSSELL 2000 INDEX
CHANGE: -.8% YTD: -26.63 YTD % CHG: -2.2%
CLOSE: 1,178.07 PREV. CLOSE: 1,187.70 RANGE: 1,178.06-1,189.85
S&P 500’S BIGGEST GAINERS/LOSERS GAINERS
LOSERS
Company (ticker symbol)
YTD % Chg % Chg
Price
$ Chg
Xerox (XRX) Tops third-quarter earnings and climbs.
10.25
+.63
Molson Coors Brewing (TAP) SABMiller to sell MillerCoors stake for $12 billion.
92.19 +3.88
+4.4 +23.7
ADT (ADT) Forecasts 2016 subscriber gain.
33.99
+1.44
+4.4
D.R. Horton (DHI) Tops sales and keeps forecast.
32.02
+.87
Allegion (ALLE) 65.01 Makes up month’s loss after average hold rating.
+1.68
+2.7
+17.2
Motorola Solutions (MSI) Fund manager takes a stake, rises.
70.02
+1.68
+2.5
+4.4
FirstEnergy (FE) Up another day since 2015 low in strong session.
30.21
+.73
+2.5
-22.5
Discovery Communications (DISCK) Rises another day as it teams with Lions Gate.
29.22
+.67
+2.3
-13.3
+6.5
-26.0
+2.8 +26.6
PPL (PPL) Nearly evens November in leading sector.
+2.1
33.99
+.71
+.8
Price
$ Chg
YTD % Chg % Chg
40.44
-6.58
-14.0 -38.5
Mallinckrodt (MNK) Recommended to buy, but Acthar Lupus fails.
57.12
-5.46
-8.7
-42.3
Marathon Oil (MRO) Shares down along with weak oil prices.
17.30
-1.48
-7.9
-38.8
Cabot Oil & Gas (COG) Stock price near 2015 low in trailing sector.
20.88
-1.76
-7.8
-29.5
Keurig Green Mountain (GMCR) Rating cut to negative vs. mixed at OTR Global.
46.24
-3.80
-7.6
-65.1
Urban Outfitters (URBN) Weak Macy’s pushes shares down.
26.59
-2.12
-7.4
-24.3
Chesapeake Energy (CHK) Shares drop on retreating oil prices.
6.54
-.52
-7.4
-66.6
Apache (APA) 49.40 Anadarko withdraws offer to buy after rejection.
-3.91
-7.3
-21.2
Consol Energy (CNX) Shares decline on oil price downturn.
7.57
-.60
-7.3
-77.6
10.64
-.79
-6.9
-61.0
Southwestern Energy (SWN) Weak sector, lowered price target, lower shares.
-1.65 -5.49 AAPL WPX SUNE
MODERATE 51%-70% equities
AGGRESSIVE 71% or more in equities
5-day avg.: 6-month avg.: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold:
5-day avg.: 6-month avg.: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold:
-1.54 -5.41 AAPL AAPL AAPL
-1.49 -6.15 AAPL AAPL AAPL
POWERED BY SIGFIG
4-WEEK TREND
The department store chain said its third-quarter profit and sales $60 Price: $40.44 fell and that it is examining real esChg: -$6.58 tate options for some of its most % chg: -14.0% Day’s high/low: prized stores, including its Herald $40 Square flagship in Manhattan. Oct. 14 $42.81/$39.75
SunEdison
The renewable energy company reported a larger-than-expected loss for the third quarter and revealed a cash shortage. In October, the company revealed plans to cut about 15% of its workforce.
Price: $4.90 Chg: -$0.87 % chg: -15.1% Day’s high/low: $5.72/$4.75
Price: $24.50 Chg: $8.50 The French radiopharmaceutical % chg: 53.1% Day’s high/low: firm sold 4.69 million shares in an initial public offering at $16 each. $25.90/$18.00 Chg. -0.62 -0.21 -0.62 -0.21 -0.61 -0.13 -0.18 +0.05 +0.01 unch.
4wk 1 +3.2% +2.6% +3.2% +2.6% +3.2% +4.2% +3.7% -1.5% +1.1% -0.9%
YTD 1 +2.6% +1.9% +2.6% +1.8% +2.6% +8.0% +6.2% -2.2% -0.9% -1.9%
1 – CAPITAL GAINS AND DIVIDENDS REINVESTED
Close 207.74 8.26 18.90 34.34 13.65 12.53 13.76 24.49 113.14 117.14
Chg. -0.82 -0.69 +0.41 +0.07 +0.18 +0.05 -0.33 -0.08 -0.14 -1.03
% Chg %YTD -0.4% +1.1% -7.7% -83.1% +2.2% -40.0% +0.2% -12.6% +1.3% -25.7% +0.4% +11.5% -2.3% -32.4% -0.3% -1.0% -0.1% +9.6% -0.9% -2.1%
INTEREST RATES
MORTGAGE RATES
Type Prime lending Federal funds 3 mo. T-bill 5 yr. T-note 10 yr. T-note
Type 30 yr. fixed 15 yr. fixed 1 yr. ARM 5/1 ARM
Close 6 mo ago 3.25% 3.25% 0.12% 0.13% 0.13% 0.01% 1.72% 1.60% 2.34% 2.28%
Close 6 mo ago 3.86% 3.92% 3.03% 3.08% 2.58% 2.62% 3.45% 3.13%
SOURCE: BANKRATE.COM
COMMODITIES
SOURCE: BLOOMBERG AND THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Commodities Close Prev. Cattle (lb.) 1.31 1.28 Corn (bushel) 3.62 3.59 Gold (troy oz.) 1,084.70 1,088.20 Hogs, lean (lb.) .56 .54 Natural Gas (Btu.) 2.26 2.32 Oil, heating (gal.) 1.45 1.49 Oil, lt. swt. crude (bar.) 42.93 44.21 Silver (troy oz.) 14.26 14.36 Soybeans (bushel) 8.69 8.65 Wheat (bushel) 4.95 4.91
Chg. +0.03 +0.03 -3.50 +0.02 -0.06 -0.04 -1.28 -0.10 +0.04 +0.04
% Chg. +2.3% +0.9% -0.3% +4.9% -2.5% -2.6% -2.9% -0.7% +0.5% +0.8%
% YTD -20.8% -8.8% -8.4% -30.8% -21.7% -21.6% -19.4% -8.4% -14.8% -16.1%
FOREIGN CURRENCIES Currency per dollar British pound Canadian dollar Chinese yuan Euro Japanese yen Mexican peso
Close .6573 1.3269 6.3681 .9312 122.89 16.7397
Prev. .6620 1.3273 6.3635 .9340 123.25 16.7560
6 mo. ago .6415 1.2097 6.2103 .8965 120.09 15.3479
Yr. ago .6281 1.1334 6.1245 .8014 115.40 13.5898
FOREIGN MARKETS Country Frankfurt Hong Kong Japan (Nikkei) London Mexico City
Close 10,907.87 22,352.17 19,691.39 6,297.20 44,347.91
Prev. 10,832.52 22,401.70 19,671.26 6,275.28 44,359.89
Nov. 11
$4
$4.90
Oct. 14
Nov. 11
$24.50
$25
$15
Oct. 14
Nov. 11
INVESTING ASK MATT
NAV 191.89 51.85 190.01 51.83 190.03 104.82 45.31 14.94 20.89 56.95
ETF, ranked by volume Ticker SPDR S&P500 ETF Tr SPY CS VelSh 3xLongCrude UWTI Barc iPath Vix ST VXX iShs Emerg Mkts EEM Mkt Vect Gold Miners GDX iShare Japan EWJ US Oil Fund LP USO SPDR Financial XLF PowerShs QQQ Trust QQQ iShares Rus 2000 IWM
$10
4-WEEK TREND
Advanced Accelerator Applications
Fund, ranked by size Vanguard 500Adml Vanguard TotStIAdm Vanguard InstIdxI Vanguard TotStIdx Vanguard InstPlus Fidelity Contra American Funds GrthAmA m Vanguard TotIntl American Funds IncAmerA m American Funds CapIncBuA m
$40.44
4-WEEK TREND
TOP 10 EXCHANGE TRADED FUNDS
+2.1 +116.9
Macy’s (M) Plunges after cutting profit forecast.
5-day avg.: 6-month avg.: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold:
-2.18 -4.92 TSPCF AAPL VRX
TOP 10 MUTUAL FUNDS -6.2
Amazon.com (AMZN) 673.25 +13.57 Strong video streaming, strong e-commerce presence.
Company (ticker symbol)
5-day avg.: 6-month avg.: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold:
STORY STOCKS Macy’s
RUSSELL
RUT
COMPOSITE
BALANCED 30%-50% equities
More than half a million investors nationwide with total assets of $200 billion manage their investment portfolios online with SigFig investment tracking service. Data on this page are based on SigFig analysis.
STANDARD & POOR'S
CHANGE: -.3% YTD: +16.10 YTD % CHG: +.8%
CONSERVATIVE Less than 30% equities
NOTE: INFORMATION PROVIDED BY SIGFIG IS STATISTICAL IN NATURE AND DOES NOT CONSTITUTE A RECOMMENDATION OF ANY STRATEGY OR SECURITY. VISIT SIGFIG.USATODAY.COM/DISCLOSE FOR ADDITIONAL DISCLOSURES AND INFORMATION.
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S&P 500
SPX
USA’s portfolio allocation by risk
Here’s how America’s individual investors are performing based on data from SigFig online investment tracking service:
MAJOR INDEXES DJIA
How we’re performing
DID YOU KNOW?
Profits look to avoid quarterly contraction
ALL THE MARKET ACTION IN REAL TIME. AMERICASMARKETS.USATODAY.COM
Change +75.35 -49.53 +20.13 +21.92 -11.98
%Chg. YTD % +0.7% +11.2% -0.2% -5.3% +0.1% +12.8% +0.4% -4.1% unch. +2.8%
SOURCES: MORNINGSTAR, DOW JONES INDEXES, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
IN-DEPTH MARKETS COVERAGE USATODAY.COM/MONEY
Investors like wireless carrier’s standout efforts
Q: Will more video streaming hurt T-Mobile? Matt Krantz
mkrantz@usatoday.com USA TODAY
A: T-Mobile US screams to stand out from the other wireless carriers. But its offer to provide more unlimited streaming video data is just noise to investors. The third largest U.S. wireless carrier behind AT&T and Verizon this week said it soon will allow subscribers of some plans to stream video to their phones without eating into monthly data allowances. Some investors might fear higher costs for T-Mobile to handle the increased video demand. But the fine print shows why it’s not much of a concern. The video isn’t being streamed at high definition, but rather lower 480p, so it’s not as much of a bandwidth hog. The offer only includes Hulu, Netflix and HBO. Consumers that watch videos from Facebook and Alphabet’s YouTube, on the other hand, still will need to use their monthly bandwidth allowance. T-Mobile is famous for its loud antics to draw attention — as the cellular market is mature and becoming a zero-sum game. Getting new subscribers usually requires convincing people to switch from another carrier. So far, T-Mobile’s efforts seem to please investors. Shares are up more than 35% this year hitting roughly $37 a share Wednesday. Analysts think shares could be worth $47 a share in 18 months and profit double next year.
Companies still chipping away at health insurance benefits Jayne O’Donnell @JayneODonnell USA TODAY
Companies’ health care costs in 2015 rose at the lowest rate in at least 20 years, says a report out Thursday, but workers’ share of costs continues to skyrocket. The average health care rate increase for midsized and large companies was 3.2% this year, the lowest since the consulting firm Aon started tracking it in 1996. Despite this, the average amount workers have to contribute toward their health care is up more
than 134% over the past decade, and that trend will accelerate. “Our clients say, ‘I can’t keep paying more and more of these ever-rising health costs,’ ” says Craig Dolezal, a senior vice president of Aon’s health practice. Employees on average contributed $2,490 toward premiums and another $2,208 in out-ofpocket costs, such as co-payments, co-insurance and deductibles, the report shows. The amount of employees’ premium and out-of-pocket costs combined was just $2,001 in 2005. Increases in deductibles and other out-of-pocket costs stem in
GETTY IMAGES/ZOONAR RF
Company health plans keep shrinking, a new report finds.
large part from the looming “Cadillac tax” that takes effect in 2018, experts at Aon and consulting firm Towers Watson say.
This tax — which some members of Congress want to kill — penalizes companies for having especially generous cost sharing beginning in January 2018. High deductible plans are the easiest way to avoid the tax. “No question change is afoot, and the excise tax is a catalyst for change,” says Randall Abbott, a senior strategist in consulting firm Towers Watson’s health and group benefits practice. Although some critics say companies are going farther and moving faster than they need to in cutting health benefits ahead of the tax, Dolezal says companies
couldn’t realistically wait and make drastic changes in cost sharing just for 2018. Employers are instead raising cost sharing and helping workers learn how to shop for health care. No matter what happens to this tax, workers can expect to face more surcharges on spouses who can get insurance through their own employers and limits on specialty drug coverage. Towers Watson own analysis of business’ health costs last month found about 53% of employers already restrict coverage of specialty drugs and 32% more are expected to do so by 2018.
USA TODAY - L awrence J ournal -W orld THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 2015
LIFELINE HOW WAS YOUR DAY?
GIUSEPPE CACACE, AFP/GETTY IMAGES
GOOD DAY JUSTIN BIEBER FANS The singer has announced a 58-date tour in support of his album ‘Purpose,’ out Friday. The Purpose World Tour kicks off March 9 in Seattle and will travel across North America before wrapping up July 18 in New York.
SPORTS LIFE AUTOS ‘TRUMBO’ TRAVEL SUMMONS
7B
MOVIES
‘UN-AMERICAN’ GHOSTS
ROBERT DEUTSCH, USA TODAY
GOOD DAY STEPHEN COLBERT Colbert has landed the coveted high-profile slot immediately following the Super Bowl 50 telecast. CBS will air a special edition of his ‘Late Show’ after the game Feb. 7, marking the first time a late-night talk show has been given the postgame slot. That time historically has been used to launch new shows, or — more recently — boost established hits. BAD DAY TAMAR BRAXTON Braxton has been forced to pull out of ‘Dancing With the Stars’ — as well as her tour dates with R&B performer Kem — because of health problems. What Braxton thought was GETTY IMAGES pneumonia turned out to be blood clots in her lungs. “As you all know I will be the first to always encourage anyone to push through any obstacle that comes along one’s way. But in this case, my health is my current obstacle,” Braxton posted on social media.
AWARD TRACKER AMERICAN MUSIC AWARDS Gwen Stefani and Coldplay have been added to the list of performers for the 2015 ceremonies. Macklemore & Ryan Lewis also will perform at the show Nov. 22 in Los Angeles, which will air live on ABC. Stefani is set to perform her current single, ‘Used to Love You,’ Coldplay will sing the first single from its new album, and the rap duo will unveil a new song. Compiled by Cindy Clark
Hollywood’s ordeal before Congress plays out in the life of one of its top screenwriters JACK GRUBER, USA TODAY
Bryan Cranston, who plays the title role in Trumbo, says screenwriter Dalton Trumbo handled his 1947 grilling by the House Un-American Activities Committee “with wit and humor, and it’s emblematic of our movie.” Brian Truitt @briantruitt USA TODAY
Even when empty, the Cannon Caucus Room, where men and women argued and fought for their lives and their livelihoods in front of the House Un-American Activities Committee decades ago, is filled with an unmistakable sense of history. And after playing screenwriter Dalton Trumbo, who defended his own beliefs in the committee’s hearings in Washington, D.C., in 1947, Trumbo star Bryan Cranston takes in all of it when he walks through the room’s grand doors. “Man,” he says. “You can feel the ghosts, can’t you?” Trumbo (in select theaters now and going nationwide later this month) chronicles much of the irascible scribe’s life as he went from being one of Hollywood’s top storytellers to getting hauled in front of the committee for his communist leanings — with the blacklisted writer going to prison after being convicted for contempt of Congress. Walking around the Caucus Room, Cranston can’t help but stand on the central podium and WASHINGTON
HILARY BRONWYN GAYLE
Trumbo, Cranston says, wanted to show the “ridiculousness” of the congressional panel’s hunt for communists. state that infamous query Trumbo and the rest of the Hollywood Ten faced: “Are you now or have you ever been a member of the Communist Party?” Trumbo’s answer to that in the film: “Many questions can be answered yes or no, only by a moron or a slave.” The scene where Trumbo, cigarette in hand, is being interrogated by the committee is one of Cranston’s favorites, and because footage exists of the real-life fig-
ure’s testimony, the actor was able to see how he handled himself in the thick of it. “I felt he was very confident going in, that he was not going to be bullied or feel that he was belittled sitting there testifying,” Cranston says. In fact, he was as vicious with his answers as the committee was with its questioning. When Trumbo doesn’t budge on giving up info on his affiliation, committee chairman J. Parnell Thomas
MOVIES
Jolie Pitt’s ‘By the Sea’ has critics adrift Andrea Mandell @AndreaMandell USA TODAY
GABRIEL OLSEN, WIREIMAGE
USA SNAPSHOTS©
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Source Nielsen SoundScan for week ending Nov. 5 MAEVE MCDERMOTT AND VERONICA BRAVO, USA TODAY
(James DuMont), a representative from New Jersey, barks, “Are you refusing to answer?” Trumbo replies, “Mr. Chairman, I shall refuse to answer none of your questions.” “He did that on purpose. He wanted to tie this up,” Cranston says. “He wanted to have the audience — the witnesses, the spectators — to laugh and put a mirror up to the committee and show the ridiculousness of it.” Even faced with jail time after his conviction, a reporter asks Trumbo, “Are you in contempt of Congress?” and he calmly says in cantankerous fashion, “Well, I have total contempt of this Congress.” That was just Trumbo being Trumbo, says director Jay Roach. “He was a debater in high school and an orator, and he had an oldschool tendency to perform his arguments and his ideas like someone on a stage.” And in the movie, he says, “Bryan really loved fully embodying that tendency of Trumbo and trying to channel that kind of zeal and passion and charisma.” It was a serious situation the real Trumbo “handled with wit and humor,” Cranston adds, “and it’s emblematic of our movie.”
It’s all so beautiful. By the Sea’s first frames focus on two of the most photogenic movie stars on the planet (married in real life, to boot), careening along a seaside road in Malta. The world, not to mention the box office, should be their oyster. But upon viewing Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie’s European honeymoon project, edited into a 122-minute weepy drama, critics are confused, and distributor Universal Pictures doesn’t seem any clearer. Is By the Sea (which hits theaters in New York, Los Angeles and Toronto on Friday) a carefully paced European-style indie? (Not quite; Universal produced it for $10 million.) Is it a bookend to the black comedy Mr. & Mrs. Smith, which during its making the couple fell in love 10 years ago? No, thanks to By the Sea’s scant (but treasured) tonguein-cheek moments. OK, is it a peek into their marriage? Jolie Pitt, as she bills herself in the movie, says no. “This is a film, at the core, about grief, and that grief was
UNIVERSAL PICTURES
By the Sea is the third directorial effort for Angelina Jolie. from the loss of my mother,” she said at By the Sea’s AFI Fest premiere last week in Hollywood. “But at the end, I think this film is also about learning about how to move past it.” Written, directed and produced by Jolie Pitt, By the Sea is a study on the rocky marriage of 1970s author Roland (he has writer’s block) and his former dancer wife, Vanessa, who remains bereft and withdrawn, her slender frame drowning in fabric and false eyelashes. It’s only when two attractive French newlyweds (Melvil Poupaud and Melanie Laurent) check
into the room next door — and Vanessa finds a peephole to watch them have sex — that flashes of vibrancy pierce through her anguish. Variety’s Justin Chang called By the Sea “an unabashed vanity project … meandering and overlong in ways that will test the patience of even die-hard Brangelina fans.” The Hollywood Reporter found even the film’s final dramatic payoff (why is Vanessa so sad?) underwhelming. “There’s no catharsis at the end from the journey taken, just relief that it’s over,” critic Todd McCarthy wrote.
A few facts behind the film assist in revealing its raison d’etre. Shortly before marrying Pitt last summer and setting off for Malta with their six children, Jolie had completed her biggest feature to date, Unbroken, also for Universal. (It grossed a respectable $115 million domestically.) The studio likely wants to remain in business with Jolie, says Jeff Bock, box office analyst for Exhibitor Relations. Not to mention, when powerhouses appear together on screen (Tom Cruise and Nicole Kidman or Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton) it can prove fruitful. (Let’s not speak of what can happen otherwise ... Gigli.) According to Universal, the film will hit10 theaters this weekend, a surprising move. “Most studio films, set for wide release, are released to a minimum of 2,000 theaters,” Bock says. By the Sea does plan to expand to additional markets on Nov. 20, though the studio would not confirm which ones or how many. Bock calls the cautious rollout “pretty telling. Two actors like this, some of the biggest names in Hollywood, to really have no buzz behind (their film) is really surprising, no matter what (kind of film) it is.”
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Baylor 38-31
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Baylor 28-21
Texas at West Virginia
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West Virginia 41-28
West Virginia 34-24
West Virginia 33-17
West Virginia 31-20
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Kansas State 31-30
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Texas Tech 45-38
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Texas Tech 28-20
Texas Tech 28-20
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Houston 24-17
Houston 35-31
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Houston 45-42
Memphis 28-27
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Alabama 27-20
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Georgia 30-20
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Missouri 31-28
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BYU 38-28
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BYU 28-27
BYU 33-27
TCU 59-21
TCU 70-20
TCU 63-14
TCU 63-17
TCU 52-7
TCU 61-13
TCU 41-40
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Buffalo 24-21
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KU COACH BEATY SEES PROGRESS FROM FRESHMEN. 3C
Sports
C
Lawrence Journal-World l LJWorld.com/sports l Thursday, November 12, 2015
KANSAS VOLLEYBALL
So close
Tom Keegan tkeegan@ljworld.com
Kansas volleyball setting loftier goals Eighteenth-year Kansas University volleyball coach Ray Bechard’s program has come so far so swiftly in the past handful of years that the Jayhawks took mighty Texas to five sets Wednesday night in electric Horejsi and instead of strutting at that achievement they kicked themselves for not winning it in four sets. And rightly so. Better serving late in the third set could have made a four-set victory happen, which would have put Kansas alone atop the Big 12 standings. Instead, KU trails Texas by a game with four matches left after losing in five sets. Kansas will earn its fourth consecutive NCAA tournament invitation, a program first, and is ranked 10th in the nation and sixth in the most recent RPI rankings. An NCAA rule change also plays to KU’s favor in terms of having a stronger homecourt advantage come tournament time. Thanks to the lowering of the minimum capacity required for tournament matches, Horejsi now qualifies and the site won’t have to be Allen Fieldhouse, where bigger crowds could be accommodated, but the less intimate setting would dilute the homecourt advantage. “I don’t think there’s any reason why you want to play anywhere else after the environment you saw tonight,” Bechard said. “I’d be all for going to the fieldhouse, because we could get 5,000, 6,000 people and grow the sport, but I think the big thing is to give our team the best chance to win.” No-brainer. Play them at Horejsi and find a way to hog the tickets for Kansas fans to the greatest extent possible. Even before this recent elevation of the program, one aided by associate head coach Laura “Bird” Kuhn and assistant coach Todd Chamberlain, both 2010 additions, volleyball crowds had lent loud support from loyal backers. As the program’s recruiting has improved, the decibel level in the building has kept pace. As with so many athletic programs at Kansas, the Texas recruiting pipeline has served the Jayhawks well. A talented trio of sophomore Texans — superstar Kelsie Payne (Austin), Madison Rigdon (Plugerville) and Ainise Havili (Fort Worth) — all had memorable plays during Wednesday’s five-set thriller. Junior Tayler Soucie from Osawatomie and senior Tiana Dockery from Richmond, Texas, had exceptional nights. Kansas never looked intimidated Wednesday to share the floor with mighty Texas. “I think our kids believe that this is a legit volleyball program,” Bechard said. “...There’s an expectation. There’s a culture. And I think we can continue to maintain that and grow.”
John Young/Journal-World Photos
KANSAS UNIVERSITY’S TIANA DOCKERY (7) AND ANNA CHURCH (1) try to chase down the ball against Texas. The Jayhawks fell in five sets Wednesday night at Horejsi Center.
Texas turns back Jayhawks in five sets By Gary Bedore gbedore@ljworld.com
Losing to powerful Texas in a five-set thriller in a match for first place in the Big 12 Conference — before a loud sellout crowd Wednesday in Horejsi Center — made Kansas University’s volleyball players feel just like one would imagine they’d feel. “It hurts a lot,” KU senior Tiana Dockery said after blasting 18 kills against three errors with 13 digs in the No. 10-ranked (22-2, 10-2) Jayhawks’ 25-20, 20-25, 28-30, 25-22, 9-15 loss to the No. 5-rated (21-2, 11-1) Longhorns. “But I felt our team did really well,” Dockery quickly added. Indeed ... KU’s Kelsie Payne ripped 23 kills against zero errors and Tayler Soucie 16 kills against one error, while Janae Hall and Madison Rigdon had nine kills each. Ainise Havili dished 67 assists and Cassie Wait totaled 17 digs in a match that did not resemble Texas’ 3-0 rout of KU on Oct. 23 in Austin. “We were just discussing (in locker room) my sophomore year we played a fiveset match against Texas. It’s the year we went to the
Sweet 16,” Dockery said. “We talked about coming together as a team even more.” Or as Soucie said ... “we know what we can do. We know if we take care of our side, if we don’t give them serves, don’t make hitting errors, we take care of our stuff we can beat anybody. We can do a lot. “A lot of us showed we can play. When we have everybody, who can stop us?” Soucie added. KU had chances to win the third set. In fact the Jayhawks had set point twice. But UT, which has beaten KU 24 straight times, claimed the 30-28 win. KU battled back and won the fourth set. The Jayhawks trailed 4-3 in a fifth set KU coach Ray Bechard called “choppy,” and never led the rest of the way in KU’s first five-set match of the year. “We played with a lot of will today, a lot of pride, went toe-to-toe with a highlevel team,” Bechard said. “We’ve just got to figure out how to make a few plays to get a different result.” KU will next meet TCU at 1 p.m., Saturday, in Horejsi, while Texas travels to Iowa
KANSAS’ CASSIE WAIT REACTS AS A BALL moves past her
Please see VOLLEYBALL, page 4C Wednesday night against Texas.
Attorney confident Diallo will play this season By Gary Bedore gbedore@ljworld.com
Don Jackson, the attorney who is representing the guardian of Kansas University freshman basketball forward Cheick Diallo in Diallo’s eligibility case with the NCAA, said Wednesday that he is confident Diallo will play for the Jayhawks this season.
“I think his chances of playing for Kansas this year are excellent,” Alabamabased attorney Jackson said to Kansas City 610 Radio, acknowledging there are two components to this case — initial academic eligibility of Diallo as well as possible amateurism violations regarding Diallo’s legal guardian, Tidiane Drame. “There’s no reason as to
why he wouldn’t (play in games). I think that’s almost a certainty. A timeline? That will be determined over the next day or so. Candidly, at a certain point, when it becomes quite clear that all administrative possibilities have been exhausted, then legal action becomes more of a possibility,” Jackson added. Yes, Jackson may file a
lawsuit — if he has to — to get Diallo eligible. The Mali native has yet to be deemed academically fit to play by the NCAA Eligibility Center. “My goal is always to resolve these issues administrative-first, because in order to get legal equitable relief you have to exhaust Please see HOOPS, page 4C Diallo
AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE
Sports 2
EAST
2C | LAWRENCE JOURNAL-WORLD | THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 2015
COMING AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE EAST EAST
NORTH
FRIDAY
TWO-DAY
• A look ahead to Kansas-Northern Colorado basketball • The latest on Kansas University football
SPORTS CALENDAR
NORTH NORTH KANSAS UNIVERSITY FRIDAY • Men’s basketball vs. Northern Colorado, 7 p.m. • Cross country at Midwest Regional, Rim Rock Farm
OUR TOWN SPORTS Ad Astra swimming: Ad Astra Area Aquatics invites your family to experience Lawrence’s only athlete-centered, coach-directed, parentsupported swim team. Tryouts are open, just contact coach Patrick at 785-331-6940 or coach Katie at 785-766-7423 or visit the website at adastraareaaquatics.org. Come find out why AAAA is known in our area for its reliable staff and fun-friendly-fast culture! l
Horseshoes anyone?: Anyone interested in pitching horseshoes is welcome at 7 p.m. every Thursday at Broken Arrow. Contact Wynne at 8438450. l
Aquahawks openings: The Aquahawks are always accepting new members. The Aquahawks are a year-round USA Swimming-sponsored competitive swim team. The Aquahawks offer a swim lesson program and competitive swim team for all ages. The Aquahawks are coached by professional coaches with weekly practices geared toward a variety of skill levels. For information contact Andrew Schmidt at andrew.aquahawks@gmail. com l
Cycling team: Join Team GP VeloTek (www.gpvelotek.com) to improve your road cycling. Open to youth and adults from beginners to advanced cyclists. Contact coach Jim Whittaker at 913.269.VELO or velotek@ aol.com l
Next level lessons: Next Level Baseball Academy offers year-round private and semiprivate baseball lessons ages 8-18. Locations in Lawrence, Big Springs and New Century. For information, email Duncanmatt32@yahoo.com or visit NextLevelBaseballAcademy. com l
FUNdamental softball: Learn the proper mechanics and techniques to play softball. Emphasis placed on fundamental instruction teaching the aspects of pitching, catching, fielding, base-running and hitting. Coach and team consulting available, too. For information, contact LuAnn Metsker at 785-331-9438 or dmgshowpig@aol.com l
Archery club: The Junior Olympic Archery Development Club meets at 9 a.m. every Saturday in the indoor target range at Overton’s Archery Center, 1025 N. Third Street, Suite 119. Youth age 8-20, all levels of experience, are invited to join. The Archery Center has a full-service pro shop with rental equipment available. For information, call Overton’s Archery Center at 832-1654 or visit www.overtonsarcherycenter.com l
Basketball basics: One-toone instruction by Frank Kelly, for boys and girls of all ages. Fundamentals of shooting, passing, dribbling, defense and rebounding. Ten years coaching experience. References. Cost: $25 per hour. For information, call 393-3162 or email lingofrank@gmail.com
trail system. The race is a benefit for veterans’ support group Team RWB (Red, White and Do you have a camp or a Blue). More information, includFREE STATE HIGH tournament or a sign-up sesing online entry, is available at FRIDAY WEST sion on tap? How about sometrailhawks.com. The Lawrence • Football at Wichita Northwest, one who turned in a noteworthy l Trail Hawks are Lawrence’s 7 p.m. performance? We’d like you to EAST Youth basketball: Lawrence ALoriginal trail- and ultra-running tell us about it. Mail it to Our Parks and Recreation is takclub. Town Sports, Journal-World, l ing registration for youths in LAWRENCE HIGH Box 888, Lawrence 66044,SOUTH fax WEST Thanksgiving Day Run: For grades K-8 for the 2015 Youth FRIDAY it to 785 843-4512, e-mail to AL CENTRAL SOUTH 12 years they’ve been comRecreational Basketball proWEST • Football vs. Blue Valley, 7 p.m. sportsdesk@ljworld.com or call ing home to run with family gram, which runs November AL EAST 832-7147. through December. To register, and friends. Come join us for AL EAST the Thanksgiving Day 5K Run/ stop by any of the recreation HASKELL centers or online at www.lprd. ALWalk WEST on Nov. 26, 8:30 a.m. at FRIDAY l org. Registration deadlineALisCENTRAL Woodlawn School. This year’s • Men’s basketball at McPherson, Baseball lessons: Hourly Sept. 10. There will be a second event is also the RRCA 5K State 6 p.m. lessons. Grades K-12. All skill Championship. Signing up will session. Call 330-7355ALfor CENTRAL • Women’s basketball vs. levels. Fundamentals of hitting, information. get you a souvenir neck gaiter Southwestern at Tara Patterson l pitching, fielding, baserunning perfect for winter runs. FamClassic, 7 p.m. Group run: At 6 p.m. every and other baseball-related ily discounts for three or more AL WEST AFCCall TEAM LOGOS 081312: Helmet and team logos for teams; variousNov. sizes;20. stand-alone; Thursday, Ad Astra Running (16the AFC skills. Have references. entries before Free staff; ETA 5 p.m. AL WEST E. 8th St.) holds a group run coach Dan at 785-760-6161 one-mile kids run after the 5K. SPORTS ON TV from its store. It’s called “Mass To register: www.runlawrence. (baseballknowhow@weebly. Street Milers,” and all paces com). org/TDay5k.html. More info: TODAY l and ability levels are welcome. Dee Boeck, 785-841-3587, Pro Football Time Net Cable Basketball lessons: Gary For information, call the store runlawrence@gmail.com AFC TEAM LOGOS 081312: Helmet and team logos for the AFC teams; various sizes; stand-alone; staff; ETA 5 p.m. Buffalo v. Jets 7 p.m. NFL 154,230 l Hammer offers private and at 785-830-8353 or e-mail Outlaws looking: The 13U small group basketball lessons. j.jenkins@adastrarunning.com AFC LOGOS 081312: sizes;Outlaws stand-alone; ETA 5 p.m. Lawrence arestaff; looking Hammer is TEAM the P.E. teacher and Helmet and team logoslfor the AFC teams; various College Football Time Net Cable Royals looking: The U12 to add a player to their compet- Va. Tech v. Ga. Tech 6:30p.m. ESPN 33, 233 a coach at Veritas Christian Royals baseball team is interitive team for the 2016 Spring/ La.-La. v. S. Alabama 6:30p.m. ESPNU 35, 235 School. Affordable prices and ested in adding a new player. Summer season. Come be part excellent instruction! Contact of an established, successful Gary at gjhammer@sunflower. The Royals will play in the U12 College Basketball Time Ne Cable American DCABA league next program that has been around com or call 785-841-1800. l summer. Player must be 12 since 2011. Pitching experience Md-Amer. Chr. v. Okla. 7 p.m. FCSC 145 Basketball Academy: Reign or younger as of May 1, 2016. a plus. Players must not turn Pro Basketball Time Net Cable Basketball Academy, LLC., The Royals have a experienced 14 before May 1, 2016. Please offers year-round elite level coaching staff with many years contact Kevin Burenheide at Golden St. v. Minn. 7 p.m. TNT 45, 245 agility, speed and basketball of youth and high school level baseballsluggers21@gmail.com Clippers v. Phoenix 9:30p.m. TNT 45, 245 training for all youth athletes, experience. Player will have to arrange a tryout. l ages 5-18. PRICING: 4-Session unlimited access to indoor hitGolf Time Net Cable Family fun run: The third Package (1-hour each) for 5-12 ting and pitching facility. Please OHL Classic noon Golf 156,289 annual TJ5K & Family Fun Run, is $140. 4-Session Package for contact Andy Vigna at 785Lorena Ochoa Inv. 3 p.m. Golf 156,289 in memory of Thomas John 13 & up is $200. For more infor- 691-5656 or at andyvigna14@ BMW Masters 9 p.m. Golf 156,289 Giffin, will be held on Saturmation, contact Rebekah Vann gmail.com l day, Nov. 21, at 1470 N 1000 at 785-766-3056 or reignbbPro Hockey Time Net Cable Youth baseball tryouts: A Road (Wells Overlook Road), academy@gmail.com. For more Lawrence. The events which information, go to reignbasket- youth baseball team is looking St. Louis v. Rangers 6 p.m. FSN 36, 236 for U10 American League kids begin at 9 a.m., include a 5K ballacademy.weebly.com. Join for the 2016 season who are Trail Run, 1 Mile Run/Walk and us on Twitter @reignbbacadCollege Volleyball Time Net Cable interested in playing in compet- tiny-k Kids’ Fun Run. Proceeds emy, YouTube and Facebook. KU v. Texas replay 8 a.m. TWCSC 37, 226 itive, yet fun DCABA baseball. benefit tiny-k Early Intervencom/reignbasketballacademy. KU v. Texas replay midnight TWCSC 37, 226 l We will play in the U10 Amerition of Douglas County, a local Sac. St. v. N. Arizona 8 p.m. FCSP 146 Robinson Center court can regular-season league and organization, that provides Stanford v. Washington 10p.m. ESPNU 35, 235 availability: The Robinson possibly look into playing a developmental support and Center at Kansas University couple of tournaments. Contact services at no cost to children FRIDAY has courts available for rent for David Pedersen at pedersen@ birth to three years of age who basketball, volleyball, racquetku.edu or 785-691-5240. need them. Prior to his death at College Basketball Time Net Cable l ball, soccer, baseball, softball 21 months of age, Thomas John Colorado v. Iowa St. 4 p.m. ESPN2 34, 234 Winter clinic: The Kansas and other sports. For informareceived excellent services Wagner v. St. John’s 5 p.m. FS1 150,227 University softball program tion, contact Bernie Kish at from tiny-k. To register, go to Gonzaga v. Pittsburgh 6 p.m. ESPN 33, 233 has announced its winter 864-0703 or bkish@ku.edu. tj5k.com. Visit our Facebook Siena v. Duke 6 p.m. ESPNU 35, 235 l clinic date. Grades 1 through page at TJ5K Run. Send any Miami (Ohio) v. Xavier 6 p.m. FCSA 144 =Parks and Rec. hiring: 5 will participate in a morning questions to tj5krun@gmail. Kansas v. N. Colorado 7 p.m. TWCSC 37, 226 Lawrence Parks & Recreation session on Dec. 12. Grades com or call Janice Dunn at Md.-E.S. v. K-State 7 p.m. FSN 36, 236 Youth Sports Office is cur8 through 12 will work in an 785-760-1191. l rently taking applications afternoon session on the same Mt. St. Mary’s v. Md. 6 p.m. BTN 147,237 Baldwin City Wrestling: For Fair.-D. v Villanova 6 p.m. FS2 153 for the following part-time day. For more information and an informational flyer on the positions: Youth Basketball to register go to www.kusoftAlbany v. Kentucky 6 p.m. SEC 157 Officials — Applicant must be ballcamp.com. Per NCAA rules, Baldwin City Wrestling Club, McNeese St. v. LSU 8 p.m. ESPNU 35, 235 a least 17 years of age. Must this camp is open to any and all email kharris@usd348.com High Pt. v. Texas Tech 8 p.m. FCSP 146 or call Kit Harris at 785-221be dependable, knowledgeable players with grade exceptions. W. Illinois v. Wis. 8 p.m. BTN 147,237 l 8025. The club if for ages 14u, of the rules and have some E. Wash. v. Miss. St. 8 p.m. SEC 157 Lawrence Trail Hawks 12u, 10u, 8u, 6u. Has practices basketball background experiSFA v. Baylor 8:30p.m. FCSA 144 to host 10k and 25k runs: on Tuesdays & Thursdays, opence either as a player or an Texas v. Washington 9 p.m. ESPN 33, 233 tional Wednesdays. Preseason official. Scorekeepers—Appli- The Lawrence Trail Hawks workouts in December. Regular cant must be a least 17. Would will host the seventh annual College Football Time Net Cable season begins in January and be responsible for keeping the “Sanders’ Saunter 10k and 25k Trail Runs,” Saturday, Nov. competes through March. scorebook and clock during USC v. Colorado 8 p.m. ESPN2 34, 234 l competitive Hoopster basket- 21, on Clinton Lake’s North Vann takes post: Rebekah Women’s Basketball Time Net Cable Shore Trails. Sanders’ Saunter ball games. Hoopster games Vann, owner and trainer of begins and ends at the Corps are played Sunday-Thursday. Tex.-Arl. v. Baylor 6 p.m. FCSP 146 Reign Basketball Academy LLC., of Engineers trailhead on the Applicants must apply online Winthrop v. Okla. 7 p.m. FCSC 145 Clinton Lake North Shore Trails, and Reign Basketball Minisat http://www.lawrenceks. tries Foundation (501c3) has in Clinton Lake State Park. The org/jobs Golf Time Net Cable l accepted a new position as marked courses include difnoon Golf 156,289 Titans looking: The Lawhead women’s basketball coach OHL Classic ficult rocky, root-bound trails; rence Titans U14 baseball team smooth, flat, easy trails, scenic at Kansas Christian College in Lorena Ochoa Inv. 3 p.m. Golf 156,289 is looking for two players. It is a lake views; long stretches Overland Park. Coach Vann has BMW Masters 9 p.m. Golf 156,289 competitive team that will play through old-growth forest; more than a decade of playing in league and 6-8 tournaments and two traverses of Sanders’ and coaching experience, com- College Soccer Time Net Cable in spring of 2016. Players canpeting at the AAU, high school, Mound, for which the race is Big Ten tourn. noon BTN 147,237 not turn 15 before May 1, 2016. named. Sanders’ Mound is a college (MidAmerica Nazarene) Big Ten tourn. 2:30p.m. BTN 147,237 Contact baseball66@outlook. hill overlooking Clinton Lake at and semi-professional (KC com for tryout details the East end of the North Shore Queenz/Columbia Reign) levels. l
Let us know
Rebels looking: The Kansas Rebels U11 baseball team is looking for players. For a SOUTH private tryout, text Mark Kern at 785-691-6940.
BOSTON RED SOX
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HIGH SCHOOLS HUB:
Friday Usc ....................................16 (62)................... COLORADO Saturday DUKE .............................. 3 1/2 (50)................. Pittsburgh CINCINNATI ..................17 1/2 (77)............................ Tulsa Utsa . .............................. 5 1/2 (56)............... CHARLOTTE Massachusetts ...............7 (66).................. E. MICHIGAN Middle Tenn St ........... 5 1/2 (58).......... FLA ATLANTIC Michigan . ....................12 1/2(57.5).................... INDIANA MARSHALL ......................12 (50)................... Florida Intl Akron ...............................7 (45.5)................. MIAMI-OHIO MICHIGAN ST ..................15 (57)...................... Maryland HOUSTON .........................7 (72)........................ Memphis Ohio St ........................... 16 (55.5)....................... ILLINOIS ARMY ............................2 1/2 (44.5)....................... Tulane Clemson ......................27 1/2 (58)................ SYRACUSE Temple ..............................3 (45)........... SOUTH FLORIDA Nebraska ........................9 (64.5)...................... RUTGERS OLD DOMINION ..........4 1/2 (56.5)........................... Utep TCU .........................45 (71).................. Kansas TEXAS TECH . ...... 5 1/2 (71.5)......... Kansas St VANDERBILT ................ 3 1/2 (39)................... Kentucky NORTHWESTERN ........15 1/2 (49)....................... Purdue FLORIDA ST .................. 9 1/2 (53)..................... NC State Utah St .............................. 1 (52)..................... AIR FORCE
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TEXAS ST ..........................3 (65)..................... Georgia St Arkansas St . ............. 14 1/2(58.5)............ UL-MONROE UCLA .............................9 1/2 (65.5)....... Washington St WEST VIRGINIA .... 8 1/2 (55)................. Texas NOTRE DAME ..................27 (52)............... Wake Forest Alabama ...........................8 (50)............ MISSISSIPPI ST NORTH CAROLINA . ....12 1/2 (64).......... Miami-Florida Southern Miss .............7 1/2 (61).............................. RICE NAVY ..............................21 1/2 (63)............................. Smu Oklahoma St ...........14 (63)................ IOWA ST LSU ................................7 1/2 (55.5).................. Arkansas AUBURN .......................1 1/2 (50.5)..................... Georgia ARIZONA ST .....................3 (54).................. Washington BAYLOR ...................3 (77).............. Oklahoma x-Byu .................................6 (XX)........................ Missouri Georgia Southern .......6 (56.5).............................. TROY NEVADA ............................ 1 (52).................. San Jose St CALIFORNIA .................. 21 (57.5)................... Oregon St Appalachian St ..........17 1/2 (68)......................... IDAHO COLORADO ST ............. 7 1/2 (58)............................. Unlv LOUISVILLE .....................13 (49).......................... Virginia Utah .................................6 (63.5)....................... ARIZONA TENNESSEE .....................42 (65)................ North Texas Florida ..........................7 1/2 (46.5)...SOUTH CAROLINA STANFORD . .....................10 (69).......................... Oregon
TORONTO BLUE JAYS
MINNESOTA TWINS
TORONTO BLUE JAYS
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These logos are provided to you for use in an editorial news context only. Other uses, including as a linking device on a Web site, or in an advertising or promotional piece, may violate this entity’s trademark or other intellectual property rights, and may CITY violate your agreement with AP. MINNESOTA TWINS DETROIT TIGERS KANSAS ROYALS
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LATEST LINE NFL Favorite ............. Points (O/U).......... Underdog Week 10 NY JETS ........................ 2 1/2 (43)........................ Buffalo Sunday GREEN BAY ..................11 1/2 (48)........................ Detroit TAMPA BAY . .................1 1/2 (43)........................... Dallas Carolina .......................4 1/2 (43.5)............. TENNESSEE ST. LOUIS ........................7 (42.5)........................ Chicago New Orleans ...................1 (50)................ WASHINGTON PHILADELPHIA ................6 (47).............................. Miami PITTSBURGH .................4 1/2 (41)................... Cleveland BALTIMORE .................. 5 1/2 (48)............. Jacksonville OAKLAND ........................3 (43.5)................... Minnesota DENVER . ................. 6 (42)........... Kansas City New England . ............7 1/2 (54.5)............... NY GIANTS SEATTLE . ........................3 (44.5)......................... Arizona Monday CINCINNATI .................10 1/2(47.5)................... Houston Bye Week: Atlanta, Indianapolis, San Diego, San Francisco. COLLEGE FOOTBALL Favorite ............. Points (O/U).......... Underdog GEORGIA TECH ............ 3 1/2 (53)............ Virginia Tech SOUTH ALABAMA . ......... 3 (61)................ UL-Lafayette
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DETROIT TIGERS
CLEVELAND INDIANS
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BALTIMORE ORIOLES
BALTIMORE ORIOLES
NEW YORK YANKEES
BOISE ST ..........................30 (57)................ New Mexico IOWA ............................... 12 (45.5).................. Minnesota SAN DIEGO ST ..............24 (50.5).................... Wyoming HAWAII .........................4 1/2 (55.5)................. Fresno St x-at Arrowhead Stadium-Kansas City, Mo. NBA Favorite ............. Points (O/U).......... Underdog MIAMI ................................5 (182)................................ Utah Golden St .....................7 1/2 (210).............. MINNESOTA LA Clippers .................2 1/2 (209).................... PHOENIX NHL Favorite .............. Goals (O/U).......... Underdog Washington ...............Even-1/2 (5)........ PHILADELPHIA NY RANGERS .............Even-1/2 (5)................... St. Louis BOSTON . ....................... 1/2-1 (5.5).................... Colorado CAROLINA . .................Even-1/2 (5)............... Minnesota TAMPA BAY . ................ 1/2-1 (5.5)....................... Calgary OTTAWA ....................Even-1/2 (5.5)............ Vancouver FLORIDA ..........................1/2-1 (5).......................... Buffalo NASHVILLE ................... 1/2-1 (5.5)...................... Toronto CHICAGO .........................1/2-1 (5)................. New Jersey DALLAS .....................Even-1/2 (5.5)................ Winnipeg ARIZONA ...................Even-1/2 (5.5)............. Edmonton LOS ANGELES ................1/2-1 (5)............... NY Islanders Home Team in CAPS (c) TRIBUNE CONTENT AGENCY, LLC
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TODAY IN SPORTS 1972 — Don Shula becomes the first NFL coach to win 100 regular-season games in 10 seasons as the Miami Dolphins beat the New England Patriots, 52-0. 2006 — Indianapolis edges Buffalo, 17-16, to become the first team to have consecutive 9-0 records. 2013 — Keith Dawson tips in a miss with less than six seconds left to give No. 2 Michigan State a 78-74 victory over top-ranked Kentucky. It’s the earliest meeting of 1 vs. 2 in AP poll history, and the first since 2008.
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L awrence J ournal -W orld
Thursday, November 12, 2015
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KANSAS FOOTBALL
Beaty believes freshmen are growing By Matt Tait mtait@ljworld.com
One of the most difficult things for college football coaches to do year in and year out is to find ways to spend time with their families during the grind of the season that keeps their attention from sun up well past sundown. During a recent hangout session with his oldest daughter, Averie, first-year Kansas University football coach David Beaty found himself relating time with his teenager to an important aspect of his football team. “She’s been driving for about seven months now,” Beaty began. “And the first time I got in the car with her, I was scared to death. I was pretty much convinced that
she did not see past the hood, and I needed one of t h o s e brakes. Got in the Beaty car with her yesterday and it was amazing what that experience has done for her.... In my mind, it’s the same thing (with our team).” Whether he’s talking about freshman cornerback Tyrone Miller’s sense of belonging in a secondary that faces some of the best offenses in the country, the development of freshman quarterback Ryan Willis, who started the season well behind KU’s first-string QB, or the proper technique employed by sophomore
receiver Darious Crawley on a deep ball against Texas, Beaty is recognizing progress week after week and starting to feel more comfortable with his young Jayhawks behind the wheel. “Tyrone Miller (and I) were standing in the stretch lines and I said, ‘Hey, man, how much more comfortable do you feel now from the first snap you took against South Dakota State,’” Beaty said. “And he’s like, ‘Coach, I can’t even believe that I was out there.’” Even though it was awhile ago, fifth-year senior Ben Goodman remembers the feeling well. And although he often laughs when looking back at how little he actually knew during his first couple of years in the pro-
gram, the KU co-captain is doing his part to help this team grow even if the win total isn’t. “Talking to Ben Goodman yesterday in leadership council, I said, ‘Look, tell these guys what it was like as a freshman until now,’” Beaty recalled. “He was very eloquent in the way he said it. He said my first year I was trying to figure out what to do, figuring out how to do it. Now, it’s how to attack them. I know what that tackle is doing now because his legs are further back. But he’s got a slight bend in his front knee. Those things all tell you things. As a freshman, you don’t have the benefit of that experience.” Goodman, who will be playing the 58th game in his KU career on Saturday at TCU, said his mes-
sage for the younger guys in that meeting was to use film study as much as possible to slow the game down. “My freshman year, the game was going fast, fast, fast,” Goodman said. “But now I can line up and get a presnap read. I know if it’s a pass or a run. Most of the time it’s (KU cornerback) Brandon Stewart on my side, and I tell him if it’s a pass or not. Once you’ve been playing for a little bit, you notice little things that the young guys don’t notice.” Little by little, some of these younger guys are starting to pick that up. That’s why defensive end Dorance Armstrong has been arguably KU’s best defensive player during the past few weeks. That’s why third-
string QB Keaton Perry, a red-shirt freshman who spelled an injured Willis in last week’s loss at Texas, checked out of the called play during his first live snap of the season. That’s why junior cornerback Marnez Ogletree, despite getting beat for an 84-yard touchdown on the first play of the game last week, kept his head up and finished the game with three tackles and a pass break-up. “Everybody has to do their one-eleventh,” Beaty said. “And stuff’s starting to take hold. It really is. We’re kind of winding down towards the end of the season here, but, as coaches, we wish we had 10 more (games) right now. We need 10 more to close that gap.”
Lions’ Taylor signs with Northern Colorado softball By Chris Duderstadt cduderstadt@ljworld.com
One day about 10 and a half years ago, Lawrence High senior softball player Sophie Taylor was playing catch with her father, Kyle Taylor, in her grandparents’ backyard when she decided to set forth on a journey. “I remember this just like it was yesterday that she was looking at me and I was looking at her and she says, ‘Dad, I’m going to play softball in college,’” Kyle said. After working with multiple coaches for countless hours to improve on different facets of the game, Sophie reached her destination more than a decade later, as she signed her national letter of intent to play softball at the University of Northern Colorado on Wednesday in the LHS library. “There were a lot of bumps in the road. I really wouldn’t have gotten to this point without my coaches,” Sophie said.
Mike Yoder/Journal-World Photo
LAWRENCE HIGH SENIOR SOPHIE TAYLOR, left, shows her softball teammates a photo display of her softball career during her signing day Wednesday at LHS. Taylor signed a letter of intent to play softball at Northern Colorado. With Taylor, from left, are Maria Urban, Sami Mills, Megan Williams and Rhiannon Emerson. “I remember telling my mom that I wanted to play at Northern Colorado and she kind of laughed at me because it is (NCAA Division I) and not many girls go D1 around here, so it’s
a big deal. But I worked hard, and I put myself in positions to succeed, and I’m here now.” While the work to get to this point has been hard for Sophie, the de-
cision on where to play collegiately was easy because of Bears head coach Shana Easley and her staff. “When I first met them and they started recruit-
FSHS swimmers Campbell, McCurdy ready to step up to the next level By Bobby Nightengale bnightengale@ljworld.com
Free State High seniors Cierra Campbell and Anna McCurdy have swam together for the past decade. On Wednesday, they celebrated one of their biggest swimming achievements alongside each other. Campbell signed her letter of intent to swim with Indiana State University, and McCurdy signed with the University of Maine in the school’s multi-purpose room in front of family, friends and coaches. “This is pretty surreal seeing all these people come out and support Cierra and I,” McCurdy said. “I’ve known Cierra since I was 6 or 7, so we’ve been swimming together for quite a while. It’s pretty cool to be able to sign next to her and see how we’ve both grown and really developed as people and swimmers. It’s pretty special.” Campbell won state championships in the 200-yard freestyle, 200 freestyle relay and 400 freestyle relay last year, breaking state records in both of her relays. She added a second-place finish in the 500 freestyle, helping the Firebirds to their first team title since 2009. She will join the Syca-
Richard Gwin/Journal-World Photo
ANNA MCCURDY, LEFT, AND CIERRA CAMPBELL show a picture of the two swimming together 10 years ago. The Free State seniors signed letters of intent on Wednesday: McCurdy with Maine, and Campbell with Indiana State. mores for their inaugural season next year. The school announced it was adding a women’s swimming and diving program in October 2014. “The coach is phenomenal,” said Campbell, who plans to major in business with a minor in textiles. “It’s a brand
new program and I just felt like I would be a real good fit and have an opportunity to grow as a leader, as a person and as an athlete. I just thought it was a perfect fit for me.” Both of Campbell’s parents swam collegiately, and her brother, Canaan,
is a sophomore swimmer at Missouri State. Her father, Clark, is the women’s swim coach at Kansas University. Being familiar with the signing day process didn’t make the day any less emotional. “It’s so exciting,” Campbell said. “It’s such a weight off of your shoulder. Definitely overwhelming right now. Right now, it just feels like I’m getting older.” McCurdy finished 13th at state in the 200 individual medley and seventh in the 500 freestyle last season. She decided last week that she was going to attend Maine after visiting the school in September. “I knew I wanted a smaller Div. I school,” McCurdy said. “Then just visiting the campus … it was gorgeous. I really like the team and coaches. That just kind of sold it for me.” With a few months until the start of their final high school swim season, McCurdy and Campbell were just happy to have their college choices finalized. “You can enjoy senior year now,” McCurdy said. “I know where I’m going. Really just enjoy it before we both leave and go to new places and start our next journey.”
ing me, they were just switching colleges, and they weren’t allowed to tell me,” Sophie said. “So really it had nothing to do with the college itself at first, it was the coaches. I went on a visit in eighth grade, and I loved it.” The LHS shortstop batted .580 with five home runs, six triples, 40 hits and 29 runs scored to earn first-team all-state honors in her junior campaign. With LHS coach Joe Dee Tarbutton and several club coaches who have mentored Sophie on hand for the signing, they all shared aspects of the game where they have seen the Northern Colorado signee grow. And while Sophie gave thanks to her coaches, she has given back to them as well. “Soph made me stop chewing tobacco,” Dave Meyer, who coached Sophie with the Kansas City Zephyrs, said. “For one, it became expense because I’d carry my chewing tobacco with me and hide it
at the games. She would start stealing it from me, but then I caught on and carried an extra can anyway so when she took mine, I had one. Kyle was telling me that he got into her bag one day and was really concerned because she had cans of chewing tobacco. She sent me a picture one day of my chewing tobacco, and on the back of it it talks about cancer and all of the different things like that, and she said, ‘you know how ugly you’re going to be if you have this?’” Meyer has not dabbled with chewing tobacco for “two to three years now” because of Sophie’s persistence in telling him to stop. It’s the same persistence at practice, along with being an all-state player that made it a nobrainer for Tarbutton to select Sophie as a captain for her senior season. “She has a keen eye for what can help other players get better,” Tarbutton said. “She’s not like, ‘I’m better than you are, but here’s what we can do.’”
BRIEFLY Dykes, Strauss sign letters
City players named all-league
Lawrence High seniors Caroline Dykes and Coulter Strauss both signed their letters of intent to play college sports on Wednesday. Dykes signed to play volleyball at Missouri Science and Technology in the LHS cafeteria. A first-team AllSunflower League pick for the past two seasons, Dykes led the Lions in kills this year. Strauss will play lacrosse at Lindenwood University, signing in a ceremony at his home. He plays lacrosse for Olathe East in the spring because the sport isn’t offered at LHS.
Several city volleyball players earned All-Sunflower League honors for their play this season. Lawrence High senior Caroline Dykes and Free State junior Naomi Hickman were named to the first team. Free State junior Payton Gannaway and freshman Rachel Hickman, along with LHS senior Kyleigh Severa, were secondteam selections. FSHS seniors Allie Knapp and Natalie Clarke, and LHS sophomore Laurel Bird received an honorable mention.
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Thursday, November 12, 2015
SPORTS
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SCOREBOARD
NBA Roundup The Associated Press
Hornets 95, Knicks 93 Charlotte, N.C. — Cody Zeller made a layup off an inbounds play with 0.6 seconds left to lift Charlotte to a victory over New York on Wednesday night. Kristaps Porzingis hit what appeared to be a winning 3-pointer from 29 feet on the ensuing inbounds play, but officials huddled and ruled that he didn’t get the shot off in time. NEW YORK (93) Anthony 12-25 2-4 29, Porzingis 5-10 0-0 10, Lopez 0-3 0-0 0, Calderon 6-9 0-0 13, Afflalo 6-13 0-0 12, Grant 4-8 0-0 8, Galloway 2-6 0-0 4, O’Quinn 2-3 2-2 6, Amundson 4-4 1-1 9, Thomas 0-3 0-0 0, D.Williams 0-1 0-0 0, Seraphin 1-1 0-0 2. Totals 42-86 5-7 93. CHARLOTTE (95) Hairston 2-8 0-0 5, M.Williams 3-6 1-2 8, Jefferson 2-10 0-0 4, Walker 2-11 4-4 9, Batum 10-18 2-5 24, Zeller 2-6 8-15 12, Hawes 0-2 0-0 0, Lamb 6-10 0-0 14, Lin 7-11 2-2 17, Kaminsky 1-2 0-0 2. Totals 35-84 17-28 95. New York 27 20 32 14—93 Charlotte 18 31 20 26—95 3-Point Goals-New York 4-21 (Anthony 3-6, Calderon 1-4, Galloway 0-1, Porzingis 0-1, Grant 0-3, Afflalo 0-3, Thomas 0-3), Charlotte 8-23 (Lamb 2-4, Batum 2-5, Lin 1-1, Walker 1-2, M.Williams 1-3, Hairston 1-5, Kaminsky 0-1, Hawes 0-2). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-New York 59 (Porzingis 15), Charlotte 47 (Jefferson, Batum 5). Assists-New York 20 (Calderon, Grant 5), Charlotte 21 (Hawes 5). Total FoulsNew York 24, Charlotte 9. A-16,643 (19,077).
Magic 101, Lakers 99 Orlando, Fla. — Nik Vucevic hit a fallaway 18-footer at the buzzer to lift Orlando to a victory over the Los Angeles Lakers. Shabazz Napier led Orlando with 22 points, Vucevic had 18 and Evan Fournier added 16 for the Magic, who got 65 points from their bench. L.A. LAKERS (99) World Peace 4-7 0-0 9, Randle 6-10 0-3 12, Hibbert 5-8 5-5 15, Russell 6-15 0-0 14, Clarkson 2-7 0-0 4, Young 4-7 0-0 10, Williams 2-8 9-10 13, Nance Jr. 6-6 0-0 13, Black 0-2 0-0 0, Huertas 2-3 0-0 5, Bass 2-6 0-0 4. Totals 39-79 14-18 99. ORLANDO (101) Fournier 6-16 2-3 16, Harris 5-13 0-0 11, Dedmon 2-6 0-0 4, Payton 1-13 0-2 2, Oladipo 1-2 0-0 3, Gordon 1-3 1-2 4, Napier 8-16 1-1 22, Vucevic 9-16 0-0 18, Hezonja 1-4 4-4 7, Marble 0-4 0-0 0, Frye 6-7 0-0 14. Totals 40-100 8-12 101. L.A. Lakers 25 20 25 29— 99 Orlando 26 22 26 27—101 3-Point Goals-L.A. Lakers 7-22 (Young 2-5, Russell 2-5, Nance Jr. 1-1, Huertas 1-2, World Peace 1-3, Randle 0-1, Clarkson 0-2, Williams 0-3), Orlando 13-28 (Napier 5-9, Frye 2-2, Fournier 2-6, Oladipo 1-1, Gordon 1-2, Harris 1-3, Hezonja 1-3, Marble 0-2). Fouled Out-None. ReboundsL.A. Lakers 52 (Randle 8), Orlando 56 (Harris 11). Assists-L.A. Lakers 25 (Clarkson, Huertas 5), Orlando 22 (Payton 8). Total Fouls-L.A. Lakers 11, Orlando 19. A-18,846 (18,500).
Warriors 100, Grizzlies 84 Memphis, Tenn. — Stephen Curry scored 28 points and Andre Iguodala added 20 as Golden State matched a franchise record for most wins to start a season with a victory over Memphis. Harrison Barnes added 19 points for Golden State, which won its ninth straight to open the season. Curry’s was 9 of 21 from the field, but only 3 of 10 from outside the arc. GOLDEN STATE (100) H.Barnes 7-11 4-5 19, D.Green 3-7 0-0 7, Ezeli 1-2 1-2 3, Curry 9-21 7-7 28, K.Thompson 3-9 0-0 8, Iguodala 6-9 4-6 20, Bogut 1-3 1-2 3, Livingston 3-3 0-0 6, Barbosa 2-5 0-1 4, Speights 0-3 0-0 0, McAdoo 0-0 0-0 0, J.Thompson 1-1 0-0 2, Clark 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 36-75 17-23 100. MEMPHIS (84) Allen 5-7 4-4 15, Randolph 6-13 7-7 19, Gasol 6-15 13-14 26, Conley 1-12 2-2 4, Lee 1-7 1-1 3, M.Barnes 1-8 0-0 3, Ja.Green 3-4 3-4 9, Je.Green 0-2 0-0 0, Smith 1-2 3-4 5. Totals 24-70 33-36 84. Golden State 26 21 27 26—100 Memphis 15 26 22 21— 84 3-Point Goals-Golden State 11-27 (Iguodala 4-5, Curry 3-10, K.Thompson 2-5, H.Barnes 1-1, D.Green 1-4, Clark 0-1, Barbosa 0-1), Memphis 3-15 (Gasol 1-1, Allen 1-2, M.Barnes 1-4, Je.Green 0-1, Lee 0-3, Conley 0-4). Fouled Out-D. Green. Rebounds-Golden State 45 (K.Thompson, Bogut 7), Memphis 49 (Ja.Green 9). Assists-Golden State 22 (Curry 5), Memphis 15 (Conley 9). Total Fouls-Golden State 30, Memphis 26. Technicals-D.Green, Lee. A-18,119 (18,119).
Mavericks 118, Clippers 108 Dallas — Dirk Nowitzki scored a season-high 31 points to lead Dallas to a victory over the Los Angeles Clippers in DeAndre Jordan’s first visit since backing out on an agreement to sign with the Mavericks in free agency. A tight second half upstaged the sideshow of the return of Jordan, who was booed throughout before coach Doc Rivers pulled him in the fourth quarter with Dallas successfully using the hacka-Jordan tactic against one of the NBA’s worst free throw shooters.
How former Jayhawks fared Cole Aldrich, L.A. Clippers Did not play (coach’s decision). Cliff Alexander, Portland Did not play (inactive). Darrell Arthur, Denver Min: 18. Pts: 2. Reb: 1. Ast: 3. Tarik Black, L.A. Lakers Min: 6. Pts: 0. Reb: 3. Ast: 0. Mario Chalmers, Memphis Did not play (not yet active following trade). Ben McLemore, Sacramento Min: 3. Pts: 0. Reb: 0. Ast: 0. Marcus Morris, Detroit Min: 36. Pts: 16. Reb: 9. Ast: 3. Paul Pierce, L.A. Clippers Min: 22. Pts: 10. Reb: 7. Ast: 2. Thomas Robinson, Brooklyn Min: 13. Pts: 6. Reb: 6. Ast: 0. Brandon Rush, Golden State Did not play (inactive). L.A. CLIPPERS (108) Stephenson 3-9 0-0 6, Griffin 8-19 5-7 21, Jordan 3-5 3-9 9, Paul 2-11 6-7 11, Redick 4-6 0-0 10, Crawford 3-8 4-4 11, Smith 2-6 1-2 7, Rivers 7-14 0-0 16, Pierce 3-5 2-2 10, Johnson 2-2 1-2 7, Mbah a Moute 0-1 0-0 0, Prigioni 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 37-86 22-33 108. DALLAS (118) Matthews 9-13 4-4 25, Nowitzki 11-14 4-5 31, Pachulia 2-6 6-8 10, Williams 5-11 3-3 13, Felton 4-9 4-4 13, Harris 2-6 2-4 7, Powell 4-5 0-0 8, Villanueva 2-4 0-0 4, Barea 0-5 0-2 0, Anderson 3-3 0-0 7, Evans 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 42-76 23-30 118. L.A. Clippers 35 19 24 30—108 Dallas 27 26 31 34—118 3-Point Goals-L.A. Clippers 12-27 (Johnson 2-2, Redick 2-3, Pierce 2-4, Smith 2-4, Rivers 2-6, Crawford 1-3, Paul 1-3, Stephenson 0-2), Dallas 11-24 (Nowitzki 5-6, Matthews 3-4, Anderson 1-1, Harris 1-4, Felton 1-5, Williams 0-2, Villanueva 0-2). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-L.A. Clippers 51 (Jordan 11), Dallas 50 (Nowitzki 11). Assists-L.A. Clippers 21 (Paul 11), Dallas 23 (Barea 7). Total Fouls-L.A. Clippers 24, Dallas 29. Technicals-Griffin, Rivers, L.A. Clippers Coach Rivers, Dallas defensive three second. A-19,805 (19,200).
lyn to its first victory of the season, over Houston. BROOKLYN (106) Johnson 4-13 7-7 16, Young 5-8 3-5 13, Lopez 6-17 2-3 14, Jack 3-10 0-0 7, HollisJefferson 0-2 0-0 0, Bogdanovic 10-20 0-0 22, Robinson 3-3 0-0 6, Ellington 2-8 0-0 5, Bargnani 3-7 2-2 8, Larkin 6-10 0-0 15. Totals 42-98 14-17 106. HOUSTON (98) Ariza 5-14 0-1 11, Thornton 9-15 0-0 21, Howard 10-16 0-2 20, Lawson 3-11 2-2 8, Harden 8-22 4-5 23, Capela 4-5 0-0 8, Terry 0-1 0-0 0, Brewer 2-6 0-0 4, Jones 0-3 0-2 0, Beverley 1-5 0-0 3. Totals 42-98 6-12 98. Brooklyn 22 33 24 27—106 Houston 28 21 34 15— 98 3-Point Goals-Brooklyn 8-17 (Larkin 3-4, Bogdanovic 2-5, Johnson 1-2, Jack 1-3, Ellington 1-3), Houston 8-34 (Thornton 3-9, Harden 3-10, Beverley 1-4, Ariza 1-6, Terry 0-1, Brewer 0-1, Jones 0-1, Lawson 0-2). Fouled OutNone. Rebounds-Brooklyn 66 (Lopez 12), Houston 55 (Howard 17). AssistsBrooklyn 25 (Johnson 10), Houston 25 (Thornton 7). Total Fouls-Brooklyn 13, Houston 14. Technicals-Brooklyn defensive three second, Howard. A-18,155 (18,023).
Pacers 102, Celtics 91 Boston — Paul George scored 26 points and grabbed 10 rebounds to lead Indiana to victory over Boston. INDIANA (102) Miles 6-10 4-4 17, George 10-22 4-5 26, Mahinmi 4-7 3-8 11, G.Hill 3-8 0-0 7, Ellis 4-9 4-6 13, Budinger 4-7 1-2 10, M.Turner 0-0 0-0 0, J.Hill 5-10 2-4 12, Allen 2-5 2-2 6, Robinson III 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 38-79 20-31 102. BOSTON (91) Crowder 1-5 2-2 5, Johnson 3-5 1-4 7, Sullinger 5-10 0-0 11, Thomas 4-13 5-7 14, E.Turner 9-13 2-2 20, Smart 1-6 6-8 8, Jerebko 0-1 0-0 0, Olynyk 1-5 2-2 4, Hunter 2-5 0-0 5, Lee 4-5 5-7 13, Rozier 2-9 0-0 4. Totals 32-77 23-32 91. Indiana 31 20 30 21—102 Boston 23 26 25 17— 91 3-Point Goals-Indiana 6-17 (George 2-5, Budinger 1-2, G.Hill 1-3, Ellis 1-3, Miles 1-4), Boston 4-24 (Crowder 1-3, Hunter 1-3, Sullinger 1-3, Thomas 1-4, Johnson 0-1, Olynyk 0-2, Rozier 0-4, Smart 0-4). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-Indiana 55 (George 10), Boston 51 (Sullinger 11). AssistsIndiana 20 (Ellis 6), Boston 18 (Thomas 4). Total Fouls-Indiana 28, Boston 26. Technicals-George. A-17,879 (18,624).
Nets 106, Rockets 98 Houston — Bojan Bogdanovic came off the bench to score a seasonhigh 22 points with nine rebounds and lead Brook-
Big 12 Standings
Big 12 Overall W L W L 8 0 Baylor 5 0 Oklahoma State 6 0 9 0 Oklahoma 5 1 8 1 8 1 TCU 5 1 4 5 Texas 3 3 Iowa State 2 4 3 6 Texas Tech 2 5 5 5 West Virginia 1 4 4 4 Kansas State 0 5 3 5 Kansas 0 6 0 9 Saturday, Nov. 14 Kansas at TCU, 11 a.m. (FS1) Kansas State at Texas Tech, 2:30 p.m. (FS1) Texas at West Virginia, 11 a.m. (ESPNU) Oklahoma State at Iowa State, 2:30 p.m. (ESPN) Oklahoma at Baylor, 7 p.m. (ABC)
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 7 0 .222 210 249 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 3 5 0 .375 162 221 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 Today’s Game Buffalo at N.Y. Jets, 7:25 p.m. Sunday’s Games Detroit at Green Bay, Noon Carolina at Tennessee, Noon Chicago at St. Louis, Noon Dallas at Tampa Bay, Noon New Orleans at Washington, Noon Miami at Philadelphia, Noon Cleveland at Pittsburgh, Noon Jacksonville at Baltimore, Noon Minnesota at Oakland, 3:05 p.m. Kansas City at Denver, 3:25 p.m. New England at Giants, 3:25 p.m. Arizona at Seattle, 7:30 p.m. Open: Atlanta, Indianapolis, San Diego, San Francisco Monday’s Game Houston at Cincinnati, 7:30 p.m.
NEW ORLEANS (98) Babbitt 2-8 1-2 7, Anderson 7-16 1-1 17, Asik 0-1 4-6 4, Smith 8-17 0-0 18, Gordon 10-20 2-3 26, Cunningham 3-3 1-2 7, Ajinca 0-3 0-0 0, Douglas 4-11 1-1 12, Gee 3-4 0-0 7. Totals 37-83 10-15 98. ATLANTA (106) Bazemore 4-11 2-2 10, Millsap 6-14 7-8 19, Horford 11-15 0-0 26, Teague 6-16 1-2 14, Korver 3-7 0-0 7, Sefolosha 2-3 2-4 7, Splitter 4-5 0-0 8, Schroder 5-11 0-0 12, Ju.Holiday 0-2 0-0 0, Scott 0-0 0-0 0, Muscala 1-2 0-0 3. Totals 42-86 12-16 106. New Orleans 26 30 19 23— 98 Atlanta 24 23 29 30—106 3-Point Goals-New Orleans 14-29 (Gordon 4-6, Douglas 3-7, Smith 2-4, Babbitt 2-5, Anderson 2-5, Gee 1-2), Atlanta 10-26 (Horford 4-6, Schroder 2-4, Muscala 1-1, Sefolosha 1-1, Teague 1-2, Korver 1-4, Millsap 0-2, Ju.Holiday 0-2, Bazemore 0-4). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-New Orleans 48 (Anderson 11), Atlanta 51 (Millsap 16). AssistsNew Orleans 21 (Smith 10), Atlanta 26 (Teague 10). Total Fouls-New Orleans 21, Atlanta 16. Technicals-Bazemore. A-15,597 (18,729).
Vasquez 6-14 0-0 15, Bayless 7-10 5-6 22. Totals 42-79 8-9 102. DENVER (103) Gallinari 7-17 7-7 25, Faried 8-9 3-6 19, Hickson 5-8 2-2 12, Mudiay 5-16 5-8 16, Harris 3-7 0-0 8, Jokic 4-7 0-1 8, Arthur 1-3 0-0 2, Foye 2-5 0-0 4, Barton 3-5 0-0 6, Papanikolaou 1-2 0-0 3. Totals 39-79 17-24 103. Milwaukee 32 32 16 22—102 Denver 25 28 34 16—103 3-Point Goals-Milwaukee 10-22 (Bayless 3-3, Middleton 3-5, Vasquez 3-8, Ennis 1-2, Vaughn 0-1, Antetokounmpo 0-3), Denver 8-24 (Gallinari 4-8, Harris 2-4, Papanikolaou 1-2, Mudiay 1-6, Arthur 0-1, Barton 0-1, Foye 0-2). Fouled Out-O’Bryant. Rebounds-Milwaukee 39 (Monroe 10), Denver 46 (Faried 9). AssistsMilwaukee 26 (Vasquez 9), Denver 27 (Mudiay 11). Total Fouls-Milwaukee 23, Denver 12. A-9,403 (19,155).
Kings 101, Pistons 92 Sacramento, Calif. — DeMarcus Cousins had 33 points and nine rebounds, Rajon Rondo had a tripledouble, and Sacramento snapped a six-game losing streak with a victory over Detroit. Rudy Gay scored 12 of his 25 points in the first quarter for the Kings. Rondo had his 24th regular-season tripledouble, finishing with 14 points, 15 assists and 11 rebounds. DETROIT (92) Morris 5-15 5-6 16, Ilyasova 3-6 0-0 8, Drummond 7-13 0-2 14, Jackson 5-15 5-6 16, Caldwell-Pope 5-14 3-4 15, Johnson 3-11 2-2 8, Baynes 1-3 0-0 2, Blake 2-7 0-0 5, Tolliver 3-5 0-0 8. Totals 34-89 15-20 92. SACRAMENTO (101) Gay 10-14 4-5 25, Cousins 11-21 7-11 33, Cauley-Stein 2-3 0-0 4, Rondo 6-16 1-2 14, Anderson 1-3 0-0 3, Belinelli 2-7 4-4 9, Koufos 2-5 0-0 4, Casspi 3-5 2-2 9, McLemore 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 37-74 18-24 101. Detroit 23 26 21 22— 92 Sacramento 36 25 25 15—101 3-Point Goals-Detroit 9-32 (Tolliver 2-4, Ilyasova 2-4, Caldwell-Pope 2-6, Morris 1-4, Blake 1-5, Jackson 1-6, Johnson 0-3), Sacramento 9-16 (Cousins 4-5, Rondo 1-2, Gay 1-2, Anderson 1-2, Casspi 1-2, Belinelli 1-3). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-Detroit 51 (Drummond 17), Sacramento 52 (Rondo, Casspi 11). Assists-Detroit 16 (Tolliver 4), Sacramento 20 (Rondo 15). Total Fouls-Detroit 20, Sacramento 20. Technicals-Sacramento Bench, Sacramento defensive three second. A-17,317 (17,317).
Nov. 20 Sub-State Blue Valley-Lawrence winner vs. Shawnee Mission East-Olathe North winner Free State-Wichita Northwest winner vs. Derby-Junction City winner Nov. 28 State 1 p.m. at Emporia State East vs. West sub-state winners
NHL
Wednesday’s Games Pittsburgh 4, Montreal 3, SO Edmonton at Anaheim, (n)
NBA
EAST No. 1 Lawrence 56, No. 8 SM North 32 No. 4 Blue Valley 37, No. 5 SM West 14 No. 6 Olathe North 35, No. 3 Blue Valley North 28 No. 2 SM East 49, No. 7 Blue Valley Northwest 13 WEST No. 1 Wichita Northwest 55, No. 8 Wichita North 13 No. 4 Free State 49, No. 5 Wichita West 0 No. 3 Derby 52, No. 6 Topeka 21 No. 2 Junction City 56, No. 7 Hutchinson 21 Nov. 13 Sectionals EAST Blue Valley (8-2) at Lawrence (10-0) SM East (9-1) at Olathe North (9-1) at ODAC WEST Free State (7-3) at Wichita NW (10-0) Derby (9-1) at Junction City (10-0)
EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W L Pct GB Toronto 6 3 .667 — New York 4 5 .444 2 Boston 3 4 .429 2 Brooklyn 1 7 .125 4½ Philadelphia 0 8 .000 5½ Southeast Division W L Pct GB Atlanta 8 2 .800 — Miami 5 3 .625 2 Charlotte 4 4 .500 3 Orlando 4 5 .444 3½ Washington 3 4 .429 3½ Central Division W L Pct GB Cleveland 7 1 .875 — Detroit 5 3 .625 2 Chicago 5 3 .625 2 Indiana 5 4 .556 2½ Milwaukee 4 5 .444 3½ WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division W L Pct GB San Antonio 5 2 .714 — Dallas 4 4 .500 1½ Houston 4 4 .500 1½ Memphis 3 6 .333 3 New Orleans 1 7 .125 4½ Northwest Division W L Pct GB Oklahoma City 5 3 .625 — Minnesota 4 3 .571 ½ Utah 4 3 .571 ½ Denver 4 4 .500 1 Portland 4 4 .500 1 Pacific Division W L Pct GB Golden State 9 0 1.000 — L.A. Clippers 5 3 .625 3½ Phoenix 3 4 .429 5 Sacramento 2 7 .222 7 L.A. Lakers 1 7 .125 7½ Wednesday’s Games Toronto 119, Philadelphia 103 Orlando 101, L.A. Lakers 99 Charlotte 95, New York 93 Indiana 102, Boston 91 Golden State 100, Memphis 84 Brooklyn 106, Houston 98 Dallas 118, L.A. Clippers 108 Atlanta 106, New Orleans 98 Denver 103, Milwaukee 102 Sacramento 101, Detroit 92 San Antonio at Portland, (n) Today’s Games Utah at Miami, 6:30 p.m. Golden State at Minnesota, 7 p.m. L.A. Clippers at Phoenix, 9:30 p.m.
of certain aspects of this investigation has not even been interviewed,” Jackson exclaimed. “He has advised them he wants to be interviewed. They have not even interviewed him even though they apparently have drawn conclusions about his relationship with this young man without ever having spoken to him.” Jackson said there is no concern about amateurism violations as Drame is Diallo’s legal guardian in the country of Mali. “We have a gentleman who based on Mayan law is the legal guardian of this young man,” Jackson said. “Unless an athletic regulatory association somehow claims their internal legislation is superior to the legal system in a sovereign nation that ends that area of consideration.” As far as the initial eligibility side of the case, Jackson is shocked the NCAA is reportedly looking into classes Diallo took in Mali as far back as the sixth grade. He said normally the cutoff is ninth grade. Jackson called it an “intentional effort to delay and somewhat of a witchhunt.” “If you don’t have coursework in your high school algebra class or 9th grade biology class or 10th grade geometry class (at Our Savior New American High in New York which Diallo attended three years) to satisfy them it was academically rigorous enough they’ll disallow that course as a core course. There’s been an element of that involved in this case,” Jackson said. “This young man has been subjected to an exhaustive review that lasted for almost six months
on both of issues both on amateurism side and academic side. Candidly the vast majority of these cases end late August or early September. Quite often you’ll find cases that will linger into the season. Once that occurs it’s nothing more than a de-facto suspension which essentially the young man is serving right now.” l Good news on Greene: Brannen Greene, who missed Tuesday’s 89-66 exhibition victory over Fort Hays State because of discomfort and stiffness in his surgically repaired hip, practiced on Wednesday. “He couldn’t go Tuesday and today he was 100 percent. It’s going to be like that for a while (as Greene continues recovery),” coach Bill Self said on his Hawk Talk radio show. l Lightfoot to sign today: Mitch Lightfoot, a 6-foot-9, 210-pound senior forward from Gilbert (Arizona) Christian High, who orally committed to KUon Oct. 24, is expected to sign his letter-of-intent today, the second day of the week-long early signing period. Lightfoot, who is ranked No. 117 nationally by Rivals.com, did not sign Wednesday because school was not in session on the Veterans Day holiday. l Fox announcement today: De’Aaron Fox, a 6-3 senior point guard from Cypress Lakes High in Katy, Texas, who is ranked No. 5 nationally by Rivals.com, is expected to announce for Kentucky over KU, Louisville and LSU today on ESPNU’s Signing Day Special, to run from 5 to 6 p.m., Central time.
recently, is in fifth place at 7-5, while ISU is in third at 9-3. Kansas State is 8-4 and in CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C fourth place. “One game up with State. TCU, which actually beat Texas, 3-0, four to play would have
been fun,” Bechard said. “We’ve got to take care of our business and hope we get a little help. It’s not a position you want to be in. That’s where we’re at.”
Kansas
Sept. 5 — South Dakota State, L 38-41 (0-1) Sept. 12 — Memphis, L 23-55 (0-2) Sept. 26 — at Rutgers, L 14-27 (0-3) Oct. 3 — at Iowa State, L 13-38 (0-4, 0-1) Oct. 10 — Baylor, L 7-66 (0-5, 0-2) Oct. 17 — Texas Tech, L 20-30 (0-6, 0-3) Oct. 24 — at Oklahoma State, L 10-58 (0-7, 0-4) Oct. 31 — Oklahoma, L 7-62 (0-8, 0-5) Nov. 7 — at Texas, L 20-59 (0-9, 0-6) Nov. 14 — at TCU, 11 a.m. Nov. 21 — West Virginia, 11 a.m. Nov. 28 — Kansas State, TBA
Hawks 106, Pelicans 98 Atlanta — Al Horford scored 26 points and Atlanta rallied to beat the injury depleted New Orleans, who led much of the way but couldn’t hang on without star Anthony Davis. After trailing by 12 points in the first half, Baker Aug. 29 — at Grand View, W 20-15 the Hawks pulled away (1-0, 0-0) Sept. 5 — at Culver-Stockton, W 58-0 down the stretch. Paul 0-0) Millsap converted a (2-0, Sept. 12 — William Penn, W 41-13 couple of three-point (3-0, 0-0) Sept. 19 — Graceland, W 52-21 (4-0, plays to help seal the vic- 0-0) tory for Atlanta, which Sept. 26 — at Benedictine, L 35-31 0-1) bounced back from a (4-1, Oct. 3 — Peru State, W 35-10 (5-1, High School Playoffs home loss to Minnesota 0-1) CLASS 6A Oct. 10 — Bye two nights earlier. Friday
Nuggets 103, Bucks 102 Denver — Kenneth Faried rebounded Danilo Gallinari’s errant shot in the lane for a putback with 5 seconds remaining to give Denver a victory over Milwaukee. Khris Middleton’s shot from the corner rimmed out at the buzzer as the Raptors 119, 76ers 103 Bucks lost for the sixth Philadelphia — Kyle straight time in Denver. Lowry scored 23 points MILWAUKEE (102) and Luis Scola had 21 to Antetokounmpo 6-12 0-0 12, 4-7 3-3 11, Monroe 9-13 0-0 lead Toronto to a victory O’Bryant 18, Ennis 3-4 0-0 7, Middleton 5-13 0-0 over winless Philadelphia. 13, Henson 2-5 0-0 4, Vaughn 0-1 0-0 0, TORONTO (119) Johnson 3-6 2-2 8, Scola 10-15 0-0 21, Valanciunas 4-8 3-4 11, Lowry 6-12 9-10 23, DeRozan 4-9 5-6 14, Biyombo 3-8 4-4 10, Patterson 3-8 0-0 7, Joseph 6-9 3-3 15, Powell 4-10 0-0 8, Bennett 0-1 2-2 2, Wright 0-2 0-0 0, Nogueira 0-0 0-0 0, Caboclo 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 43-89 28-31 119. PHILADELPHIA (103) Sampson 4-10 1-2 9, Grant 5-10 2-4 12, Okafor 13-22 0-2 26, McConnell 1-5 0-0 2, Stauskas 3-11 0-0 8, Wood 2-7 0-0 4, Thompson 6-8 2-2 19, Canaan 5-11 3-3 18, Pressey 1-3 3-4 5. Totals 40-87 11-17 103. Toronto 29 34 33 23—119 Philadelphia 34 23 20 26—103 3-Point Goals-Toronto 5-18 (Lowry 2-6, DeRozan 1-1, Scola 1-2, Patterson 1-5, Johnson 0-1, Joseph 0-1, Powell 0-1, Bennett 0-1), Philadelphia 12-29 (Thompson 5-6, Canaan 5-10, Stauskas 2-7, Grant 0-1, Wood 0-1, McConnell 0-2, Pressey 0-2). Fouled Out-None. Rebounds-Toronto 60 (Valanciunas 12), Philadelphia 42 (Grant 10). Assists-Toronto 22 (Lowry 8), Philadelphia 28 (McConnell 13). Total Fouls-Toronto 18, Philadelphia 24. A-12,744 (20,318).
L awrence J ournal -W orld
Oct. 17 — at Avila, W 42-14 (6-1. 1-0) Oct. 24 — MidAmerica Nazarene, W 38-29 (7-1, 2-0) Oct. 31 — Central Methodist, W 40-21 (8-1, 3-0) Nov. 7 — at Missouri Valley, W 26-0 (9-1, 4-0) Nov. 14 — at Evangel, 1:30 p.m.
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
Hoops CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C
all administrative possibilities of the young man being cleared,” Jackson said. “At the same time the actions here as I see them at the moment ... these actions (of NCAA) appear to be quite illegal. In this situation, the manner in which this investigation has occurred and the manner in which a determination has been made on a statement of fact relative to young man’s legal guardian ... it clearly appears they (NCAA) have violated their own rules. How can you conduct a credible investigation and have a particular individual as a target of that investigation without ever having had any interaction with him?” Jackson added. Jackson is referring to the NCAA not having yet spoken with Diallo’s legal guardian, even though Drame has made it clear he’s ready and willing and able to be inteviewed. “The fact of the matter is in cases where they can’t establish that a student-athlete has violated NCAA rules — where they can’t establish violations, they will intentionally drag cases out to essentially impose a defacto suspension. That is what is happening in this case,” Jackson said. “They have not been able to establish a violation. As a result of that it serves their purpose to continue an investigation for an interminable amount of time and essentially force the student-athlete to serve a suspension. The young man’s legal guardian who is very much at the heart
Volleyball
Thursday, November 12, 2015
jobs.lawrence.com
CLASSIFIEDS
PLACE YOUR AD:
785.832.2222
classifieds@ljworld.com
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.
Part-Time Accounting Clerk The ideal job for a Retired Accountant. Communities In Schools of Mid-America, Inc. (CIS) seeks a part-time Accounting Clerk in Lawrence, KS to help process financial transactions, analyze data, reconcile accounts, monitor A/P, A/R, and prepare some financial reports. The candidate must understand fund accounting and GAAP. Bachelor’s Degree in Accounting preferred. Applicant must have 3 or more years of experience and/or training and be proficient in QuickBooks. Wage is $18/hour. CIS of Mid-America is an Equal Opportunity Employer.
For a complete job description see our website at www.cismidamerica.org. Please submit a cover letter, resume and 3 references by November 16th to: cis@cismidamerica.org.
Mid-America
Communities In Schools of Mid-America, Inc. 2721 W. 6th Street, Suite E Lawrence, Kansas 66049 785-856-5190 office 785-856-5191 fax cis@cismidamerica.org
FLEXIBLE SCHEDULES • BENEFITS • PAID TIME-OFF
MANUFACTURING/PRODUCTION NOW STARTING AT $11.00 HR + UP! (DE SOTO KS)
ENTRY LEVEL WELDERS PRODUCTION ASSEMBLY SHEET METAL FABRICATOR
ARE YOU: 19 years or older? A high school graduate or GED? Qualified to drive a motor vehicle? Looking for a great, meaningful job? Help individuals with developmental disabilities, learn various life skills, lead a self directed life and participate in the community. Join the CLO family today:
SUPPORT! TEACH! INSPIRE! ADVOCATE!
Community Living Opportunities, a non-profit organization dedicated to helping adults and children with developmental disabilities is currently hiring Direct Support Professionals (DSP’s).
WORK THREE DAYS A WEEK, TAKE FOUR DAYS OFF! $10/HOUR If you are interested in learning more about becoming a direct care professional at CLO and to fill out an application, please visit our website:
785-865-5520 www.clokan.org
Follow Us On Twitter!
renceKS @JobsLawing s at the best for the latest open companies in Northeast Kansas!
[
ELECTRICAL HARNESS ASSEMBLY
1st shift - 7:00 to 3:30
[
Overtime possible. Hourly Wages • Health Benefits Medical, Dental, Vision. Able to handle physical work, may include heavy lifting of at least 50 pounds
Apply in person
32050 W. 83rd Street., DeSoto, Kansas 66018
At 83rd and Kill Creek Rd. 913-583-3181
EOE • Se habla Español
Think Fast. Think FedEx Ground. Interested in a fast-paced job with career advancement opportunities? Join the FedEx Ground team as a part-time package handler.
Package Handlers - $10.70-$11.70/hr. to start 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 All interested candidates must attend a sort observation at our facility prior to applying for the position.
DAY SHIFT: Mon-Fri 2:30pm-7:30pm TWILIGHT SHIFT:
Mon-Fri, 6:30pm-11:30pm OVERNIGHT SHIFT:
Tues-Sat, Midnight-3am SUNRISE SHIFT: Tues-Sat, 4:30am-7:30am 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
6C
|
Thursday, November 12, 2015
.
L awrence J ournal -W orld
JOBS
RENTALS REAL ESTATE
TO PLACE AN AD:
785.832.2222
classifieds@ljworld.com
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
Career Opportunities for: CNA, LPN, RN, HOUSEKEEPER, DIETARY AIDE MDS Coordinator and Staffing Coordinator 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
www.midwest- health.com/careers
General
Part Time
Starting at $11.00 hr + up! Full-time Jobs!! (Not Temporary)
Welders - Entry Level Production Assembly Sheet Metal Fabricator Electrical Harness Assembly 1st shift - 7:00 to 3:30 Overtime possible. Health Benefits Medical, Dental, Vision. Able to handle physical work, may include heavy lifting of at least 50 pounds Apply in person. 32050 W. 83rd Street. DeSoto, Kansas 66018 At 83rd and Kill Creek Rd. EOE Se habla Espanol
Customer Service
AdministrativeProfessional
Seasonal Tax Pros Needed at Lawrence locations. lauren.durkin@ hrblock.com
Customer Service Representative FT position with an established local company. Must have good communication skills & Microsoft Office experience. Competitive wage & benefits. Send resume to:
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
EOE
DriversTransportation
Experienced Concrete Finisher $18 an hr, work mostly Douglas County. Also need laborers.
Drivers
785-423-7145
Ready Mix Co is looking
Customer Service
for qualified drivers. Pay based on yrs of exp. Bonus .84/yd. Execellent benefits. Apply at: KCK 5620 Wolcott Dr. (913) 788-3165
Activity Coordinator Assisted Living, Full Time Activity Director or Recreation Therapist preferred. CNA preferred. 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
Family Medicine and Urgent Care of Basehor LPN or MA FT with benefits, PTO, sick leave, competitive pay. Must be CPR certified. Excellent opportunity. Apply in person or Fax resume to: 913-774-3366 or Email: hr@jcmhospital.org www.fwhuston.com 408 Delaware Winchester, KS 66097
TIPS
Fri - Sun • 7pm - 7am Fri - Sun • 9 am - 9 pm 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! Stop by 304 W. 7th St in Wellsville or apply online:
Breakfast Attendant
Please Contact: Katie Schmidt RN Admin 785.354.9800 x596 Katie.schmidt@Corizonhe alth.com EOE/AAP/DTR
Healthcare
jbosco@purozone.com
Construction
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.
www.wellsvillerc.com
Suffering will make you
Hotel-Restaurant
Sous Chef (Ottawa, KS)
Join our morning team! Ability to multi task and deliver great customer service with a smile! Apply in person: 3411 S. Iowa Lawrence, KS
General
HIRING IMMEDIATELY! Drive for KU on Wheels or Lawrence Transit System. Flexible part-time schedules, 80% company paid employee health insurance for full time. Career opportunities. $11.50/hr after paid training. Must be 21+ w. good driving record. Apply online: lawrencetransit.org/ employment Or come to: MV Transportation, Inc. 1260 Timberedge Road Lawrence, KS. EOE
10 Hard Workers needed NOW! $10 hr to train. Quickly earn $12-$15 hr Weekly pay checks. Paid Vacations No Weekends
Call today! 785-841-9999
Job Seeker Tip
RN/LPN Wellsville Retirement Community has an opening for a Charge Nurse in our CountryView Neighborhood. 30 residents and a GREAT staff. Work 36 hrs. paid for 40. 6a - 6a Fri-Sun. Come join a team committed to creating a new culture for long term care. We are family owned & operated. Apply online at www.wellsvillerc.com or stop by 304 W. 7th
Corporate dining environment. Evening & Weekend availability and supervisory experience required. $14-$15/hr & benefits. Fwd resume to eaglewingcafe@gmail.co m or call (785) 760-3560
Office-Clerical Secretary 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
“Thinking Right” When making a choice, think what will be the result in a week, a month or a year later. Really good decisions lead to really good results in the long run.
Housekeeper Laundry Aide 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
“You’ve got to play the tape all the way through!” (Sherman Tolbert) Decisions Determine Destiny
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.
B E A U T I F U L & S PA C I O U S
1 & 2 Bedrooms
start at $450/mo. • Near campus, bus stop • Near stores, restaurants • Laundries on site • Water & trash paid
CALL TODAY (Mon. – Fri.) 785-843-1116
“ Where Carefree, Comfortable Living Begins…” 2 Bedroom, 2 Bathroom Townhomes
Now Available!
• Fireplace • Easy access to I-70 • Central Air • Includes paid • Washer/Dryer cable. Hookups • 2 Car Garage with • Pet under 20 lbs. allowed Opener Call 785-842-2575 www.princeton-place.com REAL ESTATE Lawrence INVESTMENT/DEVELOPMENT
- Peter Steimle
OPPORTUNITY
147 acres, Lawrence Schools, large custom 4 bed/3 bath home, barns, 2nd house, ponds, just west of 6h & SLT, fastest growing intersection in Kansas. $1.6M Bill Fair and Company www.billfair.com 785-887-6900
Open House Special!
• 1 Day - $50 • 2 Days - $75 • 28 Days - $280 Call 785-832-2222 to schedule your ad!
RENTALS Apartments Unfurnished AVAILABLE NOW Brand New 1 BR APARTMENT ON SIXTH 5100 W. Sixth Full Size W/D Incl, Starting at $595, Small Pet Friendly, ApartmentOnSixth.com 785-856-3322
Cedarwood Apts 2411 Cedarwood Ave.
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
classifieds@ljworld.com
2411 Cedarwood Ave.
BETTER or BITTER You choose...and don’t blame me for hiring positive people—I’d rather work with a happy person any day.
785.832.2222
C EDARWOOD A PARTMENTS
Healthcare Dental Assistant
Manufacturing/Production 1st Shift (De Soto KS)
TO PLACE AN AD:
Beautiful & Spacious 1 & 2 Bedrooms Start at $450/mo. * Near campus, bus stop * Laundries on site * Near stores, restaurants * Water & trash paid ——————————————
CALL TODAY (Monday - Friday)
785-843-1116
Apartments Unfurnished
Townhomes
LAUREL GLEN APTS All Electric
1, 2 & 3 BR units Some with W/D, Water & Trash Paid, Small Pet, Income Restrictions Apply
785-838-9559 EOH
Duplexes 2BR, in a 4-plex. New carpet, vinyl, cabinets, countertop. W/D is included. Equal Housing Opportunity. 785-865-2505
Townhomes 3 and 4 Bedroom Townhouses and Single Family Homes Available Now $950-$1800 a month. Garber Property Management
785-842-2475
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 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
Thicker line? Bolder heading? Color background? Ask how to get these features in your ad! Call: 785-832-2222
SUNRISE VILLAGE & PLACE
Now Leasing 2 BR’s Close to Campus & Downtown
Lawrence 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
Pool, On KU Bus Route, Spacious Floorplan,Patios/Decks. Great location: 837 Michigan $200 OFF First Month Rent
Call now! 785-841-8400 www.sunriseapartments.com Need to sell your car? Place your ad at classifieds.lawrence.com or email classifieds@ljworld.com
TUCKAWAY APARTMENTS
Tuckawayapartments.com HARPER SQUARE Harpersquareapartments.com TUCKAWAY AT BRIARWOOD
Tuckawayatbriarwood.com HUTTON FARMS Huttonfarms.com 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
Office Space OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE Call Garber Property Management at 785-842-2475 for more information.
YOUR NEXT APARTMENT IS READY. FIND IT HERE.
Search Amenities, Floorplans & More
View Apartments and Complex Features
Find Google Maps and Get Directions
Contact Property Management Directly
apartments.lawrence.com
PUBLIC NOTICES 785.832.2222 (First published in the Lawrence Daily JournalWorld November 5, 2015) IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS CIVIL DEPARTMENT Federal National Mortgage Association (“Fannie Mae”), a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the United States of America Plaintiff,
classifieds@ljworld.com vs. Robert W. Scott, et al. Defendants. Case No. 15CV56 Court Number: 3 Pursuant to K.S.A. Chapter 60 NOTICE OF SALE
Under and by virtue of an Order of Sale issued to me by the Clerk of the District Court of Douglas County,
Kansas, the undersigned Sheriff of Douglas County, Kansas, will offer for sale at public auction and sell to the highest bidder for cash in hand, at the Lower Level of the Judicial and Law Enforcement Center of the Courthouse at Lawrence, Douglas County, Kansas, on December 3, 2015, at 10:00 AM, the following real estate: A tract of land in the West half of the Northeast Quarter, and the East Half of the Northwest Quarter
of Section 24, Township 14 South, Range 17 East of the 6th P.M., Douglas County, Kansas, described as follows: Commencing at the Northeast corner of said West half, thence South 00 degrees 57’ 14” East, 1669.12 feet along the East line thereof to the point of beginning; thence South 00 degrees 57’ 14” West 977.20 feet, thence North 89 degrees 39’ 26” West, 1317.23 feet
along the South line of said West half, thence North 1 degree 03’ 35” East, 720.06 feet along the West line of said East half, thence North 31 degrees 01’ 34” West, 301.15 feet, thence South 89 degrees 39’ 26” East, 1475.40 feet to the point of beginning, except any part in street, roads, or highways
the above-entitled case. The sale is to be made without appraisement and subject to the redemption period as provided by law, and further subject to the approval of the Court. For more information, visit www.Southlaw.com
(KS #10551) 6363 College Blvd., Suite 100 Overland Park, KS 66211 (913) 663-7600 (913) 663-7899 (Fax) Attorneys for Plaintiff (166549) _______
Kenneth M. McGovern, Sheriff Douglas County, Kansas
(First published in the Lawrence Daily JournalWorld November 12, 2015)
, commonly known as 560 East 150 Road, Overbrook, Prepared By: KS 66524 (the “Property”) SouthLaw, P.C. to satisfy the judgment in Kristen G. Stroehmann
NOTICE TO BIDDERS Sealed proposals will be
received by the City of Lawrence, Kansas, in the Office of the City Clerk, 6 East Sixth Street until 2:00 p.m., Tuesday, November 24, 2015, for the following: BID #B1555 - PVC Pipe for Watermain Installations, Rehabilitation and Replacement
PUBLIC NOTICE CONTINUED ON 8C
L AWRENCE J OURNAL -W ORLD
Thursday, November 12, 2015
CARS
SPECIAL! 10 LINES & PHOTO 7 DAYS $19.95 | 28 DAYS $49.95 Doesn’t sell in 28 days? FREE RENEWAL!
TO PLACE AN AD: TRANSPORTATION
Chevrolet Crossovers
785.832.2222 Ford Cars
classiďŹ eds@ljworld.com
USED CAR GIANT
Ford Crossovers
2012 FORD MUSTANG V6
BMW Cars
2014 FORD ESCAPE SE
PRICED BELOW BOOK!
2010 CHEVROLET TRAVERSE 2LT 2006 BMW 3 SERIES 330Ci
2013 FORD FOCUS SE
2014 FORD EDGE SPORT
Sync, Auto, Best Seller! Stk# PL2022
$12,998
$13,495
Stk#215T787C
$12,295
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
Chevrolet SUVs
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
$15,495
Stock #PL1992
Stk#115T794
2015 FORD ESCAPE SE
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
UCG PRICE
$17,997
Stock #115T901
2009 FORD EDGE SEL
LOCAL TRADE, LOW MILEAGE!
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
2.0 ECOBOOST. PRICED BELOW NADA!
UCG PRICE
Panoramic Roof
$18,995
Stk#2P1746B
Driving Machine for the Working Man!
| 7C
UCG PRICE
$20,995
Stock #1PL1934
UCG PRICE
Stock #P1768A
$10,995
785-727-7151 23rd & Alabama, Lawrence www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Cadillac Cars Ford Trucks 2014 FORD FUSION SE
2014 FORD ESCAPE SE
Leather, Luxury Package
2.0 Ecoboost
Stk#PL1937
Cadillac 2005 STS V8 Leather heated seats, remote start, alloy wheels, Bose sound, all the luxury without the price! Stk#114211 Only $9,777 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
Stk#115T901
Chevrolet 2008 Trailblazer
$14,995
$17,997
LT, power equipment, alloy wheels, sunroof, tow package. Stk#35514A1
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Only $8,8750 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
2009 FORD F-350SD LARIAT
2013 FORD F-150 XLT
Dullay, Leather
Ecoboost, Crew Cab, 4x4
Stk#1PL1973
Stk# 115T779
$30,995
$23,995
$35,979 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
Ask how to get these features in your ad TODAY!!
2014 FORD MUSTANG V6
Call 785-832-2222
2015 FORD ESCAPE SE
Stk#PL1947
Local Trade, Low Mileage!
$18,998
Stk# 1PL1934
Terrific Condition! Stk# 114T730
$14,495 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Convertible
Dodge SUVs
Stk#PL1938
$21,899 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
2007 Dodge Nitro 6 Cylinder, 4 door, automatic, A/C , power windows, power locks, Excellent condition, New tires. Runs and drives good. $ 6000.00 Please call 785-331-5802
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
Ford SUVs
2012 FORD F-150 LARIAT Stk#115T551 Ford 2006 F150 XLT
$33,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
2011 FORD F-350SD LARIAT Utility Bed, Ready to Work!
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
$34,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
2013 FORD EXPEDITION EL XLT
2012 FORD F-150 LARIAT
2014 FORD TRANSIT CONNECT XLT
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Extended, Leather, 4x4
4X4, Power Sunroof
Local Trade, Only 7,700 Miles!
Stk# 215T877
Stk#1PL1919
Stk#1PL1948A
Honda 2008 Accord EXL
$19,972
Local trade in, leather heated seats, moon roof, cd changer, power equipment, alloy wheels, in great shape! Stk#56166B3
$32,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
Stk# 115T984
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
GMC Crossovers
2013 Honda Accord EX
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
2012 FORD ESCAPE LIMITED Leather, Sunroof
2014 FORD EXPLORER LIMITED
2012 FORD F-150 LARIAT 4X4, Power Sunroof
Stk# 215C582
9,089 mi. LIKE NEW! 4 cylinder, rear wheel drive, blue compact, automatic. Selling because of health. $12,500 obo 785-550-5645
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
2008 FORD F-150 XLT
2014 GMC TERRAIN STL-1
Supercab, 2WD
Leather, Sunroof, Pioneer Stereo Stk#115T926
Certified Pre-Owned,21K miles, 7 Year/100,000 mile warranty, 182-pt. Mechanical Inspection. Stk# LF722A
$24,495
Only $18,997
Stk#PL1915
Stk#1PL1919
Stk# 115T807A
$17,995
$26,995
$29,995
$11,974
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
23rd & Alabama - 2829 Iowa
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
LairdNollerLawrence.com
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We Buy all Domestic cars, trucks, and suvs. Call Scott 785-727-7151
Only $10,500 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Chevrolet Sonic LC 2013
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
$28,979
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Chrome Package, Crew Cab, 4x4
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
$29,995
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
2013 FORD F-150 XLT
$29,995
Stk#115T785
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047
$15,495
Stk#215T589A
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
888-631-6458
Stk#PL1992
2012 DODGE RAM 1500 LARAMIE LONGHORN
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Call Coop at
Ford Vans
Priced Below Book!
Limited, Hemi!
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Only $17,888
Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Ford Crossovers
$31,499
Certified Pre-Owned, Local One-Owner, 31K miles, 7 year/100,000 mile Warranty. Stk# F605A
Only $13,855 Stk#PL1974
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
2012 FORD MUSTANG V6
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
Only 6,600 Miles!
4wd extended cab, 5.4 V8, running boards, power equipment, alloy wheels. Stk #398253
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
2014 CHEVROLET CAMARO 2SS
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
JackEllenaHonda.com
Dodge Trucks
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Honda Cars
2013 Honda Accord EX
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
2014 CHEVROLET CAMARO
Only $16,555 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
4x4, Ecoboost, White Platinum
$20,999
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
GMC 2009 Acadia SLT 1 owner, leather heated seats, sunroof, room for 7, Bose sound. Stk#408801
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Leather, Convertible
2010 CHEVROLET 2500 CARGO VAN
GMC SUVs
Stk#115T599A
Thicker line? Bolder heading? Color background or Logo?
Chevrolet Cars
Ford Trucks
2013 FORD F-150 FX4 - LOADED
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
Chevrolet Vans
Ford Trucks
Call Coop at
888-631-6458 2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047 JackEllenaHonda.com
OPEN HOUSES
RENTALS & REAL ESTATE
GARAGE SALES
20 LINES: Ä ĆŤ ƍĸĆĀƍƍđƍƍĂƍ ĆŤÄ¸ÄˆÄ† + FREE PHOTO!
10 LINES: Ä‚ĆŤ ĆŤÄ¸Ä†Ä€ĆŤĆŤÄ‘ĆŤĆŤÄˆĆŤ ƍĸĉĀ Ăĉƍ ƍĸĂĉĀƍ+ FREE PHOTO!
UNLIMITED LINES:ĆŤ ĆŤ ĆŤÄƒĆŤ ÄŒĆŤ ƍĸĂąċĊĆ + FREE GARAGE SALE KIT!
CARS
SERVICE DIRECTORY
MERCHANDISE & PETS
10 LINES & PHOTO: ÄˆĆŤ ĆŤÄ¸Ä ÄŠÄ‹ÄŠÄ†ĆŤÄ‘ĆŤÄ‚Ä‰ĆŤ ƍĸąĊċĊĆ Äš ĆŤ
ƍ ƍĂĉƍ ĕƍ+ FREE RENEWAL!
6 LINES: Ä ĆŤ ĆŤÄ¸Ä Ä Ä‰Ä‹ÄŠÄ†ĆŤÄ‘ĆŤÄ‡ĆŤ ĆŤÄ¸ÄŠÄ Ä‹ÄŠÄ†ÄĽ ĆŤĆŤÄ Ä‚ĆŤ ƍĸćąċĊĆļ ĆŤ+ FREE LOGO!
10 LINES & PHOTO:ĆŤÄˆĆŤ ĆŤÄ¸Ä ÄŠÄ‹ÄŠÄ†ĆŤÄ‘ĆŤÄ‚Ä‰ĆŤ ƍĸąĊċĊĆ Äš ĆŤ
ƍ ƍĂĉƍ ĕƍ+ FREE RENEWAL!
ADVERTISE TODAY! ((ĆŤÄˆÄ‰Ä†Ä‹Ä‰ÄƒÄ‚Ä‹Ä‚Ä‚Ä‚Ä‚ĆŤ+.ĆŤ!) %(ĆŤ ( //%Ăź!
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8C
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Thursday, November 12, 2015
.
L AWRENCE J OURNAL -W ORLD
CARS TO PLACE AN AD: Honda Cars
Jeep
SPECIAL! 10 LINES & PHOTO 7 DAYS $19.95 | 28 DAYS $49.95 Doesn’t sell in 28 days? FREE RENEWAL!
785.832.2222 Lincoln Cars
Nissan Cars
classiďŹ eds@ljworld.com Pontiac Cars
Toyota Cars
Toyota Trucks
2013 Honda Accord EX
Fully Loaded, 57K miles, Leather, Moonroof, Great Deal, Fully Inspected, Awesome Condition, Well Maintained. Stk# F670A
Only $13,997
2013 Toyota Sienna LE
2014 JEEP CHEROKEE SPORT
2013 LINCOLN MKZ
Stk#PL1935
Stk#PL1951
AWD
$17,954
$26,997
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
2013 NISSAN ALTIMA 2.5 S Hard To Find Coupe!
Pontiac 2003 Grand Am GT, one owner, sunroof, spoiler, alloy wheels, power equipment, Stk#311522
$15,232 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
$18,979
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
2009 HONDA CR-V EX-L
TECHNOLOGY PKG Stk#PL1921
$28,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
AWD & Only 24,000 Miles!
Mazda Cars
Stk#115L769B
Call Coop at
888-631-6458 2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047 JackEllenaHonda.com
Volkswagen Cars
Absolutely Perfect!
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
Stk#115C905
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
$21,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
$14,495
2012 Nissan Maxima 3.5 S
2013 MAZDA 3i TOURING Hatchback
$14,495
$3,000 Below NADA!
Nice Car, Well Maintained, 91K miles, Great Condition, Loaded, One Owner Stk# F591A
FWD, 4 cyl, automatic, power equipment, great gas mileage and room. Stk#473362 Only $8,977 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
Call Coop at
888-631-6458
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
JackEllenaHonda.com
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
Nissan Crossovers
2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
ANNOUNCEMENTS
LUNCH: Fri, Nov. 13 11am-2pm Soup, cheese, bread, & apple pie
Hard to Find, Low Miles! Stk# 115T983A
$18,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
888-631-6458
28 Days - $49.95
2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047 JackEllenaHonda.com
785-832-2222
785.832.2222
Special Notices
Lawrence, KS
PLOUGHMAN’S LUNCH
2014 MAZDA CX-5 SPORT
7 Days - $19.95
CNA/CMA CLASSES!
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
2012 Honda Pilot EX 4WD
Find A Buyer Here!
TO PLACE AN AD:
Mazda Crossovers
$23,494
Kia Cars
TRAILER?
$15,495 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller! 23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Motorcycle-ATV 1992 Honda Shadow Excellent condition, 50,XXX miles, good tires, clean title, great bike. $2800 OBO
785-542-2232
NOTICES
Stk#115T850
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Stk#216M062
Only $14,995
Special Notices
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
Turbocharged!
SELLING A
Scion 2011 XB
Stk#PL2006
2011 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE OVERLAND
Only $9,650
Dale Willey Automotive 2840 Iowa Street (785) 843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
2012 VOLKSWAGEN BEETLE 2.0 Tsi
Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
Stk# 113L909
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
2010 Honda CR-V 4WD
AWD, Reduced!
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
Stk#2P1794
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
One owner, V6, automatic, power seat, alloy wheels, very affordable Stk #536752
2008 TOYOTA HIGHLANDER SPORT
Scion
4x4
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Toyota 2004 Highlander
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
2011 JEEP GRAND CHREOKEE LAREDO
$22,107
JackEllenaHonda.com
2009 NISSAN 370Z BASE
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047
Only $20,490
$8,995
2013 LINCOLN MKZ
Only $11,555
888-631-6458
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
7 Passenger, Power Sliding Doors, 76K miles, Local Owner, Awesome Condition, Well Maintained. Stk# G040A
Stk#216B007A
Leather, power equipment, alloy wheels. Stk #38866A2
Call Coop at
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
2010 PONTIAC G6
Jeep 2006 Grand Cherokee Laredo
Only $14,995
$21,995
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Toyota SUVs
Honda Crossovers
4WD Just in time for winter, Moonroof, 115K miles, Local Owner, Great Value Stk# F784A
Stk#1PL1977
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
JackEllenaHonda.com
Honda SUVs
4X4, 5.7 V-8, Hard to Find Long Bed!
Stk# 1PL1991
2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
2010 TOYOTA TUNDRA
Luxury and Fuel Efficiency
Only $5,500
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
888-631-6458
2012 TOYOTA CAMRY HYBRID XLE
Stk#PL2003
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Call Coop at
$19,995
Toyota Vans
2013 NISSAN JUKE SV
& TRINITY TREASURES SALE SALE: Fri. Nov. 13 10am -2pm
AWD Stk#PL1930
$15,995 Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Handmade quilts, sweaters, toys & Christmas decor
Trinity Episcopal Church 10th & Vermont Need to sell your car? Place your ad at classifieds.lawrence.com
CNA DAY CLASSES Nov 2 - Nov 24 9 H U * 1@ Nov 30- Dec 22 9 H U * 1@ Jan 4 - Jan 17 9 H U * #
classiďŹ eds@ljworld.com Special Notices
YOUR NEXT APARTMENT IS READY. FIND IT HERE.
CNA EVENING CLASSES LAWRENCE KS Nov 2 - Nov 25 H H U 1 1@ # CMA DAY CLASSES LAWRENCE KS Dec 1 -Dec 23 9 H U * 4 # CNA REFRESHER/CMA UPDATE LAWRENCE Nov 6/7 Dec 4/5,18/19 CALL NOW- 785.331.2025 trinitycareerinstitute.com
Search Amenities, Floorplans & More
View Apartments and Complex Features
Find Google Maps and Get Directions
Contact Property Management Directly
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
2015 KIA RIO
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151 www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Only 7,500 Miles! Stk#14T1034B Certified Pre-Owned, 4WD, 78K miles, 7 year/100K mile warranty, 8 Passenger, 182-pt. Inspection. Stk# F053A
Only $23,995
Mercedes-Benz
$11,995
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
888-631-6458
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
PUBLIC NOTICE CONTINUED FROM 6C
Pontiac 2009 Vibe
Kia Crossovers
JackEllenaHonda.com
2007 MERCEDES BENZ CLK 350 Luxury and Power!
Fwd, 4 cyl, great gas mileage, alloy wheels, power equipment, cruise control. Stk#352451
Stk#215T628
Hyundai Cars
Only $9,714
$11,837 2012 Kia Sorento LX 2012 Hyundai Elantra Limited
PUBLIC NOTICES TO PLACE AN AD:
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Call Coop at 2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047
Pontiac Cars
Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
Always Priced Below NADA Retail! It Just Makes Sense to Buy From Laird Noller!
Copies of the Notice to Bidders and specifications may be obtained at the Finance Department at the above address. The City Commission reserves the right to reject any or all bids and to waive informalities. City of Lawrence, Kansas Brandon McGuire Acting City Clerk ________ (First published in the Lawrence Daily JournalWorld November 10, 2015)
23rd & Alabama Lawrence 785-727-7151
Invitation to Bid
www.lairdnollerlawrence.com
Loaded, Navigation, Leather, Moonroof, Alloy Wheels, 61K miles, Thousands less than a Honda. Stk# G077A
Great Space, 77K miles, Local Ower, Automatic, Safe Vehicle, Fully Inspected and Well Maintained. Stk# F368B
TRANSPORTATION SPECIAL!
Only $13,495
Only $15,990
7 DAYS $19.95 28 DAYS $49.95
Call Coop at
Call Coop at
888-631-6458
888-631-6458
2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047
2112 W. 29th Terrace Lawrence, KS 66047
JackEllenaHonda.com
JackEllenaHonda.com
10 LINES & PHOTO:
ADVERTISE TODAY! CALL 832-2222 or email classifieds@ljworld.com
Douglas County Fairgrounds - Meeting Hall
Pontiac 2007 G6 GT Coupe, Sporty & Fun to drive, V6, leather heated seats, sunroof, alloy wheels, and more! Stk#32726B2 Only $9,250 Dale Willey 785-843-5200 www.dalewilleyauto.com
Mar Lan Construction is the CM at Risk for the Douglas County Fairgrounds Improvements project. Subcontractor bids will be received for the new Meeting Hall as shown on the plans and specifications dated October 21, 2015 and in accordance with Mar Lan Construction’s Scopes of Work for each Bid Pack-
age.
785.832.2222
classiďŹ eds@ljworld.com
a Mar Lan Construction prequalification statement prior to submitting a bid. Bids from subcontractors who have not been pre-qualified will not be considered. The prequalification form can be found at the link below.
This is Phase 1 of a multiple Phase project. Project phasing is proposed as follows: Phase 1 - 7,600 square foot Meeting Hall, parking, and utilities Phase 2 - 55,000 square foot Open Pavilion Subcontractor bids will be Phase 3 - Arena, seating, received until 2:00 PM, Tuesday, December 1, and site improvements 2015 at the office of Mar Construction and The Meeting Hall Phase in- Lan cludes, but is not limited opened privately. Fax and email bids will be acto, the followings: Building and site demoli- cepted. Bids shall be dition, concrete, polished rected to Gale Lantis at concrete floors, masonry gale@marlanconstruction.c veneer, structural steel, om or to Mar Lan Conwood framing, wood struction, 1008 New Hamptrusses, casework, insula- shire, Lawrence, Kansas tion, metal siding, spray on 66044, office 785-749-2647, weather barrier, joint seal- fax 785-749-9507. Scope or ants, composition shingle schedule questions must submitted to Gale roofing, metal roofing, alu- be minum storefront and win- Lantis in writing or via dows, hollow metal frames e-mail. and doors, drywall, acoustical ceilings, tiling, paint- Documents can be viewed ing, operable partition, fire via box.com at the link besprinkler system, plumb- low: ing, HVAC, electrical, fire alarm system, earthwork, https://marlanconstruction. termite treatment, con- box.com/s/7tae2e1s2lbrdhjs crete paving, asphalt pav- rydcselwkqtigvcq ing, site utilities. All bidders agree that they Bidders who are not on the may be required to submit financial stateMar Lan Construction current references and company pre-approved ments, bidders list and wish to bid safety history to Mar Lan prior to must complete and submit Construction
award of a contract. A payment and performance bond may be required in the amount of 100% of your subcontract amount. ________ (First published in the Lawrence Daily JournalWorld November 12, 2015) Before the Governing Body of the City of Lawrence, Kansas in the matter of the vacation of a pedestrian easement; described as Lot 3, Block 2; and Lot 4, Block 2, both a final plat of Hanscom-Tappan Addition a Subdivision in the City of Lawrence, Douglas County, Kansas (aka 1511 Hanscom Road and 1515 Hanscom Road) Notice of Hearing The State of Kansas to all persons who are or may be concerned: Take notice that on the 15 day of December, 2015, at 5:45 p.m., or as soon thereafter as the matter can be heard, the Governing Body of the City of Lawrence, Kansas, will convene in the Commission meeting room, 1st floor, City Hall, 6 East 6th Street, Lawrence, Kansas
PUBLIC NOTICE CONTINUED ON 9C
L awrence J ournal -W orld
Thursday, November 12, 2015
| 9C
MERCHANDISE PETS TO PLACE AN AD:
AUCTIONS Auction Calendar 2 Online Auctions NOW Preview for both auctions: Monday, Nov. 16, Noon-4 Monticello Auction Ctr, 4795 Frisbie Rd. Shawnee, KS Auction 1: Electrical Surplus Auction 2: Farm Toys, & Train Collection from a collector. See web for pics and full list www.lindsayauctions.com Lindsay Auction Svc. 913.441.1557
785.832.2222
Auction Calendar
Auction Calendar
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
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
APPLIANCES & FURNITURE, ANTIQUES & COLLECTIBLES, TOOLS & MISC. EDGECOMB AUCTIONS 785-594-3507 | 785-766-6074 See web for pics & more: www.edgecombauctions.com
Sebree Auction LLC 816-223-9235
Estate Auction Sunday, Nov. 15, 10:30 am 17778 214th St Tonganoxie, KS
www.edgecombauctions.com
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
Tractors, Stationary Baler, Vintage Equipment, Hit Miss Engines, White Mountain Ice Cream Freezers, Car Trailer, Antique Equipment, Antiques & Collectibles, Collectible Glass. View web for pictures & bill:
Honda Goldwing, International Truck, Ford Tractor & Trucks, Chipper, Jewelry, Collectibles, Guns, & much more. See full list on web:
sullivanauctioneers.com 217-847-2160
www.kansasuctions.net/hamilton
HAMILTON AUCTIONS
www.kansasauctions.net/miller
Estate Sales
785-214-0560 | 785-759-9805
Miller Auction LLC 1-913-441-1271
PUBLIC AUCTION Sunday, Nov 15th 11:00 AM 4541 Stafford Terr Wellsville, KS
FARM AUCTION: Sunday, Nov. 15, 11:00am 14418 206th Linwood, KS
TRUCK, HOT RODS, PARTS MOWERS, SHOP, TOOLS & MATERIAL, GUNS, HORSE RELATED, OUTDOOR, GUITARS & MUSIC RELATED, APPLIANCES, FURNITURE- Dale Reese, owner 785-214-0013
Tractors/Trucks/Combine/E quipment/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:
Branden Otto, Auctioneer 913-710-7111 www.ottoauctioneering.com
www.KansasAuctions.net/elston
Red concrete pavers The following red concrete pavers are FREE if you pick them up: 48 SF (200) 4”x8”x2” paving bricks. 17 SF (10) 16”x16”x2’ pavers. 24 SF (28) 16”X8”x2” pavers FREE 785-312-4840
Huge High End Lawrence Estate Sale 1712 Lake Alvamar Dr Lawrence, 66047 Thurs Nov. 12-Sat Nov. 14 9am-4pm.
Bombenstabail chair. This chair is German made. It is hand carved and highly detailed. The company that made it went out of business in 1949. $525.00 obo 785-304-9938
Firewood-Stoves
Baby & Children Items 2 Diaper Champs. Like New. $35-$45 retail. $20 Debbie each, OBO. 785-843-7759.
Franklin wood stove in great condition. Heavy cast iron. $400 OBO. 785-841-2259
GARAGE SALES
PIANOS • H.L. Phillips upright $650 •Baldwin Spinet - $550 • Cable Nelson or Kimball Spinet - $500 • Gulbranson Spinet - $450 Prices include tuning & delivery
785-832-9906
FOR SALE——-Standard size 32’ Wide Steel Door white with window. Excellent cond. Asking $25.00 Please call 785-856-0858 Lawrence.
www.kansasauctions.net/edgecomb
PUBLIC AUCTION Saturday, Nov. 14th, 10 AM 420 Sandcreek Rd Pomona, KS
www.kansasauctions.net/sebree
Music-Stereo
Building Materials
EDGECOMB AUCTIONS: 785-594-3507 or 785-766-6074 ART HANCOCK-BROKER 913-207-4231
www.kansasauctions.net/edgecomb
Baby & Children Items
Vintage Large Little Tikes County Kitchen set. CoAntiques mes with tons of food & dishes, etc. Bought for Antique Hoosier Cabinet, $99 $150 w/out anything. Selling all for $80. Debbie or best offer. 785-856-2509 785-843-7759.
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.
SATURDAY, NOV 21, @ 10 AM, REAL ESTATE SELLS @ 1 PM 2602 LOUISIANA LAWRENCE, KS
Shotguns, rifles, handguns, ammo, bird calls, knives, air gun, bb guns, much more. See internet for more:
MERCHANDISE
mcclivestock.com/clinerealty
PERSONAL PROPERTY AUCTION
BIG GUN AUCTION Sun., Nov. 15, 2015 @ 1pm Basehor VFW Hall 2806 N 155th St Basehor, KS
classifieds@ljworld.com
Technics, sx-PX series, Digital Piano....... This Full Size Electric Piano with Stool has a lot of features to make a wide range of sounds. One of the pedals is not working, but otherwise works great and just looking for a new home. $500.00 obo 785-304-9938
Lawrence ENTERTAINMENT SALE 4813 McCormick St. Lawrence Sat, Nov 14. 8 am-12:00 Thousands of CDs ($1), books (50c-$2) and DVDs ($2). The CDs are in all genres with many country, rock, classical, soundtrack and Christmas. The books are mostly non-fiction with many history and military history. Movies, concerts and documentary DVDs are available.
HUGE MOVING SALE 601 West 27th Place Lawrence
Sat, Nov 14 & Sun, Nov 15. 9am-3pm Couch/Love Seat, Futon, Kitchenware & 2 Kitchen Tables, Bar Stools, Slot Machine, Smokers, Dressers, Trolling Motor, Fishing Gear, Table Saw, Tools, Mikasa Wurlitzer Spinnet Piano, $99 Glassware, lots & lots of or best offer. 785-856-2509 “dust collectors,” many more items. NO EARLY CALLERS please!
Sports-Fitness Equipment
Fisher-Price tool work bench. Comes with all Furniture original tools, nails, & bolts. Tons of extras. $40. wall unit Fisher-Price Vintage Little Scandinavian People City Skyway w/out Great storage. Teak wood $75 785-841-3945, leave Furniture, decor, collectibles, cars & people. Good for msg Art: including 1980 Peter Max, hotwheel use. $30. Debbie jewelry, Malibu gym, & tools. 785-843-7759. High Quality! Miscellaneous Little Tikes Vintage Workshop. Comes with drawWeslo Treadmill in very FOR 150+ PICS ers, original tools, nuts (2) Old Metal school good condition with hand estatesales.net/ks/lawrence/6604 and bolts, phone and tons lockers, $25 ea. weights Folds up for stor7/1046505 of extra tools. $40. Debbie 785-255-4340 age. $95 785-841-2026 Reenie Henry Estate Sales 785-843-7759.
Lawrence Huge 3 Family Clean Out Sale 3032 Steven Dr Saturday 8 am - 4 pm Antiques- Door w/ hardware, oak game table, oak tool chest w/ compartments, curio cabinet, oil lamps. Furniture- Oak table w/ 8 chairs, butterfly leaf table that seats 6 to 8, table w/ 4 chairs,patio furniture. Misc- Clothes, decor, Hallmark ornaments in original boxes, St. Nicholas Square Christmas village and lots of misc.
Lawrence-Rural Antique & Collectible Sale
1676 N. 1000 Rd Saturday, Nov. 7 9 am - 3 pm
OVER 8 FAMILIES! Antiques / collectibles; Furniture, Black Americana, Vintage Glassware, British Wades, Horsetack, Housewares, and MORE!
Basehor
Huge Barn Sale HUGE DOWNSIZING SALE 17271 Hollingsworth Rd. 3918 Wilshire Dr Basehor, Kansas 66007 Wednesday - Saturday, NOV. 13TH & NOV. 14TH November 11th - 14 9AM-4PM 8:00 - 4:00 Militaria (uniforms and weapon), furniture, chairs, tables, tools, and Antiques include, claw foot wrenches, ETC. bathtub, ringer washing Also 400 plus vintage machine, weight scales, linens. 300 plus jewelry doors, knobs, dressers, items. Dolls, toys, buttons, chests, beds, tables, multitude of CDs, 400 Hall- chairs, buffet, Murphy mark ornaments, lots of bed, metal cabinets and Christmas items, tons of stools, trunks, jelly cabimisc. EVERYTHING CHEAP net, school desks, dishes, & PRICED TO SELL!!! pots and pans, silverware, Skystream wind turbine Need to sell your car? generator, 1972 Honda CL Place your ad at 175 motorcycle, Camero classifieds.lawrence.com hood and bumper chain or email link fence and gates and classifieds@ljworld.com so much more!
PUBLIC NOTICES 785.832.2222
classifieds@ljworld.com
LESS ALL IN THE CITY OF LAWRENCE, DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANSAS, SUBJECT TO RIGHTS-OF-WAY, EASEMENTS AND RESTRICTIONS for the purpose of con- OF RECORD. ducting a hearing on the petition of Jacqueline Juhl THE NORTHEAST CORNER and Jason & Joanna Bonee, OF LOT 4, BLOCK 2, OF THE PLAT OF wherein prayer is made to FINAL ADDIvacate a pedestrian ease- HANSCOM-TAPPAN ment in the City of Law- TION, A SUBDIVISION IN rence, Douglas County, THE CITY OF LAWRENCE, Kansas, located between DOUGLAS COUNTY, KANTHENCE SOUTH 1511 Hanscom Road and SAS; 1515 Hanscom Road. De- 01°30’24” EAST ON THE scription of area to be va- EAST LINE OF SAID LOT 4, A DISTANCE OF 7.58 FEET; cated: THENCE NORTH 83°21’01” THE SOUTHEAST CORNER WEST, A DISTANCE OF OF LOT 3, BLOCK 2, OF THE 98.93 FEET TO THE WEST FINAL PLAT OF LINE OF SAID LOT 4; HANSCOM-TAPPAN ADDI- THENCE NORTH 06°38’59” TION, A SUBDIVISION IN EAST ON THE WEST LINE THE CITY OF LAWRENCE, OF SAID LOT 4, A DISTANCE DOUGLAS COUNTY, KAN- OF 7.50 FEET, TO THE SAS; THENCE NORTH NORTHWEST CORNER OF 83°21’01” WEST ON THE SAID LOT 4; THENCE SOUTH SOUTH LINE OF SAID LOT 3, 83°21’01” EAST ON THE A DISTANCE OF 97.85 FEET, NORTH LINE OF SAID LOT 4, TO THE SOUTHWEST COR- A DISTANCE OF 97.85 FEET, NER OF SAID LOT 3; TO THE POINT OF BEGINNCONTAINING 737.91 THENCE NORTH 06°38’59” ING EAST ON THE WEST LINE SQUARE FEET MORE OR LESS ALL IN THE CITY OF OF SAID LOT 3, A DISTANCE DOUGLAS OF 7.50 FEET; THENCE LAWRENCE, SOUTH 83°21’01” EAST, A COUNTY, KANSAS, SUBJECT DISTANCE OF 96.77 FEET TO TO RIGHTS-OF-WAY, EASETHE EAST LINE OF SAID LOT MENTS AND RESTRICTIONS 3; THENCE SOUTH OF RECORD. 01°30’24” EAST ON THE That said petition has been EAST LINE OF SAID LOT 3, A filed in the office of the DISTANCE OF 7.58 FEET, TO City Clerk of the City of THE POINT OF BEGINNING Lawrence, Kansas, and reCONTAINING 729.84 ferred to the Governing SQUARE FEET MORE OR Body of the City of Law-
PUBLIC NOTICE CONTINUED FROM 8C
rence, Kansas, for hearing and determination. That at said time and place all interested persons can appear and be heard under said petition.
above named Defendants and The Unknown Heirs, executors, devisees, trustees, creditors, and assigns of any deceased defendants; the unknown spouses of any defend/s/ Brandon McGuire ants; the unknown offic-Brandon McGuire, ers, successors, trustees, Acting City Clerk creditors and assigns of ________ any defendants that are existing, dissolved or dor(First published in the mant corporations; the unLawrence Daily Journal- known executors, adminisWorld October 29, 2015) trators, devisees, trustees, creditors, successors and IN THE DISTRICT COURT assigns of any defendants OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, that are or were partners KANSAS or in partnership; and the CIVIL DEPARTMENT unknown guardians, conservators and trustees of CitiMortgage, Inc. any defendants that are Plaintiff, minors or are under any legal disability and all other vs. person who are or may be concerned: Laura A. Davis, Phillip C. Davis, Jane Doe, John Doe, YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED City of Lawrence, Kansas, that a Petition for Mortgage and United States Foreclosure has been filed Bankruptcy Trustee Jan in the District Court of Hamilton, et al., Douglas County, Kansas by Defendants CitiMortgage, Inc., praying Case No. 15CV371 Court No. 3
for foreclosure of certain real property legally described as follows:
Lawrence, KS 66044 (“the Property”) MS169734 for a judgment against defendants and any other interested parties and, unless otherwise served by personal or mail service of summons, the time in which you have to plead to the Petition for Foreclosure in the District Court of Douglas County Kansas will expire on December 9, 2015. If you fail to plead, judgment and decree will be entered in due course upon the request of plaintiff. MILLSAP & SINGER, LLC By:___________________ Chad R. Doornink, #23536 cdoornink@msfirm.com 8900 Indian Creek Parkway, Suite 180 Overland Park, KS 66210 (913) 339-9132 (913) 339-9045 (fax) By: /s/ Tiffany T. Johnson Tiffany T. Johnson, #26544 tjohnson@msfirm.com Garrett M. Gasper, #25628 ggasper@msfirm.com Aaron M. Schuckman, #22251 aschuckman@msfirm.com 612 Spirit Dr. St. Louis, MO 63005 (636) 537-0110 (636) 537-0067 (fax)
LOTS “A” AND 1, IN BLOCK 1, SMITH’S SUBDIVISION OF THAT PART OF ADDITION NO. 6 AND 7 NORTH LAWPursuant to K.S.A. §60 RENCE, IN THE CITY OF LAWRENCE, DOUGLAS NOTICE OF SUIT COUNTY, KANSAS. Tax ID ATTORNEYS FOR PLAINTIFF _______ No. N07510A Commonly STATE OF KANSAS to the known as 706 Lincoln St., Title to Real Estate Involved
(First published in the Lawrence Daily Journal-World November 12, 2015)
DOUGLAS COUNTY TREASURER’S OFFICE STATEMENT OF FUNDS ENDING OCTOBER 30, 2015 100 201 218 222 224 225 226 231 235 236 240 245 253 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 301 302 450 451 452
Fund Amount - General Fund $14,824,228.75 - Road and Bridge $3,079,250.99 - Employee Benefits $5,771,455.41 - Special Liability $393,746.27 - Special Parks & Recreation $36,468.23 - Special Alcohol Programs $20,666.54 - Special Building $483,769.52 - Economic Development $2,575.36 - Emergency Telephone Service $1,037,509.38 - Youth Services $780,095.87 - Ambulance $965,501.56 - Motor Vehicle Operations $180,495.99 - Employee Activities $9,840.92 - Donation $43,138.60 - Workers Compensation $255,339.65 - Sheriff Special Use $37,612.72 - Prosecuting Training &Assist $27,109.86 - Spec Law Enforce Trust $708,687.75 - DA Bad Check Admin $11,782.15 - Sheriff Holding $15,435.00 - Bond & Interest $234,968.95 - Local County Sales Tax 1% $2,177,579.24 - Capital Improvement Plan $14,810,679.23 - CIP Sales Tax $2,171,549.44 - Valley View Building $150,428.51
501 - Youth Services Grants $388,705.32 502 - Grant Programs $201,040.17 503 - Community Correction Plan $114,823.35 601 - Special Highway Improvement $536,607.06 602 - Equipment Reserve Fund $8,178,054.20 603 - Register Of Deeds Technology $526,835.27 604 - Ambulance Capital Reserve $900,141.36 701 - Insufficient Checks ($16,106.20) 702 - Collection Long/Short $5,758.67 703 - Credit Card Charges ($65,303.72) 704 - Sales Tax Collection $285,208.87 705 - Rec’d For Distribution $29,314.02 706 - Hold For State Payment $64,842.40 707 - Hold For County Payment $40,328.22 708 - Payroll $10,904.12 750 - Tax District Holding $38,070.48 801 - Advalorem Tax $465,069.16 802 - Vehicle Tax $1,160,265.20 Ledger Total $61,094,473.84 Assets 11200 - Cash in Banks 11201 - Vault Cash 11300 - Idle Investments Grand Total
$4,838,910.64 $2,500.00 $56,253,063.20 $61,094,473.84
I hereby certify that the above are the true and correct balances of the Treasurer’s Ledgers as of October 30, 2015. SENT EMAIL - SIGNATURE ON FILE IN TREASURER OFFICE Paula Gilchrist Douglas County Treasurer Eleventh & Massachusetts Lawrence, Ks 66044-0884
CONTACT SHANICE TO ADVERTISE! 785.832.7113 | SVARNADO@LJWORLD.COM
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Decks • Gazebos Siding • Fences • Additions Remodel • Weatherproofing Insured • 25 yrs exp. 785-550-5592
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DECK BUILDER
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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
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913-962-0798 Fast Service
New York Housekeeping: Accepting clients for wkly, bi-wkly & seasonal or special occasion cleaning. Excellent References. Beth - 785-766-6762.
Home Improvements
JAYHAWK GUTTERING
Decks & Fences
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
Guttering Services
Dirt-Manure-Mulch
REAL ESTATE AUCTIONS
STARTING or BUILDING a Business?
Foundation Repair
Foundation and Masonry Specialist Water prevention systems for basements, Sump pumps, foundation supports & repair and more. Call 785-221-3568
Many colors to choose from. Install, repair, screen, clean-out. Locally owned. Insured. Free estimates.
Landscaping 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.
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785-312-1917
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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
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